If you want to find God, you can go by rail or catch a jeepney, repaired a thousand times and driven by a madman with a rosary on the mirror. Tell him you seek the Divine and be certain
that he does not misconstrue your meaning. You go down General Luna street to the place where the Moon and Mars both must bow to the great glittering of the Creator's face.
When you arrive, look for the Indian Laurel tree where a crow has come down the backbone of the Sierra Madre to wait here for you. He knows you have lost much, your child, your home.
The Sierra Madre crow can offer only baubles, still-warm bits of pan desal bread, and his wise mein. He is here, like the church of San Agustin, as mournful as the Christ, as wounded, as kind.
Go inside, where adobe bricks contain time itself, and the Spanish artifacts reconcile gold with rust. There you will find Dibella, Alberoni, majesty and peace. Outside, the kind crow, the Philippine sky, the laurel trees.