werenât together. She didnât need more to disturb her own nights. She loved cats, but was always shy with dogs.
*Â Â Â *Â Â Â *
A week later, just before our three-day weekendâwhen we were planning to rent a car and travel happily, romantically, to towns and villagesâwe were returning at sunset through the colonia to our house. Just beyond the first gated place, we saw the body in the gutter. It was a big dog, but barely recognizable because of what had been done to it.
Something had torn out its throat, filling the asphalt by its head with blood, but that was nothing compared to the stomach.
Jennifer sucked in a deep breath and said, âIâm sorry, David, but I canât look at this. Iâm going to get sick.â
âSure.â I took her by the elbow and aimed her away, down the street to the first colonia houses. âGo on home. Iâll catch up.â
She looked scared. It was a dead dog, I told myself. Nothing more.
âWhy canât you come with me?â she asked.
I was curious. I wanted to understand better what had happened. Only human nature, wasnât it?
âI want to checkââ I started to say. âJust go over to the corner and wait for me. Look at the sunset. Iâll be just a second.â
She went to the corner. She looked beautiful standing there, with her long hair and skinny legs. The girl I loved. She didnât look at the sunset. She didnât look at the mountains. She was looking at me as if the disemboweled body might jump up and grab me, or the wild dogs that had killed and eaten it (what else would have done this?) might suddenly reappear, and Iâd be their next meal ⦠or both of us would.
I looked down at the body in the dimming light. Something had eaten the entire belly. White ribs were showing. There wasnât an entrail left, as if a big hand had scooped it clean. There was also a smellârancid and feralâbut I didnât think much of it. Death had its smells.
I crouched down.
What showed of the dogâs collar in all the blood looked pink, with big rhinestones. It was familiar. Iâd seen this dog and its two siblingsâheavy, sleek Dobermansâbehind a gate in the colonia .
*Â Â Â *Â Â Â *
We took our rental, an old sedan, and drove first to San Luis because weâd heard the architecture there was pure colonial-frontier. It felt like Spainâthe conquerorsâand yet it was rough, what youâd expect of a frontier. The way, Iâm sure, even upscale New York had seemed to British royalty back in the day, and certainly how the houses of the wealthy in the San Francisco Bay Area must have seemed to those who owned mansions in Newport, Rhode Island.
In an alcove just off the cathedral there, there was a chapelâone you had to visit, everyone said. When we stepped into it, we didnât understand what we were seeing. It was maybe 10â by 10â. In each corner there was a life-sized, painted plaster saint. But this wasnât the crazy thing. Each of the four saintsâall of them in Bible dressâwas bleeding more blood than any human being should. One had a plaster axe cleaving his body at the shoulder. Blood poured from the wound, covering the saintâs body and pooling at his feet.
To the right of that saint was one we knew. Saint Sebastian. Full of arrows. Blood running like faucets from each arrowâa physical impossibility, of course, but this hadnât mattered to the craftsman whoâd made it centuries ago. The story here, everywhere in this little room, was blood âhow much blood there was in the worldâhow much the world could and perhaps should bleed. A symphony of blood, filling rivers, seas, draining every human bodyâ
I shook my head, feeling dizzy and delirious and wondering if I were sickâfood poisoning or another bug.
The dizziness didnât fade when I looked at the other two
Kit Tunstall, R.E. Saxton