"Jance, J. A. - Joanna Brady 10 - Partner in Crime" - читать интересную книгу автора (Jance J. A)
PROLOGUE
“Well?” Deidre Canfield asked, as she mopped her dripping
forehead and straightened the last picture. “What do you think?”
Rochelle Baxter stood back and eyed the painting
critically. It was one of sixteen pieces in her first-ever gallery showing. With
occasional heavy-lifting help from Dee’s boyfriend, Warren Gibson, the two
women had spent the previous six hours hanging and rehanging the paintings in
Dee’s recently remodeled and—for anyone doing physical labor—incredibly
overheated Castle Rock Gallery in Bisbee, Arizona. For Dee it was a new
beginning. For Rochelle, it was something else.
“It’s fine,” she said. Then, seeing how her lack of
enthusiasm caused a cloud of concern to cross Dee’s broad face, Rochelle added
quickly, “It’s great, Dee. Really, it’s fine.”
“I’m glad you like it,” Dee said. ‘And don’t worry. I know
this show is going to be a huge success. You heard the phone calls that came in
about it just today. I’m betting we’ll have an overflow crowd for tomorrow’s
grand opening.”
Deidre Canfield may have been convinced, but Rochelle wasn’t
so sure. “I hope so,” she said dubiously.
Dee grinned. “What’s wrong, Shelley? Sounds like you’re
suffering from a case of opening-night jitters.”
“Maybe so,” Rochelle admitted. “In fact, probably so.”
“Take my word for it,” Dee assured her. “I’ve been
managing art galleries for years. I know what people like, and I’m telling you,
they’re going to love your stuff. What worries me is that we’ll sell out so
fast that some people will go away disappointed. I’m a lot more concerned about
that than I am about no one showing up.”
Turning away, Dee walked over to her desk and picked up
her purse. “Warren wants me to give him a lift to the house, and I have to stop
by the bank before it closes. Want to ride along?”
Rochelle shook her head. “You two go ahead. If you don’t
mind, Dee, I’d rather stay here. I want to be alone with the paintings for a
little while.”
Dee smiled sympathetically. “It must seem like saying
good-bye to a bunch of old friends.”
Rochelle nodded, but she kept her face averted so the
tears welling up in her eyes didn’t show. Dee’s comment was far closer to the
mark than Rochelle Baxter wanted to admit. “Something like that,” she murmured.
Dee shrugged. “Suit yourself,” she said. “Stay as long as
you like. I’ll be back in forty-five minutes or so. I also need to do some
last-minute consulting with the caterer. I’ll lock the door and put up the
CLOSED sign. If someone wants in, ignore them. Don’t bother opening the door.
Eventually they’ll get the message and go away. If you have to leave before I
get back, pull the door shut behind you.”
“Will do,” Rochelle replied.
Dee and Warren left then, walking out into the warm autumn
weather of a late-October Arizona afternoon. They made an Incongruous, Jack
Sprat sort of couple. Warren was tall and lanky and looked as though he’d never
eaten a square meal in his life. Dee was short and almost as wide as she was
tall. He wore a faded denim shirt, frayed jeans, and equally worn tennis shoes.
Dee’s roly poly figure was swathed in a flowing tie-dyed smock that covered
her from her plump neck to the toes of her aging Birkenstocks. The only
similarity lay in their hairdos. Both wore their hair pulled back into single
braids, although Dee’s gun-metal colored plait was a good two feet longer than
Warren’s.
The afternoon temperature was a mild eighty-three degrees.
Nevertheless, Dee insisted on keeping a reflective sunshade inside the
windshield of her elderly Pinto station wagon. Rochelle watched as Warren
pulled the sunshade out of the window and stowed it in the backseat. Then he
climbed into the rider’s side of the multicolored rattletrap vehicle whose
dented panels had been painted in vivid shades of lacquer that almost rivaled
Deidre’s equally multicolored smock. Dee crammed herself behind the meeting
wheel.
Alter three separate tries, the touchy old engine finally
wheezed to life. Driving with little-old-lady concentration, Dee eased the
Pinto into what passed for rush-hour traffic in Bisbee and headed down
Tombstone Canyon, leaving Rochelle to marvel how a plump, wide-faced, oddly
dressed white woman had, in the last few months, become both her good friend as
well as an enthusiastic and unflagging artistic booster.
It was Dee Canfield who, after seeing Rochelle’s
paintings, had decided on mounting a one-woman show. “Reminiscent of Norman
Rockwell,” Dee had pronounced upon viewing Rochelle’s collection of work. “People
won’t be able to keep from buying it. It has that same old-fashioned,
uncomplicated look and feel to it. There are a lot of people out there who are
sick and tired of so-called artists who throw globs of paint on canvas and
pronounce it ‘fine art.’ ”
Rochelle didn’t entirely share Dee’s confidence about the
salability of her work. There was good reason that her paintings were “reminiscent
of” Norman Rockwell. As a child growing up in Macon, Georgia, Rochelle had
pored over a book—one of her grandmother’s coffee-table books—that was
chock-full of Norman Rockwell’s paintings. She had paged through each picture
one by one, focusing all her attention and wonder on the occasional black
people she saw depicted there—children and old people and ordinary adults
whose appearance resembled her own.
Those few dark-skinned people in the paintings, like
Rockwell’s other subjects, were caught while engaged in the most mundane of
behaviors—standing outside a barbershop, riding in a wagon, playing with a
ball, blowing on a harmonica. She had studied each picture with painstaking
care, noticing how the artist had used light and dark to create the subtle
variations of skin color. She had marveled at how Rockwell had captured
intimate scenes in a way that made her feel as though she, too, knew the people
depicted there. But most of all, seeing Rockwell’s work had made her want to
emulate him—to paint her subjects with the same respect and dignity he had
accorded those he had painted.
Now Rochelle had. Her paintings were finished and framed
and hanging on the walls of Dee’s gallery. But would anyone buy them? That she
doubted. In a community populated by precious few African-Americans, Shelley
wondered how much commercial appeal her work would have. Based on demographics
alone, it seemed unlikely to her that there would be an overwhelming demand for
the paintings. Still, she had allowed herself to he dragged along by Dee’s
unbridled enthusiasm as well as by the encouragement and stubborn minded
insistence of her new friend, LaMar Jenkins.
As far as Rochelle knew, LaMar was the only other African-American
currently living in Bisbee. Everyone else called him Bobo, but Shelley
preferred the quiet dignity of his given name.
If Deidre Canfield was Rochelle’s booster and cheerleader,
LaMar Jenkins was her champion. It was no accident that the picture she turned
to now was one of him, grinning amiably and leaning, with studied ease, against
the back gate of his prized bright yellow El Camino. LaMar was a man in his
late forties. His well conditioned, muscle-hardened body may have belied his
age, but there was wisdom in the lines that etched his face, and a sprinkling
of gray peppered his short-cropped hair. Behind him and just overhead hung a
wooden sign that said BLUE MOON SALOON AND LOUNGE, the Brewery Gulch watering
hole he had recently sold.
Of all the portraits hanging in the gallery, that was the
only one with the telltale red dot that indicated it was already sold. LaMar,
subject and purchaser, hadn’t wanted the painting to be exhibited at all, but
Dee had insisted. For her, having sixteen pieces represented some kind of magic
number. Without LaMar’s portrait, entitled simply Car and Driver, the
show would have been one painting short. So there it was.
Looking at it—seeing LaMar’s engaging grin and the
reined-in strength of his powerful forearms—caused a lump to grow in Rochelle’s
throat. She had done something she never should have done, something she had
countless times forbidden herself to do—she had allowed him to get too close
and, as a result, had become too involved. That kind of involvement was
dangerous for both of them now that LaMar “Bobo” Jenkins was about to run for
mayor of Bisbee.
The next municipal election was almost a year away, but
Rochelle understood the necessity of distancing herself now rather than later.
Once LaMar Jenkins officially declared his candidacy, he would be newsworthy.
He would be an African-American running for office in a town where everyone
considered himself part of an oppressed minority That was bound to attract
attention to LaMar as well as to anyone connected with him.
During the months Rochelle Baxter had lived in the community
of Naco, Arizona, a few miles outside of Bisbee, she had noticed how the lady
county sheriff, Joanna Brady, and her family were routinely covered in both
local and statewide media venues. When the sheriff had remarried, the wedding
itself had made headlines in the local paper, The Bisbee Bee. Sheriff
Brady was, after all, a public figure. Several months earlier, when the sheriff’s
young daughter and a friend had stumbled over the body of a murdered woman
while on a Girl Scout campout, that, too, had been front-page fodder—and not
just in Bisbee, either.
Rochelle couldn’t afford to live in the unblinking focus
of a media microscope. Being a part of that kind of associated publicity—where
a picture of Rochelle accompanying LaMar to some campaign event might well be
beamed all over the country—was something she could ill afford. She had made up
her mind. No matter how much it hurt, she would break off the relationship. And
the breakup had to come soon. Now. While she could still do it and make it
stick.
Sighing, she turned away from LaMar’s portrait and
wandered through the building to view the other pictures hanging on the freshly
painted stuccoed walls. Castle Rock Gallery occupied a series of small
buildings that had been cobbled together over time. Rochelle theorized that a
previous owner or owners had added on and stitched the pieces together in a
haphazard fashion, as both spirit and funds had allowed. As a result, the rooms—of
various sizes and shapes—were arranged with wildly varying floor elevations.
With an eye to forestalling a potential lawsuit from some crusading Americans
with Disabilities Act activist, Dee and Warren had installed a complex series
of ramps that linked the rooms and uneven floor levels together.
Around the corner from LaMar’s grinning portrait but in
another room altogether hung Rochelle’s favorite piece, one titled A Boy and
His Dog. The two figures sat side by side on the edge of a large porch
overlooking a sun-drenched front yard with a tree-lined paved street beyond a
picket fence. One of the boy’s arms was flung casually across the golden Lab’s
sturdy shoulder. Sitting with only their backs showing, they were framed by a
doorway as though the artist, standing just inside the shadowy house, had
painted them from that vantage point.
Of course, the boy was not really “a boy” at all. It was
really Tommy, Rochelle’s younger brother. And “his dog” was really Scooter.
Rochelle remembered coming out through the front door one summer’s day and
seeing them sitting together like that. Tommy had been only ten at the time and
Rochelle twelve. What hadn’t shown then—and what didn’t show now in the
painting—was the leukemia that was already robbing Tommy of his childhood and
obliterating his ability to play outdoors on that carefree summer’s day. What
also didn’t show on that warm and lazy Georgia afternoon was how, a few months
later, when an ambulance carrying Tommy to the hospital was speeding away from
the house, lights flashing and siren blaring, Scooter went racing after it down
the street, where he was struck by a car two intersections away. None of that
showed in the picture, but it was all there, twenty-three years later, etched
deeply into Rochelle’s still-grieving heart.
Two pictures away was another favorite. In it, Rochelle’s
niece, Jolene, crouched, ball in hand, beneath a basketball hoop fastened high
over her grandfather’s garage door. Her skin gleamed with sweat and her dark
eyes glittered with clear determination. Her cornrows shone in the sunlight.
The painting was titled Making a Basket, although the ball was still
poised on the ends of Jolene’s fingertips as she prepared to spring upward.
A viewer would simply have to take it on faith that she
had actually made the ball swish effortlessly through the hoop, but Rochelle
didn’t. She knew for sure. She had been there, home on leave after Operation
Desert Storm, playing a predinner pickup game with her sister’s teenage daughter.
Jolene was married now and had two children of her own. Maybe three, for all
Rochelle knew, but in her artist’s eye, Jolene was still young and innocent and
with a world of possibility open to her.
Rochelle moved from one room to another, strolling up and
down the various ramps. Standing in front of each painting, she allowed the
images she had captured there to speak to her once more. In The Pastor and
the Lamb she saw her father again. Roundly middle-aged and dressed in his
bright red summer preacher’s robe, he leaned down to shake hands with a shy
little boy who gazed worshipfully up at him over the grubby white Bible he
clutched tightly in his other hand.
Next to that picture was one called Napping. In it,
Rochelle’s grandmother, Cornelia, drowsed peacefully in her rocking chair while
rays of early-afternoon sunlight streamed in through the sheer window curtains
and transformed her silvery hair into a glowing halo.
Around the corner from Napping was the The
Carver. An old man—Rochelle’s grandfather, his vitality not yet drained and
Iris mahogany skin not yet tinged with the jaundice of kidney disease—sat on a
kitchen chair and sharpened his knife on a soap stone while curls of newly
whittled wood littered the floor around his feet.
A few feet away from The Carver was Homecoming. In
that one, Rochelle’s mother, dressed in a suit and looking determinedly
elegant, walked toward the front steps late one afternoon carrying her
leather-bound briefcase balanced effortlessly in one hand. The slight smile on her
lips showed that although she loved her work, she was nonetheless grateful to
be coming home to her family to her husband and children.
Concealed under the paint of that picture and three of the
others in the gallery was a never-finished self-portrait. Rochelle had tried to
paint that one over and over again. Each time she had given up in frustration
and covered the unfinished work over with some other painting. That was the
magic of working with oils. If a painting didn’t come together, you could always
render it invisible by burying it under layers of other colors. Gazing at her
mother’s well-remembered and equally well-rendered features, Rochelle realized
why she had never succeeded in painting herself. She knew who her mother was,
but when it came to Rochelle Baxter, the artist wasn’t so sure.
Sighing, she turned away. Dee had been absolutely right
when she said selling the paintings must be like saying good-bye to a group of
old friends, but for Rochelle it went far beyond that. In painting the
portraits, she had recalled those loved ones from the past and remembered why
she had loved them. Now, knowing she would never see any of them again, it
seemed as though she was letting go of them forever at the same time she was
letting go of their portraits. Hail and farewell.
Finally, it was all too much. Walking through the empty
gallery, a half-sob escaped Rochelle’s lips and she knew she was about to lose
it. That shook her. If it could happen to her when she was all alone in the
gallery, how would she manage to maintain her composure tomorrow night at the
opening-night party, when the place would be crowded with people, all of
them—according to Dee—potential buyers? What would she do if some nice lady
asked the artist who that little boy was, sitting on the porch with his dog?
And what if someone else wanted to know about that nice old lady napping so
peacefully in her rocking chair?
Feeling the first subtle heart-pounding, breath-robbing
symptoms of an oncoming panic attack, Rochelle bolted out of Castle Rock
Gallery, slamming the door shut behind her. Anxiously she scanned the parking
lot, afraid Dee and Warren might return before she could make good her escape.
Her closed Camry had been sitting in full afternoon sunlight. Shivering and
sweating at the same time, she sank, gasping for breath, into the cloth seat
and welcomed the comforting warmth that surrounded her. She grasped the
steering wheel and held on, hoping the heated plastic would help still her quaking
hands. After a few long minutes, the panic attack subsided enough to allow her
to start the car and drive away.
Leaving Old Bisbee behind, she drove past the remains of
Lavender Pit, around the traffic circle, and then southwest out of town toward
Naco. When her case manager had asked her where she wanted to go—where she
would care to settle—Rochelle had chosen the Bisbee area for two reasons: It
was known as a place where artists were welcome. It was also surprisingly
affordable.
After only a day or two of prowling around, she had
stumbled on the tiny border community of Naco, seven miles south of Bisbee proper.
She had spotted the FOR SALE sign on a crumbling but thick walled adobe
building that had, in previous incarnations, had served as a customhouse, a
whorehouse, and—most recently—a nightclub. She had purchased the place and had
then remodeled it into part studio, part living quarters. That’s where Rochelle
headed now—home to Naco.
Mexico’s towering San Jose Mountain loomed in solitary majesty
over the valley floor below. Behind it arched a cloudless blur sky. The summer
rains had barely materialized that year, leaving all of Arizona brittle and
dry. Naco was no exception. Turning off the short and poorly paved main drag,
Rochelle entered a dusty dirt alleyway that ran parallel to the paved street.
She parked in the makeshift carport that had been tacked on to the hack of the
building. Bullet holes from the Mexican Revolution still scored some of the
adobe bricks that passing time had denuded of countless layers of stucco.
Once out of the car, she hurried to the studio’s back
entrance. Unlocking the dead bolt, she hurried inside and punched in the code
on her alarm keypad. The system had been installed by the previous tenant. In
the interest of saving money, she had kept the existing equipment, merely reactivating
it and changing the code. Having a security system made her feel safe and
allowed her to sleep easier at night.
The interior of the building consisted of two rooms—a bathroom
dominated by an old-fashioned claw-footed tub and a large open space that
Rochelle had divided into work, sleep, and eating arras by the strategic
placement of a series of rustic used-wood screens. Eating, sleeping, and
working in that one huge, high-ceilinged room suited her simple needs. In the
months since she had moved here from Washington State, while waiting for the
other shoe to drop, she had buried herself in her work, toiling at her easel
almost around the clock, stopping only when exhaustion finally overwhelmed her
now-chronic insomnia. Eating, too, had taken a backseat to feverish work.
A skylight in the middle of the ceiling suffused the white
walls and the broad planks of the wooden floor with the soft pink glow of
late-afternoon light, but with all the paintings hauled off to Castle Rock
Gallery, the studio seemed strangely empty.
Ignoring the loneliness that threatened to engulf her,
Rochelle stripped off her clothes and hurried into the bathroom, where she
spent the better part of an hour soaking in the long, narrow tub. She had
climbed out and was wrapping her hair in a turban when she heard a persistent
knocking on the front door. It was times like this when living and working in
the same place had its disadvantages. Pulling on a robe and leaving her hair
wrapped, she hurried to the door and used the peephole to check on the identity
of her visitor. She was dismayed to find LaMar Jenkins standing outside on the
makeshift sidewalk. With his hands stuffed deep in his pockets, he rocked back and
forth on his heels and looked distinctly unhappy. Sighing, Rochelle unlatched
the dead bolt and let him in.
“We were supposed to have dinner tonight,” he reminded her
in an aggrieved tone as he stepped inside. “You left a message on my machine
saying that you couldn’t come. What happened? Did somebody make you a better
offer?”
“Dee and I hung the show today” Rochelle said lamely. “I
knew I’d be tired and probably not very good company”
“I would have been happy to help with the hanging,” LaMar
said. “Why didn’t you ask me?”
Rochelle shrugged and didn’t answer. They were standing
only inches apart. LaMar Jenkins was a tall man, but his eyes and Rochelle’s
were almost on the same level. Feeling guilty and embarrassed, Rochelle was the
first to look away.
“Can I get you something to drink?” she offered. “Iced
tea? A beer?”
“No fair changing the subject,” he said. “But a beer would
be fine.”
Rochelle walked away from him and disappeared behind the
wooden screen that marked the line of demarcation between studio and kitchen.
He followed her and took a seat at the old-fashioned Formica-topped table she
had purchased from a nearby consignment store. She set a bottle of Bud in front
of him, then went to the refrigerator and poured herself a glass of iced tea.
Without being asked, LaMar opened two packages of sweetener
and poured them into her glass. It was exactly that kind of unasked courtesy
and thoughtfulness that was driving Rochelle away from the man.
It disturbed her to realize that in the few months they
had known each other, LaMar Jenkins had learned far too much about her. He
knew, for instance, that she took two packets of sweetener in her iced tea, but
none at all in her coffee. He knew that she preferred root beer to Coke and
smooth peanut butter to any flavor of jelly. He knew she wanted her eggs fried
hard and hated refried beans. Those were all little secret things she hadn’t
wanted anyone to learn about her ever again. That had never been part of her
game plan.
“How about a sandwich?” she offered. “Bologna, BLT, tuna.
I’ve got the makings for any or all.”
Shaking his head, LaMar reached out, caught her by the
wrist, and drew her toward him. “I’m not hungry,” he said, pulling her clown
onto the chair next to his. “And I sure as hell don’t want a sandwich. Talk to
me, Shelley. Tell me what’s wrong.”
“Nothing,” she said. “I’m just nervous—about the show, I
guess.”
LaMar studied her, his hooded eyes searching her face. “It’s
not about the show, is it?” he said accusingly. “You and I have a good thing
going, but now you’re pulling away from me, shutting me out. I want to know
what’s going on, and how come?”
“I need some time for myself,” she said.
LaMar had been holding her hand. Now he released it and
she let it fall limply into her lap. “That’s bullshit, and you know it,” he
growled back at her. “But even if it’s true, you still haven’t told me why.”
Because knowing me is dangerous, Rochelle wanted to say.
Because when they come looking for me, they might come looking for you, too.
“You’re too intense,” she said instead. ‘And I’m not ready
for that.” Even as she said the words, her body, in absolute betrayal, longed
for nothing so much as to have LaMar Jenkins take her into his strong, capable
arms and hold her tightly against his chest. Afraid she might yield to that
temptation, she added quickly, “You’d better go.”
“Why? Don’t you trust me?”
I don’t trust myself,
she
thought. “Something like that.”
Taking a long drink from his beer, LaMar Jenkins showed no
sign of leaving. “You never talk about the past,” he said. “Why is that?”
“The past doesn’t matter,” she said flatly. “There’s
nothing to talk about.” She tried to sound cold—as though she didn’t care—but,
like her body, her voice betrayed her. The past mattered far too much.
“Somebody hurt you, Shelley.” LaMar’s voice was suddenly
kind, concerned. “Whoever it was and whatever they did to you, it wasn’t me.
Let me help fix it. Talk to me.”
“You can’t fix it,” Rochelle said, shaking her head and fighting
back tears. “Just go, please.”
Without another word, LaMar Jenkins carefully put down his
beer bottle and stood up. He walked as far as the first wooden screen before he
turned back to her. “I’ll see you tomorrow,” he said. “At the show. And
afterward, we’re having dinner. No excuses.”
She capitulated. “All right,” she said. “We’ll have
dinner.”
“Promise?”
She nodded. “Yes.”
He left then. She followed him as far as the door, made
sure the dead bolt was locked, and double-checked the alarm system. Then she
returned to the kitchen table. For the next half hour, Rochelle Baxter sat at
the gray Formica tabletop and thoughtfully sipped her iced tea while rehashing
every word that had been said. She didn’t bother making herself a sandwich. She
wasn’t hungry. Instead, she sat and wondered whether or not she would really go
to dinner with LaMar after the show. Maybe by then she’d be able to find the
resolve to tell him once and for all that she had to break it off.
When her tea was almost gone, Rochelle left the nearly
empty glass and half-finished beer bottle sitting on the kitchen table and
returned to her eerily denuded studio.
To combat the loneliness left by all the bare walls,
Rochelle wrestled a new canvas out of storage and put it on her easel. It sat there
staring back at her, waiting for her hands to fill it with color and give it
life. Turning away from the empty canvas, she settled down at her drafting
table and went through her sketchbooks trying to decide what she would paint
next. Finally, around nine or so, she went to bed.
In her dream, she was back in Desert Storm. Oil-well
fires, burning all around her, tilled the air with evil smelling smoke. She
couldn’t breathe. She felt as it she were choking; her eyes were tearing. What
woke her up, though, wasn’t the dream. It was a terrible cramping in her gut.
Writhing in pain, Rochelle attempted to get out of bed, but before her feet
touched the floor, her body heaved. The involuntary spasm hurled a spray of
vomit halfway across the room. Falling back onto the bed, she grasped blindly
for the phone. Somehow she reached it. Her stabbing fingers seemed numb and out
of control, almost as though they belonged to someone else. Struggling
desperately to manage her limbs, she finally succeeded in dialing.
“Nine one one,” the calm voice of an emergency dispatcher
responded. “What is the nature of your emergency?”
By then Rochelle Baxter was beyond answering. Another wild
spasm of vomiting hit her and sent her reeling back onto the bed. As she lay
there, retching helplessly and unable to move, the phone clattered uselessly to
the floor.
“Ma’am?” the operator said more urgently. “Can you hear
me? Is there anyone there to help you? Can you tell me your location?”
There was no answer. By then Rochelle Baxter was beyond
hearing as well. A few minutes later, medics dispatched by the Cochise County
emergency operator arrived at the scene. When no one responded to their
repeated knocking, they finally splintered the sturdy front door to gain
entry. While a noisy burglar alarm squawked its insistent warning in the
background, a young EMT located Rochelle in her vomit-splattered bed. Gingerly,
he felt for a pulse, then looked at his supervisor and shook his head.
“We may have already lost her,” he said.
CHAPTER ONE
As sheriff Joanna Brady drove through the last thicket of
mesquite, the house at High Lonesome Ranch lay dark and still under a rising
moon. Usually her daughter Jenny’s two dogs—Sadie, a bluetick hound, and
Tigger, a half golden retriever/half pit-bull mutt—would have bounded through
the undergrowth to meet her. This time, Joanna surmised, they had chosen to
accompany Butch on his appointment with the contractor at the site of the new
house they were planning to build a mile or so away.
Butch had bugged out of St. Dominick’s immediately after
the service, while he and Joanna waited for the sanctuary to empty. “I’ll stay
if you want,” he had whispered. “But I really need to go.”
“Right,” she had told him. “You do what you have to. I’ll
be line.
“I’ll stop by the house and do the chores first,” he said.
“Don’t worry about that.”
Joanna had simply nodded. “‘Thanks,” she said.
By then Yolanda Ortiz Caсedo’s grieving husband, her two
young sons, her parents, brothers, and sister were walking out of the church
through two lines of saluting officers made up of both police and fire department
personnel. Joanna could barely stand to watch. It was all too familiar, too
close to her own experience. As her green eyes filled with tears, Joanna
glanced away, only to catch sight of the prisoners. That forlorn group—eleven
county prisoners, freshly barbered and dressed in civilian clothes—stood in
respectful silence under the watchful eyes of two jail guards and Ted Chapman,
the executive director of the Cochise County Jail Ministry.
Ted had come to Joanna’s office the day after the young
jail matron had died of cervical cancer at a hospice facility in Tucson. “Some
of the inmates would like to go to the services,” Chapman had said. “Yolanda Caсedo
did a lot of good around here. She really cared about the guys she worked with,
and it showed. She helped me get the jail literacy program going, and she came
in during off-hours to give individual help to prisoners who were going after
GEDs. Some of the people she helped—inmates who have already been released—will
be there on their own, but the ones who are still in lockup wanted me to ask if
they could go, too. The newer prisoners, the ones who came in after Yolanda got
sick, aren’t included, of course. They have no idea who she was or what she
did.”
“What about security?” Sheriff Brady had asked. “Who’s
going to stand guard?”
“I already have two volunteers who will come in on their
day off,” Chapman answered. “You have my word of honor, along with that of the
prisoners, that there won’t be any trouble.”
Joanna thought about how good some of the jail inmates’ words
of honor might be. But then she also had to consider the notebook full of
greetings handmade by jail inmates dial Reverend Chapman had brought to Yolanda
and her family as the young woman had lain gravely ill in the Intensive Care
Unit at University Medical Center in Tucson. Sheriff Brady had been touched by
the heartfelt sincerity in all those clumsily pasted together cards. Several of
them had been made by men able to sign their own names at the bottom of a
greeting card for the very first time. Other cards had names printed by someone
else under scrawled Xs. Their good wishes had seemed genuine enough hack then.
Now, so did the Reverend Chapman’s somewhat unorthodox request.
“How many inmates are we talking about?” Joanna had asked.
“Fourteen.”
“Any of them high-risk?”
“I don’t think so.”
“Give me the list,” Joanna had conceded at last. “I’m not making;
any promises, but I’ll run the proposition by the jail commander and see what
he has to say.”
In the end, eleven of the proposed inmates had been
allowed to attend the service. In his eulogy, Father Morris had spoken of
Yolanda Caсedo as a remarkable young woman. Certainly the presence of that
solemn collection of inmates bore witness to that. And, as far as Joanna could
tell, the prisoners’ behavior had been nothing short of exemplary.
They stood now in a single straight row. With feet splayed
apart and hands clasped behind their backs, they might have been a troop of
soldiers standing at ease. Seeing them there, dignified and silent in the warm
afternoon sun, Joanna was glad she had vetoed the jail commander’s suggestion
that they attend the funeral wearing handcuffs and shackles.
Chief Deputy Frank Montoya came up behind her then. “Hey,
boss,” he whispered in her ear. “They’re putting the casket into the hearse.
Since we’re supposed to be directly behind the family cars, we’d better mount
up.”
Nodding, Joanna left the inmates to the care of the two
guards and Ted Chapman and walked back toward Frank’s waiting Crown Victoria.
Even in heels, the five-foot-four sheriff felt dwarfed as she made her way
through the crush of uniformed officers. A light breeze riffled her short red
hair.
“Looks like the members of Reverend Chapman’s flock are
behaving themselves,” her chief deputy observed, as he started the Civvie’s
engine.
“So far so good,” Joanna agreed.
“But they’re not coming to the cemetery?”
Joanna shook her head. “No. Having them at the church is
one thing, but going to the cemetery is something else. If there’s any
confusion, I was afraid one or more of them might slip away.”
“You’ve got that right,” Frank agreed. “We don’t need to
give your friend Ken Junior anything else to piss and moan about.”
“Since when does he need a reason?” Joanna returned.
Ken Junior, otherwise known as Deputy Kenneth Galloway,
was Sheriff Brady’s current problem child. He was the nephew and namesake of
another Deputy Galloway, one who had been part of a network of corrupt police
officers in the administration that had immediately preceded Joanna’s. The
elder Galloway had died as a result of wounds received during an armed
confrontation with Joanna Brady. Although Joanna had been cleared of any
wrongdoing in that incident, the dead man’s relatives continued to hold her
responsible for Galloway’s death.
Although the younger man was the deceased deputy’s nephew
rather than his son, around the department, he was referred to as Ken Junior.
Fresh out of the Arizona Police Academy at the time of. his uncle’s death, the
younger Galloway had been far too new and inexperienced to have taken an active
part in the police corruption that had marred Sheriff Walter V. McFadden’s
administration. For that reason, Ken Junior had been allowed to stay on as a
Cochise County deputy sheriff. Never a great supporter of Joanna’s, he had
quickly gravitated to union activism and had recently been elected president of
Local 83 of the National Federation of Deputy Sheriffs.
In recent months Joanna had clashed with Ken Junior twice
regarding Yolanda Caсedo’s illness. The first confrontation had occurred when
Joanna suggested that members of the union ought to do at least as much for the
Caсedo family as the jail inmates had. The second had happened only a few days
earlier, as the Caсedo family had struggled to make arrangements for Yolanda’s
funeral.
Deputy Galloway had balked at Joanna’s insistence on
giving Yolanda the honor of an official Fallen Officer funeral. Ken
Junior had taken the position that, as a mere jail matron, Yolanda Caсedo didn’t
qualify as a real Fallen Officer. Joanna had gone to the mat with him on that
score. Only over his vociferous objections had two lines of smartly saluting officers
greeted Yolanda’s grieving family as they exited St. Dominick’s Church
after the funeral.
Led by two Arizona Department of Public Safety motorcycle
officers, the hearse pulled away from the curb. One by one the other members of
the funeral cortege formed up behind them for the slow, winding trip down
Tombstone Canyon to Bisbee’s Ever-green Cemetery two miles away. The ceremony
in the cemetery was the part of the service Joanna had steeled herself for. She
dreaded the symbolic Last Call and the moment when she would he required to
take a carefully folded American flag and deliver it into Leon Caсedo’s hands.
She remembered too clearly another bright fall afternoon,
not so different from this one, when Walter V. McFadden had placed a similarly
folded flag in Joanna’s trembling hands at the close of Andy’s graveside
services.
During the ride down the canyon and around Lavender Pit,
Joanna was glad her daughter, Jenny, wouldn’t be at the cemetery. Once again
she had reason to be thankful for her former mother-in-law’s kindness and
wisdom. Eva Lou Brady had called High Lonesome Ranch early that morning.
“Let Jenny come stay with Jim Bob and me tonight,” Eva Lou
had urged. “After what happened to Andy, Yolanda’s funeral is going to be
difficult enough for you. It’ll be even harder on Jen. I’ll have Jim Bob pick
her up after school so she’s here with us before the service gets started. That
way she won’t have to see the hearse and the cars pulling into the cemetery. We’ll
take her out for pizza and try to keep her occupied.”
Lowell School, where Jenny attended seventh grade, was
situated directly across the street from Evergreen Cemetery. Not only that,
Joanna had been dismayed the day before when she drove by the cemetery and
noticed that the plot Leon Caсedo had chosen was fully visible from some of
Jenny’s classroom windows.
Bearing all that in mind, Joanna had readily agreed to her
former mother-in-law’s suggestion. Now, driving into her own front yard and
seeing the darkened house, Joanna was even more grateful. This was a night
when she needed a buffer between home and work. The killer combination of
funeral, wailing bagpipes, graveside service, and church-sponsored reception
afterward had stretched Sheriff Joanna Brady’s considerable resources to the
breaking point. Had Butch or Jenny asked about Yolanda Caсedo’s funeral, Joanna
would likely have dissolved in tears.
The motion-activated light above the garage flashed on,
illuminating Joanna’s way from the car to the house. The afternoon had been
warm, but as soon as the sun went down, there was a hint of fall in the air.
Once inside, Joanna hurried to the bedroom, where she stripped off her clothing
and weapons. She locked away her two Glocks and pulled on a thick terry-cloth
robe. Headed for the kitchen, she was stopped halfway there by a ringing phone.
“How did it go?” the Reverend Marianne Maculyea asked. “And
how are you doing?”
Joanna’s friendship with Marianne dated from when the two
of them had been preadolescent students at the same school Jenny now attended.
Married and the mother of two, Marianne was also pastor at Tombstone Canyon
United Methodist Church, where Joanna and Butch were members. She was the only
person to whom Joanna had confided her concerns about attending and participating
in Yolanda Caсedo’s funeral service.
“I’m all right,” Joanna replied grimly. “But it was tough.”
“You don’t sound all right,” Marianne observed.
“No, I suppose not,” Joanna said. “The Last Call was bad,
but when I had to give Leon the flag, I really choked up. If I could have come
home right then, maybe it wouldn’t have been so bad. Instead, I had to go back
up to the church and stay through the whole reception. That almost killed me,
Mari. Yolanda’s sons, Manny and Frankie, were there in their white shirts and
blue slacks and little bow ties. They’re such cute kids, but they’re so lost
and hurt right now, I could hardly stand to look at them, to say nothing of
speak to them. What do you say to kids like that? What can you say?”
“You say what’s in your heart,” Marianne Maculyea
replied. “I’m sure seeing them bothered you that much more because it made you
think about what it was like for Jenny during Andy’s funeral.”
Marianne Maculyea’s on the money comment left Joanna with
nothing to say. After a moment of silence, Marianne added, “Speaking of Jenny,
how is she?”
“Fine, I’m sure,” Joanna replied. “She’s with Grandma and
Grandpa Brady. Eva Lou called this morning and invited her to spend the night.
They’re going out for pizza. I wish Eva Lou had asked me to join them. For two
cents I would have ditched the reception and eaten pizza instead.”
“You had to go to the reception, Joanna,” Marianne
reminded her. “It’s your job.”
“I know,” Joanna said hollowly. “But I sure didn’t like
it.”
There was another pause. In the background on Marianne’s
end of the phone, Joanna heard a murmur of voices. “I’d better run,” she said. “Jeff
needs help with baths. I just wanted to be sure you’re okay.”
“I’m fine,” Joanna said with more conviction than she
felt, because she wasn’t fine at all. And what was bothering her most was
something she wasn’t ready to discuss with anyone—including Marianne Maculyea.
Or with Butch Dixon, either, for that matter.
Putting down the phone, Joanna wandered into the kitchen,
where she opened the refrigerator door and peered inside. The ladies’ auxiliary
of St. Dominick’s had put on an amazing spread, but Joanna had eaten none of
it. And now none of Butch’s carefully maintained leftovers looked remotely
appetizing, either. Giving up, she pulled a carton of milk out of the fridge
and then rummaged in the pantry for a box of Honey Nut Cheerios. Armed with
cereal, a bowl, and a spoon, she settled into the break-fast nook. After a few
bites she lost interest in the cereal and found herself staring, unseeing, at
the game CD taped to the outside of the box.
“Damn Ken Galloway anyway!’’ she muttered.
He was the main reason she had been heartsick at the
funeral reception. Joanna was sure it was due to arm-twisting on his part that
so few deputies from her department had been in attendance. In addition to
Frank Montoya, only one other deputy—a relatively new hire named Debra
Howell—had defied peer pressure and come to the reception.
Not that the Cochise County Sheriff’s Department hadn’t
been represented. All jail personnel who weren’t on duty had turned up,
including the two guards who had escorted the inmates to the funeral earlier.
And there had been plenty of representation by support staff—the clerks and
secretaries who worked in the offices, crime lab, and evidence room. Casey
Ledford, Joanna’s fingerprint technician, had been there, along with all but
one of the emergency dispatch operators. And there were plenty of officers from
other jurisdictions who had shown up out of courtesy. As a group, however, the
deputies from Cochise County were notable to their absence.
Only half of Joanna’s detective division had shown up, but
that was understandable. Jaime Carbajal’s eleven-year-old son, Pepe, played on
the same Little League team as Yolanda Caсedo’s elder son, Frankie. So Jaime
and his wife, Delcia, had both been there. Detective Ernie Carpenter’s absence
had nothing to do with Ken Galloway’s political machinations; he was on
vacation. Ernie had reluctantly agreed to take his wife, Rose, on a weeklong
trip to Branson, Missouri, in celebration of their thirtieth wedding
anniversary.
So Ken Galloway hadn’t managed to keep everyone away.
Still, at a time when Joanna needed the entire department to pull in the same
direction, she was upset that the head of the deputies’ union local seemed
determined to drive wedges among members of her department. She worried that eventually
those small wedges might splinter her employees into warring factions.
The phone rang. As Joanna picked up the extension on the
kitchen counter, she caught sight of the Cochise County Dispatch number on the
caller ID. “Sheriff Brady here,” she said. “What’s up?”
“A 911 call came in a little while ago from down in Naco,”
Dispatch operator Tica Romero reported. “When the EMTs arrived, they found a
nonresponsive African-American female. They trans-ported her to the hospital
and did their best to revive her, but she was DOA.”
Joanna Brady felt the familiar clutch in her gut.
Something bad had happened in her jurisdiction. It was time to go to work. “Any
sign of foul play?” she asked.
“No. The general assumption is natural causes. The victim
had evidently been terribly ill. There was no sign of forced entry—until the
EMTs had to break in to get to her, that is. The place was locked up tight, and
the screeching security alarm almost drove the medics nuts while they were
working on her.”
“They closed everything back up once they left?” Joanna
asked.
“The night-watch commander is sending a deputy out to make
sure that’s taken care of.”
“Good,” Joanna said. “What about the body?”
“The woman’s young,” Tica Romero replied. “Somewhere in
her thirties. The hospital has asked Doc Winfield to take charge of the body
and do an autopsy, just to make sure that whatever she had isn’t transmittable.
Since the ME’s been called out on the case, he’ll handle next-of-kin
notification.”
Joanna allowed her body to relax. Dr. George Winfield,
Cochise County’s medical examiner, was married to Joanna’s mother, Eleanor.
Unfortunately, George would have more on his hands than simply unmasking the
cause of death, communicable or not, and locating next of kin. He’d also have
to explain to his demanding wife why he was going back to work at eleven o’clock
on a weekday evening.
“Better him than me,” Joanna murmured.
“I lave to go,” Tica said urgently. ‘Another call’s coming
in.”
Joanna took the phone back over to the table with her. By
then, her once-crispy Cheerios had turned soggy. She went out to the laundry
room and dumped the remainder, dividing it evenly between the two dog bowls.
She was straightening up from doing that when Butch’s Outback pulled into the
yard. She waited on the porch, watching as he opened the luggage-gate door,
letting Sadie and Tigger bound out onto the ground. Together the dogs raced the
water dish and eagerly lapped up what sounded like a gallon of water each.
“You’re spoiling them,” she said, kissing Butch hello. “Sadie
and Tigger are ranch dogs, remember? They’re supposed to run, not ride.”
“‘They ran from here over to Clayton’s place,” Butch said.
“That was how they still, months after his death, referred
to the ranch Joanna’s octogenarian handyman, Clayton Rhodes, had left them in
his will.
“When it was time to come home,” Butch continued, “Tigger
was the only one hot to trot. Sadie wasn’t interested. Once I let her into the
car and Tigger figured out she was riding, he wanted a ride, too.”
“Sibling rivalry,” Joanna said with a smile. “But like I
said, you’re spoiling them. Did you eat anything?”
“I had a sandwich when I got home from the funeral. What
about you?”
“I just fixed myself a bowl of cereal.”
“Not very substantial,” Butch observed.
“It was all I wanted.”
He studied her face closely. “Are you okay?” he asked.
Joanna shrugged. “Going to law enforcement funerals isn’t
exactly my favorite afternoon pastime.”
Butch opened the refrigerator and took out a beer. “Do you
want anything?”
“Nothing,” Joanna said. “Thanks. I’m fine.”
“You don’t look fine.”
“I just got off the phone with Dispatch,” she replied. “The
EMTs hauled a DOA up to Copper Queen Hospital from Naco a little while ago.”
“Does that mean you have to go back out?”
Joanna shook her head. “No. Tica Romero said it looks like
natural causes. The woman was evidently terribly sick. She’s George’s problem
now, not mine.”
“Thank God for small favors,” Butch muttered.
“What’s going on with the house? Have you been working
with Quentin all this time?”
Quentin Branch was the contractor Joanna and Butch had
hired to build their new rammed-earth home.
“No,” Butch said. “The meeting didn’t last that long, but
there were things I needed to do. Puttering, mostly. Making myself useful.”
While Joanna was having trouble at work with Ken Galloway,
Butch Dixon was dealing with his own identity crisis. He had yet to adjust to
his relatively new role as stay-at-home spouse. He had completed writing his
first mystery novel, but now, while he lived through the interminable months of
waiting to see if a literary agency would agree to handle his work, Butch had
tackled the job of overseeing construction on the house.
Quentin Branch would be in charge of the major aspects the
job. Butch was doing some of the hand excavation and finish carpentry. It was a
way of passing time and keeping his hand in. Joanna had seen Butch’s previous
remodeling projects. She had no doubt as to his ability, and his do-it-yourself
skill would wring more than full value out of their home-building dollars. Her only
qualm had to do with how long the process would take.
Butch finished his beer, and they went to bed. Within
minutes, Butch was snoring softly on his side of the bed while Joanna lay awake
and wrestled with the Devil in the guise of Ken Galloway. She was sorry now
that she hadn’t answered truthfully whet Butch had asked what was bothering
her. He might have had some useful suggestions about dealing with the
recalcitrant president of Local 83. Still, Ken Junior was Joanna’s problem and
nobody else’s. If she hauled him on the carpet again and made an issue of the
deputies’ collective snub of the funeral reception, it would probably do more
harm than good. For all concerned. It certainly wouldn’t make things any easier
for Leon Caсedo, and it wouldn’t improve intradepartmental relations, either.
The last time Joanna looked at the clock, it was nearly
two in the morning. A ringing telephone jarred her awake at ten past seven.
Butch was already long gone from his side of the bed when Joanna opened her
eyes and groped for the bedside phone.
“I hope I didn’t waken you,” George Winfield said.
“‘That’s all right,” Joanna mumbled sleepily. “It’s time
for nit to be up anyway. What’s going on?”
“It’s about that DOA from last night,” the medical examine
said.
Joanna forced herself to sit up. “What about her?” she
asked.
“The name’s Rochelle Baxter,” George returned. “Her driver’s
license says she’s thirty-five. My preliminary examination says she was in good
health.”
“What did she die of?”
“I don’t know. I thought you might want to have a
detective on hand when I do the autopsy, just in case.”
“In case of what?”
“In case she was poisoned.”
Joanna was wide awake now “You think she was murdered?”
“I didn’t say that. But for an apparently healthy woman to
become as violently ill as she was, I’m thinking she may have ingested
something.”
“What about the water?” Joanna asked. “Could contaminated
water have made her that sick?”
For years the local water system had been under
investigation by the Arizona Department of Ecology due to sewage from across
the line in Old Mexico that had been allowed to seep into the water table and
possibly contaminate the wells that provided water for the entire Bisbee area.
Lack of money, combined with lack of enthusiasm, had resulted in nothing much
being done.
“It could be, but I doubt it,” George replied.
“What are you saying—it’s a homicide?”
“At this time I won’t say anything more than it’s a
suspicious death,” George said. “But if you’re not treating the victim’s place
as a crime scene, Joanna, you probably should.”
“Thanks,” Joanna said. “I’ll get right on it. When are you
planning to do the autopsy?”
“As soon as you can have one of your detectives up at my
office. I’m here now. I’d like to get started as soon as possible.”
“Ernie’s on vacation, so it’ll have to be Jaime,” Joanna
said. ‘‘I’ll get a hold of him at home and give him a heads up. Thanks for the
call, George.”
“Just doing my job.”
Butch appeared at the bedroom door carrying a mug of coffee.
“What’s up?”
“The DOA from last night just turned into what George is
calling ‘a suspicious death’. In case it turns out to be a homicide, I’ve got
to get Jaime to witness the autopsy. The victim’s home down in Naco needs to be
designated as a crime scene and then investigated.”
Butch glanced at the clock, which now showed twenty past
seven, and shook his head ruefully. “Sounds like a full day to me. Joey, don’t
you sometimes wish you had a regular nine-to-five job?” he asked, handing
Joanna her coffee.
She shook her head.
“Okay, then. Breakfast in fifteen minutes, whether you
need it or not.”
Chief Deputy Frank Montoya usually arrived at the department
by seven in order to get incident reports lined up for the morning briefing at
eight-thirty. Joanna dialed his direct number and was relieved to hear his
cheerful “Good morning.”
“You know about the DOA from Naco?” she asked.
“I was just reading the report,” Frank replied. “The EMTs made
it sound like natural causes.”
“Doc Winfield doesn’t think so,” Joanna replied. “We need
Casey and Dave down there right away.” Dave Hollicker, having just completed a
strenuous course of training, had moved out of patrol into the newly created
position of crime scene investigator.
“I’ll get right on it,” Frank told her.
“Anything earth-shattering for the morning briefing?”
“Nothing.”
“Good,” Joanna said. “In that case, we’ll put it off until
afternoon. You hold down the fort there. When I leave the house, I’ll go straight
to the crime scene.”
“Fair enough,” Frank said.
Once showered and dressed, Joanna hurried into the
kitchen, where eggs and bacon and freshly squeezed orange juice were already on
the table. Butch stood at the kitchen counter buttering toast with the smooth
economy of a well-practiced cook.
“Jenny called while you were showering,” he said. Joanna
reached for the phone. “Don’t bother trying to reach her,” Butch told her. “Jenny
said Jim Bob was taking her to school early. Something about play practice.
There are two rehearsals today, both before school and again this evening.”
“She’s all right then?” Joanna asked.
Butch shrugged. “She sounded okay to me.”
He brought a plate of toast over to the table and set it
down. “I suppose this means we won’t be having lunch at Daisy’s,” he added.
“Why not?”
“Come on, Joanna,” Butch said, rubbing his clean-shaven
head with one hand. Joanna recognized the gesture for what it was—unspoken
exasperation. “You know as well as I do. If there’s a murder investigation
under way, you won’t pause long enough to breathe, let alone eat.”
Butch’s complaint sounded familiar—like something Eleanor
Lathrop might have said to Joanna’s father when D.H. Lathrop was sheriff of
Cochise County.
“We don’t know for sure it’s a homicide,” Joanna
countered. “Right this minute, I don’t see any reason to call off lunch.”
“When you call to cancel later,” Butch said, “I won’t
forget to say ‘I told you so.’ “
Dr. George Winfield didn’t like making next of kin notifications
over the phone, but hours of fruitless searching for Rochelle Baxter’s
relatives had left him little choice. DMV records had yielded a bogus address
with a working phone number.
“Washington State Attorney General’s Office,” a
businesslike voice responded.
Hearing that, Doc Winfield was convinced the phone number was
wrong as well. “I’m looking for someone named Lawrence Baxter,” he said.
There was a long pause. “One moment, please,” the woman said.
“Let me connect you with Mr. Todd’s office.”
“Did you say Mr. Todd?” Doc managed before she cut him off.
“Yes.” She was gone before he could ask anything more. After an interminable
wait, a man’s voice came on the line. “O.H. Todd,” he said brusquely. “To whom
am I speaking?”
“My name’s Winfield. Dr. George Winfield. There’s probably
been a mistake. I’m looking for someone named Lawrence Baxter, but they
connected me to you instead.”
“Baxter!” O.H. Todd exclaimed. “What do you want with him?”
“You know him then?” George asked hopefully.
“Why do you need him?” Todd demanded. “Who are you again?”
“Dr. George Winfield,” he explained patiently. “I’m the medical
examiner in Cochise County, Arizona. I’m calling about Mr. Baxter’s daughter,
Rochelle. If you could simply tell me how to reach him—”
“Something’s the matter with her?” the man interrupted. “Why?
What’s happened?”
George Winfield sighed. This was all wrong. “I’m sorry to
have to deliver the news in this fashion,” he said finally. “Over the phone, I
mean. But Ms. Baxter is dead. She died last night.”
For a long moment, all George heard was stark silence.
Just as the ME was beginning to think he’d been disconnected, O.H. Todd
breathed a single word.
“Damn!” he muttered, sounding for all the world like he
meant it.
CHAPTER TWO
Driving past the Cochise County Justice Center on her way
to the Naco, Arizona, crime scene, Joanna wondered about her own motives. Had
she opted to go to the crime scene in order to avoid the members of her
department who had boycotted the funeral reception? She had anticipated that countywide
politics was a necessary part of being elected to the office of sheriff. What
she hadn’t expected were the political machinations within the department
itself.
She had managed to dodge the obstacles her former chief deputy
Dick Voland had rolled into her path. Once he resigned from the department,
Joanna had thought her troubles were over. She knew now that had simply been
wishful thinking. Politics was everywhere—inside the department and out. She
had to accept that reality and learn to work around it.
Fifteen minutes after leaving High Lonesome Ranch, Joanna pulled
in behind a fleet of departmental cars parked at the corner of South Tower and
West Valenzuela in the tiny hamlet of Naco. The front door of an aging stucco
building stood ajar. When Joanna knocked, Detective Carbajal appeared in the
doorway.
“Morning, boss,” he said.
“What are you doing here?” she asked. “I thought you were with
the ME.”
Jaime nodded. “I thought so, too. Then Doc Winfield called
to ay there would be a slight delay. I had an extra forty minutes, so I thought
I’d come see what’s what.” He moved aside and allowed Joanna to enter. “We left
the door open in hopes of airing the place out,” he added, handing her the
crime scene log. “You may not want to come in.”
As Joanna stepped into the large open room, she understood
it once what Jaime meant. The all-pervading stench of stale vomit assailed her
nostrils. When she finished signing the log, Jaime passed her a mask and a
small jar of Vicks VapoRub.
“Thanks,” she said, dabbing some on her upper lip. “Now
where?”
“Dave Hollicker is over there in what passes for a
bedroom,” Jaime Carbajal said, pointing. “That’s where the EMTs found the
victim. She’d been sick as a dog all over her bed and most of the room as well.
Casey’s in the kitchen lifting prints.”
“What’s the victim’s name again?”
Jaime checked his notebook. “Rochelle Ida Baxter. Age
thirty-five. The EMTs found a purse with a driver’s license and gave the
information to Doc Winfield.”
“Any sign of robbery?”
Jaime shook his head. “Negative on that. They found eighty
dollars and some change in her purse, along with a full contingent of credit
cards. She was wearing two rings when she was taken to the hospital, and
nothing around here looks disturbed. No broken glass. It’s not looking good for
a robbery motive.”
“Forced entry?” Joanna asked.
“‘That’s a little harder to tell, but I don’t think so,”
Jaime said. “Both front and back doors were locked when the ambulance arrived,
so the EMTs had to break in. If the lock on the front door was damaged prior to
that, there’d be no way to separate EMT damage from any that might have
occurred previously. There’s an alarm system that went off like a banshee while
the medics were here. I’ve already checked with the alarm company. Their monitoring
system shows no disturbance prior to the arrival of the emergency personnel.”
Following Jaime’s directions, and with the smell of vomit
no longer actively engaging her gag reflexes, Joanna moved to the bedroom area.
The bed had been stripped down to bare mattress, and Dave Hollicker was in the
process of rolling up a soiled bedside rug. The place didn’t resemble a crime
scene so much as it did a hospital room, emptied of one desperately ill patient
and awaiting the arrival of another. Joanna was relieved to see that most of
the mess had been cleaned up prior to her arrival.
“How’s it going, Dave?”
He finished bagging the rug and placed it in a stack of
similarly full and tightly closed bags before answering. “I’ve taken photographs
and bagged everything I could. Once I load this stuff into the van, I’ll come
back and start looking for hair and fibers.”
“How’s the print work coming?”
Dave Hollicker shrugged. “Beats me. You’ll have to ask
Casey. I’ve been in here most of the time.”
“I’ll go see,” Joanna said, heading for the screens she
assumed walled off the kitchen. The great room glowed with natural morning
light that streamed in through an overhead skylight. Of to one side stood a
large wooden easel. On it hung a starkly empty canvas. Joanna paused in front
of it, struck by the fact that the person who had placed the canvas there was
no longer alive to color it. Whatever scene Rochelle Ida Baxter had intended to
paint there would never materialize. Next to the easel squatted a
paint-blotched taboret. The top drawer sat slightly open, revealing neat rows
of paint tubes. On the back of the taboret was a collection of oddly sized
jars. In them brushes of various sizes stood with their bristles up, waiting to
be taken up and used once more.
“Our victim’s an artist then?” Joanna asked, turning back
to Jaime Carbajal.
The detective nodded. “Evidently,” he said, “although you
couldn’t prove it by what’s here. So far I haven’t found anything but a few
sketchbooks and more empty canvases just like the one on the easel. Maybe she
was an artist who hadn’t quite gotten around to actually doing any painting.”
Joanna looked at the floor underneath the easel, where
more daubs of paint stained the white planks of the floor. “She’d been
painting, all right,” Joanna observed. “There must be finished canvases around
here somewhere. Keep looking.”
When Joanna poked her head into the kitchen area, Casey
Ledford was carefully brushing fine black powder onto the smooth gray surface
of an old-fashioned Formica-topped table.
“How’s it going?” Joanna asked.
Pursing her lips in concentration, Casey smoothed a strip
of clear tape onto the powder before she answered. “All right,” she said. “Good
morning, Sheriff,” she added.
Carefully peeling it back, Casey smoothed the
black-smudged clear tape onto a stiff manila card. After holding the card up
and examining it, she put it back down. On the top of the card she jotted a
series of notations about where and when the prints ha been found. Then she
tossed the tagged card into an open briefcase that already held many others
just like it.
“From what I’m seeing here,” Casey said, “I’d say our
victim had company last night. We found an almost empty glass and partially
emptied beer bottle sitting on the table. Dave bottled up the remaining
contents from the glass. He’ll take that back to the lab. I picked up two
distinctly different sets of prints from both the bottle and the glass, and
from the table, too. Assuming one set belongs to the victim, it’s possible the
other one could belong to the perp. We’ll take the glass, the bottle, and
whatever else is in the trash back to the department. Together Dave and I will
go through it all. I’ll look for prints; he’ll look for anything else. Oh, and
at Doc Winfield’s suggestion, we’ll be taking all the foodstuffs from here in
the kitchen as well.”
Joanna nodded. As she often did these days, she had chosen
to wear a uniform. Not wanting to disturb evidence, she stood in the middle of
the kitchen area with her hands in her pockets. The room was tiny, but orderly.
The cupboards were the kind that come, ready to be hung, from discount lumber
stores. The table, fridge, and a small apartment-size stove made for a kitchen
that was functional enough, but one that had been put together by someone
focused on neither cooking nor eating.
“Have you collected water samples?” Joanna asked.
“Dave did that first thing.”
Just then Joanna heard the sound of a woman’s voice,
raised ii anger, coming from the other side of the screen. “What do you mean, I
can’t come in? What’s going on here? What’s happened?”
Back in the studio, Joanna found Detective Carbajal standing
in the doorway and barring the entry of a solidly built woman who kept trying
to dodge past him.
“I’m sorry, ma’am,” Jaime was saying. “This is a crime
scene. No one is allowed inside.”
“Crime scene!” the woman repeated. “Crime scene? What kind
of crime? What’s happened? Where’s Rochelle?”
Removing her mask, Joanna walked up behind her detective,
close enough to glimpse a heavyset woman whose long gray hair was caught in a
single braid that fell over one shoulder and dangled as far as her waist. She
was swathed from head to toe in a loose-flowing, tie-dyed smock.
“I’m Sheriff Joanna Brady,” Joanna explained, stepping
into view “We’re investigating a suspicious death here. Who are you?”
“Death?” the woman repeated, wide-eyed. “Somebody died
here? But what about Rochelle? Where’s she? Certainly Shelley isn’t—”
Suddenly the woman broke off. She blanched. One hand went
to her mouth, and she wavered unsteadily on her feet. Up to then, Jaime
Carbajal had been steadfastly trying to keep her outside. Now, as she swayed in
front of him, he stepped forward and grasped her by one elbow. Then he led her
into the great room and eased her onto a nearby stool. For a moment, no one
spoke.
“I take it Rochelle Baxter is a friend of yours?” Joanna
asked softly.
The woman glanced wordlessly from Joanna’s face to Jaime’s.
Finally she nodded.
“I’m sorry to have to tell you this, then,” Joanna
continued. “Rochelle Baxter fell gravely ill last night. She called 911, but by
the time emergency personnel reached her, she was unresponsive. She was
declared dead on arrival at the hospital.”
The woman began to shake her head, wagging it desperately
back and forth, as though by simply denying what she’d been told she could keep
it from being true. “‘That can’t be,” she moaned. “It’s not possible.”
By now Jaime had his spiral notebook out of his pocket. “Yon
name, please, ma’am?”
“Canfield,” the woman answered in a cracked whisper. “Deidre
Canfield. Most people call me Dee.”
“And your relationship to Miss Baxter?”
“We were friends. I own an art gallery up in Old Bisbee—the
Castle Rock Gallery. It’s where Shelley was going to have her first-ever show
tonight ...” Dee Canfield’s voice faltered and she burst into tears. “Oh, no,”
she wailed. “This can’t be. It’s so awful, so ... unfair. It isn’t happening.”
For several long moments, Joanna and Jaime Carbajal simply
looked on, waiting for Dee Canfield to master her emotions. Finally, pulling a
man’s hanky out from under a bra strap, she blew her nose. “Has anyone told
Bobo yet?”
Joanna knew of only one person in the Bisbee area with that
distinctive name. “You mean Bobo Jenkins?” Joanna asked quickly] “‘The former
owner of the Blue Moon Saloon and Lounge?”
Dee nodded. “That’s the one.”
“What’s his relationship to Miss Baxter?” Jaime asked.
Dec shrugged in a manner that suggested she thought Bobo Jenkins’s
relationship with Rochelle Baxter was nobody else’s business. Jaime, however,
insisted. “Would you say they were friends? hr asked.
Dec paused for several moments before answering. “More
than friends, I suppose,” she conceded.
“They were going together?” Joanna suggested.
“Yes.”
“For how long?”
“I don’t know exactly. Several months now. Bobo is the one
who introduced Shelley to me.”
“Had there been any trouble between them?” Jaime asked. “Any
disagreements?”
“No!” Dee Canfield declared staunchly. “Not at all.
Nothing like that.”
“You mentioned Rochelle’s show is scheduled to open at
your gallery tonight,” Joanna said quietly. “Is that why you stopped by this
morning?”
“No,” Dee replied. “Thursday mornings are when I come down
to get gas. I have a Pinto, you see,” she explained. “It still uses leaded.
Once a week I come down here, go across the line to Old Mexico, and fill up in
Naco, Sonora. I usually stop by to see Shelley, coming or going. We have a cup
of coffee and indulge in girl talk. When Shelley worked, she’d isolate herself
completely. A little chitchat is what I used to drag her back into the real
world.”
“If Rochelle Baxter is an artist, why don’t we see any
paintings here?” Jaime Carbajal asked.
“Because everything’s up at the show. Oh my God!” Deidre
Canfield wailed. “What am I going to do about that? Should I cancel it? Have
the opening anyway? And who’s going to tell Bobo?”
“My department will notify Mr. Jenkins,” Joanna reassured
her. “We’ll need to talk to him anyway. But when it comes to deciding whether
or not to cancel the show, you’re on your own.”
Dee nodded and swallowed hard. “Rochelle was such a talented
young woman,” she said, dabbing at her tears. “This was her very first show,
you see, and she was so excited about it—excited and nervous, too.”
“Did she complain to you about feeling ill?”
“Ill? You mean was she sick? Absolutely not. We worked together
all day long yesterday—Shelley, Warren, and I. She certainly would have told me
if she wasn’t feeling well.”
“Who’s Warren?” Jaime asked.
“Warren Gibson. My boyfriend. He helps out around the
gallery. I’m the brains of the outfit. He’s the brawn.”
Just outside Dee Canfield’s line of vision, Jaime caught
Joanna’s eye and motioned toward his watch, indicating he needed to head for
his autopsy appointment at Doc Winfield’s office.
“Detective Carbajal has to leave now,” Joanna explained. “But
if you don’t mind, I’d like to ask you a few more questions.”
“Okay,” Dee said. “I’m happy to tell you whatever you need
to know. I want to help, but I’ll have to leave soon, too, so I can make
arrangements about the show”
As Jaime hurried out the front door, Dave Hollicker
appeared from behind one of the screens lugging two heavy bags. Joanna took Dee’s
elbow, helped her off the stool, an escorted her outside.
“It might be better if we talk out here,” Joanna said,
taking he own notebook out of her purse. “Now tell me, Ms. Canfield, how long
have you known Rochelle Baxter?”
“Five months or so,” Dee answered. “As I said, Bobo Jenkins
met her first—I’m not sure how—and he introduced us. He knew I was getting
ready to open the gallery. He thought Shelley and would hit it off. Which we
did, of course. She was such a nice person, for an ex-Marine, that is. I’m more
into peace and love,” Dee added with a self-deprecating smile. “But then, by
the time Shelly made it to Bisbee, so was she—into peace and love, I mean.”
“Where did she come from?”
Dee Canfield frowned. “This may sound strange, but I’m not
sure. The way she talked about being glad to be out of the rain, it could have
been somewhere in the Northwest, but she never did say for certain. I asked her
once or twice, but she didn’t like to talk about it, so I just let it be. I had
the feeling that she had walked away from some kind of bad news—probably a
creep of an ex-husband—but I didn’t press her. I figured she’d get around to
telling me one of these days, if she wanted to, that is.” Dee frowned. “Now
that I think about it, maybe she has,” she added thoughtfully.
“What do you mean?”
Dee countered with a question of her own. “What do you
know about art?”
“Not much,” Joanna admitted. “I had to take the humanities
course at the university, but that’s about all.”
“Remember that old saw about writers writing about what
they know?”
Joanna nodded.
“The same thing goes for artists,” Dee continued. “They
paint what they know. Shelley painted portraits. Her subjects glow with the
kind of intensity that only comes from the inside out—from the inside of the
subject and of the painter as well. The titles are all perfectly innocuous—The Carver,
The Pastor and the Lamb, Homecoming—and yet they’re all painted
with the kind of longing that puts a lump in your throat. Shelley was painting
far more than what she saw. She was also painting what she wanted—a time
and place and people she wanted to go back to, but couldn’t. Does that make any
sense?”
Joanna nodded. “She never talked to you about any of the
people in her paintings?”
Dee shook her head. “Not really. ‘Somebody I knew back
home,’ she’d tell me without ever bothering saying where ‘back home’ was. But I
did notice that there’s no rain in any of her pictures. Wherever home was, it
must not rain very often, or else she just didn’t like to paint rain.”
“Maybe Rochelle Baxter didn’t tell you where she came from
because she had something to hide,” Joanna suggested.
“Like maybe she had done something wrong? Something illegal?”
Dee demanded.
“Possibly.”
“No!” Dee replied hotly. “Nothing like that. I’m sure of
it. I’m an excellent judge of character, Sheriff Brady. Psychic, even. Shelley
was as honest as the day is long. If she had done something bad, I would have
known it.”
“You said she was an ex-Marine. Did Rochelle mention anything
to you about where she served and when?”
“She’d been in the Gulf War,” Dee answered. “I remember
something about her being an MP, but again, she wasn’t big on details.”
“Do you have any idea about the people in the paintings?”
Joanna asked. “Who they might be?”
“Maybe you should come up to the gallery and see for yourself,”
Dee suggested. “I assume they’re people from Shelley’s past. They’re all
painted in a wonderful sort of summer light, but not the light we have here in
the desert. The shadows don’t have the same hard edges that desert shadows do.
This is much softer. And speaking of soft, that’s how she spoke, too—with a
soft drawl that makes me think she must have come originally from somewhere
down south, but then she’d say something about being glad her bones were
finally warming up, so I really don’t know.
“If that’s all you need, I’d better go,” Dee added,
extracting a car key from the fringed leather purse that hung from her shoulder.
She edged away from Joanna toward a wildly colored, custom-painted Pinto
station wagon.
“I still need to go get gas,” she said, “but I’ve made up
my mind. I’m going to go through with the show’s grand opening tonight after
all. For one thing, it’s too late to call off the caterer. Even if I canceled,
I’d still have to pay for the food. So we’ll have an event anyway, even if it’s
more like a wake than anything else—a wake with paintings instead of a body.
But before it opens, I’m going to redo all the prices.”
“Redo them?” Joanna asked. “What do you mean?”
“I’m going to raise them,” Dee Canfield returned
decisively. “Those fifteen pieces are all I have to sell of Shelley’s work.
With her gone, that’s all there’s ever going to be, which makes a big difference
to collectors. It means the paintings are more valuable.”
“There aren’t any others?”
“Only one,” Dee replied. “But that one’s already sold.”
“But I would have thought there’d be others, either here
in her studio or in storage....” Joanna began.
Dee shook her head. “Shelley was something of a perfectionist,
you see. She’d paint one canvas over and over until she got it right and moved
on to the next one. Maybe she was just cheap, but she didn’t believe in letting
canvases go to waste.”
“How do art galleries work?” Joanna asked innocently. “Do
you get a set fee and the artist receives all the rest?”
“Of course not,” Dee said. “Shelley’s and my agreement
works on a percentage basis, fifty-fifty.”
“So, if you raise the prices on Rochelle Baxter’s work,
her heirs will receive more, but so will you.”
“Believe me,” Dee said, “I’ll see to it that Shelley’s
heirs receive the additional proceeds, if that’s what you mean.” She paused,
and her eyes narrowed. “Wait a minute. Are you suggesting that I may have had
something to do with Shelley’s death—that I killed her so I could make more
money off her paintings?”
“I wasn’t implying anything of the kind,” Joanna replies
evenly. “But whenever we encounter a suspicious death like this we question
everyone. It’s the only way to find out what really happened.”
Joanna’s response did nothing to calm Dee Canfield’s sudden
anger. “You can take your questions and your not-so-subtle hint and go straight
to hell!” she fumed.
With that, Dee got in her car and slammed the door behind
her. On the second turn of the key, the old engine coughed fitfully to life.
Jerking and half-stalling, the Pinto lurched away from the curb and bounced
through an axle-bending pothole.
As the Pinto shuddered out of sight, Joanna Brady jotted into
her notebook: Who is Deidre Canfield and where did she come from?
CHAPTER THREE
Dave Hollicker came outside and heaved yet another set of
plastic bags into his waiting van. “How much longer do you think you’re going
to be?” Joanna asked.
“Probably several more hours,” he said.
Joanna nodded. “All right, then. I’ll leave you and Casey
to it. In the meantime, I’m going back to the department to try to herd my day
into some kind of order.”
As she drove toward the Justice Center, Joanna recalled
the last time she had seen Bobo Jenkins. It had been several months earlier,
on the occasion of Angie Kellogg’s marriage to Dennis Hacker. The wedding
ceremony had taken place in the parsonage of Tombstone Canyon United Methodist
Church, with the Reverend Marianne Maculyea presiding. Bobo Jenkins, Angie’s
employer at the Blue Moon Saloon and Lounge, had given away the bride.
Recalling the event, Joanna remembered that Bubo Jenkins had
seemed buoyantly happy as he told Butch about his plan to sell the Blue Moon to
Angie and Dennis. He said he was looking forward to his second early
retirement.
Rochelle hadn’t been in evidence at the wedding, but
Joanna wondered if Bobo Jenkins’s happiness then had had less to do with early
retirement than with the appearance of a new woman in his life. Now, though,
whatever future the two of them might have planned together had evaporated.
Rochelle Baxter was dead.
Halfway back to the department, Joanna changed her mind
about going there. Bobo Jenkins was a man Joanna knew and liked. He needed to
be informed about Rochelle’s death in person rather than through one of Bisbee’s
notoriously swift gossip mills. Plus, if Joanna went to see him right then, she
wouldn’t have time to think about it for too long, while her own sense of dread
kept building. She hated doing next-of-kin notifications—hated having to tell
some poor unsuspecting person that a loved one was suddenly and unexpectedly
dead.
Picking up her radio, she called in and asked for Bobo
Jenkins’s address. She learned that he lived on Youngblood Hill in Old Bisbee,
only a matter of blocks from his former business, the Blue Moon. Joanna drove
directly there and parked in the designated area at the top of the hill. She
then hiked down the steep incline to the arched and gated entrance that led
back up a steep flight of stairs to a house perched far above the street. It
was no accident that people who lived on some of Old Bisbee’s higher elevations
were regular winners in the annual Fourth of July race up “B” Hill.
Thirty-two steps later found her standing, out of breath,
on the wooden porch of a fully renovated 1880s-vintage miner’s cabin
overlooking Brewery Gulch. The clapboard siding, front door, and porch railings
were all newly painted. The broad planks of flooring showed evidence of having
been recently replaced. The period piece of etched glass in the front door had
been carefully relined with new putty, and the glass itself sparkled in the morning
sun. Sighing with reluctance, Joanna placed her finger on the old-fashioned
doorbell and listened while it buzzed inside the tiny house.
When Bobo Jenkins came to the door, he wore shorts, a
sweat-soaked T-shirt, and a pair of tennis shoes. A limp towel was thrown
around the back of his neck. “Hi, there, Joanna,” he said. “I was out back
working out. Care to come in?”
Joanna made her way into a brightly painted living room.
Hardwood flooring glistened underfoot while huge pieces of leather furniture dominated
the space. Looking at the furniture, Joanna shuddered at the idea of dragging
those large pieces up from the street.
“Nice place,” she said. “But how on earth did you get this
furniture up here?”
“I didn’t beam it up, if that’s what you mean.” He
grinned. “It helps if you lift weights. It’s also a good idea to have a bunch
of weight-lifting friends. Have a seat.”
Joanna eased herself down onto the soft gray leather
couch. She would have preferred keeping up the pretense of polite conversation.
Her stomach clenched at the idea of doing what she had come to do. Once she
unleashed her bad news, this comfortable, peaceful room would never again be
quite so peaceful. Some of her disquiet must have communicated itself. When she
turned back to Bobo Jenkins, his easygoing smile had disappeared.
“What’s going on?” he asked, perching on the arm of the
couch.
“I’m sorry to have to do this,” she began. “I understand
you’re good friends with a woman named Rochelle Baxter. Is that true?”
“With Shelley? Of course it’s true. And I hope we’re a
little more than friends,” he added. A concerned frown crossed his face “Why
are you asking Inc about her? Has something happened?”
Joanna took a deep breath. There was no easy way. “She’s
dead, Bobo,” Joanna said.
The big man’s mahogany-colored skin faded to gray. “No!” he
exclaimed. “That’s impossible!”
Joanna shook her head. “I’m sorry, Bobo,” she said, “but
it’s true. Rochelle Baxter was taken ill and called 911 around ten o’clock last
night. She collapsed while talking to the emergency operator. When the EMTs
reached her, she was unresponsive. Rochelle was DOA on arrival at Copper Queen
Hospital.”
Bobo buried his face in the towel. “Shelley, dead?” he murmured.
“I can’t believe it. She was fine when I left her—perfectly fine. What
happened?”
“We don’t know,” Joanna replied. “At least, not yet. From
what we can tell, she became desperately ill. By the time help reached her, it
was already too late.”
Joanna paused, allowing Bobo to internalize the awful information.
Finally she asked, “Did Rochelle have any known medical condition that might
explain this sudden attack?”
His face contorted by anguish, Bobo shook his head
wordlessly.
“You said she was fine when you left her,” Joanna
continued. “Does that mean you saw her last night?”
Bobo nodded.
“What time?”
“I don’t know exactly,” he answered. “Fairly early. It
couldn’t have been much later than seven or so. I was back here by
seven-thirty:”
“What was the purpose of your visit?”
Bobo sighed. “Shelley and I were supposed to have dinner
last night, but she stood me up. Not stood up, exactly. She just called and
canceled. I went to see her anyway—to ask her about it and find out what was
going on.”
“You say she canceled. What time was that?” Joanna asked.
“What time did she call?”
Joanna nodded.
“Sometime in the afternoon. I don’t remember exactly when.
I erased the message after I listened to it.”
“And why did she?” Joanna asked. “Cancel, I mean. Was something
wrong?”
“You mean was she sick?” Bobo asked.
Joanna nodded.
“Sick, but not physically,” he said ruefully. “Sick of me
is more like it. Still, when I showed up at her place in Naco, she invited me
in and offered me a drink. We talked for a little while. She tried to give me
the brush-off. Told me she needed time for herself—time by herself. I was
afraid she was going to break up with me right then and there, but I talked her
out of it. The last thing before I left, she agreed to have dinner with me
tonight after the gallery opening.”
“You parted on good terms?”
“Of course.” Bobo Jenkins frowned. “Wait a minute. What
about that opening? Somebody needs to call Dee Canfield right away and tell her
what’s happened.”
“She already knows,” Joanna said. “She came by the studio
down in Naco while I was still there.”
“She’s going to cancel, right?”
“I don’t think so. She said she intended to go through
with the opening after all. The only difference is she plans to raise the
prices.”
“Raise the prices? What do you mean?”
Joanna nodded. “Dec told me that Shelley’s death automat
rally makes the pieces more valuable.”
Bobo Jenkins stood up abruptly. “What is she, some kind of
vulture? What the hell is Dee Canfield thinking? You’ll have to excuse me,
Joanna. There’s something I have to do.”
He went to the door and held it open, motioning Joanna
through it.
“What’s the hurry?” Joanna asked, allowing herself to be
escorted back outside. “Where are you going?”
“To Castle Rock Gallery,” he told her determinedly. “I’m going
to go have a heart-to-heart chat with Deidre Canfield.”
“Wait, Bobo,” Joanna began. “Do you think that’s a good idea?”
He ignored her. Without bothering to lock the door, he
pulled it shut behind them and loped off down the steep flight of stairs that
led to the street. Standing alone on the small porch, Joanna watched him take
the steps two and three at a time. When he reached the bottom, Joanna expected
him to turn right and head back up the hill to retrieve his waiting El Camino.
Instead, he turned left and barreled down Youngblood Hill toward Brewery Gulch
on foot.
Stunned, Joanna stared after Bobo Jenkins’s retreating
figure. She had known him for years, but she had never seen him angry before.
Now that she had, she worried about the damage those powerfully muscled arms
and fists might inflict once he caught up with Deidre Canfield.
Sheriff Joanna Brady had just brought Bobo Jenkins an
entire lifetime’s worth of unwelcome news. As sheriff she was charged with
protecting the citizens of Cochise County. Instead, by telling Bobo about Dee
Canfield’s plans, Joanna had inadvertently incited him possibly to the point of
violence.
Not good,
Joanna
told herself grimly as she, too, started down the stairs. Not good at all!
Bobo Jenkins was completely out of sight by the time
Joanna reached the arched gate at the bottom of the stairs. She jogged back
uphill to her Crown Victoria, then threw herself inside. Panting with
exertion, Joanna punched up her radio.
“Sheriff Brady here,” she gasped when she heard the voice
of Larry Kendrick, her lead dispatcher. “I’m on my way to Castle Rock Gallery.
Please advise Bisbee PD that I may need backup.”
“What’s the problem, Sheriff?” Larry asked. “You sound
like you’ve been running for miles.”
“Not miles, just up and down Youngblood Hill,” she told
him. “I just finished telling Bobo Jenkins that Rochelle Baxter is dead. He’s
upset with a woman named Deidre Canfield and is on his way to her place of
business, Castle Rock Gallery on Main Street in Old Bisbee. Bobo said he was
going to talk to her, but he was really off the charts when he left here. I’d
say he’s more likely to punch somebody’s lights out. I’m headed there, too.”
By then the Civvie was on the move. Joanna turned on her
lights and siren as she careened down Youngblood Hill into the upper reaches of
Brewery Gulch. Bobo Jenkins was moving fast. By racing down stairways and
cutting through back alleys, it was likely he would reach the Castle Rock
Gallery on foot well before Joanna could drive there.
Deidre Canfield’s place of business consisted of a series
of small, formerly ramshackle buildings that looked invitingly renovated when
Joanna drove up. As soon as she opened her car door, she heard a chorus of
raised voices coming from inside.
As she pushed open the door to the gallery, a tiny bell
tinkled overhead, but neither Dee Canfield nor Bobo Jenkins noticed. Across the
room they stood locked in a fierce, nose to nose confrontation.
“You’ve got no right barging in here and telling me what I
can and can’t do,” Dee shouted shrilly. “This is my gallery. The contract is
between Rochelle Baxter and me. It has nothing to do with you, Bobo Jenkins.
The terms of that contract allow me to set, raise, or lower prices as I see
fit.”
Bobo’s powerful fists were clenched at his sides. Beads of
sweat glistened on his face as he struggled to keep his anger under Control. “That
was before she died,” he said pointedly.
“Yes,” Dee returned. “And that’s why I’m raising the
prices. In the world of art, those pieces are all more valuable.”
“Not more valuable,” Bobo countered softly. “They’re priceless.
What about Shelley’s family?”
“Who else do you think I’m doing it for?” Dee demanded. “If
the pieces sell for more money, the family receives more. It’s as simple as
that.”
Bobo stepped closer to Dee. It was a threatening gesture. She
blinked, but stood her ground.
“You think that’s what Shelley’s family is going to want—money?”
he demanded, his face bare inches from hers. He waved an arm, motioning at the
vividly colored paintings that lined the white-stuccoed walls. “Who the hell do
you think those people are, Deidre Canfield? You know as well as I that they
must be Shelley’s family. Having those pictures is going to be far more important
to them than any amount of money. Cancel the show, Dee.”
“No. Absolutely not!”
“‘Then I’ll cancel it for you.”
A man Joanna hadn’t seen before emerged from a backroom,
carrying a hammer. “You’d better leave now, Bobo,” the newcomer said, tapping
the head of the hammer in the palm of his other hand.
“And you’d better stay out of this, Warren,” Jenkins
growled, his eyes swiveling in Warren Gibson’s direction. “This is between Dee
and me.”
“You’d all better cool it,” Joanna ordered, physically
inserting herself between Dee Canfield and Bobo. “Now. Before things get out of
hand.” She turned toward the man with the hammer. “As for you, put that thing
down. On the desk. Now”
After a momentary hesitation, Warren complied. Meanwhile,
Bobo Jenkins ignored Joanna’s presence entirely. “Give me my picture, Dee,” he
said, speaking over Joanna’s head. “You can go on with the damned show if you
want, but it won’t be with my picture in it.”
“All right,” Dee said. “Go get it, Warren. Whatever it
takes to get him out of here.”
Again, Gibson hesitated. “Go,” she urged again. Finally,
shaking his head, Warren shambled out of the room.
“Look,” Joanna said reasonably. “You’ve all had a terrible
shock this morning. No one here is thinking clearly.”
“Those pictures shouldn’t be sold,” Bobo Jenkins insisted.
“Or, if they are, it should only be done once Shelley’s family members have
given permission.”
For the first time Joanna took a moment to look around the
room. Her eyes fell on a picture of a boy and a dog sitting on a front porch.
The heat of a summer’s day shimmered around them, but the two figures in the
foreground rested companionably in cool, deep shade. The boy and the dog had
been lovingly rendered by someone who knew them well; by someone who cared
about who they were. Even without looking at any of the other pictures, Joanna
knew instinctively that Dee Canfield was right—that the portraits were those of
Rochelle Baxter’s loved ones. She was equally sure that Bobo was correct as
well. The people painted there would want the pictures to treasure far more
than any amount of money.
“Shelley’s family!” Dee Canfield spat back at him. “What
family? Did you ever meet any of them?”
Bobo shook his head.
“If Shelley’s work was so damned important to that
so-called family of hers,” Dee continued, “don’t you suppose one or two of them
would have been included in the invitations for tonight’s opening party? I
asked Shelley specifically if there was anyone she wanted me to invite. She
said there wasn’t anyone at all.”
“Now that Rochelle is dead, her family is bound to turn
up,” Lobo said.
“Fair enough,” Dee replied. “When they do, I’ll have a
nice fat check waiting for them, and they’ll be more than happy to take the
money and run.”
Warren Gibson appeared in the doorway carrying an almost
life-size portrait of Bobo Jenkins. Bobo swallowed hard when he saw it, then he
stepped forward and snatched it out of Warren’s grasp. He walked back over to
Dee and stood there, holding the painting with both hands.
“Do you know what you are?” he demanded. “You’re a
money-grubbing bitch who doesn’t know a damned thing about what’s important.”
With that, he turned and stalked out of the gallery while the little bell
tinkled merrily overhead.
Once Bobo was gone, all the starch and fight drained out
of Deidre Canfield’s face and body. She staggered over to the polished wooden
desk where Warren had deposited his hammer. She sank into the rolling desk
chair and laid her head on her arms. “I can’t believe Bobo would talk to me
that way,” she sobbed. “He and I have been friends for a long time. How could
he?”
Warren Gibson moved to the back of Dee’s chair and gave
her shoulder a comforting pat. “It’s all right, Dee Dee,” he said. “He’s gone
now”
The doorbell tinkled again. A young uniformed police
officer wearing a City of Bisbee badge with a tag that said “Officer Jesus
Romero” ventured cautiously into the room.
“Everything all right, Sheriff Brady?” Romero asked. “I
was told there might be some kind of problem.”
Joanna felt embarrassed. The lights, siren, and call for
backup had all proved unnecessary. “Sorry about that,” she said. “It turned out
to be nothing. Everything’s under control.”
The officer grinned at her. “I’d rather have it be nothing
than something any day of the week. Glad to be of service.”
With that he left. As the doorbell chimed again, Joanna
turned back to Dee Canfield, who looked pale and drawn. There was little
resemblance between the woman seated at the desk and the angry hoyden who had
raised such hell down in Naco a scant hour earlier.
“Are you all right?” Joanna asked.
“I’m fine,” Dee returned, though she didn’t sound it. “I’ve
sunk everything I have into getting this gallery up and running. It’s fine for
Bobo Jenkins to be all sentimental and altruistic with my money. It’s no
concern of his. He’s got his military retirement and now he’s sold his business
and has payments coming from that on a regular basis as well. But what the hell
does he think I’m going to use to pay my bills? My good looks? This show is
important to me, Sheriff Brady, damned important! It’s a chance to make some
real money for a change. I’m not going to hand over the paintings for free just
because he said so!”
“What about the prices?” Warren said, reappearing behind
her. “I started changing them. Want me to keep on?”
“Absolutely.”
Joanna sighed. Obviously Bobo Jenkins’s visit hadn’t altered
Dee Canfield’s intentions, but at least Joanna had been there to prevent any
physical violence.
“All right, then,” she said. “Mind if I take a look around
before I go?”
“Go ahead,” Dee said. “Help yourself.”
Joanna spent the next few minutes wandering through the
gallery. The lovingly rendered subjects—a young girl shooting baskets, an old
man sharpening his knife, a minister leaning down to speak to a young
parishioner—were most likely the same living and breathing people who, by now,
would be reeling from the terrible news that Rochelle Baxter was dead. Joanna
noticed that the paintings in the first two rooms were priced from $85o to
$1,000. In the room where Warren was hard at work, they were triple that. Bobo’s
accusation of her being “money-grubbing” wasn’t wrong.
Shaking her head, Joanna returned to the front desk, where
Dee Canfield was on the phone. Without saying a word, Joanna let herself out
the door. She and her Civvie caught up with Bobo Jenkins halfway through town.
“Hey, Bobo,” she called. “That looks heavy. Care for a
lift?”
He glared at her briefly, then shrugged his broad
shoulder: and headed for the car. Between them, they carefully loaded the painting
into the Civvie’s backseat, then he climbed in the from next to her.
“‘Thanks,” he muttered gruffly. “Appreciate it.”
He sat in brooding silence until they started up O.K.
Street “Dee’s still going through with it, isn’t she—the opening and raising
the prices?”
“Yes,” Joanna replied.
Bobo slumped deeper into the seat. “Damn!” he said. “What
about Shelley’s family? Have you found them yet?”
“Not so far. We’re working on it.”
“Once Dee sells the paintings, Shelley’s family will never
be able to afford to buy them back.”
“Probably not,” Joanna agreed. “But you tried, Bobo. You
did your best.”
He shook his head. “Not good enough.”
Joanna stopped the car halfway down Youngblood Hill, right
in front of the gate and the steep stairway that led to Bobo’s house. For the
better part of a minute he made no move to exit the car. The depth of his
misery was palpable, and Joanna’s heart ached for him.
“I’m sorry about all this, Bobo,” she said at last. “I can
see Shelley meant a lot to you.”
He chewed his lip, nodding but saying nothing.
“And I’m sorry to burden you further,” she added. “But we’re
going to need your cooperation.”
“What kind?”
“We’ll want you to stop by the department and give us a
set of prints. Detective Carbajal is tied up right now. As soon as he’s free,
he’ll need to ask you a few questions.”
“You need my fingerprints? Why? I thought you said Shelley
was sick.”
“She was sick,” Joanna agreed. “But the medical examiner
has labeled her death as suspicious.”
“You’re saying someone killed her?” Bobo asked
incredulously. “Who would have done such a thing? And why?”
“I can’t answer those questions, either,” Joanna said. “Not
yet. We’re working on it, but it’s very early in the process. Investigations
take time.”
“But you want my prints. Am I a suspect?”
“Not at all. Yours will be elimination prints. We print
everyone who was known to have been at the crime scene prior to the event. That
way we can sort prints that belong from those that don’t. From what you’ve told
me, you may have been the last person see Shelley alive.”
Bobo Jenkins nodded morosely. “I see,” he said. “Do I need
I do that right away—the fingerprinting?”
“As soon as possible,” Joanna told him. “Time is always
important, but you’ll need to call the department before you come by and make
sure Casey Ledford is there. She’s our latent fingerprint tech. The last I
heard, she was still at the crime scene. And Detective Carbajal is busy at the
moment, too. I’m sure he’ll contact you once he’s free.”
“Crime scene.” Bobo repeated the words and then took a
deep breath. “Detectives. I can’t believe all this is happening. I car believe
Shelley was murdered.”
“Bobo, we don’t know that for sure, either,” Joanna reminded
him patiently. “At this time, her death is regarded as suspicious. For all I
know, it could have been a suicide.”
“No,” Bobo Jenkins declared. “Absolutely not! Whatever
killed Shelley, it sure as hell wasn’t suicide!”
With that, he opened the car door, got out, and slammed
shut again. Joanna unlocked the back door. Then she exited the car, too, and
helped him retrieve his painting.
“It’s a very good likeness,” she said, once he was holding
upright so she could see it clearly. “Your Shelley must have been very talented
woman, and very special, too.”
As Bobo Jenkins looked down at the painting, his eyes
filled with tears. He wiped them away with one end of the grubby towel that
still dangled, unheeded, around his neck.
“Thank you for telling me about this, Joanna,” he said
quietly. “For coming in person, I mean,” he added. “You’re the boss. It would
have been easy to send someone else instead of doing it yourself.”
Joanna nodded. “You’re welcome,” she said.
“And thanks for following me down to the gallery, too,” he
continued. “I was so pissed off when I went down there that I might have done
something stupid. I could have hurt somebody”
Joanna looked up at him and smiled reassuringly. “No,
Bobo,” she said. “I don’t think you would have. But for whatever it’s worth, I
think you’re right about the paintings. There’s no question—they shouldn’t be
sold. They should all go to Shelley’s family. Deidre Canfield is dead wrong on
this one.”
“Thanks for that, too,” he said.
Carefully holding the painting in front of him, he angled
his way through the gate and started up the stairs. Behind Joanna a horn honked
impatiently. She jumped back into the Civvie and hurriedly moved it out of the
way of the vehicle she’d been blocking.
It was a tough way to start the day, considering she still
hadn’t had her morning briefing or a second cup of coffee.
Standing in the warm late-morning sun with the heavy pay
phone receiver held to one ear, the man waited impatiently for his call to he
put through. The receptionist had accepted the charges, so it wasn’t a matter
of money. Still, he didn’t have all day.
Finally someone picked up at the other end. “Good,” he
said when he heard the voice. “It’s you. You’ll be happy to know it’s done. She’s
dead. All you have to do now is send money.”
CHAPTER FOUR
By the time Joanna arrived at the Justice Center and let
herself in through her private back-door entrance, it was almost eleven o’clock.
As usual, her office was a mess. The wooden surface of her desk was barely
visible under stacks of neglected files and paper.
Organizing the Fallen Officer portion of Yolanda Caсedo’s
funeral had taken far more of Joanna’s personal time and effort than she had
expected. She and Frank Montoya had shared the responsibilities. All essential
law enforcement work had been handled, but some of the more routine matters
had been allowed to slide. Now, though, as Joanna dug into the paperwork on her
desk, she discovered items that had been routine on Monday. By Thursday they
had moved to the “urgent” column.
Wanting to have some quiet time to attack the daunting
back-log of paper, Joanna set to work without bothering to announce her
presence to anyone, not even to Kristin Gregovich, her secretary in the outside
office. Twenty minutes later, as Joanna whaled away at the mess, Kristin came
into her office to deliver yet another batch of paperwork. Startled to find
Joanna seated at her desk, Kristin almost dropped what she was carrying.
“You scared me to death!” she exclaimed. “Why didn’t you
tell me you were here?”
“Because my phone would have been ringing off the hook,”
Joanna answered. “The only way I’m going to make any progress with this mess is
to work on it without interruptions.”
Kristin nodded and placed a neatly arranged stack of paper
on the one part of the desk Joanna had finally managed to clear. Then, instead
of taking the hint and returning to her own office, Kristin sighed and sank,
uninvited, into one of the two captain’s chairs facing Joanna’s desk.
In the past two months, Kristin Gregovich had gone from
being slightly pregnant to being profoundly pregnant. Her once showgirl-worthy
ankles were now severely swollen by the end of each workday. The baby, a girl,
wasn’t due for another three weeks, but Kristin, rubbing her aching back, was
vocal about hoping to deliver sooner than that. On the other hand, money concerns
made her want to stay on the job as long as possible.
Hearing Kristin’s sigh, Joanna looked at her secretary
with concern. She worried that there might be some third-trimester complication
brewing. “Are you all right?” she asked.
Kristin nodded, but she didn’t look all right.
“Weren’t you supposed to see the doctor yesterday?” Joanne
asked.
Kristin nodded again. “That’s what I wanted to talk to you
about, Sheriff Brady. We did go, Terry and I both.”
Terry Gregovich, Kristin’s husband, and Spike, his German
shepherd, comprised the Cochise County Sheriff’s Department’s K-9 Unit.
Joanna stood up and came around to the front of the desk. “You
look upset, Kristin,” she said. “What is it? Is there something the matter with
the baby?”
“Oh, no, nothing like that,” the young woman answered hurriedly.
“Shaundra’s fine. The thing is, the only time we could get in for the
ultrasound was late yesterday afternoon. We went right after the church service
ended. By the time we finished up at the hospital, it was too late to go to the
graveside service. I was too beat to go to the reception, so Terry and I just
stayed home. But I didn’t want you to think we didn’t come because ...” Kristin’s
voice trailed off uneasily.
When Joanna had first taken over the job of sheriff, she
and her young secretary had needed to sort out some issues between them. For a
time after Joanna’s election, Kristin’s loyalties had remained with members of
the previous administration. With the passage of time, however, the two women
had developed a comfortable working relationship. Months earlier, Joanna was
the person to whom Kristin had first confided the news of her unexpected
pregnancy. And it was Joanna who had helped Kristin and Terry arrange their
nice but hurried shotgun wedding.
In the months since, Joanna Brady had taken a kind of
proprietary interest in the young couple’s situation. She had been more than a
little disappointed the day before when she’d been forced to assume that they,
too, had boycotted the funeral reception. It had hurt her to think that both
Kristin and Terry had aligned themselves with Ken Galloway’s malcontents in
Local 83. That, of course, had been the other reason Joanna had avoided
announcing her presence to Kristin.
“You didn’t want me to think you missed the reception
because of what?” Joanna asked.
“You know,” Kristin said with an uneasy shrug. “Because of
what’s going on around here.”
“You mean because of Deputy Galloway?”
Kristin nodded. “That’s right. Neither Terry nor I wanted
to have anything to do with him and his buddies,” she said quickly. “But four
forty-five was the only time we could schedule the ultra-sound, and the doctor
was later than that. I just wanted you to know, Sheriff Brady—whatever those
guys in the union are trying to pull, Terry and I aren’t involved. If we had
known what was going to happen—that everybody else was going to stay away like
they did—we would have come no matter what!”
A wave of relief washed over Joanna. She eased herself
into the chair next to Kristin. Maybe things inside her department weren’t
quite as universally one-sided as she had supposed.
“The baby’s welfare has to be your first priority,” Joanna
said kindly. “Thanks for telling me, though.” She paused, then added, “But what
exactly do you think Ken Junior and his pals are up to? Any ideas?”
“I don’t know,” Kristin said, shaking her head. “Not
really. I asked Terry the same thing this morning on the way to work. He thinks
most of the guys are just messing around and that we shouldn’t pay any
attention to them. But how could they do some-thing like that—ditch the
cemetery and the reception, I mean? And what about Leon Caсedo? How do those
jerks think their staying away made him feel?” Kristin demanded, her voice
quivering with suppressed emotion. “What would they think if somebody did
something like that to their wives or kids?”
Joanna leaned back in the chair and thought for a moment before
she answered. She didn’t want whatever she said to Kristin to add to her
department’s inner turmoil if it happened to be repeated to anyone else.
“Some people are simply incapable of putting themselves in
anybody else’s shoes, Kristin,” she said finally. “Empathy won’t ever be one of
Deputy Galloway’s long suits. But if it will put your mind at ease, I think
Leon Caсedo was so overwhelmed by everything that was going on yesterday, he
probably didn’t notice who was there and who wasn’t. Ken Junior may have
drained off everyone he could bamboozle into not showing up, but it was still
standing room only in the parish hall up at St. Dominick’s for most of the
evening.”
Kristin heaved another sigh, this one of relief. “Good. I’m
really glad.” Saying that, she pushed her unwieldy body upright. “Now that I
know you’re here,” she said, “I’ll go get your messages.”
Joanna felt like saying, Do you have to? She didn’t.
Instead, she watched Kristin waddle out of the room before returning to her own
desk. Moments later, Kristin was back with a fanfold of telephone message
slips in her hand. “Chief Deputy Montoya wants to know if you’re ready for the
briefing yet.”
“Not yet. Give me a while.”
Nodding, Kristin went out, closing the door behind her.
Joanna took the messages and shuffled through them. One was from her mother,
one from the county attorney’s office, and two were from people in the
community whose names she recognized but who had somehow failed to mention
exactly why they were calling. Pulling all pertinent information from reticent
phone callers was one of the essential secretarial skills Kristin Gregovich had
yet to master. The bottom message was from Butch. “Daisy’s,” it said. “Twelve o’clock.
DON’T FORGET!”
With an air of impatience she pushed that one aside. After
all, it wasn’t anywhere near twelve yet. What would make him think she’d
forget? She glanced at her watch. It was only twenty past eleven—plenty of
time.
When it came to returning phone calls, Joanna was a
believer in doing the tough things first. She dialed her mother’s number
immediately.
“Why, there you are,” Eleanor Lathrop Winfield said. “I’m
so glad you called back. I just had the strangest conversation with Marliss
Shackleford.”
The fact that her mother was a longtime bosom buddy of The
Bisbee Bee’s featured columnist was one of the crosses Sheriff Joanna Brady
had learned to bear. Anytime there was a question Marliss didn’t want to pose
through official channels—like going through the media relations officer, Chief
Deputy Montoya--she had no compunction about asking Eleanor instead. Joanna’s
first thought was that Marliss was on the trail of something to do with the
Rochelle Baxter case. That assumption proved wrong.
“Marliss asked me why there were so few Cochise County deputies
in attendance at the funeral reception yesterday evening,” Eleanor was saying. “I
told her she had to be mistaken. I was there myself. It seemed to me there were
plenty of people in uniform, all of them plowing through that buffet like they
hadn’t eaten in days.”
Hardly any of those starving uniforms belonged to me,
Joanna thought despairingly. It bugged her to realize
that, as usual, Marliss Shackleford had focused in on the one critical issue
Sheriff Brady had been trying to dodge. Rather than issuing a denial Marliss
could easily refute, Joanna played coy.
“Really,” she said, feigning as much innocence as she
could muster. “Marliss says my deputies weren’t there? That’s strange. I could
have sworn they were all over the place, but I could be wrong. I had a few
other details to worry about. There wasn’t time for an official roll call.”
“See there?” Eleanor responded, sounding relieved. “I
tried to tell Marliss that very thing—that she had to be mistaken, but you know
her. Sometimes you have to hit that woman over the head with a baseball bat to
get through to her.”
Hitting Marliss Shackleford over the head with anything
sounded like an excellent idea to Sheriff Joanna Brady about then, but she
fought down a biting comment that could have turned into additional ammunition.
“I’ve noticed,” she agreed.
“I’d best be going,” Eleanor went on briskly. “I just
spoke to George. He’s finished up with whatever it was he had to do this
morning. He’s coming home for lunch. I should get it on the table. The egg
salad is ready, but I haven’t made sandwiches yet.”
That, too, was vintage Eleanor Lathrop. The “whatever”
George Winfield had to do that morning was to perform an autopsy. How like
Eleanor simply to gloss over and/or ignore anything remotely unpleasant. Her
husband’s title might be that of Cochise County Medical Examiner, but in
Eleanor’s self-centered world, none of his professional duties were any more
important than the egg-salad sandwiches she planned to serve for lunch. And if
a scheduled autopsy or an unexpected phone call happened to delay him beyond
what Eleanor considered reasonable, Joanna knew there would be hell to pay.
Better him than me,
she
thought.
Even so, Eleanor didn’t hang up immediately. “According to
Marliss, there was another murder last night,” she added.
Here we go again,
Joanna
fumed. Another one of Marliss Shackleford’s notorious end runs.
“A suspicious death,” she corrected. “I suppose she asked
you about that, too.”
“Not about the death specifically,” Eleanor replied. “She
wanted to know if I had noticed how the crime rate has really taken off since
you became Sheriff.”
That depends on who’s counting,
Joanna thought. “What did you say?” she asked.
“I told her the truth,” Eleanor replied. “I said that no
matter who’s in charge, the crime rate stays pretty much the same.”
Coming from Eleanor Lathrop Winfield, that lukewarm statement
constituted a ringing endorsement.
“Thanks, Mom,” Joanna said.
“You’re welcome.”
Next Joanna dialed the county attorney’s office. Arlee
Jones was a blowhard, deal-making good old boy.
“Glad to hear from you, Sheriff Brady,” he said cordially.
“Wanted to keep you in the know”
“About what?” Joanna replied.
“Remember Rob Majors?” Arlee asked. “That kid from San
Simon?”
Joanna remembered Rob Majors all too well. He was a
not-too bright kid who had spent the summer earning college tuition money by
carjacking travelers along I-10 and selling their stolen vehicles to
migrant-smuggling crooks from Old Mexico. Joanna’s department had spent weeks
and far too much valuable overtime before they had apprehended him. They had
finally decoyed Majors into trying to lift a car driven by Terry Gregovich with
Spike, his German shepherd sidekick, stationed in the backseat.
Majors had been taken into custody at the rest area just
inside the Arizona/New Mexico border, but he wasn’t jailed until after
emergency-room treatment of the numerous puncture wounds on his arm,
compliments of an eighty-five-pound police dog.
“What about him?” Joanna asked.
“‘Thought you’d be relived to hear that I’ve brokered a
deal. Rob Majors pleads guilty to a lesser charge, and he drops the police
brutality charge against your K-9 officer.”
“How good a deal did he get?” Joanna asked. Arlee Jones’s
plea bargains usually gave her a headache. This one was no exception.
“He pleads guilty to one count of first-degree assault and
goes to Fort Grant until his twenty-first birthday.”
Joanna barely believed her ears. “The kid’s seventeen. You’re
letting him off as a juvenile?”
“It’s the best I could do,” Jones said in an aggrieved
tone. “At least it gets your Deputy Gregovich off the hook.”
“Thanks,” Joanna said. “That’s just what I wanted to hear.”
She hung up and was still burning with indignation when
she dialed the number for Debra Highsmith, the newly installed principal at
Bisbee High School. A student office assistant put the call through.
“This is Sheriff Brady,” Joanna said when Debra Highsmith
answered. “I understand you called earlier.”
“That’s right. Thanks so much for returning the call,” Ms.
Highsmith said. “We’re trying to do something a little unusual around here. I
was wondering if you could help us out.”
“That depends,” Joanna said. “What are we talking about?”
“I attended an all-girls high school, and an all-girls
college as well. This was back in the days when they still had such things,”
Debra Highsmith added with a chuckle. “I’m trying to create an atmosphere that
will challenge and motivate the young women here at Bisbee High. We want to get
them thinking outside the box, as it were. For that we need really dynamic role
models.”
Joanna waited silently for Debra Highsmith to cut to the
chase.
“BHS career day cones up the end of next week,” Ms. Highsmith
continued. “I must apologize for calling you at the last minute. I had made
arrangements for an old college chum of mine, Althea Peachy, who works for
NASA, to speak to our girls-only assembly. Unfortunately, Peaches found out
just this morning that she has to testify before the House Appropriations
Commit lee in D.C. next week. I was wondering if I could prevail on you to
pinch-hit.”
Suppressing a sigh, Joanna reached for her desktop
calendar “What day?” she asked.
“Next Thursday. We’d like you to speak first thing in the
morning around nine or so. The boys will be in the gym having their own
assembly. The girls will be in the auditorium.”
Joanna consulted her calendar. The morning after a night
of Halloween pranks would be a bad day for her to be out of the office, but
encouraging young people was also part of her job.
“All right,” she said, penciling it in. “Nine o’clock. Anything
else I should know?”
“Well, there is one more thing,” Debra Highsmith added. “I
need to let you know that we have a zero-tolerance policy about weapons here on
campus.”
“Wait a minute,” Joanna objected. “I’m a sworn police
officer, remember? You want me to come to your school and talk to students
about the possibility of considering law enforcement as a career, but you don’t
want me to wear my guns?”
“Right,” Debra Highsmith allowed. “It doesn’t make sense,
but you know how paranoid school boards can be about such things these days.
What if a student overpowered you, grabbed one of your weapons, and used it on
some other student?”
“And what if one of your students shows up at
school that day with a weapon of his or her own? What then?” Joanna returned. “Wouldn’t
it be a good idea to have a properly trained and armed police officer on-site
when all hell breaks loose?”
“I don’t make the rules,” Debra Highsmith returned. “I
simply enforce them.”
That’s the same thing I always say,
Joanna thought.
“All right,” she said. “Nine o’clock, on Thursday,
November first, in the auditorium.”
She put down the phone and was still staring at it when her
private line rang.
“You’re late,” Butch said. “It’s ten after twelve. You’re
still in the office.”
“Sorry,” she said. “Time got away from me. I’ll be right
there.”
Ten minutes later and twenty minutes after the appointed
time, she pulled up in front of Daisy Maxwell’s cafe in Bisbee’s Bakerville
neighborhood. Junior Dowdle, the developmentally disabled fifty-year-old ward
of the restaurant’s owner, met Joanna at the door. He carried a pile of menus
and sported a wide smile. “Time to eat?” he asked.
Junior had been abandoned by his caretakers a year
earlier. Daisy and her retired postal worker husband, Moe, had taken him under
their wing and assumed guardianship. Junior had blossomed under their care.
Working in their restaurant, he took his tasks of clearing tables and washing
dishes very seriously. Occasionally he was allowed to serve as host, passing
out menus and accompanying guests to tables or booths.
Joanna stood in the doorway of Daisy’s and scanned the
room for Butch. His Honda Goldwing was parked in front of the restaurant.
Butch himself was nowhere to be seen.
“Back,” Junior said, pointing helpfully. “Back there.
Reservation,” he added with an emphatic nod.
Following Junior Dowdle’s directions, Joanna made her way
it the private hack room that sometimes doubled as a meeting roan for the local
Rotary Club. Pushing open the door, she was surprised to find every available
surface covered by unfurled blue prints.
Butch looked up when she entered. “‘There you are,” he
salt wryly. “I may be your husband, but do you have any idea how hard it is to
book an appointment with you these days?”
She looked around the room. “What’s this?”
“Our new house,” he said. “Or what’s supposed to be our
new house. The problem is, I can’t get you to sit still long enough to talk
about and sign off on the plans. In other words, you and I are having a
meeting—an official meeting. We’re still working through the permit process,
but before construction can begin, all the decisions need to be made. Cabinets
have to he ordered, plumbing fixtures, appliances, everything. So first we’ll
have lunch. They made Cornish pasties today, so I ordered two of those. Then we’re
going to go over each of these papers, one piece at a time.”
“I saw the house you redid in Saginaw,” Joanna told him. “I’m
sure whatever decisions you make will be fine with me.”
“Still,” he said. “There are things we should talk about.
Marriages don’t work well when one person makes too many unilateral decisions.
I’m not going ahead until you’ve officially signed of on everything, from
countertops to cabinets.”
Joanna wanted the new house. She was looking forward to
living in it, but she dreaded the process of getting there. If only she could
bring herself to tell Butch how she had grown up listening to her parents
squabble endlessly over one of D.H. Lathrop’s grindingly slow remodeling
projects after another.
“All right,” she said, and sat down.
They had eaten lunch and were making good progress through
the various blueprints until they got to a detailed rendering of the family
room. “What’s this?” Joanna asked, pointing to a line that went all the way
around the room, just above the door-jambs and window frames.
“That’s the train shelf,” Butch told her proudly.
“The what?”
“Remember the 0-gauge Lionel trains I used to have on display
up at the Roundhouse? They’ve been in storage ever since I came to Bisbee. I
decided the family room would be a great place to put them out again—in sight
but not in the way. And by putting it in now, during the building process, the
wiring can be built into the conduit in the walls behind the shelf.”
As he spoke, Butch brimmed with enthusiasm. Now he stopped
and glanced sharply at Joanna’s face. “Don’t you like it?”
“A train in the family room?” she asked uneasily.
“Several, actually,” Butch answered. “I have six. There
won’t be enough room to have all of them out at once, but ...”
“Wouldn’t it be better to have just a television set, some
sound equipment, and a couch and some chairs in there?” Joanna asked
tentatively. “Having pictures on the walls would be fine, but trains?”
Butch’s face fell. All right,” he said glumly. “I’ll get
rid of it, but at this rate, I might just as well get rid of the trains, too.” “I
didn’t say that.”
“Well,” he said, “why not? If I’ve got no place to display
them—if I have to leave them packed up and in storage all the time—what’s the
point of having them?”
“Butch, please, I never said you should get rid of your
trains.” “It sounded like it to me.”
Joanna’s cell phone rang. Butch rolled his eyes and
crossed his arms as she plucked it out of her pocket to answer it. Detective Jaime
Carbajal was on the line. “What’s up?” she asked.
“According to Doc Winfield, we just ran into a problem,”
Jaime said.
More than one,
Joanna
thought, looking at Butch. Scowling, he had returned to studying the
family-room blueprint. “Like what?” she asked.
“Our victim’s name isn’t Rochelle Baxter,” he said.
“What is it?”
“Latisha Wall, originally from Macon, Georgia.”
“Okay,” Joanna said. “She went by a different name. I low
come? Does she have a record?”
“No.”
Joanna was losing patience playing Twenty Questions. “What’s
the deal?”
“‘The ME tracked down one Lawrence Baxter, supposedly her
father and the person the DMV lists as her next of kin. Turns out he doesn’t
exist, either. Doc Winfield ended up talking to some guy in the Washington
State Attorney General’s Office in Olympia. His name’s O.H. Todd, and he claims
he’s Latisha Wall’s case manager. She was evidently in a witness protection
progran.”
“They gave her a new name and identity and set her up to
live down here in Arizona?” Joanna asked.
“That’s right,” Jaime said. “Except now she’s dead. Doc
Winfield said the guy in Olympia almost had a coronary when he heard what had
happened.”
“What was she a witness about?”
“Todd wasn’t saying, at least not to Doc Winfield,” Jaime
replied. “Said he had to check with his superiors before he could release any
information to anyone, including us. However, he did request that he be kept informed
about all aspects of the investigation. He gave Doc Winfield the name, phone
number, and address of Latisha’s mother and sister back home in Georgia. The
father is deceased, and the mother is in poor health. The ME says authorities
from Washington will contact the next of kin.”
“Thank God for small favors,” Joanna said. “What about the
preliminary results from the autopsy?”
“Inconclusive. No wounds of any kind. No bruises or abrasions.
No defensive wounds that would indicate a struggle, and no sign of disease,
either. Doc’s not willing to say she died of natural causes, though. He’s
ordering a full set of toxicology tests. You know how long those take.”
“Weeks,” Joanna murmured.
“Right,” Jaime said. “So where does that leave us?”
Joanna thought for a moment before she answered. “Okay,”
she said. “We’ll handle this case like a full-blown homicide investigation
until we know otherwise. If we learn later that Latisha Wall took her own life
or died from some kind of accidental poisoning, all we’ll be out are the
man-hours we’ve devoted to the investigation. But we have to pay attention
right now, while the evidence is fresh. If someone did murder her and we wait
for toxicology reports, the trail will be cold by the time we start looking for
the perp.”
“What should I do then?” Jaime asked.
“Go back to the crime scene,” Joanna said without
hesitation. “Make sure Dave and Casey went over every inch of that place
without missing anything. I want you to check with the alarm company and see if
there was anything the least bit out of kilter in the last few days or weeks.
Talk to people. Canvass the neighbor-hood.”
“I’m on it, boss,” Jaime said. “Anything else?”
“Yes. You should interview Bobo Jenkins up in Old Bisbee,
since he and Rochelle Baxter had something going. Bobo told me he was in her
home last evening. He must be the last person to have seen her alive.”
“You think he’s involved?” Jaime asked.
“He and Shelley Baxter were romantically involved,” Joanna
replied. “But if you’re asking if I think he killed her, the answer is no. I
personally told him about what had happened. He was absolutely devastated.”
“He could have been acting,” Jaime suggested.
“Wasn’t,” Joanna returned.
“All right,” Detective Carbajal said. “I’m on my way.”
Joanna shut off the phone and turned back to Butch. He had
sat down in front of the family room blueprint. The disappointed expression on
his face made her feel as though she’d just told some unsuspecting
kindergartner that there was no Santa Claus.
“Butch, if you really want to have a train shelf, it’ll be
fine. I can live with it.”
“You’re not supposed to live with it,” he
countered. “You’re supposed to love it.”
“The rest of the house is great,” Joanna continued. “And I
do love the kitchen and the bathrooms. There’ll be so much more space than we
have now. My problem is that I want the house to he sort of ... well, normal,”
she said finally.
“Normal as opposed to bizarre,” he said. “You’re right. It’s
a dumb idea. I should just grow up.”
“We’ll find a place for your trains,” she assured him. “I
promise we will.”
“Where? Not in the house. None of the other rooms are big
enough.”
“We’ll sort it out. Isn’t that what marriage is all
about—compromise?”
“I guess.” Butch began reassembling and rolling up the set
of blueprints. “Sounds like you need to go,” he added.
“I do,” she said. “But not like this. Not if we’re
quarreling.”
“We’re not quarreling,” Butch returned. “You were right; I
was wrong. The train shelf’s out of there.”
“But you really wanted it.”
“Look, Joey,” he said. “You can’t have it both ways. The
train shelf was an oddball idea. You happen to want normal. That’s reasonable
enough. You win. We’ll have normal.”
“But I don’t want to win,” Joanna objected. “I want us
both to be happy with the house.”
“I’ll be happy.”
“How much trouble will it be to take it out of the plans?”
He shrugged. “Not much. The train shelf was a
late-breaking brilliant idea I added in just a few days ago or so. All I have
to do is take it back out. I’m guessing Quentin will be ecstatic to avoid all
that extra electrical work. So there you are. Two to one—I lose.”
“It’s going to be okay, then? You’re not mad?”
“Not terminally mad, but you can buy lunch,” he said. “By
the time you pay up, chances are I’ll be almost over it.”
Out at the cash register, Junior took Joanna’s money and
then painstakingly counted out her change. When he had finished he flashed
Joanna a triumphant smile. “Daisy taught me,” he said proudly.
“Daisy’s a very good teacher.”
“Yes,” Junior agreed, nodding vehemently. “Very good!”
By then Butch, with blueprints in one hand and motorcycle
helmet in the other, had followed Joanna out of the backroom. He arrived in
time to watch the end of the monetary transaction. He waited until they were
out in the parking lot before commenting.
“Amazing,” he exclaimed. “When we first met Junior, I
never would have dreamed he’d be capable of making change.”
“Kindness and patience go a very long way,” Joanna said. “Now
kiss me. I have to go back to work.”
He gave her a halfhearted smooch and opened her car door. “Can’t
you do better than that?” she demanded.
“Not in public,” he said.
He grinned when he said it. Even so, a troubled Joanna
Brady headed back to the Cochise County Justice Center. Getting married and
combining households wasn’t easy. She had expected that she and Butch would
have tough going over child-rearing practices; over the chores of looking after
a ranch full of animals in need of care and feeding.
Whoever would have thought we’d end up fighting over model
trains?
she wondered. Compared to that,
everything else has been a picnic.
WASHINGTON STATE ATTORNEY GENERAL Ross Alan Connors had
just returned from a meeting with the governor when O.H. Todd came into his
office to give him the had news.
“Damn!” Connors muttered. “You’re sure it’s her?”
“No mistake, I’m sorry to say,” O.H. returned. “What do we
do now?”
Connors rubbed his forehead thoughtfully. “We’d better
send someone,” he said at last. “But who?”
“One of the special investigators?” O.H. Todd suggested.
Connors considered and then nodded.
“Which one?”
“What about that new hire?” Connors returned. “The one who
just retired from Seattle PD.”
“You mean J.P. Beaumont?”
“Right,” Connors said, nodding. “That’s the one. He hasn’t
been on board very long. You should probably check with Harry Ball and see if
Beau’s up to speed.”
O.H. Todd stood up and made for the door. “Right,” he
said. ‘Will do.”
Five
“How’s it going?” Joanna asked.
Jaime shook his head and sank into a chair. “I just
finished preliminary interviews with Dee Canfield and Bobo Jenkins. Bobo
stopped by so Casey could print him. I caught up with him while he was here.”
“What do you think?” Joanna asked.
“Gut instinct?”
Joanna nodded.
“You may be convinced he’s in the clear on this, but I’m
not sure I agree.”
“Fair enough,” Joanna said. “We’ll agree to disagree. Did
anything more turn up at the crime scene?”
“No. I canvassed the entire neighborhood. No one saw or
heard anything out of line until the EMTs showed up and started breaking down
the door. What about you?”
She told him everything she had learned earlier from both
Bobo Jenkins and Dee Canfield.
“Since she’s going ahead with the show,” Jaime said, “I
guess I should be there. One of the guests may be able to fill in some of our
blanks on the victim.”
“Speaking of blanks,” Joanna said. “Have you talked to
that guy up in Washington?”
“O.H. Todd?” Jaime replied. “I’ve tried. I’ve called his
number three different times. All I get is voice mail. So far he hasn’t bothered
to call me back.”
“The man must have a boss,” Joanna said. “What’s his name?”
“I don’t know.”
“Find out, Jaime, and get me his number,” Joanna said. “I’ll
give him a call. Maybe the big boss can set a fire under Mr. Todd’s butt.”
Jaime Carbajal grinned. “Works for me,” he said. He left
the room. A few minutes later he returned with a slip of paper. “Good luck,” he
said, handing it over.
Joanna glanced at her watch. “It’s already after five. He’s
probably gone.”
“Try anyway,” Jaime said.
Picking up her phone, Joanna dialed. “Attorney general’s
office,” a woman’s voice answered.
“I’d like to speak to Mr. Ross Alan Connors,” Joanna said.
“This is Sheriff Joanna Brady of Cochise County, Arizona.”
“May I say what this is concerning?”
“Latisha Wall.”
There was a noticeable pause. One moment, please.”
As soon as the operator went away, canned classical music
began playing, interrupted periodically by a recorded voice apologizing for the
length of the wait and assuring Joanna that her cal was very important to them
and that someone would be with her as soon as possible. The third time she
heard the equally canned apology she was ready to blow.
Five minutes later a live voice finally returned to the
line. “I’m sorry. Mr. Connors is in a meeting right now”
“Any idea what time he’ll be through with it?”
“None at all. Sorry.”
Like hell you’re sorry,
Joanna
thought. “What about O.H. Todd?” she asked. “Is he available?”
“He’s also in a meeting.”
The same one, no doubt.
“Would you like to be connected to Mr. Connors’s voice mail?”
the woman asked.
“No, thank you,” Joanna said. “I’d like you to personally
take a message. Tell him Sheriff Joanna Brady needs to speak to him, urgently.
Detective Jaime Carbajal, the investigator working Latisha Wall’s death, has so
far been unable to reach Mr. Todd. Obviously, time is of the essence.” After
leaving her office, home, and cell-phone numbers, Joanna hung up. Across the
desk from her Jaime Carbajal scowled.
“You got the same treatment I did,” he said. “Don’t hold
your breath waiting for a callback.”
Harry Ignatius ball had turned off the light in his office
and was about to close the door and head home when his phone rang. Muttering
irritably under his breath, he returned to his desk and grabbed up the
receiver.
“Special Unit B,” he said. “Ball speaking.”
“Harry, glad I caught you,” O.H. Todd said, sounding
relieved. “I just got cut loose from a meeting that lasted all afternoon.”
Harry rattled his car keys, hoping O.H. would get the message.
“What’s up?” he asked.
“How’s Beaumont doing?”
“What do you mean, how’s he doing?”
“Is he up to speed?” O.H. asked. “Ready to send out on a
case?”
Harry snorted. “He was ready for that the day he got here.
Why?”
“We’ve developed a problem down in Arizona. A place called
Bisbee. Ross may need to ship someone down to check it out.” Todd paused. “What
can you tell me about Beaumont?” he added. “About him personally, I mean. What
kind of guy is he?”
“From what I’ve seen so far,” Harry replied, “he isn’t
exactly a team player.”
“Maybe that’s okay,” O.H. Todd said thoughtfully. “In
fact, for this case, that may be just what the doctor ordered.”
It was almost seven when Joanna finally pulled into the
yard at High Lonesome Ranch. The house was dark and locked up tight. Once
inside, she discovered that Jenny and Butch had evidently already eaten. A
single place setting remained on the table in the breakfast nook. In the middle
of the plate was a note from Butch saying he had taken Jenny back into town for
a play rehearsal and that there was a green chili casserole waiting for her in
the fridge. All she had to do was heat it up.
After locking her weapons away and changing clothes,
Joanna dished up a serving of the casserole and put the plate in the microwave.
“Looks like I’m in the doghouse, too,” she said to Sadie and Tigger, who sprawled
comfortably on the kitchen floor. Other than thumping their tails in unison,
the dogs made no further comment.
Joanna picked halfheartedly at the casserole—a dish that
was usually one of her favorites. All the while she couldn’t help wondering if
Butch was still mad at her about the model train situation. He said he wasn’t,
but he still must be, she surmised. After all, he hadn’t bothered calling
to remind her about having to eat early due to Jenny’s rehearsal. If he had,
she could have come home ear her rather than waiting for Ross Connors to have
the common decency to return her call. Now Joanna was home by herself when she
didn’t especially want to be alone.
No longer hungry, she divvied the remaining casserole on
her plate into two portions and plopped them into the dog dishes. Uncharacteristically,
Sadie showed no interest in the proffered treat. She stayed where she was,
allowing Tigger to lick both dishes clean.
Joanna leaned down and patted the bluetick hound on her
smooth, round forehead. “We’re both a little out of sorts today, aren’t we,
girl,” she said.
Joanna spent the evening catching up on reading, watching
the clock, and waiting for the telephone to ring. It was after nine before
Butch’s Subaru finally pulled into the yard. Joanna and the dogs went out to
greet the new arrivals.
“How was rehearsal?” Joanna asked.
“Awful,” Jenny said. “The show’s just two weeks away and
most of the boys still don’t know their lines. It’s going to be a
gigantic flop, Mom. I wish Miss Stammer would cancel if. We’re all going to be
up on stage looking stupid.”
“It’ll be line, Jen,” Joanna reassured her, tousling Jenny’s
blond curls. Behind Jenny’s back, Butch rolled his eyes and shook his head as
if to say Jenny’s assessment was far closer to the truth than any motherly
platitudes.
Jenny took the dogs and went into the house. Joanna turned
to Butch. “Is it really that bad?”
“I’ll say,” Butch said.
Joanna changed the subject. “You should have called and
reminded me to come home early.”
Butch reached into the car and removed the roll of
blueprints that, these days, seemed to be a natural extension of his arm. When
he turned to reply, he wasn’t smiling.
“I had to remind you to come to lunch today,” he said. “I
figured you were a big enough girl that you could decide when to come home for
dinner on your own.”
Ouch,
Joanna thought.
She followed him into the house and locked the back door
once she was inside. Butch put the blueprints on the dining room table. Joanna
thought he would unroll them and pore over them as he did almost every night.
Instead he said, “I think I’ll turn in.”
“You just got home,” Joanna objected. “Don’t you want to
talk?”
Butch shook his head. “I’m beat. Quentin and I have a
meeting first thing in the morning. Night.”
He gave Joanna a halfhearted peck on the cheek and left
her standing in the middle of the dining room. Rebuffed and hurt, Joanna
returned to the kitchen. In a bid for sympathy, she had wanted to tell her
husband about her day. She had wanted Butch to give her a loving pat and tell
her that of course Ross Connors from Washington State was an unmitigated jerk.
But Butch Dixon had surprised her. He had given her a cold shoulder rather than
one to cry on.
Joanna sulked in the kitchen for a while. Then, wanting to
talk and thinking Butch must still be awake, she crept into the bedroom, only
to find him snoring softly. So much for that! she thought.
It was midnight before she finally went to bed and much
later than that before she fell asleep. And overslept. If it hadn’t been for
the telephone ringing at ten after eight the next morning, she might have
missed the board of supervisors meeting altogether.
“Hello,” she mumbled into the phone. Staring wide-eyed at
the clock, she staggered out of bed. The caller ID box next to the phone said
the number was unavailable. Taking the phone with her, she headed for the
bathroom.
“Sheriff Brady?”
“Yes. Who’s this?”
“My name’s Harry Eyeball and—”
“Look, mister,” she said, cutting him off. “If this is
some kind of joke—”
“Believe me, Sheriff Brady, it’s no joke. My name is
Harry, initial I, Ball. I’m with the Washington State Attorney General’s Special
Homicide Investigation Team. I’m returning the call you made to Ross Connors
yesterday afternoon.”
“Oh, yes,” Joanna said. “I called about Latisha Wall.”
“Making any progress?”
Joanna bristled. “My call was to Mr. Connors,” Joanna
said. “I’m not in the habit of discussing ongoing cases with people I don’t
know”
“I just told you—”
“Yes, yes, I know. Your name is Harry Ball. But I don’t
know you from Adam’s Off Ox, Mr. Bail,” she said, resorting to one of her
father-in-law’s favorite expressions. “My homicide detective, Jaime Carbajal,
has been trying to contact Mr. Connors’s office for information regarding this
case. Up to now there’s been no response.”
“So Latisha Wall was murdered, then?”
Joanna ignored the question. “What Detective Carbajal
needs, I believe, is for someone to fax Latisha Wall’s information to us so we’ll
know where to start. All we have so far is her real name and her family’s
address in Georgia.”
“That file isn’t faxable, ma’am,” Harry Ball told her.
“What do you mean, it isn’t faxable?” Joanna returned. “What
is it, chiseled in granite?”
“It’s confidential. We have no assurances that it might
not fall into unauthorized hands in the process of transmitting it.”
“You’re implying that someone in my department might leak
it?” Joanna demanded. “And why is it so damned confidential? Let me remind you,
Mr. Ball: Latisha Wall is already dead. If she was in a witness protection
program you guys set up, I’d have to say you didn’t do such a great job of it.
And I still need the information.”
“That’s what I’m trying to tell you, ma’am. We’re sending
it to you.”
“How? By pony express?”
Joanna glared at the clock, whose hands were moving inexorably
forward. The board of supervisors meeting would start at nine sharp. Even
skipping a shower, it was going to be close.
“One of the members of my team, an investigator named J.P.
Beaumont, will be delivering it in person. Once he does so, Mr. Connors would
like him to stay on as an observer.”
“A what?”
“An observer. This is an important case with long term,
serious financial implications for the state of Washington,” Harry Ball
continued. “We wouldn’t want someone to inadvertently let something slip.”
Joanna was dumbfounded. “Let something slip?” she demanded.
“Connors thinks my department is so incompetent that he’s sending someone to
bird-dog my investigation? I don’t believe this! You can give that boss of
yours a message from me. Tell him he has a hell of a lot of nerve!”
Slamming down the phone, she hopped into the shower after
all. She was too steamed not to. Her hair was still damp and her makeup
haphazardly applied when she slid into a chair next to Frank Montoya at the
board of supervisors’ Melody Lane conference room fifty minutes later. Frank
glanced at his watch and sighed with relief when he saw her. The board
secretary was already reading the minutes of the previous meeting.
“What happened?” he whispered.
“I overslept.”
“Oh,” Frank said. “Is that all? From the look on your
face, I thought it was something serious.”
Sheriff Joanna Brady hated having to attend board of
supervisors meetings. For routine matters, Frank Montoya usually attended in
her stead. This meeting, however, was anything but routine. The general
downturn in the national economy had hit hard in Cochise County, requiring
budget cuts in every aspect of county government. Today, with the board’s
cost-cutting knives aimed at the sheriff’s department, she and Frank had
decided they should both appear. Within minutes, Joanna knew they’d made a wise
decision.
The newest member of the board, Charles Longworth Neighbors,
was a man no one ever referred to as Charley—at least not to his face. He was a
full-bird colonel who had retired front the army at Fort Huachuca a year or so
earlier. He had now been appointed to fill out another board member’s unexpired
term of office.
Since Charles Neighbors was career army, the United States
government had seen to it that he had earned a Harvard MBA while in the
service. Now in civilian life, he loved to wield his relatively recent degree
as a double-edged sword. He had no compunction about inflicting everything he
had learned on the unwashed masses in every branch of Cochise County government,
one reluctant department at a time. Today he homed in on the sheriff’s
department, going over budget items line by line, convinced that there were
substantial cuts that could and should be made.
“If it can be done, it should be done,” he told Joanna,
with a patronizing smile that made her want to grind her teeth.
Three and a half grueling hours later, she and Frank
escaped the boardroom, having taken a 10-percent-across-the-board hit. She
waited until they were safely outside the building and out of earshot before
she exploded.
“If it can be done, it should be done,” she grumbled,
doing a credible job of imitating Charles Longworth’s pedantic, school-principal-like
delivery. “If he had said that one more time, I think I would have thrown
something! Of course, his should-bes are all one-way streets. Budget items are
to be taken out and never put back in.”
“Now, now,” Frank counseled, “give the man a break. He’s
new and trying to get a grip on how things work. Supervising county government
has to be different from being an officer in the army.”
“Right,” Joanna agreed. “We can’t afford
two-hundred-dollar toilet seats. And then there’s Harry I. Ball.”
“What hairy eyeball?” Frank asked. “I don’t remember anyone
saying a word about that.”
“Not ‘hairy eyeball,’ ” Joanna returned. “‘That’s a man’s
name,” she said, reading off the scrap of paper she had stuffed in the pocket
of her blazer. “First name is Harry, middle initial I, and last name Ball. I
made him spell it out for me.”
“Who the hell is he?”
“Some high mucky-muck with the Washington State Attorney
General’s Office. He called me at home this morning when I should have been on
my way to work.” She didn’t add that Harry Ball’s unwelcome call was the only
reason she hadn’t been even later to the board of supervisors meeting.
“What did he want?”
“His office is sending someone to bring us Latisha Wall’s file
because the material is too volatile to be sent any other way than in person.
Not only that, whoever they send is supposed to hang around and keep an eye on
us—an observer to bird-dog us the whole time we’re doing the Latisha Wall
investigation. I believe the exact phrase he used is that his boss didn’t want
anyone to ‘let something slip.’ The good folks up in Washington are evidently
convinced that our department is totally incapable of conducting an adequate
homicide investigation. If you ask me, Mr. Ball sounded exactly like some of
those high-handed yahoos from the other Washington, and just as screwed
up.”
“When does this so-called observer arrive?” Frank asked
mildly.
“Who knows?” Joanna shot back. “And who cares? His name’s
...” She paused again to consult her note. “J.P. Beaumont. All I can say is,
Mr. Beaumont had better stand back and stay out of my way.”
Frank shook his head and unlocked the door to his waiting Civvie.
“Want to stop off and grab some lunch before we head back to the office?” he
asked. “Something tells me you’re running on empty.”
Joanna gave him a sidelong glance. “What makes you say
that? Just because I’m ranting and raving?”
Frank nodded. “The thought crossed my mind.”
“We’ve been working together for too long,” Joanna said,
grinning in spite of herself. “And lunch is probably a good idea. Butch left
the house early this morning. I ran late and skipped breakfast.”
“I thought so,” Frank said.
Minutes later Frank and Joanna turned their matching Crown
Victorias into Chico’s Taco Stand in Bisbee’s Don Luis neighbor-hood. The
building that housed Chico’s had once served as the office of a junkyard. The
wrecked cars had all disappeared, and now the building itself had been
transformed. The tiny restaurant consisted of a counter where people lined up
to place their orders. In addition to the counter’s four stools, there were
five booths that consisted of sagging, cigarette-scarred red vinyl benches with
matching chrome-and-chipped-Formica tabletops. All of the furnishings had been
purchased secondhand from a soon-to-be-demolished diner in Tucson. Several
dusty, fading piсatas and a few unframed bullfight posters provided what passed
for interior decor.
Fortunately, Chico’s lunchtime clientele was in search of
good food rather than trendy surroundings. Customers lined up daily for some of
Chico Rodriguez’s signature tacos, made from a recipe passed down from his
great-grandmother to his grandmother, then to his mother, all of whom had spent
decades cooking in various Bisbee-area Mexican eateries. When the last of the
Rodriguez women retired, Chico had followed in their footsteps and opened his
own establishment, one where his mother still filled in occasionally so Chico
could have a day off.
Joanna and Frank went to the counter and placed their
order. Taking their drinks, they retreated to a recently vacated booth, where
they were obliged to clear their own table. Minutes later, Chico himself
delivered their orders. The food came on paper plates accompanied by
paper-napkin-wrapped plastic utensils. The shredded-beef tacos, made from
crunchy homemade corn tortillas, were piled high with chopped lettuce. The
lettuce was sprinkled with a generous helping of finely grated sharp cheese and
topped by a dollop of tomato salsa that was more sweet than hot. It was that
special combination of ingredients that made Chico’s tacos taste better than
any Joanna had eaten elsewhere.
As she took her first bite, Frank grinned at her. “As soon
as you’re no longer a raving maniac, tell me more about your call from the
Washington State Attorney General’s Office and this so-called observer they’re sending.”
“I’ve pretty much told you what I know,” Joanna returned. “The
guy’s name is Beaumont. That’s about it.”
“When can we expect him?”
“Tomorrow or Sunday, I suppose,” she said.
“And the purpose of his visit?”
“Other than spying on us and getting in the way? Beats the
hell out of me. Like I said before, talking with Mr. Eyeball, as you called
him, was like dealing with feds from back east. He fully expected me to spill
my guts and tell him everything we know. But that isn’t going to happen, at
least not until that file gets here.”
“He didn’t go into any details as to why the state of
Washing-ton is so concerned about Latisha Wall’s death?”
“No, and the longer they keep us working in the dark, the easier
it’ll be for us to make that slip Harry Ball seems to be expecting.”
Frank jotted himself a note. “When we get hack to the
office, I’ll go on-line and find out what I can about Ms. Latisha Wall. It must
be a pretty high-profile case to garner this much attention from the attorney
general’s office. There may be newspaper coverage that will tell us some of
what we need to know.”
“Good idea,” Joanna said. “We should also check with Casey
and Dave to see how they’re doing with processing all the evidence they
brought back from the crime scene.”
Frank nodded and made another note as Joanna finished the
second of her two tacos. She was scraping the last of the refritos off
her plate when the phone in her purse crowed.
“Hello, boss,” Detective Jaime Carbajal announced when she
answered. “Sorry to bother you. Kristin said you were at a board of supervisors
meeting. Hope I’m not interrupting.”
“The meeting’s over,” Joanna assured him. “Frank and I
stopped off at Chico’s to grab some lunch. What’s up?”
“I still haven’t heard a word from anybody in Washington,”
Jaime complained.
Joanna’s laughter barked into the phone. “I have,” she
told him. “And I can tell you now, you’re not going to like it. Meet us out at
the department. I’ll bring you up to date, and you can do the same.”
Jaime Carbajal was waiting in the outside office when
Joanna arrived. As predicted, he was irate at the idea of an outsider prowling
around on his turf and messing around in his case.
“What about the opening at Castle Rock Gallery?” Joanna
asked when she, Frank, and Jaime had exhausted the topic of Ross Connors’s
unconscionable interference.
“I didn’t go,” Jaime replied.
“You didn’t go?” Joanna asked. “Why not?”
“It was canceled. When I got there last night, I found a
sign on the door saying the opening had been canceled due to the death of the
artist. Sorry for any inconvenience, et cetera, et cetera.”
“Dec Canfield canceled the show after all?” Joanna mused.
She must have conic to her senses then. The last I heard she was determined to
go through with it. I wonder why she changed her mind....”
CHAPTER SIX
As I pulled my Porsche 928 out of the Belltown Terrace parking
garage at seven that morning, I wasn’t thinking about traffic or even about
work. I was thinking about my mother and about how fortunate it was that she
was dead and had been for more than thirty years. I still miss her, of course,
but if I had told her about my new job with the Washington State Attorney
General’s SHIT squad, she would have been obliged to wash my mouth out with
soap no matter how old I was.
Somewhere in the wilds of the state capitol down in
Olympia was the out-of-touch Washington State bureaucrat who had dreamed up the
name for the Special Homicide Investigation Team of which former Seattle homicide
detective J.P. Beaumont was now the newest member. If you say the name word for
word like that—Special Homicide Investigation Team—it sounds fine, dignified,
even. The same holds true if you print it out on stationery or business cards.
And that’s exactly what that same dim-witted state official did. He went nuts
ordering reams preprinted stationery, forms, envelopes, and business carols.
There was, however, a fly in the ointment. The world we live
in is made up of shortcuts and acronyms—the Seattle PD, the U.S. of A., the U
Dub, et cetera. The AG’s (see what I mean?) Special Homicide Investigation Team
had barely opened its doors to business when people started shortening the name
to something little more manageable. And that’s where the SHIT hit the fan, so
to speak. While everyone agrees the name is “regrettable” and “unfortunate,” no
one in the state bureaucracy is willing to take the heat for rescinding that
previously placed order for preprinted stationery, forms, and business cards.
So SHIT it was, and SHIT it remains.
Getting back to my mother. I don’t want you to think Karen
Piedmont was some kind of humorless prude. She was, after all an unwed mother
who, in the uptight fifties, raised me without much help from anyone—including
her own parents. Her total locus was on turning me into a “good boy.” To that
end, “bad language” was not allowed. As far as I know, the word “shit” never
escaped my mother’s lips. Her mother, on the other hand, a chirp
eighty-six-year-old named Beverly Piedmont Jenssen, loves to ask me about my
job—acronym included. It’s as though, at her advanced age, she’s decided she’s
allowed to say anything she damned well pleases. And does.
Woolgathering as I went, I drove straight to what locals
call the Mercer Mess—the Mercer Street on-ramp to I-5. I planned to take 1-5
south to I-90 and go east across Lake Washington to the business park in
Bellevue’s Eastgate area, where the attorney general had seen fit to set his
team of investigators up in a glass-walled low-rise building.
But southbound 1-5 was where things went dreadfully wrong.
I turned onto the on-ramp and stopped cold. Nobody was moving not on the ramp,
and not on the freeway, either.
This was not news from the front. Seattle’s metropolitan
area is notorious for gridlock. It’s a tradition. For the last several decades
our trusted elected public officials have done everything possible to limit
highway construction while allowing unprecedented growth. It doesn’t take a
rocket scientist to figure out that this is a recipe for transportation
disaster. Now that it’s here, those very same public officials alternately
wring their hands and try to blame the problem on somebody else.
I have to confess that while I was both living and working
downtown, the increasingly awful traffic situation was easy to ignore. However,
now that I had thrown myself into the role of a trans–Lake Washington commuter,
I was learning about the problem up close and personal.
So I wasn’t especially surprised to find that I-5 traffic
was barely moving. At least, that’s what I thought—that it was barely moving.
Then, when I had advanced only three car lengths in the space of fifteen
minutes, I finally switched on the radio in time to hear KUOW’s metro traffic
reporter, Leslie Larkin, announce that the I-90 bridge was closed in both
directions due to “police action.”
The I-90 floating bridge is made up of two entirely
separate side-by-side structures with eight lanes of traffic between them.
During rush hour, the two center lanes are reversible. If there’s an accident
going one way or the other, it would normally shut traffic down in one
direction only. But Leslie had clearly stated that it was closed in both directions,
which seemed ominous to me. It made me wish I were still part of the Seattle
PD. I could have called in and found out what was really going on. Instead, I
concentrated on getting far enough onto the freeway so I could get off again—at
the first available exit.
To understand the scope of the Seattle area’s traffic
woes, you have to imagine a densely populated metropolitan area with a
twenty-five-mile-long lake dividing it neatly in half. Now, superimpose a huge
pound sign over that body of water, and you can visualize the problem. The two
legs are Interstates 5 and 405 running along the western and eastern sides of
the lake. Two bridges, I-90 and Highway 520, form the cross-legs. If one of the
two lake bridges goes out of commission, all hell breaks loose. Drivers have to
choose among three unacceptably inconvenient and time-consuming choices. They
can drive around either the top or the bottom of Lake Washington, or else they
take a number and get in line to cross whichever bridge is still working.
I chose to go around. I exited the freeway at Stewart and
took surface roads, but by then they were stopped up, too. Finally I called
into the office to say I was going to be late.
“Special Unit B,” Harold Ignatius Ball, my new boss,
barked into the phone. “Whaddya need?”
I’ve had problems with my name all my life. Jonas Piedmont
Beaumont isn’t a handle any right-thinking woman should have laid on a poor
defenseless baby, but that’s what my mother did. Once I had a say in the
matter, I chose to go by either Beau or by my initials, J.P. But in the
troublesome name game, my mother was a piker compared to Harry’s mom. By naming
him as she did, Mrs. Ball had sentenced her little son Harold to be designated Harry
I. Ball for the rest of his life. The words “Special Homicide Investigation
Team” look fine on paper, and so does Harry’s name. The trouble starts when you
string the first together or say the second one aloud.
Harry went to work for the Bellingham Police Department
right alter returning from Vietnam. I suppose he could have nipped the problem
in the bud by using his given name, going by Harold at work, and ditching his
middle initial altogether. If he’d just used initials alone, it would have
still made him an easy target for teasing. Hi-ball isn’t much better. But Harry’s
a perverse sort of guy. Harry I. Ball is what his name tag said when he was a
uniformed cop in Bellingham, and it’s what’s on his desk right now as Squad B
leader of the Special Homicide Investigation Team. Occasionally, someone will
look at the name and think it’s some kind of joke, but anyone who
underestimates Harry I. Ball is making a serious mistake.
“I’m going to be late,” I said.
“You and everybody else,” he muttered. “Why the hell don’t
you move to the right side of the lake?”
Harry lives in North Bend, right up against Mount Si on
the west side of the Cascades. His commute is even longer than mine. The only
difference is, there are no bridges.
“What’s going on?” I asked. “I understand I-90 is shut
down in both directions.”
“Who knows?” he grumbled. And who cares? When you gonna be
in?”
“As soon as I can.”
And I was. I arrived at nine-thirty, an hour and a half
late, having spent two and a half hours making what is, in the best of circumstances,
a twenty-minute drive. Barbara Galvin, Unit B’s office manager, hadn’t made it
in yet, either. Knowing better than to risk my stomach lining on a cup of Harry
I. Ball’s crankcase-oil coffee, I timed in and then slipped into my tiny
cubicle to go to work.
Every new hire in the Special Homicide Investigation Team
spends his first few weeks of employment going over cold-case files before
being brought on board one of the current investigations. Conventional wisdom
dictates that one of us may bring the table some previously unheeded bit of
insight that will magically solve one of those cold cases. As far as I know, it’s
never happened, but it might.
I had worked my way through most of the files, saving the
biggest and, as a consequence, most unwieldy, to last. I was manfully working
my way through the Green River Killer Task Force documents when Harry’s stocky
figure darkened my doorway.
“How’s it going?” he asked.
Sorry to be caught with my reading glasses on, I quick
stowed them in my pocket. “Okay,” I said. “But it’s like slogging though mud.”
“I know,” he said. “And you’re dying to read every word,
but I need you in my office. Now”
I followed him back down the hall. Since Barbara was at her
desk by then, I stopped into the break room long enough to pour myself a cup of
her freshly brewed coffee. Harry sat at his desk, massive arms resting on a
file folder as I eased myself into one of the chairs.
“What’s up?” I asked.
“I understand you’re acquainted with a town in Arizona called
Bisbee,” he said casually.
I was so dumbfounded that I nearly dropped my coffee in my
lap. The Department of Labor and Industries would have had a blast with that
workman’s comp. claim. Yes, I did know Bisbee. My second wife, Anne, had come
from there, along with the money that had once been hers and was now mine.
To say Anne Corley was as troubled as she was beautiful
something of an understatement on both counts. I personally never discuss the
circumstances surrounding her death on what was our wedding day, but I knew
enough about Harry I. Ball to understand that if he was asking the question, he
also knew the correct answer.
“Yes,” I said. “I know a little about Bisbee.”
He looked at me with a raised eyebrow worthy of Mr. Spock
from Star Trek. “Ever been there?” he asked.
I had gotten as close to Bisbee as Sierra Vista
once—twenty-five miles or so away. At the time I hadn’t been ready to face
visiting Anne’s hometown. I wasn’t emotionally equipped to deal with what I
might have learned there. Fresh out of treatment at Ironwood Ranch up near
Wickenburg, I was smart enough to know that there were some questions I was
better off leaving unanswered.
“No,” I said. “I never have.”
“Would you have a problem going there now?” Harry asked.
I was stronger, older, and hopefully a little wiser. “I
don’t think so,” I said.
“Good,” Harry told me. “Because something’s come up that
needs looking into. It means sending someone out for an undetermined period of
time. Since you say you prefer working alone, I thought it would be a helluva
lot easier on the budget if we sent one investigator rather than two.”
He had that right. I’m not a partner kind of guy. “What
needs investigating?” I asked.
Harry sighed. He glared at the folder on his desk, but he
didn’t open it. “Know anything about UPPI?” he asked.
I shook my head. Another collection of damnably
meaningless letters. Doesn’t anything go by its full name anymore?
“Those initials mean nothing to me,” I said. “Give me a
clue.”
“United Private
Prisons, Incorporated.”
Then it registered. “Okay, okay,” I said. “I remember now.
That’s the company the state of Washington contracted with to ease overcrowding
in the state juvenile justice system, right?”
“Exactly,” Harry agreed, “right up until we fired ’em. Nov
they’re suing the state of Washington’s ass for a hundred and twenty-five
million dollars—breach of contract.”
“Great,” I said. “What does that have to do with us—with
me I mean?”
“The state of Washington’s star witness, a young lady by
the name of Latisha Wall, was murdered in Bisbee, Arizona, the day before
yesterday. Or maybe not murdered, because the local sheriff’s department down
there is playing coy. The point is, Latish Wall is dead, and we need to know
how come.”
I was a little foggy on the details of the Latisha Wall
situation because I hadn’t been directly involved, but I remembered the name.
There had been a huge problem at a new, supposedly state-of-the-art
correctional facility built near Aberdeen in southwestern Washington. Aberdeen
had been given the nod in hopes that locating a new prison there would help
relieve some of the long-standing unemployment in the state’s lumber industry.
Two years after opening, the place was summarily closed.
“Wasn’t Latisha Wall some kind of whistle-blower?”
Harry nodded morosely. “That’s right, and now she’s dead.
She begged Ross Connors to put her in a witness protection program. Said she
was afraid somebody from UPPI might come gunning for her. We did as she asked,
but now it looks like they found her anyway.”
Ross Connors, the Washington State Attorney General, was Harry
I. Ball’s boss and mine as well.
“Didn’t you say she was murdered in Bisbee, Arizona? Why
should we be involved in the investigation?”
At last Harry moved his arms and opened the folder. “‘Turns
out Latisha Wall didn’t actually die in Bisbee proper,” he said. “She died in a
place called Naco, a little burg that’s seven or eight miles outside of town
and right on the U.S./Mexican border. Technically, the murder is being
investigated by the Cochise County Sheriff’s Department.”
“So?”
“So. The sheriff’s a young woman named Joanna Brady. I
talked to her a little while ago. Sounds like she’s just barely out of high
school. Anyway, as soon as I started asking questions, she got her tits in a
wringer and threatened to go to my boss. Of course, that’s no problem since
Ross is the one who had me call her in the first place.”
Did I tell you that Harry I. Ball is an almost terminally
unreconstituted male chauvinist? Word has it that when the personnel folks at
the city of Bellingham diplomatically suggested he attend a sensitivity
seminar, Harry told them to put their sensitivity where the sun don’t shine. He
then pulled the pin and went down the road, pension in hand. As for Attorney
General Ross Connors? I wouldn’t call him a beacon of political correctness,
either. That goes for me as well, but I like to think I’m trying.
“Once I got off the phone with her, I called Ross myself,”
Harry continued. “Believe me, he has no intention of leaving a case this big in
the hands of some little wet-behind-the-ears cow-girl who probably rides a
horse, wears ten-gallon hats, and packs a forty-five on her hip, just for show”
For me, easy acquiescence to that kind of comment has been
forever erased by the searing memory of my former partner, a bloodied Sue
Danielson, sitting slumped against the wall of her trashed living room, my
Glock in her wavering hand. She hadn’t been holding it just for show.
And no matter how much I try to avoid thinking about it, I know she would have
used that weapon if she’d had to. She would have used it to save my life
But sitting there in Harry I. Ball’s office, I understood
it was hopeless for me to try fixing his outdated view of the world. I’ve now
spent enough time in AA that I understand the meaning of the Serenity Prayer.
It says to change what you can and accept what you can’t change. Harry wasn’t
changing—not for me, and not for anybody else. I let it pass.
“What do you want me to do?” I asked.
“When Barbara came dragging her butt in here a little
while ago—she was even later than you, by the way—I told her to get on the horn
with the AG’s travel agent down in Olympia. She’s to get you down to Arizona
ASAP, before our latter-day Nancy Drew/Annie Oakley can screw up the evidence.
In other words, I want you there yesterday, but I suppose that’s asking a
little much. In the meantime, while you’re waiting for your travel packet, you
might want to go over this.”
With that, he spun the file folder across his desk. I
managed to catch it before it skidded onto the floor. “Oh, well,” I said, as I
collected the file and my coffee cup and stood up to leave. “I guess the Green
River Task Force file is going to have to wait,”
“Right,” Harry agreed with a grin. “It’s just too damned bad.”
On the way back to my cubicle I passed the office manager’s
desk. Barbara Galvin is an attractive, up-and-coming young woman in her late
twenties. She’s competent and cheerful. She can also type like a maniac on her
little laptop computer. In the world of slow-moving civil-service
bureaucracies, those qualifications make her some kind of superstar. She wears
a modest diamond and a wedding ring on her left hand and an equally modest diamond
stud in her left nostril. The only picture that clutters her otherwise
immaculately clean desk is one of a knobby-kneed, straw-headed kid about six or
seven years old and wearing a red-and-white soccer uniform. He’s holding a
black-and-white ball and grinning from ear to ear.
I paused momentarily in front of Barbara’s desk. She
motioned to the earpiece of her phone to indicate someone else was talking, so
I went on my way. Back at my desk I opened Latisha Wall’s folder and was
relieved when the first piece of paper that fluttered out contained a scribbled
notation in Harry’s virtually illegible scrawl that said Officer Unreadable in
Indecipherable, Georgia, had made the next-of-kin notification. I was glad to
know I had dodged that particular bullet.
I had only just started on the file’s first page when my
phone rang. “Beaumont here.”
“Good morning,” Naomi Pepper said cheerily. “How long did
it take you to make it over to this side of the water?”
Naomi Cullen Pepper is a relatively recent widow and a
girlfriend of rather brief standing. We had met more than a month earlier on a
cruise ship bound for Alaska. Through several strange turns of events, we had
found ourselves bunking in the same cabin—a situation that had, almost
effortlessly, evolved into our becoming lovers. It was only when we were back
home and on solid ground that the new reality hit me.
The first time I asked her out on a date, I spent hours
agonizing over where I would take her and what I would wear. Ralph Ames, my
attorney and good friend, happened to be visiting my Belltown Terrace condo at
the time I was wrestling with that dilemma. He had almost fallen on the floor
laughing.
“What the hell’s the matter with you?” he had demanded. “You’ve
already spent several nights in a cruise-ship cabin with the woman. How can you
be worried about what you’re going to wear?”
Believe me, worrying was easy. The truth is, on board the Starfire
Breeze, where Naomi and I had walked away with the ship’s tango prize,
everything had seemed amazingly simple. But back on dry land, being involved in
a relationship was much more complicated. And a lot more like hard work. What
wasn’t easy for me right then was carrying on my half of the conversation
opposite Naomi’s breezy sweet nothings when I was stuck in a tiny open-ended
cubicle with God knew how many of my fellow Unit B SHIT investigators lapping
it all up.
“Long time,” I muttered in response to her question. “Two
and a half hours. How about you?”
“I had to be here for a seven o’clock meeting,” she said.
Naomi had recently been promoted to assistant manager in
the kitchen department at The Bon Marchй. Part of the promotion had involved
her transferring from the downtown Seattle store to the Bell Square one in
downtown Bellevue. This meant we were both now commuting from the west side of
Lake Washington to the east side, although our disjointed schedules made
carpooling impossible.
“I was already crossing 520 before they shut down I-90,”
she continued. “I heard they’ve reopened the bridge,” she added. “No bombs
anywhere. Are we still on for tomorrow?”
I was lost in Latisha Wall’s history. “For tomorrow?” I
said vaguely.
“Come on, Beau. Don’t play dumb. It’s your birthday. Were
going out, remember? My treat.”
There comes a time, somewhere after forty, when birthdays
are best forgotten. Or ignored. In this case, I had forgotten completely.
“Come on,” I wheedled. ‘Am I the kind of guy who would forget
his own birthday?”
Of course, the answer was yes. I was and I had, but Naomi
was all for giving me the benefit of the doubt.
“Good,” she said. “We’re going someplace special. As long
as you don’t mind driving back to Bellevue after driving home from work, that
is.”
With a dozen top-rated restaurants within walking distance
of Belltown Terrace, there wasn’t much need to drive all the way to Bellevue
for dinner, but Naomi had made it clear that this time she was paying. “I don’t
mind at all,” I told her.
All right,” she said. “I just wanted to confirm. Will I
see you tonight?”
“Probably,” I said. “I’ll give you a call this afternoon.”
I looked up to see Barbara Galvin standing in my doorway
and giving me a knowing smile. Why wouldn’t she? It’s no coincidence that the newest
kid on the block—me—has the cubicle closest to Barbara’s desk.
“Gotta go,” I said hurriedly to Naomi. “Somebody’s
waiting.”
“You didn’t have to hang up on her like that,” Barbara
told me. “I would have waited.”
She had been listening. My ears turned red. “We were done
anyway,” I said. “What’s up?”
Barbara tossed an envelope onto my desk. “Your travel
packet, complete with itinerary,” she said. “You’re booked on Alaska Flight
790. It leaves for Tucson tomorrow morning at seven A.M.”
“Seven A.M.!” I groaned. “Are you kidding? Why so early?”
Barbara grinned. “What’s the matter, Beau?” she asked. “Got
a hot date? You’re on that flight because, even though it’s the last minute,
the travel agent was able to get us a good deal. She has you scheduled to return
next Friday afternoon, but you can always extend if you need to.”
Maybe I should go ahead and do it right now,
I thought glumly. Whet Naomi finds out about this,
there won’t be any point in corning home.
Assuming the conversation had ended, I opened the envelope
and glanced at the E-ticket itinerary. When I glanced back up, Barbara was
still standing in my doorway looking at me with a strange, faraway look on her
face.
“What is it?” I asked.
“Nothing,” she said with a shrug. “I was just thinking
about how much you remind me of my dad.”
Words every older guy loves to hear! No longer a hunk, you’re
someone’s dad instead.
With that she was gone. Poor kid, I thought in a
sudden flash of empathy. No wonder she can put up with all of Unit B’s
geriatric cop crap. She must have spent most of her life living with an old
troglodyte who is as tough to get along with as we are.
I picked up the phone and called Naomi right back. “Where
were you planning on taking me to dinner tomorrow night?” I asked.
“Why? It’s supposed to be a surprise.”
“It’s a surprise, all right. I just found out I have to be
on a plane to Tucson at seven o’clock tomorrow morning.”
“Work or pleasure?” Naomi asked.
“What do you think?”
“Bis,” she said. “Bis on Main is the name of the
restaurant.”
“What do you say we go tonight instead? I’ll pay”
“I suppose,” she agreed, although I could tell she wasn’t
happy about it. “If you can get a reservation, that is. It’s a pretty popular
place.”
I looked up the number in the phone book, called, and gave
whoever answered my tale of woe. “For you, my friend, I believe we can do
something,” he said. “We’re very busy this evening, but if you could come in
early, say five-thirty ...”
“Done,” I told him. “It might just as well be early. I
have to be up at the crack of dawn tomorrow morning to catch a plane.”
I put down the phone. Part of me was sorry to disappoint
Naomi. And part of me was pissed at the people in the AG’s office for dropping
this on me at the last minute. But there was a third part of me—the stubborn
old-coot part—that was more than happy to get off his butt, put the cold-case
files back where they belonged, and go to work.
CHAPTER SEVEN
For the second time in as many days, Joanna and Frank
Montoya’s “early-morning” briefing took place in the early afternoon.
Afterward, Joanna started in on that day’s worth of correspondence. Almost an
hour later and near the bottom of the stack, she discovered the latest edition
of The Bisbee Bee. The words “See page two!” were scribbled on
the top of the Front page in Kristin Gregovich’s girlish handwriting.
Joanna opened the paper and turned to what she knew would
be Marliss Shackleford’s latest column. The headline read:
CAN COCHISE COUNTY AFFORD A SOFT-HEARTED SHERIFF?
There can be no question that Wednesday’s Fallen Officer
memorial in honor of Cochise County Corrections Officer Yolanda Caсedo was
moving and inspirational, but here’s the question many county residents are
asking themselves: Should a dirty dozen of Cochise County inmates have been in
attendance with what amounted to minimal sheriff’s department supervision?
There can also be no question that, as a corrections
officer, Yolanda Caсedo made a difference in the less-than-exemplary lives of
some of those unfortunate inmates. Ms. Caсedo used her off-duty hours to work
as an unpaid volunteer with an inmate literacy project. She personally tutored
a number of inmates who were working toward GED certificates while being
incarcerated.
But the fact remains that these men are prisoners. They’re
in the county lockup for reasons that either a judge or a jury could not ignore
or excuse. Why, then, were they allowed to attend Ms. Caсedo’s funeral services
without any evidence of restraints and with only two off-duty guards and the
director of the Cochise County Jail Ministry looking after them?
Not that they did anything bad. From what I could learn,
the inmates caused no difficulty. They behaved themselves during the funeral
service and afterward were all returned to their cells at the Cochise County
Jail without incident. But some people, including yours truly, think that
letting those prisoners out at all was a mistake and that having done so sets a
bad precedent.
Unnamed sources within the department suggest that Sheriff
Joanna Brady herself is the one who made the decision to allow prisoners to
attend the service. And why would she do such a thing? Was it a grandstanding effort
on her part to let people see that her department is interested in
rehabilitating county prisoners, as opposed to locking them up and throwing
away the key? Or was it something else entirely?
Since her election, Sheriff Brady has gone to great
lengths
The problem is, if one of those inmates had decided to
take
Finished reading, Joanna wadded up the paper and tossed it
into the trash. For a while she tried to return to her paperwork, but it was no
use. Distracted and unable to concentrate, she touched the intercom button.
“I’m going home early,” she said to Kristin. “If anybody
needs me, have them call me there.”
‘Are you okay?” Kristin asked. “I mean, it’s only three o’clock.
You’re not sick or anything, are you?”
“Lots of people go home at three o’clock,” she said. “And
today that’s me. I’ve done all I can do, unless there’s an emergency, that is.”
She left her office via the private door. Once back home
at High Lonesome Ranch, she changed into a T-shirt, jeans, and boots. Then she
hurried out to the barn, where she started mucking out the stall where Jenny
kept her sorrel quarter-horse gelding, Kiddo. It was hot, dirty, smelly work
just the thing to take Joanna’s mind off Marliss Shackleford’s latest piece of
attack journalism.
She became so involved in her shoveling and cleaning that
she lost track of time. When Jenny came home from school and spoke to her from
a few feet away, Joanna was so startled, she jumped.
“Mom, what are you doing that for?” Jenny demanded. “I
told Butch I’d clean the stall out today, as soon as I got home front school. I
haven’t had a chance to do it before because of play practice and—”
“I just felt like doing it myself,” Joanna said. “I was
sick and tired of sitting behind a desk. I decided a little physical labor
would do me a world of good.”
A look of alarm flitted briefly across Jenny’s face. She
paled. “Nothing bad happened at work, did it?” she asked.
“Not really,” Joanna reassured her daughter. “All I’m
saying is, my day was rotten. How was yours?”
“Okay, I guess,” Jenny said unenthusiastically.
“Let’s go wrestle a few bales of hay together,” Joanna suggested
cheerfully. “Maybe throwing a couple of those around will make us feel better.”
Once the chores were done, Joanna came out of the barn to
find Jenny leaning against the topmost rail of the corral with Kiddo nuzzling
her jacket pocket, searching for the sugar cubes she routinely carried there.
With their matching blond manes, girl and horse leaned on each other in an
unspoken communion that made Joanna marvel.
Kiddo had come into their lives not long after Andy’s
death. As a single mother with a demanding full-time job, Joanna had been wary
of taking on any more responsibilities. She had objected to the idea of Jenny’s
having a horse, but on that subject she had been overruled by her in-laws. And
rightly so, she realized now.
She had watched in amazement as Jenny and the gelding had
bonded. She had also been astonished at how caring for the horse had somehow
helped ease Jenny’s terrible grief after her father’s death. In a way Joanna
didn’t quite understand, she realized that allowing Jenny to be responsible for
this huge, four-legged creature had helped transform her from a child into
what she was now—a self-possessed young girl verging on womanhood.
Silently Joanna went over and joined Jenny at the fence,
noticing as she did so that she and her daughter stood almost eye-to-eye.
Within months, Jennifer Ann Brady would most likely be taller than her
five-foot-four mother.
“Did you and Butch have a fight or something?” Jenny asked
as Joanna reached out a hand to touch Kiddo’s sleek neck.
“Why do you ask that?” Joanna returned.
Jenny shrugged. “He was real quiet last night when he took
me to play practice, and he was gone this morning by the time I got up,” she
said. “He usually cooks breakfast, but today he didn’t. I had cold cereal
instead.”
“We had a disagreement,” Joanna conceded after a pause. “Not
a fight. And it’s all settled now. He said he had a meeting over at the new
house this morning. I’m sure that’s the only reason he left the house so early.”
“What was it about?” Jenny asked pointedly.
“The disagreement?”
Jenny nodded.
“About his trains,” Joanna answered, thinking how silly
that must sound.
“What about them?” Jenny asked.
“He wants to build a permanent track for them in the
family room and run it over the doors and window frames,” Joanna replied. “I
want a regular family room with a couch, a couple of chairs, a television set,
and no trains.”
“If he’s still mad about it, then I guess you won,” Jenny
said.
“It’s not a matter of winning or losing,” Joanna replied. “Being
married means you have to discuss things and work out compromises you can both
live with. I told Butch we’d find someplace else to put his trains, and we
will.”
There was a long pause after that. Joanna assumed the
conversation was over. It wasn’t.
“Did you and Dad have disagreements?” Jenny asked.
This was tougher ground. With Andy dead, it might have
been easier to pretend that everything between them had always been perfect,
even if that wasn’t true.
“Yes,” Joanna admitted finally. “Yes, we did.”
“What about?”
Joanna thought about those first stormy years in her
previous marriage. She and Andy had both been young, and having a child only a
few months after the wedding had added a whole other dimension to the usual
newlyweds conflicts. For years, there had always been too little money and too
many bills. Thinking back, it seemed to Joanna that she and Andy had fought
about almost everything—about whether or not he had filled the car with gas the
last time he drove it, about why he was late for dinner or hadn’t picked up his
dirty clothes, and why he always seemed to leave an unsightly sprinkle of
whiskers in the bathroom sink. Then, after five years or so, things had
smoothed out. Joanna and Andy had made it to their tenth anniversary and most
likely would have made it longer if only .. .
“A lot of little things, I guess,” Joanna said finally. “Things
that I see now weren’t important enough to fight over in the first place.”
“I never heard you fight,” Jenny said wistfully. “Or if I
did, I don’t remember.”
“Good,” Joanna returned, meaning it. Her relationship with
Roy Andrew Brady hadn’t been all good or all bad. Neither was her relationship
with Butch Dixon. Jenny needed to have a more realistic idea of how the world
worked.
“It’s better to forget quarrels than it is to remember them,”
Joanna added.
Then, as they stepped off the rail and started toward the
house, Butch drove into the yard. Again the dogs rode in the back with their
heads thrust out the open windows.
As soon as Butch opened the door, the two dogs leaped out
and gamboled over to Jenny. Only after greeting her did they make for their
water.
“I see you let them ride again,” Joanna said, walking up
to kiss him hello. If he was still angry about the train situation, it didn’t
show.
He kissed her back and then frowned at the dogs. “I remembered
what you said about spoiling them,” he said. “I tried to get them to run home,
but Sadie wasn’t having any of it. She lay down in the middle of the road and
wouldn’t budge. I had to go back and get her. Once she was in the car, Tigger
wanted to ride, too.”
“It’s all right,” Joanna said. “I was teasing.”
Butch glanced down at Joanna’s clothing and then checked
his watch. “It’s only five now. How long have you been home?”
Joanna shrugged. A couple of hours. Jenny and I have been cleaning
Kiddo’s stall and putting out hay.”
“Why so early?”
“I gave myself part of the afternoon off,” she said.
“How come?”
“Politics,” she said.
“I see,” Butch said. “Come tell me about it while I fix
dinner.”
Inside the house, Jenny and the dogs disappeared into her
room. Relieved that things were better with Butch, Joanna sat in the breakfast
nook and sipped at a soda while he hustled around the kitchen. There was no
point in asking if she could help. Years of being a short-order cook made Butch’s
culinary efforts far supe hot. to Joanna’s limited skills in that regard. His
movements were quick, decisive, and economical.
Joanna told him everything—about the Rochelle Baxter/ Latisha
Wall case as well as the difficult board of supervisors meeting and Marliss
Shackleford’s hurtful column. Somehow, though, she neglected to mention the
heart-to-heart she and Jenny had shared outside Kiddo’s corral.
“It sounds like Marliss is throwing her lot in with your
opposition,” Butch said when she finished relating the part about the column.
“Any idea who that’s going to be?”
“Not really,” Joanna said. “I have my suspicions. It was
Ken Galloway who raised such a stink about Yolanda’s Fallen Officer funeral. I
wouldn’t be surprised to learn he’s Marliss Shackleford’s ‘unnamed source.’ “
Butch stopped with a half-peeled potato in one hand and
the paring knife in the other. “Do you think Galloway might run against you?”
he asked.
Joanna nodded. “It’s possible.”
“That’s my guess, too,” Butch agreed.
The phone rang, and Joanna hurried to answer it. “Howdy, boss,”
Jaime Carbajal said. “Sorry to bother you at home.”
“It’s all right. What’s up?”
“I had an appointment to finish my interview with Dee Canfield
today. Like I told you, I did a preliminary with her yesterday, but she was so
anxious about getting ready for the show that she barely paid attention to my
questions. Since she was so distracted, I made an appointment to see her this
afternoon at the gallery.”
“And?”
“She wasn’t there. Her boyfriend wasn’t, either. The place
is still closed up tight, just like it was last night. The sign’s still on the door.
There were two notices—one from FedEx and one from UPS—saying they had
attempted deliveries.”
Joanna felt a twinge of concern. She had been pleased to
hear Dee had canceled the show, thinking the gallery owner had come to her senses.
Now there was a far more ominous possibility. Only one person in town had been
absolutely determined to shut down that grand-opening party.
“Did you go by her house?” Joanna asked. “Maybe she’s ill.”
“Sure did. She lives on Cochise Drive out in Huachuca
Terraces. I stopped by twice,” Jaime said. “Nobody was home. The blinds are
down and the curtains closed. Something’s not right here, Sheriff. I have a
really bad feeling about it. If there’s still no sign of her or Warren Gibson
by tomorrow morning, I should probably get search warrants and go through both
the house and the gallery”
“Maybe they decided to take a few days off,” Joanna suggested.
“I doubt that,” Jaime said. “For one thing, I talked to
Gina Dodd at Desert Stairs Catering. Dee hired Gina to supply the food fin last
night’s party. The first Gina knew about the cancellation was when she showed
up with a vanful of food and found the sign on the gallery door. Gina says Dee
never would have done that without calling. She says that’s not the way Dee
Canfield does business. Gina’s convinced something is terribly wrong.”
“Do you think Gina Dodd’s word will be enough for you to
get a search warrant? And will you be able to get one on Saturday morning?”
“By the time I talked to Phyllis Kelly, Judge Moore’s
clerk, he was gone for the day,” Jaime replied. “He and his wife have a dinner
engagement in Tucson. I’ll have to catch up with him in the morning. Phyllis
says I can bring the paperwork by his house then.”
“Did you talk to Bobo Jenkins about any of this?” Joanna
asked. “I le had a disagreement with Dee Canfield over Rochelle Baxter’s show,
but I believe he and Dec have been friends for a long time. Maybe he knows
where Dee and Warren might have gone off to.”
“I didn’t actually talk to Bobo today,” Jaime said. “What
I got instead was a call from Burton Kimball. He says he’ll be along for the
ride when Bobo Jenkins comes to talk to us at ten o’clock tomorrow morning.”
Joanna was surprised. “Bobo’s bringing Cochise County’s
premier defense attorney along for the interview? How come?”
“You tell me. I told Mr. Kimball all we want is to ask
Bobo a few routine questions. Burton hinted that he thought our reasons for
wanting to talk to his client were possibly politically or racially motivated.”
“Politically or racially motivated?” Joanna repeated. “What
kind of nonsense is that?”
“I’ve heard talk that Bobo Jenkins is thinking of running
for mayor,” Jaime offered.
“He can run for governor, for all I care,” Joanna shot
back, angered by the implication. “Bobo is one of the last people who saw
Latisha Wall alive. He was also raising hell in Castle Rock Gallery yesterday
morning, not long before Dee Canfield and Warren Gibson disappeared. Of course
we need to talk to him. That’s not race or politics; that’s police work. If
Bobo feels a need to have Burton Kimball along to hold his hand, it’s his
problem, not ours.”
There was a pause. “Are you okay, boss?” Jaime asked.
“What do you mean, am I okay?” Joanna demanded, trying not
to sound as irritable as she felt. “Of course I’m okay.”
“Kristin told me that you went home early, which, you have
to admit, isn’t like you,” he said. “She thought you weren’t feeling well, and
you do sound a little ...”
“A little what?”
“Well ... cranky,” Jaime replied reluctantly.
Joanna didn’t want to sound cranky. Or unreasonable. “I’m
fine, Jaime,” she assured him, deliberately softening her tone “What time is
that Bobo Jenkins interview again?”
“Ten.”
When her other homicide detective, Ernie Carpenter, had
asked to take a full week of vacation all at once, it hadn’t seemed like that
big a deal. “When’s Ernie due home?” she asked.
“Monday.”
“I wish it was sooner, but that’s the way it is. All
right, then. If Bobo is bringing the big guns in with him, you’d better have
some backup as well. Call Frank Montoya and ask him to be there with you.”
“Will do,” Jaime agreed.
“All the same,” Joanna added, “I’ll be in the office. When
you’re done with the interview, come tell me how it went.”
“Okeydokey,” Jaime Carbajal responded. “Who needs
week-ends anyway?”
He hung up and Joanna turned back to Butch. “What was that
all about?” he asked.
Joanna explained as best she could.
“Dee Canfield,” Butch said. “The woman who disappeared.
Who’s she again?”
“She owns the gallery where Rochelle/Latisha’s art was
going to he exhibited. Even with the artist dead, she was going to go through
with the grand opening last night, but then she didn’t. Jaime Carbajal tried to
go to the party himself, but the gallery was closed up tight, and it still is,
more than twenty-four hours later.”
Butch lifted a pot lid to check on the potatoes. “I can
hardly wait to read next week’s paper,” he said. “No doubt Marliss will figure
out a way to make all of this your fault as well.”
At that moment Jenny meandered into the kitchen. “What’s
your fault?” she asked, opening the refrigerator door and examining the
contents. “What’s for dinner?” she added. “It smells good, and I’m starved.”
“Pork chops and gravy,” Butch replied. ‘Along with mashed
potatoes, string beans, and apple sauce.”
“Great,” Jenny said. “Everything except the string beans.”
Butch’s fried pork chops were her unqualified favorite. Reaching for a clean
glass, she poured herself some milk.
“So what’s your fault, Mom?” Jenny asked, sipping her milk
and studying her mother’s face over the rim of the glass.
At the moment, one person is dead and two others are missing,”
Butch explained. “I was saying that in Marliss Shackleford’s next column, she’ll
probably try to blame all of it on your mother. That’s Marliss’ usual modus
operandi.”
“Oh,” Jenny said, taking her half-empty glass and heading
into the dining room. “Is that all? I thought you guys were back to talking
about putting a train track in the family room.”
Butch shot Joanna a quizzical look. Joanna sighed.
Thanks, Jen,
she
thought. You’ve just provided a perfect ending to a perfect day!
CHAPTER EIGHT
It wasn’t a particularly nice way to begin celebrating my
birthday. For one thing, I had to be up and out of Belltown Terrace by five in
the morning in order to make that 7 A.M. Alaska Airlines flight to Tucson. It
was pitch-dark as I climbed into a cigarette-smoke-saturated cab driven by a
non communicative maniac. I wasn’t about to give the state of Washington access
to the condo’s communal limo.
The rain was pouring down as we headed for the airport,
but I didn’t regard that as any kind of ill omen. After all, it was the last
week in October. Everybody knows it rains like mad in Seattle in October. And
maybe that’s why the seven-o’clock plane to Tucson was loaded to the gills. It
was full of people wanting to trade chill autumn rain for one last glimpse of
sun along with a whole wad of purple-and-gold-bedecked rowdy Husky fans on
their way to a U Dub/U of A football game.
When I reached my row, I discovered I was in the back of
the plane in the middle seat, squashed between two very large men. I’m not
exactly a lightweight, but these two guys dwarfed me. One was a
twenty-something weight lifter with massive shoulders. The other was in his
mid-to-late seventies and had probably never been in a gym in his life. His
shoulder muscles had come about the old-fashioned way—by doing hard physical
labor. He was an old codger with several missing teeth and amazingly bad
breath. He read every word of his in-flight magazine, moving his lips constantly
and showing off those missing teeth as he did so.
Resigned to two and a half hours of misery, I settled into
my seat as best I could, closing my eyes and hoping to nap my way to Arizona. I
willed myself into unconsciousness and thought about the previous evening’s
night on the town with Naomi Pepper.
We’d had a nice-enough dinner. The food at Bis on Main was
wonderful and the service impeccable. Even so, the evening hadn’t turned out to
be the complete success either Naomi or I had envisioned. I could tell when I
stopped by the mall to pick her up after work that Naomi wasn’t a happy camper.
“What’s wrong?” I asked.
“It’s my mother,” she said.
In the month or so that Naomi Pepper and I had been
hanging out together, I had gleaned bits and pieces of information about her
mother, Katherine Foley. Putting those pieces together, I had determined
Katherine was something of a handful. Twice widowed and once divorced, she had
now been abandoned by her most recent boy toy.
Some of Katherine’s wilder antics—like insisting on doing
her weekly shopping at midnight in her local Albertson’s in full evening-wear
regalia—verged on Auntie Mame behavior. It’s easier to deal with Auntie Mame
when the person in question is some distant relative, preferably a second
cousin. When the kook turns out to be your very own mother, all bets are off. That
evening I realized that being Katherine Foley’s daughter had turned into tough
duty for Naomi Pepper.
“What about her?” I asked.
To my surprise, Naomi’s eyes filled with tears. “Let’s not
talk about it right now,” she said. “We’re having a fun birthday celebration. I
don’t want anything to spoil it.”
“Tell me about your mother,” I insisted.
“She wants to move in with me,” Naomi said finally, after
taking a deep breath. “She’s just this week been diagnosed with Parkinson’s.
She’s worried about continuing to live on her on now that Geoff has taken off
for parts unknown. I don’t know much about Parkinson’s disease, but I suppose
she has a point. But she’s so incredibly bossy, Beau. She’s forever trying to
run my life by remote control. If I let her move in ...”
Naomi’s voice trailed off, and I could guess at what wasn’t
being said. Naomi Pepper is one of the nicest people I’ve ever met. Nice as in
kind. Nice as in loving. Nice as in giving you the shirt off her back and
caring about everyone else first and herself last, often to her own detriment.
The problem is, the world is full of not-nice people who prey on the ones who
are, people who have zero compunction about taking advantage of their victims.
Naomi Pepper’s husband, Gary, is a prime case in point.
Gary hadn’t quite finished divorcing her when he was diagnosed
with liver cancer. His girlfriend wouldn’t look after him, so he had dragged
his dying butt back home to Naomi. And, because she’s a nice person, she had
taken him in and cared for him until his death several months later.
Then there’s Naomi’s daughter, Melissa. She may not be
Gary’s biological daughter, but she’s still a chip off the old block. The
hair-raising stories I’d heard about Missy’s formative years put her in a class
with the rotten little kid in that old movie The Bad Seed. From seventh
grade on, Missy Pepper had been a mess—in and out of juvie and rehab and on and
off the streets. Despite Melissa’s propensity for getting into trouble, Naomi
loves the girl to distraction and has stuck with her through some very rough
times. Naomi may have been introduced to the concept of tough love, but I’m
sure she’ll be there to bail Melissa out of trouble the next time the girl
needs bailing.
What I thought Naomi Pepper herself needed right then was
a vacation from troublesome relatives. Here, though, was her mother, prepared
to waltz into Naomi’s life as yet another patient in need of nursing and
attention.
Let me be clear: I wasn’t being totally altruistic. I know
the younger set is under the impression that adult sex drives disappear
completely somewhere around age thirty-seven. But that’s not true. At least
mine hasn’t. Still, the idea of having a sexual interlude in a bedroom where
someone’s aging mother might possibly burst in on the scene at any moment
encourages a degree of sexual malfunction that no amount of Viagra can fix.
In other words, I wanted Katherine Foley to live somewhere
else, but I was hoping for subtlety. I tried to avoid saying it in so many
words. What I said instead was, “Are you sure you want to do that—take her in,
I mean?”
“I don’t have a choice,” Naomi said. “I’m an only child.”
“Does your mother have money?”
Harry I. Ball isn’t alone in asking nothing but questions
for which he already knows the answers. It’s one of the oldest ploys in an
experienced interrogator’s bag of tricks, one I myself utilized to good effect
during the years I worked as a homicide detective at Seattle PD. In this case I
happened to know that the answer to my money question was an unequivocal yes.
Naomi had mentioned on several occasions—occasions when the mother-daughter guilt
card wasn’t faceup on the table—that Katherine Foley’s various ventures into
the world of holy matrimony had left her Fairly well off, much better off
financially than her daughter, who still had to go to work at The Bon every day
to earn her keep.
“Some,” Naomi allowed now.
“Couldn’t she move into an assisted-living place? Beverly
and Lars live in one of those, you know. They’re in Queen Anne Gardens, up at
the top of the Counterbalance. It’s very nice. At least it seems nice to me.”
Beverly Piedmont, my widowed, eighty-six-year-old
grandmother, had recently married Lars Jenssen, my AA sponsor, who’s a spry
eighty-seven. After their wedding, they moved into a retirement center on top
of Seattle’s Queen Anne Hill, where they seem to be enjoying themselves
immensely. The common areas of what they call “the home” resemble the lobby of
a posh hotel. The rooms and corridors are brightly painted and well-lit. The
floors are covered with bluish-green carpets that look new and smell clean.
At Queen Anne Gardens, Lars and Beverly had signed up for
a plan that comes complete with linen service as well as three hot meals a day.
The food is plentiful and palatable, with no need to shop or cook beforehand or
to wash up and put away dishes afterward. Beverly Piedmont Jenssen had spent
more than five decades cooking and serving three meals a day, with little or no
help from my now deceased grandfather. As far as she’s concerned, being
relieved of KP duty qualifies as nothing short of heaven on earth. And, since
Beverly is happy, Lars is happy, too.
“Does your mother have any pets?” I asked.
Naomi nodded. “A cocker named Spade,” she said. “He’s
eleven.”
“According to Lars, some of the residents have pets,” I
hinted. “There may be a size restriction. You probably couldn’t get away with
bringing along an Irish wolfhound, but I’m sure a cocker spaniel would qualify”
“Mother won’t go,” Naomi said flatly.
“How do you know that?” I said. “Have you asked her?”
“No, but I know my mother,” Naomi replied. “She’d rather
die than have to go live in a place like that.”
Watch out,
I
wanted to warn Naomi. You’re about to be suckered. But I didn’t. I kept
my mouth shut because I’ve learned over the years that when it comes to minding
other people’s business, I always wind up getting myself in trouble.
Alaska Air Lines Flight 790 had reached what the pilot
called a “comfortable cruising altitude.” That was easy for him to say. He wasn’t
jammed into the middle of a three-seat row. About that time the guy in front of
me leaned his seat back all the way, crushing both my kneecaps. Is it any
wonder I’m not much of a fan of air travel? I don’t know many people over six
feet tall who are.
The weight lifter next to the window—the guy whose humongous
shoulders overlapped my seat by a good three inches—suddenly needed to get up.
Climbing over both me and Mr. Moving Lips, he removed a laptop computer from
the overhead compartment and turned it on. I thought he was going to work on
something interesting. Instead, he began playing solitaire. The only time he
paused was during the couple of minutes it took him to plow his way through his
English muffin /scrambled egg sandwich. It wouldn’t have been so bad if he had
been any good at solitaire, but he wasn’t. He’d sit there not making moves
that I could see and he couldn’t.
I would have gone back to thinking about Naomi, but
between the lip-moving reader on one side and the solitaire player on the
other, it wasn’t possible. Finally, with my seat mates seemingly preoccupied
with their own activities, I opened my own briefcase, took out the Latisha Wall
file, and commenced to reread the reports I found there. As soon as I started
working, the weight lifter abandoned his solitaire game in favor of engaging me
in polite conversation. Rather than let him read over my shoulder, I put the
file away.
Guess what he wanted to talk about? Working out. It seen
his father was a championship weight lifter in the age fifty-five-to-sixty-five
category. Father and son worked out at the same gym where all the other weight
lifters thought the father-and-son act was cool. Since they had bonded so well
this way, the weight lifter felt free to tell me that he thought everybody else
should do the same thing. And so on and so on. At tedious length. I was tempted
to tell him this would be difficult for me since I never knew my Father, but
even that probably wouldn’t have shut him up.
I was trapped with no means of escape. It reached a point
where I would have welcomed a comment from the guy on the other side, but he
continued to read his magazine in total, lip-moving concentration.
Eventually—and not nearly soon enough—the pilot announced
that we were beginning our gradual descent into Tucson International, which—as
far as I could see from my limited middle-seat view—seemed to consist of a vast
sea of brown. Brown or not, I was looking forward to landing. That would mean
the guy who was crushing my knees would have to put his seat back in the full
upright and locked position. I thought my troubles would soon be over. They
weren’t. Once I managed to escape from the plane, my life immediately got
worse.
Compared to Sea-Tac, Tucson International Airport is small
potatoes. I collected my luggage and walked down the car-rental isle, looking for
a counter called Saguaro Discount Rental, the car-rental agency listed on my
itinerary. I finally stopped at the Alamo desk and asked one of the women
working there.
“That’s pronounced ‘sa-waro,’ “ she told mQ, rolling her
eyes. It’s Spanish, so the g is pronounced like a w. They’re
off-site. You have to call on their courtesy phone. It’s over there on the
wall. They’ll send a shuttle to pick you up.”
No matter how you pronounce it, the office and lot for
Saguaro Discount Rental was more than a mile from the airport. As soon as I saw
their fleet of brightly colored KIAs—all of them last year’s model—I knew that
the Washington State Attorney’s penny-pinching travel agent had struck again.
My car was a four-cylinder automatic KIA Sportage SUV, a name that sounds a
whole lot more sporting and exotic than it is.
I admit to being spoiled. At Seattle PD I often drove
vehicles equipped with police pursuit engines. Meanwhile, parked on the P-3
level of the Belltown Terrace garage is my slick guard’s red 928. Even so, I do
have some experience at driving four-cylinder vehicles. I spent eight years—the
whole time I was in college and four years afterward—driving an old-time VW
Beetle, but that was a standard four-speed, not an automatic. My rental
Sportage did fine as long as I was driving on flat ground. It was only when I
started up an incline, even a gradual one, that it lugged down so far that it
seemed I was barely moving. Compared to the rest of the
seventy-five-mile-an-hour traffic on the freeway, I wasn’t.
My printed MapQuest directions said it would take me two
hours and twelve minutes to get from Tucson to Bisbee. It actually took
forty-five minutes longer than that because the road was uphill most of the
way. By the time I came chugging up over the mountain pass just north of
Bisbee, I was beginning to think I’d never get there. The good news is, moving
that slowly I had plenty of time to survey the scenery. I found myself
regretting not having brought along a pair of sunglasses, but in the dark and
wet of pre-dawn Seattle, sunglasses hadn’t seemed like a pressing necessity.
The mountainous terrain on either side of the highway leading
to Bisbee was either reddish brown or gray. The hillsides were dotted with
green specks I assumed to be bushes of some kind. Then, as I started up the
north side of the Mule Mountains, I realized those bushes were really
full-fledged trees after all. They’re not the kind of towering, stately
evergreens we have in Washington. No, these starved and stunted trees did have
leaves on them, but there was no hint that they were about to change colors or
drop off.
Every once in a while, winding along what looked like a
dry creek bed, I’d see a stand of much bigger trees that had leaves that were
beginning to change, but just barely. I’ve never beer much of a botanist, but I
found this astonishing. Back home it Seattle, many of the trees that line the
avenues were already mostly bare.
I drove through a tunnel—the Mule Mountain Tunnel, I believe
it’s called—near the top of that range of mountains. When I emerged from the
tunnel, the town of Bisbee lay nestled in a red-hued canyon that twisted down
the other side. Seeing the town for the first time gave me an odd sensation. It
seemed so isolated, as though the entire rest of the world were on the far side
of those mountains. The Bisbee side—with a brilliant-blue sky above it—was a
world unto itself, like a self-sufficient castle with a wide moat of desert all
around it.
That’s when it struck me. This place—this small, isolated
mining town—had been Anne Corley’s world when she was a young innocent girl.
This was where she had grown up and where she had first run off the rails. And
that one thought about Anne Corley was enough to wipe all concerns about Naomi
Pepper and her aging mother right out of my head.
I had arrived in town shortly after one on Saturday,
probably far too early to check in to my hotel. Considering the car I was
driving, I was under no delusions that I had been booked into luxury
accommodations. And so, since I wasn’t on vacation anyway, I followed the next
set of incredibly confusing directions that were supposed to take me to a place
called the Cochise County Justice Center.
I wound down a long canyon, through an abandoned open-pit
mine, and around a traffic circle. It took several turns around the circle and
more than one false start before I finally turned off on Highway 8o toward
Douglas. For the better part of a mile I drove along a huge flat mound of red
rocks that stretched along the highway. I assumed this had to be waste that had
been removed from the open-pit mine I had just driven through. Beyond the dump,
although the desert near at hand continued to be of that strange Mars-like
shade of red, the cliff-lined hills that jutted up a mile or so beyond it were
a dull, uninspiring gray that reminded me of Seattle’s winter skies.
The Cochise County Justice Center was on the left-hand
side of the road a couple of miles out of town. To get into the parking lot, I
had to cross a rough metal grating. The cluster of buildings I found there was
about as different from Seattle’s Public Safety Building as possible. Of
single-story construction, they spread across a wide swath of desert. The
exterior walls were reddish brown in the early-afternoon sun. They might have
been made by simply scooping up the surrounding earth and turning that into
building material. The campus was good-looking enough, I suppose. It might even
have been mistaken for a school if it hadn’t been for the curls of razor wire
that surrounded what was evidently the jail.
I drove my panting Sportage into the public parking lot
and got out of the car. Missing my sunglasses even more, I went looking for a
lady sheriff named Joanna Brady.
Joanna arrived at the office at nine that Saturday morning.
She put down her purse and called Jaime Carbajal. “Any sign of Dee Canfield or
Warren Gibson?” she asked.
“Not so far, boss. I stopped by her house again this
morning. Nothing’s changed since yesterday.”
“What about the search warrant?”
“I’ve got a problem with that, too. Judge and Mrs. Moore
must have stayed over in Tucson last night. They’re still not home. I won’t be
able to do anything about a warrant until after the Bobo Jenkins interview”
“That’s fine,” Joanna said. “The warrant can wait.”
Once again she tackled the endless stream of paperwork. At
ten o’clock she was studying the latest vacation schedule and shift rotations
when she saw Frank Montoya and Jaime Carbajal escort Bobo Jenkins and Burton
Kimball into the conference room down the hall.
Dressed in a jacket and tie, Bobo didn’t look nearly as
intimidating as he had in the Castle Rock Gallery two days earlier. At the
time, Joanna had thought she had derailed his anger and that he no longer posed
any kind of threat to Dee Canfield. Now Joanna wasn’t so sure about that. Both
the gallery owner and her boyfriend were presumed missing, and Bobo Jenkins had
come to a routine interview with a defense lawyer in tow.
When I’m wrong, I do it up brown, Joanna told herself.
Shaking her head, she returned to the rotation schedule. A
few minutes later, Dave Hollicker knocked on the casing of her open office
door. “May I come in?” he asked.
“Sure,” she said, looking up. “Have a seat. What’s going
on? And why are you at work on a Saturday morning?”
After the previous day’s budget-cutting ordeal with the
board of supervisors, Joanna knew that, from now on, she would have to curtail
overtime wages.
Dave seemed to read her mind. “I know Casey and I weren’t
scheduled to work today,” he said, “but there’s so much crime scene evidence to
process, we thought you’d want us to get on it as soon as possible.”
I may,
Joanna
thought. Charles Neighbors may have other ideas.
“Next time, you’d better have the overtime authorized
beforehand,” she said. “But I can see from your face that you’ve found
something, and I’m guessing it’s not good news.”
Dave sighed. “You know Bobo Jenkins came by the department
on Thursday afternoon to see Casey.”
Joanna nodded. “Right. I’m the one who told him we’d need
his prints. Why?”
“Casey’s found Mr. Jenkins’s prints on the empty sweetener
packets we pulled out of the trash at Latisha Wall’s place.”
“Of course they are,” Joanna agreed. “He told me he’d been
to see her Wednesday evening. He also said he’d had a drink. If he had tea or
coffee, it’s to be expected that his prints would show up on some of the
sweetener packets.”
“The problem is,” Dave said, “they may be sweetener
packets, but what’s in them isn’t sweetener.”
Joanna felt a familiar clutch in her gut. If the sweetener
packets had been tampered with, it was likely Doc Winfield was right. “You’re
saying Latisha Wall really was poisoned?”
“All I’m saying right now, Sheriff Brady, is that some of
the packets appear to have been tampered with,” Dave replied. “They were slit
open and then carefully resealed. When Casey was straightening one of them so
she could lilt prints off the outside, she noticed white powder clinging to
something tacky inside. You know how those little packets work. Usually the
paper isn’t sticky at all. So we checked the other packets, including several
of the supposedly unopened ones we took from the crime scene. Most of them are
fine. Three of them aren’t.”
“Do you have the contents from those three unopened
packets?” Dave nodded.
“Any idea what it is?”
“None. I tried taking just a little whiff to see if there
was any odor. I started feeling woozy. Whatever it is, it’s powerful stuff. I’ve
put the remaining packets in stainless-steel containers.”
“Good,” Joanna said. “You’d better hustle whatever you’ve
got up to the DPS satellite crime lab in Tucson. Get them working on it ASAP.
If they give you any grief, have them call me personally, understand?”
Taking that for a dismissal, Dave Hollicker stood. “Yes,
ma’am,” he said. “I’ll get on it right away.”
“Wait,” Joanna added, holding up her hand. “One more
thing. Does Jaime Carbajal know about this?”
Dave shook his head. “As I was coming over from the lab,
he was already in the conference room with the OCCUPIED sign showing. A clerk
told me he and Chief Deputy Montoya are conducting an interview. Rather than
interrupt, I came to you instead.”
“Thanks, Dave,” she said. “I’ll take it from here. You get
that stuff to the crime lab.”
Joanna sat at her desk for a few moments after Dave left
her office. Naturally, a mere deputy would have been wary about interrupting an
ongoing homicide interview. Under most circumstances, interrupting detectives
at work didn’t seem like a good idea to Sheriff Joanna Brady, either. However,
she was in possession of vital information that Jaime Carbajal needed to have
now, while he was still interviewing Bobo Jenkins, rather than later, when it
no longer mattered.
Hustling to the conference room door, Joanna ignored the
OCCUPIED sign and let herself in. As she entered, she was greeted by the sound
of raised voices.
“Don’t keep calling her Latisha Wall, Detective Carbajal,”
Bobo Jenkins growled. “I’m telling you, I don’t know anyone by that
name. The woman I knew was Rochelle Baxter. Shelley. She’s the one I came here
to talk about.”
Joanna heard the overwrought man’s voice falter on the
word “Shelley.” She winced at the audible hurt in that word. Bobo Jenkins was
angry and grieving both. He sat still, his powerful arms folded across a
massive chest. His jaws were clenched so tightly that the muscles in his cheeks
twitched. Burton Kimball, seated next to his client, reached over and touched
Bobo’s shoulder. The attorney was the first person in the room to notice Joanna’s
arrival.
He stood and held out his hand. “Good morning, Sheriff
Brady,” he said politely. “So glad you could join us.”
Joanna ignored Jaime’s impatient scowl and returned the
greeting. Then she turned to her detective. “Could I speak to you for a moment,
please, Detective Carbajal?” she asked, beckoning him toward the door.
Jaime rose at once and followed Joanna out into the lobby.
“What’s going on in there?” she asked.
Jaime shrugged. “You heard some of it. Bobo insists he
knows nothing about Rochelle Baxter’s other life. As you can see, he’s more
than a little upset about it.’’
“Why wouldn’t he be?” Joanna returned. “Someone he cared
about is dead. It must seem to him as though we’re treating him more like a
suspect than a witness. No wonder he’s upset. Bu that’s not why I called you
out here, Jaime. Dave Hollicker and Casey Ledford have come up with something
important.”
“What?”
“Several of the sweetener packets they removed from the
crime scene appear to have been tampered with. They contain at unknown
substance Dave is taking to the DPS crime lab in Tucson for analysis and
identification. Not only that, Casey found Bobo Jenkins’s fingerprints on some
of the tampered packets that were empty. When I talked to Bobo right after we
found Latisha Wall’s body, Bobo told me he had been to her place the evening
she died to have a drink.”
“In other words, if his prints are on the sweetener
packets why isn’t he dead, too?”
“Exactly,” Joanna said. “I thought you’d want to know about
this as you go forward with the interview”
Jaime nodded. “Thanks,” he said. With that, he turned and
let himself back into the conference room.
Joanna stared at the closed door and thought about what
kind of person would knowingly place a fatal dose of poison in some one else’s
glass, especially when the unsuspecting victim wit someone close—a lover, a
friend. Joanna had thought Bobo Jenkins capable of striking out in anger, but
that was vastly different from committing cold, premeditated murder.
Just thinking about it was enough to leave Joanna feeling
chilled and sick at heart.
CHAPTER NINE
For the next two and a half hours, Joanna waited
impatiently for the Bobo Jenkins interview to come to an end. During that time,
she would have welcomed Kristin’s waddling into her office to pile another load
of correspondence onto her desk. Unfortunately, an hour into the process, her
jungle of paperwork was entirely cleared away. All e-mails had been answered,
all memos duly signed off on. Desperate to keep herself occupied, Joanna
rummaged through a stack of previously unread issues of Law Enforcement
Digest and the Arizona Sheriffs’ Association Newsletter, where she
actually scanned several of the articles. By twelve-thirty she had been reduced
to the rarely performed task of cleaning her desk.
When someone knocked on the doorjamb a while later, Joanna
looked up eagerly, hoping for Jaime Carbajal or Frank Montoya. Instead, Lupe
Alvarez, one of the public lobby receptionists, stood in the doorway.
“Yes?” Joanna said.
“There’s someone to see you, Sheriff Brady. Do you want me
to bring him back?”
“Who is it?”
“He gave his name and showed me a badge. He’s Special Investigator
Beaumont, J.P. Beaumont, from Seattle, Washington.” So, she thought, Mr.
J.P. Bird Dog has arrived.
No doubt the big-city cop who was here to screw up her
investigation and look down his nose at her department would expect to find a
small-town sheriff in a squalid office with her shirtsleeve rolled up and her
feet planted on her desk. She was glad to be in uniform that day and grateful
that her office was, for a change, in pristine order.
“Thanks, Lupe,” she said. “I’ll come out and get him
myself.’
Lupe disappeared. Joanna checked her makeup and hair in the
mirror before venturing into the lobby. As she stepped through the secured
door, she glanced around the room. The only visibly visitor was a tall,
broad-shouldered man with a gray crew cut and a loose-fitting sport coat. He
stood at the far end of the room examining a glass case that contained a
display of black-and-white photos of the current sheriff of Cochise County
along with all her male predecessors.
The photos of the men were all formal portraits. Most of
them had posed in Western garb that included visible weapons. Their faces were
set in serious, unapproachable expressions. Joanna’s picture stood in stark
contrast to the rest. The informal snapshot, taken by her father, showed her as
a grinning Brownie Scout pulling a Radio Flyer wagon loaded front-to-back with
stacked boxes of Girl Scout cookies.
As Joanna’s uninvited visitor lingered in front of the display
case, Joanna wished for the first time that she had knuckled under to one of
Eleanor Lathrop Winfield’s never-ending hits of motherly advice. Eleanor had
tried to convince Joanna that she should do what the previous sheriffs had done
and use her official, professionally done campaign photo in the display. She
realized now that it wouldn’t be easy for her to be taken seriously by this
unwelcome emissary from the Washington State Attorney General’s Office if his
first impression of Sheriff Joanna Brady was as a care-free eight-year-old out
selling Girl Scout cookies.
“Mr. Beaumont?” she asked, holding out her hand and straining
to sound more cordial than she felt. She wasn’t especially interested in
making him feel welcome, since he was anything but. As he turned toward her,
she realized he stood well over six feet. Naturally, at five feet four, she
felt dwarfed beside him. She held herself erect, hoping to appear taller.
“I’m Sheriff Brady,” she said.
As he returned her handshake, Joanna realized J.P.
Beaumont wasn’t a particularly handsome man. Despite herself, though, she was
drawn to the pattern of smile lines that crinkled around his eyes. At least
smiling isn’t an entirely foreign activity, she thought.
“Glad to meet you,” he said, pumping her small hand with
his much larger one. “I’m Beaumont—Special Investigator J.P. Beaumont. Most
people call me Beau.”
“What can I do for you?” she asked.
“I believe we need to talk,” he replied.
“In that case,” she said, “we’d better go to my office.”
I had been waiting for Sheriff Brady for several minutes, but
she surprised me when she walked up behind me without making a sound. Her
bright red hair was cut short. The emerald green eyes that studied me could
have sparked lire. She wore dark olive-green uniform, which looked
exceptionally good on her since she filled it out in all the right places. If
it hadn’t been for the forbidding frown on her face, she might have been
pretty. Instead she looked as if she had just bitten into an apple and
discoverer half a worm. In other words, she wasn’t glad to see me.
I followed Sheriff Brady from the public lobby into her
private office, realizing as I did so that I hadn’t expected her to be so short
in every sense of the word. She waited until she had closed the door behind us
before she really turned on me. “What exactly de you want?” she demanded.
I know how, as a detective, I used to hate having outside
interference in one of my cases, so I didn’t expect her to welcome me with open
arms. But I hadn’t foreseen outright hostility, either.
“We have a case to solve,” I began.
“We?” she returned sarcastically. “I have a case to solve.
My department has a case to solve. There’s no we about it.”
“The Washington State Attorney General’s Office has a vested
interest in your solving this case,” I said.
“So I’ve heard,” she responded, crossing her arms and
drilling into me with those amazingly green eyes.
In that moment Sheriff Joanna Brady reminded me eerily o
Miss Edith Heard, a young, fearsomely outspoken geometry teacher from my days
at Seattle’s Ballard High School. At the time I was in her class, Miss Heard
must have been only a few years older than her students, but she brooked no
nonsense. After suffering through two semesters of geometry that I barely
managed to pass, I had fled in terror from any further ventures into higher
math.
Like Joanna Brady, Miss Heard had been short, red-haired,
and green-eyed, and she had scared the hell out of me. But a lot of time had
passed since then. I wasn’t nearly as terrified by Joanna Brady as I was
annoyed. And it wasn’t lost on me that she hadn’t offered me a chair.
“Look,” I said impatiently, “today happens to be my
birthday. There are any number of ways I’d rather be spending it than being
hassled by you. So how about if we cut the crap and get our jobs done so I can
go back home.”
She never even blinked. “Your going home sounds good,” she
said. “Now, if the Washington State Attorney General is so vitally interested
in this case—”
“The AG’s name is Connors,” I interjected. “Mr. Ross Connors.
He’s my boss.”
“If Mr. Connors is so vitally interested in this case, why
can’t I get any information about Latisha Wall out of his office?”
I set my briefcase down on a nearby conference table and
flicked open the lid. “You can,” I said, extracting Latisha Wall’s file from my
briefcase. “That’s why I’m here.” I handed it over to her. She took it. Then,
without opening the file or even glancing at it, she walked over to her desk
and put it down.
“I’m delighted to know that Mr. Connors’s office has the
financial wherewithal to have files hand-delivered by personally authorized
couriers. It seems to me it would have made more sense for him to fax it. All
we needed were straight answers to a few questions. Instead, we got
stonewalled, Mr. Beaumont. And now we have you,” she added. “When you get
around to it, you might let Mr. Connors know that the Cochise County Sheriff’s
Department doesn’t require the assistance of one of his personal emissaries.”
The lady was getting under my skin. I pulled out a
business card and handed it to her.
“I’m not an emissary,” I said. ‘As you can see, I’m an
investigator a special investigator working for the attorney general. Latisha
Wall was in our witness protection program. Mr. Connors needs to know whether
or not her death is related to her being in that program. If not, fine. What
happened is on your turf. It’s your problem and not ours. But if it is related,”
I added, “if Latisha Wall died because someone wanted to keep her from giving
potentially damaging testimony in a court of law, then it’s our problem as much
as it is yours. Whoever killed her should never have been able to find her in
the first place.”
“In other words, your witness protection program has a leak
and you’re the plumber sent here to plug it,” Sheriff Brady returned.
“Exactly,” I said.
She recrossed her arms. “Tell me about Latisha Wall,” she
said.
I had read through the file several times by then. I didn’t
need to consult it as I related the story. “After graduating from high school,
Latisha Wall did two stints in the Marines where she worked primarily as an MP.
Once she got out of the service, she went to work for an outfit from Chicago
called UPPI. Ever heard of them?”
“I know all of that,” Sheriff Brady said.
“You do?”
She smiled. “We only look like we live in the sticks, Mr.
Beaumont. Have you ever heard of the Internet? My chief deputy Frank Montoya,
was able to glean that much information from newspaper articles. What else?”
Score one for Joanna Brady.
“Mind if I sit down?”
“Please do,” she said. She motioned me into a chair and
then sat behind a huge desk that was so impossibly clean it was frightening. I
worry about people with oppressively clean desks.
“So in the nineties,” I continued, “United Private
Prisons, Incorporated, saw coming what they thought was a long-term
prisoner-incarceration boom. They set out to corner themselves a piece of that
market. The state of Washington went for them in a big way, and when it came to
picking up one of those lucrative state contracts, it didn’t hurt to have an
African-American female on board to help deal with all those pesky EEOC
considerations.
“UPPI won the bid to build and run a boot-camp juvenile
facility near the town of Aberdeen in southwestern Washington. Once the
Aberdeen Juvenile Detention Center opened, UPPI appointed Latisha Wall to be
its first director. On the surface of it, I’m sure putting an African-American
female who was also an ex-Marine MP in charge of a place like that must have
seemed like a good choice all around.”
“What went wrong?” Joanna asked.
“According to subsequent investigations, UPPI had cut some
serious corners in order to get costs low enough to win the contract. Some of
those cut corners were in basic building materials. Only the cheapest and
shoddiest materials were used during the construction phase. Subsequent
investigations show that basics like insulation and wiring didn’t even meet
code, but they somehow had passed all required building inspections.
Consequently, the deficiencies came to light only after the building was
occupied, at which point they were passed off as the fledgling director’s
fault.”
“We had a few jail-construction problems of our own,”
Sheriff Brady said thoughtfully. “So they turned her into a fall guy.”
“Or girl,” I suggested.
Sheriff Brady didn’t return my smile. “Whatever,” she
said.
“UPPI’s corner-cutting at the facility didn’t stop with
construction of the physical plant. UPPI budgets expected to provide for food,
medical care, bedding, and personnel were too low to sustain a livable
environment. Even with a boot-camp style existence, the available monies and
feeding the inmates nutrition loaf three meals a day, seven days a week, wouldn’t
have stretched far enough.
“The state had situated the facility in an economically
depressed part of southwestern Washington in hopes of creating living-wage jobs
for people after the lumber industry pretty much disappeared. Only UPPI didn’t
budget for living wages, either. Nor did they make any effort to turn new
employees into trained correction officers. As a result, people who ended up
working there weren’t necessarily the best or the brightest. That caused real
problems, too, in terms of lack of discipline, inappropriate sexual interactions,
gang activity, drug and alcohol abuse—all the things a boot-camp environment is
supposed to prevent.
“Aberdeen Juvenile Detention Center opened in the spring
three years ago and was operating at full capacity within three months. By the
time fall came along and the rains started, the walls began weeping moisture
and forming mold. Latisha Wall immediately reported the facility’s shortcomings
to her supervisor. When inmates complained that the food they were given was
full of bugs and wasn’t fit to eat, she passed that information along as well.
Nothing happened. No corrective measures were taken, and no additional
expenditures were allowed. Finally, Latisha was told that dealing with the
ongoing difficulties was her problem. At that point, she went to her supervisor’s
supervisor, with the same result.
“The final straw came when Ms. Wall discovered that her
assistant—her second in command—had been routinely covering up prisoner
complaints of misconduct on the part of a number of guards. The inmates were
troubled kids who had been put in her charge in hopes of straightening them
out. Rather than getting help, they were being abused both sexually and
physically. When Latisha tried to fire the guards involved, along with the guy responsible
for the cover-up, UPPI cut her off at the knees. They told her she wasn’t
allowed to fire anybody. That’s when she finally figured out that not only had
she been suckered but so had the state of Washington.”
“Latisha Wall was underqualified for the position she held
and was being very well paid to do it. UPPI expected her to take her money, go
with the flow, and keep her mouth shut. Instead, Ms. Wall went to Ross Connors’s
office and told her story there. She resigned. The facility was shut down
completely a few months later.”
“She was a whistle-blower, then.”
“Right,” I answered. “What wasn’t in the papers—what Ross
Connors did his best to keep out of the media—was that once the scandal went
public, Latisha Wall was subjected to numerous death threats. None of them could
be traced back to UPPI Headquarters in Chicago, but that’s where the AG
theorized they came from. Latisha Wall thought so, too.”
“So your boss put her in a witness protection program and shipped
her here, to Bisbee, under the name of Rochelle Baxter.”
“Right,” I told her.
“And you think someone from UPPI came here to kill her?”
“That’s certainly a possibility,” I said.
“Why’s that?” she asked.
“Because there’s a civil trial coming up in Olympia in a
little more than a month. Based on lack of performance at the Aberdeen
facility, Washington State has terminated all contracts with UPPI, and they’re
suing for breach of contract. Latisha Wall was scheduled to be the state’s star
witness. Without her, UPPI may walk away with a bundle.”
Finished with my recitation, I paused. “So what’s the
deal, then?” I asked.
“What do you mean?”
“What have your guys found out?” I asked. “We need to
know—the attorney general’s office needs to know what’s going on.”
“My ‘guys,’ as you call them—my investigations unit,” she
corrected stiffly, “which isn’t all male, by the way—has been working the
problem. As far as your need to know or your boss’s need to know, Mr. Beaumont,
that’s up to me.”
I could see that I had stepped in it big time without
really knowing how. Sheriff Brady had been chilly when she had first escorted
me into her office. Now she was downright frosty.
“Please, Sheriff Brady, I don’t want you to think I’m
taking anything away from your people—”
“Oh?” she said, cutting me off. “Is that so? You could
have fooled me. I thought that’s exactly what this is about. What you’ve
told me just now is what your office could and should have told me two days
ago. Right this moment, Special Investigator Beaumont, I can’t think of a
single compelling reason to tell you any of what my people have learned so far.
Not until that information is in some kind of reasonable order. Give me a day
or two to think it over.”
She smiled coolly, then added, “Actually, two days sounds
just about right. Let me know where you’ll be staying. I’ll give you a call,
say Monday or Tuesday, and let you know what’s happening. After all, that’s how
long it took you to get to us. Now, if you don’t mind, I’m somewhat busy.”
In other words, “Here’s your hat, what’s your hurry?” And
I did mind. I minded very much, but there didn’t seem to he much point arguing
about it. I heard people’s voices out in the hall. The way her green eyes
darted toward the door, I could tell Joanna Brady was far more interested in
what was going on outside than she was in talking to me. There are times when
pushing works and times when it doesn’t. I had a feeling that Sheriff Joanna
Brady would react badly to pushing. I took the hint, stood up, and headed for
the door.
“One more thing,” I said. If I wasn’t going to be doing
anything for Ross Connors for the next two days besides sitting on my butt, I
could just as well be doing something for me.
“What’s that?” Joanna Brady asked.
“How long have you lived in Bisbee?”
“All my life. Why?”
“Did you ever know of someone named Anne Rowland?”
It took a moment for Anne Corley’s maiden name to register
in Joanna Brady’s mental database, but it did eventually—with visible
consequences. “I didn’t know her personally,” the sheriff said guardedly. “I
know of her. Why?”
“She was my wife,” I said. “I was hoping maybe I could
meet someone who knew her when she was growing up and maybe talk with them for
a little while.”
Joanna Brady blinked. “I can’t think of anyone right off,”
she said.
“All right.”
“Where will you be staying?” she asked.
“At a place called the Copper Queen Hotel.”
“Good,” Sheriff Brady said distractedly. “If anything
comes up, I’ll call you.”
I reached out, took her hand, and shook it. Her handshake
was firm, but that was to be expected. Not only was she the sheriff, she was
also a politician. I opened the door and let myself out, leaving Joanna Brady
standing in what looked for all the world like stunned silence.
Once the door closed behind him, Joanna went back to her
desk and sat down. Of course she remembered Anne Rowland Corley. Who wouldn’t?
People in Bisbee thought about Anne Rowland Corley’s guilt or innocence the way
lots of people think about O.J. Simpson’s: She was a killer who had gotten away
with it.
It had happened only a year or so before Joanna’s father
had been elected sheriff. The saga of the Rowland family’s series of tragedies
was one that wouldn’t go away. Anita and Roger Row land had two daughters,
Patricia and Anne. The older girl, Patty, was developmentally disabled and died
after an accidental fall in their Warren neighborhood home. Shortly after that,
Roger Rowland too was dead of a single gunshot wound to the head. Because both
deaths had occurred inside the city limits, the cases had been investigated by
the Bisbee Police Department. Joanna remembered her father fussing about that.
“Roger Rowland and Chuck Brannigan have been asshole bud
dies for years,” Joanna remembered D.H. Lathrop complaining. “If Chief of
Police Brannigan were actually smart enough to think his way out of a paper
bag, he would have recused himself and let someone else take charge of the
investigation.”
But Brannigan hadn’t removed himself from either case, and
neither had the then Cochise County Coroner, Bill Woodruff, who was another of
Roger Rowland’s cronies. Brannigan and Woodruff were two good old boys working
together. Their hasty but official determinations of “accident” and “suicide”
had stuck despite the fact that, shortly after Roger Rowland’s funeral, his
younger daughter, Anne, had claimed she had fired the shot that had killed her
father. That claim had never been investigated. Instead, Anne had been packed
off to a private mental institution somewhere in Phoenix.
One of the city detectives from that time, a man named Dan
Goodson, had left Bisbee PD shortly thereafter to work for Joanna’s father,
Sheriff D.H. Lathrop. He had told his new boss that he had quit Bisbee PD
partly out of disgust at the way the Rowland cases had been handled.
“Anne Rowland isn’t crazy,” Joanna’s father had reported
an outraged Danny Goodson as saying. “Not a bit of it. She’s a killer, and with
Chuck Brannigan’s and Bill Woodruff’s help, she’s getting off scot-free.”
Although rumors about Anne Rowland’s guilt continued to
swirl around town, the coroner’s rulings had remained unassailable.
Joanna vaguely remembered hearing or reading that Anne
Rowland Corley had died a violent death somewhere out of state several years
earlier, but she couldn’t recall any details. Now it turned out that this same
woman had once been married to Detective J.P. Beaumont?
Lost in thought, Joanna jumped reflexively when the phone
on her desk rang.
“Mom?” a tearful Jenny sobbed into the phone.
“Yes. What’s the matter?”
“It’s Sadie,” Jenny wailed. “Something awful’s wrong with
her. I just got home from Cassie’s. Her mom dropped me off. Sadie’s lying on
the back porch. She won’t get up.”
“Where’s Butch?” Joanna asked.
“At the other house. He left a note that he’d be back by
one, but he isn’t. I need someone here now. She’s real sick, Mom. Is she gonna
die?”
Joanna closed her eyes and remembered how, the last few
days, Sadie hadn’t been quite herself. How she hadn’t wanted to run home to the
ranch. How she hadn’t wanted to eat the Cheerios or the green chili casserole.
No doubt something was wrong with Sadie. Joanna hadn’t paid enough attention to
notice.
“I don’t know, Jen,” she told her daughter. “But you hold
tight I’ll be there as soon as I can.”
With everything else forgotten, Joanna grabbed her purse
and dashed out the back door into the parking lot.
CHAPTER TEN
Joanna pulled into the yard at High Lonesome Ranch and
stopped the Civvie in a cloud of dirt and gravel. As she raced home, she had
expected to find Jenny in hysterics, but that wasn’t the case. She found her
daughter and both dogs grouped on the back porch. Tigger leaped off the porch
and came to greet her while neither Jenny nor Sadie moved. Jenny sat with the
dog’s head cradled in her lap, gently stroking Sadie’s long, floppy ears. The
dog’s sides heaved as she struggled to breathe.
Stepping close to her daughter, Joanna saw there was ample
evidence that Jenny had been crying, but she wasn’t crying now.
“She doesn’t like it when I cry,” Jenny explained. “It
upsets her, so I stopped. And I already called Dr. Ross’s office. She says we should
bring Sadie right over.”
Sadie was a big dog—seventy-five pounds at least, Joanna
estimated. “How will we get her to the car?” she asked.
“We have to, that’s all,” Jenny replied.
“Wait here while I go get the keys to the other car,”
Joanna said. “Sadie will he more comfortable in the Eagle than in the Civvie.”
Jenny nodded. “Hurry,” she said.
Joanna dashed into the house, grabbed the keys to the
Eagle, and hurried back outside. Sadie and Jenny hadn’t moved.
“I tried giving her some water, but she wouldn’t drink it,”
Jenny said. “That’s a bad sign, isn’t it.”
It was a statement, not a question. Joanna blinked hack
her own tears. “Probably,” she agreed.
Years of hefting hay bales had served both mother and
daughter in good stead. As soon as they lifted the dog, though, it was clear
Sadie no longer weighed what she once had.
When did she lose so much weight?
Joanna wondered. Why didn’t I see what was happening?
Once Sadie was loaded into the car, Tigger wanted to go
along. “No!” Jenny told him. “You stay.”
With his tail between his legs, the dejected mutt
retreated into the yard and curled up, moping, on the porch. Joanna got in and
turned the key in the ignition. The Eagle was driven so seldom nowadays that
she worried if the battery was charged, but it started right away. Once the
engine was running, Joanna expected Jenny to clamber into her seat. Instead,
blond hair flying behind her, she darted back into the house. She emerged
moments later carrying Sadie’s blanket.
“Good thinking,” Joanna said. For the remainder of the
drive into town, neither mother nor daughter said a word.
Veterinarian Millicent Ross’s office was only a mile or so
past the Cochise County Justice Center. Joanna was there less than ten minutes
after leaving home. Millicent was a broad, more-than-middle-aged woman who had
returned to college to become a vet only after her three children had
graduated.
She came out to the parking area to meet them, bringing
along a gurney that had been designed with animals in mind. Sadie, who had
never liked going to the vet, started to struggle as Dr. Ross began to transfer
her to the gurney. Jenny held Sadie’s head and spoke soothingly until Dr. Ross
was able to strap the dog down. As they rolled the gurney toward the building,
Joanna’s cell phone rang. She stayed outside to take the call and was grateful
to hear Butch’s voice.
“Where are you?” he asked. “I came home and found your
Civvie here, but no Eagle, no Joey, no Jenny, and no note. What’s going on?”
“It’s Sadie,” Joanna said brokenly. “She’s sick. We’ve
brought her to Dr. Ross’s office. I’m afraid she’s not going to ...” Her voice
faltered. She couldn’t continue.
“I’ll be right there,” Butch said.
Hanging up, Joanna turned off her phone. For once her family’s
needs would take precedence over the people of Cochise County. If something
important came up, somebody else would have to handle it.
Inside the office waiting room, Jenny sat disconsolately
on a chair, clutching Sadie’s blanket to her chest. “Dr. Ross took her into the
back for X rays,” Jenny explained matter-of-factly. “To see if she can find out
what’s wrong.”
Joanna sat down on the chair next to Jenny’s. “That was
Butch on the phone,” she said. “He’s back at the house. He’ll be here as soon
as he can.”
Jenny nodded. “Okay.”
Since Jenny wasn’t crying, Joanna didn’t either. Instead,
she thought about how many years the long-legged bluetick had been part of
their lives. Jenny was barely a year old when Andy brought the gangly,
ill-mannered six-month-old puppy home from work. Another deputy had bought it
for his son but had subsequently discovered that both his wife and son were
allergic to dogs. Or perhaps just to that particularly energetic and
rambunctious dog. He had been on his way to drop Sadie off at the pound when
Andy had intervened.
Initially, Joanna had voiced the same kinds of objections
to Sadie that she would attempt to use years later when Jenny wanted Kiddo.
They didn’t need a dog. Dogs were too much trouble, too much work. But Andy had
insisted, and Jenny had been ecstatic. “Mama” or “Dada” may be the first words
most children speak, but for Jennifer Ann Brady, it was “’Adie.” It would he
another two years before she’d be able to get her little tongue around that
initial S.
And if Jenny was crazy about the dog, the feeling was
mutual. The two were inseparable. Joanna could recall few family snap shots of
Jenny that didn’t have Sadie lurking, lop-eared and panting, in one corner or
another. Only in more recent ones had Sadie been joined by Tigger’s clownish
presence.
Fifteen minutes after his phone call, Butch drove up and
parked beside the Eagle. When he entered the waiting room, a buzzer in the back
of the office announced the newcomer’s arrival. The sound of the buzzer
reminded Joanna of the jangling bell over the door of the Castle Rock Gallery.
Determinedly, she shut the thought away. Now was not the time.
Butch took the chair on Jenny’s far side. “What’s
happening, Tigger?” he asked.
Jenny looked at him for a long minute before she answered.
Then her long-lashed blue eyes filled with tears and she threw herself into
Butch’s arms. “It’s Sadie,” she croaked. “She’s sick. I think she’s going to
die.”
Butch held her and stroked her hair. “There, there,” he
said, while his eyes sought Joanna’s over the weeping child’s head.
Joanna bit her lip, nodded in confirmation, and wondered
why Jenny had gone to Butch for comfort rather than to her own mother. The
obvious snub hurt Joanna in a way that surprised her.
“I’m sorry, Jen,” Butch continued, holding her tightly. “I’m
so very sorry.”
Jenny’s desperate sobs subsided finally, but they were all
still sitting that same way—with Jenny in Butch’s arms and Joanna off to one
side—a few minutes later, when Dr. Ross emerged from the backroom. “Joanna, if
you’d like to come with me and ...”
Seeing the grim expression on the vet’s face, Joanna knew
it was bad news. By taking Joanna aside, Millicent Ross hoped to spare Jenny
further heartache. But in this instance, Joanna decided, Jennifer Ann Brady had
earned the right to be treated as a grown-up.
“Sadie is Jenny’s dog,” Joanna said, shaking her head. “Whatever’s
going on—whatever has to be decided—we’ll all hear about it together.”
Millicent sighed and nodded. “Very well,” she said. She
eased her stocky frame into another of the waiting-room chairs. “I’ve looked at
the X rays. Sadie has a large tumor on one of her lungs and a smaller one on
the other. The larger one is affecting her heart.”
“Tumors?” Jenny asked. “How can that be? She hasn’t been
sick or anything.”
“It’s like that with animals sometimes,” Millicent Ross
explained gently. “Tumors come on swiftly. A few months ago, when Sadie was
here because of that poisoning incident, there was no sign of a tumor. Now
there are two. Her lungs are filling up with fluid. That’s why she’s having
such difficulty breathing.”
Jenny’s lower lip trembled. “What can you do?”
Dr. Ross shrugged her shoulders. “Nothing, really,” she
said. “Sadie’s in pain and she’s suffering. The longer we wait, the harder it
will be for her.”
“You mean we should put her to sleep?”
While Joanna found herself unable to speak, Jenny had
asked the questions.
“Yes,” the vet replied.
“When? Now?”
“There’s no sense in prolonging it, Jenny. I can do it
this afternoon—as soon as you leave.”
“No,” Jenny said at once. “We’re not leaving. I want to be
with her.”
“That’s really not necessary,” Dr. Ross said. “She’s still
strapped to the gurney....”
“Sadie doesn’t like being at the vet’s, and she hates
those metal tables,” Jenny said determinedly. “They scare her. I have her
blanket right here. Let’s take her off the gurney and put her on that. I’ll sit
on the floor and hold her while you do it. That way she won’t be afraid.”
Millicent Ross nodded. “Good thinking,” she said. “If you’ll
come with me, then ...”
Still clutching the blanket, Jenny stood up. She glanced briefly
at Joanna, then she stiffened her shoulders. “Okay,” she said. “I’m ready.”
As the door to the back office closed, Joanna burst
into tears She fell into Butch’s arms. As he moved to comfort her, his eyes
too, were brimming.
“Jenny knew it was coming,” Joanna managed in a strangled
whisper. “That’s why she brought along the blanket.”
“She’s one smart kid,” Butch said admiringly. “I wonder
where she gets it.”
I made my way back uptown and located the Copper Queen
Hotel. The closest parking place was two perpendicular blocks away. There was
no bellman, but my room was ready. I checked in and then took myself downstairs
to the restaurant. My scanty airline breakfast had long since disappeared. I
was more than happy to mow my way through one of the Copper Queen’s generously
greasy hamburgers. I hadn’t had one that good since Seattle’s old Doghouse
Restaurant closed up shop years ago.
Joanna Brady may not have won any Miss Congeniality
awards, but something she had said stuck with me. She had called me a plumber,
and I supposed that was true. The sheriff of Cochise County wasn’t pissed at me
so much as she was at Ross Connors for taking so long in getting back to her
department with the needed information. I admit I was puzzled by that, too.
None of the information in Latisha Wall’s file had seemed
so volatile or critical or even confidential that it couldn’t have been faxed
back and forth to Cochise County without a problem. Due to that AG-enforced lag
time, Joanna Brady was going to make me cool my heels for a while. I had told
her I would spend my downtime looking for people from Anne Corley’s past. And
maybe I would, but there was something almost physically addictive about once
again sinking my teeth back into an active homicide investigation. Being
benched and put on the sidelines by the likes of Sheriff Brady wasn’t how J.P.
Beaumont played the game.
And so, using a paper napkin from the other, unused, place
setting at my table, I began making notes. There were really only a few
possibilities. One: Rochelle Baxter/ Latisha Wall had died of accidental or
natural causes. In either of those instances, no one was responsible, and both
Joanna Brady’s department and mine were off the hook. Two: The victim had
indeed been murdered Why? A: She had died as a result of something that had
happens( while living in Bisbee. If that was true, the solution was entirely
Joanna Brady’s responsibility. Whatever her “investigators” might or might not
have discovered had nothing to do with me.
Or B: The woman Bisbee knew as Rochelle Baxter had beet
murdered because she was really Latisha Wall. The trail then would likely lead
back to her having blown the whistle on UPPI. It that case what had happened to
her definitely was my business Ross Connors had blundered along and
dragged his feet for two days. Homicide cops call those first forty-eight hours
after an incident the magic time. It’s then, right after the death and before
the trail goes cold, that most homicides are solved. In Latisha Wall’s case,
those hours had been allowed to elapse with no help from the state of
Washington.
So who all had information concerning Latisha Wall’s
whereabouts,
I asked myself.
As far as I know, I’m not on a nodding-acquaintance basis
with anyone currently or formerly in a witness protection program. Even so, I
understand that programs like that can operate success fully only so long as
the fewest possible people know details of the arrangements. Cumbersome
bureaucracies leave behind paper of computer trails with far too many
opportunities for unauthorized personnel to access the same information. Computers
are susceptible to hacking. Stray pieces of paper can end up damned neat
anywhere.
I remembered that among the supposedly confidential pieces
of paper Harry 1. Ball had given me before I left town was one with a list of
telephone numbers scribbled on it. I had been directed to guard that scrap of
paper with my life. It contained all the confidential phone numbers that
belonged to Washington State Attorney General Ross Alan Connors.
“Home, office, and mobile phones,” Harry had said,
pointing at each of them with the tip of his pen. “Whatever you do, don’t lose
them. You’re to report directly to him by phone on this. No intermediaries. No
left messages. No e-mail. Understand?”
“Got it,” I had said, reveling in the first case I could
ever remember that came complete with an actual prohibition against writing
reports. “This is my kind of case.”
“We’ll see,” Harry I. Ball had muttered in return.
“Ask the AG who knew,” I jotted on the napkin.
There was a stir in the room. Two guys at the table next
to me and a woman one table away peered at the dining room entrance with avid
interest. As the door swung shut, a hint of flowery perfume wafted through the
room. The hostess, carrying a single menu, strode past my table leading a tall,
heavyset African-American woman wearing low heels and a gray silk suit that rustled
as she walked. The hostess seated the newcomer at a table for two next to a
lace-curtained window
“Can I get you something to drink?” the hostess asked.
“Coffee,” the woman said in a thick Southern drawl. “Coffee
and water, please.”
“It takes one to know one,” my mother used to say, and on
this occasion that trite old saying was true. I was a stranger in Bisbee,
Arizona, and so was the black woman seated three tables away. A single photo of
Latisha Wall had been in the file I’d handed over to Sheriff Brady. It had been
taken on the occasion of Latisha’s graduation from USMC boot camp. Except for
an extra hundred pounds or so, the woman seated across from me could have been
Latisha’s older twin.
A waitress brought coffee and water. While the woman
studied the menu, I studied her. Long black hair was drawn back into a cascade
of neatly braided cornrows that flowed past her shoulders. Her teeth were
large, straight, and very white. The fingers that held the menu were topped by
long scarlet-tipped nails. Everything except the nails spoke of solemn dignity
and unspeakable sorrow.
“What can I bring you, ma’am?” the waitress asked. “What’s
the soup today?”
“Tortilla/green chili,” the waitress offered cheerily. “It’s
really very good.”
The woman look unconvinced. “I’ll have the tuna salad,”
she said.
The waitress took my plate away and dropped off the bill.
It was a subtle hint for me to move along. “Could I please have another cup of
coffee?” I asked.
For some time I sat and wondered about my next move
Clearly this was a relative of Latisha Wall’s—an aunt or a much older sister
perhaps—come to bring the dead woman’s body home for burial. Most likely the
woman had been summoned by local coroner or medical examiner’s office in order
to make a positive identification. After all, if none of the people in Bisbee
knew that Rochelle Baxter was really Latisha Wall, they could hardly he counted
upon to make a positive ID.
The woman’s tuna salad arrived at the same time my coffee
refill did. She picked at her food with faint interest, as though slit was
going through the motions of eating because she knew shi should rather than
because she was hungry. By the time she put down her fork and pushed away her
still-laden plate, I had made up my mind.
I stood up and walked over to her table. “Excuse me,” I
said. “I couldn’t help noticing. You look so much like Rochelle that you must
be related. Please accept my condolences.”
She nodded. Her eyelashes were thick and almost as long as
her fingernails. “Thank you,” she said. “You’re very kind. And, yes. Her real
name was Latisha, you know. She was my sister, my younger sister.” She held out
her hand. “My name is Cornelia Lester. And you are?”
I wondered if, to maintain the subterfuge, I should ask
about the Rochelle Baxter alias, but decided against it. At that point, the
less said, the better.
“Beaumont,” I told her, returning her solid handshake. “J.P.
Beaumont.”
“Have a seat.” She motioned me into the table’s other
chair. “I hate eating alone,” she said, as if to explain her uneaten salad.
After a pause she added, “Did you know her?”
I sat down and shook my head. “Not really,” I lied. “But I
know about her. Bisbee’s a very small town.”
“Yes,” Cornelia agreed. “Small towns are like that. Did
you know she was an artist?”
“No.”
“Tizzy was always sketching away when she was a kid. That’s
what we called her back home, Tizzy. Other kids would be out playing ball or
swimming, or just hanging out, but Tizzy always had a pencil in one hand and a
piece of paper in the other. Even back then we all knew she had a God-given
talent, although our parents weren’t much in favor of art for art’s sake. They
wanted us to have jobs that would actually pay the rent. It’s bad enough that she’s
gone, but to die like that, the night before her lust show...” Cornelia Lester
shook her head and lapsed into silence.
“Show?” I asked.
“Yes. A one-woman exhibition of her paintings at a place
called Castle Rock Gallery. The opening party was to be held Thursday night,
but Latisha died on Wednesday. I’d really love to see the paintings, but I
haven’t been able to. The gallery isn’t open I checked on my way through town.”
I glanced at my watch. “It’s after one,” I suggested
helpfully “Maybe they’re open now”
Once again Cornelia Lester shook her head. The beads on he
cornrows knocked together with a sound that reminded me of baby’s rattle. “No,”
she said. “I don’t think so. I talked to a man who owns the antique store next
door. He said this is the second day in a row the gallery has been closed. He’s
heard rumors that something bad may have happened to the owner. Dee Canfield,
think her name is. She’s been missing for two days now, ever since she posted
the notice canceling the show and locked the place up on Thursday afternoon.”
“That’s odd,” I said.
“Yes. I thought so, too,” Cornelia Lester agreed. “Since this
Canfield woman and Latisha were evidently friends, I intend to ask Sheriff
Brady about this the first chance I can.”
“You haven’t spoken with Sheriff Brady then?” I asked.
“No. I tried calling a few minutes ago and was told the
sheriff is currently unavailable. I left a message, but she hasn’t called back.
That’s all right. There’s plenty of time. I’ll be here until Tuesday a least.
That’s the very soonest the medical examiner may be able to release the body.”
This was all very interesting. It would have been nice if
Joanna Brady had bothered to mention that another woman was missing, especially
since she was someone closely connected to Latisha Wall, making it more than
likely that the two incidents were related. Since Sheriff Brady hadn’t said a
word, I decided it was time to follow up on my own leads.
“If you’ll excuse me,” I said, standing up, “I really must
go. It was rude of me to barge in on you this way.”
“Not at all,” Cornelia Lester said. “I enjoyed the
company. I was glad to have a chance to talk.”
“Same here,” I said.
I charged lunch to my room and then hurried out to the
desk, where I borrowed a local telephone book. Castle Rock Gallery wasn’t
listed in the dog-eared copy the clerk handed me, so I asked him instead.
“Oh, that,” he said. “No wonder. The phone book came out
last spring. Castle Rock Gallery is brand-new—too new to be listed, but it’s
not hard to find. Go straight out here, cross the street, cut through the park,
and then turn right on Main Street. The gallery is several blocks up on the
right. If you find yourself walking past a big chunk of gray limestone two or
three stories tall, that’s Castle Rock. It means you’ve missed the gallery and
gone too far. Come back down and try again.”
The uncomplicated directions made it sound fairly close,
so I left the Sportage parked where it was and set out on foot. Getting there
took me just ten minutes, but it was real walking—all of it uphill. I
remembered seeing a sign that said Bisbee’s elevation was over five thousand
feet. By the time I arrived at Castle Rock Gallery, I felt every damned one of
them.
I was out of breath and sweating up a storm by the time I
reached the place. Cornelia Lester had been right. Castle Rock Gallery was
locked up tight even though the posted hours said the gallery was open from ten
to six on Saturdays. A hand-lettered sign taped to the inside surface of a
window next to the door said the grand opening of Rochelle Baxter’s one-woman
show had been canceled until further notice.
I looked around. Cornelia Lester had mentioned speaking to
the man who ran an antique shop next door. Because the gallery meandered down
the street and filled three adjacent storefront buildings, next door was
actually three doors away in a place called Treasure Trove Antiques.
I went there and let myself into a musty, dusty place
stacked high with mountains of junk some people had thrown out of their lives.
No doubt other people would be happy to part with far too much of their own
hard-earned cash to bring the cast-off crap into theirs.
A bow-legged guy in cowboy boots and a Western shirt sat
in a faded leather morris chair with a thousand-dollar price tag. He took off a
pair of wire-rimmed glasses as he looked up from the paperback he was reading. “Howdy,”
he said. “Let me know if I can be of any help. Don’t like to smother people.
Not my style.”
I pulled out my badge and held it up for him to look at
it. I hoped the combination of bad lighting and slightly below-par eye-sight
would fix it so he didn’t get that good a look. “Actually,” I said, “I
understand the lady who owns the gallery next door has gone missing.”
“Sure enough,” he said. “Dee’s gone, and so is that jerk
of a boyfriend of hers—Warren something or other. They’ve been gone almost two
full days now. If Dee’s come to any harm, I’m guessing that Bobo Jenkins from
up Brewery Gulch way might’ve had something to do with it. He was in there
raising so much hell the other day—Thursday morning, it was—that the sheriff
had to show up with her siren screaming and lights flashing just to calm things
down. This here’s a quiet little town,” he added. “Don’t get a lot of
that—lights and sirens, I mean.”
I jotted down the name. “You said Bobo Jenkins?”
“Yup. Used to own a place called the Blue Moon Saloon up
in Brewery Gulch. I believe he sold it a couple of months back. I was outside
having a smoke Thursday morning. That’s the thing with all the dad-gummed rules
and regulations we have nowadays. A man can’t smoke in his own shop even when
he ain’t hurtin’ nobody but his own damned self. So I was outside smoking when
of Bobo comes charging up the street like the devil hisself is after him. I do
mean he was movin’. Not jogging. Not trotting along, but outright running.
Looked mad enough to chew nails. Next thing I know, he’s in the gallery and him
and Dee are screaming at each other something fierce.”
“Did you hear what was said?”
“I’m not one of them eavesdroppers. Even if I had heard, I
pro’ly wouldn’t say. But it was loud, I can tell you that much. And they didn’t
stop carrying on until Sheriff Brady showed up and made ‘em. I didn’t vote for
her, you understand, but I got to give her credit. She’s no bigger ‘n a minute,
but the sheriff’s a feisty one, I’ll say that for her. She busted that argument
right up. The next thing I know, Bobo was walkin’ down the street carryin’ this
big old picture, and lookin’ like someone’d just told him to shut up and get
the hell out.”
Sheriff Brady may be feisty,
I thought, but she’s also one closed-mouthed little
bitch!
“Thank you,” I said. “I appreciate the help. Your name is?”
“Harvey,” he replied. “Harvey Dowd. Most people call me
Harve. And you?”
“Beaumont,” I told him. “J.P. As I said, you’ve been a big
help, Mr. Dowd. Now, if you could direct me to the place you told me about. The
one that Mr. Jenkins owns ...”
“The Blue Moon?”
I nodded.
“Sure. That’s no trouble. You walkin’ or drivin’?”
“Walking.”
“Well, sir, you just go right down this here hill. Stick
to the main drag. You’ll go through town and past the park. Turn left at the
end of the park and just walk straight ahead until you get there. It’ll be on
the left. Believe me, you can’t miss it.”
You’d be surprised,
I
thought, but I set out with a spring in my step. Part of the spring was due to
the fact that I’d finally gotten around to having the bone spurs removed from
my heels. And it helped that it was all downhill. But something else—something
perfectly simple—made me feel downright gleeful as I walked hack down through
the narrow two-lane street Harve Dowd had called Bisbee’s “main drag.” Nothing
could possibly have improved my state of mind more than having a lead Sheriff
Joanna Brady hadn’t given me and obviously didn’t want me to have.
Now, before she had a chance to stop me, I was going to see
what I could do with it.
CHAPTER ELEVEN
If you’re a stranger in town and want to dig up a few
pertinent details about someone local, it’s a good bet to go where his friends
might possibly hang out, keep a low profile, and listen like crazy. Which is
why I left Treasure Trove Antiques and headed immediately for the Blue Moon.
As far as I could tell, Brewery Gulch is actually a street
rather than a gulch. It looked a bit bedraggled and worn around the edges. In
fact, it could easily have doubled for an old-time movie set. Brewery Gulch
evidently did once boast a working brewery. In fact, there was a decrepit
building bearing a sign that said BREWERY. But professional beer making in
Bisbee, Arizona, had long since passed into oblivion. A single restaurant
survived inside the brick-fronted hulk, but little else.
Other buildings along Brewery Gulch were similarly
ram-shackle. Many storefronts exhibited faded FOR RENT signs. Others were
entirely boarded up. Not so the Blue Moon Saloon and Lounge. That establishment
was hopping. Thirty or so big, honking Harleys sat angle-parked outside along
the curb. I’m an office of the law I don’t generally feel welcome in places of
business frequented by bikers.
Looking at the building, I saw no reason the Blue Moon,
unlike its nearest neighbors, hadn’t closed down years ago. I stepped inside,
hoping the place wouldn’t fall down around my ears.
My eyes had to go from bright sunlight to hardly any light
at all. When my pupils finally had adjusted, I saw that the interior of the
Blue Moon was in better shape than the exterior. Reasonably new linoleum
covered the floor. Pedestal cocktail tables scattered throughout the room were
jammed with leather-clad, chain-wearing bikers, all of them drinking and
smoking. A few were clearly well on their way to being drunk while others were
just gearing up. Ironically, the atmosphere reminded me of a Twelve-Step biker
bar a friend of mine use( to run up on Eighty-fifth in Seattle’s Greenwood
District. This establishment, however, was definitely not alcohol-free—no even
close.
Beyond the tables, a magnificent wooden bar that dated from
the eighteen hundreds ran the length of the long, narrow room. The bar, like the
tables, appeared to be fully occupied except for a single seat three stools
from the end wall, where dreary, painted over windows obscured all trace of
outside light.
Grabbing that one empty stool, I immediately understood
why it had been left unoccupied. My neighbors to the right were two crippled
old geezers who looked like escapees from a low-rent retirement home. Two
walkers were stowed in what I had thought to be available leg space.
Unfortunately, I noticed the walkers the hard way—by banging my kneecap, full
force, into the handle of one of them.
“Sorry about that,” the guy nearest me said. “Let me haul
that thing out of your way.”
“No,” I said, rubbing my bruised knee. “It’s fine where it
is.”
“Hate having to drag that thing around with me everywhere
I go, but it beats being locked up at home.”
“What can I get you?” someone asked.
I turned away from the old man to find myself facing what
had to be the Blue Moon’s greatest asset—a killer blond bartender. She was a
gorgeous young woman whose lush good looks would have turned heads at a Miss
America Pageant.
“O’Doul’s,” I replied.
“Sure thing,” she said. I watched as she walked briskly
away. My obvious admiration didn’t pass unnoticed.
“Look but don’t touch,” my neighbor advised. “Angie’s happily
married, and she don’t take nonsense off nobody.”
I scanned the room for evidence of another bartender,
cocktail waitress, or bouncer who might lend Angie a hand if the band of bikers
started acting up. I saw no one. Filling glasses at the distant tap, Angie
seemed totally unruffled by her roomful of tough customers. Obviously Angie was
more than just a pretty face. And body.
When she returned with my bottle of alcohol-free O’Doul’s,
Angie brought along two brimming glasses of beer. She set those in front of my
neighbors, picked up their two empties, and then turned to me.
“That’ll be three bucks,” she said.
I pulled a ten out of my wallet and handed it over. As she
walked back down the bar to the cash register, my neighbor leaned over to me. “It’s
getting close to the end of the month,” he confided in a beery-breathed
whisper. “Angie’s real good about carrying me an’ Willy till our checks catch
up with us the first o the month, if you know what I mean.”
So Angie wasn’t above running a tab. The practice was most
likely illegal, but it was something the two guys at the end of the bar really
appreciated.
“You from around here?” I asked.
The man’s loud burst of laughter was punctuated by an
equally loud belch. “You hear that, Willy?” he demanded, clapping his buddy on
the shoulder.
“Hear what?” Willy asked.
“This fella wants to know if we’re from around here.”
Willy grinned at that, and they both laughed uproariously.
Since they thought my question utterly hilarious, I took that to mean they were
natives.
Angie returned with my change and laid it on the polished
surface of the bar. “Are these guys bothering you?” she asked, giving my two
bar mates a searing look.
“No,” I said. “Not at all.”
She raised a warning finger. “You and Willy behave
yourselves, Arch,” she said. “You bother any of the other customers and you two
are out of here.”
“Yes, ma’am,” a seriously chastened Archie replied. “We’ll
be good.”
“Wha’d she say?” Willy asked.
“We got to behave,” Archie shouted.
“Right,” Willy agreed, raising his glass. “Absolutely.”
It seemed unlikely that I would glean any useful information
hum this pair of doddering old drunks, so I turned hopefully toward my
neighbors on the other side. No luck there. The person next to me—someone I had
actually thought to be a guy—turned out to be a leather-booted, leather
jacketed babe whose face was almost as well-tanned as the cowhide she wore on
the rest of her body. When I glanced in her direction, the man next to her glowered
back at me in the mirror. Resigned, I returned to Archie.
“Who owns this place?” I asked.
Archie frowned. “Why’d you want to know?”
I shrugged. “Maybe I’m thinking about making some investments
around town,” I offered. “Maybe I’d like to buy it.”
“No way!” Archie glowered. “The Blue Moon’s not for sale.”
“Wha’d he say?” Willy asked. The man must have been
stone-deaf. As far as I could tell, that was his only line.
“If you know it’s not for sale, you must be the owner
then,” I remarked casually.
“Angie and her husband own it,” Archie allowed, nodding
toward the shapely blonde. “Bought it off Bobo Jenkins a couple of months ago,
and it’s a good thing, too. Bobo was tired of running it. Can’t blame him
there. Workin’ too hard’s not good for you. ‘Sides, I hear he’s thinking about
running for mayor. You ask me, he’d do a helluva job. If I ever get a chance,
you can bet I’ll vote for him, too.
“Bobo might’ve just closed up the place and walked away.
Locked the door and throwed away the key. Lucky for us, Angie come along and
saved our bacon. She and that husband of hers offered to buy it off him, and he
sold, just like that. The place runs a little irregular now. You can’t always
count on it being open.”
“Does Angie’s husband work here, too?” I asked.
Archie sipped his beer and shook his head. “Hacker’s an
odd duck. He’s a Brit and a bird-watcher besides. Does something with birds. I’m
not sure what. So when he goes out into the boonies to do whatever it is he
does, Angie sometimes shuts the place down and goes with him. Who can blame
her? They’re newlyweds, after all. Why shouldn’t she? But that’s mostly during
the week. Weekends the place is open regular, like it should be.
“It’s like I told my good friend Willy here. So what if we
can’t always count on the hours? It’s better than having no Blue Moor at all.
Me and Willy’ve been coming here for what, forty years now? I’d hate like hell
to see it shut down and boarded up.”
“What?” Willy asked.
“Never mind,” Archie told him. “Just drink your beer. Thu
man’s deaf as a post, you see,” Archie explained unnecessarily to me. “Too many
years of working with dynamite in the mines. You ever been in a mine?”
“No,” I said. “I never have.” And never wanted to,
either thought.
“They’ve got theirselves a underground tour over across the
way, in case you’re interested,” he suggested. “Takes you right back into the
mountain.”
“Thanks, but no thanks,” I said.
What I really wanted was information about Bobo Jenkins. I
f could manage to prime Archie’s pump, I guessed he’d turn out l( be a
veritable fountain of information, some of which might be useful.
“I hear there’s been some trouble around town the last
lien days,” I suggested innocently.
Archie took a sip of beer and then slammed his glass onto
the bar, splashing beer in every direction. “Boy howdy!” he exclaimed. “If that
ain’t the truth! Poor old Bobo. Me and Willy’ve knowed that man for years and
years, ever since he come to town and bought this joint. In all that time, he
wasn’t never sweet on anybody before that Shelley Baxter woman showed up. They just
seemed to click, know what I mean?
“Not that I’m prejudiced or nothing,” he continued, “but I
like it when whites stay with whites, blacks stay with blacks, and Mexicans
stay with Mexicans. That’s how God Almighty meant for things to work. But there
weren’t hardly no black women in town for Bobo to hook up with, so he was sort
of a lone wolf. Then she turned up and put a smile on his face.”
If Archie wasn’t prejudiced, then Willy wasn’t deaf,
either. I kept my mouth shut and let him talk.
“But now Bobo’s girlfriend, this Shelley, up and died at
her place down in Naco. That’s Naco, Arizona, not Naco, Sonora, you see. So
what do the cops do? This morning they haul poor of Bobo’s ass into the sheriff’s
office for questioning. Like they think maybe he did it. Like maybe he’s
responsible for what happened to her. I was telling Angie a little while ago,
it’s all so much BS. I didn’t use that word, of course, not in front of the
lady. But between you and I, that’s what it is. All bullshit—and knee-deep,
too.
“Bobo Jenkins may be what they call a African-American,
and strong as a mule, but he’s definitely not the violent type. Wouldn’t hurt a
fly. Willy and me, we’ve seen him break up some pretty bad fights in this place
over the years. Bobo’s so big he could scare shit out of you by just lookin’ at
you crooked, but I never saw him hurt nobody—not even when they were raising
hell and really deserved it.”
Once Archie got started talking, there was no turning him
off, but I was no longer paying attention. I was thinking about a
closed-mouthed lady sheriff named Joanna Brady, damn her anyway! All the while
she was playing coy with me, her detectives were questioning a suspect. That’s
all right. The next time I saw her, I planned to ask her straight out what her
investigators had learned in their interview with Bobo Jenkins. And I intended
for “next time” to be soon. Now, if at all possible.
Angie had left my change lying on the bar, and so had I.
Now I left a dollar tip and pushed the remainder over to Archie.
“Take this,” I said. “You and Willy have one on me. It’ll
help tide you over until next month’s checks arrive.”
Archie looked at the money gratefully, as though he’d just
won a lotto jackpot. He gave me a heartfelt grin. “Thanks,” he said. “Thanks a
lot.”
For a change Willy didn’t bother asking what had been said.
He’d seen the money pass along the bar and had figured out on his own what that
meant.
“Thanks, fella,” he mumbled, once again raising a glass
that still had a few modest dregs of beer in it. “You’re a gentleman,” he said.
“A gentleman and a scholar.”
When a dry-eyed Jenny emerged from Dr. Ross’s back office,
she was carrying Sadie’s blanket and collar. “Ready?” she asked.
“Which car do you want to ride in?” Butch asked.
“I’ll go with Mom,” Jenny said.
Butch nodded. “You two go on, then,” he said. “I’ll stay
here to settle up with Dr. Ross.”
Joanna unlocked the Eagle, and they both climbed in. “Dr.
Ross asked if we wanted to bring Sadie home to bury her,” Jenny said. “I told
her no. There’ve been too many funerals. I didn’t want another one. That’s okay
with you, isn’t it?” she asked.
“Jenny, sweetie, whatever you decide,” Joanna said. “It’
entirely up to you.”
“Okay, then,” Jenny said. She settled back in the car seat
ant closed her eyes. “Will you tell the Gs?” she asked.
“Yes,” Joanna said. “I’ll be glad to,” although “glad”
wasn’t at all the right word.
Several times on the drive home, Joanna had to brush unbidden
tears out of her own eyes. Sadie had been a beloved family pet. But it was more
than just losing Sadie. Joanna was losing her daughter as well, losing her
baby. Because Jenny must have known what was coming when she went racing back
into the house to get Sadie’s blanket. Even then, she was thinking about Sadie
first—putting the dog’s comfort and well-being before her own.
No, Jenny wasn’t Joanna’s baby anymore. She was a thoughtful,
caring, wonderful, surprisingly mature person who put others’ needs ahead of
her own. She could probably give me lessons, Joanna thought
bleakly. And grateful as she was for all that—for the kind of human being
Jennifer Ann Brady was becoming, there was a tiny corner of Joanna’s heart that
wanted to turn back the clock so Jenny could once again be the cute, cuddly
little girl she had been before.
Once out of the car at home, Tigger raced around the Eagle
several times, sniffing eagerly. “He’s looking for her, isn’t he?” Jenny said.
Joanna nodded. “Yes. I suppose he is.”
Jenny called the dog to her and knelt down to hug his
neck. “Come on, boy,” she said finally. “Let’s go get Kiddo. We’ll go for a
ride.”
Alone, Joanna went into the house. While Jenny was with
Dr. Ross, she had called in to the department to let Frank and Dispatch both
know what was going on, that she would be out of radio, phone, and pager
contact for the next little while. When she picked up the phone, the broken
beeping of the dial tone announced that there were messages waiting. For a
change she didn’t bother checking them. Instead, she dialed her former in-laws’
number.
“How terrible for Jenny,” Eva Lou Brady said when she
heard the news. “Do you want Jim Bob and me to come out and spend some time
with her? We’d be glad to.”
“No,” Joanna said, “that’s not necessary. She’s handling
it amazingly well. She’s out saddling up Kiddo right now. A long ride will do
both her and Tigger a world of good.”
“Sounds just like her daddy,” Eva Lou offered. “That’s the
way Andy always was, too. Whenever there was a crisis, he’d go off by himself
to think things over and come to terms with whatever it was. Don’t you worry
about Jenny, Joanna.” Eva Lou added. “She’s one tough little cookie. She’ll be
fine.”
Joanna’s next call was to her own mother. “Oh, dear,” Eleanor
Lathrop Winfield said. “Is Jenny all right?”
“She’s fine,” Joanna said.
“That’s the problem with having dogs,” Eleanor went on
with barely a pause. “You just get used to them and before you know it, they
get old and die on you. Of course, Jenny can always get another one. Heaven
knows there are enough unwanted dogs in this world, although why you’d want to
have two, I can’t imagine.”
Joanna Brady closed her eyes and wished her mother could
somehow be different than she was.
“I just heard Butch drive up,” Joanna said. “Have to go.”
“All right,” Eleanor said. “You let Jenny know I’m
thinking about her.”
You may be thinking about her,
Joanna thought grimly, but we’re all better off with
her not knowing what you’re thinking.
Butch came into the house and dropped his keys on the
counter. “I thought we’d bring Sadie home and bury her some where out here on
the ranch, but Dr. Ross said Jenny didn’t want us to. So I let it go. What do
you think?”
“Jenny told me she was tired of funerals.”
“You can hardly blame her for that,” Butch replied. “Where
is she?”
“Out riding,” Joanna told him. “She took Tigger along. I
thought it was probably the best thing for both of them.”
Butch nodded. They were standing in the kitchen with their
arms wrapped around each other when the phone rang.
“Don’t answer,” Butch said. “Let it go to voice mail.”
“I’d better not,” Joanna said, pulling away. “I’ve been
unavailable all afternoon. It could be important.”
She plucked the cordless phone off the counter. “Brady/
Dixon residence,” she said.
“Sheriff Brady?” Dave Hollicker asked. He sounded excited.
“Hi, Dave,” she told him. “How’s it going? Are you back
from Tucson already?”
“No, I’m still here. At the crime lab. But I’ve got
something for you.”
“What?”
“Ever hear of sodium azide?”
“Never. What is it?”
“It’s the propellant they use in cars to make air bags
work. It ignites, and the resulting explosion inflates the bag.”
“So?”
“It’s a white, odorless compound that resembles salt. Or
sweetener. And it dissolves readily in liquids.”
Joanna felt her pulse quicken. “I suppose it’s also
poisonous?” she asked.
“Very,” Dave agreed. “More poisonous than cyanide.”
“And tasteless?”
“I wouldn’t know about that,” Dave answered. “And I don’t
know how you’d find out for sure. Who’d be willing to taste it, and how would
they tell us what they’d found out after they died? But since it evidently
ended up in Rochelle Baxter’s iced tea and since she emptied the glass without
noticing, we pretty much have to assume it’s tasteless.”
“If sodium azide is that deadly, how come she didn’t die
right away?”
“Ingested poisons don’t work until they’re assimilated
into the bloodstream. If you breathe it in, it can kill almost instantly. I’m lucky
I just got woozy when I did. Otherwise, you’d be having another Fallen Officer
funeral in a day or two,” Dave went on.
“Thank God,” Joanna said. “But tell me, where would somebody
get this awful stuff?”
“That’s the really bad news,” Dave Hollicker replied. “The
answer is, almost anywhere. It’s not a controlled substance, so you could buy a
whole barrel of it if you wanted. You could also rip the air bags out of your
car and claim somebody stole them. Or else you could go to your local junkyard.
If a car wrecks and the air bags are deployed, it’s not a problem. Once the air
bag inflates what’s left after the sodium azide oxidizes is totally harmless.
It’s the undeployed air bags with their canisters of unused sodium azide that
are the problem.”
“Don’t junkyards strip the air bags out and sell them?”
Joann: objected. “My understanding is that they can be parted out and reused.,,
“That’s how everybody assumed it would work,” Dave
said. “II actual practice, it’s not that simple. People don’t want to ride around
in a vehicle where their life and the lives of their loved ones depend on the
effectiveness of somebody else’s secondhand air hag. And, if death or injury
occurs in a vehicle fitted with a used air bag, there’s always a potential liability
problem. All of which leaves this country with millions of unrecycled air bags
sitting in junkyards everywhere.”
“The sodium azide is loose, then?” Joanna asked.
“No. It comes in little aluminum canisters about the size
of tuna-fish cans. I’m guessing there are stacks of dozens of those little
hummers sitting on used-parts shelves in junkyards in Cochise County alone.”
“Wait a minute,” Joanna objected. “You’ve told me this is
a deadly poison. Do you mean somebody could just walk in off the street and
pick a can of it off a shelf?”
“You ever been to a junkyard, boss?” Dave Hollicker asked.
“Not recently”
“Well, that’s pretty much how they work. Around here,
junkyards are long on self-service.”
“Can sodium azide be traced?”
“You mean have the manufacturers put markers in it the way
they do with explosives?”
“Exactly”
“I suppose it’s possible, but I’m guessing the automobile
industry would be dead-set against it.”
“Because they don’t want to admit the stuff is a potential
problem?”
“You’ve got it,” Dave agreed.
“Great,” Joanna said. “It’s readily available, totally
untraceable, and deadly”
“And that’s what was in those tampered sweetener packets
that Casey and I brought back from Latisha Wall’s place down in Naco. I’ve got
the DPS crime lab’s printed analysis right here in my hand.”
“Have you told anyone else about this?” Joanna asked.
“Not yet. I’ve been cooling my heels around here all day
waiting for test results. They dissolved some and ran it through an ion
chromatograph. That’s what I have right now—a preliminary) report and a
tentative identification of sodium azide. They’ll do confirmation test using
mass spectrometry. The lab manager told me we won’t have tentative results on
that for another day or so Official results will take another week. The
criminalist I talked to says they can use the same technique on vomit samples
if Doc Winfield sends them along, but that takes up to two weeks longer. I thought
you should be the first to know”
“Thanks for calling,” Joanna said. “I’ll get on the horn
and tell everyone else.”
“Do you want me to come by the office with this when I get
hack to Bisbee, or can it wait until tomorrow?”
Joanna thought about the board of supervisors meeting and
the looming overtime issue. “No, since it’s just a preliminary copy, have the
lab fax one to the department tonight. Nobody will be able to work on it before
tomorrow or Monday anyway. Good work, Dave,” she added. “You and Casey deserve
a lot of credit for being on top of this.”
“Thanks, boss,” he said, “but isn’t that what you pay us
to do?’
Joanna heard the unmistakable pleasure in his voice at
having been given a compliment. “You’re right,” she returned. “‘That’s exactly
why we pay you the big bucks.”
By the time she hung up, Butch had gone over to the fridge
and pulled out a beer. “I can hear it already,” he said. “‘They’ll sucking you
back into work, aren’t they?”
“Not really,” Joanna said. “But now that we know what
killer Rochelle Baxter, I have to tell people. I’ll make some calls. It won’t
take more than a few minutes.”
She went into the living room. Butch, tired of having the
dining room table constantly littered with work-related papers, had redesigned
the living room. Eva Lou Brady’s little fifties-era telephone table had been
replaced by a secondhand cherry secretary, where Joanna’s papers could be
spread out and the hinged desk surface closed up over them when necessary.
Joanna retreated there and picked up the phone. The first
call she made was to Jaime Carbajal.
When Jaime’s wife, Delcia, said, “Hold on, I’ll get him,”
Joanna glanced guiltily at her watch. It was only a few minutes past four. Good,
she thought. At least it’s too early for me to be interrupting dinner.
When Jaime came to the phone, he sounded out of breath. “Pepe
and I were out doing batting practice,” he said. “Frank told me earlier about
Sadie. Is Jenny okay?”
“She’s fine,” Joanna returned. “In fact, she’s handling it
better than I am at this point, but tell me about the interview with Bobo
Jenkins. How did it go?”
“No surprises there,” Jaime said. “Bobo insists he had
nothing to do with what happened to Latisha Wall. He claims the two of them
were in love and that he had no reason to harm her.”
“Did he mention being afraid that she was about to break
up with him?”
“He said something about it, but he claimed things were
fine between them when he left her place on Wednesday night. As far as I’m
concerned, that remains to be seen.”
“Did you let him know we found his prints on the sweetener
packets?”
“No. That’s a holdback. I didn’t want to say anything
about that until I had a chance to talk to both Dave and Casey.”
“Makes sense,” Joanna said.
“Did you ask Bobo about Dee Canfield?”
“Affirmative. He claims the last time he saw her was in the
gallery on Thursday morning. He said you were there at the same time. He says
he has no idea what happened to her afterward, and he has no clue where she and
Warren might have gone.”
“He’s right,” Joanna said. “I was there when he was. Nov
what’s the deal on the search warrant?”
“Not yet,” Jaime said. “I finally found out why the judge
didn’t come home last night. Mrs. Moore ended up in TMC with an emergency
appendectomy. I talked to their house sitter. She says Judge Moore is
supposedly coming back to Bisbee tonight. The soonest I’ll be able to get the
warrant and serve it will be later this evening.”
“That’ll have to do, then,” Joanna said. “If you want someone
along when you serve it, check with Frank.”
“Will do,” Jaime said. “Now, what about Dave Hollicker?”
The detective listened in silence while Joanna told him
what the crime scene investigator had learned. “Does Frank know about any of
this?” Detective Carbajal asked.
“He’s my next call.”
She tried Frank’s home number and got no answer. Next she
called the department.
“He’s in,” Lupe Alvarez told her. “But he’s got someone with
him at the moment. That guy from Washington.”
Beaumont again,
Joanna
thought. Good enough. Let Frank deal with him.
“Have Chief Deputy Montoya call me when he’s done,” Joanna
said. “I’m at home. Anything else I should know about now that I’m available?”
“Yes,” Lupe said. “You’ve had three calls from someone
named Cornelia Lester. She says she’s ...”
Joanna remembered the name from the next-of-kin contact sheet
in Latisha Wall’s file. “I know who she is. Is she here in town?”
“Yes. She’s staying at the Copper Queen, room five-twelve.”
Joanna picked up a pen. “Do you have the number?”
“Yes.”
“You’d better give it to me, then,” Joanna said, once
again dreading the thought of having to speak to yet another grieving relative.
“I’ll call her back while I’m waiting to hear from Frank.”
CHAPTER TWELVE
By four o’clock that afternoon I was back at the Cochise
County Justice Center. “I’m sorry, but Sheriff Brady has had a family
emergency,” the same public lobby receptionist told me. “She’s not available at
this time.” “What about her second-in-command?” I asked.
“Chief Deputy Montoya is on his line at the moment. When
he’s free, I’ll let him know you’re here.”
“And my name is—”
“I know,” she returned. “You’re Special Investigator Beaumont.
I remember you from earlier.”
I wondered about that. Did she remember my name because
she just happened to remember it, or had her boss passed the word that I was
persona non grata? For the next ten minutes, I cooled my heels in the lobby.
The longer I waited, the more I fumed. It wasn’t as though I was in a hurry or
had anywhere else to go. It was the principle of the thing. So far, Sheriff
Brady and her department had been something less than cooperative.
I found myself once again studying the picture montage in
that glass display case. Joanna Brady may have been cute as a button when she
was a little kid, dressed in a Brownie uniform and selling Girl Scout cookies
like mad. Maybe she still was, but cute wasn’t working on me.
Eventually the secured door to the back offices opened and
out walked a late-thirty-something Hispanic guy. He wore the same kind of
uniform the sheriff had been wearing when I last saw her, although his was free
of curves. And his head was shaved absolutely smooth.
“Hello,” he said as he approached my chair. “You must be
Special Investigator Beaumont. I’m Chief Deputy Frank Montoya. What can I do
for you?”
He escorted me back to his office, which was in the same
wing of the building as the sheriff’s private office. I thought maybe I could
pull out the good of boy card and jolly Chief Deputy Montoya out of some
useful information. But Sheriff Brady had her people firmly in line as far as
J.P. Beaumont was concerned. Montoya gave me diddly-squat.
“Look,” he said in answer to my direct question about the
Bobo Jenkins interview. “I can appreciate your wanting to know about that, but
our department is conducting what is becoming a more and more complicated
investigation. Without Sheriff Brady’s express permission, I’m not authorized
to give out any information. Period.”
“It is complicated,” I agreed, “what with the addition of
not one but two missing persons cases.”
Montoya’s eyes narrowed when I said that. He didn’t like
my knowing about the missing art dealer and her boyfriend.
Too had,
I
thought. I found that out on my own, Mr. Chief Deputy Montoya. If you don’t
like it, you’ll just have to lump it.
“If I were Sheriff Brady,” I said aloud, “I think I’d be
glad to have an extra detective show up and lend a hand with all this.”
Frank Montoya’s lips curled into a tight smile. “I don’t
think that’s quite how she views the situation,” he said. “And until I have a
chance to talk to her about it ...”
By then I had pretty well decided that Sheriff Brady’s supposed
family emergency was nothing but a smoke screen to keep me out of her hair.
“When will that be?” I asked. “When will you be able to
talk to her again? And how long is this so-called family emergency scheduled to
last?”
That one pissed him off. “As long as it takes,” he
replied, standing up. “Now, if there’s nothing else, I’m quite busy at to
moment.”
With that he escorted me to the door, down the hall, and back
into the public lobby. As he booted me out I realized that, years ago when I
had the chance, I should have coughed up the six hundred bucks and taken myself
through the Dale Carnegie course.
Joanna dialed the hotel and was relieved when Cornelia Lester
didn’t answer. She left word with the desk clerk and had just put down the
phone when Frank called her back. “Losing a dog tough,” he said. “How’s Jenny
faring?”
Joanna liked the fact that everyone who knew about Sadie
asked about Jenny. “Better than I would have expected,” Joanna] told him. “She
took Kiddo and Tigger and went for a ride. No tell me. What did Mr. Beaumont
want?”
“Anything and everything,” Frank replied.
“I’m not surprised, but what exactly?”
“He asked about the Bobo Jenkins interview”
It was something Joanna hadn’t anticipated. “How did he
know about that?” she demanded.
“Who knows?” Frank replied. “I sure as hell didn’t tell
him. He also asked if we were making any progress in locating Dee Canfield and
her boyfriend.”
“So he knows about the missing persons part of it, too,”
Joanna mused. “Who all has he been talking to?”
“Beats me, boss,” Frank said. “Remember, though, the man’s
an ex-homicide detective. He’s probably been all over town asking questions.
You know how people here love to talk.”
Joanna knew that very well. Bisbee was a small place where
everyone had a finger in everyone else’s pie.
“What did you tell him?” she asked.
“Nothing. Not without your approval.”
“Which I’m not in danger of giving anytime soon,” Joanna
said. “Now let me tell you what Dave Hollicker found out.”
When she finished explaining about sodium azide, Frank
Montoya was aghast. “Geez!” he exclaimed. “That stuff sounds scary!”
“You’ve got that right,” Joanna told him grimly. “It’s
scary as hell.”
“You’re saying this sodium azide crap is lying around all
over the place where any nutcase in the universe can lay hands on it?”
“That’s the deal,” she told him. “And,” she added, “unlike
cyanide or arsenic, there aren’t any limits on who can have it.”
“There should be,” Frank said.
“Amen to that,” Joanna agreed.
There was a pause. “Maybe I should go on the Internet and
check this out,” Frank suggested. “I’ll see what more I can find out about it.”
“Good idea,” Joanna said. “Unfortunately, we have no idea
how much of it the killer still has in his or her possession. I’m guessing
there’s some left over after loading up the sweetener packets in Latisha Wall’s
kitchen.” Then, as an afterthought, she added, “While you’re surfing the Net,
there’s something else I’d like you to check out, Frank. I want you to do some
research on Anne Rowland Corley.”
“Wait a minute,” Frank said. “Isn’t she the young girl from
Bisbee who, years ago, supposedly killed her father and then skated?
At the time, the two Rowland deaths had been high profile
cases in southern Arizona, and they still were. Joanna wasn’t surprised to
learn that, years later, their outcomes continued to be common knowledge in
local law enforcement circles.
“She’s the one,” Joanna replied.
Frank frowned. “I seem to recall she died several years
ago.”
Joanna nodded. “I vaguely remember that, too,” she said. “But
the details escape me. That’s why I want you to check it out.”
“This Rowland thing is ancient history,” Frank objected. “Why
the sudden interest?”
“Because Special Investigator Beaumont told me he used to
be married to Anne Rowland Corley,” Joanna told him. “I believe he said she was
his second wife, although he’s probably on number three or four by now”
“Beaumont was married to her?” Frank asked. “That’s interesting.”
“Isn’t it, though,” Joanna agreed. “Very interesting.”
Earlier at the hotel I had tried using my laptop to check
my e-mail. Years ago, when Seattle PD dragged me kicking and screaming into the
twentieth century and forced me to start using a computer, I hated the damned
things. Now that I’m used to them, I can see they have some advantages. I’ve
adjusted. On this day, however, not being able to make my connection work in
the twenty-first century drove me nuts.
Frustrated, I had turned to my cell phone. I wanted to
talk to Ross Connors and ask him who all had been in the know when it came to
witness protection living arrangements for Latisha Wall. To my astonishment, I
found that my cell phone didn’t work, either—not
in Bisbee. The call wouldn’t go through. When I went downstairs and asked the
desk clerk about the problem, he explained that maybe my cell phone’s poor
signal strength was due to the hotel’s location deep inside the steep walls of
what he called Tombstone Canyon.
Now, having been thrown out of Frank Montoya’s office, I
sat in my Sportage in the Justice Center parking lot and considered my options.
Reflexively checking the readout on my cell phone, I was delighted to see that
I had full signal strength. Again I dialed the Washington State Attorney
General’s home number. The phone rang once and was immediately answered by a
woman speaking in a torrent of rapid-fire Spanish. After a couple of futile
attempts to get her to switch to English, I realized I was talking to a
recording.
Thinking I must have dialed the wrong number, I dug the
list Dr. Ross Connors’s phone numbers out of my wallet and checked to be sure I
hadn’t transposed some of the digits. No such luck. The number I had dialed was
correct. I had no idea what was going on with my cell phone now.
Cochise County, Arizona, has to be the black hole of
the telecommunications universe, I told myself.
I drove back into town and wandered around until I finally
located a pay phone at a Chevron station by the selfsame traffic circle that
had given me such fits when I had been trying to react the sheriff’s office the
first time. With the proliferation of cell phones, it seemed like years since I’d
been reduced to using an outdoor phone booth. It felt a little weird to be
standing there in the open—practically in public—and dialing Ross Connors’
super-secret unlisted phone numbers. Since it was Saturday, I tried the cell
phone first. No answer. Then I tried the office and reached a machine. Finally
I dialed his home number, where a woman answered after the third or fourth
ring. To my eternal delight, she spoke English. “Is Mr. Connors there?” I
asked.
“No. He’s out,” she said. “This is his wife, Francine. Who’s
calling, please? Can I take a message?”
I recalled Harry I. Ball’s stern admonition. “No messages.”
“Please tell him Beau called,” I said. That seemed
innocuous enough. “Tell him I’ll call back later. Any idea when he’ll be home?”
“It’s sunny today,” she said. “He’s playing golf”
That figured. The rain had cleared up in Seattle and Ross
Connors was out having himself a nice Saturday afternoon while J.P.
Beaumont—the birthday boy—was stuck spending a very long day in Bisbee,
Arizona, being kicked around by a pushy small town sheriff and her entire
department.
In the old days, that kind of feeling-sorry-for-myself
miser would have sent me straight to the nearest bar, but the Blue Moon wasn’t
calling me. Instead, I decided to stay right where I was and exercise the
prepaid phone card the Washington State travel agent had thoughtfully placed in
my travel packet. It certainly wasn’t my fault that none of my nearest and
dearest could reach me by telephone to wish me many happy returns.
First I talked to
Kelly, my daughter. She and her husband live
in Ashland, a
small town located in southern Oregon. When Kelly dropped out of school and ran away from home mere weeks
before her high school graduation, I wouldn't have bet a plugged
nickel that she'd ever go back and
finish, especially since she had taken up with a young actor/musician and was pregnant besides.
But it turned out marriage and motherhood were good for her.
She picked up her GED right after the
baby was born. Kelly's now two years into a bachelor of fine arts program at Southern Oregon University. Not only that, my
son-in-law, Jeremy, seems to be a
pretty good sort,
too—for an actor, that is. At least he's gainfully employed.
Kelly wished me a
happy birthday and told me about her mid-term exams before turning me over to three-year-old
Kayla, who spent the next several minutes babbling incoherently to her
"Goompa."
Next I called my
newly graduated and only recently gainfully employed son, Scott. He's a neophyte electronics engineer
who lives and works in the Bay Area. He and his girlfriend, Cherisse,
are up to their eyeballs in plans for
a wedding that is scheduled to take place sometime next spring. As we chatted on the phone, he
gave me some of the pertinent wedding
details, but I forgot them
as soon as he
told them to me. As Father of the Groom, I know all
I have to do is show up, pay for the rehearsal dinner, and
keep my
mouth shut. It's a far better deal
than the one you get as Father of the Bride.
Finally, I called
Naomi Pepper. If I thought she'd be glad to hear from me, I should have had—as
my mother would have said—another think coming. She was distant, to say the
least.
"What's going on?" I asked.
“I did what you
said,” she told me.
“What’s that?”
“I suggested to Mother that maybe we should look into an
assisted-living sort of arrangement for her. I told her about the one you
mentioned, the place up on Queen Anne that takes dogs.”
“And?”
“She hung up on me. She even left the phone off the hook
so I couldn’t call her back. I was so worried, I finally got in the car and
drove over to check on her, just to make sure she was okay. When I got there,
she had a whole line of pill bottles set out on the kitchen counter. She told
me that if that was how I felt about it—if I didn’t care for her any more than
that—there was no reason for her to go on living. If I hadn’t been there, Beau,
I can’t imagine what she might have done.”
I was fairly certain that the pill bottles had been
strictly for show. She wouldn’t have done a damned thing, I wanted to
say, but Naomi was crying now, and I knew the poor woman had been totally
outfoxed and outmaneuvered. As I said before, Naomi’s a nice person; her mother
isn’t. There was no need for me to add to Naomi’s misery by telling her so.
“What are you going to do?” I asked.
“The only thing I can do,” Naomi replied shakily. “She’s
coming to stay with me. Mother says she’ll call and start getting estimates
from moving companies first thing Monday morning. I’ll have to put some of my
stuff in storage to make room for hers. You’re not mad at me about this, are
you, Beau?”
Heartsick,
I
thought. And disappointed, but not mad.
“No,”
I said. “I’m not
mad at all. You have to do what you have to do.”
“Thank you,” she said gratefully. “Thank you so much for
saying that.” She seemed to gather herself together. “And now,” she added, “tell
me all about your birthday. How’s it going?”
“About as well as can be expected,” I said.
Jenny came back from her ride and headed directly for her
room. “Are you going to want dinner?” Butch asked as she passed through the
kitchen.
“I’m not hungry.”
“There’s plenty of food in the fridge if you want
something later.”
“Okay,” she said.
“What about you?” he asked Joanna.
“I’m not hungry, either,” she said.
“In that case, the cook is taking the night off. We’ll all
make do with leftovers.”
Joanna stretched out on the couch and covered her eyes
with one hand. She was about to doze off when Cornelia Lester called. It was
painful to have to tell the woman that although Joanna’s investigators were
making progress on the case, they still had no idea who had murdered Latisha
Wall.
“You say she was poisoned?” Cornelia asked in what sounded
like disbelief.
“That’s what we believe,” Joanna said.
Cornelia absorbed that information. “What about her paintings?”
she asked. “The ones in the gallery. Will I be able to see those anytime soon?”
“I’ll try to make arrangements for you to be allowed
inside the gallery,” Joanna said. “But I’m not sure when that will be.”
“In other words,” Cornelia said, “you still haven’t
located the gallery owner.”
Cornelia Lester was a stranger who wasn’t a former
detective yet she, too, seemed to be as privy to what was happening inside the
Cochise County Sheriff’s Department as J.P. Beaumont was. What would it be
like to work in a big city? Sheriff Brady wondered. To be able to do
this job in a place where everyone didn’t mind everyone else’s business?
“No,” Joanna had admitted with a sigh. “We still
haven’t located Dee Canfield.”
“What if you don’t?”
“If we don’t find her?”
“Or what if you do and she’s dead, too?” Cornelia persisted4
“What happens to the paintings then?”
“As far as I know, they belonged to your sister,” Joanna
said. “If something unfortunate has happened to Dee Canfield—and I’m certainly
not saying it has—then the paintings would, either by will or by law, go to
Latisha’s heirs. I’m assuming her heirs would be her family members, but let me
remind you, Ms. Lester, that we won’t be able to release them to anyone so long
as they’re part of an ongoing investigation.”
“Of course not,” Cornelia said. “But I’d still like to see
them.”
“I’ll see what I can do.”
“Thank you.”
Joanna put the phone down and had actually fallen asleep
before it rang again. This time Butch answered.
“It’s for you,” he said, scowling at the receiver as he
handed it over. “Tica Romero.”
“Hello?”
“We just got another 911 call from Naco,” the dispatcher
said. “Some kids were playing around in one of the old cavalry barracks down
there. They’ve reportedly found a body—a woman’s body. Chief Deputy Montoya and
Detective Carbajal are already on their way. Deputy Montoya wanted me to let
you know as well.”
“Thanks, Tica,” Joanna said, sitting up and shoving her
aching feet back into her shoes. “I’ll be right there.”
Joanna went into the bedroom and slipped on her soft body
armor as well as her weapons. Once she was dressed she stopped by Jenny’s room.
The door was ajar. When she peeked in, she saw Jenny and Tigger curled up
together on the bottom bunk, both of them sound asleep.
Leaving them be, Joanna returned to the kitchen where
Butch was at work on his house file.
“Duty calls,” she said when she bent over to collect a
good-bye kiss.”
“Don’t say I didn’t tell you so,” Butch said, but Joanna
was relieved to see that he was smiling.
“I won’t,” she said.
I had hung up after talking with Naomi and was wondering
what to do next. It sounded like the Naomi Pepper door in my life was about to
be slammed shut in my face. It came as no surprise that I immediately went back
to thinking about Anne Corley.
I recognized I’d gone slinking off to Bisbee, Arizona,
without mentioning it to my friend Ralph Ames. If I had been willing to ask him
questions about Anne Rowland Corley’s history, I’m sure he could have given me
answers, chapter and verse. As her attorney, he had known everything about
her. Well, almost everything.
The problem with asking Ralph about Anne is that he knew
her too well. Not only that, he had cared for her almost as much as I had.
Ralph and I are friends, good friends, so whatever he might tell me would
automatically go through those two distinctly separate filtering processes. I
had no doubt that Ralph would tell me in the truth up to a point but I
suspected he might leave out a detail or two, if only to spare my feelings.
I was wavering between calling him and not, when I heard a
siren. I looked up as a patrol car came racing up to the traffic circle from
Highway 80. I’m always conscious of cop cars. It’s something I notice wherever
I go. While in town, I had spotted several city of Bisbee patrol cars. They
were white with a blue shield on the door. The fast-moving Crown Victoria
making its way around the traffic circle sported a gold star on the door. That
meant it belonged to the Cochise County Sheriff’s Department.
I watched it go and wondered about it, but then I heard a second
siren coming from the direction of Old Bisbee. This one was a cumbersome Ford
Econoline van, but the same star was emblazoned on the outside. Something was
up, something serious. The sheriff’s department was being summoned en masse.
Should I follow or not? I
wondered.
Then, barely seconds later, a third vehicle came along—this
one a second Crown Victoria. It followed the same path as the first one. As it
slowed to negotiate the curve of the circle, I caught a glimpse of bright red
hair behind the wheel. This Crown Vic was being driven by Sheriff Brady
herself. Whatever had happened was serious enough to summon her away from her
family emergency. That did it. Moments later I was in the Sportage and trying
to catch up.
Of course, there was never any question that the underpowered
Sportage would catch up. The best I could hope for was to keep the Crown
Vic in sight. It rounded the traffic circle and took off in what I judged to be
a southwesterly direction. As I turned off the traffic circle myself, I thought
at first that I’d lost her. Then, after coming through two subdivisions, past a
mysterious no-visible-reason stoplight and through what looked like a genuine
slum, I caught sight of her again.
From what I could tell, Bisbee is made up of little
separate knots of tumbledown buildings strung together by strips of failing
blacktop. In between are big chunks of undeveloped desert. By the time Sheriff
Brady made it to the next little burb, I had closed some of the distance
between us. Signaling for a left-hand turn, she paused at yet another traffic
light. That slight delay gave me time enough to draw even nearer.
I, of course, had to stop at the light, too, and wait for
what seemed an interminable length of time. Eventually, though, when the light
changed, I could still see Joanna Brady’s car, speeding away on a straight
downhill stretch. We seemed to be headed toward a solitary mountain that rose
up in front of us some distance away.
Going downhill, the Sportage did a little better. After a
few more little pieces of town, we were in desert again. What I wouldn’t have
given to be driving my 928 about then. Barring that, it would have helped to
have a police radio with me. At least I would have had some idea what was
happening.
The next time the Crown Vic made a turn it was onto a
smaller road that bordered a golf course. I guess I was surprised to see a golf
course sitting there like a little emerald-green oasis in the middle of an
otherwise unremittingly brown desert. There was a marked golf-cart crossing at
the entrance. Naturally I had to stop and wait for not one but two golf carts
to dawdle their way into the small but jam-packed RV park that faced the
course. In the process I really did lose sight of Joanna’s Crown Vic.
Cursing under my breath, I drove to the far end of the
course and looked around. Still I saw nothing. Then I stopped the car, got out,
and listened.
The place was quiet. At first all I heard was a still
breeze blowing from the west. But then, carried on by the wind, I heard the
faint but familiar chatter from a nearby police radio. Even if the radio wasn’t
Sheriff Brady’s, she wouldn’t be far from the one I was hearing.
I got back into the Sportage and drove. I roamed through
several blocks of gravel-topped streets where a series of very old wooden and
red-dirt buildings seemed intent on melting hack into the desert. I found what
I was looking for when I came to where patrol car with flashing lights was
parked astride a red-dirt trail. The officer signaled for me to stop. I pulled
up next to a big bony dog who lay beside the road, unconcernedly observing the
action. His shaggy black coat was tinged red by a layer of dust. The officer,
who was now engaged in putting out a string of flares, booted the dog out of
the way. Shaking off a cloud of dust, the dog sauntered off.
With the dog gone, the scowling deputy turned his ill
tempered gaze on me. “Sorry, buddy,” he said. “This is a crime scene. No
unauthorized personnel allowed beyond this point.”
“My name’s Beaumont,” I said, passing him my badge. “Special
Investigator Beaumont. It’s okay,” I added. “Sheriff Brady knows I’m here.”
He squinted at the badge and compared my face to the
picture on my ID. “All right, then,” he said. “Pull over to one side so your
vehicle’s not blocking emergency access.”
Poor guy,
I
thought, feeling almost guilty as I followed his instructions. She’ll have
his butt for letting me through.
I decided my best course of action was simply to act as
though I belonged. I left the car with the keys in it. Mimicking the dog’s
unconcerned attitude, I sauntered past the deputy who, by then was busy turning
someone else away. I walked through several blocks of what looked like old-time
military barracks. And I do mean old. The place came complete with a long,
dilapidated building that had clearly been a stable. It took a few minutes for
me to realize that I hadn’t wandered into a moldering Western movie set. This
was truly the genuine article—an old U.S. Cavalry station.
By then I could see Sheriff Brady. She stood in a huddle
with Frank Montoya and a plainclothes guy I hadn’t seen before.
She caught sight of me while I was still fifty feet away.
Breaking out of the huddle, she marched toward me, furious and practically
breathing fire.
“What have we got?” I asked casually, thinking that my
well-placed “we” might mollify her just a little.
It didn’t. “What the hell are you doing here?” she
demanded.
I expect women to yell when they’re upset. That’s what I’m
used to, anyway—ranting and raving, if not outright screaming. That wasn’t
Joanna Brady’s style. She barely whispered her question, but the effect was
the same.
“Look,” I said reasonably, “I’m trying to do my job. Your
deputy back there told me there’s been another homicide. I thought maybe it
might have something to do with those two missing—”
“Get out!” she ordered.
“But Sheriff Brady, I thought we were supposed to be
working together on—”
“I said, ‘Get out!’ and I meant it.”
“I just—”
“You just nothing! Go!”
More officers were showing up by then, and I could see she
wasn’t going to change her mind. So I left. I put my tail between my legs and
beat it back to the Sportage. A woman wearing golf course duds was chatting
with the unfortunate deputy. No one could have overheard what Sheriff Brady was
saying too me, but her hand gestures had spoken volumes. By then the deputy had
figured out that he had made a potentially career-stopping mistake in letting
me through. He shot me a disparaging look as I passed but I ignored it. What
did he expect me to do? Apologize?
I had folded myself back into the Sportage and was
wondering what to do next when somebody tapped on my window. When rolled it
down, the lady in the golf clothes, who wore her blond hair in a wild frizz of
curls, gave me a bright smile.
“Yes?” I said.
She reached in through the opened window and handed my a
card. “Marliss Shackleford,” the card said. “Columnist. The Bisbee Bee.”
“Glad to make your acquaintance,” she said, batting her
eyes.
Under normal circumstances, I wouldn’t be caught dead
talking to a reporter. But I was currently at war with Sheriff Joanna Brady.
That meant all bets were off.
I held out my hand. “Special Investigator J.P. Beaumont,”
said. “Glad to make your acquaintance.”
CHAPTER THIRTEEN
When I invited Marliss Shackleford to come up to the
Copper Queen Hotel so we could talk, she jumped at the chance. “If you don’t
mind, though,” she said, “I’d like to go home and change first.”
“Sure,” I said. “I’ll see you there.”
As I walked into the lobby, the desk clerk caught my eye
and waved to me before I could step into the elevator. “There you are,” he
said. “A call for you. I was about to take a message. If you want, there’s a
house phone over there.”
He pointed to an old-fashioned black phone hidden away in
the corner, right next to a darkened hotel-lobby jewelry stand that was
evidently closed for the evening.
“Is that you, Beau?” Attorney General Ross Connors asked. “Francine
told me you called. How’s it going?”
“Let’s just say Sheriff Brady didn’t exactly welcome me
with open arms.”
“I didn’t expect she would. Are her people making any
progress?”
“They brought a suspect in for an interview today. He was
accompanied by his attorney. As far as I know, however, no arrests have been
made.”
“Who’s the suspect?” Connors demanded impatiently.
I glanced around the lobby to see if anyone was listening.
No one seemed to be. Still, talking on a house phone in a hotel lobby, I didn’t
want to say too much. “Boyfriend,” I said. “Could be a lovers’ spat of some
kind.”
Ross Connors breathed a sigh of relief. “Let’s hope,” he
said. His heartfelt reaction jangled a nerve that had been niggling at me ever
since Harry I. Ball sent me off on this wild-goose chase. “Would Latisha Wall’s
presence really have made that big a difference?” I asked. “In the upcoming
trial, I mean. Surely you have depositions and so forth from her that can be
placed in evidence even if she’s not there to testify in person.”
“Believe me,” Ross said. “It makes a huge difference.”
In other words, I’d have to take his word for it.
“Listen,” he went on, “if the boyfriend angle pans out—and
I’m sure you’ll know that within a day or two—then you can put yourself on a
plane and come on home.”
“If
it pans out,” I
returned. “There’s no guarantee that it will. In the meantime, though, while we’re
still looking at all the angles, I have a question for you.”
“What?”
“Who knew about the arrangements?”
“What arrangements?”
What the hell did he think I meant—arrangements for his
next day’s tee time? “For Latisha Wall,”
I said. “I know enough about witness protection programs to realize they cost
money, lots of it. I also know you don’t jar that kind of money loose from the
Washington State budget without having to jump through a bunch of hoops.”
“Dale Ahearn,” Ross answered. And O.H. Todd. O.H. is the
actual case manager. He was in charge of making all financial and living
arrangements. He’s also the one who put together her supporting documents.”
“His telephone number is the one that’s listed for
Lawrence Baxter, the guy who’s named as next of kin in Rochelle Baxter’s DMV
file.”
“Right,” Ross agreed.
“What about Dale Ahearn? Who’s he, and what does he do?”
“He’s my chief of staff. Like I said, O.H. made the
arrangements, but Dale signed off on them and passed them along to me for
final approval.”
I didn’t know O.H. Todd and Dale Ahearn from holes in the
ground, but Ross Connors did. “You think these two guys are trustworthy?” I
asked.
“I certainly thought so,” Connors replied. And that’s why
this thing has me so spooked. I’ve worked with O.H. and Dale for years. Until
all this came up, I would have trusted either one of them with my life. Now I’m
not so sure. That’s why it’s so important for me to know exactly what
happened. It’s also why I’m counting on your discretion.”
So that’s what this is all about,
I told myself. I’m not down here on the state’s nickel
to fend off UPPI’s upcoming breach-of-contract dispute with the state of
Washington. I’m here because Ross Connors is having a crisis of confidence with
some of his minions.
My enthusiasm for having signed up with Ross Connors and
his outfit took a sudden nosedive. I had thought the purpose of the Special
Homicide Investigation Team was to investigate murders. Now it sounded as
though someone in the attorney general’s office might actually be causing
homicides here and there rather than simply solving them. That being the case,
could a cover up be far behind?
“I’ve just come from another crime scene,” I said into the
phone. “I’m pretty sure it’s another homicide. There’s a possibility that it
could be related to what happened to Latisha Wall.”
“Could be?” Ross repeated. “You mean you don’t know for
sure? That’s why I have you on the scene, Beaumont. It’s also why we paid to
fly you down there. We need to know for sure what’s going on.”
As Attorney General Ross slipped into the old blame game
routine, I bristled. “I’m not exactly working under optimal conditions,” I
growled.
“Why not?”
“Because Sheriff Brady ordered me to leave the scene the
minute I showed up.”
“Why would she do that?” Connors asked. “What is she, some
kind of prima donna?”
You’re the problem,
I
wanted to say. And I did, in so many words. “Sheriff Brady is ripped because it
took so long for us to get her any information.”
“I was trying to get a handle on the situation,” he said.
Handle, my ass!
I
thought. What you really mean is spin.
That was about the time Marliss Shackleford waltzed into
the lobby. “Sorry to have cut you off,” I told the attorney genera “Someone’s
here to see me. I’ve gotta go.”
“How many times do I have to tell you boys to stay away
from those houses?” an outraged Velma Verdugo railed. “ ‘The places are falling
down,’ I say. ‘They’re dangerous. The ceilings could cave in on you. A floor
could collapse. You never know what you’ll find. You’re bound to end up getting
in trouble.’ That’s what I tell them, but do they listen? Not on your life!”
Unfortunately, Joanna knew exactly how this exasperated
mother felt. It hadn’t been that many months ago when Jenny, while breaking a
similar prohibition and doing something she shouldn’t have, had stumbled on the
body of a murder victim. This time the boys in question—two brothers ages eight
and nine—had found the body of a woman Joanna presumed to be the missing Deidre
Canfield.
As their mother shrieked at them and shook her finger in
their faces, the two boys shrank away from her. Cowering just out of reach,
they looked so thoroughly humiliated that Joanna felt sorry for them, just as
she did for Velma. Joanna suspected that the woman’s shrill tirade had far more
to do with her being frightened for her sons—over what might have happened to
them—than it did with genuine anger.
“If you’d allow us to speak to them for a few minutes,
Mrs. Verdugo,” Joanna said soothingly. “It shouldn’t take long.”
“It better not,” Velma returned. “Their daddy will be off
work soon. Believe me, when Gabe gets here, he’ll do more than talk.”
Faced with the old wait-till-your-father-gets-home threat,
the boys exchanged wary glances but they didn’t speak. The look that passed
between them wasn’t lost on Joanna.
“I hope he won’t be too severe,” Joanna said. “It’s really
fortunate for my investigators that Marcus and Eddie found the body when they
did.”
Chief Deputy Montoya ambled over to where Joanna stood
talking to the Verdugos. Taking in the situation, he winked at the boys and
then began speaking to their mother in Spanish. Joanna had taken years of both
high school and college Spanish, but the classes had left her something less
than fluent. Nevertheless she was able to follow enough of what Frank was
saying to realize he was simply expanding on much of what Joanna had said
moments earlier and praising the two boys for reporting their find rather than
concealing it.
Frank’s words seemed to have a calming effect on the
agitated woman. Velma listened in silence. When he stopped speaking, she turned
back to her sons. Squeezing her eyes tightly shut and with tears streaming down
her face, she pounced on the two boys and then hugged them to her in a
desperate embrace.
Jaime Carbajal appeared just then with his crime scene
camera still in his hand. “Sorry for the interruption, Sheriff Brady. Could you
please come with me?”
Excusing herself, Joanna followed Detective Carbajal. She
had visited this deserted, crumbling cavalry post with her father years
earlier. D.H. Lathrop, an amateur historian, had explained to her how Pancho
Villa had attacked Columbus, New Mexico, in 1916. Camp Harry J. Jones in Naco,
Arizona, named after a murdered Army guard, had been part of a network of
military posts main twining border security during the Mexican Revolution. With
her father, Joanna had explored the adobe-walled stables and the fallen-down
barracks. Now Jaime Carbajal led her toward what had once been the officers’
quarters. The house—a small, graffiti marred wreck—was missing all its windows
and doors.
“You’d better come inside and take a look,” the detective
said. And you’re going to need these.” Once again he handed her a mask,
evidence-preserving Tyvek booties, and his much-used vial of Vicks.
“Dee Canfield?” Joanna asked. She paused on the small
front porch long enough to apply the menthol and don the mask and booties.
Meanwhile Jaime nodded grimly in answer to her question.
“Any sign of Warren Gibson?” the sheriff added.
“Not yet,” Jaime reported. “But we haven’t searched the
whole place yet. There could be another body hidden in one of the other
buildings. We just haven’t found it yet.”
Joanna nodded. “Has Frank called for extra deputies?”
“He has,” Jaime said. “Dispatch tells me two of them are
on their way”
Joanna nodded. “Good. We’ll give one of the deputies to
you for the crime scene. The other we’ll send with Casey Ledford when she goes
through Dee’s house and the gallery, assuming you did manage to pick up those
search warrants,” she added.
Jaime nodded. “Dave’s on his way to pick them up.”
Long before Joanna stepped through the open doorway into
the gloomy, dusty interior, and even through the barrier of menthol, her
nostrils detected the unmistakably rank odor of human decomposition. A woman’s
fully clad body lay on the sagging wooden floor of what had once been a
kitchen. Joanna immediately recognized the distinctive hues of Dee Canfield’s
tie-dyed smock. After maneuvering far enough around the body to have a complete
view of the victim’s face, Joanna saw that the dead woman’s fleshy features
were drawn up in a horrific grimace.
“Any signs of violence?”
Jaime shook his head. “No apparent bleeding or bruising as
far as I can see.”
Joanna looked at him closely. “Are you thinking the same
thing I am, that maybe we’re dealing with another poisoning?”
The detective nodded. “The thought did cross my mind.”
“Damn,” Joanna said.
She made her way outside.
Velma Verdugo was now seated in the front passenger seat
Frank’s Civvie while her two sons leaned against the front fender few feet
away. The chief deputy crouched before them. Holding clipboard, he was asking
questions and making notes.
Frank glanced over his shoulder as Joanna approached. “The
boys may have seen Sheriff Brady a while ago,” he said, “but I doubt you were
introduced. This is Eddie,” Frank explained to Joanna, indicating the taller of
the two. “That one is Marcus.”
Joanna held out her hand, and the boys took turns shaking
it.
“Here’s what we have so far,” Frank continued. “Eddie and
Marcus told me that they discovered the body earlier in the day, probably
between three and four this afternoon. Because their parents have declared this
whole place off-limits, they didn’t want to let on about their discovery for
fear of getting in trouble. They talked it over, though, and finally decided to
tell anyway. Mrs. Verdugo found out about it around forty-five minutes ago.
That when she called 911.”
Joanna turned to the boys herself. “Did either of you touch
anything while you were inside?” she asked.
“No, ma’am,” Eddie replied at once. “We were both too
scared. Besides,” he added, “Marcus was about to puke because it smelled so bad
and he’s such a sissy. Ee got out of there and ran
“The woman whose body you found has been missing since
Thursday,” Joanna told them. “It’s likely she’s been here since then. Did
either of you see any unusual activity between then and now—any unusual
vehicles? Any people who looked out of place and who maybe had no business
being here?”
“Nada,” Eddie Verdugo answered.
“Me, either,” Marcus chirped.
Joanna turned to Velma. “What about you, Mrs. Verdugo?”
she asked. “You must live nearby, don’t you?”
Velma nodded and pointed toward a mobile home parked on a
lot a block or so away. “That’s where we live.”
“Did you notice any unusual activity?”
“No.”
Just then, a man dressed in a Border Patrol uniform passed
through the checkpoint and strode toward them.
“Daddy,” Marcus cried. Darting away from Frank’s car, the
boy broke into a run and raced to meet the new arrival. The man caught Marcus
in midstep, lifted him off the ground, swung him around in a circle, and then
hugged him close. It was only as they came nearer that Joanna recognized Gabe
Verdugo, a Border Patrol officer she had encountered on previous occasions when
her officers and those from the Border Patrol had been involved in joint
operations.
“What’s going on?” Gabe Verdugo demanded. “Is everyone all
right?”
While Frank explained what had happened, little Marcus
clung like a burr to his father’s neck. Joanna guessed that if Velma expected
someone to ream her boys out for their willful disobedience, she was out of
luck as far as Gabe Verdugo was concerned.
Fortunately, Gabe, a law enforcement officer himself, knew
what would be expected of his sons now that they had blundered into a homicide
investigation.
“When will you want them to come in for the official
interview?” he asked.
“Good question,” Joanna told him. “We’re one detective
short at the moment. Right now Detective Carbajal has his hands full. We won’t
be ready to talk to the boys anytime before Monday morning, when Detective
Carpenter comes back.”
“Hey, great!” Eddie crowed, his face breaking into a wide
grin “If we go Monday morning, we’ll get to miss school.”
That was more than his mother could stand. “Oh, no, you
don’t,” Velma Verdugo said fiercely. “The detectives can interview you during
lunch.” Then, after a long moment, her troubled face collapsed into a smile.
Seconds later, the entire Verdugo clan was laughing and hugging.
Joanna Brady understood that, too. Something awful had
happened. Like Jenny finding the body at camp, the Verdugo boys while just
being kids, had stumbled unwittingly into a homicide. Their lives had been
touched by an evil that had left them all feeling vulnerable and scared. But
now, while that vulnerability was still fresh, there was much to be thankful
for in just being alive. In that situation, even a mother’s fierce anger could
be cause for celebration.
“Sheriff Brady?” Deputy Howell said, announcing her
arrival. “They told us to report to you or Chief Deputy Montoya.”
Joanna turned away from the people clustered around Frank
Montoya’s Civvie to greet the two uniformed officers who had dust arrived on
the scene. Although Joanna was glad to see Deputy Debra Howell, she was less
than thrilled when she realized the second deputy was Kenneth Galloway.
“What should we do?” Debra asked.
“We’ve got another homicide,” Joanna told them. “I want you
to work with Detective Carbajal and Dave Hollicker on the crime scene
investigation here, Deputy Howell. Deputy Galloway, you’ll be assisting Casey
Ledford.”
“Doing what?” Ken Junior asked.
It wasn’t outright insubordination, but it was close—more
in tone of voice than anything else.
“Whatever Casey needs,” Joanna told him. “From keeping the
evidence log to lifting prints. She’s over there talking with Detective
Carbajal. Ask her.”
Galloway walked away, muttering something unintelligible
under his breath. “What’s wrong with him?” Frank Montoya asked.
“I’m not sure,” Joanna said. “But I suspect Deputy
Galloway has a few issues about working with women.”
Within minutes, the medical examiner arrived. While Detective
Carbajal led Doc Winfield to the body, Deputies Howell and Hollicker were sent
to search other nearby buildings for a second possible victim. Meanwhile,
Joanna and Frank Montoya consulted with Casey Ledford while Galloway lounged in
the background.
“What do we know about the missing boyfriend?” the
fingerprint tech asked. “How long has he been around?”
“According to Jaime, he’s been in town for several months,”
Frank responded. “Working for and living with Dee Canfield most of the time.
The DMV tells me that no one named Warren Gibson currently holds a valid
Arizona driver’s license, and I haven’t been able to find any other official
record of him, either.”
“All right,” Joanna said. “We have search warrants for
both Dee Canfield’s house and her gallery, but let’s check the gallery first.
There may be employment records or something else there that’ll make it
possible for us to find out more about Warren Gibson. Something’s out of whack
here.”
It didn’t take long for me to figure out that Marliss
Shackleford hadn’t agreed to talk to me because she’d been charmed by my
boyish good looks and overwhelming charm. She was after something. No, make
that someone. She was out to get the goods on Sheriff Joanna Brady.
We retreated from the lobby to the bar. I had O’Doul’s.
Marliss had a tall gin and tonic.
“I should have thought you’d be more interested in hanging
around a homicide crime scene than in talking to me,” I said for openers.
Marliss gave me a flirtatious smile. She was fortyish and
not at that bad looking. She had what my old partner, Sue Danielson once
referred to as big hair. Ash blond and crinkly, it stood out horn her head like
a massive halo.
“That’s the reporter’s job,” she explained. “Like my card
says I’m a columnist. I write a thrice-weekly piece called “Bisbee Buzzings.”
The paper is called the Bee, you see,” she added, as if
site thought me a bit dim. “The Bisbee Bee.”
I have a long-term, not-so-cordial relationship with a man
named Maxwell Cole who’s a columnist for the Seattle Post-Intelligencer. Marliss
Shackleford didn’t know it, but being in the same league with Max wasn’t the
best kind of third-party referral.
“As I understand it, you’re a detective.”
“Used to be,” I told her. “Now I’m a special investigator
with the Washington State Attorney’s Special Homicide Investigation Team. That’s
spelled S-H-I-T,” I added helpfully.
Marliss Shackleford’s face changed. She looked shocked. “I
beg your pardon?”
“‘That’s what my unit is called, the Special Homicide
Investigation ‘team.”
“Oh,” she murmured. “But since this is a family newspaper
well probably have to write the whole thing out.” She fumbled to an uneasy stop
and then started over. “And you’re here in Bisbee because ...”
“Why do you think I’m here?” I asked in return.
She shrugged. “I presume it’s because of the woman who died
down in Naco on Wednesday night. I’ve learned that her real name was Latisha
Wall. I’ve also been told she was in the Washington State Witness Protection
Program.”
Marliss obviously had sources inside the Cochise County
Sheriff’s Department. I wondered who those sources might be. Rather than
asking, though, I simply raised my bottle of O’Doul’s and clinked it on her
glass.
“See there?” I said. “Since you already know so much about
it, I don’t understand why you need to talk to me at all.”
“All right,” she admitted, dropping her ploy of fake
innocence for the moment. “I know who you are and where you’re from, but I
still don’t know why you’re here. Is it because your boss ... ?”
“Ross Connors,” I supplied. “He’s the Washington State
Attorney General.”
“Are you here because Mr. Connors has no faith in Sheriff
Brady’s ability to bring this case to a successful conclusion?”
Marliss Shackleford waited for my answer with her pen
poised over a small notebook and with her eyes sparkling in anticipation, like
a cat ready to spring on some poor unsuspecting sparrow. She clearly wanted me
to say that I thought Sheriff Joanna Brady was incompetent. And, much as I
might have liked to—much as I thought Joanna Brady to be an arrogant little
twit—I couldn’t bring myself to do it. I was incapable of saying so to a
reporter, much less to a newspaper columnist.
“From what I can see,” I told her guardedly, “Sheriff
Brady is doing a credible job, especially since her department is so
short-handed. She seems to have only one detective on the job, and he’s having
to deal with two separate homicides. Her plate is pretty full.”
Marliss’ eager expression faded to disappointment. She put
down her pen. “Ernie’s on vacation,” she told me unnecessarily.
“Ernie?” I asked.
“Ernie Carpenter. He’s the sheriff’s department’s other
detective. He and his wife, Rose, are off on an anniversary trip—their
thirtieth.”
Bully for them, I
thought.
God spare me from living in a small town. “So you think the
county investigators are doing a good job?” Marliss continued.
“Yes,” I said. “I do.”
“And your function is?”
“I’m here as an observer,” I told her. “An interested
observer; nothing more.”
“I see.” She frowned briefly, then added. “I understand Latisha
Wall’s sister is in town. Have you talked to her?”
“I’m not sure there’s any reason for me to talk to her,” I
fudged. “As I said, I’m observing, not investigating.”
Marliss tried coming at me from another direction. “I
believe the sheriff’s department investigators interviewed a suspect today.”
The columnist certainly did have an inside track. Now it
was my turn to play innocent. “Really?” I asked.
She nodded. “The guy’s a local, someone who’s lived around
here for years. His name is Bobo Jenkins—LaMar Jenkins, actually. He and
Latisha were a romantic item for several months. I suppose there’s a
possibility that Latisha Wall’s death could have resulted from some kind of
domestic dispute. What do you think of that idea?”
Cops don’t talk to the press about critical aspects of
ongoing investigations. Those are words I’ve lived by for most of my adult life.
Joanna Brady’s actions may have provoked me beyond endurance, but I couldn’t
bring myself to do that much of a flip flop.
“I don’t think 1 should comment about that one way or the
other.” I said.
“You think it’s true then?”
“No. I said, ‘No comment.’ There’s a difference.”
The desk clerk came through the doorway and poked his head
into the bar. “Hey, Marliss,” he said, “I’ve got a call for you. Want to take
it here or in the lobby?”
“Lobby,” she said.
Marliss got up and left me sitting alone. On this cool
Saturday night the bar was filling up with people, most of whom seemed to know
one another. I was relieved that none of the bikers from the Blue Moon were in
evidence. Alone in that crowded room, I thought about what it might be like to
be a homicide cop in a small burg like this—a place where almost every victim
and suspect would be someone known to you and where every move you made would
be accomplished under the glaring spotlight of local reporters who knew you,
the victims, and the perps. That kind of case-solving was definitely not for
me.
And I also thought about having a drink, just one, maybe,
in honor of my birthday. But before I made up my mind one way or the other,
Marliss returned looking flushed and excited.
“That was Kevin,” she explained breathlessly. “He’s our
reporter. He just heard that the second victim has been identified.
Tentatively, of course. Not officially.”
“Really,” I said nonchalantly.
If I had acted as though I were vitally interested in the
information, I doubt Marliss would have told me. Since I gave every indication
that I couldn’t care less, she eagerly filled me in.
“Her name is Deidre Canfield,” Marliss said in a stage
whisper that was entirely unnecessary since no one in the bar was paying us the
slightest visible attention. “Dee owned an art gallery here in town. She and Latisha
Wall were friends. This is all confidential, of course. It’s totally on the QT until
there’s been an official notification of next of kin. You won’t tell anyone,
will you?”
“Of course not,” I agreed.
“But I have to go back to the paper and check something
out,” Marliss added. “I did a profile of Dee Canfield a year or so ago, when
she first came to town. I’ll be able to reuse some of that material. I won’t
print anything prematurely, you understand, but if I write it right now while
it’s all still fresh, then the column will be ready the moment the coast is
clear.”
As I said before, between living in big cities or little
towns, give me the city any day of the week.
CHAPTER FOURTEEN
After Marliss Shackleford left, I found I needed either a
drink or some air and space. Upon reflection, I took myself for a walk. It was
well after dark by then and much chillier than the toasty daytime temperatures
would have led me to expect. I was glad I was still wearing my wrinkled blazer
as I wandered through narrow, crooked streets. The two- and three-story
buildings I saw reminded me of those in downtown Ballard back home in Seattle.
I wondered what Bisbee must have been like back in its heyday, back when
domestic copper production was still a moneymaking proposition.
Here and there streetlights revealed ghostly traces of old
signs painted on the sides of brick buildings, just barely still legible. They
testified to the more abundant and diverse commercial past in small-town
America—Western Auto, Woolworth’s, JC Penney. But those bedrock businesses had
long since deserted Bisbee, just as they had deserted countless other
communities across the nation. Now the buildings had different occupants. It
looked as though the current crop of merchants and organizations catered to
tourism—a mining museum, an antiques mall, and a mostly used bookstore. The
bars, of course, hadn’t gone away. Maybe you couldn’t buy a hammer and nails on
Main Street in Bisbee, Arizona, anymore, but Coors on tap was readily
available.
Naturally, as I walked, my mind strayed back to Anne. Had
she walked this winding canyon street as a little girl? Had she bought an Etch
A Sketch in Woolworth’s or an Easter outfit in JC Penney?
And, as often happens when I think of Anne, I see her
again as I did that very first time. It’s a cloudless spring afternoon in Seat
tie’s Mount Pleasant Cemetery. Wearing that bright red dress, she’s striding
across the green grass toward Angela Barstogi’s open grave. The dowdily dressed
mourners from Faith Tabernacle all stand aside to let her pass, parting before
her commanding presence as the waters of the Red Sea did for Moses.
She stops only when she reaches the grave. Her hair is
long and dark. A slight breeze ruffles it around her face, and I realize I’ve
never seen anyone more beautiful or so undeniably sad.
The crowd is dumbstruck, and so am I. No one moves. Even
the overbearing Pastor Michael Brodie is stunned to silence. Then slowly,
gracefully, she raises her hand. A single rose drifts away from her open
fingers and falls gently onto the casket of a small, murdered child.
And then the scene shifts. The funeral is over and when I
see her again, she is coming down the hill. She is walking purpose fully, with
a certain goal in mind. Eventually I realize she’s coining to me—directly to
me. I am her goal, and my life will never again he the same.
Lost in thought, I nearly blundered into Cornelia Lester,
who was making her way down Main Street.
“Sorry,” I apologized. “I was thinking of something else.
Mind if I join you?”
“But you were going in the other direction,” she objected.
“That’s all right. I was about to turn back anyway.”
She laughed. “Help yourself, then, Mr.... I’m sorry. You’ll
have to forgive me. I seem to have forgotten your name.”
“Beaumont,” I supplied, falling into step beside her. “J.P.
Beaumont. You can call me Beau.”
Once again, Cornelia Lester’s clothing rustled as she
walked. Despite her ample girth, she set a brisk pace, moving much more swiftly
than I had been on my own. Only the fact that we were now going downhill made
it possible for me to keep up.
“I went up to the art gallery again,” she explained. “I
keep hoping someone will show up there and let me in.”
I wrestled with whether or not I should tell her what
Marliss Shackleford had just told me—that Dee Canfield had now been identified
as a murder victim as well—but I decided against it. A reporter’s
unsubstantiated tip might very well be wrong. That kind of information needs to
come from someone officially connected to the investigation. Marliss
Shackleford certainly wasn’t official and, as fair as this latest incident was
concerned, neither was I.
“There were lights on inside,” Cornelia continued. “They must
be on a timer so they come on automatically. I was able to catch a glimpse of a
couple of Tizzy’s paintings through the window. The one of Daddy ...” She
stopped talking abruptly, swallowed hard, and wiped at her eyes.
“Did you know our father was a minister?” she asked
finally when she found her voice again. “He was a United Methodist minister at
a mostly black church in Macon, Georgia. You ever been to Georgia?”
“Never,” I said.
“Macon’s a quiet place. Comfortable. But Tizzy couldn’t
wait to get out of town, and out of Daddy’s church, too. We both did that,
Tizzy and I, left home and neither of us set foot inside a church for years.”
She shrugged. “That’s kids for you. They have to rebel. Daddy was a man
of prayer. Tizzy loved action. He believed in nonviolence. He wanted his
daughters to go to church and get educated. What did Tizzy do? She joined the
Marines and went off to war. I finally got over what was bugging me. I went
back home to Macon for keeps and to Daddy’s church as well. I made my peace
with our parents. Tizzy never did, and it broke Daddy’s heart. I think that’s
part of what killed him, but that one picture ...”
Again she paused, overcome by emotion.
“Which picture?” I asked.
“It’s one of Tizzy’s paintings in the gallery. Have you
seen them?”
“No.”
“Well, one of them shows Daddy standing outside his church
on a sunny Sunday morning. He’s wearing that old robe of his the bright red one
that he loved so much and wore every summer until it was so thin you could
practically see through it. Tizzy captured everything about it, even the little
patch Momma darned into the arm. I could almost smell it, reeking of Daddy’s
old Spice.
“The picture was so true to life that it took my breath
away. It might have been a photograph. And there’s little T. J. Evans, standing
there looking up at Daddy with those big brown trusting eyes. I’d know that boy
anywhere; he was such a cute little thing. T.J.’s gone now, of course. Died in
a car wreck three or four years ago, but Tizzy painted him just the way he was
back then when he was a little-bitty sprout. It’s like her mind was a camera,
with everything stored there just like it used to be.”
We walked the distance of a block in silence, although
with no cross-streets, it’s hard to measure blocks in Bisbee.
“That picture just got to me, I guess,” Cornelia Lester
continued eventually. “Made me think maybe she was intending to come back
after all. Not home, of course. I know she couldn’t have done that, but maybe
she was ready to come back to the fold. Like she was finally ready to make
peace with Daddy and with all he stood for. What do you think?”
“I wouldn’t know,” I said. “But maybe so.”
“Did you happen to notice that United Methodist Church
back there, just across the street from the gallery?” Cornelia asked.
I hadn’t. “No,” I said.
“Tombstone Something, I think. The sign says services
start at ten-thirty. I believe I’ll go there tomorrow morning. I like to do
that—visit other churches when I’m traveling.”
I’ve never had a sibling, but if I had just learned one of
them had been murdered, I doubt I would have been out looking for Sunday-morning
services in a strange church in a strange town. Cornelia Lester had a depth of
belief that made me half envious. We had come to a small plaza, an almost level
spot in an otherwise up-and-down town. We crossed a one-way backstreet and were
making our way through a postage-stamp-size park when three Cochise County
patrol cars came roaring past us, one right after the other. None of them had
their flashers or sirens on. Even so, they were moving at a good clip. I was
pretty sure one of them belonged to Sheriff Brady, and I theorized that they
had cone from the crime scene in Naco and were probably headed for Castle Rock
Gallery.
I really wanted to turn on my heel and go there, too. But
I didn’t. I was certain that if I showed up somewhere uninvited, Sheriff Brady
would send me packing. Again.
Call me a slow learner, but I’ve finally figured out that
sometimes I’m better off not going where I’m not wanted.
Cornelia Lester and I made our way up the steps on the far
side of the park and then across a narrow side street and up into the hotel
lobby. By the time we topped the last set of stairs, we were both huffing and
puffing. I fully expected Cornelia Lester to head directly for the elevator and
her room, but she didn’t. Instead she made her way toward one of the leather
couches.
“Wouldn’t you mind sitting with me awhile?” she asked. “I’d
really appreciate it. I feel a need to talk to someone tonight, but it’s past
midnight back home by now. Everyone there is probably sound asleep.”
“Sure,” I agreed.
After all, it may have been my birthday, but I had nothing
else to do but listen. And with memories of Anne Corley haunting me once
more, it was either that, find an AA meeting, or go to the bar and have a
drink. Faced with those three alternatives, listening to Cornelia Lester was by
far the best choice.
While Frank Montoya stayed with the crime scene
Investigation in Naco, Joanna took her Civvie and followed Casey and Ken Junior
back into town and up to Castle Rock Gallery in Old Bisbee. Joanna had parked
her car and was locking the door when a man smoking a glowing cigarette
materialized unexpectedly next to her.
“Oh, Harve,” she said, recognizing the owner of Treasure
Trove Antiques. “You startled me. I didn’t see you there.”
“Wasn’t,” he said. “Came down when I heard them other two
cop cars drive up. See you’ve got some officers in there now,” he added,
nodding in the direction of the gallery. “Did you find her? Something bad must
have happened.”
Joanna nodded. “Dee Canfield is dead, Harve,” she said. “Some
boys found her body in an abandoned house down in Naco several hours ago, but
that’s not for public knowledge just yet. We need to notify her family.”
Harve sighed and nodded sagely. “I was afraid of that,” he
said. “In fact, I pro’ly should have said as much to that other detective of
yours when I talked to him earlier this afternoon, but I’m no gossip. I didn’t
want to cause trouble.”
“You talked to Detective Carbajal today?” Joanna asked.
“Oh, no. Not Jaime—that other fellow, the big one with the
salt-and-pepper crew cut. He must be new. I don’t remember ever seein’ him
around before. Can’t tell you his name, but I’m sure you know who I mean.”
Joanna knew exactly whom Harvey Dowd meant. Mr. Beaumont,
I presume, she thought.
“What all did you tell him?” she asked.
“Nothin’ much. About that fight the other day, the one you
had to break up. I was surprised that he didn’t seem to know nothin’ about it.”
I’m not,
Joanna
thought.
“I haven’t had a chance to talk to him this afternoon,”
she said innocently. “Did you tell him anything else I should know about? Or
have you seen anything unusual going on around the gallery in the last day or
two?”
Harvey Dowd took a final, thoughtful drag on the end of
his cigarette, then he dropped the stub into the gutter and ground it out with
the sole of his boot. “Had a long talk again this evening with that nice black
lady, the one whose sister was killed down in Naco earlier this week. She keeps
coming by hoping to get a look at her sister’s paintings, but, of course,
nobody’s been there.”
Cornelia Lester,
Joanna
thought.
“She was all wore out from walking so far uphill,” Harve
Dowd continued. “She’s from Georgia, you see. She’s not accustomed to this here
elevation of ours. My shop was closed for the day, but I let her come in and
sit a spell in one of my old rockers until she got her breath back. I offered
to bring my car down from the parking lot and give her a ride back to the
hotel, but she wouldn’t hear of it. She said walking was fine.”
Harve paused long enough to shake another cigarette out of
his pack of Camels. “What about that boyfriend of Dee’s?” he asked.
“So far there’s no sign of him,” Joanna answered.
Sheltering a flickering match with his cupped hand, Harvey
Dowd lit his next cigarette. “Not surprised,” he drawled when he finished. “I’m
guessing you’re not gonna find him, either. Never did like Warren Gibson much.
Struck me as sort of underhanded, know what I mean? Didn’t seem like the type
who’d stick around if there was any sign of trouble. I knew as soon as I heard
the ruckus that Bobo Jenkins meant trouble.”
“You think Warren Gibson is underhanded?” Joanna asked. “What
makes you say that?”
“When I’m out prospecting in the desert, which I do every
now and again, I sometimes get this funny feeling. I call it feeling snaky. It’s
like my body is picking up signals that I can’t see or hear, but it’s tryin’ to
let me know all the same; tryin’ to tell me there’s a rattlesnake out there
somewhere, and I’d best be careful. First time or two it happened, I ignored it
and damned near got myself bit. Then I learned to pay attention. Now I stop and
look around until I find the snake before it finds me.
“Warren Gibson’s the first human being ever who gives me
that same kind of snaky feeling. It happened right off, the first time Dee
introduced us, and for no real reason I can explain.”
“He makes you feel snaky?” Joanna asked, trying keep the
disbelief out of her voice.
Harvey Dowd nodded. “Not exactly the same, but sort of.
Like he’s dangerous or somethin’, although he never done nothin’ to me and
never said anything out of line, so I could be mistaken about the man. Like I
said, it’s just a feelin’.”
“Did you ever mention any of this to Deidre Canfield?”
Harve shook his head. “Did you ever have any dealings with
that woman?”
A few,” Joanna replied.
“I liked old Dee well enough, but she could be a screaming
meemie when she wanted to. She seemed to think the sun rose and set on that man
of hers, so far be it from me to try to tell her otherwise. Like I told you
before, I’m not the gossipin’ kind. If I’d a told Dee Canfield that Warren was
two-timing her, she would’ve bit my head clean off.”
“Two-timing?” Joanna asked. “Are you saying you saw Warren
Gibson with another woman?”
“Didn’t see,” Harvey Dowd corrected. “Heard. Maybe not
even heard, either, as far as that goes, but I’m as sure of it as I’m standing
here. Why else would someone, with a perfectly good phone at home and another
one right there in the gallery, spend so much time standing around on Main Street
yakkin’ away on a pay phone? Maybe I’m all wet. Maybe its not a girlfriend,
but I saw him talking on those pay phones down by the post office a lot—well
out of Dee’s sight, you see. And what crossed my mind at the time was that,
whoever it was he was talking to and whatever he was up to, he sure as
hell didn’t want Dee Canfield to know about it.”
Joanna knew that Frank Montoya would be looking at the
phone records for both the gallery and Dee Canfield’s house, but without Harve
Dowd’s tip, no one would have thought to check the pair of pay phones on Main
Street.
Thanking Harvey Dowd for his help, Joanna stuck her head into
the gallery long enough to let Casey Ledford know where she was going. Then she
got back into the car and drove down to the post office, where two waist-high
public telephones stood side by side. After jotting down all the numbers, she
radioed them into Dispatch, asking Tica to pass them along to Frank Montoya so
he could ask for phone logs as soon as possible.
With that call completed, Joanna started to return to
Castle Rock Gallery but changed her mind. The more people who showed up at a
potential crime scene, the greater the potential for contamination, and the
longer it would take for Casey and Ken Junior to process the place.
Across the street, through a tiny park, and up a concrete
stair way, Joanna glimpsed the creamy-lit facade of Bisbee’s Copper Queen
Hotel. Inside the hotel Joanna knew she would find Cornelia Lester. Latisha
Wall’s sister was someone who had yet to have a face-to-face visit from the Cochise
County sheriff. Joanna owed the woman that much courtesy, and some information
as well.
With a sigh, Joanna put her Crown Victoria in gear and
headed for the hotel. Once there, she stopped at the desk and asked for Cornelia
Lester’s room. “She’s not there,” the clerk responded. “She’s right around the
corner on the far side of the stairs.”
Walking around the sheltering stairway, Joanna saw a large
African-American woman sitting on a leather-backed chair speaking to someone.
Reluctant to interrupt, Joanna paused for a moment—long enough to see that the
person opposite Cornelia Lester was none other than Special Investigator
Beaumont.
All afternoon, the man had dogged her heels. Now he was
interviewing Latisha Wall’s sister. Refusing to give way to a budding temper
tantrum and steeling herself to be civil, Joanna stepped forward. “Good
evening, Mr. Beaumont,” she said as she walked past him. She stopped in front
of the woman. “You must be Cornelia Lester,” she said. “I’m Sheriff Joanna
Brady. Please accept my condolences for the loss of your sister.”
If looks could kill, I would have keeled over dead when
Joanna Brady walked into the lobby of the Copper Queen Hotel and shook hands
with Cornelia Lester.
“Thank you,” Cornelia said graciously. “I take it you and
Mr. Beaumont here already know each other?”
Joanna nodded. “Yes,” she said. “We’ve met.” Her cool
response was less than enthusiastic.
Settling into a nearby chair, Joanna leaned toward
Cornelia as she spoke again. “I’m sorry to have to tell you this, Ms. Lester,
but we’ve had another homicide this evening. Actually, I’m guessing that the
death happened a day or so ago, but we’ve only just now discovered the body.”
Cornelia Lester didn’t blink. “Who?” she asked.
“Deidre Canfield.”
“The woman who owns the gallery?”
Joanna nodded. “Yes.”
“If she’s dead, too,” Cornelia speculated, “and if she and
my sister were friends, then her death must have something to do with Tizzy’s,
don’t you think? I’m sorry, Sheriff Brady. I mean with Latisha’s. Tizzy is what
we always called my sister back home. But tell me, please, is there any
progress now?”
Joanna glanced at me before she answered. “Not much,” she
admitted. “We have only preliminary autopsy results for your sister at the
moment. We believe she ingested some kind of poison, which may have been placed
in your sister’s iced tea.”
“Who did it?” Cornelia asked. For her it was a simple
question that should have had an equally simple answer—one Joanna Brady was
currently unable to give.
“At this point, Ms. Lester, I’m afraid we have no viable
suspects. My investigators are working on it, of course, but it’s still very
early.”
“If it was in Tizzy’s tea, could it be a random-tampering
case that has nothing to do with Tizzy being in the witness protection program?”
I have to give the lady credit. Cornelia asked tough
questions. Joanna shook her head. “We can’t say one way or the other.”
“What are the chances that this second dead woman this Deidre
Canfield who was supposedly Tizzy’s friend—was some how connected to the people
who ran UPPI, the people Tizzy was so afraid were going to try to kill her?”
“That is a possibility,” Joanna conceded. “So far we’ve found
nothing that would bolster that theory.”
“What about this?” Cornelia asked. “First they use Deidre Canfield
to get to my sister, and then, with Tizzy gone, they get rid of Dee Canfield,
too. Those UPPI folks are not nice people, Sheriff Brady.”
“I’m convinced your sister was right to be scared,” Joanna
agreed. “But as for Deidre Canfield being tied in with them, that doesn’t seem
likely.”
“What about Tizzy’s boyfriend then?” Cornelia asked,
switching directions. “What’s his name again?”
“Jenkins,” Joanna supplied, glaring at me. “His name is
Bobo Jenkins, but I must object to Mr. Beaumont here giving you access to
confidential information. He may be a special investigator with the Washington
State Attorney General’s Office, but he has no business ...”
Oops. I should have come clean with Cornelia Lester and
told her who I was. Now the cat was out of the bag. My ears reddened under her
shrewdly appraising look.
“Mr. Beaumont?” she said finally. “Why, he never told me a
thing about Mr. Jenkins. It was that nice man up at the antiques store. What’s
his name again?”
“Harvey Dowd?” I asked tentatively.
Joanna Brady shot another baleful look in my direction. I
had noticed earlier that her eyes were a vivid shade of green. In the dim light
of the hotel lobby, however, they looked more like chips of slate.
“That’s right,” Cornelia said with a nod that somehow conveyed
she had forgiven me my sin of omission. “Harvey Dowd is the one. He gave me to
understand that Mr. Jenkins has quite a temper. He told me about a serious
confrontation of some kind up at the gallery the other day—serious enough that
police officers had to intervene.”
“That’s true,” Joanna said. “There was a confrontation. In
fact, I’m the one who broke it up, but in Mr. Jenkins’s defense, you have to
understand that he had just learned of your sister’s death—the death of the
woman he had known as Rochelle Baxter and whom he had cared about deeply. When
he discovered that Deidre Canfield still planned to go ahead with her grand-opening
party, he was outraged. And when he learned Dee was raising the prices on the
pictures ...”
“Raising the prices?”
“Yes. Her position was that, with the artist dead, the few
paintings that did exist would be that much more valuable. Mr. Jenkins took exception
to that. He thought the show should be canceled and the pictures turned over to
their rightful owners—the artist’s family.”
“He wanted the paintings returned to us?” Cornelia asked.
Joanna nodded. “That’s what the big fuss at Castle Rock Gallery
that morning was all about.”
“He was trying to keep the gallery from selling them?”
“Yes,” Joanna said. “So they could be given to you.”
Cornelia Lester shook her head thoughtfully. “Mr. Dowd
didn’t say a word about that,” she said, after a moment.
“No,” Joanna agreed. “I’m sure he didn’t, because he didn’t
know it.”
Cornelia Lester sighed. “I’ve never met Mr. Jenkins, but
when I do, I owe him an apology and my thanks. Now, if’ you’ll both excuse me,
I’d better go on upstairs and go to bed. My body’s still on East Coast time. I’m
running out of steam.”
She used the arms of the deep leather chair to raise herself
to her feet. “There’s a lot more I’d like to discuss with you, Sheriff Brady,
but not tonight. I’m just not up to it.”
“I understand,” Joanna said. “I know you already have my
phone numbers. Feel free to call anytime.”
Nodding, Cornelia started toward the elevator. As she
rounded the stairs, she stopped and turned back to us. “By the way,” she added.
“I’m glad to know you and Mr. Beaumont are working on this situation together,
Sheriff Brady. It gives me a lot more confidence that something will come of
it.”
Not wanting to be chewed up and spit out by Sheriff Brady,
I stood up, too. “I could just as well be going,” I said.
“No, you don’t,” she said. “I want to talk to you.”
I sat back down and slumped down on the couch. Here it
comes, I thought, remembering being hauled on the carpet by the daunting
Miss Heard.
“How long have you been in town?” Joanna asked.
“Since around one P.M.,” I said.
“And who all have you talked to since then?”
I pulled a tattered notebook out of my pocket and
consulted the list of names I had jotted there. “Cornelia Lester, Harvey Dowd,
Angie Hacker, Archie McBride, and Willy Haskins. Later on I spoke to your chief
deputy Mr. Montoya and also to a reporter named Marliss Shackleford.”
Sheriff Brady’s eyes registered surprise when I mentioned
the last name on the list. “You’ve talked to Marliss?” she asked. “You know
her, I take it?”
Joanna nodded grimly. “We’re not on the best of terms.”
I suppose I should have let it go at that, but I felt
constrained to tell her the rest. “You should be aware that I met with her
earlier this evening,” I said. “Marliss introduced herself to me down at the
crime scene, the one where you sent me packing. Then, a little while ago, she
came here, to the hotel, and interviewed me.”
“About?”
“She wanted to know why I was in town,” I said.
“What did you tell her?”
“I told her I was sent as an observer for the Washington
State Attorney General’s Office. I doubt that was what she was really after,
though. She seems to be under the impression that Ross Connors doesn’t think
your department can handle the Latisha Wall case. I believe her exact words
were: ‘Ross Connors has no faith in Sheriff Brady’s ability.’ Something to that
effect, anyway.”
“What did you tell her?”
“That both Mr. Connors and I thought you were doing fine.”
Joanna blinked. “Thanks,” she said.
“‘There’s something else,” I added.
“What’s that?”
“She started asking questions about the Bobo Jenkins
interview.”
“How did she know about that?” Joanna demanded.
“I sure as hell didn’t tell her,” I responded quickly. “I
may be a royal pain in the ass as far as you’re concerned, Sheriff Brady, but I
know better than to compromise an ongoing investigation by leaking information
to the press. The same can’t be said for everyone in your department, however.
Someone on your staff needs to learn to keep his mouth shut.”
There was a long period of silence after that. The longer
Joanna Brady went without speaking, the more I figured I had blown it for sure.
If there had ever been a remote chance of the two of us working together
successfully, it was gone for good.
“‘Thanks for telling me,” she said finally. “I’m pretty
sure I know who Mr. Big Mouth is, but I haven’t figured out what to do about
him.”
“If I were you,” I told her, “I’d kick ass and take names
later.”
She laughed then. “I’ll take that suggestion under advisement.”
Her single burst of laughter seemed to put us on a whole new footing. “Cornelia
Lester isn’t the only one who needs to hand out apologies,” she said. “I
believe I owe you one as well.”
“What for?”
“You’ve been in town for less than twelve hours, Mr. Beaumont.
And yet, without any help from me or my people, you’ve managed to sort out most
of the major players in this case.”
“I used to be ...” I began.
“I know you used to work homicide at Seattle PD. I’m guessing
you must have been pretty good at it. The truth is, we are shorthanded at the
moment, so if you’re still willing to help, please be at my office tomorrow
afternoon at one. I’m creating a task force, and you’re more than welcome to
join it.”
Nothing short of flabbergasted, I said, “I’ll be there.”
Joanna stood up then and held out her small hand with that
surprisingly firm grip. “It’s late,” she said. “My daughter’s dog had to be put
down today. I should be at home with Jenny instead of out here traipsing all
over the county. I’ll see you tomorrow, then?”
I nodded. “One o’clock.”
“Sharp,” she added.
“I’ll be there.”
As she walked away, I was still shaking my head in utter
befuddlement. It may have been my birthday, but I was no closer to
understanding women than I was on the day I was born.
I sat for several minutes listening as the noise from the
bar got louder and louder. It kept tugging at me. Finally, breaking free, I
headed up to my room. Once there, I glanced at the clock. It was nearly
midnight, but my night-owl grandparents would still be wide awake.
I dialed their number and was relieved when my new
step-grandfather, Lars Jenssen, who is also my AA sponsor, answered the phone. “Ja
sure,” he said. “If it isn’t the birthday boy! Beverly tried calling you off
and on all day, but there was no answer on your clang cell phone. She’s in
getting ready for bed. I tang on. I’ll go get her.”
“No,” I said quickly. “Don’t do that. This isn’t that kind
of call.”
“You having a tough time?” Lars asked, immediately
switching gears. “You thinking about having that first drink?”
“Yes,” I admitted. “I am.”
“Well, then,” he said. “Let’s talk about it.”
And we did.
CHAPTER FIFTEEN
Driving up to the house at High Lonesome Ranch, Joanna was
vividly aware that with Sadie gone, neither of the dogs came bounding down the
road to greet her. When she pulled into the yard, she noticed a light still
burning in the window of Jenny’s corner bedroom.
Butch was in bed reading when she went in to undress. “Did
Jenny ever come out of her room?” Joanna asked, kissing him hello.
“Once,” he said. “To feed Tigger and let him out. Other
than that, I haven’t seen her.”
“Did she eat dinner?”
“Nope.”
“Her light’s still on,” Joanna said. “Maybe I should go
talk to her.”
“Good idea,” Butch said. “You can try, anyway.”
Hoping Jenny might be asleep, Joanna opened the door without
knocking. Inside the room, Jenny lay on the bottom bunk, one arm wrapped
tightly around Tigger, who was curled up next to her. Tigger thumped his tail
when Joanna first entered the room, but he didn’t try to slink off the bed,
where, under normal circumstances, he wasn’t allowed.
“You awake?” Joanna asked, sinking into the creaking
rocker next to the bed.
“I fell asleep this afternoon,” Jenny said. “Now I can’t
sleep. I’m lying here, thinking.”
“About Sadie?”
Jenny nodded. “She was just always here, Mom. I never
thought she’d go away. She never seemed sick. She never acted sick.”
“That’s the good thing about dogs,” Joanna said. “They don’t
complain. The bad thing is, they can’t tell us what’s wrong with them, either.
And they don’t live forever, Jen. What’s important is what you said this
afternoon. We loved Sadie and took care or her while she was here with us. Now
we have to let her go. And you were wonderful with her, sweetie. No one could
have done more...”
“Really?” Jenny asked.
“Really.”
There was a long pause. When Jenny said nothing, Joanna finally
asked, “Are you hungry? Would you like me to fix you something?”
Jenny shook her head. “No, thanks,” she said.
For a time after that the only sound in the room was the
creaking of Butch’s grandmother’s rocking chair. Jenny broke the long silence.
“I think Tigger knows what happened—that Sadie’s gone and
she isn’t coming back. Somebody told me that dogs don’t have feelings like we
do—that they don’t grieve or feel sorry for themselves or anything. Do you
think that’s true?”
Joanna studied Tigger, who had yet to move anything other
than his tail and his dark, soulful eyes. The usually lively dog was
mysteriously still, as quiet as Joanna had ever seen him. If he wasn’t
grieving, he was doing a good imitation.
“I’m sure he does know something’s wrong,” Joanna said. “Maybe
he’s simply responding to your unhappiness, but I believe he understands.”
“I think so, too,” Jenny said. “He doesn’t usually like to
cuddle.” Neither do you, Joanna thought.
That was followed by yet another silence. At last Joanna
sighed and checked her watch. It was after midnight. ‘All right, then,” she
said. “If you’re not hungry, I guess I’ll go to bed.”
She got as far as the door before Jenny stopped her. “Mom?”
“What?”
“I think I know what I want to be when I grow up.”
Joanna’s heart lurched, grateful for this small connection
with her grieving daughter. “What?” she asked, turning back.
‘A veterinarian,” Jenny replied. Just like Dr. Ross. She
couldn’t fix Sadie—she couldn’t make her better—but she was really nice to
Sadie and to me, too. It was like, well, she really cared. Know what I mean?”
“Yes.” Joanna returned to the bed and perched on the edge
of it, close enough that she could rub Tigger’s ears. “I know exactly what you
mean, Jen,” she said. “The way you love animals, I’m sure you’ll be a terrific
vet.”
“Is it hard?” Jenny asked.
“Every job has hard things and good things about it,”
Joanna said. “I’d hate to have to put a sick animal down and then try to
comfort the owner.”
“How long do you have to go to school?”
“To be a vet? A long time. First you have to graduate from
college, then its just like going to medical school. To get in, you have to
earn top grades in math and science, chemistry especially.” “Do you think I can
do it?”
“You’re a very smart girl, sweetie. If you set your mind
to it, you can do anything you want.”
At a quarter to ten the next morning, as Butch, Jenny, and
Joanna were ready to walk out the door for church, the telephone rang. “Here we
go again,” Butch grumbled, handing Joanna the receiver. “It’s Lupe Alvarez,” he
said. “According to her, its urgent.”
“What is it?” Joanna asked.
“There’s a lady here in the lobby,” Lupe replied. “Her
name is Serenity Granger. She’s Deidre Canfield’s daughter. The ME’s office had
the Cheyenne Police Department contact her last night. She wants to talk to you
right away.”
“All right,” Joanna agreed. “I’ll be there as soon as I
can.” When she turned to Butch, he was shaking his head. “Sorry,” she told him.
“You and Jenny go on without me. I’ll join you as soon as I can.”
“I won’t hold my breath,” he said.
While Butch and Jenny drove away in the Subaru, Joanna
opted for her Civvie. Ten minutes later she entered her office through the back
door. Once at her desk, she called out to the lobby. “Okay, Lupe,” she said. “I’m
here. You can bring Ms. Granger back now.”
Knowing Dee Canfield, Joanna was surprised by her first
glimpse of Serenity Granger. She was the exact antithesis of her mother’s
tie-dyed, let-it-all-hang-out splendor. Serenity, perhaps a few years older
than Joanna, was tall and pencil-thin. She wore a business suit—the kind of smart,
above-the-knee tailored model favored by the current crop of television
heroines. The charcoal pin-striped outfit was complemented by matching two-inch
gray sling-back pumps with an elegant Italian pedigree.
Joanna realized that Serenity Granger must have traveled
most of the night in order to make it from Cheyenne, Wyoming, to Bisbee,
Arizona, by ten o’clock in the morning. The woman should have looked wrinkled
and travel-worn, but she didn’t. The suit showed no trace of unwanted creases.
The mass of bleached-blond curls that framed a somber face was in perfect
order. Only her makeup, which had no doubt started out as perfection itself,
was beginning to show a few ill effects. Her gray eye shadow was slightly
smudged, and a speck of unruly mascara had dribbled down one cheek.
“I’m Sheriff Brady,” Joanna said at once, standing up and
offering her hand. “I’m so sorry about the loss of your mother. Please, have a
seat.”
“Thank you,” Serenity returned.
Removing a small long-strapped purse from her shoulder,
she eased herself into one of the captain’s chairs and folded her
well-manicured hands in her lap. “I know this is Sunday,” Serenity began. “I’m
sorry to interrupt your day off, but this is too important to let go until
Monday.”
“What’s too important?” Joanna asked.
Serenity chewed her lower lip. “Please understand,” she
said. “This is all very difficult.”
“I’m sure it is. Take your time, Ms. Granger. Can I offer
you something to drink—coffee, water?”
“Water would be nice.”
Without Kristin in the outside office, Joanna had no one
to fetch it. “Hang on,” she said. “I’ll be right back.”
When she returned a few minutes later, Serenity Granger
sat in the same position. Now, though, under her still-folded hands Joanna
spied a single piece of paper that hadn’t been there before.
“I suppose I don’t have to tell you my mother and I weren’t
close,” Serenity began again with a regretful half-smile. “We didn’t have much
in common.”
“There’s a lot of that going around these days,” Joanna
offered encouragingly. After all, when it came to mother-daughter relation
ships, she and Eleanor Lathrop weren’t exactly shining examples.
“We were at loggerheads as long as I can remember,”
Serenity continued. “Whatever came up, we fought about it. My mother tuned in
during the sixties, dropped out, and stayed that way. I couldn’t wait to join
the establishment. My mother never completed high school. I did four years of
college and finished law school with honors in a year and a half. Mother never
voted in her life. According to her, the Democrats are too conservative.
Naturally, I’m a card carrying Republican.” She shrugged. “What else could I
do?”
Joanna nodded.
“Anyway, for years we weren’t in touch at all. In fact,
for a time I didn’t know if she was dead or alive. Then, about a year ago and
out of the clear blue sky, Mother sent me an e-mail. She had come into a bit of
money, from my grandfather, I guess. She said she was moving to Bisbee and
getting ready to open an art gallery.
“I wasn’t necessarily overjoyed to hear from her. For a
while I didn’t bother to respond, but my husband’s a psychologist. Mel finally
convinced me that the best thing I could do for Mother and for me, too, was to
figure out a way to forgive her. Eventually I wrote back. We started by sending
little notes back and firth. To my amazement, e-mail ended up bringing us
closer than ever.
“I’m not sure how it happened, but for the first time I
can remember we weren’t at each other’s throats. Maybe part of it was not being
in the same household and having some distance between us. We’d talk about what
was going on in our day-to-day lives. Even though I had been married for seven
years, Mother had never met Mel. I told her about him, about our house and
garden, and about both our jobs. Mel has a private practice in Cheyenne. I’m a
corporate attorney for an oil-exploration company. I thought hearing that would
freak her out, but it didn’t. She never said a word.
“She told me about what it was like to live in Bisbee,
about the little house she had bought—the first one ever—and about the new man
in her life, a guy named Warren Gibson. As a kid, that was one of the reasons I
despised my mother. There was always a new man in her life. They came and went
with astonishing regularity. But I could tell from the way she talked about
Warren, this time things were different. She really liked the guy; really cared
about him. I think she was finally ready to settle down to some-thing
permanent, and she believed Warren Gibson was it.
“She told me about the work they did together on the
gallery, getting it ready to open. She also told me about the upcoming showing
of Rochelle Baxter’s stuff. Mother was really excited about it and proud of
having discovered someone she fully expected to turn into one of this country’s
up-and-coming African-American artists.”
Serenity stopped long enough to sip her water before
continuing. “She sent me this e-mail on Thursday afternoon. Unfortunately, I
was out of town and didn’t read it until yesterday.”
Unfolding the single piece of paper that had been lying in
her lap, Serenity Granger handed Joanna the printed copy of an e-mail.
Dear Serenity,
Something terrible has happened. Rochelle Baxter is dead,
murdered. She died last night sometime. The grand opening of her show is
tonight. The caterer will be here in a little less than two hours. I found out
about Shelley too late to cancel the food. Since I have to pay for it anyway, I
decided to go ahead with the party.
The problem is Warren. He and I were among the last people
to see Shelley before she died. The cops wanted to talk to both of us.
Detective Carbajal is with the sheriff’s department. He told me this afternoon
that they’ll also need to fingerprint us since we’d both been at Shelley’s
place earlier in the day. We went there to collect the pieces from her studio
to hang them here in the gallery.
When I told Warren about the fingerprint thing, he went
nuts. We ended up having a huge fight. In all the months I’ve known him, I’ve
never seen him so upset. He’s off doing some errands right now. I’ve been
sitting here thinking about all this—thinking and wondering.
Is it possible Warren could have had something to do with
what happened to Shelley? I mean, we were both there in her house. I can’t
think of any other reason why the very mention of fingerprints would
The e-mail ended in midsentence. “Where’s the rest of it?”
Joanna asked.
“That’s just it,” Serenity returned. “There isn’t any
more. It’s like Mother had to hit the ‘Send’ button in a hurry. Warren may have
come into the gallery right then, and she didn’t want him to know about her
suspicions or about her sending them along to me.
“As soon as I accessed my e-mail yesterday evening, I
started trying to call. I called both the gallery and the house several times
and left messages. Naturally, there wasn’t any answer. Then, an hour or so
later, when a Cheyenne PD patrol car stopped in front of our house, I knew what
was up. The officer didn’t have to tell me Mother was dead. I already knew.
“So where’s Warren Gibson, Sheriff Brady? I am convinced
he killed my mother, and he must have murdered that other woman as well. I want
him caught.”
“I can assure you, Ms. Granger, so do we. Now, please
excuse me for a moment while I make a phone call.”
Joanna picked up her phone. It was Sunday, after all.
Frank Montoya could have been home or at church. On a hunch, though, she dialed
her chief deputy’s office number. He answered after half a ring.
“You’d better come into my office, Frank,” she told
him. “Dee Canfield’s daughter is here. I’m sure you and Detective Carbajal will
both be interested in what she has to say. Is Jaime in, by the way?”
“No,” Frank Montoya said. “But he will be as soon as I can
reach him.”
It took only half an hour for both Frank and Jaime to
converge on Joanna’s office. For the next hour or so, they pumped Serenity for
information.
“Did your mother tell you anything in particular about Warren
Gibson?” Jaime Carbajal asked.
“Just that he was good with his hands. He could put up
dry-wall, plaster, install wiring, and do any number of things she would have
had to spend money on otherwise.”
“She didn’t say where he came from?”
“Not that I remember. At the beginning, I think she maybe
hired him to do a couple of days’ worth of odd jobs. Before very long, though,
he had moved in with her. As far as Mother was concerned, that’s typical. It
also goes a long way to explain why I was a twenty-six-year-old virgin when I
got married.”
The sardonic self-deprecation in that sentence lodged like
a sharp-edged pebble in Joanna Brady’s heart. Dee Canfield and her daughter had
spent a lifetime locked in almost mortal combat. Serenity Granger’s strategy had
been to look at what her mother did and then do the opposite. The same was true
for Joanna and Eleanor Lathrop.
What will happen with Jenny?
Joanna wondered. Since I’m a cop, does that mean
she’s destined to end up a crook? Or will she really turn into a
veterinarian?
Joanna was drawn out of her reverie, not by the continuing
questions and answers, but by a sudden urgent knocking on her office door. Why
was it that just when she had something important going on—just when she needed
a little peace and quiet—her office turned into Grand Central Station?
Not wanting to disrupt Jaime’s interview with Serenity Granger,
Joanna hurried to the door. Casey Ledford stood outside holding several pieces
of computer-generated printouts.
“What is it, Casey? We’ve got an important interview going
on in here.”
“Yes, I know” Casey nodded. “Lupe told me, but this is important,
too. I got a hit from one of the prints I took off a hammer I found in a drawer
up at Castle Rock Gallery. Everything else was pretty clean, but whoever wiped
the place down must have forgotten about the hammer or maybe didn’t see it.
Anyway, here’s the guy’s rap sheet. I thought you’d want to check it out.”
Joanna took the paper and looked at the mug shot. The name
said Jack Brampton, but the photo was clearly Dee Canfield’s boyfriend, the man
known around Bisbee as Warren Gibson. Joanna’s memory flashed back to when she
had last seen him, standing in Castle Rock Gallery, glaring threateningly at Bobo
Jenkins and tapping the head of a hammer—perhaps the very same one—in the open
palm of his hand. Brampton had served twenty-one months in a medium-security
Illinois prison for involuntary manslaughter committed while driving drunk. He
had previously worked as a pharmaceutical salesman.
That might be enough for him to know something about
sodium azide,
Joanna thought. Enough to make him
very dangerous. “Good work, Casey,” she said. “Can I keep this?”
Casey nodded. “Sure. I’m making copies for everyone who’ll
be coming to the one-o’clock meeting.”
“Terrific. Drop one off with Dispatch as you go. I want an
APB out on this guy ASAP. He’s got a good head start on us, so we may have a
tough time catching up. We’ll assume, for right now, that he’s still driving
Deidre Canfield’s Pinto. It’s distinctive enough that it shouldn’t be hard to
find.”
While Casey hurried away, Joanna turned back into her
office. The interview was coming to an end. Serenity Granger, purse in hand,
stood just inside the door. “So you think it’s going to be several days before
Mother’s body can be released?”
“Several for sure,” Jaime Carbajal said. “First there’ll
have to be an autopsy. The medical examiner won’t release the body until well
after that. If I were you, I’d find a hotel room where you can settle in and
wait.”
“Any suggestions?”
“Probably the Copper Queen back uptown in Old Bisbee,” he
told her. “But regardless of where you stay, please let us know where you’ll
be.”
Serenity Granger nodded. “Of course,” she said.
Joanna wished Jaime Carbajal hadn’t suggested the Copper
Queen. Pretty soon everyone staying at the old hotel would be connected to this
case, one way or the other. But she didn’t voice her objection aloud. After
all, the only thing Joanna wanted was for Serenity Granger to leave her office.
The information about Warren Gibson’s criminal past was far too important to
blurt out with a civilian present, even if that civilian was vitally concerned
with finding the person under investigation.
“I’ll walk you to the lobby,” Frank Montoya offered.
“Don’t bother,” Serenity said, turning him down. “I can
find my way.”
As soon as the door closed behind her, both Frank and
Jaime turned to Joanna expectantly. “All right,” Frank said. “Give.”
Joanna handed him the paper. “Warren Gibson’s real name is
Jack Brampton,” she said. “He’s an ex—pharmaceutical salesman who’s done time
for DWI and involuntary manslaughter. Casey’s made copies of the rap sheet so
we’ll have them available for the task force meeting at one. I want everybody
there. I also want copies available of everything we have so far, including a
written report of what we’ve just learned from Serenity Granger. By the way,
Beaumont will be here for the meeting.”
Both men looked at Joanna. “Since when?” Jaime asked.
“Since last night when I invited him,” Joanna said.
Jaime shook his head. “Great,” he muttered. “Guess I’d
better get started typing my report, then.”
Jaime stalked from the room. Joanna glanced at Frank to
see if he shared Jaime’s opinion about including Beaumont in the task force. If
the chief deputy disapproved, it didn’t show. He walked over to Joanna’s desk
and retrieved a pile of papers he’d brought along with him into her office.
“What are those?” she asked.
“Copies of everything we had up to this morning. Even with
Beaumont included, there’ll be enough to go around. I thought you might want to
go over them yourself before the meeting.”
“Thanks, Frank. You’re good at keeping me on track. I
really appreciate it.”
“And then there’s this.” He removed a fat manila envelope
from the bottom of the stack and passed it over as well. “What is it?” she
asked.
“A present,” he said. “It’s the information you asked me
to track down on Anne Rowland Corley,” Frank told her. “There’s quite a bit of
it—probably too much to read between now and one o’clock, but you might want to
skim through some of it. If what I’m picking up is anything close to accurate,
whoever sent Special Investigator Beaumont to Bisbee wasn’t doing the poor guy
any favors.”
Joanna pulled out the topmost clipping and glanced at it.
The article, dated several years earlier, was taken from the Seattle Times. It
reported that a special internal investigation conducted by the Seattle Police
Department had concluded that a deranged Anne Corley had died three weeks
earlier as a result of a single gunshot wound, fired by her husband of one day,
Seattle Homicide Detective J.P. Beaumont. The fatal shooting had occurred at a
place called Snoqualmie Falls State Park. Anne Corley’s death had now been
officially ruled as self-defense, and Detective Beaumont had been recalled from
administrative leave.
Putting the paper down, Joanna stared at her chief deputy.
“It sounds to me like cop-assisted suicide,” she said.
Frank Montoya shrugged his shoulders. “Or husband-assisted
suicide,” he said. “Take your pick. Now I’d better get going, too. I’m working
on the telephone information you asked me to get, but weekends aren’t the best
time to do that.”
He went out then, closing the door behind him. Meanwhile,
Joanna shuffled through the contents of the envelope. Looking at the dates, she
realized that at the time Anne Rowland Corley died, Joanna had been a working
wife with a husband, a young child, and a ranch to look after. In addition to
her full-time job as office manager for the Davis Insurance Agency in Bisbee,
she had been making a two-hundred-mile commute back and forth to Tucson twice a
week while she finished up her bachelor’s degree at the University of Arizona.
No wonder Anne Rowland Corley’s death hadn’t made a noticeable blip on Joanna’s
mental radar.
As Frank had suggested, Joanna scanned several more
articles from Seattle-area papers. Most of them were from immediately before
and after the fatal shooting. One piece was a blatantly snide commentary from a
columnist named Maxwell Cole connecting Detective Beaumont with a “mysterious
lady in red.” Finally, Joanna came to a much longer, denser article from the Denver
Post. This one, running several pages in length, was an in-depth piece that
had been part of an investigative series dealing with female serial killers.
A look at the clock told Joanna she was running out of time.
Intriguing as the article might be, her first responsibility was to be properly
prepared for the upcoming task force meeting. Thoughtfully, Joanna shoved the
collection of papers back into the envelope, which she dropped into her
briefcase.
From the moment Joanna had met J.P. Beaumont, she had
thought of him as a smart-mouthed jerk. Last night, at the Copper Queen, when
he had been straight with her and told her about his interview with Marliss
Shackleford, she had glimpsed something else about him—that he was probably a
good cop, a straight and trustworthy one.
Now, though, she realized there had been something else
there as well, a certain indefinable something she had recognized without being
able to put her finger on it, a sort of common denominator between the two of
them that she couldn’t quite grasp. Now she knew what it was. Beaumont’s wife
had died tragically; so had Joanna Brady’s husband. Having survived that kind
of event didn’t excuse the man’s smart-mouthed attitude, but it made it a hell
of a lot easier to understand.
For the next while Joanna concentrated on reading the
material Frank Montoya had brought her. Lost in her work, she jumped when her
phone rang and was astonished to see that her clock said it was already twenty
minutes to one.
“I’m guessing you won’t be coming home for Sunday dinner,
is that right?” Butch asked.
“I’m sorry,” she said. “The time got away from me. I’m due
to be in a meeting at one. Save some for me, will you?”
“I already did.”
With Lars Jenssen’s timely intervention I managed to avoid
that first drink. When I finally went to bed around one, I fell right to sleep.
The problem is, the dream started almost as soon as I closed my eyes. It’s a
dream I’ve had over and over for years. Even in my sleep, it makes me angry. I
want to wake up. I don’t want to see it again, and yet there’s always the faint
hope that somehow this time it will be different. That it won’t end with the
same awful carnage.
I know from interviewing crime scene witnesses that human
memory is flawed. Dreams, which are memory once removed, are even more so. The
events of the few jewel-like spring days I spent with Anne are jumbled in my
dreams, sometimes out of sequence and often out of sync with the way things
really played out. The words we said to each other are hazy; the scenes
slightly out of focus. Still, they always leave me wrestling with an overriding
guilt and with the same unanswered questions: When did I fall in love with her?
How did it happen? What else could I have done?
In the dream I usually relive feelings rather than what
actually happened: The joy I felt when I asked her to marry me and she said
yes. The amazement as I slipped my mother’s treasured engagement ring on her
waiting finger and saw how perfectly it fit. There’s the fun of the surprise
wedding shower the guys from Seattle PD threw for us down at F. X. McRory’s and
the blue sky perfection of our early-morning wedding.
But then a cloud moves between us and the sun. The scene
darkens. Sometimes I manage to wake myself up here, but it doesn’t matter. When
I fall back asleep, the dream will he there again, cued up and waiting at the
exact same place.
I’m in the interview room on the fifth floor of the Public
Safety Building, listening to that poor, terrified phone company service rep. “I
left a message,” he tells me hopelessly. “I left a message with your wife. Didn’t
you get it?” But, of course, I didn’t get it. I didn’t have a wife then—not
until that very morning in Myrtle Edwards Park.
The scene goes darker still. I’m driving toward North Bend,
toward Snoqualmie Falls, squinting through a daytime blackness no headlights
can penetrate. I try to fight off the yawning chasm of despair that threatens
to engulf me, because I know by then know beyond a reasonable doubt—that Anne
Corley is a killer. A murderer. People are dead, and it’s all because of me. My
fault. My responsibility.
And then I walk into the restaurant. She’s seated across a
crowded room from the door. Sometimes she’s wearing her vibrant turquoise
wedding dress. Sometimes she’s in a jogging suit. Sometimes she’s swathed all
in black. This time it’s the bright blue dress. Our eyes meet over the heads of
the other carefree, unsuspecting diners. The look she gives me is electric,
chilling.
This is another point in the dream where I sometimes
manage to wake myself up. I used to have a drink—make that another drink. Now I
go to the bathroom and have a glass of plain water. But it’s no use. Whatever I
do, I’m trapped in the dream’s inevitability. When I close my eyes again, she’s
there waiting for me, beckoning to me from across the room.
The dream usually skips that last conversation. And I know
why. Even when I’m awake, I can’t remember it exactly, and I consider that a
blessing. It would be too painful to remember. She simply stands up and leaves.
As she maneuvers through the tables, I see the gun in her hand—a gun no one
else can see—and know it as my own.
Next we’re racing down the path toward the pool at the bottom
of the falls. She’s ahead of me. There are people in my way—gimpy, slow-moving
tourists going up, coming down. I thrust past them, push them out of my way.
And then we’re at the bottom. She turns to face me. I see her raising the gun
and feel the bullet smash into my shoulder. I fall—fall forever. And then, once
I land, I fire, too.
I’m a good shot. An excellent shot. I shoot to disarm, not
to kill. But she’s standing on wet, moss-covered rocks. As I pull the trigger,
she somehow loses her footing. She slips, and the motion moves her ever so
slightly. My bullet misses her arm and slams into her breast. As she falls, a
crimson stain blossoms across the fabric of whatever she’s wearing.
In the Copper Queen Hotel that night, that’s when I woke
up—sweaty, shaken, and filled with remorse. I stayed awake for hours after that,
fearing that the dream would come again the moment I closed my eyes. The sun
was just rising when I finally went back to sleep. Thankfully, the dream did
not return.
When I finally staggered downstairs late that Sunday
morning, I was as bleary-eyed and hungover as in my worst drinking and stinking
days. I barely made it into the dining room before they stopped serving
breakfast at eleven. As soon as I finished eating, I headed for the Cochise
County Justice Center. It was just twelve-thirty when I arrived there for the
one o’clock meeting. Still not sure of what my reception would be, I opted for
being prompt. After all, Sheriff Brady may have relented enough to allow me
inside the investigation, but I didn’t want to do any thing that would screw
things up.
The same lady I had met the day before, Lupe Alvarez,
manned the front desk. She greeted me with a smile. “Good after noon, Mr.
Beaumont. Sheriff Brady asked me to give you this to use while you’re here.”
She handed me a badge that had my name on it, along with
the initials MJF. The other side contained a magnetic strip. “What’s MJF?” I
asked.
“The Multi Jurisdiction Force,” Lupe explained. “When members
of the MJF work joint-ops out of our building, it’s easier to give them badges
so they can come and go as they please without our having to buzz them in and
out. The card works on all the lobby security doors. Also the rest rooms,” she
added.
If I was being given my own rest-room key, I had evidently
arrived. “Thanks,” I told her. “Now, where do I go?”
“The conference room,” she said. “It’s through that door
and three doors down the hall on the left.”
Since it wasn’t yet twelve forty-five, I figured I’d be
the first to arrive, but I was wrong. Sheriff Brady was already in the conference
room. She sat at the head of a long table with several stacks of paper lined up
in front of her. She looked up at me curiously as I entered the room. Her
appraisal was so thorough that I wondered for a moment if my fly was unzipped.
“Good afternoon, Special Investigator Beaumont,” she said,
motioning me into a chair. “You’re early.”
I took the seat she indicated. She slid one of the stacks
in my direction.
“What you have there are copies of everything we’ve come
up with so far,” she told me. “You’ll find crime scene reports, preliminary
autopsy results, transcripts of interviews, an Internet treatise on poisons in
general and sodium azide in particular. If we’re going to be working together,
you need to know everything we do.”
“Thanks,” I said, and meant it.
It hurt to have to haul my reading glasses out of my
pocket, but I swallowed my pride and did so. The topmost report was the crime
scene report from the Latisha Wall murder in Naco. I started to read, but
stopped a couple of sentences into it.
“There is one thing,” I said.
Sheriff Brady looked up from her own reading. Under her
questioning brow, I caught a glimpse of the banked fire in those vivid green
eyes. “What’s that?” she asked.
“Since we’re going to be working together, how about ditching
the ‘Special Investigator’ crap? Most people call me Beau. Either that or J.P.”
She studied me for a long time before she answered. “All
right,” she said finally. “Beau it is, and I’m Joanna.”
Sixteen
When I was in the
eighth grade at Seattle’s Loyal Heights Junior High, my homeroom and social
studies teacher, Miss Bond, encouraged me to run for student council.
Unfortunately, I won. That year of attending regular and utterly pointless
meetings doomed me to a lifetime of hating same. In my twenty-plus years at
Seattle PD I had a reputation for dodging meetings—this very kind of meeting
whenever possible.
This particular task force gathering, however, was one I
had actually wanted to attend. Since Joanna and I seemed to have a few more
minutes before the others were due to arrive, I settled in and read as much of
the handout material as I could. I wanted to he prepared. Before, Sheriff Brady’s
department had given me no information at all. Now, with someone obviously burning
the midnight-copier ink, I’d been given far too much.
One by one, people wandered into the room and were
introduced: Casey Ledford, the latent fingerprint tech; Deputy Dave Hollicker,
crime scene investigator; and homicide detective Jaime Carbajal. The last to
arrive was Chief Deputy Frank Montoya, but I already knew him. As they showed
up, I was struck by how young they all were. I could just as well have wandered
into a Junior Chamber of Commerce meeting. My understanding about Jaycees is
that once a member hits the ripe old age of thirty-five, he’s out on his tush.
Self-consciously, I stroked my chin, making sure I had shaved closely enough
that morning to erase the stubborn patch of gray whiskers that has lately
started sprouting there.
I’m not sure what Joanna’s team of investigators had been
told previously about my presence in their midst. None of them went out of his
or her way to make me feel welcome. I was grateful when Joanna Brady tackled
that issue head-on.
“You’ve all been introduced to Special Investigator Beaumont,”
Sheriff Brady said when she stood up at the stroke of 1 P.M. “He’s here as a
representative of the Washington State Attorney General’s Office, which has a
vested interest in seeing that whoever killed Latisha Wall is brought to
justice. Since it seems inconceivable that Latisha’s murder and Deidre
Canfield’s death are unrelated, this is Mr. Beaumont’s deal as much as it is
ours. From here on, he’s to be treated as a full member of this investigation.
Any information you give me, you should also give him. Is that clear?”
Sheriff Brady’s crew may have been young, but they were
unarguably professional. Uneasy nods of assent passed around the table. None of
them were thrilled to have an interloper among them, but no one raised an
audible objection.
“Good, then,” Joanna concluded. “Let’s get started.”
Clearly I wasn’t the only one who had put in a relatively
sleepless night. Deputy Hollicker looked especially bedraggled, with dark circles
under bloodshot eyes. He had spent most of the night processing the Canfield
crime scene down in Nacre. Scanning through my pile of papers, I noticed that
it didn’t contain a written report from him about that. Bearing that in mind, I
wasn’t the least surprised when Joanna Brady put him in the hot seat first.
“I’m working on the paper,” he said when she called on
him. “I’m sorry my report isn’t ready—”
“Never mind the report,” Joanna Brady said, waving aside
his apology. “Just tell us. Did you find anything useful?”
The CSI shook his head miserably. “Not really. Local kids
have been messing around in those old cavalry barracks for years. I found all
kinds of junk in there—trash, beer bottles, cigarette butts, and gum wrappers.
It’s tough to tell what, if anything, might be related.”
“You did say cavalry,” I confirmed. “As in horses?”
“That’s right. The building where the body was found is on
the site of an old U.S. Cavalry post that dates from the 1880s,” Joanna Brady
explained. “The crime scene is actually one of the old officers’ quarters. What
about the stables, Dave? Did you search them, too?”
If I had stumbled into a case where the crime scene turned
out to be a cavalry post, maybe I was Rip Van Winkle in reverse.
Hollicker nodded. “Yes, ma’am. Every inch. Detective Carbajal
thought we might find another body there—the boyfriend’s, presumably. We didn’t,
though.”
“No, I’m sure you didn’t,” Joanna said grimly. “‘There’ll
he more about Warren Gibson later. Go on.”
“Deputy Howell and I brought back as much stuff to the lab
as we thought might be relevant. Again, it’ll take time to go through it all. I’ll
work on it as time allows.”
“Did you talk to Doc Winfield?” Joanna asked.
Dave nodded. “Detective Carbajal and I both did. It was
right after the ME arrived on the scene, so he didn’t know much at that point.
He did tell us, though, that he’s reasonably certain Dee Canfield died
somewhere else. The body was dumped there afterward.”
“What about Dee’s house out in Huachuca Terraces? Did
either you or Casey get around to checking it out?”
Casey Ledford and Dave Hollicker shook their heads in unison.
“Ran out of time,” Dave explained. “I had a deputy put up crime scene tape. I’ll
go there later today, right after the meeting.”
“Good,” Joanna said. “Moving right along. Let’s talk about
Warren Gibson for a minute. Dave, you and Mr. Beaumont probably haven’t heard
about this yet, but Ms. Canfield’s daughter from Cheyenne, Wyoming—a woman
named Serenity Granger—came to my office this morning. She brought along a copy
of an unfinished e-mail that her mother sent her Thursday afternoon. Ms.
Granger didn’t actually read the message until yesterday. You should have a
copy of that along with your other handouts.”
I shuffled through my paperwork until I located Deidre
Canfield’s unfinished missive to her daughter.
“If you check the time,” Joanna Brady was saying, “it’s
listed as 4:10:26 P.M. Mountain Standard. Now look at the transcript of Jaime’s
interview with Dee Canfield. Look at the last two sentences right at the end.”
After a little more paper shuffling, I located the right
passages.
Detective Carbajal: Since both you and Mr. Gibson were in
Latisha Wall’s house yesterday, we’ll need fingerprints from both of you.
Ms. Canfield: Yes, yes, of course. I understand. We’ll take
care of it right away, tomorrow probably, but not right now. The show’s
tonight. I really do have to get back up to the gallery now so I can be ready
to meet the caterer and let her in.
That was the last entry. The transcript indicated that the
interview terminated at 3:08 PM. An hour and two minutes later, Dee had sent
her daughter an incomplete e-mail voicing her concern that perhaps Warren
Gibson had been involved in Latisha Wall’s murder. I could see where Sheriff
Brady was going with all this.
“Casey and Deputy Galloway spent a great deal of time last
night and early this morning processing Castle Rock Gallery. A while ago, Casey
got an AFIS hit on one of the prints she found there. The man everyone in
Bisbee knows as Warren Gibson turns out to be a convicted felon named Jack
Brampton. Flow about passing around copies of that rap sheet, Casey?”
As we say in the trade, “Bingo!”
Joanna Brady was totally in her groove by then. While the fingerprint
tech slid pieces of paper out across the smooth surface of the conference
table, Sheriff Brady continued without pause. “So we’ve put out an APB on Jack
Brampton, aka Warren Gibson.” She stopped long enough to give her chief deputy
a searching look. “It did go out, didn’t it, Frank?”
“Yes, ma’am,” Montoya replied. “And I added that the
suspect is most likely driving a 1970 red Pinto wagon.”
Joanna frowned. “Red,” she repeated. “Where did you get
that information?”
Montoya bristled slightly at the impatient way she posed
the question. I would have, too.
“Where else?” he returned. “From the DMV. That’s the vehicle
they show as being registered to one Deidre Canfield, 114 Cochise Drive,
Bisbee, Arizona.”
“The DMV maybe thinks it’s red,” Joanna told him. “But
they’re wrong. The last time I saw Dee Canfield’s Pinto, it looked like
somebody had used it for a drop cloth.”
“What color is it then?” Montoya asked.
“All colors,” she answered.
The chief deputy sighed. “All right, then,” he said. “If
you’ll excuse me for a moment, I’ll go amend that APB.”
Frank Montoya stood to leave the room as Joanna continued.
“The good news is, there aren’t that many 1970 Pintos of any kind or color
still on the road. If someone spots one moving under its own power, they’re
likely to let us know”
“Wait a minute,” I said, opening my mouth for only the second
time in the course of the meeting. “A 1970 Pinto? What kind of fuel does it run
on?”
“Leaded,” Joanna said.
“I didn’t know you could still buy leaded,” I objected.
“You can,” she replied, “but only across the line in Old
Mexico.”
Frank Montoya was still lingering by the conference room
door. “That’s something then,” he said. “If Brampton is using the Pinto as his
getaway car, it’s a pretty good bet he’ll be headed south. I’ll get on the horn
to Border Patrol here about him, and I’ll let the federales in Mexico
know about this as well.”
“Good idea,” Joanna said. “Do it.”
Meanwhile, I busied myself studying Jack Brampton’s rap
sheet. What stuck in my head was the fact that he’d served his time at a
medium-security facility in Illinois. UPPI’s corporate headquarters was based
in Illinois. I wondered if there was a connection. I circled the name of the
prison. When I came back to the discussion, Frank had returned and Joanna had
moved on to another topic.
“For someone who claims he doesn’t gossip, Harve Dowd from
Treasure Trove is full of information,” she was saying. “He told me last night
he thought Warren Gibson was pulling a fast one on Dee Canfield. Harve is of
the opinion that Dee wasn’t Gibson’s only romantic Interest. He claims to have
seen Gibson using the pay phones down by the post office on numerous occasions.
Frank is currently in the process of checking phone records, but since his
special phone company pal doesn’t work weekends, it’s taking more time than
usual.”
“Wait a minute,” Jaime Carbajal said. “Does this mean we’re
dropping Bobo Jenkins as a possible suspect?”
“Okay,” Joanna said. “Let’s talk about him for the moment.
What do we know?”
“That he was at Latisha Wall’s home the night she died,”
Jaime Carbajal began. “We also know, by his own admission, that he and the
woman he calls Rochelle Baxter had quarreled or at least had a disagreement
earlier in the day. We also have his fingerprints on those sweetener packets
from the kitchen.”
Casey Ledford raised her hand. “May I speak to that? To
the sweetener packets?”
Joanna nodded and all eyes went to the fingerprint tech. “Dave
and I examined the crime scene evidence from Latisha Wall’s kitchen. It’s true
Mr. Jenkins’s fingerprints are on the sweetener packets. They are. But the
physical evidence—the way the fingerprints are layered on the glass and
bottle—would indicate that Ms. Wall drank iced tea and Mr. Jenkins had the
beer.”
“See there?” Jaime said. “What did I tell you? He poured
the sweetener in her tea and then sat right there and watched her drink it.
What a hell of a nice guy! And then, on the Dee Canfield part of the equation,
we know Bobo was adamantly opposed to her plan to go through with the show
despite Latisha Wall’s death. Sheriff Brady, you witnessed some of that
yourself on Thursday morning at the gallery”
“You’re right about that,” Joanna conceded. “Bobo Jenkins
was at the gallery, and he was very upset. Do we have any idea where he was or
what he was doing between three and five on Thursday afternoon?”
“He claims he was at home and alone the entire afternoon,”
Jaime answered. “That’s in the transcript of the interview Frank and I did with
him on Saturday morning. He told us he stayed home all day, trying to come to
grips with what had happened. Of course,” the detective added, “at the time we
spoke to him, we were only aware of the Latisha Wall incident. We had no idea
Dee Canfield was also dead, so there was no reason to check on his whereabouts
or movements the day after what we assumed to be a single homicide.”
“Did he come right out and actually say he was home alone?”
Joanna asked.
Jaime scanned through the transcript. “Here it is, right
here. Yes, that’s what he said, but I’ll go uptown a little later. I’ll talk to
Bobo’s neighbors and see what they have to say.”
“All right,” Joanna said. “You do that.” Then she turned
to Chief Deputy Montoya. “In the meantime, Frank, while you’re dealing with the
phone factory, have a go at Bobo’s phone records as well. If he happened to be
on the phone making calls between three and four o’clock Thursday afternoon,
that would tend to corroborate his story even if no one was there with him at
the time.”
That intrigued me. Just because Bobo Jenkins was a suspect
in one homicide, Joanna Brady wasn’t giving her people carte blanche to turn
him automatically into prime-suspect material in the second death as well. In
other words, rather than looking for the quickest way to clear cases, Sheriff
Brady was prepared to take the time and make the effort to find out what had
really happened. I liked that about her. Respected it.
As Joanna Brady fired off one question after another, I
felt as though I had been transported back to the fishbowl at Seattle PD with
Captain Larry Powell popping questions left and right to see if his detectives
were making any progress or doing something to earn their keep.
I sat up straighter and paid closer attention because I
was beginning to suspect that perhaps Sheriff Joanna Brady was my kind of cop
after all.
Joanna looked down at the checklist she had scribbled off
in advance of the meeting. “So,” she said, crossing off another item. “With the
next-of-kin notification out of the way, what does Doc Winfield say about
scheduling the autopsy?”
“He’ll do it first thing tomorrow, and he’ll give me a
call beforehand,” Jaime Carbajal replied. “The good news is that Ernie will be
back on duty tomorrow morning. Once he’s back on board, maybe I can have him
handle the Verdugo boys’ interviews. At least I’ll have some help covering the
bases.”
“Or Mr. Beaumont could help out,” Joanna suggested
quietly. With Jaime looking mutinous, she moved to lessen the tension. “Hey,
Frank,” she added. “Next time Ernie asks for a whole week off, let him know he’s
not allowed to leave town until alter he checks with our upcoming homicide
scheduler.”
They all laughed at that, even Jaime. The atmosphere in
the room relaxed noticeably.
“All right,” she said. “Now for our chemistry lesson.”
We spent the next half hour hearing all about some thing
called sodium azide. Joanna had mentioned it prior to the meeting. Rather than
show my ignorance, I had said nothing. It turns out that as far as sodium azide
is concerned, ignorance is bliss. Just hearing about the stuff was enough to scare
the crap out of me.
Frank Montoya had tracked down an Internet article that
explained how various poisons, sodium azide included, present. An ingested
poison often exhibits a delayed reaction. The victim isn’t affected until the
substance is absorbed into the bloodstream. Inhaled sodium azide goes into the
lungs and directly into the blood, where its molecules bond with oxygen
molecules and render the oxygen unusable.
The information in Frank’s article was already more than I
wanted to know, but it did explain the time lag between when Latisha Wall drank
her tea and her death sometime later. What Dave Hollicker had to say about
sodium azide’s ready availability was horrifying.
“Wait a minute,” I interrupted, minutes into his lecture. “You’re
saying this stuff—this incredibly dangerous stuff that isn’t even illegal—can
be found in damned near every two-car garage in America?”
“That’s right,” Hollicker agreed blandly. “Those canisters
are in every car with air bags.”
“So the next kid who gets pissed off at his English
teacher in Podunk, USA, can slip some of it into her coffee and knock her off
just like that? This is nuts, totally nuts! And nobody’s doing any thing about
it?”
“Not so far,” Dave Hollicker said. “According to what I’ve
learned, there’s currently no plan to regulate sodium azide in any way or even
to add a marker substance.”
About that time there was a knock on the conference room
door. “Come in,” Joanna called.
Lupe Alvarez stuck her head inside. “Rick Orting, the dispatcher
for the city of Bisbee just called, Sheriff Brady. Someone from Phelps Dodge is
reporting finding an abandoned multicolored Pinto.”
A charge of excitement surged around the room. “Where is
it?” Joanna demanded.
“Between the end of Wood Canyon and Old Bisbee,” Lupe
replied. “It’s on one of those company roads, the ones that go out to PD’s new
drilling sites north of Lavender Pit. The Pinto’s rear axle is broken. A
day-shift watchman found it a little while ago when he was out doing his
rounds.”
“Thanks, Lupe,” Joanna said, then turned back to her team
of investigators. “Okay, Jaime. You, Casey, and Dave get on this right away.”
Without another word, the three of them hustled out of the room.
“What about me, boss?” Frank Montoya asked.
“Even if you’re dealing with second-stringers, you stay
here and keep after the phone stuff. We need that information.”
“And me?” I asked. “What am I supposed to do?”
“You’re with me.”
“Why?”
“So I can keep an eye on you. You’re part of this
investigation, but I don’t want to spend the entire afternoon giving you directions
and guiding you from one place to another.”
“I have a map ...” I began.
“Forget it. Just go get in the car.”
“Yours or mine?”
The disparaging look she gave me told me the question was
unworthy of being dignified with an answer. “Come on,” she said. Rather than
going out through the public lobby, Joanna hustled me first to her private
office and then out a door that led directly into the parking lot. I started
toward the Crown Victoria knew to be hers.
“Not that one,” she said, stopping me. “We’ll take the
Blazer.”
We walked two rows into the parking lot, where she climbed
into the driver’s seat of an SUV that had definitely seen better days—from a
physical-beauty point of view. However, a powerful engine sprang to life the
moment she turned the key in the ignition. The term “ugly but honest!” came to
mind.
We drove into town and back toward Old Bisbee. At the far end
of the huge layered hole in the ground she explained was Lavender Pit we came
to a spot where a group of cop cars, lights flashing, had converged alongside
the road. Some of the vehicles were marked CITY OF BISBEE; others, SHERIFF’S
DEPARTMENT. They were grouped around the entrance to a freshly graded dirt road
that led off between the red-rock hills.
We were pulling over to check things out when a call came
in over the radio. “Sheriff Brady?”
“Yes, Tica,” she responded. “What is it?”
“I have Burton Kimball on the phone. He needs to talk to
you right away.”
Joanna sighed. “Look, Tica. I’m really busy at the moment....”
“He says it’s urgent,” Tica insisted. “Is it all right if
I patch him rough?”
“I suppose so,” Joanna agreed grudgingly. “Go ahead.”
“Sheriff Brady?” A male voice roared through the radio. Despite
having been filtered through both a telephone receiver and the radio, his words
buzzed angrily in the air.
“What in the world are you and your people trying to pull now?”
he demanded. “I can’t believe you’d stoop so low that you’d go to such incredible
lengths. Really, Joanna, I always thought you were above this kind of stunt.”
Whoever Burton Kimball was, he was pissed as hell. In the
course of the previous twenty-four hours, I’d seen some pretty strong
indications that Sheriff Brady has a temper. I fully expected her to cut loose
and give the guy as good as she got. She surprised me.
“Slow down a minute, Burton,” she returned mildly. “What
are you talking about?”
“Someone has broken into my client’s house and planted
what looks like a cache of drugs here,” he replied. “If you think you can get
away with that kind of nonsense ...” He paused as if searching for words. “I
tell you, Joanna, I’m outraged about this absolutely outraged!”
She and I hit on the word “drugs” at the same time, and we
both jumped to the same conclusion. Why wouldn’t we? Drug or not, sodium azide
was the topic of the moment. A few minutes earlier we’d been sitting in a
conference room learning all about it.
It was interesting to realize once again that when Joanna
Brady was upset, her voice went down instead of up. “What drugs?” she asked
urgently but softly. Sitting right next to her, I could barely hear her, but
Burton Kimball heard.
“How would I know?” he snapped back. “I didn’t taste it,
if that’s what you mean. I wouldn’t know what cocaine tastes like if it walked
up and hit me in the face, but since this is a white powder, cocaine is my
first assumption.”
I watched while every trace of color drained from Joanna
Brady’s face. Her voice didn’t change or falter. “This white powder,” she said
calmly, “where exactly is it?”
“In my client’s laundry room,” Burton Kimball replied. “Bobo
went out there this afternoon to do some laundry and found it sitting there,
right in plain sight on the dryer. It’s in a box that’s been wrapped in duct
tape and hooked up to the dryer vent. When he called to tell me about it, I
advised him to leave it alone. I tell you, Joanna ...”
“Where are you right now?” Joanna interrupted.
“Where am I?” Burton Kimball returned. “Where do you
think? I’m at my client’s house, and you can bet I’m staying here until someone
comes to collect this stuff and take it away.”
“Whereabouts are you in the house?” Joanna prodded.
I had to give the lady credit for staying cool. By then
she had put the idling Blazer in gear. We were back on the road, speeding
toward Old Bisbee.
“In the kitchen,” he said. “Talking to you on the phone.”
“What about Bobo?” she asked. “Where’s he?”
“Right here with me. Why?”
“Good,” she said. “Now listen to me, Burton. Listen very
carefully. Whatever’s in that box in Bobo’s laundry room wasn’t planted by
anyone from my department. But I suspect that it is dangerous, probably even
deadly.”
“What is it, then, some kind of bomb? Is it going to
explode?”
“No, nothing like that. But don’t interrupt. I want you
both to leave the house, Burton. Immediately. Go outside and stay out. I’ll be
there in a few minutes. In the meantime, don’t go near the laundry room, and
whatever you do, don’t touch that box.”
“I hope you’re not trying to pull a fast one here, Joanna,”
Burton Kimball warned, but his tone of voice had changed slightly. The naked
urgency in her orders had commanded his attention.
“All right,” he relented, backing down. “But if you even
so much as try using this as evidence against my client without having a
properly drawn search warrant ...”
Joanna started to lose it. “I don’t give a rat’s ass about
evidence,” she interrupted. “I’m trying to save lives here. Now gel the hell
out of that house, Burton, and take Bobo Jenkins with you.” She ended the call
and tossed me the microphone.
“What?” I said.
“Call Dispatch back,” she ordered, switching on both
lights and siren. The calm voice she had used to address Burton Kimball was
replaced by that of a drill sergeant barking orders. “Tell them we need the
state Haz-Mat team at Bobo Jenkins’s place on Youngblood Hill. Tell them you
and I are on our way to secure the scene.”
“Which is where?”
“On Youngblood Hill.”
“I know that. What’s the address?”
Joanna Brady shook her head in disgust. “For crying out
loud!” she exclaimed. “I have no idea, but since it’ll take the Haz-Mat team a
good hour and a half to get here from Tucson, we should be able to figure out
the address between now and then. Maybe somebody with half a brain can look his
address up in the phone hook!”
I punched the “Talk” button on the microphone. As I gave Tica
the necessary information, it occurred to me that I wasn’t the only person in
that speeding Blazer who should have invested a few hundred bucks in a Dale
Carnegie course.
With lights flashing and siren blaring, we screamed into
the old part of town and turned right up a narrow, one-lane strip of steep
pavement. The sign said “O.K. Street,” but there was nothing okay about it. Calling
it a goat path would have been closer to the mark than calling it a street.
Then, about the time I was sure the Blazer was going to scrape off both its
mirrors, we met a vehicle coming down. A silver-haired lady, driving a Pontiac
Grand Prix with Nebraska plates, backed out of a parking lot beside what was
evidently a small hotel and started in our direction.
She looked a bit surprised when she realized a cop car
with flashing lights and a blaring siren was aimed right at her, but instead of
stopping or returning to the parking lot, she kept right on coming, motioning
for us to move over and get out of her way. Somehow Joanna
managed to do exactly that, tucking the Blazer into an almost nonexistent wide
spot.
“For God’s sake!” I demanded. “Isn’t this a one-way
street?”
“For everyone but the tourists!” Joanna muttered. The
woman in the Pontiac edged past us, waving cheerfully and smiling as she went. “Lights
and sirens must not mean the same thing in Nebraska.”
“Sheriff Brady,” the dispatcher called, interrupting
Joanna in midgripe.
Not wanting her to take her eyes off the road, I picked up
the mike. “Beaumont here. What is it?”
“City of Bisbee wants to know what’s going on, so I told
them. They’re sending backup for you. And I have that address on Youngblood
Hill for you now.”
Joanna Brady didn’t look as though she needed to be told
where she was going, and right that minute I was too busy hanging on for dear
life to take notes.
“As long as the Haz-Mat guys have it,” I said. “I think we’re
fine.”
We came to a real wide spot in the road where several cars
were parked at haphazard angles around the perimeter. Joanna threw the Blazer
into “Park” and jammed on the emergency brake. She paused long enough to
retrieve a pair of worn tennis shoes from the floor of the backseat. After
changing shoes, she leaped out of the car and started down a winding street
that was even steeper than the one we’d been on before. The posted sign here
said “Youngblood Hill.” Glad to be ignorant of the street name’s origin, I
tagged after her.
The pockmarked, broken pavement was scattered with loose
gravel. The surface was an open invitation for broken legs. Or ankles. It was
all I could do to keep from falling ass over teakettle.
Halfway down the hill was a blind curve. I expected
Youngblood Hill to be a one-way street. No such luck. Rounding the curve, we
came face-to-face with a city of Bisbee patrol car nosing its way uphill. About
that time Joanna Brady turned left, darted under an archway, through a wrought-iron
gate, and up an impossibly narrow concrete stairway. I went after her. Taking
both age and altitude into consideration, I didn’t even try to keep up. The
best I hoped for was not to die in the process.
Hearing footsteps behind me, I looked back. Right on my
heels came a beefy young man in a blue uniform. The Bisbee City cop had left
his idling patrol car sitting in the middle of the street and charged after us.
He outweighed me by forty pounds, but by the time we reached a small terrace of
a yard, he was only a step or two behind me. My chest was about to burst open.
He hadn’t broken a sweat.
The new arrival was Officer Frank Rojas. I stood aside
long enough to let him hurtle past me and catch up with Sheriff Brady. Since we
were obviously inside city boundaries, I expected an immediate outbreak of
jurisdictional warfare. I’ve seen it happen often enough. I know of numerous
occasions in the Seattle area where bad guys have gotten away because cops from
neighboring suburbs weren’t necessarily on speaking terms. In Bisbee, Arizona,
that was evidently not the case.
“What do you need, Sheriff Brady?” Rojas asked.
“To secure the residence,” she gasped. That made me feel a
little better. At least I wasn’t the only one having trouble breathing. “Anyone
inside?”
Joanna glanced at two men who stood together in the far
corner of the tiny front yard—a rangy African-American in a T-shirt, shorts,
and tennis shoes, and a white man in full Sunday go-to-meeting attire—gray
suit, white shirt, and tie. His once highly polished shoes now sported a layer
of red dust. I assumed the guy in the suit to be the attorney, Burton Kimball.
That meant the other one was Bobo Jenkins, Latisha Wall’s boyfriend.
The man was big and tough, and I wondered how he felt
about being called Bobo. Someone tried to pin that handle on me once when I was
in fifth grade. I creamed the guy. I hoped Mr. Jenkins didn’t mind. Despite
Archie’s description of Bobo as a sort of gentle giant, Mr. Jenkins looked as
though he was more than capable of taking care of himself when it came to
physical combat.
“No,” Joanna told Rojas. ‘As far as I know, no one’s
inside.”
“What seems to be the problem?”
“Dangerous chemicals,” she answered. “We’ve called for the
Haz-Mat team from Tucson. You take the back of the house, Frankie. Make sure no
one enters. And whatever you do, don’t go near the dryer vent.”
Frank Rojas didn’t question her orders. “Yes, ma’am,” he
said. Without another word, off he went.
Seventeen
About then the man in the suit charged aces the yard to
meet us. From the irate expression on the attorney’s face I doubted Burton
Kimball would be nearly as tractable as Officer Rojas had been.
“All right, Sheriff Brady,” Kimball snapped. “As you can
se, we did what you said. We’re out of the house. Now how about telling us what
this is about? If the white powder in the box isn’t a drug, what is it?”
Joanna took one more deep breath before she answered. “I’m
guessing it’ll turn out to be sodium azide,” she answered. “It’s a deadly
poison. We have reason to believe Latisha Wall died as a result of sodium azide
poisoning.”
“Never heard of it,” Kimball grunted.
“Not many people have,” Joanna agreed.
“What is it?”
“It’s the propellant used to deploy air bags in vehicles,”
she explained. “Sodium azide is more toxic than cyanide. It has no known
antidote.”
Bobo Jenkins spoke for the first time. “Did you say
Shelley was poisoned?” he croaked. “How’s that possible?”
“We believe the fatal dose was placed in something she
frank,” Joanna answered. “Most likely in her iced tea.”
“But how ...” Bobo began. Then his face changed as he put
it together. “The sweetener packets!” he exclaimed.
Joanna gave him a searching look. Finally, she nodded.
As I said, Bobo Jenkins was a big man. His arms and legs
bulged with muscles. As the awfulness of the situation sank in, his knees
seemed to buckle. He staggered unsteadily over to the porch steps and dropped
down onto the topmost one.
“But I’m the one who put the sweetener in her tea,” he
blurted out. “Two packets. That’s what Shelley always took in her iced tea. Two
packets. Never any more; never any less. Does that mean I’m the one who killed
her?”
“Enough, Bobo,” Burton Kimball interjected. “Don’t say
anything more. Not another word.”
If Kimball’s stunned client heard his attorney’s
objection, he paid no attention.
‘And that’s what you think is here in my house right now,
in the box in my laundry room?” Jenkins continued. “You think its the same thing?
The same poison?”
By then, Kimball was practically beside himself. “Mr.
Jenkins, please. No more. Sheriff Brady, you haven’t informed my client of its
rights. I must ask that you refrain from asking any more questions, the answers
to which may be prejudicial....”
Ignoring the lawyer, Joanna sat down on the porch step
next to lobo Jenkins. “Tell me about today,” she said quietly.
“Today?” He gave her an anguished look, as though not
quite comprehending the question.
“Tell me everything that happened,” she urged. “Everything
that led up to your finding the box.”
He sighed and shook his head. “Last night I couldn’t
sleep.” He said. “I kept tossing and turning and thinking about ...” He paused
and swallowed hard before continuing. “... about what had happened. I couldn’t
believe I’d lost Shelley just like that. I still can’t believe it. Sometimes it
seems like it’s got to be some awful nightmare. Eventually, I’ll wake up and
she won’t be gone.
“Anyway, after lying in bed for hours, I finally got up
about three o’clock this morning. I dressed and went for a run. I ran all the
way down to Warren and back. By the time I finished, the sun was just coming
up. I showered and went to bed. I finally fell asleep after that and didn’t
wake up until a little while ago. I went out to the kitchen to put on some
coffee. While I waited for the coffee to finish, I decided to start a load of
clothes. That’s when I found that box—a duct-taped box I’d never seen before—sitting
there on top of the dryer. The flexible vent duct is connected to it.”
“Did you touch it?”
Jenkins shook his head. “Give me some credit. I’m smarter
than that. The box has a window in the top that’s covered with plastic wrap. As
soon as I saw the white powder in it, I called Mr. Kimball.”
“Why?”
“Are you kidding? When Jaime Carbajal and Frank Montoya
interviewed me yesterday morning, they didn’t give out any details, but I could
tell from their questions that I was under suspicion—that they thought I was
somehow responsible for Shelley’s death. Now I know why. You must have found my
fingerprints on the sweetener packets, since I’m the one who poured them into
her glass.”
Ignoring that, Joanna responded with yet another question.
“When you saw the box, what did you think was in it?” she asked.
Jenkins shrugged. “I assumed it was cocaine. I figured
some one was trying to frame me for dealing drugs or something worse.”
“But why would you think someone from my department placed
it there?” Joanna asked.
He shook his head as though no explanation should have
been necessary. “You’re not a black man considering running for public office
in this country,” he said softly. “You’re not being paranoid if people really
are out to get you.”
I had been listening to all of this and trying to keep my
mouth shut. Now, though, I couldn’t resist putting in my two cents’ worth. “Look.
If someone planted the box in Mr. Jenkins’s house, how was it done? Any sign of
a break-in? It takes time to rip off a dryer duct and reconnect it.”
“I don’t lock my doors,” Bobo said. “I never have.”
Burton Kimball looked distinctly unhappy about the way the
conversation was going, but there wasn’t much he could do about it. Nobody paid
any attention to him, least of all his client.
“You said you were making coffee,” Joanna mused
thoughtfully. “What do you use in it?” she added.
It seemed like an off-the-wall question. At first I couldn’t
see where she was going. Bobo Jenkins seemed puzzled as well. “What do you
think? Coffee and water,” he said. “What else is there?”
“I mean, how do you take it?” Joanna asked. “Black, or
with cream and sugar?”
“Sugar but no cream,” he said. “I’m lactose-intolerant.”
“Where do you keep your sugar?”
“In the fridge,” he said. “If I leave it out on the
counter or table, I sometimes have problems with ants. Why?”
Then I understood. The white powder in the duct-taped box.
It would have taken time, effort, and ingenuity to put sodium azide in
sweetener packets. By comparison, putting a few spoonfuls of it into a sugar
bowl would be simple—and just as deadly.
At that moment a deputy I didn’t know—an officer named
Matt Raymond—hustled up the steps and into the yard. “What’s happening?” Joanna
asked.
“Detective Carbajal says it’s confirmed. The abandoned car
definitely belongs to Dee Canfield. It’s on a road that winds through the hills
and ends up about half a mile east of here, on the far side of B-Hill.”
I had noticed a big whitewashed “B” on one of the hills as
I drove into town for the first time. Now I realized that Bobo Jenkins’s home
was on one of the flanks of that selfsame hill. Half a mile away wasn’t very
far.
“Which way was the Pinto going when they found it?” Joanna
asked. “In or out?”
“Out,” the deputy returned. “Detective Carbajal says it
looks like the driver was attempting to turn the vehicle around so he could
head back to the highway when he got hung up on a boulder. Broke the axle right
in two.”
“Thank God for small favors,” Joanna said. “We’d better
get the K-9 unit out there on the double.”
“Already done,” Officer Raymond said. “Deputy Gregovich
and Spike are on their way.
Nodding, Joanna turned back to the attorney. “Look, Burton,
she said, “we’ve called in the Haz-Mat team. The fewer people we have hanging
around when they get here, the better. How about if you take Mr. Jenkins and go
someplace else for a while? Let me know where you are. Someone from the
department will notify you when it’s safe for him to return home.”
“I’ll be only too happy to,” Kimball said, still sounding
slightly miffed. “Come on, Bobo. Let’s get out of here. We wouldn’t want to be
in anyone’s way.”
Joanna Brady wasn’t good at waiting; she never had been.
As the minutes ticked by, she paced back and forth in Bobo’s small terraced
yard. If her suspicions proved correct, her jurisdiction had been plagued by
two murders and an attempted homicide in less than a week. Right that minute,
the only thing working in her favor was the fact that the supposed getaway
car—Dee Canfield’s aging Pinto—had finally come to grief. Had it not been for
that, Warren Gibson would have been long gone. Then again, with as much of a
head start as he’d had, maybe he’d made good his escape after all.
It didn’t help that J.P. Beaumont sat on the porch staring
at her and watching her every move as she anxiously paced the confines of the
yard. The last thing she needed right then was an audience.
“Sit down,” he suggested. “Take a load off.”
But Joanna didn’t want to sit. She didn’t want to be
patronized, either. “I’d rather stand,” she said.
Across the yard, Matt Raymond’s radio crackled to life. “What
is it?” she demanded.
The deputy listened for a moment, holding one finger in
the air. “It’s Detective Carbajal. He says the K-9 Unit has found two separate
trails. One seems to head in this general direction. The other one heads back
along the road and out to the highway.”
“Have them follow that one,” Joanna said at once. “Let’s
try to see where the SOB went.”
When she glanced back at Beau once more, she noticed he
had taken his packet of Xeroxed reports out of his coat pocket. He unfolded the
pages, put on a pair of horn-rimmed reading glasses, and began studying the
pages, occasionally making notes.
At least he finally quit staring at me,
Joanna thought as she checked her watch for the third time
in as many minutes. At this rate, the hour-and-a-half wait for the arrival of
the Haz-Mat team was going to take a very long time.
Several long minutes passed without a word being
exchanged. Beaumont finally broke the lingering silence. “Could you do me a
favor?” he asked.
“What’s that?”
“It says here that Jack Brampton was incarcerated in the
Gardendale Correctional Institute outside Elgin, Illinois.”
“Right.”
“I need to find out if that’s a state- or privately run
facility.”
“Frank Montoya’s your guy,” Joanna said. She removed her
cell phone from her pocket, punched up Frank’s direct number, and handed it
over to Beau. He looked down at it in baffled silence, as though he had never
seen a cell phone before in his life.
“The number’s already programmed in,” she told him impatiently.
“All you have to do is hit ‘Send.
Beaumont shot her another dubious look and then did as he
was told. A moment later he was explaining to Chief Deputy Montoya what was
needed.
Joanna glanced at her watch once more. Time was passing,
but not nearly fast enough. She listened to Beau’s part of the conversation
with only half an ear. The call had barely ended when another one came through.
She took the phone from Beau’s hand and answered the call herself.
“What is it, Jaime?” she asked.
“Sorry, boss,” he said. “It’s a dead end. Spike led us
right hack here—to the highway. That’s where the trail stops. Brampton got into
a vehicle and rode away.”
“Have Terry and Spike go back to the Pinto and try
following the trail in the other direction,” she ordered. “I want to know where
that one goes as well. In the meantime, send Casey out to Dee Canfield’s house.
I’ll need Dave up here so he can handle the chain of custody on whatever
evidence the Haz-Mat guys turn up.”
She ended the call. Beaumont had obviously been listening.
“If the killer got in a car and rode away,” he said, “that probably means one
of two things.”
“What would those be?” Joanna asked.
“Either Jack Brampton has an accomplice who came and
picked him up, or else he hitched a ride with some poor innocent passerby who’s
going to wind up being our next victim.”
“Great,” Joanna muttered. “Just what I want to hear.”
About that time the first member of the moon-suited Haz
Mat team came huffing up the stairs. “I’m Ron Workman, the team captain,” the
leader announced to everyone in the small yard. “Who’s in charge here?”
Since Deputy Raymond’s was the only visible uniform, the
question was addressed to him. The deputy nodded in Joanna’s direction and she
stepped forward.
“I am, Mr. Workman. I’m Sheriff Joanna Brady.”
The man gave Joanna a skeptical top-to-toe appraisal, from
her grubby tennis shoes to the skirt, blouse, and blazer she had dressed in for
church. He seemed less than thrilled at the idea that she was in charge.
Workman peered around the yard. “I was told we’d find a
hazardous material situation here,” he said. “What is it, some kind of false
alarm?”
By then three more moon-suited guys had crowded into Bobo Jenkins’s
tiny front yard. They stood in a clump like a hunch of stranded astronauts
waiting to see what would happen.
It would have been nice if Workman’s dismissive attitude hadn’t
been quite so blatant. Joanna had dealt with similar reactions for years; they
still irked her.
“It’s no false alarm,” she assured him crisply. “The
hazardous material is inside the house. In the laundry room you’ll find a box
we suspect contains sodium azide. The box is hooked up to the dryer vent.”
That got Mr. Workman’s attention. “Sodium azide?” he
demanded. “My God, woman! Do you have any idea how dangerous that stuff can be?”
“As a matter of fact, I do,” Joanna said sweetly. “That’s
why we called you.”
“Where is it?”
“Around back. A uniformed officer is standing by at the
back or—”
Not waiting for her to finish, Workman motioned to his
teals. “All right, guys. Let’s get moving.”
“Stop,” Joanna barked. “That’s not all.”
A moment earlier, Workman had been prepared to write the
whole thing off as a false alarm. Now he scowled impatiently at the delay. “What
then?” he asked.
“Your team is to remove and examine all open food
containers, including the contents of all sugar, flour, and salt containers. We’ve
had one homicide due to sodium azide poisoning and suspect we may have another.
In the first case, the poison was concealed in sweetener packets. My concern is
that here it may have been used to contaminate other foodstuff’s. So, although
this is primarily a hazardous-materials operation, it’s also a crime scene
investigation. I want photographs and a properly documented evidence log.”
“I was told no one here was hurt,” Workman objected. “In
fact, I asked the dispatcher specifically, and he said—”
“You’re right, no one is hurt here,” Joanna corrected. “Not
at this location, but only because we got lucky. Let me remind you, however,
Mr. Workman, that two other people are dead. If you find any trace of
sodium azide in the food inside the house, that adds one count of attempted
murder as well.”
“All right, all right!” Workman conceded grudgingly. “I
get the picture.” He turned once again to his waiting crew. “Okay, guys,” he
said. “Move it.”
One by one, the Haz-Mat team disappeared into the house. “Good
work,” Beaumont said after they left.
Joanna turned on him. “What do you mean?”
He grinned at her. “You know exactly what I mean. You
chewed that poor guy up and spit him out. He never even saw it coming.”
The next thing Joanna Brady knew, she was grinning, too. “Something’s
bothering me,” he said, when the lighthearted moment had passed.
“What’s that?” she asked.
He reached into his pocket and pulled out a cell phone
that was very nearly a duplicate of her own. “How come yours works and mine
doesn’t?” he asked.
“Oh, that,” she says. “It’s a Dual-NAM phone.”
“What’s that?”
“Two numbers and two cell-phone providers. I got tired of
all the dropped calls. Now I’m hooked into the system down in Naco, Senora, as
well. They have a stronger signal....”
“Is that why I keep ending up with the recording in
Spanish?”
“Right,” she said. And you’re going to keep on getting it
until you’re on the other side of the Mule Mountains.”
Shaking his head, Beau pocketed his phone. “Sorry I asked,”
he said.
Sometime later, the first of the haz-mat crew members
emerged from the house carrying several tightly closed stainless-steel
containers. It was an hour after that when the last of them, Ron Workman,
stepped out onto the porch. Divested of his moon suit, he stopped in front of
Joanna and handed over an evidence log as well as a fanfold of Polaroid prints.
“Whoever your guy is, he knows what he’s doing,” Workman
told Joanna as she studied the pictures.
“What makes you say that?”
“If he hadn’t known something about sodium azide, he’d
most likely be lying dead in there, too, since just breathing this stuff can
kill you.” Dave Hollicker was standing nearby. Remembering her crime scene
investigator was lucky to he alive, Joanna shot him a meaningful glance. Dave
nodded and said nothing.
Workman continued. “He jury-rigged himself a laminar flow fume
hood. Attached a cooling fan from a computer to one side and cut a hole big
enough for his hands in the other. With his hands inside, the two openings would
be almost the same. He also cut holes into the top and made Saran Wrap windows
so he could work with his hands inside the box and still see what he was doing.
Then he sealed all the seams with duct tape. And—voila. There you have it the
same kind of equipment we use when we’re working with hazardous materials in
the lab, except ours sets the state back a bundle of money. What your guy used
was crude but effective.”
“And portable,” Joanna added.
“That, too,” Workman agreed. “Whenever he was working with
it, he would have connected it to an outside vent.”
“It’s hooked to the dryer vent so he wouldn’t end up
breathing it himself.”
“Right.”
“Did you dust for prints?” Joanna asked.
“Not yet,” Workman told her. “When we get back to the lab,
we’ll dust the box and the food containers we took, but for the rest ...”
“That’s all right,” Joanna said. “My people will handle
it. How much sodium azide did you find in there?”
“In the box?”
She nodded.
“Plenty,” Workman answered grimly. “More than I wanted to
see. If your suspicions about the sugar and flour are correct, he had enough to
do some real damage.”
“How long will it take you to find out about the sugar and
flour?” she asked.
“Not long,” he said with a shrug. A day or two. I’ll be in
touch as soon as we finish the analysis.”
Joanna wanted to grab the man by his shoulders and give
him a shake. She wanted to flood Workman with the same kind of urgency she
felt, but he didn’t have people in his jurisdiction dying right and left. He
didn’t have some nutcase walking around his town carrying God knew how much
more sodium azide. But Joanna understood she had already pushed him just
getting him to create the evidence log. If she said much more, it would likely slow
the process rather than speed it up. “Thanks,” she said. “I’m sure you’ll do
your best.”
I got a kick out of watching it go down. It occurred to me
while Sheriff Brady was nailing Ron Workman’s feet to the floor that even
though the Haz-Mat squad leader was a good twenty years younger than Harry I.
Ball, the two men were cut from the same cloth.
Most people are under the mistaken impression that sexism
is limited to old farts like Harry and me. They think one of these days all of
the old guys will die off, sort of like the dinosaurs did, and the problem will
disappear from the face of the planet. I have had news for those folks. Since
Ron Workman wasn’t a day over thirty five, they probably shouldn’t look for it
to happen anytime soon.
The Haz-Mat guys and Deputy Hollicker were packing up to
leave when Joanna’s cell phone rang again. She answered and then handed it over
to me. “For you,” she said.
“I’ve got two things to tell you,” Frank Montoya reported
excitedly. “Number one: I checked on that Gardendale Correctional Institute you
asked me about. It’s private, not public, owned and operated by UPPI.”
“And the other?”
“I’ve finally managed to get a hold of some of the phone
records we need. I started with the pay phones down by the post office, and I’ve
found something very interesting. There are three long distance calls that were
placed from one of those phones to Winnetka, Illinois, on Thursday. One was at
eleven-twenty. The second was at three forty-six, the third at three-fifty. The
first two went to the offices of a law firm named Maddern, Maddern, and Peek.
The last one was to the residence of someone named Louis F. Maddern, the Third.
That call lasted for close to ten minutes. Does the name ‘Maddern’ ring a bell?”
“Not to me,” I told him, jotting the information into my
notebook. “Never heard of the guy or the law firm, either one.”
“It could be nothing,” Frank was saying. “Since Brampton
is evidently from Illinois, it could be Maddern is a friend or a relative. But
still, the timing ...”
I was doing some dot-connecting. Frank Montoya was right.
The timing of the calls was critical. Vital, even. One had been placed in the
morning, probably shortly after the end of the donnybrook at Castle Rock
Galley. The second two had been placed within minutes of Brampton’s finding out
he was about to be fingerprinted in regard to the Latisha Wall homicide. If he’d
had something to do with her death—if he was in any way responsible—he might
have been operating in a state of near panic about then. Everyone pretends that
detectives solve cases by virtue of pure skill and dogged determination. The
truth is, we usually catch crooks because they make stupid mistakes.
“This is good stuff,” I told him. “Thanks.”
“I thought you’d like it,” Frank replied.
I started to hand the phone back to Joanna, then changed
my mind. “Could you check on one more thing?” I asked.
“What’s that?” Frank returned.
“UPPI and the state of Washington are currently involved
in some upcoming litigation. How about checking to see if a company named
Maddern, Maddern, and Peek is representing in that case.”
“Sure thing,” Frank said. “I’ll see what I can do.” I
heard some one speaking to Montoya in the background. When he returned to the
radio mike, his voice crackled with new urgency. “I lave the Haz-Mat guys left
yet?” he demanded.
I looked around. The yard was empty. While we talked, Joanna
had evidently followed Ron Workman and his crew back down to the street. “I’m
not sure,” I told him. “If they’re not already gone, they’re packing up to
leave. Why?”
“Somebody’d better grab them before they do,” Frank
Montoya returned. “Casey Ledford just radioed in from Dee Dee Canfield’s house
out in Huachuca Terraces. She says there are clear signs of a struggle in the
living room, and there are traces of a white powder on the furniture and in the
rugs. She’s evacuated the place and is awaiting Haz-Mat assistance.”
Before the call even ended, I was thundering down the
stairs, looking for Joanna Brady. Ron Workman was shaking her hand and about to
get into his truck when I caught up with them. I gave her Frank’s message,
which she immediately passed along to Ron. He took the news of this additional
Haz-Mat site with all the eye rolling good grace of a fifth grader who’s just
been told the principal has canceled recess.
“Where’s this one?” he demanded.
“A few miles from here,” Joanna said. “You’ll get there faster
it I lead the way.”
With that, Joanna Brady struck off up the street toward
the parked Blazer. Since I was currently without wheels of my own, I jogged
along. If where we were going was “a few” miles away, I had no intention of
walking.
Riding through town, I was struck by the general junkiness
of the place. Homes and businesses alike seemed to have collections of old
cars, washing machines, refrigerators, and other rusty equipment that defied
identification moldering around them. Evidently the city of Bisbee wasn’t big
on litter patrol.
The route we took around the traffic circle and out of
town was familiar. We’d gone that way the day before when I had followed
Joanna’s Crown Vic to Naco. This time, though, we blew straight through that
critical intersection. Half a mile later, we turned left into a little
subdivision of humble-looking late-fifties bungalows, complete with what looked
distinctly like another hazardous material—asbestos siding.
Dee Canfield’s house was the most beat-up place on the
block. A seven-foot-tall chicken, made of soldered-together scrap metal and too
tall to fit under the low-slung front porch’s overhang, stood sentry in the
middle of a weed-clogged front yard.
Joanna parked on the street. While she hurried off to
confer with her deputies and the Haz-Mat guys once again, I stayed put. I didn’t
have the patience or the inclination to go hang around another crime scene.
Playing fifth wheel and staying out of the way of the people who are doing
useful work doesn’t suit me.
That’s how come I was still in the car and half-dozing
when the radio call came in from Frank Montoya.
“Sheriff Brady,” he asked. “Can you put Beaumont on?”
I picked up the radio. “I’m here,” I said. “What’s up?”
“Maddern, Maddern, and Peek may not be representing UPPI
in Washington State, but they are in several other jurisdictions—Missouri,
Arkansas, and Pennsylvania, to be exact. The law firm UPPI is using in
Washington is actually McRainey and Dobbs. They’re located in a place called
Bellevue.”
My heartbeat quickened. It may have been entirely
circumstantial, but here was a connection—a real connection—between Latisha
Wall’s killer and UPPI. I could hardly wait to tell Ross Connors that I was
making progress.
“Thanks, Frank,” I said. “Thanks a lot. I’ll let Sheriff
Brady know right away.”
But before I did that, I picked up my cell phone. Without thinking,
I dialed the attorney general’s cell phone number, only to discover I had once
again been captured by that Spanish-speaking babe from Old Mexico.
“Damn!” I exclaimed, whacking the phone on the dashboard in
utter frustration. What’s the point in packing the damned thing if it doesn’t
work most of the time?
Climbing out of the car, I went looking for Joanna Brady.
“What now?” she asked when I interrupted her yet again. I
was going to ask to borrow her phone, but she looked so harried that I simply
passed along what Frank Montoya had told me. “I need to get back up to the
hotel,” I added. “I want to call my boss and let him know what’s happened.”
“Sure,” Joanna said. “Go ahead.” With that, she turned
once again to her officers.
“But I don’t have a car,” I objected.
Shaking her head, she reached in her pocket and found a
set of keys, which she tossed over to me. I caught them in midair. “Go get your
Kia,” she said. “Leave my Blazer at the department. You can leave the keys at
the front desk.”
“But how will you get back?” I asked.
“Don’t worry. Somebody here will give me a ride when we
finish up.” With that Joanna turned away and returned to her huddle with
Workman, Hollicker, and the others.
I didn’t fault her for rudeness. Cops working crime scenes
don’t have time to observe all the Miss Manners rules of polite behavior.
Joanna Brady was working a crime scene and, as it turned out, so was I.
CHAPTER EIGHTEEN
After dropping off Joanna’s Blazer, I took the Kia and
headed for the hotel. It was early Sunday evening. With the weekend over,
parking was a little less scarce than it had been the day before. I walked down
the hill and up the steps in early evening twilight.
Entering the Copper Queen, I was intent on going straight
to my room and calling Ross Connors, but Cornelia Lester was in the lobby. She
caught my eye and flagged me down before I could make it to the elevator. She
sat on one of the deep leather couches before a cup-and-saucer-laden coffee
table. Walking toward her, I realized she wasn’t alone. A grim-faced Bobo
Jenkins was there, with her, along with a blond-haired woman in a business
suit. The blonde appeared to be crying.
“You know Mr. Jenkins, don’t you?” Connie asked.
“Yes, I do.”
Bobo Jenkins and I shook hands.
“And this is Serenity Granger,” Connie continued. “She’s Deidre
Canfield’s daughter. Serenity, this is Mr. J.P Beaumont. He’s a special
investigator for the Washington State Attorney General’s Office.”
The other murder victim’s daughter,
I realized. No wonder she’s in tears.
Serenity Granger pulled herself together. “Hello,” she
said. “I’m so sorry about your mother,” I said.
She nodded. “Thank you,” she murmured.
“Won’t you sit down?” Cornelia Lester asked.
What I wanted to say was, No, thanks. I have to go up
to my room and make some phone calls. But I didn’t want to be rude. Here
were three grieving people, two black and one white—all of them bound together
by tragedy and loss—who had found the strength of character to offer comfort to
one another in a time of trouble.
I understood the kind of limbo they were in. They were
stuck between knowing their loved one was gone and being able to deal with it.
Their lives had been put on hold by officialdom. There would have to be
questions and interviews and autopsies before bodies could be released. Only
then would they be free to observe the familiar rituals of funerals and
memorial services that precede any kind of return to normalcy.
Under those circumstances, it was impossible for me to
walk away no matter how much I might have wanted to. I sat.
Cornelia Lester was clearly in charge. “Can we get you some
thing?” she asked. “Coffee, tea, a drink? The waitstaff has been kind enough to
serve us out here. It was far too noisy in the bar, and we weren’t interested
in food.”
“I’m fine,” I said. “Nothing for me.”
“Have you heard if they’re finished with Mr. Jenkins’s
house yet?” Cornelia asked. “Sheriff Brady said someone would let him know when
it’s safe for him to return home. So far he’s heard nothing.”
That was hardly surprising. Once the second call came in
summoning Joanna to the new Haz-Mat site, the sheriff had a readily
understandable excuse for not getting back to Bobo Jenkins. I also knew that,
although the Haz-Mat guys were gone, Casey Ledford, the fingerprint tech,
probably hadn’t had a chance to go through Bobo’s house yet, either.
“She’s pretty busy,” I said. “Another call came in.”
Bobo’s eye drilled into mine. “You mean I can’t go home yet?”
“I don’t think so. You’d probably be better off renting a
room. Maybe you should bunk in here with the rest of us.”
There was plenty I could have told them, but not without
raising Joanna Brady’s considerable ire. I sat for a while making appropriately
meaningless small talk. When a waitress from the dining room came out to refill
coffee cups, she asked me if I wanted something. I took that as a sign I had
done my bit and was free to escape.
“If you’ll excuse me,” I said. “I need to make some phone
calls.”
As soon as I shut the door to my room, I hurried over to
the desk. I dragged the raggedy list of Ross Connors’s telephone numbers out of
my wallet and dialed his home number first. I recognized Francine Connors’s
voice as soon as she answered the phone.
“Is Ross there?” I asked.
“Yes, he is,” she replied. “May I tell him who’s calling,
please?”
“Sure,” I said. “Tell him it’s Beau.”
I hate waiting on phones even when it’s on somebody else’s
nickel. It seemed like a long time before Ross Connors came on the line, but
then again, the AG and I aren’t exactly pals. I had never been invited to his
residence down in Olympia, but I assumed from the considerable delay that it
had to be a fairly large place with lots of distance between phone jacks.
Eventually, Ross’s hearty baritone boomed into my ear.
“Beaumont!” he exclaimed. “What’s the news?”
“Not good, I’m afraid,” I told him. “It’s looking more and
more like whoever did this went to great effort to frame Latisha Will’s
boyfriend.”
“Damn!” Ross Connors said.
“But wait,” I added, “there’s more.” I must have sounded for
.III the world like an agitated announcer hawking television’s latest 1-800 fruitcake
invention. “You remember that second homicide I told you about, the one I said
could be related?”
“The one Sheriff Brady threw you off?” Connors asked.
“Right. It turns out the second victim was a good friend
of Latisha Wall’s. Her name was Deidre Canfield. The prime suspect in that case
is a guy named Jack Brampton. Ever heard of him?”
“Not that I remember.”
“Bisbee’s a small town,” I explained. ‘A snoopy neighbor
let on that this Brampton character routinely used a pay phone down near the
post office. Our informant was under the impression that Brampton had a
girlfriend on the side.”
“Do people do that in small towns?” Connors demanded with
a chuckle. “Are they so bored that they have to report on pay phone use, for
Crissake? What about cell phones? Do they call in it someone uses one of those,
too?”
Right that minute I didn’t feel like explaining the difficulties
of cell-phone usage in Bisbee, Arizona. Instead, I forged on. “We suspect that
Brampton used one of those phones three times on Thursday, once in the morning
and twice in the afternoon, the second time was within minutes of his learning
that Cochise County investigators were going to fingerprint him as part of the Latisha
Wall investigation.”
“Get to the point,” Connors urged.
“The calls went to someone in Winnetka, Illinois, at a law
firm called Maddern, Maddern, and Peek. One of Maddern, Maddern, and Peek’s big-deal
clients happens to be UPPI, and Brampton did time in a UPPI facility when he
was convicted of involuntary manslaughter.”
There was stark silence on the other end of the phone, a
silence so complete that I wondered if maybe I’d been disconnected. Finally,
Connors said quietly, “There really is a leak, then.”
“No shit,” I agreed.
“I’ll have to bring the feds in,” he added.
It was a statement, not a question. My response should
have been an unequivocal and resounding yes, but I said nothing, letting Ross
Connors draw his own conclusions. There was another long pause. Finally, he
took a deep breath.
“All right, Beau, here’s what we’re going to do. I know
how this must look to you, but I’m going to let sleeping dogs lie for another
day or so. I don’t want to do anything prematurely. So far this all sounds
pretty circumstantial. You keep right on doing whatever it is you’re doing, and
keep me posted on anything else that comes up. I’m not going to make my move
until after we have rock-solid evidence.”
What more do you want?
I
wondered.
Thinking about it, I figured Connors needed the extra time
to come to terms with his changing reality. It also occurred to me that he
might be looking for a way to cover his own butt. Still, the man was my boss,
and he was calling the shots. If he wanted to wait for more damning information
before nailing his own people, that was entirely up to him.
“Sure,” I said coldly, “I’ll be in touch,” And we signed
off
I put down the phone and gave myself the benefit of a
long, hot shower. Then I lay down on the bed with every intention of watching
television. I saw a few minutes of 60 Minutes. It wasn’t even dark yet before I
was sound asleep.
Anne Corley stopped by to visit and woke me up around
three. In the wee small hours of the morning I was once again wide awake and
sleepless in Bisbee, Arizona. But I wasn’t mulling over the increasingly
complicated aspects of the Latisha Wall and Deidre Canfield cases. No, I was
thinking about something else. Someone else. I was thinking about a little girl
named Anne, growing up in a house with a developmentally disabled sister she
was unable to protect from their pedophile father and with a mother who didn’t
believe—who wouldn’t believe—anything of the kind could happen under her own
roof
No wonder the Anne I had known had been so terribly
damaged and hurt. She had been an incredibly beautiful but broken bird. No
wonder I had loved her.
It was ten o’clock that night when Joanna Brady finally
dragged herself into the house at High Lonesome Ranch. Jenny was already in
bed. Joanna was rummaging through the refrigerator for leftovers when she
spotted a bottle of champagne and two glasses sitting on the table in the
breakfast nook.
A broadly grinning Butch Dixon appeared in the kitchen
door way. “What’s this?” she asked, nodding toward the bottle.
“Nothing much,” he said casually, but Joanna knew at once
that wasn’t true. The man looked so pleased with himself she thought he was
going to burst.
“What nothing much?” Joanna asked.
“I had a call from an agent today,” he beamed. “Her name
is Drew Mabrey, and she wants to represent me. She says she thinks she knows an
editor who’s looking for something just like Serve and Protect.”
Joanna slammed the refrigerator door shut, hurried over,
and planted a congratulatory kiss on her husband’s lips. “That’s great!” she
exclaimed. “Wonderful! What else did he say?”
“She,” Butch corrected. “The agent’s a woman.”
“Did she tell you how good it was?” Joanna continued. “I
told you it was good, didn’t I?”
“Yes.” He smiled, heading for the champagne. “I think you
did say something to that effect. That it was all right, anyway”
Joanna glared at him in mock exasperation. “I never said
any thing of the kind and you know it. Now tell me. What did she say?”
“Like I said before,” he told her, carefully loosening the
cork. “Drew loves it and wants to handle it, but there’s a problem.”
“What? Tell me.”
“It’s my name.”
“Your name?” Joanna asked, mystified. “What’s wrong with
your name?”
“Drew said she almost didn’t bother to read it because it
came under the name F. W. Dixon.”
“So what? Those are your initials. It is your name.”
“But it’s also the pseudonym of the author who wrote the
Hardy Boy books, remember?”
“So?”
“Drew said that while she was growing up, she had to go
visit her grandmother in Connecticut every summer. Her grand mother kept trying
to get her to read her old Hardy Boy mysteries. Drew ended up hating them.”
“So drop the initials then,” Joanna advised Butch. “Write
tinder the name of Frederick Dixon. What’s wrong with that?”
“There’s a difficulty there, too,” Butch said. With a
practiced hand he poured champagne into the glasses, doing it slowly enough
that no liquid bubbled over the sides. “Drew says that with all the humor in
the story it’s really more of a cozy than a police procedural. She says male
readers don’t buy cozies; women do, and most cozies are written by women.”
“What are you supposed to do, then?” Joanna asked.
“She wants me to change my name to something ‘less gender
specific’ were the words she used. Something like Kendall Dixon or Dale Dixon
or Gayle Dixon.”
“The agent wants you to pretend to be a woman to fool your
readers?”
“And the editor, too,” Butch said. “She wants me to pick a
name before she submits the manuscript to anyone.”
“What do you do when it comes time for an author photo?”
Joanna asked.
Giving her the champagne, Butch shrugged. “I give up. I
guess we’ll cross that bridge when we get to it.”
Joanna raised her glass in a toast. “Well, here’s to you,
then,” she said with a smile. “Or to whoever you turn out to be.”
“So tell me about your day,” Butch said as they settled
into the breakfast nook to sip their champagne. “I knew you’d never make it to
church.”
When Joanna arrived at work the next morning, Kristin
Gregovich was nowhere to be seen, but the conference room down the hall was
already crowded. Frank Montoya, Ernie Carpenter, and Jaime Carbajal were seated
around the table. J.P. Beaumont, however, was among the missing.
“Welcome home, Ernie,” Joanna said, making her way to her usual
chair. “Turns out we need you.”
“So I hear,” he said.
For the next forty-five minutes they each briefed
Detective Carpenter on everything that had happened. Then, when Jaime left for
the medical examiner’s office and Ernie went to handle the interviews
with Eddie and Marcus Verdugo, Joanna retreated to her own office. She
was surprised Kristin hadn’t called in to say she would be late. Nevertheless,
having worked all weekend long, Joanna appreciated the absence of that first
load of morning mail. It meant her clean desk could stay that way awhile
longer.
Reaching for her briefcase, she withdrew the first thing
that came to hand—the envelope containing the Anne Rowland Corley materials.
The first article she removed from the envelope was the one from the Denver
Post titled:
THE FEMALE OF THE SPECIES
CAN BE DEADLIER THAN THE MALE
Conventional wisdom holds that serial killers are usually
disaffected white males. But what happens when women turn deadly? How do they
differ from their male counterparts, and how are they treated by the criminal
justice system?
In this series of six articles, award-winning Denver
Post staff writer Susan DePew focuses on six notorious female killers, each
of whom escaped detection far longer than she should have due to the fact that
law-enforcement agents weren’t looking for murderers from the second sex.
Today’s installment deals with Arizona copper heiress Anne
Rowland Corley, whose jet-set lifestyle underpinned a decades-long pursuit of
misguided vigilante justice, which ultimately ended in her own death as well as
in the deaths of’ at least two innocent people.
On a sunny May morning six years ago when Anne Row land
Corley married her second husband, Jonas Piedmont Beaumont, the groom was a
homicide detective with the Seattle Police Department. The bride told the presiding
minister that she intended to continue using the name of her first husband,
Milton Corley, a Phoenix-area psychologist who had died several years earlier.
Hours after the wedding ceremony in one of Seattle’s
waterfront public parks, Anne Rowland Corley was dead of a gunshot wound
received during a fatal shoot-out with her new husband. Her death was
subsequently ruled self-defense. It was only afterward that the truth about
Anne Rowland Corley’s life of homicidal vengeance began to surface.
Serial killers often manifest their murderous tendencies
early on. Stories abound of how an adolescent history of torturing and killing
small animals is an early indicator of a troubled youth who may well end up
becoming a serial killer. But Anne Rowland Corley skipped that intermediate
step. At age twelve, she went straight for the gusto and allegedly murdered her
father. Not that she was ever convicted or even tried for that offense.
Roger Rowland was the well-heeled heir to a pioneering
Arizona copper-mining fortune who carried on a family tradition of hands-on
involvement in the mining industry by moving his young family—a wife, Anita,
and two daughters, Patricia and Anne—to Bisbee, Arizona, where he oversaw one
of the family holdings.
Patty, the older of the two and developmentally disabled,
died at age thirteen in what the Cochise County coroner’s report declared “an
accidental fall” in the family home. A few days later, Roger Rowland was dead
as well, as a result of what was officially termed “a self-inflicted gunshot
wound.”
That double family tragedy was made worse when, prior to
her father’s funeral, Rowland’s younger daughter, Anne, rocked the official
boat by insisting that she had shot her father because he had been molesting
her sister. The molestation allegations were never substantiated. Instead,
twelve-year-old Anne Rowland was shipped off to a private mental institution in
Phoenix, Arizona, where she remained for more than a decade.
While hospitalized, Anne Rowland came under the care of
Dr. Milton Corley. She was released shortly after her mother’s death, and, at
age twenty-four, she married Dr. Corley. She remained with him until his death
seven years later. Corley suffered from colon cancer but he, like Anne Rowland
Corley’s father, died of what was subsequently ruled to be a self-inflicted
gunshot wound.
Dr. Myra Collins, a longtime friend and colleague of
Milton Corley, says that even at the time she doubted Corley would have taken
his own life, but no one was interested in hearing what she had to say. They
still aren’t.
“By that time Anne was the sole heir to her father’s
fortune,” Dr. Collins stated. “She also picked up a nice piece of change when
Milton died. She had the financial resources to hire high-powered attorneys and
to get away with murder, which I continue to believe to this day is exactly
what she did.”
When asked if she thought Anne Rowland Corley was
responsible for her father’s death years earlier, Dr. Collins replied, “Anne
always claimed she was the one who killed him. No amount of so-called treatment
ever made her retract that statement. She was a smart, beautiful, and utterly
ruthless young woman. I never had any reason to doubt what she said.”
After Milton Corley’s death, his widow lived a shadowy,
vagabond lifestyle, never staying long in any one place. Her bills were sent to
Scottsdale-area attorney Ralph Ames, who handled her finances and paid the
bills as they came in, leaving her free to come and go as she wished.
People who had dealings with her during the next ten years
said she looked like a movie star, drove a series of bright red Porsches, and
stayed only in first-class hotels. It is also thought that she left behind a
trail of murder.
Her victims were most likely people free on bail and
awaiting trial in cases of suspected child abuse. Local law enforcement
agencies, freed of the necessity of trying, convicting, and incarcerating yet
another pedophile, were usually happy to close the books on those cases after
only cursory investigations.
After Anne Rowland Corley’s death, there is some sketchy
evidence that her widowed husband and her longtime attorney contacted several
jurisdictions around the country, quietly closing several of those far-flung
cases.
In one of them, Jake Morris, a forty-six-year-old drifter
suspected of kidnapping and raping a six-year-old girl, was shot dead in
Bangor, Maine. In another, twenty-three-year-old Lawrence Kenneth Addison,
suspected of luring and molesting numerous children who lived near his parents’
home in Red Bluff, California, disappeared on a sunny Friday afternoon. His
body was found two days later at a deserted I-5 rest area.
In both of those cases, witnesses mentioned something
about a stranger—a good-looking woman—who was seen talking to both victims
shortly before their deaths, but no one ever bothered to track her down. She
was never thought to be a viable subject. Since there was no communication
between the two affected jurisdictions, no one ever made the connection or
noticed the similarities.
“That doesn’t surprise me,” Dr. Collins says. “There are
plenty of male chauvinist homicide detectives out there who don’t believe women
are smart enough or tough enough to be killers.”
Both Anne Rowland Corley’s widower and her long-term
attorney refused to respond to repeated requests for interviews in conjunction
with this story. Perhaps the possibility of a series of wrongful-death suits
contributed to their reticence.
Anne Rowland Corley usually dispatched her victims with a
single bullet to the head. She believed in being up close and personal with her
victims. Once her identity was established, some local police investigators in
those far-flung cases admitted that she had befriended officers in both
locations as a way of gaining information and access to her intended victims.
She did so by claiming to be writing a book on convicted child molesters,
although no such manuscript has ever surfaced.
Her use of subterfuge may well account for the ongoing
conspiracy of silence on the part of many police agencies involved. Although
there are no doubt other cases to which Anne Rowland Corley was connected, it
has been impossible to track down any additional ones in which she was directly
involved. Only a diligent search of public records finally uncovered the list
of acknowledged victims that accompanies this story. It’s likely there are
other victims whose cases remain unsolved.
Six years ago, as a homicide detective for Seattle PD,
J.P. Beaumont was investigating the abuse and death of a five-year-old child,
Angela Barstogi. Suspects in that case included the child’s mother, Suzanne
Barstogi, and the mother’s spiritual adviser, Michael Brodie, a dictatorial,
self-styled religious leader whose followers in a sect called Faith Tabernacle
did whatever he required of them.
Like his counterparts in Bangor, Maine, and Red Bluff, California,
Detective Beaumont found himself befriended by a disturbingly beautiful woman
who expressed an interest in the case. Shortly thereafter, the two prime
suspects were found shot to death in a Seattle-area church. A day later, a man
who turned out to be the real killer in the Angela Barstogi homicide
investigation was also found murdered. Hours later, Anne Rowland Corley herself
was shot dead.
“This was clearly a woman who felt violated and betrayed
by the very people who should have protected her,” says August Benson,
professor of criminal psychology at the University of Colorado. “When the
people who should have offered protection failed her, Anne Rowland Corley took
matters into her own hands.”
Joanna paused in her reading and glanced at the accompanying
photo and the sidebar. The Anne Rowland Corley pictured in a posed
black-and-white portrait was a lovely young woman with long dark hair and a
reserved smile.
No wonder cops talked to her,
Joanna thought. And no wonder J.P. Beaumont fell so
hard.
Joanna was about to return to her reading when the phone
rang. “Sheriff Brady?” Tica Romero, the day-shift dispatcher, asked.
“Yes. What’s up?”
“We’ve got a situation unfolding just west of Miracle
Valley, out by Palominas. An unidentified intruder walked up to what he thought
was an unoccupied house. He broke in and stole some food from the kitchen of
Paul and Billyann Lozier’s place on River Trail Road. Then he went out to a
corral, saddled up one of their horses, and took off. Billyann’s mother, Alma
Wingate, was in an upstairs bedroom and saw the whole thing. Unfortunately, she
didn’t have a phone with her at the time and couldn’t call 911 until
after he left.”
“Undocumented alien?” Joanna asked.
“I don’t think so,” Tica replied. “For one thing, the guy on
the horse seemed to be headed south, not north. For another, from the
description Mrs. Wingate gave me, the suspect might very well be the guy on our
APB. She said he was tall and skinny, with a single gray braid hanging down the
middle of his back.”
“You’re right,” Joanna breathed. “Sounds like Jack
Brampton.”
“I’ve got units on their way,” Tica continued, “but they’re
clear over by Benson. It’ll take time for them to reach the scene. The problem
is, the border fence is only four miles away, and it looks like that’s where
the perp is headed. As of now, he’s got a ten minute head start.”
Joanna Brady was already on her feet. “Give me the
address,” she urged. “We’ll get on this right away. I’m a lot closer than Benson.
I’ll take a couple of cars and a squad of officers along with me. Thanks for
letting me know, Tica. And how about calling out Terry Gregovich and Spike? If
we lose him, Spike may he able to track him down.”
“Will do,” Tica said.
Pulling on her Kevlar vest, Joanna raced to the conference
room. “Okay, guys,” she announced. “On the double. Somebody who looks like Jack
Brampton just stole a horse from a corral between Palominas and Miracle Valley.
According to an eyewitness, the guy who did it is headed for the Mexican
border. Let’s get rolling.”
I came dragging in late, feeling like hell and ashamed to
think that I had overslept—again. By the time I showed up, I had already missed
the morning briefing. Frank Montoya introduced me to a guy named Ernie
Carpenter, Detective Carbajal’s homicide counterpart, who had evidently just
finished interviewing the two little boys who had found Dee Canfield’s body.
Ernie Carpenter was around my age, which made him by far
the oldest officer I had met in the Cochise County Sheriff’s Department. He was
a big bear of a man with a pair of bushy eyebrows and a knuckle-crushing
handshake. In other words, Ernie was my kind of guy. After introductions were
out of the way, Frank Montoya passed both Ernie and me two tall stacks of
computer-generated printouts.
“What’s this?” I asked.
“Background on your friends at UPPI,” Frank told me. “I
downloaded it from the Internet and thought you might find it interesting. They’re
even more litigious than I thought they were when we found out about that law
firm in Illinois yesterday.”
As I settled in to read, I realized this was information I
should and could have had from the beginning. If Ross Connors had wanted to
keep a lid on things, he couldn’t have chosen better when he entrusted the
problem to Harry I. Ball and me. Of the two of us, I’d be hard-pressed to
decide which one was less likely to go surfing the Internet.
But, as Frank Montoya said, the material was interesting. UPPI
had ventured into prison construction and management when the field was
booming, but whoever drew up their business plan had failed to predict the
sudden drop in crime at the end of the nineties that would leave them holding
thousands of unoccupied and shoddily built prison beds.
To make up for their own bad planning, they had tried to
staunch the flow of red ink by filing breach-of-contract suits in twelve different
states, all of them still pending. Although one article hinted that at least
one UPPI executive was suspected of having links to organized crime, no firm
connections had ever been established.
Lost in the material, I paid no attention as people came
and went from the conference room. Ernie Carpenter and I were the only ones
left when Joanna Brady burst in a while later to tell us that something was
going down at a place called Palominas. When she first mentioned a stolen
horse, I thought she was joking. But as soon as she said the suspected horse
thief was most likely Jack Brampton, Ernie and I dropped what we were doing and
headed for the door.
I was two steps down the hallway when she stopped me. “Wait
a minute, Beau,” she said. “Where’s your vest?”
“Not on me.”
“You’d better go see Frank Montoya then,” she said. “You’re
sure as hell not riding along without one.”
“But ...” I began.
“No buts,” she said. “My way or the highway.”
With that, she turned and sprinted away, leaving me with a
whole mouthful of unspoken arguments still superglued to my tongue.
CHAPTER NINETEEN
By the time Joanna neared Palominas, she had learned from
Dispatch that the backup cars Tica had called for, although en route, were
still ten and twelve miles away, respectively. The assets she had brought with
her from the Justice Center—the two cars driven by Detective Ernie Carpenter
and Chief Deputy Frank Montoya—were the only immediate help she would have at
her disposal. She had expected someone else to show up as well.
“What happened to Beaumont?” she demanded into her radio. “He
was supposed to come with Frank.”
“By the time Frank was ready to leave, Mr. Beaumont was
nowhere to be found,” dispatcher Tica Romero told her.
Just as
well,
Joanna thought. “What about Deputy Gregovich?” she asked. “Is he on his way?”
“I still haven’t been able to locate him,” Tica said.
“Keep trying.”
Joanna swung the Blazer off Highway 92 and onto the short
stretch of paved street that ran through Palominas. Overall, the tiny community
ran along the highway and was far longer than it was wide. At River Trail Road,
where she had turned off, the town was barely two lots deep. The pavement ended
just beyond the sec and house. Now she sped down the dirt road that ran
alongside the eastern bank of the north-flowing San Pedro River. The turnoff to
Paul and Billyann Lozier’s place was half a mile south of town.
With Joanna leading the way, the three patrol cars pulled
into the Loziers’s yard, spewing dust behind them. Eighty-two-year-old Alma Wingate
met them on the front porch. She was a frail looking woman, thin beyond belief,
and leaning heavily on a cane, but her blue eyes sparkled with determination.
“Thank God I had my cataract surgery,” she exclaimed as
Joanna sprinted onto the porch. “Otherwise I wouldn’t have been able to see a
thing. When he broke in, I hid in a closet and didn’t come out until I heard
the screen door slam shut. I went to the window and saw him grab Princess—that’s
Billyann’s horse, and she loves that animal to pieces—then I knew I had to do
some thing.”
The frightened woman’s words poured out in a torrent. “Please,
Mrs. Wingate,” Joanna interrupted. “Slow down. Which way did he go?”
Alma pointed a shaky finger. “That way,” she said. “Toward
the river.”
Joanna nodded wordlessly at Frank, who sprinted off in the
direction of the river, following a trail of fresh hoofprints. “Do you know if
he was armed?” Joanna asked.
Alma nodded. “Must be,” she said. “I just checked. The
door to my son-in-law’s gun cabinet is smashed to smithereens. I don’t know
what all’s missing. You’ll have to ask him.”
“Look,” Joanna advised. “You should probably go back
inside the house and stay there. Backup officers are on the way, but in the
meantime, you need to be safe.”
“You think he’s dangerous then?” Alma demanded. “I thought
he was just a dirty low-down horse thief.”
“I’m afraid this guy’s far worse than just a horse thief,
Mrs. Wingate,” Joanna said as Frank came racing back toward the house. “Much,
much worse.”
By the time Joanna had guided Alma Wingate safely into the
house, Frank was leaning against his Civvie, gasping for breath. Ernie had
disappeared.
“He went down into the riverbed and turned south,” Frank
reported. “It’s a good thing we didn’t come with sirens blaring. It looks like
he’s walking the horse rather than running her.”
“Where’s Ernie?”
“He’s going to move south, sticking to the riverbed to
make sure he doesn’t turn out somewhere between here and the border. I’ve put
in a call to the federales across the line in Old Mexico. They’re
sending a squad of agents over from Naco. They should be here within fifteen
minutes. I told them someone would meet them where the river crosses the
border.”
Knowing her own lack of proficiency in Spanish, Joanna had
no doubt about who should be at the border to meet the federates.
“Do it, Frank,” she said. “I’ll drive along the riverbank
and sec if I can spot him somewhere between here and there.”
Frank nodded. “Be careful,” he warned. “There’s lots of
thick cover in there, places where he could hide and see you without being
seen.”
“You be careful, too,” she told him.
Moments later, with tires spinning in the dirt, both cars
swung out of the yard and headed south. A quarter of a mile down the road,
Joanna stopped and got out. Crouching behind the trunk of a cottonwood tree,
she used a pair of binoculars to peer up and down the river. Even though there
was no movement in the dry bed of the river, she could make out the pattern of
blurred hoofprints that said a horse had recently passed that way.
Parallel to her and across the river, a cloud of
fast-moving dust rose skyward. She didn’t remember there being another road
over there, but obviously one existed nonetheless.
Whoever you are,
she
told the faceless driver in that invisible vehicle, just stay the hell out
of our way.
With that, she jumped back in the Blazer and headed south
again. As she drove she was glad she’d had the good sense to use lights only;
no sirens. Out here in the silent desert, Jack Brampton would have heard those
sirens from far away and would have known they were coming. This way, there was
still a chance of surprising him.
Joanna stopped for a second time and got out, crouching in
the dead grass, keeping under cover. And that’s when she heard the sound of
sirens, wafting up from the south. The federales were coming, all right,
with their sirens blaring to kingdom come!
“Damn,” she muttered. “Damn! Damn! Damn!”
Grumbling under my breath, I went looking for Frank
Montoya. It turns out he did have a vest, but it wasn’t my size. He said he
thought there were larger ones back in the supply room, but since he was on his
way to Palominas, I’d have to have one of the clerks in the lobby get it for
me. By the time I had the blasted thing in my hand and made it out to the
parking lot, everyone else, including Chief Deputy Montoya, was long gone. So
much her hot pursuit!
“Damn!” I hurried back into the lobby. “Where’s Palominas?”
I demanded.
“West of town, on Highway 92,” the clerk told me. “It’s
beyond Huachuca Terraces. Do you know how to get there?”
I’m a native of Seattle. There, geography poses no
problem. I know the streets and my way around them. In Bisbee I was totally
useless, but the name Huachuca Terraces sounded vaguely familiar. I was pretty
sure that’s where Dee Canfield’s house was located.
“Thanks,” I told her. “I think I can find it.”
Racing back out to the parking lot, I jumped into the Kia
and wound it up as fast as it would go. If somebody gave me a speeding ticket,
it was just too damned bad, although the idea of getting a speeding ticket in a
Kia might have been worth it. Then again, out here in the world of the Wild
West, where crooks used stolen horses instead of getaway cars, maybe state
patrollers just shot speeders instead of handing out tickets.
Retracing the route Joanna Brady had driven the day
before, I was relieved when I finally saw a sign that read: PALOMINAS, 10
MILES. I knew then that I was on the right track. And with the Kia running on
the flat and wound up to a full eighty-five miles per hour, I knew that meant I
was six minutes out.
Driving through the desert, I looked ahead. In the
distance I saw a long meandering line of greenish-yellow autumn-tinged trees
stretching south to north. Near that line of trees I saw what appeared to be a
cluster of buildings. That must be the town of Palominas, whatever that means.
Isn’t that some kind of horse?
I wondered.
Crossing a railroad overpass, I caught my first glimpse of
flashing red lights as the fast-moving police cars ahead of me swept into that
tiny community. I was thrilled to think that I was actually closing the
distance between me and them. They had all left the Justice Center a couple of
long minutes before I did. Maybe my Kia wasn’t so terribly lame after all.
Soon I was near enough to tell that the rearmost vehicle
was signaling for a left-hand turn. About that time, however, I met a pair of
oncoming dodoes who never should have been issued driver’s licenses. As soon as
one guy pulled out to pass, the other one sped up, thus making the passing
process take far longer than it should have. As they rushed toward me side by
side in both lanes, I started looking for somewhere to hit the ditch and dodge
out of the way. Finally, at the last moment, the passing car gave up and pulled
back into the right-hand lane. By the time I looked again, the police cars had
disappeared.
As I entered town, I slowed down. When I reached what I
assumed to be the correct intersection, I turned left. After a hundred yards or
so, the pavement ended and I bounced down a narrow, rutted cow path without
another vehicle in sight. I stopped finally, rolled down the window, and
listened. I was hoping for sirens. I saw clouds of dirt billowing skyward east
of me, but I heard nothing, at least not at first. But then, very, very
faintly, I did hear a siren. Not the standard kind of siren we use here in the
States. No, this one had a decidedly foreign flavor to it.
I was watching the clouds of dust off to my left and
listening to the siren when it finally hit me. I had made a mistake and over
shot the turn. The action was there, all right—to the south and east of where I
was.
I pulled ahead, looking for a place to turn around so I
could go back the way I had come, but then I stumbled on another dirt road.
This one, little more than a two-wheel track, was even narrower than the one I
was already on, but at least it wandered off toward the southeast, the same
general direction I wanted to go. So I went that way as well.
The Kia and l were tooling along just fine until we came
up over a ridge and dropped down toward that line of trees I had seen earlier.
I knew now for sure that the trees marked a riverbed. In fact, I remembered
flying across a bridge back on the highway immediately after I had been looking
for a place to ditch. There had been a sign attached to the bridge announcing
the name of the river that ran under it, but I didn’t remember the name, and I
hadn’t spotted any water, either.
Where I come from, rivers usually contain water. Actually,
in the Pacific Northwest, it’s a rule.
Whatever the unknown river’s name might be, water wasn’t
required. What it lacked in moisture, however, it made up in sand—loads of it.
Ahead of me, the bone-dry riverbed was a good fifty yards wide. On the far side
of that long expanse of sand I spotted another narrow set of tire tracks. It
seemed reasonable to assume that those tracks might be a continuation of the
road I was on.
I paused long enough to consider my options. Going back
and taking the other road would use up the better part of half an hour. By
then, whatever action there was across the river would he over and done with.
If I could cross the sand, though, I might be able to catch up with Joanna and
the others before I missed out; before they had Jack Brampton handcuffed and
thrown in the back of a patrol car.
Naturally, my low-priced rental Kia wasn’t equipped with four-wheel
drive. Even so, I thought that if I built up a good enough head of steam before
I hit the sand, maybe moment fin would carry me across.
That was the plan, anyway, and that’s exactly what I did.
I shoved the gas pedal all the way to the floor and charged into the riverbed.
I was doing fine. In fact, I probably would have made it to the far side
without a hitch, except for one thing. All of a sudden, right in the dead
center of the sand trap, a horse and rider appeared out of nowhere. They came
galloping down the riverbed straight at me.
When I finally realized that the crazy bastard on the
horse was headed right for me, I took my foot off the gas and slammed on the
brakes. The Kia stopped dead. At the same time, something smashed into and
through the windshield. It smacked into the shoulder rest of the passenger seat
only a foot or so from where I was sitting. Simultaneously, a spiderweb of tiny
cracks spread across the windshield’s safety glass.
By then I had seen the gun and understood that the son of
a bitch on the horse was shooting at me—shooting to kill! Covering my head, I
dived for cover and put the Kia’s engine block between me and any more flying
bullets. Even muffled by sand, I could hear the thud of the horse’s hooves as
it pounded by. I waited until I couldn’t hear it anymore. Only then, with my
small backup Glock in my hand, I cautiously raised my head and peered out.
Off to the south, the riverbed curved slowly to the left.
Horse and rider were fast disappearing around that bend. By then, they were
already far beyond the range of my wimpy backup handgun. Shaking my head in
disgust, I climbed out of the car. I plowed through deep sand in my once
pristine Johnston and Murphys and surveyed the damage. The windshield was a
goner. Both axles were buried up to the hubs. It would take time and a well
equipped tow truck to dig me out.
I set out to finish crossing the river on foot. A stiff
wind blew from the south, kicking powdery sand into my eyes. As l walked along,
half-blinded by the sand, I heard Joanna Brady’s voice calling my name.
“Beaumont, what are you doing down there?” she demanded. “Are
you hurt?”
Looking up, I caught sight of her. She stood on the edge
of the far bank. The top of her Blazer was barely visible in the back ground.
It hurt my pride to admit it—hurt like hell, in fact-- but I had to do it.
“I’m stuck,” I called back, “but the guy on the horse went
that way.” I pointed to what I assumed was downriver, although I learned later
it was actually up.
Joanna turned her back on me and disappeared from view. I
figured she would leave me stranded and go after Brampton with out me. Instead,
moments later, the speeding Blazer hurtled down the bank. Instead of setting
out across the expanse of treacherous sand, she stayed near the edge, where the
sand was covered with what looked like a cracked, hard-baked crust.
“Come on,” she yelled, motioning for me to join her. “We
haven’t got all day! The border’s only a mile away.”
Running through sand is a joke. My feet sank up to my
ankles with every step. I’ve always assumed that quicksand is wet. This was
dry, but it was treacherous as hell. I finally lost one shoe altogether and had
to go back to retrieve it. At last, shoe in hand, I caught up with the Blazer,
wrenched open the door, and clambered inside.
“Did you get a good look at him?” she demanded.
That morning, in the conference room, I had studied Jack
Brampton’s mug shots. “It’s him, all right.” I panted. “Believe me, he is armed
and dangerous.”
“No kidding,” Joanna said.
There was no time to look at him as Beaumont slumped in
the passenger seat. Her eyes were glued to the riverbed. Sticking to the shelf
of caliche, she headed south.
“The bastard tried to kill me,” Beaumont grumbled. “Shot
the hell out of my windshield. I’m lucky he didn’t take me out, too. By the
way,” he added in what sounded like a grudging after thought, “thanks for the
vest.”
“You’re welcome,” she returned. “And don’t worry. Brampton
won’t get away. Frank went on ahead. He’s meeting up with some federales. They’ll
be waiting at the border.”
“Right,” Beaumont said. “I heard them.”
“So did Brampton,” Joanna said grimly.
They drove in silence after that. Periodically the narrow
shelf of caliche would give way to sand. When they hit that, it took all of
Joanna’s considerable driving skill to keep the Blazer moving, even with four-wheel
drive. She was paying attention to the sand directly in front of them when
Beaumont yelled, “There he is.”
Ahead of them, Joanna caught sight of the galloping horse
and rider. The little mare, laboring through the treacherous, knee deep sand,
was struggling to maintain the pace. Beyond Princess, Joanna spotted the string
of fence posts that marked the international border. Unfortunately, Frank
Montoya and his promised squad of federales were nowhere to be seen.
Knowing Brampton was almost at the border, Joanna stomped
on the gas and the Blazer shot forward. Then, unexpectedly, the horse stopped.
She stopped abruptly, but her rider didn’t. Jack Brampton kept right on going.
He tumbled headfirst over the horse’s neck and shoulders and then over the
fence, where he lay still in the sand.
Tossing her head, Princess wheeled around and started back
toward the Blazer. Meanwhile, Joanna jammed on the brakes, stopping twenty
yards downriver from the fallen man.
“Hit the dirt!” she ordered. Drawing her weapon, she flung
herself out of the Blazer and down onto the sand. On the far side of the
Blazer, J.P. Beaumont followed suit.
Princess trotted back toward them and then stood still
once more, with her trembling legs spread wide apart and her head drooping. She
was close enough to the Blazer that Joanna could hear the exhausted horse’s
snorting and labored breathing. Lying flat on the ground, Joanna wriggled a
pair of binoculars out of her pocket and looked through them. On the far side
of the fence, Jack Brampton lay in a crumpled heap on the ground.
“Freeze!” Joanna shouted. “Don’t move.”
Brampton complied with the order. Joanna and Beau watched
for half a minute and detected no sign of movement.
“Closer?” Beaumont asked.
Joanna nodded and stowed the binoculars. “Go!” she said.
With their weapons drawn, they advanced again. When they
ducked for cover the third time, Brampton still hadn’t moved. “He’s either
knocked out cold or he’s dead,” she said.
Before they moved forward that last time, a gust of wind
blew down the bed of the river, bringing with it a sudden flurry of movement. A
cloud of something seemed to rise up ghostlike out of the ground beside the
fallen man. It floated toward them, eddying in the breeze. As the mini–dust
devil came closer, it separated itself into individual pieces of paper. Only
when one of them landed beside her did Joanna realize it was a twenty-dollar bill—one
of hundreds of other bills, twenties and fifties and hundreds spiraling through
the air.
Blood money,
Joanna
thought.
Still the suspect didn’t move. “Shall we take him?” she
asked. Beaumont nodded. “Let’s.”
“Go!” she ordered.
Joanna and Beaumont scrambled to their feet simultaneously
and rushed toward Jack Brampton. When they reached the border fence, they
stopped. On the far side of it their murder suspect lay lifeless on the ground,
his neck twisted back toward them, his eyes open but unmoving. Still strapped to
his body was a torn backpack leaking money.
“He must have thought Princess was a jumper,” Joanna Brady
muttered as she reholstered her weapon. “Lucky for us, it turns out she wasn’t.”
CHAPTER TWENTY
Hindsight is always twenty-twenty. What Joanna Brady and I
probably should have done the moment we saw Jack Brampton was grab him by his
legs and drag his body back under the fence. Unfortunately, we were so relieved
to be alive that neither of us figured that out until it was too late. By then,
the federales had arrived on the scene, and all bets were off.
I worked the Seattle PD Homicide Unit for the better part
of two decades. In all that time, I never had to bring a dead suspect’s body
back across an international border. I was about to get a first hand lesson,
and it wouldn’t be pretty.
Sheriff Brady spoke. Frank Montoya translated. The federales
listened and shook their heads. One of them caught sight of the packets of
money spilling out of the fallen backpack. At that point the head-shaking
became even more adamant. I believe the applicable term would be “No way, Jose.”
Right then I knew how it was going to play out. Without the personal
intervention of Vicente Fox, or even God himself, Jack Brampton wasn’t coming
back across the border anytime soon. Neither was the money.
Frustrated beyond belief, I went plowing back down the
river, gathering hundred-, fifty-, and twenty-dollar bills as I went. I had a
whole fistful of them by the time Joanna Brady, her face clouded with anger,
caught up with me. I glanced back at what should have been an official crime
scene in time to see the Mexican officers summarily load Jack Brampton’s body
onto a stretcher and cart him away, right along with his backpack.
“Which do you want to take back?” she demanded. “Princess
or the Blazer?”
“Princess?” I repeated.
“The horse,” she said impatiently. “The horse’s name is
Princess.”
I had far more faith in my ability to drive a Blazer than
I did with my skill on a horse. For one thing, just inside the border fence on
the U.S. side, I had spotted a reasonably serviceable roadway someone had
carved through the desert. I suspected it had been put there for the
convenience of passing Border Patrol vehicles and agents, and it looked to be
in better condition than either of the narrow tracks I had driven on earlier.
“I’ll drive,” I said. “What about the money?” I added,
showing her the wad of bills I held in my hand.
“Give it to Frank,” she said. “He’ll have deputies gather
what they can and bring it back to the department. I’ll be more than happy to
put it in the confiscated-funds account.”
Without another word, Joanna tossed me the keys, then she
stalked off toward the Blazer. Once there, she pulled a gallon-sized plastic
bottle of water out of the luggage compartment and poured it into a hard hat
she evidently kept on hand in an equipment locker. Holding the water-filled
hard hat in front of her, she moved cautiously toward the horse, making soothing
clucking sounds as she did so.
As a city-born-and-bred boy, I figured the animal would
take off. Instead, Princess pricked up her ears, trotted straight over to
Joanna, and gratefully buried her muzzle in the water. By the time Princess had
drunk her fill, Joanna had the creature’s bridle firmly in hand. Without a
word, Sheriff Brady vaulted easily into the saddle. As she rode past, she
tossed me the hard hat.
“Put it back in the Blazer, would you?”
“Sure thing,” I said.
Watching her ride away, I remembered what Harry I. Ball
had said all those days earlier about Joanna Brady being a latter day Annie
Oakley. As it turned out, he hadn’t been far from wrong.
Joanna delivered Princess back to the Lozier place. By
then someone had contacted Billyann Lozier at work, and she had come home to be
with her mother. Alma Wingate, worn out by all the excitement, was back up in
her bedroom lying down. Billyann was ecstatic to see Princess. She ran across
the road to greet them when Joanna and the horse emerged from the riverbed.
With tears running down her cheeks, Billyann Lozier buried her face in the
horse’s long black mane.
“Thank you so much for bringing her home, Sheriff Brady,
Billyann murmured. “Thank you, thank you, thank you. inter what Mother told me,
I didn’t think I’d ever see Princess again.”
“You’re welcome,” Joanna said.
Returning the horse safely was the single bright spot in
the day’s events. Joanna should have been happy knowing that Jack Brampton was
done for. He would never be able to harm anyone else. The problem was, he had
died without revealing anything about the people he had worked for—the people
who had pm vided the money that the wind had blown out of his backpack. As far
as Joanna was concerned, the job of apprehending the killer was only half done.
Not only that, but from the ham-fisted way the federales
were handling the situation, Joanna doubted she and her investigators would
learn anything more from the effects on the dead man’s body. Plus, she didn’t
even know if Jack Brampton had gone to his death with an additional supply of
sodium azide still in his possession, although Frank had apprised the Mexican
officers of the possibility.
It was only when Joanna was standing in Paul and Billyann
Lozier’s front yard that she realized one of the backup deputies she had
summoned had yet to appear. The others had both been sent down to join Chief
Deputy Montoya and Ernie in searching for more of the scattered money. The K-9
Unit, however, wasn’t with them.
Once Beaumont handed over the keys to the Blazer and they
were headed into town, Joanna got on the radio to Dispatch. “Tica,” she said, “whatever
happened to Deputy Gregovich? He never showed up.”
“He’s at the hospital,” Tica Romero replied. “At least
Deputy Gregovich is. I don’t know about Spike. Kristin’s about to have her
baby.”
“Oh,” a relieved Joanna said. “That explains it.”
Minutes later, while requesting a tow truck to come to
retrieve Beau’s damaged Kia, she turned to him and asked, “Where should they
take it?”
“I have no idea.” He shrugged. “The rental agreement’s in
the glove box. Have the tow-truck driver call Saguaro Discount Rental in Tucson
and ask them where they want it. Unless you need it liar evidence, that is. II
so, you can take it back to your department and have someone dig the bullet out
of the passenger seat.”
Joanna shook her head dispiritedly. “Why bother?” she
asked. The shooter’s dead and you’re not. I don’t see any point in wasting time
or energy on it.”
“Makes sense to me,” Beaumont agreed.
Sensing that he wasn’t any happier about the situation
than she was, Joanna drove for several miles without saying anything more.
“I’m sorry we didn’t catch him,” she said at last. “If
your boss thought we were incompetent before—”
“Ross Connors didn’t say anything of the kind,” Beaumont
said quickly. “And just for the record, neither did I.”
“Thanks,” Joanna said, and meant it. “What’ll you do now?”
she asked. “Head back home?” She was wondering if he’d say any thing more about
Anne Rowland Corley. He didn’t.
“Probably,” he answered. “With Brampton dead, there’s not
much reason to hang around any longer. Although, since Frank went to the
trouble of getting those phone logs, I should finish going over them before I
leave. I’ll catch a plane back to Seattle tomorrow sometime.”
Riding Princess back to the Lozier place had given Joanna
time to mull over what she had read earlier in the Denver Post article.
She wanted to talk to Beaumont about it, but her office at the Justice Center
was the wrong place to broach the subject. She glanced at her watch.
“It’s after one now,” she said. “I’ll probably have to
spend the afternoon on my knees, begging the governor of Arizona to work with
the governor of Sonora to get Jack Brampton’s body shipped back to the States.
To do that, I’ll need patience, strength, and food. How about grabbing some
lunch?”
“Fine,” Beaumont said. “As long as you let the state of
Washington buy”
Feeling a little underhanded, Joanna stopped at Chico’s in
Don Luis. Once inside, she ordered tacos for both of them. Her choice of food
was actually a test, and Joanna liked the man better for contentedly munching
his way through a plate loaded with Chico’s luncheon special.
“Tell me about your wife,” Joanna said quietly as Beau
mopped up the last few crumbs of shredded beef and cheese that lingered on his
plate.
When he raised his eyes to look at her, J.P. Beaumont’s
gaze was suddenly wary. “Which one?” he asked, but it was only a defense
mechanism. They both knew Joanna was asking about Anne Corley.
“The second one,” Joanna said.
“What do you want to know?”
“I’ve read the Denver Post article,” she told him. “Frank
down loaded it from the Internet.”
“Damn his computer anyway!” Beau muttered. “Why the hell
couldn’t he mind his own business? You, too, for that matter?”
“It is my business,” Joanna said. “You asked me about her,
remember?”
His expression softened a little. “Well, yes. I suppose I
did. I just haven’t had time ...”
“As I was reading through the article,” Joanna continued, “something
kept bothering me.”
“What’s that?” She heard the tightly controlled anger
beneath his question.
“How many cases were there?” she asked. “Besides the two
mentioned in the article and the three victims in Seattle, the article hinted
there were others. Were there?”
Beau paused below he answered. Finally he nodded. “Several,”
he said. “It really doesn’t matter how many. Ralph Ames and I worked with the
various jurisdictions and cleared the ones we knew about—the ones Anne had kept
a record of. There was no need to make a big deal of it.”
“The article implied that you did it quietly because you
were worried about a flurry of wrongful-death suits.”
“That’s not true,” Beau replied shortly. “Anne was dead, for
God’s sake. Just as dead as Jack Brampton back there in the riverbed. Ralph and
I did it that way so Anne’s name wouldn’t her dragged through the mud any worse
than it already had been.”
“Anne’s name?” Joanna asked. “Or yours?”
Beaumont’s face fell. Finally, he nodded bleakly. “That, too,”
he admitted.
“My father used to be sheriff here,” Joanna said. “Did you
know that?”
“I saw the picture and the name in the display case out in
the lobby. I assumed the two of you might be related.”
“Dad always maintained that Anne Rowland got away with
murder. He said that by claiming she was crazy and locking her up in a mental
institution, Anne’s mother, Anita Rowland, caused a miscarriage of justice.”
“No,” Beau said quietly after a moment. “You’re wrong
there. That’s not where justice miscarried. What Anne’s father had done to her
big sister—what Anne had been forced to witness as a little girl—drove her over
the edge. By the time she killed her father—which she readily admitted—she
really was crazy. Locking her up was the right thing to do, but they never
should have let her loose. If the legal definition of insanity is an inability
to tell right from wrong, Anne never was cured. She was able to sec how other people’s
actions might he wrong, but never her own.”
“How did she get out then?” Joanna asked. “Why was she
released?”
“Because she conned Milton Corley the same way she conned
me.”
“The article hinted she might have had something to do
with her husband’s death as well.”
“Yes,” Beau said softly. “I’m sure she did. Milton Corley
was dying of cancer, but she helped him along. She told me so herself that last
day, the day she tried to kill me, too.”
The man’s anguish was so visible, Joanna felt ashamed of
her-self for prying. “I can see this is terribly hurtful for you,” she said. “I’m
sorry I brought it up.”
“No,” he replied. “Don’t be. It’s okay. If I hadn’t wanted
to talk to someone about it, I wouldn’t have mentioned her to you that first
day. It’s just that sometimes I feel as though Anne never existed at all, as
though she’s a figment of my imagination. I knew her for such a short time, you
see, and . . .” He shook his head and didn’t continue.
Joanna slid across the cigarette-marred bench seat. “Come
on,” she said gently. “We’d better go.”
When we got back to the Justice Center, I went straight to
the conference room. I was glad no one else was there. I needed some time
alone. I sat down in front of the stack of phone logs and put on my reading
glasses, but I made no effort to read. The conversation about Anne had rocked
me. I was filled with the same kind of apprehension I had felt that May morning
as I had driven to Snoqualmie Falls, and in countless dreams since—that there
was more to learn about the woman who called herself Anne Corley—more than I
would ever want to know.
Finally, because I had to do something to keep from losing
it, I picked up the first of the telephone logs.
In terms of excitement, examining telephone logs is right
up there with watching paint dry. Or maybe playing with Tinkertoys.
When I was a kid being raised by a single mother in
Seattle’s Ballard neighborhood, we were poor as church mice. One year for
Christmas my mother came home from the local Toys for Tots drive with a Tinkertoy
set. That’s what I got for Christmas that year—Tinkertoys and a plaid flannel
shirt Mother made for me. I remember hating to wear the shirt to school because
other kids knew it was homemade.
But the Tinkertoys were a hit. I loved putting the round
sticks into those little round knobs with the holes and making them jut out at
all different angles. Telephone logs are a lot like that. The numbers are the
little round knobs with holes in them. The calls that travel back and forth
between them are the sticks.
The first knob was the pay phone that had been used to
make the three separate calls to Winnetka, Illinois, on the day Deidre Canfield
disappeared. But Frank Montoya is nothing if not thorough. Based on Harve Dowd’s
observation that Jack Brampton had used the phones on numerous occasions, Frank
had collected phone logs for both of the post-office pay phones over a period
of several months—for as long as Jack Brampton had been in the area. Scanning
through those, I found two more calls had been placed to Winnetka,
Illinois—both of those to the offices of Maddern, Maddern, and Peek.
The next set of knobs were the two phone numbers in
Illinois. Because of the volume of calls, I started with the log for the
residence number first. The logs were arranged in order of’ the most recent
calls first. I worked my way down list after list after list until I could
barely see straight. Until I felt myself starting to doze in the chair.
And then I saw it. The words “Olympia, Washington,” leaped off the page and
brought me bolt upright and wide awake.
The call had been placed two months earlier at ten o’clock
in the morning and had lasted for forty minutes. Excited now, I scanned faster.
Three weeks before that was another call. A month before that was another. All
of the calls were placed to the same 360 prefix number. Shaking my head, I
extracted my wallet from my pocket and pulled out the list of telephone
numbers, and there it was. That 360 number was the unlisted home number for
Ross Alan Connors.
“What the hell does this mean?” I asked myself aloud.
Actually, the answer seemed pretty clear. I remembered
that long empty silence when I had told Ross about the phone calls to the
Illinois law firm. Now I had to face the possibility that Washington State
Attorney General Ross Connors was actually involved in the plot that had
resulted in the death of his own witness.
I’ve never been long on patience. Cooler heads might have
paused for a moment or two of consideration. Not me. There was a phone on a
table at the far end of the conference room. I grabbed the receiver off the
hook and dialed in Ross Connors’s office number, only to be told he was out to
lunch. Next I tried his cell phone. As soon as he answered, I heard the tinkle
of glassware and the muted hum of background conversation. Connors was in a
public place—some fine dining establishment, no doubt and most likely with
friends or associates. It wasn’t the best venue for me to try forcing him to
tell me the truth, but I wasn’t willing to wait any longer. If my boss was a crook,
I wanted to know it right then so I could deliver my verbal resignation on the
spot.
“Beau,” he said when he recognized my voice. “I really can’t
talk right now—”
“Sorry to interrupt your lunch, but the suspect we were
looking for, Jack Brampton, is dead,” I told him. “He died this morning making
a run for the Mexican border. I thought you’d want to know “
“You’re absolutely right!” Ross Connors exclaimed. “I do
want to know about that. Good work. Anything else?”
“Answer me one question,” I growled into the phone. “Why
didn’t you come clean with me when I told you about Maddern, Maddern, and Peek?
Louis Maddern is obviously a friend of yours.”
He excused himself from the table and didn’t speak again
until he was outside the restaurant. “Louis really isn’t a friend of mine,,” he
said. “The Madderns are closer to Francine. She’s known Madeline since college,
since she was Madeline Springer, in fact. The girls were sorority sisters
together. Lou can be a bit of a pill some times, but I suppose he’s all right.
Why? What’s going on?”
Sorority sisters, I
thought.
That might explain those widely spaced, long-winded phone calls. It could be
they were nothing more than that, the totally harmless chatting of a pair of
old friends, but still .. .
“Probably nothing,” I said.
“Well,” Connors said. “I should get back to my guests. I’ll
be back in my office about three. Why don’t you give me a callback then.”
“Sure,” I told him. “Will do.”
I put down the phone. I’ve spent most of my adult life
working as a homicide detective, and I can usually spot a liar a mile away.
J.P. Beaumont’s gut-instinct opinions carry about the same weight in a court of
law as polygraph results do—which means they’re widely regarded as totally
unreliable.
The problem for me right then was that my gut instinct
didn’t think Ross Alan Connors was lying. True, he hadn’t answered my question
in front of his guests, but nowadays that was considered to be polite
cell-phone behavior. Still, he had sounded glad to hear from me and delighted
that Jack Brampton had been run to ground. He didn't sound to me like someone
with some dark, hidden secret.
I should have been ecstatic about thinking my boss wasn't
a crook after all, but I wasn't. Because if his relationship to Madeline and
Louis Maddern was totally harmless, then I was getting nowhere fast.
I went back to my place at the table and returned to the
telephone logs. The law firm logged hundreds of phone calls a day, which meant
I was dealing with a huge stack of pages. I lit into scanning them with renewed
vigor, but instead of starting from the most recent ones, I decided to go to
the end of the list and begin there. Halfway through the fourth page, Olympia,
Washington, began appearing again. Not one call or two, but dozens of them,
some only a minute or two long, some that lasted for forty or fifty minutes.
That pattern was obvious almost immediately. None of the
calls were placed earlier than 11 A.M. central time, which would have been 9
A.M. Pacific. And none were placed later than 5 P.M. Pacific. And, although
they all went to the same number in Olympia, it wasn't one of the numbers I had
on my Ross Connors contact list. I guessed then where this was most likely
leading, but before I did anything about it, I wanted to be absolutely sure.
CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE
Once back in her office, Joanna immediately tried reaching
Governor Wallace Hickman, only to be told that he wasn't in, who was calling,
and he would call her back. Not likely, Joanna thought. She'd had previous
dealings with Wally Hickman in a case that had reflected badly on one of the
governor's former partners. With that in mind, she doubted the governor would
be eager to return her phone call—no matter how urgent.
The surface of Joanna's desk was still unnaturally clean.
While she waited, Joanna took messages off the machine. One was on in Terry
Gregovich. "Sheriff Brady, sorry I didn't call in earlier. Kristin went
into labor and there was too much happening. Kristin is fine. We think Shaundra
is, too, but she had some breathing problems. Dr. Lee is having her airlifted
to the neonatal unit at University Medical Center in Tucson. Kristin went with
her in the medevac helicopter. Spike and I are going along, too, but we're driving,
not flying. I’ll let you know how things arc as soon as know anything.”
As she erased that message, Joanna said a small prayer for
the whole Gregovich family.
Next came a call from Joanna’s mother. “Hi,” Eleanor Lathrop
Winfield said airily. “George and I are planning a little dinner get together
for Friday evening. We wanted to know if you and Butch could come.”
The fact that Eleanor had finally unbent enough to call her
son-in-law Butch rather than insisting on using the more formal given name of
Frederick still gave Joanna pause.
“He said there wasn’t anything on his calendar, but that I
should check with you,” Eleanor’s message continued. “Grown ups only this time,
but Jenny won’t mind. She’d probably rather he with Jim Bob and Eva Lou anyway.
Let me know We’ll get together around six and eat at seven or so.”
Joanna groaned inwardly. This would be one of her mother’s
command performances. Since Butch had already said they were free, Joanna
probably wouldn’t be able to dodge it. She made a note in her calendar, then
called Eleanor back and left a message that she and Butch would indeed attend.
The next voice she heard was Marliss Shackleford’s. “I
understand you’ll be speaking to a high school career assembly later this week,”
she said. “I wanted to put an item in my column about that. I was also
wondering if you have any comment on the fact that Deputy Galloway has
officially declared that he’s running for sheriff.”
With a decisive poke of her dialing finger, Joanna erased
that message without bothering to jot down the number. She had suspected it
was coming. Still, now that Ken Junior’s candidacy was evidently official,
Joanna felt a sudden flash of anger toward Deputy Galloway. She had allowed him
to continue with the department when others might have manufactured reasons to
let him go. He had repaid Joanna’s kindness by undermining her administration
in secret. Now his opposition had gone public.
If he had made a public announcement, it was probably in
that day’s edition of The Bisbee Bee. Under normal circumstances,
Kristin would have placed the paper on Joanna’s desk with any pertinent
articles marked with Hi-Liter. But Kristin wasn’t here. Wanting to know exactly
what candidate Galloway had to say, Joanna called the mail room and spoke to
the clerk, Sylvia Roark.
“Kristin Gregovich is out today,” Joanna said into the
phone. “Would you please bring the admin mail down to my office?”
Minutes later Sylvia Roark appeared in the office doorway,
wheeling a large metal cart that was filled to the brim with a mass of papers.
Joanna was surprised when she saw it. She had often objected to the piles of
paper Kristin Gregovich routinely brought into Joanna’s office and stacked on
her desk, but she had no idea that the relatively small piles that actually
appeared had been culled from this kind of daunting heap.
“What should I do with it?” Sylvia asked.
Sylvia was a mousy, painfully shy young woman with bad
teeth and ill-fitting clothing who came and went from the mail room on a daily
basis without exchanging a word with anyone. She spent most of her work hours
closeted in the mail room. When not actively dealing with mail, she hunkered
over a computer and transferred cold-case information from microfiche into
files that could be accessed via computer.
“I’m going to need you to sort it for me,” Joanna said.
Sylvia’s face turned crimson. “But I don’t know how!” she
objected.
“Then you’ll have to learn,” Joanna told her firmly. “Make
five stacks. One for junk mail, one for magazines, newspapers, and newsletters,
one for Chief Deputy Montoya, one for me, and one for don’t know. I’ll help you
sort through the don’t-know stack later.”
“But doesn’t Kristin do that?”
“Kristin just had a baby,” Joanna said. “Until she’s back
on the job, we’ll be counting on you.”
“All right,” Sylvia said, backing up and scuttling toward
the hallway. “I’ll take it back to the mail room and sort it there.”
“No,” Joanna said. “That won’t do. Use Kristin’s desk. And
if the phone rings while you’re there, you’ll have to answer it.”
“But ...” Sylvia began.
“Please,” Joanna insisted. “I need your help.”
Nodding, Sylvia pushed the cart closer to Kristin’s desk.
Joanna didn’t want to spook the young woman further by looking over her
shoulder as she set about doing an unfamiliar task. Spying a copy of The
Bisbee Bee near the top of the pile, Joanna grabbed it, then retreated to
her office and closed the door.
With the new unidentified number in hand, I left the
conference room and went looking for Frank Montoya. The desk outside Sheriff
Brady’s office was almost buried under stacks of paper. Seated there was a
young woman I hadn’t seen before. When I asked if Chief Deputy Montoya was in,
she didn’t answer. Instead, she ducked her head and pointed.
When I entered the chief deputy’s office, Frank was on the
phone patiently explaining to an out-of-town reporter that, until the dead
suspect’s relatives had been contacted, he was unable to release any further
information.
“How’s it going?” he asked, when the call finally ended.
I handed him a sheet of paper on which I had written the unidentified
number, the next cog in my telephone Tinkertoy trail. “Can you find out whose
phone number this is?” I asked.
“Sure,” he said. “It may take a few minutes.”
“Good,” I said. “I’ll be in the conference room.”
The headline Joanna sought was in the right--hand hail
torn corner of the Bee’s front page:
DEPUTY KENNETH GALLOWAY
OPPOSES SHERIFF BRADY
“Crime rates may be down in the rest of the country,”
Cochise County Deputy Sheriff Kenneth Galloway declared yesterday while
throwing his hat into the ring in the race for sheriff. “But here, on Sheriff
Joanna Brady’s watch, it seems to be going in the opposite direction.”
Citing increased numbers of undocumented aliens who arc
flooding into the county, Galloway says sheriff’s deputies are often outgunned
and outnumbered. “We don’t have the man power to deal with UDAs and with our
regular law enforcement responsibilities as well. Sheriff Brady hasn’t done
enough to increase staffing to deal with this ever-growing problem.”
That was as far as Joanna could bear to read. Increased
staffing simply wasn’t possible in the face of lower tax receipts and across-the-board
budget cuts. It was easy for someone outside the process to point a finger and
call her incompetent, but Ken Junior wasn’t the one who had to face up to the
board of supervisors and try to balance the budget. She tossed the paper aside.
She had already decided she would run again. With the next
election still more than a year away, she hadn’t wanted to start campaigning
quite so early. But if Kenneth Galloway was already out on the stump, she would
be forced to follow suit. That meant organizing a committee, raising funds, and
doing appearances, all while doing her job.
For several minutes she sat brooding, wondering where she’d
find the time and energy to do both. Gradually, though, her thoughts shifted.
She was mentally back at Chico’s and analyzing the conversation she and Beau
had shared there. She recalled the man’s painful admission about how Anne
Rowland Corley had conned him and others; about how the real miscarriage of
justice hadn’t been in confining a twelve-year-old to a mental institution but
in releasing her years later.
Joanna had dropped the offending copy of The Bisbee Bee
on top of the serial-killer piece from the Denver Post. Now she
unearthed the article and scanned the timeline sidebar that had accompanied the
feature article. It showed when the child Anne Rowland had been shipped off to
Phoenix and when she had been released.
With a growing sense of purpose, Joanna picked up the
phone and dialed Frank Montoya’s office. When he didn’t answer, she tried
Dispatch. “Where’s the chief deputy?” she asked. “Is he still out at Palominas?”
“No,” Tica Romero said. “I think he’s out in the lobby
talking to some reporters. Want me to interrupt?”
“Never mind,” Joanna said. Her next call was to Ernie
Carpenter. “When did Bill Woodruff disappear?” she asked when he answered. “Who?”
“Bill Woodruff. You remember him. He used to be the
Cochise County Coroner.”
“Oh, that Bill Woodruff,” Ernie said. “Sure, I remember
him. That’s a long time ago. I was a brand-new detective back then. Woodruff
went fishing down at Guyamas and never came hack.”
“That’s what I remember, too, because Dad was sheriff,”
Joanna said. “But wasn’t there something about Woodruff having a ‘side dish’
somewhere down across the line in Old Mexico?”
“Sounds familiar,” Ernie allowed.
“Do you remember any of the details?”
“Like I said, it’s been a long time,” Ernie said.
“Yes,” Joanna said. “It has. Thanks.”
She hurried to the office door. Sylvia Roark was still
pulling envelopes out of the cart. “How are you doing?” Joanna asked. “Okay,”
Sylvia mumbled.
“Not on the mail,” Joanna corrected. “I mean, how are you
doing on the microfiche project?”
“I can’t do anything on it if I’m here,” Sylvia sputtered.
“I thought you said I should—”
“Not right now,” Joanna said quickly. “I don’t mean today.
I mean in general. How far have you gotten?”
“Only the mid-eighties, I guess,” Sylvia said. “I’m
working backward, and it takes time, you know. I can work on it only an hour or
two a day, but I’m doing the best—”
Without waiting for Sylvia to finish, Joanna headed for
the mail room. Tucked into a far corner sat the clumsy old microfiche machine
next to its multiple-drawered file. Pulling out the one marked “1979-1981,” Joanna
settled herself in front of the screen and went to work.
I sat in the conference room twiddling my thumbs for
the next twenty minutes. Finally Frank Montoya showed up.
Wordlessly he handed me back the piece of paper on which I
had scribbled the unknown telephone number. “Who’s Francine Connors?” he asked.
“The Washington State Attorney General’s wife,” I told
him. “Why?”
“I’d say the man has a problem then,” Frank Montoya
replied. “The cell phone in question is registered to her.”
Frank exited the room, leaving me feeling as though he had
poured a bucket of cold water down my back. Ross Connors had been looking for a
leak in his department and among his trusted advisers. It was clear to me now
that the problem had been far closer to him—in his own home! Francine Connors
had been carrying on a long-distance relationship with the husband of one of
her friends. In the process, she had not simply betrayed her husband, she had
also helped murder Latisha Wall.
I popped my head back out of the conference room. Chief
Deputy Montoya had not yet made it to his office. “Hey, Frank,” I called. “One
more thing.”
“What’s that?”
“I’m going to need a log on that one, too.”
“No kidding,” he replied. “I’ve already ordered it. I’ll
bring it to you as soon as I can.”
While waiting, I struggled with my conscience, wondering
what to do. Under the circumstances, nothing seemed clear cut. Was my first
responsibility to my boss? Did I have an obligation to call Ross Connors and
tell him my as yet unproved suspicions? But if I did that, wasn’t I dodging my
responsibilities to Latisha Wall? Most of my adult life has been spent tracking
killers. If Francine Connor had betrayed a protected witness’s whereabouts,
then she was as guilty of Latisha Wall’s murder as the man who had poisoned
her,
Francine Connors was the dishonorable wife of a man sworn to
uphold the laws of Washington State. How would Ross Connors react? Would he
listen to what I had to say and do what had to be done, or would he try to save
his wife? In a tiny corner of my mind, I wondered if that was why I was here.
Was it possible Ross Connors already had his own suspicions about
Francine’s possible involvement? Had he sent me to Arizona hoping against hope
that I wouldn’t discover the truth about what had gone on? Was that why, when I
first brought up Maddern’s name, Ross had said so little?
Finally, I picked up the phone in the conference room.
Pulling a battered ticket folder out of my pocket, I dialed the toll free
number for Alaska Airlines.
“When’s the next flight from Tucson to Seattle?” I asked.
“There’s one this afternoon at three-thirty,” I was told.
The conference room clock said it was already ten past two. I was a good
hundred miles away from the airport and without a vehicle. “That one won’t
work,” I said. “When’s the next flight?”
“Tomorrow morning at seven.”
I reserved a seat on that flight. I had finished and was
putting the phone down when Joanna Brady appeared at the conference room door.
She stepped inside, flipped up the OCCUPIED sign and pulled the door shut
behind her. Her face was set; her eyes chips of dark green slate. Something was
up.
“Did Frank tell you?” I asked.
“Tell me what?”
“He’s waiting for the next set of telephone-toll logs, but
it looks as though my boss’s wife has been carrying on a clandestine affair
with one of UPPI’s big-name attorneys back East. I’m guessing that’s how they
learned of Latisha Wall’s whereabouts. As soon as they knew, they must have
sent Jack Brampton here to runib her out.”
Joanna relaxed a little. “You’ve caught them then,” she
breathed, but she didn’t sound nearly as pleased about it as I would have
expected.
“Frank’s the one who did it,” I said. “I’ve never seen
anybody who can work with the phone company the way he does.”
Joanna nodded absently, as though she wasn’t really paying
attention. She had taken a seat at the conference table. Sitting directly
across from her, I noticed a long, jagged scar on her cheek for the first time.
She probably usually covered it with makeup, but now her face was pale. The
scar stood out vividly against her white skin, making me wonder what had caused
it.
“What’s wrong?” I asked.
Joanna put a slim file folder down on the table, but she
made no move to hand it to me. “You said earlier that you and Anne Rowland
Corley’s attorney ...”
I wished she wouldn’t keep using Anne’s maiden name. I
hated having Anne’s name linked to her father’s.
“Ralph Ames,” I supplied. “The attorney’s name is Ralph
Ames.”
“That the two of you cleared all the cases,” she
continued. “That’s right.”
“But you didn’t come here,” she said. “You didn’t clear
any cases here.”
It was a statement more than a question. My heart gave a
lurch.
“As far as we knew there weren’t any cases here,” I said, “other
than Anne’s father, that is. With the whole family dead by then ...”
“You said she kept a written record?”
“Yes, in the form of a manuscript. Why?”
“Was Bill Woodruff’s name in it?” Joanna asked.
“Bill Woodruff? Not that I remember. Who’s he?”
“You mean who was he,” Joanna corrected. “Years ago
he used to be the Cochise County Coroner—before he disappeared, that is. He
wasn’t declared officially dead until three years later, but I’m sure now that
he died much earlier than that. He was also the man who ruled Patty Rowland’s
death an accident and Roger Rowland’s a suicide.”
She spun the file folder across the table to me then. “Check
the dates yourself,” she added. “Bill Woodruff disappeared within three weeks
of Anne Rowland Corley’s release from the hospital in Phoenix.”
Joanna left the room, leaving me to pick up the pieces of
my heart. In the file I found several pages copied from a missing persons
report. From the bare bones of what was written there I learned that Bill
Woodruff had gone on a fishing trip to a town in Mexico, where he was
reportedly seen in several bars in the company of a young woman—a strikingly
beautiful young woman—after which neither of them were ever seen again.
I’m always accusing Maxwell Cole of editorializing. Since
he writes a newspaper column, I suppose he’s entitled to put his opinions right
there in print for all to see. But the truth is, cops editorialize, too.
Couched in the supposedly nonemotional declaration of fact and allegation that
passes for cop-talk and cop-write, I recognized what the long-ago investigator
had obviously concluded. A few terse but nevertheless disparaging remarks about
Bill Woodruff’s wife, Belinda, revealed the investigator’s opinion that the
missing man might well have had good reason to walk away from a shrewish,
carping wife—walk away and simply disappear.
Unlike that original investigator, I saw Anne Corley’s
troubled face leap toward me out of the telling words in the report: “strikingly
beautiful.” That was Anne, all right—strikingly beautiful. And ultimately
dangerous. Bill Woodruff must have thought he was about to get lucky and have
himself a harmless little fling. I’m sure he had no idea he was dealing
with the now-grown and incredibly vengeful little girl his official reports had
once betrayed.
That much Anne had told me herself. Her written manuscript
had alleged that her sister Patty hadn’t really died as a result of an
accidental fall. She had been tortured and abused and finally savagely beaten.
And both of Anne’s parents, along with her father’s cronies—the police chief
and the local coroner—had conspired together to cover it up, just as Anita
Rowland and Woodruff had concealed Anne’s role in her father’s supposed suicide.
It’s hard to be angry with someone who’s been dead for
years. But I was. A riot of fury boiled up in my heart because Anne had done it
to me again, damn her! She had left me a manuscript that, according to her,
told me the whole truth. Clearly she had left out a few things—a few important
things—and had suckered me one more time. And that brought me back to the
central question I have about Anne Corley: Did she ever really love me, or did
I just make it all up? Because, if she had loved me, wouldn’t she have told me everything?
There was a discreet tap on the door. I looked up from
staring at a paper I was no longer seeing as Joanna Brady came into the room,
once again closing the door behind her.
“I’m sorry,” she said. “I assumed you knew, but I can see
from your face—you had no idea.”
I shook my head. “It happened within weeks of her being
released from the hospital, just prior to her marriage to Milton Corley,” I
said. “How do you suppose she did it? How did she pull it off?”
Joanna shrugged. “I have no idea,” she said kindly. “But remember,
we could both be wrong. We don’t have any actual proof. It might have been
someone else.”
I wasn’t prepared to give either Anne or me that kind of
break. “No,” I said. “I don’t think so.”
“Then you’re right,” Joanna said finally. “The real
miscarriage of justice happened when they released her. And you were right
about something else, too,” she added. “Look.”
She’d been holding something in her hand, but I had been
too preoccupied to notice. Now she passed me a new set of phone logs. Putting
on my reading glasses, I scanned through the listings. They included literally
dozens of phone calls from Francine Connors’s cell phone to Winnetka, Illinois.
Some I recognized as going to Louis Maddern’s office number, while a few of the
others went to his residence. Most of them, however, had been placed to a third
number I didn’t recognize.
“Maddern’s cell phone?” I asked.
Joanna nodded. “You’ve got it,” she said. “Frank just
checked.”
The last call had been placed on Sunday night. Looking at
the time, I realized it had been placed within minutes of my call to the
Connors’s home. That one, lasting over an hour, originated from Francine’s cell
phone. After that there was nothing.
I closed my eyes and tried to remember exactly what had
gone on during that critical call. I was sure Francine Connors had answered the
phone and had asked who was calling. Had I told her who I was? I couldn’t
remember, but I wondered now if she had somehow stayed on the line and listened
in on my conversation with her husband. I tried to recall exactly what Ross had
said. The only thing that stuck in my head was that he had planned on calling
in the FBI to track down the leak.
Bearing all that in mind, there could he no question about
what I had to do next. “May I use this phone?” I asked, although I had already
used it once without having asked for Sheriff Brady’s permission.
“Sure,” Joanna said. “Go right ahead. Do you want me to
leave?”
“No,” I told her. “That’s not necessary.”
I searched through my wallet until I once again located
the list of Ross Connors’s telephone numbers. By then I should have known them
by heart, but I didn’t. I dialed his office number first.
“Attorney General Connors’s Office,” a crisp voice
replied. “May I help you?”
“Mr. Connors, please.”
“I’m sorry, he’s not in. May I take a message?”
“No,” I said. “That’s all right.”
I dialed his cell-phone number. After ringing several
times, the call went to voice mail. Hanging up, I tried the home number last. A
woman answered. I wasn’t sure, but the voice didn’t sound like Francine Connors’s
voice.
“Ross, please,” I said easily, hoping to pass for an
acquaintance if not a friend.
“He’s not here,” the woman said, her voice quavering
slightly. “He’s at the hospital. I’m Christine Connors, Ross’s mother. Is there
a message?”
“Hospital?” I asked. “Has something happened to him? Is he
ill?”
“Oh,” she said. “You must not have heard then. It’s not
Ross. He’s fine. At least he’s okay. No, it’s Francine.”
“What about her?”
“She’s dead. She and Ross went to lunch together. He had a
wonderful time, and he thought Francine did, too. But then, when she came home,
and, without even changing her clothes, she went out in the backyard and just
... just ...” Christine Connors stilled a tiny sob. “The gardener was working
out front. He heard the shot and came running. He called an ambulance and they
took her to the hospital, but they couldn’t save her. I can’t imagine why she’d
do such a thing. I just can’t.”
I was stunned. I remembered the sound of tinkling
glassware in the background—the sounds of fine dining at a luncheon meeting. I
hadn’t thought that Francine might be there, but she must have been. And from
that and the call on Sunday night, she must have known the jig was up.
“I’m sorry,” I murmured into the phone. “I’m so very sorry.”
“Well, if you’ll leave your name, I’ll be sure to let Ross
know you called.”
“No,” I told her. “Don’t bother. I’ll be in touch.”
When I put down the phone, Joanna Brady was staring at my
face. “She’s gone, isn’t she?” she said.
In no more than ten minutes, J.P. Beaumont looked as
though he had aged ten years.
“Is there anything I can do?” Joanna asked.
Beaumont shook his head. “I don’t think so,” he said. “No,
wait. There is something. I’m going to need a ride. First I have to go to the
hotel and check out. Then I need a lift as far as Tucson. My plane’s first
thing tomorrow morning.”
“Come on,” Joanna said. “We’ll take my Civvie.”
Beaumont followed her through the building and out the
office door without exchanging a word with anyone. Only when he was fastening
the seat belt in Joanna’s Crown Victoria did he have second thoughts.
“That was rude,” he said. “I should go hack in and tell
Frank how much I appreciated his help.”
“Don’t worry,” Joanna told him. “I’ll pass it along.”
“He’s a good man to have on your team.”
“Yes,” she agreed. “I know”
When they reached the entrance to the Justice Center,
Joanna sat there, hesitating, even though there was no traffic coming in either
direction. Finally, making up her mind, she turned left.
“Wait a minute,” Beau objected. “Where are we going? I
thought the Copper Queen was the other direction. I need to check out.”
“We’re taking a detour,” Joanna told him. “There’s
something I want to show you.”
After heading east for a mile or so, she turned right onto
a road labeled WARREN CUTOFF.
“What’s Warren?” he asked.
“It’s another Bisbee neighborhood,” she explained. “Until
the 1950s, when Bisbee was incorporated, Warren and all these other places were
separate towns.”
“Oh,” he said and lapsed into silence.
Coming into town, Joanna turned right at the first
intersection and then gunned the Civvie up and over two short but relatively
steep hills. At the top of the second one the road curved, first to the left
and then back to the right. Beyond the curve, Joanna pulled over onto the
shoulder, stopped the car, and got out. Beaumont followed.
“What’s this?” he asked.
Joanna pointed to a massive brown stucco mansion lurking
behind a curtain of twenty-foot-high oleander. The house stood at the top end
of what had once been the lush green of Vista Park. Now the park was little
more than a desert wasteland—a long, desolate expanse of dry grass and boulders
with houses facing it on either side.
“I thought you’d want to see this,” Joanna told him
quietly. “This was Roger Rowland’s house. It’s where Anne Rowland Corley grew
up.”
She saw him swallow hard. Tears welled in his eyes. A sob
caught in his throat. There was nothing for her to do but try to comfort the
man. As she wrapped her arms around him, hot tears dribbled down his cheeks and
ran through her hair. His arms closed around her as well. As they stood there
holding each other, it seemed to Joanna like the most natural thing in the
world.
CHAPTER TWENTY-TWO
I don’t know what came over me. It was more than a
momentary lapse. I remember crying like that when my mother died of breast
cancer, and again when my first wife, Karen, succumbed to the disease, too. But
Anne Corley had been gone for a very long time.
I should have thought that by now the hurt of losing her
would have been scabbed over and covered with a protective layer of scar
tissue. Still, seeing the house she grew up in—a mansion of a place that must
have seemed more like a prison than a home—hit me hard. It sat there obscured
behind a thick, decades-old oleander hedge. That planted green barrier had
provided far more than simple privacy for the troubled family that had once
lived behind it. Evil, murder, and incipient insanity had resided there along
with the woman I loved.
It was only when I started to pull myself together that I
real zed I was standing in broad daylight with both arms wrapped tightly around
Sheriff Joanna Brady. And with her arms wrapped around me, too. It was a shock
when I noticed I didn’t want to move away. Pulsing electricity seemed to arc
between us.
I started to push her away, but she wouldn’t let go. Then
a call came in on her car radio.
“Sheriff Brady?” the dispatcher asked.
With a sigh, Joanna loosened her grip on me and returned
to her Crown Vic. “What’s up?” she asked.
“I have Governor Hickman on the phone. Do you want me to
patch him through?”
While Joanna talked to the governor, trying to convince
kiln that he needed to negotiate with Mexican authorities to the return of Jack
Brampton’s body, I stood beside the car and tried to get a grip. Several cars
rolled past, slowing when they saw the Crown Vic with its flashing yellow
hazard lights pulled over on the narrow shoulder. To a person, every driver
eyed me curiously, probably trying to figure out what kind of miscreant I was. Fortunately,
they couldn’t tell by looking.
I remembered all too clearly that it was only due to some Bisbeeite’s
nosiness that we had come to focus our investigative efforts on Jack Brampton
and his suspicious pay-phone calls. If making a simple phone call had been
enough to raise an alarm, what would people think if they had observed my
unexpected and entirely unauthorized embrace with the sheriff of Cochise
County? I also wondered how long it would take for that juicy tidbit to become
public knowledge.
It probably already has,
I thought grimly. I didn’t know Marliss Shackleford well,
but I guessed that would be just the kind of item she’d love to lay her hands
on. Even so, I still wanted to hold Joanna Brady again and feel her
surprisingly strong body against mine and her curved cheek grazing my shoulder.
When she finally ended her radio transmission, I climbed
back into the car. “What’d the governor have to say?” I tried to sound
nonchalant, but I was embarrassed and ill at ease. She’d been nothing but
kind—offering me comfort and a shoulder to cry on, Obviously, I had taken it
the wrong way—read something into it that hadn’t been intended.
“He’ll see what he can do,” Joanna said without meeting my
gaze.
“In other words, you’re supposed to take an old cold tater
and wait.”
“I guess.” Joanna sighed. “We’d better go,” she said. “You’ve
got that right.”
She shot me a defiant look then. Her green eyes pierced
right through me. “I’m not sorry,” she said.
I was astonished. What did that mean? That the
flash of desire I had felt flowed in both directions? That right there in broad
day light, Joanna Brady had wanted me as much as I wanted her? Unbelievable!
“I’m not, either,” I agreed, and that was the truth. Sorry
didn’t apply. Confused? Yes. Concerned? You bet; that, too.
Joanna was driving again, faster than she should have. I
watched the speedometer spike upward—ten miles over the posted limit. Ten, then
fifteen, then twenty.
“Maybe we should slow down,” I suggested quietly. She
jammed on the brakes hard enough that the seat belt dug into my collarbone. The
truth is, I wasn’t talking about the car—and she knew it.
It’s probably a function of age rather than wisdom, but I’ve
finally outgrown my need to play chicken the way we used to down along the
railroad tracks in Golden Gardens when I was a kid. My need for Joanna Brady
was a speeding locomotive. It was time to get the hell off the tracks or pay
the price.
Another call came in on the radio. “Sheriff Brady?” I
recognized Frank Montoya’s voice.
“Yes.”
“Serenity Granger is here at the department,” Montoya
said. “I told her Jack Brampton is dead. I also told her that, although we can’t
be absolutely sure at this point, we’re fairly certain he’s the one who
murdered her mother. Serenity wants to know it it’s possible for her to have
access to Castle Rock Gallery. While she’s here waiting for Doc Winfield to
release Deidre Canfield’s body, she wants to clear up some of her mother’s
affairs. Latisha Wall’s paintings were on consignment. Serenity wants them crated
up in time to ship home with Cornelia Lester. She’s worried about a liability
problem if something were to happen to them.
“I told her that the house out in Huachuca Terraces is
clearly a crime scene and that’s still off limits, but I agreed to check with
you about the gallery.”
“What do you think, Frank?” Joanna asked.
“Those paintings are probably worth some serious money,”
he returned. “Sentimental value to the family would make them priceless. If we
force Serenity to leave them hanging in the gallery and something does happen
to them—if they end up being dam aged in a fire or stolen—we could end up being
liable, too.”
“You don’t think releasing them will have an adverse
effect on the rest of the investigation?”
“I can’t see that it will.”
‘All right, then,” Joanna said, making up her mind. “Tell
Ms. Granger to go ahead. Someone will have to go to the gallery to let her in,
but we should probably have someone on-site while she’s doing the packing just
in case something turns up.”
“Okay,” Montoya said. “I’ll handle it.” He paused for a
moment. “By the way,” he added, “I heard about Ken Junior. Don’t worry.”
“Thanks,” Joanna said. “I’ll try not to.”
I had heard the name Ken Junior mentioned in passing
several times. I knew he was a member of Joanna’s department, and I wondered if
something had happened to him.
“Ken Junior is one of your deputies, isn’t he?” I asked,
trying to steer the conversation into less dangerous territory. “Did he get
hurt or something?”
“He’s running for office against me,” Joanna replied. “That
reporter you met, Marliss Shackleford, is a great supporter of his.”
I may have had to deal with Maxwell Cole on occasion, but
not while I was running for public office. “Not good,” I said.
Joanna put down the microphone and glanced at me. “I
suppose you think returning the paintings is a bad idea.”
“No,” I replied. “Not at all. Returning them to their
lawful owners is the right thing to do—the sooner the better.”
Another radio call came in. I was grateful for the
continuing interference. It was giving me time to pull myself together.
“Sheriff Brady,” the dispatcher said. “Is Mr. Beaumont
with you?”
“Yes. Why?”
“The tow-truck driver is on the line. He was on his way to
pick up Mr. Beaumont’s vehicle, but the car-rental agency needs a form signed
before the driver can pick it up and take it back to Tucson. He wants to know
where Saguaro should fax the form.”
Joanna had already offered me a lift to Tucson, but if I
accepted it, God only knew what would happen. My mother struggled to raise me
to be a “good boy,” and good boys don’t do the kinds of things I wanted to do
with some other man’s wife.
When Joanna handed me the microphone, I took the easy way
out of what could have been a bad situation for all concerned.
“Have Saguaro fax me the form at the Copper Queen Hotel,”
I said. “And tell the driver that when he comes to pick up the form, he’ll need
to pick me up as well. He can give me a ride hack to Tucson right along with
the car.”
At that very moment, Joanna’s Crown Vic was pulling into
the loading zone in front of the hotel.
“You’re turning down my offer of a ride?” she asked. I
nodded. “I think it’s for the best. Don’t you?”
She bit her lower lip. I wanted that lip about then,
wanted to feel it against mine and taste the remains of the lipstick she had
bitten off. But her lips were forbidden fruit for me, just as mine were for
her.
“Does that mean we’re supposed to pretend that what
happened back there didn’t happen?” she demanded huskily. “Or maybe I’m wrong.
Maybe I made the whole thing up, and it didn’t happen after all.”
“No,” I told her evenly. “It happened, all right—it
happened to both of us.”
“What does it mean, then?” She seemed close to
tears.
I wavered between what I wanted to do and what I needed to
do. Between right and wrong. Good and evil. Between my mother’s long-ago
admonitions and the burning present. I tried to ignore the craving I felt. And
the need.
“We’re comrades-in-arms,” I said at last. “We’ve been
through a tough three-day war. Being on a battlefield together makes for strong
connections. They’re not meaningless, but they don’t necessarily last forever.
What happened to us hack there isn’t worth risking the family you already have
or hurting the people you love. The war is over, Joanna. This old soldier needs
to go home now, and so do you.”
I reached out, clasped her hand—the one without the
wedding ring—and shook it. “You’re doing a fine job, Sheriff Brady. Best of
luck to you. Keep up the good work.”
“Thank you,” she said softly. “I guess.”
I opened the car door and stepped out into brilliant
sunlight. I stood on the curb and watched her drive away. She didn’t wave, and
she didn’t look back.
Two hours later a still-shaken Joanna Brady ventured into
Castle Rock Gallery, which was bustling with activity. Detective Carbajal had
been dispatched to unlock the door and then stand by and observe the
proceedings. Bobo Jenkins, how ever, had drafted Jaime into the work crew.
Armed with hammer and nails, the two men worked together, busily fashioning
sturdy crates from sheets of plywood and lengths of two-by-fours.
One by one, Serenity Granger and Cornelia Lester removed
the framed paintings from the walls, brought them to the construction zone,
wrapped the artwork in bubble wrap, and slipped them into newly made crates. As
they worked, Cornelia related stories about the people pictured on the various
canvases—the absent loved ones whose lives Latisha Wall had so carefully recreated
with brush and pigment. Working like that while listening to Cornelia’s stories
was a balm that seemed to help all three hurt and bereaved people begin to come
to grips with their losses.
Banished to the sidelines and nursing her own hurt, Joanna
felt let down and useless. She was relieved when Ernie Carpenter came looking for
her.
“Hey, boss,” he said, peering at her face. Are you all
right?”
“I’m fine,” she said impatiently. “What’s up?”
“We finally finished scouring the San Pedro for money.”
“How much did you come up with?” she asked.
“Six thousand and some,” he answered.
“There was a lot more than that in Brampton’s backpack,”
she told him. “Do you think that’s his pay for making the hit?”
“Seems likely,” Carpenter answered. “The people Jaime and
I have talked to who knew Jack Brampton said he was usually dead broke. If it
hadn’t been for Dee Canfield putting a roof over his head, the man would have
been living on the streets.”
Joanna was struck by a sudden inspiration. “Let’s say he
got paid twenty thousand,” she said. “If I’m the guy paying for a hit, I sure
as hell wouldn’t want to cough up that kind of money until I was sure the job
was done. Latisha Wall died on Wednesday night. Today is only Monday. So who
sent Brampton the blood money, and how did it get here?”
“FedEx?” Ernie suggested. “Either that, or UPS.”
But Joanna’s mind was on that pair of pay phones that
stood outside the post office—the phones Jack Brampton had used open enough to
arouse Harve Dowd’s suspicion.
“The post office has next-day delivery,” she told Ernie. “Do
you have any friends who work there?”
“Moe Maxwell retired.”
“Ask him anyway. He may still be able to ask around and
find out whether or not any packages came in for Warren Gibson on Friday or
Saturday. Tell him it’s an informal inquiry only. If it looks like a yes, we’ll
get a warrant.”
An hour later, when Joanna drove into the yard at High
Lonesome Ranch, Tigger came racing out to meet her. She felt a tug at her heart
to see that Sadie wasn’t with him, but it was reassuring that the younger dog
was picking up the pieces and going on. That was what she had to do, too. She
had lost something—missed something—even if she wasn’t sure what.
Slanting late-afternoon sunlight glinted off the house’s
tin roof. The surrounding trees were only now beginning to change color. Fall
was definitely on its way.
Opening the back door, she welcomed the steamy warmth of a
kitchen replete with the comforting aroma of baking meat loan. She found Butch
and Jenny in the combination living and dining room. Jenny was sprawled on the
floor talking on the telephone while Butch worked at his computer on the
dining-room table. Once inside, Tigger raced to Jenny and curled up next to
her, letting her use his shoulders as a shaggy, pit-bull/golden retriever
pillow
Joanna started for the bedroom but paused long enough to
give Butch a peck on the cheek as she went by.
“How’d it go today?” he asked, not taking his eyes off the
screen or his fingers off the keyboard.
“Okay,” she said. “I think we got him.”
“Great,” he said. “Not bad for a girl.”
She gave his shoulder a friendly whack and then continued
into the bedroom, where she removed her uniform and locked away her weapons.
When she returned to the living room, Jenny was still on the phone, but Butch’s
computer was closed. She saw him moving back and forth in the kitchen, carrying
dishes from cupboard to table.
He brightened when she came into the kitchen. “So tell me about
your day,” he said, handing her three glasses. “I’ve already heard the
condensed version. Now give me the real story.”
Half an hour later, Jenny finally put down the phone and
canoe into the kitchen, “Oh, Mom,” she said, “I almost forgot. Some body called
while I was talking to Cassie. He wanted me to give you a message.”
“Who was it?”
“I can’t remember his name now. Ron something. He said to
tell you that you were right and there was something I don’t remember that
word, either—in the sugar.”
“Ron Workman,” Joanna said. “And sodium azide.”
“Right,” Jenny said. “It seemed like a funny kind of
message. What does it mean?”
“That we got lucky,” her mother replied. “Very, very
lucky.”
Late that night—long after dinner was over and the dishes
had been washed and put away Joanna lay in bed. She had felt a sudden magnetic
attraction to J.P. Beaumont. But lying next to the soothing warmth of Butch
Dixon’s sleeping body, Joanna finally began to see that instant of connection
for what it was and what it was not.
Butch’s presence in her life had blessed Joanna with a
kind of calm stability she had never known before, not even with Andy. He
offered her the loving creature comforts of warm meals and clean and folded
laundry. He listened to her troubles and talked her through moments of
self-doubt. He loved Jenny. I le loved High Lonesome Ranch. And he loved
Joanna.
With a cringe that made her blush in the dark, Joanna
thought about that time, a few months earlier, when she had suspected Butch of
having renewed an affair with an old flame. Joanna had been quick to jump in
with all kinds of wild accusations. Now slit herself had come close to starting
something with someone who, just a few days earlier, had been a complete
stranger. In both instances, nothing untoward had happened, but in Joanna’s
case, it had been close—far too close. If J.P. Beaumont had been any less of a
man than what he was ...
It was time, Joanna decided, to pay attention to the essentials
in life—to the things that were worth keeping; worth treasuring. Things people
like Bobo Jenkins and Latisha Wall would never have a chance to share.
In the dark, she snuggled closer to Butch. “You awake?”
she asked.
“I am now,” he grumbled sleepily. He reached over and
pulled her close. “I don’t understand it. How can you get by on so little
sleep?”
“I’ve always been that way,” she said. “It drove my mother
crazy.”
“I can see why,” he said. “Now what’s happening?”
“Remember what you wanted to do in the family room?”
“I wanted to do it in the family room?” he asked, rolling
over onto his back. “When?”
“Not that.” Joanna giggled. “I’m talking about the train
track.”
“Oh, right, the train track. You said you didn’t want it.”
“Well, I’ve been thinking,” she said, “and I’ve changed my
mind. If it’s not too late, we should put the track in after all.”
“I thought you said it was weird and you wanted normal.”
Joanna sighed. “We’re not normal. Why should our family room be any different?”
“Well, then. If you’re sure you don’t mind.”
“I told you. It’s fine.”
“Great, then, well have trains. Oh, by the way. I forgot
to tell you. We agreed on Gayle.”
“Gayle what?”
“Gayle Dixon. My pen name. Drew and I finally worked it
out today. She’s sending me an agency contract for me to sign and rewrite
suggestions. When those are done she wants me to send the manuscript back under
the nom de plume of Gayle Dixon.”
“I still think it’s strange that you have to change your
name.”
“So do I,” Butch agreed. “But you’ll still love me, won’t
you? Even if I turn into someone named Gayle?”
“As long as Gayle keeps the same meat-loaf recipe.”
“The name may change,” Butch said, chuckling. “but the
timid is bound to remain the same. Now, is that the only reason you woke me
up—to talk about model trains?”
“Maybe not the only one,” she told him.
“Show me,” he said.
The tow-truck driver was kind enough to drop me off at
some anonymously forgettable, cheapo motel close to the airport. The next
morning I took the motel shuttle to catch my plane. Surprisingly enough, the
early-morning flight to Seattle was almost deserted. The Husky fans had
evidently all gone home to Seattle, and I had no idea who had won or lost the
game.
I had a whole row of three seats to myself. With no one
crowding me and no one to talk to, I had plenty of time to think. With some
effort, I managed to keep my mind off both Anne Corley and Joanna Brady.
I had yet to speak to Ross Alan Connors, but that was my
first priority. As soon as I landed at Sea-Mc, I rented a car and drove
straight down to Olympia. On the way, I called the office an spoke to Barbara
Galvin, Unit B’s office manager.
“Where are you?” she asked. “Still in Arizona?”
“I’m on my way home,” I told her.
“Did you hear about what happened to Ross Connors’s wile?”
Barbara asked.
“Yes, I did. In fact, that’s why I’m calling,” I told her.
“I need his address. I want to send flowers.”
“You don’t have to do that,” she said. “The whole squad to
chipping in and sending a single arrangement.”
“I want to do my own,” I said.
“Well, okay, then,” she agreed. “Suit yourself.”
She gave me an address on Water Street. Once I arrived in
Olympia, I wasn’t surprised to find the attorney general’s home was within easy
walking distance of the capitol complex. The house wasn’t quite as imposing as
the one Anne Corley had been raised in, but it came close. Built of red brick
and boasting a genuine slate roof, it was a showy kind of place, with a three
story round turret on one side. The expansive yard was surrounded by an
ornamental iron fence with a bronze fleur-de-lis topping every post,
Up and down the narrow street, late-model upscale cars—Mercedeses,
Jaguars, and an understated Lexus or two were parked on either side. When I
rang the bell, a uniformed maid answered the door. I gave her my card. Minutes
later, I was led inside. Hearing voices in the living room, I was a bit miffed
at being directed away from the piss-elegant crowd that had conic to mingle and
comfort Ross Connors in his hour of need. Underlings like J.P. Beaumont,
however, were shunted away from other, more important, guests. As I allowed
myself to he unceremoniously herded up the staircase that wound through the
turret, it irked me that Ross was keeping me out of sight and out of mind.
Imagine my surprise, then, when I reached the small single
room at the top of the stairs and discovered that Ross Alan Connors was already
there before me, all alone and seated at a battered, old-fashioned teacher’s
desk. Windows in the room offered a panoramic view of the water hinted at in
the street name. But if you’re used to looking out the window at the majesty of
Elliott Bay, the puddle that is Capitol Lake doesn’t count for much.
But just then Ross Connors wasn’t enjoying the view such
as it was. In fact, I doubt he even saw it. When he rose to meet me, I was
shocked by the haggard look on his face and the dark hollows under his eyes.
His normally florid complexion was sallow and gray. There was no trace of the
man I knew as a high-flying lawyer and glad-handing politician. Ross Connors
was a doubly defeated man, bereft and betrayed. Unfortunately, I knew exactly
how he felt because I had been there, too. My heart ached with sympathy.
“Hello, J.P.,” he said somberly. “I didn’t know you were
back.”
“I came straight here. I’m so sorry about Francine....”
“I know, I know,” he said impatiently, brushing aside my
condolences. “Sit down.” He motioned me toward a sagging, butt sprung leather
recliner that could have been a brother to the re-covered wreck in my own
living room. “Who told you about it?”
“Your mother. I talked to her yesterday afternoon.”
“Oh,” he said.
Not knowing what to say next, I waited for him to
continue.
“She left me a note,” Ross Connors said finally, his voice
brittle with emotion. “She said she listened in the other night when you and I
spoke on the phone. She was sure that once the FBI got involved, the whole
thing would come out. She said she couldn’t face it.”
He paused. I knew what it was—knew what he couldn’t bring himself
to say, so I helped him along.
“I know she was involved with Louis Maddern,” I said
quietly, “It’s all in the telephone logs. I can show you....”
“That no-good son of a bitch!” Connors muttered fiercely. “It
must have been going on behind my back for years, and I never figured it
out. How could I have been so stupid that I never had a clue? But somebody else
must have figured it out—someone who works for UPPI. Maddern, Maddern, and Peek
didn’t get that big piece of UPPI’s business by random selection, J.P. They
figured out that that worm Louis Maddern might be able to deliver something
more valuable than legal representation and, God help me, he did!”
“Latisha’s whereabouts,” I supplied.
Ross nodded miserably. “I didn’t even realize I had said
anything. It must have slipped out. Francine and I didn’t have any secrets from
each other, at least ...” We both saw heartbreak where that sentence was going.
He broke off and didn’t finish.
Half a minute later, he continued. “One way or another, Louis
must have weaseled the information out of Francine. Once she put it all
together and realized it was her fault that Latisha Wall was dead, Francine
couldn’t live with herself. She was Louis Maddern’s lover. She was also his
partner in crime, but until Sunday night, I don’t think she had any idea. Then
yesterday, at lunch…”
Again he broke off and couldn’t go on.
“Ross, I’m so sorry. I didn’t know she was with you at
lunch.”
“It’s okay,” he said. “It’s not your fault. You didn’t say
anything out of line. Francine knew me very well. She must have read it in my
face.”
He fell silent. We sat without speaking for more than a
minute. “It’s such a shock. I’m still ragged around the edges,” he said at
last. “All those nice people downstairs. They want to tell me how sorry they
are—how much they care—but it hurts too much to hear it. That’s why I’m hiding
out up here, where no one can find me.”
I wondered if changing the subject would help. “There’s
something I don’t understand,” I said. “Why did UPPI need Latisha Wall dead?
What made her so important? You told me yourself there’s enough evidence
available in the form of depositions that even if she weren’t here to testify
at the trial...”
It turned out I was right. Bracing anger flooded across
Ross Connors’s face.
“Latisha Wall was supposedly under our protection!” he
growled, sounding more like himself again. “My protection! She was a single
protected witness in a single case. Right now UPPI has lots of other cases
hanging fire, and there are lots of other witnesses who are expected to testify
against them. How many of them will still be tough enough to stand up and speak
out if they know they’re in mortal danger? How many other employees or
ex-employees will be willing to put their lives on the line and conk forward to
testify?”
The man’s anger and anguish were both palpable. “I’m
sorry,” I said.
He nodded. “So am I.”
I had been told no official report was expected on my trip
to Arizona. And Ross Connors had plenty of reasons to bury what I had found out
right along with his wife.
“Should I write a formal report?” I asked.
He took a deep breath, straightened his shoulders, and
looked me straight in the eye. “You bet,” he said. “Type it up and send it through
the regular chain of command. If it gets leaked, too bad. My first instinct was
to cover up this whole thing, but I’m not going to. Francine is dead, by God! I
want the world to know who did this to her and why”
And in that moment, I realized I was glad Ross Alan
Connors was my boss and proud that my name had been added to the roster of his
Special Homicide Investigation Team. He may have been a politician, but he was
also a good man who wasn’t afraid to make a tough call when the situation
required it.
“There’s something else,” I said.
“What’s that?”
“What do you know about sodium azide?”
He frowned. “Never heard of it. Why, should I have?”
“Yes,” I told him. ‘And here’s why”
As I drove to Seattle from Olympia, I called Harry I. Ball
on my now-working cell phone. He told me to take the rest of the day off.
“That’s big of you,” I said. “Especially considering I’ve
been working my butt off almost round the clock for the last three days.”
“Don’t start,” he warned. “I don’t wanna hear it.”
I returned the rental car to the airport and climbed into
the Belltown Terrace limo I had summoned to drag me home. By 2 P.M. I was in my
recliner, thinking.
I had told Ross Connors about the dangers of sodium azide,
but what about the dangers of love? Latisha Wall and Bobo Jenkins had fallen
in love, and he had unwittingly poisoned her. Alter years of playing the field,
Dee Canfield had gone for a guy she thought was finally the love of her life,
and Warren Gibson had snuffed her out of existence. Francine Connors had
betrayed her husband for a fling with Louis Maddern, and now a widowed Ross
Connors was imprisoned in his turret, nursing a broken heart.
And then there was me. J.P. Beaumont and Anne Corley. J.P.
Beaumont and Joanna Brady. Anne had been a case of fatal attraction, and Joanna
might have been.
Without realizing it, I drifted off, and all too soon the
dream came again.
At first it was the same as it’s always been, and I tried
to light it off. Anne Corley was striding toward me across a grassy hill in
Mount Pleasant Cemetery. But then I noticed something different about her. This
particular Anne Corley had bright red hair and amazingly green eyes.
Once I realized that, I didn’t bother trying to wake myself
up. For the first time ever, I just lay back and enjoyed it.
Author’s Mote
Ideas for books come from strange places. Partner in
Crime had its origins in reading an article on the dangers of sodium azide
I discovered in my University of Arizona alumni magazine. From that article and
from subsequent research, I’ve come to believe that the widespread availability
of this hazardous and so-far uncontrolled substance poses a real threat to the
safety of far too many people.
When used as intended to inflate air bags in automobiles,
the substance is transformed into a harmless nitrogen-based gas. Originally,
the idea was that the unused air bags and canisters would be removed from
wrecked vehicles and recycled, but in the real world, that’s not happening. No
one wants to risk his own life or the lives of his family members to somebody
else’s cast-off air bag. As a result, tons of unused and unsecured containers
of this deadly, poisonous, and easily water-soluble compound are readily
available. They lie, unguarded and unsecured, in junked cars and on junkyard
shelves all over the country. And that’s what worries me.
I completed writing this book prior to September 11, 2001,
when the world suddenly became a vastly different and more dangerous place. I’m
hoping that somewhere there’s a courageous lawmaker who’ll be willing to take
on the automotive industry and introduce legislation requiring that all air
bags in vehicles must be deployed and the sodium azide rendered harmless at the
time the vehicle is scrapped.
PROLOGUE
“Well?” Deidre Canfield asked, as she mopped her dripping
forehead and straightened the last picture. “What do you think?”
Rochelle Baxter stood back and eyed the painting
critically. It was one of sixteen pieces in her first-ever gallery showing. With
occasional heavy-lifting help from Dee’s boyfriend, Warren Gibson, the two
women had spent the previous six hours hanging and rehanging the paintings in
Dee’s recently remodeled and—for anyone doing physical labor—incredibly
overheated Castle Rock Gallery in Bisbee, Arizona. For Dee it was a new
beginning. For Rochelle, it was something else.
“It’s fine,” she said. Then, seeing how her lack of
enthusiasm caused a cloud of concern to cross Dee’s broad face, Rochelle added
quickly, “It’s great, Dee. Really, it’s fine.”
“I’m glad you like it,” Dee said. ‘And don’t worry. I know
this show is going to be a huge success. You heard the phone calls that came in
about it just today. I’m betting we’ll have an overflow crowd for tomorrow’s
grand opening.”
Deidre Canfield may have been convinced, but Rochelle wasn’t
so sure. “I hope so,” she said dubiously.
Dee grinned. “What’s wrong, Shelley? Sounds like you’re
suffering from a case of opening-night jitters.”
“Maybe so,” Rochelle admitted. “In fact, probably so.”
“Take my word for it,” Dee assured her. “I’ve been
managing art galleries for years. I know what people like, and I’m telling you,
they’re going to love your stuff. What worries me is that we’ll sell out so
fast that some people will go away disappointed. I’m a lot more concerned about
that than I am about no one showing up.”
Turning away, Dee walked over to her desk and picked up
her purse. “Warren wants me to give him a lift to the house, and I have to stop
by the bank before it closes. Want to ride along?”
Rochelle shook her head. “You two go ahead. If you don’t
mind, Dee, I’d rather stay here. I want to be alone with the paintings for a
little while.”
Dee smiled sympathetically. “It must seem like saying
good-bye to a bunch of old friends.”
Rochelle nodded, but she kept her face averted so the
tears welling up in her eyes didn’t show. Dee’s comment was far closer to the
mark than Rochelle Baxter wanted to admit. “Something like that,” she murmured.
Dee shrugged. “Suit yourself,” she said. “Stay as long as
you like. I’ll be back in forty-five minutes or so. I also need to do some
last-minute consulting with the caterer. I’ll lock the door and put up the
CLOSED sign. If someone wants in, ignore them. Don’t bother opening the door.
Eventually they’ll get the message and go away. If you have to leave before I
get back, pull the door shut behind you.”
“Will do,” Rochelle replied.
Dee and Warren left then, walking out into the warm autumn
weather of a late-October Arizona afternoon. They made an Incongruous, Jack
Sprat sort of couple. Warren was tall and lanky and looked as though he’d never
eaten a square meal in his life. Dee was short and almost as wide as she was
tall. He wore a faded denim shirt, frayed jeans, and equally worn tennis shoes.
Dee’s roly poly figure was swathed in a flowing tie-dyed smock that covered
her from her plump neck to the toes of her aging Birkenstocks. The only
similarity lay in their hairdos. Both wore their hair pulled back into single
braids, although Dee’s gun-metal colored plait was a good two feet longer than
Warren’s.
The afternoon temperature was a mild eighty-three degrees.
Nevertheless, Dee insisted on keeping a reflective sunshade inside the
windshield of her elderly Pinto station wagon. Rochelle watched as Warren
pulled the sunshade out of the window and stowed it in the backseat. Then he
climbed into the rider’s side of the multicolored rattletrap vehicle whose
dented panels had been painted in vivid shades of lacquer that almost rivaled
Deidre’s equally multicolored smock. Dee crammed herself behind the meeting
wheel.
Alter three separate tries, the touchy old engine finally
wheezed to life. Driving with little-old-lady concentration, Dee eased the
Pinto into what passed for rush-hour traffic in Bisbee and headed down
Tombstone Canyon, leaving Rochelle to marvel how a plump, wide-faced, oddly
dressed white woman had, in the last few months, become both her good friend as
well as an enthusiastic and unflagging artistic booster.
It was Dee Canfield who, after seeing Rochelle’s
paintings, had decided on mounting a one-woman show. “Reminiscent of Norman
Rockwell,” Dee had pronounced upon viewing Rochelle’s collection of work. “People
won’t be able to keep from buying it. It has that same old-fashioned,
uncomplicated look and feel to it. There are a lot of people out there who are
sick and tired of so-called artists who throw globs of paint on canvas and
pronounce it ‘fine art.’ ”
Rochelle didn’t entirely share Dee’s confidence about the
salability of her work. There was good reason that her paintings were “reminiscent
of” Norman Rockwell. As a child growing up in Macon, Georgia, Rochelle had
pored over a book—one of her grandmother’s coffee-table books—that was
chock-full of Norman Rockwell’s paintings. She had paged through each picture
one by one, focusing all her attention and wonder on the occasional black
people she saw depicted there—children and old people and ordinary adults
whose appearance resembled her own.
Those few dark-skinned people in the paintings, like
Rockwell’s other subjects, were caught while engaged in the most mundane of
behaviors—standing outside a barbershop, riding in a wagon, playing with a
ball, blowing on a harmonica. She had studied each picture with painstaking
care, noticing how the artist had used light and dark to create the subtle
variations of skin color. She had marveled at how Rockwell had captured
intimate scenes in a way that made her feel as though she, too, knew the people
depicted there. But most of all, seeing Rockwell’s work had made her want to
emulate him—to paint her subjects with the same respect and dignity he had
accorded those he had painted.
Now Rochelle had. Her paintings were finished and framed
and hanging on the walls of Dee’s gallery. But would anyone buy them? That she
doubted. In a community populated by precious few African-Americans, Shelley
wondered how much commercial appeal her work would have. Based on demographics
alone, it seemed unlikely to her that there would be an overwhelming demand for
the paintings. Still, she had allowed herself to he dragged along by Dee’s
unbridled enthusiasm as well as by the encouragement and stubborn minded
insistence of her new friend, LaMar Jenkins.
As far as Rochelle knew, LaMar was the only other African-American
currently living in Bisbee. Everyone else called him Bobo, but Shelley
preferred the quiet dignity of his given name.
If Deidre Canfield was Rochelle’s booster and cheerleader,
LaMar Jenkins was her champion. It was no accident that the picture she turned
to now was one of him, grinning amiably and leaning, with studied ease, against
the back gate of his prized bright yellow El Camino. LaMar was a man in his
late forties. His well conditioned, muscle-hardened body may have belied his
age, but there was wisdom in the lines that etched his face, and a sprinkling
of gray peppered his short-cropped hair. Behind him and just overhead hung a
wooden sign that said BLUE MOON SALOON AND LOUNGE, the Brewery Gulch watering
hole he had recently sold.
Of all the portraits hanging in the gallery, that was the
only one with the telltale red dot that indicated it was already sold. LaMar,
subject and purchaser, hadn’t wanted the painting to be exhibited at all, but
Dee had insisted. For her, having sixteen pieces represented some kind of magic
number. Without LaMar’s portrait, entitled simply Car and Driver, the
show would have been one painting short. So there it was.
Looking at it—seeing LaMar’s engaging grin and the
reined-in strength of his powerful forearms—caused a lump to grow in Rochelle’s
throat. She had done something she never should have done, something she had
countless times forbidden herself to do—she had allowed him to get too close
and, as a result, had become too involved. That kind of involvement was
dangerous for both of them now that LaMar “Bobo” Jenkins was about to run for
mayor of Bisbee.
The next municipal election was almost a year away, but
Rochelle understood the necessity of distancing herself now rather than later.
Once LaMar Jenkins officially declared his candidacy, he would be newsworthy.
He would be an African-American running for office in a town where everyone
considered himself part of an oppressed minority That was bound to attract
attention to LaMar as well as to anyone connected with him.
During the months Rochelle Baxter had lived in the community
of Naco, Arizona, a few miles outside of Bisbee, she had noticed how the lady
county sheriff, Joanna Brady, and her family were routinely covered in both
local and statewide media venues. When the sheriff had remarried, the wedding
itself had made headlines in the local paper, The Bisbee Bee. Sheriff
Brady was, after all, a public figure. Several months earlier, when the sheriff’s
young daughter and a friend had stumbled over the body of a murdered woman
while on a Girl Scout campout, that, too, had been front-page fodder—and not
just in Bisbee, either.
Rochelle couldn’t afford to live in the unblinking focus
of a media microscope. Being a part of that kind of associated publicity—where
a picture of Rochelle accompanying LaMar to some campaign event might well be
beamed all over the country—was something she could ill afford. She had made up
her mind. No matter how much it hurt, she would break off the relationship. And
the breakup had to come soon. Now. While she could still do it and make it
stick.
Sighing, she turned away from LaMar’s portrait and
wandered through the building to view the other pictures hanging on the freshly
painted stuccoed walls. Castle Rock Gallery occupied a series of small
buildings that had been cobbled together over time. Rochelle theorized that a
previous owner or owners had added on and stitched the pieces together in a
haphazard fashion, as both spirit and funds had allowed. As a result, the rooms—of
various sizes and shapes—were arranged with wildly varying floor elevations.
With an eye to forestalling a potential lawsuit from some crusading Americans
with Disabilities Act activist, Dee and Warren had installed a complex series
of ramps that linked the rooms and uneven floor levels together.
Around the corner from LaMar’s grinning portrait but in
another room altogether hung Rochelle’s favorite piece, one titled A Boy and
His Dog. The two figures sat side by side on the edge of a large porch
overlooking a sun-drenched front yard with a tree-lined paved street beyond a
picket fence. One of the boy’s arms was flung casually across the golden Lab’s
sturdy shoulder. Sitting with only their backs showing, they were framed by a
doorway as though the artist, standing just inside the shadowy house, had
painted them from that vantage point.
Of course, the boy was not really “a boy” at all. It was
really Tommy, Rochelle’s younger brother. And “his dog” was really Scooter.
Rochelle remembered coming out through the front door one summer’s day and
seeing them sitting together like that. Tommy had been only ten at the time and
Rochelle twelve. What hadn’t shown then—and what didn’t show now in the
painting—was the leukemia that was already robbing Tommy of his childhood and
obliterating his ability to play outdoors on that carefree summer’s day. What
also didn’t show on that warm and lazy Georgia afternoon was how, a few months
later, when an ambulance carrying Tommy to the hospital was speeding away from
the house, lights flashing and siren blaring, Scooter went racing after it down
the street, where he was struck by a car two intersections away. None of that
showed in the picture, but it was all there, twenty-three years later, etched
deeply into Rochelle’s still-grieving heart.
Two pictures away was another favorite. In it, Rochelle’s
niece, Jolene, crouched, ball in hand, beneath a basketball hoop fastened high
over her grandfather’s garage door. Her skin gleamed with sweat and her dark
eyes glittered with clear determination. Her cornrows shone in the sunlight.
The painting was titled Making a Basket, although the ball was still
poised on the ends of Jolene’s fingertips as she prepared to spring upward.
A viewer would simply have to take it on faith that she
had actually made the ball swish effortlessly through the hoop, but Rochelle
didn’t. She knew for sure. She had been there, home on leave after Operation
Desert Storm, playing a predinner pickup game with her sister’s teenage daughter.
Jolene was married now and had two children of her own. Maybe three, for all
Rochelle knew, but in her artist’s eye, Jolene was still young and innocent and
with a world of possibility open to her.
Rochelle moved from one room to another, strolling up and
down the various ramps. Standing in front of each painting, she allowed the
images she had captured there to speak to her once more. In The Pastor and
the Lamb she saw her father again. Roundly middle-aged and dressed in his
bright red summer preacher’s robe, he leaned down to shake hands with a shy
little boy who gazed worshipfully up at him over the grubby white Bible he
clutched tightly in his other hand.
Next to that picture was one called Napping. In it,
Rochelle’s grandmother, Cornelia, drowsed peacefully in her rocking chair while
rays of early-afternoon sunlight streamed in through the sheer window curtains
and transformed her silvery hair into a glowing halo.
Around the corner from Napping was the The
Carver. An old man—Rochelle’s grandfather, his vitality not yet drained and
Iris mahogany skin not yet tinged with the jaundice of kidney disease—sat on a
kitchen chair and sharpened his knife on a soap stone while curls of newly
whittled wood littered the floor around his feet.
A few feet away from The Carver was Homecoming. In
that one, Rochelle’s mother, dressed in a suit and looking determinedly
elegant, walked toward the front steps late one afternoon carrying her
leather-bound briefcase balanced effortlessly in one hand. The slight smile on her
lips showed that although she loved her work, she was nonetheless grateful to
be coming home to her family to her husband and children.
Concealed under the paint of that picture and three of the
others in the gallery was a never-finished self-portrait. Rochelle had tried to
paint that one over and over again. Each time she had given up in frustration
and covered the unfinished work over with some other painting. That was the
magic of working with oils. If a painting didn’t come together, you could always
render it invisible by burying it under layers of other colors. Gazing at her
mother’s well-remembered and equally well-rendered features, Rochelle realized
why she had never succeeded in painting herself. She knew who her mother was,
but when it came to Rochelle Baxter, the artist wasn’t so sure.
Sighing, she turned away. Dee had been absolutely right
when she said selling the paintings must be like saying good-bye to a group of
old friends, but for Rochelle it went far beyond that. In painting the
portraits, she had recalled those loved ones from the past and remembered why
she had loved them. Now, knowing she would never see any of them again, it
seemed as though she was letting go of them forever at the same time she was
letting go of their portraits. Hail and farewell.
Finally, it was all too much. Walking through the empty
gallery, a half-sob escaped Rochelle’s lips and she knew she was about to lose
it. That shook her. If it could happen to her when she was all alone in the
gallery, how would she manage to maintain her composure tomorrow night at the
opening-night party, when the place would be crowded with people, all of
them—according to Dee—potential buyers? What would she do if some nice lady
asked the artist who that little boy was, sitting on the porch with his dog?
And what if someone else wanted to know about that nice old lady napping so
peacefully in her rocking chair?
Feeling the first subtle heart-pounding, breath-robbing
symptoms of an oncoming panic attack, Rochelle bolted out of Castle Rock
Gallery, slamming the door shut behind her. Anxiously she scanned the parking
lot, afraid Dee and Warren might return before she could make good her escape.
Her closed Camry had been sitting in full afternoon sunlight. Shivering and
sweating at the same time, she sank, gasping for breath, into the cloth seat
and welcomed the comforting warmth that surrounded her. She grasped the
steering wheel and held on, hoping the heated plastic would help still her quaking
hands. After a few long minutes, the panic attack subsided enough to allow her
to start the car and drive away.
Leaving Old Bisbee behind, she drove past the remains of
Lavender Pit, around the traffic circle, and then southwest out of town toward
Naco. When her case manager had asked her where she wanted to go—where she
would care to settle—Rochelle had chosen the Bisbee area for two reasons: It
was known as a place where artists were welcome. It was also surprisingly
affordable.
After only a day or two of prowling around, she had
stumbled on the tiny border community of Naco, seven miles south of Bisbee proper.
She had spotted the FOR SALE sign on a crumbling but thick walled adobe
building that had, in previous incarnations, had served as a customhouse, a
whorehouse, and—most recently—a nightclub. She had purchased the place and had
then remodeled it into part studio, part living quarters. That’s where Rochelle
headed now—home to Naco.
Mexico’s towering San Jose Mountain loomed in solitary majesty
over the valley floor below. Behind it arched a cloudless blur sky. The summer
rains had barely materialized that year, leaving all of Arizona brittle and
dry. Naco was no exception. Turning off the short and poorly paved main drag,
Rochelle entered a dusty dirt alleyway that ran parallel to the paved street.
She parked in the makeshift carport that had been tacked on to the hack of the
building. Bullet holes from the Mexican Revolution still scored some of the
adobe bricks that passing time had denuded of countless layers of stucco.
Once out of the car, she hurried to the studio’s back
entrance. Unlocking the dead bolt, she hurried inside and punched in the code
on her alarm keypad. The system had been installed by the previous tenant. In
the interest of saving money, she had kept the existing equipment, merely reactivating
it and changing the code. Having a security system made her feel safe and
allowed her to sleep easier at night.
The interior of the building consisted of two rooms—a bathroom
dominated by an old-fashioned claw-footed tub and a large open space that
Rochelle had divided into work, sleep, and eating arras by the strategic
placement of a series of rustic used-wood screens. Eating, sleeping, and
working in that one huge, high-ceilinged room suited her simple needs. In the
months since she had moved here from Washington State, while waiting for the
other shoe to drop, she had buried herself in her work, toiling at her easel
almost around the clock, stopping only when exhaustion finally overwhelmed her
now-chronic insomnia. Eating, too, had taken a backseat to feverish work.
A skylight in the middle of the ceiling suffused the white
walls and the broad planks of the wooden floor with the soft pink glow of
late-afternoon light, but with all the paintings hauled off to Castle Rock
Gallery, the studio seemed strangely empty.
Ignoring the loneliness that threatened to engulf her,
Rochelle stripped off her clothes and hurried into the bathroom, where she
spent the better part of an hour soaking in the long, narrow tub. She had
climbed out and was wrapping her hair in a turban when she heard a persistent
knocking on the front door. It was times like this when living and working in
the same place had its disadvantages. Pulling on a robe and leaving her hair
wrapped, she hurried to the door and used the peephole to check on the identity
of her visitor. She was dismayed to find LaMar Jenkins standing outside on the
makeshift sidewalk. With his hands stuffed deep in his pockets, he rocked back and
forth on his heels and looked distinctly unhappy. Sighing, Rochelle unlatched
the dead bolt and let him in.
“We were supposed to have dinner tonight,” he reminded her
in an aggrieved tone as he stepped inside. “You left a message on my machine
saying that you couldn’t come. What happened? Did somebody make you a better
offer?”
“Dee and I hung the show today” Rochelle said lamely. “I
knew I’d be tired and probably not very good company”
“I would have been happy to help with the hanging,” LaMar
said. “Why didn’t you ask me?”
Rochelle shrugged and didn’t answer. They were standing
only inches apart. LaMar Jenkins was a tall man, but his eyes and Rochelle’s
were almost on the same level. Feeling guilty and embarrassed, Rochelle was the
first to look away.
“Can I get you something to drink?” she offered. “Iced
tea? A beer?”
“No fair changing the subject,” he said. “But a beer would
be fine.”
Rochelle walked away from him and disappeared behind the
wooden screen that marked the line of demarcation between studio and kitchen.
He followed her and took a seat at the old-fashioned Formica-topped table she
had purchased from a nearby consignment store. She set a bottle of Bud in front
of him, then went to the refrigerator and poured herself a glass of iced tea.
Without being asked, LaMar opened two packages of sweetener
and poured them into her glass. It was exactly that kind of unasked courtesy
and thoughtfulness that was driving Rochelle away from the man.
It disturbed her to realize that in the few months they
had known each other, LaMar Jenkins had learned far too much about her. He
knew, for instance, that she took two packets of sweetener in her iced tea, but
none at all in her coffee. He knew that she preferred root beer to Coke and
smooth peanut butter to any flavor of jelly. He knew she wanted her eggs fried
hard and hated refried beans. Those were all little secret things she hadn’t
wanted anyone to learn about her ever again. That had never been part of her
game plan.
“How about a sandwich?” she offered. “Bologna, BLT, tuna.
I’ve got the makings for any or all.”
Shaking his head, LaMar reached out, caught her by the
wrist, and drew her toward him. “I’m not hungry,” he said, pulling her clown
onto the chair next to his. “And I sure as hell don’t want a sandwich. Talk to
me, Shelley. Tell me what’s wrong.”
“Nothing,” she said. “I’m just nervous—about the show, I
guess.”
LaMar studied her, his hooded eyes searching her face. “It’s
not about the show, is it?” he said accusingly. “You and I have a good thing
going, but now you’re pulling away from me, shutting me out. I want to know
what’s going on, and how come?”
“I need some time for myself,” she said.
LaMar had been holding her hand. Now he released it and
she let it fall limply into her lap. “That’s bullshit, and you know it,” he
growled back at her. “But even if it’s true, you still haven’t told me why.”
Because knowing me is dangerous, Rochelle wanted to say.
Because when they come looking for me, they might come looking for you, too.
“You’re too intense,” she said instead. ‘And I’m not ready
for that.” Even as she said the words, her body, in absolute betrayal, longed
for nothing so much as to have LaMar Jenkins take her into his strong, capable
arms and hold her tightly against his chest. Afraid she might yield to that
temptation, she added quickly, “You’d better go.”
“Why? Don’t you trust me?”
I don’t trust myself,
she
thought. “Something like that.”
Taking a long drink from his beer, LaMar Jenkins showed no
sign of leaving. “You never talk about the past,” he said. “Why is that?”
“The past doesn’t matter,” she said flatly. “There’s
nothing to talk about.” She tried to sound cold—as though she didn’t care—but,
like her body, her voice betrayed her. The past mattered far too much.
“Somebody hurt you, Shelley.” LaMar’s voice was suddenly
kind, concerned. “Whoever it was and whatever they did to you, it wasn’t me.
Let me help fix it. Talk to me.”
“You can’t fix it,” Rochelle said, shaking her head and fighting
back tears. “Just go, please.”
Without another word, LaMar Jenkins carefully put down his
beer bottle and stood up. He walked as far as the first wooden screen before he
turned back to her. “I’ll see you tomorrow,” he said. “At the show. And
afterward, we’re having dinner. No excuses.”
She capitulated. “All right,” she said. “We’ll have
dinner.”
“Promise?”
She nodded. “Yes.”
He left then. She followed him as far as the door, made
sure the dead bolt was locked, and double-checked the alarm system. Then she
returned to the kitchen table. For the next half hour, Rochelle Baxter sat at
the gray Formica tabletop and thoughtfully sipped her iced tea while rehashing
every word that had been said. She didn’t bother making herself a sandwich. She
wasn’t hungry. Instead, she sat and wondered whether or not she would really go
to dinner with LaMar after the show. Maybe by then she’d be able to find the
resolve to tell him once and for all that she had to break it off.
When her tea was almost gone, Rochelle left the nearly
empty glass and half-finished beer bottle sitting on the kitchen table and
returned to her eerily denuded studio.
To combat the loneliness left by all the bare walls,
Rochelle wrestled a new canvas out of storage and put it on her easel. It sat there
staring back at her, waiting for her hands to fill it with color and give it
life. Turning away from the empty canvas, she settled down at her drafting
table and went through her sketchbooks trying to decide what she would paint
next. Finally, around nine or so, she went to bed.
In her dream, she was back in Desert Storm. Oil-well
fires, burning all around her, tilled the air with evil smelling smoke. She
couldn’t breathe. She felt as it she were choking; her eyes were tearing. What
woke her up, though, wasn’t the dream. It was a terrible cramping in her gut.
Writhing in pain, Rochelle attempted to get out of bed, but before her feet
touched the floor, her body heaved. The involuntary spasm hurled a spray of
vomit halfway across the room. Falling back onto the bed, she grasped blindly
for the phone. Somehow she reached it. Her stabbing fingers seemed numb and out
of control, almost as though they belonged to someone else. Struggling
desperately to manage her limbs, she finally succeeded in dialing.
“Nine one one,” the calm voice of an emergency dispatcher
responded. “What is the nature of your emergency?”
By then Rochelle Baxter was beyond answering. Another wild
spasm of vomiting hit her and sent her reeling back onto the bed. As she lay
there, retching helplessly and unable to move, the phone clattered uselessly to
the floor.
“Ma’am?” the operator said more urgently. “Can you hear
me? Is there anyone there to help you? Can you tell me your location?”
There was no answer. By then Rochelle Baxter was beyond
hearing as well. A few minutes later, medics dispatched by the Cochise County
emergency operator arrived at the scene. When no one responded to their
repeated knocking, they finally splintered the sturdy front door to gain
entry. While a noisy burglar alarm squawked its insistent warning in the
background, a young EMT located Rochelle in her vomit-splattered bed. Gingerly,
he felt for a pulse, then looked at his supervisor and shook his head.
“We may have already lost her,” he said.
CHAPTER ONE
As sheriff Joanna Brady drove through the last thicket of
mesquite, the house at High Lonesome Ranch lay dark and still under a rising
moon. Usually her daughter Jenny’s two dogs—Sadie, a bluetick hound, and
Tigger, a half golden retriever/half pit-bull mutt—would have bounded through
the undergrowth to meet her. This time, Joanna surmised, they had chosen to
accompany Butch on his appointment with the contractor at the site of the new
house they were planning to build a mile or so away.
Butch had bugged out of St. Dominick’s immediately after
the service, while he and Joanna waited for the sanctuary to empty. “I’ll stay
if you want,” he had whispered. “But I really need to go.”
“Right,” she had told him. “You do what you have to. I’ll
be line.
“I’ll stop by the house and do the chores first,” he said.
“Don’t worry about that.”
Joanna had simply nodded. “‘Thanks,” she said.
By then Yolanda Ortiz Caсedo’s grieving husband, her two
young sons, her parents, brothers, and sister were walking out of the church
through two lines of saluting officers made up of both police and fire department
personnel. Joanna could barely stand to watch. It was all too familiar, too
close to her own experience. As her green eyes filled with tears, Joanna
glanced away, only to catch sight of the prisoners. That forlorn group—eleven
county prisoners, freshly barbered and dressed in civilian clothes—stood in
respectful silence under the watchful eyes of two jail guards and Ted Chapman,
the executive director of the Cochise County Jail Ministry.
Ted had come to Joanna’s office the day after the young
jail matron had died of cervical cancer at a hospice facility in Tucson. “Some
of the inmates would like to go to the services,” Chapman had said. “Yolanda Caсedo
did a lot of good around here. She really cared about the guys she worked with,
and it showed. She helped me get the jail literacy program going, and she came
in during off-hours to give individual help to prisoners who were going after
GEDs. Some of the people she helped—inmates who have already been released—will
be there on their own, but the ones who are still in lockup wanted me to ask if
they could go, too. The newer prisoners, the ones who came in after Yolanda got
sick, aren’t included, of course. They have no idea who she was or what she
did.”
“What about security?” Sheriff Brady had asked. “Who’s
going to stand guard?”
“I already have two volunteers who will come in on their
day off,” Chapman answered. “You have my word of honor, along with that of the
prisoners, that there won’t be any trouble.”
Joanna thought about how good some of the jail inmates’ words
of honor might be. But then she also had to consider the notebook full of
greetings handmade by jail inmates dial Reverend Chapman had brought to Yolanda
and her family as the young woman had lain gravely ill in the Intensive Care
Unit at University Medical Center in Tucson. Sheriff Brady had been touched by
the heartfelt sincerity in all those clumsily pasted together cards. Several of
them had been made by men able to sign their own names at the bottom of a
greeting card for the very first time. Other cards had names printed by someone
else under scrawled Xs. Their good wishes had seemed genuine enough hack then.
Now, so did the Reverend Chapman’s somewhat unorthodox request.
“How many inmates are we talking about?” Joanna had asked.
“Fourteen.”
“Any of them high-risk?”
“I don’t think so.”
“Give me the list,” Joanna had conceded at last. “I’m not making;
any promises, but I’ll run the proposition by the jail commander and see what
he has to say.”
In the end, eleven of the proposed inmates had been
allowed to attend the service. In his eulogy, Father Morris had spoken of
Yolanda Caсedo as a remarkable young woman. Certainly the presence of that
solemn collection of inmates bore witness to that. And, as far as Joanna could
tell, the prisoners’ behavior had been nothing short of exemplary.
They stood now in a single straight row. With feet splayed
apart and hands clasped behind their backs, they might have been a troop of
soldiers standing at ease. Seeing them there, dignified and silent in the warm
afternoon sun, Joanna was glad she had vetoed the jail commander’s suggestion
that they attend the funeral wearing handcuffs and shackles.
Chief Deputy Frank Montoya came up behind her then. “Hey,
boss,” he whispered in her ear. “They’re putting the casket into the hearse.
Since we’re supposed to be directly behind the family cars, we’d better mount
up.”
Nodding, Joanna left the inmates to the care of the two
guards and Ted Chapman and walked back toward Frank’s waiting Crown Victoria.
Even in heels, the five-foot-four sheriff felt dwarfed as she made her way
through the crush of uniformed officers. A light breeze riffled her short red
hair.
“Looks like the members of Reverend Chapman’s flock are
behaving themselves,” her chief deputy observed, as he started the Civvie’s
engine.
“So far so good,” Joanna agreed.
“But they’re not coming to the cemetery?”
Joanna shook her head. “No. Having them at the church is
one thing, but going to the cemetery is something else. If there’s any
confusion, I was afraid one or more of them might slip away.”
“You’ve got that right,” Frank agreed. “We don’t need to
give your friend Ken Junior anything else to piss and moan about.”
“Since when does he need a reason?” Joanna returned.
Ken Junior, otherwise known as Deputy Kenneth Galloway,
was Sheriff Brady’s current problem child. He was the nephew and namesake of
another Deputy Galloway, one who had been part of a network of corrupt police
officers in the administration that had immediately preceded Joanna’s. The
elder Galloway had died as a result of wounds received during an armed
confrontation with Joanna Brady. Although Joanna had been cleared of any
wrongdoing in that incident, the dead man’s relatives continued to hold her
responsible for Galloway’s death.
Although the younger man was the deceased deputy’s nephew
rather than his son, around the department, he was referred to as Ken Junior.
Fresh out of the Arizona Police Academy at the time of. his uncle’s death, the
younger Galloway had been far too new and inexperienced to have taken an active
part in the police corruption that had marred Sheriff Walter V. McFadden’s
administration. For that reason, Ken Junior had been allowed to stay on as a
Cochise County deputy sheriff. Never a great supporter of Joanna’s, he had
quickly gravitated to union activism and had recently been elected president of
Local 83 of the National Federation of Deputy Sheriffs.
In recent months Joanna had clashed with Ken Junior twice
regarding Yolanda Caсedo’s illness. The first confrontation had occurred when
Joanna suggested that members of the union ought to do at least as much for the
Caсedo family as the jail inmates had. The second had happened only a few days
earlier, as the Caсedo family had struggled to make arrangements for Yolanda’s
funeral.
Deputy Galloway had balked at Joanna’s insistence on
giving Yolanda the honor of an official Fallen Officer funeral. Ken
Junior had taken the position that, as a mere jail matron, Yolanda Caсedo didn’t
qualify as a real Fallen Officer. Joanna had gone to the mat with him on that
score. Only over his vociferous objections had two lines of smartly saluting officers
greeted Yolanda’s grieving family as they exited St. Dominick’s Church
after the funeral.
Led by two Arizona Department of Public Safety motorcycle
officers, the hearse pulled away from the curb. One by one the other members of
the funeral cortege formed up behind them for the slow, winding trip down
Tombstone Canyon to Bisbee’s Ever-green Cemetery two miles away. The ceremony
in the cemetery was the part of the service Joanna had steeled herself for. She
dreaded the symbolic Last Call and the moment when she would he required to
take a carefully folded American flag and deliver it into Leon Caсedo’s hands.
She remembered too clearly another bright fall afternoon,
not so different from this one, when Walter V. McFadden had placed a similarly
folded flag in Joanna’s trembling hands at the close of Andy’s graveside
services.
During the ride down the canyon and around Lavender Pit,
Joanna was glad her daughter, Jenny, wouldn’t be at the cemetery. Once again
she had reason to be thankful for her former mother-in-law’s kindness and
wisdom. Eva Lou Brady had called High Lonesome Ranch early that morning.
“Let Jenny come stay with Jim Bob and me tonight,” Eva Lou
had urged. “After what happened to Andy, Yolanda’s funeral is going to be
difficult enough for you. It’ll be even harder on Jen. I’ll have Jim Bob pick
her up after school so she’s here with us before the service gets started. That
way she won’t have to see the hearse and the cars pulling into the cemetery. We’ll
take her out for pizza and try to keep her occupied.”
Lowell School, where Jenny attended seventh grade, was
situated directly across the street from Evergreen Cemetery. Not only that,
Joanna had been dismayed the day before when she drove by the cemetery and
noticed that the plot Leon Caсedo had chosen was fully visible from some of
Jenny’s classroom windows.
Bearing all that in mind, Joanna had readily agreed to her
former mother-in-law’s suggestion. Now, driving into her own front yard and
seeing the darkened house, Joanna was even more grateful. This was a night
when she needed a buffer between home and work. The killer combination of
funeral, wailing bagpipes, graveside service, and church-sponsored reception
afterward had stretched Sheriff Joanna Brady’s considerable resources to the
breaking point. Had Butch or Jenny asked about Yolanda Caсedo’s funeral, Joanna
would likely have dissolved in tears.
The motion-activated light above the garage flashed on,
illuminating Joanna’s way from the car to the house. The afternoon had been
warm, but as soon as the sun went down, there was a hint of fall in the air.
Once inside, Joanna hurried to the bedroom, where she stripped off her clothing
and weapons. She locked away her two Glocks and pulled on a thick terry-cloth
robe. Headed for the kitchen, she was stopped halfway there by a ringing phone.
“How did it go?” the Reverend Marianne Maculyea asked. “And
how are you doing?”
Joanna’s friendship with Marianne dated from when the two
of them had been preadolescent students at the same school Jenny now attended.
Married and the mother of two, Marianne was also pastor at Tombstone Canyon
United Methodist Church, where Joanna and Butch were members. She was the only
person to whom Joanna had confided her concerns about attending and participating
in Yolanda Caсedo’s funeral service.
“I’m all right,” Joanna replied grimly. “But it was tough.”
“You don’t sound all right,” Marianne observed.
“No, I suppose not,” Joanna said. “The Last Call was bad,
but when I had to give Leon the flag, I really choked up. If I could have come
home right then, maybe it wouldn’t have been so bad. Instead, I had to go back
up to the church and stay through the whole reception. That almost killed me,
Mari. Yolanda’s sons, Manny and Frankie, were there in their white shirts and
blue slacks and little bow ties. They’re such cute kids, but they’re so lost
and hurt right now, I could hardly stand to look at them, to say nothing of
speak to them. What do you say to kids like that? What can you say?”
“You say what’s in your heart,” Marianne Maculyea
replied. “I’m sure seeing them bothered you that much more because it made you
think about what it was like for Jenny during Andy’s funeral.”
Marianne Maculyea’s on the money comment left Joanna with
nothing to say. After a moment of silence, Marianne added, “Speaking of Jenny,
how is she?”
“Fine, I’m sure,” Joanna replied. “She’s with Grandma and
Grandpa Brady. Eva Lou called this morning and invited her to spend the night.
They’re going out for pizza. I wish Eva Lou had asked me to join them. For two
cents I would have ditched the reception and eaten pizza instead.”
“You had to go to the reception, Joanna,” Marianne
reminded her. “It’s your job.”
“I know,” Joanna said hollowly. “But I sure didn’t like
it.”
There was another pause. In the background on Marianne’s
end of the phone, Joanna heard a murmur of voices. “I’d better run,” she said. “Jeff
needs help with baths. I just wanted to be sure you’re okay.”
“I’m fine,” Joanna said with more conviction than she
felt, because she wasn’t fine at all. And what was bothering her most was
something she wasn’t ready to discuss with anyone—including Marianne Maculyea.
Or with Butch Dixon, either, for that matter.
Putting down the phone, Joanna wandered into the kitchen,
where she opened the refrigerator door and peered inside. The ladies’ auxiliary
of St. Dominick’s had put on an amazing spread, but Joanna had eaten none of
it. And now none of Butch’s carefully maintained leftovers looked remotely
appetizing, either. Giving up, she pulled a carton of milk out of the fridge
and then rummaged in the pantry for a box of Honey Nut Cheerios. Armed with
cereal, a bowl, and a spoon, she settled into the break-fast nook. After a few
bites she lost interest in the cereal and found herself staring, unseeing, at
the game CD taped to the outside of the box.
“Damn Ken Galloway anyway!’’ she muttered.
He was the main reason she had been heartsick at the
funeral reception. Joanna was sure it was due to arm-twisting on his part that
so few deputies from her department had been in attendance. In addition to
Frank Montoya, only one other deputy—a relatively new hire named Debra
Howell—had defied peer pressure and come to the reception.
Not that the Cochise County Sheriff’s Department hadn’t
been represented. All jail personnel who weren’t on duty had turned up,
including the two guards who had escorted the inmates to the funeral earlier.
And there had been plenty of representation by support staff—the clerks and
secretaries who worked in the offices, crime lab, and evidence room. Casey
Ledford, Joanna’s fingerprint technician, had been there, along with all but
one of the emergency dispatch operators. And there were plenty of officers from
other jurisdictions who had shown up out of courtesy. As a group, however, the
deputies from Cochise County were notable to their absence.
Only half of Joanna’s detective division had shown up, but
that was understandable. Jaime Carbajal’s eleven-year-old son, Pepe, played on
the same Little League team as Yolanda Caсedo’s elder son, Frankie. So Jaime
and his wife, Delcia, had both been there. Detective Ernie Carpenter’s absence
had nothing to do with Ken Galloway’s political machinations; he was on
vacation. Ernie had reluctantly agreed to take his wife, Rose, on a weeklong
trip to Branson, Missouri, in celebration of their thirtieth wedding
anniversary.
So Ken Galloway hadn’t managed to keep everyone away.
Still, at a time when Joanna needed the entire department to pull in the same
direction, she was upset that the head of the deputies’ union local seemed
determined to drive wedges among members of her department. She worried that eventually
those small wedges might splinter her employees into warring factions.
The phone rang. As Joanna picked up the extension on the
kitchen counter, she caught sight of the Cochise County Dispatch number on the
caller ID. “Sheriff Brady here,” she said. “What’s up?”
“A 911 call came in a little while ago from down in Naco,”
Dispatch operator Tica Romero reported. “When the EMTs arrived, they found a
nonresponsive African-American female. They trans-ported her to the hospital
and did their best to revive her, but she was DOA.”
Joanna Brady felt the familiar clutch in her gut.
Something bad had happened in her jurisdiction. It was time to go to work. “Any
sign of foul play?” she asked.
“No. The general assumption is natural causes. The victim
had evidently been terribly ill. There was no sign of forced entry—until the
EMTs had to break in to get to her, that is. The place was locked up tight, and
the screeching security alarm almost drove the medics nuts while they were
working on her.”
“They closed everything back up once they left?” Joanna
asked.
“The night-watch commander is sending a deputy out to make
sure that’s taken care of.”
“Good,” Joanna said. “What about the body?”
“The woman’s young,” Tica Romero replied. “Somewhere in
her thirties. The hospital has asked Doc Winfield to take charge of the body
and do an autopsy, just to make sure that whatever she had isn’t transmittable.
Since the ME’s been called out on the case, he’ll handle next-of-kin
notification.”
Joanna allowed her body to relax. Dr. George Winfield,
Cochise County’s medical examiner, was married to Joanna’s mother, Eleanor.
Unfortunately, George would have more on his hands than simply unmasking the
cause of death, communicable or not, and locating next of kin. He’d also have
to explain to his demanding wife why he was going back to work at eleven o’clock
on a weekday evening.
“Better him than me,” Joanna murmured.
“I lave to go,” Tica said urgently. ‘Another call’s coming
in.”
Joanna took the phone back over to the table with her. By
then, her once-crispy Cheerios had turned soggy. She went out to the laundry
room and dumped the remainder, dividing it evenly between the two dog bowls.
She was straightening up from doing that when Butch’s Outback pulled into the
yard. She waited on the porch, watching as he opened the luggage-gate door,
letting Sadie and Tigger bound out onto the ground. Together the dogs raced the
water dish and eagerly lapped up what sounded like a gallon of water each.
“You’re spoiling them,” she said, kissing Butch hello. “Sadie
and Tigger are ranch dogs, remember? They’re supposed to run, not ride.”
“‘They ran from here over to Clayton’s place,” Butch said.
“That was how they still, months after his death, referred
to the ranch Joanna’s octogenarian handyman, Clayton Rhodes, had left them in
his will.
“When it was time to come home,” Butch continued, “Tigger
was the only one hot to trot. Sadie wasn’t interested. Once I let her into the
car and Tigger figured out she was riding, he wanted a ride, too.”
“Sibling rivalry,” Joanna said with a smile. “But like I
said, you’re spoiling them. Did you eat anything?”
“I had a sandwich when I got home from the funeral. What
about you?”
“I just fixed myself a bowl of cereal.”
“Not very substantial,” Butch observed.
“It was all I wanted.”
He studied her face closely. “Are you okay?” he asked.
Joanna shrugged. “Going to law enforcement funerals isn’t
exactly my favorite afternoon pastime.”
Butch opened the refrigerator and took out a beer. “Do you
want anything?”
“Nothing,” Joanna said. “Thanks. I’m fine.”
“You don’t look fine.”
“I just got off the phone with Dispatch,” she replied. “The
EMTs hauled a DOA up to Copper Queen Hospital from Naco a little while ago.”
“Does that mean you have to go back out?”
Joanna shook her head. “No. Tica Romero said it looks like
natural causes. The woman was evidently terribly sick. She’s George’s problem
now, not mine.”
“Thank God for small favors,” Butch muttered.
“What’s going on with the house? Have you been working
with Quentin all this time?”
Quentin Branch was the contractor Joanna and Butch had
hired to build their new rammed-earth home.
“No,” Butch said. “The meeting didn’t last that long, but
there were things I needed to do. Puttering, mostly. Making myself useful.”
While Joanna was having trouble at work with Ken Galloway,
Butch Dixon was dealing with his own identity crisis. He had yet to adjust to
his relatively new role as stay-at-home spouse. He had completed writing his
first mystery novel, but now, while he lived through the interminable months of
waiting to see if a literary agency would agree to handle his work, Butch had
tackled the job of overseeing construction on the house.
Quentin Branch would be in charge of the major aspects the
job. Butch was doing some of the hand excavation and finish carpentry. It was a
way of passing time and keeping his hand in. Joanna had seen Butch’s previous
remodeling projects. She had no doubt as to his ability, and his do-it-yourself
skill would wring more than full value out of their home-building dollars. Her only
qualm had to do with how long the process would take.
Butch finished his beer, and they went to bed. Within
minutes, Butch was snoring softly on his side of the bed while Joanna lay awake
and wrestled with the Devil in the guise of Ken Galloway. She was sorry now
that she hadn’t answered truthfully whet Butch had asked what was bothering
her. He might have had some useful suggestions about dealing with the
recalcitrant president of Local 83. Still, Ken Junior was Joanna’s problem and
nobody else’s. If she hauled him on the carpet again and made an issue of the
deputies’ collective snub of the funeral reception, it would probably do more
harm than good. For all concerned. It certainly wouldn’t make things any easier
for Leon Caсedo, and it wouldn’t improve intradepartmental relations, either.
The last time Joanna looked at the clock, it was nearly
two in the morning. A ringing telephone jarred her awake at ten past seven.
Butch was already long gone from his side of the bed when Joanna opened her
eyes and groped for the bedside phone.
“I hope I didn’t waken you,” George Winfield said.
“‘That’s all right,” Joanna mumbled sleepily. “It’s time
for nit to be up anyway. What’s going on?”
“It’s about that DOA from last night,” the medical examine
said.
Joanna forced herself to sit up. “What about her?” she
asked.
“The name’s Rochelle Baxter,” George returned. “Her driver’s
license says she’s thirty-five. My preliminary examination says she was in good
health.”
“What did she die of?”
“I don’t know. I thought you might want to have a
detective on hand when I do the autopsy, just in case.”
“In case of what?”
“In case she was poisoned.”
Joanna was wide awake now “You think she was murdered?”
“I didn’t say that. But for an apparently healthy woman to
become as violently ill as she was, I’m thinking she may have ingested
something.”
“What about the water?” Joanna asked. “Could contaminated
water have made her that sick?”
For years the local water system had been under
investigation by the Arizona Department of Ecology due to sewage from across
the line in Old Mexico that had been allowed to seep into the water table and
possibly contaminate the wells that provided water for the entire Bisbee area.
Lack of money, combined with lack of enthusiasm, had resulted in nothing much
being done.
“It could be, but I doubt it,” George replied.
“What are you saying—it’s a homicide?”
“At this time I won’t say anything more than it’s a
suspicious death,” George said. “But if you’re not treating the victim’s place
as a crime scene, Joanna, you probably should.”
“Thanks,” Joanna said. “I’ll get right on it. When are you
planning to do the autopsy?”
“As soon as you can have one of your detectives up at my
office. I’m here now. I’d like to get started as soon as possible.”
“Ernie’s on vacation, so it’ll have to be Jaime,” Joanna
said. ‘‘I’ll get a hold of him at home and give him a heads up. Thanks for the
call, George.”
“Just doing my job.”
Butch appeared at the bedroom door carrying a mug of coffee.
“What’s up?”
“The DOA from last night just turned into what George is
calling ‘a suspicious death’. In case it turns out to be a homicide, I’ve got
to get Jaime to witness the autopsy. The victim’s home down in Naco needs to be
designated as a crime scene and then investigated.”
Butch glanced at the clock, which now showed twenty past
seven, and shook his head ruefully. “Sounds like a full day to me. Joey, don’t
you sometimes wish you had a regular nine-to-five job?” he asked, handing
Joanna her coffee.
She shook her head.
“Okay, then. Breakfast in fifteen minutes, whether you
need it or not.”
Chief Deputy Frank Montoya usually arrived at the department
by seven in order to get incident reports lined up for the morning briefing at
eight-thirty. Joanna dialed his direct number and was relieved to hear his
cheerful “Good morning.”
“You know about the DOA from Naco?” she asked.
“I was just reading the report,” Frank replied. “The EMTs made
it sound like natural causes.”
“Doc Winfield doesn’t think so,” Joanna replied. “We need
Casey and Dave down there right away.” Dave Hollicker, having just completed a
strenuous course of training, had moved out of patrol into the newly created
position of crime scene investigator.
“I’ll get right on it,” Frank told her.
“Anything earth-shattering for the morning briefing?”
“Nothing.”
“Good,” Joanna said. “In that case, we’ll put it off until
afternoon. You hold down the fort there. When I leave the house, I’ll go straight
to the crime scene.”
“Fair enough,” Frank said.
Once showered and dressed, Joanna hurried into the
kitchen, where eggs and bacon and freshly squeezed orange juice were already on
the table. Butch stood at the kitchen counter buttering toast with the smooth
economy of a well-practiced cook.
“Jenny called while you were showering,” he said. Joanna
reached for the phone. “Don’t bother trying to reach her,” Butch told her. “Jenny
said Jim Bob was taking her to school early. Something about play practice.
There are two rehearsals today, both before school and again this evening.”
“She’s all right then?” Joanna asked.
Butch shrugged. “She sounded okay to me.”
He brought a plate of toast over to the table and set it
down. “I suppose this means we won’t be having lunch at Daisy’s,” he added.
“Why not?”
“Come on, Joanna,” Butch said, rubbing his clean-shaven
head with one hand. Joanna recognized the gesture for what it was—unspoken
exasperation. “You know as well as I do. If there’s a murder investigation
under way, you won’t pause long enough to breathe, let alone eat.”
Butch’s complaint sounded familiar—like something Eleanor
Lathrop might have said to Joanna’s father when D.H. Lathrop was sheriff of
Cochise County.
“We don’t know for sure it’s a homicide,” Joanna
countered. “Right this minute, I don’t see any reason to call off lunch.”
“When you call to cancel later,” Butch said, “I won’t
forget to say ‘I told you so.’ “
Dr. George Winfield didn’t like making next of kin notifications
over the phone, but hours of fruitless searching for Rochelle Baxter’s
relatives had left him little choice. DMV records had yielded a bogus address
with a working phone number.
“Washington State Attorney General’s Office,” a
businesslike voice responded.
Hearing that, Doc Winfield was convinced the phone number was
wrong as well. “I’m looking for someone named Lawrence Baxter,” he said.
There was a long pause. “One moment, please,” the woman said.
“Let me connect you with Mr. Todd’s office.”
“Did you say Mr. Todd?” Doc managed before she cut him off.
“Yes.” She was gone before he could ask anything more. After an interminable
wait, a man’s voice came on the line. “O.H. Todd,” he said brusquely. “To whom
am I speaking?”
“My name’s Winfield. Dr. George Winfield. There’s probably
been a mistake. I’m looking for someone named Lawrence Baxter, but they
connected me to you instead.”
“Baxter!” O.H. Todd exclaimed. “What do you want with him?”
“You know him then?” George asked hopefully.
“Why do you need him?” Todd demanded. “Who are you again?”
“Dr. George Winfield,” he explained patiently. “I’m the medical
examiner in Cochise County, Arizona. I’m calling about Mr. Baxter’s daughter,
Rochelle. If you could simply tell me how to reach him—”
“Something’s the matter with her?” the man interrupted. “Why?
What’s happened?”
George Winfield sighed. This was all wrong. “I’m sorry to
have to deliver the news in this fashion,” he said finally. “Over the phone, I
mean. But Ms. Baxter is dead. She died last night.”
For a long moment, all George heard was stark silence.
Just as the ME was beginning to think he’d been disconnected, O.H. Todd
breathed a single word.
“Damn!” he muttered, sounding for all the world like he
meant it.
CHAPTER TWO
Driving past the Cochise County Justice Center on her way
to the Naco, Arizona, crime scene, Joanna wondered about her own motives. Had
she opted to go to the crime scene in order to avoid the members of her
department who had boycotted the funeral reception? She had anticipated that countywide
politics was a necessary part of being elected to the office of sheriff. What
she hadn’t expected were the political machinations within the department
itself.
She had managed to dodge the obstacles her former chief deputy
Dick Voland had rolled into her path. Once he resigned from the department,
Joanna had thought her troubles were over. She knew now that had simply been
wishful thinking. Politics was everywhere—inside the department and out. She
had to accept that reality and learn to work around it.
Fifteen minutes after leaving High Lonesome Ranch, Joanna pulled
in behind a fleet of departmental cars parked at the corner of South Tower and
West Valenzuela in the tiny hamlet of Naco. The front door of an aging stucco
building stood ajar. When Joanna knocked, Detective Carbajal appeared in the
doorway.
“Morning, boss,” he said.
“What are you doing here?” she asked. “I thought you were with
the ME.”
Jaime nodded. “I thought so, too. Then Doc Winfield called
to ay there would be a slight delay. I had an extra forty minutes, so I thought
I’d come see what’s what.” He moved aside and allowed Joanna to enter. “We left
the door open in hopes of airing the place out,” he added, handing her the
crime scene log. “You may not want to come in.”
As Joanna stepped into the large open room, she understood
it once what Jaime meant. The all-pervading stench of stale vomit assailed her
nostrils. When she finished signing the log, Jaime passed her a mask and a
small jar of Vicks VapoRub.
“Thanks,” she said, dabbing some on her upper lip. “Now
where?”
“Dave Hollicker is over there in what passes for a
bedroom,” Jaime Carbajal said, pointing. “That’s where the EMTs found the
victim. She’d been sick as a dog all over her bed and most of the room as well.
Casey’s in the kitchen lifting prints.”
“What’s the victim’s name again?”
Jaime checked his notebook. “Rochelle Ida Baxter. Age
thirty-five. The EMTs found a purse with a driver’s license and gave the
information to Doc Winfield.”
“Any sign of robbery?”
Jaime shook his head. “Negative on that. They found eighty
dollars and some change in her purse, along with a full contingent of credit
cards. She was wearing two rings when she was taken to the hospital, and
nothing around here looks disturbed. No broken glass. It’s not looking good for
a robbery motive.”
“Forced entry?” Joanna asked.
“‘That’s a little harder to tell, but I don’t think so,”
Jaime said. “Both front and back doors were locked when the ambulance arrived,
so the EMTs had to break in. If the lock on the front door was damaged prior to
that, there’d be no way to separate EMT damage from any that might have
occurred previously. There’s an alarm system that went off like a banshee while
the medics were here. I’ve already checked with the alarm company. Their monitoring
system shows no disturbance prior to the arrival of the emergency personnel.”
Following Jaime’s directions, and with the smell of vomit
no longer actively engaging her gag reflexes, Joanna moved to the bedroom area.
The bed had been stripped down to bare mattress, and Dave Hollicker was in the
process of rolling up a soiled bedside rug. The place didn’t resemble a crime
scene so much as it did a hospital room, emptied of one desperately ill patient
and awaiting the arrival of another. Joanna was relieved to see that most of
the mess had been cleaned up prior to her arrival.
“How’s it going, Dave?”
He finished bagging the rug and placed it in a stack of
similarly full and tightly closed bags before answering. “I’ve taken photographs
and bagged everything I could. Once I load this stuff into the van, I’ll come
back and start looking for hair and fibers.”
“How’s the print work coming?”
Dave Hollicker shrugged. “Beats me. You’ll have to ask
Casey. I’ve been in here most of the time.”
“I’ll go see,” Joanna said, heading for the screens she
assumed walled off the kitchen. The great room glowed with natural morning
light that streamed in through an overhead skylight. Of to one side stood a
large wooden easel. On it hung a starkly empty canvas. Joanna paused in front
of it, struck by the fact that the person who had placed the canvas there was
no longer alive to color it. Whatever scene Rochelle Ida Baxter had intended to
paint there would never materialize. Next to the easel squatted a
paint-blotched taboret. The top drawer sat slightly open, revealing neat rows
of paint tubes. On the back of the taboret was a collection of oddly sized
jars. In them brushes of various sizes stood with their bristles up, waiting to
be taken up and used once more.
“Our victim’s an artist then?” Joanna asked, turning back
to Jaime Carbajal.
The detective nodded. “Evidently,” he said, “although you
couldn’t prove it by what’s here. So far I haven’t found anything but a few
sketchbooks and more empty canvases just like the one on the easel. Maybe she
was an artist who hadn’t quite gotten around to actually doing any painting.”
Joanna looked at the floor underneath the easel, where
more daubs of paint stained the white planks of the floor. “She’d been
painting, all right,” Joanna observed. “There must be finished canvases around
here somewhere. Keep looking.”
When Joanna poked her head into the kitchen area, Casey
Ledford was carefully brushing fine black powder onto the smooth gray surface
of an old-fashioned Formica-topped table.
“How’s it going?” Joanna asked.
Pursing her lips in concentration, Casey smoothed a strip
of clear tape onto the powder before she answered. “All right,” she said. “Good
morning, Sheriff,” she added.
Carefully peeling it back, Casey smoothed the
black-smudged clear tape onto a stiff manila card. After holding the card up
and examining it, she put it back down. On the top of the card she jotted a
series of notations about where and when the prints ha been found. Then she
tossed the tagged card into an open briefcase that already held many others
just like it.
“From what I’m seeing here,” Casey said, “I’d say our
victim had company last night. We found an almost empty glass and partially
emptied beer bottle sitting on the table. Dave bottled up the remaining
contents from the glass. He’ll take that back to the lab. I picked up two
distinctly different sets of prints from both the bottle and the glass, and
from the table, too. Assuming one set belongs to the victim, it’s possible the
other one could belong to the perp. We’ll take the glass, the bottle, and
whatever else is in the trash back to the department. Together Dave and I will
go through it all. I’ll look for prints; he’ll look for anything else. Oh, and
at Doc Winfield’s suggestion, we’ll be taking all the foodstuffs from here in
the kitchen as well.”
Joanna nodded. As she often did these days, she had chosen
to wear a uniform. Not wanting to disturb evidence, she stood in the middle of
the kitchen area with her hands in her pockets. The room was tiny, but orderly.
The cupboards were the kind that come, ready to be hung, from discount lumber
stores. The table, fridge, and a small apartment-size stove made for a kitchen
that was functional enough, but one that had been put together by someone
focused on neither cooking nor eating.
“Have you collected water samples?” Joanna asked.
“Dave did that first thing.”
Just then Joanna heard the sound of a woman’s voice,
raised ii anger, coming from the other side of the screen. “What do you mean, I
can’t come in? What’s going on here? What’s happened?”
Back in the studio, Joanna found Detective Carbajal standing
in the doorway and barring the entry of a solidly built woman who kept trying
to dodge past him.
“I’m sorry, ma’am,” Jaime was saying. “This is a crime
scene. No one is allowed inside.”
“Crime scene!” the woman repeated. “Crime scene? What kind
of crime? What’s happened? Where’s Rochelle?”
Removing her mask, Joanna walked up behind her detective,
close enough to glimpse a heavyset woman whose long gray hair was caught in a
single braid that fell over one shoulder and dangled as far as her waist. She
was swathed from head to toe in a loose-flowing, tie-dyed smock.
“I’m Sheriff Joanna Brady,” Joanna explained, stepping
into view “We’re investigating a suspicious death here. Who are you?”
“Death?” the woman repeated, wide-eyed. “Somebody died
here? But what about Rochelle? Where’s she? Certainly Shelley isn’t—”
Suddenly the woman broke off. She blanched. One hand went
to her mouth, and she wavered unsteadily on her feet. Up to then, Jaime
Carbajal had been steadfastly trying to keep her outside. Now, as she swayed in
front of him, he stepped forward and grasped her by one elbow. Then he led her
into the great room and eased her onto a nearby stool. For a moment, no one
spoke.
“I take it Rochelle Baxter is a friend of yours?” Joanna
asked softly.
The woman glanced wordlessly from Joanna’s face to Jaime’s.
Finally she nodded.
“I’m sorry to have to tell you this, then,” Joanna
continued. “Rochelle Baxter fell gravely ill last night. She called 911, but by
the time emergency personnel reached her, she was unresponsive. She was
declared dead on arrival at the hospital.”
The woman began to shake her head, wagging it desperately
back and forth, as though by simply denying what she’d been told she could keep
it from being true. “‘That can’t be,” she moaned. “It’s not possible.”
By now Jaime had his spiral notebook out of his pocket. “Yon
name, please, ma’am?”
“Canfield,” the woman answered in a cracked whisper. “Deidre
Canfield. Most people call me Dee.”
“And your relationship to Miss Baxter?”
“We were friends. I own an art gallery up in Old Bisbee—the
Castle Rock Gallery. It’s where Shelley was going to have her first-ever show
tonight ...” Dee Canfield’s voice faltered and she burst into tears. “Oh, no,”
she wailed. “This can’t be. It’s so awful, so ... unfair. It isn’t happening.”
For several long moments, Joanna and Jaime Carbajal simply
looked on, waiting for Dee Canfield to master her emotions. Finally, pulling a
man’s hanky out from under a bra strap, she blew her nose. “Has anyone told
Bobo yet?”
Joanna knew of only one person in the Bisbee area with that
distinctive name. “You mean Bobo Jenkins?” Joanna asked quickly] “‘The former
owner of the Blue Moon Saloon and Lounge?”
Dee nodded. “That’s the one.”
“What’s his relationship to Miss Baxter?” Jaime asked.
Dec shrugged in a manner that suggested she thought Bobo Jenkins’s
relationship with Rochelle Baxter was nobody else’s business. Jaime, however,
insisted. “Would you say they were friends? hr asked.
Dec paused for several moments before answering. “More
than friends, I suppose,” she conceded.
“They were going together?” Joanna suggested.
“Yes.”
“For how long?”
“I don’t know exactly. Several months now. Bobo is the one
who introduced Shelley to me.”
“Had there been any trouble between them?” Jaime asked. “Any
disagreements?”
“No!” Dee Canfield declared staunchly. “Not at all.
Nothing like that.”
“You mentioned Rochelle’s show is scheduled to open at
your gallery tonight,” Joanna said quietly. “Is that why you stopped by this
morning?”
“No,” Dee replied. “Thursday mornings are when I come down
to get gas. I have a Pinto, you see,” she explained. “It still uses leaded.
Once a week I come down here, go across the line to Old Mexico, and fill up in
Naco, Sonora. I usually stop by to see Shelley, coming or going. We have a cup
of coffee and indulge in girl talk. When Shelley worked, she’d isolate herself
completely. A little chitchat is what I used to drag her back into the real
world.”
“If Rochelle Baxter is an artist, why don’t we see any
paintings here?” Jaime Carbajal asked.
“Because everything’s up at the show. Oh my God!” Deidre
Canfield wailed. “What am I going to do about that? Should I cancel it? Have
the opening anyway? And who’s going to tell Bobo?”
“My department will notify Mr. Jenkins,” Joanna reassured
her. “We’ll need to talk to him anyway. But when it comes to deciding whether
or not to cancel the show, you’re on your own.”
Dee nodded and swallowed hard. “Rochelle was such a talented
young woman,” she said, dabbing at her tears. “This was her very first show,
you see, and she was so excited about it—excited and nervous, too.”
“Did she complain to you about feeling ill?”
“Ill? You mean was she sick? Absolutely not. We worked together
all day long yesterday—Shelley, Warren, and I. She certainly would have told me
if she wasn’t feeling well.”
“Who’s Warren?” Jaime asked.
“Warren Gibson. My boyfriend. He helps out around the
gallery. I’m the brains of the outfit. He’s the brawn.”
Just outside Dee Canfield’s line of vision, Jaime caught
Joanna’s eye and motioned toward his watch, indicating he needed to head for
his autopsy appointment at Doc Winfield’s office.
“Detective Carbajal has to leave now,” Joanna explained. “But
if you don’t mind, I’d like to ask you a few more questions.”
“Okay,” Dee said. “I’m happy to tell you whatever you need
to know. I want to help, but I’ll have to leave soon, too, so I can make
arrangements about the show”
As Jaime hurried out the front door, Dave Hollicker
appeared from behind one of the screens lugging two heavy bags. Joanna took Dee’s
elbow, helped her off the stool, an escorted her outside.
“It might be better if we talk out here,” Joanna said,
taking he own notebook out of her purse. “Now tell me, Ms. Canfield, how long
have you known Rochelle Baxter?”
“Five months or so,” Dee answered. “As I said, Bobo Jenkins
met her first—I’m not sure how—and he introduced us. He knew I was getting
ready to open the gallery. He thought Shelley and would hit it off. Which we
did, of course. She was such a nice person, for an ex-Marine, that is. I’m more
into peace and love,” Dee added with a self-deprecating smile. “But then, by
the time Shelly made it to Bisbee, so was she—into peace and love, I mean.”
“Where did she come from?”
Dee Canfield frowned. “This may sound strange, but I’m not
sure. The way she talked about being glad to be out of the rain, it could have
been somewhere in the Northwest, but she never did say for certain. I asked her
once or twice, but she didn’t like to talk about it, so I just let it be. I had
the feeling that she had walked away from some kind of bad news—probably a
creep of an ex-husband—but I didn’t press her. I figured she’d get around to
telling me one of these days, if she wanted to, that is.” Dee frowned. “Now
that I think about it, maybe she has,” she added thoughtfully.
“What do you mean?”
Dee countered with a question of her own. “What do you
know about art?”
“Not much,” Joanna admitted. “I had to take the humanities
course at the university, but that’s about all.”
“Remember that old saw about writers writing about what
they know?”
Joanna nodded.
“The same thing goes for artists,” Dee continued. “They
paint what they know. Shelley painted portraits. Her subjects glow with the
kind of intensity that only comes from the inside out—from the inside of the
subject and of the painter as well. The titles are all perfectly innocuous—The Carver,
The Pastor and the Lamb, Homecoming—and yet they’re all painted
with the kind of longing that puts a lump in your throat. Shelley was painting
far more than what she saw. She was also painting what she wanted—a time
and place and people she wanted to go back to, but couldn’t. Does that make any
sense?”
Joanna nodded. “She never talked to you about any of the
people in her paintings?”
Dee shook her head. “Not really. ‘Somebody I knew back
home,’ she’d tell me without ever bothering saying where ‘back home’ was. But I
did notice that there’s no rain in any of her pictures. Wherever home was, it
must not rain very often, or else she just didn’t like to paint rain.”
“Maybe Rochelle Baxter didn’t tell you where she came from
because she had something to hide,” Joanna suggested.
“Like maybe she had done something wrong? Something illegal?”
Dee demanded.
“Possibly.”
“No!” Dee replied hotly. “Nothing like that. I’m sure of
it. I’m an excellent judge of character, Sheriff Brady. Psychic, even. Shelley
was as honest as the day is long. If she had done something bad, I would have
known it.”
“You said she was an ex-Marine. Did Rochelle mention anything
to you about where she served and when?”
“She’d been in the Gulf War,” Dee answered. “I remember
something about her being an MP, but again, she wasn’t big on details.”
“Do you have any idea about the people in the paintings?”
Joanna asked. “Who they might be?”
“Maybe you should come up to the gallery and see for yourself,”
Dee suggested. “I assume they’re people from Shelley’s past. They’re all
painted in a wonderful sort of summer light, but not the light we have here in
the desert. The shadows don’t have the same hard edges that desert shadows do.
This is much softer. And speaking of soft, that’s how she spoke, too—with a
soft drawl that makes me think she must have come originally from somewhere
down south, but then she’d say something about being glad her bones were
finally warming up, so I really don’t know.
“If that’s all you need, I’d better go,” Dee added,
extracting a car key from the fringed leather purse that hung from her shoulder.
She edged away from Joanna toward a wildly colored, custom-painted Pinto
station wagon.
“I still need to go get gas,” she said, “but I’ve made up
my mind. I’m going to go through with the show’s grand opening tonight after
all. For one thing, it’s too late to call off the caterer. Even if I canceled,
I’d still have to pay for the food. So we’ll have an event anyway, even if it’s
more like a wake than anything else—a wake with paintings instead of a body.
But before it opens, I’m going to redo all the prices.”
“Redo them?” Joanna asked. “What do you mean?”
“I’m going to raise them,” Dee Canfield returned
decisively. “Those fifteen pieces are all I have to sell of Shelley’s work.
With her gone, that’s all there’s ever going to be, which makes a big difference
to collectors. It means the paintings are more valuable.”
“There aren’t any others?”
“Only one,” Dee replied. “But that one’s already sold.”
“But I would have thought there’d be others, either here
in her studio or in storage....” Joanna began.
Dee shook her head. “Shelley was something of a perfectionist,
you see. She’d paint one canvas over and over until she got it right and moved
on to the next one. Maybe she was just cheap, but she didn’t believe in letting
canvases go to waste.”
“How do art galleries work?” Joanna asked innocently. “Do
you get a set fee and the artist receives all the rest?”
“Of course not,” Dee said. “Shelley’s and my agreement
works on a percentage basis, fifty-fifty.”
“So, if you raise the prices on Rochelle Baxter’s work,
her heirs will receive more, but so will you.”
“Believe me,” Dee said, “I’ll see to it that Shelley’s
heirs receive the additional proceeds, if that’s what you mean.” She paused,
and her eyes narrowed. “Wait a minute. Are you suggesting that I may have had
something to do with Shelley’s death—that I killed her so I could make more
money off her paintings?”
“I wasn’t implying anything of the kind,” Joanna replies
evenly. “But whenever we encounter a suspicious death like this we question
everyone. It’s the only way to find out what really happened.”
Joanna’s response did nothing to calm Dee Canfield’s sudden
anger. “You can take your questions and your not-so-subtle hint and go straight
to hell!” she fumed.
With that, Dee got in her car and slammed the door behind
her. On the second turn of the key, the old engine coughed fitfully to life.
Jerking and half-stalling, the Pinto lurched away from the curb and bounced
through an axle-bending pothole.
As the Pinto shuddered out of sight, Joanna Brady jotted into
her notebook: Who is Deidre Canfield and where did she come from?
CHAPTER THREE
Dave Hollicker came outside and heaved yet another set of
plastic bags into his waiting van. “How much longer do you think you’re going
to be?” Joanna asked.
“Probably several more hours,” he said.
Joanna nodded. “All right, then. I’ll leave you and Casey
to it. In the meantime, I’m going back to the department to try to herd my day
into some kind of order.”
As she drove toward the Justice Center, Joanna recalled
the last time she had seen Bobo Jenkins. It had been several months earlier,
on the occasion of Angie Kellogg’s marriage to Dennis Hacker. The wedding
ceremony had taken place in the parsonage of Tombstone Canyon United Methodist
Church, with the Reverend Marianne Maculyea presiding. Bobo Jenkins, Angie’s
employer at the Blue Moon Saloon and Lounge, had given away the bride.
Recalling the event, Joanna remembered that Bubo Jenkins had
seemed buoyantly happy as he told Butch about his plan to sell the Blue Moon to
Angie and Dennis. He said he was looking forward to his second early
retirement.
Rochelle hadn’t been in evidence at the wedding, but
Joanna wondered if Bobo Jenkins’s happiness then had had less to do with early
retirement than with the appearance of a new woman in his life. Now, though,
whatever future the two of them might have planned together had evaporated.
Rochelle Baxter was dead.
Halfway back to the department, Joanna changed her mind
about going there. Bobo Jenkins was a man Joanna knew and liked. He needed to
be informed about Rochelle’s death in person rather than through one of Bisbee’s
notoriously swift gossip mills. Plus, if Joanna went to see him right then, she
wouldn’t have time to think about it for too long, while her own sense of dread
kept building. She hated doing next-of-kin notifications—hated having to tell
some poor unsuspecting person that a loved one was suddenly and unexpectedly
dead.
Picking up her radio, she called in and asked for Bobo
Jenkins’s address. She learned that he lived on Youngblood Hill in Old Bisbee,
only a matter of blocks from his former business, the Blue Moon. Joanna drove
directly there and parked in the designated area at the top of the hill. She
then hiked down the steep incline to the arched and gated entrance that led
back up a steep flight of stairs to a house perched far above the street. It
was no accident that people who lived on some of Old Bisbee’s higher elevations
were regular winners in the annual Fourth of July race up “B” Hill.
Thirty-two steps later found her standing, out of breath,
on the wooden porch of a fully renovated 1880s-vintage miner’s cabin
overlooking Brewery Gulch. The clapboard siding, front door, and porch railings
were all newly painted. The broad planks of flooring showed evidence of having
been recently replaced. The period piece of etched glass in the front door had
been carefully relined with new putty, and the glass itself sparkled in the morning
sun. Sighing with reluctance, Joanna placed her finger on the old-fashioned
doorbell and listened while it buzzed inside the tiny house.
When Bobo Jenkins came to the door, he wore shorts, a
sweat-soaked T-shirt, and a pair of tennis shoes. A limp towel was thrown
around the back of his neck. “Hi, there, Joanna,” he said. “I was out back
working out. Care to come in?”
Joanna made her way into a brightly painted living room.
Hardwood flooring glistened underfoot while huge pieces of leather furniture dominated
the space. Looking at the furniture, Joanna shuddered at the idea of dragging
those large pieces up from the street.
“Nice place,” she said. “But how on earth did you get this
furniture up here?”
“I didn’t beam it up, if that’s what you mean.” He
grinned. “It helps if you lift weights. It’s also a good idea to have a bunch
of weight-lifting friends. Have a seat.”
Joanna eased herself down onto the soft gray leather
couch. She would have preferred keeping up the pretense of polite conversation.
Her stomach clenched at the idea of doing what she had come to do. Once she
unleashed her bad news, this comfortable, peaceful room would never again be
quite so peaceful. Some of her disquiet must have communicated itself. When she
turned back to Bobo Jenkins, his easygoing smile had disappeared.
“What’s going on?” he asked, perching on the arm of the
couch.
“I’m sorry to have to do this,” she began. “I understand
you’re good friends with a woman named Rochelle Baxter. Is that true?”
“With Shelley? Of course it’s true. And I hope we’re a
little more than friends,” he added. A concerned frown crossed his face “Why
are you asking Inc about her? Has something happened?”
Joanna took a deep breath. There was no easy way. “She’s
dead, Bobo,” Joanna said.
The big man’s mahogany-colored skin faded to gray. “No!” he
exclaimed. “That’s impossible!”
Joanna shook her head. “I’m sorry, Bobo,” she said, “but
it’s true. Rochelle Baxter was taken ill and called 911 around ten o’clock last
night. She collapsed while talking to the emergency operator. When the EMTs
reached her, she was unresponsive. Rochelle was DOA on arrival at Copper Queen
Hospital.”
Bobo buried his face in the towel. “Shelley, dead?” he murmured.
“I can’t believe it. She was fine when I left her—perfectly fine. What
happened?”
“We don’t know,” Joanna replied. “At least, not yet. From
what we can tell, she became desperately ill. By the time help reached her, it
was already too late.”
Joanna paused, allowing Bobo to internalize the awful information.
Finally she asked, “Did Rochelle have any known medical condition that might
explain this sudden attack?”
His face contorted by anguish, Bobo shook his head
wordlessly.
“You said she was fine when you left her,” Joanna
continued. “Does that mean you saw her last night?”
Bobo nodded.
“What time?”
“I don’t know exactly,” he answered. “Fairly early. It
couldn’t have been much later than seven or so. I was back here by
seven-thirty:”
“What was the purpose of your visit?”
Bobo sighed. “Shelley and I were supposed to have dinner
last night, but she stood me up. Not stood up, exactly. She just called and
canceled. I went to see her anyway—to ask her about it and find out what was
going on.”
“You say she canceled. What time was that?” Joanna asked.
“What time did she call?”
Joanna nodded.
“Sometime in the afternoon. I don’t remember exactly when.
I erased the message after I listened to it.”
“And why did she?” Joanna asked. “Cancel, I mean. Was something
wrong?”
“You mean was she sick?” Bobo asked.
Joanna nodded.
“Sick, but not physically,” he said ruefully. “Sick of me
is more like it. Still, when I showed up at her place in Naco, she invited me
in and offered me a drink. We talked for a little while. She tried to give me
the brush-off. Told me she needed time for herself—time by herself. I was
afraid she was going to break up with me right then and there, but I talked her
out of it. The last thing before I left, she agreed to have dinner with me
tonight after the gallery opening.”
“You parted on good terms?”
“Of course.” Bobo Jenkins frowned. “Wait a minute. What
about that opening? Somebody needs to call Dee Canfield right away and tell her
what’s happened.”
“She already knows,” Joanna said. “She came by the studio
down in Naco while I was still there.”
“She’s going to cancel, right?”
“I don’t think so. She said she intended to go through
with the opening after all. The only difference is she plans to raise the
prices.”
“Raise the prices? What do you mean?”
Joanna nodded. “Dec told me that Shelley’s death automat
rally makes the pieces more valuable.”
Bobo Jenkins stood up abruptly. “What is she, some kind of
vulture? What the hell is Dee Canfield thinking? You’ll have to excuse me,
Joanna. There’s something I have to do.”
He went to the door and held it open, motioning Joanna
through it.
“What’s the hurry?” Joanna asked, allowing herself to be
escorted back outside. “Where are you going?”
“To Castle Rock Gallery,” he told her determinedly. “I’m going
to go have a heart-to-heart chat with Deidre Canfield.”
“Wait, Bobo,” Joanna began. “Do you think that’s a good idea?”
He ignored her. Without bothering to lock the door, he
pulled it shut behind them and loped off down the steep flight of stairs that
led to the street. Standing alone on the small porch, Joanna watched him take
the steps two and three at a time. When he reached the bottom, Joanna expected
him to turn right and head back up the hill to retrieve his waiting El Camino.
Instead, he turned left and barreled down Youngblood Hill toward Brewery Gulch
on foot.
Stunned, Joanna stared after Bobo Jenkins’s retreating
figure. She had known him for years, but she had never seen him angry before.
Now that she had, she worried about the damage those powerfully muscled arms
and fists might inflict once he caught up with Deidre Canfield.
Sheriff Joanna Brady had just brought Bobo Jenkins an
entire lifetime’s worth of unwelcome news. As sheriff she was charged with
protecting the citizens of Cochise County. Instead, by telling Bobo about Dee
Canfield’s plans, Joanna had inadvertently incited him possibly to the point of
violence.
Not good,
Joanna
told herself grimly as she, too, started down the stairs. Not good at all!
Bobo Jenkins was completely out of sight by the time
Joanna reached the arched gate at the bottom of the stairs. She jogged back
uphill to her Crown Victoria, then threw herself inside. Panting with
exertion, Joanna punched up her radio.
“Sheriff Brady here,” she gasped when she heard the voice
of Larry Kendrick, her lead dispatcher. “I’m on my way to Castle Rock Gallery.
Please advise Bisbee PD that I may need backup.”
“What’s the problem, Sheriff?” Larry asked. “You sound
like you’ve been running for miles.”
“Not miles, just up and down Youngblood Hill,” she told
him. “I just finished telling Bobo Jenkins that Rochelle Baxter is dead. He’s
upset with a woman named Deidre Canfield and is on his way to her place of
business, Castle Rock Gallery on Main Street in Old Bisbee. Bobo said he was
going to talk to her, but he was really off the charts when he left here. I’d
say he’s more likely to punch somebody’s lights out. I’m headed there, too.”
By then the Civvie was on the move. Joanna turned on her
lights and siren as she careened down Youngblood Hill into the upper reaches of
Brewery Gulch. Bobo Jenkins was moving fast. By racing down stairways and
cutting through back alleys, it was likely he would reach the Castle Rock
Gallery on foot well before Joanna could drive there.
Deidre Canfield’s place of business consisted of a series
of small, formerly ramshackle buildings that looked invitingly renovated when
Joanna drove up. As soon as she opened her car door, she heard a chorus of
raised voices coming from inside.
As she pushed open the door to the gallery, a tiny bell
tinkled overhead, but neither Dee Canfield nor Bobo Jenkins noticed. Across the
room they stood locked in a fierce, nose to nose confrontation.
“You’ve got no right barging in here and telling me what I
can and can’t do,” Dee shouted shrilly. “This is my gallery. The contract is
between Rochelle Baxter and me. It has nothing to do with you, Bobo Jenkins.
The terms of that contract allow me to set, raise, or lower prices as I see
fit.”
Bobo’s powerful fists were clenched at his sides. Beads of
sweat glistened on his face as he struggled to keep his anger under Control. “That
was before she died,” he said pointedly.
“Yes,” Dee returned. “And that’s why I’m raising the
prices. In the world of art, those pieces are all more valuable.”
“Not more valuable,” Bobo countered softly. “They’re priceless.
What about Shelley’s family?”
“Who else do you think I’m doing it for?” Dee demanded. “If
the pieces sell for more money, the family receives more. It’s as simple as
that.”
Bobo stepped closer to Dee. It was a threatening gesture. She
blinked, but stood her ground.
“You think that’s what Shelley’s family is going to want—money?”
he demanded, his face bare inches from hers. He waved an arm, motioning at the
vividly colored paintings that lined the white-stuccoed walls. “Who the hell do
you think those people are, Deidre Canfield? You know as well as I that they
must be Shelley’s family. Having those pictures is going to be far more important
to them than any amount of money. Cancel the show, Dee.”
“No. Absolutely not!”
“‘Then I’ll cancel it for you.”
A man Joanna hadn’t seen before emerged from a backroom,
carrying a hammer. “You’d better leave now, Bobo,” the newcomer said, tapping
the head of the hammer in the palm of his other hand.
“And you’d better stay out of this, Warren,” Jenkins
growled, his eyes swiveling in Warren Gibson’s direction. “This is between Dee
and me.”
“You’d all better cool it,” Joanna ordered, physically
inserting herself between Dee Canfield and Bobo. “Now. Before things get out of
hand.” She turned toward the man with the hammer. “As for you, put that thing
down. On the desk. Now”
After a momentary hesitation, Warren complied. Meanwhile,
Bobo Jenkins ignored Joanna’s presence entirely. “Give me my picture, Dee,” he
said, speaking over Joanna’s head. “You can go on with the damned show if you
want, but it won’t be with my picture in it.”
“All right,” Dee said. “Go get it, Warren. Whatever it
takes to get him out of here.”
Again, Gibson hesitated. “Go,” she urged again. Finally,
shaking his head, Warren shambled out of the room.
“Look,” Joanna said reasonably. “You’ve all had a terrible
shock this morning. No one here is thinking clearly.”
“Those pictures shouldn’t be sold,” Bobo Jenkins insisted.
“Or, if they are, it should only be done once Shelley’s family members have
given permission.”
For the first time Joanna took a moment to look around the
room. Her eyes fell on a picture of a boy and a dog sitting on a front porch.
The heat of a summer’s day shimmered around them, but the two figures in the
foreground rested companionably in cool, deep shade. The boy and the dog had
been lovingly rendered by someone who knew them well; by someone who cared
about who they were. Even without looking at any of the other pictures, Joanna
knew instinctively that Dee Canfield was right—that the portraits were those of
Rochelle Baxter’s loved ones. She was equally sure that Bobo was correct as
well. The people painted there would want the pictures to treasure far more
than any amount of money.
“Shelley’s family!” Dee Canfield spat back at him. “What
family? Did you ever meet any of them?”
Bobo shook his head.
“If Shelley’s work was so damned important to that
so-called family of hers,” Dee continued, “don’t you suppose one or two of them
would have been included in the invitations for tonight’s opening party? I
asked Shelley specifically if there was anyone she wanted me to invite. She
said there wasn’t anyone at all.”
“Now that Rochelle is dead, her family is bound to turn
up,” Lobo said.
“Fair enough,” Dee replied. “When they do, I’ll have a
nice fat check waiting for them, and they’ll be more than happy to take the
money and run.”
Warren Gibson appeared in the doorway carrying an almost
life-size portrait of Bobo Jenkins. Bobo swallowed hard when he saw it, then he
stepped forward and snatched it out of Warren’s grasp. He walked back over to
Dee and stood there, holding the painting with both hands.
“Do you know what you are?” he demanded. “You’re a
money-grubbing bitch who doesn’t know a damned thing about what’s important.”
With that, he turned and stalked out of the gallery while the little bell
tinkled merrily overhead.
Once Bobo was gone, all the starch and fight drained out
of Deidre Canfield’s face and body. She staggered over to the polished wooden
desk where Warren had deposited his hammer. She sank into the rolling desk
chair and laid her head on her arms. “I can’t believe Bobo would talk to me
that way,” she sobbed. “He and I have been friends for a long time. How could
he?”
Warren Gibson moved to the back of Dee’s chair and gave
her shoulder a comforting pat. “It’s all right, Dee Dee,” he said. “He’s gone
now”
The doorbell tinkled again. A young uniformed police
officer wearing a City of Bisbee badge with a tag that said “Officer Jesus
Romero” ventured cautiously into the room.
“Everything all right, Sheriff Brady?” Romero asked. “I
was told there might be some kind of problem.”
Joanna felt embarrassed. The lights, siren, and call for
backup had all proved unnecessary. “Sorry about that,” she said. “It turned out
to be nothing. Everything’s under control.”
The officer grinned at her. “I’d rather have it be nothing
than something any day of the week. Glad to be of service.”
With that he left. As the doorbell chimed again, Joanna
turned back to Dee Canfield, who looked pale and drawn. There was little
resemblance between the woman seated at the desk and the angry hoyden who had
raised such hell down in Naco a scant hour earlier.
“Are you all right?” Joanna asked.
“I’m fine,” Dee returned, though she didn’t sound it. “I’ve
sunk everything I have into getting this gallery up and running. It’s fine for
Bobo Jenkins to be all sentimental and altruistic with my money. It’s no
concern of his. He’s got his military retirement and now he’s sold his business
and has payments coming from that on a regular basis as well. But what the hell
does he think I’m going to use to pay my bills? My good looks? This show is
important to me, Sheriff Brady, damned important! It’s a chance to make some
real money for a change. I’m not going to hand over the paintings for free just
because he said so!”
“What about the prices?” Warren said, reappearing behind
her. “I started changing them. Want me to keep on?”
“Absolutely.”
Joanna sighed. Obviously Bobo Jenkins’s visit hadn’t altered
Dee Canfield’s intentions, but at least Joanna had been there to prevent any
physical violence.
“All right, then,” she said. “Mind if I take a look around
before I go?”
“Go ahead,” Dee said. “Help yourself.”
Joanna spent the next few minutes wandering through the
gallery. The lovingly rendered subjects—a young girl shooting baskets, an old
man sharpening his knife, a minister leaning down to speak to a young
parishioner—were most likely the same living and breathing people who, by now,
would be reeling from the terrible news that Rochelle Baxter was dead. Joanna
noticed that the paintings in the first two rooms were priced from $85o to
$1,000. In the room where Warren was hard at work, they were triple that. Bobo’s
accusation of her being “money-grubbing” wasn’t wrong.
Shaking her head, Joanna returned to the front desk, where
Dee Canfield was on the phone. Without saying a word, Joanna let herself out
the door. She and her Civvie caught up with Bobo Jenkins halfway through town.
“Hey, Bobo,” she called. “That looks heavy. Care for a
lift?”
He glared at her briefly, then shrugged his broad
shoulder: and headed for the car. Between them, they carefully loaded the painting
into the Civvie’s backseat, then he climbed in the from next to her.
“‘Thanks,” he muttered gruffly. “Appreciate it.”
He sat in brooding silence until they started up O.K.
Street “Dee’s still going through with it, isn’t she—the opening and raising
the prices?”
“Yes,” Joanna replied.
Bobo slumped deeper into the seat. “Damn!” he said. “What
about Shelley’s family? Have you found them yet?”
“Not so far. We’re working on it.”
“Once Dee sells the paintings, Shelley’s family will never
be able to afford to buy them back.”
“Probably not,” Joanna agreed. “But you tried, Bobo. You
did your best.”
He shook his head. “Not good enough.”
Joanna stopped the car halfway down Youngblood Hill, right
in front of the gate and the steep stairway that led to Bobo’s house. For the
better part of a minute he made no move to exit the car. The depth of his
misery was palpable, and Joanna’s heart ached for him.
“I’m sorry about all this, Bobo,” she said at last. “I can
see Shelley meant a lot to you.”
He chewed his lip, nodding but saying nothing.
“And I’m sorry to burden you further,” she added. “But we’re
going to need your cooperation.”
“What kind?”
“We’ll want you to stop by the department and give us a
set of prints. Detective Carbajal is tied up right now. As soon as he’s free,
he’ll need to ask you a few questions.”
“You need my fingerprints? Why? I thought you said Shelley
was sick.”
“She was sick,” Joanna agreed. “But the medical examiner
has labeled her death as suspicious.”
“You’re saying someone killed her?” Bobo asked
incredulously. “Who would have done such a thing? And why?”
“I can’t answer those questions, either,” Joanna said. “Not
yet. We’re working on it, but it’s very early in the process. Investigations
take time.”
“But you want my prints. Am I a suspect?”
“Not at all. Yours will be elimination prints. We print
everyone who was known to have been at the crime scene prior to the event. That
way we can sort prints that belong from those that don’t. From what you’ve told
me, you may have been the last person see Shelley alive.”
Bobo Jenkins nodded morosely. “I see,” he said. “Do I need
I do that right away—the fingerprinting?”
“As soon as possible,” Joanna told him. “Time is always
important, but you’ll need to call the department before you come by and make
sure Casey Ledford is there. She’s our latent fingerprint tech. The last I
heard, she was still at the crime scene. And Detective Carbajal is busy at the
moment, too. I’m sure he’ll contact you once he’s free.”
“Crime scene.” Bobo repeated the words and then took a
deep breath. “Detectives. I can’t believe all this is happening. I car believe
Shelley was murdered.”
“Bobo, we don’t know that for sure, either,” Joanna reminded
him patiently. “At this time, her death is regarded as suspicious. For all I
know, it could have been a suicide.”
“No,” Bobo Jenkins declared. “Absolutely not! Whatever
killed Shelley, it sure as hell wasn’t suicide!”
With that, he opened the car door, got out, and slammed
shut again. Joanna unlocked the back door. Then she exited the car, too, and
helped him retrieve his painting.
“It’s a very good likeness,” she said, once he was holding
upright so she could see it clearly. “Your Shelley must have been very talented
woman, and very special, too.”
As Bobo Jenkins looked down at the painting, his eyes
filled with tears. He wiped them away with one end of the grubby towel that
still dangled, unheeded, around his neck.
“Thank you for telling me about this, Joanna,” he said
quietly. “For coming in person, I mean,” he added. “You’re the boss. It would
have been easy to send someone else instead of doing it yourself.”
Joanna nodded. “You’re welcome,” she said.
“And thanks for following me down to the gallery, too,” he
continued. “I was so pissed off when I went down there that I might have done
something stupid. I could have hurt somebody”
Joanna looked up at him and smiled reassuringly. “No,
Bobo,” she said. “I don’t think you would have. But for whatever it’s worth, I
think you’re right about the paintings. There’s no question—they shouldn’t be
sold. They should all go to Shelley’s family. Deidre Canfield is dead wrong on
this one.”
“Thanks for that, too,” he said.
Carefully holding the painting in front of him, he angled
his way through the gate and started up the stairs. Behind Joanna a horn honked
impatiently. She jumped back into the Civvie and hurriedly moved it out of the
way of the vehicle she’d been blocking.
It was a tough way to start the day, considering she still
hadn’t had her morning briefing or a second cup of coffee.
Standing in the warm late-morning sun with the heavy pay
phone receiver held to one ear, the man waited impatiently for his call to he
put through. The receptionist had accepted the charges, so it wasn’t a matter
of money. Still, he didn’t have all day.
Finally someone picked up at the other end. “Good,” he
said when he heard the voice. “It’s you. You’ll be happy to know it’s done. She’s
dead. All you have to do now is send money.”
CHAPTER FOUR
By the time Joanna arrived at the Justice Center and let
herself in through her private back-door entrance, it was almost eleven o’clock.
As usual, her office was a mess. The wooden surface of her desk was barely
visible under stacks of neglected files and paper.
Organizing the Fallen Officer portion of Yolanda Caсedo’s
funeral had taken far more of Joanna’s personal time and effort than she had
expected. She and Frank Montoya had shared the responsibilities. All essential
law enforcement work had been handled, but some of the more routine matters
had been allowed to slide. Now, though, as Joanna dug into the paperwork on her
desk, she discovered items that had been routine on Monday. By Thursday they
had moved to the “urgent” column.
Wanting to have some quiet time to attack the daunting
back-log of paper, Joanna set to work without bothering to announce her
presence to anyone, not even to Kristin Gregovich, her secretary in the outside
office. Twenty minutes later, as Joanna whaled away at the mess, Kristin came
into her office to deliver yet another batch of paperwork. Startled to find
Joanna seated at her desk, Kristin almost dropped what she was carrying.
“You scared me to death!” she exclaimed. “Why didn’t you
tell me you were here?”
“Because my phone would have been ringing off the hook,”
Joanna answered. “The only way I’m going to make any progress with this mess is
to work on it without interruptions.”
Kristin nodded and placed a neatly arranged stack of paper
on the one part of the desk Joanna had finally managed to clear. Then, instead
of taking the hint and returning to her own office, Kristin sighed and sank,
uninvited, into one of the two captain’s chairs facing Joanna’s desk.
In the past two months, Kristin Gregovich had gone from
being slightly pregnant to being profoundly pregnant. Her once showgirl-worthy
ankles were now severely swollen by the end of each workday. The baby, a girl,
wasn’t due for another three weeks, but Kristin, rubbing her aching back, was
vocal about hoping to deliver sooner than that. On the other hand, money concerns
made her want to stay on the job as long as possible.
Hearing Kristin’s sigh, Joanna looked at her secretary
with concern. She worried that there might be some third-trimester complication
brewing. “Are you all right?” she asked.
Kristin nodded, but she didn’t look all right.
“Weren’t you supposed to see the doctor yesterday?” Joanne
asked.
Kristin nodded again. “That’s what I wanted to talk to you
about, Sheriff Brady. We did go, Terry and I both.”
Terry Gregovich, Kristin’s husband, and Spike, his German
shepherd, comprised the Cochise County Sheriff’s Department’s K-9 Unit.
Joanna stood up and came around to the front of the desk. “You
look upset, Kristin,” she said. “What is it? Is there something the matter with
the baby?”
“Oh, no, nothing like that,” the young woman answered hurriedly.
“Shaundra’s fine. The thing is, the only time we could get in for the
ultrasound was late yesterday afternoon. We went right after the church service
ended. By the time we finished up at the hospital, it was too late to go to the
graveside service. I was too beat to go to the reception, so Terry and I just
stayed home. But I didn’t want you to think we didn’t come because ...” Kristin’s
voice trailed off uneasily.
When Joanna had first taken over the job of sheriff, she
and her young secretary had needed to sort out some issues between them. For a
time after Joanna’s election, Kristin’s loyalties had remained with members of
the previous administration. With the passage of time, however, the two women
had developed a comfortable working relationship. Months earlier, Joanna was
the person to whom Kristin had first confided the news of her unexpected
pregnancy. And it was Joanna who had helped Kristin and Terry arrange their
nice but hurried shotgun wedding.
In the months since, Joanna Brady had taken a kind of
proprietary interest in the young couple’s situation. She had been more than a
little disappointed the day before when she’d been forced to assume that they,
too, had boycotted the funeral reception. It had hurt her to think that both
Kristin and Terry had aligned themselves with Ken Galloway’s malcontents in
Local 83. That, of course, had been the other reason Joanna had avoided
announcing her presence to Kristin.
“You didn’t want me to think you missed the reception
because of what?” Joanna asked.
“You know,” Kristin said with an uneasy shrug. “Because of
what’s going on around here.”
“You mean because of Deputy Galloway?”
Kristin nodded. “That’s right. Neither Terry nor I wanted
to have anything to do with him and his buddies,” she said quickly. “But four
forty-five was the only time we could schedule the ultra-sound, and the doctor
was later than that. I just wanted you to know, Sheriff Brady—whatever those
guys in the union are trying to pull, Terry and I aren’t involved. If we had
known what was going to happen—that everybody else was going to stay away like
they did—we would have come no matter what!”
A wave of relief washed over Joanna. She eased herself
into the chair next to Kristin. Maybe things inside her department weren’t
quite as universally one-sided as she had supposed.
“The baby’s welfare has to be your first priority,” Joanna
said kindly. “Thanks for telling me, though.” She paused, then added, “But what
exactly do you think Ken Junior and his pals are up to? Any ideas?”
“I don’t know,” Kristin said, shaking her head. “Not
really. I asked Terry the same thing this morning on the way to work. He thinks
most of the guys are just messing around and that we shouldn’t pay any
attention to them. But how could they do some-thing like that—ditch the
cemetery and the reception, I mean? And what about Leon Caсedo? How do those
jerks think their staying away made him feel?” Kristin demanded, her voice
quivering with suppressed emotion. “What would they think if somebody did
something like that to their wives or kids?”
Joanna leaned back in the chair and thought for a moment before
she answered. She didn’t want whatever she said to Kristin to add to her
department’s inner turmoil if it happened to be repeated to anyone else.
“Some people are simply incapable of putting themselves in
anybody else’s shoes, Kristin,” she said finally. “Empathy won’t ever be one of
Deputy Galloway’s long suits. But if it will put your mind at ease, I think
Leon Caсedo was so overwhelmed by everything that was going on yesterday, he
probably didn’t notice who was there and who wasn’t. Ken Junior may have
drained off everyone he could bamboozle into not showing up, but it was still
standing room only in the parish hall up at St. Dominick’s for most of the
evening.”
Kristin heaved another sigh, this one of relief. “Good. I’m
really glad.” Saying that, she pushed her unwieldy body upright. “Now that I
know you’re here,” she said, “I’ll go get your messages.”
Joanna felt like saying, Do you have to? She didn’t.
Instead, she watched Kristin waddle out of the room before returning to her own
desk. Moments later, Kristin was back with a fanfold of telephone message
slips in her hand. “Chief Deputy Montoya wants to know if you’re ready for the
briefing yet.”
“Not yet. Give me a while.”
Nodding, Kristin went out, closing the door behind her.
Joanna took the messages and shuffled through them. One was from her mother,
one from the county attorney’s office, and two were from people in the
community whose names she recognized but who had somehow failed to mention
exactly why they were calling. Pulling all pertinent information from reticent
phone callers was one of the essential secretarial skills Kristin Gregovich had
yet to master. The bottom message was from Butch. “Daisy’s,” it said. “Twelve o’clock.
DON’T FORGET!”
With an air of impatience she pushed that one aside. After
all, it wasn’t anywhere near twelve yet. What would make him think she’d
forget? She glanced at her watch. It was only twenty past eleven—plenty of
time.
When it came to returning phone calls, Joanna was a
believer in doing the tough things first. She dialed her mother’s number
immediately.
“Why, there you are,” Eleanor Lathrop Winfield said. “I’m
so glad you called back. I just had the strangest conversation with Marliss
Shackleford.”
The fact that her mother was a longtime bosom buddy of The
Bisbee Bee’s featured columnist was one of the crosses Sheriff Joanna Brady
had learned to bear. Anytime there was a question Marliss didn’t want to pose
through official channels—like going through the media relations officer, Chief
Deputy Montoya--she had no compunction about asking Eleanor instead. Joanna’s
first thought was that Marliss was on the trail of something to do with the
Rochelle Baxter case. That assumption proved wrong.
“Marliss asked me why there were so few Cochise County deputies
in attendance at the funeral reception yesterday evening,” Eleanor was saying. “I
told her she had to be mistaken. I was there myself. It seemed to me there were
plenty of people in uniform, all of them plowing through that buffet like they
hadn’t eaten in days.”
Hardly any of those starving uniforms belonged to me,
Joanna thought despairingly. It bugged her to realize
that, as usual, Marliss Shackleford had focused in on the one critical issue
Sheriff Brady had been trying to dodge. Rather than issuing a denial Marliss
could easily refute, Joanna played coy.
“Really,” she said, feigning as much innocence as she
could muster. “Marliss says my deputies weren’t there? That’s strange. I could
have sworn they were all over the place, but I could be wrong. I had a few
other details to worry about. There wasn’t time for an official roll call.”
“See there?” Eleanor responded, sounding relieved. “I
tried to tell Marliss that very thing—that she had to be mistaken, but you know
her. Sometimes you have to hit that woman over the head with a baseball bat to
get through to her.”
Hitting Marliss Shackleford over the head with anything
sounded like an excellent idea to Sheriff Joanna Brady about then, but she
fought down a biting comment that could have turned into additional ammunition.
“I’ve noticed,” she agreed.
“I’d best be going,” Eleanor went on briskly. “I just
spoke to George. He’s finished up with whatever it was he had to do this
morning. He’s coming home for lunch. I should get it on the table. The egg
salad is ready, but I haven’t made sandwiches yet.”
That, too, was vintage Eleanor Lathrop. The “whatever”
George Winfield had to do that morning was to perform an autopsy. How like
Eleanor simply to gloss over and/or ignore anything remotely unpleasant. Her
husband’s title might be that of Cochise County Medical Examiner, but in
Eleanor’s self-centered world, none of his professional duties were any more
important than the egg-salad sandwiches she planned to serve for lunch. And if
a scheduled autopsy or an unexpected phone call happened to delay him beyond
what Eleanor considered reasonable, Joanna knew there would be hell to pay.
Better him than me,
she
thought.
Even so, Eleanor didn’t hang up immediately. “According to
Marliss, there was another murder last night,” she added.
Here we go again,
Joanna
fumed. Another one of Marliss Shackleford’s notorious end runs.
“A suspicious death,” she corrected. “I suppose she asked
you about that, too.”
“Not about the death specifically,” Eleanor replied. “She
wanted to know if I had noticed how the crime rate has really taken off since
you became Sheriff.”
That depends on who’s counting,
Joanna thought. “What did you say?” she asked.
“I told her the truth,” Eleanor replied. “I said that no
matter who’s in charge, the crime rate stays pretty much the same.”
Coming from Eleanor Lathrop Winfield, that lukewarm statement
constituted a ringing endorsement.
“Thanks, Mom,” Joanna said.
“You’re welcome.”
Next Joanna dialed the county attorney’s office. Arlee
Jones was a blowhard, deal-making good old boy.
“Glad to hear from you, Sheriff Brady,” he said cordially.
“Wanted to keep you in the know”
“About what?” Joanna replied.
“Remember Rob Majors?” Arlee asked. “That kid from San
Simon?”
Joanna remembered Rob Majors all too well. He was a
not-too bright kid who had spent the summer earning college tuition money by
carjacking travelers along I-10 and selling their stolen vehicles to
migrant-smuggling crooks from Old Mexico. Joanna’s department had spent weeks
and far too much valuable overtime before they had apprehended him. They had
finally decoyed Majors into trying to lift a car driven by Terry Gregovich with
Spike, his German shepherd sidekick, stationed in the backseat.
Majors had been taken into custody at the rest area just
inside the Arizona/New Mexico border, but he wasn’t jailed until after
emergency-room treatment of the numerous puncture wounds on his arm,
compliments of an eighty-five-pound police dog.
“What about him?” Joanna asked.
“‘Thought you’d be relived to hear that I’ve brokered a
deal. Rob Majors pleads guilty to a lesser charge, and he drops the police
brutality charge against your K-9 officer.”
“How good a deal did he get?” Joanna asked. Arlee Jones’s
plea bargains usually gave her a headache. This one was no exception.
“He pleads guilty to one count of first-degree assault and
goes to Fort Grant until his twenty-first birthday.”
Joanna barely believed her ears. “The kid’s seventeen. You’re
letting him off as a juvenile?”
“It’s the best I could do,” Jones said in an aggrieved
tone. “At least it gets your Deputy Gregovich off the hook.”
“Thanks,” Joanna said. “That’s just what I wanted to hear.”
She hung up and was still burning with indignation when
she dialed the number for Debra Highsmith, the newly installed principal at
Bisbee High School. A student office assistant put the call through.
“This is Sheriff Brady,” Joanna said when Debra Highsmith
answered. “I understand you called earlier.”
“That’s right. Thanks so much for returning the call,” Ms.
Highsmith said. “We’re trying to do something a little unusual around here. I
was wondering if you could help us out.”
“That depends,” Joanna said. “What are we talking about?”
“I attended an all-girls high school, and an all-girls
college as well. This was back in the days when they still had such things,”
Debra Highsmith added with a chuckle. “I’m trying to create an atmosphere that
will challenge and motivate the young women here at Bisbee High. We want to get
them thinking outside the box, as it were. For that we need really dynamic role
models.”
Joanna waited silently for Debra Highsmith to cut to the
chase.
“BHS career day cones up the end of next week,” Ms. Highsmith
continued. “I must apologize for calling you at the last minute. I had made
arrangements for an old college chum of mine, Althea Peachy, who works for
NASA, to speak to our girls-only assembly. Unfortunately, Peaches found out
just this morning that she has to testify before the House Appropriations
Commit lee in D.C. next week. I was wondering if I could prevail on you to
pinch-hit.”
Suppressing a sigh, Joanna reached for her desktop
calendar “What day?” she asked.
“Next Thursday. We’d like you to speak first thing in the
morning around nine or so. The boys will be in the gym having their own
assembly. The girls will be in the auditorium.”
Joanna consulted her calendar. The morning after a night
of Halloween pranks would be a bad day for her to be out of the office, but
encouraging young people was also part of her job.
“All right,” she said, penciling it in. “Nine o’clock. Anything
else I should know?”
“Well, there is one more thing,” Debra Highsmith added. “I
need to let you know that we have a zero-tolerance policy about weapons here on
campus.”
“Wait a minute,” Joanna objected. “I’m a sworn police
officer, remember? You want me to come to your school and talk to students
about the possibility of considering law enforcement as a career, but you don’t
want me to wear my guns?”
“Right,” Debra Highsmith allowed. “It doesn’t make sense,
but you know how paranoid school boards can be about such things these days.
What if a student overpowered you, grabbed one of your weapons, and used it on
some other student?”
“And what if one of your students shows up at
school that day with a weapon of his or her own? What then?” Joanna returned. “Wouldn’t
it be a good idea to have a properly trained and armed police officer on-site
when all hell breaks loose?”
“I don’t make the rules,” Debra Highsmith returned. “I
simply enforce them.”
That’s the same thing I always say,
Joanna thought.
“All right,” she said. “Nine o’clock, on Thursday,
November first, in the auditorium.”
She put down the phone and was still staring at it when her
private line rang.
“You’re late,” Butch said. “It’s ten after twelve. You’re
still in the office.”
“Sorry,” she said. “Time got away from me. I’ll be right
there.”
Ten minutes later and twenty minutes after the appointed
time, she pulled up in front of Daisy Maxwell’s cafe in Bisbee’s Bakerville
neighborhood. Junior Dowdle, the developmentally disabled fifty-year-old ward
of the restaurant’s owner, met Joanna at the door. He carried a pile of menus
and sported a wide smile. “Time to eat?” he asked.
Junior had been abandoned by his caretakers a year
earlier. Daisy and her retired postal worker husband, Moe, had taken him under
their wing and assumed guardianship. Junior had blossomed under their care.
Working in their restaurant, he took his tasks of clearing tables and washing
dishes very seriously. Occasionally he was allowed to serve as host, passing
out menus and accompanying guests to tables or booths.
Joanna stood in the doorway of Daisy’s and scanned the
room for Butch. His Honda Goldwing was parked in front of the restaurant.
Butch himself was nowhere to be seen.
“Back,” Junior said, pointing helpfully. “Back there.
Reservation,” he added with an emphatic nod.
Following Junior Dowdle’s directions, Joanna made her way
it the private hack room that sometimes doubled as a meeting roan for the local
Rotary Club. Pushing open the door, she was surprised to find every available
surface covered by unfurled blue prints.
Butch looked up when she entered. “‘There you are,” he
salt wryly. “I may be your husband, but do you have any idea how hard it is to
book an appointment with you these days?”
She looked around the room. “What’s this?”
“Our new house,” he said. “Or what’s supposed to be our
new house. The problem is, I can’t get you to sit still long enough to talk
about and sign off on the plans. In other words, you and I are having a
meeting—an official meeting. We’re still working through the permit process,
but before construction can begin, all the decisions need to be made. Cabinets
have to he ordered, plumbing fixtures, appliances, everything. So first we’ll
have lunch. They made Cornish pasties today, so I ordered two of those. Then we’re
going to go over each of these papers, one piece at a time.”
“I saw the house you redid in Saginaw,” Joanna told him. “I’m
sure whatever decisions you make will be fine with me.”
“Still,” he said. “There are things we should talk about.
Marriages don’t work well when one person makes too many unilateral decisions.
I’m not going ahead until you’ve officially signed of on everything, from
countertops to cabinets.”
Joanna wanted the new house. She was looking forward to
living in it, but she dreaded the process of getting there. If only she could
bring herself to tell Butch how she had grown up listening to her parents
squabble endlessly over one of D.H. Lathrop’s grindingly slow remodeling
projects after another.
“All right,” she said, and sat down.
They had eaten lunch and were making good progress through
the various blueprints until they got to a detailed rendering of the family
room. “What’s this?” Joanna asked, pointing to a line that went all the way
around the room, just above the door-jambs and window frames.
“That’s the train shelf,” Butch told her proudly.
“The what?”
“Remember the 0-gauge Lionel trains I used to have on display
up at the Roundhouse? They’ve been in storage ever since I came to Bisbee. I
decided the family room would be a great place to put them out again—in sight
but not in the way. And by putting it in now, during the building process, the
wiring can be built into the conduit in the walls behind the shelf.”
As he spoke, Butch brimmed with enthusiasm. Now he stopped
and glanced sharply at Joanna’s face. “Don’t you like it?”
“A train in the family room?” she asked uneasily.
“Several, actually,” Butch answered. “I have six. There
won’t be enough room to have all of them out at once, but ...”
“Wouldn’t it be better to have just a television set, some
sound equipment, and a couch and some chairs in there?” Joanna asked
tentatively. “Having pictures on the walls would be fine, but trains?”
Butch’s face fell. All right,” he said glumly. “I’ll get
rid of it, but at this rate, I might just as well get rid of the trains, too.” “I
didn’t say that.”
“Well,” he said, “why not? If I’ve got no place to display
them—if I have to leave them packed up and in storage all the time—what’s the
point of having them?”
“Butch, please, I never said you should get rid of your
trains.” “It sounded like it to me.”
Joanna’s cell phone rang. Butch rolled his eyes and
crossed his arms as she plucked it out of her pocket to answer it. Detective Jaime
Carbajal was on the line. “What’s up?” she asked.
“According to Doc Winfield, we just ran into a problem,”
Jaime said.
More than one,
Joanna
thought, looking at Butch. Scowling, he had returned to studying the
family-room blueprint. “Like what?” she asked.
“Our victim’s name isn’t Rochelle Baxter,” he said.
“What is it?”
“Latisha Wall, originally from Macon, Georgia.”
“Okay,” Joanna said. “She went by a different name. I low
come? Does she have a record?”
“No.”
Joanna was losing patience playing Twenty Questions. “What’s
the deal?”
“‘The ME tracked down one Lawrence Baxter, supposedly her
father and the person the DMV lists as her next of kin. Turns out he doesn’t
exist, either. Doc Winfield ended up talking to some guy in the Washington
State Attorney General’s Office in Olympia. His name’s O.H. Todd, and he claims
he’s Latisha Wall’s case manager. She was evidently in a witness protection
progran.”
“They gave her a new name and identity and set her up to
live down here in Arizona?” Joanna asked.
“That’s right,” Jaime said. “Except now she’s dead. Doc
Winfield said the guy in Olympia almost had a coronary when he heard what had
happened.”
“What was she a witness about?”
“Todd wasn’t saying, at least not to Doc Winfield,” Jaime
replied. “Said he had to check with his superiors before he could release any
information to anyone, including us. However, he did request that he be kept informed
about all aspects of the investigation. He gave Doc Winfield the name, phone
number, and address of Latisha’s mother and sister back home in Georgia. The
father is deceased, and the mother is in poor health. The ME says authorities
from Washington will contact the next of kin.”
“Thank God for small favors,” Joanna said. “What about the
preliminary results from the autopsy?”
“Inconclusive. No wounds of any kind. No bruises or abrasions.
No defensive wounds that would indicate a struggle, and no sign of disease,
either. Doc’s not willing to say she died of natural causes, though. He’s
ordering a full set of toxicology tests. You know how long those take.”
“Weeks,” Joanna murmured.
“Right,” Jaime said. “So where does that leave us?”
Joanna thought for a moment before she answered. “Okay,”
she said. “We’ll handle this case like a full-blown homicide investigation
until we know otherwise. If we learn later that Latisha Wall took her own life
or died from some kind of accidental poisoning, all we’ll be out are the
man-hours we’ve devoted to the investigation. But we have to pay attention
right now, while the evidence is fresh. If someone did murder her and we wait
for toxicology reports, the trail will be cold by the time we start looking for
the perp.”
“What should I do then?” Jaime asked.
“Go back to the crime scene,” Joanna said without
hesitation. “Make sure Dave and Casey went over every inch of that place
without missing anything. I want you to check with the alarm company and see if
there was anything the least bit out of kilter in the last few days or weeks.
Talk to people. Canvass the neighbor-hood.”
“I’m on it, boss,” Jaime said. “Anything else?”
“Yes. You should interview Bobo Jenkins up in Old Bisbee,
since he and Rochelle Baxter had something going. Bobo told me he was in her
home last evening. He must be the last person to have seen her alive.”
“You think he’s involved?” Jaime asked.
“He and Shelley Baxter were romantically involved,” Joanna
replied. “But if you’re asking if I think he killed her, the answer is no. I
personally told him about what had happened. He was absolutely devastated.”
“He could have been acting,” Jaime suggested.
“Wasn’t,” Joanna returned.
“All right,” Detective Carbajal said. “I’m on my way.”
Joanna shut off the phone and turned back to Butch. He had
sat down in front of the family room blueprint. The disappointed expression on
his face made her feel as though she’d just told some unsuspecting
kindergartner that there was no Santa Claus.
“Butch, if you really want to have a train shelf, it’ll be
fine. I can live with it.”
“You’re not supposed to live with it,” he
countered. “You’re supposed to love it.”
“The rest of the house is great,” Joanna continued. “And I
do love the kitchen and the bathrooms. There’ll be so much more space than we
have now. My problem is that I want the house to he sort of ... well, normal,”
she said finally.
“Normal as opposed to bizarre,” he said. “You’re right. It’s
a dumb idea. I should just grow up.”
“We’ll find a place for your trains,” she assured him. “I
promise we will.”
“Where? Not in the house. None of the other rooms are big
enough.”
“We’ll sort it out. Isn’t that what marriage is all
about—compromise?”
“I guess.” Butch began reassembling and rolling up the set
of blueprints. “Sounds like you need to go,” he added.
“I do,” she said. “But not like this. Not if we’re
quarreling.”
“We’re not quarreling,” Butch returned. “You were right; I
was wrong. The train shelf’s out of there.”
“But you really wanted it.”
“Look, Joey,” he said. “You can’t have it both ways. The
train shelf was an oddball idea. You happen to want normal. That’s reasonable
enough. You win. We’ll have normal.”
“But I don’t want to win,” Joanna objected. “I want us
both to be happy with the house.”
“I’ll be happy.”
“How much trouble will it be to take it out of the plans?”
He shrugged. “Not much. The train shelf was a
late-breaking brilliant idea I added in just a few days ago or so. All I have
to do is take it back out. I’m guessing Quentin will be ecstatic to avoid all
that extra electrical work. So there you are. Two to one—I lose.”
“It’s going to be okay, then? You’re not mad?”
“Not terminally mad, but you can buy lunch,” he said. “By
the time you pay up, chances are I’ll be almost over it.”
Out at the cash register, Junior took Joanna’s money and
then painstakingly counted out her change. When he had finished he flashed
Joanna a triumphant smile. “Daisy taught me,” he said proudly.
“Daisy’s a very good teacher.”
“Yes,” Junior agreed, nodding vehemently. “Very good!”
By then Butch, with blueprints in one hand and motorcycle
helmet in the other, had followed Joanna out of the backroom. He arrived in
time to watch the end of the monetary transaction. He waited until they were
out in the parking lot before commenting.
“Amazing,” he exclaimed. “When we first met Junior, I
never would have dreamed he’d be capable of making change.”
“Kindness and patience go a very long way,” Joanna said. “Now
kiss me. I have to go back to work.”
He gave her a halfhearted smooch and opened her car door. “Can’t
you do better than that?” she demanded.
“Not in public,” he said.
He grinned when he said it. Even so, a troubled Joanna
Brady headed back to the Cochise County Justice Center. Getting married and
combining households wasn’t easy. She had expected that she and Butch would
have tough going over child-rearing practices; over the chores of looking after
a ranch full of animals in need of care and feeding.
Whoever would have thought we’d end up fighting over model
trains?
she wondered. Compared to that,
everything else has been a picnic.
WASHINGTON STATE ATTORNEY GENERAL Ross Alan Connors had
just returned from a meeting with the governor when O.H. Todd came into his
office to give him the had news.
“Damn!” Connors muttered. “You’re sure it’s her?”
“No mistake, I’m sorry to say,” O.H. returned. “What do we
do now?”
Connors rubbed his forehead thoughtfully. “We’d better
send someone,” he said at last. “But who?”
“One of the special investigators?” O.H. Todd suggested.
Connors considered and then nodded.
“Which one?”
“What about that new hire?” Connors returned. “The one who
just retired from Seattle PD.”
“You mean J.P. Beaumont?”
“Right,” Connors said, nodding. “That’s the one. He hasn’t
been on board very long. You should probably check with Harry Ball and see if
Beau’s up to speed.”
O.H. Todd stood up and made for the door. “Right,” he
said. ‘Will do.”
Five
“How’s it going?” Joanna asked.
Jaime shook his head and sank into a chair. “I just
finished preliminary interviews with Dee Canfield and Bobo Jenkins. Bobo
stopped by so Casey could print him. I caught up with him while he was here.”
“What do you think?” Joanna asked.
“Gut instinct?”
Joanna nodded.
“You may be convinced he’s in the clear on this, but I’m
not sure I agree.”
“Fair enough,” Joanna said. “We’ll agree to disagree. Did
anything more turn up at the crime scene?”
“No. I canvassed the entire neighborhood. No one saw or
heard anything out of line until the EMTs showed up and started breaking down
the door. What about you?”
She told him everything she had learned earlier from both
Bobo Jenkins and Dee Canfield.
“Since she’s going ahead with the show,” Jaime said, “I
guess I should be there. One of the guests may be able to fill in some of our
blanks on the victim.”
“Speaking of blanks,” Joanna said. “Have you talked to
that guy up in Washington?”
“O.H. Todd?” Jaime replied. “I’ve tried. I’ve called his
number three different times. All I get is voice mail. So far he hasn’t bothered
to call me back.”
“The man must have a boss,” Joanna said. “What’s his name?”
“I don’t know.”
“Find out, Jaime, and get me his number,” Joanna said. “I’ll
give him a call. Maybe the big boss can set a fire under Mr. Todd’s butt.”
Jaime Carbajal grinned. “Works for me,” he said. He left
the room. A few minutes later he returned with a slip of paper. “Good luck,” he
said, handing it over.
Joanna glanced at her watch. “It’s already after five. He’s
probably gone.”
“Try anyway,” Jaime said.
Picking up her phone, Joanna dialed. “Attorney general’s
office,” a woman’s voice answered.
“I’d like to speak to Mr. Ross Alan Connors,” Joanna said.
“This is Sheriff Joanna Brady of Cochise County, Arizona.”
“May I say what this is concerning?”
“Latisha Wall.”
There was a noticeable pause. One moment, please.”
As soon as the operator went away, canned classical music
began playing, interrupted periodically by a recorded voice apologizing for the
length of the wait and assuring Joanna that her cal was very important to them
and that someone would be with her as soon as possible. The third time she
heard the equally canned apology she was ready to blow.
Five minutes later a live voice finally returned to the
line. “I’m sorry. Mr. Connors is in a meeting right now”
“Any idea what time he’ll be through with it?”
“None at all. Sorry.”
Like hell you’re sorry,
Joanna
thought. “What about O.H. Todd?” she asked. “Is he available?”
“He’s also in a meeting.”
The same one, no doubt.
“Would you like to be connected to Mr. Connors’s voice mail?”
the woman asked.
“No, thank you,” Joanna said. “I’d like you to personally
take a message. Tell him Sheriff Joanna Brady needs to speak to him, urgently.
Detective Jaime Carbajal, the investigator working Latisha Wall’s death, has so
far been unable to reach Mr. Todd. Obviously, time is of the essence.” After
leaving her office, home, and cell-phone numbers, Joanna hung up. Across the
desk from her Jaime Carbajal scowled.
“You got the same treatment I did,” he said. “Don’t hold
your breath waiting for a callback.”
Harry Ignatius ball had turned off the light in his office
and was about to close the door and head home when his phone rang. Muttering
irritably under his breath, he returned to his desk and grabbed up the
receiver.
“Special Unit B,” he said. “Ball speaking.”
“Harry, glad I caught you,” O.H. Todd said, sounding
relieved. “I just got cut loose from a meeting that lasted all afternoon.”
Harry rattled his car keys, hoping O.H. would get the message.
“What’s up?” he asked.
“How’s Beaumont doing?”
“What do you mean, how’s he doing?”
“Is he up to speed?” O.H. asked. “Ready to send out on a
case?”
Harry snorted. “He was ready for that the day he got here.
Why?”
“We’ve developed a problem down in Arizona. A place called
Bisbee. Ross may need to ship someone down to check it out.” Todd paused. “What
can you tell me about Beaumont?” he added. “About him personally, I mean. What
kind of guy is he?”
“From what I’ve seen so far,” Harry replied, “he isn’t
exactly a team player.”
“Maybe that’s okay,” O.H. Todd said thoughtfully. “In
fact, for this case, that may be just what the doctor ordered.”
It was almost seven when Joanna finally pulled into the
yard at High Lonesome Ranch. The house was dark and locked up tight. Once
inside, she discovered that Jenny and Butch had evidently already eaten. A
single place setting remained on the table in the breakfast nook. In the middle
of the plate was a note from Butch saying he had taken Jenny back into town for
a play rehearsal and that there was a green chili casserole waiting for her in
the fridge. All she had to do was heat it up.
After locking her weapons away and changing clothes,
Joanna dished up a serving of the casserole and put the plate in the microwave.
“Looks like I’m in the doghouse, too,” she said to Sadie and Tigger, who sprawled
comfortably on the kitchen floor. Other than thumping their tails in unison,
the dogs made no further comment.
Joanna picked halfheartedly at the casserole—a dish that
was usually one of her favorites. All the while she couldn’t help wondering if
Butch was still mad at her about the model train situation. He said he wasn’t,
but he still must be, she surmised. After all, he hadn’t bothered calling
to remind her about having to eat early due to Jenny’s rehearsal. If he had,
she could have come home ear her rather than waiting for Ross Connors to have
the common decency to return her call. Now Joanna was home by herself when she
didn’t especially want to be alone.
No longer hungry, she divvied the remaining casserole on
her plate into two portions and plopped them into the dog dishes. Uncharacteristically,
Sadie showed no interest in the proffered treat. She stayed where she was,
allowing Tigger to lick both dishes clean.
Joanna leaned down and patted the bluetick hound on her
smooth, round forehead. “We’re both a little out of sorts today, aren’t we,
girl,” she said.
Joanna spent the evening catching up on reading, watching
the clock, and waiting for the telephone to ring. It was after nine before
Butch’s Subaru finally pulled into the yard. Joanna and the dogs went out to
greet the new arrivals.
“How was rehearsal?” Joanna asked.
“Awful,” Jenny said. “The show’s just two weeks away and
most of the boys still don’t know their lines. It’s going to be a
gigantic flop, Mom. I wish Miss Stammer would cancel if. We’re all going to be
up on stage looking stupid.”
“It’ll be line, Jen,” Joanna reassured her, tousling Jenny’s
blond curls. Behind Jenny’s back, Butch rolled his eyes and shook his head as
if to say Jenny’s assessment was far closer to the truth than any motherly
platitudes.
Jenny took the dogs and went into the house. Joanna turned
to Butch. “Is it really that bad?”
“I’ll say,” Butch said.
Joanna changed the subject. “You should have called and
reminded me to come home early.”
Butch reached into the car and removed the roll of
blueprints that, these days, seemed to be a natural extension of his arm. When
he turned to reply, he wasn’t smiling.
“I had to remind you to come to lunch today,” he said. “I
figured you were a big enough girl that you could decide when to come home for
dinner on your own.”
Ouch,
Joanna thought.
She followed him into the house and locked the back door
once she was inside. Butch put the blueprints on the dining room table. Joanna
thought he would unroll them and pore over them as he did almost every night.
Instead he said, “I think I’ll turn in.”
“You just got home,” Joanna objected. “Don’t you want to
talk?”
Butch shook his head. “I’m beat. Quentin and I have a
meeting first thing in the morning. Night.”
He gave Joanna a halfhearted peck on the cheek and left
her standing in the middle of the dining room. Rebuffed and hurt, Joanna
returned to the kitchen. In a bid for sympathy, she had wanted to tell her
husband about her day. She had wanted Butch to give her a loving pat and tell
her that of course Ross Connors from Washington State was an unmitigated jerk.
But Butch Dixon had surprised her. He had given her a cold shoulder rather than
one to cry on.
Joanna sulked in the kitchen for a while. Then, wanting to
talk and thinking Butch must still be awake, she crept into the bedroom, only
to find him snoring softly. So much for that! she thought.
It was midnight before she finally went to bed and much
later than that before she fell asleep. And overslept. If it hadn’t been for
the telephone ringing at ten after eight the next morning, she might have
missed the board of supervisors meeting altogether.
“Hello,” she mumbled into the phone. Staring wide-eyed at
the clock, she staggered out of bed. The caller ID box next to the phone said
the number was unavailable. Taking the phone with her, she headed for the
bathroom.
“Sheriff Brady?”
“Yes. Who’s this?”
“My name’s Harry Eyeball and—”
“Look, mister,” she said, cutting him off. “If this is
some kind of joke—”
“Believe me, Sheriff Brady, it’s no joke. My name is
Harry, initial I, Ball. I’m with the Washington State Attorney General’s Special
Homicide Investigation Team. I’m returning the call you made to Ross Connors
yesterday afternoon.”
“Oh, yes,” Joanna said. “I called about Latisha Wall.”
“Making any progress?”
Joanna bristled. “My call was to Mr. Connors,” Joanna
said. “I’m not in the habit of discussing ongoing cases with people I don’t
know”
“I just told you—”
“Yes, yes, I know. Your name is Harry Ball. But I don’t
know you from Adam’s Off Ox, Mr. Bail,” she said, resorting to one of her
father-in-law’s favorite expressions. “My homicide detective, Jaime Carbajal,
has been trying to contact Mr. Connors’s office for information regarding this
case. Up to now there’s been no response.”
“So Latisha Wall was murdered, then?”
Joanna ignored the question. “What Detective Carbajal
needs, I believe, is for someone to fax Latisha Wall’s information to us so we’ll
know where to start. All we have so far is her real name and her family’s
address in Georgia.”
“That file isn’t faxable, ma’am,” Harry Ball told her.
“What do you mean, it isn’t faxable?” Joanna returned. “What
is it, chiseled in granite?”
“It’s confidential. We have no assurances that it might
not fall into unauthorized hands in the process of transmitting it.”
“You’re implying that someone in my department might leak
it?” Joanna demanded. “And why is it so damned confidential? Let me remind you,
Mr. Ball: Latisha Wall is already dead. If she was in a witness protection
program you guys set up, I’d have to say you didn’t do such a great job of it.
And I still need the information.”
“That’s what I’m trying to tell you, ma’am. We’re sending
it to you.”
“How? By pony express?”
Joanna glared at the clock, whose hands were moving inexorably
forward. The board of supervisors meeting would start at nine sharp. Even
skipping a shower, it was going to be close.
“One of the members of my team, an investigator named J.P.
Beaumont, will be delivering it in person. Once he does so, Mr. Connors would
like him to stay on as an observer.”
“A what?”
“An observer. This is an important case with long term,
serious financial implications for the state of Washington,” Harry Ball
continued. “We wouldn’t want someone to inadvertently let something slip.”
Joanna was dumbfounded. “Let something slip?” she demanded.
“Connors thinks my department is so incompetent that he’s sending someone to
bird-dog my investigation? I don’t believe this! You can give that boss of
yours a message from me. Tell him he has a hell of a lot of nerve!”
Slamming down the phone, she hopped into the shower after
all. She was too steamed not to. Her hair was still damp and her makeup
haphazardly applied when she slid into a chair next to Frank Montoya at the
board of supervisors’ Melody Lane conference room fifty minutes later. Frank
glanced at his watch and sighed with relief when he saw her. The board
secretary was already reading the minutes of the previous meeting.
“What happened?” he whispered.
“I overslept.”
“Oh,” Frank said. “Is that all? From the look on your
face, I thought it was something serious.”
Sheriff Joanna Brady hated having to attend board of
supervisors meetings. For routine matters, Frank Montoya usually attended in
her stead. This meeting, however, was anything but routine. The general
downturn in the national economy had hit hard in Cochise County, requiring
budget cuts in every aspect of county government. Today, with the board’s
cost-cutting knives aimed at the sheriff’s department, she and Frank had
decided they should both appear. Within minutes, Joanna knew they’d made a wise
decision.
The newest member of the board, Charles Longworth Neighbors,
was a man no one ever referred to as Charley—at least not to his face. He was a
full-bird colonel who had retired front the army at Fort Huachuca a year or so
earlier. He had now been appointed to fill out another board member’s unexpired
term of office.
Since Charles Neighbors was career army, the United States
government had seen to it that he had earned a Harvard MBA while in the
service. Now in civilian life, he loved to wield his relatively recent degree
as a double-edged sword. He had no compunction about inflicting everything he
had learned on the unwashed masses in every branch of Cochise County government,
one reluctant department at a time. Today he homed in on the sheriff’s
department, going over budget items line by line, convinced that there were
substantial cuts that could and should be made.
“If it can be done, it should be done,” he told Joanna,
with a patronizing smile that made her want to grind her teeth.
Three and a half grueling hours later, she and Frank
escaped the boardroom, having taken a 10-percent-across-the-board hit. She
waited until they were safely outside the building and out of earshot before
she exploded.
“If it can be done, it should be done,” she grumbled,
doing a credible job of imitating Charles Longworth’s pedantic, school-principal-like
delivery. “If he had said that one more time, I think I would have thrown
something! Of course, his should-bes are all one-way streets. Budget items are
to be taken out and never put back in.”
“Now, now,” Frank counseled, “give the man a break. He’s
new and trying to get a grip on how things work. Supervising county government
has to be different from being an officer in the army.”
“Right,” Joanna agreed. “We can’t afford
two-hundred-dollar toilet seats. And then there’s Harry I. Ball.”
“What hairy eyeball?” Frank asked. “I don’t remember anyone
saying a word about that.”
“Not ‘hairy eyeball,’ ” Joanna returned. “‘That’s a man’s
name,” she said, reading off the scrap of paper she had stuffed in the pocket
of her blazer. “First name is Harry, middle initial I, and last name Ball. I
made him spell it out for me.”
“Who the hell is he?”
“Some high mucky-muck with the Washington State Attorney
General’s Office. He called me at home this morning when I should have been on
my way to work.” She didn’t add that Harry Ball’s unwelcome call was the only
reason she hadn’t been even later to the board of supervisors meeting.
“What did he want?”
“His office is sending someone to bring us Latisha Wall’s file
because the material is too volatile to be sent any other way than in person.
Not only that, whoever they send is supposed to hang around and keep an eye on
us—an observer to bird-dog us the whole time we’re doing the Latisha Wall
investigation. I believe the exact phrase he used is that his boss didn’t want
anyone to ‘let something slip.’ The good folks up in Washington are evidently
convinced that our department is totally incapable of conducting an adequate
homicide investigation. If you ask me, Mr. Ball sounded exactly like some of
those high-handed yahoos from the other Washington, and just as screwed
up.”
“When does this so-called observer arrive?” Frank asked
mildly.
“Who knows?” Joanna shot back. “And who cares? His name’s
...” She paused again to consult her note. “J.P. Beaumont. All I can say is,
Mr. Beaumont had better stand back and stay out of my way.”
Frank shook his head and unlocked the door to his waiting Civvie.
“Want to stop off and grab some lunch before we head back to the office?” he
asked. “Something tells me you’re running on empty.”
Joanna gave him a sidelong glance. “What makes you say
that? Just because I’m ranting and raving?”
Frank nodded. “The thought crossed my mind.”
“We’ve been working together for too long,” Joanna said,
grinning in spite of herself. “And lunch is probably a good idea. Butch left
the house early this morning. I ran late and skipped breakfast.”
“I thought so,” Frank said.
Minutes later Frank and Joanna turned their matching Crown
Victorias into Chico’s Taco Stand in Bisbee’s Don Luis neighbor-hood. The
building that housed Chico’s had once served as the office of a junkyard. The
wrecked cars had all disappeared, and now the building itself had been
transformed. The tiny restaurant consisted of a counter where people lined up
to place their orders. In addition to the counter’s four stools, there were
five booths that consisted of sagging, cigarette-scarred red vinyl benches with
matching chrome-and-chipped-Formica tabletops. All of the furnishings had been
purchased secondhand from a soon-to-be-demolished diner in Tucson. Several
dusty, fading piсatas and a few unframed bullfight posters provided what passed
for interior decor.
Fortunately, Chico’s lunchtime clientele was in search of
good food rather than trendy surroundings. Customers lined up daily for some of
Chico Rodriguez’s signature tacos, made from a recipe passed down from his
great-grandmother to his grandmother, then to his mother, all of whom had spent
decades cooking in various Bisbee-area Mexican eateries. When the last of the
Rodriguez women retired, Chico had followed in their footsteps and opened his
own establishment, one where his mother still filled in occasionally so Chico
could have a day off.
Joanna and Frank went to the counter and placed their
order. Taking their drinks, they retreated to a recently vacated booth, where
they were obliged to clear their own table. Minutes later, Chico himself
delivered their orders. The food came on paper plates accompanied by
paper-napkin-wrapped plastic utensils. The shredded-beef tacos, made from
crunchy homemade corn tortillas, were piled high with chopped lettuce. The
lettuce was sprinkled with a generous helping of finely grated sharp cheese and
topped by a dollop of tomato salsa that was more sweet than hot. It was that
special combination of ingredients that made Chico’s tacos taste better than
any Joanna had eaten elsewhere.
As she took her first bite, Frank grinned at her. “As soon
as you’re no longer a raving maniac, tell me more about your call from the
Washington State Attorney General’s Office and this so-called observer they’re sending.”
“I’ve pretty much told you what I know,” Joanna returned. “The
guy’s name is Beaumont. That’s about it.”
“When can we expect him?”
“Tomorrow or Sunday, I suppose,” she said.
“And the purpose of his visit?”
“Other than spying on us and getting in the way? Beats the
hell out of me. Like I said before, talking with Mr. Eyeball, as you called
him, was like dealing with feds from back east. He fully expected me to spill
my guts and tell him everything we know. But that isn’t going to happen, at
least not until that file gets here.”
“He didn’t go into any details as to why the state of
Washing-ton is so concerned about Latisha Wall’s death?”
“No, and the longer they keep us working in the dark, the easier
it’ll be for us to make that slip Harry Ball seems to be expecting.”
Frank jotted himself a note. “When we get hack to the
office, I’ll go on-line and find out what I can about Ms. Latisha Wall. It must
be a pretty high-profile case to garner this much attention from the attorney
general’s office. There may be newspaper coverage that will tell us some of
what we need to know.”
“Good idea,” Joanna said. “We should also check with Casey
and Dave to see how they’re doing with processing all the evidence they
brought back from the crime scene.”
Frank nodded and made another note as Joanna finished the
second of her two tacos. She was scraping the last of the refritos off
her plate when the phone in her purse crowed.
“Hello, boss,” Detective Jaime Carbajal announced when she
answered. “Sorry to bother you. Kristin said you were at a board of supervisors
meeting. Hope I’m not interrupting.”
“The meeting’s over,” Joanna assured him. “Frank and I
stopped off at Chico’s to grab some lunch. What’s up?”
“I still haven’t heard a word from anybody in Washington,”
Jaime complained.
Joanna’s laughter barked into the phone. “I have,” she
told him. “And I can tell you now, you’re not going to like it. Meet us out at
the department. I’ll bring you up to date, and you can do the same.”
Jaime Carbajal was waiting in the outside office when
Joanna arrived. As predicted, he was irate at the idea of an outsider prowling
around on his turf and messing around in his case.
“What about the opening at Castle Rock Gallery?” Joanna
asked when she, Frank, and Jaime had exhausted the topic of Ross Connors’s
unconscionable interference.
“I didn’t go,” Jaime replied.
“You didn’t go?” Joanna asked. “Why not?”
“It was canceled. When I got there last night, I found a
sign on the door saying the opening had been canceled due to the death of the
artist. Sorry for any inconvenience, et cetera, et cetera.”
“Dec Canfield canceled the show after all?” Joanna mused.
She must have conic to her senses then. The last I heard she was determined to
go through with it. I wonder why she changed her mind....”
CHAPTER SIX
As I pulled my Porsche 928 out of the Belltown Terrace parking
garage at seven that morning, I wasn’t thinking about traffic or even about
work. I was thinking about my mother and about how fortunate it was that she
was dead and had been for more than thirty years. I still miss her, of course,
but if I had told her about my new job with the Washington State Attorney
General’s SHIT squad, she would have been obliged to wash my mouth out with
soap no matter how old I was.
Somewhere in the wilds of the state capitol down in
Olympia was the out-of-touch Washington State bureaucrat who had dreamed up the
name for the Special Homicide Investigation Team of which former Seattle homicide
detective J.P. Beaumont was now the newest member. If you say the name word for
word like that—Special Homicide Investigation Team—it sounds fine, dignified,
even. The same holds true if you print it out on stationery or business cards.
And that’s exactly what that same dim-witted state official did. He went nuts
ordering reams preprinted stationery, forms, envelopes, and business carols.
There was, however, a fly in the ointment. The world we live
in is made up of shortcuts and acronyms—the Seattle PD, the U.S. of A., the U
Dub, et cetera. The AG’s (see what I mean?) Special Homicide Investigation Team
had barely opened its doors to business when people started shortening the name
to something little more manageable. And that’s where the SHIT hit the fan, so
to speak. While everyone agrees the name is “regrettable” and “unfortunate,” no
one in the state bureaucracy is willing to take the heat for rescinding that
previously placed order for preprinted stationery, forms, and business cards.
So SHIT it was, and SHIT it remains.
Getting back to my mother. I don’t want you to think Karen
Piedmont was some kind of humorless prude. She was, after all an unwed mother
who, in the uptight fifties, raised me without much help from anyone—including
her own parents. Her total locus was on turning me into a “good boy.” To that
end, “bad language” was not allowed. As far as I know, the word “shit” never
escaped my mother’s lips. Her mother, on the other hand, a chirp
eighty-six-year-old named Beverly Piedmont Jenssen, loves to ask me about my
job—acronym included. It’s as though, at her advanced age, she’s decided she’s
allowed to say anything she damned well pleases. And does.
Woolgathering as I went, I drove straight to what locals
call the Mercer Mess—the Mercer Street on-ramp to I-5. I planned to take 1-5
south to I-90 and go east across Lake Washington to the business park in
Bellevue’s Eastgate area, where the attorney general had seen fit to set his
team of investigators up in a glass-walled low-rise building.
But southbound 1-5 was where things went dreadfully wrong.
I turned onto the on-ramp and stopped cold. Nobody was moving not on the ramp,
and not on the freeway, either.
This was not news from the front. Seattle’s metropolitan
area is notorious for gridlock. It’s a tradition. For the last several decades
our trusted elected public officials have done everything possible to limit
highway construction while allowing unprecedented growth. It doesn’t take a
rocket scientist to figure out that this is a recipe for transportation
disaster. Now that it’s here, those very same public officials alternately
wring their hands and try to blame the problem on somebody else.
I have to confess that while I was both living and working
downtown, the increasingly awful traffic situation was easy to ignore. However,
now that I had thrown myself into the role of a trans–Lake Washington commuter,
I was learning about the problem up close and personal.
So I wasn’t especially surprised to find that I-5 traffic
was barely moving. At least, that’s what I thought—that it was barely moving.
Then, when I had advanced only three car lengths in the space of fifteen
minutes, I finally switched on the radio in time to hear KUOW’s metro traffic
reporter, Leslie Larkin, announce that the I-90 bridge was closed in both
directions due to “police action.”
The I-90 floating bridge is made up of two entirely
separate side-by-side structures with eight lanes of traffic between them.
During rush hour, the two center lanes are reversible. If there’s an accident
going one way or the other, it would normally shut traffic down in one
direction only. But Leslie had clearly stated that it was closed in both directions,
which seemed ominous to me. It made me wish I were still part of the Seattle
PD. I could have called in and found out what was really going on. Instead, I
concentrated on getting far enough onto the freeway so I could get off again—at
the first available exit.
To understand the scope of the Seattle area’s traffic
woes, you have to imagine a densely populated metropolitan area with a
twenty-five-mile-long lake dividing it neatly in half. Now, superimpose a huge
pound sign over that body of water, and you can visualize the problem. The two
legs are Interstates 5 and 405 running along the western and eastern sides of
the lake. Two bridges, I-90 and Highway 520, form the cross-legs. If one of the
two lake bridges goes out of commission, all hell breaks loose. Drivers have to
choose among three unacceptably inconvenient and time-consuming choices. They
can drive around either the top or the bottom of Lake Washington, or else they
take a number and get in line to cross whichever bridge is still working.
I chose to go around. I exited the freeway at Stewart and
took surface roads, but by then they were stopped up, too. Finally I called
into the office to say I was going to be late.
“Special Unit B,” Harold Ignatius Ball, my new boss,
barked into the phone. “Whaddya need?”
I’ve had problems with my name all my life. Jonas Piedmont
Beaumont isn’t a handle any right-thinking woman should have laid on a poor
defenseless baby, but that’s what my mother did. Once I had a say in the
matter, I chose to go by either Beau or by my initials, J.P. But in the
troublesome name game, my mother was a piker compared to Harry’s mom. By naming
him as she did, Mrs. Ball had sentenced her little son Harold to be designated Harry
I. Ball for the rest of his life. The words “Special Homicide Investigation
Team” look fine on paper, and so does Harry’s name. The trouble starts when you
string the first together or say the second one aloud.
Harry went to work for the Bellingham Police Department
right alter returning from Vietnam. I suppose he could have nipped the problem
in the bud by using his given name, going by Harold at work, and ditching his
middle initial altogether. If he’d just used initials alone, it would have
still made him an easy target for teasing. Hi-ball isn’t much better. But Harry’s
a perverse sort of guy. Harry I. Ball is what his name tag said when he was a
uniformed cop in Bellingham, and it’s what’s on his desk right now as Squad B
leader of the Special Homicide Investigation Team. Occasionally, someone will
look at the name and think it’s some kind of joke, but anyone who
underestimates Harry I. Ball is making a serious mistake.
“I’m going to be late,” I said.
“You and everybody else,” he muttered. “Why the hell don’t
you move to the right side of the lake?”
Harry lives in North Bend, right up against Mount Si on
the west side of the Cascades. His commute is even longer than mine. The only
difference is, there are no bridges.
“What’s going on?” I asked. “I understand I-90 is shut
down in both directions.”
“Who knows?” he grumbled. And who cares? When you gonna be
in?”
“As soon as I can.”
And I was. I arrived at nine-thirty, an hour and a half
late, having spent two and a half hours making what is, in the best of circumstances,
a twenty-minute drive. Barbara Galvin, Unit B’s office manager, hadn’t made it
in yet, either. Knowing better than to risk my stomach lining on a cup of Harry
I. Ball’s crankcase-oil coffee, I timed in and then slipped into my tiny
cubicle to go to work.
Every new hire in the Special Homicide Investigation Team
spends his first few weeks of employment going over cold-case files before
being brought on board one of the current investigations. Conventional wisdom
dictates that one of us may bring the table some previously unheeded bit of
insight that will magically solve one of those cold cases. As far as I know, it’s
never happened, but it might.
I had worked my way through most of the files, saving the
biggest and, as a consequence, most unwieldy, to last. I was manfully working
my way through the Green River Killer Task Force documents when Harry’s stocky
figure darkened my doorway.
“How’s it going?” he asked.
Sorry to be caught with my reading glasses on, I quick
stowed them in my pocket. “Okay,” I said. “But it’s like slogging though mud.”
“I know,” he said. “And you’re dying to read every word,
but I need you in my office. Now”
I followed him back down the hall. Since Barbara was at her
desk by then, I stopped into the break room long enough to pour myself a cup of
her freshly brewed coffee. Harry sat at his desk, massive arms resting on a
file folder as I eased myself into one of the chairs.
“What’s up?” I asked.
“I understand you’re acquainted with a town in Arizona called
Bisbee,” he said casually.
I was so dumbfounded that I nearly dropped my coffee in my
lap. The Department of Labor and Industries would have had a blast with that
workman’s comp. claim. Yes, I did know Bisbee. My second wife, Anne, had come
from there, along with the money that had once been hers and was now mine.
To say Anne Corley was as troubled as she was beautiful
something of an understatement on both counts. I personally never discuss the
circumstances surrounding her death on what was our wedding day, but I knew
enough about Harry I. Ball to understand that if he was asking the question, he
also knew the correct answer.
“Yes,” I said. “I know a little about Bisbee.”
He looked at me with a raised eyebrow worthy of Mr. Spock
from Star Trek. “Ever been there?” he asked.
I had gotten as close to Bisbee as Sierra Vista
once—twenty-five miles or so away. At the time I hadn’t been ready to face
visiting Anne’s hometown. I wasn’t emotionally equipped to deal with what I
might have learned there. Fresh out of treatment at Ironwood Ranch up near
Wickenburg, I was smart enough to know that there were some questions I was
better off leaving unanswered.
“No,” I said. “I never have.”
“Would you have a problem going there now?” Harry asked.
I was stronger, older, and hopefully a little wiser. “I
don’t think so,” I said.
“Good,” Harry told me. “Because something’s come up that
needs looking into. It means sending someone out for an undetermined period of
time. Since you say you prefer working alone, I thought it would be a helluva
lot easier on the budget if we sent one investigator rather than two.”
He had that right. I’m not a partner kind of guy. “What
needs investigating?” I asked.
Harry sighed. He glared at the folder on his desk, but he
didn’t open it. “Know anything about UPPI?” he asked.
I shook my head. Another collection of damnably
meaningless letters. Doesn’t anything go by its full name anymore?
“Those initials mean nothing to me,” I said. “Give me a
clue.”
“United Private
Prisons, Incorporated.”
Then it registered. “Okay, okay,” I said. “I remember now.
That’s the company the state of Washington contracted with to ease overcrowding
in the state juvenile justice system, right?”
“Exactly,” Harry agreed, “right up until we fired ’em. Nov
they’re suing the state of Washington’s ass for a hundred and twenty-five
million dollars—breach of contract.”
“Great,” I said. “What does that have to do with us—with
me I mean?”
“The state of Washington’s star witness, a young lady by
the name of Latisha Wall, was murdered in Bisbee, Arizona, the day before
yesterday. Or maybe not murdered, because the local sheriff’s department down
there is playing coy. The point is, Latish Wall is dead, and we need to know
how come.”
I was a little foggy on the details of the Latisha Wall
situation because I hadn’t been directly involved, but I remembered the name.
There had been a huge problem at a new, supposedly state-of-the-art
correctional facility built near Aberdeen in southwestern Washington. Aberdeen
had been given the nod in hopes that locating a new prison there would help
relieve some of the long-standing unemployment in the state’s lumber industry.
Two years after opening, the place was summarily closed.
“Wasn’t Latisha Wall some kind of whistle-blower?”
Harry nodded morosely. “That’s right, and now she’s dead.
She begged Ross Connors to put her in a witness protection program. Said she
was afraid somebody from UPPI might come gunning for her. We did as she asked,
but now it looks like they found her anyway.”
Ross Connors, the Washington State Attorney General, was Harry
I. Ball’s boss and mine as well.
“Didn’t you say she was murdered in Bisbee, Arizona? Why
should we be involved in the investigation?”
At last Harry moved his arms and opened the folder. “‘Turns
out Latisha Wall didn’t actually die in Bisbee proper,” he said. “She died in a
place called Naco, a little burg that’s seven or eight miles outside of town
and right on the U.S./Mexican border. Technically, the murder is being
investigated by the Cochise County Sheriff’s Department.”
“So?”
“So. The sheriff’s a young woman named Joanna Brady. I
talked to her a little while ago. Sounds like she’s just barely out of high
school. Anyway, as soon as I started asking questions, she got her tits in a
wringer and threatened to go to my boss. Of course, that’s no problem since
Ross is the one who had me call her in the first place.”
Did I tell you that Harry I. Ball is an almost terminally
unreconstituted male chauvinist? Word has it that when the personnel folks at
the city of Bellingham diplomatically suggested he attend a sensitivity
seminar, Harry told them to put their sensitivity where the sun don’t shine. He
then pulled the pin and went down the road, pension in hand. As for Attorney
General Ross Connors? I wouldn’t call him a beacon of political correctness,
either. That goes for me as well, but I like to think I’m trying.
“Once I got off the phone with her, I called Ross myself,”
Harry continued. “Believe me, he has no intention of leaving a case this big in
the hands of some little wet-behind-the-ears cow-girl who probably rides a
horse, wears ten-gallon hats, and packs a forty-five on her hip, just for show”
For me, easy acquiescence to that kind of comment has been
forever erased by the searing memory of my former partner, a bloodied Sue
Danielson, sitting slumped against the wall of her trashed living room, my
Glock in her wavering hand. She hadn’t been holding it just for show.
And no matter how much I try to avoid thinking about it, I know she would have
used that weapon if she’d had to. She would have used it to save my life
But sitting there in Harry I. Ball’s office, I understood
it was hopeless for me to try fixing his outdated view of the world. I’ve now
spent enough time in AA that I understand the meaning of the Serenity Prayer.
It says to change what you can and accept what you can’t change. Harry wasn’t
changing—not for me, and not for anybody else. I let it pass.
“What do you want me to do?” I asked.
“When Barbara came dragging her butt in here a little
while ago—she was even later than you, by the way—I told her to get on the horn
with the AG’s travel agent down in Olympia. She’s to get you down to Arizona
ASAP, before our latter-day Nancy Drew/Annie Oakley can screw up the evidence.
In other words, I want you there yesterday, but I suppose that’s asking a
little much. In the meantime, while you’re waiting for your travel packet, you
might want to go over this.”
With that, he spun the file folder across his desk. I
managed to catch it before it skidded onto the floor. “Oh, well,” I said, as I
collected the file and my coffee cup and stood up to leave. “I guess the Green
River Task Force file is going to have to wait,”
“Right,” Harry agreed with a grin. “It’s just too damned bad.”
On the way back to my cubicle I passed the office manager’s
desk. Barbara Galvin is an attractive, up-and-coming young woman in her late
twenties. She’s competent and cheerful. She can also type like a maniac on her
little laptop computer. In the world of slow-moving civil-service
bureaucracies, those qualifications make her some kind of superstar. She wears
a modest diamond and a wedding ring on her left hand and an equally modest diamond
stud in her left nostril. The only picture that clutters her otherwise
immaculately clean desk is one of a knobby-kneed, straw-headed kid about six or
seven years old and wearing a red-and-white soccer uniform. He’s holding a
black-and-white ball and grinning from ear to ear.
I paused momentarily in front of Barbara’s desk. She
motioned to the earpiece of her phone to indicate someone else was talking, so
I went on my way. Back at my desk I opened Latisha Wall’s folder and was
relieved when the first piece of paper that fluttered out contained a scribbled
notation in Harry’s virtually illegible scrawl that said Officer Unreadable in
Indecipherable, Georgia, had made the next-of-kin notification. I was glad to
know I had dodged that particular bullet.
I had only just started on the file’s first page when my
phone rang. “Beaumont here.”
“Good morning,” Naomi Pepper said cheerily. “How long did
it take you to make it over to this side of the water?”
Naomi Cullen Pepper is a relatively recent widow and a
girlfriend of rather brief standing. We had met more than a month earlier on a
cruise ship bound for Alaska. Through several strange turns of events, we had
found ourselves bunking in the same cabin—a situation that had, almost
effortlessly, evolved into our becoming lovers. It was only when we were back
home and on solid ground that the new reality hit me.
The first time I asked her out on a date, I spent hours
agonizing over where I would take her and what I would wear. Ralph Ames, my
attorney and good friend, happened to be visiting my Belltown Terrace condo at
the time I was wrestling with that dilemma. He had almost fallen on the floor
laughing.
“What the hell’s the matter with you?” he had demanded. “You’ve
already spent several nights in a cruise-ship cabin with the woman. How can you
be worried about what you’re going to wear?”
Believe me, worrying was easy. The truth is, on board the Starfire
Breeze, where Naomi and I had walked away with the ship’s tango prize,
everything had seemed amazingly simple. But back on dry land, being involved in
a relationship was much more complicated. And a lot more like hard work. What
wasn’t easy for me right then was carrying on my half of the conversation
opposite Naomi’s breezy sweet nothings when I was stuck in a tiny open-ended
cubicle with God knew how many of my fellow Unit B SHIT investigators lapping
it all up.
“Long time,” I muttered in response to her question. “Two
and a half hours. How about you?”
“I had to be here for a seven o’clock meeting,” she said.
Naomi had recently been promoted to assistant manager in
the kitchen department at The Bon Marchй. Part of the promotion had involved
her transferring from the downtown Seattle store to the Bell Square one in
downtown Bellevue. This meant we were both now commuting from the west side of
Lake Washington to the east side, although our disjointed schedules made
carpooling impossible.
“I was already crossing 520 before they shut down I-90,”
she continued. “I heard they’ve reopened the bridge,” she added. “No bombs
anywhere. Are we still on for tomorrow?”
I was lost in Latisha Wall’s history. “For tomorrow?” I
said vaguely.
“Come on, Beau. Don’t play dumb. It’s your birthday. Were
going out, remember? My treat.”
There comes a time, somewhere after forty, when birthdays
are best forgotten. Or ignored. In this case, I had forgotten completely.
“Come on,” I wheedled. ‘Am I the kind of guy who would forget
his own birthday?”
Of course, the answer was yes. I was and I had, but Naomi
was all for giving me the benefit of the doubt.
“Good,” she said. “We’re going someplace special. As long
as you don’t mind driving back to Bellevue after driving home from work, that
is.”
With a dozen top-rated restaurants within walking distance
of Belltown Terrace, there wasn’t much need to drive all the way to Bellevue
for dinner, but Naomi had made it clear that this time she was paying. “I don’t
mind at all,” I told her.
All right,” she said. “I just wanted to confirm. Will I
see you tonight?”
“Probably,” I said. “I’ll give you a call this afternoon.”
I looked up to see Barbara Galvin standing in my doorway
and giving me a knowing smile. Why wouldn’t she? It’s no coincidence that the newest
kid on the block—me—has the cubicle closest to Barbara’s desk.
“Gotta go,” I said hurriedly to Naomi. “Somebody’s
waiting.”
“You didn’t have to hang up on her like that,” Barbara
told me. “I would have waited.”
She had been listening. My ears turned red. “We were done
anyway,” I said. “What’s up?”
Barbara tossed an envelope onto my desk. “Your travel
packet, complete with itinerary,” she said. “You’re booked on Alaska Flight
790. It leaves for Tucson tomorrow morning at seven A.M.”
“Seven A.M.!” I groaned. “Are you kidding? Why so early?”
Barbara grinned. “What’s the matter, Beau?” she asked. “Got
a hot date? You’re on that flight because, even though it’s the last minute,
the travel agent was able to get us a good deal. She has you scheduled to return
next Friday afternoon, but you can always extend if you need to.”
Maybe I should go ahead and do it right now,
I thought glumly. Whet Naomi finds out about this,
there won’t be any point in corning home.
Assuming the conversation had ended, I opened the envelope
and glanced at the E-ticket itinerary. When I glanced back up, Barbara was
still standing in my doorway looking at me with a strange, faraway look on her
face.
“What is it?” I asked.
“Nothing,” she said with a shrug. “I was just thinking
about how much you remind me of my dad.”
Words every older guy loves to hear! No longer a hunk, you’re
someone’s dad instead.
With that she was gone. Poor kid, I thought in a
sudden flash of empathy. No wonder she can put up with all of Unit B’s
geriatric cop crap. She must have spent most of her life living with an old
troglodyte who is as tough to get along with as we are.
I picked up the phone and called Naomi right back. “Where
were you planning on taking me to dinner tomorrow night?” I asked.
“Why? It’s supposed to be a surprise.”
“It’s a surprise, all right. I just found out I have to be
on a plane to Tucson at seven o’clock tomorrow morning.”
“Work or pleasure?” Naomi asked.
“What do you think?”
“Bis,” she said. “Bis on Main is the name of the
restaurant.”
“What do you say we go tonight instead? I’ll pay”
“I suppose,” she agreed, although I could tell she wasn’t
happy about it. “If you can get a reservation, that is. It’s a pretty popular
place.”
I looked up the number in the phone book, called, and gave
whoever answered my tale of woe. “For you, my friend, I believe we can do
something,” he said. “We’re very busy this evening, but if you could come in
early, say five-thirty ...”
“Done,” I told him. “It might just as well be early. I
have to be up at the crack of dawn tomorrow morning to catch a plane.”
I put down the phone. Part of me was sorry to disappoint
Naomi. And part of me was pissed at the people in the AG’s office for dropping
this on me at the last minute. But there was a third part of me—the stubborn
old-coot part—that was more than happy to get off his butt, put the cold-case
files back where they belonged, and go to work.
CHAPTER SEVEN
For the second time in as many days, Joanna and Frank
Montoya’s “early-morning” briefing took place in the early afternoon.
Afterward, Joanna started in on that day’s worth of correspondence. Almost an
hour later and near the bottom of the stack, she discovered the latest edition
of The Bisbee Bee. The words “See page two!” were scribbled on
the top of the Front page in Kristin Gregovich’s girlish handwriting.
Joanna opened the paper and turned to what she knew would
be Marliss Shackleford’s latest column. The headline read:
CAN COCHISE COUNTY AFFORD A SOFT-HEARTED SHERIFF?
There can be no question that Wednesday’s Fallen Officer
memorial in honor of Cochise County Corrections Officer Yolanda Caсedo was
moving and inspirational, but here’s the question many county residents are
asking themselves: Should a dirty dozen of Cochise County inmates have been in
attendance with what amounted to minimal sheriff’s department supervision?
There can also be no question that, as a corrections
officer, Yolanda Caсedo made a difference in the less-than-exemplary lives of
some of those unfortunate inmates. Ms. Caсedo used her off-duty hours to work
as an unpaid volunteer with an inmate literacy project. She personally tutored
a number of inmates who were working toward GED certificates while being
incarcerated.
But the fact remains that these men are prisoners. They’re
in the county lockup for reasons that either a judge or a jury could not ignore
or excuse. Why, then, were they allowed to attend Ms. Caсedo’s funeral services
without any evidence of restraints and with only two off-duty guards and the
director of the Cochise County Jail Ministry looking after them?
Not that they did anything bad. From what I could learn,
the inmates caused no difficulty. They behaved themselves during the funeral
service and afterward were all returned to their cells at the Cochise County
Jail without incident. But some people, including yours truly, think that
letting those prisoners out at all was a mistake and that having done so sets a
bad precedent.
Unnamed sources within the department suggest that Sheriff
Joanna Brady herself is the one who made the decision to allow prisoners to
attend the service. And why would she do such a thing? Was it a grandstanding effort
on her part to let people see that her department is interested in
rehabilitating county prisoners, as opposed to locking them up and throwing
away the key? Or was it something else entirely?
Since her election, Sheriff Brady has gone to great
lengths
The problem is, if one of those inmates had decided to
take
Finished reading, Joanna wadded up the paper and tossed it
into the trash. For a while she tried to return to her paperwork, but it was no
use. Distracted and unable to concentrate, she touched the intercom button.
“I’m going home early,” she said to Kristin. “If anybody
needs me, have them call me there.”
‘Are you okay?” Kristin asked. “I mean, it’s only three o’clock.
You’re not sick or anything, are you?”
“Lots of people go home at three o’clock,” she said. “And
today that’s me. I’ve done all I can do, unless there’s an emergency, that is.”
She left her office via the private door. Once back home
at High Lonesome Ranch, she changed into a T-shirt, jeans, and boots. Then she
hurried out to the barn, where she started mucking out the stall where Jenny
kept her sorrel quarter-horse gelding, Kiddo. It was hot, dirty, smelly work
just the thing to take Joanna’s mind off Marliss Shackleford’s latest piece of
attack journalism.
She became so involved in her shoveling and cleaning that
she lost track of time. When Jenny came home from school and spoke to her from
a few feet away, Joanna was so startled, she jumped.
“Mom, what are you doing that for?” Jenny demanded. “I
told Butch I’d clean the stall out today, as soon as I got home front school. I
haven’t had a chance to do it before because of play practice and—”
“I just felt like doing it myself,” Joanna said. “I was
sick and tired of sitting behind a desk. I decided a little physical labor
would do me a world of good.”
A look of alarm flitted briefly across Jenny’s face. She
paled. “Nothing bad happened at work, did it?” she asked.
“Not really,” Joanna reassured her daughter. “All I’m
saying is, my day was rotten. How was yours?”
“Okay, I guess,” Jenny said unenthusiastically.
“Let’s go wrestle a few bales of hay together,” Joanna suggested
cheerfully. “Maybe throwing a couple of those around will make us feel better.”
Once the chores were done, Joanna came out of the barn to
find Jenny leaning against the topmost rail of the corral with Kiddo nuzzling
her jacket pocket, searching for the sugar cubes she routinely carried there.
With their matching blond manes, girl and horse leaned on each other in an
unspoken communion that made Joanna marvel.
Kiddo had come into their lives not long after Andy’s
death. As a single mother with a demanding full-time job, Joanna had been wary
of taking on any more responsibilities. She had objected to the idea of Jenny’s
having a horse, but on that subject she had been overruled by her in-laws. And
rightly so, she realized now.
She had watched in amazement as Jenny and the gelding had
bonded. She had also been astonished at how caring for the horse had somehow
helped ease Jenny’s terrible grief after her father’s death. In a way Joanna
didn’t quite understand, she realized that allowing Jenny to be responsible for
this huge, four-legged creature had helped transform her from a child into
what she was now—a self-possessed young girl verging on womanhood.
Silently Joanna went over and joined Jenny at the fence,
noticing as she did so that she and her daughter stood almost eye-to-eye.
Within months, Jennifer Ann Brady would most likely be taller than her
five-foot-four mother.
“Did you and Butch have a fight or something?” Jenny asked
as Joanna reached out a hand to touch Kiddo’s sleek neck.
“Why do you ask that?” Joanna returned.
Jenny shrugged. “He was real quiet last night when he took
me to play practice, and he was gone this morning by the time I got up,” she
said. “He usually cooks breakfast, but today he didn’t. I had cold cereal
instead.”
“We had a disagreement,” Joanna conceded after a pause. “Not
a fight. And it’s all settled now. He said he had a meeting over at the new
house this morning. I’m sure that’s the only reason he left the house so early.”
“What was it about?” Jenny asked pointedly.
“The disagreement?”
Jenny nodded.
“About his trains,” Joanna answered, thinking how silly
that must sound.
“What about them?” Jenny asked.
“He wants to build a permanent track for them in the
family room and run it over the doors and window frames,” Joanna replied. “I
want a regular family room with a couch, a couple of chairs, a television set,
and no trains.”
“If he’s still mad about it, then I guess you won,” Jenny
said.
“It’s not a matter of winning or losing,” Joanna replied. “Being
married means you have to discuss things and work out compromises you can both
live with. I told Butch we’d find someplace else to put his trains, and we
will.”
There was a long pause after that. Joanna assumed the
conversation was over. It wasn’t.
“Did you and Dad have disagreements?” Jenny asked.
This was tougher ground. With Andy dead, it might have
been easier to pretend that everything between them had always been perfect,
even if that wasn’t true.
“Yes,” Joanna admitted finally. “Yes, we did.”
“What about?”
Joanna thought about those first stormy years in her
previous marriage. She and Andy had both been young, and having a child only a
few months after the wedding had added a whole other dimension to the usual
newlyweds conflicts. For years, there had always been too little money and too
many bills. Thinking back, it seemed to Joanna that she and Andy had fought
about almost everything—about whether or not he had filled the car with gas the
last time he drove it, about why he was late for dinner or hadn’t picked up his
dirty clothes, and why he always seemed to leave an unsightly sprinkle of
whiskers in the bathroom sink. Then, after five years or so, things had
smoothed out. Joanna and Andy had made it to their tenth anniversary and most
likely would have made it longer if only .. .
“A lot of little things, I guess,” Joanna said finally. “Things
that I see now weren’t important enough to fight over in the first place.”
“I never heard you fight,” Jenny said wistfully. “Or if I
did, I don’t remember.”
“Good,” Joanna returned, meaning it. Her relationship with
Roy Andrew Brady hadn’t been all good or all bad. Neither was her relationship
with Butch Dixon. Jenny needed to have a more realistic idea of how the world
worked.
“It’s better to forget quarrels than it is to remember them,”
Joanna added.
Then, as they stepped off the rail and started toward the
house, Butch drove into the yard. Again the dogs rode in the back with their
heads thrust out the open windows.
As soon as Butch opened the door, the two dogs leaped out
and gamboled over to Jenny. Only after greeting her did they make for their
water.
“I see you let them ride again,” Joanna said, walking up
to kiss him hello. If he was still angry about the train situation, it didn’t
show.
He kissed her back and then frowned at the dogs. “I remembered
what you said about spoiling them,” he said. “I tried to get them to run home,
but Sadie wasn’t having any of it. She lay down in the middle of the road and
wouldn’t budge. I had to go back and get her. Once she was in the car, Tigger
wanted to ride, too.”
“It’s all right,” Joanna said. “I was teasing.”
Butch glanced down at Joanna’s clothing and then checked
his watch. “It’s only five now. How long have you been home?”
Joanna shrugged. A couple of hours. Jenny and I have been cleaning
Kiddo’s stall and putting out hay.”
“Why so early?”
“I gave myself part of the afternoon off,” she said.
“How come?”
“Politics,” she said.
“I see,” Butch said. “Come tell me about it while I fix
dinner.”
Inside the house, Jenny and the dogs disappeared into her
room. Relieved that things were better with Butch, Joanna sat in the breakfast
nook and sipped at a soda while he hustled around the kitchen. There was no
point in asking if she could help. Years of being a short-order cook made Butch’s
culinary efforts far supe hot. to Joanna’s limited skills in that regard. His
movements were quick, decisive, and economical.
Joanna told him everything—about the Rochelle Baxter/ Latisha
Wall case as well as the difficult board of supervisors meeting and Marliss
Shackleford’s hurtful column. Somehow, though, she neglected to mention the
heart-to-heart she and Jenny had shared outside Kiddo’s corral.
“It sounds like Marliss is throwing her lot in with your
opposition,” Butch said when she finished relating the part about the column.
“Any idea who that’s going to be?”
“Not really,” Joanna said. “I have my suspicions. It was
Ken Galloway who raised such a stink about Yolanda’s Fallen Officer funeral. I
wouldn’t be surprised to learn he’s Marliss Shackleford’s ‘unnamed source.’ “
Butch stopped with a half-peeled potato in one hand and
the paring knife in the other. “Do you think Galloway might run against you?”
he asked.
Joanna nodded. “It’s possible.”
“That’s my guess, too,” Butch agreed.
The phone rang, and Joanna hurried to answer it. “Howdy, boss,”
Jaime Carbajal said. “Sorry to bother you at home.”
“It’s all right. What’s up?”
“I had an appointment to finish my interview with Dee Canfield
today. Like I told you, I did a preliminary with her yesterday, but she was so
anxious about getting ready for the show that she barely paid attention to my
questions. Since she was so distracted, I made an appointment to see her this
afternoon at the gallery.”
“And?”
“She wasn’t there. Her boyfriend wasn’t, either. The place
is still closed up tight, just like it was last night. The sign’s still on the door.
There were two notices—one from FedEx and one from UPS—saying they had
attempted deliveries.”
Joanna felt a twinge of concern. She had been pleased to
hear Dee had canceled the show, thinking the gallery owner had come to her senses.
Now there was a far more ominous possibility. Only one person in town had been
absolutely determined to shut down that grand-opening party.
“Did you go by her house?” Joanna asked. “Maybe she’s ill.”
“Sure did. She lives on Cochise Drive out in Huachuca
Terraces. I stopped by twice,” Jaime said. “Nobody was home. The blinds are
down and the curtains closed. Something’s not right here, Sheriff. I have a
really bad feeling about it. If there’s still no sign of her or Warren Gibson
by tomorrow morning, I should probably get search warrants and go through both
the house and the gallery”
“Maybe they decided to take a few days off,” Joanna suggested.
“I doubt that,” Jaime said. “For one thing, I talked to
Gina Dodd at Desert Stairs Catering. Dee hired Gina to supply the food fin last
night’s party. The first Gina knew about the cancellation was when she showed
up with a vanful of food and found the sign on the gallery door. Gina says Dee
never would have done that without calling. She says that’s not the way Dee
Canfield does business. Gina’s convinced something is terribly wrong.”
“Do you think Gina Dodd’s word will be enough for you to
get a search warrant? And will you be able to get one on Saturday morning?”
“By the time I talked to Phyllis Kelly, Judge Moore’s
clerk, he was gone for the day,” Jaime replied. “He and his wife have a dinner
engagement in Tucson. I’ll have to catch up with him in the morning. Phyllis
says I can bring the paperwork by his house then.”
“Did you talk to Bobo Jenkins about any of this?” Joanna
asked. “I le had a disagreement with Dee Canfield over Rochelle Baxter’s show,
but I believe he and Dec have been friends for a long time. Maybe he knows
where Dee and Warren might have gone off to.”
“I didn’t actually talk to Bobo today,” Jaime said. “What
I got instead was a call from Burton Kimball. He says he’ll be along for the
ride when Bobo Jenkins comes to talk to us at ten o’clock tomorrow morning.”
Joanna was surprised. “Bobo’s bringing Cochise County’s
premier defense attorney along for the interview? How come?”
“You tell me. I told Mr. Kimball all we want is to ask
Bobo a few routine questions. Burton hinted that he thought our reasons for
wanting to talk to his client were possibly politically or racially motivated.”
“Politically or racially motivated?” Joanna repeated. “What
kind of nonsense is that?”
“I’ve heard talk that Bobo Jenkins is thinking of running
for mayor,” Jaime offered.
“He can run for governor, for all I care,” Joanna shot
back, angered by the implication. “Bobo is one of the last people who saw
Latisha Wall alive. He was also raising hell in Castle Rock Gallery yesterday
morning, not long before Dee Canfield and Warren Gibson disappeared. Of course
we need to talk to him. That’s not race or politics; that’s police work. If
Bobo feels a need to have Burton Kimball along to hold his hand, it’s his
problem, not ours.”
There was a pause. “Are you okay, boss?” Jaime asked.
“What do you mean, am I okay?” Joanna demanded, trying not
to sound as irritable as she felt. “Of course I’m okay.”
“Kristin told me that you went home early, which, you have
to admit, isn’t like you,” he said. “She thought you weren’t feeling well, and
you do sound a little ...”
“A little what?”
“Well ... cranky,” Jaime replied reluctantly.
Joanna didn’t want to sound cranky. Or unreasonable. “I’m
fine, Jaime,” she assured him, deliberately softening her tone “What time is
that Bobo Jenkins interview again?”
“Ten.”
When her other homicide detective, Ernie Carpenter, had
asked to take a full week of vacation all at once, it hadn’t seemed like that
big a deal. “When’s Ernie due home?” she asked.
“Monday.”
“I wish it was sooner, but that’s the way it is. All
right, then. If Bobo is bringing the big guns in with him, you’d better have
some backup as well. Call Frank Montoya and ask him to be there with you.”
“Will do,” Jaime agreed.
“All the same,” Joanna added, “I’ll be in the office. When
you’re done with the interview, come tell me how it went.”
“Okeydokey,” Jaime Carbajal responded. “Who needs
week-ends anyway?”
He hung up and Joanna turned back to Butch. “What was that
all about?” he asked.
Joanna explained as best she could.
“Dee Canfield,” Butch said. “The woman who disappeared.
Who’s she again?”
“She owns the gallery where Rochelle/Latisha’s art was
going to he exhibited. Even with the artist dead, she was going to go through
with the grand opening last night, but then she didn’t. Jaime Carbajal tried to
go to the party himself, but the gallery was closed up tight, and it still is,
more than twenty-four hours later.”
Butch lifted a pot lid to check on the potatoes. “I can
hardly wait to read next week’s paper,” he said. “No doubt Marliss will figure
out a way to make all of this your fault as well.”
At that moment Jenny meandered into the kitchen. “What’s
your fault?” she asked, opening the refrigerator door and examining the
contents. “What’s for dinner?” she added. “It smells good, and I’m starved.”
“Pork chops and gravy,” Butch replied. ‘Along with mashed
potatoes, string beans, and apple sauce.”
“Great,” Jenny said. “Everything except the string beans.”
Butch’s fried pork chops were her unqualified favorite. Reaching for a clean
glass, she poured herself some milk.
“So what’s your fault, Mom?” Jenny asked, sipping her milk
and studying her mother’s face over the rim of the glass.
At the moment, one person is dead and two others are missing,”
Butch explained. “I was saying that in Marliss Shackleford’s next column, she’ll
probably try to blame all of it on your mother. That’s Marliss’ usual modus
operandi.”
“Oh,” Jenny said, taking her half-empty glass and heading
into the dining room. “Is that all? I thought you guys were back to talking
about putting a train track in the family room.”
Butch shot Joanna a quizzical look. Joanna sighed.
Thanks, Jen,
she
thought. You’ve just provided a perfect ending to a perfect day!
CHAPTER EIGHT
It wasn’t a particularly nice way to begin celebrating my
birthday. For one thing, I had to be up and out of Belltown Terrace by five in
the morning in order to make that 7 A.M. Alaska Airlines flight to Tucson. It
was pitch-dark as I climbed into a cigarette-smoke-saturated cab driven by a
non communicative maniac. I wasn’t about to give the state of Washington access
to the condo’s communal limo.
The rain was pouring down as we headed for the airport,
but I didn’t regard that as any kind of ill omen. After all, it was the last
week in October. Everybody knows it rains like mad in Seattle in October. And
maybe that’s why the seven-o’clock plane to Tucson was loaded to the gills. It
was full of people wanting to trade chill autumn rain for one last glimpse of
sun along with a whole wad of purple-and-gold-bedecked rowdy Husky fans on
their way to a U Dub/U of A football game.
When I reached my row, I discovered I was in the back of
the plane in the middle seat, squashed between two very large men. I’m not
exactly a lightweight, but these two guys dwarfed me. One was a
twenty-something weight lifter with massive shoulders. The other was in his
mid-to-late seventies and had probably never been in a gym in his life. His
shoulder muscles had come about the old-fashioned way—by doing hard physical
labor. He was an old codger with several missing teeth and amazingly bad
breath. He read every word of his in-flight magazine, moving his lips constantly
and showing off those missing teeth as he did so.
Resigned to two and a half hours of misery, I settled into
my seat as best I could, closing my eyes and hoping to nap my way to Arizona. I
willed myself into unconsciousness and thought about the previous evening’s
night on the town with Naomi Pepper.
We’d had a nice-enough dinner. The food at Bis on Main was
wonderful and the service impeccable. Even so, the evening hadn’t turned out to
be the complete success either Naomi or I had envisioned. I could tell when I
stopped by the mall to pick her up after work that Naomi wasn’t a happy camper.
“What’s wrong?” I asked.
“It’s my mother,” she said.
In the month or so that Naomi Pepper and I had been
hanging out together, I had gleaned bits and pieces of information about her
mother, Katherine Foley. Putting those pieces together, I had determined
Katherine was something of a handful. Twice widowed and once divorced, she had
now been abandoned by her most recent boy toy.
Some of Katherine’s wilder antics—like insisting on doing
her weekly shopping at midnight in her local Albertson’s in full evening-wear
regalia—verged on Auntie Mame behavior. It’s easier to deal with Auntie Mame
when the person in question is some distant relative, preferably a second
cousin. When the kook turns out to be your very own mother, all bets are off. That
evening I realized that being Katherine Foley’s daughter had turned into tough
duty for Naomi Pepper.
“What about her?” I asked.
To my surprise, Naomi’s eyes filled with tears. “Let’s not
talk about it right now,” she said. “We’re having a fun birthday celebration. I
don’t want anything to spoil it.”
“Tell me about your mother,” I insisted.
“She wants to move in with me,” Naomi said finally, after
taking a deep breath. “She’s just this week been diagnosed with Parkinson’s.
She’s worried about continuing to live on her on now that Geoff has taken off
for parts unknown. I don’t know much about Parkinson’s disease, but I suppose
she has a point. But she’s so incredibly bossy, Beau. She’s forever trying to
run my life by remote control. If I let her move in ...”
Naomi’s voice trailed off, and I could guess at what wasn’t
being said. Naomi Pepper is one of the nicest people I’ve ever met. Nice as in
kind. Nice as in loving. Nice as in giving you the shirt off her back and
caring about everyone else first and herself last, often to her own detriment.
The problem is, the world is full of not-nice people who prey on the ones who
are, people who have zero compunction about taking advantage of their victims.
Naomi Pepper’s husband, Gary, is a prime case in point.
Gary hadn’t quite finished divorcing her when he was diagnosed
with liver cancer. His girlfriend wouldn’t look after him, so he had dragged
his dying butt back home to Naomi. And, because she’s a nice person, she had
taken him in and cared for him until his death several months later.
Then there’s Naomi’s daughter, Melissa. She may not be
Gary’s biological daughter, but she’s still a chip off the old block. The
hair-raising stories I’d heard about Missy’s formative years put her in a class
with the rotten little kid in that old movie The Bad Seed. From seventh
grade on, Missy Pepper had been a mess—in and out of juvie and rehab and on and
off the streets. Despite Melissa’s propensity for getting into trouble, Naomi
loves the girl to distraction and has stuck with her through some very rough
times. Naomi may have been introduced to the concept of tough love, but I’m
sure she’ll be there to bail Melissa out of trouble the next time the girl
needs bailing.
What I thought Naomi Pepper herself needed right then was
a vacation from troublesome relatives. Here, though, was her mother, prepared
to waltz into Naomi’s life as yet another patient in need of nursing and
attention.
Let me be clear: I wasn’t being totally altruistic. I know
the younger set is under the impression that adult sex drives disappear
completely somewhere around age thirty-seven. But that’s not true. At least
mine hasn’t. Still, the idea of having a sexual interlude in a bedroom where
someone’s aging mother might possibly burst in on the scene at any moment
encourages a degree of sexual malfunction that no amount of Viagra can fix.
In other words, I wanted Katherine Foley to live somewhere
else, but I was hoping for subtlety. I tried to avoid saying it in so many
words. What I said instead was, “Are you sure you want to do that—take her in,
I mean?”
“I don’t have a choice,” Naomi said. “I’m an only child.”
“Does your mother have money?”
Harry I. Ball isn’t alone in asking nothing but questions
for which he already knows the answers. It’s one of the oldest ploys in an
experienced interrogator’s bag of tricks, one I myself utilized to good effect
during the years I worked as a homicide detective at Seattle PD. In this case I
happened to know that the answer to my money question was an unequivocal yes.
Naomi had mentioned on several occasions—occasions when the mother-daughter guilt
card wasn’t faceup on the table—that Katherine Foley’s various ventures into
the world of holy matrimony had left her Fairly well off, much better off
financially than her daughter, who still had to go to work at The Bon every day
to earn her keep.
“Some,” Naomi allowed now.
“Couldn’t she move into an assisted-living place? Beverly
and Lars live in one of those, you know. They’re in Queen Anne Gardens, up at
the top of the Counterbalance. It’s very nice. At least it seems nice to me.”
Beverly Piedmont, my widowed, eighty-six-year-old
grandmother, had recently married Lars Jenssen, my AA sponsor, who’s a spry
eighty-seven. After their wedding, they moved into a retirement center on top
of Seattle’s Queen Anne Hill, where they seem to be enjoying themselves
immensely. The common areas of what they call “the home” resemble the lobby of
a posh hotel. The rooms and corridors are brightly painted and well-lit. The
floors are covered with bluish-green carpets that look new and smell clean.
At Queen Anne Gardens, Lars and Beverly had signed up for
a plan that comes complete with linen service as well as three hot meals a day.
The food is plentiful and palatable, with no need to shop or cook beforehand or
to wash up and put away dishes afterward. Beverly Piedmont Jenssen had spent
more than five decades cooking and serving three meals a day, with little or no
help from my now deceased grandfather. As far as she’s concerned, being
relieved of KP duty qualifies as nothing short of heaven on earth. And, since
Beverly is happy, Lars is happy, too.
“Does your mother have any pets?” I asked.
Naomi nodded. “A cocker named Spade,” she said. “He’s
eleven.”
“According to Lars, some of the residents have pets,” I
hinted. “There may be a size restriction. You probably couldn’t get away with
bringing along an Irish wolfhound, but I’m sure a cocker spaniel would qualify”
“Mother won’t go,” Naomi said flatly.
“How do you know that?” I said. “Have you asked her?”
“No, but I know my mother,” Naomi replied. “She’d rather
die than have to go live in a place like that.”
Watch out,
I
wanted to warn Naomi. You’re about to be suckered. But I didn’t. I kept
my mouth shut because I’ve learned over the years that when it comes to minding
other people’s business, I always wind up getting myself in trouble.
Alaska Air Lines Flight 790 had reached what the pilot
called a “comfortable cruising altitude.” That was easy for him to say. He wasn’t
jammed into the middle of a three-seat row. About that time the guy in front of
me leaned his seat back all the way, crushing both my kneecaps. Is it any
wonder I’m not much of a fan of air travel? I don’t know many people over six
feet tall who are.
The weight lifter next to the window—the guy whose humongous
shoulders overlapped my seat by a good three inches—suddenly needed to get up.
Climbing over both me and Mr. Moving Lips, he removed a laptop computer from
the overhead compartment and turned it on. I thought he was going to work on
something interesting. Instead, he began playing solitaire. The only time he
paused was during the couple of minutes it took him to plow his way through his
English muffin /scrambled egg sandwich. It wouldn’t have been so bad if he had
been any good at solitaire, but he wasn’t. He’d sit there not making moves
that I could see and he couldn’t.
I would have gone back to thinking about Naomi, but
between the lip-moving reader on one side and the solitaire player on the
other, it wasn’t possible. Finally, with my seat mates seemingly preoccupied
with their own activities, I opened my own briefcase, took out the Latisha Wall
file, and commenced to reread the reports I found there. As soon as I started
working, the weight lifter abandoned his solitaire game in favor of engaging me
in polite conversation. Rather than let him read over my shoulder, I put the
file away.
Guess what he wanted to talk about? Working out. It seen
his father was a championship weight lifter in the age fifty-five-to-sixty-five
category. Father and son worked out at the same gym where all the other weight
lifters thought the father-and-son act was cool. Since they had bonded so well
this way, the weight lifter felt free to tell me that he thought everybody else
should do the same thing. And so on and so on. At tedious length. I was tempted
to tell him this would be difficult for me since I never knew my Father, but
even that probably wouldn’t have shut him up.
I was trapped with no means of escape. It reached a point
where I would have welcomed a comment from the guy on the other side, but he
continued to read his magazine in total, lip-moving concentration.
Eventually—and not nearly soon enough—the pilot announced
that we were beginning our gradual descent into Tucson International, which—as
far as I could see from my limited middle-seat view—seemed to consist of a vast
sea of brown. Brown or not, I was looking forward to landing. That would mean
the guy who was crushing my knees would have to put his seat back in the full
upright and locked position. I thought my troubles would soon be over. They
weren’t. Once I managed to escape from the plane, my life immediately got
worse.
Compared to Sea-Tac, Tucson International Airport is small
potatoes. I collected my luggage and walked down the car-rental isle, looking for
a counter called Saguaro Discount Rental, the car-rental agency listed on my
itinerary. I finally stopped at the Alamo desk and asked one of the women
working there.
“That’s pronounced ‘sa-waro,’ “ she told mQ, rolling her
eyes. It’s Spanish, so the g is pronounced like a w. They’re
off-site. You have to call on their courtesy phone. It’s over there on the
wall. They’ll send a shuttle to pick you up.”
No matter how you pronounce it, the office and lot for
Saguaro Discount Rental was more than a mile from the airport. As soon as I saw
their fleet of brightly colored KIAs—all of them last year’s model—I knew that
the Washington State Attorney’s penny-pinching travel agent had struck again.
My car was a four-cylinder automatic KIA Sportage SUV, a name that sounds a
whole lot more sporting and exotic than it is.
I admit to being spoiled. At Seattle PD I often drove
vehicles equipped with police pursuit engines. Meanwhile, parked on the P-3
level of the Belltown Terrace garage is my slick guard’s red 928. Even so, I do
have some experience at driving four-cylinder vehicles. I spent eight years—the
whole time I was in college and four years afterward—driving an old-time VW
Beetle, but that was a standard four-speed, not an automatic. My rental
Sportage did fine as long as I was driving on flat ground. It was only when I
started up an incline, even a gradual one, that it lugged down so far that it
seemed I was barely moving. Compared to the rest of the
seventy-five-mile-an-hour traffic on the freeway, I wasn’t.
My printed MapQuest directions said it would take me two
hours and twelve minutes to get from Tucson to Bisbee. It actually took
forty-five minutes longer than that because the road was uphill most of the
way. By the time I came chugging up over the mountain pass just north of
Bisbee, I was beginning to think I’d never get there. The good news is, moving
that slowly I had plenty of time to survey the scenery. I found myself
regretting not having brought along a pair of sunglasses, but in the dark and
wet of pre-dawn Seattle, sunglasses hadn’t seemed like a pressing necessity.
The mountainous terrain on either side of the highway leading
to Bisbee was either reddish brown or gray. The hillsides were dotted with
green specks I assumed to be bushes of some kind. Then, as I started up the
north side of the Mule Mountains, I realized those bushes were really
full-fledged trees after all. They’re not the kind of towering, stately
evergreens we have in Washington. No, these starved and stunted trees did have
leaves on them, but there was no hint that they were about to change colors or
drop off.
Every once in a while, winding along what looked like a
dry creek bed, I’d see a stand of much bigger trees that had leaves that were
beginning to change, but just barely. I’ve never beer much of a botanist, but I
found this astonishing. Back home it Seattle, many of the trees that line the
avenues were already mostly bare.
I drove through a tunnel—the Mule Mountain Tunnel, I believe
it’s called—near the top of that range of mountains. When I emerged from the
tunnel, the town of Bisbee lay nestled in a red-hued canyon that twisted down
the other side. Seeing the town for the first time gave me an odd sensation. It
seemed so isolated, as though the entire rest of the world were on the far side
of those mountains. The Bisbee side—with a brilliant-blue sky above it—was a
world unto itself, like a self-sufficient castle with a wide moat of desert all
around it.
That’s when it struck me. This place—this small, isolated
mining town—had been Anne Corley’s world when she was a young innocent girl.
This was where she had grown up and where she had first run off the rails. And
that one thought about Anne Corley was enough to wipe all concerns about Naomi
Pepper and her aging mother right out of my head.
I had arrived in town shortly after one on Saturday,
probably far too early to check in to my hotel. Considering the car I was
driving, I was under no delusions that I had been booked into luxury
accommodations. And so, since I wasn’t on vacation anyway, I followed the next
set of incredibly confusing directions that were supposed to take me to a place
called the Cochise County Justice Center.
I wound down a long canyon, through an abandoned open-pit
mine, and around a traffic circle. It took several turns around the circle and
more than one false start before I finally turned off on Highway 8o toward
Douglas. For the better part of a mile I drove along a huge flat mound of red
rocks that stretched along the highway. I assumed this had to be waste that had
been removed from the open-pit mine I had just driven through. Beyond the dump,
although the desert near at hand continued to be of that strange Mars-like
shade of red, the cliff-lined hills that jutted up a mile or so beyond it were
a dull, uninspiring gray that reminded me of Seattle’s winter skies.
The Cochise County Justice Center was on the left-hand
side of the road a couple of miles out of town. To get into the parking lot, I
had to cross a rough metal grating. The cluster of buildings I found there was
about as different from Seattle’s Public Safety Building as possible. Of
single-story construction, they spread across a wide swath of desert. The
exterior walls were reddish brown in the early-afternoon sun. They might have
been made by simply scooping up the surrounding earth and turning that into
building material. The campus was good-looking enough, I suppose. It might even
have been mistaken for a school if it hadn’t been for the curls of razor wire
that surrounded what was evidently the jail.
I drove my panting Sportage into the public parking lot
and got out of the car. Missing my sunglasses even more, I went looking for a
lady sheriff named Joanna Brady.
Joanna arrived at the office at nine that Saturday morning.
She put down her purse and called Jaime Carbajal. “Any sign of Dee Canfield or
Warren Gibson?” she asked.
“Not so far, boss. I stopped by her house again this
morning. Nothing’s changed since yesterday.”
“What about the search warrant?”
“I’ve got a problem with that, too. Judge and Mrs. Moore
must have stayed over in Tucson last night. They’re still not home. I won’t be
able to do anything about a warrant until after the Bobo Jenkins interview”
“That’s fine,” Joanna said. “The warrant can wait.”
Once again she tackled the endless stream of paperwork. At
ten o’clock she was studying the latest vacation schedule and shift rotations
when she saw Frank Montoya and Jaime Carbajal escort Bobo Jenkins and Burton
Kimball into the conference room down the hall.
Dressed in a jacket and tie, Bobo didn’t look nearly as
intimidating as he had in the Castle Rock Gallery two days earlier. At the
time, Joanna had thought she had derailed his anger and that he no longer posed
any kind of threat to Dee Canfield. Now Joanna wasn’t so sure about that. Both
the gallery owner and her boyfriend were presumed missing, and Bobo Jenkins had
come to a routine interview with a defense lawyer in tow.
When I’m wrong, I do it up brown, Joanna told herself.
Shaking her head, she returned to the rotation schedule. A
few minutes later, Dave Hollicker knocked on the casing of her open office
door. “May I come in?” he asked.
“Sure,” she said, looking up. “Have a seat. What’s going
on? And why are you at work on a Saturday morning?”
After the previous day’s budget-cutting ordeal with the
board of supervisors, Joanna knew that, from now on, she would have to curtail
overtime wages.
Dave seemed to read her mind. “I know Casey and I weren’t
scheduled to work today,” he said, “but there’s so much crime scene evidence to
process, we thought you’d want us to get on it as soon as possible.”
I may,
Joanna
thought. Charles Neighbors may have other ideas.
“Next time, you’d better have the overtime authorized
beforehand,” she said. “But I can see from your face that you’ve found
something, and I’m guessing it’s not good news.”
Dave sighed. “You know Bobo Jenkins came by the department
on Thursday afternoon to see Casey.”
Joanna nodded. “Right. I’m the one who told him we’d need
his prints. Why?”
“Casey’s found Mr. Jenkins’s prints on the empty sweetener
packets we pulled out of the trash at Latisha Wall’s place.”
“Of course they are,” Joanna agreed. “He told me he’d been
to see her Wednesday evening. He also said he’d had a drink. If he had tea or
coffee, it’s to be expected that his prints would show up on some of the
sweetener packets.”
“The problem is,” Dave said, “they may be sweetener
packets, but what’s in them isn’t sweetener.”
Joanna felt a familiar clutch in her gut. If the sweetener
packets had been tampered with, it was likely Doc Winfield was right. “You’re
saying Latisha Wall really was poisoned?”
“All I’m saying right now, Sheriff Brady, is that some of
the packets appear to have been tampered with,” Dave replied. “They were slit
open and then carefully resealed. When Casey was straightening one of them so
she could lilt prints off the outside, she noticed white powder clinging to
something tacky inside. You know how those little packets work. Usually the
paper isn’t sticky at all. So we checked the other packets, including several
of the supposedly unopened ones we took from the crime scene. Most of them are
fine. Three of them aren’t.”
“Do you have the contents from those three unopened
packets?” Dave nodded.
“Any idea what it is?”
“None. I tried taking just a little whiff to see if there
was any odor. I started feeling woozy. Whatever it is, it’s powerful stuff. I’ve
put the remaining packets in stainless-steel containers.”
“Good,” Joanna said. “You’d better hustle whatever you’ve
got up to the DPS satellite crime lab in Tucson. Get them working on it ASAP.
If they give you any grief, have them call me personally, understand?”
Taking that for a dismissal, Dave Hollicker stood. “Yes,
ma’am,” he said. “I’ll get on it right away.”
“Wait,” Joanna added, holding up her hand. “One more
thing. Does Jaime Carbajal know about this?”
Dave shook his head. “As I was coming over from the lab,
he was already in the conference room with the OCCUPIED sign showing. A clerk
told me he and Chief Deputy Montoya are conducting an interview. Rather than
interrupt, I came to you instead.”
“Thanks, Dave,” she said. “I’ll take it from here. You get
that stuff to the crime lab.”
Joanna sat at her desk for a few moments after Dave left
her office. Naturally, a mere deputy would have been wary about interrupting an
ongoing homicide interview. Under most circumstances, interrupting detectives
at work didn’t seem like a good idea to Sheriff Joanna Brady, either. However,
she was in possession of vital information that Jaime Carbajal needed to have
now, while he was still interviewing Bobo Jenkins, rather than later, when it
no longer mattered.
Hustling to the conference room door, Joanna ignored the
OCCUPIED sign and let herself in. As she entered, she was greeted by the sound
of raised voices.
“Don’t keep calling her Latisha Wall, Detective Carbajal,”
Bobo Jenkins growled. “I’m telling you, I don’t know anyone by that
name. The woman I knew was Rochelle Baxter. Shelley. She’s the one I came here
to talk about.”
Joanna heard the overwrought man’s voice falter on the
word “Shelley.” She winced at the audible hurt in that word. Bobo Jenkins was
angry and grieving both. He sat still, his powerful arms folded across a
massive chest. His jaws were clenched so tightly that the muscles in his cheeks
twitched. Burton Kimball, seated next to his client, reached over and touched
Bobo’s shoulder. The attorney was the first person in the room to notice Joanna’s
arrival.
He stood and held out his hand. “Good morning, Sheriff
Brady,” he said politely. “So glad you could join us.”
Joanna ignored Jaime’s impatient scowl and returned the
greeting. Then she turned to her detective. “Could I speak to you for a moment,
please, Detective Carbajal?” she asked, beckoning him toward the door.
Jaime rose at once and followed Joanna out into the lobby.
“What’s going on in there?” she asked.
Jaime shrugged. “You heard some of it. Bobo insists he
knows nothing about Rochelle Baxter’s other life. As you can see, he’s more
than a little upset about it.’’
“Why wouldn’t he be?” Joanna returned. “Someone he cared
about is dead. It must seem to him as though we’re treating him more like a
suspect than a witness. No wonder he’s upset. Bu that’s not why I called you
out here, Jaime. Dave Hollicker and Casey Ledford have come up with something
important.”
“What?”
“Several of the sweetener packets they removed from the
crime scene appear to have been tampered with. They contain at unknown
substance Dave is taking to the DPS crime lab in Tucson for analysis and
identification. Not only that, Casey found Bobo Jenkins’s fingerprints on some
of the tampered packets that were empty. When I talked to Bobo right after we
found Latisha Wall’s body, Bobo told me he had been to her place the evening
she died to have a drink.”
“In other words, if his prints are on the sweetener
packets why isn’t he dead, too?”
“Exactly,” Joanna said. “I thought you’d want to know about
this as you go forward with the interview”
Jaime nodded. “Thanks,” he said. With that, he turned and
let himself back into the conference room.
Joanna stared at the closed door and thought about what
kind of person would knowingly place a fatal dose of poison in some one else’s
glass, especially when the unsuspecting victim wit someone close—a lover, a
friend. Joanna had thought Bobo Jenkins capable of striking out in anger, but
that was vastly different from committing cold, premeditated murder.
Just thinking about it was enough to leave Joanna feeling
chilled and sick at heart.
CHAPTER NINE
For the next two and a half hours, Joanna waited
impatiently for the Bobo Jenkins interview to come to an end. During that time,
she would have welcomed Kristin’s waddling into her office to pile another load
of correspondence onto her desk. Unfortunately, an hour into the process, her
jungle of paperwork was entirely cleared away. All e-mails had been answered,
all memos duly signed off on. Desperate to keep herself occupied, Joanna
rummaged through a stack of previously unread issues of Law Enforcement
Digest and the Arizona Sheriffs’ Association Newsletter, where she
actually scanned several of the articles. By twelve-thirty she had been reduced
to the rarely performed task of cleaning her desk.
When someone knocked on the doorjamb a while later, Joanna
looked up eagerly, hoping for Jaime Carbajal or Frank Montoya. Instead, Lupe
Alvarez, one of the public lobby receptionists, stood in the doorway.
“Yes?” Joanna said.
“There’s someone to see you, Sheriff Brady. Do you want me
to bring him back?”
“Who is it?”
“He gave his name and showed me a badge. He’s Special Investigator
Beaumont, J.P. Beaumont, from Seattle, Washington.” So, she thought, Mr.
J.P. Bird Dog has arrived.
No doubt the big-city cop who was here to screw up her
investigation and look down his nose at her department would expect to find a
small-town sheriff in a squalid office with her shirtsleeve rolled up and her
feet planted on her desk. She was glad to be in uniform that day and grateful
that her office was, for a change, in pristine order.
“Thanks, Lupe,” she said. “I’ll come out and get him
myself.’
Lupe disappeared. Joanna checked her makeup and hair in the
mirror before venturing into the lobby. As she stepped through the secured
door, she glanced around the room. The only visibly visitor was a tall,
broad-shouldered man with a gray crew cut and a loose-fitting sport coat. He
stood at the far end of the room examining a glass case that contained a
display of black-and-white photos of the current sheriff of Cochise County
along with all her male predecessors.
The photos of the men were all formal portraits. Most of
them had posed in Western garb that included visible weapons. Their faces were
set in serious, unapproachable expressions. Joanna’s picture stood in stark
contrast to the rest. The informal snapshot, taken by her father, showed her as
a grinning Brownie Scout pulling a Radio Flyer wagon loaded front-to-back with
stacked boxes of Girl Scout cookies.
As Joanna’s uninvited visitor lingered in front of the display
case, Joanna wished for the first time that she had knuckled under to one of
Eleanor Lathrop Winfield’s never-ending hits of motherly advice. Eleanor had
tried to convince Joanna that she should do what the previous sheriffs had done
and use her official, professionally done campaign photo in the display. She
realized now that it wouldn’t be easy for her to be taken seriously by this
unwelcome emissary from the Washington State Attorney General’s Office if his
first impression of Sheriff Joanna Brady was as a care-free eight-year-old out
selling Girl Scout cookies.
“Mr. Beaumont?” she asked, holding out her hand and straining
to sound more cordial than she felt. She wasn’t especially interested in
making him feel welcome, since he was anything but. As he turned toward her,
she realized he stood well over six feet. Naturally, at five feet four, she
felt dwarfed beside him. She held herself erect, hoping to appear taller.
“I’m Sheriff Brady,” she said.
As he returned her handshake, Joanna realized J.P.
Beaumont wasn’t a particularly handsome man. Despite herself, though, she was
drawn to the pattern of smile lines that crinkled around his eyes. At least
smiling isn’t an entirely foreign activity, she thought.
“Glad to meet you,” he said, pumping her small hand with
his much larger one. “I’m Beaumont—Special Investigator J.P. Beaumont. Most
people call me Beau.”
“What can I do for you?” she asked.
“I believe we need to talk,” he replied.
“In that case,” she said, “we’d better go to my office.”
I had been waiting for Sheriff Brady for several minutes, but
she surprised me when she walked up behind me without making a sound. Her
bright red hair was cut short. The emerald green eyes that studied me could
have sparked lire. She wore dark olive-green uniform, which looked
exceptionally good on her since she filled it out in all the right places. If
it hadn’t been for the forbidding frown on her face, she might have been
pretty. Instead she looked as if she had just bitten into an apple and
discoverer half a worm. In other words, she wasn’t glad to see me.
I followed Sheriff Brady from the public lobby into her
private office, realizing as I did so that I hadn’t expected her to be so short
in every sense of the word. She waited until she had closed the door behind us
before she really turned on me. “What exactly de you want?” she demanded.
I know how, as a detective, I used to hate having outside
interference in one of my cases, so I didn’t expect her to welcome me with open
arms. But I hadn’t foreseen outright hostility, either.
“We have a case to solve,” I began.
“We?” she returned sarcastically. “I have a case to solve.
My department has a case to solve. There’s no we about it.”
“The Washington State Attorney General’s Office has a vested
interest in your solving this case,” I said.
“So I’ve heard,” she responded, crossing her arms and
drilling into me with those amazingly green eyes.
In that moment Sheriff Joanna Brady reminded me eerily o
Miss Edith Heard, a young, fearsomely outspoken geometry teacher from my days
at Seattle’s Ballard High School. At the time I was in her class, Miss Heard
must have been only a few years older than her students, but she brooked no
nonsense. After suffering through two semesters of geometry that I barely
managed to pass, I had fled in terror from any further ventures into higher
math.
Like Joanna Brady, Miss Heard had been short, red-haired,
and green-eyed, and she had scared the hell out of me. But a lot of time had
passed since then. I wasn’t nearly as terrified by Joanna Brady as I was
annoyed. And it wasn’t lost on me that she hadn’t offered me a chair.
“Look,” I said impatiently, “today happens to be my
birthday. There are any number of ways I’d rather be spending it than being
hassled by you. So how about if we cut the crap and get our jobs done so I can
go back home.”
She never even blinked. “Your going home sounds good,” she
said. “Now, if the Washington State Attorney General is so vitally interested
in this case—”
“The AG’s name is Connors,” I interjected. “Mr. Ross Connors.
He’s my boss.”
“If Mr. Connors is so vitally interested in this case, why
can’t I get any information about Latisha Wall out of his office?”
I set my briefcase down on a nearby conference table and
flicked open the lid. “You can,” I said, extracting Latisha Wall’s file from my
briefcase. “That’s why I’m here.” I handed it over to her. She took it. Then,
without opening the file or even glancing at it, she walked over to her desk
and put it down.
“I’m delighted to know that Mr. Connors’s office has the
financial wherewithal to have files hand-delivered by personally authorized
couriers. It seems to me it would have made more sense for him to fax it. All
we needed were straight answers to a few questions. Instead, we got
stonewalled, Mr. Beaumont. And now we have you,” she added. “When you get
around to it, you might let Mr. Connors know that the Cochise County Sheriff’s
Department doesn’t require the assistance of one of his personal emissaries.”
The lady was getting under my skin. I pulled out a
business card and handed it to her.
“I’m not an emissary,” I said. ‘As you can see, I’m an
investigator a special investigator working for the attorney general. Latisha
Wall was in our witness protection program. Mr. Connors needs to know whether
or not her death is related to her being in that program. If not, fine. What
happened is on your turf. It’s your problem and not ours. But if it is related,”
I added, “if Latisha Wall died because someone wanted to keep her from giving
potentially damaging testimony in a court of law, then it’s our problem as much
as it is yours. Whoever killed her should never have been able to find her in
the first place.”
“In other words, your witness protection program has a leak
and you’re the plumber sent here to plug it,” Sheriff Brady returned.
“Exactly,” I said.
She recrossed her arms. “Tell me about Latisha Wall,” she
said.
I had read through the file several times by then. I didn’t
need to consult it as I related the story. “After graduating from high school,
Latisha Wall did two stints in the Marines where she worked primarily as an MP.
Once she got out of the service, she went to work for an outfit from Chicago
called UPPI. Ever heard of them?”
“I know all of that,” Sheriff Brady said.
“You do?”
She smiled. “We only look like we live in the sticks, Mr.
Beaumont. Have you ever heard of the Internet? My chief deputy Frank Montoya,
was able to glean that much information from newspaper articles. What else?”
Score one for Joanna Brady.
“Mind if I sit down?”
“Please do,” she said. She motioned me into a chair and
then sat behind a huge desk that was so impossibly clean it was frightening. I
worry about people with oppressively clean desks.
“So in the nineties,” I continued, “United Private
Prisons, Incorporated, saw coming what they thought was a long-term
prisoner-incarceration boom. They set out to corner themselves a piece of that
market. The state of Washington went for them in a big way, and when it came to
picking up one of those lucrative state contracts, it didn’t hurt to have an
African-American female on board to help deal with all those pesky EEOC
considerations.
“UPPI won the bid to build and run a boot-camp juvenile
facility near the town of Aberdeen in southwestern Washington. Once the
Aberdeen Juvenile Detention Center opened, UPPI appointed Latisha Wall to be
its first director. On the surface of it, I’m sure putting an African-American
female who was also an ex-Marine MP in charge of a place like that must have
seemed like a good choice all around.”
“What went wrong?” Joanna asked.
“According to subsequent investigations, UPPI had cut some
serious corners in order to get costs low enough to win the contract. Some of
those cut corners were in basic building materials. Only the cheapest and
shoddiest materials were used during the construction phase. Subsequent
investigations show that basics like insulation and wiring didn’t even meet
code, but they somehow had passed all required building inspections.
Consequently, the deficiencies came to light only after the building was
occupied, at which point they were passed off as the fledgling director’s
fault.”
“We had a few jail-construction problems of our own,”
Sheriff Brady said thoughtfully. “So they turned her into a fall guy.”
“Or girl,” I suggested.
Sheriff Brady didn’t return my smile. “Whatever,” she
said.
“UPPI’s corner-cutting at the facility didn’t stop with
construction of the physical plant. UPPI budgets expected to provide for food,
medical care, bedding, and personnel were too low to sustain a livable
environment. Even with a boot-camp style existence, the available monies and
feeding the inmates nutrition loaf three meals a day, seven days a week, wouldn’t
have stretched far enough.
“The state had situated the facility in an economically
depressed part of southwestern Washington in hopes of creating living-wage jobs
for people after the lumber industry pretty much disappeared. Only UPPI didn’t
budget for living wages, either. Nor did they make any effort to turn new
employees into trained correction officers. As a result, people who ended up
working there weren’t necessarily the best or the brightest. That caused real
problems, too, in terms of lack of discipline, inappropriate sexual interactions,
gang activity, drug and alcohol abuse—all the things a boot-camp environment is
supposed to prevent.
“Aberdeen Juvenile Detention Center opened in the spring
three years ago and was operating at full capacity within three months. By the
time fall came along and the rains started, the walls began weeping moisture
and forming mold. Latisha Wall immediately reported the facility’s shortcomings
to her supervisor. When inmates complained that the food they were given was
full of bugs and wasn’t fit to eat, she passed that information along as well.
Nothing happened. No corrective measures were taken, and no additional
expenditures were allowed. Finally, Latisha was told that dealing with the
ongoing difficulties was her problem. At that point, she went to her supervisor’s
supervisor, with the same result.
“The final straw came when Ms. Wall discovered that her
assistant—her second in command—had been routinely covering up prisoner
complaints of misconduct on the part of a number of guards. The inmates were
troubled kids who had been put in her charge in hopes of straightening them
out. Rather than getting help, they were being abused both sexually and
physically. When Latisha tried to fire the guards involved, along with the guy responsible
for the cover-up, UPPI cut her off at the knees. They told her she wasn’t
allowed to fire anybody. That’s when she finally figured out that not only had
she been suckered but so had the state of Washington.”
“Latisha Wall was underqualified for the position she held
and was being very well paid to do it. UPPI expected her to take her money, go
with the flow, and keep her mouth shut. Instead, Ms. Wall went to Ross Connors’s
office and told her story there. She resigned. The facility was shut down
completely a few months later.”
“She was a whistle-blower, then.”
“Right,” I answered. “What wasn’t in the papers—what Ross
Connors did his best to keep out of the media—was that once the scandal went
public, Latisha Wall was subjected to numerous death threats. None of them could
be traced back to UPPI Headquarters in Chicago, but that’s where the AG
theorized they came from. Latisha Wall thought so, too.”
“So your boss put her in a witness protection program and shipped
her here, to Bisbee, under the name of Rochelle Baxter.”
“Right,” I told her.
“And you think someone from UPPI came here to kill her?”
“That’s certainly a possibility,” I said.
“Why’s that?” she asked.
“Because there’s a civil trial coming up in Olympia in a
little more than a month. Based on lack of performance at the Aberdeen
facility, Washington State has terminated all contracts with UPPI, and they’re
suing for breach of contract. Latisha Wall was scheduled to be the state’s star
witness. Without her, UPPI may walk away with a bundle.”
Finished with my recitation, I paused. “So what’s the
deal, then?” I asked.
“What do you mean?”
“What have your guys found out?” I asked. “We need to
know—the attorney general’s office needs to know what’s going on.”
“My ‘guys,’ as you call them—my investigations unit,” she
corrected stiffly, “which isn’t all male, by the way—has been working the
problem. As far as your need to know or your boss’s need to know, Mr. Beaumont,
that’s up to me.”
I could see that I had stepped in it big time without
really knowing how. Sheriff Brady had been chilly when she had first escorted
me into her office. Now she was downright frosty.
“Please, Sheriff Brady, I don’t want you to think I’m
taking anything away from your people—”
“Oh?” she said, cutting me off. “Is that so? You could
have fooled me. I thought that’s exactly what this is about. What you’ve
told me just now is what your office could and should have told me two days
ago. Right this moment, Special Investigator Beaumont, I can’t think of a
single compelling reason to tell you any of what my people have learned so far.
Not until that information is in some kind of reasonable order. Give me a day
or two to think it over.”
She smiled coolly, then added, “Actually, two days sounds
just about right. Let me know where you’ll be staying. I’ll give you a call,
say Monday or Tuesday, and let you know what’s happening. After all, that’s how
long it took you to get to us. Now, if you don’t mind, I’m somewhat busy.”
In other words, “Here’s your hat, what’s your hurry?” And
I did mind. I minded very much, but there didn’t seem to he much point arguing
about it. I heard people’s voices out in the hall. The way her green eyes
darted toward the door, I could tell Joanna Brady was far more interested in
what was going on outside than she was in talking to me. There are times when
pushing works and times when it doesn’t. I had a feeling that Sheriff Joanna
Brady would react badly to pushing. I took the hint, stood up, and headed for
the door.
“One more thing,” I said. If I wasn’t going to be doing
anything for Ross Connors for the next two days besides sitting on my butt, I
could just as well be doing something for me.
“What’s that?” Joanna Brady asked.
“How long have you lived in Bisbee?”
“All my life. Why?”
“Did you ever know of someone named Anne Rowland?”
It took a moment for Anne Corley’s maiden name to register
in Joanna Brady’s mental database, but it did eventually—with visible
consequences. “I didn’t know her personally,” the sheriff said guardedly. “I
know of her. Why?”
“She was my wife,” I said. “I was hoping maybe I could
meet someone who knew her when she was growing up and maybe talk with them for
a little while.”
Joanna Brady blinked. “I can’t think of anyone right off,”
she said.
“All right.”
“Where will you be staying?” she asked.
“At a place called the Copper Queen Hotel.”
“Good,” Sheriff Brady said distractedly. “If anything
comes up, I’ll call you.”
I reached out, took her hand, and shook it. Her handshake
was firm, but that was to be expected. Not only was she the sheriff, she was
also a politician. I opened the door and let myself out, leaving Joanna Brady
standing in what looked for all the world like stunned silence.
Once the door closed behind him, Joanna went back to her
desk and sat down. Of course she remembered Anne Rowland Corley. Who wouldn’t?
People in Bisbee thought about Anne Rowland Corley’s guilt or innocence the way
lots of people think about O.J. Simpson’s: She was a killer who had gotten away
with it.
It had happened only a year or so before Joanna’s father
had been elected sheriff. The saga of the Rowland family’s series of tragedies
was one that wouldn’t go away. Anita and Roger Row land had two daughters,
Patricia and Anne. The older girl, Patty, was developmentally disabled and died
after an accidental fall in their Warren neighborhood home. Shortly after that,
Roger Rowland too was dead of a single gunshot wound to the head. Because both
deaths had occurred inside the city limits, the cases had been investigated by
the Bisbee Police Department. Joanna remembered her father fussing about that.
“Roger Rowland and Chuck Brannigan have been asshole bud
dies for years,” Joanna remembered D.H. Lathrop complaining. “If Chief of
Police Brannigan were actually smart enough to think his way out of a paper
bag, he would have recused himself and let someone else take charge of the
investigation.”
But Brannigan hadn’t removed himself from either case, and
neither had the then Cochise County Coroner, Bill Woodruff, who was another of
Roger Rowland’s cronies. Brannigan and Woodruff were two good old boys working
together. Their hasty but official determinations of “accident” and “suicide”
had stuck despite the fact that, shortly after Roger Rowland’s funeral, his
younger daughter, Anne, had claimed she had fired the shot that had killed her
father. That claim had never been investigated. Instead, Anne had been packed
off to a private mental institution somewhere in Phoenix.
One of the city detectives from that time, a man named Dan
Goodson, had left Bisbee PD shortly thereafter to work for Joanna’s father,
Sheriff D.H. Lathrop. He had told his new boss that he had quit Bisbee PD
partly out of disgust at the way the Rowland cases had been handled.
“Anne Rowland isn’t crazy,” Joanna’s father had reported
an outraged Danny Goodson as saying. “Not a bit of it. She’s a killer, and with
Chuck Brannigan’s and Bill Woodruff’s help, she’s getting off scot-free.”
Although rumors about Anne Rowland’s guilt continued to
swirl around town, the coroner’s rulings had remained unassailable.
Joanna vaguely remembered hearing or reading that Anne
Rowland Corley had died a violent death somewhere out of state several years
earlier, but she couldn’t recall any details. Now it turned out that this same
woman had once been married to Detective J.P. Beaumont?
Lost in thought, Joanna jumped reflexively when the phone
on her desk rang.
“Mom?” a tearful Jenny sobbed into the phone.
“Yes. What’s the matter?”
“It’s Sadie,” Jenny wailed. “Something awful’s wrong with
her. I just got home from Cassie’s. Her mom dropped me off. Sadie’s lying on
the back porch. She won’t get up.”
“Where’s Butch?” Joanna asked.
“At the other house. He left a note that he’d be back by
one, but he isn’t. I need someone here now. She’s real sick, Mom. Is she gonna
die?”
Joanna closed her eyes and remembered how, the last few
days, Sadie hadn’t been quite herself. How she hadn’t wanted to run home to the
ranch. How she hadn’t wanted to eat the Cheerios or the green chili casserole.
No doubt something was wrong with Sadie. Joanna hadn’t paid enough attention to
notice.
“I don’t know, Jen,” she told her daughter. “But you hold
tight I’ll be there as soon as I can.”
With everything else forgotten, Joanna grabbed her purse
and dashed out the back door into the parking lot.
CHAPTER TEN
Joanna pulled into the yard at High Lonesome Ranch and
stopped the Civvie in a cloud of dirt and gravel. As she raced home, she had
expected to find Jenny in hysterics, but that wasn’t the case. She found her
daughter and both dogs grouped on the back porch. Tigger leaped off the porch
and came to greet her while neither Jenny nor Sadie moved. Jenny sat with the
dog’s head cradled in her lap, gently stroking Sadie’s long, floppy ears. The
dog’s sides heaved as she struggled to breathe.
Stepping close to her daughter, Joanna saw there was ample
evidence that Jenny had been crying, but she wasn’t crying now.
“She doesn’t like it when I cry,” Jenny explained. “It
upsets her, so I stopped. And I already called Dr. Ross’s office. She says we should
bring Sadie right over.”
Sadie was a big dog—seventy-five pounds at least, Joanna
estimated. “How will we get her to the car?” she asked.
“We have to, that’s all,” Jenny replied.
“Wait here while I go get the keys to the other car,”
Joanna said. “Sadie will he more comfortable in the Eagle than in the Civvie.”
Jenny nodded. “Hurry,” she said.
Joanna dashed into the house, grabbed the keys to the
Eagle, and hurried back outside. Sadie and Jenny hadn’t moved.
“I tried giving her some water, but she wouldn’t drink it,”
Jenny said. “That’s a bad sign, isn’t it.”
It was a statement, not a question. Joanna blinked hack
her own tears. “Probably,” she agreed.
Years of hefting hay bales had served both mother and
daughter in good stead. As soon as they lifted the dog, though, it was clear
Sadie no longer weighed what she once had.
When did she lose so much weight?
Joanna wondered. Why didn’t I see what was happening?
Once Sadie was loaded into the car, Tigger wanted to go
along. “No!” Jenny told him. “You stay.”
With his tail between his legs, the dejected mutt
retreated into the yard and curled up, moping, on the porch. Joanna got in and
turned the key in the ignition. The Eagle was driven so seldom nowadays that
she worried if the battery was charged, but it started right away. Once the
engine was running, Joanna expected Jenny to clamber into her seat. Instead,
blond hair flying behind her, she darted back into the house. She emerged
moments later carrying Sadie’s blanket.
“Good thinking,” Joanna said. For the remainder of the
drive into town, neither mother nor daughter said a word.
Veterinarian Millicent Ross’s office was only a mile or so
past the Cochise County Justice Center. Joanna was there less than ten minutes
after leaving home. Millicent was a broad, more-than-middle-aged woman who had
returned to college to become a vet only after her three children had
graduated.
She came out to the parking area to meet them, bringing
along a gurney that had been designed with animals in mind. Sadie, who had
never liked going to the vet, started to struggle as Dr. Ross began to transfer
her to the gurney. Jenny held Sadie’s head and spoke soothingly until Dr. Ross
was able to strap the dog down. As they rolled the gurney toward the building,
Joanna’s cell phone rang. She stayed outside to take the call and was grateful
to hear Butch’s voice.
“Where are you?” he asked. “I came home and found your
Civvie here, but no Eagle, no Joey, no Jenny, and no note. What’s going on?”
“It’s Sadie,” Joanna said brokenly. “She’s sick. We’ve
brought her to Dr. Ross’s office. I’m afraid she’s not going to ...” Her voice
faltered. She couldn’t continue.
“I’ll be right there,” Butch said.
Hanging up, Joanna turned off her phone. For once her family’s
needs would take precedence over the people of Cochise County. If something
important came up, somebody else would have to handle it.
Inside the office waiting room, Jenny sat disconsolately
on a chair, clutching Sadie’s blanket to her chest. “Dr. Ross took her into the
back for X rays,” Jenny explained matter-of-factly. “To see if she can find out
what’s wrong.”
Joanna sat down on the chair next to Jenny’s. “That was
Butch on the phone,” she said. “He’s back at the house. He’ll be here as soon
as he can.”
Jenny nodded. “Okay.”
Since Jenny wasn’t crying, Joanna didn’t either. Instead,
she thought about how many years the long-legged bluetick had been part of
their lives. Jenny was barely a year old when Andy brought the gangly,
ill-mannered six-month-old puppy home from work. Another deputy had bought it
for his son but had subsequently discovered that both his wife and son were
allergic to dogs. Or perhaps just to that particularly energetic and
rambunctious dog. He had been on his way to drop Sadie off at the pound when
Andy had intervened.
Initially, Joanna had voiced the same kinds of objections
to Sadie that she would attempt to use years later when Jenny wanted Kiddo.
They didn’t need a dog. Dogs were too much trouble, too much work. But Andy had
insisted, and Jenny had been ecstatic. “Mama” or “Dada” may be the first words
most children speak, but for Jennifer Ann Brady, it was “’Adie.” It would he
another two years before she’d be able to get her little tongue around that
initial S.
And if Jenny was crazy about the dog, the feeling was
mutual. The two were inseparable. Joanna could recall few family snap shots of
Jenny that didn’t have Sadie lurking, lop-eared and panting, in one corner or
another. Only in more recent ones had Sadie been joined by Tigger’s clownish
presence.
Fifteen minutes after his phone call, Butch drove up and
parked beside the Eagle. When he entered the waiting room, a buzzer in the back
of the office announced the newcomer’s arrival. The sound of the buzzer
reminded Joanna of the jangling bell over the door of the Castle Rock Gallery.
Determinedly, she shut the thought away. Now was not the time.
Butch took the chair on Jenny’s far side. “What’s
happening, Tigger?” he asked.
Jenny looked at him for a long minute before she answered.
Then her long-lashed blue eyes filled with tears and she threw herself into
Butch’s arms. “It’s Sadie,” she croaked. “She’s sick. I think she’s going to
die.”
Butch held her and stroked her hair. “There, there,” he
said, while his eyes sought Joanna’s over the weeping child’s head.
Joanna bit her lip, nodded in confirmation, and wondered
why Jenny had gone to Butch for comfort rather than to her own mother. The
obvious snub hurt Joanna in a way that surprised her.
“I’m sorry, Jen,” Butch continued, holding her tightly. “I’m
so very sorry.”
Jenny’s desperate sobs subsided finally, but they were all
still sitting that same way—with Jenny in Butch’s arms and Joanna off to one
side—a few minutes later, when Dr. Ross emerged from the backroom. “Joanna, if
you’d like to come with me and ...”
Seeing the grim expression on the vet’s face, Joanna knew
it was bad news. By taking Joanna aside, Millicent Ross hoped to spare Jenny
further heartache. But in this instance, Joanna decided, Jennifer Ann Brady had
earned the right to be treated as a grown-up.
“Sadie is Jenny’s dog,” Joanna said, shaking her head. “Whatever’s
going on—whatever has to be decided—we’ll all hear about it together.”
Millicent sighed and nodded. “Very well,” she said. She
eased her stocky frame into another of the waiting-room chairs. “I’ve looked at
the X rays. Sadie has a large tumor on one of her lungs and a smaller one on
the other. The larger one is affecting her heart.”
“Tumors?” Jenny asked. “How can that be? She hasn’t been
sick or anything.”
“It’s like that with animals sometimes,” Millicent Ross
explained gently. “Tumors come on swiftly. A few months ago, when Sadie was
here because of that poisoning incident, there was no sign of a tumor. Now
there are two. Her lungs are filling up with fluid. That’s why she’s having
such difficulty breathing.”
Jenny’s lower lip trembled. “What can you do?”
Dr. Ross shrugged her shoulders. “Nothing, really,” she
said. “Sadie’s in pain and she’s suffering. The longer we wait, the harder it
will be for her.”
“You mean we should put her to sleep?”
While Joanna found herself unable to speak, Jenny had
asked the questions.
“Yes,” the vet replied.
“When? Now?”
“There’s no sense in prolonging it, Jenny. I can do it
this afternoon—as soon as you leave.”
“No,” Jenny said at once. “We’re not leaving. I want to be
with her.”
“That’s really not necessary,” Dr. Ross said. “She’s still
strapped to the gurney....”
“Sadie doesn’t like being at the vet’s, and she hates
those metal tables,” Jenny said determinedly. “They scare her. I have her
blanket right here. Let’s take her off the gurney and put her on that. I’ll sit
on the floor and hold her while you do it. That way she won’t be afraid.”
Millicent Ross nodded. “Good thinking,” she said. “If you’ll
come with me, then ...”
Still clutching the blanket, Jenny stood up. She glanced briefly
at Joanna, then she stiffened her shoulders. “Okay,” she said. “I’m ready.”
As the door to the back office closed, Joanna burst
into tears She fell into Butch’s arms. As he moved to comfort her, his eyes
too, were brimming.
“Jenny knew it was coming,” Joanna managed in a strangled
whisper. “That’s why she brought along the blanket.”
“She’s one smart kid,” Butch said admiringly. “I wonder
where she gets it.”
I made my way back uptown and located the Copper Queen
Hotel. The closest parking place was two perpendicular blocks away. There was
no bellman, but my room was ready. I checked in and then took myself downstairs
to the restaurant. My scanty airline breakfast had long since disappeared. I
was more than happy to mow my way through one of the Copper Queen’s generously
greasy hamburgers. I hadn’t had one that good since Seattle’s old Doghouse
Restaurant closed up shop years ago.
Joanna Brady may not have won any Miss Congeniality
awards, but something she had said stuck with me. She had called me a plumber,
and I supposed that was true. The sheriff of Cochise County wasn’t pissed at me
so much as she was at Ross Connors for taking so long in getting back to her
department with the needed information. I admit I was puzzled by that, too.
None of the information in Latisha Wall’s file had seemed
so volatile or critical or even confidential that it couldn’t have been faxed
back and forth to Cochise County without a problem. Due to that AG-enforced lag
time, Joanna Brady was going to make me cool my heels for a while. I had told
her I would spend my downtime looking for people from Anne Corley’s past. And
maybe I would, but there was something almost physically addictive about once
again sinking my teeth back into an active homicide investigation. Being
benched and put on the sidelines by the likes of Sheriff Brady wasn’t how J.P.
Beaumont played the game.
And so, using a paper napkin from the other, unused, place
setting at my table, I began making notes. There were really only a few
possibilities. One: Rochelle Baxter/ Latisha Wall had died of accidental or
natural causes. In either of those instances, no one was responsible, and both
Joanna Brady’s department and mine were off the hook. Two: The victim had
indeed been murdered Why? A: She had died as a result of something that had
happens( while living in Bisbee. If that was true, the solution was entirely
Joanna Brady’s responsibility. Whatever her “investigators” might or might not
have discovered had nothing to do with me.
Or B: The woman Bisbee knew as Rochelle Baxter had beet
murdered because she was really Latisha Wall. The trail then would likely lead
back to her having blown the whistle on UPPI. It that case what had happened to
her definitely was my business Ross Connors had blundered along and
dragged his feet for two days. Homicide cops call those first forty-eight hours
after an incident the magic time. It’s then, right after the death and before
the trail goes cold, that most homicides are solved. In Latisha Wall’s case,
those hours had been allowed to elapse with no help from the state of
Washington.
So who all had information concerning Latisha Wall’s
whereabouts,
I asked myself.
As far as I know, I’m not on a nodding-acquaintance basis
with anyone currently or formerly in a witness protection program. Even so, I
understand that programs like that can operate success fully only so long as
the fewest possible people know details of the arrangements. Cumbersome
bureaucracies leave behind paper of computer trails with far too many
opportunities for unauthorized personnel to access the same information. Computers
are susceptible to hacking. Stray pieces of paper can end up damned neat
anywhere.
I remembered that among the supposedly confidential pieces
of paper Harry 1. Ball had given me before I left town was one with a list of
telephone numbers scribbled on it. I had been directed to guard that scrap of
paper with my life. It contained all the confidential phone numbers that
belonged to Washington State Attorney General Ross Alan Connors.
“Home, office, and mobile phones,” Harry had said,
pointing at each of them with the tip of his pen. “Whatever you do, don’t lose
them. You’re to report directly to him by phone on this. No intermediaries. No
left messages. No e-mail. Understand?”
“Got it,” I had said, reveling in the first case I could
ever remember that came complete with an actual prohibition against writing
reports. “This is my kind of case.”
“We’ll see,” Harry I. Ball had muttered in return.
“Ask the AG who knew,” I jotted on the napkin.
There was a stir in the room. Two guys at the table next
to me and a woman one table away peered at the dining room entrance with avid
interest. As the door swung shut, a hint of flowery perfume wafted through the
room. The hostess, carrying a single menu, strode past my table leading a tall,
heavyset African-American woman wearing low heels and a gray silk suit that rustled
as she walked. The hostess seated the newcomer at a table for two next to a
lace-curtained window
“Can I get you something to drink?” the hostess asked.
“Coffee,” the woman said in a thick Southern drawl. “Coffee
and water, please.”
“It takes one to know one,” my mother used to say, and on
this occasion that trite old saying was true. I was a stranger in Bisbee,
Arizona, and so was the black woman seated three tables away. A single photo of
Latisha Wall had been in the file I’d handed over to Sheriff Brady. It had been
taken on the occasion of Latisha’s graduation from USMC boot camp. Except for
an extra hundred pounds or so, the woman seated across from me could have been
Latisha’s older twin.
A waitress brought coffee and water. While the woman
studied the menu, I studied her. Long black hair was drawn back into a cascade
of neatly braided cornrows that flowed past her shoulders. Her teeth were
large, straight, and very white. The fingers that held the menu were topped by
long scarlet-tipped nails. Everything except the nails spoke of solemn dignity
and unspeakable sorrow.
“What can I bring you, ma’am?” the waitress asked. “What’s
the soup today?”
“Tortilla/green chili,” the waitress offered cheerily. “It’s
really very good.”
The woman look unconvinced. “I’ll have the tuna salad,”
she said.
The waitress took my plate away and dropped off the bill.
It was a subtle hint for me to move along. “Could I please have another cup of
coffee?” I asked.
For some time I sat and wondered about my next move
Clearly this was a relative of Latisha Wall’s—an aunt or a much older sister
perhaps—come to bring the dead woman’s body home for burial. Most likely the
woman had been summoned by local coroner or medical examiner’s office in order
to make a positive identification. After all, if none of the people in Bisbee
knew that Rochelle Baxter was really Latisha Wall, they could hardly he counted
upon to make a positive ID.
The woman’s tuna salad arrived at the same time my coffee
refill did. She picked at her food with faint interest, as though slit was
going through the motions of eating because she knew shi should rather than
because she was hungry. By the time she put down her fork and pushed away her
still-laden plate, I had made up my mind.
I stood up and walked over to her table. “Excuse me,” I
said. “I couldn’t help noticing. You look so much like Rochelle that you must
be related. Please accept my condolences.”
She nodded. Her eyelashes were thick and almost as long as
her fingernails. “Thank you,” she said. “You’re very kind. And, yes. Her real
name was Latisha, you know. She was my sister, my younger sister.” She held out
her hand. “My name is Cornelia Lester. And you are?”
I wondered if, to maintain the subterfuge, I should ask
about the Rochelle Baxter alias, but decided against it. At that point, the
less said, the better.
“Beaumont,” I told her, returning her solid handshake. “J.P.
Beaumont.”
“Have a seat.” She motioned me into the table’s other
chair. “I hate eating alone,” she said, as if to explain her uneaten salad.
After a pause she added, “Did you know her?”
I sat down and shook my head. “Not really,” I lied. “But I
know about her. Bisbee’s a very small town.”
“Yes,” Cornelia agreed. “Small towns are like that. Did
you know she was an artist?”
“No.”
“Tizzy was always sketching away when she was a kid. That’s
what we called her back home, Tizzy. Other kids would be out playing ball or
swimming, or just hanging out, but Tizzy always had a pencil in one hand and a
piece of paper in the other. Even back then we all knew she had a God-given
talent, although our parents weren’t much in favor of art for art’s sake. They
wanted us to have jobs that would actually pay the rent. It’s bad enough that she’s
gone, but to die like that, the night before her lust show...” Cornelia Lester
shook her head and lapsed into silence.
“Show?” I asked.
“Yes. A one-woman exhibition of her paintings at a place
called Castle Rock Gallery. The opening party was to be held Thursday night,
but Latisha died on Wednesday. I’d really love to see the paintings, but I
haven’t been able to. The gallery isn’t open I checked on my way through town.”
I glanced at my watch. “It’s after one,” I suggested
helpfully “Maybe they’re open now”
Once again Cornelia Lester shook her head. The beads on he
cornrows knocked together with a sound that reminded me of baby’s rattle. “No,”
she said. “I don’t think so. I talked to a man who owns the antique store next
door. He said this is the second day in a row the gallery has been closed. He’s
heard rumors that something bad may have happened to the owner. Dee Canfield,
think her name is. She’s been missing for two days now, ever since she posted
the notice canceling the show and locked the place up on Thursday afternoon.”
“That’s odd,” I said.
“Yes. I thought so, too,” Cornelia Lester agreed. “Since this
Canfield woman and Latisha were evidently friends, I intend to ask Sheriff
Brady about this the first chance I can.”
“You haven’t spoken with Sheriff Brady then?” I asked.
“No. I tried calling a few minutes ago and was told the
sheriff is currently unavailable. I left a message, but she hasn’t called back.
That’s all right. There’s plenty of time. I’ll be here until Tuesday a least.
That’s the very soonest the medical examiner may be able to release the body.”
This was all very interesting. It would have been nice if
Joanna Brady had bothered to mention that another woman was missing, especially
since she was someone closely connected to Latisha Wall, making it more than
likely that the two incidents were related. Since Sheriff Brady hadn’t said a
word, I decided it was time to follow up on my own leads.
“If you’ll excuse me,” I said, standing up, “I really must
go. It was rude of me to barge in on you this way.”
“Not at all,” Cornelia Lester said. “I enjoyed the
company. I was glad to have a chance to talk.”
“Same here,” I said.
I charged lunch to my room and then hurried out to the
desk, where I borrowed a local telephone book. Castle Rock Gallery wasn’t
listed in the dog-eared copy the clerk handed me, so I asked him instead.
“Oh, that,” he said. “No wonder. The phone book came out
last spring. Castle Rock Gallery is brand-new—too new to be listed, but it’s
not hard to find. Go straight out here, cross the street, cut through the park,
and then turn right on Main Street. The gallery is several blocks up on the
right. If you find yourself walking past a big chunk of gray limestone two or
three stories tall, that’s Castle Rock. It means you’ve missed the gallery and
gone too far. Come back down and try again.”
The uncomplicated directions made it sound fairly close,
so I left the Sportage parked where it was and set out on foot. Getting there
took me just ten minutes, but it was real walking—all of it uphill. I
remembered seeing a sign that said Bisbee’s elevation was over five thousand
feet. By the time I arrived at Castle Rock Gallery, I felt every damned one of
them.
I was out of breath and sweating up a storm by the time I
reached the place. Cornelia Lester had been right. Castle Rock Gallery was
locked up tight even though the posted hours said the gallery was open from ten
to six on Saturdays. A hand-lettered sign taped to the inside surface of a
window next to the door said the grand opening of Rochelle Baxter’s one-woman
show had been canceled until further notice.
I looked around. Cornelia Lester had mentioned speaking to
the man who ran an antique shop next door. Because the gallery meandered down
the street and filled three adjacent storefront buildings, next door was
actually three doors away in a place called Treasure Trove Antiques.
I went there and let myself into a musty, dusty place
stacked high with mountains of junk some people had thrown out of their lives.
No doubt other people would be happy to part with far too much of their own
hard-earned cash to bring the cast-off crap into theirs.
A bow-legged guy in cowboy boots and a Western shirt sat
in a faded leather morris chair with a thousand-dollar price tag. He took off a
pair of wire-rimmed glasses as he looked up from the paperback he was reading. “Howdy,”
he said. “Let me know if I can be of any help. Don’t like to smother people.
Not my style.”
I pulled out my badge and held it up for him to look at
it. I hoped the combination of bad lighting and slightly below-par eye-sight
would fix it so he didn’t get that good a look. “Actually,” I said, “I
understand the lady who owns the gallery next door has gone missing.”
“Sure enough,” he said. “Dee’s gone, and so is that jerk
of a boyfriend of hers—Warren something or other. They’ve been gone almost two
full days now. If Dee’s come to any harm, I’m guessing that Bobo Jenkins from
up Brewery Gulch way might’ve had something to do with it. He was in there
raising so much hell the other day—Thursday morning, it was—that the sheriff
had to show up with her siren screaming and lights flashing just to calm things
down. This here’s a quiet little town,” he added. “Don’t get a lot of
that—lights and sirens, I mean.”
I jotted down the name. “You said Bobo Jenkins?”
“Yup. Used to own a place called the Blue Moon Saloon up
in Brewery Gulch. I believe he sold it a couple of months back. I was outside
having a smoke Thursday morning. That’s the thing with all the dad-gummed rules
and regulations we have nowadays. A man can’t smoke in his own shop even when
he ain’t hurtin’ nobody but his own damned self. So I was outside smoking when
of Bobo comes charging up the street like the devil hisself is after him. I do
mean he was movin’. Not jogging. Not trotting along, but outright running.
Looked mad enough to chew nails. Next thing I know, he’s in the gallery and him
and Dee are screaming at each other something fierce.”
“Did you hear what was said?”
“I’m not one of them eavesdroppers. Even if I had heard, I
pro’ly wouldn’t say. But it was loud, I can tell you that much. And they didn’t
stop carrying on until Sheriff Brady showed up and made ‘em. I didn’t vote for
her, you understand, but I got to give her credit. She’s no bigger ‘n a minute,
but the sheriff’s a feisty one, I’ll say that for her. She busted that argument
right up. The next thing I know, Bobo was walkin’ down the street carryin’ this
big old picture, and lookin’ like someone’d just told him to shut up and get
the hell out.”
Sheriff Brady may be feisty,
I thought, but she’s also one closed-mouthed little
bitch!
“Thank you,” I said. “I appreciate the help. Your name is?”
“Harvey,” he replied. “Harvey Dowd. Most people call me
Harve. And you?”
“Beaumont,” I told him. “J.P. As I said, you’ve been a big
help, Mr. Dowd. Now, if you could direct me to the place you told me about. The
one that Mr. Jenkins owns ...”
“The Blue Moon?”
I nodded.
“Sure. That’s no trouble. You walkin’ or drivin’?”
“Walking.”
“Well, sir, you just go right down this here hill. Stick
to the main drag. You’ll go through town and past the park. Turn left at the
end of the park and just walk straight ahead until you get there. It’ll be on
the left. Believe me, you can’t miss it.”
You’d be surprised,
I
thought, but I set out with a spring in my step. Part of the spring was due to
the fact that I’d finally gotten around to having the bone spurs removed from
my heels. And it helped that it was all downhill. But something else—something
perfectly simple—made me feel downright gleeful as I walked hack down through
the narrow two-lane street Harve Dowd had called Bisbee’s “main drag.” Nothing
could possibly have improved my state of mind more than having a lead Sheriff
Joanna Brady hadn’t given me and obviously didn’t want me to have.
Now, before she had a chance to stop me, I was going to see
what I could do with it.
CHAPTER ELEVEN
If you’re a stranger in town and want to dig up a few
pertinent details about someone local, it’s a good bet to go where his friends
might possibly hang out, keep a low profile, and listen like crazy. Which is
why I left Treasure Trove Antiques and headed immediately for the Blue Moon.
As far as I could tell, Brewery Gulch is actually a street
rather than a gulch. It looked a bit bedraggled and worn around the edges. In
fact, it could easily have doubled for an old-time movie set. Brewery Gulch
evidently did once boast a working brewery. In fact, there was a decrepit
building bearing a sign that said BREWERY. But professional beer making in
Bisbee, Arizona, had long since passed into oblivion. A single restaurant
survived inside the brick-fronted hulk, but little else.
Other buildings along Brewery Gulch were similarly
ram-shackle. Many storefronts exhibited faded FOR RENT signs. Others were
entirely boarded up. Not so the Blue Moon Saloon and Lounge. That establishment
was hopping. Thirty or so big, honking Harleys sat angle-parked outside along
the curb. I’m an office of the law I don’t generally feel welcome in places of
business frequented by bikers.
Looking at the building, I saw no reason the Blue Moon,
unlike its nearest neighbors, hadn’t closed down years ago. I stepped inside,
hoping the place wouldn’t fall down around my ears.
My eyes had to go from bright sunlight to hardly any light
at all. When my pupils finally had adjusted, I saw that the interior of the
Blue Moon was in better shape than the exterior. Reasonably new linoleum
covered the floor. Pedestal cocktail tables scattered throughout the room were
jammed with leather-clad, chain-wearing bikers, all of them drinking and
smoking. A few were clearly well on their way to being drunk while others were
just gearing up. Ironically, the atmosphere reminded me of a Twelve-Step biker
bar a friend of mine use( to run up on Eighty-fifth in Seattle’s Greenwood
District. This establishment, however, was definitely not alcohol-free—no even
close.
Beyond the tables, a magnificent wooden bar that dated from
the eighteen hundreds ran the length of the long, narrow room. The bar, like the
tables, appeared to be fully occupied except for a single seat three stools
from the end wall, where dreary, painted over windows obscured all trace of
outside light.
Grabbing that one empty stool, I immediately understood
why it had been left unoccupied. My neighbors to the right were two crippled
old geezers who looked like escapees from a low-rent retirement home. Two
walkers were stowed in what I had thought to be available leg space.
Unfortunately, I noticed the walkers the hard way—by banging my kneecap, full
force, into the handle of one of them.
“Sorry about that,” the guy nearest me said. “Let me haul
that thing out of your way.”
“No,” I said, rubbing my bruised knee. “It’s fine where it
is.”
“Hate having to drag that thing around with me everywhere
I go, but it beats being locked up at home.”
“What can I get you?” someone asked.
I turned away from the old man to find myself facing what
had to be the Blue Moon’s greatest asset—a killer blond bartender. She was a
gorgeous young woman whose lush good looks would have turned heads at a Miss
America Pageant.
“O’Doul’s,” I replied.
“Sure thing,” she said. I watched as she walked briskly
away. My obvious admiration didn’t pass unnoticed.
“Look but don’t touch,” my neighbor advised. “Angie’s happily
married, and she don’t take nonsense off nobody.”
I scanned the room for evidence of another bartender,
cocktail waitress, or bouncer who might lend Angie a hand if the band of bikers
started acting up. I saw no one. Filling glasses at the distant tap, Angie
seemed totally unruffled by her roomful of tough customers. Obviously Angie was
more than just a pretty face. And body.
When she returned with my bottle of alcohol-free O’Doul’s,
Angie brought along two brimming glasses of beer. She set those in front of my
neighbors, picked up their two empties, and then turned to me.
“That’ll be three bucks,” she said.
I pulled a ten out of my wallet and handed it over. As she
walked back down the bar to the cash register, my neighbor leaned over to me. “It’s
getting close to the end of the month,” he confided in a beery-breathed
whisper. “Angie’s real good about carrying me an’ Willy till our checks catch
up with us the first o the month, if you know what I mean.”
So Angie wasn’t above running a tab. The practice was most
likely illegal, but it was something the two guys at the end of the bar really
appreciated.
“You from around here?” I asked.
The man’s loud burst of laughter was punctuated by an
equally loud belch. “You hear that, Willy?” he demanded, clapping his buddy on
the shoulder.
“Hear what?” Willy asked.
“This fella wants to know if we’re from around here.”
Willy grinned at that, and they both laughed uproariously.
Since they thought my question utterly hilarious, I took that to mean they were
natives.
Angie returned with my change and laid it on the polished
surface of the bar. “Are these guys bothering you?” she asked, giving my two
bar mates a searing look.
“No,” I said. “Not at all.”
She raised a warning finger. “You and Willy behave
yourselves, Arch,” she said. “You bother any of the other customers and you two
are out of here.”
“Yes, ma’am,” a seriously chastened Archie replied. “We’ll
be good.”
“Wha’d she say?” Willy asked.
“We got to behave,” Archie shouted.
“Right,” Willy agreed, raising his glass. “Absolutely.”
It seemed unlikely that I would glean any useful information
hum this pair of doddering old drunks, so I turned hopefully toward my
neighbors on the other side. No luck there. The person next to me—someone I had
actually thought to be a guy—turned out to be a leather-booted, leather
jacketed babe whose face was almost as well-tanned as the cowhide she wore on
the rest of her body. When I glanced in her direction, the man next to her glowered
back at me in the mirror. Resigned, I returned to Archie.
“Who owns this place?” I asked.
Archie frowned. “Why’d you want to know?”
I shrugged. “Maybe I’m thinking about making some investments
around town,” I offered. “Maybe I’d like to buy it.”
“No way!” Archie glowered. “The Blue Moon’s not for sale.”
“Wha’d he say?” Willy asked. The man must have been
stone-deaf. As far as I could tell, that was his only line.
“If you know it’s not for sale, you must be the owner
then,” I remarked casually.
“Angie and her husband own it,” Archie allowed, nodding
toward the shapely blonde. “Bought it off Bobo Jenkins a couple of months ago,
and it’s a good thing, too. Bobo was tired of running it. Can’t blame him
there. Workin’ too hard’s not good for you. ‘Sides, I hear he’s thinking about
running for mayor. You ask me, he’d do a helluva job. If I ever get a chance,
you can bet I’ll vote for him, too.
“Bobo might’ve just closed up the place and walked away.
Locked the door and throwed away the key. Lucky for us, Angie come along and
saved our bacon. She and that husband of hers offered to buy it off him, and he
sold, just like that. The place runs a little irregular now. You can’t always
count on it being open.”
“Does Angie’s husband work here, too?” I asked.
Archie sipped his beer and shook his head. “Hacker’s an
odd duck. He’s a Brit and a bird-watcher besides. Does something with birds. I’m
not sure what. So when he goes out into the boonies to do whatever it is he
does, Angie sometimes shuts the place down and goes with him. Who can blame
her? They’re newlyweds, after all. Why shouldn’t she? But that’s mostly during
the week. Weekends the place is open regular, like it should be.
“It’s like I told my good friend Willy here. So what if we
can’t always count on the hours? It’s better than having no Blue Moor at all.
Me and Willy’ve been coming here for what, forty years now? I’d hate like hell
to see it shut down and boarded up.”
“What?” Willy asked.
“Never mind,” Archie told him. “Just drink your beer. Thu
man’s deaf as a post, you see,” Archie explained unnecessarily to me. “Too many
years of working with dynamite in the mines. You ever been in a mine?”
“No,” I said. “I never have.” And never wanted to,
either thought.
“They’ve got theirselves a underground tour over across the
way, in case you’re interested,” he suggested. “Takes you right back into the
mountain.”
“Thanks, but no thanks,” I said.
What I really wanted was information about Bobo Jenkins. I
f could manage to prime Archie’s pump, I guessed he’d turn out l( be a
veritable fountain of information, some of which might be useful.
“I hear there’s been some trouble around town the last
lien days,” I suggested innocently.
Archie took a sip of beer and then slammed his glass onto
the bar, splashing beer in every direction. “Boy howdy!” he exclaimed. “If that
ain’t the truth! Poor old Bobo. Me and Willy’ve knowed that man for years and
years, ever since he come to town and bought this joint. In all that time, he
wasn’t never sweet on anybody before that Shelley Baxter woman showed up. They just
seemed to click, know what I mean?
“Not that I’m prejudiced or nothing,” he continued, “but I
like it when whites stay with whites, blacks stay with blacks, and Mexicans
stay with Mexicans. That’s how God Almighty meant for things to work. But there
weren’t hardly no black women in town for Bobo to hook up with, so he was sort
of a lone wolf. Then she turned up and put a smile on his face.”
If Archie wasn’t prejudiced, then Willy wasn’t deaf,
either. I kept my mouth shut and let him talk.
“But now Bobo’s girlfriend, this Shelley, up and died at
her place down in Naco. That’s Naco, Arizona, not Naco, Sonora, you see. So
what do the cops do? This morning they haul poor of Bobo’s ass into the sheriff’s
office for questioning. Like they think maybe he did it. Like maybe he’s
responsible for what happened to her. I was telling Angie a little while ago,
it’s all so much BS. I didn’t use that word, of course, not in front of the
lady. But between you and I, that’s what it is. All bullshit—and knee-deep,
too.
“Bobo Jenkins may be what they call a African-American,
and strong as a mule, but he’s definitely not the violent type. Wouldn’t hurt a
fly. Willy and me, we’ve seen him break up some pretty bad fights in this place
over the years. Bobo’s so big he could scare shit out of you by just lookin’ at
you crooked, but I never saw him hurt nobody—not even when they were raising
hell and really deserved it.”
Once Archie got started talking, there was no turning him
off, but I was no longer paying attention. I was thinking about a
closed-mouthed lady sheriff named Joanna Brady, damn her anyway! All the while
she was playing coy with me, her detectives were questioning a suspect. That’s
all right. The next time I saw her, I planned to ask her straight out what her
investigators had learned in their interview with Bobo Jenkins. And I intended
for “next time” to be soon. Now, if at all possible.
Angie had left my change lying on the bar, and so had I.
Now I left a dollar tip and pushed the remainder over to Archie.
“Take this,” I said. “You and Willy have one on me. It’ll
help tide you over until next month’s checks arrive.”
Archie looked at the money gratefully, as though he’d just
won a lotto jackpot. He gave me a heartfelt grin. “Thanks,” he said. “Thanks a
lot.”
For a change Willy didn’t bother asking what had been said.
He’d seen the money pass along the bar and had figured out on his own what that
meant.
“Thanks, fella,” he mumbled, once again raising a glass
that still had a few modest dregs of beer in it. “You’re a gentleman,” he said.
“A gentleman and a scholar.”
When a dry-eyed Jenny emerged from Dr. Ross’s back office,
she was carrying Sadie’s blanket and collar. “Ready?” she asked.
“Which car do you want to ride in?” Butch asked.
“I’ll go with Mom,” Jenny said.
Butch nodded. “You two go on, then,” he said. “I’ll stay
here to settle up with Dr. Ross.”
Joanna unlocked the Eagle, and they both climbed in. “Dr.
Ross asked if we wanted to bring Sadie home to bury her,” Jenny said. “I told
her no. There’ve been too many funerals. I didn’t want another one. That’s okay
with you, isn’t it?” she asked.
“Jenny, sweetie, whatever you decide,” Joanna said. “It’
entirely up to you.”
“Okay, then,” Jenny said. She settled back in the car seat
ant closed her eyes. “Will you tell the Gs?” she asked.
“Yes,” Joanna said. “I’ll be glad to,” although “glad”
wasn’t at all the right word.
Several times on the drive home, Joanna had to brush unbidden
tears out of her own eyes. Sadie had been a beloved family pet. But it was more
than just losing Sadie. Joanna was losing her daughter as well, losing her
baby. Because Jenny must have known what was coming when she went racing back
into the house to get Sadie’s blanket. Even then, she was thinking about Sadie
first—putting the dog’s comfort and well-being before her own.
No, Jenny wasn’t Joanna’s baby anymore. She was a thoughtful,
caring, wonderful, surprisingly mature person who put others’ needs ahead of
her own. She could probably give me lessons, Joanna thought
bleakly. And grateful as she was for all that—for the kind of human being
Jennifer Ann Brady was becoming, there was a tiny corner of Joanna’s heart that
wanted to turn back the clock so Jenny could once again be the cute, cuddly
little girl she had been before.
Once out of the car at home, Tigger raced around the Eagle
several times, sniffing eagerly. “He’s looking for her, isn’t he?” Jenny said.
Joanna nodded. “Yes. I suppose he is.”
Jenny called the dog to her and knelt down to hug his
neck. “Come on, boy,” she said finally. “Let’s go get Kiddo. We’ll go for a
ride.”
Alone, Joanna went into the house. While Jenny was with
Dr. Ross, she had called in to the department to let Frank and Dispatch both
know what was going on, that she would be out of radio, phone, and pager
contact for the next little while. When she picked up the phone, the broken
beeping of the dial tone announced that there were messages waiting. For a
change she didn’t bother checking them. Instead, she dialed her former in-laws’
number.
“How terrible for Jenny,” Eva Lou Brady said when she
heard the news. “Do you want Jim Bob and me to come out and spend some time
with her? We’d be glad to.”
“No,” Joanna said, “that’s not necessary. She’s handling
it amazingly well. She’s out saddling up Kiddo right now. A long ride will do
both her and Tigger a world of good.”
“Sounds just like her daddy,” Eva Lou offered. “That’s the
way Andy always was, too. Whenever there was a crisis, he’d go off by himself
to think things over and come to terms with whatever it was. Don’t you worry
about Jenny, Joanna.” Eva Lou added. “She’s one tough little cookie. She’ll be
fine.”
Joanna’s next call was to her own mother. “Oh, dear,” Eleanor
Lathrop Winfield said. “Is Jenny all right?”
“She’s fine,” Joanna said.
“That’s the problem with having dogs,” Eleanor went on
with barely a pause. “You just get used to them and before you know it, they
get old and die on you. Of course, Jenny can always get another one. Heaven
knows there are enough unwanted dogs in this world, although why you’d want to
have two, I can’t imagine.”
Joanna Brady closed her eyes and wished her mother could
somehow be different than she was.
“I just heard Butch drive up,” Joanna said. “Have to go.”
“All right,” Eleanor said. “You let Jenny know I’m
thinking about her.”
You may be thinking about her,
Joanna thought grimly, but we’re all better off with
her not knowing what you’re thinking.
Butch came into the house and dropped his keys on the
counter. “I thought we’d bring Sadie home and bury her some where out here on
the ranch, but Dr. Ross said Jenny didn’t want us to. So I let it go. What do
you think?”
“Jenny told me she was tired of funerals.”
“You can hardly blame her for that,” Butch replied. “Where
is she?”
“Out riding,” Joanna told him. “She took Tigger along. I
thought it was probably the best thing for both of them.”
Butch nodded. They were standing in the kitchen with their
arms wrapped around each other when the phone rang.
“Don’t answer,” Butch said. “Let it go to voice mail.”
“I’d better not,” Joanna said, pulling away. “I’ve been
unavailable all afternoon. It could be important.”
She plucked the cordless phone off the counter. “Brady/
Dixon residence,” she said.
“Sheriff Brady?” Dave Hollicker asked. He sounded excited.
“Hi, Dave,” she told him. “How’s it going? Are you back
from Tucson already?”
“No, I’m still here. At the crime lab. But I’ve got
something for you.”
“What?”
“Ever hear of sodium azide?”
“Never. What is it?”
“It’s the propellant they use in cars to make air bags
work. It ignites, and the resulting explosion inflates the bag.”
“So?”
“It’s a white, odorless compound that resembles salt. Or
sweetener. And it dissolves readily in liquids.”
Joanna felt her pulse quicken. “I suppose it’s also
poisonous?” she asked.
“Very,” Dave agreed. “More poisonous than cyanide.”
“And tasteless?”
“I wouldn’t know about that,” Dave answered. “And I don’t
know how you’d find out for sure. Who’d be willing to taste it, and how would
they tell us what they’d found out after they died? But since it evidently
ended up in Rochelle Baxter’s iced tea and since she emptied the glass without
noticing, we pretty much have to assume it’s tasteless.”
“If sodium azide is that deadly, how come she didn’t die
right away?”
“Ingested poisons don’t work until they’re assimilated
into the bloodstream. If you breathe it in, it can kill almost instantly. I’m lucky
I just got woozy when I did. Otherwise, you’d be having another Fallen Officer
funeral in a day or two,” Dave went on.
“Thank God,” Joanna said. “But tell me, where would somebody
get this awful stuff?”
“That’s the really bad news,” Dave Hollicker replied. “The
answer is, almost anywhere. It’s not a controlled substance, so you could buy a
whole barrel of it if you wanted. You could also rip the air bags out of your
car and claim somebody stole them. Or else you could go to your local junkyard.
If a car wrecks and the air bags are deployed, it’s not a problem. Once the air
bag inflates what’s left after the sodium azide oxidizes is totally harmless.
It’s the undeployed air bags with their canisters of unused sodium azide that
are the problem.”
“Don’t junkyards strip the air bags out and sell them?”
Joann: objected. “My understanding is that they can be parted out and reused.,,
“That’s how everybody assumed it would work,” Dave
said. “II actual practice, it’s not that simple. People don’t want to ride around
in a vehicle where their life and the lives of their loved ones depend on the
effectiveness of somebody else’s secondhand air hag. And, if death or injury
occurs in a vehicle fitted with a used air bag, there’s always a potential liability
problem. All of which leaves this country with millions of unrecycled air bags
sitting in junkyards everywhere.”
“The sodium azide is loose, then?” Joanna asked.
“No. It comes in little aluminum canisters about the size
of tuna-fish cans. I’m guessing there are stacks of dozens of those little
hummers sitting on used-parts shelves in junkyards in Cochise County alone.”
“Wait a minute,” Joanna objected. “You’ve told me this is
a deadly poison. Do you mean somebody could just walk in off the street and
pick a can of it off a shelf?”
“You ever been to a junkyard, boss?” Dave Hollicker asked.
“Not recently”
“Well, that’s pretty much how they work. Around here,
junkyards are long on self-service.”
“Can sodium azide be traced?”
“You mean have the manufacturers put markers in it the way
they do with explosives?”
“Exactly”
“I suppose it’s possible, but I’m guessing the automobile
industry would be dead-set against it.”
“Because they don’t want to admit the stuff is a potential
problem?”
“You’ve got it,” Dave agreed.
“Great,” Joanna said. “It’s readily available, totally
untraceable, and deadly”
“And that’s what was in those tampered sweetener packets
that Casey and I brought back from Latisha Wall’s place down in Naco. I’ve got
the DPS crime lab’s printed analysis right here in my hand.”
“Have you told anyone else about this?” Joanna asked.
“Not yet. I’ve been cooling my heels around here all day
waiting for test results. They dissolved some and ran it through an ion
chromatograph. That’s what I have right now—a preliminary) report and a
tentative identification of sodium azide. They’ll do confirmation test using
mass spectrometry. The lab manager told me we won’t have tentative results on
that for another day or so Official results will take another week. The
criminalist I talked to says they can use the same technique on vomit samples
if Doc Winfield sends them along, but that takes up to two weeks longer. I thought
you should be the first to know”
“Thanks for calling,” Joanna said. “I’ll get on the horn
and tell everyone else.”
“Do you want me to come by the office with this when I get
hack to Bisbee, or can it wait until tomorrow?”
Joanna thought about the board of supervisors meeting and
the looming overtime issue. “No, since it’s just a preliminary copy, have the
lab fax one to the department tonight. Nobody will be able to work on it before
tomorrow or Monday anyway. Good work, Dave,” she added. “You and Casey deserve
a lot of credit for being on top of this.”
“Thanks, boss,” he said, “but isn’t that what you pay us
to do?’
Joanna heard the unmistakable pleasure in his voice at
having been given a compliment. “You’re right,” she returned. “‘That’s exactly
why we pay you the big bucks.”
By the time she hung up, Butch had gone over to the fridge
and pulled out a beer. “I can hear it already,” he said. “‘They’ll sucking you
back into work, aren’t they?”
“Not really,” Joanna said. “But now that we know what
killer Rochelle Baxter, I have to tell people. I’ll make some calls. It won’t
take more than a few minutes.”
She went into the living room. Butch, tired of having the
dining room table constantly littered with work-related papers, had redesigned
the living room. Eva Lou Brady’s little fifties-era telephone table had been
replaced by a secondhand cherry secretary, where Joanna’s papers could be
spread out and the hinged desk surface closed up over them when necessary.
Joanna retreated there and picked up the phone. The first
call she made was to Jaime Carbajal.
When Jaime’s wife, Delcia, said, “Hold on, I’ll get him,”
Joanna glanced guiltily at her watch. It was only a few minutes past four. Good,
she thought. At least it’s too early for me to be interrupting dinner.
When Jaime came to the phone, he sounded out of breath. “Pepe
and I were out doing batting practice,” he said. “Frank told me earlier about
Sadie. Is Jenny okay?”
“She’s fine,” Joanna returned. “In fact, she’s handling it
better than I am at this point, but tell me about the interview with Bobo
Jenkins. How did it go?”
“No surprises there,” Jaime said. “Bobo insists he had
nothing to do with what happened to Latisha Wall. He claims the two of them
were in love and that he had no reason to harm her.”
“Did he mention being afraid that she was about to break
up with him?”
“He said something about it, but he claimed things were
fine between them when he left her place on Wednesday night. As far as I’m
concerned, that remains to be seen.”
“Did you let him know we found his prints on the sweetener
packets?”
“No. That’s a holdback. I didn’t want to say anything
about that until I had a chance to talk to both Dave and Casey.”
“Makes sense,” Joanna said.
“Did you ask Bobo about Dee Canfield?”
“Affirmative. He claims the last time he saw her was in the
gallery on Thursday morning. He said you were there at the same time. He says
he has no idea what happened to her afterward, and he has no clue where she and
Warren might have gone.”
“He’s right,” Joanna said. “I was there when he was. Nov
what’s the deal on the search warrant?”
“Not yet,” Jaime said. “I finally found out why the judge
didn’t come home last night. Mrs. Moore ended up in TMC with an emergency
appendectomy. I talked to their house sitter. She says Judge Moore is
supposedly coming back to Bisbee tonight. The soonest I’ll be able to get the
warrant and serve it will be later this evening.”
“That’ll have to do, then,” Joanna said. “If you want someone
along when you serve it, check with Frank.”
“Will do,” Jaime said. “Now, what about Dave Hollicker?”
The detective listened in silence while Joanna told him
what the crime scene investigator had learned. “Does Frank know about any of
this?” Detective Carbajal asked.
“He’s my next call.”
She tried Frank’s home number and got no answer. Next she
called the department.
“He’s in,” Lupe Alvarez told her. “But he’s got someone with
him at the moment. That guy from Washington.”
Beaumont again,
Joanna
thought. Good enough. Let Frank deal with him.
“Have Chief Deputy Montoya call me when he’s done,” Joanna
said. “I’m at home. Anything else I should know about now that I’m available?”
“Yes,” Lupe said. “You’ve had three calls from someone
named Cornelia Lester. She says she’s ...”
Joanna remembered the name from the next-of-kin contact sheet
in Latisha Wall’s file. “I know who she is. Is she here in town?”
“Yes. She’s staying at the Copper Queen, room five-twelve.”
Joanna picked up a pen. “Do you have the number?”
“Yes.”
“You’d better give it to me, then,” Joanna said, once
again dreading the thought of having to speak to yet another grieving relative.
“I’ll call her back while I’m waiting to hear from Frank.”
CHAPTER TWELVE
By four o’clock that afternoon I was back at the Cochise
County Justice Center. “I’m sorry, but Sheriff Brady has had a family
emergency,” the same public lobby receptionist told me. “She’s not available at
this time.” “What about her second-in-command?” I asked.
“Chief Deputy Montoya is on his line at the moment. When
he’s free, I’ll let him know you’re here.”
“And my name is—”
“I know,” she returned. “You’re Special Investigator Beaumont.
I remember you from earlier.”
I wondered about that. Did she remember my name because
she just happened to remember it, or had her boss passed the word that I was
persona non grata? For the next ten minutes, I cooled my heels in the lobby.
The longer I waited, the more I fumed. It wasn’t as though I was in a hurry or
had anywhere else to go. It was the principle of the thing. So far, Sheriff
Brady and her department had been something less than cooperative.
I found myself once again studying the picture montage in
that glass display case. Joanna Brady may have been cute as a button when she
was a little kid, dressed in a Brownie uniform and selling Girl Scout cookies
like mad. Maybe she still was, but cute wasn’t working on me.
Eventually the secured door to the back offices opened and
out walked a late-thirty-something Hispanic guy. He wore the same kind of
uniform the sheriff had been wearing when I last saw her, although his was free
of curves. And his head was shaved absolutely smooth.
“Hello,” he said as he approached my chair. “You must be
Special Investigator Beaumont. I’m Chief Deputy Frank Montoya. What can I do
for you?”
He escorted me back to his office, which was in the same
wing of the building as the sheriff’s private office. I thought maybe I could
pull out the good of boy card and jolly Chief Deputy Montoya out of some
useful information. But Sheriff Brady had her people firmly in line as far as
J.P. Beaumont was concerned. Montoya gave me diddly-squat.
“Look,” he said in answer to my direct question about the
Bobo Jenkins interview. “I can appreciate your wanting to know about that, but
our department is conducting what is becoming a more and more complicated
investigation. Without Sheriff Brady’s express permission, I’m not authorized
to give out any information. Period.”
“It is complicated,” I agreed, “what with the addition of
not one but two missing persons cases.”
Montoya’s eyes narrowed when I said that. He didn’t like
my knowing about the missing art dealer and her boyfriend.
Too had,
I
thought. I found that out on my own, Mr. Chief Deputy Montoya. If you don’t
like it, you’ll just have to lump it.
“If I were Sheriff Brady,” I said aloud, “I think I’d be
glad to have an extra detective show up and lend a hand with all this.”
Frank Montoya’s lips curled into a tight smile. “I don’t
think that’s quite how she views the situation,” he said. “And until I have a
chance to talk to her about it ...”
By then I had pretty well decided that Sheriff Brady’s supposed
family emergency was nothing but a smoke screen to keep me out of her hair.
“When will that be?” I asked. “When will you be able to
talk to her again? And how long is this so-called family emergency scheduled to
last?”
That one pissed him off. “As long as it takes,” he
replied, standing up. “Now, if there’s nothing else, I’m quite busy at to
moment.”
With that he escorted me to the door, down the hall, and back
into the public lobby. As he booted me out I realized that, years ago when I
had the chance, I should have coughed up the six hundred bucks and taken myself
through the Dale Carnegie course.
Joanna dialed the hotel and was relieved when Cornelia Lester
didn’t answer. She left word with the desk clerk and had just put down the
phone when Frank called her back. “Losing a dog tough,” he said. “How’s Jenny
faring?”
Joanna liked the fact that everyone who knew about Sadie
asked about Jenny. “Better than I would have expected,” Joanna] told him. “She
took Kiddo and Tigger and went for a ride. No tell me. What did Mr. Beaumont
want?”
“Anything and everything,” Frank replied.
“I’m not surprised, but what exactly?”
“He asked about the Bobo Jenkins interview”
It was something Joanna hadn’t anticipated. “How did he
know about that?” she demanded.
“Who knows?” Frank replied. “I sure as hell didn’t tell
him. He also asked if we were making any progress in locating Dee Canfield and
her boyfriend.”
“So he knows about the missing persons part of it, too,”
Joanna mused. “Who all has he been talking to?”
“Beats me, boss,” Frank said. “Remember, though, the man’s
an ex-homicide detective. He’s probably been all over town asking questions.
You know how people here love to talk.”
Joanna knew that very well. Bisbee was a small place where
everyone had a finger in everyone else’s pie.
“What did you tell him?” she asked.
“Nothing. Not without your approval.”
“Which I’m not in danger of giving anytime soon,” Joanna
said. “Now let me tell you what Dave Hollicker found out.”
When she finished explaining about sodium azide, Frank
Montoya was aghast. “Geez!” he exclaimed. “That stuff sounds scary!”
“You’ve got that right,” Joanna told him grimly. “It’s
scary as hell.”
“You’re saying this sodium azide crap is lying around all
over the place where any nutcase in the universe can lay hands on it?”
“That’s the deal,” she told him. “And,” she added, “unlike
cyanide or arsenic, there aren’t any limits on who can have it.”
“There should be,” Frank said.
“Amen to that,” Joanna agreed.
There was a pause. “Maybe I should go on the Internet and
check this out,” Frank suggested. “I’ll see what more I can find out about it.”
“Good idea,” Joanna said. “Unfortunately, we have no idea
how much of it the killer still has in his or her possession. I’m guessing
there’s some left over after loading up the sweetener packets in Latisha Wall’s
kitchen.” Then, as an afterthought, she added, “While you’re surfing the Net,
there’s something else I’d like you to check out, Frank. I want you to do some
research on Anne Rowland Corley.”
“Wait a minute,” Frank said. “Isn’t she the young girl from
Bisbee who, years ago, supposedly killed her father and then skated?
At the time, the two Rowland deaths had been high profile
cases in southern Arizona, and they still were. Joanna wasn’t surprised to
learn that, years later, their outcomes continued to be common knowledge in
local law enforcement circles.
“She’s the one,” Joanna replied.
Frank frowned. “I seem to recall she died several years
ago.”
Joanna nodded. “I vaguely remember that, too,” she said. “But
the details escape me. That’s why I want you to check it out.”
“This Rowland thing is ancient history,” Frank objected. “Why
the sudden interest?”
“Because Special Investigator Beaumont told me he used to
be married to Anne Rowland Corley,” Joanna told him. “I believe he said she was
his second wife, although he’s probably on number three or four by now”
“Beaumont was married to her?” Frank asked. “That’s interesting.”
“Isn’t it, though,” Joanna agreed. “Very interesting.”
Earlier at the hotel I had tried using my laptop to check
my e-mail. Years ago, when Seattle PD dragged me kicking and screaming into the
twentieth century and forced me to start using a computer, I hated the damned
things. Now that I’m used to them, I can see they have some advantages. I’ve
adjusted. On this day, however, not being able to make my connection work in
the twenty-first century drove me nuts.
Frustrated, I had turned to my cell phone. I wanted to
talk to Ross Connors and ask him who all had been in the know when it came to
witness protection living arrangements for Latisha Wall. To my astonishment, I
found that my cell phone didn’t work, either—not
in Bisbee. The call wouldn’t go through. When I went downstairs and asked the
desk clerk about the problem, he explained that maybe my cell phone’s poor
signal strength was due to the hotel’s location deep inside the steep walls of
what he called Tombstone Canyon.
Now, having been thrown out of Frank Montoya’s office, I
sat in my Sportage in the Justice Center parking lot and considered my options.
Reflexively checking the readout on my cell phone, I was delighted to see that
I had full signal strength. Again I dialed the Washington State Attorney
General’s home number. The phone rang once and was immediately answered by a
woman speaking in a torrent of rapid-fire Spanish. After a couple of futile
attempts to get her to switch to English, I realized I was talking to a
recording.
Thinking I must have dialed the wrong number, I dug the
list Dr. Ross Connors’s phone numbers out of my wallet and checked to be sure I
hadn’t transposed some of the digits. No such luck. The number I had dialed was
correct. I had no idea what was going on with my cell phone now.
Cochise County, Arizona, has to be the black hole of
the telecommunications universe, I told myself.
I drove back into town and wandered around until I finally
located a pay phone at a Chevron station by the selfsame traffic circle that
had given me such fits when I had been trying to react the sheriff’s office the
first time. With the proliferation of cell phones, it seemed like years since I’d
been reduced to using an outdoor phone booth. It felt a little weird to be
standing there in the open—practically in public—and dialing Ross Connors’
super-secret unlisted phone numbers. Since it was Saturday, I tried the cell
phone first. No answer. Then I tried the office and reached a machine. Finally
I dialed his home number, where a woman answered after the third or fourth
ring. To my eternal delight, she spoke English. “Is Mr. Connors there?” I
asked.
“No. He’s out,” she said. “This is his wife, Francine. Who’s
calling, please? Can I take a message?”
I recalled Harry I. Ball’s stern admonition. “No messages.”
“Please tell him Beau called,” I said. That seemed
innocuous enough. “Tell him I’ll call back later. Any idea when he’ll be home?”
“It’s sunny today,” she said. “He’s playing golf”
That figured. The rain had cleared up in Seattle and Ross
Connors was out having himself a nice Saturday afternoon while J.P.
Beaumont—the birthday boy—was stuck spending a very long day in Bisbee,
Arizona, being kicked around by a pushy small town sheriff and her entire
department.
In the old days, that kind of feeling-sorry-for-myself
miser would have sent me straight to the nearest bar, but the Blue Moon wasn’t
calling me. Instead, I decided to stay right where I was and exercise the
prepaid phone card the Washington State travel agent had thoughtfully placed in
my travel packet. It certainly wasn’t my fault that none of my nearest and
dearest could reach me by telephone to wish me many happy returns.
First I talked to
Kelly, my daughter. She and her husband live
in Ashland, a
small town located in southern Oregon. When Kelly dropped out of school and ran away from home mere weeks
before her high school graduation, I wouldn't have bet a plugged
nickel that she'd ever go back and
finish, especially since she had taken up with a young actor/musician and was pregnant besides.
But it turned out marriage and motherhood were good for her.
She picked up her GED right after the
baby was born. Kelly's now two years into a bachelor of fine arts program at Southern Oregon University. Not only that, my
son-in-law, Jeremy, seems to be a
pretty good sort,
too—for an actor, that is. At least he's gainfully employed.
Kelly wished me a
happy birthday and told me about her mid-term exams before turning me over to three-year-old
Kayla, who spent the next several minutes babbling incoherently to her
"Goompa."
Next I called my
newly graduated and only recently gainfully employed son, Scott. He's a neophyte electronics engineer
who lives and works in the Bay Area. He and his girlfriend, Cherisse,
are up to their eyeballs in plans for
a wedding that is scheduled to take place sometime next spring. As we chatted on the phone, he
gave me some of the pertinent wedding
details, but I forgot them
as soon as he
told them to me. As Father of the Groom, I know all
I have to do is show up, pay for the rehearsal dinner, and
keep my
mouth shut. It's a far better deal
than the one you get as Father of the Bride.
Finally, I called
Naomi Pepper. If I thought she'd be glad to hear from me, I should have had—as
my mother would have said—another think coming. She was distant, to say the
least.
"What's going on?" I asked.
“I did what you
said,” she told me.
“What’s that?”
“I suggested to Mother that maybe we should look into an
assisted-living sort of arrangement for her. I told her about the one you
mentioned, the place up on Queen Anne that takes dogs.”
“And?”
“She hung up on me. She even left the phone off the hook
so I couldn’t call her back. I was so worried, I finally got in the car and
drove over to check on her, just to make sure she was okay. When I got there,
she had a whole line of pill bottles set out on the kitchen counter. She told
me that if that was how I felt about it—if I didn’t care for her any more than
that—there was no reason for her to go on living. If I hadn’t been there, Beau,
I can’t imagine what she might have done.”
I was fairly certain that the pill bottles had been
strictly for show. She wouldn’t have done a damned thing, I wanted to
say, but Naomi was crying now, and I knew the poor woman had been totally
outfoxed and outmaneuvered. As I said before, Naomi’s a nice person; her mother
isn’t. There was no need for me to add to Naomi’s misery by telling her so.
“What are you going to do?” I asked.
“The only thing I can do,” Naomi replied shakily. “She’s
coming to stay with me. Mother says she’ll call and start getting estimates
from moving companies first thing Monday morning. I’ll have to put some of my
stuff in storage to make room for hers. You’re not mad at me about this, are
you, Beau?”
Heartsick,
I
thought. And disappointed, but not mad.
“No,”
I said. “I’m not
mad at all. You have to do what you have to do.”
“Thank you,” she said gratefully. “Thank you so much for
saying that.” She seemed to gather herself together. “And now,” she added, “tell
me all about your birthday. How’s it going?”
“About as well as can be expected,” I said.
Jenny came back from her ride and headed directly for her
room. “Are you going to want dinner?” Butch asked as she passed through the
kitchen.
“I’m not hungry.”
“There’s plenty of food in the fridge if you want
something later.”
“Okay,” she said.
“What about you?” he asked Joanna.
“I’m not hungry, either,” she said.
“In that case, the cook is taking the night off. We’ll all
make do with leftovers.”
Joanna stretched out on the couch and covered her eyes
with one hand. She was about to doze off when Cornelia Lester called. It was
painful to have to tell the woman that although Joanna’s investigators were
making progress on the case, they still had no idea who had murdered Latisha
Wall.
“You say she was poisoned?” Cornelia asked in what sounded
like disbelief.
“That’s what we believe,” Joanna said.
Cornelia absorbed that information. “What about her paintings?”
she asked. “The ones in the gallery. Will I be able to see those anytime soon?”
“I’ll try to make arrangements for you to be allowed
inside the gallery,” Joanna said. “But I’m not sure when that will be.”
“In other words,” Cornelia said, “you still haven’t
located the gallery owner.”
Cornelia Lester was a stranger who wasn’t a former
detective yet she, too, seemed to be as privy to what was happening inside the
Cochise County Sheriff’s Department as J.P. Beaumont was. What would it be
like to work in a big city? Sheriff Brady wondered. To be able to do
this job in a place where everyone didn’t mind everyone else’s business?
“No,” Joanna had admitted with a sigh. “We still
haven’t located Dee Canfield.”
“What if you don’t?”
“If we don’t find her?”
“Or what if you do and she’s dead, too?” Cornelia persisted4
“What happens to the paintings then?”
“As far as I know, they belonged to your sister,” Joanna
said. “If something unfortunate has happened to Dee Canfield—and I’m certainly
not saying it has—then the paintings would, either by will or by law, go to
Latisha’s heirs. I’m assuming her heirs would be her family members, but let me
remind you, Ms. Lester, that we won’t be able to release them to anyone so long
as they’re part of an ongoing investigation.”
“Of course not,” Cornelia said. “But I’d still like to see
them.”
“I’ll see what I can do.”
“Thank you.”
Joanna put the phone down and had actually fallen asleep
before it rang again. This time Butch answered.
“It’s for you,” he said, scowling at the receiver as he
handed it over. “Tica Romero.”
“Hello?”
“We just got another 911 call from Naco,” the dispatcher
said. “Some kids were playing around in one of the old cavalry barracks down
there. They’ve reportedly found a body—a woman’s body. Chief Deputy Montoya and
Detective Carbajal are already on their way. Deputy Montoya wanted me to let
you know as well.”
“Thanks, Tica,” Joanna said, sitting up and shoving her
aching feet back into her shoes. “I’ll be right there.”
Joanna went into the bedroom and slipped on her soft body
armor as well as her weapons. Once she was dressed she stopped by Jenny’s room.
The door was ajar. When she peeked in, she saw Jenny and Tigger curled up
together on the bottom bunk, both of them sound asleep.
Leaving them be, Joanna returned to the kitchen where
Butch was at work on his house file.
“Duty calls,” she said when she bent over to collect a
good-bye kiss.”
“Don’t say I didn’t tell you so,” Butch said, but Joanna
was relieved to see that he was smiling.
“I won’t,” she said.
I had hung up after talking with Naomi and was wondering
what to do next. It sounded like the Naomi Pepper door in my life was about to
be slammed shut in my face. It came as no surprise that I immediately went back
to thinking about Anne Corley.
I recognized I’d gone slinking off to Bisbee, Arizona,
without mentioning it to my friend Ralph Ames. If I had been willing to ask him
questions about Anne Rowland Corley’s history, I’m sure he could have given me
answers, chapter and verse. As her attorney, he had known everything about
her. Well, almost everything.
The problem with asking Ralph about Anne is that he knew
her too well. Not only that, he had cared for her almost as much as I had.
Ralph and I are friends, good friends, so whatever he might tell me would
automatically go through those two distinctly separate filtering processes. I
had no doubt that Ralph would tell me in the truth up to a point but I
suspected he might leave out a detail or two, if only to spare my feelings.
I was wavering between calling him and not, when I heard a
siren. I looked up as a patrol car came racing up to the traffic circle from
Highway 80. I’m always conscious of cop cars. It’s something I notice wherever
I go. While in town, I had spotted several city of Bisbee patrol cars. They
were white with a blue shield on the door. The fast-moving Crown Victoria
making its way around the traffic circle sported a gold star on the door. That
meant it belonged to the Cochise County Sheriff’s Department.
I watched it go and wondered about it, but then I heard a second
siren coming from the direction of Old Bisbee. This one was a cumbersome Ford
Econoline van, but the same star was emblazoned on the outside. Something was
up, something serious. The sheriff’s department was being summoned en masse.
Should I follow or not? I
wondered.
Then, barely seconds later, a third vehicle came along—this
one a second Crown Victoria. It followed the same path as the first one. As it
slowed to negotiate the curve of the circle, I caught a glimpse of bright red
hair behind the wheel. This Crown Vic was being driven by Sheriff Brady
herself. Whatever had happened was serious enough to summon her away from her
family emergency. That did it. Moments later I was in the Sportage and trying
to catch up.
Of course, there was never any question that the underpowered
Sportage would catch up. The best I could hope for was to keep the Crown
Vic in sight. It rounded the traffic circle and took off in what I judged to be
a southwesterly direction. As I turned off the traffic circle myself, I thought
at first that I’d lost her. Then, after coming through two subdivisions, past a
mysterious no-visible-reason stoplight and through what looked like a genuine
slum, I caught sight of her again.
From what I could tell, Bisbee is made up of little
separate knots of tumbledown buildings strung together by strips of failing
blacktop. In between are big chunks of undeveloped desert. By the time Sheriff
Brady made it to the next little burb, I had closed some of the distance
between us. Signaling for a left-hand turn, she paused at yet another traffic
light. That slight delay gave me time enough to draw even nearer.
I, of course, had to stop at the light, too, and wait for
what seemed an interminable length of time. Eventually, though, when the light
changed, I could still see Joanna Brady’s car, speeding away on a straight
downhill stretch. We seemed to be headed toward a solitary mountain that rose
up in front of us some distance away.
Going downhill, the Sportage did a little better. After a
few more little pieces of town, we were in desert again. What I wouldn’t have
given to be driving my 928 about then. Barring that, it would have helped to
have a police radio with me. At least I would have had some idea what was
happening.
The next time the Crown Vic made a turn it was onto a
smaller road that bordered a golf course. I guess I was surprised to see a golf
course sitting there like a little emerald-green oasis in the middle of an
otherwise unremittingly brown desert. There was a marked golf-cart crossing at
the entrance. Naturally I had to stop and wait for not one but two golf carts
to dawdle their way into the small but jam-packed RV park that faced the
course. In the process I really did lose sight of Joanna’s Crown Vic.
Cursing under my breath, I drove to the far end of the
course and looked around. Still I saw nothing. Then I stopped the car, got out,
and listened.
The place was quiet. At first all I heard was a still
breeze blowing from the west. But then, carried on by the wind, I heard the
faint but familiar chatter from a nearby police radio. Even if the radio wasn’t
Sheriff Brady’s, she wouldn’t be far from the one I was hearing.
I got back into the Sportage and drove. I roamed through
several blocks of gravel-topped streets where a series of very old wooden and
red-dirt buildings seemed intent on melting hack into the desert. I found what
I was looking for when I came to where patrol car with flashing lights was
parked astride a red-dirt trail. The officer signaled for me to stop. I pulled
up next to a big bony dog who lay beside the road, unconcernedly observing the
action. His shaggy black coat was tinged red by a layer of dust. The officer,
who was now engaged in putting out a string of flares, booted the dog out of
the way. Shaking off a cloud of dust, the dog sauntered off.
With the dog gone, the scowling deputy turned his ill
tempered gaze on me. “Sorry, buddy,” he said. “This is a crime scene. No
unauthorized personnel allowed beyond this point.”
“My name’s Beaumont,” I said, passing him my badge. “Special
Investigator Beaumont. It’s okay,” I added. “Sheriff Brady knows I’m here.”
He squinted at the badge and compared my face to the
picture on my ID. “All right, then,” he said. “Pull over to one side so your
vehicle’s not blocking emergency access.”
Poor guy,
I
thought, feeling almost guilty as I followed his instructions. She’ll have
his butt for letting me through.
I decided my best course of action was simply to act as
though I belonged. I left the car with the keys in it. Mimicking the dog’s
unconcerned attitude, I sauntered past the deputy who, by then was busy turning
someone else away. I walked through several blocks of what looked like old-time
military barracks. And I do mean old. The place came complete with a long,
dilapidated building that had clearly been a stable. It took a few minutes for
me to realize that I hadn’t wandered into a moldering Western movie set. This
was truly the genuine article—an old U.S. Cavalry station.
By then I could see Sheriff Brady. She stood in a huddle
with Frank Montoya and a plainclothes guy I hadn’t seen before.
She caught sight of me while I was still fifty feet away.
Breaking out of the huddle, she marched toward me, furious and practically
breathing fire.
“What have we got?” I asked casually, thinking that my
well-placed “we” might mollify her just a little.
It didn’t. “What the hell are you doing here?” she
demanded.
I expect women to yell when they’re upset. That’s what I’m
used to, anyway—ranting and raving, if not outright screaming. That wasn’t
Joanna Brady’s style. She barely whispered her question, but the effect was
the same.
“Look,” I said reasonably, “I’m trying to do my job. Your
deputy back there told me there’s been another homicide. I thought maybe it
might have something to do with those two missing—”
“Get out!” she ordered.
“But Sheriff Brady, I thought we were supposed to be
working together on—”
“I said, ‘Get out!’ and I meant it.”
“I just—”
“You just nothing! Go!”
More officers were showing up by then, and I could see she
wasn’t going to change her mind. So I left. I put my tail between my legs and
beat it back to the Sportage. A woman wearing golf course duds was chatting
with the unfortunate deputy. No one could have overheard what Sheriff Brady was
saying too me, but her hand gestures had spoken volumes. By then the deputy had
figured out that he had made a potentially career-stopping mistake in letting
me through. He shot me a disparaging look as I passed but I ignored it. What
did he expect me to do? Apologize?
I had folded myself back into the Sportage and was
wondering what to do next when somebody tapped on my window. When rolled it
down, the lady in the golf clothes, who wore her blond hair in a wild frizz of
curls, gave me a bright smile.
“Yes?” I said.
She reached in through the opened window and handed my a
card. “Marliss Shackleford,” the card said. “Columnist. The Bisbee Bee.”
“Glad to make your acquaintance,” she said, batting her
eyes.
Under normal circumstances, I wouldn’t be caught dead
talking to a reporter. But I was currently at war with Sheriff Joanna Brady.
That meant all bets were off.
I held out my hand. “Special Investigator J.P. Beaumont,”
said. “Glad to make your acquaintance.”
CHAPTER THIRTEEN
When I invited Marliss Shackleford to come up to the
Copper Queen Hotel so we could talk, she jumped at the chance. “If you don’t
mind, though,” she said, “I’d like to go home and change first.”
“Sure,” I said. “I’ll see you there.”
As I walked into the lobby, the desk clerk caught my eye
and waved to me before I could step into the elevator. “There you are,” he
said. “A call for you. I was about to take a message. If you want, there’s a
house phone over there.”
He pointed to an old-fashioned black phone hidden away in
the corner, right next to a darkened hotel-lobby jewelry stand that was
evidently closed for the evening.
“Is that you, Beau?” Attorney General Ross Connors asked. “Francine
told me you called. How’s it going?”
“Let’s just say Sheriff Brady didn’t exactly welcome me
with open arms.”
“I didn’t expect she would. Are her people making any
progress?”
“They brought a suspect in for an interview today. He was
accompanied by his attorney. As far as I know, however, no arrests have been
made.”
“Who’s the suspect?” Connors demanded impatiently.
I glanced around the lobby to see if anyone was listening.
No one seemed to be. Still, talking on a house phone in a hotel lobby, I didn’t
want to say too much. “Boyfriend,” I said. “Could be a lovers’ spat of some
kind.”
Ross Connors breathed a sigh of relief. “Let’s hope,” he
said. His heartfelt reaction jangled a nerve that had been niggling at me ever
since Harry I. Ball sent me off on this wild-goose chase. “Would Latisha Wall’s
presence really have made that big a difference?” I asked. “In the upcoming
trial, I mean. Surely you have depositions and so forth from her that can be
placed in evidence even if she’s not there to testify in person.”
“Believe me,” Ross said. “It makes a huge difference.”
In other words, I’d have to take his word for it.
“Listen,” he went on, “if the boyfriend angle pans out—and
I’m sure you’ll know that within a day or two—then you can put yourself on a
plane and come on home.”
“If
it pans out,” I
returned. “There’s no guarantee that it will. In the meantime, though, while we’re
still looking at all the angles, I have a question for you.”
“What?”
“Who knew about the arrangements?”
“What arrangements?”
What the hell did he think I meant—arrangements for his
next day’s tee time? “For Latisha Wall,”
I said. “I know enough about witness protection programs to realize they cost
money, lots of it. I also know you don’t jar that kind of money loose from the
Washington State budget without having to jump through a bunch of hoops.”
“Dale Ahearn,” Ross answered. And O.H. Todd. O.H. is the
actual case manager. He was in charge of making all financial and living
arrangements. He’s also the one who put together her supporting documents.”
“His telephone number is the one that’s listed for
Lawrence Baxter, the guy who’s named as next of kin in Rochelle Baxter’s DMV
file.”
“Right,” Ross agreed.
“What about Dale Ahearn? Who’s he, and what does he do?”
“He’s my chief of staff. Like I said, O.H. made the
arrangements, but Dale signed off on them and passed them along to me for
final approval.”
I didn’t know O.H. Todd and Dale Ahearn from holes in the
ground, but Ross Connors did. “You think these two guys are trustworthy?” I
asked.
“I certainly thought so,” Connors replied. And that’s why
this thing has me so spooked. I’ve worked with O.H. and Dale for years. Until
all this came up, I would have trusted either one of them with my life. Now I’m
not so sure. That’s why it’s so important for me to know exactly what
happened. It’s also why I’m counting on your discretion.”
So that’s what this is all about,
I told myself. I’m not down here on the state’s nickel
to fend off UPPI’s upcoming breach-of-contract dispute with the state of
Washington. I’m here because Ross Connors is having a crisis of confidence with
some of his minions.
My enthusiasm for having signed up with Ross Connors and
his outfit took a sudden nosedive. I had thought the purpose of the Special
Homicide Investigation Team was to investigate murders. Now it sounded as
though someone in the attorney general’s office might actually be causing
homicides here and there rather than simply solving them. That being the case,
could a cover up be far behind?
“I’ve just come from another crime scene,” I said into the
phone. “I’m pretty sure it’s another homicide. There’s a possibility that it
could be related to what happened to Latisha Wall.”
“Could be?” Ross repeated. “You mean you don’t know for
sure? That’s why I have you on the scene, Beaumont. It’s also why we paid to
fly you down there. We need to know for sure what’s going on.”
As Attorney General Ross slipped into the old blame game
routine, I bristled. “I’m not exactly working under optimal conditions,” I
growled.
“Why not?”
“Because Sheriff Brady ordered me to leave the scene the
minute I showed up.”
“Why would she do that?” Connors asked. “What is she, some
kind of prima donna?”
You’re the problem,
I
wanted to say. And I did, in so many words. “Sheriff Brady is ripped because it
took so long for us to get her any information.”
“I was trying to get a handle on the situation,” he said.
Handle, my ass!
I
thought. What you really mean is spin.
That was about the time Marliss Shackleford waltzed into
the lobby. “Sorry to have cut you off,” I told the attorney genera “Someone’s
here to see me. I’ve gotta go.”
“How many times do I have to tell you boys to stay away
from those houses?” an outraged Velma Verdugo railed. “ ‘The places are falling
down,’ I say. ‘They’re dangerous. The ceilings could cave in on you. A floor
could collapse. You never know what you’ll find. You’re bound to end up getting
in trouble.’ That’s what I tell them, but do they listen? Not on your life!”
Unfortunately, Joanna knew exactly how this exasperated
mother felt. It hadn’t been that many months ago when Jenny, while breaking a
similar prohibition and doing something she shouldn’t have, had stumbled on the
body of a murder victim. This time the boys in question—two brothers ages eight
and nine—had found the body of a woman Joanna presumed to be the missing Deidre
Canfield.
As their mother shrieked at them and shook her finger in
their faces, the two boys shrank away from her. Cowering just out of reach,
they looked so thoroughly humiliated that Joanna felt sorry for them, just as
she did for Velma. Joanna suspected that the woman’s shrill tirade had far more
to do with her being frightened for her sons—over what might have happened to
them—than it did with genuine anger.
“If you’d allow us to speak to them for a few minutes,
Mrs. Verdugo,” Joanna said soothingly. “It shouldn’t take long.”
“It better not,” Velma returned. “Their daddy will be off
work soon. Believe me, when Gabe gets here, he’ll do more than talk.”
Faced with the old wait-till-your-father-gets-home threat,
the boys exchanged wary glances but they didn’t speak. The look that passed
between them wasn’t lost on Joanna.
“I hope he won’t be too severe,” Joanna said. “It’s really
fortunate for my investigators that Marcus and Eddie found the body when they
did.”
Chief Deputy Montoya ambled over to where Joanna stood
talking to the Verdugos. Taking in the situation, he winked at the boys and
then began speaking to their mother in Spanish. Joanna had taken years of both
high school and college Spanish, but the classes had left her something less
than fluent. Nevertheless she was able to follow enough of what Frank was
saying to realize he was simply expanding on much of what Joanna had said
moments earlier and praising the two boys for reporting their find rather than
concealing it.
Frank’s words seemed to have a calming effect on the
agitated woman. Velma listened in silence. When he stopped speaking, she turned
back to her sons. Squeezing her eyes tightly shut and with tears streaming down
her face, she pounced on the two boys and then hugged them to her in a
desperate embrace.
Jaime Carbajal appeared just then with his crime scene
camera still in his hand. “Sorry for the interruption, Sheriff Brady. Could you
please come with me?”
Excusing herself, Joanna followed Detective Carbajal. She
had visited this deserted, crumbling cavalry post with her father years
earlier. D.H. Lathrop, an amateur historian, had explained to her how Pancho
Villa had attacked Columbus, New Mexico, in 1916. Camp Harry J. Jones in Naco,
Arizona, named after a murdered Army guard, had been part of a network of
military posts main twining border security during the Mexican Revolution. With
her father, Joanna had explored the adobe-walled stables and the fallen-down
barracks. Now Jaime Carbajal led her toward what had once been the officers’
quarters. The house—a small, graffiti marred wreck—was missing all its windows
and doors.
“You’d better come inside and take a look,” the detective
said. And you’re going to need these.” Once again he handed her a mask,
evidence-preserving Tyvek booties, and his much-used vial of Vicks.
“Dee Canfield?” Joanna asked. She paused on the small
front porch long enough to apply the menthol and don the mask and booties.
Meanwhile Jaime nodded grimly in answer to her question.
“Any sign of Warren Gibson?” the sheriff added.
“Not yet,” Jaime reported. “But we haven’t searched the
whole place yet. There could be another body hidden in one of the other
buildings. We just haven’t found it yet.”
Joanna nodded. “Has Frank called for extra deputies?”
“He has,” Jaime said. “Dispatch tells me two of them are
on their way”
Joanna nodded. “Good. We’ll give one of the deputies to
you for the crime scene. The other we’ll send with Casey Ledford when she goes
through Dee’s house and the gallery, assuming you did manage to pick up those
search warrants,” she added.
Jaime nodded. “Dave’s on his way to pick them up.”
Long before Joanna stepped through the open doorway into
the gloomy, dusty interior, and even through the barrier of menthol, her
nostrils detected the unmistakably rank odor of human decomposition. A woman’s
fully clad body lay on the sagging wooden floor of what had once been a
kitchen. Joanna immediately recognized the distinctive hues of Dee Canfield’s
tie-dyed smock. After maneuvering far enough around the body to have a complete
view of the victim’s face, Joanna saw that the dead woman’s fleshy features
were drawn up in a horrific grimace.
“Any signs of violence?”
Jaime shook his head. “No apparent bleeding or bruising as
far as I can see.”
Joanna looked at him closely. “Are you thinking the same
thing I am, that maybe we’re dealing with another poisoning?”
The detective nodded. “The thought did cross my mind.”
“Damn,” Joanna said.
She made her way outside.
Velma Verdugo was now seated in the front passenger seat
Frank’s Civvie while her two sons leaned against the front fender few feet
away. The chief deputy crouched before them. Holding clipboard, he was asking
questions and making notes.
Frank glanced over his shoulder as Joanna approached. “The
boys may have seen Sheriff Brady a while ago,” he said, “but I doubt you were
introduced. This is Eddie,” Frank explained to Joanna, indicating the taller of
the two. “That one is Marcus.”
Joanna held out her hand, and the boys took turns shaking
it.
“Here’s what we have so far,” Frank continued. “Eddie and
Marcus told me that they discovered the body earlier in the day, probably
between three and four this afternoon. Because their parents have declared this
whole place off-limits, they didn’t want to let on about their discovery for
fear of getting in trouble. They talked it over, though, and finally decided to
tell anyway. Mrs. Verdugo found out about it around forty-five minutes ago.
That when she called 911.”
Joanna turned to the boys herself. “Did either of you touch
anything while you were inside?” she asked.
“No, ma’am,” Eddie replied at once. “We were both too
scared. Besides,” he added, “Marcus was about to puke because it smelled so bad
and he’s such a sissy. Ee got out of there and ran
“The woman whose body you found has been missing since
Thursday,” Joanna told them. “It’s likely she’s been here since then. Did
either of you see any unusual activity between then and now—any unusual
vehicles? Any people who looked out of place and who maybe had no business
being here?”
“Nada,” Eddie Verdugo answered.
“Me, either,” Marcus chirped.
Joanna turned to Velma. “What about you, Mrs. Verdugo?”
she asked. “You must live nearby, don’t you?”
Velma nodded and pointed toward a mobile home parked on a
lot a block or so away. “That’s where we live.”
“Did you notice any unusual activity?”
“No.”
Just then, a man dressed in a Border Patrol uniform passed
through the checkpoint and strode toward them.
“Daddy,” Marcus cried. Darting away from Frank’s car, the
boy broke into a run and raced to meet the new arrival. The man caught Marcus
in midstep, lifted him off the ground, swung him around in a circle, and then
hugged him close. It was only as they came nearer that Joanna recognized Gabe
Verdugo, a Border Patrol officer she had encountered on previous occasions when
her officers and those from the Border Patrol had been involved in joint
operations.
“What’s going on?” Gabe Verdugo demanded. “Is everyone all
right?”
While Frank explained what had happened, little Marcus
clung like a burr to his father’s neck. Joanna guessed that if Velma expected
someone to ream her boys out for their willful disobedience, she was out of
luck as far as Gabe Verdugo was concerned.
Fortunately, Gabe, a law enforcement officer himself, knew
what would be expected of his sons now that they had blundered into a homicide
investigation.
“When will you want them to come in for the official
interview?” he asked.
“Good question,” Joanna told him. “We’re one detective
short at the moment. Right now Detective Carbajal has his hands full. We won’t
be ready to talk to the boys anytime before Monday morning, when Detective
Carpenter comes back.”
“Hey, great!” Eddie crowed, his face breaking into a wide
grin “If we go Monday morning, we’ll get to miss school.”
That was more than his mother could stand. “Oh, no, you
don’t,” Velma Verdugo said fiercely. “The detectives can interview you during
lunch.” Then, after a long moment, her troubled face collapsed into a smile.
Seconds later, the entire Verdugo clan was laughing and hugging.
Joanna Brady understood that, too. Something awful had
happened. Like Jenny finding the body at camp, the Verdugo boys while just
being kids, had stumbled unwittingly into a homicide. Their lives had been
touched by an evil that had left them all feeling vulnerable and scared. But
now, while that vulnerability was still fresh, there was much to be thankful
for in just being alive. In that situation, even a mother’s fierce anger could
be cause for celebration.
“Sheriff Brady?” Deputy Howell said, announcing her
arrival. “They told us to report to you or Chief Deputy Montoya.”
Joanna turned away from the people clustered around Frank
Montoya’s Civvie to greet the two uniformed officers who had dust arrived on
the scene. Although Joanna was glad to see Deputy Debra Howell, she was less
than thrilled when she realized the second deputy was Kenneth Galloway.
“What should we do?” Debra asked.
“We’ve got another homicide,” Joanna told them. “I want you
to work with Detective Carbajal and Dave Hollicker on the crime scene
investigation here, Deputy Howell. Deputy Galloway, you’ll be assisting Casey
Ledford.”
“Doing what?” Ken Junior asked.
It wasn’t outright insubordination, but it was close—more
in tone of voice than anything else.
“Whatever Casey needs,” Joanna told him. “From keeping the
evidence log to lifting prints. She’s over there talking with Detective
Carbajal. Ask her.”
Galloway walked away, muttering something unintelligible
under his breath. “What’s wrong with him?” Frank Montoya asked.
“I’m not sure,” Joanna said. “But I suspect Deputy
Galloway has a few issues about working with women.”
Within minutes, the medical examiner arrived. While Detective
Carbajal led Doc Winfield to the body, Deputies Howell and Hollicker were sent
to search other nearby buildings for a second possible victim. Meanwhile,
Joanna and Frank Montoya consulted with Casey Ledford while Galloway lounged in
the background.
“What do we know about the missing boyfriend?” the
fingerprint tech asked. “How long has he been around?”
“According to Jaime, he’s been in town for several months,”
Frank responded. “Working for and living with Dee Canfield most of the time.
The DMV tells me that no one named Warren Gibson currently holds a valid
Arizona driver’s license, and I haven’t been able to find any other official
record of him, either.”
“All right,” Joanna said. “We have search warrants for
both Dee Canfield’s house and her gallery, but let’s check the gallery first.
There may be employment records or something else there that’ll make it
possible for us to find out more about Warren Gibson. Something’s out of whack
here.”
It didn’t take long for me to figure out that Marliss
Shackleford hadn’t agreed to talk to me because she’d been charmed by my
boyish good looks and overwhelming charm. She was after something. No, make
that someone. She was out to get the goods on Sheriff Joanna Brady.
We retreated from the lobby to the bar. I had O’Doul’s.
Marliss had a tall gin and tonic.
“I should have thought you’d be more interested in hanging
around a homicide crime scene than in talking to me,” I said for openers.
Marliss gave me a flirtatious smile. She was fortyish and
not at that bad looking. She had what my old partner, Sue Danielson once
referred to as big hair. Ash blond and crinkly, it stood out horn her head like
a massive halo.
“That’s the reporter’s job,” she explained. “Like my card
says I’m a columnist. I write a thrice-weekly piece called “Bisbee Buzzings.”
The paper is called the Bee, you see,” she added, as if
site thought me a bit dim. “The Bisbee Bee.”
I have a long-term, not-so-cordial relationship with a man
named Maxwell Cole who’s a columnist for the Seattle Post-Intelligencer. Marliss
Shackleford didn’t know it, but being in the same league with Max wasn’t the
best kind of third-party referral.
“As I understand it, you’re a detective.”
“Used to be,” I told her. “Now I’m a special investigator
with the Washington State Attorney’s Special Homicide Investigation Team. That’s
spelled S-H-I-T,” I added helpfully.
Marliss Shackleford’s face changed. She looked shocked. “I
beg your pardon?”
“‘That’s what my unit is called, the Special Homicide
Investigation ‘team.”
“Oh,” she murmured. “But since this is a family newspaper
well probably have to write the whole thing out.” She fumbled to an uneasy stop
and then started over. “And you’re here in Bisbee because ...”
“Why do you think I’m here?” I asked in return.
She shrugged. “I presume it’s because of the woman who died
down in Naco on Wednesday night. I’ve learned that her real name was Latisha
Wall. I’ve also been told she was in the Washington State Witness Protection
Program.”
Marliss obviously had sources inside the Cochise County
Sheriff’s Department. I wondered who those sources might be. Rather than
asking, though, I simply raised my bottle of O’Doul’s and clinked it on her
glass.
“See there?” I said. “Since you already know so much about
it, I don’t understand why you need to talk to me at all.”
“All right,” she admitted, dropping her ploy of fake
innocence for the moment. “I know who you are and where you’re from, but I
still don’t know why you’re here. Is it because your boss ... ?”
“Ross Connors,” I supplied. “He’s the Washington State
Attorney General.”
“Are you here because Mr. Connors has no faith in Sheriff
Brady’s ability to bring this case to a successful conclusion?”
Marliss Shackleford waited for my answer with her pen
poised over a small notebook and with her eyes sparkling in anticipation, like
a cat ready to spring on some poor unsuspecting sparrow. She clearly wanted me
to say that I thought Sheriff Joanna Brady was incompetent. And, much as I
might have liked to—much as I thought Joanna Brady to be an arrogant little
twit—I couldn’t bring myself to do it. I was incapable of saying so to a
reporter, much less to a newspaper columnist.
“From what I can see,” I told her guardedly, “Sheriff
Brady is doing a credible job, especially since her department is so
short-handed. She seems to have only one detective on the job, and he’s having
to deal with two separate homicides. Her plate is pretty full.”
Marliss’ eager expression faded to disappointment. She put
down her pen. “Ernie’s on vacation,” she told me unnecessarily.
“Ernie?” I asked.
“Ernie Carpenter. He’s the sheriff’s department’s other
detective. He and his wife, Rose, are off on an anniversary trip—their
thirtieth.”
Bully for them, I
thought.
God spare me from living in a small town. “So you think the
county investigators are doing a good job?” Marliss continued.
“Yes,” I said. “I do.”
“And your function is?”
“I’m here as an observer,” I told her. “An interested
observer; nothing more.”
“I see.” She frowned briefly, then added. “I understand Latisha
Wall’s sister is in town. Have you talked to her?”
“I’m not sure there’s any reason for me to talk to her,” I
fudged. “As I said, I’m observing, not investigating.”
Marliss tried coming at me from another direction. “I
believe the sheriff’s department investigators interviewed a suspect today.”
The columnist certainly did have an inside track. Now it
was my turn to play innocent. “Really?” I asked.
She nodded. “The guy’s a local, someone who’s lived around
here for years. His name is Bobo Jenkins—LaMar Jenkins, actually. He and
Latisha were a romantic item for several months. I suppose there’s a
possibility that Latisha Wall’s death could have resulted from some kind of
domestic dispute. What do you think of that idea?”
Cops don’t talk to the press about critical aspects of
ongoing investigations. Those are words I’ve lived by for most of my adult life.
Joanna Brady’s actions may have provoked me beyond endurance, but I couldn’t
bring myself to do that much of a flip flop.
“I don’t think 1 should comment about that one way or the
other.” I said.
“You think it’s true then?”
“No. I said, ‘No comment.’ There’s a difference.”
The desk clerk came through the doorway and poked his head
into the bar. “Hey, Marliss,” he said, “I’ve got a call for you. Want to take
it here or in the lobby?”
“Lobby,” she said.
Marliss got up and left me sitting alone. On this cool
Saturday night the bar was filling up with people, most of whom seemed to know
one another. I was relieved that none of the bikers from the Blue Moon were in
evidence. Alone in that crowded room, I thought about what it might be like to
be a homicide cop in a small burg like this—a place where almost every victim
and suspect would be someone known to you and where every move you made would
be accomplished under the glaring spotlight of local reporters who knew you,
the victims, and the perps. That kind of case-solving was definitely not for
me.
And I also thought about having a drink, just one, maybe,
in honor of my birthday. But before I made up my mind one way or the other,
Marliss returned looking flushed and excited.
“That was Kevin,” she explained breathlessly. “He’s our
reporter. He just heard that the second victim has been identified.
Tentatively, of course. Not officially.”
“Really,” I said nonchalantly.
If I had acted as though I were vitally interested in the
information, I doubt Marliss would have told me. Since I gave every indication
that I couldn’t care less, she eagerly filled me in.
“Her name is Deidre Canfield,” Marliss said in a stage
whisper that was entirely unnecessary since no one in the bar was paying us the
slightest visible attention. “Dee owned an art gallery here in town. She and Latisha
Wall were friends. This is all confidential, of course. It’s totally on the QT until
there’s been an official notification of next of kin. You won’t tell anyone,
will you?”
“Of course not,” I agreed.
“But I have to go back to the paper and check something
out,” Marliss added. “I did a profile of Dee Canfield a year or so ago, when
she first came to town. I’ll be able to reuse some of that material. I won’t
print anything prematurely, you understand, but if I write it right now while
it’s all still fresh, then the column will be ready the moment the coast is
clear.”
As I said before, between living in big cities or little
towns, give me the city any day of the week.
CHAPTER FOURTEEN
After Marliss Shackleford left, I found I needed either a
drink or some air and space. Upon reflection, I took myself for a walk. It was
well after dark by then and much chillier than the toasty daytime temperatures
would have led me to expect. I was glad I was still wearing my wrinkled blazer
as I wandered through narrow, crooked streets. The two- and three-story
buildings I saw reminded me of those in downtown Ballard back home in Seattle.
I wondered what Bisbee must have been like back in its heyday, back when
domestic copper production was still a moneymaking proposition.
Here and there streetlights revealed ghostly traces of old
signs painted on the sides of brick buildings, just barely still legible. They
testified to the more abundant and diverse commercial past in small-town
America—Western Auto, Woolworth’s, JC Penney. But those bedrock businesses had
long since deserted Bisbee, just as they had deserted countless other
communities across the nation. Now the buildings had different occupants. It
looked as though the current crop of merchants and organizations catered to
tourism—a mining museum, an antiques mall, and a mostly used bookstore. The
bars, of course, hadn’t gone away. Maybe you couldn’t buy a hammer and nails on
Main Street in Bisbee, Arizona, anymore, but Coors on tap was readily
available.
Naturally, as I walked, my mind strayed back to Anne. Had
she walked this winding canyon street as a little girl? Had she bought an Etch
A Sketch in Woolworth’s or an Easter outfit in JC Penney?
And, as often happens when I think of Anne, I see her
again as I did that very first time. It’s a cloudless spring afternoon in Seat
tie’s Mount Pleasant Cemetery. Wearing that bright red dress, she’s striding
across the green grass toward Angela Barstogi’s open grave. The dowdily dressed
mourners from Faith Tabernacle all stand aside to let her pass, parting before
her commanding presence as the waters of the Red Sea did for Moses.
She stops only when she reaches the grave. Her hair is
long and dark. A slight breeze ruffles it around her face, and I realize I’ve
never seen anyone more beautiful or so undeniably sad.
The crowd is dumbstruck, and so am I. No one moves. Even
the overbearing Pastor Michael Brodie is stunned to silence. Then slowly,
gracefully, she raises her hand. A single rose drifts away from her open
fingers and falls gently onto the casket of a small, murdered child.
And then the scene shifts. The funeral is over and when I
see her again, she is coming down the hill. She is walking purpose fully, with
a certain goal in mind. Eventually I realize she’s coining to me—directly to
me. I am her goal, and my life will never again he the same.
Lost in thought, I nearly blundered into Cornelia Lester,
who was making her way down Main Street.
“Sorry,” I apologized. “I was thinking of something else.
Mind if I join you?”
“But you were going in the other direction,” she objected.
“That’s all right. I was about to turn back anyway.”
She laughed. “Help yourself, then, Mr.... I’m sorry. You’ll
have to forgive me. I seem to have forgotten your name.”
“Beaumont,” I supplied, falling into step beside her. “J.P.
Beaumont. You can call me Beau.”
Once again, Cornelia Lester’s clothing rustled as she
walked. Despite her ample girth, she set a brisk pace, moving much more swiftly
than I had been on my own. Only the fact that we were now going downhill made
it possible for me to keep up.
“I went up to the art gallery again,” she explained. “I
keep hoping someone will show up there and let me in.”
I wrestled with whether or not I should tell her what
Marliss Shackleford had just told me—that Dee Canfield had now been identified
as a murder victim as well—but I decided against it. A reporter’s
unsubstantiated tip might very well be wrong. That kind of information needs to
come from someone officially connected to the investigation. Marliss
Shackleford certainly wasn’t official and, as fair as this latest incident was
concerned, neither was I.
“There were lights on inside,” Cornelia continued. “They must
be on a timer so they come on automatically. I was able to catch a glimpse of a
couple of Tizzy’s paintings through the window. The one of Daddy ...” She
stopped talking abruptly, swallowed hard, and wiped at her eyes.
“Did you know our father was a minister?” she asked
finally when she found her voice again. “He was a United Methodist minister at
a mostly black church in Macon, Georgia. You ever been to Georgia?”
“Never,” I said.
“Macon’s a quiet place. Comfortable. But Tizzy couldn’t
wait to get out of town, and out of Daddy’s church, too. We both did that,
Tizzy and I, left home and neither of us set foot inside a church for years.”
She shrugged. “That’s kids for you. They have to rebel. Daddy was a man
of prayer. Tizzy loved action. He believed in nonviolence. He wanted his
daughters to go to church and get educated. What did Tizzy do? She joined the
Marines and went off to war. I finally got over what was bugging me. I went
back home to Macon for keeps and to Daddy’s church as well. I made my peace
with our parents. Tizzy never did, and it broke Daddy’s heart. I think that’s
part of what killed him, but that one picture ...”
Again she paused, overcome by emotion.
“Which picture?” I asked.
“It’s one of Tizzy’s paintings in the gallery. Have you
seen them?”
“No.”
“Well, one of them shows Daddy standing outside his church
on a sunny Sunday morning. He’s wearing that old robe of his the bright red one
that he loved so much and wore every summer until it was so thin you could
practically see through it. Tizzy captured everything about it, even the little
patch Momma darned into the arm. I could almost smell it, reeking of Daddy’s
old Spice.
“The picture was so true to life that it took my breath
away. It might have been a photograph. And there’s little T. J. Evans, standing
there looking up at Daddy with those big brown trusting eyes. I’d know that boy
anywhere; he was such a cute little thing. T.J.’s gone now, of course. Died in
a car wreck three or four years ago, but Tizzy painted him just the way he was
back then when he was a little-bitty sprout. It’s like her mind was a camera,
with everything stored there just like it used to be.”
We walked the distance of a block in silence, although
with no cross-streets, it’s hard to measure blocks in Bisbee.
“That picture just got to me, I guess,” Cornelia Lester
continued eventually. “Made me think maybe she was intending to come back
after all. Not home, of course. I know she couldn’t have done that, but maybe
she was ready to come back to the fold. Like she was finally ready to make
peace with Daddy and with all he stood for. What do you think?”
“I wouldn’t know,” I said. “But maybe so.”
“Did you happen to notice that United Methodist Church
back there, just across the street from the gallery?” Cornelia asked.
I hadn’t. “No,” I said.
“Tombstone Something, I think. The sign says services
start at ten-thirty. I believe I’ll go there tomorrow morning. I like to do
that—visit other churches when I’m traveling.”
I’ve never had a sibling, but if I had just learned one of
them had been murdered, I doubt I would have been out looking for Sunday-morning
services in a strange church in a strange town. Cornelia Lester had a depth of
belief that made me half envious. We had come to a small plaza, an almost level
spot in an otherwise up-and-down town. We crossed a one-way backstreet and were
making our way through a postage-stamp-size park when three Cochise County
patrol cars came roaring past us, one right after the other. None of them had
their flashers or sirens on. Even so, they were moving at a good clip. I was
pretty sure one of them belonged to Sheriff Brady, and I theorized that they
had cone from the crime scene in Naco and were probably headed for Castle Rock
Gallery.
I really wanted to turn on my heel and go there, too. But
I didn’t. I was certain that if I showed up somewhere uninvited, Sheriff Brady
would send me packing. Again.
Call me a slow learner, but I’ve finally figured out that
sometimes I’m better off not going where I’m not wanted.
Cornelia Lester and I made our way up the steps on the far
side of the park and then across a narrow side street and up into the hotel
lobby. By the time we topped the last set of stairs, we were both huffing and
puffing. I fully expected Cornelia Lester to head directly for the elevator and
her room, but she didn’t. Instead she made her way toward one of the leather
couches.
“Wouldn’t you mind sitting with me awhile?” she asked. “I’d
really appreciate it. I feel a need to talk to someone tonight, but it’s past
midnight back home by now. Everyone there is probably sound asleep.”
“Sure,” I agreed.
After all, it may have been my birthday, but I had nothing
else to do but listen. And with memories of Anne Corley haunting me once
more, it was either that, find an AA meeting, or go to the bar and have a
drink. Faced with those three alternatives, listening to Cornelia Lester was by
far the best choice.
While Frank Montoya stayed with the crime scene
Investigation in Naco, Joanna took her Civvie and followed Casey and Ken Junior
back into town and up to Castle Rock Gallery in Old Bisbee. Joanna had parked
her car and was locking the door when a man smoking a glowing cigarette
materialized unexpectedly next to her.
“Oh, Harve,” she said, recognizing the owner of Treasure
Trove Antiques. “You startled me. I didn’t see you there.”
“Wasn’t,” he said. “Came down when I heard them other two
cop cars drive up. See you’ve got some officers in there now,” he added,
nodding in the direction of the gallery. “Did you find her? Something bad must
have happened.”
Joanna nodded. “Dee Canfield is dead, Harve,” she said. “Some
boys found her body in an abandoned house down in Naco several hours ago, but
that’s not for public knowledge just yet. We need to notify her family.”
Harve sighed and nodded sagely. “I was afraid of that,” he
said. “In fact, I pro’ly should have said as much to that other detective of
yours when I talked to him earlier this afternoon, but I’m no gossip. I didn’t
want to cause trouble.”
“You talked to Detective Carbajal today?” Joanna asked.
“Oh, no. Not Jaime—that other fellow, the big one with the
salt-and-pepper crew cut. He must be new. I don’t remember ever seein’ him
around before. Can’t tell you his name, but I’m sure you know who I mean.”
Joanna knew exactly whom Harvey Dowd meant. Mr. Beaumont,
I presume, she thought.
“What all did you tell him?” she asked.
“Nothin’ much. About that fight the other day, the one you
had to break up. I was surprised that he didn’t seem to know nothin’ about it.”
I’m not,
Joanna
thought.
“I haven’t had a chance to talk to him this afternoon,”
she said innocently. “Did you tell him anything else I should know about? Or
have you seen anything unusual going on around the gallery in the last day or
two?”
Harvey Dowd took a final, thoughtful drag on the end of
his cigarette, then he dropped the stub into the gutter and ground it out with
the sole of his boot. “Had a long talk again this evening with that nice black
lady, the one whose sister was killed down in Naco earlier this week. She keeps
coming by hoping to get a look at her sister’s paintings, but, of course,
nobody’s been there.”
Cornelia Lester,
Joanna
thought.
“She was all wore out from walking so far uphill,” Harve
Dowd continued. “She’s from Georgia, you see. She’s not accustomed to this here
elevation of ours. My shop was closed for the day, but I let her come in and
sit a spell in one of my old rockers until she got her breath back. I offered
to bring my car down from the parking lot and give her a ride back to the
hotel, but she wouldn’t hear of it. She said walking was fine.”
Harve paused long enough to shake another cigarette out of
his pack of Camels. “What about that boyfriend of Dee’s?” he asked.
“So far there’s no sign of him,” Joanna answered.
Sheltering a flickering match with his cupped hand, Harvey
Dowd lit his next cigarette. “Not surprised,” he drawled when he finished. “I’m
guessing you’re not gonna find him, either. Never did like Warren Gibson much.
Struck me as sort of underhanded, know what I mean? Didn’t seem like the type
who’d stick around if there was any sign of trouble. I knew as soon as I heard
the ruckus that Bobo Jenkins meant trouble.”
“You think Warren Gibson is underhanded?” Joanna asked. “What
makes you say that?”
“When I’m out prospecting in the desert, which I do every
now and again, I sometimes get this funny feeling. I call it feeling snaky. It’s
like my body is picking up signals that I can’t see or hear, but it’s tryin’ to
let me know all the same; tryin’ to tell me there’s a rattlesnake out there
somewhere, and I’d best be careful. First time or two it happened, I ignored it
and damned near got myself bit. Then I learned to pay attention. Now I stop and
look around until I find the snake before it finds me.
“Warren Gibson’s the first human being ever who gives me
that same kind of snaky feeling. It happened right off, the first time Dee
introduced us, and for no real reason I can explain.”
“He makes you feel snaky?” Joanna asked, trying keep the
disbelief out of her voice.
Harvey Dowd nodded. “Not exactly the same, but sort of.
Like he’s dangerous or somethin’, although he never done nothin’ to me and
never said anything out of line, so I could be mistaken about the man. Like I
said, it’s just a feelin’.”
“Did you ever mention any of this to Deidre Canfield?”
Harve shook his head. “Did you ever have any dealings with
that woman?”
A few,” Joanna replied.
“I liked old Dee well enough, but she could be a screaming
meemie when she wanted to. She seemed to think the sun rose and set on that man
of hers, so far be it from me to try to tell her otherwise. Like I told you
before, I’m not the gossipin’ kind. If I’d a told Dee Canfield that Warren was
two-timing her, she would’ve bit my head clean off.”
“Two-timing?” Joanna asked. “Are you saying you saw Warren
Gibson with another woman?”
“Didn’t see,” Harvey Dowd corrected. “Heard. Maybe not
even heard, either, as far as that goes, but I’m as sure of it as I’m standing
here. Why else would someone, with a perfectly good phone at home and another
one right there in the gallery, spend so much time standing around on Main Street
yakkin’ away on a pay phone? Maybe I’m all wet. Maybe its not a girlfriend,
but I saw him talking on those pay phones down by the post office a lot—well
out of Dee’s sight, you see. And what crossed my mind at the time was that,
whoever it was he was talking to and whatever he was up to, he sure as
hell didn’t want Dee Canfield to know about it.”
Joanna knew that Frank Montoya would be looking at the
phone records for both the gallery and Dee Canfield’s house, but without Harve
Dowd’s tip, no one would have thought to check the pair of pay phones on Main
Street.
Thanking Harvey Dowd for his help, Joanna stuck her head into
the gallery long enough to let Casey Ledford know where she was going. Then she
got back into the car and drove down to the post office, where two waist-high
public telephones stood side by side. After jotting down all the numbers, she
radioed them into Dispatch, asking Tica to pass them along to Frank Montoya so
he could ask for phone logs as soon as possible.
With that call completed, Joanna started to return to
Castle Rock Gallery but changed her mind. The more people who showed up at a
potential crime scene, the greater the potential for contamination, and the
longer it would take for Casey and Ken Junior to process the place.
Across the street, through a tiny park, and up a concrete
stair way, Joanna glimpsed the creamy-lit facade of Bisbee’s Copper Queen
Hotel. Inside the hotel Joanna knew she would find Cornelia Lester. Latisha
Wall’s sister was someone who had yet to have a face-to-face visit from the Cochise
County sheriff. Joanna owed the woman that much courtesy, and some information
as well.
With a sigh, Joanna put her Crown Victoria in gear and
headed for the hotel. Once there, she stopped at the desk and asked for Cornelia
Lester’s room. “She’s not there,” the clerk responded. “She’s right around the
corner on the far side of the stairs.”
Walking around the sheltering stairway, Joanna saw a large
African-American woman sitting on a leather-backed chair speaking to someone.
Reluctant to interrupt, Joanna paused for a moment—long enough to see that the
person opposite Cornelia Lester was none other than Special Investigator
Beaumont.
All afternoon, the man had dogged her heels. Now he was
interviewing Latisha Wall’s sister. Refusing to give way to a budding temper
tantrum and steeling herself to be civil, Joanna stepped forward. “Good
evening, Mr. Beaumont,” she said as she walked past him. She stopped in front
of the woman. “You must be Cornelia Lester,” she said. “I’m Sheriff Joanna
Brady. Please accept my condolences for the loss of your sister.”
If looks could kill, I would have keeled over dead when
Joanna Brady walked into the lobby of the Copper Queen Hotel and shook hands
with Cornelia Lester.
“Thank you,” Cornelia said graciously. “I take it you and
Mr. Beaumont here already know each other?”
Joanna nodded. “Yes,” she said. “We’ve met.” Her cool
response was less than enthusiastic.
Settling into a nearby chair, Joanna leaned toward
Cornelia as she spoke again. “I’m sorry to have to tell you this, Ms. Lester,
but we’ve had another homicide this evening. Actually, I’m guessing that the
death happened a day or so ago, but we’ve only just now discovered the body.”
Cornelia Lester didn’t blink. “Who?” she asked.
“Deidre Canfield.”
“The woman who owns the gallery?”
Joanna nodded. “Yes.”
“If she’s dead, too,” Cornelia speculated, “and if she and
my sister were friends, then her death must have something to do with Tizzy’s,
don’t you think? I’m sorry, Sheriff Brady. I mean with Latisha’s. Tizzy is what
we always called my sister back home. But tell me, please, is there any
progress now?”
Joanna glanced at me before she answered. “Not much,” she
admitted. “We have only preliminary autopsy results for your sister at the
moment. We believe she ingested some kind of poison, which may have been placed
in your sister’s iced tea.”
“Who did it?” Cornelia asked. For her it was a simple
question that should have had an equally simple answer—one Joanna Brady was
currently unable to give.
“At this point, Ms. Lester, I’m afraid we have no viable
suspects. My investigators are working on it, of course, but it’s still very
early.”
“If it was in Tizzy’s tea, could it be a random-tampering
case that has nothing to do with Tizzy being in the witness protection program?”
I have to give the lady credit. Cornelia asked tough
questions. Joanna shook her head. “We can’t say one way or the other.”
“What are the chances that this second dead woman this Deidre
Canfield who was supposedly Tizzy’s friend—was some how connected to the people
who ran UPPI, the people Tizzy was so afraid were going to try to kill her?”
“That is a possibility,” Joanna conceded. “So far we’ve found
nothing that would bolster that theory.”
“What about this?” Cornelia asked. “First they use Deidre Canfield
to get to my sister, and then, with Tizzy gone, they get rid of Dee Canfield,
too. Those UPPI folks are not nice people, Sheriff Brady.”
“I’m convinced your sister was right to be scared,” Joanna
agreed. “But as for Deidre Canfield being tied in with them, that doesn’t seem
likely.”
“What about Tizzy’s boyfriend then?” Cornelia asked,
switching directions. “What’s his name again?”
“Jenkins,” Joanna supplied, glaring at me. “His name is
Bobo Jenkins, but I must object to Mr. Beaumont here giving you access to
confidential information. He may be a special investigator with the Washington
State Attorney General’s Office, but he has no business ...”
Oops. I should have come clean with Cornelia Lester and
told her who I was. Now the cat was out of the bag. My ears reddened under her
shrewdly appraising look.
“Mr. Beaumont?” she said finally. “Why, he never told me a
thing about Mr. Jenkins. It was that nice man up at the antiques store. What’s
his name again?”
“Harvey Dowd?” I asked tentatively.
Joanna Brady shot another baleful look in my direction. I
had noticed earlier that her eyes were a vivid shade of green. In the dim light
of the hotel lobby, however, they looked more like chips of slate.
“That’s right,” Cornelia said with a nod that somehow conveyed
she had forgiven me my sin of omission. “Harvey Dowd is the one. He gave me to
understand that Mr. Jenkins has quite a temper. He told me about a serious
confrontation of some kind up at the gallery the other day—serious enough that
police officers had to intervene.”
“That’s true,” Joanna said. “There was a confrontation. In
fact, I’m the one who broke it up, but in Mr. Jenkins’s defense, you have to
understand that he had just learned of your sister’s death—the death of the
woman he had known as Rochelle Baxter and whom he had cared about deeply. When
he discovered that Deidre Canfield still planned to go ahead with her grand-opening
party, he was outraged. And when he learned Dee was raising the prices on the
pictures ...”
“Raising the prices?”
“Yes. Her position was that, with the artist dead, the few
paintings that did exist would be that much more valuable. Mr. Jenkins took exception
to that. He thought the show should be canceled and the pictures turned over to
their rightful owners—the artist’s family.”
“He wanted the paintings returned to us?” Cornelia asked.
Joanna nodded. “That’s what the big fuss at Castle Rock Gallery
that morning was all about.”
“He was trying to keep the gallery from selling them?”
“Yes,” Joanna said. “So they could be given to you.”
Cornelia Lester shook her head thoughtfully. “Mr. Dowd
didn’t say a word about that,” she said, after a moment.
“No,” Joanna agreed. “I’m sure he didn’t, because he didn’t
know it.”
Cornelia Lester sighed. “I’ve never met Mr. Jenkins, but
when I do, I owe him an apology and my thanks. Now, if’ you’ll both excuse me,
I’d better go on upstairs and go to bed. My body’s still on East Coast time. I’m
running out of steam.”
She used the arms of the deep leather chair to raise herself
to her feet. “There’s a lot more I’d like to discuss with you, Sheriff Brady,
but not tonight. I’m just not up to it.”
“I understand,” Joanna said. “I know you already have my
phone numbers. Feel free to call anytime.”
Nodding, Cornelia started toward the elevator. As she
rounded the stairs, she stopped and turned back to us. “By the way,” she added.
“I’m glad to know you and Mr. Beaumont are working on this situation together,
Sheriff Brady. It gives me a lot more confidence that something will come of
it.”
Not wanting to be chewed up and spit out by Sheriff Brady,
I stood up, too. “I could just as well be going,” I said.
“No, you don’t,” she said. “I want to talk to you.”
I sat back down and slumped down on the couch. Here it
comes, I thought, remembering being hauled on the carpet by the daunting
Miss Heard.
“How long have you been in town?” Joanna asked.
“Since around one P.M.,” I said.
“And who all have you talked to since then?”
I pulled a tattered notebook out of my pocket and
consulted the list of names I had jotted there. “Cornelia Lester, Harvey Dowd,
Angie Hacker, Archie McBride, and Willy Haskins. Later on I spoke to your chief
deputy Mr. Montoya and also to a reporter named Marliss Shackleford.”
Sheriff Brady’s eyes registered surprise when I mentioned
the last name on the list. “You’ve talked to Marliss?” she asked. “You know
her, I take it?”
Joanna nodded grimly. “We’re not on the best of terms.”
I suppose I should have let it go at that, but I felt
constrained to tell her the rest. “You should be aware that I met with her
earlier this evening,” I said. “Marliss introduced herself to me down at the
crime scene, the one where you sent me packing. Then, a little while ago, she
came here, to the hotel, and interviewed me.”
“About?”
“She wanted to know why I was in town,” I said.
“What did you tell her?”
“I told her I was sent as an observer for the Washington
State Attorney General’s Office. I doubt that was what she was really after,
though. She seems to be under the impression that Ross Connors doesn’t think
your department can handle the Latisha Wall case. I believe her exact words
were: ‘Ross Connors has no faith in Sheriff Brady’s ability.’ Something to that
effect, anyway.”
“What did you tell her?”
“That both Mr. Connors and I thought you were doing fine.”
Joanna blinked. “Thanks,” she said.
“‘There’s something else,” I added.
“What’s that?”
“She started asking questions about the Bobo Jenkins
interview.”
“How did she know about that?” Joanna demanded.
“I sure as hell didn’t tell her,” I responded quickly. “I
may be a royal pain in the ass as far as you’re concerned, Sheriff Brady, but I
know better than to compromise an ongoing investigation by leaking information
to the press. The same can’t be said for everyone in your department, however.
Someone on your staff needs to learn to keep his mouth shut.”
There was a long period of silence after that. The longer
Joanna Brady went without speaking, the more I figured I had blown it for sure.
If there had ever been a remote chance of the two of us working together
successfully, it was gone for good.
“‘Thanks for telling me,” she said finally. “I’m pretty
sure I know who Mr. Big Mouth is, but I haven’t figured out what to do about
him.”
“If I were you,” I told her, “I’d kick ass and take names
later.”
She laughed then. “I’ll take that suggestion under advisement.”
Her single burst of laughter seemed to put us on a whole new footing. “Cornelia
Lester isn’t the only one who needs to hand out apologies,” she said. “I
believe I owe you one as well.”
“What for?”
“You’ve been in town for less than twelve hours, Mr. Beaumont.
And yet, without any help from me or my people, you’ve managed to sort out most
of the major players in this case.”
“I used to be ...” I began.
“I know you used to work homicide at Seattle PD. I’m guessing
you must have been pretty good at it. The truth is, we are shorthanded at the
moment, so if you’re still willing to help, please be at my office tomorrow
afternoon at one. I’m creating a task force, and you’re more than welcome to
join it.”
Nothing short of flabbergasted, I said, “I’ll be there.”
Joanna stood up then and held out her small hand with that
surprisingly firm grip. “It’s late,” she said. “My daughter’s dog had to be put
down today. I should be at home with Jenny instead of out here traipsing all
over the county. I’ll see you tomorrow, then?”
I nodded. “One o’clock.”
“Sharp,” she added.
“I’ll be there.”
As she walked away, I was still shaking my head in utter
befuddlement. It may have been my birthday, but I was no closer to
understanding women than I was on the day I was born.
I sat for several minutes listening as the noise from the
bar got louder and louder. It kept tugging at me. Finally, breaking free, I
headed up to my room. Once there, I glanced at the clock. It was nearly
midnight, but my night-owl grandparents would still be wide awake.
I dialed their number and was relieved when my new
step-grandfather, Lars Jenssen, who is also my AA sponsor, answered the phone. “Ja
sure,” he said. “If it isn’t the birthday boy! Beverly tried calling you off
and on all day, but there was no answer on your clang cell phone. She’s in
getting ready for bed. I tang on. I’ll go get her.”
“No,” I said quickly. “Don’t do that. This isn’t that kind
of call.”
“You having a tough time?” Lars asked, immediately
switching gears. “You thinking about having that first drink?”
“Yes,” I admitted. “I am.”
“Well, then,” he said. “Let’s talk about it.”
And we did.
CHAPTER FIFTEEN
Driving up to the house at High Lonesome Ranch, Joanna was
vividly aware that with Sadie gone, neither of the dogs came bounding down the
road to greet her. When she pulled into the yard, she noticed a light still
burning in the window of Jenny’s corner bedroom.
Butch was in bed reading when she went in to undress. “Did
Jenny ever come out of her room?” Joanna asked, kissing him hello.
“Once,” he said. “To feed Tigger and let him out. Other
than that, I haven’t seen her.”
“Did she eat dinner?”
“Nope.”
“Her light’s still on,” Joanna said. “Maybe I should go
talk to her.”
“Good idea,” Butch said. “You can try, anyway.”
Hoping Jenny might be asleep, Joanna opened the door without
knocking. Inside the room, Jenny lay on the bottom bunk, one arm wrapped
tightly around Tigger, who was curled up next to her. Tigger thumped his tail
when Joanna first entered the room, but he didn’t try to slink off the bed,
where, under normal circumstances, he wasn’t allowed.
“You awake?” Joanna asked, sinking into the creaking
rocker next to the bed.
“I fell asleep this afternoon,” Jenny said. “Now I can’t
sleep. I’m lying here, thinking.”
“About Sadie?”
Jenny nodded. “She was just always here, Mom. I never
thought she’d go away. She never seemed sick. She never acted sick.”
“That’s the good thing about dogs,” Joanna said. “They don’t
complain. The bad thing is, they can’t tell us what’s wrong with them, either.
And they don’t live forever, Jen. What’s important is what you said this
afternoon. We loved Sadie and took care or her while she was here with us. Now
we have to let her go. And you were wonderful with her, sweetie. No one could
have done more...”
“Really?” Jenny asked.
“Really.”
There was a long pause. When Jenny said nothing, Joanna finally
asked, “Are you hungry? Would you like me to fix you something?”
Jenny shook her head. “No, thanks,” she said.
For a time after that the only sound in the room was the
creaking of Butch’s grandmother’s rocking chair. Jenny broke the long silence.
“I think Tigger knows what happened—that Sadie’s gone and
she isn’t coming back. Somebody told me that dogs don’t have feelings like we
do—that they don’t grieve or feel sorry for themselves or anything. Do you
think that’s true?”
Joanna studied Tigger, who had yet to move anything other
than his tail and his dark, soulful eyes. The usually lively dog was
mysteriously still, as quiet as Joanna had ever seen him. If he wasn’t
grieving, he was doing a good imitation.
“I’m sure he does know something’s wrong,” Joanna said. “Maybe
he’s simply responding to your unhappiness, but I believe he understands.”
“I think so, too,” Jenny said. “He doesn’t usually like to
cuddle.” Neither do you, Joanna thought.
That was followed by yet another silence. At last Joanna
sighed and checked her watch. It was after midnight. ‘All right, then,” she
said. “If you’re not hungry, I guess I’ll go to bed.”
She got as far as the door before Jenny stopped her. “Mom?”
“What?”
“I think I know what I want to be when I grow up.”
Joanna’s heart lurched, grateful for this small connection
with her grieving daughter. “What?” she asked, turning back.
‘A veterinarian,” Jenny replied. Just like Dr. Ross. She
couldn’t fix Sadie—she couldn’t make her better—but she was really nice to
Sadie and to me, too. It was like, well, she really cared. Know what I mean?”
“Yes.” Joanna returned to the bed and perched on the edge
of it, close enough that she could rub Tigger’s ears. “I know exactly what you
mean, Jen,” she said. “The way you love animals, I’m sure you’ll be a terrific
vet.”
“Is it hard?” Jenny asked.
“Every job has hard things and good things about it,”
Joanna said. “I’d hate to have to put a sick animal down and then try to
comfort the owner.”
“How long do you have to go to school?”
“To be a vet? A long time. First you have to graduate from
college, then its just like going to medical school. To get in, you have to
earn top grades in math and science, chemistry especially.” “Do you think I can
do it?”
“You’re a very smart girl, sweetie. If you set your mind
to it, you can do anything you want.”
At a quarter to ten the next morning, as Butch, Jenny, and
Joanna were ready to walk out the door for church, the telephone rang. “Here we
go again,” Butch grumbled, handing Joanna the receiver. “It’s Lupe Alvarez,” he
said. “According to her, its urgent.”
“What is it?” Joanna asked.
“There’s a lady here in the lobby,” Lupe replied. “Her
name is Serenity Granger. She’s Deidre Canfield’s daughter. The ME’s office had
the Cheyenne Police Department contact her last night. She wants to talk to you
right away.”
“All right,” Joanna agreed. “I’ll be there as soon as I
can.” When she turned to Butch, he was shaking his head. “Sorry,” she told him.
“You and Jenny go on without me. I’ll join you as soon as I can.”
“I won’t hold my breath,” he said.
While Butch and Jenny drove away in the Subaru, Joanna
opted for her Civvie. Ten minutes later she entered her office through the back
door. Once at her desk, she called out to the lobby. “Okay, Lupe,” she said. “I’m
here. You can bring Ms. Granger back now.”
Knowing Dee Canfield, Joanna was surprised by her first
glimpse of Serenity Granger. She was the exact antithesis of her mother’s
tie-dyed, let-it-all-hang-out splendor. Serenity, perhaps a few years older
than Joanna, was tall and pencil-thin. She wore a business suit—the kind of smart,
above-the-knee tailored model favored by the current crop of television
heroines. The charcoal pin-striped outfit was complemented by matching two-inch
gray sling-back pumps with an elegant Italian pedigree.
Joanna realized that Serenity Granger must have traveled
most of the night in order to make it from Cheyenne, Wyoming, to Bisbee,
Arizona, by ten o’clock in the morning. The woman should have looked wrinkled
and travel-worn, but she didn’t. The suit showed no trace of unwanted creases.
The mass of bleached-blond curls that framed a somber face was in perfect
order. Only her makeup, which had no doubt started out as perfection itself,
was beginning to show a few ill effects. Her gray eye shadow was slightly
smudged, and a speck of unruly mascara had dribbled down one cheek.
“I’m Sheriff Brady,” Joanna said at once, standing up and
offering her hand. “I’m so sorry about the loss of your mother. Please, have a
seat.”
“Thank you,” Serenity returned.
Removing a small long-strapped purse from her shoulder,
she eased herself into one of the captain’s chairs and folded her
well-manicured hands in her lap. “I know this is Sunday,” Serenity began. “I’m
sorry to interrupt your day off, but this is too important to let go until
Monday.”
“What’s too important?” Joanna asked.
Serenity chewed her lower lip. “Please understand,” she
said. “This is all very difficult.”
“I’m sure it is. Take your time, Ms. Granger. Can I offer
you something to drink—coffee, water?”
“Water would be nice.”
Without Kristin in the outside office, Joanna had no one
to fetch it. “Hang on,” she said. “I’ll be right back.”
When she returned a few minutes later, Serenity Granger
sat in the same position. Now, though, under her still-folded hands Joanna
spied a single piece of paper that hadn’t been there before.
“I suppose I don’t have to tell you my mother and I weren’t
close,” Serenity began again with a regretful half-smile. “We didn’t have much
in common.”
“There’s a lot of that going around these days,” Joanna
offered encouragingly. After all, when it came to mother-daughter relation
ships, she and Eleanor Lathrop weren’t exactly shining examples.
“We were at loggerheads as long as I can remember,”
Serenity continued. “Whatever came up, we fought about it. My mother tuned in
during the sixties, dropped out, and stayed that way. I couldn’t wait to join
the establishment. My mother never completed high school. I did four years of
college and finished law school with honors in a year and a half. Mother never
voted in her life. According to her, the Democrats are too conservative.
Naturally, I’m a card carrying Republican.” She shrugged. “What else could I
do?”
Joanna nodded.
“Anyway, for years we weren’t in touch at all. In fact,
for a time I didn’t know if she was dead or alive. Then, about a year ago and
out of the clear blue sky, Mother sent me an e-mail. She had come into a bit of
money, from my grandfather, I guess. She said she was moving to Bisbee and
getting ready to open an art gallery.
“I wasn’t necessarily overjoyed to hear from her. For a
while I didn’t bother to respond, but my husband’s a psychologist. Mel finally
convinced me that the best thing I could do for Mother and for me, too, was to
figure out a way to forgive her. Eventually I wrote back. We started by sending
little notes back and firth. To my amazement, e-mail ended up bringing us
closer than ever.
“I’m not sure how it happened, but for the first time I
can remember we weren’t at each other’s throats. Maybe part of it was not being
in the same household and having some distance between us. We’d talk about what
was going on in our day-to-day lives. Even though I had been married for seven
years, Mother had never met Mel. I told her about him, about our house and
garden, and about both our jobs. Mel has a private practice in Cheyenne. I’m a
corporate attorney for an oil-exploration company. I thought hearing that would
freak her out, but it didn’t. She never said a word.
“She told me about what it was like to live in Bisbee,
about the little house she had bought—the first one ever—and about the new man
in her life, a guy named Warren Gibson. As a kid, that was one of the reasons I
despised my mother. There was always a new man in her life. They came and went
with astonishing regularity. But I could tell from the way she talked about
Warren, this time things were different. She really liked the guy; really cared
about him. I think she was finally ready to settle down to some-thing
permanent, and she believed Warren Gibson was it.
“She told me about the work they did together on the
gallery, getting it ready to open. She also told me about the upcoming showing
of Rochelle Baxter’s stuff. Mother was really excited about it and proud of
having discovered someone she fully expected to turn into one of this country’s
up-and-coming African-American artists.”
Serenity stopped long enough to sip her water before
continuing. “She sent me this e-mail on Thursday afternoon. Unfortunately, I
was out of town and didn’t read it until yesterday.”
Unfolding the single piece of paper that had been lying in
her lap, Serenity Granger handed Joanna the printed copy of an e-mail.
Dear Serenity,
Something terrible has happened. Rochelle Baxter is dead,
murdered. She died last night sometime. The grand opening of her show is
tonight. The caterer will be here in a little less than two hours. I found out
about Shelley too late to cancel the food. Since I have to pay for it anyway, I
decided to go ahead with the party.
The problem is Warren. He and I were among the last people
to see Shelley before she died. The cops wanted to talk to both of us.
Detective Carbajal is with the sheriff’s department. He told me this afternoon
that they’ll also need to fingerprint us since we’d both been at Shelley’s
place earlier in the day. We went there to collect the pieces from her studio
to hang them here in the gallery.
When I told Warren about the fingerprint thing, he went
nuts. We ended up having a huge fight. In all the months I’ve known him, I’ve
never seen him so upset. He’s off doing some errands right now. I’ve been
sitting here thinking about all this—thinking and wondering.
Is it possible Warren could have had something to do with
what happened to Shelley? I mean, we were both there in her house. I can’t
think of any other reason why the very mention of fingerprints would
The e-mail ended in midsentence. “Where’s the rest of it?”
Joanna asked.
“That’s just it,” Serenity returned. “There isn’t any
more. It’s like Mother had to hit the ‘Send’ button in a hurry. Warren may have
come into the gallery right then, and she didn’t want him to know about her
suspicions or about her sending them along to me.
“As soon as I accessed my e-mail yesterday evening, I
started trying to call. I called both the gallery and the house several times
and left messages. Naturally, there wasn’t any answer. Then, an hour or so
later, when a Cheyenne PD patrol car stopped in front of our house, I knew what
was up. The officer didn’t have to tell me Mother was dead. I already knew.
“So where’s Warren Gibson, Sheriff Brady? I am convinced
he killed my mother, and he must have murdered that other woman as well. I want
him caught.”
“I can assure you, Ms. Granger, so do we. Now, please
excuse me for a moment while I make a phone call.”
Joanna picked up her phone. It was Sunday, after all.
Frank Montoya could have been home or at church. On a hunch, though, she dialed
her chief deputy’s office number. He answered after half a ring.
“You’d better come into my office, Frank,” she told
him. “Dee Canfield’s daughter is here. I’m sure you and Detective Carbajal will
both be interested in what she has to say. Is Jaime in, by the way?”
“No,” Frank Montoya said. “But he will be as soon as I can
reach him.”
It took only half an hour for both Frank and Jaime to
converge on Joanna’s office. For the next hour or so, they pumped Serenity for
information.
“Did your mother tell you anything in particular about Warren
Gibson?” Jaime Carbajal asked.
“Just that he was good with his hands. He could put up
dry-wall, plaster, install wiring, and do any number of things she would have
had to spend money on otherwise.”
“She didn’t say where he came from?”
“Not that I remember. At the beginning, I think she maybe
hired him to do a couple of days’ worth of odd jobs. Before very long, though,
he had moved in with her. As far as Mother was concerned, that’s typical. It
also goes a long way to explain why I was a twenty-six-year-old virgin when I
got married.”
The sardonic self-deprecation in that sentence lodged like
a sharp-edged pebble in Joanna Brady’s heart. Dee Canfield and her daughter had
spent a lifetime locked in almost mortal combat. Serenity Granger’s strategy had
been to look at what her mother did and then do the opposite. The same was true
for Joanna and Eleanor Lathrop.
What will happen with Jenny?
Joanna wondered. Since I’m a cop, does that mean
she’s destined to end up a crook? Or will she really turn into a
veterinarian?
Joanna was drawn out of her reverie, not by the continuing
questions and answers, but by a sudden urgent knocking on her office door. Why
was it that just when she had something important going on—just when she needed
a little peace and quiet—her office turned into Grand Central Station?
Not wanting to disrupt Jaime’s interview with Serenity Granger,
Joanna hurried to the door. Casey Ledford stood outside holding several pieces
of computer-generated printouts.
“What is it, Casey? We’ve got an important interview going
on in here.”
“Yes, I know” Casey nodded. “Lupe told me, but this is important,
too. I got a hit from one of the prints I took off a hammer I found in a drawer
up at Castle Rock Gallery. Everything else was pretty clean, but whoever wiped
the place down must have forgotten about the hammer or maybe didn’t see it.
Anyway, here’s the guy’s rap sheet. I thought you’d want to check it out.”
Joanna took the paper and looked at the mug shot. The name
said Jack Brampton, but the photo was clearly Dee Canfield’s boyfriend, the man
known around Bisbee as Warren Gibson. Joanna’s memory flashed back to when she
had last seen him, standing in Castle Rock Gallery, glaring threateningly at Bobo
Jenkins and tapping the head of a hammer—perhaps the very same one—in the open
palm of his hand. Brampton had served twenty-one months in a medium-security
Illinois prison for involuntary manslaughter committed while driving drunk. He
had previously worked as a pharmaceutical salesman.
That might be enough for him to know something about
sodium azide,
Joanna thought. Enough to make him
very dangerous. “Good work, Casey,” she said. “Can I keep this?”
Casey nodded. “Sure. I’m making copies for everyone who’ll
be coming to the one-o’clock meeting.”
“Terrific. Drop one off with Dispatch as you go. I want an
APB out on this guy ASAP. He’s got a good head start on us, so we may have a
tough time catching up. We’ll assume, for right now, that he’s still driving
Deidre Canfield’s Pinto. It’s distinctive enough that it shouldn’t be hard to
find.”
While Casey hurried away, Joanna turned back into her
office. The interview was coming to an end. Serenity Granger, purse in hand,
stood just inside the door. “So you think it’s going to be several days before
Mother’s body can be released?”
“Several for sure,” Jaime Carbajal said. “First there’ll
have to be an autopsy. The medical examiner won’t release the body until well
after that. If I were you, I’d find a hotel room where you can settle in and
wait.”
“Any suggestions?”
“Probably the Copper Queen back uptown in Old Bisbee,” he
told her. “But regardless of where you stay, please let us know where you’ll
be.”
Serenity Granger nodded. “Of course,” she said.
Joanna wished Jaime Carbajal hadn’t suggested the Copper
Queen. Pretty soon everyone staying at the old hotel would be connected to this
case, one way or the other. But she didn’t voice her objection aloud. After
all, the only thing Joanna wanted was for Serenity Granger to leave her office.
The information about Warren Gibson’s criminal past was far too important to
blurt out with a civilian present, even if that civilian was vitally concerned
with finding the person under investigation.
“I’ll walk you to the lobby,” Frank Montoya offered.
“Don’t bother,” Serenity said, turning him down. “I can
find my way.”
As soon as the door closed behind her, both Frank and
Jaime turned to Joanna expectantly. “All right,” Frank said. “Give.”
Joanna handed him the paper. “Warren Gibson’s real name is
Jack Brampton,” she said. “He’s an ex—pharmaceutical salesman who’s done time
for DWI and involuntary manslaughter. Casey’s made copies of the rap sheet so
we’ll have them available for the task force meeting at one. I want everybody
there. I also want copies available of everything we have so far, including a
written report of what we’ve just learned from Serenity Granger. By the way,
Beaumont will be here for the meeting.”
Both men looked at Joanna. “Since when?” Jaime asked.
“Since last night when I invited him,” Joanna said.
Jaime shook his head. “Great,” he muttered. “Guess I’d
better get started typing my report, then.”
Jaime stalked from the room. Joanna glanced at Frank to
see if he shared Jaime’s opinion about including Beaumont in the task force. If
the chief deputy disapproved, it didn’t show. He walked over to Joanna’s desk
and retrieved a pile of papers he’d brought along with him into her office.
“What are those?” she asked.
“Copies of everything we had up to this morning. Even with
Beaumont included, there’ll be enough to go around. I thought you might want to
go over them yourself before the meeting.”
“Thanks, Frank. You’re good at keeping me on track. I
really appreciate it.”
“And then there’s this.” He removed a fat manila envelope
from the bottom of the stack and passed it over as well. “What is it?” she
asked.
“A present,” he said. “It’s the information you asked me
to track down on Anne Rowland Corley,” Frank told her. “There’s quite a bit of
it—probably too much to read between now and one o’clock, but you might want to
skim through some of it. If what I’m picking up is anything close to accurate,
whoever sent Special Investigator Beaumont to Bisbee wasn’t doing the poor guy
any favors.”
Joanna pulled out the topmost clipping and glanced at it.
The article, dated several years earlier, was taken from the Seattle Times. It
reported that a special internal investigation conducted by the Seattle Police
Department had concluded that a deranged Anne Corley had died three weeks
earlier as a result of a single gunshot wound, fired by her husband of one day,
Seattle Homicide Detective J.P. Beaumont. The fatal shooting had occurred at a
place called Snoqualmie Falls State Park. Anne Corley’s death had now been
officially ruled as self-defense, and Detective Beaumont had been recalled from
administrative leave.
Putting the paper down, Joanna stared at her chief deputy.
“It sounds to me like cop-assisted suicide,” she said.
Frank Montoya shrugged his shoulders. “Or husband-assisted
suicide,” he said. “Take your pick. Now I’d better get going, too. I’m working
on the telephone information you asked me to get, but weekends aren’t the best
time to do that.”
He went out then, closing the door behind him. Meanwhile,
Joanna shuffled through the contents of the envelope. Looking at the dates, she
realized that at the time Anne Rowland Corley died, Joanna had been a working
wife with a husband, a young child, and a ranch to look after. In addition to
her full-time job as office manager for the Davis Insurance Agency in Bisbee,
she had been making a two-hundred-mile commute back and forth to Tucson twice a
week while she finished up her bachelor’s degree at the University of Arizona.
No wonder Anne Rowland Corley’s death hadn’t made a noticeable blip on Joanna’s
mental radar.
As Frank had suggested, Joanna scanned several more
articles from Seattle-area papers. Most of them were from immediately before
and after the fatal shooting. One piece was a blatantly snide commentary from a
columnist named Maxwell Cole connecting Detective Beaumont with a “mysterious
lady in red.” Finally, Joanna came to a much longer, denser article from the Denver
Post. This one, running several pages in length, was an in-depth piece that
had been part of an investigative series dealing with female serial killers.
A look at the clock told Joanna she was running out of time.
Intriguing as the article might be, her first responsibility was to be properly
prepared for the upcoming task force meeting. Thoughtfully, Joanna shoved the
collection of papers back into the envelope, which she dropped into her
briefcase.
From the moment Joanna had met J.P. Beaumont, she had
thought of him as a smart-mouthed jerk. Last night, at the Copper Queen, when
he had been straight with her and told her about his interview with Marliss
Shackleford, she had glimpsed something else about him—that he was probably a
good cop, a straight and trustworthy one.
Now, though, she realized there had been something else
there as well, a certain indefinable something she had recognized without being
able to put her finger on it, a sort of common denominator between the two of
them that she couldn’t quite grasp. Now she knew what it was. Beaumont’s wife
had died tragically; so had Joanna Brady’s husband. Having survived that kind
of event didn’t excuse the man’s smart-mouthed attitude, but it made it a hell
of a lot easier to understand.
For the next while Joanna concentrated on reading the
material Frank Montoya had brought her. Lost in her work, she jumped when her
phone rang and was astonished to see that her clock said it was already twenty
minutes to one.
“I’m guessing you won’t be coming home for Sunday dinner,
is that right?” Butch asked.
“I’m sorry,” she said. “The time got away from me. I’m due
to be in a meeting at one. Save some for me, will you?”
“I already did.”
With Lars Jenssen’s timely intervention I managed to avoid
that first drink. When I finally went to bed around one, I fell right to sleep.
The problem is, the dream started almost as soon as I closed my eyes. It’s a
dream I’ve had over and over for years. Even in my sleep, it makes me angry. I
want to wake up. I don’t want to see it again, and yet there’s always the faint
hope that somehow this time it will be different. That it won’t end with the
same awful carnage.
I know from interviewing crime scene witnesses that human
memory is flawed. Dreams, which are memory once removed, are even more so. The
events of the few jewel-like spring days I spent with Anne are jumbled in my
dreams, sometimes out of sequence and often out of sync with the way things
really played out. The words we said to each other are hazy; the scenes
slightly out of focus. Still, they always leave me wrestling with an overriding
guilt and with the same unanswered questions: When did I fall in love with her?
How did it happen? What else could I have done?
In the dream I usually relive feelings rather than what
actually happened: The joy I felt when I asked her to marry me and she said
yes. The amazement as I slipped my mother’s treasured engagement ring on her
waiting finger and saw how perfectly it fit. There’s the fun of the surprise
wedding shower the guys from Seattle PD threw for us down at F. X. McRory’s and
the blue sky perfection of our early-morning wedding.
But then a cloud moves between us and the sun. The scene
darkens. Sometimes I manage to wake myself up here, but it doesn’t matter. When
I fall back asleep, the dream will he there again, cued up and waiting at the
exact same place.
I’m in the interview room on the fifth floor of the Public
Safety Building, listening to that poor, terrified phone company service rep. “I
left a message,” he tells me hopelessly. “I left a message with your wife. Didn’t
you get it?” But, of course, I didn’t get it. I didn’t have a wife then—not
until that very morning in Myrtle Edwards Park.
The scene goes darker still. I’m driving toward North Bend,
toward Snoqualmie Falls, squinting through a daytime blackness no headlights
can penetrate. I try to fight off the yawning chasm of despair that threatens
to engulf me, because I know by then know beyond a reasonable doubt—that Anne
Corley is a killer. A murderer. People are dead, and it’s all because of me. My
fault. My responsibility.
And then I walk into the restaurant. She’s seated across a
crowded room from the door. Sometimes she’s wearing her vibrant turquoise
wedding dress. Sometimes she’s in a jogging suit. Sometimes she’s swathed all
in black. This time it’s the bright blue dress. Our eyes meet over the heads of
the other carefree, unsuspecting diners. The look she gives me is electric,
chilling.
This is another point in the dream where I sometimes
manage to wake myself up. I used to have a drink—make that another drink. Now I
go to the bathroom and have a glass of plain water. But it’s no use. Whatever I
do, I’m trapped in the dream’s inevitability. When I close my eyes again, she’s
there waiting for me, beckoning to me from across the room.
The dream usually skips that last conversation. And I know
why. Even when I’m awake, I can’t remember it exactly, and I consider that a
blessing. It would be too painful to remember. She simply stands up and leaves.
As she maneuvers through the tables, I see the gun in her hand—a gun no one
else can see—and know it as my own.
Next we’re racing down the path toward the pool at the bottom
of the falls. She’s ahead of me. There are people in my way—gimpy, slow-moving
tourists going up, coming down. I thrust past them, push them out of my way.
And then we’re at the bottom. She turns to face me. I see her raising the gun
and feel the bullet smash into my shoulder. I fall—fall forever. And then, once
I land, I fire, too.
I’m a good shot. An excellent shot. I shoot to disarm, not
to kill. But she’s standing on wet, moss-covered rocks. As I pull the trigger,
she somehow loses her footing. She slips, and the motion moves her ever so
slightly. My bullet misses her arm and slams into her breast. As she falls, a
crimson stain blossoms across the fabric of whatever she’s wearing.
In the Copper Queen Hotel that night, that’s when I woke
up—sweaty, shaken, and filled with remorse. I stayed awake for hours after that,
fearing that the dream would come again the moment I closed my eyes. The sun
was just rising when I finally went back to sleep. Thankfully, the dream did
not return.
When I finally staggered downstairs late that Sunday
morning, I was as bleary-eyed and hungover as in my worst drinking and stinking
days. I barely made it into the dining room before they stopped serving
breakfast at eleven. As soon as I finished eating, I headed for the Cochise
County Justice Center. It was just twelve-thirty when I arrived there for the
one o’clock meeting. Still not sure of what my reception would be, I opted for
being prompt. After all, Sheriff Brady may have relented enough to allow me
inside the investigation, but I didn’t want to do any thing that would screw
things up.
The same lady I had met the day before, Lupe Alvarez,
manned the front desk. She greeted me with a smile. “Good after noon, Mr.
Beaumont. Sheriff Brady asked me to give you this to use while you’re here.”
She handed me a badge that had my name on it, along with
the initials MJF. The other side contained a magnetic strip. “What’s MJF?” I
asked.
“The Multi Jurisdiction Force,” Lupe explained. “When members
of the MJF work joint-ops out of our building, it’s easier to give them badges
so they can come and go as they please without our having to buzz them in and
out. The card works on all the lobby security doors. Also the rest rooms,” she
added.
If I was being given my own rest-room key, I had evidently
arrived. “Thanks,” I told her. “Now, where do I go?”
“The conference room,” she said. “It’s through that door
and three doors down the hall on the left.”
Since it wasn’t yet twelve forty-five, I figured I’d be
the first to arrive, but I was wrong. Sheriff Brady was already in the conference
room. She sat at the head of a long table with several stacks of paper lined up
in front of her. She looked up at me curiously as I entered the room. Her
appraisal was so thorough that I wondered for a moment if my fly was unzipped.
“Good afternoon, Special Investigator Beaumont,” she said,
motioning me into a chair. “You’re early.”
I took the seat she indicated. She slid one of the stacks
in my direction.
“What you have there are copies of everything we’ve come
up with so far,” she told me. “You’ll find crime scene reports, preliminary
autopsy results, transcripts of interviews, an Internet treatise on poisons in
general and sodium azide in particular. If we’re going to be working together,
you need to know everything we do.”
“Thanks,” I said, and meant it.
It hurt to have to haul my reading glasses out of my
pocket, but I swallowed my pride and did so. The topmost report was the crime
scene report from the Latisha Wall murder in Naco. I started to read, but
stopped a couple of sentences into it.
“There is one thing,” I said.
Sheriff Brady looked up from her own reading. Under her
questioning brow, I caught a glimpse of the banked fire in those vivid green
eyes. “What’s that?” she asked.
“Since we’re going to be working together, how about ditching
the ‘Special Investigator’ crap? Most people call me Beau. Either that or J.P.”
She studied me for a long time before she answered. “All
right,” she said finally. “Beau it is, and I’m Joanna.”
Sixteen
When I was in the
eighth grade at Seattle’s Loyal Heights Junior High, my homeroom and social
studies teacher, Miss Bond, encouraged me to run for student council.
Unfortunately, I won. That year of attending regular and utterly pointless
meetings doomed me to a lifetime of hating same. In my twenty-plus years at
Seattle PD I had a reputation for dodging meetings—this very kind of meeting
whenever possible.
This particular task force gathering, however, was one I
had actually wanted to attend. Since Joanna and I seemed to have a few more
minutes before the others were due to arrive, I settled in and read as much of
the handout material as I could. I wanted to he prepared. Before, Sheriff Brady’s
department had given me no information at all. Now, with someone obviously burning
the midnight-copier ink, I’d been given far too much.
One by one, people wandered into the room and were
introduced: Casey Ledford, the latent fingerprint tech; Deputy Dave Hollicker,
crime scene investigator; and homicide detective Jaime Carbajal. The last to
arrive was Chief Deputy Frank Montoya, but I already knew him. As they showed
up, I was struck by how young they all were. I could just as well have wandered
into a Junior Chamber of Commerce meeting. My understanding about Jaycees is
that once a member hits the ripe old age of thirty-five, he’s out on his tush.
Self-consciously, I stroked my chin, making sure I had shaved closely enough
that morning to erase the stubborn patch of gray whiskers that has lately
started sprouting there.
I’m not sure what Joanna’s team of investigators had been
told previously about my presence in their midst. None of them went out of his
or her way to make me feel welcome. I was grateful when Joanna Brady tackled
that issue head-on.
“You’ve all been introduced to Special Investigator Beaumont,”
Sheriff Brady said when she stood up at the stroke of 1 P.M. “He’s here as a
representative of the Washington State Attorney General’s Office, which has a
vested interest in seeing that whoever killed Latisha Wall is brought to
justice. Since it seems inconceivable that Latisha’s murder and Deidre
Canfield’s death are unrelated, this is Mr. Beaumont’s deal as much as it is
ours. From here on, he’s to be treated as a full member of this investigation.
Any information you give me, you should also give him. Is that clear?”
Sheriff Brady’s crew may have been young, but they were
unarguably professional. Uneasy nods of assent passed around the table. None of
them were thrilled to have an interloper among them, but no one raised an
audible objection.
“Good, then,” Joanna concluded. “Let’s get started.”
Clearly I wasn’t the only one who had put in a relatively
sleepless night. Deputy Hollicker looked especially bedraggled, with dark circles
under bloodshot eyes. He had spent most of the night processing the Canfield
crime scene down in Nacre. Scanning through my pile of papers, I noticed that
it didn’t contain a written report from him about that. Bearing that in mind, I
wasn’t the least surprised when Joanna Brady put him in the hot seat first.
“I’m working on the paper,” he said when she called on
him. “I’m sorry my report isn’t ready—”
“Never mind the report,” Joanna Brady said, waving aside
his apology. “Just tell us. Did you find anything useful?”
The CSI shook his head miserably. “Not really. Local kids
have been messing around in those old cavalry barracks for years. I found all
kinds of junk in there—trash, beer bottles, cigarette butts, and gum wrappers.
It’s tough to tell what, if anything, might be related.”
“You did say cavalry,” I confirmed. “As in horses?”
“That’s right. The building where the body was found is on
the site of an old U.S. Cavalry post that dates from the 1880s,” Joanna Brady
explained. “The crime scene is actually one of the old officers’ quarters. What
about the stables, Dave? Did you search them, too?”
If I had stumbled into a case where the crime scene turned
out to be a cavalry post, maybe I was Rip Van Winkle in reverse.
Hollicker nodded. “Yes, ma’am. Every inch. Detective Carbajal
thought we might find another body there—the boyfriend’s, presumably. We didn’t,
though.”
“No, I’m sure you didn’t,” Joanna said grimly. “‘There’ll
he more about Warren Gibson later. Go on.”
“Deputy Howell and I brought back as much stuff to the lab
as we thought might be relevant. Again, it’ll take time to go through it all. I’ll
work on it as time allows.”
“Did you talk to Doc Winfield?” Joanna asked.
Dave nodded. “Detective Carbajal and I both did. It was
right after the ME arrived on the scene, so he didn’t know much at that point.
He did tell us, though, that he’s reasonably certain Dee Canfield died
somewhere else. The body was dumped there afterward.”
“What about Dee’s house out in Huachuca Terraces? Did
either you or Casey get around to checking it out?”
Casey Ledford and Dave Hollicker shook their heads in unison.
“Ran out of time,” Dave explained. “I had a deputy put up crime scene tape. I’ll
go there later today, right after the meeting.”
“Good,” Joanna said. “Moving right along. Let’s talk about
Warren Gibson for a minute. Dave, you and Mr. Beaumont probably haven’t heard
about this yet, but Ms. Canfield’s daughter from Cheyenne, Wyoming—a woman
named Serenity Granger—came to my office this morning. She brought along a copy
of an unfinished e-mail that her mother sent her Thursday afternoon. Ms.
Granger didn’t actually read the message until yesterday. You should have a
copy of that along with your other handouts.”
I shuffled through my paperwork until I located Deidre
Canfield’s unfinished missive to her daughter.
“If you check the time,” Joanna Brady was saying, “it’s
listed as 4:10:26 P.M. Mountain Standard. Now look at the transcript of Jaime’s
interview with Dee Canfield. Look at the last two sentences right at the end.”
After a little more paper shuffling, I located the right
passages.
Detective Carbajal: Since both you and Mr. Gibson were in
Latisha Wall’s house yesterday, we’ll need fingerprints from both of you.
Ms. Canfield: Yes, yes, of course. I understand. We’ll take
care of it right away, tomorrow probably, but not right now. The show’s
tonight. I really do have to get back up to the gallery now so I can be ready
to meet the caterer and let her in.
That was the last entry. The transcript indicated that the
interview terminated at 3:08 PM. An hour and two minutes later, Dee had sent
her daughter an incomplete e-mail voicing her concern that perhaps Warren
Gibson had been involved in Latisha Wall’s murder. I could see where Sheriff
Brady was going with all this.
“Casey and Deputy Galloway spent a great deal of time last
night and early this morning processing Castle Rock Gallery. A while ago, Casey
got an AFIS hit on one of the prints she found there. The man everyone in
Bisbee knows as Warren Gibson turns out to be a convicted felon named Jack
Brampton. Flow about passing around copies of that rap sheet, Casey?”
As we say in the trade, “Bingo!”
Joanna Brady was totally in her groove by then. While the fingerprint
tech slid pieces of paper out across the smooth surface of the conference
table, Sheriff Brady continued without pause. “So we’ve put out an APB on Jack
Brampton, aka Warren Gibson.” She stopped long enough to give her chief deputy
a searching look. “It did go out, didn’t it, Frank?”
“Yes, ma’am,” Montoya replied. “And I added that the
suspect is most likely driving a 1970 red Pinto wagon.”
Joanna frowned. “Red,” she repeated. “Where did you get
that information?”
Montoya bristled slightly at the impatient way she posed
the question. I would have, too.
“Where else?” he returned. “From the DMV. That’s the vehicle
they show as being registered to one Deidre Canfield, 114 Cochise Drive,
Bisbee, Arizona.”
“The DMV maybe thinks it’s red,” Joanna told him. “But
they’re wrong. The last time I saw Dee Canfield’s Pinto, it looked like
somebody had used it for a drop cloth.”
“What color is it then?” Montoya asked.
“All colors,” she answered.
The chief deputy sighed. “All right, then,” he said. “If
you’ll excuse me for a moment, I’ll go amend that APB.”
Frank Montoya stood to leave the room as Joanna continued.
“The good news is, there aren’t that many 1970 Pintos of any kind or color
still on the road. If someone spots one moving under its own power, they’re
likely to let us know”
“Wait a minute,” I said, opening my mouth for only the second
time in the course of the meeting. “A 1970 Pinto? What kind of fuel does it run
on?”
“Leaded,” Joanna said.
“I didn’t know you could still buy leaded,” I objected.
“You can,” she replied, “but only across the line in Old
Mexico.”
Frank Montoya was still lingering by the conference room
door. “That’s something then,” he said. “If Brampton is using the Pinto as his
getaway car, it’s a pretty good bet he’ll be headed south. I’ll get on the horn
to Border Patrol here about him, and I’ll let the federales in Mexico
know about this as well.”
“Good idea,” Joanna said. “Do it.”
Meanwhile, I busied myself studying Jack Brampton’s rap
sheet. What stuck in my head was the fact that he’d served his time at a
medium-security facility in Illinois. UPPI’s corporate headquarters was based
in Illinois. I wondered if there was a connection. I circled the name of the
prison. When I came back to the discussion, Frank had returned and Joanna had
moved on to another topic.
“For someone who claims he doesn’t gossip, Harve Dowd from
Treasure Trove is full of information,” she was saying. “He told me last night
he thought Warren Gibson was pulling a fast one on Dee Canfield. Harve is of
the opinion that Dee wasn’t Gibson’s only romantic Interest. He claims to have
seen Gibson using the pay phones down by the post office on numerous occasions.
Frank is currently in the process of checking phone records, but since his
special phone company pal doesn’t work weekends, it’s taking more time than
usual.”
“Wait a minute,” Jaime Carbajal said. “Does this mean we’re
dropping Bobo Jenkins as a possible suspect?”
“Okay,” Joanna said. “Let’s talk about him for the moment.
What do we know?”
“That he was at Latisha Wall’s home the night she died,”
Jaime Carbajal began. “We also know, by his own admission, that he and the
woman he calls Rochelle Baxter had quarreled or at least had a disagreement
earlier in the day. We also have his fingerprints on those sweetener packets
from the kitchen.”
Casey Ledford raised her hand. “May I speak to that? To
the sweetener packets?”
Joanna nodded and all eyes went to the fingerprint tech. “Dave
and I examined the crime scene evidence from Latisha Wall’s kitchen. It’s true
Mr. Jenkins’s fingerprints are on the sweetener packets. They are. But the
physical evidence—the way the fingerprints are layered on the glass and
bottle—would indicate that Ms. Wall drank iced tea and Mr. Jenkins had the
beer.”
“See there?” Jaime said. “What did I tell you? He poured
the sweetener in her tea and then sat right there and watched her drink it.
What a hell of a nice guy! And then, on the Dee Canfield part of the equation,
we know Bobo was adamantly opposed to her plan to go through with the show
despite Latisha Wall’s death. Sheriff Brady, you witnessed some of that
yourself on Thursday morning at the gallery”
“You’re right about that,” Joanna conceded. “Bobo Jenkins
was at the gallery, and he was very upset. Do we have any idea where he was or
what he was doing between three and five on Thursday afternoon?”
“He claims he was at home and alone the entire afternoon,”
Jaime answered. “That’s in the transcript of the interview Frank and I did with
him on Saturday morning. He told us he stayed home all day, trying to come to
grips with what had happened. Of course,” the detective added, “at the time we
spoke to him, we were only aware of the Latisha Wall incident. We had no idea
Dee Canfield was also dead, so there was no reason to check on his whereabouts
or movements the day after what we assumed to be a single homicide.”
“Did he come right out and actually say he was home alone?”
Joanna asked.
Jaime scanned through the transcript. “Here it is, right
here. Yes, that’s what he said, but I’ll go uptown a little later. I’ll talk to
Bobo’s neighbors and see what they have to say.”
“All right,” Joanna said. “You do that.” Then she turned
to Chief Deputy Montoya. “In the meantime, Frank, while you’re dealing with the
phone factory, have a go at Bobo’s phone records as well. If he happened to be
on the phone making calls between three and four o’clock Thursday afternoon,
that would tend to corroborate his story even if no one was there with him at
the time.”
That intrigued me. Just because Bobo Jenkins was a suspect
in one homicide, Joanna Brady wasn’t giving her people carte blanche to turn
him automatically into prime-suspect material in the second death as well. In
other words, rather than looking for the quickest way to clear cases, Sheriff
Brady was prepared to take the time and make the effort to find out what had
really happened. I liked that about her. Respected it.
As Joanna Brady fired off one question after another, I
felt as though I had been transported back to the fishbowl at Seattle PD with
Captain Larry Powell popping questions left and right to see if his detectives
were making any progress or doing something to earn their keep.
I sat up straighter and paid closer attention because I
was beginning to suspect that perhaps Sheriff Joanna Brady was my kind of cop
after all.
Joanna looked down at the checklist she had scribbled off
in advance of the meeting. “So,” she said, crossing off another item. “With the
next-of-kin notification out of the way, what does Doc Winfield say about
scheduling the autopsy?”
“He’ll do it first thing tomorrow, and he’ll give me a
call beforehand,” Jaime Carbajal replied. “The good news is that Ernie will be
back on duty tomorrow morning. Once he’s back on board, maybe I can have him
handle the Verdugo boys’ interviews. At least I’ll have some help covering the
bases.”
“Or Mr. Beaumont could help out,” Joanna suggested
quietly. With Jaime looking mutinous, she moved to lessen the tension. “Hey,
Frank,” she added. “Next time Ernie asks for a whole week off, let him know he’s
not allowed to leave town until alter he checks with our upcoming homicide
scheduler.”
They all laughed at that, even Jaime. The atmosphere in
the room relaxed noticeably.
“All right,” she said. “Now for our chemistry lesson.”
We spent the next half hour hearing all about some thing
called sodium azide. Joanna had mentioned it prior to the meeting. Rather than
show my ignorance, I had said nothing. It turns out that as far as sodium azide
is concerned, ignorance is bliss. Just hearing about the stuff was enough to scare
the crap out of me.
Frank Montoya had tracked down an Internet article that
explained how various poisons, sodium azide included, present. An ingested
poison often exhibits a delayed reaction. The victim isn’t affected until the
substance is absorbed into the bloodstream. Inhaled sodium azide goes into the
lungs and directly into the blood, where its molecules bond with oxygen
molecules and render the oxygen unusable.
The information in Frank’s article was already more than I
wanted to know, but it did explain the time lag between when Latisha Wall drank
her tea and her death sometime later. What Dave Hollicker had to say about
sodium azide’s ready availability was horrifying.
“Wait a minute,” I interrupted, minutes into his lecture. “You’re
saying this stuff—this incredibly dangerous stuff that isn’t even illegal—can
be found in damned near every two-car garage in America?”
“That’s right,” Hollicker agreed blandly. “Those canisters
are in every car with air bags.”
“So the next kid who gets pissed off at his English
teacher in Podunk, USA, can slip some of it into her coffee and knock her off
just like that? This is nuts, totally nuts! And nobody’s doing any thing about
it?”
“Not so far,” Dave Hollicker said. “According to what I’ve
learned, there’s currently no plan to regulate sodium azide in any way or even
to add a marker substance.”
About that time there was a knock on the conference room
door. “Come in,” Joanna called.
Lupe Alvarez stuck her head inside. “Rick Orting, the dispatcher
for the city of Bisbee just called, Sheriff Brady. Someone from Phelps Dodge is
reporting finding an abandoned multicolored Pinto.”
A charge of excitement surged around the room. “Where is
it?” Joanna demanded.
“Between the end of Wood Canyon and Old Bisbee,” Lupe
replied. “It’s on one of those company roads, the ones that go out to PD’s new
drilling sites north of Lavender Pit. The Pinto’s rear axle is broken. A
day-shift watchman found it a little while ago when he was out doing his
rounds.”
“Thanks, Lupe,” Joanna said, then turned back to her team
of investigators. “Okay, Jaime. You, Casey, and Dave get on this right away.”
Without another word, the three of them hustled out of the room.
“What about me, boss?” Frank Montoya asked.
“Even if you’re dealing with second-stringers, you stay
here and keep after the phone stuff. We need that information.”
“And me?” I asked. “What am I supposed to do?”
“You’re with me.”
“Why?”
“So I can keep an eye on you. You’re part of this
investigation, but I don’t want to spend the entire afternoon giving you directions
and guiding you from one place to another.”
“I have a map ...” I began.
“Forget it. Just go get in the car.”
“Yours or mine?”
The disparaging look she gave me told me the question was
unworthy of being dignified with an answer. “Come on,” she said. Rather than
going out through the public lobby, Joanna hustled me first to her private
office and then out a door that led directly into the parking lot. I started
toward the Crown Victoria knew to be hers.
“Not that one,” she said, stopping me. “We’ll take the
Blazer.”
We walked two rows into the parking lot, where she climbed
into the driver’s seat of an SUV that had definitely seen better days—from a
physical-beauty point of view. However, a powerful engine sprang to life the
moment she turned the key in the ignition. The term “ugly but honest!” came to
mind.
We drove into town and back toward Old Bisbee. At the far end
of the huge layered hole in the ground she explained was Lavender Pit we came
to a spot where a group of cop cars, lights flashing, had converged alongside
the road. Some of the vehicles were marked CITY OF BISBEE; others, SHERIFF’S
DEPARTMENT. They were grouped around the entrance to a freshly graded dirt road
that led off between the red-rock hills.
We were pulling over to check things out when a call came
in over the radio. “Sheriff Brady?”
“Yes, Tica,” she responded. “What is it?”
“I have Burton Kimball on the phone. He needs to talk to
you right away.”
Joanna sighed. “Look, Tica. I’m really busy at the moment....”
“He says it’s urgent,” Tica insisted. “Is it all right if
I patch him rough?”
“I suppose so,” Joanna agreed grudgingly. “Go ahead.”
“Sheriff Brady?” A male voice roared through the radio. Despite
having been filtered through both a telephone receiver and the radio, his words
buzzed angrily in the air.
“What in the world are you and your people trying to pull now?”
he demanded. “I can’t believe you’d stoop so low that you’d go to such incredible
lengths. Really, Joanna, I always thought you were above this kind of stunt.”
Whoever Burton Kimball was, he was pissed as hell. In the
course of the previous twenty-four hours, I’d seen some pretty strong
indications that Sheriff Brady has a temper. I fully expected her to cut loose
and give the guy as good as she got. She surprised me.
“Slow down a minute, Burton,” she returned mildly. “What
are you talking about?”
“Someone has broken into my client’s house and planted
what looks like a cache of drugs here,” he replied. “If you think you can get
away with that kind of nonsense ...” He paused as if searching for words. “I
tell you, Joanna, I’m outraged about this absolutely outraged!”
She and I hit on the word “drugs” at the same time, and we
both jumped to the same conclusion. Why wouldn’t we? Drug or not, sodium azide
was the topic of the moment. A few minutes earlier we’d been sitting in a
conference room learning all about it.
It was interesting to realize once again that when Joanna
Brady was upset, her voice went down instead of up. “What drugs?” she asked
urgently but softly. Sitting right next to her, I could barely hear her, but
Burton Kimball heard.
“How would I know?” he snapped back. “I didn’t taste it,
if that’s what you mean. I wouldn’t know what cocaine tastes like if it walked
up and hit me in the face, but since this is a white powder, cocaine is my
first assumption.”
I watched while every trace of color drained from Joanna
Brady’s face. Her voice didn’t change or falter. “This white powder,” she said
calmly, “where exactly is it?”
“In my client’s laundry room,” Burton Kimball replied. “Bobo
went out there this afternoon to do some laundry and found it sitting there,
right in plain sight on the dryer. It’s in a box that’s been wrapped in duct
tape and hooked up to the dryer vent. When he called to tell me about it, I
advised him to leave it alone. I tell you, Joanna ...”
“Where are you right now?” Joanna interrupted.
“Where am I?” Burton Kimball returned. “Where do you
think? I’m at my client’s house, and you can bet I’m staying here until someone
comes to collect this stuff and take it away.”
“Whereabouts are you in the house?” Joanna prodded.
I had to give the lady credit for staying cool. By then
she had put the idling Blazer in gear. We were back on the road, speeding
toward Old Bisbee.
“In the kitchen,” he said. “Talking to you on the phone.”
“What about Bobo?” she asked. “Where’s he?”
“Right here with me. Why?”
“Good,” she said. “Now listen to me, Burton. Listen very
carefully. Whatever’s in that box in Bobo’s laundry room wasn’t planted by
anyone from my department. But I suspect that it is dangerous, probably even
deadly.”
“What is it, then, some kind of bomb? Is it going to
explode?”
“No, nothing like that. But don’t interrupt. I want you
both to leave the house, Burton. Immediately. Go outside and stay out. I’ll be
there in a few minutes. In the meantime, don’t go near the laundry room, and
whatever you do, don’t touch that box.”
“I hope you’re not trying to pull a fast one here, Joanna,”
Burton Kimball warned, but his tone of voice had changed slightly. The naked
urgency in her orders had commanded his attention.
“All right,” he relented, backing down. “But if you even
so much as try using this as evidence against my client without having a
properly drawn search warrant ...”
Joanna started to lose it. “I don’t give a rat’s ass about
evidence,” she interrupted. “I’m trying to save lives here. Now gel the hell
out of that house, Burton, and take Bobo Jenkins with you.” She ended the call
and tossed me the microphone.
“What?” I said.
“Call Dispatch back,” she ordered, switching on both
lights and siren. The calm voice she had used to address Burton Kimball was
replaced by that of a drill sergeant barking orders. “Tell them we need the
state Haz-Mat team at Bobo Jenkins’s place on Youngblood Hill. Tell them you
and I are on our way to secure the scene.”
“Which is where?”
“On Youngblood Hill.”
“I know that. What’s the address?”
Joanna Brady shook her head in disgust. “For crying out
loud!” she exclaimed. “I have no idea, but since it’ll take the Haz-Mat team a
good hour and a half to get here from Tucson, we should be able to figure out
the address between now and then. Maybe somebody with half a brain can look his
address up in the phone hook!”
I punched the “Talk” button on the microphone. As I gave Tica
the necessary information, it occurred to me that I wasn’t the only person in
that speeding Blazer who should have invested a few hundred bucks in a Dale
Carnegie course.
With lights flashing and siren blaring, we screamed into
the old part of town and turned right up a narrow, one-lane strip of steep
pavement. The sign said “O.K. Street,” but there was nothing okay about it. Calling
it a goat path would have been closer to the mark than calling it a street.
Then, about the time I was sure the Blazer was going to scrape off both its
mirrors, we met a vehicle coming down. A silver-haired lady, driving a Pontiac
Grand Prix with Nebraska plates, backed out of a parking lot beside what was
evidently a small hotel and started in our direction.
She looked a bit surprised when she realized a cop car
with flashing lights and a blaring siren was aimed right at her, but instead of
stopping or returning to the parking lot, she kept right on coming, motioning
for us to move over and get out of her way. Somehow Joanna
managed to do exactly that, tucking the Blazer into an almost nonexistent wide
spot.
“For God’s sake!” I demanded. “Isn’t this a one-way
street?”
“For everyone but the tourists!” Joanna muttered. The
woman in the Pontiac edged past us, waving cheerfully and smiling as she went. “Lights
and sirens must not mean the same thing in Nebraska.”
“Sheriff Brady,” the dispatcher called, interrupting
Joanna in midgripe.
Not wanting her to take her eyes off the road, I picked up
the mike. “Beaumont here. What is it?”
“City of Bisbee wants to know what’s going on, so I told
them. They’re sending backup for you. And I have that address on Youngblood
Hill for you now.”
Joanna Brady didn’t look as though she needed to be told
where she was going, and right that minute I was too busy hanging on for dear
life to take notes.
“As long as the Haz-Mat guys have it,” I said. “I think we’re
fine.”
We came to a real wide spot in the road where several cars
were parked at haphazard angles around the perimeter. Joanna threw the Blazer
into “Park” and jammed on the emergency brake. She paused long enough to
retrieve a pair of worn tennis shoes from the floor of the backseat. After
changing shoes, she leaped out of the car and started down a winding street
that was even steeper than the one we’d been on before. The posted sign here
said “Youngblood Hill.” Glad to be ignorant of the street name’s origin, I
tagged after her.
The pockmarked, broken pavement was scattered with loose
gravel. The surface was an open invitation for broken legs. Or ankles. It was
all I could do to keep from falling ass over teakettle.
Halfway down the hill was a blind curve. I expected
Youngblood Hill to be a one-way street. No such luck. Rounding the curve, we
came face-to-face with a city of Bisbee patrol car nosing its way uphill. About
that time Joanna Brady turned left, darted under an archway, through a wrought-iron
gate, and up an impossibly narrow concrete stairway. I went after her. Taking
both age and altitude into consideration, I didn’t even try to keep up. The
best I hoped for was not to die in the process.
Hearing footsteps behind me, I looked back. Right on my
heels came a beefy young man in a blue uniform. The Bisbee City cop had left
his idling patrol car sitting in the middle of the street and charged after us.
He outweighed me by forty pounds, but by the time we reached a small terrace of
a yard, he was only a step or two behind me. My chest was about to burst open.
He hadn’t broken a sweat.
The new arrival was Officer Frank Rojas. I stood aside
long enough to let him hurtle past me and catch up with Sheriff Brady. Since we
were obviously inside city boundaries, I expected an immediate outbreak of
jurisdictional warfare. I’ve seen it happen often enough. I know of numerous
occasions in the Seattle area where bad guys have gotten away because cops from
neighboring suburbs weren’t necessarily on speaking terms. In Bisbee, Arizona,
that was evidently not the case.
“What do you need, Sheriff Brady?” Rojas asked.
“To secure the residence,” she gasped. That made me feel a
little better. At least I wasn’t the only one having trouble breathing. “Anyone
inside?”
Joanna glanced at two men who stood together in the far
corner of the tiny front yard—a rangy African-American in a T-shirt, shorts,
and tennis shoes, and a white man in full Sunday go-to-meeting attire—gray
suit, white shirt, and tie. His once highly polished shoes now sported a layer
of red dust. I assumed the guy in the suit to be the attorney, Burton Kimball.
That meant the other one was Bobo Jenkins, Latisha Wall’s boyfriend.
The man was big and tough, and I wondered how he felt
about being called Bobo. Someone tried to pin that handle on me once when I was
in fifth grade. I creamed the guy. I hoped Mr. Jenkins didn’t mind. Despite
Archie’s description of Bobo as a sort of gentle giant, Mr. Jenkins looked as
though he was more than capable of taking care of himself when it came to
physical combat.
“No,” Joanna told Rojas. ‘As far as I know, no one’s
inside.”
“What seems to be the problem?”
“Dangerous chemicals,” she answered. “We’ve called for the
Haz-Mat team from Tucson. You take the back of the house, Frankie. Make sure no
one enters. And whatever you do, don’t go near the dryer vent.”
Frank Rojas didn’t question her orders. “Yes, ma’am,” he
said. Without another word, off he went.
Seventeen
About then the man in the suit charged aces the yard to
meet us. From the irate expression on the attorney’s face I doubted Burton
Kimball would be nearly as tractable as Officer Rojas had been.
“All right, Sheriff Brady,” Kimball snapped. “As you can
se, we did what you said. We’re out of the house. Now how about telling us what
this is about? If the white powder in the box isn’t a drug, what is it?”
Joanna took one more deep breath before she answered. “I’m
guessing it’ll turn out to be sodium azide,” she answered. “It’s a deadly
poison. We have reason to believe Latisha Wall died as a result of sodium azide
poisoning.”
“Never heard of it,” Kimball grunted.
“Not many people have,” Joanna agreed.
“What is it?”
“It’s the propellant used to deploy air bags in vehicles,”
she explained. “Sodium azide is more toxic than cyanide. It has no known
antidote.”
Bobo Jenkins spoke for the first time. “Did you say
Shelley was poisoned?” he croaked. “How’s that possible?”
“We believe the fatal dose was placed in something she
frank,” Joanna answered. “Most likely in her iced tea.”
“But how ...” Bobo began. Then his face changed as he put
it together. “The sweetener packets!” he exclaimed.
Joanna gave him a searching look. Finally, she nodded.
As I said, Bobo Jenkins was a big man. His arms and legs
bulged with muscles. As the awfulness of the situation sank in, his knees
seemed to buckle. He staggered unsteadily over to the porch steps and dropped
down onto the topmost one.
“But I’m the one who put the sweetener in her tea,” he
blurted out. “Two packets. That’s what Shelley always took in her iced tea. Two
packets. Never any more; never any less. Does that mean I’m the one who killed
her?”
“Enough, Bobo,” Burton Kimball interjected. “Don’t say
anything more. Not another word.”
If Kimball’s stunned client heard his attorney’s
objection, he paid no attention.
‘And that’s what you think is here in my house right now,
in the box in my laundry room?” Jenkins continued. “You think its the same thing?
The same poison?”
By then, Kimball was practically beside himself. “Mr.
Jenkins, please. No more. Sheriff Brady, you haven’t informed my client of its
rights. I must ask that you refrain from asking any more questions, the answers
to which may be prejudicial....”
Ignoring the lawyer, Joanna sat down on the porch step
next to lobo Jenkins. “Tell me about today,” she said quietly.
“Today?” He gave her an anguished look, as though not
quite comprehending the question.
“Tell me everything that happened,” she urged. “Everything
that led up to your finding the box.”
He sighed and shook his head. “Last night I couldn’t
sleep.” He said. “I kept tossing and turning and thinking about ...” He paused
and swallowed hard before continuing. “... about what had happened. I couldn’t
believe I’d lost Shelley just like that. I still can’t believe it. Sometimes it
seems like it’s got to be some awful nightmare. Eventually, I’ll wake up and
she won’t be gone.
“Anyway, after lying in bed for hours, I finally got up
about three o’clock this morning. I dressed and went for a run. I ran all the
way down to Warren and back. By the time I finished, the sun was just coming
up. I showered and went to bed. I finally fell asleep after that and didn’t
wake up until a little while ago. I went out to the kitchen to put on some
coffee. While I waited for the coffee to finish, I decided to start a load of
clothes. That’s when I found that box—a duct-taped box I’d never seen before—sitting
there on top of the dryer. The flexible vent duct is connected to it.”
“Did you touch it?”
Jenkins shook his head. “Give me some credit. I’m smarter
than that. The box has a window in the top that’s covered with plastic wrap. As
soon as I saw the white powder in it, I called Mr. Kimball.”
“Why?”
“Are you kidding? When Jaime Carbajal and Frank Montoya
interviewed me yesterday morning, they didn’t give out any details, but I could
tell from their questions that I was under suspicion—that they thought I was
somehow responsible for Shelley’s death. Now I know why. You must have found my
fingerprints on the sweetener packets, since I’m the one who poured them into
her glass.”
Ignoring that, Joanna responded with yet another question.
“When you saw the box, what did you think was in it?” she asked.
Jenkins shrugged. “I assumed it was cocaine. I figured
some one was trying to frame me for dealing drugs or something worse.”
“But why would you think someone from my department placed
it there?” Joanna asked.
He shook his head as though no explanation should have
been necessary. “You’re not a black man considering running for public office
in this country,” he said softly. “You’re not being paranoid if people really
are out to get you.”
I had been listening to all of this and trying to keep my
mouth shut. Now, though, I couldn’t resist putting in my two cents’ worth. “Look.
If someone planted the box in Mr. Jenkins’s house, how was it done? Any sign of
a break-in? It takes time to rip off a dryer duct and reconnect it.”
“I don’t lock my doors,” Bobo said. “I never have.”
Burton Kimball looked distinctly unhappy about the way the
conversation was going, but there wasn’t much he could do about it. Nobody paid
any attention to him, least of all his client.
“You said you were making coffee,” Joanna mused
thoughtfully. “What do you use in it?” she added.
It seemed like an off-the-wall question. At first I couldn’t
see where she was going. Bobo Jenkins seemed puzzled as well. “What do you
think? Coffee and water,” he said. “What else is there?”
“I mean, how do you take it?” Joanna asked. “Black, or
with cream and sugar?”
“Sugar but no cream,” he said. “I’m lactose-intolerant.”
“Where do you keep your sugar?”
“In the fridge,” he said. “If I leave it out on the
counter or table, I sometimes have problems with ants. Why?”
Then I understood. The white powder in the duct-taped box.
It would have taken time, effort, and ingenuity to put sodium azide in
sweetener packets. By comparison, putting a few spoonfuls of it into a sugar
bowl would be simple—and just as deadly.
At that moment a deputy I didn’t know—an officer named
Matt Raymond—hustled up the steps and into the yard. “What’s happening?” Joanna
asked.
“Detective Carbajal says it’s confirmed. The abandoned car
definitely belongs to Dee Canfield. It’s on a road that winds through the hills
and ends up about half a mile east of here, on the far side of B-Hill.”
I had noticed a big whitewashed “B” on one of the hills as
I drove into town for the first time. Now I realized that Bobo Jenkins’s home
was on one of the flanks of that selfsame hill. Half a mile away wasn’t very
far.
“Which way was the Pinto going when they found it?” Joanna
asked. “In or out?”
“Out,” the deputy returned. “Detective Carbajal says it
looks like the driver was attempting to turn the vehicle around so he could
head back to the highway when he got hung up on a boulder. Broke the axle right
in two.”
“Thank God for small favors,” Joanna said. “We’d better
get the K-9 unit out there on the double.”
“Already done,” Officer Raymond said. “Deputy Gregovich
and Spike are on their way.
Nodding, Joanna turned back to the attorney. “Look, Burton,
she said, “we’ve called in the Haz-Mat team. The fewer people we have hanging
around when they get here, the better. How about if you take Mr. Jenkins and go
someplace else for a while? Let me know where you are. Someone from the
department will notify you when it’s safe for him to return home.”
“I’ll be only too happy to,” Kimball said, still sounding
slightly miffed. “Come on, Bobo. Let’s get out of here. We wouldn’t want to be
in anyone’s way.”
Joanna Brady wasn’t good at waiting; she never had been.
As the minutes ticked by, she paced back and forth in Bobo’s small terraced
yard. If her suspicions proved correct, her jurisdiction had been plagued by
two murders and an attempted homicide in less than a week. Right that minute,
the only thing working in her favor was the fact that the supposed getaway
car—Dee Canfield’s aging Pinto—had finally come to grief. Had it not been for
that, Warren Gibson would have been long gone. Then again, with as much of a
head start as he’d had, maybe he’d made good his escape after all.
It didn’t help that J.P. Beaumont sat on the porch staring
at her and watching her every move as she anxiously paced the confines of the
yard. The last thing she needed right then was an audience.
“Sit down,” he suggested. “Take a load off.”
But Joanna didn’t want to sit. She didn’t want to be
patronized, either. “I’d rather stand,” she said.
Across the yard, Matt Raymond’s radio crackled to life. “What
is it?” she demanded.
The deputy listened for a moment, holding one finger in
the air. “It’s Detective Carbajal. He says the K-9 Unit has found two separate
trails. One seems to head in this general direction. The other one heads back
along the road and out to the highway.”
“Have them follow that one,” Joanna said at once. “Let’s
try to see where the SOB went.”
When she glanced back at Beau once more, she noticed he
had taken his packet of Xeroxed reports out of his coat pocket. He unfolded the
pages, put on a pair of horn-rimmed reading glasses, and began studying the
pages, occasionally making notes.
At least he finally quit staring at me,
Joanna thought as she checked her watch for the third time
in as many minutes. At this rate, the hour-and-a-half wait for the arrival of
the Haz-Mat team was going to take a very long time.
Several long minutes passed without a word being
exchanged. Beaumont finally broke the lingering silence. “Could you do me a
favor?” he asked.
“What’s that?”
“It says here that Jack Brampton was incarcerated in the
Gardendale Correctional Institute outside Elgin, Illinois.”
“Right.”
“I need to find out if that’s a state- or privately run
facility.”
“Frank Montoya’s your guy,” Joanna said. She removed her
cell phone from her pocket, punched up Frank’s direct number, and handed it
over to Beau. He looked down at it in baffled silence, as though he had never
seen a cell phone before in his life.
“The number’s already programmed in,” she told him impatiently.
“All you have to do is hit ‘Send.
Beaumont shot her another dubious look and then did as he
was told. A moment later he was explaining to Chief Deputy Montoya what was
needed.
Joanna glanced at her watch once more. Time was passing,
but not nearly fast enough. She listened to Beau’s part of the conversation
with only half an ear. The call had barely ended when another one came through.
She took the phone from Beau’s hand and answered the call herself.
“What is it, Jaime?” she asked.
“Sorry, boss,” he said. “It’s a dead end. Spike led us
right hack here—to the highway. That’s where the trail stops. Brampton got into
a vehicle and rode away.”
“Have Terry and Spike go back to the Pinto and try
following the trail in the other direction,” she ordered. “I want to know where
that one goes as well. In the meantime, send Casey out to Dee Canfield’s house.
I’ll need Dave up here so he can handle the chain of custody on whatever
evidence the Haz-Mat guys turn up.”
She ended the call. Beaumont had obviously been listening.
“If the killer got in a car and rode away,” he said, “that probably means one
of two things.”
“What would those be?” Joanna asked.
“Either Jack Brampton has an accomplice who came and
picked him up, or else he hitched a ride with some poor innocent passerby who’s
going to wind up being our next victim.”
“Great,” Joanna muttered. “Just what I want to hear.”
About that time the first member of the moon-suited Haz
Mat team came huffing up the stairs. “I’m Ron Workman, the team captain,” the
leader announced to everyone in the small yard. “Who’s in charge here?”
Since Deputy Raymond’s was the only visible uniform, the
question was addressed to him. The deputy nodded in Joanna’s direction and she
stepped forward.
“I am, Mr. Workman. I’m Sheriff Joanna Brady.”
The man gave Joanna a skeptical top-to-toe appraisal, from
her grubby tennis shoes to the skirt, blouse, and blazer she had dressed in for
church. He seemed less than thrilled at the idea that she was in charge.
Workman peered around the yard. “I was told we’d find a
hazardous material situation here,” he said. “What is it, some kind of false
alarm?”
By then three more moon-suited guys had crowded into Bobo Jenkins’s
tiny front yard. They stood in a clump like a hunch of stranded astronauts
waiting to see what would happen.
It would have been nice if Workman’s dismissive attitude hadn’t
been quite so blatant. Joanna had dealt with similar reactions for years; they
still irked her.
“It’s no false alarm,” she assured him crisply. “The
hazardous material is inside the house. In the laundry room you’ll find a box
we suspect contains sodium azide. The box is hooked up to the dryer vent.”
That got Mr. Workman’s attention. “Sodium azide?” he
demanded. “My God, woman! Do you have any idea how dangerous that stuff can be?”
“As a matter of fact, I do,” Joanna said sweetly. “That’s
why we called you.”
“Where is it?”
“Around back. A uniformed officer is standing by at the
back or—”
Not waiting for her to finish, Workman motioned to his
teals. “All right, guys. Let’s get moving.”
“Stop,” Joanna barked. “That’s not all.”
A moment earlier, Workman had been prepared to write the
whole thing off as a false alarm. Now he scowled impatiently at the delay. “What
then?” he asked.
“Your team is to remove and examine all open food
containers, including the contents of all sugar, flour, and salt containers. We’ve
had one homicide due to sodium azide poisoning and suspect we may have another.
In the first case, the poison was concealed in sweetener packets. My concern is
that here it may have been used to contaminate other foodstuff’s. So, although
this is primarily a hazardous-materials operation, it’s also a crime scene
investigation. I want photographs and a properly documented evidence log.”
“I was told no one here was hurt,” Workman objected. “In
fact, I asked the dispatcher specifically, and he said—”
“You’re right, no one is hurt here,” Joanna corrected. “Not
at this location, but only because we got lucky. Let me remind you, however,
Mr. Workman, that two other people are dead. If you find any trace of
sodium azide in the food inside the house, that adds one count of attempted
murder as well.”
“All right, all right!” Workman conceded grudgingly. “I
get the picture.” He turned once again to his waiting crew. “Okay, guys,” he
said. “Move it.”
One by one, the Haz-Mat team disappeared into the house. “Good
work,” Beaumont said after they left.
Joanna turned on him. “What do you mean?”
He grinned at her. “You know exactly what I mean. You
chewed that poor guy up and spit him out. He never even saw it coming.”
The next thing Joanna Brady knew, she was grinning, too. “Something’s
bothering me,” he said, when the lighthearted moment had passed.
“What’s that?” she asked.
He reached into his pocket and pulled out a cell phone
that was very nearly a duplicate of her own. “How come yours works and mine
doesn’t?” he asked.
“Oh, that,” she says. “It’s a Dual-NAM phone.”
“What’s that?”
“Two numbers and two cell-phone providers. I got tired of
all the dropped calls. Now I’m hooked into the system down in Naco, Senora, as
well. They have a stronger signal....”
“Is that why I keep ending up with the recording in
Spanish?”
“Right,” she said. And you’re going to keep on getting it
until you’re on the other side of the Mule Mountains.”
Shaking his head, Beau pocketed his phone. “Sorry I asked,”
he said.
Sometime later, the first of the haz-mat crew members
emerged from the house carrying several tightly closed stainless-steel
containers. It was an hour after that when the last of them, Ron Workman,
stepped out onto the porch. Divested of his moon suit, he stopped in front of
Joanna and handed over an evidence log as well as a fanfold of Polaroid prints.
“Whoever your guy is, he knows what he’s doing,” Workman
told Joanna as she studied the pictures.
“What makes you say that?”
“If he hadn’t known something about sodium azide, he’d
most likely be lying dead in there, too, since just breathing this stuff can
kill you.” Dave Hollicker was standing nearby. Remembering her crime scene
investigator was lucky to he alive, Joanna shot him a meaningful glance. Dave
nodded and said nothing.
Workman continued. “He jury-rigged himself a laminar flow fume
hood. Attached a cooling fan from a computer to one side and cut a hole big
enough for his hands in the other. With his hands inside, the two openings would
be almost the same. He also cut holes into the top and made Saran Wrap windows
so he could work with his hands inside the box and still see what he was doing.
Then he sealed all the seams with duct tape. And—voila. There you have it the
same kind of equipment we use when we’re working with hazardous materials in
the lab, except ours sets the state back a bundle of money. What your guy used
was crude but effective.”
“And portable,” Joanna added.
“That, too,” Workman agreed. “Whenever he was working with
it, he would have connected it to an outside vent.”
“It’s hooked to the dryer vent so he wouldn’t end up
breathing it himself.”
“Right.”
“Did you dust for prints?” Joanna asked.
“Not yet,” Workman told her. “When we get back to the lab,
we’ll dust the box and the food containers we took, but for the rest ...”
“That’s all right,” Joanna said. “My people will handle
it. How much sodium azide did you find in there?”
“In the box?”
She nodded.
“Plenty,” Workman answered grimly. “More than I wanted to
see. If your suspicions about the sugar and flour are correct, he had enough to
do some real damage.”
“How long will it take you to find out about the sugar and
flour?” she asked.
“Not long,” he said with a shrug. A day or two. I’ll be in
touch as soon as we finish the analysis.”
Joanna wanted to grab the man by his shoulders and give
him a shake. She wanted to flood Workman with the same kind of urgency she
felt, but he didn’t have people in his jurisdiction dying right and left. He
didn’t have some nutcase walking around his town carrying God knew how much
more sodium azide. But Joanna understood she had already pushed him just
getting him to create the evidence log. If she said much more, it would likely slow
the process rather than speed it up. “Thanks,” she said. “I’m sure you’ll do
your best.”
I got a kick out of watching it go down. It occurred to me
while Sheriff Brady was nailing Ron Workman’s feet to the floor that even
though the Haz-Mat squad leader was a good twenty years younger than Harry I.
Ball, the two men were cut from the same cloth.
Most people are under the mistaken impression that sexism
is limited to old farts like Harry and me. They think one of these days all of
the old guys will die off, sort of like the dinosaurs did, and the problem will
disappear from the face of the planet. I have had news for those folks. Since
Ron Workman wasn’t a day over thirty five, they probably shouldn’t look for it
to happen anytime soon.
The Haz-Mat guys and Deputy Hollicker were packing up to
leave when Joanna’s cell phone rang again. She answered and then handed it over
to me. “For you,” she said.
“I’ve got two things to tell you,” Frank Montoya reported
excitedly. “Number one: I checked on that Gardendale Correctional Institute you
asked me about. It’s private, not public, owned and operated by UPPI.”
“And the other?”
“I’ve finally managed to get a hold of some of the phone
records we need. I started with the pay phones down by the post office, and I’ve
found something very interesting. There are three long distance calls that were
placed from one of those phones to Winnetka, Illinois, on Thursday. One was at
eleven-twenty. The second was at three forty-six, the third at three-fifty. The
first two went to the offices of a law firm named Maddern, Maddern, and Peek.
The last one was to the residence of someone named Louis F. Maddern, the Third.
That call lasted for close to ten minutes. Does the name ‘Maddern’ ring a bell?”
“Not to me,” I told him, jotting the information into my
notebook. “Never heard of the guy or the law firm, either one.”
“It could be nothing,” Frank was saying. “Since Brampton
is evidently from Illinois, it could be Maddern is a friend or a relative. But
still, the timing ...”
I was doing some dot-connecting. Frank Montoya was right.
The timing of the calls was critical. Vital, even. One had been placed in the
morning, probably shortly after the end of the donnybrook at Castle Rock
Galley. The second two had been placed within minutes of Brampton’s finding out
he was about to be fingerprinted in regard to the Latisha Wall homicide. If he’d
had something to do with her death—if he was in any way responsible—he might
have been operating in a state of near panic about then. Everyone pretends that
detectives solve cases by virtue of pure skill and dogged determination. The
truth is, we usually catch crooks because they make stupid mistakes.
“This is good stuff,” I told him. “Thanks.”
“I thought you’d like it,” Frank replied.
I started to hand the phone back to Joanna, then changed
my mind. “Could you check on one more thing?” I asked.
“What’s that?” Frank returned.
“UPPI and the state of Washington are currently involved
in some upcoming litigation. How about checking to see if a company named
Maddern, Maddern, and Peek is representing in that case.”
“Sure thing,” Frank said. “I’ll see what I can do.” I
heard some one speaking to Montoya in the background. When he returned to the
radio mike, his voice crackled with new urgency. “I lave the Haz-Mat guys left
yet?” he demanded.
I looked around. The yard was empty. While we talked, Joanna
had evidently followed Ron Workman and his crew back down to the street. “I’m
not sure,” I told him. “If they’re not already gone, they’re packing up to
leave. Why?”
“Somebody’d better grab them before they do,” Frank
Montoya returned. “Casey Ledford just radioed in from Dee Dee Canfield’s house
out in Huachuca Terraces. She says there are clear signs of a struggle in the
living room, and there are traces of a white powder on the furniture and in the
rugs. She’s evacuated the place and is awaiting Haz-Mat assistance.”
Before the call even ended, I was thundering down the
stairs, looking for Joanna Brady. Ron Workman was shaking her hand and about to
get into his truck when I caught up with them. I gave her Frank’s message,
which she immediately passed along to Ron. He took the news of this additional
Haz-Mat site with all the eye rolling good grace of a fifth grader who’s just
been told the principal has canceled recess.
“Where’s this one?” he demanded.
“A few miles from here,” Joanna said. “You’ll get there faster
it I lead the way.”
With that, Joanna Brady struck off up the street toward
the parked Blazer. Since I was currently without wheels of my own, I jogged
along. If where we were going was “a few” miles away, I had no intention of
walking.
Riding through town, I was struck by the general junkiness
of the place. Homes and businesses alike seemed to have collections of old
cars, washing machines, refrigerators, and other rusty equipment that defied
identification moldering around them. Evidently the city of Bisbee wasn’t big
on litter patrol.
The route we took around the traffic circle and out of
town was familiar. We’d gone that way the day before when I had followed
Joanna’s Crown Vic to Naco. This time, though, we blew straight through that
critical intersection. Half a mile later, we turned left into a little
subdivision of humble-looking late-fifties bungalows, complete with what looked
distinctly like another hazardous material—asbestos siding.
Dee Canfield’s house was the most beat-up place on the
block. A seven-foot-tall chicken, made of soldered-together scrap metal and too
tall to fit under the low-slung front porch’s overhang, stood sentry in the
middle of a weed-clogged front yard.
Joanna parked on the street. While she hurried off to
confer with her deputies and the Haz-Mat guys once again, I stayed put. I didn’t
have the patience or the inclination to go hang around another crime scene.
Playing fifth wheel and staying out of the way of the people who are doing
useful work doesn’t suit me.
That’s how come I was still in the car and half-dozing
when the radio call came in from Frank Montoya.
“Sheriff Brady,” he asked. “Can you put Beaumont on?”
I picked up the radio. “I’m here,” I said. “What’s up?”
“Maddern, Maddern, and Peek may not be representing UPPI
in Washington State, but they are in several other jurisdictions—Missouri,
Arkansas, and Pennsylvania, to be exact. The law firm UPPI is using in
Washington is actually McRainey and Dobbs. They’re located in a place called
Bellevue.”
My heartbeat quickened. It may have been entirely
circumstantial, but here was a connection—a real connection—between Latisha
Wall’s killer and UPPI. I could hardly wait to tell Ross Connors that I was
making progress.
“Thanks, Frank,” I said. “Thanks a lot. I’ll let Sheriff
Brady know right away.”
But before I did that, I picked up my cell phone. Without thinking,
I dialed the attorney general’s cell phone number, only to discover I had once
again been captured by that Spanish-speaking babe from Old Mexico.
“Damn!” I exclaimed, whacking the phone on the dashboard in
utter frustration. What’s the point in packing the damned thing if it doesn’t
work most of the time?
Climbing out of the car, I went looking for Joanna Brady.
“What now?” she asked when I interrupted her yet again. I
was going to ask to borrow her phone, but she looked so harried that I simply
passed along what Frank Montoya had told me. “I need to get back up to the
hotel,” I added. “I want to call my boss and let him know what’s happened.”
“Sure,” Joanna said. “Go ahead.” With that, she turned
once again to her officers.
“But I don’t have a car,” I objected.
Shaking her head, she reached in her pocket and found a
set of keys, which she tossed over to me. I caught them in midair. “Go get your
Kia,” she said. “Leave my Blazer at the department. You can leave the keys at
the front desk.”
“But how will you get back?” I asked.
“Don’t worry. Somebody here will give me a ride when we
finish up.” With that Joanna turned away and returned to her huddle with
Workman, Hollicker, and the others.
I didn’t fault her for rudeness. Cops working crime scenes
don’t have time to observe all the Miss Manners rules of polite behavior.
Joanna Brady was working a crime scene and, as it turned out, so was I.
CHAPTER EIGHTEEN
After dropping off Joanna’s Blazer, I took the Kia and
headed for the hotel. It was early Sunday evening. With the weekend over,
parking was a little less scarce than it had been the day before. I walked down
the hill and up the steps in early evening twilight.
Entering the Copper Queen, I was intent on going straight
to my room and calling Ross Connors, but Cornelia Lester was in the lobby. She
caught my eye and flagged me down before I could make it to the elevator. She
sat on one of the deep leather couches before a cup-and-saucer-laden coffee
table. Walking toward her, I realized she wasn’t alone. A grim-faced Bobo
Jenkins was there, with her, along with a blond-haired woman in a business
suit. The blonde appeared to be crying.
“You know Mr. Jenkins, don’t you?” Connie asked.
“Yes, I do.”
Bobo Jenkins and I shook hands.
“And this is Serenity Granger,” Connie continued. “She’s Deidre
Canfield’s daughter. Serenity, this is Mr. J.P Beaumont. He’s a special
investigator for the Washington State Attorney General’s Office.”
The other murder victim’s daughter,
I realized. No wonder she’s in tears.
Serenity Granger pulled herself together. “Hello,” she
said. “I’m so sorry about your mother,” I said.
She nodded. “Thank you,” she murmured.
“Won’t you sit down?” Cornelia Lester asked.
What I wanted to say was, No, thanks. I have to go up
to my room and make some phone calls. But I didn’t want to be rude. Here
were three grieving people, two black and one white—all of them bound together
by tragedy and loss—who had found the strength of character to offer comfort to
one another in a time of trouble.
I understood the kind of limbo they were in. They were
stuck between knowing their loved one was gone and being able to deal with it.
Their lives had been put on hold by officialdom. There would have to be
questions and interviews and autopsies before bodies could be released. Only
then would they be free to observe the familiar rituals of funerals and
memorial services that precede any kind of return to normalcy.
Under those circumstances, it was impossible for me to
walk away no matter how much I might have wanted to. I sat.
Cornelia Lester was clearly in charge. “Can we get you some
thing?” she asked. “Coffee, tea, a drink? The waitstaff has been kind enough to
serve us out here. It was far too noisy in the bar, and we weren’t interested
in food.”
“I’m fine,” I said. “Nothing for me.”
“Have you heard if they’re finished with Mr. Jenkins’s
house yet?” Cornelia asked. “Sheriff Brady said someone would let him know when
it’s safe for him to return home. So far he’s heard nothing.”
That was hardly surprising. Once the second call came in
summoning Joanna to the new Haz-Mat site, the sheriff had a readily
understandable excuse for not getting back to Bobo Jenkins. I also knew that,
although the Haz-Mat guys were gone, Casey Ledford, the fingerprint tech,
probably hadn’t had a chance to go through Bobo’s house yet, either.
“She’s pretty busy,” I said. “Another call came in.”
Bobo’s eye drilled into mine. “You mean I can’t go home yet?”
“I don’t think so. You’d probably be better off renting a
room. Maybe you should bunk in here with the rest of us.”
There was plenty I could have told them, but not without
raising Joanna Brady’s considerable ire. I sat for a while making appropriately
meaningless small talk. When a waitress from the dining room came out to refill
coffee cups, she asked me if I wanted something. I took that as a sign I had
done my bit and was free to escape.
“If you’ll excuse me,” I said. “I need to make some phone
calls.”
As soon as I shut the door to my room, I hurried over to
the desk. I dragged the raggedy list of Ross Connors’s telephone numbers out of
my wallet and dialed his home number first. I recognized Francine Connors’s
voice as soon as she answered the phone.
“Is Ross there?” I asked.
“Yes, he is,” she replied. “May I tell him who’s calling,
please?”
“Sure,” I said. “Tell him it’s Beau.”
I hate waiting on phones even when it’s on somebody else’s
nickel. It seemed like a long time before Ross Connors came on the line, but
then again, the AG and I aren’t exactly pals. I had never been invited to his
residence down in Olympia, but I assumed from the considerable delay that it
had to be a fairly large place with lots of distance between phone jacks.
Eventually, Ross’s hearty baritone boomed into my ear.
“Beaumont!” he exclaimed. “What’s the news?”
“Not good, I’m afraid,” I told him. “It’s looking more and
more like whoever did this went to great effort to frame Latisha Will’s
boyfriend.”
“Damn!” Ross Connors said.
“But wait,” I added, “there’s more.” I must have sounded for
.III the world like an agitated announcer hawking television’s latest 1-800 fruitcake
invention. “You remember that second homicide I told you about, the one I said
could be related?”
“The one Sheriff Brady threw you off?” Connors asked.
“Right. It turns out the second victim was a good friend
of Latisha Wall’s. Her name was Deidre Canfield. The prime suspect in that case
is a guy named Jack Brampton. Ever heard of him?”
“Not that I remember.”
“Bisbee’s a small town,” I explained. ‘A snoopy neighbor
let on that this Brampton character routinely used a pay phone down near the
post office. Our informant was under the impression that Brampton had a
girlfriend on the side.”
“Do people do that in small towns?” Connors demanded with
a chuckle. “Are they so bored that they have to report on pay phone use, for
Crissake? What about cell phones? Do they call in it someone uses one of those,
too?”
Right that minute I didn’t feel like explaining the difficulties
of cell-phone usage in Bisbee, Arizona. Instead, I forged on. “We suspect that
Brampton used one of those phones three times on Thursday, once in the morning
and twice in the afternoon, the second time was within minutes of his learning
that Cochise County investigators were going to fingerprint him as part of the Latisha
Wall investigation.”
“Get to the point,” Connors urged.
“The calls went to someone in Winnetka, Illinois, at a law
firm called Maddern, Maddern, and Peek. One of Maddern, Maddern, and Peek’s big-deal
clients happens to be UPPI, and Brampton did time in a UPPI facility when he
was convicted of involuntary manslaughter.”
There was stark silence on the other end of the phone, a
silence so complete that I wondered if maybe I’d been disconnected. Finally,
Connors said quietly, “There really is a leak, then.”
“No shit,” I agreed.
“I’ll have to bring the feds in,” he added.
It was a statement, not a question. My response should
have been an unequivocal and resounding yes, but I said nothing, letting Ross
Connors draw his own conclusions. There was another long pause. Finally, he
took a deep breath.
“All right, Beau, here’s what we’re going to do. I know
how this must look to you, but I’m going to let sleeping dogs lie for another
day or so. I don’t want to do anything prematurely. So far this all sounds
pretty circumstantial. You keep right on doing whatever it is you’re doing, and
keep me posted on anything else that comes up. I’m not going to make my move
until after we have rock-solid evidence.”
What more do you want?
I
wondered.
Thinking about it, I figured Connors needed the extra time
to come to terms with his changing reality. It also occurred to me that he
might be looking for a way to cover his own butt. Still, the man was my boss,
and he was calling the shots. If he wanted to wait for more damning information
before nailing his own people, that was entirely up to him.
“Sure,” I said coldly, “I’ll be in touch,” And we signed
off
I put down the phone and gave myself the benefit of a
long, hot shower. Then I lay down on the bed with every intention of watching
television. I saw a few minutes of 60 Minutes. It wasn’t even dark yet before I
was sound asleep.
Anne Corley stopped by to visit and woke me up around
three. In the wee small hours of the morning I was once again wide awake and
sleepless in Bisbee, Arizona. But I wasn’t mulling over the increasingly
complicated aspects of the Latisha Wall and Deidre Canfield cases. No, I was
thinking about something else. Someone else. I was thinking about a little girl
named Anne, growing up in a house with a developmentally disabled sister she
was unable to protect from their pedophile father and with a mother who didn’t
believe—who wouldn’t believe—anything of the kind could happen under her own
roof
No wonder the Anne I had known had been so terribly
damaged and hurt. She had been an incredibly beautiful but broken bird. No
wonder I had loved her.
It was ten o’clock that night when Joanna Brady finally
dragged herself into the house at High Lonesome Ranch. Jenny was already in
bed. Joanna was rummaging through the refrigerator for leftovers when she
spotted a bottle of champagne and two glasses sitting on the table in the
breakfast nook.
A broadly grinning Butch Dixon appeared in the kitchen
door way. “What’s this?” she asked, nodding toward the bottle.
“Nothing much,” he said casually, but Joanna knew at once
that wasn’t true. The man looked so pleased with himself she thought he was
going to burst.
“What nothing much?” Joanna asked.
“I had a call from an agent today,” he beamed. “Her name
is Drew Mabrey, and she wants to represent me. She says she thinks she knows an
editor who’s looking for something just like Serve and Protect.”
Joanna slammed the refrigerator door shut, hurried over,
and planted a congratulatory kiss on her husband’s lips. “That’s great!” she
exclaimed. “Wonderful! What else did he say?”
“She,” Butch corrected. “The agent’s a woman.”
“Did she tell you how good it was?” Joanna continued. “I
told you it was good, didn’t I?”
“Yes.” He smiled, heading for the champagne. “I think you
did say something to that effect. That it was all right, anyway”
Joanna glared at him in mock exasperation. “I never said
any thing of the kind and you know it. Now tell me. What did she say?”
“Like I said before,” he told her, carefully loosening the
cork. “Drew loves it and wants to handle it, but there’s a problem.”
“What? Tell me.”
“It’s my name.”
“Your name?” Joanna asked, mystified. “What’s wrong with
your name?”
“Drew said she almost didn’t bother to read it because it
came under the name F. W. Dixon.”
“So what? Those are your initials. It is your name.”
“But it’s also the pseudonym of the author who wrote the
Hardy Boy books, remember?”
“So?”
“Drew said that while she was growing up, she had to go
visit her grandmother in Connecticut every summer. Her grand mother kept trying
to get her to read her old Hardy Boy mysteries. Drew ended up hating them.”
“So drop the initials then,” Joanna advised Butch. “Write
tinder the name of Frederick Dixon. What’s wrong with that?”
“There’s a difficulty there, too,” Butch said. With a
practiced hand he poured champagne into the glasses, doing it slowly enough
that no liquid bubbled over the sides. “Drew says that with all the humor in
the story it’s really more of a cozy than a police procedural. She says male
readers don’t buy cozies; women do, and most cozies are written by women.”
“What are you supposed to do, then?” Joanna asked.
“She wants me to change my name to something ‘less gender
specific’ were the words she used. Something like Kendall Dixon or Dale Dixon
or Gayle Dixon.”
“The agent wants you to pretend to be a woman to fool your
readers?”
“And the editor, too,” Butch said. “She wants me to pick a
name before she submits the manuscript to anyone.”
“What do you do when it comes time for an author photo?”
Joanna asked.
Giving her the champagne, Butch shrugged. “I give up. I
guess we’ll cross that bridge when we get to it.”
Joanna raised her glass in a toast. “Well, here’s to you,
then,” she said with a smile. “Or to whoever you turn out to be.”
“So tell me about your day,” Butch said as they settled
into the breakfast nook to sip their champagne. “I knew you’d never make it to
church.”
When Joanna arrived at work the next morning, Kristin
Gregovich was nowhere to be seen, but the conference room down the hall was
already crowded. Frank Montoya, Ernie Carpenter, and Jaime Carbajal were seated
around the table. J.P. Beaumont, however, was among the missing.
“Welcome home, Ernie,” Joanna said, making her way to her usual
chair. “Turns out we need you.”
“So I hear,” he said.
For the next forty-five minutes they each briefed
Detective Carpenter on everything that had happened. Then, when Jaime left for
the medical examiner’s office and Ernie went to handle the interviews
with Eddie and Marcus Verdugo, Joanna retreated to her own office. She
was surprised Kristin hadn’t called in to say she would be late. Nevertheless,
having worked all weekend long, Joanna appreciated the absence of that first
load of morning mail. It meant her clean desk could stay that way awhile
longer.
Reaching for her briefcase, she withdrew the first thing
that came to hand—the envelope containing the Anne Rowland Corley materials.
The first article she removed from the envelope was the one from the Denver
Post titled:
THE FEMALE OF THE SPECIES
CAN BE DEADLIER THAN THE MALE
Conventional wisdom holds that serial killers are usually
disaffected white males. But what happens when women turn deadly? How do they
differ from their male counterparts, and how are they treated by the criminal
justice system?
In this series of six articles, award-winning Denver
Post staff writer Susan DePew focuses on six notorious female killers, each
of whom escaped detection far longer than she should have due to the fact that
law-enforcement agents weren’t looking for murderers from the second sex.
Today’s installment deals with Arizona copper heiress Anne
Rowland Corley, whose jet-set lifestyle underpinned a decades-long pursuit of
misguided vigilante justice, which ultimately ended in her own death as well as
in the deaths of’ at least two innocent people.
On a sunny May morning six years ago when Anne Row land
Corley married her second husband, Jonas Piedmont Beaumont, the groom was a
homicide detective with the Seattle Police Department. The bride told the presiding
minister that she intended to continue using the name of her first husband,
Milton Corley, a Phoenix-area psychologist who had died several years earlier.
Hours after the wedding ceremony in one of Seattle’s
waterfront public parks, Anne Rowland Corley was dead of a gunshot wound
received during a fatal shoot-out with her new husband. Her death was
subsequently ruled self-defense. It was only afterward that the truth about
Anne Rowland Corley’s life of homicidal vengeance began to surface.
Serial killers often manifest their murderous tendencies
early on. Stories abound of how an adolescent history of torturing and killing
small animals is an early indicator of a troubled youth who may well end up
becoming a serial killer. But Anne Rowland Corley skipped that intermediate
step. At age twelve, she went straight for the gusto and allegedly murdered her
father. Not that she was ever convicted or even tried for that offense.
Roger Rowland was the well-heeled heir to a pioneering
Arizona copper-mining fortune who carried on a family tradition of hands-on
involvement in the mining industry by moving his young family—a wife, Anita,
and two daughters, Patricia and Anne—to Bisbee, Arizona, where he oversaw one
of the family holdings.
Patty, the older of the two and developmentally disabled,
died at age thirteen in what the Cochise County coroner’s report declared “an
accidental fall” in the family home. A few days later, Roger Rowland was dead
as well, as a result of what was officially termed “a self-inflicted gunshot
wound.”
That double family tragedy was made worse when, prior to
her father’s funeral, Rowland’s younger daughter, Anne, rocked the official
boat by insisting that she had shot her father because he had been molesting
her sister. The molestation allegations were never substantiated. Instead,
twelve-year-old Anne Rowland was shipped off to a private mental institution in
Phoenix, Arizona, where she remained for more than a decade.
While hospitalized, Anne Rowland came under the care of
Dr. Milton Corley. She was released shortly after her mother’s death, and, at
age twenty-four, she married Dr. Corley. She remained with him until his death
seven years later. Corley suffered from colon cancer but he, like Anne Rowland
Corley’s father, died of what was subsequently ruled to be a self-inflicted
gunshot wound.
Dr. Myra Collins, a longtime friend and colleague of
Milton Corley, says that even at the time she doubted Corley would have taken
his own life, but no one was interested in hearing what she had to say. They
still aren’t.
“By that time Anne was the sole heir to her father’s
fortune,” Dr. Collins stated. “She also picked up a nice piece of change when
Milton died. She had the financial resources to hire high-powered attorneys and
to get away with murder, which I continue to believe to this day is exactly
what she did.”
When asked if she thought Anne Rowland Corley was
responsible for her father’s death years earlier, Dr. Collins replied, “Anne
always claimed she was the one who killed him. No amount of so-called treatment
ever made her retract that statement. She was a smart, beautiful, and utterly
ruthless young woman. I never had any reason to doubt what she said.”
After Milton Corley’s death, his widow lived a shadowy,
vagabond lifestyle, never staying long in any one place. Her bills were sent to
Scottsdale-area attorney Ralph Ames, who handled her finances and paid the
bills as they came in, leaving her free to come and go as she wished.
People who had dealings with her during the next ten years
said she looked like a movie star, drove a series of bright red Porsches, and
stayed only in first-class hotels. It is also thought that she left behind a
trail of murder.
Her victims were most likely people free on bail and
awaiting trial in cases of suspected child abuse. Local law enforcement
agencies, freed of the necessity of trying, convicting, and incarcerating yet
another pedophile, were usually happy to close the books on those cases after
only cursory investigations.
After Anne Rowland Corley’s death, there is some sketchy
evidence that her widowed husband and her longtime attorney contacted several
jurisdictions around the country, quietly closing several of those far-flung
cases.
In one of them, Jake Morris, a forty-six-year-old drifter
suspected of kidnapping and raping a six-year-old girl, was shot dead in
Bangor, Maine. In another, twenty-three-year-old Lawrence Kenneth Addison,
suspected of luring and molesting numerous children who lived near his parents’
home in Red Bluff, California, disappeared on a sunny Friday afternoon. His
body was found two days later at a deserted I-5 rest area.
In both of those cases, witnesses mentioned something
about a stranger—a good-looking woman—who was seen talking to both victims
shortly before their deaths, but no one ever bothered to track her down. She
was never thought to be a viable subject. Since there was no communication
between the two affected jurisdictions, no one ever made the connection or
noticed the similarities.
“That doesn’t surprise me,” Dr. Collins says. “There are
plenty of male chauvinist homicide detectives out there who don’t believe women
are smart enough or tough enough to be killers.”
Both Anne Rowland Corley’s widower and her long-term
attorney refused to respond to repeated requests for interviews in conjunction
with this story. Perhaps the possibility of a series of wrongful-death suits
contributed to their reticence.
Anne Rowland Corley usually dispatched her victims with a
single bullet to the head. She believed in being up close and personal with her
victims. Once her identity was established, some local police investigators in
those far-flung cases admitted that she had befriended officers in both
locations as a way of gaining information and access to her intended victims.
She did so by claiming to be writing a book on convicted child molesters,
although no such manuscript has ever surfaced.
Her use of subterfuge may well account for the ongoing
conspiracy of silence on the part of many police agencies involved. Although
there are no doubt other cases to which Anne Rowland Corley was connected, it
has been impossible to track down any additional ones in which she was directly
involved. Only a diligent search of public records finally uncovered the list
of acknowledged victims that accompanies this story. It’s likely there are
other victims whose cases remain unsolved.
Six years ago, as a homicide detective for Seattle PD,
J.P. Beaumont was investigating the abuse and death of a five-year-old child,
Angela Barstogi. Suspects in that case included the child’s mother, Suzanne
Barstogi, and the mother’s spiritual adviser, Michael Brodie, a dictatorial,
self-styled religious leader whose followers in a sect called Faith Tabernacle
did whatever he required of them.
Like his counterparts in Bangor, Maine, and Red Bluff, California,
Detective Beaumont found himself befriended by a disturbingly beautiful woman
who expressed an interest in the case. Shortly thereafter, the two prime
suspects were found shot to death in a Seattle-area church. A day later, a man
who turned out to be the real killer in the Angela Barstogi homicide
investigation was also found murdered. Hours later, Anne Rowland Corley herself
was shot dead.
“This was clearly a woman who felt violated and betrayed
by the very people who should have protected her,” says August Benson,
professor of criminal psychology at the University of Colorado. “When the
people who should have offered protection failed her, Anne Rowland Corley took
matters into her own hands.”
Joanna paused in her reading and glanced at the accompanying
photo and the sidebar. The Anne Rowland Corley pictured in a posed
black-and-white portrait was a lovely young woman with long dark hair and a
reserved smile.
No wonder cops talked to her,
Joanna thought. And no wonder J.P. Beaumont fell so
hard.
Joanna was about to return to her reading when the phone
rang. “Sheriff Brady?” Tica Romero, the day-shift dispatcher, asked.
“Yes. What’s up?”
“We’ve got a situation unfolding just west of Miracle
Valley, out by Palominas. An unidentified intruder walked up to what he thought
was an unoccupied house. He broke in and stole some food from the kitchen of
Paul and Billyann Lozier’s place on River Trail Road. Then he went out to a
corral, saddled up one of their horses, and took off. Billyann’s mother, Alma
Wingate, was in an upstairs bedroom and saw the whole thing. Unfortunately, she
didn’t have a phone with her at the time and couldn’t call 911 until
after he left.”
“Undocumented alien?” Joanna asked.
“I don’t think so,” Tica replied. “For one thing, the guy on
the horse seemed to be headed south, not north. For another, from the
description Mrs. Wingate gave me, the suspect might very well be the guy on our
APB. She said he was tall and skinny, with a single gray braid hanging down the
middle of his back.”
“You’re right,” Joanna breathed. “Sounds like Jack
Brampton.”
“I’ve got units on their way,” Tica continued, “but they’re
clear over by Benson. It’ll take time for them to reach the scene. The problem
is, the border fence is only four miles away, and it looks like that’s where
the perp is headed. As of now, he’s got a ten minute head start.”
Joanna Brady was already on her feet. “Give me the
address,” she urged. “We’ll get on this right away. I’m a lot closer than Benson.
I’ll take a couple of cars and a squad of officers along with me. Thanks for
letting me know, Tica. And how about calling out Terry Gregovich and Spike? If
we lose him, Spike may he able to track him down.”
“Will do,” Tica said.
Pulling on her Kevlar vest, Joanna raced to the conference
room. “Okay, guys,” she announced. “On the double. Somebody who looks like Jack
Brampton just stole a horse from a corral between Palominas and Miracle Valley.
According to an eyewitness, the guy who did it is headed for the Mexican
border. Let’s get rolling.”
I came dragging in late, feeling like hell and ashamed to
think that I had overslept—again. By the time I showed up, I had already missed
the morning briefing. Frank Montoya introduced me to a guy named Ernie
Carpenter, Detective Carbajal’s homicide counterpart, who had evidently just
finished interviewing the two little boys who had found Dee Canfield’s body.
Ernie Carpenter was around my age, which made him by far
the oldest officer I had met in the Cochise County Sheriff’s Department. He was
a big bear of a man with a pair of bushy eyebrows and a knuckle-crushing
handshake. In other words, Ernie was my kind of guy. After introductions were
out of the way, Frank Montoya passed both Ernie and me two tall stacks of
computer-generated printouts.
“What’s this?” I asked.
“Background on your friends at UPPI,” Frank told me. “I
downloaded it from the Internet and thought you might find it interesting. They’re
even more litigious than I thought they were when we found out about that law
firm in Illinois yesterday.”
As I settled in to read, I realized this was information I
should and could have had from the beginning. If Ross Connors had wanted to
keep a lid on things, he couldn’t have chosen better when he entrusted the
problem to Harry I. Ball and me. Of the two of us, I’d be hard-pressed to
decide which one was less likely to go surfing the Internet.
But, as Frank Montoya said, the material was interesting. UPPI
had ventured into prison construction and management when the field was
booming, but whoever drew up their business plan had failed to predict the
sudden drop in crime at the end of the nineties that would leave them holding
thousands of unoccupied and shoddily built prison beds.
To make up for their own bad planning, they had tried to
staunch the flow of red ink by filing breach-of-contract suits in twelve different
states, all of them still pending. Although one article hinted that at least
one UPPI executive was suspected of having links to organized crime, no firm
connections had ever been established.
Lost in the material, I paid no attention as people came
and went from the conference room. Ernie Carpenter and I were the only ones
left when Joanna Brady burst in a while later to tell us that something was
going down at a place called Palominas. When she first mentioned a stolen
horse, I thought she was joking. But as soon as she said the suspected horse
thief was most likely Jack Brampton, Ernie and I dropped what we were doing and
headed for the door.
I was two steps down the hallway when she stopped me. “Wait
a minute, Beau,” she said. “Where’s your vest?”
“Not on me.”
“You’d better go see Frank Montoya then,” she said. “You’re
sure as hell not riding along without one.”
“But ...” I began.
“No buts,” she said. “My way or the highway.”
With that, she turned and sprinted away, leaving me with a
whole mouthful of unspoken arguments still superglued to my tongue.
CHAPTER NINETEEN
By the time Joanna neared Palominas, she had learned from
Dispatch that the backup cars Tica had called for, although en route, were
still ten and twelve miles away, respectively. The assets she had brought with
her from the Justice Center—the two cars driven by Detective Ernie Carpenter
and Chief Deputy Frank Montoya—were the only immediate help she would have at
her disposal. She had expected someone else to show up as well.
“What happened to Beaumont?” she demanded into her radio. “He
was supposed to come with Frank.”
“By the time Frank was ready to leave, Mr. Beaumont was
nowhere to be found,” dispatcher Tica Romero told her.
Just as
well,
Joanna thought. “What about Deputy Gregovich?” she asked. “Is he on his way?”
“I still haven’t been able to locate him,” Tica said.
“Keep trying.”
Joanna swung the Blazer off Highway 92 and onto the short
stretch of paved street that ran through Palominas. Overall, the tiny community
ran along the highway and was far longer than it was wide. At River Trail Road,
where she had turned off, the town was barely two lots deep. The pavement ended
just beyond the sec and house. Now she sped down the dirt road that ran
alongside the eastern bank of the north-flowing San Pedro River. The turnoff to
Paul and Billyann Lozier’s place was half a mile south of town.
With Joanna leading the way, the three patrol cars pulled
into the Loziers’s yard, spewing dust behind them. Eighty-two-year-old Alma Wingate
met them on the front porch. She was a frail looking woman, thin beyond belief,
and leaning heavily on a cane, but her blue eyes sparkled with determination.
“Thank God I had my cataract surgery,” she exclaimed as
Joanna sprinted onto the porch. “Otherwise I wouldn’t have been able to see a
thing. When he broke in, I hid in a closet and didn’t come out until I heard
the screen door slam shut. I went to the window and saw him grab Princess—that’s
Billyann’s horse, and she loves that animal to pieces—then I knew I had to do
some thing.”
The frightened woman’s words poured out in a torrent. “Please,
Mrs. Wingate,” Joanna interrupted. “Slow down. Which way did he go?”
Alma pointed a shaky finger. “That way,” she said. “Toward
the river.”
Joanna nodded wordlessly at Frank, who sprinted off in the
direction of the river, following a trail of fresh hoofprints. “Do you know if
he was armed?” Joanna asked.
Alma nodded. “Must be,” she said. “I just checked. The
door to my son-in-law’s gun cabinet is smashed to smithereens. I don’t know
what all’s missing. You’ll have to ask him.”
“Look,” Joanna advised. “You should probably go back
inside the house and stay there. Backup officers are on the way, but in the
meantime, you need to be safe.”
“You think he’s dangerous then?” Alma demanded. “I thought
he was just a dirty low-down horse thief.”
“I’m afraid this guy’s far worse than just a horse thief,
Mrs. Wingate,” Joanna said as Frank came racing back toward the house. “Much,
much worse.”
By the time Joanna had guided Alma Wingate safely into the
house, Frank was leaning against his Civvie, gasping for breath. Ernie had
disappeared.
“He went down into the riverbed and turned south,” Frank
reported. “It’s a good thing we didn’t come with sirens blaring. It looks like
he’s walking the horse rather than running her.”
“Where’s Ernie?”
“He’s going to move south, sticking to the riverbed to
make sure he doesn’t turn out somewhere between here and the border. I’ve put
in a call to the federales across the line in Old Mexico. They’re
sending a squad of agents over from Naco. They should be here within fifteen
minutes. I told them someone would meet them where the river crosses the
border.”
Knowing her own lack of proficiency in Spanish, Joanna had
no doubt about who should be at the border to meet the federates.
“Do it, Frank,” she said. “I’ll drive along the riverbank
and sec if I can spot him somewhere between here and there.”
Frank nodded. “Be careful,” he warned. “There’s lots of
thick cover in there, places where he could hide and see you without being
seen.”
“You be careful, too,” she told him.
Moments later, with tires spinning in the dirt, both cars
swung out of the yard and headed south. A quarter of a mile down the road,
Joanna stopped and got out. Crouching behind the trunk of a cottonwood tree,
she used a pair of binoculars to peer up and down the river. Even though there
was no movement in the dry bed of the river, she could make out the pattern of
blurred hoofprints that said a horse had recently passed that way.
Parallel to her and across the river, a cloud of
fast-moving dust rose skyward. She didn’t remember there being another road
over there, but obviously one existed nonetheless.
Whoever you are,
she
told the faceless driver in that invisible vehicle, just stay the hell out
of our way.
With that, she jumped back in the Blazer and headed south
again. As she drove she was glad she’d had the good sense to use lights only;
no sirens. Out here in the silent desert, Jack Brampton would have heard those
sirens from far away and would have known they were coming. This way, there was
still a chance of surprising him.
Joanna stopped for a second time and got out, crouching in
the dead grass, keeping under cover. And that’s when she heard the sound of
sirens, wafting up from the south. The federales were coming, all right,
with their sirens blaring to kingdom come!
“Damn,” she muttered. “Damn! Damn! Damn!”
Grumbling under my breath, I went looking for Frank
Montoya. It turns out he did have a vest, but it wasn’t my size. He said he
thought there were larger ones back in the supply room, but since he was on his
way to Palominas, I’d have to have one of the clerks in the lobby get it for
me. By the time I had the blasted thing in my hand and made it out to the
parking lot, everyone else, including Chief Deputy Montoya, was long gone. So
much her hot pursuit!
“Damn!” I hurried back into the lobby. “Where’s Palominas?”
I demanded.
“West of town, on Highway 92,” the clerk told me. “It’s
beyond Huachuca Terraces. Do you know how to get there?”
I’m a native of Seattle. There, geography poses no
problem. I know the streets and my way around them. In Bisbee I was totally
useless, but the name Huachuca Terraces sounded vaguely familiar. I was pretty
sure that’s where Dee Canfield’s house was located.
“Thanks,” I told her. “I think I can find it.”
Racing back out to the parking lot, I jumped into the Kia
and wound it up as fast as it would go. If somebody gave me a speeding ticket,
it was just too damned bad, although the idea of getting a speeding ticket in a
Kia might have been worth it. Then again, out here in the world of the Wild
West, where crooks used stolen horses instead of getaway cars, maybe state
patrollers just shot speeders instead of handing out tickets.
Retracing the route Joanna Brady had driven the day
before, I was relieved when I finally saw a sign that read: PALOMINAS, 10
MILES. I knew then that I was on the right track. And with the Kia running on
the flat and wound up to a full eighty-five miles per hour, I knew that meant I
was six minutes out.
Driving through the desert, I looked ahead. In the
distance I saw a long meandering line of greenish-yellow autumn-tinged trees
stretching south to north. Near that line of trees I saw what appeared to be a
cluster of buildings. That must be the town of Palominas, whatever that means.
Isn’t that some kind of horse?
I wondered.
Crossing a railroad overpass, I caught my first glimpse of
flashing red lights as the fast-moving police cars ahead of me swept into that
tiny community. I was thrilled to think that I was actually closing the
distance between me and them. They had all left the Justice Center a couple of
long minutes before I did. Maybe my Kia wasn’t so terribly lame after all.
Soon I was near enough to tell that the rearmost vehicle
was signaling for a left-hand turn. About that time, however, I met a pair of
oncoming dodoes who never should have been issued driver’s licenses. As soon as
one guy pulled out to pass, the other one sped up, thus making the passing
process take far longer than it should have. As they rushed toward me side by
side in both lanes, I started looking for somewhere to hit the ditch and dodge
out of the way. Finally, at the last moment, the passing car gave up and pulled
back into the right-hand lane. By the time I looked again, the police cars had
disappeared.
As I entered town, I slowed down. When I reached what I
assumed to be the correct intersection, I turned left. After a hundred yards or
so, the pavement ended and I bounced down a narrow, rutted cow path without
another vehicle in sight. I stopped finally, rolled down the window, and
listened. I was hoping for sirens. I saw clouds of dirt billowing skyward east
of me, but I heard nothing, at least not at first. But then, very, very
faintly, I did hear a siren. Not the standard kind of siren we use here in the
States. No, this one had a decidedly foreign flavor to it.
I was watching the clouds of dust off to my left and
listening to the siren when it finally hit me. I had made a mistake and over
shot the turn. The action was there, all right—to the south and east of where I
was.
I pulled ahead, looking for a place to turn around so I
could go back the way I had come, but then I stumbled on another dirt road.
This one, little more than a two-wheel track, was even narrower than the one I
was already on, but at least it wandered off toward the southeast, the same
general direction I wanted to go. So I went that way as well.
The Kia and l were tooling along just fine until we came
up over a ridge and dropped down toward that line of trees I had seen earlier.
I knew now for sure that the trees marked a riverbed. In fact, I remembered
flying across a bridge back on the highway immediately after I had been looking
for a place to ditch. There had been a sign attached to the bridge announcing
the name of the river that ran under it, but I didn’t remember the name, and I
hadn’t spotted any water, either.
Where I come from, rivers usually contain water. Actually,
in the Pacific Northwest, it’s a rule.
Whatever the unknown river’s name might be, water wasn’t
required. What it lacked in moisture, however, it made up in sand—loads of it.
Ahead of me, the bone-dry riverbed was a good fifty yards wide. On the far side
of that long expanse of sand I spotted another narrow set of tire tracks. It
seemed reasonable to assume that those tracks might be a continuation of the
road I was on.
I paused long enough to consider my options. Going back
and taking the other road would use up the better part of half an hour. By
then, whatever action there was across the river would he over and done with.
If I could cross the sand, though, I might be able to catch up with Joanna and
the others before I missed out; before they had Jack Brampton handcuffed and
thrown in the back of a patrol car.
Naturally, my low-priced rental Kia wasn’t equipped with four-wheel
drive. Even so, I thought that if I built up a good enough head of steam before
I hit the sand, maybe moment fin would carry me across.
That was the plan, anyway, and that’s exactly what I did.
I shoved the gas pedal all the way to the floor and charged into the riverbed.
I was doing fine. In fact, I probably would have made it to the far side
without a hitch, except for one thing. All of a sudden, right in the dead
center of the sand trap, a horse and rider appeared out of nowhere. They came
galloping down the riverbed straight at me.
When I finally realized that the crazy bastard on the
horse was headed right for me, I took my foot off the gas and slammed on the
brakes. The Kia stopped dead. At the same time, something smashed into and
through the windshield. It smacked into the shoulder rest of the passenger seat
only a foot or so from where I was sitting. Simultaneously, a spiderweb of tiny
cracks spread across the windshield’s safety glass.
By then I had seen the gun and understood that the son of
a bitch on the horse was shooting at me—shooting to kill! Covering my head, I
dived for cover and put the Kia’s engine block between me and any more flying
bullets. Even muffled by sand, I could hear the thud of the horse’s hooves as
it pounded by. I waited until I couldn’t hear it anymore. Only then, with my
small backup Glock in my hand, I cautiously raised my head and peered out.
Off to the south, the riverbed curved slowly to the left.
Horse and rider were fast disappearing around that bend. By then, they were
already far beyond the range of my wimpy backup handgun. Shaking my head in
disgust, I climbed out of the car. I plowed through deep sand in my once
pristine Johnston and Murphys and surveyed the damage. The windshield was a
goner. Both axles were buried up to the hubs. It would take time and a well
equipped tow truck to dig me out.
I set out to finish crossing the river on foot. A stiff
wind blew from the south, kicking powdery sand into my eyes. As l walked along,
half-blinded by the sand, I heard Joanna Brady’s voice calling my name.
“Beaumont, what are you doing down there?” she demanded. “Are
you hurt?”
Looking up, I caught sight of her. She stood on the edge
of the far bank. The top of her Blazer was barely visible in the back ground.
It hurt my pride to admit it—hurt like hell, in fact-- but I had to do it.
“I’m stuck,” I called back, “but the guy on the horse went
that way.” I pointed to what I assumed was downriver, although I learned later
it was actually up.
Joanna turned her back on me and disappeared from view. I
figured she would leave me stranded and go after Brampton with out me. Instead,
moments later, the speeding Blazer hurtled down the bank. Instead of setting
out across the expanse of treacherous sand, she stayed near the edge, where the
sand was covered with what looked like a cracked, hard-baked crust.
“Come on,” she yelled, motioning for me to join her. “We
haven’t got all day! The border’s only a mile away.”
Running through sand is a joke. My feet sank up to my
ankles with every step. I’ve always assumed that quicksand is wet. This was
dry, but it was treacherous as hell. I finally lost one shoe altogether and had
to go back to retrieve it. At last, shoe in hand, I caught up with the Blazer,
wrenched open the door, and clambered inside.
“Did you get a good look at him?” she demanded.
That morning, in the conference room, I had studied Jack
Brampton’s mug shots. “It’s him, all right.” I panted. “Believe me, he is armed
and dangerous.”
“No kidding,” Joanna said.
There was no time to look at him as Beaumont slumped in
the passenger seat. Her eyes were glued to the riverbed. Sticking to the shelf
of caliche, she headed south.
“The bastard tried to kill me,” Beaumont grumbled. “Shot
the hell out of my windshield. I’m lucky he didn’t take me out, too. By the
way,” he added in what sounded like a grudging after thought, “thanks for the
vest.”
“You’re welcome,” she returned. “And don’t worry. Brampton
won’t get away. Frank went on ahead. He’s meeting up with some federales. They’ll
be waiting at the border.”
“Right,” Beaumont said. “I heard them.”
“So did Brampton,” Joanna said grimly.
They drove in silence after that. Periodically the narrow
shelf of caliche would give way to sand. When they hit that, it took all of
Joanna’s considerable driving skill to keep the Blazer moving, even with four-wheel
drive. She was paying attention to the sand directly in front of them when
Beaumont yelled, “There he is.”
Ahead of them, Joanna caught sight of the galloping horse
and rider. The little mare, laboring through the treacherous, knee deep sand,
was struggling to maintain the pace. Beyond Princess, Joanna spotted the string
of fence posts that marked the international border. Unfortunately, Frank
Montoya and his promised squad of federales were nowhere to be seen.
Knowing Brampton was almost at the border, Joanna stomped
on the gas and the Blazer shot forward. Then, unexpectedly, the horse stopped.
She stopped abruptly, but her rider didn’t. Jack Brampton kept right on going.
He tumbled headfirst over the horse’s neck and shoulders and then over the
fence, where he lay still in the sand.
Tossing her head, Princess wheeled around and started back
toward the Blazer. Meanwhile, Joanna jammed on the brakes, stopping twenty
yards downriver from the fallen man.
“Hit the dirt!” she ordered. Drawing her weapon, she flung
herself out of the Blazer and down onto the sand. On the far side of the
Blazer, J.P. Beaumont followed suit.
Princess trotted back toward them and then stood still
once more, with her trembling legs spread wide apart and her head drooping. She
was close enough to the Blazer that Joanna could hear the exhausted horse’s
snorting and labored breathing. Lying flat on the ground, Joanna wriggled a
pair of binoculars out of her pocket and looked through them. On the far side
of the fence, Jack Brampton lay in a crumpled heap on the ground.
“Freeze!” Joanna shouted. “Don’t move.”
Brampton complied with the order. Joanna and Beau watched
for half a minute and detected no sign of movement.
“Closer?” Beaumont asked.
Joanna nodded and stowed the binoculars. “Go!” she said.
With their weapons drawn, they advanced again. When they
ducked for cover the third time, Brampton still hadn’t moved. “He’s either
knocked out cold or he’s dead,” she said.
Before they moved forward that last time, a gust of wind
blew down the bed of the river, bringing with it a sudden flurry of movement. A
cloud of something seemed to rise up ghostlike out of the ground beside the
fallen man. It floated toward them, eddying in the breeze. As the mini–dust
devil came closer, it separated itself into individual pieces of paper. Only
when one of them landed beside her did Joanna realize it was a twenty-dollar bill—one
of hundreds of other bills, twenties and fifties and hundreds spiraling through
the air.
Blood money,
Joanna
thought.
Still the suspect didn’t move. “Shall we take him?” she
asked. Beaumont nodded. “Let’s.”
“Go!” she ordered.
Joanna and Beaumont scrambled to their feet simultaneously
and rushed toward Jack Brampton. When they reached the border fence, they
stopped. On the far side of it their murder suspect lay lifeless on the ground,
his neck twisted back toward them, his eyes open but unmoving. Still strapped to
his body was a torn backpack leaking money.
“He must have thought Princess was a jumper,” Joanna Brady
muttered as she reholstered her weapon. “Lucky for us, it turns out she wasn’t.”
CHAPTER TWENTY
Hindsight is always twenty-twenty. What Joanna Brady and I
probably should have done the moment we saw Jack Brampton was grab him by his
legs and drag his body back under the fence. Unfortunately, we were so relieved
to be alive that neither of us figured that out until it was too late. By then,
the federales had arrived on the scene, and all bets were off.
I worked the Seattle PD Homicide Unit for the better part
of two decades. In all that time, I never had to bring a dead suspect’s body
back across an international border. I was about to get a first hand lesson,
and it wouldn’t be pretty.
Sheriff Brady spoke. Frank Montoya translated. The federales
listened and shook their heads. One of them caught sight of the packets of
money spilling out of the fallen backpack. At that point the head-shaking
became even more adamant. I believe the applicable term would be “No way, Jose.”
Right then I knew how it was going to play out. Without the personal
intervention of Vicente Fox, or even God himself, Jack Brampton wasn’t coming
back across the border anytime soon. Neither was the money.
Frustrated beyond belief, I went plowing back down the
river, gathering hundred-, fifty-, and twenty-dollar bills as I went. I had a
whole fistful of them by the time Joanna Brady, her face clouded with anger,
caught up with me. I glanced back at what should have been an official crime
scene in time to see the Mexican officers summarily load Jack Brampton’s body
onto a stretcher and cart him away, right along with his backpack.
“Which do you want to take back?” she demanded. “Princess
or the Blazer?”
“Princess?” I repeated.
“The horse,” she said impatiently. “The horse’s name is
Princess.”
I had far more faith in my ability to drive a Blazer than
I did with my skill on a horse. For one thing, just inside the border fence on
the U.S. side, I had spotted a reasonably serviceable roadway someone had
carved through the desert. I suspected it had been put there for the
convenience of passing Border Patrol vehicles and agents, and it looked to be
in better condition than either of the narrow tracks I had driven on earlier.
“I’ll drive,” I said. “What about the money?” I added,
showing her the wad of bills I held in my hand.
“Give it to Frank,” she said. “He’ll have deputies gather
what they can and bring it back to the department. I’ll be more than happy to
put it in the confiscated-funds account.”
Without another word, Joanna tossed me the keys, then she
stalked off toward the Blazer. Once there, she pulled a gallon-sized plastic
bottle of water out of the luggage compartment and poured it into a hard hat
she evidently kept on hand in an equipment locker. Holding the water-filled
hard hat in front of her, she moved cautiously toward the horse, making soothing
clucking sounds as she did so.
As a city-born-and-bred boy, I figured the animal would
take off. Instead, Princess pricked up her ears, trotted straight over to
Joanna, and gratefully buried her muzzle in the water. By the time Princess had
drunk her fill, Joanna had the creature’s bridle firmly in hand. Without a
word, Sheriff Brady vaulted easily into the saddle. As she rode past, she
tossed me the hard hat.
“Put it back in the Blazer, would you?”
“Sure thing,” I said.
Watching her ride away, I remembered what Harry I. Ball
had said all those days earlier about Joanna Brady being a latter day Annie
Oakley. As it turned out, he hadn’t been far from wrong.
Joanna delivered Princess back to the Lozier place. By
then someone had contacted Billyann Lozier at work, and she had come home to be
with her mother. Alma Wingate, worn out by all the excitement, was back up in
her bedroom lying down. Billyann was ecstatic to see Princess. She ran across
the road to greet them when Joanna and the horse emerged from the riverbed.
With tears running down her cheeks, Billyann Lozier buried her face in the
horse’s long black mane.
“Thank you so much for bringing her home, Sheriff Brady,
Billyann murmured. “Thank you, thank you, thank you. inter what Mother told me,
I didn’t think I’d ever see Princess again.”
“You’re welcome,” Joanna said.
Returning the horse safely was the single bright spot in
the day’s events. Joanna should have been happy knowing that Jack Brampton was
done for. He would never be able to harm anyone else. The problem was, he had
died without revealing anything about the people he had worked for—the people
who had pm vided the money that the wind had blown out of his backpack. As far
as Joanna was concerned, the job of apprehending the killer was only half done.
Not only that, but from the ham-fisted way the federales
were handling the situation, Joanna doubted she and her investigators would
learn anything more from the effects on the dead man’s body. Plus, she didn’t
even know if Jack Brampton had gone to his death with an additional supply of
sodium azide still in his possession, although Frank had apprised the Mexican
officers of the possibility.
It was only when Joanna was standing in Paul and Billyann
Lozier’s front yard that she realized one of the backup deputies she had
summoned had yet to appear. The others had both been sent down to join Chief
Deputy Montoya and Ernie in searching for more of the scattered money. The K-9
Unit, however, wasn’t with them.
Once Beaumont handed over the keys to the Blazer and they
were headed into town, Joanna got on the radio to Dispatch. “Tica,” she said, “whatever
happened to Deputy Gregovich? He never showed up.”
“He’s at the hospital,” Tica Romero replied. “At least
Deputy Gregovich is. I don’t know about Spike. Kristin’s about to have her
baby.”
“Oh,” a relieved Joanna said. “That explains it.”
Minutes later, while requesting a tow truck to come to
retrieve Beau’s damaged Kia, she turned to him and asked, “Where should they
take it?”
“I have no idea.” He shrugged. “The rental agreement’s in
the glove box. Have the tow-truck driver call Saguaro Discount Rental in Tucson
and ask them where they want it. Unless you need it liar evidence, that is. II
so, you can take it back to your department and have someone dig the bullet out
of the passenger seat.”
Joanna shook her head dispiritedly. “Why bother?” she
asked. The shooter’s dead and you’re not. I don’t see any point in wasting time
or energy on it.”
“Makes sense to me,” Beaumont agreed.
Sensing that he wasn’t any happier about the situation
than she was, Joanna drove for several miles without saying anything more.
“I’m sorry we didn’t catch him,” she said at last. “If
your boss thought we were incompetent before—”
“Ross Connors didn’t say anything of the kind,” Beaumont
said quickly. “And just for the record, neither did I.”
“Thanks,” Joanna said, and meant it. “What’ll you do now?”
she asked. “Head back home?” She was wondering if he’d say any thing more about
Anne Rowland Corley. He didn’t.
“Probably,” he answered. “With Brampton dead, there’s not
much reason to hang around any longer. Although, since Frank went to the
trouble of getting those phone logs, I should finish going over them before I
leave. I’ll catch a plane back to Seattle tomorrow sometime.”
Riding Princess back to the Lozier place had given Joanna
time to mull over what she had read earlier in the Denver Post article.
She wanted to talk to Beaumont about it, but her office at the Justice Center
was the wrong place to broach the subject. She glanced at her watch.
“It’s after one now,” she said. “I’ll probably have to
spend the afternoon on my knees, begging the governor of Arizona to work with
the governor of Sonora to get Jack Brampton’s body shipped back to the States.
To do that, I’ll need patience, strength, and food. How about grabbing some
lunch?”
“Fine,” Beaumont said. “As long as you let the state of
Washington buy”
Feeling a little underhanded, Joanna stopped at Chico’s in
Don Luis. Once inside, she ordered tacos for both of them. Her choice of food
was actually a test, and Joanna liked the man better for contentedly munching
his way through a plate loaded with Chico’s luncheon special.
“Tell me about your wife,” Joanna said quietly as Beau
mopped up the last few crumbs of shredded beef and cheese that lingered on his
plate.
When he raised his eyes to look at her, J.P. Beaumont’s
gaze was suddenly wary. “Which one?” he asked, but it was only a defense
mechanism. They both knew Joanna was asking about Anne Corley.
“The second one,” Joanna said.
“What do you want to know?”
“I’ve read the Denver Post article,” she told him. “Frank
down loaded it from the Internet.”
“Damn his computer anyway!” Beau muttered. “Why the hell
couldn’t he mind his own business? You, too, for that matter?”
“It is my business,” Joanna said. “You asked me about her,
remember?”
His expression softened a little. “Well, yes. I suppose I
did. I just haven’t had time ...”
“As I was reading through the article,” Joanna continued, “something
kept bothering me.”
“What’s that?” She heard the tightly controlled anger
beneath his question.
“How many cases were there?” she asked. “Besides the two
mentioned in the article and the three victims in Seattle, the article hinted
there were others. Were there?”
Beau paused below he answered. Finally he nodded. “Several,”
he said. “It really doesn’t matter how many. Ralph Ames and I worked with the
various jurisdictions and cleared the ones we knew about—the ones Anne had kept
a record of. There was no need to make a big deal of it.”
“The article implied that you did it quietly because you
were worried about a flurry of wrongful-death suits.”
“That’s not true,” Beau replied shortly. “Anne was dead, for
God’s sake. Just as dead as Jack Brampton back there in the riverbed. Ralph and
I did it that way so Anne’s name wouldn’t her dragged through the mud any worse
than it already had been.”
“Anne’s name?” Joanna asked. “Or yours?”
Beaumont’s face fell. Finally, he nodded bleakly. “That, too,”
he admitted.
“My father used to be sheriff here,” Joanna said. “Did you
know that?”
“I saw the picture and the name in the display case out in
the lobby. I assumed the two of you might be related.”
“Dad always maintained that Anne Rowland got away with
murder. He said that by claiming she was crazy and locking her up in a mental
institution, Anne’s mother, Anita Rowland, caused a miscarriage of justice.”
“No,” Beau said quietly after a moment. “You’re wrong
there. That’s not where justice miscarried. What Anne’s father had done to her
big sister—what Anne had been forced to witness as a little girl—drove her over
the edge. By the time she killed her father—which she readily admitted—she
really was crazy. Locking her up was the right thing to do, but they never
should have let her loose. If the legal definition of insanity is an inability
to tell right from wrong, Anne never was cured. She was able to sec how other people’s
actions might he wrong, but never her own.”
“How did she get out then?” Joanna asked. “Why was she
released?”
“Because she conned Milton Corley the same way she conned
me.”
“The article hinted she might have had something to do
with her husband’s death as well.”
“Yes,” Beau said softly. “I’m sure she did. Milton Corley
was dying of cancer, but she helped him along. She told me so herself that last
day, the day she tried to kill me, too.”
The man’s anguish was so visible, Joanna felt ashamed of
her-self for prying. “I can see this is terribly hurtful for you,” she said. “I’m
sorry I brought it up.”
“No,” he replied. “Don’t be. It’s okay. If I hadn’t wanted
to talk to someone about it, I wouldn’t have mentioned her to you that first
day. It’s just that sometimes I feel as though Anne never existed at all, as
though she’s a figment of my imagination. I knew her for such a short time, you
see, and . . .” He shook his head and didn’t continue.
Joanna slid across the cigarette-marred bench seat. “Come
on,” she said gently. “We’d better go.”
When we got back to the Justice Center, I went straight to
the conference room. I was glad no one else was there. I needed some time
alone. I sat down in front of the stack of phone logs and put on my reading
glasses, but I made no effort to read. The conversation about Anne had rocked
me. I was filled with the same kind of apprehension I had felt that May morning
as I had driven to Snoqualmie Falls, and in countless dreams since—that there
was more to learn about the woman who called herself Anne Corley—more than I
would ever want to know.
Finally, because I had to do something to keep from losing
it, I picked up the first of the telephone logs.
In terms of excitement, examining telephone logs is right
up there with watching paint dry. Or maybe playing with Tinkertoys.
When I was a kid being raised by a single mother in
Seattle’s Ballard neighborhood, we were poor as church mice. One year for
Christmas my mother came home from the local Toys for Tots drive with a Tinkertoy
set. That’s what I got for Christmas that year—Tinkertoys and a plaid flannel
shirt Mother made for me. I remember hating to wear the shirt to school because
other kids knew it was homemade.
But the Tinkertoys were a hit. I loved putting the round
sticks into those little round knobs with the holes and making them jut out at
all different angles. Telephone logs are a lot like that. The numbers are the
little round knobs with holes in them. The calls that travel back and forth
between them are the sticks.
The first knob was the pay phone that had been used to
make the three separate calls to Winnetka, Illinois, on the day Deidre Canfield
disappeared. But Frank Montoya is nothing if not thorough. Based on Harve Dowd’s
observation that Jack Brampton had used the phones on numerous occasions, Frank
had collected phone logs for both of the post-office pay phones over a period
of several months—for as long as Jack Brampton had been in the area. Scanning
through those, I found two more calls had been placed to Winnetka,
Illinois—both of those to the offices of Maddern, Maddern, and Peek.
The next set of knobs were the two phone numbers in
Illinois. Because of the volume of calls, I started with the log for the
residence number first. The logs were arranged in order of’ the most recent
calls first. I worked my way down list after list after list until I could
barely see straight. Until I felt myself starting to doze in the chair.
And then I saw it. The words “Olympia, Washington,” leaped off the page and
brought me bolt upright and wide awake.
The call had been placed two months earlier at ten o’clock
in the morning and had lasted for forty minutes. Excited now, I scanned faster.
Three weeks before that was another call. A month before that was another. All
of the calls were placed to the same 360 prefix number. Shaking my head, I
extracted my wallet from my pocket and pulled out the list of telephone
numbers, and there it was. That 360 number was the unlisted home number for
Ross Alan Connors.
“What the hell does this mean?” I asked myself aloud.
Actually, the answer seemed pretty clear. I remembered
that long empty silence when I had told Ross about the phone calls to the
Illinois law firm. Now I had to face the possibility that Washington State
Attorney General Ross Connors was actually involved in the plot that had
resulted in the death of his own witness.
I’ve never been long on patience. Cooler heads might have
paused for a moment or two of consideration. Not me. There was a phone on a
table at the far end of the conference room. I grabbed the receiver off the
hook and dialed in Ross Connors’s office number, only to be told he was out to
lunch. Next I tried his cell phone. As soon as he answered, I heard the tinkle
of glassware and the muted hum of background conversation. Connors was in a
public place—some fine dining establishment, no doubt and most likely with
friends or associates. It wasn’t the best venue for me to try forcing him to
tell me the truth, but I wasn’t willing to wait any longer. If my boss was a crook,
I wanted to know it right then so I could deliver my verbal resignation on the
spot.
“Beau,” he said when he recognized my voice. “I really can’t
talk right now—”
“Sorry to interrupt your lunch, but the suspect we were
looking for, Jack Brampton, is dead,” I told him. “He died this morning making
a run for the Mexican border. I thought you’d want to know “
“You’re absolutely right!” Ross Connors exclaimed. “I do
want to know about that. Good work. Anything else?”
“Answer me one question,” I growled into the phone. “Why
didn’t you come clean with me when I told you about Maddern, Maddern, and Peek?
Louis Maddern is obviously a friend of yours.”
He excused himself from the table and didn’t speak again
until he was outside the restaurant. “Louis really isn’t a friend of mine,,” he
said. “The Madderns are closer to Francine. She’s known Madeline since college,
since she was Madeline Springer, in fact. The girls were sorority sisters
together. Lou can be a bit of a pill some times, but I suppose he’s all right.
Why? What’s going on?”
Sorority sisters, I
thought.
That might explain those widely spaced, long-winded phone calls. It could be
they were nothing more than that, the totally harmless chatting of a pair of
old friends, but still .. .
“Probably nothing,” I said.
“Well,” Connors said. “I should get back to my guests. I’ll
be back in my office about three. Why don’t you give me a callback then.”
“Sure,” I told him. “Will do.”
I put down the phone. I’ve spent most of my adult life
working as a homicide detective, and I can usually spot a liar a mile away.
J.P. Beaumont’s gut-instinct opinions carry about the same weight in a court of
law as polygraph results do—which means they’re widely regarded as totally
unreliable.
The problem for me right then was that my gut instinct
didn’t think Ross Alan Connors was lying. True, he hadn’t answered my question
in front of his guests, but nowadays that was considered to be polite
cell-phone behavior. Still, he had sounded glad to hear from me and delighted
that Jack Brampton had been run to ground. He didn't sound to me like someone
with some dark, hidden secret.
I should have been ecstatic about thinking my boss wasn't
a crook after all, but I wasn't. Because if his relationship to Madeline and
Louis Maddern was totally harmless, then I was getting nowhere fast.
I went back to my place at the table and returned to the
telephone logs. The law firm logged hundreds of phone calls a day, which meant
I was dealing with a huge stack of pages. I lit into scanning them with renewed
vigor, but instead of starting from the most recent ones, I decided to go to
the end of the list and begin there. Halfway through the fourth page, Olympia,
Washington, began appearing again. Not one call or two, but dozens of them,
some only a minute or two long, some that lasted for forty or fifty minutes.
That pattern was obvious almost immediately. None of the
calls were placed earlier than 11 A.M. central time, which would have been 9
A.M. Pacific. And none were placed later than 5 P.M. Pacific. And, although
they all went to the same number in Olympia, it wasn't one of the numbers I had
on my Ross Connors contact list. I guessed then where this was most likely
leading, but before I did anything about it, I wanted to be absolutely sure.
CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE
Once back in her office, Joanna immediately tried reaching
Governor Wallace Hickman, only to be told that he wasn't in, who was calling,
and he would call her back. Not likely, Joanna thought. She'd had previous
dealings with Wally Hickman in a case that had reflected badly on one of the
governor's former partners. With that in mind, she doubted the governor would
be eager to return her phone call—no matter how urgent.
The surface of Joanna's desk was still unnaturally clean.
While she waited, Joanna took messages off the machine. One was on in Terry
Gregovich. "Sheriff Brady, sorry I didn't call in earlier. Kristin went
into labor and there was too much happening. Kristin is fine. We think Shaundra
is, too, but she had some breathing problems. Dr. Lee is having her airlifted
to the neonatal unit at University Medical Center in Tucson. Kristin went with
her in the medevac helicopter. Spike and I are going along, too, but we're driving,
not flying. I’ll let you know how things arc as soon as know anything.”
As she erased that message, Joanna said a small prayer for
the whole Gregovich family.
Next came a call from Joanna’s mother. “Hi,” Eleanor Lathrop
Winfield said airily. “George and I are planning a little dinner get together
for Friday evening. We wanted to know if you and Butch could come.”
The fact that Eleanor had finally unbent enough to call her
son-in-law Butch rather than insisting on using the more formal given name of
Frederick still gave Joanna pause.
“He said there wasn’t anything on his calendar, but that I
should check with you,” Eleanor’s message continued. “Grown ups only this time,
but Jenny won’t mind. She’d probably rather he with Jim Bob and Eva Lou anyway.
Let me know We’ll get together around six and eat at seven or so.”
Joanna groaned inwardly. This would be one of her mother’s
command performances. Since Butch had already said they were free, Joanna
probably wouldn’t be able to dodge it. She made a note in her calendar, then
called Eleanor back and left a message that she and Butch would indeed attend.
The next voice she heard was Marliss Shackleford’s. “I
understand you’ll be speaking to a high school career assembly later this week,”
she said. “I wanted to put an item in my column about that. I was also
wondering if you have any comment on the fact that Deputy Galloway has
officially declared that he’s running for sheriff.”
With a decisive poke of her dialing finger, Joanna erased
that message without bothering to jot down the number. She had suspected it
was coming. Still, now that Ken Junior’s candidacy was evidently official,
Joanna felt a sudden flash of anger toward Deputy Galloway. She had allowed him
to continue with the department when others might have manufactured reasons to
let him go. He had repaid Joanna’s kindness by undermining her administration
in secret. Now his opposition had gone public.
If he had made a public announcement, it was probably in
that day’s edition of The Bisbee Bee. Under normal circumstances,
Kristin would have placed the paper on Joanna’s desk with any pertinent
articles marked with Hi-Liter. But Kristin wasn’t here. Wanting to know exactly
what candidate Galloway had to say, Joanna called the mail room and spoke to
the clerk, Sylvia Roark.
“Kristin Gregovich is out today,” Joanna said into the
phone. “Would you please bring the admin mail down to my office?”
Minutes later Sylvia Roark appeared in the office doorway,
wheeling a large metal cart that was filled to the brim with a mass of papers.
Joanna was surprised when she saw it. She had often objected to the piles of
paper Kristin Gregovich routinely brought into Joanna’s office and stacked on
her desk, but she had no idea that the relatively small piles that actually
appeared had been culled from this kind of daunting heap.
“What should I do with it?” Sylvia asked.
Sylvia was a mousy, painfully shy young woman with bad
teeth and ill-fitting clothing who came and went from the mail room on a daily
basis without exchanging a word with anyone. She spent most of her work hours
closeted in the mail room. When not actively dealing with mail, she hunkered
over a computer and transferred cold-case information from microfiche into
files that could be accessed via computer.
“I’m going to need you to sort it for me,” Joanna said.
Sylvia’s face turned crimson. “But I don’t know how!” she
objected.
“Then you’ll have to learn,” Joanna told her firmly. “Make
five stacks. One for junk mail, one for magazines, newspapers, and newsletters,
one for Chief Deputy Montoya, one for me, and one for don’t know. I’ll help you
sort through the don’t-know stack later.”
“But doesn’t Kristin do that?”
“Kristin just had a baby,” Joanna said. “Until she’s back
on the job, we’ll be counting on you.”
“All right,” Sylvia said, backing up and scuttling toward
the hallway. “I’ll take it back to the mail room and sort it there.”
“No,” Joanna said. “That won’t do. Use Kristin’s desk. And
if the phone rings while you’re there, you’ll have to answer it.”
“But ...” Sylvia began.
“Please,” Joanna insisted. “I need your help.”
Nodding, Sylvia pushed the cart closer to Kristin’s desk.
Joanna didn’t want to spook the young woman further by looking over her
shoulder as she set about doing an unfamiliar task. Spying a copy of The
Bisbee Bee near the top of the pile, Joanna grabbed it, then retreated to
her office and closed the door.
With the new unidentified number in hand, I left the
conference room and went looking for Frank Montoya. The desk outside Sheriff
Brady’s office was almost buried under stacks of paper. Seated there was a
young woman I hadn’t seen before. When I asked if Chief Deputy Montoya was in,
she didn’t answer. Instead, she ducked her head and pointed.
When I entered the chief deputy’s office, Frank was on the
phone patiently explaining to an out-of-town reporter that, until the dead
suspect’s relatives had been contacted, he was unable to release any further
information.
“How’s it going?” he asked, when the call finally ended.
I handed him a sheet of paper on which I had written the unidentified
number, the next cog in my telephone Tinkertoy trail. “Can you find out whose
phone number this is?” I asked.
“Sure,” he said. “It may take a few minutes.”
“Good,” I said. “I’ll be in the conference room.”
The headline Joanna sought was in the right--hand hail
torn corner of the Bee’s front page:
DEPUTY KENNETH GALLOWAY
OPPOSES SHERIFF BRADY
“Crime rates may be down in the rest of the country,”
Cochise County Deputy Sheriff Kenneth Galloway declared yesterday while
throwing his hat into the ring in the race for sheriff. “But here, on Sheriff
Joanna Brady’s watch, it seems to be going in the opposite direction.”
Citing increased numbers of undocumented aliens who arc
flooding into the county, Galloway says sheriff’s deputies are often outgunned
and outnumbered. “We don’t have the man power to deal with UDAs and with our
regular law enforcement responsibilities as well. Sheriff Brady hasn’t done
enough to increase staffing to deal with this ever-growing problem.”
That was as far as Joanna could bear to read. Increased
staffing simply wasn’t possible in the face of lower tax receipts and across-the-board
budget cuts. It was easy for someone outside the process to point a finger and
call her incompetent, but Ken Junior wasn’t the one who had to face up to the
board of supervisors and try to balance the budget. She tossed the paper aside.
She had already decided she would run again. With the next
election still more than a year away, she hadn’t wanted to start campaigning
quite so early. But if Kenneth Galloway was already out on the stump, she would
be forced to follow suit. That meant organizing a committee, raising funds, and
doing appearances, all while doing her job.
For several minutes she sat brooding, wondering where she’d
find the time and energy to do both. Gradually, though, her thoughts shifted.
She was mentally back at Chico’s and analyzing the conversation she and Beau
had shared there. She recalled the man’s painful admission about how Anne
Rowland Corley had conned him and others; about how the real miscarriage of
justice hadn’t been in confining a twelve-year-old to a mental institution but
in releasing her years later.
Joanna had dropped the offending copy of The Bisbee Bee
on top of the serial-killer piece from the Denver Post. Now she
unearthed the article and scanned the timeline sidebar that had accompanied the
feature article. It showed when the child Anne Rowland had been shipped off to
Phoenix and when she had been released.
With a growing sense of purpose, Joanna picked up the
phone and dialed Frank Montoya’s office. When he didn’t answer, she tried
Dispatch. “Where’s the chief deputy?” she asked. “Is he still out at Palominas?”
“No,” Tica Romero said. “I think he’s out in the lobby
talking to some reporters. Want me to interrupt?”
“Never mind,” Joanna said. Her next call was to Ernie
Carpenter. “When did Bill Woodruff disappear?” she asked when he answered. “Who?”
“Bill Woodruff. You remember him. He used to be the
Cochise County Coroner.”
“Oh, that Bill Woodruff,” Ernie said. “Sure, I remember
him. That’s a long time ago. I was a brand-new detective back then. Woodruff
went fishing down at Guyamas and never came hack.”
“That’s what I remember, too, because Dad was sheriff,”
Joanna said. “But wasn’t there something about Woodruff having a ‘side dish’
somewhere down across the line in Old Mexico?”
“Sounds familiar,” Ernie allowed.
“Do you remember any of the details?”
“Like I said, it’s been a long time,” Ernie said.
“Yes,” Joanna said. “It has. Thanks.”
She hurried to the office door. Sylvia Roark was still
pulling envelopes out of the cart. “How are you doing?” Joanna asked. “Okay,”
Sylvia mumbled.
“Not on the mail,” Joanna corrected. “I mean, how are you
doing on the microfiche project?”
“I can’t do anything on it if I’m here,” Sylvia sputtered.
“I thought you said I should—”
“Not right now,” Joanna said quickly. “I don’t mean today.
I mean in general. How far have you gotten?”
“Only the mid-eighties, I guess,” Sylvia said. “I’m
working backward, and it takes time, you know. I can work on it only an hour or
two a day, but I’m doing the best—”
Without waiting for Sylvia to finish, Joanna headed for
the mail room. Tucked into a far corner sat the clumsy old microfiche machine
next to its multiple-drawered file. Pulling out the one marked “1979-1981,” Joanna
settled herself in front of the screen and went to work.
I sat in the conference room twiddling my thumbs for
the next twenty minutes. Finally Frank Montoya showed up.
Wordlessly he handed me back the piece of paper on which I
had scribbled the unknown telephone number. “Who’s Francine Connors?” he asked.
“The Washington State Attorney General’s wife,” I told
him. “Why?”
“I’d say the man has a problem then,” Frank Montoya
replied. “The cell phone in question is registered to her.”
Frank exited the room, leaving me feeling as though he had
poured a bucket of cold water down my back. Ross Connors had been looking for a
leak in his department and among his trusted advisers. It was clear to me now
that the problem had been far closer to him—in his own home! Francine Connors
had been carrying on a long-distance relationship with the husband of one of
her friends. In the process, she had not simply betrayed her husband, she had
also helped murder Latisha Wall.
I popped my head back out of the conference room. Chief
Deputy Montoya had not yet made it to his office. “Hey, Frank,” I called. “One
more thing.”
“What’s that?”
“I’m going to need a log on that one, too.”
“No kidding,” he replied. “I’ve already ordered it. I’ll
bring it to you as soon as I can.”
While waiting, I struggled with my conscience, wondering
what to do. Under the circumstances, nothing seemed clear cut. Was my first
responsibility to my boss? Did I have an obligation to call Ross Connors and
tell him my as yet unproved suspicions? But if I did that, wasn’t I dodging my
responsibilities to Latisha Wall? Most of my adult life has been spent tracking
killers. If Francine Connor had betrayed a protected witness’s whereabouts,
then she was as guilty of Latisha Wall’s murder as the man who had poisoned
her,
Francine Connors was the dishonorable wife of a man sworn to
uphold the laws of Washington State. How would Ross Connors react? Would he
listen to what I had to say and do what had to be done, or would he try to save
his wife? In a tiny corner of my mind, I wondered if that was why I was here.
Was it possible Ross Connors already had his own suspicions about
Francine’s possible involvement? Had he sent me to Arizona hoping against hope
that I wouldn’t discover the truth about what had gone on? Was that why, when I
first brought up Maddern’s name, Ross had said so little?
Finally, I picked up the phone in the conference room.
Pulling a battered ticket folder out of my pocket, I dialed the toll free
number for Alaska Airlines.
“When’s the next flight from Tucson to Seattle?” I asked.
“There’s one this afternoon at three-thirty,” I was told.
The conference room clock said it was already ten past two. I was a good
hundred miles away from the airport and without a vehicle. “That one won’t
work,” I said. “When’s the next flight?”
“Tomorrow morning at seven.”
I reserved a seat on that flight. I had finished and was
putting the phone down when Joanna Brady appeared at the conference room door.
She stepped inside, flipped up the OCCUPIED sign and pulled the door shut
behind her. Her face was set; her eyes chips of dark green slate. Something was
up.
“Did Frank tell you?” I asked.
“Tell me what?”
“He’s waiting for the next set of telephone-toll logs, but
it looks as though my boss’s wife has been carrying on a clandestine affair
with one of UPPI’s big-name attorneys back East. I’m guessing that’s how they
learned of Latisha Wall’s whereabouts. As soon as they knew, they must have
sent Jack Brampton here to runib her out.”
Joanna relaxed a little. “You’ve caught them then,” she
breathed, but she didn’t sound nearly as pleased about it as I would have
expected.
“Frank’s the one who did it,” I said. “I’ve never seen
anybody who can work with the phone company the way he does.”
Joanna nodded absently, as though she wasn’t really paying
attention. She had taken a seat at the conference table. Sitting directly
across from her, I noticed a long, jagged scar on her cheek for the first time.
She probably usually covered it with makeup, but now her face was pale. The
scar stood out vividly against her white skin, making me wonder what had caused
it.
“What’s wrong?” I asked.
Joanna put a slim file folder down on the table, but she
made no move to hand it to me. “You said earlier that you and Anne Rowland
Corley’s attorney ...”
I wished she wouldn’t keep using Anne’s maiden name. I
hated having Anne’s name linked to her father’s.
“Ralph Ames,” I supplied. “The attorney’s name is Ralph
Ames.”
“That the two of you cleared all the cases,” she
continued. “That’s right.”
“But you didn’t come here,” she said. “You didn’t clear
any cases here.”
It was a statement more than a question. My heart gave a
lurch.
“As far as we knew there weren’t any cases here,” I said, “other
than Anne’s father, that is. With the whole family dead by then ...”
“You said she kept a written record?”
“Yes, in the form of a manuscript. Why?”
“Was Bill Woodruff’s name in it?” Joanna asked.
“Bill Woodruff? Not that I remember. Who’s he?”
“You mean who was he,” Joanna corrected. “Years ago
he used to be the Cochise County Coroner—before he disappeared, that is. He
wasn’t declared officially dead until three years later, but I’m sure now that
he died much earlier than that. He was also the man who ruled Patty Rowland’s
death an accident and Roger Rowland’s a suicide.”
She spun the file folder across the table to me then. “Check
the dates yourself,” she added. “Bill Woodruff disappeared within three weeks
of Anne Rowland Corley’s release from the hospital in Phoenix.”
Joanna left the room, leaving me to pick up the pieces of
my heart. In the file I found several pages copied from a missing persons
report. From the bare bones of what was written there I learned that Bill
Woodruff had gone on a fishing trip to a town in Mexico, where he was
reportedly seen in several bars in the company of a young woman—a strikingly
beautiful young woman—after which neither of them were ever seen again.
I’m always accusing Maxwell Cole of editorializing. Since
he writes a newspaper column, I suppose he’s entitled to put his opinions right
there in print for all to see. But the truth is, cops editorialize, too.
Couched in the supposedly nonemotional declaration of fact and allegation that
passes for cop-talk and cop-write, I recognized what the long-ago investigator
had obviously concluded. A few terse but nevertheless disparaging remarks about
Bill Woodruff’s wife, Belinda, revealed the investigator’s opinion that the
missing man might well have had good reason to walk away from a shrewish,
carping wife—walk away and simply disappear.
Unlike that original investigator, I saw Anne Corley’s
troubled face leap toward me out of the telling words in the report: “strikingly
beautiful.” That was Anne, all right—strikingly beautiful. And ultimately
dangerous. Bill Woodruff must have thought he was about to get lucky and have
himself a harmless little fling. I’m sure he had no idea he was dealing
with the now-grown and incredibly vengeful little girl his official reports had
once betrayed.
That much Anne had told me herself. Her written manuscript
had alleged that her sister Patty hadn’t really died as a result of an
accidental fall. She had been tortured and abused and finally savagely beaten.
And both of Anne’s parents, along with her father’s cronies—the police chief
and the local coroner—had conspired together to cover it up, just as Anita
Rowland and Woodruff had concealed Anne’s role in her father’s supposed suicide.
It’s hard to be angry with someone who’s been dead for
years. But I was. A riot of fury boiled up in my heart because Anne had done it
to me again, damn her! She had left me a manuscript that, according to her,
told me the whole truth. Clearly she had left out a few things—a few important
things—and had suckered me one more time. And that brought me back to the
central question I have about Anne Corley: Did she ever really love me, or did
I just make it all up? Because, if she had loved me, wouldn’t she have told me everything?
There was a discreet tap on the door. I looked up from
staring at a paper I was no longer seeing as Joanna Brady came into the room,
once again closing the door behind her.
“I’m sorry,” she said. “I assumed you knew, but I can see
from your face—you had no idea.”
I shook my head. “It happened within weeks of her being
released from the hospital, just prior to her marriage to Milton Corley,” I
said. “How do you suppose she did it? How did she pull it off?”
Joanna shrugged. “I have no idea,” she said kindly. “But remember,
we could both be wrong. We don’t have any actual proof. It might have been
someone else.”
I wasn’t prepared to give either Anne or me that kind of
break. “No,” I said. “I don’t think so.”
“Then you’re right,” Joanna said finally. “The real
miscarriage of justice happened when they released her. And you were right
about something else, too,” she added. “Look.”
She’d been holding something in her hand, but I had been
too preoccupied to notice. Now she passed me a new set of phone logs. Putting
on my reading glasses, I scanned through the listings. They included literally
dozens of phone calls from Francine Connors’s cell phone to Winnetka, Illinois.
Some I recognized as going to Louis Maddern’s office number, while a few of the
others went to his residence. Most of them, however, had been placed to a third
number I didn’t recognize.
“Maddern’s cell phone?” I asked.
Joanna nodded. “You’ve got it,” she said. “Frank just
checked.”
The last call had been placed on Sunday night. Looking at
the time, I realized it had been placed within minutes of my call to the
Connors’s home. That one, lasting over an hour, originated from Francine’s cell
phone. After that there was nothing.
I closed my eyes and tried to remember exactly what had
gone on during that critical call. I was sure Francine Connors had answered the
phone and had asked who was calling. Had I told her who I was? I couldn’t
remember, but I wondered now if she had somehow stayed on the line and listened
in on my conversation with her husband. I tried to recall exactly what Ross had
said. The only thing that stuck in my head was that he had planned on calling
in the FBI to track down the leak.
Bearing all that in mind, there could he no question about
what I had to do next. “May I use this phone?” I asked, although I had already
used it once without having asked for Sheriff Brady’s permission.
“Sure,” Joanna said. “Go right ahead. Do you want me to
leave?”
“No,” I told her. “That’s not necessary.”
I searched through my wallet until I once again located
the list of Ross Connors’s telephone numbers. By then I should have known them
by heart, but I didn’t. I dialed his office number first.
“Attorney General Connors’s Office,” a crisp voice
replied. “May I help you?”
“Mr. Connors, please.”
“I’m sorry, he’s not in. May I take a message?”
“No,” I said. “That’s all right.”
I dialed his cell-phone number. After ringing several
times, the call went to voice mail. Hanging up, I tried the home number last. A
woman answered. I wasn’t sure, but the voice didn’t sound like Francine Connors’s
voice.
“Ross, please,” I said easily, hoping to pass for an
acquaintance if not a friend.
“He’s not here,” the woman said, her voice quavering
slightly. “He’s at the hospital. I’m Christine Connors, Ross’s mother. Is there
a message?”
“Hospital?” I asked. “Has something happened to him? Is he
ill?”
“Oh,” she said. “You must not have heard then. It’s not
Ross. He’s fine. At least he’s okay. No, it’s Francine.”
“What about her?”
“She’s dead. She and Ross went to lunch together. He had a
wonderful time, and he thought Francine did, too. But then, when she came home,
and, without even changing her clothes, she went out in the backyard and just
... just ...” Christine Connors stilled a tiny sob. “The gardener was working
out front. He heard the shot and came running. He called an ambulance and they
took her to the hospital, but they couldn’t save her. I can’t imagine why she’d
do such a thing. I just can’t.”
I was stunned. I remembered the sound of tinkling
glassware in the background—the sounds of fine dining at a luncheon meeting. I
hadn’t thought that Francine might be there, but she must have been. And from
that and the call on Sunday night, she must have known the jig was up.
“I’m sorry,” I murmured into the phone. “I’m so very sorry.”
“Well, if you’ll leave your name, I’ll be sure to let Ross
know you called.”
“No,” I told her. “Don’t bother. I’ll be in touch.”
When I put down the phone, Joanna Brady was staring at my
face. “She’s gone, isn’t she?” she said.
In no more than ten minutes, J.P. Beaumont looked as
though he had aged ten years.
“Is there anything I can do?” Joanna asked.
Beaumont shook his head. “I don’t think so,” he said. “No,
wait. There is something. I’m going to need a ride. First I have to go to the
hotel and check out. Then I need a lift as far as Tucson. My plane’s first
thing tomorrow morning.”
“Come on,” Joanna said. “We’ll take my Civvie.”
Beaumont followed her through the building and out the
office door without exchanging a word with anyone. Only when he was fastening
the seat belt in Joanna’s Crown Victoria did he have second thoughts.
“That was rude,” he said. “I should go hack in and tell
Frank how much I appreciated his help.”
“Don’t worry,” Joanna told him. “I’ll pass it along.”
“He’s a good man to have on your team.”
“Yes,” she agreed. “I know”
When they reached the entrance to the Justice Center,
Joanna sat there, hesitating, even though there was no traffic coming in either
direction. Finally, making up her mind, she turned left.
“Wait a minute,” Beau objected. “Where are we going? I
thought the Copper Queen was the other direction. I need to check out.”
“We’re taking a detour,” Joanna told him. “There’s
something I want to show you.”
After heading east for a mile or so, she turned right onto
a road labeled WARREN CUTOFF.
“What’s Warren?” he asked.
“It’s another Bisbee neighborhood,” she explained. “Until
the 1950s, when Bisbee was incorporated, Warren and all these other places were
separate towns.”
“Oh,” he said and lapsed into silence.
Coming into town, Joanna turned right at the first
intersection and then gunned the Civvie up and over two short but relatively
steep hills. At the top of the second one the road curved, first to the left
and then back to the right. Beyond the curve, Joanna pulled over onto the
shoulder, stopped the car, and got out. Beaumont followed.
“What’s this?” he asked.
Joanna pointed to a massive brown stucco mansion lurking
behind a curtain of twenty-foot-high oleander. The house stood at the top end
of what had once been the lush green of Vista Park. Now the park was little
more than a desert wasteland—a long, desolate expanse of dry grass and boulders
with houses facing it on either side.
“I thought you’d want to see this,” Joanna told him
quietly. “This was Roger Rowland’s house. It’s where Anne Rowland Corley grew
up.”
She saw him swallow hard. Tears welled in his eyes. A sob
caught in his throat. There was nothing for her to do but try to comfort the
man. As she wrapped her arms around him, hot tears dribbled down his cheeks and
ran through her hair. His arms closed around her as well. As they stood there
holding each other, it seemed to Joanna like the most natural thing in the
world.
CHAPTER TWENTY-TWO
I don’t know what came over me. It was more than a
momentary lapse. I remember crying like that when my mother died of breast
cancer, and again when my first wife, Karen, succumbed to the disease, too. But
Anne Corley had been gone for a very long time.
I should have thought that by now the hurt of losing her
would have been scabbed over and covered with a protective layer of scar
tissue. Still, seeing the house she grew up in—a mansion of a place that must
have seemed more like a prison than a home—hit me hard. It sat there obscured
behind a thick, decades-old oleander hedge. That planted green barrier had
provided far more than simple privacy for the troubled family that had once
lived behind it. Evil, murder, and incipient insanity had resided there along
with the woman I loved.
It was only when I started to pull myself together that I
real zed I was standing in broad daylight with both arms wrapped tightly around
Sheriff Joanna Brady. And with her arms wrapped around me, too. It was a shock
when I noticed I didn’t want to move away. Pulsing electricity seemed to arc
between us.
I started to push her away, but she wouldn’t let go. Then
a call came in on her car radio.
“Sheriff Brady?” the dispatcher asked.
With a sigh, Joanna loosened her grip on me and returned
to her Crown Vic. “What’s up?” she asked.
“I have Governor Hickman on the phone. Do you want me to
patch him through?”
While Joanna talked to the governor, trying to convince
kiln that he needed to negotiate with Mexican authorities to the return of Jack
Brampton’s body, I stood beside the car and tried to get a grip. Several cars
rolled past, slowing when they saw the Crown Vic with its flashing yellow
hazard lights pulled over on the narrow shoulder. To a person, every driver
eyed me curiously, probably trying to figure out what kind of miscreant I was. Fortunately,
they couldn’t tell by looking.
I remembered all too clearly that it was only due to some Bisbeeite’s
nosiness that we had come to focus our investigative efforts on Jack Brampton
and his suspicious pay-phone calls. If making a simple phone call had been
enough to raise an alarm, what would people think if they had observed my
unexpected and entirely unauthorized embrace with the sheriff of Cochise
County? I also wondered how long it would take for that juicy tidbit to become
public knowledge.
It probably already has,
I thought grimly. I didn’t know Marliss Shackleford well,
but I guessed that would be just the kind of item she’d love to lay her hands
on. Even so, I still wanted to hold Joanna Brady again and feel her
surprisingly strong body against mine and her curved cheek grazing my shoulder.
When she finally ended her radio transmission, I climbed
back into the car. “What’d the governor have to say?” I tried to sound
nonchalant, but I was embarrassed and ill at ease. She’d been nothing but
kind—offering me comfort and a shoulder to cry on, Obviously, I had taken it
the wrong way—read something into it that hadn’t been intended.
“He’ll see what he can do,” Joanna said without meeting my
gaze.
“In other words, you’re supposed to take an old cold tater
and wait.”
“I guess.” Joanna sighed. “We’d better go,” she said. “You’ve
got that right.”
She shot me a defiant look then. Her green eyes pierced
right through me. “I’m not sorry,” she said.
I was astonished. What did that mean? That the
flash of desire I had felt flowed in both directions? That right there in broad
day light, Joanna Brady had wanted me as much as I wanted her? Unbelievable!
“I’m not, either,” I agreed, and that was the truth. Sorry
didn’t apply. Confused? Yes. Concerned? You bet; that, too.
Joanna was driving again, faster than she should have. I
watched the speedometer spike upward—ten miles over the posted limit. Ten, then
fifteen, then twenty.
“Maybe we should slow down,” I suggested quietly. She
jammed on the brakes hard enough that the seat belt dug into my collarbone. The
truth is, I wasn’t talking about the car—and she knew it.
It’s probably a function of age rather than wisdom, but I’ve
finally outgrown my need to play chicken the way we used to down along the
railroad tracks in Golden Gardens when I was a kid. My need for Joanna Brady
was a speeding locomotive. It was time to get the hell off the tracks or pay
the price.
Another call came in on the radio. “Sheriff Brady?” I
recognized Frank Montoya’s voice.
“Yes.”
“Serenity Granger is here at the department,” Montoya
said. “I told her Jack Brampton is dead. I also told her that, although we can’t
be absolutely sure at this point, we’re fairly certain he’s the one who
murdered her mother. Serenity wants to know it it’s possible for her to have
access to Castle Rock Gallery. While she’s here waiting for Doc Winfield to
release Deidre Canfield’s body, she wants to clear up some of her mother’s
affairs. Latisha Wall’s paintings were on consignment. Serenity wants them crated
up in time to ship home with Cornelia Lester. She’s worried about a liability
problem if something were to happen to them.
“I told her that the house out in Huachuca Terraces is
clearly a crime scene and that’s still off limits, but I agreed to check with
you about the gallery.”
“What do you think, Frank?” Joanna asked.
“Those paintings are probably worth some serious money,”
he returned. “Sentimental value to the family would make them priceless. If we
force Serenity to leave them hanging in the gallery and something does happen
to them—if they end up being dam aged in a fire or stolen—we could end up being
liable, too.”
“You don’t think releasing them will have an adverse
effect on the rest of the investigation?”
“I can’t see that it will.”
‘All right, then,” Joanna said, making up her mind. “Tell
Ms. Granger to go ahead. Someone will have to go to the gallery to let her in,
but we should probably have someone on-site while she’s doing the packing just
in case something turns up.”
“Okay,” Montoya said. “I’ll handle it.” He paused for a
moment. “By the way,” he added, “I heard about Ken Junior. Don’t worry.”
“Thanks,” Joanna said. “I’ll try not to.”
I had heard the name Ken Junior mentioned in passing
several times. I knew he was a member of Joanna’s department, and I wondered if
something had happened to him.
“Ken Junior is one of your deputies, isn’t he?” I asked,
trying to steer the conversation into less dangerous territory. “Did he get
hurt or something?”
“He’s running for office against me,” Joanna replied. “That
reporter you met, Marliss Shackleford, is a great supporter of his.”
I may have had to deal with Maxwell Cole on occasion, but
not while I was running for public office. “Not good,” I said.
Joanna put down the microphone and glanced at me. “I
suppose you think returning the paintings is a bad idea.”
“No,” I replied. “Not at all. Returning them to their
lawful owners is the right thing to do—the sooner the better.”
Another radio call came in. I was grateful for the
continuing interference. It was giving me time to pull myself together.
“Sheriff Brady,” the dispatcher said. “Is Mr. Beaumont
with you?”
“Yes. Why?”
“The tow-truck driver is on the line. He was on his way to
pick up Mr. Beaumont’s vehicle, but the car-rental agency needs a form signed
before the driver can pick it up and take it back to Tucson. He wants to know
where Saguaro should fax the form.”
Joanna had already offered me a lift to Tucson, but if I
accepted it, God only knew what would happen. My mother struggled to raise me
to be a “good boy,” and good boys don’t do the kinds of things I wanted to do
with some other man’s wife.
When Joanna handed me the microphone, I took the easy way
out of what could have been a bad situation for all concerned.
“Have Saguaro fax me the form at the Copper Queen Hotel,”
I said. “And tell the driver that when he comes to pick up the form, he’ll need
to pick me up as well. He can give me a ride hack to Tucson right along with
the car.”
At that very moment, Joanna’s Crown Vic was pulling into
the loading zone in front of the hotel.
“You’re turning down my offer of a ride?” she asked. I
nodded. “I think it’s for the best. Don’t you?”
She bit her lower lip. I wanted that lip about then,
wanted to feel it against mine and taste the remains of the lipstick she had
bitten off. But her lips were forbidden fruit for me, just as mine were for
her.
“Does that mean we’re supposed to pretend that what
happened back there didn’t happen?” she demanded huskily. “Or maybe I’m wrong.
Maybe I made the whole thing up, and it didn’t happen after all.”
“No,” I told her evenly. “It happened, all right—it
happened to both of us.”
“What does it mean, then?” She seemed close to
tears.
I wavered between what I wanted to do and what I needed to
do. Between right and wrong. Good and evil. Between my mother’s long-ago
admonitions and the burning present. I tried to ignore the craving I felt. And
the need.
“We’re comrades-in-arms,” I said at last. “We’ve been
through a tough three-day war. Being on a battlefield together makes for strong
connections. They’re not meaningless, but they don’t necessarily last forever.
What happened to us hack there isn’t worth risking the family you already have
or hurting the people you love. The war is over, Joanna. This old soldier needs
to go home now, and so do you.”
I reached out, clasped her hand—the one without the
wedding ring—and shook it. “You’re doing a fine job, Sheriff Brady. Best of
luck to you. Keep up the good work.”
“Thank you,” she said softly. “I guess.”
I opened the car door and stepped out into brilliant
sunlight. I stood on the curb and watched her drive away. She didn’t wave, and
she didn’t look back.
Two hours later a still-shaken Joanna Brady ventured into
Castle Rock Gallery, which was bustling with activity. Detective Carbajal had
been dispatched to unlock the door and then stand by and observe the
proceedings. Bobo Jenkins, how ever, had drafted Jaime into the work crew.
Armed with hammer and nails, the two men worked together, busily fashioning
sturdy crates from sheets of plywood and lengths of two-by-fours.
One by one, Serenity Granger and Cornelia Lester removed
the framed paintings from the walls, brought them to the construction zone,
wrapped the artwork in bubble wrap, and slipped them into newly made crates. As
they worked, Cornelia related stories about the people pictured on the various
canvases—the absent loved ones whose lives Latisha Wall had so carefully recreated
with brush and pigment. Working like that while listening to Cornelia’s stories
was a balm that seemed to help all three hurt and bereaved people begin to come
to grips with their losses.
Banished to the sidelines and nursing her own hurt, Joanna
felt let down and useless. She was relieved when Ernie Carpenter came looking for
her.
“Hey, boss,” he said, peering at her face. Are you all
right?”
“I’m fine,” she said impatiently. “What’s up?”
“We finally finished scouring the San Pedro for money.”
“How much did you come up with?” she asked.
“Six thousand and some,” he answered.
“There was a lot more than that in Brampton’s backpack,”
she told him. “Do you think that’s his pay for making the hit?”
“Seems likely,” Carpenter answered. “The people Jaime and
I have talked to who knew Jack Brampton said he was usually dead broke. If it
hadn’t been for Dee Canfield putting a roof over his head, the man would have
been living on the streets.”
Joanna was struck by a sudden inspiration. “Let’s say he
got paid twenty thousand,” she said. “If I’m the guy paying for a hit, I sure
as hell wouldn’t want to cough up that kind of money until I was sure the job
was done. Latisha Wall died on Wednesday night. Today is only Monday. So who
sent Brampton the blood money, and how did it get here?”
“FedEx?” Ernie suggested. “Either that, or UPS.”
But Joanna’s mind was on that pair of pay phones that
stood outside the post office—the phones Jack Brampton had used open enough to
arouse Harve Dowd’s suspicion.
“The post office has next-day delivery,” she told Ernie. “Do
you have any friends who work there?”
“Moe Maxwell retired.”
“Ask him anyway. He may still be able to ask around and
find out whether or not any packages came in for Warren Gibson on Friday or
Saturday. Tell him it’s an informal inquiry only. If it looks like a yes, we’ll
get a warrant.”
An hour later, when Joanna drove into the yard at High
Lonesome Ranch, Tigger came racing out to meet her. She felt a tug at her heart
to see that Sadie wasn’t with him, but it was reassuring that the younger dog
was picking up the pieces and going on. That was what she had to do, too. She
had lost something—missed something—even if she wasn’t sure what.
Slanting late-afternoon sunlight glinted off the house’s
tin roof. The surrounding trees were only now beginning to change color. Fall
was definitely on its way.
Opening the back door, she welcomed the steamy warmth of a
kitchen replete with the comforting aroma of baking meat loan. She found Butch
and Jenny in the combination living and dining room. Jenny was sprawled on the
floor talking on the telephone while Butch worked at his computer on the
dining-room table. Once inside, Tigger raced to Jenny and curled up next to
her, letting her use his shoulders as a shaggy, pit-bull/golden retriever
pillow
Joanna started for the bedroom but paused long enough to
give Butch a peck on the cheek as she went by.
“How’d it go today?” he asked, not taking his eyes off the
screen or his fingers off the keyboard.
“Okay,” she said. “I think we got him.”
“Great,” he said. “Not bad for a girl.”
She gave his shoulder a friendly whack and then continued
into the bedroom, where she removed her uniform and locked away her weapons.
When she returned to the living room, Jenny was still on the phone, but Butch’s
computer was closed. She saw him moving back and forth in the kitchen, carrying
dishes from cupboard to table.
He brightened when she came into the kitchen. “So tell me about
your day,” he said, handing her three glasses. “I’ve already heard the
condensed version. Now give me the real story.”
Half an hour later, Jenny finally put down the phone and
canoe into the kitchen, “Oh, Mom,” she said, “I almost forgot. Some body called
while I was talking to Cassie. He wanted me to give you a message.”
“Who was it?”
“I can’t remember his name now. Ron something. He said to
tell you that you were right and there was something I don’t remember that
word, either—in the sugar.”
“Ron Workman,” Joanna said. “And sodium azide.”
“Right,” Jenny said. “It seemed like a funny kind of
message. What does it mean?”
“That we got lucky,” her mother replied. “Very, very
lucky.”
Late that night—long after dinner was over and the dishes
had been washed and put away Joanna lay in bed. She had felt a sudden magnetic
attraction to J.P. Beaumont. But lying next to the soothing warmth of Butch
Dixon’s sleeping body, Joanna finally began to see that instant of connection
for what it was and what it was not.
Butch’s presence in her life had blessed Joanna with a
kind of calm stability she had never known before, not even with Andy. He
offered her the loving creature comforts of warm meals and clean and folded
laundry. He listened to her troubles and talked her through moments of
self-doubt. He loved Jenny. I le loved High Lonesome Ranch. And he loved
Joanna.
With a cringe that made her blush in the dark, Joanna
thought about that time, a few months earlier, when she had suspected Butch of
having renewed an affair with an old flame. Joanna had been quick to jump in
with all kinds of wild accusations. Now slit herself had come close to starting
something with someone who, just a few days earlier, had been a complete
stranger. In both instances, nothing untoward had happened, but in Joanna’s
case, it had been close—far too close. If J.P. Beaumont had been any less of a
man than what he was ...
It was time, Joanna decided, to pay attention to the essentials
in life—to the things that were worth keeping; worth treasuring. Things people
like Bobo Jenkins and Latisha Wall would never have a chance to share.
In the dark, she snuggled closer to Butch. “You awake?”
she asked.
“I am now,” he grumbled sleepily. He reached over and
pulled her close. “I don’t understand it. How can you get by on so little
sleep?”
“I’ve always been that way,” she said. “It drove my mother
crazy.”
“I can see why,” he said. “Now what’s happening?”
“Remember what you wanted to do in the family room?”
“I wanted to do it in the family room?” he asked, rolling
over onto his back. “When?”
“Not that.” Joanna giggled. “I’m talking about the train
track.”
“Oh, right, the train track. You said you didn’t want it.”
“Well, I’ve been thinking,” she said, “and I’ve changed my
mind. If it’s not too late, we should put the track in after all.”
“I thought you said it was weird and you wanted normal.”
Joanna sighed. “We’re not normal. Why should our family room be any different?”
“Well, then. If you’re sure you don’t mind.”
“I told you. It’s fine.”
“Great, then, well have trains. Oh, by the way. I forgot
to tell you. We agreed on Gayle.”
“Gayle what?”
“Gayle Dixon. My pen name. Drew and I finally worked it
out today. She’s sending me an agency contract for me to sign and rewrite
suggestions. When those are done she wants me to send the manuscript back under
the nom de plume of Gayle Dixon.”
“I still think it’s strange that you have to change your
name.”
“So do I,” Butch agreed. “But you’ll still love me, won’t
you? Even if I turn into someone named Gayle?”
“As long as Gayle keeps the same meat-loaf recipe.”
“The name may change,” Butch said, chuckling. “but the
timid is bound to remain the same. Now, is that the only reason you woke me
up—to talk about model trains?”
“Maybe not the only one,” she told him.
“Show me,” he said.
The tow-truck driver was kind enough to drop me off at
some anonymously forgettable, cheapo motel close to the airport. The next
morning I took the motel shuttle to catch my plane. Surprisingly enough, the
early-morning flight to Seattle was almost deserted. The Husky fans had
evidently all gone home to Seattle, and I had no idea who had won or lost the
game.
I had a whole row of three seats to myself. With no one
crowding me and no one to talk to, I had plenty of time to think. With some
effort, I managed to keep my mind off both Anne Corley and Joanna Brady.
I had yet to speak to Ross Alan Connors, but that was my
first priority. As soon as I landed at Sea-Mc, I rented a car and drove
straight down to Olympia. On the way, I called the office an spoke to Barbara
Galvin, Unit B’s office manager.
“Where are you?” she asked. “Still in Arizona?”
“I’m on my way home,” I told her.
“Did you hear about what happened to Ross Connors’s wile?”
Barbara asked.
“Yes, I did. In fact, that’s why I’m calling,” I told her.
“I need his address. I want to send flowers.”
“You don’t have to do that,” she said. “The whole squad to
chipping in and sending a single arrangement.”
“I want to do my own,” I said.
“Well, okay, then,” she agreed. “Suit yourself.”
She gave me an address on Water Street. Once I arrived in
Olympia, I wasn’t surprised to find the attorney general’s home was within easy
walking distance of the capitol complex. The house wasn’t quite as imposing as
the one Anne Corley had been raised in, but it came close. Built of red brick
and boasting a genuine slate roof, it was a showy kind of place, with a three
story round turret on one side. The expansive yard was surrounded by an
ornamental iron fence with a bronze fleur-de-lis topping every post,
Up and down the narrow street, late-model upscale cars—Mercedeses,
Jaguars, and an understated Lexus or two were parked on either side. When I
rang the bell, a uniformed maid answered the door. I gave her my card. Minutes
later, I was led inside. Hearing voices in the living room, I was a bit miffed
at being directed away from the piss-elegant crowd that had conic to mingle and
comfort Ross Connors in his hour of need. Underlings like J.P. Beaumont,
however, were shunted away from other, more important, guests. As I allowed
myself to he unceremoniously herded up the staircase that wound through the
turret, it irked me that Ross was keeping me out of sight and out of mind.
Imagine my surprise, then, when I reached the small single
room at the top of the stairs and discovered that Ross Alan Connors was already
there before me, all alone and seated at a battered, old-fashioned teacher’s
desk. Windows in the room offered a panoramic view of the water hinted at in
the street name. But if you’re used to looking out the window at the majesty of
Elliott Bay, the puddle that is Capitol Lake doesn’t count for much.
But just then Ross Connors wasn’t enjoying the view such
as it was. In fact, I doubt he even saw it. When he rose to meet me, I was
shocked by the haggard look on his face and the dark hollows under his eyes.
His normally florid complexion was sallow and gray. There was no trace of the
man I knew as a high-flying lawyer and glad-handing politician. Ross Connors
was a doubly defeated man, bereft and betrayed. Unfortunately, I knew exactly
how he felt because I had been there, too. My heart ached with sympathy.
“Hello, J.P.,” he said somberly. “I didn’t know you were
back.”
“I came straight here. I’m so sorry about Francine....”
“I know, I know,” he said impatiently, brushing aside my
condolences. “Sit down.” He motioned me toward a sagging, butt sprung leather
recliner that could have been a brother to the re-covered wreck in my own
living room. “Who told you about it?”
“Your mother. I talked to her yesterday afternoon.”
“Oh,” he said.
Not knowing what to say next, I waited for him to
continue.
“She left me a note,” Ross Connors said finally, his voice
brittle with emotion. “She said she listened in the other night when you and I
spoke on the phone. She was sure that once the FBI got involved, the whole
thing would come out. She said she couldn’t face it.”
He paused. I knew what it was—knew what he couldn’t bring himself
to say, so I helped him along.
“I know she was involved with Louis Maddern,” I said
quietly, “It’s all in the telephone logs. I can show you....”
“That no-good son of a bitch!” Connors muttered fiercely. “It
must have been going on behind my back for years, and I never figured it
out. How could I have been so stupid that I never had a clue? But somebody else
must have figured it out—someone who works for UPPI. Maddern, Maddern, and Peek
didn’t get that big piece of UPPI’s business by random selection, J.P. They
figured out that that worm Louis Maddern might be able to deliver something
more valuable than legal representation and, God help me, he did!”
“Latisha’s whereabouts,” I supplied.
Ross nodded miserably. “I didn’t even realize I had said
anything. It must have slipped out. Francine and I didn’t have any secrets from
each other, at least ...” We both saw heartbreak where that sentence was going.
He broke off and didn’t finish.
Half a minute later, he continued. “One way or another, Louis
must have weaseled the information out of Francine. Once she put it all
together and realized it was her fault that Latisha Wall was dead, Francine
couldn’t live with herself. She was Louis Maddern’s lover. She was also his
partner in crime, but until Sunday night, I don’t think she had any idea. Then
yesterday, at lunch…”
Again he broke off and couldn’t go on.
“Ross, I’m so sorry. I didn’t know she was with you at
lunch.”
“It’s okay,” he said. “It’s not your fault. You didn’t say
anything out of line. Francine knew me very well. She must have read it in my
face.”
He fell silent. We sat without speaking for more than a
minute. “It’s such a shock. I’m still ragged around the edges,” he said at
last. “All those nice people downstairs. They want to tell me how sorry they
are—how much they care—but it hurts too much to hear it. That’s why I’m hiding
out up here, where no one can find me.”
I wondered if changing the subject would help. “There’s
something I don’t understand,” I said. “Why did UPPI need Latisha Wall dead?
What made her so important? You told me yourself there’s enough evidence
available in the form of depositions that even if she weren’t here to testify
at the trial...”
It turned out I was right. Bracing anger flooded across
Ross Connors’s face.
“Latisha Wall was supposedly under our protection!” he
growled, sounding more like himself again. “My protection! She was a single
protected witness in a single case. Right now UPPI has lots of other cases
hanging fire, and there are lots of other witnesses who are expected to testify
against them. How many of them will still be tough enough to stand up and speak
out if they know they’re in mortal danger? How many other employees or
ex-employees will be willing to put their lives on the line and conk forward to
testify?”
The man’s anger and anguish were both palpable. “I’m
sorry,” I said.
He nodded. “So am I.”
I had been told no official report was expected on my trip
to Arizona. And Ross Connors had plenty of reasons to bury what I had found out
right along with his wife.
“Should I write a formal report?” I asked.
He took a deep breath, straightened his shoulders, and
looked me straight in the eye. “You bet,” he said. “Type it up and send it through
the regular chain of command. If it gets leaked, too bad. My first instinct was
to cover up this whole thing, but I’m not going to. Francine is dead, by God! I
want the world to know who did this to her and why”
And in that moment, I realized I was glad Ross Alan
Connors was my boss and proud that my name had been added to the roster of his
Special Homicide Investigation Team. He may have been a politician, but he was
also a good man who wasn’t afraid to make a tough call when the situation
required it.
“There’s something else,” I said.
“What’s that?”
“What do you know about sodium azide?”
He frowned. “Never heard of it. Why, should I have?”
“Yes,” I told him. ‘And here’s why”
As I drove to Seattle from Olympia, I called Harry I. Ball
on my now-working cell phone. He told me to take the rest of the day off.
“That’s big of you,” I said. “Especially considering I’ve
been working my butt off almost round the clock for the last three days.”
“Don’t start,” he warned. “I don’t wanna hear it.”
I returned the rental car to the airport and climbed into
the Belltown Terrace limo I had summoned to drag me home. By 2 P.M. I was in my
recliner, thinking.
I had told Ross Connors about the dangers of sodium azide,
but what about the dangers of love? Latisha Wall and Bobo Jenkins had fallen
in love, and he had unwittingly poisoned her. Alter years of playing the field,
Dee Canfield had gone for a guy she thought was finally the love of her life,
and Warren Gibson had snuffed her out of existence. Francine Connors had
betrayed her husband for a fling with Louis Maddern, and now a widowed Ross
Connors was imprisoned in his turret, nursing a broken heart.
And then there was me. J.P. Beaumont and Anne Corley. J.P.
Beaumont and Joanna Brady. Anne had been a case of fatal attraction, and Joanna
might have been.
Without realizing it, I drifted off, and all too soon the
dream came again.
At first it was the same as it’s always been, and I tried
to light it off. Anne Corley was striding toward me across a grassy hill in
Mount Pleasant Cemetery. But then I noticed something different about her. This
particular Anne Corley had bright red hair and amazingly green eyes.
Once I realized that, I didn’t bother trying to wake myself
up. For the first time ever, I just lay back and enjoyed it.
Author’s Mote
Ideas for books come from strange places. Partner in
Crime had its origins in reading an article on the dangers of sodium azide
I discovered in my University of Arizona alumni magazine. From that article and
from subsequent research, I’ve come to believe that the widespread availability
of this hazardous and so-far uncontrolled substance poses a real threat to the
safety of far too many people.
When used as intended to inflate air bags in automobiles,
the substance is transformed into a harmless nitrogen-based gas. Originally,
the idea was that the unused air bags and canisters would be removed from
wrecked vehicles and recycled, but in the real world, that’s not happening. No
one wants to risk his own life or the lives of his family members to somebody
else’s cast-off air bag. As a result, tons of unused and unsecured containers
of this deadly, poisonous, and easily water-soluble compound are readily
available. They lie, unguarded and unsecured, in junked cars and on junkyard
shelves all over the country. And that’s what worries me.
I completed writing this book prior to September 11, 2001,
when the world suddenly became a vastly different and more dangerous place. I’m
hoping that somewhere there’s a courageous lawmaker who’ll be willing to take
on the automotive industry and introduce legislation requiring that all air
bags in vehicles must be deployed and the sodium azide rendered harmless at the
time the vehicle is scrapped. |
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