Blood Lines

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Blood Lines Page 38

by Mel Odom


  “Right here.” Estrella brought up a screen on her computer.

  Will walked over to her desk, then entered the number on his phone. He waited while the phone rang. An answering service picked up. He left his name and number and a brief message detailing what the call was about. Then he studied the maps Maggie had sent.

  >> 1807 Hours (Central Time Zone)

  A youthful seventy-six-year-old, U.S. Army Colonel Mack Ramsey, retired, sounded robust and energetic. Furthermore, he wasn’t bashful about his golf game. He’d retired to Silver Springs, Maryland, and lived there with his wife.

  Will talked golf with the man for a moment, having had just enough experience to ask a few questions, and knew that they were both feeling each other out. That was something officers and police investigators did before getting to what was really on the table.

  “I know you’re a busy man,” Ramsey said. “I hear NCIS keeps almost as busy as the Army’s CID.”

  Will smiled at that, knowing the dig was intentional and meant to break the ice.

  “Tell me you didn’t have someone dig up my phone number just to talk about my golf game.”

  “I didn’t,” Will replied. “One of your old investigations has tangled itself up in something I’m currently working on.”

  “Now you’ve got my interest. You know, you can retire from the crime business and check in your badge and pistol at the door, but you never check your curiosity. Nope, that goes with you for the rest of your days.”

  “There was an MIA in Qui Nhon in 1967 while you were stationed there.”

  “Back in those days, there were a lot of MIAs.”

  Ramsey suddenly sounded tired, and Will felt guilty about that.

  “That’s one war that won’t ever quite go away,” Ramsey commented. “Who was the MIA?”

  “Private First Class Dennis—”

  “Hinton,” Ramsey said. “I remember him.”

  The fact that Ramsey remembered Hinton so quickly cinched what Will had been thinking. After pulling a long tour like Ramsey had in Vietnam, after dealing with so many investigations, most people wouldn’t have remembered isolated cases.

  “I’m impressed,” Will said. “You’ve got quite a memory.”

  “About some things,” Ramsey said noncommittally.

  “Any particular reason this one stands out?”

  “Instead of beating around the bush here, son, why don’t you just come out and say what you think you’ve got to say?”

  “I want to lay some groundwork first so you see where I’m coming from. I’m going to lay my cards on the table.”

  “Doesn’t mean I’m going to put mine there, son.” Ramsey’s tone was guarded.

  “One of my agents is Shelton McHenry.”

  “I knew a young soldier named McHenry.”

  “Yes, sir. Tyrel McHenry. That’s my agent’s father.”

  “Small world,” Ramsey commented.

  “It is at times,” Will agreed. “A couple months ago, my agent had to shoot and kill a young man named Bobby Lee Gant.”

  “Now there’s another name I know.”

  “His father was Victor Gant.”

  “Seems like I recall the incident with your man from the news. It was ruled a good shooting.”

  “Not by Victor Gant, Colonel. Gant has tried to kill my agent in retaliation on more than one occasion.”

  “You’re lucky he didn’t get it done. Gant was a killing machine back in Vietnam.”

  “That’s what I’ve heard. Shel’s not an easy man to kill.”

  “He must not be.”

  Will shifted in his chair. “During the course of our investigation into Victor Gant, we were told about PFC Hinton. We’ve since learned that Hinton went missing while in the company of Victor Gant and his fire team.”

  “That’s right. They told me that Hinton got lost in the jungle. It happened to some men. They got blind drunk or stoned, or both, and walked into the jungle never to return.”

  “But you never thought that was what really happened to Hinton.”

  At the other end of the phone, Ramsey took a deep breath. “Not for a New York minute.”

  “Because PFC Hinton didn’t drink,” Will said, “and he would have been less inclined, according to his service jacket, to drink while on duty.”

  “Hinton was a good soldier,” Ramsey said. “His kind was hard to come by in some places.”

  “Was that why the CID was using him as an undercover operative?” Will asked.

  Ramsey was quiet for a time. Then he asked, “What do you have, Commander Coburn?”

  “I’ve got testimony that Hinton was shot, killed, and buried in a grave off Highway 19 that night,” Will said.

  The silence stretched over the phone connection.

  “I looked for that boy for a long time,” Ramsey finally said. “It was like he disappeared.”

  “He did.”

  “Did Gant kill him?”

  “No. He was shot by Tyrel McHenry.”

  “How do you know this?”

  “Because McHenry told my agent that this morning,” Will said.

  “Why would McHenry shoot Hinton? I never put McHenry with Gant and his goons. He was the reason I believed it was possible Hinton had wandered off. I wouldn’t have believed Gant or his men. McHenry, though, seemed solid. Just green. All those kids were.”

  “It was an accident.” Will described the situation as Shel had given it to him.

  “That still doesn’t make sense. Gant could have brought Hinton back in and reported the accident.”

  “Maybe he was so used to covering his tracks by that point that lying was second nature.”

  “Why did McHenry lie?”

  “He was twenty-one years old,” Will reminded. “Nothing in his life had prepared him for what had happened out there.”

  “No. You’re right about that. What do you need from me?”

  “I need to know about Hinton. I still can’t figure out why Gant would ask Hinton along or why Hinton would accept. The only thing I came up with was that Hinton was working undercover for the CID and that Gant suspected it.”

  “Working undercover for the Criminal Investigation Command was dangerous,” Ramsey said. “Men who informed on soldiers ended up dead. Either at camp or—easier yet—out in the jungle. The only law over there at that time was survival of the fittest.”

  Will waited. Even if Ramsey didn’t confirm his suspicions, he felt certain he was right.

  “Hinton was working undercover for me,” Ramsey said. “I needed someone who could get in on the inside of those men. Hinton went with them that night because of me. He knew I wanted to bring Gant down, and he didn’t like Gant either.” His voice softened. “I got that boy killed that night.”

  “No,” Will said. “Bad luck did.” And he couldn’t help feeling that bad luck had struck all the way around. It had also cost Tyrel McHenry forty years of his life.

  57

  >> La Quinta Inn

  >> El Paso, Texas

  >> 1852 Hours (Central Time Zone)

  “Director Larkin,” Will said when the phone was answered.

  “Will? How are things there?” Larkin’s voice was quiet and controlled.

  “Confusing and painful, sir,” Will replied.

  “With everything you’ve told me, I can see how that would be the case.”

  Will paced at the window and watched the sun going down in the west. He tried to frame in his mind how best to ask what he knew he had to ask. He and Larkin had a good working relationship, but he knew what he was about to request might be hard for the director to handle.

  “I need you to arrange something for me,” Will said.

  “If I can.” Larkin didn’t hesitate, but he also didn’t readily agree.

  “I want to take my team to Vietnam.”

  “Why?”

  “To recover the body of an American GI who’s been missing since 1967.”

  “Dennis Hinton?”

>   “Yes, sir.”

  “Do you know where his body is?”

  “I think we can get close enough to find it.”

  “Hinton’s recovery would be more in the Army’s interest.”

  “If Shel’s father weren’t on the line for a murder charge, I’d agree with you, sir. But that’s exactly where Tyrel McHenry is.”

  “I know this has to be hurting Shel, Will, and I know you take the things that happen to your team personally—”

  “Every time,” Will interrupted.

  “—and I respect that, but the Army isn’t going to like being cut out of this.”

  “The Army can’t rescue PFC Hinton,” Will said gently.

  “Neither can you. PFC Hinton has been dead for four decades. To me it sounds like you’re more concerned with keeping Shel’s father’s head off the block than with conducting a criminal investigation.”

  Will paused a moment. “I want to know exactly what happened that night, sir. Once we figure out what happened, we’ll know who was guilty of what.”

  “Do you think there’s going to be any crime scene evidence left after forty years?”

  “I think the possibility exists. As long as it does, I’d rather my people and the NCIS crime labs processed it. I’d just rather trust us.”

  “I agree.”

  “We’ve also got something to save here.”

  “Will, don’t get your hopes up on this one too much. And whatever you do, I wouldn’t get Shel’s hopes up.”

  “I don’t think getting Shel’s hopes up at this point is even possible. But we might be able to tie Victor Gant to a crime that will guarantee that he’ll serve his time in a military prison and never see the light of day again.”

  “You don’t think you can do that without going to Vietnam?”

  “I’d rather exhaust every avenue.”

  Larkin was silent for a time. “That’s a tall order, Will. Even though Vietnam has opened its borders to outside countries, there’s a limit to what they’ll allow over there. Getting your people in-country might not be possible.”

  “It’s not possible,” Will stated, “if nobody asks. Give me a name at the State Department and I’ll be happy to make the request myself. I just thought it would carry more weight from the director of the NCIS. And, officially, NCIS is made up more of civilians than service personnel.”

  “Not your group.”

  “No, sir. But not everyone has to know that.”

  Larkin was silent for a time.

  Will stared out the window at a circling hawk and thought about Shel and Tyrel McHenry. That one night had charted their course together even before Shel had been born.

  “I don’t know if I can make it happen,” Larkin said finally.

  “Maybe if you posited it as a goodwill gesture,” Will suggested. “Everybody wins when we bring a soldier home.” That was true even when the soldier was dead. At least the family could have closure. In the end, that was what something like this was all about.

  “Let me make a few calls,” Larkin said. “But I can’t make any promises.”

  “No, sir. I understand that. Thank you.” Will broke the connection and let out a deep breath.

  “How did that go?” Estrella asked.

  “Better than I expected,” Will admitted. “He didn’t say no.”

  >> Chapel

  >> Las Palmas Medical Center

  >> El Paso, Texas

  >> 0718 Hours (Central Time Zone)

  Shel came awake when Max moved at his feet. He lifted his head from the wall behind him and looked around. The nurse from the cardiac unit was at the doorway. Shel started to get up, expecting the worst.

  After the second attack in the ICU, Tyrel’s doctor had been more aggressive in his treatment. He had started to talk about the necessity of a pacemaker, but Tyrel had turned that down every time it was brought up.

  He had also refused to see Shel.

  Finally Tyrel had been sedated and put completely under and would be kept that way until the doctor felt he was strong enough.

  By all rights, Shel knew he should have left the hospital. He wasn’t doing anyone any good there. The relationship he had with his daddy was modeled on this kind of behavior. Every time he’d tried to reach out to Tyrel McHenry, his daddy had rebuffed him. That was to be expected. The biggest surprise was that he wasn’t walking away from his daddy this time. That was how he normally reacted.

  Some of his concern must have shown, though, because Isabella and a couple of the other nurses had kept him up-to-date with reports about his daddy’s condition. Don had gone to the hotel where Joanie and the kids were. Don was also in contact with several of his church family. All of them were concerned about him and his daddy, and they extended their prayers.

  Isabella came over to Shel and talked in a quiet voice. “I didn’t mean to wake you up.”

  “You didn’t,” Shel assured her.

  She grimaced. “That’s why you didn’t wake up until I was staring at you, right?”

  “Maybe a little,” Shel acknowledged.

  “You should get a hotel room. Someplace where you can get a good night’s rest.” Concern showed in her dark eyes.

  “I’m fine. Thanks.”

  Isabella leaned back against the wall and relaxed. She smothered a yawn with her hand, then grinned ruefully. “Sorry.”

  “Maybe I’m not the only one missing out on sleep.”

  “No, you’re not. I’m finishing up my master’s right now. Night classes. It takes a lot out of me. But the kids help.”

  “You’re married?”

  Isabella shook her head. “Widowed. My husband was a fireman. There was a bad fire downtown almost four years ago.” She didn’t meet Shel’s eyes as she spoke, lost in memory. “The building collapsed. Brian didn’t make it back out.”

  “I’m sorry.”

  “Yeah. Me too.” Isabella nodded at the cross at the front of the chapel. “There’s not a day I’m on duty that I don’t stop in here and say a prayer for him. Some days, I feel like he’s here with me.”

  “Maybe he is.”

  “I suppose, as much time as you spend in here, that you like churches too?”

  Shel shook his head. “That’s Don’s purview.”

  She looked at him.

  “I like it here because it’s quiet and no one bothers you.”

  Her eyes were deep and intense. “Do you really think that’s why you’re in here?”

  “Yes.”

  A sad smile pulled at her lips. “Then you’ve got a lot to learn, Marine. Anyway, I didn’t come here to witness to you, though I never hold back in that regard either. I just wanted to see how you were holding up.”

  “I’m fine. Thank you.”

  Isabella stood. “I usually take a break for lunch around eleven thirty. If you want some company.”

  “I’d like that,” Shel said.

  Isabella smiled. “I’ll stop by and get you.” She started to go, then turned back to face him. “Try praying, Marine. If you’ve tried everything else, what have you got to lose? Just make sure that when you do, it’s from the heart.”

  Shel nodded, but he didn’t promise anything. He wouldn’t have promised Don either.

  After Isabella left, Shel folded his arms and tried to get back to sleep. But sleep wouldn’t come. He kept staring at the cross and thinking about how Don had put so much faith in God. Evidently Isabella did too.

  How could someone do that?

  It was beyond Shel to imagine putting faith in anything outside himself. He’d acquired skills and trained his body to take care of him wherever he went. He was a warrior and had stridden across battlefields, through dozens of firefights. He’d been shot at point-blank range almost two months ago. He hadn’t called on God then. He’d just healed and gotten himself ready again. That’s what he always did. And he kept his wants small, down to things that he could manage.

  He’d learned not to ask for big things after he’d discovered
that no matter what he did, he couldn’t have a relationship with his daddy. The closest he’d ever allowed himself to come to anyone was with Will and the others on the NCIS team. Even that had been scary. He’d known then that he shouldn’t reach for anything outside himself.

  Losing Frank Billings had hurt. But thinking about Frank now, Shel realized that the thing he most remembered about Frank was his faith in God. Frank’s faith had always been there, totally unshakable.

  These days, Will had that faith too. It was still new, but Shel had noticed it. And it had come over Will at what Shel would have figured was the worst time ever: after Frank’s murder in South Korea and after his wife had dropped divorce papers on him.

  How had Will turned to God in the middle of that?

  “People who don’t have faith turn to God when they don’t have anywhere else to go,” Don had told Shel on more than one occasion. “It’s a shame they wait till then, but that’s usually when they get the wake-up call that they need help in their lives or they’re not going to make it through. That’s the whole thing about free will, Shel. God is there, but he leaves the choice in your hands.”

  Shel wondered if that was true, though. Did God move in ways to coerce people into believing in him? He figured if he’d asked that question of Don, his brother would have gotten irate with him.

  Maybe he’d even committed a sin by thinking that way.

  Then again, by believing that God was coercing you into accepting him, wasn’t that faith too? Believing that God cared enough to blackmail you into faith was also an admission that you believed. Shel wasn’t certain about that.

  One thing was certain, though: he didn’t have anywhere else to go. No one could help him.

  No, he corrected himself, no one can help Daddy. His eyes burned as he thought about that. He stared at the cross. What about it, God? Do I have to knuckle under for myself? Or can you blackmail me into believing in you by threatening Daddy?

 

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