Thursday, December 19, 2013
we’d done. And now we were ready for the last 150 miles to the magic
border. We leaped into the car and off. I was so exhausted by now I
slept all the way to Laredo and didn’t wake up till they were parking
the car in front of a lunchroom at two o’clock in the morning. “Ah”
sighed Neal “the end of Texas, the end of America, we don’t know no
more.” It was tremendously hot: we were all sweating buckets. There was
no night dew, not a breath of air, nothing, except billions of moths
smashing at bulbs everywhere and the low rank smell of a hot river in
the night nearby---the Rio Grande, that begins in cool Rocky Mountain
dales and ends up fashioning world-valleys to mingle its heats with the
Mississippi muds in the great Gulf. Laredo was a sinister town that
morning. All kinds of cabdrivers and border rats wandered around looking
for opportunities. There weren’t many, it was too late. It was the
bottom and dregs of America where all the heavy villains sink, where
disoriented people have to go to be near a specific elsewhere they can
slip in unnoticed. Contraband brooded in the heavy syrup air. Cops were
red-faced and sullen and sweaty, no swagger. Waitresses were dirty and
disgusted. Just beyond you could feel the enormous presence of the whole
continent of Mexico and almost smell the billion tortillas frying and
smoking in the night. We had no idea what Mexico would really be like.
We were at sea level again and when we tried to eat a snack we could
hardly swallow it. We left our food on plates: I wrapped it up in
napkins for the trip anyway. We felt awful and sad. But everything
changed when we crossed the mysterious bridge over the river and our
wheels rolled on official Mexican soil tho it wasn’t anything but a
carway for border inspection. Just across the street Mexico began. We
looked with wonder. To our amazement it looked exactly like Mexico. It
was three in the morning and fellows in straw hats and white pants were
lounging by the dozen against battered pocky storefronts.
“Look…at…those…cats!” whispered Neal. “Oo” he breathed softly, “wait,
wait.” The Mexican officials came out grinning and asked please if we
would take out our baggage. We did. We couldn’t take our eyes from
across the street. We were longing to rush right up there and get lost
in those
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