Almost Never A Novel - By Daniel Sada Page 0,9

embracing the newlyweds: a photograph with mountains in the background. Another of the devil laughing as enormous tongues of fire licked the newlyweds. Finally: a circuitous flickering: heavy sleep, the road to relief …

4

So much to talk about. A random recounting of minor troubles and modest joys. The breakfast conversation was merely a sketch that mother and son would fill in with details and inventions on the train. It was five in the morning, and due to their nerves, or their haste, they decided to finish chewing their toasted totopos and bread on the way to the station in their horse-drawn carriage. Among the most important things the mother—her name was Telma—told her offspring was one as portentous as:

“I’m sure you will find the woman of your life in Sacramento, the woman who will be the mother of your children.”

For Demetrio, this was a vain prophecy. He’d rather imagine Mireya’s marvelous vagina and her breasts like well-hung melons. She was the ideal, even the superlative, mamacita, who would bear him a whole legion of children …

“Did you hear me? There are lots of good and beautiful women in Sacramento; dutiful, not at all tiresome. What do you think?”

“I’ll see. Maybe I’ll give it a shot.”

This was the main subject of conversation en route. Hour after hour she insisted. Irksome to the son, who had to hold his tongue. Not a chance he’d spill the beans to Doña Telma; what if he told her that he was sleeping with a spectacular whore in Oaxaca, and even that he had screwed her in many different positions? A son should never confess such depraved sins to his mother. What a terrible lack of respect that would be—right? hence it behooves us to set this scene in a precariously balanced rowboat. A touch of anxiety, a hint of fright, perhaps a moment of relief or something of the sort, all anticipated hours beforehand. Apropos, we must relate a geographic detail Doña Telma and her son, Demetrio, discussed on their way to Sacramento in the first-class carriage—“first” implies the presence of ceilings and walls upholstered in green velvet … anyway, the point is that the Nadadores River runs parallel to the railroad tracks for two and a half miles. If you think that there’s no friction in this kind of kinship, there’s no point in mentioning the subject. But the mother thought there was, for she had heard that sometimes the rising waters covered the rails. An anomalous event that created the illusion that the train was floating. Many had witnessed this delightful effect from afar, but to experience it from inside the train: to feel afloat and derailed: which she never … maybe this would be the first time? Fear. And, it being December, the river is higher, they say, or the contrary: almost not. Hence, until they passed that stretch … just before La Polka station, where mother and son would detrain with their heavy suitcases. A bit more than a mile before said station the river bore east. And the only thing they, as well as the other passengers, saw at any given moment was a sprinkling of the rails: the one on the left: where: unwanted kisses: liquid moderation, which outside observers might have perceived as flotation. Probably not. The river had risen, undoubtedly, but not enough to produce a more or less virtual image … And having thus avoided serious difficulties Doña Telma offered her gratitude to God, and Demetrio seconded that, if only to cover his bases. They crossed themselves ostentatiously, though the one, full-fledged; the other, hypocritical. Anyway, they’d almost reached La Polka. Both had stood up, the son carrying the heavy suitcase to the exit: he staggered under its weight. His mother had warned him that they would have to cross the Nadadores River by boat. On the other shore a horse-drawn carriage would take them to Sacramento. Two old-fashioned conveyances that then and perhaps even now remain the same … Yes, there was the proof, at that point in the century nobody had yet taken the initiative to build a bridge: how difficult could it be so as to avoid the rowing nuisance? For how long had it been thus? And how about buying an automobile to replace the horse-drawn carriage. No, no modernity here, and hence we have mother and son trembling in the boat. Rowing the whole way. The narrow boat was agile. The current would never hold sway. A gentle pull, ah; a

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