Extract: Dark Horse by Gregg Hurwitz

This entry was posted on 24 February 2022.

Evan Smoak - Orphan X aka The Nowhere Man – is back at break-neck speed in a thrilling new adventure from Gregg Hurwitz.

 


 

1. A World That Contained Men Like Him

 

Some men speak of angels and devils.

Some talk about their emotions or unbidden urges.

Aragón Urrea knew it as a battle between two parts of

himself in the dead center of his soul.

Standing now at the edge of the spit-polished dance floor

watching his daughter pinball between clusters of friends in

her burnt-orange quinceañera dress, he understood that he

could not be as bad as his reputation suggested because she

came from him. Anjelina’s hair fell across one eye. Her skin,

smooth as satin. Tejano cheeks like her mother’s, broad and

defined. The impossible sweetness of her gaze.

A pair of rhinestone-studded high heels swung at her side,

looped around her index finger, her head swaying to the

band’s cover of the Stones. Wild, wild horses couldn’t drag me

awaaay. He’d offered Mick Jagger ten million dollars to fly

down here to no-fuck-where South Texas and sing it himself,

but Mick Jagger didn’t need ten million dollars or the reputational

damage.

Aragón watched his girl glide across the maple hardwood,

her hips and shoulders moving separately and yet in sync, an

orbit of muscle and grace. As if music was a language that

spoke through her body when she danced.

He turned his gaze to the boys and men watching her.

As they sensed his stare, they quickly moved their focus

elsewhere.

Anjelina’s purity – her inner light – brought a familiar ache

to his chest. That the world did not deserve her. That it would

hurt her as it was designed to hurt all beautiful young women.

And that even if he summoned the whole of the power and

menace at his disposal to preserve her innocence, he would

eventually fail, because innocence was destined for spoiling.

The one perfect thing he’d ever had a hand in creating,

and now he was haunted by her very existence – her vulnerability

in a world that contained men like him. The curse of

every father who loved beyond logic, beyond reason.

Tonight was her eighteenth birthday. And yet she’d recut

and altered her quinceañera dress, not wanting to waste money

on something new, on something that would put her even

more fully in the spotlight. She didn’t want to appear garish

in front of the other girls from Eden, this expanse of unincorporated

land upstream from Brownsville on the north bank of the yellow-

brown sludge of the Rio Grande.

Aragón had refrigerator-size blocks of shrink-wrapped

cash stacked in various structures around his compound, so

many that he had to pay teams of men to rotate them so they

wouldn’t rot or wind up chewed to a pulp by rats. And yet

Anjelina preferred to alter a three-year-old gown so as not to

show anyone up, even wearing a shawl draped over her shoulders

and hanging down her front side to dress down further.

He’d offered her Mexico City, New York, or Paris for the

venue, and she’d chosen the community center right here at

home. Tissue-paper decorations and a buffet served up by

Arnulfo and Hortensia, the rickety couple who owned the

local taquería and needed the business.

Aragón sat at the most prominent table with his aunt,

who’d been both mother and father to him since poverty had

killed his parents shortly after his birth in a Hidalgo County

regional hospital – Mamá from an undiagnosed bladder infection,

Papá from a knife in the kidney when he’d tried to stop

a fight behind a Whataburger in Corpus Christi.

The band was in inadvertent uniform – alligator-belly

boots, sapphire cowboy shirts, bedazzled vests, true-blue

jeans and, of course, giant oval belt buckles featuring buckin’

broncos or Indian-chief heads or bullshit family crests

cranked out at the mall gift shop in McAllen.

With the faintest flare of a hand, Aragón conveyed his

wishes across the dance floor. At the tiny movement, the

lead singer stopped in mid-chorus, the music severed with

guillotine finality. The singer mopped his forehead with a

hanky, nodded to his compatriots, and the band struck up a

Norteño number. The notes of the wheezing accordion

nourished Aragón’s very genes.

At the musical detour, Anjelina stopped dancing with her

friends to set her arms akimbo and frown at her father with

mock frustration. Then she broke into that life-affirming

smile, impossibly symmetrical, impossibly wide, the smile of

her mother, Belicia, who should be here at Aragón’s side

rather than languishing in her bedroom.

Anjelina flipped her high heels aside, and the men clapped

and cheered and the women trilled and she was twirling and

gliding, her lush brown curls washing across her eyes, gold

locket bouncing just beneath her sparkle-dusted collarbones.

A number of boys surrounded her and clapped, but none

dared ask her to dance, not with Aragón under the same roof

overseeing the festivities with stern paternalism and an aquiline

profile worthy of a coin. And certainly not with his men

stationed around the perimeter, hands crossed at their belt

buckles, jackets bulging at the hips. The young men held

their ground respectfully, waiting in hope for her to choose

her partner for the waltz.

Slumped bonelessly in a chair at the periphery, the Esposito

boy watched from beneath his mother’s wing. Twelve

years old with ankle-foot orthotics bowing out his sneakers

on either side. His arms, wrapped in elbow-prophylactic

braces, were splayed wide as if anticipating a hug. Last year

Aragón had had him flown to the Cerebral Palsy Clinic at

Cook Children’s in Fort Worth so he could be neuroimaged

and fitted with carbon-fiber prosthetics.

Anjelina slowed, calves fluttering in place, hips swaying,

her movements tasteful if not chaste. Her focus swiveled to

take in her options. The young men encircling her were peacocking,

showing off their best moves, their best faces, their

eyes shiny and eager.

 


“There was heartbreak in every rite of passage, in every living moment if careful attention were paid.”


 

But she looked right through them all to Nico Esposito.

Then she drifted to the boy’s table, the crowd parting. When

she crouched in front of him, his distorted face lit up with

joy. She took his hands and helped him to his feet.

Walking backward gingerly, she encouraged him onto the

dance floor. He waddled nervously on his orthotics. She was

six years older and a head taller, and yet Nico found a solidity

to his ruined spine, rising to the moment because her attention

demanded it. The braces held his arms aloft, a natural

strong frame for the box step, the Velcro straps rasping

against Anjelina’s dress until she adjusted for even that.

She held him firmly to aid his balance, creating the illusion

that he was leading, and all of a sudden he was moving in her

arms and she in his and he was beaming, freed for the

moment from the prison of his body. The other young men

overcame their envy and clapped along, whooping and patting

Nico on the back as Anjelina swept him within the

throng of bodies. He was sweating, a sheen across his face,

and yet his sloppy grin was unencumbered. They moved

faster, faster, courting disaster right through the crescendo,

and yet impossibly they finished the waltz, eliciting a hailstorm

of cheers.

Leading Nico back to his mother, Anjelina eased him

down into his chair and crouched before him. Even across

the dance floor, Aragón could read her lips: Thank you for the

dance, guapo.

Nico’s dark eyes glowed, his face flushed from the miracle

he’d just played a part in.

Aragón realized that his own cheeks were wet. And yet

he was unashamed. Like them all, he was blessed to breathe

the same air as his daughter, to admire her and know that

some part of her was his and some part of him hers.

La Tía reached across the table and took Aragón’s hand.

Her palm was dry, the skin papery. Arthritis gnarled her

knuckles, but still she wore big turquoise rings on all her fingers.

Over prominent wrinkles she’d applied foundation,

blush, eye shadow, lipstick. Neither age nor ailment could

dampen the spirit of a Mexican matriarch.

‘My boy,’ she said. ‘Now you give your toast. Speak to your

daughter.’

Aragón stepped forward, and the hundred-plus bodies in

the community center took note. The boys in their cheap

church clothes and the men in their polyester two-tone

suits and the women flashing shawls of primary colors. All that

beautiful brown skin and the scent of cologne in the air and

everyone hanging on his next movement.

Facing his daughter across the dance floor, Aragón held

out a hand, and his body man, Eduardo Gómez, materialized

out of thin air to place a flute of Cristal in his palm.

Aragón began his toast. ‘Today you turn eighteen.’ He

paused, caught off guard by the emotion graveling his deep

voice. ‘You become an adult in the eyes of the law. For me

and your mama – who wishes with all her heart that she could

be here – this is wondrous. And yet also bittersweet.’

‘I’m sorry, Papá.’ Anjelina’s eyes were moist, her slender

fingers at her gold locket.

‘You apologize too much,’ he said. ‘You must unlearn this

now to be a woman.’ He turned to the crowd, catching a

glimpse of himself in the big window’s reflection. Broad

shoulders, undiminished by age. Big, bold features. Ugly-handsome

and virile, like Carlos Fuentes or Charles Bronson.

‘Our children grow up and our hearts hurt for it, but they

must grow up.’ He swung the flute back toward his daughter,

the perfumed liquid catching the light, fizzing and straw-colored.

‘They tell us it goes by so swiftly. Blink and they’re

grown. But the thing is . . .’

He felt the gravel gathering in his voice and paused once

more to compose himself.

‘It didn’t go by fast for me. I didn’t miss a single moment.

Not when you were one breath old and I held you to my

chest. Those first steps on the front lawn of the church, how

you wobbled and fell and got back up again. Three years old

in panties and sandals and not a stitch more, clanging pots

and pans on the floor of the kitchen. Your first tooth falling

out. I remember listening at the door of your piano lesson

while you tortured yourself over the fingering for “Here

Comes the Sun.” Picking you up from cross-country practice

when you were all braces and a messy ponytail and that

awful music you’d sing into your deodorant stick on the

drive – who was it?’

Anjelina was hugging herself around her stomach, crying

and smiling. ‘Ed Sheeran.’

‘Yes. Yes. Sheeran. And that bad haircut you got before

your confirmation. Your first dance. That time you crashed

your car–’ He crossed himself. ‘Our trip to Zihuatanejo during

Semana Santa and the fight we had over that string bikini–’

‘It wasn’t a string bikini, Papá!’

‘You’re right. More like dental floss.’

Laughter washed through the room.

‘Feeding you ice chips when your wisdom teeth came out.

How you cried yourself to sleep the night we had to put Lulu

down. And now your eighteenth–’ He stopped, his eyes

moistening. Cleared his throat. And again. The room waited

for him. He lifted his gaze to her once more. ‘I didn’t miss a

second of you.’

Heat in his chest. His throat. There was heartbreak in

every rite of passage, in every living moment if careful attention

were paid. Not a shattering or crumbling of the heart

but a cracking open to accommodate more. More feeling,

more understanding, more room for the cruelty of time

without which there could be no beauty, no meaning. It was

so much greater than anything he could convey here amid

the cheap birthday decorations and fake wood paneling and

the scent of cilantro and table wine. She had saved him. She

had breathed life into him. She had civilized him, turned him

into a human.

 

Extracted from Dark Horse by Gregg Hurwitz, out now.

 

 


 
 
 
 

 

 

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