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Everyone Dies

Page 4

by Michael McGarrity


  “Everybody has someone in their life they want to hurt or get back at,” Ramona said. “Those feelings don’t make you a murderer.”

  The hairbrush in Mary Beth’s hand stopped in midstroke. “You’re just saying that.”

  “No, I’m not,” Ramona said. “Answer a few questions and we can clear everything up.”

  “What kind of questions?”

  “Easy ones,” Ramona said. “Have you been home all morning?”

  Mary Beth relaxed a bit. “Yes, I only go out with Kurt because I don’t know how to drive and it’s too far to walk anywhere.”

  “That’s important for me to know. Have you seen anybody this morning?”

  Mary Beth put the brush down and ran her fingers through her hair to fluff it up. “Just Kurt. I fixed his breakfast and then he went to work.”

  “What time was that?”

  She studied her face in the mirror, turning her head from side to side to view her wavy locks. “He gets up at five during the summer when he’s busy. I had his breakfast waiting for him. I always fix his breakfast.”

  “When did he leave?”

  “About a half hour later. I packed him a nice lunch: a meatloaf sandwich and some cookies that I made last night. He’s a big man and he needs to have a good meal at lunchtime.”

  “It sounds like you take good care of Kurt,” Ramona said. The comment earned her a pleased smile. “Has he ever expressed any resentment about Jack Potter?”

  Mary Beth’s smile dissolved. “What do you mean?”

  “Is he angry about the way Potter treated you?”

  Mary Beth tentatively shook her head, reached for the brush and started in on her hair again with a trembling hand.

  “He’s okay about Potter?”

  “Why shouldn’t he be?” Mary Beth said sharply.

  “Did Kurt ever say he wanted to get even with Potter because of the way he treated you?”

  “My Kurt is a good man,” Mary Beth said, swiveling from the mirror to face Ramona. “Now you have to go.”

  “Does Kurt own a gun?”

  “I don’t like guns.”

  “But does he own one?”

  “You think Kurt killed Jack and you’re trying to get me to help you put him in jail.”

  “Not at all,” Ramona replied. “What kind of gun does Kurt have, Mary Beth?”

  “I’m not talking to you anymore,” Mary Beth said sternly. She stormed out of the bathroom, walked to the front door, and opened it. “Go away.”

  “Does Kurt have a cell phone?” Ramona asked as she followed along.

  “No, and even if he did he’s much too busy to call me.”

  Ramona stepped outside. “Do you know where he’s working?”

  “Kurt didn’t kill anyone. Can’t you believe that?”

  “I want to believe it,” Ramona said, “but you’re not helping me give Kurt a chance to clear his name.”

  Mary Beth responded by slamming the door in Ramona’s face.

  Ramona walked to the office thinking that no matter how batty Mary Beth might be, she still did one hell of a job of standing by her man.

  Ramona checked in with Barbero, who reported there was no record of Jack Potter visiting the facility. She also confirmed that Mary Beth didn’t drive, never used the city buses, and rarely went out alone.

  “Do you know if Larsen owns a gun?” Ramona asked.

  Barbero winced at the thought of it. “That’s not allowed.”

  Ramona blew past Barbero’s gullibility and asked for Larsen’s business number. She went inside, returned with a piece of paper and handed it to Ramona.

  “It’s a cell-phone number,” Barbero said. “Did talking to you upset Mary Beth?”

  “You could say that,” Ramona replied.

  Barbero gave her a pained look and scurried off to check on Mary Beth’s emotional welfare.

  Ramona dialed the number. Surprise, surprise, the line was busy. In her unit, she tried to make radio contact with Sergeant Cruz Tafoya, who had been assigned by Molina to find Larsen, and got no response. She called his cell phone and it rang through to his voice mail. She left a message that Larsen was possibly armed with a gun, then disconnected and asked dispatch for Tafoya’s location. He was at a house in an upscale rural subdivision in the foothills above the village of Tesuque, a few miles outside of town.

  “When he calls in, tell him I’m en route to his twenty,” Ramona said. “Ask him to stand by.”

  By the time the veterinarian arrived, State Police Officer Russell Thorpe had taken Kerney’s statement and photographed the dead animal, and then completed a field search with the chief around the perimeter of the horse barn looking for evidence. Kerney pointed out some shoe prints and tire marks in front of the corral, in a spot where no vehicle had been parked during construction.

  After Kerney, his wife, and the vet went into the barn, Thorpe gathered soil samples, sketched and photographed the impressions, and mixed up a batch of dental plaster to do the castings.

  Thorpe had recently transferred to Santa Fe from the Las Vegas district. He’d first met Kerney soon after his graduation from the academy when body parts of a decomposed butchered female had been found on land Kerney had inherited and then later sold to the Nature Conservancy.

  At the time, Kerney was deputy chief of the state police. He took charge of the investigation and Russell worked on the homicide with him. In the course of that assignment, Thorpe fell asleep while on surveillance, causing him to lose contact with the murder suspect, who was later caught and convicted. Kerney saved Russell’s budding career by giving him a butt-chewing rather than an official reprimand. Now Thorpe hoped to pay back the favor by doing thorough work and maybe even catching the bad guy.

  He cleaned out the loose material from the indentations, sprayed a plastic coating on each, built a form around every impression, and carefully poured the plaster in stages, building each form up as he went to avoid letting the material run off and spoil the casting.

  Russell left the forms to dry and walked to the barn. The veterinarian had cut into the hide of the horse, sawed through some ribs, and sliced and pinned back the stomach muscles. Now he was probing for a spent round with a pair of forceps. The concrete pad under his feet ran blood red, and the smell from the exposed guts wasn’t pleasant.

  A grim Kerney and his equally unhappy-looking wife stood behind the vet watching. Tug Cheney grunted, gently extracted a slug and dropped it into Kerney’s gloved hand.

  He inspected it, marked it, and put it in a plastic bag.

  Thorpe asked to see the bullet and Kerney handed him the bag. The tip of the slug was dented, probably from hitting a rib. Other than that, Thorpe wasn’t sure what he was looking at.

  “Is it from a handgun?” he asked.

  Kerney nodded. “Probably a .38-caliber revolver.”

  “How can you tell?”

  “From the diameter of the slug and the fact that a semi-automatic round is usually fully encased in a one-piece metal jacket. The bullet you’re holding doesn’t have a jacket covering the lead core and it shows spiral grooves from the rifling of the barrel. It explains why we didn’t find any spent cartridges.”

  Thorpe nodded and handed back the bag. “Anything else?”

  “The hair around one of the entry wounds was blistered,” Kerney replied. “That means the shooter fired from close range, no more than two inches. He deliberately gut shot Soldier, then fired two more rounds to finish the job.”

  “That sucks,” Thorpe said.

  Kerney nodded. Years ago, he’d been gut shot by a drug dealer, so he had a fairly good idea of the pain Soldier had suffered before dying. He wondered if there was a connection between the two events. That was unlikely: Kerney had put the drug dealer down permanently before passing out, so that particular dirtbag couldn’t possibly be a suspect. So, who was?

  If the way Soldier was killed wasn’t a coincidence, Kerney thought, then the shooter was telling him that he knew his pers
onal history, what he cared about, where he lived, and how easy it would be to get to him or those he loved.

  “What do you want me to do next, Chief?” Thorpe asked.

  “Get me a large plastic bag,” Kerney said, noticing for the first time that Soldier was wearing a halter. Yesterday, he’d removed it and put it on a hook inside the stall.

  He stepped to the head of the horse, took out a pocket knife, cut through the halter to avoid touching the buckle, and slipped it off. He held it by the edges of his gloved fingertips until Thorpe returned with the bag.

  “When you’re finished here, have the lab check for prints and compare them to mine,” he said to Thorpe as he eased it into the bag and zipped it shut.

  “Got another one,” Tug said, lifting out the forceps and dropping a bullet into Kerney’s hand. “I think the last one went straight through the stomach cavity. We’ll have to lift him up to see.”

  Kerney marked and bagged the round. “We can use the contractor’s backhoe to do that.” He turned to Thorpe. “Have it brought over here, and then check the crew members’ shoes and their vehicle tires against the castings.”

  “What about the subcontractors?” Thorpe asked.

  “Good point. Trujillo can provide us with names and addresses. I’ll follow up with them later.”

  “I can do it,” Thorpe said. “Chief Baca said I’m assigned to the case until you release me.”

  “You wouldn’t mind?”

  Russell smiled. “I owe you one, Chief.”

  “Okay, it’s yours. Take statements, too.”

  “Affirmative,” Thorpe said, as he left to get Trujillo.

  “What do we do with Soldier?” Sara asked.

  “You can either have the carcass shipped to Albuquerque for disposal or you can bury him here on your property,” Tug said.

  “We’ll bury him,” Sara said, before Kerney could respond.

  Kerney bit his lip and nodded in agreement.

  Tug stripped off his gloves and gave Kerney a solemn look. “I’m done here. Sorry for your loss. He was a fine animal. Whoever did this should be shot.”

  “That’s not a bad idea,” Sara said.

  She put her arm around Kerney’s waist as they walked Cheney to his truck and thanked him. Across the field, Trujillo cranked up the backhoe while Thorpe checked the tires of the parked vehicles against the plaster castings.

  “What’s this all about?” Sara said as Tug drove away.

  “I don’t know yet.”

  “It’s freaky.”

  “I know,” Kerney said, looking at Sara with sad eyes. “About this morning. . . .”

  “We don’t have to talk about that now.”

  “I want to. Whatever you decide to do is fine with me, as long as I can keep you and the baby in my life.”

  “That’s a sweet sentiment,” Sara said, turning to look Kerney in the eye. “But it doesn’t get you out of really talking things through with me.”

  Kerney nodded. “We don’t have to have an ordinary marriage. Maybe that’s best.”

  “Meaning?”

  Kerney smiled weakly. “I’m not sure.”

  Kerney’s deep-set blue eyes moved from her face to the barn. He pulled himself ramrod straight, his six-one frame accentuated by big shoulders, a broad chest, and a slim waist set off by a rodeo belt buckle he’d won in a high school competition. Only a touch of gray at his temples and crow’s feet at the corners of his eyes hinted at his true age. He cleared his sad expression and replaced it with a look of detachment that tightened his square jaw. But the corded muscles in his neck showed the pain and anger he felt over the loss of Soldier.

  “I have to take care of Soldier,” he said. “Bury him.”

  “I know you do,” Sara said, as she lifted her head and kissed him on the cheek.

  “What’s that for?”

  “For being who you are,” Sara said, squeezing his hand.

  Bobby Trujillo arrived with the backhoe and some chains. Kerney guided him into the barn, and Bobby used the forks of the bucket to lift Soldier’s hindquarters so Kerney could wrap a chain around the animal and secure it to the bucket. They repeated the process at Soldier’s shoulders, then Bobby raised the animal a few inches off the pad and backed slowly out of the barn.

  Under the bloody mess, Kerney could see the third flattened bullet embedded in the concrete, but retrieving it would have to wait until everything got cleaned up.

  “Where do you want the horse to go?” Bobby asked, when Kerney came out of the barn.

  “I’ll take care of it,” Kerney said, “if you’ll let me borrow the backhoe.”

  Bobby nodded and climbed down.

  “I’ll follow you in the truck,” Sara said.

  Kerney pulled himself into the cab, raised the backhoe, swung the machine around, and started for the rutted ranch road that led to the ridge top. He stared down at Soldier’s stiff legs and exposed innards and looked quickly away to force down his anger.

  Sara caught up with him in the truck as he climbed the ridge. He topped out and found a spot off the ranch road where a massive old piñon tree stood near a fair-sized boulder. He lowered Soldier to the ground, unchained him, and dug a deep trench. He used the forks of the hoe to nudge Soldier into the trench, put the chains away, and began covering up the hole.

  Sara stood by Kerney’s truck with moist eyes studying the intense expression on Kerney’s face, thinking how hard it had to be for him to maintain his composure. Under much more tragic circumstances, he’d done this before when his parents had been killed in a head-on traffic accident while traveling to meet him at the Albuquerque airport upon his return from ’Nam. He’d placed his military decorations in their caskets, dug their graves by hand, and buried them in a beautiful grove of trees on Dale Jennings’s ranch, where his parents had lived and worked for many years. Surely, that memory had to be coursing through his mind.

  She watched him dig out the boulder, move it to the grave site, and place it on top of the mound of dirt. She could see his stiff hands working the levers and the hard set of his jaw as he packed and smoothed the earth around the rock.

  It was a lovely spot to put Soldier to rest, with a view of the expansive ridge-top pasture land and the surrounding mountain vistas.

  Sara thought about the new set of military decorations she’d requested and received through official Army channels to replace the ones Kerney had buried with his parents so many years ago. They were in her suitcase. Kerney knew nothing about them. She planned to give them to him after the birth of their baby. Not for Kerney to keep, but to pass on to his son. Now, more than ever, it felt like the right thing to do.

  He waved to her that he had finished, spun the backhoe around, and started for the ranch road. Sara followed as Kerney moved slowly down the ridge. The baby kicked her hard in the stomach.

  She placed her hand on her belly. “I know you’re there, little one,” she said softly.

  Ramona Pino met up with Sergeant Cruz Tafoya at the end of the driveway to a two-million-dollar estate in the hills behind Tesuque. Stout and balding with a scraggly black mustache and a toothy grin, Cruz greeted her with a quick nod of his head. He was wearing a Kevlar vest over his white cowboy shirt.

  “So Larsen’s armed and dangerous,” he said.

  “Armed at least,” Ramona replied.

  “Same thing,” Tafoya said. “Is he a credible suspect?”

  “We won’t know until we talk to him,” Ramona said. “But from what the girlfriend told me, he left home in plenty of time to kill Potter before heading off to work.”

  “Well, let’s do it,” Tafoya said. “Larsen got a phone call while he was here and told the estate manager he had to bid on a gardening job at a neighbor’s house and would be back later to finish up. His tools are still here. The road dead ends on the hill behind us, and Larsen’s truck is parked at the last house. Put on your vest and follow me.”

  “Let’s hope he’s there,” Ramona said. “He may have b
een tipped off that we’re looking for him.” She popped the trunk of her unit and strapped on her body armor.

  “By the girlfriend?” Tafoya asked.

  “Yeah,” Ramona replied.

  “Is she really a girl?” Cruz asked.

  “From the top of her curly head right down to her little red toenails. She’s a marvel of modern medicine.”

  Cruz shook his head in disbelief. “Santa Fe, the city different.”

  The hilltop house had a steep driveway that curved to a level parking area overlooking the road. Larsen’s truck was in plain view in front of a three-car garage. The garage doors were closed and no other vehicles were present. Ramona left her unit angled to block the driveway and walked up the driveway to Cruz, who’d positioned his unit behind Larsen’s truck. Together they walked up stone steps through a patio door and into a large courtyard, where a fountain of cut polished stone columns trickled water into a bed of pebbles. An L-shaped portal covered both the entrance and a large living room with glass doors and windows that looked out on the courtyard.

  They stood on either side of the oversized hacienda-style double doors. Cruz rang the bell while Ramona kept her eye out for movement inside the living room. The doorbell brought no response.

  Tafoya tried again with the same result. “See anything happening inside?”

  “Nothing.”

  Tafoya unholstered his sidearm. “Perimeter search,” he said, pointing the direction he wanted her to go.

  Ramona took out her weapon and began her sweep. Staying as concealed as possible, she checked every door and window, finished the circle, and met up with Tafoya at the back of the house, where a patio provided a spectacular view of the Jemez Mountains to the west and the Tesuque Valley below.

  Ramona shook her head to signal no contact. Beyond the valley she could see the soaring roof of the Santa Fe Opera and the white tents of the adjacent flea market that bordered the highway.

  “Some place,” Tafoya said.

  “There’s a trail off the master bedroom door that leads up towards the mountains,” Ramona said. “I saw some fresh footprints.”

  Cruz flipped open his cell phone and dialed the number of the alarm company he’d written down from the sign posted at the end of the driveway. He identified himself, gave his shield number, and asked for information about the owners and any occupants, employees, or personnel with authorized access to the property.

 

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