The rest of the block was lined with closed tiendas and burglar-barred homes. Crisscrossed telephone lines and pecan tree branches sliced up the sky. The only real light came from the end of the block across the street — the Church of Our Lady of the Mount. Its Moorish, yellow-capped spires were brutally lit, a dark bronze Jesus glaring down from on high at the Poco Mas. Jesus was holding aloft a circle of metal that looked suspiciously like a master's whip. Or perhaps a hubcap rim.
At the entrance to the cantina, I was greeted by a warm blast of air that smelled like an old man's closet — leather and mothballs, stale cologne, dried sweat and liquor. Inside, the rafters glinted with Christmas ornaments. Staple-gunned along the walls were decades of calendars showing off Corvettes with bras and women without. The jukebox cranked out Selena's "Quiero" just loud enough to drown casual conversation and the creaking my boots must've made on the warped floor planks.
I got a momentary, disapproving once-over from the patrons at the three center tables. The men were hard-faced Latinos, most in their forties, with black cowboy hats and steel-toed boots. The few women were overweight and trying hard to pretend otherwise — tight red dresses and red hose, peroxide hair, large bosoms, and chunky faces heavily caked with foundation and rouge designed for Anglo complexions. Long neck beer bottles and scraps of bookie numbers littered the pink and white Formica.
On a raised platform in back were two booths, one empty, one occupied by a cluster of young locos — bandannas claiming their gang colors, white tank tops, baggy jeans laced with chains, scruffy day beards. One had a Raiders jacket. Another had a porkpie hat and a pretty young Latina on his lap. The girl and I locked eyes long enough for Porkpie to notice and scowl.
Then I recognized someone else.
Hector Mara, Zeta Sanchez's ex-brother-in-law, was talking to another man at the bar.
Mara wore white shorts and Nikes and a black Spurs tunic that said ROBINSON. His egg-brown scalp reflected the beer lights.
Mara's friend was thinner, taller, maybe thirty years old, with a wiry build and a high hairline that made his thin face into a valentine. He had a silver cross earring and black-painted fingernails, a black trench coat and leather boots laced halfway up his calves. He'd either been reading too much Anne Rice or was on his way to a bandido Renaissance festival.
A line of empty beer bottles stood in front of the two men. Mara's face was illuminated by the little glowing screen of a palm-held computer, which he kept referring to as he spoke to the vampire, like they were going over numbers. I climbed onto the third bar stool next to Mara, and spoke to the bartender loud enough to be heard over Selena. "Cerveza, por favor."
Mara and the vampire stopped talking.
The bartender scowled at me. His face was puffy with age, his hair reduced to silver grease marks over his ears. "Eh?"
"Beer."
He squinted past me suspiciously, as if checking for my reinforcements. Hector Mara just stared at me. Huge loops of armhole showed off his well-muscled shoulders, swirls of tattoos on his upper arms, thick tufts of underarm hair. He had an old gunshot scar like a starburst just above his left knee. The vampire stared at me, too. He clicked his black fingernails against the bar. Friendly crowd.
"Unless you've got a special tonight," I told the bartender. "Manhattan, maybe?"
The bartender reached into his cooler, opened a bottle, then plunked a Budweiser in front of me.
"Or beer is fine," I said.
"Eh?"
I made the "okay" sign, dropped two dollars on the counter. Without hesitating, the old man got out a second beer and plunked it next to the first. I was tempted to put down a twenty and see what he'd do. Instead I slid one of the Buds toward Hector Mara.
"Maybe your friend could go commune with the night for a few minutes?" I suggested.
Mara's face was designed for perpetual anger — eyes pinched, nose flared, mouth clamped into a scowl. "I know you?"
"I saw Zeta today."
Mara and the vampire exchanged looks. The vampire studied my face one more time, memorizing it, then detached himself from the bar. He flicked his fingers toward the cholos in the back booth and they all lifted their chins. The vampire walked out.
I watched him get into the white Chevy van and drive away.
"Yo, gringo," Hector Mara said, "You got any idea who you just offended?"
"None. Much more fun that way. Although if I was guessing, I'd say it was Chich Gutierrez, your business partner."
Mara's eye twitched. "Who the fuck are you?"
"I was at that party you threw yesterday out on Green Road. The one where Zeta blew a hole in the deputy."
Mara's eyes drifted down to my boots, then made their way back up my rumpled dress clothes, my face, my uncombed hair.
"You ain't a cop," he decided.
"No."
"Then fuck off."
He pushed the beer back toward me and returned to his PalmPilot, started tapping on the screen with a little black stylus. On the jukebox, Selena segued into Shelly Lares.
I looked at the bartender. "Donde esta the famous spot?"
"Eh?"
"The place where Zeta Sanchez killed Jeremiah Brandon."
The bartender waved his hands adamantly. "No, no. New management."
He said it like a foreign phrase he'd been trained to speak in an emergency. Mara pointed over his shoulder with the stylus. "Second booth, gringo. The one that's always empty."
The bartender mumbled halfheartedly about the change of management, then retreated to his liquor display and began turning the bottles label-out.
"The D.A.'s going to prosecute," I told Mara.
"Big surprise."
"They figure ten to ninety-nine for shooting the deputy, life for Aaron Brandon's murder, maybe federal charges for the bomb blast. Quick and easy. That's before they even consider the Old Man's murder case from '93."
"Hijo de puta like you gonna love that."
"And who am I?"