Dead or Alive

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Dead or Alive Page 14

by Michael McGarrity


  He wrote out his resignation effective the end of the month and handed it to Durbin, who scanned it quickly.

  “I’ll take annual leave until then,” he added. “Tell Aldrich I’ll clean out my desk by the end of the day and turn in my department-issued equipment on Friday.”

  Durbin waved the resignation at Clayton. “You don’t have to do this, you know.”

  Clayton stood. “Yes, I do. Now, if you’ll excuse me, I have some work to finish up.”

  Durbin left with no further appeal for Clayton to remain with the department, confirming that resigning had been the right thing to do.

  He looked at his watch. He had half a shift to wind things up and clean out his desk. He decided not to call Grace at work with the news. It could wait until he got home.

  Chapter Seven

  Larson planned on several more giddyups with Ugly Nancy after he’d gotten some sleep. He left her securely tied up before raiding the well-stocked liquor cabinet in the living room and then crashing in the smaller, second bedroom. He slept twelve hours, woke up refreshed, and wrapped himself in a bathrobe before making coffee in the kitchen. While the coffee brewed, he transferred his wet clothes from the washer to the dryer and went to check on Ugly. He found her where he’d left her, spread-eagled on the bed, but lying in a smelly mess of excrement and piss.

  Disgusted, Larson untied her, forced her into the shower, and had her scrub down. He marched her dripping wet and naked back to the bedroom and made her strip the blankets and sheets off the bed and put them in the washing machine.

  In the light of a new day and with a clear head that wasn’t groggy with lack of sleep, Larson found Ugly Nancy even more nasty and horrid-looking than he’d remembered. Her little titties sagged flat against her skinny chest, there was an unattractive fold of wrinkles across her lower abdomen, her pubic hair looked like a dirty wire scrub pad used to scour pots, and she had unsightly underarm hair.

  As she poured laundry detergent into the washing machine, she asked Larson if she could dress and have something to eat and drink.

  He looked for any sign of emotion in her face and saw nothing. “You’re a butt-ugly old bitch,” Larson said in response.

  Ugly Nancy laughed between clenched teeth. “Don’t you want any more giddyup with me, Mister Killer?”

  Larson slapped her hard across the face. “Don’t piss me off, bitch.” He pushed her back into the bedroom and threw her clothes in her face. “Get dressed.”

  While Ugly Nancy put her clothes on, Larson considered what to do with her. The idea of more sex with her was repulsive, and if the cops found him and killed him before he could find a better-looking, young woman to play with, Ugly Nancy might wind up being his last piece of nooky. That just wouldn’t do.

  “What if I let you go?” he asked.

  Ugly Nancy looked at him suspiciously as she sat on the mattress and pulled on her boots. “You’d do that?”

  “I’m thinking about it. But I’m keeping your Subaru, so you’ll have to walk back to the ranch.”

  “Why not just take my car and leave me here?”

  “That’s not what I’m thinking I want to do,” Larson hissed as he pulled her to her feet. He tied her hands behind her back, found some duct tape to cover her mouth, and hobbled her legs with rope. He yanked her to the front door and pushed her outside.

  “I figure you’ve got a three-hour walk,” he said. “Get going.”

  She stood rooted to the ground, shoulders hunched, glaring at him.

  “Want me to make it more interesting? How about I blindfold you and make you go barefoot?”

  Slowly she turned and started walking.

  Larson watched her for a moment, went inside, picked up the Weatherby Mark V bolt-action rifle he’d taken from the gun cabinet at the ranch headquarters, loaded it, and walked to the open front door, expecting to see Ugly Nancy hobbling along no more than fifty feet from the lodge. Instead she was nowhere in sight.

  He cursed, slipped his bare feet into his boots, and went looking for her. He found her hiding behind her Subaru.

  “You’re stupid as well as ugly.” Larson kicked her feet out from under her, pulled off her boots, dragged her back to the lodge, and used more duct tape to blindfold her. He spun her around and pushed her in the direction he wanted her to go. “Now get moving,” he ordered.

  He watched Ugly Nancy walk gingerly away from the lodge, zigzagging a little but keeping a fairly straight line as she hobbled slowly across the mesa. Larson giggled when she ran into an occasional cholla cactus, stumbled over some gopher mounds, and stubbed her toes on some rocks. He hollered at her to keep moving.

  When she was about a hundred yards out, Larson raised the Weatherby, sighted the target through the scope, and squeezed the trigger. Ugly Nancy fell hard and didn’t move. From all appearances, it was a clean kill, and Larson congratulated himself on another fine piece of marksmanship.

  He went back inside the lodge, drank some coffee, dressed in his clothes fresh from the dryer, and went to check on good old Ugly. The bullet that entered her back had pierced her heart.

  He grabbed the hobble rope tied around her ankles and dragged her tiny, bony body back to the lodge, where he left it under a cottonwood tree while he fixed breakfast and figured out what to do with her. He decided to walk to the stolen truck he’d left at the edge of the mesa, drive it back, load up Ugly, and take her to an old nearby water tank where coyotes could feast on her when they came to drink. Then, when it was time to leave, he would torch the truck, burn down the lodge, and drive away in the Subaru.

  He waited until the cool of evening to fetch the truck and take Ugly to the water tank. He rolled her out of the bed of the truck thinking that what the coyotes didn’t want the vultures and crows would consume. She’d be nothing more than scattered, picked-over bones in a day or two.

  Back at the lodge with a bottle of Scotch at his side, Larson sipped single malt and watched TV until the local late night news came on. He was pleased to see that the manhunt for him wasn’t the top story, although after the first commercial break the news anchor did remind viewers that “escaped fugitive Craig Larson is still at large and armed and dangerous.”

  He switched channels and found the other local newscasters were also giving the manhunt story less broadcast time. Somewhat reassured that things were quieting down a bit, Larson decided to stay put overnight, but not any longer than that. Although Ugly had told him nobody was due at the ranch for some days, he didn’t know if she’d been lying or not. Best not to take any chances.

  In the morning, he’d work out a really good plan, maybe heading north. Since the federal government was building fences and stationing National Guard troops along the Mexican border to keep out the wetbacks, it would probably be far easier and a lot safer to sneak into Canada.

  Larson had read stories about escaped convicts who’d lived normal lives for twenty years or more. They’d taken on new identities, held down jobs, and raised families. And he’d heard about guys who’d broken out of prison and never been seen or heard from again.

  He had enough money and jewels to get himself set up once he got to Canada and learned his way around. But he didn’t want to make a major move until the manhunt fizzled out a bit more. He needed to find another place to stay where there wasn’t an old biddy caretaker to deal with or any nosy nearby neighbors.

  He’d cogitate on it overnight, but the one thing he already knew he needed to do was stop killing people for a while until things calmed down.

  He poured another double shot and switched the channel to a late night movie.

  It took Grace nagging Clayton for a full day about his foolish pride before he broke down, called Kerney, and gave him the news about his impending departure from the Lincoln County S.O.

  “I’m meeting with Andy Baca tomorrow morning to get sworn in as a special investigator with the New Mexico State Police,” Kerney replied without missing a beat. “How would you feel about coming on board
to help catch this scumbag?”

  “Sara doesn’t mind you coming out of retirement?” Clayton asked.

  “Not for this. She said she doesn’t want to see hide nor hair of me until Larson is planted in the ground.”

  “She actually said that?”

  “When it comes to the people she loves, the woman doesn’t have a mean bone in her body. But if you’re her enemy, watch out. How about you? Will Grace and the kids put up with you being gone for a while?”

  “That’s not a problem. She thinks Paul Hewitt should be inducted into a national top cop hall of fame, if one existed.”

  “And she’s right. Get yourself up here tonight. You can stay with us. I’m scheduled to meet with Andy early in the morning. I’ll let him know that you’re coming on board.”

  “Isn’t that his call to make?”

  “Andy will jump at the chance to put a shield in your hand. I’ll even bet you a steak dinner that, before this is over, he’ll offer you a permanent position.”

  “We’re not about to move away from the Rez. Not yet, anyway.”

  “That’s your call to make,” Kerney replied.

  “You haven’t asked for details about what went down at the S.O.”

  “I don’t need to. Paul Hewitt called me, told me he’d resigned and was putting in his retirement papers, and mentioned what he thought might happen to you as a result. From what he said about the slacker the county commission appointed as the interim sheriff, I figured you’d turn in your walking papers sooner or later.”

  Clayton laughed. “Tell me truthfully, did you call in a favor from Chief Baca to get him to agree to hire me?”

  “If that had been necessary, I might have,” Kerney replied. “But you don’t need a leg up; your record speaks for itself. See you tonight.”

  The following morning, Kevin Kerney and Clayton Istee arrived in Andy Baca’s spacious office at the Department of Public Safety building on Cerrillos Road.

  After greeting his visitors, Andy perched on the edge of his big oak desk, built for a predecessor years ago by convicts at the old penitentiary before it erupted into a murderous riot, and studied his visitors.

  Kerney and Clayton sat on the leather couch facing the desk and waited him out.

  “We have evidence of one sort or another that links Larson to a whole slew of crime scenes,” Andy finally said. “From the attack on the corrections officer, to a kid on the schoolbus who saw him walking along the highway just north of Gallegos where the pickup truck was stolen from the Dripping Springs Ranch two days ago, we’ve got solid physical evidence, substantial eyewitness accounts, and excellent circumstantial evidence. What we don’t have is a single sighting of Larson or the stolen Dripping Springs vehicle during the last forty-eight hours.”

  He picked up two thick case files, brought them to the large coffee table in front of the couch, and plopped them down. “That’s everything we’ve got on Larson, including the crime scene investigations, and all the field interviews and interrogations from every participating law enforcement agency in New Mexico and West Texas. The page count is just slightly less than War and Peace but we’re adding to it every day.”

  Kerney lifted one of the bulky files wrapped with thick rubber bands. “Well, by volume it certainly does show a good-faith effort to catch him.”

  “And isn’t that just hunky-dory,” Andy replied sarcastically as he sat in an easy chair at the side of the coffee table. “I have over two dozen officers and investigators spread out over the northeastern quadrant of the state, trying to get a line on Larson. As you know, once you get outside of the towns, villages, and settlements, it’s remote, isolated, and largely unpopulated country up there. I could put two hundred officers in the field and it would still take months to cover all the ground. We can’t really be sure that Larson is still even in New Mexico.”

  “What do you want us to do?” Clayton asked.

  Andy nodded at the case files on the conference table. “First, read the case files and get up to speed. Second, target any gaps in the investigation needed to be filled in, people who need to be interviewed again, and do the necessary follow-up. Talk to the lead investigators on the various cases to see if there are any loose ends that might give us a clue to Larson’s whereabouts. I want you two operating independently from the task force. But coordinate with it as needed and keep me personally informed of your activities.”

  “Okay,” Clayton said.

  Andy went to his desk, returned with two special investigator shields, and handed one each to Clayton and to Kerney.

  Kerney weighed the shield in his hand. “From what I can see, Larson is spiraling more and more out of control with each fresh kill. He’s become totally erratic and unpredictable. I think we need to dig into his personal history to get a handle on him.”

  “And completely bypass the existing investigations?” Andy asked.

  “Not at all,” Kerney answered. “We’ll analyze both the historical and the current facts.”

  “Okay,” Andy said. “What else?”

  “If we turn up anything of value,” Clayton said, “I want in on the hunt.”

  Kerney nodded in agreement.

  Andy looked hard at both men. Because of Larson, he had lost an excellent young officer, Kerney had lost a young friend and partner, and Clayton’s boss, Paul Hewitt, a fine man and a super cop, was now totally dependent upon his wife and caregivers for every aspect of his continued existence. It was ugly all the way around.

  “Personal vendettas cloud judgments,” he cautioned.

  “Don’t worry about me, Chief Baca,” Clayton replied. “If I find Larson, I promise to bring him back, dead or alive.”

  “Me too,” Kerney chimed in.

  Andy shook his head in mock dismay. “I’ve never hired a father and son act—I mean team—before. I hope I’m not making a big mistake. Stand up so I can swear you two in.”

  Kerney and Clayton got to their feet, raised their hands, and took the oath of office as special investigators with the New Mexico State Police.

  At his desk, Andy signed the commission certificates and asked his secretary to send in a lieutenant who would take Kerney and Clayton to have official photo identifications made, get department weapons and equipment issued, have vehicles assigned, and qualify with their weapons at the range.

  “I’ll have an empty nearby office set up for your use when you get back,” he added, “and my secretary will make sure you have any and all support and assistance you need.”

  “Let’s get started,” Kerney said as a young female lieutenant in a crisp uniform knocked and entered the office.

  “Good hunting,” Andy said as the lieutenant ushered Clayton and Kerney out.

  Craig Larson woke up lying on a Navajo rug in a pool of vomit. He pushed himself to a sitting position and tried to figure out where he was, but his spinning head and fuzzy vision made it hard to focus. He rolled away from the pool of puke, closed his eyes, and tried to think. All he could concentrate on was a pounding ache in his head that made him want to scream.

  Slowly he opened his eyes, sat up again, and recognized the hunting lodge living room. There were two empty Scotch bottles on the end table next to the leather couch. The bolt-action Weatherby he’d used to bring down Ugly Nancy sat on the fancy Mexican tile-top coffee table. On the opposite side of the room, the big-screen television had a bullet hole in it. Larson tried to think of what had made him want to kill the TV, but he drew a blank. There must have been something on the tube he really didn’t like.

  He got to his feet, went to the kitchen, soaked his head in the sink, and sucked down water from the faucet. Partially revived, he sat at the kitchen table and tried to sort out what he’d done before he started hitting the sauce. As far as he could recollect, he’d walked across the mesa, fetched the truck, driven Ugly’s body to the water tank, dumped it, and returned to the lodge.

  Just to make sure he didn’t dream it all up, Larson looked out the kitchen window. Th
e truck was there all right, parked next to the propane tank, baking in the harsh light of a blazing afternoon summer sun. He mixed up a can of frozen orange juice concentrate from the freezer and started a pot of fresh coffee. The stove clock read 1:10.

  While the coffee brewed, he slugged down some orange juice, gobbled some aspirin from the bathroom medicine cabinet, brought the clock radio from the bedroom into the kitchen, and plugged it in. With the TV out of commission, he’d have to rely on the radio to stay updated on the manhunt.

  He poured hot coffee into a mug, sipped it, fiddled with the dial, and found five AM stations but only static on the FM band. Of the AM stations, three were playing country music, one was broadcasting a canned talk radio show, and one was a pulpit for an evangelical Christian preacher asking for money.

  The noise hurt his head. Larson turned off the radio, washed down more aspirin with orange juice, and considered what to do. He’d originally planned to torch the lodge and burn the truck before leaving in Ugly’s Subaru, but smoke from a fire like that would be seen for miles and draw a lot of attention in a big hurry.

  As he abandoned that idea, he walked to the bathroom, stripped off his clothes, and stood under a hot shower. He needed to move on before someone came looking for Ugly, and find a place where he could hide out for a couple more days until he was sure the manhunt had fizzled out.

  He toweled off. If he recalled correctly, he’d seen a laptop in Ugly’s office at the ranch headquarters. One of the tricks he’d used when he first started running from the law was to research houses for sale on the Internet. Because real estate agents posted so much information about and so many photographs of properties on websites, it was easy to find vacant houses to case and break into for a night. He decided to drive back to the ranch house, surf the Internet, and see what he could turn up.

  Larson dressed, went to the kitchen, raided the cupboards for packaged and canned food, and put it all in a pillowcase. He did the same with whiskey from the liquor cabinet and carried everything to the Subaru. He transferred his money and jewelry stash from the truck to the car, went back inside the lodge, unwrapped all the freezer food from the refrigerator, and spread it throughout the house. Then he scattered dry cereal, sugar, crackers, flour, and rice on the floors, topped it off with the contents of several cans of tomato sauce, opened the doors and windows, and removed all the screens.

 

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