A mosquito bites me. And another. And another. I ignore them, observing the incredibly attractive carpet of the plant called “Bleeding Heart,” leaves like green valentines bearing upon them as though press-printed a similar design in purple-red. “Well,” says F.Z., pointing. I see the well, an unwalled pit in the dirt, and, beyond, the close-lapping river. I ask, “Isn’t this rather low along the water?” He assures me it is not. “Even in flood, never come up past here,” he explains, his gesture including most of the visible environs. To him, floods are mere inevitabilities of no great matter, and mosquitoes obviously do not exist at all. How thick they are!
— The bubble bursts, the dream subsides into the Moho with a gentle plop. So perish all plans in the Toledo, put into practice or not. Gently, very gently. not necessarily with hurricanes. not even firmly: but invariably and inevitably and seemingly without exception, the Toledo defeats every plan larger than a plantain patch. How- long will it be before the bush takes over the rice-fields as it has taken over the old Confederate-planted sugar-fields? — tall trees now growing within the old stone walls the unreconstructable Rebels slowly built at Seven Hills, shouldering slowly aside the vasty flywheels, red with rust. Who knew this land first and best? The Mayans. And they abandoned it for a thousand years! Land which defeated even the humble and patient and toiling Mayas, how long before you would defeat
“How sick and gaunt poor Llewelyn-Rhys looks,” I had commented in Punta Gorda. “Known him for years,” was the reply. “He looks
I lead the way down the crumbling bank to the boat. The day had been mostly overcast and cool, now' the sun came out and I donned my dark lenses. Mr. Faustino Zuniga dripped water on the dark dragon heads to cool them. Slowly the forest receded, the mangrove swamps resumed. “Is there
Only maybe not.
DRAGONS IN SAN FRANCISCO — A SEQUEL
“What shall I bring you back?” I’d asked.
“Bring me back an iguana,” she’d said.
Thus spoke Avram Davidson in “The Iguana Church”, an excerpt from his unpublished travel account
I have a confession to make. I am She who asked for the iguana. I didn’t really expect to
It was the mid-1960s. Avram was traveling in British Honduras (now Belize), and young Ethan and I were living in a Victorian flat in Bernal Heights in San Francisco, where I was writing and teaching. One day we got a notice to pick up a package from an obscure location, I’ll spare you the details. The sender was Avram in B. H., so off we went to fetch the package. It was made of rough wood, about the shape of a big guitar case. It didn’t rattle. Something inside scrabbled. Something alive.
The paperwork said
Out from a tangle of leaves leaped two angry wild beasts; the great black and yellow striped he-Tiger, who filled most of the bathtub, and the smaller grav-striped she-Tiger, who flicked her tongue, rose up on all her claw's, and bared her teeth at us like a miniature angry dinosaur.
An unexpected surprise. We threw some ripe bananas in the bathtub, prayed they wouldn’t scramble out, and tried to figure out what to do next. Next was that little Ethan was now afraid to use the bathroom, so we had to go to a neighbor’s.
Some fine fannish friends helped us get a very large mesh cage, the kind used to transport big dogs. We propped the cage over the bathtub with some fruit inside, and eventually lured the dragons in. Resourceful are us. We put the cage next to a heater, and plied the dragons with fruit. They huddled near the heat and glared at us. Clearly this relationship wasn’t going to work.