Mission road - By Rick Riordan Page 0,6
I tried to speak, I realized I’d been clenching my jaw.
“Thanks,” I said. “But I should—”
Bang.
The back door rattled.
Robert Johnson evaporated from the doormat, abandoning his tuna can.
“Not again,” Mrs. Loomis muttered.
We were used to unwelcome visitors on the weekends—stray partiers looking for art, free food and beer, not necessarily in that order. Most came to the front door, but some wandered in from the backyard.
“I’ll deal with ’em,” Sam said, going for his water gun.
Then a familiar face appeared at the kitchen window—the friend I’d just been thinking about.
“Keep playing,” I told Sam. “I’ll take care of it.”
I walked into the kitchen, closing the living room door behind me. I went to the back door and let in Ralph Arguello.
“Vato . . .” His voice faltered.
He had blood on his hands. There were speckles of it on his forearms, a large red explosion drying on the belly of his white guayabera.
I don’t remember exactly what I said. Something intelligent like “Oh, shit.”
Ralph pushed past me, collapsed in a chair. He dropped a gun on the breakfast table. His regular .357. At least, it used to be his regular .357 until he got married and swore never to use it again.
Mrs. Loomis called, “Tres? Are you all right?”
Ralph locked eyes with me. His expression was a few volts shy of a stripped power line.
“I’m fine,” I called. “Just an old friend.”
“Zapata set me up,” Ralph croaked. “Two of them. I got one in the gut. The other—”
“Slow down,” I said. “Any of that blood yours?”
“No. No, I don’t think so.”
I drew the shades. I ripped a roll of paper towels off the dispenser and soaked them in hot water.
“Shit, Ralph. Johnny Shoes? What were you thinking?”
“Had to talk to him . . . Supposed to be a goddamn talk.”
“We’ll call Ana.”
“No!” He snatched a steaming wad of paper towels from me and pressed his face into them. “It was self-defense, vato. But Ana can’t . . . she can’t see me like this. You gotta let me rest here—just for a little while.”
Several reasons to say hell, no occurred to me.
If Ralph had acted in self-defense, he needed to come clean with the police immediately. He would already be in deep crap for leaving the scene. Besides, I was in enough trouble with the SAPD.
Still, something in his voice made me hesitate.
The kitchen door creaked open. Sam stuck his head in.
He didn’t look surprised to see a blood-splattered man sitting at our kitchen table.
“Who shot this agent?” he asked.
Ralph and I exchanged looks.
“It was an ambush,” I told Sam. “Our CI gave us bad information.”
“I hate when that happens,” Sam said. “You need an ambulance, son?”
“I’m okay,” said Ralph, a little shaky, but catching on fast. “Thanks, Mr. Barrera.”
“Special Agent Barrera,” Sam corrected.
“Sorry, sir.”
“Sam,” I said, “we don’t want to upset Mrs. Loomis, seeing an agent in this condition. You think you could convince her to take you to the store for some Metamucil or something?”
Sam nodded grimly. “I’m on the case.”
• • •
I WRAPPED RALPH’S BLOOD-SOAKED SHIRT and .357 in a plastic garbage bag and stuffed them behind the loose plywood wall in the laundry room. I told myself I could retrieve them as soon as Ralph calmed down enough to call the police.
I reparked his Lincoln Continental so it wasn’t blocking the entire alley. I didn’t realize there was blood on the steering wheel until it was all over my hands. Feeling nauseous, I washed off with the backyard hose.
I thought about Ralph appearing at my door—the first time I’d seen him in five months. I should’ve resented him showing up like this, after he’d become a family man and let our friendship waste away. I should’ve been angry that he was bringing me so much trouble.
But the truth was I was too dazed to be angry. Not because he’d shot somebody. He’d killed men before. But I’d known Ralph Arguello since high school, and I couldn’t recall any time when he’d looked so shaken, or come to me for help. It was always the other way around.
I also understood why Ralph didn’t want his wife, Ana DeLeon, to know anything. Their marriage two years ago had caused a huge scandal in the SAPD, especially since she’d just become the first woman ever to make sergeant in homicide. Officially, there had been no problem with Ana marrying Ralph. He had no criminal record. Unofficially, everybody knew he deserved one.
For years, Ralph had monopolized the pawnshop business in town.