confused question mark in the middle of her face. 'Ain't it?'

'Don't say 'ain't,' little guy.'

'What are you doing in the picture?'

'That’s not me, Alf. Those are Texas soldiers who fought alongside John Bell Hood. I bet they were a pretty good bunch,' I said, and rubbed the top of her head.

'How do you know they're from Texas? It doesn't say that here.'

'It's just a guess.'

She looked at the photograph again and back at me, and her face became more confused.

'Let's get Elrod and Bootsie and go down to the beach for some ice cream,' I said.

I slipped the book from her hand and closed it, picked her up on my hip, and walked through the canopy of purple trumpet vine toward the patio behind the house, where Bootsie and Elrod were clearing off the dishes from supper. Down the canyon, smoke from meat fires drifted through the cedar and mesquite trees, and if I squinted my eyes in the sun's setting, I could almost pretend that Spanish soldiers in silver chest armor and bladed helmets or a long-dead race of hunters were encamped on those hillsides. Or maybe even old compatriots in butternut brown wending their way in and out of history-gallant, Arthurian, their canister-ripped colors unfurled in the roiling smoke, the fatal light in their faces a reminder that the contest is never quite over, the field never quite ours.

***
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