The ungrateful thing, he thought. “So you would have just let him shoot you? Wouldn’t even fight back?”
“That’s right.”
Kino shook his head, still disbelieving. How could anyone just stand there and let someone kill them without making even the most basic attempt to save themselves?
“I don’t understand,” he said.
“Most folks don’t.”
She dusted away the shards of glass still clinging to the folds of her T-shirt. He retrieved a glittering piece from her hair. Then he lowered the truck gate and grasped her lightly around the waist before boosting her to a seat. His hands lingered on her until she glanced at where he held her. Then he pulled away, stepping back. What was wrong with him?
“The water,” she said, looking back at the barrels. “I have to fill them.” The clear plastic water tank that occupied the last third of her truck bed looked as though it held 200 gallons or more and she had additional barrels, a pump, hose and electric hose reel.
“Nice setup.”
She scrambled to her feet to retrieve the hose.
“Lea?”
She paused, yellow hose in hand.
“This is a crime scene. You can’t fill those tanks. Plus, I know from one of the tribal council leaders, Sam Mangan, that the Tohono O’odham requested that all stations on tribal land be removed.”
Her shoulders slumped but she released the hose and returned to him, sitting on the open gate.
“Why did they do that? Some of their tribe lives on the Mexico side.”
In answer he pointed toward the bodies. “The smugglers leave a mess.”
“They’re not all smugglers.”
“I know that. But they’re all uninvited.”
“Like the Spanish and the Americans?”
Just then Kino picked up the sound of an engine. A moment later he saw the rooster tail of dust. He dragged Lea unceremoniously off the gate and shoved her behind the side of the truck bed. Then he swung his rifle out in front of him and rested it on the running board, taking aim.
“Stay behind the tire,” he ordered.
“Is he coming back?”
Kino gazed through the scope at the approaching vehicle. Was that his brother Clay or the Viper?
CHAPTER FOUR
The SUV emerged from the maze of sage and cactus. Kino blew away a breath and straightened as he recognized the vehicle.
“That’s my big brother Clay,” said Kino.
Lea stood on wobbly legs and he gripped her elbow to keep her from losing her balance. He held her long enough for her to regain her equilibrium and for him to lose his. She was a witness, an aid worker and a pacifist. Any one of those should be enough to send him running in the opposite direction. But they weren’t. Not even close. His hand tingled at the point where his fingers circled her bare arm, sending an electric sizzle of heat through him. He told himself to let go and didn’t.
Their eyes met and held. She could be only his witness, nothing more. He knew that, because he wasn’t getting mixed up with someone who spent her spare time breaking the law and wandering the desert alone without even a rifle for protection.
“You all right?” he asked, his hand relaying the softness and smooth texture of her skin.
“No,” she said and reclaimed custody of her arm.
Was she coming to the realization that her efforts might be helping the drug smugglers? That the reason they were in this very spot was because of her water station? Or was she just now realizing how close she had come to oblivion?
“I’m taking you in to headquarters at Cardon. We need a statement.”
She stepped farther away and rubbed the place where he had touched her as if to remove all memory of the contact. He noted the flush in her cheeks. Was it the heat of the day or their contact that caused that bloom of color?
“You’re detaining me?”
“Until we have your statement. They’ll interview you at Cardon.”
“Who will?”
“Border patrol.”
“I hate those guys,” she muttered and then said to him, “I’ve got to radio Oasis.” She patted the back pockets of her jeans and came up empty. Her eyes widened. “Oh, no, I was talking to her when this happened.”
She rushed back to the cab and searched for the radio from where it had fallen behind the driver’s seat as Clay pulled up, covering them with a fresh wave of grit and dust.
Kino went to speak to Clay, leaving Lea to her radio and check-in.
Clay pulled up in front of her truck.
“Any sign of him?” asked Kino.
“I’m sure there is. Everything that moves leaves a sign. But he was gone by the time I found the access road. What do you want to do?”
What Kino wanted was another shot, to go back in time and have Lea arrive ten seconds later. He looked toward the woman, scrambling in her truck to retrieve her radio. She’d seen the shooter’s face. The Viper. She could identify him.
Clay followed the direction of Kino’s gaze. “She okay?”
“Shaken.”
Clay nodded. “Understandable. So, do we chase him or question her?”
The need to hunt warred with the need to protect this woman who seemed to have no self-preservation instinct of her own.
“Her,” he said.
“Okay, then. We can wait for BP and then go cut for sign.”
Clay’s and Kino’s radios came alive simultaneously as their captain called in.
“Clay? Kino? Over.”
Clay lifted the radio. “Here, sir.”
“Border patrol is requesting you meet them at the closest access point. If you aren’t there, they’ll miss it.”
“No doubt,” muttered Kino.
“Yes, sir.” Clay glanced at Kino, who nodded. “On my way.”
“Can either of you identify the shooter?” asked Captain Rubio.
“Negative. Only witness is Miss Altaha.”
“From Oasis?”
“Affirmative.”
“Okay. Bring her for pickup by BP in twenty.”
“En route.”
Clay hooked his radio back on his shoulder and met Kino’s gaze. “I’m calling Councilman Mangan. He’ll want tribal representatives here.”
“Satellite phone’s in the car,” said Kino. “I’ll get Altaha.”
As he turned to collect their witness, he glanced at the four bodies. He had considered them no more than collateral damage, pawns in this game of chess. They weren’t the first to be killed execution style, stripped of the drugs and then left to rot. But they were the first he’d really noticed. He had his witness to thank for that.
What had she said—that they were people? He looked at them—really looked for the first time. The men were thin, dust-covered, wearing old trousers and new camo shirts provided for their journey. Their feet were sheathed in the odd shoes sewn from sections of carpet to obscure their prints from trackers like him. They’d been hired to carry a load with promises that it would earn them their passage. Instead they had earned a body bag. They’d been used and discarded, as if they were nothing more than the empty water jugs they had carried. Kino admitted to himself that he had used them, too. For him, they had been just a means to find the Viper.
The discomfort made Kino turn away.
Clay was on the satellite phone, the only sure means of communication in many of the more isolated areas out here. He lowered the phone and turned to Kino.
“Mangan is coming himself with another member of the tribe. They want us to meet them, as well.”
“We’ve gone from trackers to an escort service.”
Clay’s smile was fleeting. He motioned with his head. “She’s crying.”
Kino met his bro
ther’s look of discomfort with one of his own.
“What do you want me to do?”
“Your witness. You said so.” He might as well have shouted, “Not it!”
“Great,” said Kino, hoping his captain got here before border patrol so they could get going.
Kino headed to the battered pickup and found Lea wiping her eyes. But she didn’t fall into his arms or shatter like the windshield. Instead she met his cautious gaze with one of her own.
“What now?”
“Gotta get you to Cardon Station. They’re coming to pick you up.”
Lea sighed and followed him to the SUV, where they drove to the highway.
An hour later the rattlesnake rattle had been removed from the one man’s wound and all four bodies had been bagged. The Bureau of Indian Affairs—BIA—and the US Border Patrol, the field operations director from ICE, Shadow Wolves captain Rick Rubio and two members of the Tohono O’odham tribal council were all on site. Lea had been transported to border patrol headquarters while Kino and Clay continued to cook out here in the desert heat.
Kino stared up at the sky, counting the minutes the Viper had to escape. But now Kino had something he’d never had before: a witness.
The last to arrive was a representative from Oasis. Their regional director was a guy named Anthony DeClay: a white guy, tall, with a muscular frame evident beneath the pale blue, long-sleeved, button-up shirt he wore. Stitched to the left breast pocket was the Oasis insignia: two crossed flagpoles topped with triangular royal blue flags. The flags were a shorter interpretation of the ten-foot poles and flags that alerted travelers from a distance to the presence of water. Kino glanced from the symbol to the worn circular ring on the opposite pocket.
Was it tobacco or a tin of rattlesnake rattles?
Kino’s eyes narrowed as he studied the man now engaged in conversation with one of the tribal council, comparing his body type to the Viper and finding a possible match. The gist of the conversation was the time frame for removal of the water stations from tribal lands. Kino knew that the Oasis organization had many stations set up illegally on federal land and the Bureau of Land Management seemed to mostly look the other way. Kino thought that Oasis made a habit of going where it was not welcome. Oasis claimed it had not erected the stations, but did seem to be maintaining them.
DeClay appeared to be in his midforties with an affable smile and mirrored sunglasses. He was covered with dust even though he’d been in an air-conditioned Ford Explorer complete with water tanks, pump and coiled hose. He dangled his keys off his index finger. Kino noticed the key ring immediately because it included a one-inch rattlesnake rattle encased in clear acrylic. The man fingered the fob as he spoke to the tribal councilman.
Kino glanced at Clay, who gave the slightest nod. He’d seen the fob, as well.
Border patrol captain Gus Barrow joined the conversation. DeClay said that he had not met Lea Altaha yet, as she had been out in the field both times he had been through to check in with their area supervisor, a woman named Margaret Crocker. DeClay explained that he supervised the Oasis program in Texas, New Mexico and now Arizona. He said they had strict regulations about traveling in pairs, a rule that Altaha had apparently ignored. According to the manager, Crocker, Lea’s usual partner had recently left the organization. Altaha had been assigned a temporary partner who had called in sick. At that point, Lea had taken her own initiative and picked up the wrong map, the one denoting the stations designated to be removed, and come out here all alone, which was against every protocol they had. She had received no authorization from anyone to be on Indian land and DeClay was not willing to guess if her mistake was accidental or intentional.
The one tribal councilman Kino knew, Sam Mangan, had words with DeClay, telling him to get this station off Indian land today. DeClay promised to remove the barrels immediately and excused himself to make some calls.
Kino glanced again at the two blue barrels resting on their sides on a wooden frame. The two-by-fours and nails had that just-built glow. Strange, he thought. They were not scratched from blowing sand or worn. In fact, the station looked brand-new.
“That station hasn’t been there very long,” said Kino to his brother.
“Nails are still shiny.”
Kino watched DeClay and one of his fellows get the blue barrels loaded. The fact that they could lift them without emptying the water led Kino to surmise that the barrels were empty. But the way the two men carried them seemed wrong.
Kino went to speak to his captain. “I think there might be something in those barrels.”
Captain Rubio glanced at the two men hoisting the containers with renewed interest. “Maybe so. Worth a look.”
Clay asked permission to cut for sign but their conversation was interrupted by Captain Barrow.
“Why wasn’t I alerted to your men’s location?” asked Barrow.
“We alerted you,” said Rubio.
“After they found the bodies.”
Rubio said nothing.
“We’re supposed to be coordinating operations,” Barrow reminded Rubio. “If your men don’t report in and they go missing, we won’t have the first idea where to begin our search.”
Rubio smiled. “I would.”
Barrow snorted. “What if they were shot?”
“That’s easier.” Rubio pointed skyward. “Just follow the buzzards.” Sure enough, the black birds already circled, having smelled the carrion from miles away.
“Yeah, well, I don’t like sending my guys home in body bags.”
Kino wanted to tell them they weren’t his guys but wisely kept his mouth shut.
Rubio spoke again. “That rattle in the wound might link this to the Cosen murder.”
“Oh, this again?” Barrow threw up his hands. “Listen, that was ten years ago. And their father wasn’t crossing the border—he was found in his home. I know because I looked it up.”
“He had a bullet wound in his chest and a rattlesnake rattle plugging the hole,” said Kino. “Just like that guy.” Kino pointed at the body being stowed in the refrigerated truck.
“Right. So it has to be the same guy. Where’s he been for ten years?”
“I don’t know. Prison? Or maybe no one noticed the rattles. You don’t do autopsies on all the bodies.”
“We do on all the ones with bullet holes,” said Barrow.
Kino glanced at Clay, who shrugged. For reasons he did not understand, Clay seemed fine with letting their father’s killer go free. At least, he wasn’t driven to find him. None of his brothers seemed to share his coal-hot need to bring this guy down. Restless spirits haunted the living. That was what his grandmother believed. Kino believed it, too, because his father’s murder had haunted him every day for all ten years since Kino had witnessed his death.
Barrow turned to Rubio. “I request a copy of their report.”
“Report?” said Clay. Thus far they had been blissfully free from paperwork. That alone almost made up for the heat.
His captain rubbed his neck and glanced at Barrow.
“I’ll get you something.”
“What about my witness?” asked Kino.
“Your witness?” Barrow snorted. “You’ll be lucky if she doesn’t sue your ass. Don’t think she’ll want to see you again.”
“She’s the only one who’s seen his face,” said Kino.
Captain Barrow stopped, turned and glared. “You think I missed that part?”
“No, sir. She can identify him.”
“Yeah?”
Kino nodded. “So she needs protection.” Unless she was one of them. He pushed that unwelcome thought aside, not wanting to consider Lea as a criminal. But she had broken a lot of rules.
“I’ve already arranged for tribal to keep an eye on her overnight. She’ll be at the s
tation for a while yet. I want to speak to her.”
Rubio turned to Kino. “So this guy took the drugs. He’s either robbing the smugglers or he was their contact. That makes him local. This is his territory.” Rubio looked to Barrow. “Roadblocks?”
“In place. And an APB on the vehicle.”
“Sir.” Kino spoke to his captain. “I’d like to volunteer to keep watch over the witness tonight.”
Rubio’s brow arched. “You’re a Shadow Wolf, son. Not local tribal police or border patrol. That’s not our job and this is not your murder investigation.” He pointed at the tire tracks leaving the area. “That’s your job.”
Kino opened his mouth to argue but his captain gave a slow shake of his head.
“He might come after her,” Kino said.
“He might. Tribal or border patrol will handle it. Either way, you’re out.”
Like hell, he thought.
CHAPTER FIVE
Kino should have let it go. But he couldn’t. Lea Altaha was the key to the entire thing. He could no more leave her be than he could drop the search for his father’s murderer.
“I’d like to help in the investigation. I’m a police officer.”
Rubio sighed and looked at Barrow. The border patrol captain’s face reddened.
“Not here you’re not,” said Barrow, looking to Kino’s captain for backup.
Rubio’s usually impassive face remained unchanged, but his eyes took on a hawkish quality. “BP inspects, detains, deports. ICE enforces and we look for signs.”
Barrow’s expression turned smug. “Exactly.”
Captain Rubio directed his comments to Barrow. “But as a Shadow Wolf? That means he sees things others can’t. And to use your own words, we’re supposed to be coordinating operations. So I expect to be kept in the loop regarding Altaha.”
“Hmm,” said Barrow. “Well, I’ve got to check those barrels and get those Tohono O’odham Indians off the warpa—” He glanced at Rubio, Kino and Clay. “Uh, all right, then.”
Barrow walked away.
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