Thursday, December 19, 2013
won’t change for a long time. If you’ll drive I’ll sleep now.” I took
the wheel and drove among reveries of my own, Through Linares, through
hot flat swamp country, across the steaming Rio Soto la Marina near
Hidalgo, and on. A great verdant jungle valley with long fields of
green crops opened before me. Groups of men watched us pass from a narrow
old fashioned bridge. The hot river followed. Then we rose in altitude
till a kind of desert country began reappearing. The city of Victoria
was ahead. The boys were sleeping and I was alone in my eternity at the
wheel and the road ran straight as an arrow. Not like driving across
Carolina, or Texas, or Arizona, or Illinois; but like driving across the
world and into the places where we would finally learn ourselves among
the worldwide fellaheen people of the world, the Indians that stretch in
a belt around the world from Malaya to India to Arabia to Morocco to
Mexico and over to Polynesia. For these people were unmistakably Indians
and were not at all like the Pedros and Panchos of silly American
lore---they had high cheekbones, and slanted eyes, and soft ways---they
were not fools, they were not clowns---they were great grave Indians and
they were the source of mankind and the fathers of it. And they knew
this when we passed, ostensibly self-important moneybag Americans on a
lark in their land, they knew who was the father and who was the son of
antique life on earth, and made no comment. For when destruction comes
to the world people will stare with the same eyes from the caves of
Mexico as well as from the caves of Bali, where it all began and where
Adam was suckled and taught to know. These were my growing thoughts as I
drove the car into the hot sunbaked town of Victoria where we were
destined to spend the maddest afternoon of our entire lives. Earlier,
back at San Antonio, I had promised Neal, as a joke, that I would get
him laid. It was a bet and a challenge. As I pulled up the car at the
gas station near the gates of sunny Victoria a kid came across the road
on tattered feet carrying an enormous windshield-shade and wanted to know
if I’d buy. “You like? Sixty pesos. Habla Mexicano. Sesenta peso. My
name Gregor.” “Nah” I said jokingly “buy señorita.” “Sure sure!” he
cried excitedly. “I get you gurls, anytime.
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