Before She Dies

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Before She Dies Page 12

by Steven F Havill


  I looked at Estelle, trying to assess if she still had enough of an energy reserve to avoid making a whopper of a mistake. “What can I do for you, then?”

  “It’s important to stay here, sir.” And as if reading my mind, she added, “I’m going to go home for a few hours and try to clear my head.” She half smiled. “Francis keeps threatening to slip me a sedative. Later this morning I’ll go down to the office and see if there’s a match for prints.” She reached out a hand and touched my arm. “Will you call me if Linda can give us anything?”

  “Of course.”

  I pushed open the ICU doors. Helen Murchison was fiddling with one of the monitors, and when it behaved as she thought it should, she straightened up and frowned at me.

  “What now? You’re going to stay?”

  I nodded and pointed at the chair in the corner. “It’s my shift.”

  “Oh, that’s choice,” Helen snorted, and headed for the door. She stopped with one hand on the push plate. “Can I get you anything, sheriff?”

  “No, thanks, love.” And then as an afterthought, I added, “Yes, there is something. I really need a legal pad. Something to write on.”

  “That shouldn’t be difficult,” she said, “although a pillow would do you far more good.” She smiled that wonderful half smile again, just enough to show the gold of one of her front bridges.

  Chapter 17

  I awoke being scrutinized. Dr. Alan Perrone and Dr. Francis Guzman stood at the foot of the bed, Perrone holding a chart, Guzman with his hands thrust in the pockets of his white coat.

  Perrone had led the charge when this same hospital had cut me open for an overhaul three years before.

  I blinked and looked at Linda Real. She appeared to be peacefully sleeping.

  “The young lady is doing a first-class job, sheriff,” Perrone said. “If she keeps it up, we’ll move her out of ICU in two or three days.” He leaned forward, tipped his head up slightly, and peered at me through his bifocals. “Then we can move you in.”

  I waved a hand and pushed myself up out of the chair. “No, no. I’m just an innocent bystander, doctor.” My watch said I’d slept almost three hours, just enough to feel wretched—stiff, groggy, discombobulated. There were no windows in the ICU, but the sun would be up, even in February cheerful as always, peeling paint off cars and incubating melanomas.

  I rubbed a hand over my face and shook my head. “Effective guard,” I muttered.

  Perrone laughed. “Don’t worry about the nap, sheriff. There’s a most alert sentry outside the door.” I looked out one of the windows in the swinging doors and saw Deputy Howard Bishop sauntering back and forth, a cup of coffee in his hand.

  “Marty Holman was by earlier,” Francis said.

  “He should have said something.”

  He shrugged. “He figured you needed the sleep. I’m not sure that the DA agreed with him, but Schroeder’s always impatient. There wasn’t anything going on here, and they stayed just a few minutes—just until the deputy got here.”

  “Schroeder was with him?”

  Francis Guzman nodded. “I don’t know what he wanted, other than just to be in on things.”

  “I can guess,” I said, and moved to the bed and touched the back of Linda’s right hand. Her skin was dry and cool.

  “She’s heavily sedated right now,” Francis said. “For the next day or so, all the surgery she’s had around her eye and jaw is going to be hurting like hell. She’s not alert enough to have a self-starter for the pain.” He pumped an imaginary button with his thumb. “Maybe later. Estelle tells me that you managed a conversation of sorts with Linda earlier.”

  I grunted. “Hardly a conversation. But she’s a champ, I’ll tell you that.” I looked up at Guzman. He’d taken to wearing a neatly trimmed beard. If a Hollywood casting agent walked by, he’d sign the young physician up to play Ivanhoe in an instant. “We need a name, Francis. That’s the information she has that we need. A name. She said that she knows the person that the deputy stopped out on Fifty-six.”

  “That’s what Estelle said.”

  “Linda can’t talk, so I was holding her hand and she was responding to yes and no questions with a touch of her finger. If she gains enough strength to hold a pencil, she can scribble the name on a pad for us.”

  “That’s a long shot,” Perrone said. “Maybe by the end of the week.”

  Francis rested a hand lightly on my shoulder. “Estelle wants you to stop by the office this morning when you’re finished here.”

  I chuckled. “When we both wake up, you mean.”

  “That, too. But I think she’s got the name for you.”

  I turned and stared at Francis. “I beg your pardon?”

  “She matched a print.”

  The young physician must have seen the annoyance as well as astonishment cross my face and he interpreted it correctly. He held up both hands. “Hey, have you ever tried making that young lady do something she doesn’t want to do? Right now, rest isn’t on her agenda.”

  I planted my hat firmly on my head and hitched up my trousers. “I’ll check with you gents later,” I said, and headed for the door. As I walked out to the car, I realized it wasn’t Estelle’s nonstop pursuit that annoyed me. Hell, that’s one of the traits that made her such a formidable cop. What unsettled me was that she was burning up the trail while I slept in a chair. Old, fat, retired grandfathers dozed their lives away, not cops in the middle of a murder investigation.

  ***

  Martin Holman’s office was the first door on the left on the way to dispatch. His door was open when I passed and I saw him and Ron Schroeder deep in conversation. Holman looked up and saw me walk by.

  “Bill!”

  I stopped and backed up to stand in his office doorway.

  “Can we see you for a minute?”

  I didn’t step into the room. “I’ve got about ten seconds,” I said. The district attorney was lounging with one elbow propped on Holman’s desk. He didn’t get up, but tapped his pencil on the legal pad he’d been filling with notes.

  “Bill, where are we at with this thing?” He waved a hand in summons, but I stayed put.

  “This thing?”

  “The shooting.” He enunciated the word carefully, as if there might be a chance I’d misunderstand him.

  “I can tell you better in a few minutes. After I talk with Estelle.”

  “But so far you’ve got nothing. Other than a possible tire print and the report of a stolen vehicle from Albuquerque.”

  I didn’t say anything. He hadn’t said it as a question and I was too tired to play word games.

  “How’s Ms. Real?”

  “She’s gaining,” I said. I didn’t add that Linda and I had played talking fingers.

  Schroeder nodded and tapped his pencil again. After a few seconds he pushed himself upright and sat back in the chair. He folded his hands across his stomach and regarded me evenly, his eye blinks reminding me of when Camille, my eldest daughter, was taking piano lessons and had the metronome set on largo for some funereal piece she was studying.

  “I’ve asked Captain Eschevera if he’ll handle the investigation into Sonny Trujillo’s death, Bill.”

  “Him personally?” I asked, and Schroeder nodded. I’d known Adolfo Eschevera for years. He was as much of a dinosaur as I was, and ruled his dominion within the New Mexico State Police in true patron fashion. Martin Holman stood up quickly and motioned toward a chair.

  “Sit down, Bill. Sit down.” I did and he looked relieved. I don’t know what he had expected. I tossed my Stetson on the edge of the sheriff’s desk.

  “So,” I said.

  “We wanted to move fast on this,” Schroeder said.

  I glanced at the wall clock. “At five after seven on a Tuesday morning? I guess so. It must be an election year.” Holman grimaced.

  “That’s not the case, Bill,” Schroeder said. He leaned forward. “We have to have a formal inquest into Trujillo’s death anyway, you know t
hat. You know for a fact that his relatives are going to sue the county…and you…for all we’re worth. I mean, this is their opportunity to set themselves up for life, Bill.”

  “We’ve heard that Sonny Trujillo’s mother, Juanita Smith, has hired someone from Bacon, Ortiz and McNally in Las Cruces to represent her,” Holman said.

  “So we’re all supposed to face Mecca and bow three times?”

  Schroeder chuckled. “They don’t have a case, but Bob Weems and I want to make sure. No mistakes. If someone from the Sheriff’s Department investigates, they’re going to make an issue of it.”

  “Of course. I would, too, if I was them,” I said. “A dentist doesn’t drill on his own teeth. And Addy Eschevera is the best there is.” But I didn’t share that view of Bob Weems, the county’s attorney. He represented Posadas County part-time, attending meetings of the County Commission. I couldn’t remember the last time he’d been able to give the commissioners a direct, positive answer to a question. The thought of Weems representing the county—and me—in a wrongful death lawsuit was enough to take away my appetite.

  Schroeder picked up a manila envelope from Holman’s desk. “And Frank Dayan at the Register provided us with these.” He pulled the eight-by-ten photos from the envelope and handed them to me. “I didn’t even have to try a subpoena.” Dayan had managed to take a series of five photos during the brawl at the school, and they told the story pretty well. I adjusted my glasses and examined them with interest.

  The first photo on the negative strip included the general melee, with only a small portion of me edged into the right side of the picture. The second shot clearly showed me holding Sonny Trujillo’s right hand, my fingers clamped over the cylinder of the revolver. The barrel of the gun was close to my face.

  “That’s the most interesting part,” I said, and held the photo so Schroeder could see it. “Trujillo’s finger is in the trigger guard, clear as a bell.”

  “And the trigger is pulled all the way back,” the district attorney said with satisfaction. “He pulled it and held it.”

  The third photo caught the two of us just as Trujillo’s fist made contact with the side of my face, sending my glasses askew. The fourth image was slightly blurred from camera motion. Trujillo was down on the floor, I had regained possession of the handgun, and my right hand was groping around behind my belt for handcuffs. The last blowup showed a cowed Sonny Trujillo, blood running down his face, being escorted away, village officer Tom Pasquale on one side, me on the other.

  “Great stuff for your scrapbook when this is all over, Bill,” Schroeder grinned.

  “I don’t keep a scrapbook,” I said. I stood up and handed the envelope back. “What do you need?”

  “I just wanted to tell you that someone from Eschevera’s office will be here sometime this week to talk with you. We have your sworn deposition already, but I’m sure they’ll want to speak with you as well. Just to cover all possibilities.”

  “There aren’t any possibilities,” I said shortly. “We all know exactly what happened.”

  Schroeder pursed his lips. “Bacon, Ortiz and McNally have a pretty good reputation, Bill. This isn’t something to take lightly. I can tell you right now what course they’re going to take.”

  “What’s that?”

  “That you shouldn’t have punched the kid in the nose. It’s that simple.”

  I gestured toward the envelope of photos, but Schroeder shook his head. “They’ll say that the officer should have been able to restrain an intoxicated young man without breaking his nose.” Schroeder saw my eyes narrow and he added, “That’s what they’ll argue. I didn’t say they were right.”

  I looked across at Holman.

  “The whole affair is ridiculous,” he said. “I agreed with Ron that we should have Eschevera come in, Bill. That frees us up. I don’t want to just prove that you—that the department—did the right thing, Bill. I want to pound this kind of harassment right into the ground. I want to show that you defused a dangerous situation quickly and efficiently and that, if anything, Gayle Sedillos endangered herself when she entered that cell out of concern for the prisoners.”

  I raised an eyebrow, impressed at Holman’s dramatic speech.

  I stood up and retrieved my hat. “Well, all this shit is perfectly timed, I’ll tell you that.” My fingers groped for a cigarette and settled for patting my breast pocket.

  “Why don’t you join us for breakfast?” Holman asked. I shook my head.

  “Maybe later.” I left the two young políticos to their designs and hustled my way to Estelle Reyes-Guzman’s dark corner down the hall. The door was closed and locked. Irritated, I stalked to my own office and opened the door.

  Estelle was seated in one of the chairs in front of my desk, notepad on her lap. Seated in the other chair, looking pale and scared, was Karl Woodruff.

  Chapter 18

  “Morning,” I said shortly. I didn’t tack on a “good,” since Karl’s face told me it was anything but that. I read equal parts embarrassment, apprehension, and resentment in his expression. Estelle rose quickly from her chair and beckoned me back toward the door.

  “Will you excuse us for just a moment?” she said to Woodruff. Estelle and I stepped out into the hall and she closed my office door behind us. At first she spoke so softly I couldn’t hear her.

  “I can’t read lips, Estelle,” I said. “And how come you didn’t wake me up?”

  “Sir, it was pure chance. I decided to run the fingerprints on the wrench for a match, so I just started with the most recent prints we had on file. From this weekend.”

  “Well, that makes sense.” I looked suddenly at my office door as if I could see right through the old dingy mahogany. I could see Karl Woodruff sitting in that room, alone, his pulse hammering away in his ears. “Not him,” I said.

  “One of the prints on the wrench belongs to Tammy Woodruff.”

  “To Tammy?”

  Estelle nodded. “A perfect match, sir. No mistake. I sent the wrench to Santa Fe early this morning for backup analysis, but I’m right. There’s no mistaking that print.”

  Estelle held up her right index finger. With her left index, she drew a corkscrew line from the corner of the nail down across the pad, ending at the joint line. “Tammy has a scar across the pad of her finger. Friday night when we booked her, she told me she sliced her finger last year, when the top of a wine bottle that she was trying to open broke.”

  “Tammy Woodruff,” I mused. “What the hell was she doing out there.”

  “Changing a tire?” Estelle offered.

  “Why did you call Karl in? Tammy’s the one we should be talking to, Estelle. She’s no minor.”

  “I thought maybe her father might know where she is.”

  “You checked?”

  Estelle nodded. “She’s not at her apartment, sir.”

  “Shit,” I muttered, and added, “Let’s go see what he has to say.”

  Karl Woodruff watched us reenter the office; his eyes tracked my face as I closed the door. Estelle sat down and once more picked up her notebook, this time sliding her pencil into the spiral binding as if to announce that we were off the record. She then folded her hands on her lap.

  The casualness of that little motion was not lost on Karl Woodruff, and he took a deep breath and tried to relax back in the hard chair.

  “Sir, I asked Mr. Woodruff to join us for a few minutes this morning,” Estelle said to me. I glanced at my watch. Woodruff’s RxRite pharmacy would open in six minutes. “Is this a bad time, Karl? Do you have someone covering for you, or…”

  He shook his head quickly. He leaned forward, taking most of his weight on his elbows, pushing against the arms of the chair. His hands were balled into his gut as if he were about to toss his breakfast burritos. “No, it’s fine,” he managed. He was a spare man anyway, one of those folks whose nervous system hangs on the outside. He’d make a lousy poker player.

  “You want a cup of coffee or something?”
>
  “No, thanks.”

  I sat down behind the desk, behaving for all the world as if I knew what the hell was going on, as if I had orchestrated this reduction of a confident, successful merchant and chairman of the Republican party into a nervous wreck. Estelle pulled the pencil out of the notebook binding again.

  “Sir, I asked Mr. Woodruff to come down because of the information we’ve received that places his daughter Tammy at or near the scene of the homicide Sunday night.”

  Woodruff blanched. Homicide was one of those grim words that was a real attention grabber. I leaned forward and propped my chin on one hand. Woodruff was terrified, which was to our benefit, since if he knew anything at all he’d tell us—in a great rush of words that would try to wash away the grime of that single pronouncement.

  Tammy Woodruff was twenty-three years old. She didn’t need daddy’s permission for anything, as she’d proven the previous Friday night at the Broken Spur Saloon with Sergeant Torrez. And we sure as hell didn’t need daddy’s permission to arrest her attractive young butt if she’d gotten tangled in something far dirtier than public drunkenness.

  But for all her majority, nothing could erase her from her father’s mind as a little kid—a little kid winning 4-H ribbons at the fair, a little kid screaming out her first cheer, a little kid…all those sentimental things had to be swimming in Karl Woodruff’s mind just then. I felt sorry for him. I had four “little” kids of my own.

  Estelle bent slightly and retrieved the lug wrench from her briefcase, which had been leaning against her chair. She held it out toward Karl Woodruff.

  “Mr. Woodruff, this is part of a lug wrench from a General Motors product—a newer model truck of some sort. It’s the sort of wrench that we discovered in the grass just a few feet in front of where the deputy’s patrol car was found parked Sunday night. We have reason to believe that the deputy stopped that night, perhaps to assist someone.” She held up the wrench and turned it. Karl Woodruff’s eyes followed it.

  “I don’t…”

  “Mr. Woodruff, your daughter’s fingerprints were found on the wrench.”

 

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