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The Manager Said “Six To Eight Weeks” — Carlos Santana Said “Now. Cash.” D

Summer 2019. Bourne, Texas. A guitar  repair shop on Main Street. At 2 in the morning,   a production truck backs into the wall. Four  guitars on the floor. None of them belong to   Rafuio Delgado. Every one of them entrusted  to him. In 40 years at his father’s shop.   He has never lost a single instrument.  He goes to the production company three mornings.

Three mornings they send him away. The  fourth morning, his grandson stands beside   him with sandpaper still in his hand.  Across the street, a man in a fedora is looking   at the crack in the wall. Nobody recognizes him  yet. And this is how the story begins. Bourne is   a small town 30 mi northwest of San Antonio, right  where the Hill Country starts.

On the west end of   Main Street in the ground floor of a two-story  stone building, there is a guitar repair shop.   A handpainted sign above the window. Old now, the  letters a little soft at the edges. Delgado and   Sun established 1981. June 2019. A large music  festival is going up on the open ground south   of town. Three days, four stages, 18,000 tickets.  The production trucks start arriving a week early.

A few more every day. The long trailers shake the  stone buildings as they roll down Main Street.   Nobody complains. The festival brings money into  town. On a Tuesday night at 2 in the morning,   a driver hauling stage equipment tries a tight  turn at the back entrance of the festival grounds.   It is dark. The trailer swings right and strikes  the west wall of the repair shop. 3 seconds.

Inside, the shelves shutter. Wood cracks.  The driver gets out, looks at the wall,   writes a phone number on a piece of paper, slides  it under the door. He drives on. Rafuio Delgato   finds the paper at 6:00 in the morning. He comes  in at 6 every morning. has for 40 years. He is 63   years old. His hands are the hands of a man who  has held files and sandpaper since he was 14.

An   old cut on his left thumb from a Martin D28 saddle  in 1994. A thin burn across his right wrist where   a soldering iron slipped in 2003. He puts the key  in the lock, opens the door, turns on the light.   Then he sees the wall. The shelf on the west  side has come down. Seven guitars were on it.   Four are on the floor. A neck snapped clean off.  A body cracked through the middle. Strings loose.

None of these guitars belong to Rafuio. Everyone  belongs to a customer. Everyone held in trust.   Each one has a small wooden tag. Refugeio has been  writing those tags for 40 years. Customer’s name,   make of the guitar, date. He opens at 6:00,  closes at 7:00, eats lunch on the workbench.   His coffee always goes cold because he does not  put down what is in his hands.

There is one guitar   repair man within 30 mi of Hill Country. There  is an unwritten rule on Main Street. Everybody   knows it. The shop owners look out for each  other. 40 years nobody has broken that rule.   Now four of those customers instruments are on  the floor. Rafuio reads the tags one at a time.   His father’s voice comes to him.

Aurelio Delgado  opened this shop in 1981 with money saved from 22   years in a San Antonio factory. Learned guitar  repair in Mishawakan from his own father.   First three years in Bourne, he barely made a  living. Fourth year, the town priest brought in a   broken acoustic. Aurelio fixed it in two days. The  priest said his name in Sunday’s sermon. Monday,   three customers came in. Then five.

The name moved  through town the way a name does when the work   is honest. Aurelio died at the workbench in 2002  with an unfinished violin neck in his hand. Rafuio   opened the shop the next morning. Rafuio sits  down by the phone. He calls his four customers,   tells each one the same thing. Your guitar was  damaged. It will take a little longer, but I   give you my word. I will take care of it. By the  time he finishes the fourth call, it is past 7.

That morning, he walks to the production office.  A white container at the north end of the festival   grounds. Rafuio knocks. A young assistant opens.  Rafuio explains the truck, the wall, the guitars.   The assistant pulls out a form. Fill this  out. We will call you. Rafuio fills it out.   His pen stops when he writes the address. Same  address for 40 years. He goes home. Nobody calls.

Second day, same container, same assistant.  Your claim is on file. Refugeio asks when.   The assistant shrugs. That is how it works.  Refugeio goes home. Nobody calls. That night,   Carlos Santana is in San Antonio, 30 mi south.  Concert tomorrow night, but he came a day early.   72 years old. 3 weeks on a tour bus, a different  city every night. Tucson, Phoenix, Albuquerque.

He does not go to the hotel. He goes to  market square alone, fedora and dark glasses.   His father Jose played mariachi in that square  40ome years ago. A violin and a fedora. Carlos   used to follow the sound through the streets  as a boy. He finds the square. His father left   this world 20 years ago, but the stones have not  changed.

He sits on a bench for half an hour and   does not do anything at all. The next morning he  is driving through Bourne, a rented sedan, black,   nothing you would notice. He stops on Main Street  for a coffee. He walks, looks at the storefronts,   passes the town’s only traffic light. He  comes to the repair shop, reads the sign.   Delgado and sun. He sees the cracked wall, sees  the broken bricks at the base of it. He stops.

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At that moment, Rafuio and Marco come out of  the shop. Third morning, Marco is 19. Rifujio’s   grandson. He has been working in the shop for  2 years. He was accepted to engineering school.   He did not go. One morning, he walked into the  shop, put on the apron, and never took it off.   The sandpaper from this morning is still  in his hand.

Rafuio is holding the form   they gave him at the production office. They  start walking toward the festival grounds.   Carlos takes a sip of his coffee. He watches.  Rafuio walks into the white container.   Marco pushes past the assistant straight to  the desk. The production manager is behind it.   44 18 years in the business. 40 events a  year, a different town each time.

Rafuio   walks to the desk. Four guitars, he says. Everyone  belongs to a customer. Everyone held in trust.   He needs the repair costs and compensation.  The production manager looks at the file,   adjusts his glasses. Contact your insurance, he  says. 6 to 8 weeks if we are found liable. 6 to   8 weeks. Rafujio<unk>’s customers are expecting  their guitars back this week. He says so.

Nothing changes on the production manager’s  face. He closes the file. That is all I can do.   You are welcome to open a new claim. Marco  touches Rafuio’s arm. Let us go, Abu.   Rafuio does not move. He looks at the manager.  The manager has already turned back to his file,   picked up his phone, moved on to the next  conversation. Rafuio turns. He walks out.

Marco follows. The assistant closes the door. They  walk back to Main Street. Marco says something,   but Rafuio is not listening. Rafuio leans against  the cracked wall. He takes a cigarette from his   pocket. He does not light it. He holds it. Carlos  is standing across the street.

Coffee in his hand,   white fedora, dark glasses. You could not  tell him from a tourist. Nobody looks at him.   He is looking at everything. His coffee  has gone cold. He looks at Rafuio’s face   at the crack in the wall at the form in his hand.  He reads the whole story without hearing a word.   Three days, three forms, three refusals. One wall,  four guitars. a man standing outside his own door.

Carlos drops the coffee in a trash can. He thinks  of the bench in Market Square. His father played   there and nobody knew his name. Just a violin  and a fedora. He looks at Rafuio’s sign. Delgado   and son. The and son has faded, but you can read  it. Carlos takes out his phone, dials a number,   a short conversation. He puts the phone away, gets  in his car, drives back to San Antonio.

But the   next morning, he comes back. Fourth morning,  Carlos Santana on Main Street. Same fedora,   same glasses, fresh coffee. This time he walks  straight to the shop. Refugeio is at the door.   Marco beside him, sandpaper in his hand. Rafuio  sees him. The man from yesterday. Tall, thin,   quiet, a tourist. What happened? Carlos says.  Rafujio looks up at him.

He does not know this   man, but there is something in the way. Carlos  stands. The patience of a man who is in no hurry.   Rafuio tells him, “The truck, the wall, the  guitars, three mornings, three forms, the   production manager and his 6 to 8 weeks.” Carlos  does not interrupt once. When Rafuio finishes,   Carlos nods once. “These guitars,” he says. All  your customers all held in trust.

Is that right?   Rafujio nods. Carlos nods again. Then he turns  and starts walking toward the festival grounds.   Rafuio watches him go. Just a tourist, he thinks.  What is he going to do? Carlos walks to the white   container. The assistant is at the door, radio in  hand. Carlos walks past him. He doesn’t knock.

He   goes in. The production manager is at his desk. on  the phone. He sees Carlos and puts the phone down.   He looks at him for one second, then another. He  has had headliner lists memorized for 18 years.   His eyes narrow. The man standing in  front of him is tonight’s main act.   He stands up. Mr. Santana, he says, “We  were not expecting you until this evening.

Is there a problem?” Carlos takes two steps inside  the container. small space, files on the desk,   the festival plan, stage diagrams. Carlos does not  look at any of them. The repairmen, Carlos says,   “The shop on Main Street. Your truck hit  his wall. Four guitars damaged. Everyone   belongs to a customer. He has been at your door  3 days and nobody has listened.

” The manager’s   face settles into a familiar expression. “Mr.  Santana,” he says. This is an insurance matter.   We do not have authority to make direct payments.  We gave him a form and Carlos raises one hand   palm toward the manager. The movement is  small but there is nothing uncertain about it.   The manager stops talking. How much? Carlos  says. The manager looks at him. The wall repair.

The guitar repairs or replacements. The man’s lost  working days. How much? The manager takes off his   glasses. Sets them on the desk. Realistically  about $6,000. He says maybe seven. Carlos   reaches into his back pocket and takes out a long  brown leather wallet. He opens it on the desk.   He counts $100 bills onto the surface next to the  files, one at a time, slow. Neither man speaks. 

The container is quiet except for the generator  humming outside. 70 bills, $7,000.$7,000,   Carlos says. Now cash. The manager looks at  the bills. Looks at Carlos. Looks at the bills.   You will have the wall repaired this week,  Carlos says. You will write the man a receipt.   Paid in full. Today’s date.

Now, the manager  opens his desk drawer, takes out a receipt book,   writes the date. Rafujio Delgado. Delgato  and son. Main Street, born, Texas. $7,000.   Paid in full. Signs it. The manager holds the  receipt out to Carlos. Carlos does not take it.   Give it to him. Carlos says, “Take it  yourself.” The manager takes the receipt,   walks out of the container, crosses the parking  lot, walks toward Main Street. Carlos follows.

The manager reaches the shop. Rafujio is still  at the door. The cigarette still in his hand,   still unlit. Marco beside him. The manager holds  the receipt out to Rafuio. Rafuio looks at it,   reads it, reads it again. $7,000 paid in full.  Today’s date, the production manager’s signature.   Have you ever had someone hand you a  piece of paper that changes everything?   Your hands do not believe it right away. Rafujio’s  hands shake once, then they steady.

He looks at   the manager, then at the man behind him. White  fedora, dark glasses. He had thought tourist,   but a tourist would not have done this. Who are  you? Rafujio says, “Why did you do this?” “I do   not know you. What do I owe you?” Carlos takes one  step forward. He does not take off his glasses.   “You do not owe me anything,” he says. “Your  father fixed my guitar once a long time ago.

Charged me next to nothing.” Carlos stops. He  looks at the sign above the door. Delado and son.   He raises one finger and points at the Anson  part. That was not there back then, he says.   He looks at Marco, looks at the sandpaper in his  hand. The right place, he says. Carlos turns,   walks toward the car. Rafujio watches him. He  wants to say something, but the words do not come.

Carlos opens the car door. Marco looks at his  phone. Types something, stares at the screen,   looks up, stares again. Abu, Marco says. His  voice has changed. Rafuio turns. That man,   Carlos Santana. Rafujio looks at the parking  lot. The black sedan is pulling out. White   fedora behind the wheel, dark glasses. The car  turns right at the end of Main Street and is gone.

Rafujio looks at the receipt in his hand.  He walks into the shop. He sets the receipt   on the workbench right beside the place where his  father’s violin neck has been sitting since 2002.   That evening, Carlos Santana plays San Antonio.  15,000 people. Nobody from Bourne is in the crowd.   4 days later, June 26th, a crew sent by  the production manager repairs the west   wall of the shop. They pull out the old  bricks, set new ones, smooth the plaster.

The manager comes by once to look. He and  Rafuio make eye contact. Neither man speaks.   The manager turns and walks away. Rafujio repairs  three of the four damaged guitars himself,   spends 3,000 on parts, sets the rest aside  to return to his customers. The fourth,   a 1967 Gibson J 45 with the neck broken clean  off at the root is beyond repair.

That guitar   is still on the shelf. The tag is still on it.  The second week of July, a box arrives by UPS,   San Francisco return address. Inside the box is a  guitar case. Inside the case is a 1967 Gibson J45,   the same model down to the year. There is a note  with it, handwritten short for your customer.   CS Rujio reads the note. He stands up and looks  at the photograph of his father on the wall.

Marco Delgado keeps working in the shop. In 2021,  he takes on his first solo repair, a customer’s   broken classical guitar. When he is done, Rafuio  picks it up, turns it, holds it to the light.   Good, he says. One word. Marco already knows that  word. The production manager does something he   has never done before his next festival.

In September, a week before setup begins,   he visits every shop around the festival grounds  one by one. He knocks on the door, introduces   himself, leaves a phone number. If anything  goes wrong, call me, he says. Call me directly.   18 years in the business and this is the  first time. Carlos Santana never spoke of   that morning in Bourne. Not in an interview, not  on a stage, not in a documentary.

The tour went on   Dallas the next night, Houston after that, another  stage after that. Rafuio Delgado still opens the   shop at 6 every morning behind the workbench where  his father stood. The crack in the wall is gone,   but Rafujio knows where it was. On the workbench  beside the register, two objects sit side by side.

The first is a handwritten note by Carlos  Santana. The second is the unfinished violin   neck that fell from Aurelio’s hand in 2002, 17  years between them. Every afternoon at 3:00,   the sun comes through the window and falls  across both of them. It stays for a while,   then it moves on. Main Street has not changed. The  sign is still there. Delgado and sun hand painted.

The and sun has faded some, but you can read  it. Last summer, Marco wanted to repaint it.   Refugeio said, “No, my father wrote that.” He  said, “Leave it. It stayed.” We’ll say goodbye   in a moment with a quote from Carlos Santana. But  first, we make these videos to carry what   lives inside Carlos Santana’s heart to the  next generation.

Subscribe and leave a like   if you’d like to support us. Let’s close  with something Carlos Santana once said.   There is no greater reward than working from  your heart and making a difference in the world.

Disclaimer : This content may be created by AI for entertainment purposes. Any resemblance to real persons, events, or places is coincidental.