them came to the door. One stayed in the car. He never turned off the motor. The one who talked had funny eyes, like they didnt go together. Who is he?
What did he say?
Pete hadnt answered her question. But her heart was racing, and she answered him anyway. That yall had a misunderstanding. That you ran off in the dark or something. That he owes you some money. He was grinning all the time he talked. I shook his hand. He put out his hand and I shook it.
His head looks like it has plates in it, like theres a glitter in one eye and not the other?
Thats the one. Who is he, Pete?
His name is Hugo. He was in the truck cab with me for a while. He had a Thompson in a canvas bag. The ammo pan was rattling, and he took it out and looked at it and put it back in the bag. He said, This sweetheart of a piece belongs to the most dangerous man in Texas.
He had a what in a bag?
A World War Two submachine gun. We were stopped in the dark. He started talking on a two-way. Some guy said, Shut it down. Wipe the slate clean. I got out to take a leak, then I climbed down in an irrigation ditch and kept going.
He squeezed my hand hard, really hard. Wait, you ran away from what?
Hugo hurt your hand?
What did I just say? Are these people dope traffickers?
No, a lot worse. Ive got into some real shit, Vikki, he replied. I heard gunfire in the dark. I heard people screaming inside it. They were women, maybe some of them girls.
When she didnt answer, when her face went blank as though she were looking at someone she didnt know, he tried to examine her hand. But she went to the kitchen screen, her back to him, her arms folded across her chest, an unrelieved sadness in her eyes as she stared at the harshness of the light spreading across the landscape.
2
N ICK DOLANS SKIN joint was halfway between Austin and San Antonio, a three-story refurbished Victorian home with fresh white paint on it, set back in oak trees and pines, the balcony and windows strung with Christmas-tree lights that stayed up year-round. From the highway, it looked like a festive place, the gravel parking lot well lit, the small Mexican restaurant next door joined to the main building by a covered walkway, indicating to passersby that Nick wasnt selling just tits and ass, that this was a gentlemans place, that women were welcome, even families, if they were road-tired and wanted a fine meal at a reasonable price.
Nick had given up his floating casino in New Orleans and had left the city of his birth because he didnt like trouble with the vestiges of the old Mob or paying off every politician in the state who knew how to turn up his palm, including the governor, who was now in a federal prison. Nick didnt argue with the world or the venal nature of men or the iniquity that most of them seemed born in. His contention was with the worlds hypocrisy. He sold people what they wanted, whether it was gambling or booze, ass on the half shell, or the freedom to fulfill all their fantasies inside a safe environment, one where they would never be held accountable for the secret desires they hid from others. But whenever a groundswell of moral outrage began to crest on the horizon, Nick knew who was about to get smacked flat on the beach.
However, he had another problem besides the hypocrisy of others: He had been screwed at birth, given a dumpy fat boys body to live inside, one with flaccid arms and a short neck and duck feet, and bad eyesight on top of it, so that he had to wear thick, round glasses that made him look like a goldfish staring out of a bowl.
He dressed in elevator shoes, sport coats that had padded shoulders, and expensive and tasteful jewelry; he paid a minimum of seventy-five dollars for his shirts and ties. His twin daughters went to private school and took piano, ballet, and riding lessons;