By
JOHN SCHERBER
WILD IN THE NIGHT
I live near a
five street intersection on a hillside in San Miguel de Allende. Straight
ahead, from my second floor open-air office, I can see all the way to mountains
near Guanajuato. In the afternoon, sunlight glints off the water at the distant reservoir. High above me the Caracol, our ring road, snakes past on its way between the Luciérnaga
shopping mall and the Mega supermarket at the Salida a Celaya.
This is a
neighborhood of Mexicans, Americans and Canadians living together. Two doors
from my house is a wedge of barrio that comes to a point at its base and widens
fanlike as it climbs the steep slope. Across from me and to the west and north
and east are scattered villas of expatriates, and further uphill, a five-story
condo development––controversial at the time it started––that has mostly sold
to week-enders from Mexico City.
Like most of
San Miguel, the streets in my intersection are smooth cobblestones anchored in
a bed of dried mud. Occasionally one will pop out like a pearl from a loose bezel
in a ring. The kids will kick it around until it disappears. The colors of the
stucco facades on all sides are earthy and mellow; they do not give much away
about what goes on behind these walls.
Outside, the
streets are dominated by a single, ruthless gang, intolerant of any intruders.
Although its presence is not obvious, it is constant and pervasive. If you look
closely, you can pick its members out, even in their camouflage. I know all of
them by name.
Start with
Oso; some call him Bear for his fierce look. He is most often found lying on
his side about a third of the way out into Prolongación Aldama. Often he is
sleeping, especially in the afternoon. He is more relaxed now that the buses no
long run up this street; the pickups will usually move out around him. Only the
little old American ladies honk at him. He doesn’t pay much attention to them
other than occasionally looking up to yawn. You see, Bear works the
neighborhood watch during the night shift, and he needs his sleep.
Then there’s
Chispa, (Sparkie). Something did not quite work in Chispa’s genetic makeup.
Perhaps his mother got too friendly with a dachshund one night and paid the
price. He is about five or six times longer than he is high, and truthfully, he
has some issues with his weight. It is unkindly said of him that he pees like a
girl, squatting, but he can no longer get his leg up into the required position
and he has stopped trying. On the front of my house running from one end to the
other is a band about six or eight inches wide, like the mark made by the
repeated passing of a wide soft brush, where Chispa scratches himself. I think
he might have some flea issues too.
Don’t leave
out Frizzy. He’s a mottled white and tan dog of medium height, possibly a little
cross-eyed, and he has gone for and successfully holds the neighborhood peeing
championship. If I step outside in the
morning and find my door frame or my stoop wet, I know he’s passed. He is
envied by the other gang members, because his special expertise also means he
knows the location of more water sources than any other gang member.
Poly is a
smaller tan dog that is a close friend of my dog, Brownie, who’s a classic cinnamon
Mexican street dog. You see her cousins on every corner, and they don’t come
any smarter. Poly is lighter in color, and walks with Brownie in the morning.
They are good friends; they pound each other in a friendly way, and each
suspects the other of being in possession of an important mystery. Brownie
lives in a house, and only steps outside on a leash. Poly suspects her of being
rich, one of the 1%, and possibly well educated, although I would sometimes
question this myself. He knows for certain she’s guilty of eating special food
of a kind not often available on the street. His job as they walk is to provide
security against others, even in his own gang, who may not appreciate her as he
does. Since she’s been spayed, he’s not entirely sure what her appeal is.
For Brownie,
Poly symbolizes a dim lost recollection of the wild life she led in her youth.
His scars bear witness to his hard-earned position in the gang. He knows his
way around in ways that she doesn’t, but would still like to. She likes him
because he’s dangerous, but she knows how to rein him in.
At the pinnacle,
at the absolute unchallenged top of the pack, is Lobo, the Wolf. From his perch
in the upper levels of the barrio, he comes out only for big trouble. A larger
breed of white and dark gray, his hair is short, his ears pert, his eyes a
startling blue. The others tiptoe around in his presence. In his ancestry he
has boxer and pit bull. He likes order and calm; occasionally he leads the
others in running off cars with a noisy muffler or a pickup with too much
rattle for its own good.
There are
others too, lowly spear carriers in this opera of village life, shield bearers.
They may be nameless, but they know their places and their jobs are important,
at least to themselves if not to others.
For a while I
asked myself why these dogs live on the street. Each is associated with a human
household, each has a specific owner, yet they scrounge for food. Over time I
came to see it. This is the earlier pattern, from before the Conquest. The dogs
cluster around the edges of the Indian village. They acknowledge an owner, but
live outside. They are not housetrained; their owner would never allow them
indoors. They appear at mealtime. They warn of the approach of intruders, they
scare up game and assist in the hunt. At times they are wild in the night, but ever
watchful.
Sometimes in
México it takes a while to know what you’re looking at.
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