El Panteon. A short story by Maria Elena
In Cuernavaca, on the top of a hilly barranca, parallel to Calle
Morelos on its way out of town, lies a beautiful new cemetery. A Panteon,
already lush with Bougainvillea and shrubbery lovingly planted on graves and
crypts. Trees had been left standing, framing the natural landscaping and
parading like sentinels for the dead on the upper levels of the barranca.
Flowers were everywhere, their color and fragrance lightning the day of the
bustling traffic hurrying south, on the way to Acapulco.
An enterprising governor had liberated this land from the
"ejido" qualification, that of belonging to the people. He and some
associates had constructed a fine building, built a series of roads and paths,
drainage, a small series of streetlights, and lo, a new cemetery. His
constituents sighed and thought, Well, it was better than a fraccionamiento [a
housing development], anyway.
The people of Cuernavaca went to the grand opening and
were quite impressed, myself included. The old cemetery had been a disgrace for
decades, old mouldy stonework, cracked and tipped over from earthquakes. No
grass, just dead and rotten flowers from offerings, and a sea of mud during the
rainy season. It lay under massive Eucalyptus trees, its very air contaminated
with the detritus of the centuries, malarial mosquitos, and wall-to-wall fleas.
We who had our dead there had buried them fast and left with bugs whining after
us.
So the people of Cuernavaca began burying their newly
dead at the new cemetery. Indeed, some of us even went so far as to transfer
our dead from the appalling old cemetery, myself included. We planted
Bougainvillea and lilies and landscapey bushes and felt rather virtuous.
Relieved, certainly that we had gotten our dead out of That Place.
As my sons and I were shopping for new headstones, we
were told that they were not permitted to take orders for installation in the
new cemetery. It seems that, the governor having left office, the new governor
and everyone else with any authority was investigating him, and his business
dealings. This was just when the politicians were starting to be caught in
their manoeuvering, unheard of formerly, when people were proud of politicians
who made it big. It was a new era, however, and the people were tired of their
suffering and wanted to lay a little of it on their leaders, who had outdone
themselves in the last few administrations.
So everything stopped at the new cemetery. Those who had
already put in monuments, indeed, whole stone houses, worried. There was talk
of the ejidos becoming administrators of the cemetery. It was understood that
the land would be given back to them, as it had been taken unlawfully. There
had been no uproar when the land had been eased away from the ejidos, the
People of Mexico, but now everyone was ashamed of their politicos and wanted to
make amends. Everyone waited to see what would happen to their dead, praying
that they could stay in the beautiful new panteon, and that the ejidos would
prove that they could administrate their own property. My sons and I decided
that Grandma, Michael and Patricio would not mind having a little wait for
their gravestones.
A few years later, the ejidos had won their battle, the
ex- governor was in disgrace, and the business of laying the dead to rest was
flourishing again on top of the barrancas. The ejidos, mostly jardineros and
such, had never stopped caring for their property, and at the reopening, all
Cuernavaca was pleased, including me. I opened negotiations for three
gravestones once again before leaving for a show in Costa Rica, leaving a check
and the panteon papers with my partner, Juan, who would attend to
everything.
Three months later, upon my return, I triumphantly set
out to take a foto of the monumentos. Juan had assured me that everything was
in place perfectly, but someone had swiped the purple Bougainvillea that were
planted at the heads of the graves. So I arrived with shovel, clippers,
watering can, camera, new purple Bougainvillea clippings from our house,
whatever. And I was lost. I knew I was in the right aisle because a friend,
Carlos Quintero, was buried right across from Michael, the well-known painter
Guerrerro Galvan was buried in front of Grandma and just down the aisle was my
favorite taxi-driver's entire ancestry, smothered in lily pots. Where was
Mother, Mike and Patricio?
I put down my cargo and looked around. There seemed to be
three suspiciously familiar Bougainvillea plants to my left Unclipped for
several years, they were larger than I remembered, indeed huge, but they were
unmistakably my own personally invented [well, God and I] Bougainvillea purple.
I fished in the Panteon papers for the map. Definitely, here I am. I saw the
weathered remains of the wooden cross that Bob had fashioned temporarily for
Michael, almost lost in the purple flowers..
I knew Juan would never have neglected his charge; he was
and is the most responsible person I know, so I started walking around, having
a look. About ten minutes later, I found my gravestones gracing three other
persons' graves, on the back of the next aisle over. Mother would have approved
of them, they were quietly elegant and understated as to information, deeply
grooved. I trotted up to Administracion, papers in hand, wanting my gravestones
back. "Como lo siento, Senora, pero no es la culpa nuestra...the
installers did it and they work for the stonecutters."
I called Juan. "Didn't you go with them when they
put them down?"
"Pues, no...tu sabes, fue un sabado..." Saturdays Juan sold his
paintings in San Angel.
Mortified, Juan didn't believe it until he saw it. He
tried to argue with Administracion but got nowhere. The worst was yet to come.
Administracion now regarded those gravestones as the property of the gravesites
below them. Upon looking in their massive book to see who the lucky owners
actually were, they found that nobody was buried there at all yet. So what
happens now? Well, in that case, the gravestones belong to Administracion. Juan
hung his head.
Well. I talked it over with my sons. None of us felt up
to a skirmish with the mighty Ejido, now spelled by the press with a respected
capital E, who had already battled the governor and all of PRI for years, and
won. I didn't have the money for another set of gravestones and I was sure Mom,
Mike and even Patricio would feel that those magnificent Bougainvillea were
enough. After all, they were somewhere else anyway. So we left it like that.
Somewhere in the beautiful new cemetery there are three white marble
understated gravestones, SUE 1902-1974; MICHAEL 1956 - 1973, PATRICIO 1964, in
the warm sunshine of Cuernavaca, probably still with nobody buried under them.
White marble is hard to fiddle with. Even Michaelangelo himself would have had
trouble changing the lettering.
The ex-gobernador built his fraccionamiento down the road
a bit, just outside of Temixco, also on a hillside.
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