THIRTY-THREE

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She peered ahead at the café and assumed breakfast was being served. A few trucks and cars were still in the lot. Since she’d told Rosemary that she was going over there and knew that she could see her from where she stood behind the counter at the post office, she might as well make good on her word. Besides, breakfast, she thought, wasn’t a bad idea. She left the truck where it was and walked across the paved lot for both establishments and in through the café’s front door.

As soon as she entered, it was clear that she was the stranger and everyone else belonged. She met the eyes of the diners, most of them men, before the waitress walked out from the kitchen carrying a tray of plates, the food hot and steaming, in one hand and a pot of coffee in the other. There was a pay phone in the corner just inside the building, the one Rosemary had mentioned. Behind the counter, a television was on that was muted with closed captions and seemed to be giving the local morning news from Albuquerque.

“Just take a seat wherever you like,” the woman said as she made her way to the first booth, where two men were sitting. They made some comment about being glad that their meals had finally arrived and that if it had been much longer, they would be eating lunch.

Eve didn’t stop at the phone or the counter; she walked past the waitress to the third booth by the window. She slid in on the side where she would face the TV and watched as the garbage truck across the street finished collecting the Dumpster trash and pulled out onto the highway. She hoped the driver wasn’t planning to come over to the café, as she didn’t really want to be eyeball-to-eyeball with the man who had caught her sleeping in her vehicle.

“You want coffee?” The server had delivered the plates and was now standing beside Eve with the pot still in her hand, the tray resting under her arm.

“Yes, please,” Eve responded and watched as she filled up the cup in front of her.

“You camping in your truck?”

Eve began to wonder if everyone had seen what had just happened in the lot across the street, if everyone had noticed she had been parked at the wildlife area. She could feel the folks around her listening. “No, not really,” she answered. “I got here early, just before sunrise; thought I’d pull over and rest.”

The waitress nodded with a smile, feigning only mild interest. She waited with no further question.

Eve didn’t seem to understand why the server was still standing beside her. She inspected her uniform and noticed the name tag. Her name was Jennifer, and she looked to be about forty years old.

“You know what you want?” Jennifer asked. She was pretty, her dark hair pulled back in a ponytail, and she was dressed in a mustard-yellow uniform that was not very flattering.

“Oh, I’m sorry, no.” Eve glanced around the table until she spotted the menu stuck behind the napkin holder and the salt and pepper shakers.

“Take your time,” Jennifer said and walked away.

“Order up,” came the announcement from the kitchen.

Eve turned and noticed the cook. He appeared to be older, sported a short white beard, and was wearing a chef ’s hat, a T-shirt, and a white apron. He placed a couple of plates on the shelf and then moved away, likely going back to the grill, she assumed.

Eve pulled out the menu. The dishes were the usual New Mexican fare. There was a breakfast burrito, ranch-style eggs with chorizo, sausage-and-egg tostados, and her favorite, huevos rancheros served with black beans and home fries. She closed the menu and placed it back behind the napkins.

She poured some cream into her coffee while she glanced around the place. It looked like it had been serving meals for years, and yet somehow Eve had never noticed the café when she took her camping trips to Holy Ghost. She was always so excited about her destination, she had never really driven past the campground turnoff to see what else might be down the highway. She realized as she took in the place that she had never eaten at a restaurant when she headed north to camp; in fact, that was part of the draw for her. No services, no luxuries, no people. She always came to the area for solitude. Going out to a restaurant was never anything she’d intended to do.

As she peered ahead, the man in the booth facing her direction seemed to be watching her. Eve smoothed back her hair and straightened her blouse, thinking she must look like she just woke up. She wondered if she appeared homeless or destitute, if that was part of the reason Rosemary wouldn’t give her any information. She glanced down at what she was wearing—her crumpled shirt, old gray hoodie, wrinkled jeans—and realized she certainly didn’t look like a nun and she certainly didn’t look like somebody a person should trust with private information. She smiled at the man watching, who then looked away.

Eve turned her attention back to the highway and watched the few cars and trucks that passed by. It was not the busy season, she knew, because the campgrounds in the national forest in that area of the Santa Fe Mountains hadn’t opened yet for the season. It was still a few months before the road would be busy with tourists and hikers.

“You decide?”

Jennifer had returned.

“Huevos rancheros,” Eve answered.

Jennifer nodded. “Good choice,” she noted and then asked the question Eve was accustomed to hearing in New Mexican restaurants, “Red or green?” referring to the kind of chile Eve preferred. She topped off her coffee while she waited.

“Red,” Eve replied.

A couple walked past, apparently having just finished their meal. The woman handed the waitress fifteen dollars.

“Keep the change,” she said as she walked behind the man and headed out the door.

“Thanks, darlin’,” Jennifer said and turned to walk away. “Huevos with red,” she yelled to the cook.

Eve sat back in the booth. She liked the feel of the Tererro Café. It was comfortable and nothing fancy, and she thought that maybe when the campgrounds opened she’d come back, maybe even bring the Captain, take a drive around instead of just parking and staying at Holy Ghost. She knew her father would appreciate a place like this.

She glanced up at the television and was immediately captivated by the images on the screen. It was a report about the murder and showed a reporter standing near the front steps of the monastery giving a rundown of what had happened and who was involved. She noticed Detective Lujan standing near the young woman as the camera panned the area, and Eve felt her stomach do a flip. Since the sound was turned down, she was unable to hear the report, but captions told the story.

“The name of the victim is not being released to the public at this time,” read the words scrolled across the screen. “But the Santa Fe police spokesperson will say it was a woman and that she is not from New Mexico. Monastery officials ask for privacy during this time and will be closing their guest quarters for an undisclosed period of time.”

And then what Eve heard next was like an unexpected gift, coming from the booth in front of her.

“Hey, Jen, isn’t that where your crazy boyfriend walks every year, carrying a cross on Good Friday?”

Eve turned as the waitress came back into the main dining room.