Through the white, beating Texan heat, water towers cry out titles high above the flat land where kids from the roadside houses run around in stained tank tops, dreaming of their own names up there. The long and burnt grass cuts their ankles and the dry cement scrapes their feet. The midday ritual begins in a racing circle raising dust over the roofs and into the shy afternoon. Around 5, the roadside families reunite in front of their houses to watch the daily traffic jam and observe the variety of faces through the glass windows, which after a short while do not seem to vary at all. But today, something else had their full attention. The sky was never seen this low and the clouds turned a shade of black so dark as to be almost green, so the eldest women on that single row of houses declared bad omen. The next early morning, the closest water tower laid gravely against the ground. Already, a small boy had climbed on top of the tank, soles bleeding, and waving his shirt into the wide clear sky.