Day of the Dead
by
Fred Reed
DIGG THIS
Recently
we celebrated the Day of the Dead, el Dia de los Muertos. As the
shadows over Jocotepec lengthened with coming night, Vi and I went
up on the rooftop patio. She began setting up the altar to the dead,
los antepasados. It was not elaborate. She lit three candles, which
proved difficult in the wind, but she found some old lantern glasses
that made it work. In front, a bunch of bright orange flowers and,
on a low table, a row of solid sugar skulls, calaveras, one for
each of us. We would be four.
Mexicans of
any schooling take the Day of the Dead more seriously than Americans
do Halloween, but no more so, I suppose, than the Roman senate took
Apollo. Yet death and the dead have more immediacy here than in
a country which carefully ignores both. Mexicans have not persuaded
themselves that there is no mystery in existence. Besides, tradition
is tradition.
Jim arrived
from Ajijic. Jim is a friend from lives now remote, once a door
gunner in choppers in Asia and then a photojournalist in curious
places. Very curious, sometimes. Over the years we have bumped into
each other here and there and known many of the same madmen, derelicts,
geniuses and human oddities. A couple of months ago he came to visit
me in Joco. On the eighth day he rented a house. I guess Mexico
suited him.
Vi brought
up a sufficiency of Padre Kino red and put it on the small metal
table. Jim pulled out a pair of good Cuban cigars. Mexico, thank
god, does not concern itself with Washington's bruised vanities.
My stepdaughter Natalia joined us. She is very nearly fifteen years
old. For some reason she likes Jim. She is usually quiet with strangers,
remorselessly observant, and not readily impressed. I assure her
that he is shockingly disreputable, but she pays no attention.
High in a cloudless
sky a full moon or nearly so shed a clear silver light that cast
sharp moon shadows and the wind whipped chill around us, making
the candles flicker in their glass shelters. To the south beyond
the town the lake glowed in what looked like mist rising from a
sea of mercury. To the north, very near, the mountains loomed dark
and massive in the night. Our house really is on their lower slope.
Dogs barked in the distance. A couple of kids clopped by on horseback,
chattering.
Life
is good, Jim said in tones of deep satisfaction. Sometimes,
if only by inadvertence, it is. This was one of them.
We talked as
men will who have lived unreasonably. A misspent life is a life
best spent. At least you have stories. Jim told of having met a
chopper pilot somewhere in the East by the name of Six-Pack Muldoon.
I think it was Muldoon. He was called Six-Pack because he never
flew without beer in the cockpit. Jim asked him why. Well, said
Six-Pack, in thirty years in helicopters he had only crashed twice,
and both times he was sober. He wasnt going to risk it again.
Vi brought
tostadas and mole, new to Jim. They went over well. He asserts that
he has never had a bad meal in Mexico. The wind picked up and the
little sugar skulls grinned at us in wobbling candle light. Our
dog Pelusa (Fuzz) came to see whether there might be
a bit of tostada for her. There was. The girls listened to practice
their English, with me translating important bits.
We had hung
a rug to dry on the railing around the mirador. Natalia laid it
out, sequestered one of the candles, and lay down to read under
the moon. Jim asked her what the book was. A Midsummer Nights
Dream in translation. She has been reading the plays since she was,
I think, eleven. She is not aware that reading Shakespeare is generally
a source of intellectual pretension, of which she has none. She
just likes Williams writing. I think he would have found this
adequate.
She is the
best student in her school. If she were my biological daughter,
I would be insupportably proud of me. As it is, I have to settle
for being insupportably proud of her. Oh well.
Living with
the pair of Mexican females is half puzzle and half revelation.
Americans have grown rich and specialized. We hire people to do
things. Mexicans of fairly poor family do not readily hire plumbers,
carpenters, or much of anyone else. The money isnt there.
Instead they rely on themselves.
I have seen
Violeta and Natalia pour a concrete floor, hang a door, and wire
a garage. The key is that nothing intimidates them. Natalia's response
to my purchase of a new Toyota was to sit in it for an hour with
the manual, to see whether the buttons worked. Once, when I was
in China or maybe somewhere else, they wanted to install a wireless
card in a computer. Neither had seen a computer with the back off.
Natalia is a pretty fair geekess, but thats software. They
opened the case. Where else would a card go? Hmm, these things look
like the wireless card and they fit in these slots, and here's another
slot, so it follows that....bingo, done. I expect that they could
do open-heart surgery, figuring it out as they went. ""See,
Mama, this connects to...."
Americans,
here and elsewhere, usually regard Mexicans with unconscious condescension
as a race of maids and gardeners. In the local English-language
fish-wrapper, the Ojo del Lago, one finds endless articles, apparently
written by middle-schoolers, about how the writers just love the
culture and why, they just had some wonderful Mexican experience
only the other day and just respect Mexico sooo much; the tone reminds
me of admiration of a collies adroitness with a Frisbee. They
do not know that they are doing this. The Mexicans regard the Americans
as helpless greyhairs who always seem lost, and walk with the body
language of a mouse in a herpetarium; Mexicans do not know that
many of the gringos have had lives and know things and were not
always old and out of their element. It is an orgy of mutual underestimation.
A burro eee-honked
nearby. The Padre Kino ran low and the cigars burned down toward
fingers. I wondered whether it was bad form to hold a Cuban cigar
in a roach clip. The town was darker now, lights going out. Dogs
barked to each other in the distance. I tried to imagine what they
were saying. Natalia turned in. The three adults sat for a long
time, quiet now, watching the moonlight. There are more things in
heaven and earth, someone said. Maybe he was on to something.

November
9, 2006
Fred
Reed is author of Nekkid
in Austin: Drop Your Inner Child Down a Well and the just-published
A
Brass Pole in Bangkok: A Thing I Aspire to Be.
Copyright
© 2006 Fred Reed
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