英语六级阅读 Wife’s friend: X’mas gunman distant after marriage
2009-01-03来源:和谐英语
Sylvia Pardo and eight of her immediate family members died late Christmas Eve when Pardo’s ex-husband donned a Santa Claus suit, burst into a holiday party on a shooting rampage and then torched his former in-laws’ home.
Police said later that Bruce Pardo likely planned to kill his own mother and his wife’s divorce attorney as well before fleeing, but he suffered third-degree burns in the fire and committed suicide at his brother’s house.
Jauregui still calls Sylvia Pardo’s cell phone every day. She knows she will never get a call back, but she needs to hear her friend’s voice, a cheerful message that’s full of the laughter that defined her personality and their friendship.
Sometimes Jauregui leaves a message — part therapy, part habit.
"I have to live with her death and now I have to live with how it happened," said Jauregui, who was close to her friend’s whole extended family. "It replays in my mind, that night — I just picture it. And I can’t run to her parents, I can’t run to her sister. There’s no one left."
Jauregui, 43, first met Sylvia Pardo when the two girls were 13 and growing up in Monterey Park, just east of Los Angeles. She accompanied her friend’s large family on annual camping trips to Sequoia and Kings Canyon National Park and spent weekends dancing with her at disco clubs and house parties in the San Gabriel Valley.
The two kept in touch into adulthood and remained inseparable. Sylvia Pardo would call Jauregui every day on her way home from her job in El Monte as an administrative assistant at a flower-breeding company, and the two women saw each other regularly for shopping, drinks and dinners.
When Pardo met a new man, a tall, handsome electrical engineer, Jauregui said her friend was immediately smitten. She was attracted by Bruce Pardo’s good looks and his education and loved that he was talkative and had a good sense of humor. Jauregui and her husband went on double dates with the new couple and found him charming and sweet.
The relationship progressed quickly, Jauregui said, and the two were married in January 2006. In photos, the two are grinning and cuddling by a swimming pool — Bruce Pardo looking fit and tan — or posing in formal attire at a fancy dinner.
But almost immediately after the wedding, things changed. Jauregui said her friend would call her distraught and said that her husband had become withdrawn and indifferent within months of their nuptials. He resisted opening joint bank accounts and insisted that they keep their money separately. He was no longer affectionate or attentive, she told her friend, and seemed to expect her to provide for her three children from previous relationships without any help.
"Shave his first child. She wanted his child."
After Sylvia Pardo moved out, she talked less and less about her estranged husband but the two women were closer than ever. Jauregui last saw her friend four days before she died — and two days after her divorce was finalized.
The two women and another friend spent all day shopping in Chino Hills before going for drinks and dinner and then attending a company party at Sylvia Pardo’s brother’s house. All of Sylvia Pardo’s extended family was there, Jauregui recalled, and they huddled around a fire pit together eating pozole — a type of traditional Mexican stew — and reminiscing about old times as the party rolled on around them. Sylvia Pardo was looking forward to putting the divorce behind her and they made plans to spend New Year’s Eve together.
"She really reveled in the fact that we’d been friends 30 years. She said, ’Isn’t that special? Isn’t that great?’" Jauregui said.
Police said later that Bruce Pardo likely planned to kill his own mother and his wife’s divorce attorney as well before fleeing, but he suffered third-degree burns in the fire and committed suicide at his brother’s house.
Jauregui still calls Sylvia Pardo’s cell phone every day. She knows she will never get a call back, but she needs to hear her friend’s voice, a cheerful message that’s full of the laughter that defined her personality and their friendship.
Sometimes Jauregui leaves a message — part therapy, part habit.
"I have to live with her death and now I have to live with how it happened," said Jauregui, who was close to her friend’s whole extended family. "It replays in my mind, that night — I just picture it. And I can’t run to her parents, I can’t run to her sister. There’s no one left."
Jauregui, 43, first met Sylvia Pardo when the two girls were 13 and growing up in Monterey Park, just east of Los Angeles. She accompanied her friend’s large family on annual camping trips to Sequoia and Kings Canyon National Park and spent weekends dancing with her at disco clubs and house parties in the San Gabriel Valley.
The two kept in touch into adulthood and remained inseparable. Sylvia Pardo would call Jauregui every day on her way home from her job in El Monte as an administrative assistant at a flower-breeding company, and the two women saw each other regularly for shopping, drinks and dinners.
When Pardo met a new man, a tall, handsome electrical engineer, Jauregui said her friend was immediately smitten. She was attracted by Bruce Pardo’s good looks and his education and loved that he was talkative and had a good sense of humor. Jauregui and her husband went on double dates with the new couple and found him charming and sweet.
The relationship progressed quickly, Jauregui said, and the two were married in January 2006. In photos, the two are grinning and cuddling by a swimming pool — Bruce Pardo looking fit and tan — or posing in formal attire at a fancy dinner.
But almost immediately after the wedding, things changed. Jauregui said her friend would call her distraught and said that her husband had become withdrawn and indifferent within months of their nuptials. He resisted opening joint bank accounts and insisted that they keep their money separately. He was no longer affectionate or attentive, she told her friend, and seemed to expect her to provide for her three children from previous relationships without any help.
"Shave his first child. She wanted his child."
After Sylvia Pardo moved out, she talked less and less about her estranged husband but the two women were closer than ever. Jauregui last saw her friend four days before she died — and two days after her divorce was finalized.
The two women and another friend spent all day shopping in Chino Hills before going for drinks and dinner and then attending a company party at Sylvia Pardo’s brother’s house. All of Sylvia Pardo’s extended family was there, Jauregui recalled, and they huddled around a fire pit together eating pozole — a type of traditional Mexican stew — and reminiscing about old times as the party rolled on around them. Sylvia Pardo was looking forward to putting the divorce behind her and they made plans to spend New Year’s Eve together.
"She really reveled in the fact that we’d been friends 30 years. She said, ’Isn’t that special? Isn’t that great?’" Jauregui said.