poker-faced about his "prescription." Nobody ever wanted to argue much with a paraplegic. The line of retired sightseers froze when the smell of the mota hit them. They glanced back nervously at Garrett, then dissolved. We no longer had butts obstructing our view of the bridge.
Maia and I both refused the joint, politely. Then Garrett spent half an hour telling us about his last Parrot-head tour of the South, his asshole bosses at RNI, the impending collapse of Austin society at the hands of Silicon Valley transplants.
"Damn Californians," he concluded.
"I beg your pardon," said Maia.
Garrett grinned. "You can come into the state, honey. It's just this ugly bastard you brought with you."
I showed Garrett a hand gesture. Maia laughed.
It got dark and cool. God poured grenadine on the horizon. Finally, when he was ready to talk business, Garrett said: "So what's all this about, little brother?"
I told him. For a minute Garrett blew smoke. He stared at me, then at Maia's legs. His expression told me he'd just reevaluated my IQ downward a hefty percentage.
"So you and Maia are looking for - "
"Lillian," I said.
"More or less," said Maia.
Garrett shook his head. "Unreal."
"Can you look at the disk for us?" I asked Garrett.
Cameras flashed as the first few bats flitted overhead like sparrows with hangovers. Garrett glanced up at them, shook his head to indicate that the real show hadn't begun yet, then turned back to us. He pulled his tie-dyed shirt back down over his belly.
"I don't guess you want my advice," he said.
"Not really, " I said.
"Sounds to me like this is your old girlfriend's gig," he said. "Turn this shit over to somebody else and walk, little brother."
Somebody on the bridge shouted. When I looked up, a woman in pink was leaning over the railing with her arms dangling into a steady stream of bats.
"They tickle!" she shouted to her friends. People laughed. More cameras went off.
"Fuckers," said Garrett. "The flashes disorient the hell out of the bats. They run into cars and shit. Don't they know that? Fuckers!"
The last word he shouted into the crowd. Only a few people turned around. Nobody wanted to argue with him, maybe, but nobody wanted to pay him any attention, either.
"Tres?"
In the twilight Maia's face was losing its features, so it was hard to guess her expression, but her arm still pressed against mine warmer than ever. She waited for me to say something. When I didn't, she turned to Garrett.
"Can you look at it, Garrett?" she asked.
His scowl softened. Maybe it was Maia's hand on his armrest. Maybe it was the joint.
"Sure," he said. "Whatever. But it seems to me you got to get a life, little brother. Picking at old wounds--fuck, if I spent my life with that they'd've locked me up by now."
He met my eyes only for a second, then he laughed and shook his head. Whatever pain was there, it had been buried a long time ago under drug abuse, wildness, testiness, and arrogance - all the Navarre family values.
I couldn't help it. I tried again to imagine Garrett at those dark railroad tracks twenty years ago. The confident train-hitcher, the intractable hippie, running away from home for the twentieth and last time - the one time he'd sprinted to the freight car and missed the rungs. I tried to see his face, pale with shock, looking desperately at the black glistening lake where his legs had been. I tried to imagine him for once without that cultivated son-of-a-bitch smile. But he'd been alone then and he was still alone with it. There was no way to imagine what Garrett had said or thought two decades ago, staring at those wet rails that had mercifully sealed the blood flow. He'd been alone and conscious for more than an hour by the time my sister Shelley found him.
"Old wounds," he said now. "Fuck that."
Then the bats came out for real. Cameras stopped flashing. People's mouths dropped. We all just stared at the endless cloud of smoke drifting east into the Hill Country, smoke looking for a few jillion pounds of insects to eat.
Garrett smiled like a kid at the matinee.
"Un-fucking-real," he said.
In ten minutes more bats passed over our heads than the total number of people in South Texas. Somewhere in that time Maia had taken my hand and I hadn't pulled it away.
The tourists unfroze. Then one by one, growing bored with the bats, they drifted off to the parking lot. Maia and I stayed