hair lay uncombed and wavy on the pillow. Heâd just left her that way, messy and beautiful. Sometimes it took all the strength he had not to climb into bed beside her and bury his face in her hair and skin and sleepy smells. But he knew the moment he did, sheâd wake and push him away. He couldnât have both the Reba he saw and the Reba who saw him. They were different women, and he supposed heâd rather have one than neither.
He turned off the music and checked the address. The area was vaguely familiar. A new development of Easter-egg-colored homes strung along streets with providential names like Via Del Estrella and Via Del Oro. Behind the large neighborhood was an agriculture canal, and beyond that the river, smudge sodden and rusty as a penny. A concrete joggerâs trail whimsically snaked along beside, heat rising from it in clear currents. A realty sign boasted the subdivision as LUXURY LIVING ALONG THE RIO GRANDE ! A couple years ago, you couldnât have paid someone to live there. Nothing but scrub grass, dirt, and gopher burrows as far as the eye could see. Now, big windows and manicured yards glistened under the desert sun. Unnatural yet beautiful. He pulled up to the residentâs home, a two-story, pink palace with iron balconies lacing the upper levels like a tiered
Quinceañera birthday cake.
Before heâd had a chance to turn off the truck engine, a petite woman came to the front door in pressed khakis. He got out.
âTheyâve been there for over a week,â she immediately began. âMy husband said to let them be, and I would haveâI really would haveâbut there are
children
involved, and itâs simply unhealthy for them to be living out of a car and bathing in that muddy river like animals! So I told my husband I was calling you guys for their own goodâthe children that is. They need proper care. Their mother should be ashamed.â She ran a hand through her bobbed hair. Diamond-drop earrings shimmered against her neck. âSheâs out there, too. Every morning, washing dishesâdishes!âinthat muck. Youâd think if she was going to hop the border like this, then sheâd at least try to be more inconspicuous. I mean, seriously. Every day, I look outside and there they are, acting like itâs the 1800s.â She gestured for Riki to follow her into the house. âThen yesterday, there was a little girlâa toddlerâcrawling in the dirt with no adult supervision and I said to myself, what if a snake or a coyote came along? I wouldnât be able to live with myself if I had a dead child in my backyard and did nothing to prevent it.â
Inside, a miniature schnauzer yipped at Rikiâs heels. The house smelled like new paint and vanilla candles, like the ones Reba lit when she took long baths.
âHush it, Teeny.â The woman moved the dog away with a foot. âHope you arenât afraid of dogs.â
âNo, maâam.â
âIâm Linda Calhoun, by the way.â She stuck out her hand.
âAgent Riki Chavez.â Her fingers seemed to slip right through his clasp, soft and slick with oils.
âWeâre from North Carolina. My husbandâs with Union Pacificâthe railroad. We moved here a couple months ago. Iâm still getting used to â¦Â everything.â She waved a hand round like she was swatting flies, then led Riki to the back door. âThe cars are over there.â She pointed to the river-bank but stayed inside her refrigerated air.
Down the Rio, a weathered, four-door Dodge parked off the concrete trail. He couldnât see the second vehicle.
âAre they there now?â
âI guess,â said Linda. âI donât know where else theyâd be.â
âIâll go talk to these folks.â He slipped on his cap and went out around the stone fence separating the Calhounsâ green turf and the sandy West Texas dirt.
A
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