UVALDE, Texas – It’s the morning coffee Carmelo Quiroz will miss.

Every morning, Quiroz‘s grandson, 10-year-old Jayce Luevanos, woke up and made his grandparents a pot of coffee. It was his thing. And they loved him for it. 

Yes, there were other things about Jayce to love. The way he colored and wrote notes saying “I love you Grandpa.” The way he twirled sticks and always brought the neighborhood kids to the family home, a block from Robb Elementary School. 

Jayce’s dog, Fifi, would wait for him to get home. Sometimes, there would be 6, 7, 8 kids tumbling around the yard, playing with sticks and roughhousing as Quiroz and his wife looked on, amused. There were sodas and water for all the kids. 

Jayce was happy. He was loved. And he died Tuesday, Quiroz said. 

Here, on a sunny spring morning in the last week of school, a gunman entered Robb Elementary and killed 19 children and two teachers. Quiroz learned that night that Jayce was among the victims. 

“He was our baby,” Quiroz said. 

Visitors pay respects at the school sign of Robb Elementary School on the day after a mass shooting that left 19 children and two adults dead in Uvalde, Texas.

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On Wednesday morning, he was slumped over behind the wrought-iron fence posts in the family’s back yard, looking out into the empty day. A few blocks past there, crowds of FBI agents and other law enforcement officers still flanked the roped-off school. 

His family hasn’t been allowed to see their boy. Maybe tomorrow, Quiroz said. 

Why did this happen? he wonders. Why are these shooters so unhappy? Can’t they talk to someone? 

Jayce and his mother lived with Quiroz. Theirs is a close-knit neighborhood, the kind that little towns like Uvalde make possible. On the blocks that stretch away from the school campus, tidy facades of brick and stone share space with the occasional boarded-up window. A windowsill props up a little blue birdhouse above a patina statue. A carport carries a Cowboys football flag. Roosters crow constantly; dogs bark. 

Quiroz was standing in the quiet, with his memory of the morning before.

That day, Jayce’s grandmother was going with her great-granddaughter’s kindergarten class to the San Antonio Zoo, Quiroz said. Jayce had begged to go with them.

But to skip school? Now? There were just a few days left before summer break. Just go to school, they told him. 

And Jayce liked school, Quiroz said. How could they even begin to imagine something like this could happen? 

Soon, though, Jayce’s family knew something was wrong. They didn’t run to the school, Quiroz said. They stayed home, not wanting to get in the way. They wanted the police to do their job. 

Then they heard that it had been a shooting. They knew children were dead. Some of their other extended family members went to the hospital or the civic center, where dozens of parents people languished for hours waiting for news about their kids.