Eeeeeeeeeeeeeeeek!
by
Fred Reed
by Fred Reed
OK,
yesterday on final into Guadalajara, at the height of the flu epidemic,
indeed pandemic, predicted to be even more cleansing than the killer
flu of 1918, perhaps the beginning of the long-expected plague that
would eliminate mankind from the earth, no doubt to the earths
relief, I was ready for the worst. I had read the papers, after
all. I was sure there would be piles of festering corpses in the
streets, such as one would expect after a Burundian election. I
had read Defoes account of the bubonic plague in London, and
knew that men with wheelbarrows would be collecting the dead. Especially
with todays littering laws.
Except that,
when I had called Violeta every night during the two weeks I was
in the US, she always said What flu? Aint got
no flu heah. The schools were shut down, bars closed, everybody
hiding from the flu, but they couldnt find any flu to hide
from. My friend Ken, in another town near Guad, reported an equal
epidemic of perfect health. It was media flu, he suspected.
I knew better.
I had read of the lightning spread, the hundreds of dead, the frightening
appearance of cases in New Zealand, comparisons to the Black Death
of 1348. Ohmygodohmygodohmygod. The only logical explanation was
that the Mexican government was quietly disposing of thousandsnay,
tens of thousandsof dead so as not to alarm the tourist trade.
We deplaned.
An official of some sort was handing out those funny little masks
to anyone who wanted one, which practically no one did. Coming out
of customs, everybody had to stand briefly in front of an infrared
camera that made you appear green on a big screen if you didnt
have a fever, which nobody seemed to. No corpses. I guess they removed
them really fast. No coughs. Come on, I thought. Youve advertised
the flu. Now produce it.
Violeta and
Natalia picked me up, apparently not dead, and we headed south to
Jocotepec. The streets were semi-deserted, traffic light. Maybe,
I thought, a plague was a good thing. I mean, you could find parking.
Mexico seemed to be taking the disease seriously, doing all the
responsible things that one does with a plague. All it needed was
a plague. Can you order plagues online, I wondered, being a practical
sort.
That
evening we went with friends to the Tortuga Sedienta in Ajijic for
hamburgers and wine. (Im not sure you are supposed to drink
wine with hamburgers. The question consumes me.) One of said friends
was a Mexican doctor, shock-trauma variety I believe, who had worked
all over the world. In two hours of conversation, she never mentioned
the careening extinction, the eminent PCS to the sky, the Permanent
Change of Station that loomed over us like a bad divorce settlement.
I guess it just didnt make an impression on her. Or anyone
else.
This morning
I leaped like a startled jackrabbit to La Puta Dora and checked
the Yahoo headlines, which didnt mention the plague at all.
This was ominous. I figured all the journalists must be dead. A
news story I had read put the mortality from the Monster Flu at
ten percent, so the reporters must have gotten it several times
each to all be dead. So surviving it didnt confer immunity.
Bad, very bad.
Whats
the deal? Sure, tomorrow the virus may erupt with renewed virulence
and carry off whole populations. I suppose its more likely
than an asteroid strike. Maybe. The Yahoo headlines did Illinois
or somewhere is suspected of killing his third wife. All right,
perhaps this is of greater import than a disease that is going to
depopulate the earth. You have to respect the editors news
judgement. (Mmurdering your wife is a family matter and nobody elses
business. How about a little respect for privacy?) But if this flu
business isnt just a media frenzy staged by bored news weasels,
why arent we hearing more about it? How come I cant
find it, and Im supposed to be in the middle of it? Habeas
corpus, I say.
May
9, 2009
Fred
Reed is author of Nekkid
in Austin: Drop Your Inner Child Down a Well and the just-published
A
Brass Pole in Bangkok: A Thing I Aspire to Be. Visit his
blog.
Copyright
© 2009 Fred Reed
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