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working on either of my manuscripts was the farthest thing from my mind. I thought about the job<br />

I’d just agreed to: a year of teaching full-time English at Denholm Consolidated High School, home of<br />

the Lions. I decided I had no regrets. I could roar at halftime with the best of them.<br />

Well, I did have one regret, but it wasn’t for me. When I thought about Mimi and her current<br />

situation, I had regrets aplenty.<br />

6<br />

On the subject of love at first sight, I’m with the Beatles: I believe that it happens all the time. But it<br />

didn’t happen that way for me and Sadie, although I held her the first time I met her, and with my<br />

right hand cupping her left breast. So I guess I’m also with Mickey and Sylvia, who said love is<br />

strange.<br />

South-central Texas can be savagely hot in mid-July, but the Saturday of the post-wedding party<br />

was damned near perfect, with temperatures in the upper seventies and lots of fat white clouds<br />

hustling across a sky the color of faded overalls. Long shutters of sun and shadow slipped down Mimi’s<br />

backyard, which was on a mild slope ending at a muddy trickle of water she called Nameless Crick.<br />

There were streamers of yellow and silver—Denholm High’s colors—strung from the trees, and<br />

there was indeed a piñata, hung temptingly low from the jutting branch of a sugar pine. No child<br />

passed near it without giving it a longing glance.<br />

“After dinner, the kids’ll get sticks and beat away on it,” someone said from just behind my left<br />

shoulder. “Candy and toys for all the niños.”<br />

I turned and beheld Mike Coslaw, resplendent (and a little hallucinatory) in tight black jeans and a<br />

white open-throated shirt. A sombrero on a tug-string hung down on his back, and he wore a<br />

multicolored sash around his waist. I saw a number of other football players, including Jim LaDue,<br />

dressed in the same semi-ridiculous manner, circulating with trays. Mike held his out with a slightly<br />

crooked smile. “Canapé, Señor Amberson?”<br />

I took a baby shrimp on a toothpick, and dipped it in the sauce. “Nice getup. Kind of a Speedy<br />

Gonzales thing.”<br />

“Don’t start. If you want to see a real getup, check Vince Knowles.” He pointed beyond the net to<br />

where a group of teachers was playing a clumsy but enthusiastic game of volleyball. I beheld Vince<br />

dressed up in tails and a top hat. He was surrounded by fascinated children who were watching him<br />

pull scarves out of thin air. It worked well, if you were still young enough to miss the one poking out<br />

of his sleeve. His shoe-polish mustache gleamed in the sun.<br />

“On the whole, I prefer the Cisco Kid look,” Mike said.<br />

“I’m sure you all make terrific waiters, but who in God’s name persuaded you to dress up? And<br />

does Coach know?”<br />

“He ought to, he’s here.”<br />

“Oh? I haven’t seen him.”<br />

“He’s over by the barbecue pit, gettin hammered with the Boosters Club. As for the outfit . . . Miz<br />

Mimi can be pretty persuasive.”<br />

I thought of the contract I’d signed. “I know.”<br />

Mike lowered his voice. “We all know she’s sick. Besides . . . I think of this as acting.” He struck a<br />

bullfighter pose—not easy when you’re carrying a tray of canapés. “¡Arriba!”<br />

“Not bad, but—”<br />

“I know, I’m not really inside the part yet. Gotta submerge myself, right?”<br />

“It works for Brando. How are you guys gonna be this fall, Mike?”

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