October 28th 2023, Sam
Hey! Welcome to Saturday! You made it through another work week and here you are on my blog. So, I’m posting a story Dell wrote for you to read. It is complete, I hope you like it, feedback is always welcome, Sam
The
Mexican or As I Went Walking One Night Black
by
Wendell G Sweet
PUBLISHED BY: Writerz
Cover and Interior Art Copyright
2013 Dell Sweet
The Mexican or As I Went Walking One
Night Black
Copyright © 2013 by WENDELL SWEET
This book is licensed for your
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this author.
DEDICATION
Bear… Are
you out there?
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
All those guys who listened to my
stories when they were just stories written to pass our time. That
was a big deal.
LEGAL
This is a work of fiction. Any
names, characters, places or incidents depicted are products of the
authors imagination. Any resemblance to actual living persons places,
situations or events is purely coincidental.
This novel is Copyright © 2010 –
2013 WENDELL SWEET. No part of this book may be reproduced by any
means, electronic, print, scanner or any other means and, or
distributed without the authors permission.
Permission is granted to use short
sections of text in reviews or critiques in standard or electronic
print.
MEXICO BOUND
Sunday night.
I buried the Mexican just after
sundown. I can’t say much about the sort of man he was in life, but I
can say he was a strong man in death.
The Moon has led my way and I’m on
my way across the desert into Mexico of all places. What did they
say, hide in plain sight? There I’m going to be. Probably already
passed the border, and once I’m across the border I’ll find a small
town to buy gasoline enough so I can reach South America.
I’ve played the events of yesterday
over and over in my head as I’ve driven. It still makes no sense to
me at all. They say shit happens, we’ll sometimes it does, and I
tell myself that’s exactly what happened here. Some shit decided to
happen and I just happened to be there.
Saturday evening.
It was early. I had nothing better
to do so I took a walk downtown just to take a look at the buildings.
Thinking, as I walked, how just a few short years ago I had spent
almost all of my time down there. Chasing a high. Drunk or both.
And sometimes a third thing: Taking a little comfort with the ladies.
It all came back to me as I walked the streets.
About three years of my life had
been spent like that. From the day Lilly told me goodbye, until the
day I woke up in the alley that runs down the back of West Broad,
behind the Chinese restaurant. The back of my head had been lumped up
with something or by someone.
Some one, I decided as I began to
blink the cobwebs away and felt carefully with my fingers. A lump
only, no blood. Probably a closed fist…
Two feet away from me was a dead
rat. A big dead rat, and a few even larger rats were breakfasting on
him. And, suddenly, just like that, I was done. That gave me a
clear message about the world. And I heard it.
Of course that didn’t mean I got off
Scot free. There were many little things I’d done during my long,
long slide. And it took time to fix those things. Rehab, jail for
some bad checks I couldn’t remember. Bad teeth, health, ideas,
depression, suicide, and finally a night where I felt strong enough
to take a walk through the worst of my nightmares and see if I was
truly over the drugs, the life, the weaknesses that had led me there
in the first place.
So that’s how I came to be there
yesterday evening. Getting my feet wet. Seeing how strong I was… Or
wasn’t. And it turns out I was strong enough for the temptation of
the streets but not over the bad habits I had picked up there. And
that’s what got me… I cannot believe it was only yesterday when all
this started.
I walked by the mouth of the alley
twice. Both times I saw the old Ford sitting there in the deep
shadows. Heard the soft murmur of its engine running. Some guy and
some girl, I thought, or some guy with some guy, or boy who knows
what. It was downtown. Shit like that happened all the time. But, I
thought after the second time, this guy must be trying to set a
record. He’d been there for 15 minutes by my watch, not that it was
my business. All the same, fifteen minutes is a long time for a
trick. Or to shoot up. Fifteen minutes could bring a cop. In the
street world it was just too long for almost anything. In fifteen
minutes you could get your thing on, your drug of choice, and be a
half mile away and forgot all about that last little space of time.
So why was this guy still there?
And that was the street part of me
that was not gone. The street part of me that was still looking for
trouble. And I found it.
The third time by, which was just a
few minutes later, I was too curious. My evening had bought me some
excitement. The drugs, I could see the flow all over the avenue.
Easy to see if you knew what to look for. The ladies were calling
too. I knew what that was about. I didn’t look at them like they were
whores, or something less than human. It was a line I couldn’t draw,
had confused many times, so I came back fast to see what this was.
That Ford was calling.
I had stopped at the mouth of the
alley. Same Ford. An old one. Like a classic. Nice shape to. Maybe
somewhere in the sixties, but I wasn’t good with cars like that. I
only knew old, classic, nice looking.
Nobody around. Of course that
didn’t mean there was no one in the car. I hesitated for only a
second, and then walked quietly down the alley, staying in the
shadows as I went.
~
I found the Mexican slumped over
behind the wheel. Blood dripping down the side of his head. A gun on
the seat beside him. Another guy was slumped over into the
floorboards on the passenger side. That one was dead for sure. A
large, bloodless hole on one side of his chest. A larger hole behind
that shoulder I saw when I reached over to move him. And why are you
still here? A little voice in my head whispered. Why are you touching
him? What are you doing? But I pushed those warning voices away and
continued to look.
There was blood and gore all over
the seat on that side. The coppery stench of blood was thick and
nauseating. Something else mixed in with it, tugging at my brain.
Blood and… Fear? Something. That was when the Mexican spoke in
all that silence and nearly made me jump out of my skin.
“Don’t call the cops!” and…
“No Policia.” His head came away from wheel. He shook it and
drops of blood went flying. I felt it hit my face. But I was still
too stunned to move.
“Hey! … You hear me,
Blanquito? Habla English? … No Policia?” He muttered under
his breath “Dios Christos,” he focused his eyes on me once
more. “What’s the matter with you?”
“I thought you were dead,”
I managed. I should’ve run. I chose to talk.
“Yeah… I get that a lot.
But I ain’t dead.” He picked up the gun from the seat and before
I knew it was in my face. “Come around the side, Blanquito. Get
Lopez out of the car.” He waved the pistol and I moved.
Lopez pretty much helped himself out
of the car. When I opened the door he spilled out into the alley,
leaving the mess on the seat and a large smear of blood on the seat
back and the door panel as he went.
“Good… Good,” the
Mexican said. “Now getting in the fuckin’ car… No… No…
This side. Come back around to this side. I can’t drive no car,
Blanquito… Dios!” He waved the gun once more and I moved.
Racing around the hood of the car to the door.
The Mexican did a fair job of
getting himself over into the passenger seat. I was glad it was him
sitting in Lopez’s blood and not me, although I had been about to sit
in it.
I slid into the driver’s seat.
“You got some kind of car…
Truck… Something like that?” The Mexican asked.
I didn’t have a vehicle, but my
grandfather had had a truck. It was sitting in the garage in back of
my house. That house had also been my grandfather’s. They were the
only two things, the house and the truck, that had survived those
three years on the streets.
“Sort of.”
“Sort of?” He looked
around “Get this car moving. That’s the first thing… You got a
place?… Close by? How does anybody sort of own a fuckin’ car
anyway?”
“Yeah, I got a place” I
said. I was afraid to answer, but more afraid of not answering fast
enough.
“Let’s get there, Amigo.”
He slumped back against the seat. I shifted into drive, worried I
might drive over Lopez as I went, and drove us out of the alley.
~
The house was dark. I had thought to
leave a light on but I had forgotten. I drove this Ford right into
the garage, pulled the garage door back down, and helped the Mexican
out. He looked over at my grandfather’s truck.
“That your sort of truck? Looks
fine to me, Man. Doesn’t it run?”
The thing is it did run. I had been
working on it here and there. I like to tinker with things. And I had
a lot of spare time to fill when I quit drugging so I had turned it
to the truck.
It was an old truck. But I had in
the back of my mind to fix it up and drive it. So I had started with
an oil change, then installed a new headlight on the driver’s side,
that sort of stuff, when I had time.
I nodded. “No plates though.”
The Mexican nodded. “Don’t
worry about that… Got gas in it?”
“Some… Enough to get you
away.”
“Ha, Amigo.” He laughed
and then clutched the side of his head where the blood still drizzled
and spilled down the side of his face, spat some blood from his
mouth, and looked back at me. “Us,” he said. “Us.”
I saw an amazing thing as he spoke.
The Mexican had a small blue hole just above the stream of blood. A
hole from a bullet. In his head. The blood just pulsed out of it as
I watched. I wondered how he could possibly even be alive.
We switched the plates to the truck
and left the Ford sitting in the garage. I unloaded four big
suitcases from the trunk of the Ford into the bed of the pickup
truck. The Mexican had me stretch a tarp over the bed of the pickup
and tie it off, and we were on the road. Heading for the Mexican
border.
On The Road
I drove as he gave me directions.
We stopped just before dawn at a gas
station in the middle of a small desert border town. The Mexican
directed me past the dimly lit islands and over toward the side of
the station, and the shadowy side lot.
There was a big hound sleeping in an
open bay doorway on one side of the garage. On the other side a thin
man with long, greasy-black hair was turning wrenches on an old
Plymouth. He glanced up, nodded, and I nodded back as we pulled
around the side of the station and parked in the shadows.
There were payphones bolted to the
side wall, just past the Men’s room door. I had thought that
payphones were a thing of the past. But I had also thought gas
stations were a thing of the past too come to think of it.
I helped the Mexican to the phone.
He ran about $6.00 worth of change into the phone and then he just
stood there, leaned against the wall, panting hard, for what seemed
like ten minutes.
Finally he began to speak in a
stream of Spanish so heavily accented and fast that I could make no
sense of anything he said. Not even the gist of it, and I was usually
pretty good when it came to Spanish.
He sprayed blood from his mouth as
he talked. And he leaked blood from the bullet wound in his lower
chest all over the wall he was leaning against.
The conversation wound down. I could
tell because he spoke less and less. He finally went on a long
coughing spasm, spat a few more quick streams of Spanish into the
phone and then just dropped the handset. He came staggering off the
wall and back to the truck. I rushed to help him back in.
He was breathing hard. “We got
to kill some time. Find a place.”
I nodded. I was tempted to clean off
the wall, pick up the handset and put it back on the phone. Someone
might see that. But instead I wheeled out of the parking lot and
found a small campground just outside of the town.
The place was deserted so I drove
down into the dirt parking area and parked by what was advertised as
a lake but looked more like a swampy pond. The roof line of a rusted
Chevy rose just above the foul smelling the water. It was near dawn.
The sun a red line on the horizon. I wore no watch, but the Mexican
kept track of time on his.
The Mexican was bad off, coughing
and spitting blood out of the window every few minutes. But he said
nothing. Never complained.
We sat and watched the sunrise in
silence. Listened as the birds woke in the trees and began to call
back and forth to each other. Finally he looked at his wrist one last
time, just as morning was coming on full, and told me to drive back
to the gas station.
Along
The Border
I had thought the place would be
crowded with cops, but I was wrong. The hound dog still slept in the
open garage bay doorway, and the thin man with the greasy-black hair
was still wrenching on the Plymouth. The hanging phone handset, the
blood, now dried to a maroon smear on the handset and the wall was
still there. Untouched.
“Hang that fuckin’ phone up,”
the Mexican said. I got out and hung up the phone and it immediately
rang in my hand.
“Well answer the thing…
Dios,” the Mexican spat. He went into a coughing spasm. I picked
up the phone, and an unintelligible string of Spanish launched itself
into my ear. I held it away. “For you,” I said.
He groaned and levered himself from
the truck, stumbled, and then made his way to the pay phone. He took
the gun with him. He spoke calmly into the phone for a short time. No
rushed spate of Spanish this time, but a low murmur that I could not
make any more sense of than I had the rushed torrent. After a time he
took the headset from his ear, pressed it against his chest and spoke
to me in a near whisper.
“Take this fuckin’ gun, Amigo.”
He handed me the gun that was all splattered with gore and he pulled
a second one, equally messy, from his coat pocket. “Watch our
backs, Blanquito” he told me.
I suppose I could have shot the
Mexican and gone free, but I never had the time to do it. I didn’t
even have the time to think about doing it until later on.
As I stood there I heard the suck of
rubber against the asphalt, the way it will when the road is really
hot. And the morning was hot, the road hotter, the way it will get
sometimes in the desert.
The car slowed and pulled into the
station. I saw none of that but only perceived it from what my ears
told me. A short conversation in Spanish between someone in the car
and probably the thin man with the greasy-black hair wrenching on the
Plymouth, and I knew that someone would be coming around the side of
the gas station in a matter of seconds.
The Mexican heard the same things.
He hung up the phone and put one finger to his lips, lurched his way
back over to the truck and leaned against the front of the grill for
support. His gun pointed over the hood. Not knowing what else to do
I slipped back behind the passenger door and followed suit.
“We should be good… Don’t
just start killing… But you be ready, ’cause you never know,
Muchacho.”
Three of them came around the
corner. Two men I hadn’t seen, and the greasy-haired thin man. He
stopped short when he saw the guns aimed at him.
“Dios Mio,” he stuttered.
“Vamos,” the Mexican said.
The greasy-haired thin man slipped backwards and then disappeared
around the corner. The other two, hard eyed older men, stood their
ground. No weapons in their hands. Silence held for what seemed a
long while.
“Well, you got it,” one of
the oldsters asked. It came with such a thick accent that I had to
take the time to figure out what he’d said… “Chew gat et?”
The conversation switched to a quick
spate of Spanish then. That went back and forth between the two men
and the Mexican for a few minutes and then silence came back so hard
I could hear a bird calling in the distance. The sound of a big rig
on the highway, and that was a few miles away. One of the oldsters
nodded, turned, and walked away. He came back around the corner of
the building a few minutes later with two large duffel bags and
tossed them on the ground between us. They slid a couple of feet
towards us and then stopped in front of the truck.
“Get them bags, Amigo,”
the Mexican told me.
I looked at him like he was crazy.
But of course he was crazy, and there was nothing I could do except
come around the hood, a pistol in one hand, eyes on those two older
men.
I stopped by the hood when I
suddenly realized that I had a problem. I could not pick up both
duffel bags without putting the gun away. I debated briefly, stuffed
the gun into the waistband of my pants and picked up the bags.
“In the cab,” the Mexican
said. I Levered the door of the cab open and set them inside. “Strip
off that tarp.”
The tarp came off and the two men
came forward and lifted out the suitcases. The Mexican and the two
others stared at each other for a few moments, then the oldsters
walked away. I watched them turn the corner and they were gone.
I started to get back into the truck
when the Mexican wagged his head and put one finger to his lips. I
pulled my gun back out, scared to death. It was maybe a second after
I got the gun back in my hand that the two came back around the
corner ready to take us out.
I shot first. Unintended. Pure
reaction. The gun was in my hand and happened to be pointed in that
direction and I fired out of reflex. One of the oldsters heads
exploded. Something tugged at my collar, and then the Mexican
dropped the other guy. A second… Less than a second and it was
over. The silence didn’t come again, this time there were sounds in
the silence. The hound dog up and baying. Excited voices in Spanish
somewhere close by.
“Now we go,” the Mexican
said. “Now we go, Amigo.”
I needed no coaching. I was in the
truck and backing out of the gas station fast. The rear tires hopping
and screeching on the pavement. A black Caddy sat on the tarmac, just
past the pumps, engine idling. The doors hung open.
“Stop!… Stop!” The
Mexican yelled. “Get them bags back!”
I stalled the truck stopping without
pushing the clutch in, ran to the Caddy and got the bags along with
two others from the back seat. I threw them all into the back of the
truck and I had started back to the driver side when the Mexican
shot.
I didn’t think I just hit the ground
and I didn’t come back up until the Mexican began cursing at me to
get back in the truck. I looked back at the gas station when I did.
The man with the greasy-black hair lay sprawled in the open stall. A
shot gun off to one side. The hound dog stood stiffly, head in the
air, howling. Blood ran from the man’s body toward a floor drain.
Voices raised in Spanish, loud, somewhere close by. And the Mexican
yelling at me. I threw myself into the cab, got the truck started and
got out of there fast. And here I am now running across the desert
heading to Mexico.
Sunday night
The rest of the time has been fast
driving. I kept expecting the cops at any moment, but they never
showed up. I didn’t even know the Mexican had been shot again until
later on when I realized he was coughing up less blood and sounded as
though we were drowning instead. I could not even say when it was
that he died, but sometime late afternoon if I had to guess. He had
not spoken in some time and when I looked over at him his lips had
turned blue.
When I pulled him out to bury him in
a little dry wash off the highway I saw a new hole in the upper part
of his chest. Right through the shirt and into the lung on that side,
I guessed. Two lung shots, and a head shot, and he had still been
going. I couldn’t see how he lived so I wasn’t surprised that he had
died.
He died well. As well as can be
expected considering it’s dead after all. He didn’t cry or beg, or
curse. He just died. Slipped away.
~
After I buried the Mexican I checked
the suitcases and duffel bags. After all, they were mine now. And I
wanted to know what everybody was in such a hurry to die for.
The duffel bags were no surprise.
They were stuffed full of money and guns. They were big duffel bags.
They held a lot. An awful lot.
Two of the suitcases were surprises.
I thought drugs, what else do people get killed for? But, no.
Of the others, one held more money,
clothes and passports. I.D. That sort of stuff. All with the
Mexican’s picture. Then the other two suitcases that shocked me. One
contained the body of a dead dog. Shot full of holes and stuffed in
there.
The other held the head and hands of
someone I was sure was wishing he had them back. The last two
suitcases did contain drugs. More than I’d ever seen in one place
before.
I took out the money and added it to
the duffel bags. I buried the Cocaine and the dog along with the
Mexican. I had no idea what the suitcases were all about. I still
don’t. And I don’t want to know. I do know there was a fortune in
Cocaine and I did not want to tempt myself with it.
Later I got the truck cleaned up at
one of those self car washes on the other side of the border, turned
off the highway with a full tank of gas a few miles up the road from
there, and I’m running in the moonlight. I’ve got a map of South
America. I hope to find a road before I run out of gas. I figure
I’ll work my way down into South America as far as I can go. I don’t
know where I’ll go from there, there hasn’t been time to think about
where…
I hope you enjoyed the story. If you like the way Dell writes check out the first America the Dead book absolutely free!
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