my way to Gus's house for the party, I called the police from a pay phone and told them I could hear a baby crying at the restaurant.'
Tess sat there, trying to absorb all this,
'I could have used that information,' Guzman said. 'Twenty-one years ago, ten years ago, even last week-I could have done something with that.'
'But I didn't really know anything. It never occurred to me Gus was behind the killings, I honestly thought it was a robbery. And if it had gotten out about Frank and Lollie…well.'
'What?' Guzman asked.
'People would have talked.'
Tess rubbed her eyes, wishing Marianna would be gone when she opened them again. She knew pride could make people do stupid things-it had kept her, for example, from doing anything when Crow's postcard had first arrived. A week had gone by from the day of that first veiled plea for help and her decision to pick up the phone and call his mother. If she had started looking for him sooner, would things have turned out any differently? Where would she be? Where would he be?
A doctor was walking toward them down the hall, still in surgical scrubs. Did Tess only imagine it, or was he shaking his head ever so slightly from side to side?
'Miss Monaghan?'
'Yeah,' Guzman answered for her.
'He's conscious, but he's very weak. You can see him'-a warning look for Guzman-'but the officers aren't to speak to him, or try to get him to speak.'
Tess jumped to her feet, then wished she hadn't. What with giving blood and boycotting Guzman's cookies, the sudden movement made her woozy. She was going to black out, and she was furious. Her next-to-last conscious thought was that Crow was conscious, and now she wasn't, and wasn't there some weird symmetry in that? She reeled backward, into Guzman's arms, just like that stupid touchy-feely trust exercise. She fell, insisting to herself that she wasn't so foolish as to trust anyone ever again. Except, perhaps, Crow. It was just gravity, she told herself. Just goddamn gravity, up to its usual tricks. She was falling, helpless, incapable of doing anything about it.
That was her last conscious thought.
Epilogue
Tess folded up the letter and tucked it under her water glass, so it wouldn't fly off in the strong breeze. Eating outside in mid-November-now this was a Texas concept she could embrace. It was seventy-five degrees with a bright blue sky. Larry McMurtry, whose work had been filling her time over the past two weeks, had written it was the sky that made Texas distinctive. Among other things, she thought. But you could almost fall in love with Texas on a day like today, in a restaurant like this one, La Calesa. It occurred to her that it was only now, when she had completely given into San Antonio and its charms, that she would be able to leave it. She had fought the city so hard, and it had fought her back.
She wondered if it would fight her for Crow as well.
'So who gets Emmie?' she asked Rick. 'The courts or the hospital?'
'Her competency hearing won't be held for another few weeks. She seems determined to prove she's sane, which may be the best evidence that she's insane.'
'And Gus?'
'He's been charged, and I'm sure he'll be indicted. I'm not so sure he'll be convicted. I hear that the city's most influential residents are lining up to be character witnesses. But Clay will testify against him. In the end, it's Gus's confession to his own son that will be the most damning evidence. With Darden, Weeks, and Steve Villanueve dead, everything else is hearsay, or strictly circumstantial. It's not a slam dunk by any means. Still, I'm glad I'm not Gus Sterne's lawyer.'
'There was a time,' Kristina put in gently, 'when you would have salivated for a case like this.'
'That was before I had to devote all my energies to getting my fiance acquitted on charges of theft and criminal mischief. Not to mention assault.'
'Assault?' asked Crow, who had been uncharacteristically quiet, picking at his food with no real appetite.
'Ketchup counts,' Rick said, and kissed Kristina's hand, the left one, the one with the diamond ring on it, the one he never seemed to let go of. Crow started to laugh, then winced. Tess's heart went out to him. There was nothing worse than having laughter remind you of how fragile you were, how thin the membrane was between life and death. It had happened to her last spring, and her injury had been nothing more than a bruised rib. For Crow,