Red, Green, or Murder

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Red, Green, or Murder Page 2

by Steven F Havill


  “Maybe not that bad,” I said, not believing a word of it. Knees that pointed sideways never turned out as good as new.

  Behind us, Deputy Collins had slowed and U-turned to return to his speed trap. The kid had been my last hire in the final months before Robert Torrez, dispatcher Gayle’s husband, took over the sheriff’s office. Like most young cops, if Collins could put three or four years’ experience under his belt without making any bone-headed mistakes, he’d probably make a good deputy. But by then, he’d want to move on to some other department that paid more than a street person makes working an intersection in Albuquerque.

  Far ahead, as the buttress of Salinas Mesa rose to the south, I saw the first flash of ambulance lights. Just before the bridge across Salinas arroyo, I took the turn-out and pulled to a gentle halt, turning on the flashers. By the time the EMTs pulled the heavy diesel rig to a stop, I had the SUV’s doors and tailgate opened for them.

  In minutes, Dale Torrance was strapped to a proper gurney, an IV started, and the mercy of morphine—or whatever magic potion they use nowadays—flowing into his arm. I stayed out of the way. In a bit, the ambulance, loaded with mother and son, took off with a wail and flash, followed by Herb Torrance in the Chrysler.

  That left me standing by my SUV, in no hurry to join the parade to the hospital. There was nothing I could do now except my job. Life at the ranch would go on. Pat Gabaldon and Socks, left by themselves with a day’s work still ahead, would need the transportation permit to move the cattle. The paperwork rode on my clipboard on the passenger seat.

  I looked at my watch and saw that it was already coming up on noon. It would take at least another hour to finish with Patrick and then head back to town. George Payton was right. When the day starts to go to hell, it’s a hard snowball to stop. I climbed back into the SUV and pulled it into gear, then planted my foot hard on the brake, jolted to a stop by another siren.

  This time, Deputy Dennis Collins wasn’t sparing the horses. The county car came in from the west, traveling so fast that when it shot by me I felt its bow wave rock my truck. The siren note wafted away as Collins sped north on State 56, winding through the parade of mesas.

  I had no sheriff’s department radio in my personal rig. Retirement was retirement, I had decided. I didn’t need to be listening to all that jibber-jabber of 10-this and 10-that. Still, curiosity takes longer to retire. Hopefully EMT Matty Finnegan hadn’t swerved the loaded ambulance off the highway in an effort to miss an errant steer or antelope. I reached for the phone but immediately thought better of it. With an emergency serious enough to shag a deputy in from the other end of the county, Sheriff’s dispatcher Gayle Torrez would have enough to do without fielding curiosity calls.

  Instead, I U-turned the SUV and headed southbound toward the ranch. After issuing the Torrance permit, the rest of my day was clear, and I relished that notion. After thirty years in the same tiny county, you might imagine that there wasn’t a corner or niche that I hadn’t explored. But I knew of a couple such places, and I planned to spend my afternoon in the bright sun, poking here and there like an old badger scouting out a good spot to dig another hole.

  A pickup truck and two cars had stopped at the Broken Spur Saloon as I drove past. Two women, one of them carrying an infant, were just climbing out of a Volvo station wagon. I almost swung into the parking lot myself at the thought of one of Victor Sanchez’s enormous, dripping Spur burgers, but disciplined myself. I had a permit to deliver. Maybe on the way back, although I had second thoughts about that, too. Ice tea was one of my passions, and as edible as the rest of his food was, Victor didn’t have a clue how to brew tea leaves.

  That was the magnitude of my daydreaming as I turned off State 56, once more running the kidney jolting surface of CR 14. The wheels of the SUV rattled over the cattleguard and as if vibrated to life, my cell phone interrupted my peace and quiet.

  “Gastner.”

  “Sir,” Gayle Torrez said, “are you ten-eight?”

  I laughed at the ten-code expression, an affliction I was still trying to cure. “Almost. I’m running a permit out to the Torrance ranch so that Pat can move some cattle. What’s up?”

  “Sir,” she said, “we’ve just been called to an unattended death over at 1228 Ridgemont.” She said it as if I knew the address, but she had forgotten my selective memory—remember meal and bed time, forget everything else. In this case, however, there was no doubt that I would remember.

  I slowed for a particularly jarring section of CR14, a well of apprehension already growing in my gut. “Phil Borman called us, sir. He found Mr. Payton in the kitchen.”

  “Well, shit.” I damn near drove off into the bar ditch.

  “Estelle said you’d want to know.” Gayle’s voice was soft with sympathy.

  “Thanks, sweetheart,” I muttered, and that’s about all I could think to say. The dirt road stretched out in front of me, and it seemed a little emptier.

  “She said she’d like to meet with you if you’re clear,” Gayle added. “She’s over at that address right now.”

  I heaved a grand sigh and pulled my senses together. Moping wasn’t going to accomplish diddly. Estelle Reyes-Guzman, the county undersheriff but to me more like an adopted daughter, wouldn’t request my presence at the death scene out of sympathy. I was still fifteen minutes south of the Torrance ranch, and the time to drive there and back, with the state livestock paperwork in addition, would add another hour. Estelle hadn’t asked for me to come to George Payton’s home ‘sometime,’ or mañana.

  “I’m on the way,” I said, and found a wide spot to execute another U-turn.

  Chapter Two

  George Payton’s dilapidated International pickup dominated the driveway at 1228 Ridgemont. I recalled one of George’s pronouncements when I had suggested that he might consider something a bit smaller, agile, even lower to the ground than the mammoth green beast. Climbing into the truck was on a par with climbing the front of Cat Mesa. The suggestion was too sensible.

  “Might want to carry something someday besides my walker,” he’d growled, and that was that. It was likely that the truck had not moved from that spot in the last month.

  Cars marked and unmarked from both the Posadas County Sheriff’s Department and the dwindling Posadas Village P.D. were curbed in front, along with Linda Real’s little red Honda. That the Sheriff’s Department’s photographer would be at the scene wasn’t surprising. Any unattended death was just that—unattended. Until investigators decided otherwise, the case would stay open, and documentation was required.

  On the other side of the street, where pavement blended into weeds and pasture, another jazzy SUV and a sleek Cadillac sedan added to the clot. An EMT first-responder unit dominated the street, lights pulsing.

  The young deputy who’d blown by me a few moments before on State 56 stood by the curb with one of the village part-time officers, and when he saw me the deputy stepped out into the street and waved me forward. I rolled down my window.

  “How about right in front of the undersheriff’s unit, sir,” Deputy Dennis Collins said. “We’re getting a bit of a snarl here.” I glanced around at the congregation of neighbors and gawkers. The scrubby front yards all showed compliance with the neighborhood policy of “let ’er grow, and when it blocks the view, set it on fire.” Adept as I was at counting livestock, a quick survey came up with nine folks who should have found something better to do.

  Collins patted my SUV’s door sill as if reminding me where I was. He pointed ahead toward a vacant spot. “You bet,” I said, and as I pulled forward I saw the undersheriff of Posadas County step out onto the front stoop of George Payton’s house. Estelle Reyes-Guzman held the front door with one hand while she talked with someone inside. Estelle saw me, nodded, and started down the sidewalk to meet me.

  My oldest daughter Camille was fond of referring to the undersheriff as my “fifth kid.” Camille was only half-joking when she said that, and it was sai
d with as much affection as if it were genetically true. In fact, I’d first met Estelle when she was twelve years old. A particularly interesting escapade with her great-uncle Reuben had taken me south of the border to the tiny village of Tres Santos, where the tiny, dark, sober child lived with Teresa Reyes, Reuben’s niece. A fierce guardian, Teresa had arranged for Estelle to come to the United States a few years later to finish her high-school education. The child had lived with Reuben, which must have been a colorful experience.

  I parked, locked the truck, and climbed out, taking time to survey the neighborhood and the gawkers before turning my attention to matters at hand. As I trudged up the sidewalk, I found myself thinking that Estelle Reyes-Guzman hadn’t changed much over the years—dark olive complexion, raven hair cropped a little closer now with the added hint of steel gray here and there, full eyebrows that knit over the bridge of her nose when she was thinking hard. Her fine features reminded me of the Aztecs, not that I knew anything about that tribe beyond the fanciful paintings of their heart-rending ceremonies that I’d seen in the National Geographic.

  And who knew. Estelle’s stepmother, Teresa Reyes, had adopted the two year-old child from the local convent in Tres Santos. No records existed of who Estelle’s parents might have been. Perhaps they had descended from a long line of Aztec heart surgeons. And keeping up the tradition, Estelle had married Dr. Francis Guzman, who’d tinkered with a heart or two in his time.

  The undersheriff caught my elbow and escorted me to the front step. “I’m glad you could come over, sir,” she said soberly. Sometime decades before, she had settled on “sir” as the appropriate all-purpose name for me, alternating that with padrino after I had agreed to be godfather to her two urchins. I could count on one hand the number of times that she’d called me “Bill,” or “Mr. Gastner,” or “Sheriff.”

  “Has Alan been here?” I asked

  “Not yet.”

  I shook my head, muttered an expletive, and said, “I’m not ready for this.” Estelle gave my arm a sympathetic squeeze. “Who found him?”

  “His son-in-law,” Estelle replied. I knew Phil Borman only casually, enough to greet him by name on the street.

  I nodded in the direction of the Cadillac. “Maggie knows, then.”

  “She’s inside.”

  “You know,” I said, “George and I were all set to have lunch together today. I talked to him just…” and I looked at my watch. “An hour ago, or a little more. Right when I got tangled up with the Torrances.”

  “Gayle told me,” the undersheriff said. “Did George call you earlier?”

  “No. He might have tried,” I replied, remembering the ringing phone. “I called him to tell him I’d be late, and he wasn’t in the mood to wait. He said that he didn’t feel all that hot.”

  “Ah,” Estelle said, without explanation about what she was thinking. But I was used to that. I took another deep breath to fortify myself for the meeting with Maggie Payton Borman, George’s daughter and only child—and one of those type AAA personalities who always made me feel tired. Now in her forties, Maggie hadn’t lost any of her spunk. She ran the Posadas Realty with her new husband, Phil. I knew they enjoyed an enviable track record of convincing potential home or business buyers that the village of Posadas was poised to grow like kudzu, rather than being the dried-out desert runt that it really was.

  Linda Real, the Sheriff’s Department photographer, met us at the door. An inch shorter than Estelle and tending toward chubby, Linda’s passion, besides Deputy Thomas Pasquale, with whom she lived, was shooting enough hard film and using enough digital bits and bytes that stock prices rose every time Posadas County reported a serious incident.

  She greeted me with an affectionate half hug, the huge digital camera that hung around her neck banging against my belly. “Hi, Sheriff,” she said, one of about half the county who had kept the title attached to me as an honorarium. She lowered her voice to a whisper as she said to Estelle, “I’m finished until Dr. Perrone gets here. You want me to stick around?”

  “Yes,” Estelle nodded. I didn’t know how many pictures anyone really needed of a heart attack victim, but I’d learn long ago not to question Estelle’s judgment.

  I looked beyond Linda into the house. George Payton had lived simply in this little two bedroom, cinder-block bungalow. In the past decades, I’d been inside dozens of times. With my eyes closed, I could draw the floor plan—in part because nothing was out of the ordinary. The ambiance was neo-utilitarian. I knew that, when I looked inside, I’d see only one thing that would remind me of George’s wife, Clara—a bright, cheerful woman. Her hand-me-down, battered upright piano would still be sitting against the east wall, a bright orange vase filled with a bouquet of plastic flowers on top.

  Clara had died on daughter Maggie’s eighteenth birthday. With his wife gone and Maggie headed off to college, George had sold their fancy home behind Pershing Park and pulled into himself, making do in this tiny, 950-square-foot place. He’d brought the piano and flower vase with him, even though he didn’t know middle-C from Adam and never replaced the dusty, fading flowers.

  The old man had always lived simply, but with a fondness for anything related to the firearms industry. His Sportsmen’s Emporium had been a fixture in Posadas for almost forty years. He had an amazing inventory of stuff packed into that store, both new and historic, mass market or unique. That’s where I’d first met him, and over the years we’d become good friends.

  Wearying of the day-to-day grind and the bureaucracy of the Treasury Department’s paperwork, George sold the business when the millennium turned. The young man who bought it streamlined the operation, cleared out a lot of the old junk, ran inventory control through a nifty new computer system, raised prices to current levels, lost two-thirds of his customers, and went out of business within the year.

  An enormous cartridge collection hung on the south living room wall, its heavy walnut frame thick with dust. Each cartridge, from the tiny Kolibri cartridges designed to dispatch rabid houseflies to gargantuan shells developed to batter elephants, was labeled and mounted on a painted background depicting Cat Mesa, the mesa north of Posadas. It was an impressive collection and probably worth some money to the right buyer. Posters advertising firearms ringed the room, with paintings reminiscent of Russell or Remington painted on sheet metal—except these were all period originals, not stamped replicas.

  Maggie Payton Borman was standing beside the piano, gazing out the window at the tiny side yard that grew an abundant collection of goat-heads and tumbleweeds. There wasn’t much of a view, just the neighbor’s unkempt car-port and a tarp-covered boat on a small trailer with flat tires. The neighbors hadn’t lived there for more than a year, and the boat hadn’t been in the water for twice that.

  I doubt that Maggie saw any of it. Her mind was elsewhere. Off to her left, a yellow sheriff’s ribbon stretched across the narrow doorway into the kitchen, the bright color a jarring intrusion on this dismal scene.

  Maggie turned, saw me, and held out both arms. We met in the center of the room and she held me hard enough to make me flinch. She hung on for a long time, not saying a word. Eventually she drew back and looked me straight in the eye without saying a word.

  “Maggie,” I said, “what can I say.” She squeezed my shoulder. A good-looking woman, tending to be stocky like her father and with the same honest, open face, Maggie was the kind of person who bustled. She bustled to arrange things, to control things, to take charge of things, even when she didn’t have to. Now, she had been hauled up short, with nothing to bustle about. She had nothing to do but stay out of the way. She couldn’t even go into the kitchen to fix us a sandwich.

  “I was supposed to have lunch with your dad today,” I said. “Herb Torrance’s boy managed to break a leg, and we got hung up with that.”

  She shook her head sadly. “Dad told me yesterday that you two were getting together. But isn’t that’s the way of it,” she said. “It wa
s Dale who was hurt?”

  “Yes. He’ll be all right.”

  “Such an attractive young man,” Maggie said, and then heaved an enormous sigh. “Bill, I’m just not ready for this.”

  “No one ever is,” I said. “Had you talked to your dad this morning?”

  She shook her head again, a quick little twitch. “I meant to look in on him this morning.” She squeezed her eyes shut, forcing the tears back. “Meant to. And isn’t that the way. Like I said, he told me yesterday that he was having lunch with you.” She tried a brave smile. “More of that health food from the Don Juan.”

  One of the things I liked about Maggie, regardless of her power-brokering in the professional world, was that she tried hard to let her dad be himself. She hadn’t tried to force George’s habits, or clean a house he didn’t want cleaned, or manicure a yard that pleased him just the way it was. “What happened, do you know?” I asked.

  Maggie sighed deeply again, and I saw her eyes flick toward the yellow ribbon “As nearly as we can tell, dad sat down to lunch and then had a seizure, right there at the table.” This time, her sigh had a little shake to it, the misery close to the surface. “I wish I had been there, Bill. But,” and she shrugged helplessly, the kind of gesture that prompted me to rest a paternal hand on her shoulder. “The world turns, you know. I had to show a house, and that dragged on and on. I guess…I guess that I didn’t even think about it. I didn’t worry about dad. I mean, he said you were coming over and all. And then another call came in. I had folks waiting for me in the office—a family from Maryland, of all places.” She reached out and held my right wrist. “Phil was going to talk to dad about maybe going over to Elephant Butte for an outing this weekend. He came by here after lunch and…and found him.”

  “I’m sorry that had to happen.”

  “I just can’t believe this,” Maggie continued, and she smiled wistfully at Estelle, who had crossed the living room like a dark shadow and now waited patiently, and obviously for me, by the kitchen door. Maggie dabbed at her eyes with a tiny hanky. “He’s been so frail the past few weeks, and we check on him often, you know. He won’t wear that alert gadget I got for him.”

 

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