because he was so dark. âHe has Chichimec bloodâ indigena bloodâfrom his great grandfatherâs side, I am told,â she explained. âOtherwise he would not be so dark. His father is blonde.â The boy was dark, sure, but cute and animated and got along better with the familyâs two boxers and its two American guests than his brothers and sistersâin their blonde aloofnessâdid. The motherâs distress over her fifth child made life in the house awkward, especially when the boy was present and listening to her apologies for him. But the apologies didnât seem to bother him. She did love him, and he must have known this.
â Do you know the Chichimeca? â she asked, in Spanish.
âNo,â we answered.
âThey were the âdog people,ââ she said, then dropped the subject and moved on to the Saturday market, what fun it was, and where we could find the nearest store for school supplies.
*Â Â Â *Â Â Â *
We would walk the five blocks through the colonia and the city streets beyond the gates to the institute, and return the same way at dayâs end. Our teachers were young and liberal too, with one exceptionâa middle-aged anthropologist who seemed to have no politics and who didnât join in the laughter and occasional silliness of his younger colleagues.
The day Jennifer was house-bound with a bad cold, I returned from the institute by myself and saw a dog, a mid-sized mongrel by some bushes on the wide sidewalk just ahead of me. It was sleeping. I assumed it would move as I approached or simply let me walk by. Any dog would, wouldnât it? It was a sidewalk. Public.
As I neared it, the animal leaped to its feet snarling and jumped at me.
I was wearing a backpack with my books and supplies in it, and the dogâs jaws, clacking wetly, got the backpack. The dog hung from the pack by its jaws and thrashed. I could barely stay on my feet and nearly toppled backward. My nerves were firing like lightning, in the panic only adrenaline can make, and I was hitting at the animal behind me but never quite connecting.
Suddenly the weight on my back disappeared. I was able to straighten up, and, when I turned, the dog was trotting away, looking back once and only once. It was an ugly dogâshort-haired, long-legged, a belly bigger than any starving dog should have, and a wrinkled face like a Shar Pei, those battle dogs. Was it pregnant? Ill?
My backpack was in shreds. I kept thinking, looping in a spasm of thought: Jesus! What if it had bitten me? How do you catch a dog like that for quarantine? How do you get rabies shots? Do you stay with the family or somewhere else?
I had no idea how things worked down here, I realized, despite Tonyâs advice about the world. Just the day before, Iâd learned you could be put in jail here for witnessingâjust witnessingâa car accident.
Tony had been right. Donât be stupid. Find out what you need to know about a country.⦠so you donât die like an idiot.
Iâd been stupid.
A few people had stopped on the street, but were moving again. Nothing to see here. Dogs are dogs.
For a week I dreamed of the animal, how it had hung on like it wanted to kill me, needed to kill me, was so hungry that nothing in the universe could satisfy its hunger. In the dreams it came at my face. The wrinkles got bigger. It was wearing a maskâa human maskâand then the mask was a mirror, and it was my face. As its jaws snapped at me, blood and pieces of flesh cascaded from themâ my blood and flesh. It was more than any dog could possibly eat, so it gave back to me what it could not eat. I ate my own flesh and woke so nauseated I thought I would vomit.
What do you do with a dream like that?
Iâd moan, and Jennifer would have to wake me. But I kept the dreams to myself. Iâd already told her about the dog attackâso sheâd be cautious on the streets if we
Kit Tunstall, R.E. Saxton