“You betcha. I’m not going to chat with Mrs. Pope first, that’s for goddamn sure. A good picture or two will help me convince Judge Hobart to cut a warrant loose, but I think I want to wait a bit.”
“I can’t imagine that the judge would hesitate,” Estelle said.
Gastner shrugged. “Not with the animal health problems we’ve got now. Everybody’s worried, you know, and not just in England or Europe. That hoof-and-mouth disease thing is a real nightmare.” He nodded at the sheds. “Bring in animals like these, without proper health inspection, and we’re just asking for some real trouble.”
He paused. “Transporting these little guys around the state without a permit is just a misdemeanor. Hobart’s not going to get excited about that. Me neither. But if these animals are headed out of state, that’s a different story altogether. That’s felony time.” He thumped the fence with the palm of his hand. “She’s got ’em packed in those stalls like cordwood. Maybe that’s what bothers me most.”
“Bizarre,” Estelle said, and handed the binoculars back to Gastner. “It’d be interesting to know where they’re going.”
“That’s the deal. If I just bust in there and confiscate ’em, I might never find out what her connections are.”
“Let me see what it looks like,” Estelle said. She bent down and unzipped the camera bag, selected the largest lens and screwed it onto the camera body. She rested the lens in the V formed by the top of two boards. “Are the Popes home now?”
“Eleanor works three days a week at Price’s HairPort, today included. So far I haven’t been able to establish what her son does. I’m assuming he’s home.”
Estelle adjusted the exposure and frowned. “What I can get is a sea of brown, fuzzy backs and a bunch of ears,” she said. “Even with the sun shining into the stalls, there’s just too much shadow and obstruction for much else.”
“That’s good, though. Two ears per beastie.” Gastner chuckled softly. “That gives us a good count.”
“It’d be easy with a flash if we were closer.”
Gastner shook his head. “I don’t want to be closer. I don’t want them to know I’m interested. I just want to find out what the hell they’re up to.”
“The donkey source,” Estelle said.
“That’s it.”
“They’re cute little beasts. At least their ears are.”
“Yes, they are. That’s why the market for ’em is so strong. They’re cute and small. You can keep one in the backyard. Use him to kick and bite the crap out of the neighbor’s poodle.”
Estelle snapped several more photos of each stall. “That’s the best I can do, without going into the yard. I think you can get an ear count, though.”
“That’ll do nicely.”
“I’ll have Linda develop the film today.”
“Wonderful. Cliff Larson’s giving me a hand watching the place. There’s only the one driveway out onto Escondido Lane, so they’re not going to slip away on us.”
“How’s he doing, by the way?”
“Cliff? Not well.” Gastner grimaced. “He’s dying, and he knows it. Something like this gives him something to do with his time, I guess.”
Larson had become an institution as the district livestock inspector, and had asked Bill Gastner to fill in for him “on a temporary basis” after the November elections and Gastner’s retirement from the Sheriff’s Department. The filling in had become permanent as Larson’s illness blossomed.
“You ready for some breakfast now?” Gastner asked as Estelle stepped down from the truck’s frame.
She grinned at him. “Sure.”
Walking back toward Gastner’s truck, Estelle could smell the metal, grease, and oil as the sun gradually warmed the sea of car hulks around them. The inside of the state truck was warm, and she could cheerfully have settled back into a nap. With no place to turn around, Gastner backed the truck half a football field before a nook presented itself and he could swing into a space between a rusted Plymouth Valiant and a crushed Jeep Wagoneer.
Cameron Florek was standing by his Airstream as they approached. He crossed the driveway and Gastner opened his window and pulled the truck to a stop.
“You find the parts you was after?” Florek’s beard bobbed as he talked, and the deep crow’s-feet at the corner of his eyes crinkled. “That kinda worries me, I’d have to say.”
“Sure did. Thanks for letting us look,” Gastner said.
“Anytime, Sheriff.” He glanced across at Estelle, letting that suffice as acknowledgment of her presence.
Gastner laughed. “God, don’t say that,” he said. “I’m not sheriff anymore.”
Florek flashed a smile and jerked his beard toward the inside of Gastner’s truck. “You got your scanner turned on?”
Gastner glanced at the radio slung under the dash. “Nope.”
“Didn’t think so. You wasn’t in any hurry.” He rested both hands on the door of the truck and rocked it gently. “You might want to give your office a jingle, ma’am,” he said to Estelle.
“What’s going on?” Gastner asked.
Before Florek could answer, and even while Estelle was pulling her small cell phone out of its belt holster, the gadget chirped urgently. “There ya go,” Florek said. He patted the door of the truck and stepped back as Gastner pulled it into gear.
CHAPTER SIX
The second corpse lay in the shallow grave with his feet pointing south. Estelle stood with her hands in her pockets, gazing down at what no doubt had once been a young man who had entertained all manner of exciting ideas about his future. Those ideas had been cut short when a heavy caliber bullet had smashed through the xiphoid process on the lower end of his sternum and then minced the internal organs that bone was supposed to protect.
“Juan Doe,” as Deputy Thomas Pasquale had dubbed him, was no more than twenty-five years old, slight of stature with a lean, swarthy hawklike face, and long, black hair pulled tight behind his head in a short ponytail. He was dressed in blue jeans and a heavy denim shirt. A brown windbreaker had been tossed into the grave, perhaps as an afterthought, and lay across the man’s knees. Other than laboriously removing the dirt using first the small short-handled spades that the deputies routinely carried in their units and then by hand, the body hadn’t been touched or moved.
The grave was no more than eighteen inches deep, just enough to frustrate all but the most diligent coyotes. Estelle stood with her hands on her hips, surveying the distant horizon. Whoever had chosen the spot had worked at it. They had bounced along the rough service road that paralleled the power lines north from Maria for eleven miles. Five miles north of where she stood, the transmission lines crossed the interstate-and it was conceivable that the killers had gained access to the service road and driven south to this point. From whichever direction they’d come, this spot had served their purpose. They’d gouged out the young man’s final resting place under the hum of commerce overhead.
Estelle turned and looked west to where a shovel lay a couple dozen yards out on the prairie, partially concealed by a runty creosote bush-marked now by a bit of red flagging tied to one of the bush’s brittle limbs.
At a glance, it appeared to be a standard issue contractor’s shovel, long of handle with an elliptical blade and good, sturdy blade shoulders that would take a beating from heavy-soled work boots. The shovel was new enough that portions of the label still clung to the hickory handle.
Following Estelle’s gaze, Deputy Tom Pasquale said, “World class dumb. Somebody goes to all the trouble to dig a grave and then leaves the shovel behind.”
“Let’s hope so,” Estelle said. “If the shovel and grave are related in the first place.” She backed up half a dozen steps until she could lean against the eastern most upright of the huge transmission line support. It had taken nearly two hours to meticulously uncover the corpse, one careful scoop of desert soil at a time. She slid down the warm steel until she was resting on her haunches, arms comfortable across her knees.r />
“The crossroads,” she murmured, and pointed west. “I can make out the tracks that head out from here.” The sparse grass, bent and broken by the vehicle’s tires, would remain so for months, until summer rains hastened the decay of the vegetation, and new sprouts took their place. “And Perry MacInerny told Collins that he heard shots on the evening of Friday, February second. He’s got a parts receipt from the next day to lock in the date. All the way from here, you think?”
“Easily,” Tom Pasquale said. “Unless the wind was howling from the west.”
“MacInerny said it was calm.”
“Then he could have heard gunshots from miles away…especially heavy caliber artillery.”
Estelle nodded. “If the two killings are related, then Perry would have heard this shot first,” and she nodded toward the grave, “followed by the ones that killed number one, way over there to the west.” She turned, scanning the prairie. “I wonder how long.”
“How long?”
“MacInerny doesn’t remember an interval between the shots. If this one was first, and then”-she pointed to the west and stopped, brow furrowed-“that could be five minutes, ten minutes…almost anything.” She shook her head in frustration. “We’re going to have to work on Perry’s memory a little bit.” Turning to Jackie Taber, she said, “Tell me again what you saw.”
The stocky deputy pushed her Stetson back on her head and squinted up into the sun, now harsh and winking on the power lines overhead. The wind was strong enough to touch the expanse of power lines between each tower, flexing them slightly, making them moan.
“I was sitting in the unit, right there,” she said, indicating where the department Bronco was still parked. “I was waiting for Linda to come out. We were going to walk the tracks that showed up in the aerial photo. I saw where they took off to the west, right here, so this is where I parked. I was watching the changes in light, and I was getting ready to do some sketching. And that’s when I saw the pattern.”
Estelle regarded the grave expressionlessly. Scant as the vegetation was, there were an infinite number of places where a dedicated gravedigger could find a patch of earth two feet wide and five feet long without disturbing any plant life. Of all the places in Posadas County likely to remain undisturbed, and thus be suitable for an unmarked grave, the eastern Posadas prairie should have topped the list.
The transmission line service road, nothing more than a rude two-track in the best of places, paralleled the power lines just to the east of the tower’s legs at this particular point. The grave was across the two-track, its northwest corner forty-five feet, nine inches from the tower’s eastern support leg.
Estelle clasped her hands together and rested her chin on her intertwined fingers. “The pattern,” she repeated.
Jackie Taber’s were the eyes of an artist, Estelle knew. Why the young woman chose to spend her time as a graveyard shift deputy sheriff instead of using her GI bill money to attend a university and pursue her art was a question only Jackie could answer-and so far she had kept her reasons to herself. But the large eleven-by-fourteen sketch pad that was the deputy’s habitual companion included detailed pencil or pastel drawings that often revealed more than the impersonal wink of a camera’s lens.
“When the sun’s low, just when it starts up over the horizon,” Jackie said, holding her hand flat, palm down, “the way the light trips over things is really interesting.”
“Deputy Picasso,” Pasquale said.
Linda Real was standing within striking distance with her elbow, and did so. “She’s right, bozo.”
“I know she’s right,” Pasquale said easily and with a touch of admiration. “I tried one of those matchbook art contests once. It was so bad that when I tried to mail it in, the Post Office refused to deliver it.”
“What’s interesting is that this prairie is covered with rocks, all sizes and shapes, but uniformly covered, you know?” Jackie said. “If you want to sit down, you’re going to have to nudge a couple of rocks out of the way, no matter what. You look at Linda’s panoramic photos when she develops them, and you’ll see the grave, too. Whoever did it didn’t bother to take the time to kick the dirt smooth, so there wouldn’t be a hump. And they sure didn’t go back and duplicate the pattern of rocks.”
“Did you do a sketch?” Estelle asked.
“Yes, ma’am.”
“I’d like to see it.” She pushed herself upright and waited, one shoulder leaning against the steel support while Jackie walked to the Bronco. She returned with the pad, opening it carefully so that the wind wouldn’t grab the pages. She extended it to Estelle, who shook her head. “My hands are dirty,” she said. Jackie held the pad while the undersheriff scrutinized the drawing.
“There’s even a sort of windrow of rocks that got left after the construction crews went through, isn’t there,” she said. “Whoever dug the grave disturbed some of them.” She looked up at Jackie and smiled.
“Yes, ma’am. And it looks like whoever dug this grave didn’t take much time with it. They didn’t go a millimeter deeper than they had to.”
“So you saw this first? The grave?”
“I saw the disturbance of the ground, and that kind of tickled my imagination. I mean, this is a big prairie. To have an out-of-place feature of any kind…I mean, we’re interested in the tracks that lead over this way from the MacInerny site, and so that’s what I was looking for. Any kind of mark on the ground, any kind of disturbance. But I didn’t make the connection at first. I mean that it might be a grave.” She shrugged. “I mean, it could have just been a spot where one of the line crews parked a Bobcat or something. They let the blade down and made a mark.”
“A neat two by five,” Pasquale said.
“Well…” Jackie shrugged again. “And then I saw the shovel. The sun caught the blade. At first I thought it was just a tin can or something, then I saw the handle.” She grinned and flipped the sketch pad closed. “The handle makes a nice, hard straight line that’s really out of place. My first thought was, ‘Ah-ha, I’ve got me a nice new garden shovel, free of charge.’ And as I was getting out of the unit, it felt like somebody came up behind me and whacked me upside the head with a billy club.” She tapped her forehead with the palm of her hand. “I’m thinking, whoa! Over here’s what looks like a grave, and over there’s a shovel. And a mile or so due west, if we maybe follow a vague set of vehicular tracks, is a corpse that didn’t get buried at all…” She stopped and looked at Estelle. “It all hit me at once.”
“He’d still be comfortable under the dirt if they’d picked up their tools when they were finished,” Pasquale observed.
“Likely so,” Jackie said. “When Linda got here, she took a bunch of pictures, and then I dug down as carefully as I could, at one corner. You know, maybe somebody just buried a bunch of garbage or something. Or maybe it was nothing at all. I took about five little bites with the shovel, and uncovered the tip of one of his shoes. With my fingers, I dug down just far enough to determine that there was a foot inside the shoe, and stopped.”
The phone in Estelle’s pocket chirped, and she fished it out. The conversation was brief and one-sided. She snapped the phone closed. “They just turned on the service road down in Maria,” she said. “That’s what…almost eleven miles? So we’ve got about twenty minutes if they’re really hustling.” She turned in place, head down. With the toe of her boot, she loosened a small mound of sand and watched the wind rearrange it. “Any tracks have been obliterated long since,” she said. “And that’s too bad, because we’ve got some questions here.” Without moving, she turned and looked at the grave. “Forty-five feet, nine inches from here to the grave,” she said, tapping the vertical steel of the tower. “And how far in the opposite direction to the shovel?”
“It’s sixty-one feet from the tower’s northwest leg.”
“And so we’ve got more than a hundred feet between the grave and the shovel that dug it…if we want to make the logical assumption that the two are r
elated.”
“That’s a far toss,” Linda Real said. “But it doesn’t make sense that they’d throw the thing in the first place.”
“No, it doesn’t. Did you check it for blood or anything like that?” Estelle asked Jackie.
“Not yet. I haven’t touched it. Linda took pictures of it in place, and I flagged the bush. I didn’t touch the shovel. There were no tracks in the immediate area, nothing but the shovel. And the way it’s caught in the bush, it sure looks like it was thrown.”
“But from where?” Estelle said. “No one’s going to dig a grave way over here, and then when they’re finished, wind up and hurl the shovel about a hundred feet west, assuming that they’d miss the framework of the towers. And assuming that they could throw it that far in the first place.” She thrust her hands in her pockets. “Why throw it at all?”
“I wonder how many more of these little surprises we’ve got out here,” Tom Pasquale said. He grinned at Jackie Taber. “You see any more patterns, Picasso?”
“No,” Jackie replied without a trace of humor. “Except I’ll be willing to bet that when we move Juan here, we won’t find any ID. That’s a pattern. And whatever weapon took off the back of John Doe’s head over by the MacInernys’ could sure enough have punched that big hole through this young man’s chest. That’s a pattern.”
“The answer’s with the shovel,” Estelle said more to herself than anyone else. She ducked her head against the wind, hunched her shoulders, and walked across the rough prairie toward the creosote bush in whose angular, spiky limbs the tool had lodged.
She walked around the bush, turned her back to the wind, and knelt, hands on her thighs. “TemperRite,” she said, reading the remains of the label on the handle. The tiny rectangular price tag was worn smooth, the printing nothing but a faint trace.
Jackie Taber knelt beside her. “The finish on the handle is smooth enough that we’re going to get some prints if we’re lucky,” Estelle said. “And we’ve got a price tag that might give us a point of purchase.” She rested her hands on the ground and leaned close. The shovel was turned slightly, and she could see the back of the blade, where the steel formed a deep groove to the handle socket.
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