“Yes, we are quite capable of reading sign. And we spoke to those who witnessed the event.”
“So now your compadres are gone and you should be, too.”
“You are treading on thin ground, snake woman.”
“Why? Are you going to turn
dragon
on me now? That’s a nice example to set for your grandson. But then, you haven’t really given him anything clear to work with, have you? You just sent him out into the world on his own and if he makes it, fine. If he doesn’t, you and your friends step in to deal with him and clear up the mess. It’s all ‘better luck next time.’”
“How we do our business is not your concern.”
“Oh, but it is,” Rita told her. “You’re on my turf now and I say neither you nor your business are welcome here.”
“And you are so powerful you can force me to leave.”
Rita shook her head. “No, but what makes you think I’m alone here?”
Paupau hadn’t been paying attention. If she had, she would have sensed their approach, smelled the animal clans hidden behind their human faces. She could see them now. She didn’t know how many cousins, from how many clans, were standing amid their human counterparts. But there were many. And where the humans were staring at the ruin of the dance hall, talking to each other, these others stood with a cousin’s stillness, their attention only on the snake woman and herself.
She turned back to Rita. “I am of the Yellow Dragon Clan, snake woman. You will need more than this small army to force me away against my will.”
Rita smiled. “They’re not here to fight you. They’re here to see if you’re going to be their new protector. The one they have has served them well, but she grows old now.”
Paupau knew who Rita meant. She had caught the scent as soon as she’d arrived in Santo del Vado Viejo.
“You think a dragon would do a lizard’s job?” she said, unable to keep the condescension from her voice.
Rita’s eyes narrowed. “Señora Elena is the matriarch of an old and revered Gila clan. Speak of her with respect.”
“Because she does such a fine job of upholding her responsibilities.”
“At least she doesn’t let her pride hide her limitations from herself.”
Paupau bit back an angry retort. This snake woman was as bad as the child in the house where her grandson had been boarding. Brash, rude, and unhelpful. Their disrespect brought out the worst in her. But she would rise above it.
“How is any of this my concern?” she asked, keeping her voice mild.
“It’s not. That’s why you need to go. Both you and I know you’re too old a dragon to take a place like this under your wing.”
And then Paupau understood.
“You mean to have James accept the responsibility,” she said.
“Not exactly—or at least not yet. But I think he could work out if you leave him alone.”
Paupau gave a slow nod. “So that is why the fates sent him here.”
“Say what?”
But Paupau didn’t bother to explain. All she said was, “I give you my approval.”
“Wasn’t asking for it, dragon lady. I just want you to go away.”
“And I will do so,” Paupau said. “But I will be keeping watch on the situation. If it gets out of hand again, James’s fate will not be up to me, but to the council as a whole.”
“Yeah, well, we’ll climb that cactus when we have to.”
Paupau gave the snake woman a short brusque bow, then turned and walked away, back straight.
Do me proud, James, she thought as she crossed the parking lot.
She knew she was hard on her grandson, but she had to be. Dragons held far too much power to be allowed to run wild. But they also had to learn to wield the responsibility on their own, because in the end, they protected a place alone. She could only pray that James didn’t draw the council’s attention again. The snake woman had no idea how much worry this night had brought to her.
-
6
-
Not only can water float a boat, it can sink it also .
—CHINESE PROVERB
THE VISIT FROM
Jay’s grandmother was only the first intrusion into what Rosalie thought should be the privacy of their grief. Not long afterward, a detective called reminding them to come down to the station to read and sign the statements they’d made last night. Ramon drove Rosalie and Anna to the police station, but when they were done, reporters were waiting outside. A sympathetic police officer took them out the back way. The press wasn’t as easy to avoid at the wake that evening.
At one point the band members gathered by a side door to get a break from the crowd inside the funeral home. They weren’t there long when a reporter approached. He made the mistake of shoving his microphone in Anna’s face and asking her reaction to what had happened at their gig last night.
“If you don’t get the hell out of here,” she told him, “you’re going to be eating that mic.”
The reporter smiled like she’d made a joke. The smile disappeared when she lunged at him. The reporter almost fell down dodging her. Hector and Rosalie both had to hold her back.
“You’d better go, man,” Hector told him. “She gets like this and it’s all we can do to hang on.”
The reporter beat a hasty retreat.
It wasn’t till later that night, when Anna had been dropped off at home and Tío was still at the restaurant, that Rosalie was able to sit with Ramon on the porch and talk to him about Jay’s journal. At first, Ramon was reluctant to read the notebook himself.
“Please,” Rosalie told him. “I know it’s invading his privacy, but it seems to explain a lot and I really need to talk to someone about what’s in there.”
So Ramon had a look while Rosalie hovered at his shoulder, trying hard not to be impatient for him to be done. After a while, she managed to settle down and look out into the desert night while he read. She studied the shadows across the street, wondering if Lupita was hidden there, watching them right now. Or maybe Jay was.
It was all so impossible, but she’d seen him disappear in the parking lot, vanishing right in front of her. You couldn’t fake that.
When Ramon finally closed the notebook, she gave him an expectant look. He smiled.
“So what was it that you wanted to talk about?” he asked.
She punched him in the shoulder. “Oh, you! Everything. Did you
read
what’s in there?”
“You want to know if it’s true?”
She nodded.
“I can’t say. The hike we took is. The conversations aren’t word-for-word the way I remember them, but it’s still pretty much what we were talking about. But the rest of it . . . ” He shrugged.
“Come on,” she said. “After what we saw in the parking lot . . . how can it not be true?”
“Just because one impossible thing is true doesn’t mean they all are.”
She frowned at him. “But you’re the one who’s always talking about the spirits of the desert and everything.”
He gave her another smile. “I didn’t say I don’t believe what he wrote.”
She raised her fist but he caught it before she could punch him again.
“We have to be reasonable here,” he said.
“Nothing about this has anything to do with reason. That’s what I’m trying to figure out. There’s got to be something we can do to find Jay and help him.”
“I don’t think so,” Ramon said. “It’s amazing and wonderful to find out for sure that the world’s so much bigger than we thought it was a few days ago. And we can think and wonder about it all we want. But our part’s done. Stuff like dragons and animal spirits don’t have a whole lot to do with our lives here. It’s like a storm passed through the barrio and now we have to pick up where we were before it hit. But the magic’s not ours. We got to see it, but now it’s gone.”
“Jay’s our friend,” Rosalie said. “We can’t just pretend he never happened.”
“No, but we were only a part of his life for a moment. He . . . all this stuff has just moved on.”
“But—”
“And it’s dangerous,” Ramon said. “Look what happened to Margarita.”
“That wasn’t Jay’s doing.”
“No, but we could have all died in what followed, and that
was
Jay’s doing.”
Rosalie shook her head. “I’m not giving up on him just because it’s scary. I’ve found ways to work around the danger of living here, and I’ll find a way to work around what’s going on with Jay, too.”
She gave him a fierce look and he had to smile.
“I kind of thought you’d say that,” he said.
“Then why were you arguing with me?”
“I wanted to make sure you knew exactly what you were getting into.”
“That’s a big part of the problem,” she said. “We don’t have any idea, really. Where do we even start?”
“We can try looking for Lupita.”
“Right. We’ll walk around in the desert and call her name.”
“Maybe the uncles can help us.”
“I’m not drinking mescal tea to have visions,” she said.
Ramon shook his head and smiled. “I was thinking more of just talking to them.”
A big crowd gathered in San Miguel Cemetery for Margarita’s funeral. Family and friends, kids from school, fans wearing Malo Malo scarves, holding flowers and pictures of Margarita. Rosalie stood behind Margarita’s family along with the band and their friends. Everyone wore black. She wondered what life was like for kids who didn’t grow up in the barrio, kids who hadn’t been to as many funerals as she had in her seventeen years. Mama and Paulo. Kids from school who had the bad luck to get caught up in
bandas
business. Neighbors in the barrio who were in the wrong place at the wrong time.
There were too many dead.
She’d worn this black dress too many times.
There were a couple of news vans parked outside the cemetery. Occasionally, sunlight winked on the lens of a camera, but no one tried to intrude. Considering the dark looks Anna kept giving the camera crews, they’d be smart to move on before the funeral was over.
Rosalie looked away, returning her attention to the service. She had trouble focusing on Father Ramirez’s words, but the tone of his voice was soothing and she took what comfort she could from it.
Given the circumstances, the day was obscenely beautiful. Clear blue skies, the sun bright, but it wasn’t too hot. It was Margarita’s favorite kind of day. The kind of day when she would try to get everybody to skip school and go out into the desert. Oh, how Rosalie wished she were here now, leaning over to whisper in her ear, “This is way too depressing. Let’s go visit the cacti.”
Rosalie’s gaze lifted past the priest to where the Hierro Madera Mountains rose up from the eastern horizon. But then something closer at hand caught her attention.
Standing a hundred yards away, half-hidden by the tall cross rising above a grave, was a familiar figure. Jay stood with his arms wrapped around himself, his hoodie hanging low over his eyes. She didn’t know how anyone else would feel about him being here, but her heart lifted to see that he was safe and cared enough to pay his respects.
Beside her, Ramon could tell that something had distracted her, but before she could point Jay out, he vanished. It was just like the other night in the parking lot. One moment he was standing there by the cross, the next he was gone.
Ramon leaned closer until his mouth was by her ear. “What is it?”
“Nothing. I’ll tell you later.”
After the service, Margarita’s father came over to them. He pressed Ramon’s hand.
“” he said.
Ramon ducked his head, his gaze on the ground. “”
“”
Ramon raised his gaze. “
”
“”
Rosalie gave them a sharp look. She’d never even considered that any of the band members might want more vengeance than Alambra’s death. Why would they? They weren’t gangbangers. That wasn’t the way they lived their lives, spinning in circles of violence. But she could see from Ramon’s face that he’d been considering it.
How could he have kept it from her?
How
had he kept it from her?
“
” Margarita’s father said.
“”
“bandas
, the gangbangers are still their children. I would not have her remembered in such a way.>”
“do
?>” Ramon asked.
“”
Ramon sighed. He looked away from Señor Vargas, anywhere but at Rosalie.
“” Margarita’s father asked. “”
Finally, Ramon cleared his throat. “”
But even Rosalie knew that when it came to the gangbangers the violence would never end.
She and Ramon stood silently as Señor Vargas returned to his family. They watched the group walk across the cemetery to the waiting cars.
“When were you going to tell me?” Rosalie asked.
“I don’t know,” Ramon said.
“You weren’t going to tell me, were you?”
He finally turned to look at her. “I didn’t know what I was going to do. Maybe nothing. But if I did figure a way I could get back at the Kings, I couldn’t bring you into it.” He held up a hand before she could speak. “You have a large and forgiving heart, Rosie. How could I ever make you a part of anything like that?”