The Silver Button in the Wounded Apache Boy Changed Everything-yumihong

The day Julián Arreola gave water to the men everyone called enemies, the whole shape of San Isidro changed before sunset.

But that was not how the story began.

It began with a well.

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The well sat in the center of Julián’s failing ranch, ringed by sun-blasted stones and a rope that had rubbed grooves into the wood from years of desperate hands pulling it up.

In good seasons, nobody thought much about water.

In bad seasons, water became law.

By the summer the Apaches rode down from the sierra, the Chihuahua desert had already swallowed most of what Julián owned.

The corral was empty except for dust.

The fence leaned like tired bones.

The little jacal where he slept had one wall that shuddered whenever the hot wind came across the flats.

Still, the well remained clean.

That was why Emilio Cárdenas wanted it.

Emilio was Julián’s brother-in-law by marriage, though he had never honored the word brother and had only used the word family when it helped him take something.

He had married into influence, drank into arrogance, and purchased loyalty one bottle at a time from the men who circled his cantina at night.

His wife had been Julián’s wife’s older sister.

When Julián’s wife was alive, Emilio laughed louder around him, clapped him on the back, and called him compadre when there were witnesses.

After she died, the warmth disappeared.

Grief had barely settled in the corners of the house before Emilio began mentioning how hard it was for a man alone to keep land in such dry country.

First he offered help.

Then he offered money.

Then he offered threats dressed as advice.

Julián remembered the first offer clearly because it had come twenty-two days after the burial, when the wax from the mourning candles had not yet been scraped from the windowsill.

Emilio sat at the table where Julián’s wife had once kneaded tortillas and placed coins on the wood as though feeding a dog.

“Take it,” Emilio said. “A widower should not live out here alone.”

Julián looked at the coins and saw the insult before he understood the price.

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