At first, he’d wanted to just cut her off and walk away from the whole thing, but he realized that was childish. If she could get the hits, then fine. He’d tag along on her score. He’d take her page views, and then he’d be done with her.
Cutting her off too soon would get him nothing. She’d just go get some other pendejo to do the art, or else she might even shoot the pictures herself and get her ass paid twice, a prospect that galled him even more than the fact that he’d been manipulated.
They wound their way into the subdivision, driving past ancient Prius sedans and electric bikes. At the end of the cul-de-sac, Lucy pulled to a halt. The place didn’t look any different from any other Phoenix suburb. Except apparently, inside all the quiet houses, a last-battle resistance was brewing.
Ahead, the chain link and barbwire of the CAP boundary came into view. Beyond, there was nothing but cactus-studded hills. Timo could just make out the Texan on the far side of the CAP fences, still dangling. It looked like the dogs were at him again, tearing at the scraps.
“Will you at least talk to me?” Lucy asked. “Tell me what I did.”
Timo shrugged. “Let’s just get your shoot done. Show me these Angels of Arizona you’re so hot for.”
“No.” Lucy shook her head. “I’m not taking you to see them until you tell me why you keep acting this way.”
Timo glared at her, then looked out the dusty front window.
“Guess we’re not going to see them then.”
With the truck turned off, it was already starting to broil inside. The kind of heat that cooked pets and babies to death in a couple hours. Timo could feel sweat starting to trickle off him, but he was damned if he was going to show that he was uncomfortable. He sat and stared at the CAP fence ahead of them. They could both sweat to death for all he cared.
Lucy was staring at him, hard. “If you’ve got something you want to say, you should be man enough to say it.”
Man enough? Oh, hell no.
“Okay,” Timo said. “I think you played me.”
“Played you how?”
“Seriously? You going to keep at it? I’m on to you, girl. You act all wet, and you get people to help you out. You get people to do shit they wouldn’t normally do. You act all nice, like you’re all new and like you’re just getting your feet under you, but that’s just an act.”
“So what?” Lucy said. “Why do you care if I fool some militia nutjobs?”
“I’m not talking about them! I’m talking about me! That’s how you played me! You act like you don’t know things, get me to show you around. Show you the ropes. Get you on the inside. You act all wet and sorry, and dumbass Timo steps in to help you out. And you get a nice juicy exclusive.”
“Timo… how long have we known each other?”
“I don’t know if we ever did.”
“Timo—”
“Don’t bother apologizing.” He shouldered the truck’s door open.
As he climbed out, he knew he was making a mistake. She’d pick up some other photographer. Or else she’d shoot the story herself and get paid twice for the work.
Should have just kept my mouth shut.
Amparo would have told him he was both dumb and a sucker. Should have at least worked Lucy to get the story done before he left her ass. Instead he’d dumped her, and the story.
Lucy climbed out of the truck, too.
“Fine,” she said. “I won’t do it.”
“Won’t do what?”
“I won’t do the story. If you think I played you, I won’t do the story.”
“Oh come on. That’s bullshit. You know you came down here for your scoop. You ain’t giving that up.”
Lucy’s stared at him, looking pissed. “You know what your problem is?”
“Got a feeling you’re going to tell me.”
“You’re so busy doing your poor-me, I’m from Phoenix, everyone’s-out-to-get-me, we’re-getting-overrun wah-wah-wah routine that you can’t even tell when someone’s on your side!”
“That’s not—”
“You can’t even tell someone’s standing right in front of you who actually gives a shit about you!” Lucy was almost spitting she was so mad. Her face had turned red. Timo tried to interject, but she kept talking.
“I’m not some damn Texan here to take your water, and I’m not some big time journo here to steal your fucking stories! That’s not who I am! You know how many photographers I could work with? You know how many would bite on this story that I went out and got? I put my ass on the line out here! You think that was easy?”
“Lucy. Come on…”
She waved a hand of disgust at him and stalked off, heading for the end of the cul-de-sac and the CAP fence beyond.
“Go find someone else to do this story,” she called back. “Pick whoever you want. I wouldn’t touch this story with a ten-foot-pole. If that’s what you want, it’s all yours.”
“Come on, Lucy.” Timo felt like shit. He started to chase after her. “It’s not like that!”
She glanced back. “Don’t even try, Timo.”
Her expression was so scornful and disgusted that Timo faltered.
He could almost hear his sister Amparo laughing at him. You got the eye for some things, little bro, but you are blind blind blind.
She’ll cool off, he thought as he let her go.
Except maybe she wouldn’t. Maybe he’d said some things that sounded a little too true. Said what he’d really thought of Lucy the Northerner in a way that couldn’t get smoothed over. Sometimes, things just broke. One second, you thought you had a connection with a person. Next second, you saw them too clear, and you just knew you were never going to drink a beer together, ever again.
So go fix it, pendejo.
With a groan, Timo went after her again.
“Lucy!” he called. “Come on, girl. I’m sorry, okay? I’m sorry…”
At first, he thought she was going to ignore him, but then she turned.
Timo felt a rush of relief. She was looking at him again. She was looking right at him, like before, when they’d still been getting along. She was going to forgive him. They were going to work it out. They were friends.
But then he realized her expression was wrong. She looked dazed. Her sunburned skin had paled. And she was waving at him, waving furiously for him to join her.
Another Texan? Already?
Timo broke into a run, fumbling for his camera.
He stopped short as he made it to the fence.
“Timo?” Lucy whispered.
“I see it.”
He was already snapping pictures through the chainlink, getting the story. He had the eye, and the story was right there in front of them. The biggest luckiest break he’d ever get. Right place, right time, right team to cover the story. He was kneeling now, shooting as fast as he could, listening to the digital report of the electronic shutter, hearing money with every click.
I got it, I got it, I got it, thinking that he was saying it to himself and then realizing he was speaking out loud. “I got it,” he said. “Don’t worry, I got it!”
Lucy was turning in circles, looking dazed, staring back at the city. “We need to get ourselves assigned. We need to get supplies… We need to trace this back… We need to figure out who did it… We need to get ourselves assigned!” She yanked out her phone and started dialing madly as Timo kept snapping pictures.
Lucy’s voice was an urgent hum in the background as he changed angles and exposures.
Lucy clicked off the cell. “We’re exclusive with Xinhua!”