The Last King of Texas Read online

Page 16

Page 16

 

  "Im trying not to dwell on that. "

  She shut her eyes. "This isnt your fault. Im sorry. I dont have a box. I dont even know what things are his. "

  "Let it wait. His things dont have to go anywhere. "

  Her expression didnt change, but a thick tear traced its way down the base of her nose.

  She tried to stand and couldnt quite make it.

  She frowned, looked into her purse, then fished out an orange prescription bottle and stared at the label accusingly.

  "How many?" I asked.

  "They insisted. I broke a window. "

  "I remember. "

  "The doctor said the sedatives—" She stopped, still frowning. "Two pills. I think I took two. I dont remember. "

  She tried to put the bottle back in her purse and dropped it on the floor instead. "I need to go. "

  "Youre not doing so great. Is there anyone who could—"

  "Take me home?" she interrupted.

  "Yeah. "

  She looked up at me wearily, her expression a mixture of resentment and plea.

  I suddenly realized I had just made an offer.

  FIFTEEN

  I had to wake Ines Brandon when we pulled in front of her house on Castano. With some effort, I extracted her from the VW, got her up the five steps, navigated her around the Big Wheel and the street chalk.

  Before I could ring the bell on the front porch, a scowling woman opened the door.

  "I tell you," she scolded Ines.

  The womans arms were beefy slabs. Her upper body was stuffed into the worlds largest black Papal Visit souvenir T-shirt, the faded picture of John Paul II on the front unflatteringly distorted by the bulges of the womans breasts. Her stubby legs threatened to bust out of turquoise sweatpants and her hair was pulled back in a painfully tight bun. Her feet were bare. Her face was as brutally sculpted as a Mayan pedestal — weathered and wide and flat, designed to withstand several thousand tons. She smelled pungently of cloves. She took Ines arm and guided her into the house.

  "This is Mr. Navarre," Ines mumbled. "I didnt have a box. "

  The woman cursed at her gently in Spanish, then looked back at me and said in a stern voice: "Stay. "

  "Arf," I said.

  The woman didnt react. She and Ines disappeared down the hallway. I heard the sounds of minor protests, chastisements, orders to take off shoes. Miniblinds were snapped shut.

  There was even less to see in the living room than there had been before. Most of the boxes were now taped closed. All the framed photographs had been removed from the end table. The broken window in the dining room had been covered with a piece of cardboard.

  The Pope-shirted woman reappeared from the hallway, wiping her palms on her turquoise pants. Her squashed, disapproving eyes zeroed in on me. "Thank you, go. "

  "Youre Paloma?"

  The woman gave me a grudging nod, then brushed past and went to the front door. She opened it, looked at me expectantly.

  I pointed down the hallway where Ines had disappeared. "You get her to sleep all right?"

  "No Ingles," Paloma suddenly decided. She glared at me obstinately.

  "No problema," I assured her. Then, still in Spanish, "We had to leave Mrs. Brandons car at UTSA. The north visitors lot. Itll be all right for this afternoon, but someone should pick it up by tomorrow morning. "

  Paloma continued glaring at me, letting me know that nothing could have insulted her sensibilities worse than a fluent gringo.

  "Thank you, go," she tried again, in English.

  "I bet youre great with solicitors. Those aluminum-siding guys from Sears. "

  She shoved the door shut, irritated. "You wont go. Why?"

  "Im curious. "

  "La policia. " She scowled. "They were curious. The reporters, tambien. No more. Senora Brandon needs sleep. "

  "Youve been with the family long?"

  "Five years. Since Miguel. "

  "Since Michael was born — their son. "

  "Si. "

  "Is Michael here?"

  "No. "

  As if on cue, a whirring toy sound wailed from one of the back bedrooms, then died. It sounded like one of those sparking ray guns.

  Palomas stone face darkened.

  "Mira, Paloma," I told her. "I dont mean to pry. Ive been hired to take Dr. Brandons job. Id like to know how he got himself killed. I dont want to follow in his footsteps. "

  Palomas eyes drifted away from me and fixed on the fireplace. She scowled at the bullet holes in the limestone, as if remembering exactly where she had scrubbed, and how hard, and what the color of the water and the soap foam had been afterward.

  "Were leaving this place," she mused. "For now, an apartment. Maybe later, out of town. "

  "And will that return things to normal?"

  Paloma made a sound deep in her throat, like stone grinding. "You wish to see normal?"

  She grabbed my wrist and tugged me down the hallway, past a closed door on the right, past an open bathroom, to a door on the left that was papered with foldout animal posters from various scholastic magazines.

  Paloma pushed me into the doorway and held me there, her fingers digging into my shoulders. I was expecting to see your basic boys room, like Jems — buckets of Tinkertoys and Legos, miniature furniture, piles of little clothes and shoes. Everything in primary colors.

  What I saw instead were sheets. At least ten of them — white, blue, daisy-patterned, brown — draped waist-level wall-to-wall, covering everything. The cloth sagged in canyons, rose here and there to peaks that were probably chairs underneath. Square outlines hinted of tabletops, a bed. Where the sheet corners met, they were weighted down by heavy books to keep them together. In some places they were tied off or safety-pinned. There seemed to be talcum powder everywhere — sprinkled liberally over the tops of the sheets, gathered in thick drifts where the cloth sagged, hanging in the air with a cloying scent. The room looked like it had been commandeered for a Christo art event.

  Three feet from the bedroom door was a small triangular opening in the sheet tent. A toy ray gun lay on the carpet next to an empty plastic Lunchables tray and a Toys "R" Us circular with all the coupons cut out.

  Paloma pushed past me and managed to lower herself enough to scoop up the trash.

  "Miguel," she grunted. "Ahi. "

  Nothing moved.

  Outside the bedroom windows I could see the backyard — about twenty feet of grass, a barbecue pit, swing set, pecan tree. In the corner a wooden garage was topped with a second-story apartment. The day was sunny, but it felt miles away outside the gloom and the powder and the dust.

  "Miguel!" Paloma called again.

  This time sheets rustled in the corner. A little spherical dent appeared in them, slid toward the entrance, then emerged at the opening as the head of a five-year-old boy.

  If I had not known he was half Latino, I never wouldve guessed it. His skin was paler than mine, paler than damn near anybodys. His eyes were blue like Aaron Brandons, his hair reddish like his mothers.

  He was wearing a T-shirt and underwear and nothing else. He peered up at me with mild curiosity.

  "Miguel," Paloma said, "this is Senor Navarre. Senor Navarre is a college teacher like your papa. "

  Michael seemed to be trying to reach some conclusion about my face, as if he werent quite sure if it was real or a pretty good mask.

  "Hey, Michael," I said.

  "This is my cave," he informed me.

  "I can see that. Its a real nice cave. "

  Michael suddenly developed a keen interest in picking the skin off his knuckle.

  "He needs to clean it up," Paloma grumbled, but not like she expected any action.

  "Whats with the powder?" I asked.

  "Its fog," Michael said to his knuckle. "Makes you invisible. "

  "Thats good," I said. "But just in case they get through, you zap them, right?"

  He snatched his ray gun, gave
me an upward glance.

  Paloma receded in the doorway and gestured for me to follow. I told Michael Id see him around.

  The last I saw of him he was digging the muzzle of his ray gun into his bare knee.

  "This," Paloma said, "is normal. "

  It took me a few steps before I could speak. "Since his fathers death?"

  "Before. Since the fights. Now will you go?"

  We stopped in the living room, Paloma once again holding the front door open for me. Her face seemed even more compressed, her eyes almost slits, her mouth flattened into a hard amber line. The irreverently stretched Holy Father smiled up at me from Palomas shirt, one papal eye bigger than the other.

  "Ill go," I promised. "But the apartment in back, above the garage — is that yours?"

  She stiffened.

  "You were the witness — the one who IDed Zeta Sanchez for the police. "

  "Madre de Dios, if you dont leave now—"

  I didnt make her finish the threat. I said good-bye and went out to my car. When I looked back, Paloma stood motionless in the doorway — her eyes dark, her face hard and impassive, as if shed turned back into red Texas granite. I couldnt blame her for that. Anything as soft as human flesh could never have supported the weight of the Brandon household.

  SIXTEEN

  Sometimes necessity is the mother of invention. Sometimes necessity is just a mother.

  All the way back to the University, I brainstormed ideas for the graduate seminar, knowing I would have just enough time to stumble into the classroom with none of Brandons backlogged papers graded and no prepared lecture notes. I kept trying to come up with some brilliant game plan to make a good first impression. At ten past one, sitting on a table in front of eight graduate students in HSS 2. 0. 22, I was still without that plan.

  "So. " I tried to sound enthusiastic. "I thought wed start by going around — tell me your names, a little about yourselves. Ask whatever you want about me.

  Who wants to start?"

  No hands shot into the air.

  I waved encouragingly toward a couple of mid-fiftyish women by the door. They were crocheting from a shared bag of pink yarn.

  "You ladies?"

  They introduced themselves as Edie and Marfa, escaped housewives. Marfa told me she wanted to read some medieval romances. Edie smiled and gave me the eye.

  "Ah-ha," I said. "And you, sir?"

  The elderly man cleared his throat. He wore a mechanics jumpsuit and a buzz cut. "Sergeant Irwin, USAF, retired. Im still in this class because the military is paying every penny, and so far Im damn glad of it. "

  I thanked him for sharing, then waved toward the next man — a young Anglo in a Mens Wearhouse Italian suit.

  He looked up from his organizer long enough to say, "Brian. I run a small carpeting business and Im probably going to drop the class. Dont mind me. "

  Behind Brian was Gregory, the giant radish mail boy who delivered pipe bombs.

  "Always nice to see a familiar face," I told him.

  Gregory mumbled something. He didnt meet my eyes.

  Next to him sat two guys in Nirvana T-shirts and jeans and plentiful chains clipped to their belt loops. Simon and Blake. They asked me how it was hanging. I asked them how theyd come to choose a medieval literature class and they shrugged and grinned like Class? Were in class?

 

    The Blood of Olympus Read onlineThe Blood of OlympusThe Lightning Thief Read onlineThe Lightning ThiefThe Hidden Oracle Read onlineThe Hidden OracleThe Dark Prophecy Read onlineThe Dark ProphecyThe Sea of Monsters Read onlineThe Sea of MonstersThe Sword of Summer Read onlineThe Sword of SummerThe Lost Hero Read onlineThe Lost HeroThe Ship of the Dead Read onlineThe Ship of the DeadCamp Half-Blood Confidential Read onlineCamp Half-Blood ConfidentialThe Burning Maze Read onlineThe Burning MazeThe Battle of the Labyrinth Read onlineThe Battle of the LabyrinthThe Hammer of Thor Read onlineThe Hammer of ThorThe Last Olympian Read onlineThe Last OlympianThe Red Pyramid Read onlineThe Red PyramidThe Maze of Bones Read onlineThe Maze of BonesThe Son of Sobek Read onlineThe Son of SobekThe Titans Curse Read onlineThe Titans CurseThe Staff of Serapis Read onlineThe Staff of SerapisThe Crown of Ptolemy Read onlineThe Crown of PtolemyBig Red Tequila Read onlineBig Red TequilaPercy Jackson: The Complete Series Read onlinePercy Jackson: The Complete SeriesVespers Rising Read onlineVespers RisingThe Lightning Thief: The Graphic Novel Read onlineThe Lightning Thief: The Graphic NovelThe Mark of Athena Read onlineThe Mark of AthenaThe House of Hades Read onlineThe House of HadesThe Son of Neptune Read onlineThe Son of NeptuneThe Demigod Diaries Read onlineThe Demigod DiariesThe Serpents Shadow Read onlineThe Serpents ShadowThe Titan's Curse pjato-3 Read onlineThe Titan's Curse pjato-3The Demigods of Olympus: An Interactive Adventure Read onlineThe Demigods of Olympus: An Interactive AdventureThe Tyrant's Tomb Read onlineThe Tyrant's TombThe Demigod Files Read onlineThe Demigod FilesPercy Jackson and the Battle of the Labyrinth Read onlinePercy Jackson and the Battle of the LabyrinthThe Throne of Fire Read onlineThe Throne of FireThe Serpent's Shadow (The Kane Chronicles, Book Three) Read onlineThe Serpent's Shadow (The Kane Chronicles, Book Three)Mission Road Read onlineMission RoadThe Devil Went Down to Austin Read onlineThe Devil Went Down to AustinThe Tower of Nero Read onlineThe Tower of NeroThe Heroes of Olympus: The Complete Series Read onlineThe Heroes of Olympus: The Complete SeriesRebel Island Read onlineRebel IslandThe Trials of Apollo Camp Jupiter Classified: A Probatio's Journal Read onlineThe Trials of Apollo Camp Jupiter Classified: A Probatio's JournalPercy Jackson's Greek Gods Read onlinePercy Jackson's Greek GodsThe Last King of Texas Read onlineThe Last King of TexasThe Throne of Fire kc-2 Read onlineThe Throne of Fire kc-2Magnus Chase and the Sword of Summer Read onlineMagnus Chase and the Sword of SummerMaze of Bones - 39 Clues 01 Read onlineMaze of Bones - 39 Clues 01Magnus Chase and the Gods of Asgard, Book 2: The Hammer of Thor Read onlineMagnus Chase and the Gods of Asgard, Book 2: The Hammer of ThorKane 2 - The Throne of Fire Read onlineKane 2 - The Throne of FireThe Last Olympian pjato-5 Read onlineThe Last Olympian pjato-5The Battle of the Labyrinth pjato-4 Read onlineThe Battle of the Labyrinth pjato-4From Percy Jackson: Camp Half-Blood Confidential: Your Real Guide to the Demigod Training Camp (Trials of Apollo) Read onlineFrom Percy Jackson: Camp Half-Blood Confidential: Your Real Guide to the Demigod Training Camp (Trials of Apollo)For Magnus Chase: Hotel Valhalla Guide to the Norse Worlds: Your Introduction to Deities, Mythical Beings, & Fantastic Creatures Read onlineFor Magnus Chase: Hotel Valhalla Guide to the Norse Worlds: Your Introduction to Deities, Mythical Beings, & Fantastic CreaturesSouthtown tn-5 Read onlineSouthtown tn-5From Percy Jackson_Camp Half-Blood Confidential Read onlineFrom Percy Jackson_Camp Half-Blood ConfidentialThe Lightning Thief pjatob-1 Read onlineThe Lightning Thief pjatob-1The Sea of Monsters pjatob-2 Read onlineThe Sea of Monsters pjatob-2For Magnus Chase_Hotel Valhalla Guide to the Norse Worlds Read onlineFor Magnus Chase_Hotel Valhalla Guide to the Norse WorldsPercy Jackson and the Bronze Dragon Read onlinePercy Jackson and the Bronze DragonPercy Jackson: The Complete Series (Books 1, 2, 3, 4, 5) Read onlinePercy Jackson: The Complete Series (Books 1, 2, 3, 4, 5)The Mark of Athena (The Heroes of Olympus, Book Three) Read onlineThe Mark of Athena (The Heroes of Olympus, Book Three)The Heroes of Olympus: The Demigod Diaries Read onlineThe Heroes of Olympus: The Demigod DiariesThe Last King of Texas - Rick Riordan Read onlineThe Last King of Texas - Rick RiordanPercy Jackson and the Sword of Hades Read onlinePercy Jackson and the Sword of HadesBrooklyn House Magician's Manual Read onlineBrooklyn House Magician's ManualThe Kane Chronicles, Book One: The Red Pyramid Read onlineThe Kane Chronicles, Book One: The Red PyramidThe Trials of Apollo, Book Three: The Burning Maze Read onlineThe Trials of Apollo, Book Three: The Burning MazeThe Demigods of Olympus Read onlineThe Demigods of OlympusBig Red Tiquila - Rick Riordan Read onlineBig Red Tiquila - Rick RiordanDemigods and Magicians Read onlineDemigods and MagiciansPercy Jackson and The Stolen Chariot Read onlinePercy Jackson and The Stolen ChariotThe Mark of Athena hoo-3 Read onlineThe Mark of Athena hoo-3From Percy Jackson: Camp Half-Blood Confidential: Your Real Guide to the Demigod Training Camp Read onlineFrom Percy Jackson: Camp Half-Blood Confidential: Your Real Guide to the Demigod Training CampThe House of Hades hoo-4 Read onlineThe House of Hades hoo-4The Devil went down to Austin tn-4 Read onlineThe Devil went down to Austin tn-49 from the Nine Worlds (Magnus Chase and the Gods of Asgard) Read online9 from the Nine Worlds (Magnus Chase and the Gods of Asgard)The Trials of Apollo, Book One: The Hidden Oracle Read onlineThe Trials of Apollo, Book One: The Hidden OracleThe Serpent's Shadow kc-3 Read onlineThe Serpent's Shadow kc-3The Son of Neptune hoo-2 Read onlineThe Son of Neptune hoo-2The widower’s two step tn-2 Read onlineThe widower’s two step tn-2The Lost Hero hoo-1 Read onlineThe Lost Hero hoo-1