***Out In The Film Noir Night - The
Stuff Of Dreams, Part Two-Down Los Gatos Way-Take Two
From The Pen Of Joshua Lawrence
Breslin
It
didn’t start out that way, the stuff of dreams, the search for gold that is,
but it sure finished up that way, finished up that way with guys lying face
down in some broken unnamed desert arroyo, nobody to mourn them, or cover them
over except those fierce desert winds that would make short work of the matter,
if that counted. Yah, it didn’t start out that way with pipe dream guys just
buying into another guy’s dreams, catching their own fire dreams to get out
from under whatever it was they were trying to get out from under from. Trying
to brush off the dust of their own small dreams, maybe just trying to get back
to square one, gringo Norte Americano square one from whence they came, came
south for some reason, or no reason, came south to sunny Mexico. Maybe took up
the dream, another man’s dream to get back to some long lost Molly, all bright
blue eyes and straw blonde, and a fresh start, and, damn, to get away from that
stinking brown-eyed world, that brown dust from the brown roads, those
brown-skinned, fierce- looking brown-eyed braceros, and those brown senoritas
with their sparkling, dancing brown eyes and their karma sutra tricks (although
none of them, the senoritas, would have known that term or the book they came
from , just the arts from handed- down cantina mother to daughter practice ),
whores, really, who spoiled a man, a gringo man, for blond-haired Mollies if
you didn’t get away fast enough. Or maybe they came south for the senoritas ,
for the brown-eyed senoritas, for the cheap and easy brown-eyed senoritas with
the sparking dancing eyes looking for sugar daddy gringos with fierce blues
eyes and strange hungers, strange hung-up sex hungers, to get out from under
the bracero life. So yah it didn’t start out that way, no way.
Maybe I
had better start at the beginning, or at the beginning where my just then road
amigo Felipe, who saw the whole thing many years before and lived to tell about
it, came into the story and told a bunch of us the story over a windy night
camp fire in a jungle camp along the Southern Pacific Railroad just outside of
Gallup, New Mexico one night, one 1973 night. Told us about how when he was
young he had got caught up with a trio of guys, gringos of course, who were
bitten by the stuff of dreams.
It
started down in Vera Cruz, like I said down in sunny Mexico, and it started
with this gringo, Burl, bumming a cigarette off Felipe who was driving a cab at
the time down at the docks where this Burl’s ship, some tramp freighter that
had seen better days, the S.S. Corcoran, had just landed. This Burl, after
Felipe gave him the cigarette (and a pack of matches to light it with too, damn
Felipe should have cross the gee off right there), asked him about hotels, and,
more importantly about cantinas and senoritas, stuff like that, just like a
million guys have done who have been guy ship bound for too long since they
invented ships. It seemed, contrary to his appearance, four or five days growth
on his face, in a time when clean-shaven was the rule, ruffed-up clothes, non-descript
worn-out shoes, really sneakers, and smelling, well smelling like he could use
a bath, or something, that this guy has some dough coming, coming as back pay
off his tramp steamer journey as a ship’s mate. Felipe brightened to this news
because now he turned on his tourista guide niceness full blast, offering the
guy another cigarette (keep the matches, amigo) and his services as someone who
could safely get Mister Burl through the maze of Vera Cruz night life in one
piece. Burl agreed and the game was on.
Two
weeks later after drinking up half the high-shelf scotch in town, keeping
company with half the brown-eyed senoritas at the La Paz whorehouse (nicely
named although more hell got raised there, more fortunes got lost, more teeth
got knocked out that in the rather placid other precincts of the town) and
setting his favorite from the La Paz , Maria (hell, they are all named Maria or
Lupe something in cantina- ville), up in an adjoining hotel room for serious
pleasure, and after smoking just one too many joints of that high-spirited
marijuana grown in some wilds outside of town Burl, Burl Jackson, from
Baltimore, U.S.A. was flat broke again, flat broke with no ship heading out
since the Corcoran had left the week before without him (and good riddance he
said of that old tub in an alcoholic haze one night when Felipe informed him of
the ship’s departure), no prospects, no money for the room rent, and by now
probably no Maria as well.
While
Burl pondered his choices he asked Felipe for a cigarette, and a loan. No dice,
Felipe wasn’t born yesterday and was keeping his easily earned dough and so he
just pleaded that he had already spent his dough trying to feed his family,
gracias though. So he would have to bracero/gringo/downtrodden pan-handle the
ricos Americanos for a while over at the Central Plaza where they hung out to
get a stake up and find another ship if not in Vera Cruz then some other
port.
And that
is where Burl Jackson met Tim Conway, Tim Conway of Laredo, Texas and also with
no dough, no prospects and no place to stay just then but with big dreams, big
dreams of easy and cheap brown-eyed mex
whorehouse girls, and plenty of them, who would take you around the world for a
dollar and a little tip. Jesus, Burl said at this news. He wised the kid up
about the cheap part, forget that once those laughing Spanish eyes got under
your skin and you set up a one for your easy rider, easy rider woman like he
had with Maria, although he left the easy part for the kid to figure for
himself. In fact Tim, after some
conversation, had sized Burl up as a gringo rico and was ready to put the bite
on him. Jesus, again. They talked for a while and kind of got along.
While
they were standing on that good Mexican soil trying to figure out if two
gringos were better than one this old geezer, this old ancient geezer with a
beard like Jehovah, the stink of a guy who had been out in the desert or
someplace without a bathtub, long straggly hair, and about six missing teeth
drawing a couple of pack mules behind him came by and asked if they were
American in some low-down English. “Of course they were Americans, jesus, what
did he think they were some brown-eyed braceros,” Tim had wailed out. He then
asked them if they were looking for work. “Of course they were looking for
work, and what of it.” Burl had shouted out. The old geezer (real name Walter
Simons but nobody ever called him anything but Old Geezer according to Felipe
who had seen him off and on around town when he came in from the hills for the
previous four or five years) had a proposition for the boys if they would
trouble themselves to show their faces at the Imperial Hotel about six o’clock
that evening after he had cleaned up and had supper. Burl looked at Tim and
shrugged his shoulders in disbelieve at the Old Geezer’s address but were
non-committal on the appointment.
Needless
to say they were, after a fruitless afternoon of not finding anything
worthwhile, knocking on the door of Room 216 of the Imperial Hotel at six that
evening. And here was the now regal Old Geezer’s proposition. He was an old
time prospector (believable) and had hit some pay-dirt, some gold dust
pay-dirt, out in the arroyos and foothills around Los Gatos about one hundred
and fifty miles away from there toward the interior of sunny Mexico. He needed
help to dig for and pan the stuff on an equal basis, each a third share. He
didn’t trust the Mex, the dirty braceros that would cut his throat for a dollar
and change if he turned his back on them but with gringos he could feel that at
least they wouldn’t cut his throat and he had size dup Burl and Tim as okay,
okay for what he was offering. No soap though, not that night and not for a few
nights more until Burl and Tim were forced into some stinking bracero rooming
house with about fifty stinking braceros in space for twenty when a rain squall
forced them indoors. Then they were back at Room 216, hats in hands.
A couple
of days later they took off, Tim, Burl, the Old Geezer, four pack mules loaded
with supplies and tools for a couple of months work, and Felipe who Burl
persuaded the Old Geezer to take along for wages to “keep house” for them.
(They kept Felipe in the dark about what they were up to until they got close
to Los Gatos but he had kind of figured it out when Tim and Burl kept talking
about registering their claim in Tampico. He knew the area as well and the
history of a million gringos going for the gold but he just let them play out
their hand, like he always did with gringos, because they were kind of
trigger-happy when it came right down to it.)
Needless to say a couple of gringos one more at home in the seas of the
world, the seven seas, and whorehouses like Burl and a raw kid like Tim, who
dreamed of whorehouses and keeping his hands lily-white in the bargain sweated,
cursed, wanted to turn back about six times, got a little sunstrokes, maybe a
little desert- addled, maybe snake-bit and insect- bit and twelve other kind of
bits for the seven days it took to get to Los Gatos after stumbling, tumbling,
mumbling over some rocky arroyos, some saline desert and some ragged foothills. But damn they made it, made
camp and prepared for el dorado, yah, big time el dorado if the Old Geezer
wasn’t cracked.
Do you
need to know the work, the twelve, fourteen, sixteen hour a day work these tres
hombres went through for about a month before they even clawed, scratched,
culled a small assay of gold for their troubles, work sleep, eat and not too
much to preserve the supplies. No, you
can figure that part of the story out, and if you can’t Felipe said even he had
helped out just to past the time. Finally that small assay traced down into a
bigger lode, yah, they had hit pay dirt. Not big, according to the Old Geezer,
who over midnight camp fires would tell them about how many times he had hit
pay-dirt, jumped on easy street for a while, then busted out and hit the road
again looking for that really big mother lode. This one, also according to his
estimates, was not the mother lode but a month’s work would let them ride easy
street for a while. Burl and Tim bought the ticket and took the ride,
especially Tim, a smart young guy who figured that with his share he would just
buy a whorehouse and then he would get his loving free. The Old Geezer laughed,
hell, even Burl laughed at the kid’s moxie (and naiveté).
So they
worked, worked the lode, worked it good, and plied their takings together one
for all, at least at the beginning. Burl, Felipe guessed was the first to get
the fever, gold fever, checking each night for an hour, maybe more the weight,
and calculating his share, and maybe more than his share after a while when
Felipe noticed a that fevered look he had seen before when a man had been out
in the desert, had suffered privations, and hell hadn’t been around the gentle
influence of a woman, even a brown-eyed Mex whore, for a while. The he started
staying in his tent more, avoiding the nightly gabfest camp fire except to eat,
eat quickly and return to his tent. Tim caught it too, caught it as bad, so
most nights before they headed out back to Tampico and then Vera Cruz it was
only the Old Geezer, sometimes muttering to himself like he had the fever too
and Felipe although Felipe had caught a certain look from the geezer that made
him realize the old man was playing with his younger companions. Not a good
sign.
After a
couple of small incidents, incidents that if
left to fester would have led to gun play between Burl and Tim no question in their
then current state, nothing in the real world really something
about the food and how it tasted funny ( a reflection of Felipe, and his culinary
skill, if nothing else but fuel for their feud) magnified out in the hills the Old Geezer declared they had been
out long enough and it would be best to go back to civilization, divvy up the
profits and each head their separate ways. Strangely, or maybe not so
strangely, Burl and Tim bucked the idea at first wanting pan forever, when the geezer mentioned stray banditos out in the hills who if
they found out some gringos were afoot might come and do them all in. That got
the boys’ attention and so they broke camp, started heading
back. A couple of days out they ran into a couple of stray banditos, fought
them off, and began to hunker down on security. Three or four days later coming
out of a narrow canyon they were confronted
by a bandito force of about twenty desperados, some with they look of
career bandits about them, others who looked like the remnants of Pancho
Villa’s various armies now free-lancing with whoever paid and fed them.
The
leader, a serious guy named El Lobo, a legend
in the Mexico night just behind Villa and Zapata in the local hill pantheon and
a name known even in places like Tampico and Vera Cruz, known and dreaded by
Felipe one he spoke his name, who between spits, told the gringo trio
(he did not direct anything, in anger or calm, toward
Felipe) that he
knew, knew so don’t lie to him, that they had gold and that he
wanted half of it to let them go. The three parlayed. Tim and Burl, strung out
on gold like men strung out on some unattainable woman, were for fighting it out and moving on quickly, the old man wiser and ready to take half of
something, gold something, rather than a hail of
lead was ready
for compromise. He finally talked them into it, although the arguments were heated and the vagrant smell of gun
powder was just below the surface. He called over to El Lobo, rendered the collective
decision, went to the pack mule saddle bags, got the goods, passed El Lobo his
share, and then went back and joined up with Tim and Burl.
Just
then a fusillade of gun fire rang out from the bandito side. Tim fell first,
then Burl, and finally the Old Geezer cursing El Lobo’s name. As the
bandito army
took everything not tied down away, gold, mules, supplies, El Lobo
shouted to Felipe, now su companero, and asked if he wanted
to join the gang. Felipe said no. To that El Lobo, the blood rising in his face and the thought that tonight at least
his men would be fed and bedded indoors in some back road cantina , said-“Tell everyone you see what
happened here today, and what will happen to them if they come looking for the
oro in El Lobo’s backyard.” And he did.
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