Out of Season

Home > Other > Out of Season > Page 5
Out of Season Page 5

by Steven F Havill


  “The only thing I can remember,” she said, “is that Martin had been telling Phil that there was only one little corner of the county he’d never seen from the air.” She shrugged helplessly. “Phil and Vi were planning to leave tomorrow for home, so maybe it was just one of those spur-of-the-moment things.”

  “You don’t remember anything specific, then?”

  She shook her head.

  “Do you remember when he said that? About there being a part of the county he wanted to see from the air?” It seemed to me that the comment in itself was unusual. I’d known Marty Holman for a decade, and flying was far from being a passion with him—or even a passing interest. On the rare occasions when I’d requisitioned Jim Bergin’s charter services for the department, Holman had always blanched at the cost.

  She shook her head again, but Vivian Camp said, “We were out to dinner Tuesday night, and Philip and I had been talking about all the trips we’d taken around the country. Martin said that he didn’t care anything at all about flying, but that he’d managed to tour most of the county.” She blinked. “He said it for a joke. We’d traveled the whole country, and he’d managed to cross the county.”

  Estelle Reyes-Guzman had settled on the corner of a large planter, her hands clasped in her lap, shoulders hunched forward as if she were chilled. “Janice, yesterday afternoon, before the two men went down to the airport, did they mention to you, or to either of you, why they were going flying at that moment? Or where they were going?”

  “Phil was saying that as the sun went down, the air would get smoother,” Vivian said. “That’s all I can remember him saying.” She wiped at her left eye. “I wasn’t paying any attention.”

  Janice squeezed my hand. “Could they have talked to Jim?”

  “Jim Bergin said he was caught up doing something when they came in and that he exchanged only a word or two with them over the radio as they taxied out. Apparently Phil said something about being back within the hour.”

  Estelle shook her head, gazing off into the distance. “How long had you folks owned that airplane?”

  Vivian flinched, and I saw the muscles working in her jaws. “We bought it new in nineteen eighty-four. Phil was proud of the fact that in fifteen years, he was the only pilot who had ever flown it.”

  “It was like new, then.”

  “‘Pampered’ would be a good word,” Janice said, and I was surprised at the lightness that she could force into her voice. Vivian didn’t disagree with the assessment.

  “And you’ve been down here before on different occasions?” Estelle asked. “Visiting family?”

  “At least once a year,” Vivian said.

  “So there was no particular reason why Phil would want to show Martin anything about the plane. No new paint job, no new special avionics, nothing like that?”

  She shook her head, and Estelle added, “The sheriff had been up in that airplane on other occasions?”

  “Yes. Several times. Last year we flew to Phoenix for a weekend.”

  “I remember that,” I said.

  “Did you have any trouble of any kind with the aircraft on the flight down from Canada?” Estelle asked.

  “None,” Vivian Camp said quickly. “Not for an instant.”

  I looked down at the porch floor and frowned.

  “Tell me what you’re thinking, Bill,” Janice said.

  “I don’t know what to think,” I replied and took a deep breath. “Janice, the NTSB people will want to talk to you both, too. I’ll make sure they call first. But it’ll be helpful if each of you can think back to the conversations you had in the past day or two. Anything at all that can give us a clue.”

  “God,” Janice Holman said heavily. “What I’d give to be able to tell you something.”

  “I know,” I said, and squeezed her hand. “It’s going to be rough. But we’ll do all we can. I’ll be by off and on, but you call me at any time if there’s anything I can do.”

  Estelle and I drove away a few minutes later, leaving Janice Holman and Vivian Camp to cope with their houseful. Thinning the numbers by two was probably the most helpful thing we could have done for them.

  Estelle’s dark face was set in a frown, her black eyebrows furrowed, as we drove out of the neighborhood.

  “I think we need to find out why they went sightseeing late in the afternoon of a rough day when they had no need to do so, when there wasn’t the attraction of a new plane, or of a first-time ride or anything like that. When Martin didn’t even particularly like to fly,” I said.

  “And the feds will be looking into Phil Camp’s record, too,” Estelle said quietly.

  “Sure. I’m no crash investigator, but it’s obvious to me that the plane hit the ground at a shallow angle, traveling at high speed. Maybe the sort of thing that would result from buzzing the ground. Hotdogging.” I glanced over at Estelle. She was still frowning.

  “Do you have time now to run by and talk with Jim Bergin?” she asked.

  “That’s where I was headed next,” I said. I glanced at my watch.

  But the airport manager had no magic answers for us. Although he hadn’t talked to either man before the Bonanza departed on its last flight, he had watched from the far end of the big hangar while Phil Camp did his preflight inspection.

  “I’ve met Phil Camp a number of times,” Bergin said, leaning back in his swivel chair, his left hand resting on top of the radio console. “He’s always impressed me as a careful, considerate pilot. I watched ’em when they took off, because it was so bouncy. Camp didn’t do anything fancy. No steep climbs, no turns out of the pattern halfway down the runway, none of that shit that we see all the time.”

  “Could the crash have been caused by engine failure, do you think?” I asked.

  Bergin grunted. “That was a good, strong airplane. But things break. The crash could have been caused by one of ten thousand things. But if the engine had quit out there over the prairie, someone as experienced as Camp would have had ten dozen places to pick for a landing spot. And even if he miscalculated his approach and dumped it into a bar ditch or something, that airplane still would have been traveling at only eighty or ninety knots when it touched down. On top of that”—he waved a hand as he groped a cigarette out of his pocket with the other—“the wind was kickin’ and he’d have been headed into that. So subtract twenty knots, and his actual touchdown speed would have been fifty, sixty knots.” He took a deep drag and exhaled. “And that Bonanza was flat humpin’ when it hit the ground. It wasn’t mushing in for a landing. Nosiree.”

  “I can’t see Phil Camp or Martin Holman wanting to chase coyotes,” Estelle said.

  Jim Bergin shot her a quick glance. “That’s the usual way pilots get in trouble,” he said. “Too low and too slow. He wasn’t slow. How old a man was he?”

  “Camp? I think fifty-two or three, maybe. He was older than Holman by a bit.”

  “Heart attack, maybe,” Bergin said. “Who the hell knows? That plane had one of those swing-over control yokes. If Camp had died suddenly, he could have fallen forward on the yoke, maybe. Holman would have had hell trying to get him off and swinging the yoke over so he could use it—assuming that he knew how.” Bergin shook his head and gazed out the tinted window at the asphalt. “The feds will find some answers for you. It’s probably something so simple we’ll be surprised we didn’t see it.” He grinned. “They’ll take their own sweet time, of course.”

  His telephone rang and he twisted to pick up the receiver. I was about to say something to Estelle when Bergin said into the phone, “Yes, he’s here. You want to talk to him?” He grunted something else and then handed me the phone. “Sam Carter,” he said.

  I took the receiver. Carter had seen me at Holman’s only moments before and could have talked to me then.

  “Gastner,” I said.

  “Bill, Sam Carter. Listen, can we get together sometime today for a few minutes?”

  “Well,” I started to say, but Carter interrupted me.


  “It’s really important. I know you’re busy, but if you can spare just a handful of minutes, I’d appreciate it.”

  “I guess,” I said without much enthusiasm. “Estelle and I are about wrapped up here.”

  He said something I didn’t catch, then added, “I mean, can I meet with just you? I need to talk to you personal-like.”

  “I’ll be at the sheriff’s office in a few minutes. You want to stop by?”

  “How about my office in an hour?” he said quickly, and I didn’t see the point of arguing.

  “See you then,” I said and handed Bergin the phone. “Jim, thanks. I’m sure this place is going to be the center of the storm for a few days.”

  “I’ll be here. You need anything, you just holler.”

  As we got back into the car, I said, “I wonder what Sam Carter wants.”

  Estelle shrugged and left it at that. I added, “That’s going to be an interesting conversation.” One corner of her mouth twitched just a bit, and the crow’s-foot by the corner of her left eye deepened for an instant.

  “I can tell you right now what he’s going to say,” she said.

  “I’d rather wait and let it be a surprise,” I told her. “We’ll compare notes later. Keep the heat on the medical examiner’s office for some preliminary results. And then you and I have to find a quiet corner and do some serious talking ourselves.”

  She nodded, and we drove the rest of the way back to the Public Safety Building in silence.

  CHAPTER EIGHT

  The electronic eye saw me and snapped open the big glass doors of the Trust SuperMarket. The place was quiet and smelled of bleach and floor wax, and then, as I took a few steps in, the other odors—most of them from a display of baked goods off to my left—wafted over to greet me.

  The first in a line of four checkout registers was to my right, and Taffy Hines was working there, bent over a large bound volume of computer printouts splayed over the conveyor.

  “Is Sam around?” I asked, and Taffy looked up quickly. She was fortyish, a bleached blonde, and had the sort of facial wrinkles that hinted at too many cigarette breaks.

  “He’s out back,” she said and gestured down an aisle.

  I walked between chips, soft drinks, and bottled water for several yards, heading toward the dairy case and the white, windowless door beside it.

  Before I reached it, Sam Carter rounded the corner, his lean face set in grim lines.

  “Glad you could come by,” he said, shaking my hand. His grip was dry and limp. “Let’s find us a quiet corner.”

  He led me through the door by the dairy case and then up a short flight of stairs. His office was cramped, with only enough room for a single large folding table, two chairs, and the junk that made his business go. He pushed a pile of papers out of my way so I had a place to prop an elbow.

  He stopped fussing finally and settled into his old-fashioned swivel chair. What would appear to customers to be the polished mirror over the meat-display case was actually his office window. He had a good view of the place, and I could look out and see, fifty yards away, Taffy Hines still mulling over the computer readout.

  “So,” I said.

  Carter leaned forward with both forearms on his knees. He cocked his head at me, one eyebrow up. “Did you ever imagine something as terrible as this?” he asked.

  I shook my head.

  “God,” he said, and leaned back in the chair, gazing out the window at his customerless store.

  He turned his head and regarded me. The index finger of his left hand strayed to his mouth and he bit the nail. “I talked to Tobe this morning,” he said, “and to Hewitt earlier.”

  Hewitt Stewart was a third county commissioner.

  “We’re calling a special meeting for Monday afternoon at one. We’d sure like for you to be there.”

  I nodded slowly. “I can do that, I guess. It’s going to be an awkward time, Sam.”

  “Federal boys be in town sometime today?”

  “Yes.”

  “And no telling how long they’ll be involved, is there?”

  “No.”

  He nodded quickly. “That’s really no concern of mine, or anyone else’s outside of your bailiwick. And that’s not why I asked you to drop by. Let me get right to the point.”

  He leaned forward again, brow furrowed. “This goes no farther than this room,” he said. I raised an eyebrow and didn’t reply.

  “The county commission wants to appoint you in Sheriff Holman’s place until elections.”

  I looked at Carter quizzically and then asked, “Why would they want to do that?”

  Surprise flickered across his face, and the fingernail went back between his teeth. “It’s the only thing that makes sense to us just now,” he said.

  “I’m retiring in September,” I pointed out. “And the department has three good sergeants. You could appoint any one of them and you wouldn’t lose a minute’s sleep over your choice. Bob Torrez is senior, and he’s smart, steady, and a good leader. Howard Bishop is no ball of fire, but he’s honest and thorough. Eddie Mitchell’s got his rough edges, but he’d do the job.” I shrugged. “The last thing the county needs is a sixty-eight-year-old warhorse with enough health problems to keep the county hospital solvent.”

  “I can’t imagine Bob Torrez would take it any too kindly if we passed him by for one of the others,” Carter muttered.

  “He’d get over it. And if he’s got any political ambitions, he keeps ’em to himself. But he’s your natural choice.”

  “What about Estelle Reyes-Guzman? You don’t think she’d jump at the chance? Hell, she didn’t lose that last election by too much. If you didn’t want the job, wouldn’t she be next in line? And the way you two work together, you’d probably recommend her.”

  The tone of his voice told me what his real worry was, and I took a deep breath.

  “If she were staying in Posadas, sure. And a better sheriff you couldn’t have. But her husband has taken a job in Minnesota. It’s a hell of an opportunity for them. I don’t think she’s about to stay behind just so she can be appointed to fill in until the election. I think one stab at politics was enough for her, anyway.”

  Estelle had run against Martin Holman in a surprisingly genteel and civil race, and the loss she’d taken at the polls had told both of us that Posadas County wasn’t ready for a female Mexican sheriff.

  Carter leaned back again, relaxing. He held up both hands. “Let me tell you what the others have in mind. And I agree with ’em. This all hit us pretty fast, you understand. But it’s a concern. The commission wants you to fill in until November. That gives everyone who wants a shot at the office time to run through the primaries this June, and to go about it without rushing into something they might regret.”

  “And gives you folks time to find a candidate you like,” I said with a smile. I wondered who he and his political cronies had in mind, but I didn’t care enough to ask. Martin Holman had certainly been a good, straight-arrow Republican, a member of all the right service clubs. On top of that, he’d turned out to be a quick study. I knew I was going to miss him, and I knew I didn’t have the energy left to train a replacement.

  Carter shrugged. “Politics is politics, Bill. The county sheriff’s position is one of the most important ones there is. With all the civil litigation and so forth, we’ve got to have someone in there who knows the ropes.”

  “If you want my advice, Torrez is your first choice. Then Bishop. Then Mitchell.”

  “If one of them wants to run for the office, then that’s fine,” Carter said. “But until that time, the county commission wants to appoint you. You know Martin Holman’s policies better than anyone else. You know what he was trying to accomplish. Nothing else makes sense.”

  “I’m no administrator, Sam. I’m a cop. I don’t even do the civil legwork for the department. Holman always did that, along with Sergeant Bishop and Deputy Mears.”

  Carter leaned forward, reached out and to
uched my knee. “Then think of it this way if you want to get right down to cases. Who does more road patrol work, you or Bob Torrez?”

  “He does, of course.”

  “And who does more road work, you or Eddie Mitchell?”

  “Mitchell, hands down.”

  “You supervise them, don’t you?”

  “Sure.”

  “Does it make sense, in a county as strapped as this one is for both personnel and funds, to take one of those two boys off the road and tie him behind a desk? To ask one of them to learn the ropes of a job he’s never done before? Hell, you’ve filled in for Marty Holman before, when he went on vacations and such. And a decade or so ago, you filled in for Eduardo Salcido, when he had his heart attack.”

  I frowned. “All right, so I’m the expendable one.”

  “That’s not what I said,” Carter snapped, “but if that’s what it takes to talk some sense into your head, think of it that way. The young kids belong out on the road. You’ve got twenty-five years’ experience, and hell, you’ve been undersheriff for fifteen or twenty years. Do the county a favor and fill in for us. Just until after the November elections.”

  I shrugged, seeing no reason to play coy. If Carter and the other commissioners had an ulterior motive in moving so quickly, before Martin Holman’s shattered bones were even off the autopsy table, that was their affair.

  “All right,” I said.

  Carter nodded vigorously. “Just for the sake of continuity, if nothing else. I’ll sleep a lot better, that’s for sure.” He smiled and stood up. “I know you’re busy. But come Monday, if you can break away for a few minutes, we’d appreciate it. If there’s anything we need to do, you be sure to tell us at the meeting Monday.”

  We shook hands and I left the Trust SuperMarket Grocery. Maybe Sammy Carter would sleep better. But after the previous twenty-four hours, I’d have cheerfully traded any possibility of early retirement for one decent night’s sleep. Now I wasn’t going to get either one.

  CHAPTER NINE

  A gust of wind drove sand into our faces, and Vincent Buscema tucked his head and closed his eyes.

 

‹ Prev