for a few miles, under the Loop, into a residential area where the houses looked like army bunkers, flat and sunken behind old brick privacy walls and overgrown pampas bushes. There was some fresh gang graffiti on the walls. A phone booth on the corner of Callahan had been pried out of the ground and laid flat across a bus bench. On top of it was a line of empty MD 20/20 bottles that a little shirtless boy was hitting with a stick.
The sky wasn't helping the general impression that this whole neighbourhood had recently been stepped on. A layer of gray clouds was pressing down low, like insu
lation material. The air had heated up again, and now it was just hanging there, stagnant and heavy.
After a few blocks Chico leaned his head back and asked Ralph in Spanish if he wanted to stop by Number Fourteen, since we were passing by. Ralph checked his gold Rolex and said sure. Then he got Mr. Subtle out from under the driver's seat and loaded it. Mr. Subtle is his .357 Magnum.
"The homeboys been making noise," he said. "Pinche kids."
"Number Fourteen," I said. "Catchy name."
"Hey, man, you get over twenty pawnshops, you try naming them all."
He stuck Mr. Subtle in his jeans, underneath the guayabera. Most people couldn't wear a Magnum like that and look inconspicuous. Most people don't have Ralph's girth and his XXL linen shirts.
Chico found a Def Lepard song on the radio and turned it up. Probably still on the Top Ten in San Antonio.
"So," Ralph said, "you see my niece when you were up in Austin?"
"She's doing fine. Good worker, just like you said."
Ralph ticked. "She's going through this con crema phase, man. I don't get her sometimes."
"Con crema?"
"You know what I mean. She won't speak Spanish. Only dates white guys."
"No kidding."
Ralph nodded, shifting a little in his seat. I shifted in my seat. We stared out the windows. He decided to change the subject.
"Speaking of con crema, man, you hanging out again with that cabron, Chavez?"
I hadn't told Ralph anything about the case. Not that that mattered. Ralph had probably found out about my meeting with Chavez the day it happened. Anything that went on within the city limits, Ralph usually knew about it in time to start placing bets.
"Milo's tangled into something, Ralphas. I told him I'd try to help out."
"Yeah." Ralph grinned. "Pinche bastard ever figure out what he wants to be when he grows up?"
I had never been quite sure when or how Milo and Ralph had met. They'd simply always known and disliked each other. All three of us had gone to Alamo Heights, of course, but as far as I knew the two men had never exchanged a word, never acknowledged each other. I'd never been in a room with both of them at the same time. Aside from being North Side Latinos, the two could not have been further apart.
Ralph had come from poverty, from a factory shantytown where his father had died of cement dust in his lungs and secondgeneration natives still kept fake green cards because it was easier than making La Migra believe their nationality. Ralph had made it through high school on the strength of his football playing and cunning and a straightedged razor and the certain unwavering knowledge that someday he would be worth a million dollars. Milo had come from a placid, welloff family. He was one of the few Latinos who had been accepted in the white circles, been invited to Cotillion dances, even had a white girlfriend. The news that he'd toyed with music after high school, then business, then finally persevered through a law degree caused no surprise among his old friends, no excitement. No feeling that he'd tackled insurmountable odds. The fact that he'd changed jobs again, gone into the country music industry, would generate, at best, a few amused smiles.
"Milo's doing all right."
Ralph laughed. "Isn't he the one almost got you killed out in San Francisco?"
"That's one interpretation."
"Yeah. You remember that shit we used to drop in water in chemistry class? What was that—"
"Potassium."
"That's it. Boom, right? That shit is you and Chavez, man. I can't believe you're talking to that pinche bastard again. You thought about that offer I made you earlier?"
"I wouldn't be into it, Ralphas. I got enough worries."
Ralph blew a line of marijuana smoke against the window. He shook his head.
"I don't get you. I been trying since high school and I still don't. You push