Chapter 10 (Part 2)

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"Trust is a two-way street," said Magda. "And they trust me."

Adam shook his head. It took him a second to realize he was on the floor. Holding on to whatever he'd seen just now proved to be as useful as trying to stop a river from flowing. Soon, all his focus was on getting back up.

"You are letting them work for a scum."

"When the time comes, they'll do what's right."

"Sure?

"No."

"Then lecture them too. Where's their sermon? Why not get them in the ring and ridicule them in front of everyone?"

"Am I unfair?"

"Yes!"

"There. Anger," Magda removed her gloves. "You've found it. You can overcome it. This fight is over."

"Like hell it is!"

"You are right. The fight is not over."

"What does that even mean?" The adrenaline rush of the match and the hot fury he'd been battling to control somehow cleared his mind. Despite the beating, his body ached less, and breathing came easier to him. "Forget it. Just pray you never have to put your trust in them to the test."

"That's where you and I are different. I don't pray for fewer fights. I ask for the strength to hit back hard."

His desire to hurt her was overcoming him. Yet he stood silent and unmoving. Adam wanted to wield his sharp sarcasm like a sword. No words came to him, however. After a long silence, everyone around them resumed their workouts.

It was over.

He'd lost.

"There." Magda pointed to a thermos on top of a small wooden bench. "Stay hydrated."

"Not even my mother treated me like this."

"If she had, you wouldn't need no tough love as a grown-ass man."

Once Adam left the ring, he felt better after each sip of green tea.

"My ass is not big."

"Yeah! And I'm not old."

"Is that vanity?"

"My favorite sin." Magda grinned. "Come on, let's eat."

Adam smiled back.

Rice, stewed black beans, fried plantain slices, and a fried egg. It wasn't his kind of comfort food. Not by a long shot. But it tastes like glory. Heck! I don't mind it's room temperature. Warm food and beverages disgusted Adam. He liked everything either freezing or boiling—nothing in between. (Red Bulls had to be really cold, and if coffee didn't burn his tongue, it was no good).

"Best. Lunch. Ever," he said.

"Consider it your Christmas present."

"No decorations, by the way?"

"Are you blind?"

"Not funny."

"There."

She turned left towards a dusty garland hanging from the wall.

"Wow! Festive."

"You should come and visit during Carnaval."

Right. Magda's office was the same all year round: a narrow room, cluttered with ancient file cabinets. In there, sitting on an uncomfortable stool and using her desk as a table, Adam ate while his old coach typed, using only her index fingers on a yellowish keyboard. This computer belongs in a museum.

By the time Adam finished his fried plantain slices (the closest thing he'd have to a dessert all day), he'd told her everything about the fake plumber, the stolen PC, his encounter with Papa Smurf, and the homeless man who almost blinded him.

"I'm planning to get something special for my neighbor. You know, to thank her."

"When you're too busy making plans, God laughs at you and..."

"Life passes you by." Adam finished the sentence for her. "Fortune cookie. Seriously."

"I mean it. You're stubborn." She slammed the side of her computer to get it to work. "Can't see which tree is ablaze because you are too worried about the forest catching fire."

"Please drop the Mr. Miyagi act."

"Forget the PC. Go straight to the root of the problem."

The root of the problem? Adam could almost hear his own brain whirring. The common thread in all this mess is Rafael. His old mentor was the only person from the Mission Phidias still cashing in government checks and the one survivor of the Red Christmas he'd be able to find with little hassle.

If Adam remembered well, Rafael taught at the School of Medicine at the Central University of Venezuela. I can talk to him this afternoon, assuming I leave now. Was this risky? Maybe. But there's nothing I can do except finding out if he emailed me the audio file and why.

"Magda, you're right."

"As rain."

"Rafael is the root."

"What?"

"No one but him had access to the file or Evi's old email account."

"Where are you going?"

"To cut down the burning tree."

To be continued...

To be continued

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