This is the last chapter in what has been a long writing adventure. I've learned a lot. I hope you've enjoyed it.
12. Closing the door
Claudia watched the road in front of them and asked, "How long are you going to be here? Not all the way 'till school starts, right?"
Manny turned his car through a switchback before he answered. The last snowfall was days before, but there were still streaks of ice across the road where it was shaded by cliffs or tall stands of ponderosa. "I'm off work until the first Monday after New Years—the fourth, I think. Have you finished your Christmas shopping?"
"For everyone but you." Claudia said.
"I don't have yours either," Manny said. "Tomorrow, you might get a card from the grocery store." Manny took another tight curve then slowed and turned into a parking lot on the edge of the mountain's crest.
Claudia climbed out of the car and peered over the iron rail, down at the granite spires and crags that defined the steep mountain face, to the city sprawling below them. "Aii! That makes me dizzy," she said and stepped back.
Manny watched the smiling people with snow shoes and cross-country skis who came and went from the trails. "There's more people here than I thought there'd be. Are there too many?"
"Maybe," Claudia said. She zipped her pink, fur-trimmed jacket all the way up, and found matching mittens in her pockets. "We need to find a place where, if Angelito comes along with the locket when I call it back, he won't be able to take hostages—that's why we're not in town, si?" She pointed to the trail at the edge of the cliff. "There's no snow on that trail, so no skiers. The wind must blow it all off."
They walked south along the trail until the cliff edge veered away to a sharp point and the only sounds were from the wind rushing through the pine and spruce. It was easy to see where people had climbed over the railing to peek off the edge, and that's what Manny and Claudia did.
Manny got far enough out to look down, and then he backed away. "You know, we must have passed a dozen places on the way here that could have worked."
"But I like it here," Claudia said. "It's the top of Turtle Mountain, and the refuge of the Zuni gods. It seems like a good place to do this." She faced into the breeze that climbed the mountain's steep face and closed her eyes for a moment. "I think I'm ready."
"How can you know that?" Manny asked. "How do we know this will work at all?"
"I've been practicing," Claudia said. "I can find the locket, and I can tug on it. This is the first time I'll really try to pull it back. Ready?"
Manny didn't have anything to do but wait, so he watched Claudia close her eyes again and draw a breath. With her heart and her soul, his sister called back the charm that Falcona said would always be hers. He didn't see or feel anything change, but Claudia held her mittened hands out, and the gleaming locket appeared in her palms.
Angelito appeared with it. He was a confused old man wrapped in a blanket with the locket still on the leather thong around his neck.
Claudia clenched her jaw and shoved Angelito away while Manny snatched the charm. Angelito tried to push Manny off, but Manny pulled the charm over his head and stepped back with it dangling from his fist.
Angelito staggered a couple steps back before he stopped himself. He glanced around and seemed to realize where he was, and then he lunged for Claudia. He caught her hair and her arm and tried to hold her against his chest while he backed toward the cliff's edge.
"Give me the locket," Angelito said, "or she's goes. Maybe we both go." He struggled to stay standing with Claudia fighting and cursing in his grasp, and Manny lunged at him. In one motion, he pulled Claudia away and shoved Angelito to his knees.
Angelito hardly seemed able to lift his head, but he caught his breath, pushed himself off the ground with one hand, and cradled the other arm in front of him. He lurched toward Manny and tried to snatch the charm, but Manny held it out of reach, and Angelito took one step back and then another.
Manny started to follow Angelito, but Claudia stopped him with a hand on his arm. "Let him go," she said. "He doesn't look so dangerous right now, except maybe to himself."
Angelito nodded toward Claudia as if he agreed. "It's been weeks since I met your bear," Angelito said. "I'm hurt, I'm sick, and I'm never going to be well again." He took another step back toward the cliff. "I can't live in this world of yours anymore." He motioned to the locket that Manny still held in his hand and stepped back again. "That thing gave me a life in the shadows. Without it, there's no place for me."
Angelito stopped at the edge of the cliff with his back to the blue sky. He straightened his shoulders and focused on Manny and Claudia. "Now I'll see if all those people who cursed me to hell are going to get their wish."
Someone on the trail behind Manny and Claudia screamed, "Oh my God!" as Angelito spread his arms, arced backwards, and disappeared beyond the cliff.
Manny and Claudia scrambled to the edge and looked over. Angelito's body was broken on a snowy crag a hundred feet below. "He's still alive." Claudia said. "I can still feel him." She stopped and watched as the snow around his head turned red. "And now I can't."
Claudia turned around and sat up as two girls climbed over the railing. "We saw him jump!" they said. "Did you know him? Is he dead?"
Manny sat up beside Claudia, wrapped his arm around her and told the girls, "Yeah, sort of and yeah, he's dead."
Claudia was trembling, and then she buried her face in Manny's shoulder and started sobbing. "Dios Mio Manny! I never imagined Angelito would go that way." She had tears streaming down her cheeks when she looked up. "I think I need help."
"You and me both," Manny said.
* * *
The night was clear and cold, and Manny pulled his jacket tighter while he talked. "We stayed there while the climbers brought his body up, and we answered all their questions as well as we could," Manny said. "Out of all we told them, they'll choose to believe what they want to believe. It felt like a long day." There wasn't really very much more that he could tell his mom and dad, because he'd never told them much before.
"And on Christmas Eve!" Dolly said. "Imagine how terrible that has to be for his family." Manny shrugged without saying more. He didn't know of anyone who would mourn for Angelito, but that was something else he didn't need to say.
"This is a depressing time of year for some people," Tom said. He pulled Dolly by her hand. "Come on, the tour starts over here."
Claudia and Manny lagged behind. "I didn't know the walking tour had a start," Claudia said. She watched people moving among the glowing luminarias that lined the paths and sidewalks and found Manny watching an old woman under the portal at the east side of the plaza.