Donna reports:One of my Spanish ex-husbands' families mobbed me once, so maybe that's the connect with the term mafia. *A* mob is loosely associated, maybe just by geography and emotion, an employer, or not even. *THE* mob is by definition an extended family.
Conchi, Paco's sister explained by telephone: "
Es que somos casi como una mafia."
But he lies to you, I pled. I bet he told you I was the one gave him Hep A.
"It doesn't matter. And don't surprise yourself if suddenly there is no water or power."
This isn't because I never brought children to the tribe, that your husband stated my
arroz al horno was exquisite? That I mirror your sterility?
"1400 hours tomorrow. Under the M60 bridge,
Parque Caprichon, near the statue of Satan. With the keys. We'll have your check."
Father Unamuno had secured some goat pen in the mountains to hide our hooptie, so I had nothing to get to work in.
The family estate on a low floor of a suburban apartment block was shuttered up with painted steel blinds.
Conchi's husband since the age of 9, Jose Maria was nearly a lawyer who could draw up the documents necessary to make it all seem above board.
Mrs. Unamuno only participated passively and hid as well as could be her disappointment at no longer having one less
chico pijamado around the house to serve and mop up after.
Paco's brother, needle hanging from a vein, saw back to a time where the two boys'd lived in ecstatic flannel and hardons on thin mattresses over spring cots or at their homework desks or in the formaldehyde veneered pressboard dining salon sipping at fideos or steaming puree.
The
jamon, in its holder atop the sinfonia in the anteroom, conspired to seethe with translucent mites.