possibly die on American soil than be sent back to her homeland. Heâd seen it a hundred times over: desperation justifying the implausible.
âSeñora,â Riki comforted. âThisââhe pointed to the carââis not a good life for your children. Thereâs a way, and this isnât it.â He opened the door wide. âCome on now.â
She took his hand in both hers. âNo deportación. Por favor, señor.â
He gulped down the knot in this throat. It came every time. âIâm sorry, but itâs the law, and youâre breaking it.â
Riki was born in El Paso, an instantaneous American. His father and mother, born less than a mile away in Juárez, Mexico, waited two years for a visa and another seven for citizenship. It was a broken system that only benefited the very wealthy or very patient. His parents had been the latter. He understood this womanâs trepidation, but he also understood duty and justice. His family obeyed the laws of their new land, and, like it or not, he thought everyone else should too. Riki believed that the only way to appreciate what life gave was to respect and honor the rules that governed it. Subvert those and you might as well steal from your neighbor and piss on the Bible. Still, the greater law of compassion made him uneasy carting a woman and her children off like criminals.
In the distance, Linda Calhoun watched from her doorway holding her dog. Her diamond earrings sparkled like bonfire licks.
Riki radioed Bert at the station while the woman collected her things.
âIâm bringing in a woman and two kids. Pretty sure theyâre Mexican nationals. Havenât seen anybody else.â
â10-4.â
A toddler in shorts and flip-flops sat on his rusted tricycle in the yard of a nearby home. He did not watch them. His eyes were fixed on the padlocked trailer next door.
âHeaded back to the station,â Riki said and slid the handheld back into his front pocket clip. He kicked a wad of mud from his boot.
The Mexican woman instructed her children to gather their things. The older boy shoved a worn shirt and a pair of jeans into a duffel bag. The girl climbed between the driver and passenger seats and over her motherâs lap. She sat by the front tire, clasping her doll to her chest and sucking her thumb. Beautiful black eyes watched Riki, never blinking. He wondered if this is what his daughter would look like, only with Rebaâs strong nose and fair skin.
The boy on his tricycle turned to them. âBye!â he called out and waved. âBye-bye!â
His mother stuck her head out of her open trailer doorway. â¡Vete aquÃ! Lunch.â
Smiling wide, the boy threw his tricycle to the side and obeyed. The woman glowered at Riki before closing the door. All the while, the little girl at his feet hugged her knees and continued to stare up at him. The outline of his CBP baseball cap reflected in her dark gaze.
SCHMIDT BÃCKEREI
56 LUDWIGSTRASSE
GARMISCH, GERMANY
DECEMBER 25, 1944
Happy Christmas, Hazel. I write to you with cold feet and a mustard rub my chest. I slept poorly last night. The Gestapo came to our house past midnight searching the town for a runaway Jew. They made Mutti and Papa stand in the kitchen wearing only their nightgownsâon, Christmas Eve! What horrible times we live in
.
Mutti said Iâve caught a fever. Perhaps I should have eaten more at the banquet. They had suckling pig, potato cream, white sausage, and reisbrei for dessert, but none of it tasted the way it should. I didnât care for the champagne, either. The bubbles made the food feel wrong in my mouth. Mealy, like itâd already been chewed. My stomach was soured. As for the dress I spoke of in my last letter, chiffon might be lovely to look at, but itâs not much good against the cold. Itâs ruined anyhow. The skirt is stained, and the crystals hang from their stitches
.
We tried
Lauren Baratz-Logsted
Joy Dettman
Edward George, Dary Matera
Jessica Gadziala
Evan Currie
Caroline Linden
J.T. LeRoy
Tantoo Cardinal
Blanche Knott
Ray Mouton