Authors: Juan Pastor
"But they're only in New England?" I ask.
"Well." Sin says. "There are a few different varieties of
grouse
that occupy the northern U.S. and most of Canada. But
the one I'm talking about is Bonasa umbellus umbellus. It's
native to the northeast U.S. and the Maritime Provinces of
Canada.
Ever
heard
of
Lake
Winnipesaukee
in
New
Hampshire?"
"Lake Winny‐piss‐sockie?"
"Yeah."
"What does that mean? Winnypissockie?" I ask.
"It's Indian."
"What does it mean?" I ask.
"The wind blew piss on my sockies."
Sin smiles. I smile.
The best place to hunt grouse used to be New
Hampshire."
Sin says. And the best place in New Hampshire to
hunt grouse was the abandoned farmland around Lake
Winnipesaukee. Then the developers, bankers, and real estate
people moved in. All the suckers, blood, cock, and otherwise,
followed them. Then the grouse moved out, 'cause their
neighborhood was going downhill."
"What are you working on?" I ask.
"A grouse gun." Sin says. "But a much bigger version of
one."
"How many beers have you had?" I ask.
"I don't know." Sin says. "But I stopped when the lady
at
the cantina wouldn't serve me anymore."
"What cantina?"
"The one just down the way a bit." Sin says. "The lady's
name
is Mary. She seems very nice. She sure knows a lot about
grouse hunting."
"Yes, I bet she does." I say. "Is she the one that put you
up to this?"
"I guess so." Sin says. "She said the drones were like
large grouse. She said hitting the drones would be easier than
hitting a grouse. Grouse rarely take the same path twice,
whereas the drones take pretty predictable flight paths. She
said the only difference is that the drones are bigger, so I
would need a much bigger shotgun."
"Sin." I say. "There is no cantina 'just down the way a
bit'. And what did this Mary look like anyway?"
"She looked kind of Italian." Sin says. "No, Greek. No,
Spanish. Wait, she looked more Arabic or Jewish. Semitic?
Mediterranean, anyway."
"Do you have any idea how much trouble you would be
in if you managed to shoot one of those things down?"
"No more than I'd be in for trying and missing." Sin
says. "It just seemed awfully important to Mary for me to bag
one of these birds."
"Sin." I say. "Mary is a hallucination. You only think
she's telling you to do something. You already want to do it
anyhow. Think about it. How would a Mediterranean woman
know anything about grouse hunting? How would she know
anything about grouse hunting in New England? And how
would she know how to build anything even remotely
resembling an anti‐aircraft gun?"
"I don't know." Sin says. "How would a Mediterranean
woman know that an unmanned aircraft circles over your
clinic every day?"
Sin hefted the tube to his shoulder. On its underside
was
what looked like a semi‐auto pistol attached to it.
"How do you like it?" Sin asks. "It will launch something
similar to a Russian OG‐7 HE/frag. But I'm going to make my
own. It will be like a giant shotshell, but instead of shot I will
use ball‐bearings."
"I have no idea what you're talking about." I say.
"The fragmentation head was intended as an anti‐
personnel
weapon." Sin says.
"I didn't say I wanted to know."
Sin ignores me.
"It had to be smaller, only 40 millimeters, if it was going
to
be used against people. I mean, it could be used against
people, but the people had to be inside something for it to be
legal. You've got to follow certain rules if you want to blow
people apart."
"I still don't want to know..."
"I dream of a kinder gentler world." Sin says. "In the
future,
there will still be wars. There will always be wars. But in
the future, when two countries go to war, they will recruit
only young men."
"I thought they recruited young men now." I say.
"Countries wanting to wage war will recruit teams of
teenage
boys who are very good at video games like Halo or
Call of Duty. The team that wins the virtual war will be the one
that wins the real war for its country. Heck, you won't even
need to be a country to start a war. You can be a wanna‐be
terrorist. You can be someone who wants to overthrow his
own country's government. You can be a bored old rich guy.
As long as you can put together a team of young guys really
good at waging virtual war, you can wage war. Wouldn't that
be better than sending young men out to commit all sorts of
carnage against each other, like we do now? Wouldn't it?"
"Isn't that where we're headed anyway?" I say. "I
mean, with the unmanned aircraft. And if they're doing it with
unmanned aircraft, can unmanned tanks, boats, artillery,
robot warriors, be far behind?"
"Except that now we cheat." Sin says.
"How do you mean?"
"The side that has the technology uses it to give its
warriors, if you want to call them that anymore, an advantage.
The techs get to keep themselves hidden, safe and sound,
while they use the technology on people with nowhere to
hide, nowhere to run, no way to protect themselves."
"You intend to go up on the roof of the Clinic, and
shoot one of the drones down, don't you?" I ask.
Yep." Sin says. "Just on principle."
All I could do was shake my head.
"Quail shooting in Mexico." Sin says.
"Do you want to die, you bastardo loco viejo?" I ask.
"When you're hunting grouse or quail, they say your
target is really two crossed pencils with an acorn on the end of
one of them."
"How so?" I ask.
"The spine, the wingbones, and the head." Sin says. "If
just one particle of shot hits either of those things, the bird is
dead. Well, at least the spine or head."
"What does that have to do with anything?" I ask.
"Do you know why a drone is so quiet when it flies?"
Sin asks.
"No, I don't." I say.
"It has wooden propellers." Sin says. "If my frag load
can send just one ball bearing through a propeller blade, the
engine, or the camera, it's a dead bird."
"I'll ask again." I say. "Do you really want to die?"
"Have you ever heard of the term Deus ex machina?"
"Yes." I say. "It means God and machine."
"Well." Sin says. "Not exactly. In Spanish, it would be
Dios de la máquina."
"God from the machine?" I ask. "What does that
mean?"
"I had a teacher explain it like this." Sin says. He said a
German engineering crew was once establishing a railway in
Africa. A tribal chief wanted a ride on one of the locomotives,
and in return he would grant permission for the railway to
cross the lands of his kingdom. After the ride, the chief asked
one of the engineers how the train worked. All of the
engineers, taking turns, set out to explain the workings of the
steam locomotive in detail, pointing out, as they did so, all the
working parts of the locomotive. When they were done the
chief said that he understood how all the parts of the machine
worked, but he couldn't understand where the spirit was kept
that made the train move."
"So the spirit was like the God that came from the
machine that was the train?" I ask. "Or God is like the spirit in
the machine?"
"No." Sin says. "My teacher was wrong. The term
comes all the way from the Greek ἀπὸ μηχανῆς θεός (
apò
mêkhanễs theós
). It referred to using a device like a crane to
either lower an actor (who was playing a god in a theater
setting) onto a stage or lift him through a trapdoor on the
stage. Purists considered it a bail‐out for a play whose plot
was going nowhere. Other critics considered it a creative way
to give plays an interesting twist, or a somewhat credible way
to introduce a divine being or divinity into the affairs of
common men."
"I bet a lot of people who may have found Greek
theater a little stuffy saw this device as a bit of magic." I say.
"And there was the problem." Sin says. "It grew old
very quick, because it was used too much, in place of good
playwriting or acting. Kind of like CGI today."
"So, what does any of this have to do with the drones?"
I ask.
"They are not machines built to deliver gods into our
midst." Sin says. "They were made to deliver demons. They're
part of the Consequence Delivery System."
"Have you ever heard of Paulo Coelho?" I ask.
"I've heard the name."
"He's a writer. He's Brazilian." I say. "I like one of his
quotes. It might be my favorite quote."
"What is it?" Sin asks.
"The universe conspires to make the dreamer's dream
come true."
"I'm assuming you mean the good dreamers." Sin says.
quail.
We will be hunting Moctezuma quail. We will hunt
tomorrow.
"Is that what you call Mearn's quail?" Sin asks.
"Moctezuma quail?"
Miguel looks at me. I look at Miguel. Miguel and Sin
have known each other for decades. I have just met Miguel.
But my bond is closer with Miguel than mine with Sin, or Sin's
with Miguel. Sin, wise as he is about Mexican culture, has just
committed several common faux pas.
The first is, don't insist rudely on doing anything today
that can be done just as well mañana. There is more time than
life, and there will always be another mañana, even if you are
not necessarily here, alive, to greet it.
The second is, if a Mexican host is kind and generous
enough to invite you to do something, like go hunting, and he
lets you stay in his home until he is ready to do it, he will tell
you what it is you are going to hunt. It is bad form for you to
tell him.
Third, and very important is this. In Mexico, there is no
such word as Montezuma. Americans always say it wrong. It is
Moctezuma. Moctezuma was the last great Aztec emperor of
Mexico.
I, Pequeña, foolish little girl‐woman that I am, get it.
We will be hunting, not today, but tomorrow. Not here, but
further south, on Miguel's ranch. Not Gambel's quail, Scaled
quail, or Mearn's quail, or Montezuma quail, but Moctezuma
quail, with a "c".
To
Miguel,
any
quail
but
the
Moctezuma
quail
represents America, where they sing the song, "From the halls
of Montezuma to the shores of Tripoli." Miguel wants no part
of that.
A friend of Miguel's is to accompany us, and bring his
pointer, Cisco, a legend in the hunting world. Or so the friend
says. Since Moctezuma quail are mountain quail, and Miguel's
ranch is not in the mountains but nestled in the valley
between the mountains like a sleeping baby's head between
its mother's breasts, it will be necessary to go to the
mountains. It will be necessary to make an early start, which
reminds me of another Mexican truth. Plan to start early, as
planning shows good intention, but as long as the venture is
begun by early afternoon, that's just as good. Buenos tardes.
So we all hop in the Miguel's doctor friend's Range
Rover.
"It's a piece of crap." The doctor friend (I will never
hear his name, and I will never get the chance to ask it) says.
"But it's very prestigious to own one."
I'm surprised when Sin asks, "I don't have a small game
license. Will that be a problem?"
"Yes." The doctor says.
"No." Miguel says. "Not as long as you're with me."
"He really should have one." The doctor insists.
"If a warden appears, he can give me the gun." Miguel
says.
"So you can shoot the game warden?" The doctor asks.
"Only if I have to." Miguel says. “But it will be quick,
and he will not have to suffer.”
It takes an hour and a half to get into the 10,000 foot
high range of the closest mountain, even with the doctor
driving like a maniac. It is at 10,000' and higher where the
Moctezuma quail live, and this is where Miguel wants to hunt.
The doctor lets Cisco out of his cage, and the dog runs
around in ecstasy. Then he starts making game.
"It's about time." I think to myself. It is getting on late
afternoon.
We are on a high mountain plateau, and from it we can
see Miguel's expansive ranch below. The mountains are
starting to cast shadows across it. The trip has been dusty. I
get out my canteen.
"Don't
bother."
Sin
says.
"Let
me
show
you
something."
Sin cuts the stem of a dried thistle. Then he cuts the dry
thistle flower off. He cuts the top off one arm of a cactus‐like
plant that looks a little like Spanish bayonet. The thistle stem is
hollow. Sin shaves one end to a point, much like one might
find on the straw of a Juice Box. Sin inserts it, just like such a
straw, into the exposed sap, which he calls agua miel (honey
water).
Cisco doesn't need a straw. He climbs the open plant,
dives headfirst, without any heed of the plant's spines, toward
the cup‐shaped open chamber at the plant's heart, and slurps
noisily at the honey water that has collected there.
"What are these plants?" I ask.
"Maguey." Miguel says.
I take a sip. It is very good, very refreshing, sweet
without being too sweet. I look up. I notice there are long
straight rows of this plant on the plateau, there are hundreds
of rows, and possibly tens of thousands of these cacti‐like
plants. I vaguely remember my father calling these plants
agave. And I have also heard them called century plants, but
I'm not sure why, or if that name was correct. And I'm pretty
sure these are blue agave, but I know better than to dispute
Miguel.
I see the doctor looking at me.
"This is one of the ways Miguel makes all his money."
The doctor says.
"Si." Miguel says. "But I make a lot more from the
poppies and coca."
I can't be sure if he is joking, or serious, or joking and
serious.
Miguel sees my concern.
"Sólo estoy tomando el pelo (I'm just pulling your leg),
my innocent girl." He says. "But a lot of land around here is
owned by cartels. And you'd be surprised by how many of
those cartels are financed by good old American dollars."
"How do you make money from sweet cactus sap?" I
ask.
"The sweet is the key." Miguel says, accentuating the
word "key". "We ferment it. The resultant liquor comes out in
three grades. The most inferior, but most popular because it is
the most affordable, is called pulque."
"Is that what you make?" I foolishly ask.
Miguel seems insulted. Miguel's friend the doctor
laughs.
"The next best grade is called mescal." Miguel says.
I remain silent.
"The quality of the grade is determined by locale, soil,
climate, plant variety and quality, and know‐how of the person
making the various liquors." Miguel says. "When one becomes
an artist like me, tequila is the result."
"One of my favorites." Sin says.
"If my friend Pecado here had bought stock in my
company years ago," Miguel says, "he'd be a rich man today."
I notice Miguel uses the Spanish word for Sin.
"I thought it more important to guarantee your success
by buying as much product as possible." Sin says.
"That's why I consider you are the best of my friends."
Miguel answers.
It will be dark in a few hours, and the shadows from the
agave, excuse me, the maguey, some of which reach three
meters high, throw shadows across the weeds that grow
among the cacti. It is in these weeds that the Moctezuma
quail live and thrive.
The pointer works in careful "Z"s through the weeds.
He soon nails a covey and freezes into a statuesque point.
That's when we see it. A small, slow moving aircraft
coming out of the sun, low on the horizon in the west.
"What the fuck?" Miguel says.
"Excuse him." The doctor says to me. "He's just trying
to impress you with his fluency in Mexican."
"Yes, you laugh." Miguel says. "But I'm tired of these
things flying over all the time. Goddam drones. I'd like to know
who's responsible for them."
As it happens, only two of us have guns. The doctor
carries his Belgian Browning over/under. It looks like it has
never seen a day in the field.
"Bored skeet 1 and skeet 2." He says. "Like a good quail
gun should be."
Miguel has let me carry his bruised and battered old L.
C. Smith side by side. Sin has refused to carry it because of the
"license" thing. Hard to believe for a guy whose already used a
Barrett on a border watchtower, and has been working on a
fragging RPG.
One bird takes off and heads directly away from us.
The doctor empties skeet 1 at it, then skeet 2, then
stands there, dumbfounded, as quail take off in all different
directions and angles.
Cisco holds his point in the weeds between the rows.
By weeds I mean a mix of soybeans, oxalis, and thistle, along
with what looks like sedge grasses.
"He's still got one." Sin says.
A very colorful bird explodes out of the weeds and
heads right toward me, gaining height as it accelerates. The
head is black and white. I amaze myself by throwing the gun
to my shoulder and following the bird with the barrels. I can
see the bird over the rib of the side by side double. The sides
of the bird are covered with obvious white dots. The breast of
the bird is a pattern of russet and velvet black.
Somehow, instinctively, I blot out the bird with the
barrels, to lead it, and pull the right forward trigger. The bird
wavers in flight but keeps coming.
"Shoot again." Sin yells.
I manage to find the left rear trigger, re‐establish lead
by blocking out the bird again, and fire again.
The bird flaps its wings violently and begins a perfectly
vertical climb.
"It's towering." Sin says. "I once saw a grouse do this.
It flew until it was out of sight, and, seconds later, came
crashing back to earth."
"What makes them do this?" Miguel asks, hardly
believing what he is seeing.
"One or more of the pellets have hit an optic nerve."
Sin says. "It can't see anymore."
"A pellet has hit an auditory nerve." The doctor says.
"It no longer has a sense of orientation. It's experiencing
vertigo while in flight."
"Anyway," Sin says, "it has no idea where it is, and the
only thing it is now aware of is gravity, so it's going to fight
gravity until its heart gives out."
We all crane our necks backward to keep looking up.
The bird climbs ever higher. Bird and unmanned aircraft
collide. The bird instantly becomes a large cloud of feathers.
The aircraft slows violently, starts its dive, then spirals slowly
earthward, disintegrating as its descent speed increases.
The craft hits earth, and feathers drift down like
snowflakes.
"Now I've seen everything." Miguel says.
"Can you imagine the poor guy in New Mexico remote
piloting that thing?" The doctor says. "The last thing you saw
was WHAT?"
"I've heard of doubles in upland bird shooting." Sin
says. "But this takes the cake."
Cisco goes over to the wreckage of the craft. He sniffs
it, wondering, most likely, why it smells like a quail. He looks to
consider peeing on it, but then lowers his leg.
"Well, young lady." Sin says. "You've just become a
legend. We'll be telling our grandchildren about this. We'll be
telling YOUR grandchildren about this. What do you have to
say for yourself?"
"I'm speechless." I manage to say.
"Just like grouse shooting in New England, huh?" Sin
says. "The only thing now is the bird you just knocked down is
worth four million dollars."
"It's not nice to mess with Moctezuma." The doctor
says. "Right, Miguel?"