But what if it’s blood money, or drug money? Shit, I’m a Latino Blood with a damn conscience. Not a good combination.
I quickly fill my backpack with the cash, then take the bus to the local library, hoping I’m not being tracked. If Chuy knows I’ve been to the bank, then he knows I’ve seen what’s in the box. Is he expecting me to just hand over the cash and give him the numbers on the paper? If I don’t give them to him, will he kill me? If I do give them to him, what does he need me for, then? Best bet is that I’ll be smoked either way.
If Nikki and I were together, she’d be in danger. I’m glad I gave her up, although it’s killing me inside.
I can’t tell Alex and Carlos what’s goin’ down. They’re already involved more than they should be. I swear they haven’t let me out of their sight for one minute since they came back home. If Carlos gets involved, and something goes wrong and he gets arrested, he’ll most likely be dishonorably discharged from the army. Alex could lose his scholarship, his family … if he’s in jail, he’ll miss the birth of his second child.
I’ll never let either of them get involved. I might be a Martinez, but I still feel like a Fuentes.
I look back and realize that I’m being tailed by a black Camaro. The guy driving looks suspiciously like the pendejo who opened the door in that house Marco and I went to in the F5 territory to collect the five Gs.
Luckily I know Fairfield like the back of my hand. I walk toward the police station, which is right behind the library. I walk inside the station lobby and wait while the car passes, then go behind the station and head to the back door of the library.
Once inside, I sign up for an hour of computer use. I Google the set of numbers I found in the safety deposit box, but nothing comes up. What would Hector do with the numbers? Probably not a phone number, but the number starts with double zeroes. I deduce that it’s either some kind of code, a password, or an account number. A bank account, maybe. But what bank? There’s probably thousands of banks. How the hell am I supposed to figure out which one? Or maybe it’s not a bank account, and the numbers don’t mean shit.
It’s no use. My hour is up and I still don’t have a clue what the numbers mean. I look behind me and see someone else waiting to use the computer. Damn. I need more time.
At home, I sneak back in through my window when I catch sight of Reyes smoking a cigarette on his back porch. He’s shirtless and his back is to me. Plain as day I see a tattoo between his shoulder blades. F5.
Reyes is a gangbanger posing as a cop? Holy shit. What has he been doin’, spying on me like the others? Was this all planned out? Chuy said he’s been watching me all along, even when I was in Colorado. Could Chuy secretly be fuckin’ with me?
I’m so fucking confused it feels like my head is about to explode. Not wanting Reyes to know I’ve seen him, I sneak around to the front of the house. When I walk through the door, Peterson is sitting at the kitchen table peering at me over her glasses.
“Weren’t you supposed to give birth already?” I ask her.
She touches her protruding stomach. “Any day now. I’m on maternity leave, so you’ll have a break from me for a few months. Don’t be too broken up about it.”
“I’m not.”
“You almost missed our tutoring session,” she says, then glances at her watch.
Considering my chances of surviving the next few weeks are slim, she doesn’t need to waste her time. “Listen, Mrs. P., I know my brothers kind of coerced you to be here, but it’s a waste of your time.”
“I’m not giving up on you,” she says, patting the chair next to her.
“I would.”
“I didn’t give up on Alex, and I’m not giving up on you. Alex had every reason to throw it all away but he didn’t.”
Alex never had the connection to the LB that I do.
“Show me your math homework,” she orders in a no-nonsense voice.
“Not to be disrespectful, Mrs. P., but I’d bet I’m better in math than you.” My brothers must have found my textbook and binders in my room and “helpfully” left them on the table for me. I pull out the math sheet I finished in five seconds.
“Mr. Gasper gave me a new worksheet. I made a copy of it. I bet I can finish the worksheet faster than you.”
“How much?”
She pulls her wallet out, opens it, then slips a five-dollar bill out of the top. Attached to one side of her wallet are her checks … with a row of numbers at the bottom. The first two numbers are zeroes.
“What are those numbers?” I ask her, pointing to the bottom of the check.
“The bank routing number, and the bank account number. Why?”
I glance at my palm with the numbers written on it, and adrenaline pumps through my veins. That’s it. The bank routing number, and bank account. “No reason. I’ve never had checks,” I tell her.
Mrs. P. takes ten minutes to explain how checks work, and even pulls one of hers out of her wallet and makes me write one out.
“Sign your name here,” she says, pointing to the bottom right corner. “This is a life skill that you should know, Luis.”
“I’ve got other life skills,” I tell her.
“Yeah, well, I don’t consider cussing a life skill. Or fighting.”
“I do. Necessary ones.”
She shakes her head and sighs in frustration. “I will give you this important information about checks.” She writes the word VOID in big bold letters on the front of the check she told me to practice on. “Let this be the last time you write your name on someone else’s check. If you do, or forge someone’s name on a check, it’s a felony. You go to jail. Make good decisions, Luis. Focus on math and science and doing well in school. Those will help you. The fighting won’t.” She places Gasper’s worksheet in front of me. “You ready for the challenge?”
I pick up a pencil. “You’re on, Mrs. P. But I’ve got to warn you, I’m a numbers guy.”
“Good,” she says, patting me on the hand. “That skill will serve you well in college, and when you’re up in space.”