He grits his teeth and shakes his head at the thought of how the cops are compounding the problem. The cops hated Arnulfo too. His loud, articulate, and passionate — and very public — calls to “abolish the police” as part of the larger movement guaranteed the cops were celebrating his death. Arnulfo’s prominence also guaranteed that the cops would do little to nothing to investigate the circumstances surrounding his murder.
The real question, he thought, is who wanted to kill the peace by killing the Peacemaker?
This was Jack’s brilliant idea, he says to himself, the disheveled but brilliant old-school Italian Jew version of Columbo. Jack’s old friends from Comite Esperanza, a Salvadoran advocacy organization Rocky volunteered at years ago, approached him with Arnulfo’s case. Jack has always been solidario. Like good Salvadorans, they don’t buy the official story.
Fucking Jack figured Rocky’d dive headfirst into this case because he went back years with Arnulfo. Jack figured wrong. He’s not so into it. Rocky’s gonna let Jack know he should find someone else as soon as possible. This isn’t good for him.
The deeper sources of Rocky’s Salvadoran malaise are known only to him, but have something to do with his relationship to the music. Whatever the sources, there, between the lines of these sublime bolero songs, is something else: the sweet-and-sour secrets of the better life left to him by his parents, two extremely poor Salvadorans who danced and struggled their way through a Great Depression and other calamities that made Steinbeck’s
Rocky turns back to the case, his closed eyes and the sultry sweetness of El Chicano’s version of “Sabor a Mi” making him look like he’s serenading his ex-wife or one of the other women he never managed to stay in a relationship with beyond a few years. Except Marivel. His head moves as if he’s painting a circle with it.
Rocky’s lover seems to be the crime itself. While a mystery even to him, his alchemical method involves transforming the rhythms and lyrics into an incantation, a spell that makes the background music the fuel for his analytical and emotional processes.
Rocky, an avid reader and quick study, hears a connection between the lyrics
Locard’s Principle, the foundation of forensics and detection, is premised on a simple but powerful idea Rocky adores, one that feels, for him, like the bridge between the love of poetry and science he learned in El Salvador before the war collapsed everything: every crime leaves a bit of itself on the criminal, and criminals also leave a part of themselves at the scene of the crime. This is what Rocky hears and feels in “Sabor a Mi.”
At one level, the physical evidence of the crime would indicate that the accused killer, Pablo Guardado, did in fact leave a lot of his sabor at the Slauson Park scene. Serena, a very smart and buxom Chicana LAPD clerk Rocky once dated, managed to sneak a look at the case file. She let him know that the evidence includes hair samples, DNA, fingerprints, and other materials gathered by LA’s less-than-finest, all matching with Guardado. And, of course, the bloody machete the cops say Guardado bought at Liborio’s market in Mid-City.
Despite (or probably
More than two weeks after Rocky attended the joint LAPD and DA press conference in the park, a taste of the shitshow remains.