Father Martin was not, at first glance, the sort of man to whom violent people told violent stories. He was small, round-shouldered, and almost absurdly mild in appearance. His black coat never seemed to fit him quite properly, and his hat sat on his head with the air of something that had given up trying to look dignified. His face was ordinary enough to be forgotten at once, until one noticed his eyes, which had the disagreeable habit of seeming to understand a thing before it had been fully explained. He had come to the parish on San Jacinto Street to assist for a week while the pastor recovered from pneumonia, and in the manner of priests, doctors, and bartenders, he was told more than anybody had intended to tell him. By the third evening he had heard, in fragments and enlargements, about a thing the neighborhood still referred to as the miracle on Cardenas Avenue . He heard it first from a widow who crossed herself when she mentioned it, then from a retired mechanic who laug...
A revised version of the transcript: The Night Mercy Found Us Gunfire, brotherhood, and the grace that spared us
Looking back now, I can see that much of my youth was ruled by a confused mixture of loyalty, pride, and recklessness. At the time, I would not have called it that. I would have called it courage. I would have called it honor. I would have said it was simply the way we lived: if one of your brothers was in trouble, you stood with him; if someone challenged you, you did not back down; if a fight came, you fought. That was the code as I understood it then. Age has taught me that young men often disguise foolishness with noble names. We call it toughness, loyalty, or heart, when in truth it is often some unstable mixture of immaturity, fear, and pride. In those years I lived close to that edge, rarely thinking about consequences or how quickly a bad moment could turn into something permanent. One night at a party, I came closer than ever to learning that lesson. I was standing at the liquor table with a beer in my hand when Bobby Loco walked in. He was well over six feet tall a...