Luz blessed the day her neighbor,
Don Chuy rolled-over his milk truck. Nobody would ask for an accident
like that, but now, years later, she knew Don Chuy blessed the
day too. It was the day he was miraculously spared from the jaws
of death, the day the Virgin spoke to him.
The day of the accident that led to the miracle, Don Chuy was
at the top of the hill, about to descend, his truck horn bleating,
telling the housewives he'd arrived with fresh milk from his ranchito.
Suddenly a young mother carrying a baby stepped in front of his
old pick-up. He swerved and rolled over, down the hill.
The cans clattered, splashing thin cow's milk over the discarded
Sabritas bags and Cloralex bottles that littered the hillside.
They came to rest just before the dirt road below, in a brilliant
patch of sun, stacked like silver bullets. Later, Don Chuy remembered
nothing about the pickup going roof-wheel-roof-wheel. Luz was outside
with her soup pan, waiting to buy milk, when the truck crunched
to a stop against the rock on which she sat when she bagged roasted
squash seeds.
Luz, who had the only telephone on the hill, rushed inside. She
remembered how her youngest son Oscar had talked about a fight
at the basketball courts—a guy was cut and somebody'd called
9-1-1 for the emergency. Luz dialed and miraculously, minutes later,
an ambulance screeched to a stop at the top of the hill. Two rescuers
clambered down with a narrow stretcher and a bag of life-saving
equipment, and when they peered into the truck, Don Chuy was not
smashed to pieces in the driver's side where he should have been,
but curled up peacefully on the passenger's side as if he were
sleeping off an all-nighter.
Since the day he walked away unscratched from his truck, Don
Chuy had been organizing tours to the Guadalupe Basilica in Mexico
City . What better way to give thanks than to bring a busload of
people to the feet of the Virgin? All the more to adore her.
Don Chuy charged an affordable fare, only 180 pesos round trip,
including snacks. Everyone knew he wasn't profiting. He ladled
yogurt from big plastic tubs into cups and passed out bean and
potato tacos and fruit.
Luz wanted the Virgin of Guadalupe to save her sons. Well, her
daughter too. Jimena's life was just as much a mess as her brothers,
but she had more confidence in women to straighten out their own
affairs. Hadn't Jimena, fed up after years of arguing with her
about what to make for dinner, crossed the river in the night and
joined her brother in Florida ?
One morning as she was buying milk, Luz told Don Chuy to save
her two spaces. If the Virgin of Guadalupe could spare Don Chuy,
surely She could spend a little time working the kinks out of her
kids' lives. Luz and her husband Mariano would board at five a.m.
, eat some yogurt, take a nap and walk past the scapula and rose-petal
rosary-sellers by nine with enough time left in the day to pray
for her troublesome sons.
Luz remembered when they were little, sitting on the edge of
her bed, Oscar in Jimena's arms, all five of them, even the baby
rapturously watching an India Maria movie. Unlike some of the neighbors,
Mariano always had work, building was booming in Mexico City and
he joined up with the crews that built schools and hospitals. He
came home to San Miguel once a month, pockets filled with cash.
He'd bought the first television set in the neighborhood.
Luz liked to turn the dial to movies for the kids—when
she was home. After dark, she'd make a pot of hot Café Legal
with cinnamon and sugar and give the kids crusty rolls, warm from
the night bakery. She remembered a clear moment when she'd looked
at those five little faces, dirty from playing outside all day,
blowing on their coffee, laughing at la India Maria. They'd been
so innocent!
Late in April, Luz and Mariano rose in the dark and boarded Don
Chuy's bus in the pre-dawn gloom. The sun appeared as the bus rumbled
past the outskirts of San Miguel. Luz watched the sparse, brown
countryside, thinking of Raymundo, her oldest son. Happiest when
he was talking the night away with his brothers, his hand wrapped
around a liter bottle of beer, he had women all over the place,
so that he never had to settle in one spot. If he had a fight with
one, he went to stay with the next one. There was Angeles in San
Miguel who followed him around like a sad cow and Luz was sure
he had one over in Leon too. Couldn't he just pick one of them,
and make a home?
Lately when he'd come to San Miguel on weekends, he'd seemed
jumpy, suddenly solicitous, then angry. Bueno, Raymundo had always
been an angry kid. Maybe that's why her husband had spoiled him.
Raymundo always got the new shoes, the new pants, the new ball.
And she'd allowed it. Maybe it was because she and Mariano knew
Raymundo cared more about what others thought of him than the rest
of the children. If obliged to wear patched clothing, he skipped
school and picked fights with his siblings.
Maybe it was that, as the oldest son, Raymundo had suffered most
from their early years of fighting. Luz had only noticed how angry
he was when she stopped drinking. He’d been nineteen years
old by then, a high school graduate with no direction. Had a baby
by a woman he never wanted to see again. Drank all night and slept
all day. What could she have said to him about making a future?
She had no education and a busload of guilt. What right did she
have to tell him how to live his life?
Gazing at a group of skinny rancho horses out the window, Luz
remembered coming home late one night from drinking in El Gato
Negro with jobless Don Ceferino. She'd walked into the children's
room (Mariano had built an extra room for the kids to sleep in
by then) and snapped on the light. There was Raymundo, must have
been about eight, sitting in the middle of the bed, his back rigid,
his bravado gone.
"What are you doing?" she’d asked.
"Ma, I'm being good," he'd said.
She'd always thought Raymundo, the swaggerer and braggart, could
take care of
himself , but she’d been wrong. He was just as needy as the rest.
Then one day he'd up and left, and when he came back, he showed
her his law school diploma. Luz had sighed with relief. Now she
wouldn't have to worry. To make sure, she had him draw up the deed
(now that he was a lawyer!) to the house in his name. A house,
a career and now that he was working with that attorney in Leon
, all the fancy clothes he could afford. Still.
Luz's prayer for Raymundo was that he marry one of his women
and have Mariano build a second floor apartment for them on the
San Miguel house. Raymundo's house. She would cook for him, well,
for the couple, and her son would see she did care after
all.
What Luz wanted next was for Oscar to leave his wife. Or for
that big-assed piece of riff-raff who thought she was a princess
to leave him. Then maybe her baby Oscar would grow into the fine
man she knew he could become.
Oscar had a nice girlfriend before this one. The former girl's
father had a successful tin and iron business. He could have set
Oscar up as shop manager, or in exports! She had been a sweet,
quiet girl who brought Luz cheese pies. But just as they were talking
marriage, Oscar saw Waggle Tail at the basketball courts and he
dropped the pie-maker as if he'd been burned. The new one jiggled
her ass at Oscar until he couldn't speak.
Waggle Tail thought she had that kind of power over everyone,
thought she could be served her food and get up from the table
without even carrying her plate to the sink, not to mention wash
it. Soon as he got her pregnant, Oscar brought Waggle Tail to Luz's
house to live. Luz didn't protest; it was her duty to take the
girl in. Now Luz just wanted a little cooperation, a little housecleaning
help, a little respect! Leaving the house to board the bus that
morning, Luz had to step over a stinky diaper on the step. The
girl left her musty underwear in a wet pile on the shower floor!
Somebody told Oscar once his wife should be a model and that
was all he could see. But green eyes and a pretty face didn't make
a girl useful and Waggle Tail was about the most useless twenty-year-old
Luz had ever seen in her life. The worst part was she didn't want
to learn to wash her clothes or cook. God knows Luz had tried to
teach her. Waggle Tail let her dirty clothes pile up higher every
day, then, instead of washing them, bought new clothes for ten
pesos a piece at the Tuesday Market. She thought a container of
gelatin was a fitting lunch for a child almost a year old!
If Waggle Tail left her son, she would leave Luz's house. And
then maybe Oscar wouldn't stay out all night long, getting into
fights. Although who could blame him? With the crib squished next
to Oscar's bed now, one couldn't take more than a step without
hitting furniture or dirty clothes. And Waggle Tail couldn't get
the baby to sleep until midnight , so the room was nothing but
a four hour high-decibel cry-fest. There was one way to keep your
man at home, but with the baby awake half the night, Luz was sure
Waggle Tail wasn't tending to her man's needs. And if she did give
Oscar any, she made him work for it first, sending him out into
the street to bring her back hamburgers from El Ranon's stand.
Maybe she'd get fat.
By nine in the morning, the sun was higher and the bus was slowly
stopping in the Basilica's parking lot. Luz sighed as she picked
up her purse. The destruction of a marriage. Was that something
to pray for?
The new Basilica gleamed in the sunlight, its side construction
soaring like beams of light from the Virgin's fingertips, not Guadalupe,
but another Maria, mother of God, which Luz saw once on a holy
card. The old Basilica, built some four hundred years ago, was
to the right, roped off in parts, tilting forward, sinking into
the soft centuries-old soil.
Mariano, her husband of thirty-three years, pushed his thick
hair under his cap and tucked his t-shirt further into his sweatpants
as they approach the new cathedral. At his side, Luz walked with
slow steps. She wanted to pray for new knees, but only after she'd
ticked off everyone else on her list. Plus she thought bad knees
were her penance, and maybe she was still supposed to be repenting.
Inside, there was a mix of reverence and festival. Children played
in the aisles; mothers with shawls over their heads distractedly
tried to hand them sandwiches. Whole families were camped in the
pews in front of the tilma, Juan Diego's cape that still bore the
image of Our Lady of Guadalupe. Luz gazed at the tilma in awe.
Four centuries after Juan Diego carried roses wrapped in the cape
to the bishop, to prove he'd seen the beautiful lady who claimed
to be the mother of God, it still looked vibrant, undiminished.
Luz read in a church bulletin once how the tilma had been examined
and tested and scientists still couldn't explain how the colors
of the Virgin's face and her mantle hadn't faded in four hundred
years.
Luz and Mariano slipped into a rear pew. A lady shuffled past
in the aisle on her knees, a small girl, about six years of age,
holding her by the elbow. Luz watched the woman's slow progress
toward the tilma with some envy. She should have crawled to the
Virgin herself years ago, then maybe she'd have been spared arthritic
knees , but of course by the time she’d made her first pilgrimage
and promised to stop drinking, smoking and leaving her kids, her
knees had already started to go.
When she was young, it hadn't been hard to be good! At sixteen,
she'd been pregnant with Jimena, happy with her man. She didn't
drink at all. Mariano was a serious boy, a worker. He'd built them
a room on the little parcel of land her father gave them, a room
with rounded windows, a modern touch he'd picked up listening to
the stories of laborers who'd begun to work in the big building
boom in Mexico City . He built a sturdy washbasin for their clothes
and an alcove for a stove. He was going to buy her a stove! But
before he could, he told her there was no work in San Miguel; he
had to go to the city. Luz was left behind.
When he came home for the first time, after a month, Luz's belly
was rounder and he had to beg her to make him a meal. For four
whole hours she refused so he could see how unfair it was that
she was pregnant and alone. Couldn't he have found something to
build in San Miguel?
"Go to your mother's house until you have the baby," Mariano
said.
"Never," Luz said. She hated her sister's boyfriend,
who had moved in with her mother. He didn't work and he went through
the pockets of everybody's clothing.
Luz thought she had Mariano convinced to stay when he rubbed
her feet that night, then she rubbed his back, but then, at five
in the morning, she heard him shuffling around their new room.
Luz pretended to stay asleep; her husband touched her shoulder
and was out the door, headed for the bus station in the moonlight,
his new transistor radio tucked under his arm.
With Mariano working in Mexico D.F., Luz couldn't help but be
distracted by Nacho when he delivered iron doors to the house in
which she worked and Don Cipriano selling tomatoes from the back
of his truck. In the cavernous Basilica, she shook her head. Old
names to her now. That was something to be thankful for.
Luz had only visited the Basilica once before, twelve years earlier.
That was when she'd made her first pledge to the Virgin, the day
after Cheme, her second boy, only seventeen, disappeared in the
night. Luz threw her bottle of Presidente brandy into the creek
when the sun rose that day and watched it sink through tear-filled
eyes. She asked the Virgin to keep Cheme safe. Then she took a
bus to the Basilica to send her prayers for his safety straight
to La Guadalupe's ears. For five months she was too grieved to
miss her smokes, drinks and male callers. Then Cheme phoned San
Miguel’s public telephone station from the United States
, asking they play his message on the radio. Miraculously, while
Luz was washing dishes she heard it. Cheme had tried to cross six
times before he made it. He'd already been in and out of trouble
(Luz interpreted this to mean jail) but he had a job and a place
to stay and she wasn't to worry. In gratitude, she stopped going
out for good, made a truce with Mariano. Now it was twelve years
since she'd had a drink, smoked a cigarette or entertained a boyfriend.
Twelve years since Mariano came home, taking smaller jobs in San
Miguel and eating regular meals in Luz's kitchen.
During that time, Luz thought several times about getting it
all out on the table, saying to Mariano, "Look, I've had boyfriends.
You've had girlfriends. It's all in the past.” But what if
Mariano, instead of agreeing, turned accusing? What if he refused
to acknowledge his part, and then constantly reminded her of her
failings? Would he feel he had to go out and beat up Nacho and
Don Cipriano? What if he left her? She used to think it was what
she wanted , but faced with it, she'd felt a little sick in her
stomach. They'd had five kids together and Mariano was a good provider.
She didn't say anything. And as the tantrums of their earlier years
diminished, the silence about the lives they led when they were
apart from each other grew bigger, until now it felt impossible
to talk about.
Luz was on her knees, even though it hurt, thinking of Cheme
in Florida . Owned his own trailer home now, had lived with the
same woman for eight years, installed sprinkler systems, had people
working for him . He called sometimes, sent checks, seemed
to have forgiven all those years when he didn't come first, when
none of her kids did.
Not that Cheme was suddenly a saint. Jimena, up in Florida with
Cheme now, was the one who kept Luz informed that he still liked
to get drunk, smashed up his trucks. Luz's prayer for her son was
that he'd give up the bottle and work on his sperm count. Twenty-nine
years old and still no children. She couldn't understand it.
With Jimena in Florida bossing Cheme around, Luz worried a little
less. Jimena didn't set by drinking, which was what had started
the real trouble between mother and daughter. Her daughter blamed
the bottle for the time Luz left the children in her care. Jimena
had been twelve, Luz gone without a note, their father working
a construction job in the city. Jimena in the kitchen cursing Don
Cipriano, imagining how, while they were in school, Luz had gathered
her dancing skirt, her make-up, her vinyl purse. Imagining the
old man (he was thirty and not even good-looking!) waiting with
his bottle of brandy in his vegetable truck at the top of the hill.
As the oldest, Jimena had taken over, passing out bowls of beans
to her four little brothers sitting on the steps, silent and scared,
yelling at them extra gruff to get into bed so her voice wouldn't
shake. By the fifth day, she was cutting nopales from the cactuses
in the countryside to feed the boys. So relieved on the eighth
day that her mother came home, she returned to school and studied
extra hard. In class, she twisted her hair so tight it fell out
of her head in clumps.
When Jimena finished high school, she stayed in the house, and
with nothing else to do, argued with her mother over money and
food. Luz left fifty pesos when she went to work, and told Jimena
to make breaded beefsteaks. Jimena made a pot of beans, bought
two kilos of tortillas instead of one and gave most of the food
away to a half a dozen young gay men she'd befriended, who, rejected
by their parents, lived in a cheap house together nearby.
"It is not my duty to feed the neighborhood," Luz yelled
at Jimena, when she came home from work to only a scraping of beans
and an almost emptied bowl of salsa.
"You don't care about anyone but yourself!" Jimena
shouted back.
Luz had pledged to change quietly. After Cheme left, she came
home regularly, didn't spend afternoons in the bars any more, and
made chilaquiles on Sundays while they watched All-Star Wrestling.
She did care. But Jimena seemed stuck on the old Luz, which annoyed
Luz as much as the missing food. She'd point out in an icy tone
that the chicken soup had not been prepared as she'd instructed,
and that if tuna fish and mayonnaise on crackers was the only meal
Jimena could manage to put together, why was Luz leaving her so
much money and where was the change?
Jimena was twenty-six when she took the bus to meet the coyote
Cheme sent for her. She'd been arguing over the slightest possible
thing with her mother for months, walking around the house muttering, "I
can't wait. I just can't wait."
Luz couldn't wait for her to leave either, if that was how she
was going to behave. Then the day came. Jimena stood by the door,
backpack over her shoulder, bus ticket to the border in hand. Luz
was looking for an opening to say the tender words she'd rehearsed,
but before she could, Jimena turned to her.
"You—left—us!" Jimena said. "How could
you have done that?"
Luz had only bowed her head, her body shaking with sobs.
That had been three years ago. Luz was afraid she'd never hear
from Jimena again , but after two months, she’d received
a letter. Luz's body rippled with fear as she held it in her hand.
Would it be filled with more accusations? Would Jimena, with thousands
of kilometers between them, finally say everything she'd always
wanted to tell her mother? And wasn't it time?
Luz steeled herself. But the letter contained photos of Jimena
with a skinny boy. " Florida Beach " was scrawled on
the back of the first one. "Pick-up Truck" was written
in English on the back of another: Jimena leaning against a truck
with a Florida plate, a bandana around her head. In a photo received
this year, she was in front of a trailer home with the same skinny
boy. The beanpole looked nice enough. Will he build you a house,
give you a baby, buy you a stove? Luz would like to ask. One of
Cheme's lawn care guys, was all Jimena would say about him.
Luz had a vague idea that other people were capable of things
she was unable to do. She'd worked in gringo houses, rich ladies'
houses, washing their clothes, cooking their meals - she'd seen
people embrace, say words she was fairly sure had to do with how
they felt about one another. She just didn't know how to do it
herself. As a seven-year old child, Luz had announced to her own
mother she wasn't going to school any more. Her mother, without
turning from the tortillas she was putting on the fire, shrugged.
After that, her father had taken Luz to the river where he collected
sand to sell to the homebuilders, who mixed it with cement. Sometimes
he made four trips a day, first with their burro, and later with
a rattlely second-hand truck he managed to buy. Luz played at the
river until the trip home, singing to herself, speaking to nobody.
Maybe if she'd had playmates, she'd have learned to say things
like, "You make me mad," or, "Let's be friends."
Gabriel, Luz's second to youngest son was the love child, always
touching people, making them squirm. "Pa," Gabriel greeted
Mariano, squeezing his father's broad shoulder. Sometimes his hand
lingered on Luz's back as they spoke. Luz used to show affection
by barking, "Go wash your hands!" before she gave her
kids their soup , but Gabriel had his daughters on his shoulders,
crawling into his lap. They kissed each other right in front of
everybody. He talked to his dogs like they were people! Gabriel
wanted to tell people what to do with their lives. He wanted people
to talk. That's what his problem was. Must be from being married
to the American.
But sometimes Luz thought Gabriel had the right idea. "If
only I had been able to look at her. If only I'd said I was sorry," Luz
now told the Virgin of Guadalupe.
When she felt Mariano patting her back, Luz lifted her bowed
head and realized there were tears on her cheek. At the front of
the church, the Virgin smiled kindly. There! Didn't She lift her
eyes for a second? Mariano said that he’d been watching the
progress of the lady on her knees. He hadn't noticed. But Luz was
sure. The Virgin of Guadalupe had smiled. People around her were
busy with their rosaries; nobody else seemed to have observed it
either. It was a message just for her. La Morenita had smiled on her,
the former sinner, Luz Martinez . What could it mean?
Perhaps it meant Raymundo would come home to live soon. Or that
Waggle Tail would leave her son. Did La Guadalupe wink? Heh,
heh, sister, your house will be in peace pretty soon. The American
Wife couldn't believe Oscar didn't give his mother a single peso
for phone, cable TV, food. Food!
"Two grown people still expecting Mommy to cook for them!" the
American Wife fumed. "Kick them out of the house. That's the
only way they'll grow up!"
If it was possible anyone was bossier than Jimena, it was the
American Wife. El Bolillo, Mariano called her, “White Bread” not
without affection. Luz wished she had her nerve. Married to her,
Gabriel was the one she worried about least. Her American parents
had sent money; they’d started a hair salon, built a house,
put her two beautiful light-skinned granddaughters in good schools.
But toss Oscar, Waggle Tail and the baby onto the street, three
people who could barely take care of themselves? She just didn't
have the heart. And suddenly her thinking was clear.
Job or no job (sometimes he worked as a waiter, then always got
into a fight and got fired) , Oscar and his family would go on
living in her house, until they didn't any more, if that time ever
came.
Who else, after all, would see that Oscar's son ate chicken soup
and rice, and mashed frijoles and potatoes? Maybe the Virgin's
wink meant that Luz would help Raymundo give up some of his anger.
Or that Waggle Tail's selfishness and sloth were not going to affect
her like before, that she, Luz would glide through her own house
with an inner knowledge that she was doing the best she could.
Luz was blindsided by a new thought. Perhaps Jimena was at peace.
Luz was sure the Virgencita was putting these thoughts in her
head and that they amounted to something like forgiveness. And
that was it! That was what she had come to pray for after all.
Mariano's hand was at her elbow, helping her rise. She lifted
a finger, one more moment. Luz felt at one with the thousands of
prayers being uttered at that moment all around her. The lady on
her knees had almost reached the altar. Luz wondered what promise
she was fulfilling, if Our Lady of Guadalupe had saved a sick daughter,
or seen a son safely across the border. The senora stood, making
the sign of the cross. Luz stood too; vaguely aware her knees were
not vibrating with pain. She lifted her face in gratitude and a
warm feeling flowed through her, as if the beams of light that
surrounded La Guadalupe’s cape were lifting her.
With this warm feeling came the knowledge that her hostility
toward Waggle Tail, whose name was Frida, was actually shame for
her own selfish life. "For the past twelve years, you've been
nothing but giving," was the thought La Guadalupe was giving
her now. And Luz knew that the forgiveness she sought was inside
her and the deal she had to make was with herself.
Don Chuy's eyes were rimmed in red as he cheerfully waved Luz,
Mariano and their neighbors back onto his bus. Today's driving
would add up to eight or nine hours for him. She patted Don Chuy's
arm as she shuffled past, eyeing the empty yogurt buckets, but
there were two plastic bags filled with what smelled deliciously
like tacos behind the driver's seat.
Sweet, absolving Don Chuy! Luz wondered for how many years he
would go on living out his promise to the Virgin. She remembered
standing stunned the morning his truck crashed into the rock in
front of her house, soup pan hanging uselessly from her hand, watching
the sun bounce off the milk cans, not knowing the miracle of his
survival was also unfolding for her. |