stopped for pisscall I got out and walked across a field to the big
trees and sat awhile thinking on the plain. Frank and Neal sat in the
car gesticulating. Poor fellows, their flesh mingled with mine had been
carried now a total of nineteen hundred miles from the afternoon yards
of Denver to these vast and Biblical areas of the world and now were
about to reach the end of the road and though I didn’t know it I was
about to reach the end of my road with Neal. And my road with Neal had
been considerably longer than nineteen hundred miles. “Shall we change
our insect T-shirts?” “Naw, let’s wear them into town, hell’s bells.”
And we drove into Mexico City. A brief mountain pass took us suddenly to
a height from which we saw all of Mexico City stretched out in its
volcanic crater below and spewing city smokes and early dusklights. Down
to it we zoomed, down Insurgentes boulevard, straight to the town at
Reforma. Kids played soccer in enormous sad fields and threw up dust.
Taxi drivers overtook us and wanted to know if we wanted girls. No, we
didn’t want girls now. Long ragged adobe slums stretched out on the
plain; we saw lonely figures in the dimming alleys. Soon night would
come. Then the city roared in and we were passing crowded cafes and
theaters and many lights. Newsboys yelled at us. Mechanics slouched by
barefoot with a wrench and a rag. Mad barefoot Indian drivers cut across
us and surrounded us and tooted and made frantic traffic. The noise was
incredible. No mufflers are used on Mexican cars. Horns are batted with
glee continual. “Whee!” yelled Neal. “Lookout!” he staggered the car
through the traffic
and played with everybody. He drove like an
Indian. He got on a a circular drive on Reforma Boulevard and rolled
around it with its eight spokes shooting cars at us from all directions,
left, right, dead ahead, and yelled and jumped with joy. “This is
traffic I’ve always dreamed of! Everybody GOES!” An ambulance came
balling through. American ambulances dart and weave through traffic with
siren blowing; the great worldwide fellaheen Indian ambulances merely
come through at eighty miles an hour in the city streets and everybody
has to get our of the way, and it does not pause for an instant
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