Strange and Sad and Sweet, Amid
Mardi Gras
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I’ve heard stories about this
elderly couple who live in El Amparo, the abandoned mining town in the
mountains, ever since I moved to Etzatlan.
Every Thursday this traditional couple, she in her long
skirt, he in baggy white pants, both with wide sombreros, rode horses down the
mountain road into town. They stayed the night with family and bought supplies
at the Friday morning tianguis. Then in the afternoon, the couple would ride
back to their mountain home, carrying their meager needs in saddlebags.
“How old are they?” I ask. Answers
vary but all agree, somewhere in their nineties. A couple years ago they quit
riding horses but kept the same routine, riding into town with neighbors, often
sitting on an old bench seat in the open back of the pickup.
Four days ago the old man died. He must have said something
like, “It’s okay. I cleared the path. You may come now.” This morning his wife
died.
Somehow this news touched me greatly. I don’t know, have
never seen, this couple, yet their story lodged in my heart as if they were
family.
Sitting in a rocker under the jacaranda, I imagined, made up
a life for this couple, who surely had lived in El Amparo back in the mining
days. Perhaps they played together in the creek as children. Their fathers were
miners. Their mothers called them inside to bathe Saturday night, a light
supper of mangoes and tortillas, Church in the morning.
They would have lived through the closing of the mines,
fathers out of work, hard times, mothers making do, shelling beans from the
garden vines, grinding maize for tortillas on the metate in the back yard.
In a few idle moments I carry the youngsters up a rosary of
years, from school mates to sweethearts. They marry. He finds a job in
Etzatlan, walks to work down the mountain road every day to the cane fields.
Perhaps one day he apprentices to a welder in town, carrying on a job his
father once held at the mine.
They have babies, bury their parents, celebrate the good
times, tough out the lean years, add a room or two their house, hobble a pair
of horses in back. Watch their children grow up, leave home, one to California,
one to disappear, two daughters to Etzatlan, grandchildren to love. They grow
old.
I stop myself before I give the elder couple names and an
entire history to relive. Any people who have garnered the respect I hear in my
friends’ voices deserves my respect. I’m a sucker for a love story, even an
imagined one.
These last few days in Etzatlan have been full of
celebrations of Carnaval (Mardi Gras). By chance, I saw the first day’s parade
of horses, and such horses as we never see up north, of Spanish bloodline.
Every horse dances to the music of the band leading the parade.
Prancing in front of and alongside the band are other
dancers, the “ugly queens”. These “beauties”, young men in feminine attire,
wigs and tight skirts and jutting bosoms, vie for the crown. The contenders are
a hardy lot to dance the cobblestone streets every rock of the way to the Plaza.
As afternoon segues into evening at the Plaza, bands compete
at top volume. Young and old dance, celebrations carry long into the night,
events I choose to skip this year. One street is blocked for children’s rides.
Another for food stands. One evening food is free to whoever comes, a community
thank you from the city.
World famous toreador Andy Cartagena from Spain led the
spectacular bullfight event. At the old charro, every afternoon one could see precision
riding or contests similar to our rodeo. Our city sponsored an agricultural
expo, with purebred bulls and goats, any one of which would take top prize in
any State Fair and bring a pretty peso to his owner. These events satisfy my
needs for a whiff of farm life.
In the dark nights I hear the bands from my patio, catch some
of the fireworks over the trees. My own celebrations are quieter, private.
Etzatlan, a town trying to hang onto tradition, is changing
rapidly, as everywhere. (Children have smart phones. What is the world coming
to!)
After Carnaval, the quiet weeks of Lent. No tianguis in town
during Lent. No bands in the Plaza. We have quiet until Easter when Cathedral
bells waken us back to Celebration.
I am glad to be here in what might be the last of the “quiet”
years for Etzatlan. I’m glad I can imagine, with some knowledge of what their
lives might have been, the years of Tia and Tio, the elder couple from El
Amparo, now part of my own imaginary history. I still haven’t decided what to
give up for Lent.
Sondra
Ashton
HDN: Looking
out my back door
March 7,
2019
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