Juan was a prodigious rider. On Tuesdays, after he saw Mariana’s kids climb into the yellow school bus for their trip to the handsome brick elementary school in Bridgehampton, he took his bike out of the living room (the only secure place in the ranch house) and began his long rides. He wore no helmet. He wouldn’t have worn one even if he had one. He was free. He didn’t have to return to the house until almost four in the afternoon, when the children, tired and hungry, would jump down from the yellow bus. On Tuesdays, as on five other days of the week, Mariana worked at the old supermarket on Sag Harbor’s pretty Main Street at the end of which were Long Wharf, the windmill, and the marina where whaling ships once left for the oceans of the world. The wings of the windmill never turned.
Juan found it irresistible to ride to the ocean beaches. They were to the south, just three miles from his house. He crossed the intersection of the old turnpike and the Montauk Highway at the eastern end of Bridgehampton’s Main Street. There was a Civil War monument at the intersection-a stone sculpture of a Union soldier so old that the soldier’s features were almost effaced, and the gray surface of his uniform looked porous. Just beyond the intersection, the landscape changed suddenly from the woodsy clutter of the old road where he and the other immigrants lived into a classic country lane. The lawns became spacious. The widely spaced, shingled houses were handsome. The huge old trees lining Ocean Drive formed a canopy over the road. In the sky was light so radiant that the edges of the overhead leaves appeared to be on a fire that never consumed them.
He arrived at the beach at high tide. The powerful, flashing waves almost reached the dunes. As a wave receded, the sand was swept clean and flat until the next surging wave foamed up the beach, creating a different perimeter of gleaming flat sand as it slipped back into the ocean.
Taking off his sneakers and tying the shoelaces to the handlebars, Juan walked eastward on the beach, pushing his bicycle and staying close to the grassy dunes to avoid even the farthest-reaching incoming waves. He was concerned that the touch of salt water on the bike would create rust. The first time he had tasted, seen, or touched salt water was when, after thousands of miles of riding with seven other stinking men in the windowless rear of the rented Hertz truck, he had arrived in New York. On his fourth day in the city he walked downtown to look at the harbor. He was awestruck: the expanse of water in New York Harbor, the far shorelines of New Jersey and Staten Island, the distant Statue of Liberty, the innumerable tankers and boats criss-crossing the harbor. There had been one geography book in his village school in Mexico. Although it had pictures taken from satellites of the land masses of the world and the much vaster blue spaces of the ocean, he’d never imagined that the living ocean glittered so vibrantly to a far horizon. His teacher told him that salt water not only instantly corroded metal but had miraculous power to cure hurt or bruised bodies. Holy water, giver of miracles.
As he often did on these Tuesday afternoons, Juan decided to make his way to the East Hampton beaches three miles to the east of Bridgehampton. He rode the quiet old roads-which were once wagon trails and footpaths-from Bridgehampton through Sagaponack to East Hampton. Most houses in sight near the shore were large, shingled, sprawling, on several acres of land. Some were more modern: cubes of wood and windows piled on each other like the bright Lego pieces Mariana’s kids stacked on the floors. There were also acres of flat farm fields with rows of ripening cornstalks. It was late August. The cornstalks rustled drily in the afternoon heat.
As usual, Juan’s destination was Egypt Road, which ran between the Richardsons’ estate and the rolling golf course of the Maidstone Club. After he climbed the wooden steps that led from the beach to the road near the house, he walked his bike on the shoulder next to the hedgerows he maintained so well. He had cleaned the windows of the house on Saturday, Sunday, and Monday, and today they glinted like clear jewels in the sunshine and clean air.
Earlier in the week he had mowed the lawns, riding on the small tractor whose blades were like thousands of small shearing scissors grooming the grass as they cut. As always, even after the fragrant mowing, the lawns were lush. Not far from the Bonac’s front door, the American flag snapped from its white pole, all those vivid colors against the blue sky. Brad Richardson must have raised the flag, normally Juan’s job, since, as Juan knew, Joan Richardson was in the city and Brad had rewarded everyone who worked at the house by letting them take the day off.
Brad’s friends often worried that on these sacred Tuesdays he was alone. Unlike other extraordinarily wealthy men, he had no security guards. He never felt vulnerable in the immense house, or on the sometimes empty roads, or on the streets of East Hampton where he had walked on the weekends as a teenager and now as a 47-year-old man. He saw himself as a native of the seaside village, a local, with no need for a palace guard.
But after the financial collapse in 2008, menacing messages had been left on the voice mail of the office telephone system on Park Avenue. For several weeks Brad had been accompanied by the muscled-up, shaven-headed men, both black and white, of a security detail. Two black SUVs with tinted windows followed Brad and Joan wherever they went. Always in black suits and ties, the men were also stationed at the estate.
Brad disdained the ostentation of security details. Among the people he knew the presence of security had become yet another symbol of wealth. Joan, too, felt uncomfortable with the security. One night Brad said, “This is silly, don’t you think?”
Joan laughed. “This might make Nancy Reagan and Kim Kardashian feel important and impressive, but not me.”
And they dropped the security service.
Now, as Juan pushed his heavy bicycle near the estate, he noticed a black SUV, immaculately clean, on the fine white gravel of the circular driveway. He slowed his pace, wondering why the car was there, and then jumped on the bicycle. Its chunky tires left tracks in the roadside sand. It was a five-mile ride to the run-down ranch house on the Sag Harbor-Bridgehampton Turnpike.
On these long rides Juan had come to enjoy stopping at the Starbucks on the Montauk Highway. At first these stops were uncomfortable for him. He’d never known anyone who went into a Starbucks even for a take-out. The shops had tables, chairs, and sofas in them, and the people who had coffee and cakes and used their laptops and iPads there were for the most part young, white, and oblivious to what was happening around them.
The first time he left his Schwinn near the door and walked into the Starbucks he stared straight ahead at the girl behind the counter. Juan ignored the menu of drinks displayed on the wall and simply said, “Black coffee.”
She asked, “Grande, trente, or venti?”
Confused, Juan stared at her. She was a local girl, her face littered with acne. He was certain she couldn’t speak Spanish, although she had just uttered three Spanish words. She pointed to the smallest cup. He nodded.
In the overheated shop redolent with the odor of crushed coffee beans, he took the hot container to a chair near the front window, watching the traffic on the Montauk Highway and the cars-mainly gleaming and expensive German cars-parked in front of the store.
After that first stop Juan became more relaxed. He tried other coffee drinks. He smiled at people. Usually he sat for fifteen or twenty minutes, enjoying the coffee and the music. There was even a young woman with stylish brown hair, pretty face, and warm demeanor with whom Juan exchanged smiles but never words. He was happy when he saw her there and slightly let down when she wasn’t.