‘Into the Dread Void’ is the first in The Dread Void series by Abe Moss. Photo: google
Abe Moss has been writing horror stories for as long as he can remember and hopes to never stop. He loves creature-features, psychological horror, supernatural horror, cosmic horror, you name it. With each book he writes, he hopes to try something a little different. The possibilities are endless and that is what he really loves about storytelling. He hopes you will enjoy his stories too. The Dread Void is a chilling new series by Abe Moss with the first two books released in May and July and the third in October. They are meant to be read in numerical order. (amazon, 2021)
“Into the Dread Void” (The Dread Void Book 1) The first in a chilling new series by horror author Abe Moss, “Into the Dread Void” begins the story of an unlikely duo—Nell, a foul-mouthed orphan with an unusual gift, and Hux, an otherworldly man with a knack for destroying otherworldly things—and their union against a universe teeming with horrors the likes of which our world has never fathomed. After years of life in foster care, fourteen-year-old Nell Parrish can hardly believe her luck when she meets her newest foster family. Kind and accepting, the Palmers are everything for which she has ever hoped. However, during a weekend trip to the Palmers’ summer cabin, a dark storm rolls in, along with something else lurking in the downpour. Hux is no stranger to the horrors of our universe. It is his job to stop them when they breach the Void—the glue which binds and separates our universe’s dimensions. So, when he must track down yet another trespassing entity, it is business as usual. That is, until the trail leads him to her—a teenage girl whose peculiar nature seems to have earned her the entity’s fixation, much to the peril of those around her.
“Amid the Sinking Dark” (The Dread Void Book 2) Robbed of her only chance at a normal life, Nell Parrish now finds herself in a strange new home where darkness and mysteries abound. Plagued with dreams of the night which brought her here, she is desperate for any distraction, anything to forget those unimaginable horrors…even if it means braving another altogether. Marilyn Powell and her little daughter Emmie are running toward a new life, escaping the overbearing judgement of Marilyn’s parents who want nothing more than to separate them. But when their road-trip getaway brings them to the dark and stormy seaside town of Brightport, plans change. A monstrous thing resides in Brightport. Something with an appetite as dark as the storm overhead. What was meant to be a one-night stay soon becomes a nightmare, as Marilyn and Emmie become the town’s latest target.
‘Unthinkable’ is the new thriller by Brad Parks. Photo: amazon
International bestselling author Brad Parks is the only writer to have won the Shamus, Nero, and Lefty Awards, three of American crime fiction’s most prestigious prizes. His novels have been published in fifteen languages and have won critical acclaim across the globe, including stars from every major prepublication review outlet. A graduate of Dartmouth College, Parks is a former journalist with the Washington Post and the Star-Ledger (Newark, New Jersey). He is now a full-time novelist living in Virginia with his wife and two school-age children. His new novel, “Unthinkable,” is a thriller about an ordinary man who may be able to save the world as we know it but to do so, he must make an impossible choice. (amazon, 2021)
“Unthinkable” – Nate Lovejoy is a self-proclaimed nobody, a stay-at-home dad who does not believe he is important to anyone but his wife and their two daughters. So, it is a shock when members of a powerful secret society kidnap and spirit Nate away to a mansion at the behest of their leader, Vanslow DeGange, who claims to know the future. He has foreseen that a billion people could die―unless Nate acts. It seems improbable, especially given what DeGange says will set this mass casualty incident in motion: Nate’s wife Jenny will sue the biggest power company in Virginia. Nate quickly senses that the power company is perpetrating a fraud. But at every turn, it becomes apparent there is more to DeGange’s gift than Nate wants to acknowledge. A billion people really could die, and Nate might be the only one who can save them. All he must do is the unthinkable.
The organizations are calling for community volunteers to help restore the “Leyendas Aztecas” mural in San Antonio’s Westside. Photo: google
Local arts nonprofit SAY Sí is teaming up with San Anto Cultural Arts and community volunteers to restore the “Leyendas Aztecas” mural on San Antonio’s Westside. Located directly across from SAY Sí’s new campus at 1310 S. Brazos, San Anto Cultural Arts artists, a staple arts organization of the Westside that has historically created San Antonio’s murals that vibrantly tell the story of the community, created the mural. (SAY Sí, 2021)
A team of lead muralists and assistants from San Anto Cultural Arts will direct the volunteers and no previous painting experience is required. SAY Sí students, parents, family members, alumni, and San Antonio residents at large are welcome to join forces to help repair this Westside relic.
Participants are welcome to volunteer for multiple time slots and should dress in comfortable clothes that can get paint on them. Volunteers will receive water, sunscreen, and bug spray. To sign up to volunteer or for more information, complete the Google Form.
Volunteer dates include:
Saturday August 14 from 11a.m. to 2p.m.
Tuesday August 17 – Thursday August 19 from 5p.m. to 7p.m
Saturday August 21 from 11a.m. to 2p.m.
Tuesday August 24 – Thursday August 26 from 5p.m. to 7p.m.
Saturday August 28 from 11a.m. to 2p.m.
Founded in 1994, SAY Sí is a national award-winning, art-based nonprofit youth development program located in San Antonio, Texas. The goal of the organization is to provide San Antonio area students in grades 6-12 with the opportunity to develop artistic and social skills in preparation for higher educational advancement and career building. SAY Sí programs serve over two hundred students from all of San Antonio’s school districts – in addition to serving 4,000 youth in community programs. SAY Sí’s unique approach to education has placed the organization on the national stage, with recognition as one of the top out-of-school-time organizations in the country by The Wallace Foundation, as well as serving as one of seven international youth arts organizations chosen to receive an inaugural Creative Catalyst Award by Adobe Project 1324 in 2016.
Leyendas Aztecas on San Antonio’s Westside. Courtesy photo, used with permission.
Bakery Lorraine is celebrating ten years in business. Photo: Bakery Lorraine, used with permission.
In honor of National Prosecco Day and the bakery’s 10th anniversary this Friday August 13, Bakery Lorraine is running a fun special to celebrate. Bakery Lorraine is celebrating in elegant fashion with a “Prosecco and Macaron Happy Hour”– $6 glasses of prosecco all day while supplies last + each glass comes with a complimentary macaron of the guest’s choosing. The special is available at Bakery Lorraine’s Pearl and Rim locations in San Antonio and the Domain Northside location in Austin only on Friday, August 13, during regular business hours. (Bakery Lorraine, 2021)
Bakery Lorraine is a San Antonio favorite and nationally recognized pastry shop famous for its colorful macarons and exquisite French pastries. Owned by chefs Anne Ng, Jeremy Mandrell, and operator Charlie Biedenharn, Food & Wine and CNN’s Eatocracyblog named it one of the best new bakeries in the U.S. as well as one of the “13 Destination Bakeries” by Conde Nast Traveler. Bakery Lorraine serves handmade French pastries and macarons using the finest ingredients. The bakery also serves breakfast, brunch, lunch, and dinner, including items like its breakfast parfait, the quiche Lorraine, chicken potpie, an assortment of salads and soups, and artisan sandwiches. Bakery Lorraine has three locations in San Antonio including one in the Historic Pearl district, one in San Antonio’s Medical Center, and one in San Antonio’s RIM shopping center, including now an Austin location at Domain Northside.
Turning Tides album due out August 27, 2021. Photo: google
Grayson Jenkins’ musical versatility—playing everything from country and bluegrass to rock ‘n’ roll—has helped him create a diverse fan base, and he has built his career on his own, self-funding his projects and doing whatever he has needed to do to keep his music life rolling. A proud Kentuckian—by birth and now, by choice—Grayson Jenkins sings his stories with a shrewd sincerity, a hopeful resignation, and a canny insight into the ways of the world; a world that found him, like many others, putting his life and career on hold for the last year and a half. But now that the world is turning again, Jenkins is ready to reveal a treasure trove of songs with Turning Tides, a full-length album due out August 27, 2021. (Grayson Jenkins, 2021)
Jenkins delivers candor and vulnerability with his signature resonant baritone; powerful enough to fill large halls but still tender enough to cradle his lyrics and deliver them straight into listeners’ hearts. Album-opener, “Mockingbird,” is a bright pop-inflected track whose joyous, rollicking vibe belies the sadness of the story it tells: the end of a relationship, the persistent lingering memories of a lover, and the difficult determination to move on. The Bluegrass Situation caught up with Jenkins to learn more about the tune and its origin. “I had just broken up with my girlfriend of four years and was a bit of a mess,” he said. “I decided to go camping in my van and to see Willie Nelson and Bob Dylan in Milwaukee. The first line for this song came from a bird that was chirping non-stop by my van one morning. I couldn’t get it to leave, kind of like her memory. It was a good trip but I didn’t come back with anything but a broken heart, toll tickets, a sunburn, and this song.” Fans can listen to “Mockingbird” right here and pre-order or pre-save Turning Tides ahead of its August 27 release at this link.
Although Jenkins started recording the album in 2019 and finished it by summer 2020, he held off putting it out during the pandemic, and holding onto the album has been “kind of a life vest of music,” he says. Jenkins calls the album a labor of love, saying, “We recorded the bones of the songs in five days, and then over the course of several months I added to it.” The album features an all-star cast of Kentucky musicians, including Jesse Wells (Tyler Childers), who co-produced the album with Jenkins and played electric guitar, fiddle, and mandolin. With the help of Wells, Jenkins recruited Miles Miller (Sturgill Simpson) for drums and Kenny Miles (Wayne Graham) for bass to round out the core recording group.
The album’s title track rides in on a Dick Dale-like guitar lick before shimmering slide guitar runs provide a bed for Jenkins’ slow-burning vocals; the song evokes the uncertainty that dark times bring and the glimmering rays of anticipation that change brings. With sonic echoes of Lynyrd Skynyrd’s “The Ballad of Curtis Loew,” “Turning Tides” cannily rockets from the instrumental bridge into a bright major key. Jenkins points out that for him the primary meaning of the song is “hope and optimism. Like a lot of folks, I’ve dealt with depression and anxiety. Coming out of those hard times is one of the greatest feelings in the world and this song was written about that.” In the end, Jenkins feels just like the character from the song: “Ready for the sun to shine and the tide to turn.”
Like “Turning Tides” and “Mockingbird,” the songs on Turning Tides all tell captivating stories of love and loss, heartbreak, and hope. For Jenkins, the arc of the album follows transitions in his own life—moving into music full-time, emerging into a post-pandemic phase of life, leaving behind one relationship and starting another—and offers perspectives on the changes we all experience in our lives as we move from sadness to joy, from self-denial to self-discovery, from darkness to light.
Turning Tides Track list: Mockingbird Nowhere Nights Turning Tides Jackson Low Down Lady Dear Katie Picket Fences Kennedy Road Turning Tides (Acoustic) Sweet Yesterday
Continuance out now on CD via Metal Assault Records. Courtesy photo, used with permission.
San Diego, California’s instrumental death metal duo Fermentor released their full-length debut album, Continuance on CD via Metal Assault Records on July 2, 2021. Featuring drummer Dylan Marks and guitarist Adam “Wally” Wollach, both are members of Beekeeper (also on the label roster). Continuance is available for purchase online. (Fermentor, 2021)
Stripping away the comforts of a traditional band infrastructure, Fermentor relies solely on communicating through only two elements, drums, and guitar. The two instruments acting more like contrapuntal voices, rather than just rhythm and melody. Taking total control of their unique synchronicity and subverting expectations of tonality and song structure, Fermentor has created a highly unique release in Continuance. Bursting with intricate timings, propulsive arrangements, and unconventional riffing, this incredible offering ushers its listeners into a new realm of musical possibility.
Following the Metal Assault Records release of Continuance, Fermentor will also issue a brand-new full-length album via MAR in the not-too-distant future. In the meantime, experience the intense creativity of Fermentor by streaming their official playthrough video for the album track “Cotterpin.”
Watch the video for “7th Circle” released on July 9 by Fermentor. Pursuing an old-school death metal style as an instrumental guitar-drum duo certainly makes Fermentor a standout band to begin with. Marks and Wollach have played in bands for years and expressed their musicianship in a variety of ways, but with Fermentor their musical prowess truly comes to the forefront.
Continuance track listing:
The Stench (4:01)
Thunderboss (5:19)
Mechanism (4:45)
The Decay of Western Society (3:37)
Seventh Circle (3:18)
Landbridge (4:31)
Cotterpin (3:48)
Stage V (4:09)
Cut & Shut (2:08)
Project Zeus (4:03) Total Runtime: 39:39
FERMENTOR is: Dylan Marks (drummer) Adam “Wally” Wollach (guitarist)
The annual Arthur O’Krent Golf Classic raises funds for the American Heart Association and United Way. Photo: google
Sponsored by Methodist Health and Methodist Healthcare Ministries of South Texas, Inc., the 19th Annual Arthur O’Krent Golf Classic is set for Monday, October 11, at the Resort Course at La Cantera Resort & Spa. For information on sponsor packages go to O’Krent Golf or contact Sam O’Krent at (210) 227.7387. Registration begins at 11a.m., with a shotgun start at 1p.m. (The Arthur O’Krent Golf Classic, 2021)
“Margie and I are extremely grateful and very fortunate to have an amazing group of volunteers and sponsors working with us to ensure the tournament’s success these past 19 years. During that time, we have raised more than $1.4 million to benefit the research and programs of the American Heart Association. It’s great to be back and celebrate in person this year. We are mindful of the pandemic and are taking every precaution to ensure proper safety measures are in place.”
Sam O’Krent, president of O’Krent Floors
The community can support the cause by purchasing Super Raffle tickets or memorial markers. Only 350 Super Raffle tickets will be available at $100 each; three for $250; or five for $400 for a chance to win one of seven magnificent prizes – each valued at $5,000. The prize selection includes: Two full access 2-day passes to the 2022 Masters Tournament at the Augusta National Golf Course; two tickets to Super Bowl 56 on February 13, 2022, in Los Angeles, California; a customized Dream Vacation; the ultimate floor makeover from O’Krent Floors; a $5,000 MasterCard gift card; your choice of exquisite merchandise from Ben Adams Precious Jewels and Fine Gifts; or a $5,000 gift card from Bjorn’s Audio Video. It is a no-lose situation – you will be making a difference with your donation, but you just might also win a $5,000 prize package for only $100 or less if you purchase a multiple ticket package.
Memorial Markers offer a special sponsor opportunity to honor someone you know who has been touched by heart disease. For $100, these markers of respect and acknowledgment will be positioned throughout the golf course. Purchase online at okrentgolf.com.
Reserve a room at La Cantera Resort & Spa October 8 – 11, for $279 per night and $50 from every rental will be donated to the American Heart Association via the Arthur O’Krent Golf Classic. A reduced resort fee of $20 (regularly $36) is included. Book fast, though, because this generous offer expires September 16, 2021.
When the American Heart Association eliminated the Cardiac Classic from its roster of events in 2002 Margie and Sam O’Krent stepped in to establish the Arthur O’Krent Golf Classic. Margie and Sam are intimately aware of heart disease. Sam’s father died of heart disease in 1997, and Margie’s father, a prominent cardiologist, underwent bypass surgery himself in 2003. As past chairman of the board of the AHA, Sam is devoted to fighting the number one cause of death among San Antonians – heart and blood vessel diseases. Every year almost 250,000 people suffer cardiac arrest and only about 5 percent of them survive.
When Every Second Counts The number one cause of death among Americans is heart and blood vessel disease. The American Heart Association is the nation’s largest voluntary health agency dedicated to preventing death and disability from the United States’ number one killer – heart disease and the number three killer – stroke. The American Heart Association funds life-saving research over $1 billion since 1949 and education programs designed to minimize heart disease and stroke in San Antonio.
O’Krent Floors is San Antonio’s oldest and largest family-owned floor covering store. Since 1915, now in its fifth generation, its reputation lies in its quality installations, fair pricing, and lifetime labor warranties. Products include carpeting, ceramic tile, natural stone, wood and cork floors, area rugs, and laminate floor coverings. O’Krent’s is so proud and confident in their abilities that it offers a full lifetime installation warranty on every product installed.
‘The Panza Monologues’ opens Friday with in person and live stream performances. Photo: google
Teatro Audaz is excited to announce their return to live theatre and the final show of their 2020/21 season with ‘The Panza Monologues’ directed by Paula Rodriguez. ‘The Panza Monologues’ returns home to where it all began. It opens Friday August 13 and will run until Sunday August 22, 2021, with performances on Friday and Saturday at 7:30p.m. and Sunday at 2p.m. at the Cellar Theatre.All performances will be live and streamed live online. Ticket prices range from $15 to $25 and will only be available online. All live shows are at 50% capacity and all guests who attend a live performance must wear a mask. (Teatro Audaz, 2021)
Written by Virginia Grise and Irma Mayorga, ‘The Panza Monologues’ is based on women’s stories about their panzas—tú sabes—that roll of belly we all try to hide. ‘The Panza Monologues’ features the words of Chicanas speaking with humor and candor. Their stories boldly place the panza front and center as a symbol that reveals the lurking truths about women’s thoughts, lives, loves, abuses, and living conditions.
Since its inception in San Antonio, Panza has played across the nation (East, West, North, South) but now it is coming home to where it all began. Teatro Audaz is putting it back into the bodies and lives of San Antonio women and onto San Antonio land to revisit and reconnect with the lives of women in San Antonio who first inspired this project/play. They bring it back to San Antonio to explore the issues of obesity, diabetes, food deserts…income inequality, all STILL prevalent in San Antonio…ten years on, what remains the same? What do we still need to change?
Cellar Theatre 800 W. Ashby Pl. San Antonio, TX 78212
The Briscoe Western Art Museum’s New Works Gallery. Photo: Briscoe Western Art Museum, used with permission.
Whether it is chatting with the Duke’s Daughter, kicking back to watch an iconic movie, seeing art that highlights the true diversity of the West, or checking out the real spurs that helped shape San Antonio and the West, the Briscoe Western Art Museum’s blockbuster summer fun continues. (Briscoe Western Art Museum, 2021)
Head to the Briscoe Western Art Museum to enjoy:
• A Conversation with The Duke’s Daughter Join the Briscoe as John Wayne’s daughter, Aissa Wayne, shares memories of her father with guest curator Andrew Patrick Nelson. Then take advantage of the last chance to see the Briscoe’s blockbuster Still in the Saddle: A New History of Hollywood Westerns exhibit and a unique opportunity for a guided tour with Nelson and Aissa Wayne. The program begins at 2p.m. with a Q&A, followed by the guided tours at 3p.m. on September 4. Wayne, daughter of John and Pilar Wayne, appeared in four of her father’s films as a child, “The Alamo,” “The Comancheros,” “McClintock,” and “Donavon’s Reef,” as she regularly traveled to her father’s movie sets during his career. She wrote a memoir of her life with the Duke, “John Wayne, My Father,” and is a retired criminal and family law attorney.
• See the Spurs at the Briscoe Of all the gear that cattle drovers carried with them, few pieces of equipment were as notable and personal as the spurs of Spanish and Mexican vaqueros and American cowboys. The Briscoe’s display highlights the variety of spurs seen on the major cattle trails of the 19th century. From the functional design of Texas cowboys to the elaborate silver inlays of California vaqueros, the collection highlights the finest spur makers of the late 19th and early 20th centuries. The placement of each spur approximates where each maker lived with an example of the work he forged.
• Sharing the True History of the West: “Frank Chisum – Wild West Icon” The Briscoe is proud to share a bold new addition to its collection, Kim Wiggins’ “Frank Chisum – Wild West Icon.” Wiggins’ fifth piece in his Goodnight-Loving Trail series documenting the first major cattle drives in American history, it portrays black cowboy Frank Chisum roping a stallion out of a large box canyon. A slave until 1860 when cattle king John Chisum paid $400 for his freedom, Frank Chisum gained acclaim during the second great American cattle drive. He assisted in wrangling about 3,000 cattle from Texas to New Mexico. “Frank Chisum – Wild West Icon” is a gift from the Jack and Valerie Guenther Foundation and is on display on the Briscoe’s third floor.
• Showcasing the Missions: New Works Gallery The Briscoes’ New Works Gallery continually rotates new works, giving everyone an opportunity to enjoy the museum’s collection as it expands. The current selection of works features paintings by Enrique “Kiko” Guerra that show the five San Antonio missions in their full splendor, while the complimenting stereographs—two almost identical photographs that, when viewed side-by-side, create the illusion of a three-dimensional image—show how the missions looked in the 1860s after a century of disrepair and modification. E.M. Hennings’ painting “Spanish Occupation of Texas,” reflects how daily life for indigenous people under Catholic rule must have looked. Crowning the gallery is Jean-Marie Alfred Paris’ “The Siege of Puebla, 1902,” depicting the short-lived French victory outside of Puebla in an otherwise crushing defeat that saw the final withdraw of European military forces from North America.
• Adding Vision to the Sculpture Garden The latest addition to the museum’s stunning sculpture collection, “Hunters Vision,” 1989, bronze relief with brown patina, ed. 2/6, 51” x 66” x 31 ½,” is on view in the McNutt Sculpture Garden. On loan from the Jack and Valerie Guenther Foundation, “Hunters Vision” is the third piece from Allan Houser (1914-1994) displayed in the garden. A member of the Chiricahua Apache tribe, hunter-gatherers who roamed from New Mexico to northern Mexico, Houser’s “Dance of the Eagle” and “Buffalo Dance Relief” greet visitors to the Briscoe’s McNutt Sculpture Garden.
• Summer Film Series Features Cool, Classic Cowboys on the Silver Screen Escape the heat with an afternoon at the movies. The Briscoe’s popular Summer Film Series features an iconic Western film. Briscoe guest curator Dr. Andrew Patrick Nelson will introduce the movie and explain how it relates to Still in the Saddle: A New History of the Hollywood Western, the Briscoe’s fantastic summer exhibition. The movies are free with museum admission. Popcorn, candy, and food truck grub are available to enjoy in the museum’s draft house-style theater, along with free beer courtesy of Ranger Creek Brewing.
o “The Long Riders” Sunday, August 22, 1p.m.
Grab your brother and watch real-life brothers portray the Jesse James gang in a sympathetic portrayal of the brothers who begin their legendary bank raids because of revenge. Brothers James and Stacy Keach star as Jesse and Frank James; David, Keith and Robert Carradine play Cole, Jim, and Bob Younger; Dennis and Randy Quaid play Ed and Clell Miller, and Christopher and Nicholas Guest play Charlie and Bob Ford.
o “The Shootist” Sunday, September 5, 1p.m.
Close out the summer with John Wayne in his final film role in 1976’s “The Shootist.” Wayne portrays a dying gunfighter who spends his last days looking for a way to die with minimum pain and maximum dignity. Still in the Saddle closes on Labor Day and this last film of the summer series is a fantastic way for a fantastic exhibition to ride off into the sunset.
Locals Day: August 15, 10a.m. – 5p.m. The Briscoe welcomes its neighbors to head West by hosting a Local’s Day the third Sunday of each month. All residents of San Antonio and Bexar County receive 50 percent off general admission on August 15. As always, children twelve and under receive free admission, as do active-duty members of the military, making the Briscoe a terrific spot for families to enjoy.
Preserving and presenting the art, history, and culture of the American West through engaging exhibitions, educational programs, and public events reflective of the region’s rich traditions and shared heritage, the Briscoe Western Art Museum is located on the San Antonio River Walk at 210 W. Market Street in the beautifully restored 1930s former San Antonio Public Library building. Named in honor of the late Texas Gov. Dolph Briscoe Jr. and his wife, Janey Slaughter Briscoe, the museum includes the three-story Jack Guenther Pavilion, used for event rentals and programs, and the outdoor McNutt Sculpture Garden.
New retail concept at Pearl, Rancho Diaz, to open to the public on August 13, 2021. Photo: Laura Alexandra, used with permission.
Pearl is excited to announce the addition of a new retail concept opening to the public on Friday August 13, 2021 – Rancho Diaz. Created by Feliz Modern owners, Ginger and Mario Diaz, Rancho Diaz is a high-end eclectic edit of vintage and modern pieces that nod to a desert modern aesthetic for foodies and home decor enthusiasts. The shop will feature a rotating curation of products and designs that will appeal to locals and tourists alike. (Rancho Diaz, 2021)
The Diaz’ latest endeavor combines their design backgrounds with their love for all things Mexico and Texas, with a definite nod to the flavor of their beloved hometown. Rancho Diaz will encompass 1,600 square feet of retail space and will feature small batch vintage finds mixed with newer replicas, including home décor, kitchenware, textiles, table linens, personal handmade accessories, gifts, plants, local art, and more. Rancho Diaz will be a one-stop shop for decor, special kitchen products, at-home entertaining, and dinner parties.
Public Grand Opening on Friday, August 13, 2021
Hours of operation: Monday through Wednesday – 10a.m. to 6p.m., Thursday through Saturday – 10a.m. to 7p.m. Sunday 10a.m. to 5p.m.
Rancho Diaz 303 Pearl Pkwy, Suite 101 San Antonio, TX 78215