by Betty Webb
Desert Rage
A Lena Jones Mystery
Betty Webb
www.BettyWebb-Mystery.com
Poisoned Pen Press
Copyright
Copyright © 2014 by Betty Webb
First E-book Edition 2014
ISBN: 9781464203138 ebook
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in, or introduced into a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form, or by any means (electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise) without the prior written permission of both the copyright owner and the publisher of this book.
The historical characters and events portrayed in this book are inventions of the author or used fictitiously.
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Contents
Desert Rage
Copyright
Contents
Dedication
Acknowledgments
Prologue:
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
Chapter Fifteen
Chapter Sixteen
Chapter Seventeen
Chapter Eighteen
Chapter Nineteen
Chapter Twenty
Chapter Twenty-one
Chapter Twenty-two
Chapter Twenty-three
Chapter Twenty-four
Chapter Twenty-five
Chapter Twenty-six
Chapter Twenty-seven
Chapter Twenty-eight
Chapter Twenty-nine
Chapter Thirty
Chapter Thirty-one
Chapter Thirty-two
Chapter Thirty-three
Chapter Thirty-four
Chapter Thirty-five
Chapter Thirty-six
Chapter Thirty-seven
Chapter Thirty-eight
Epilogue
More from this Author
Contact Us
Dedication
To the brood: Paul, Jason, and Colleen,
Eric and Sandy, Ian, Alea, Ryan, Kyle, Sarah,
and to cousins Jimmy and Kenny Webb,
my childhood partners in crime.
Acknowledgments
Contrary to popular opinion, books are seldom written by just one person—there are a lot of helpers along the way. In the case of Desert Rage, many thanks to the Sheridan Street Irregulars, especially Scott Andrews, who filled me in on all things prison (but not because he’s ever been in one!); to the legal expertise of Margaret Morse; to Deputy Fire Marshall Mike MacCrone, of the Scottsdale Fire Department; and to the memory of Armetta Zielsdorf, who allowed me to use her name. My gratitude also goes out to Robert C. Keezer, Louise Signorelli, Marge Purcell, and Debra McCarthy. If there are any mistakes in this book, the mistakes are mine, not theirs.
Prologue:
2:31 p.m. Monday, July 8
The first thing Ali saw when she came through the door was the blood. The next things she saw were the bodies.
“Why’d you kill my dog?” she asked Kyle.
Kyle waited, like, forever before he answered, almost like he didn’t know what she was talking about, but then he shrugged. “Because she bit me?” He rubbed his leg like it still hurt.
Ali knelt down and placed her hand on Misty’s side. The dog’s body still felt warm. When she stroked the Yorkie’s head, it whined. She looked up at Kyle. “She’s not dead.”
“That’s all right, then. I didn’t know you cared about the dog.”
“She’s the only thing I do care for.” At the expression on Kyle’s face, she added, “Besides you, of course. So what are we going to do now? We can’t leave her like this.”
He grabbed the baseball bat leaning against the sofa. “Want me to…?”
“No!”
“Hey, girl, don’t get all jumped up about this. I only did what you wanted, didn’t I?”
“Not the Misty part. We have to take her to the vet.”
“How?
“My mom’s car. The keys are in her purse. When we were talking about running off to California together, you said you knew how to drive.”
When Ali stroked the dog again, it opened its eyes and licked her hand. Ali lowered her face to the blood-matted fur, held it there for a minute. “We’ll drop her off at the vet on the way.”
“Better get on the road, then.”
“Wait a minute.” Ali stood up, walked over to the thermostat, and turned it down as far as it would go. “I read in a mystery once where the killer did this so it would take longer for the bodies to, you know, decompose, give him time to get away.”
“Good story?”
“Better than those stupid comics you read.”
“They’re graphic novels!”
“Like there’s a difference.” As cold air blasted out of the family room vents, Ali returned to Misty and picked her up. She cuddled the dog until she realized that Misty’s blood was staining her new tee-shirt, the one with the picture of Rihanna on it. She made a sound of disgust.
“Hey, you okay?” Kyle asked.
“I’m always okay. Go up to my room and get me another top. I can’t show up at the vet’s with blood all over me.”
“Well, duh, Ali. You’ll be carrying in a bleeding dog, won’t you? Nobody’s going to think anything about your stupid shirt. Say you found her all messed up like that and brought her straight in, that, uh, your parents were out and you didn’t want to wait.”
Ali made a face. “Driving over there with blood on me. Ugh.”
With that, the two fourteen-year-olds left the house, leaving behind the cooling bodies of Ali’s mother, father, and ten-year-old brother.
Chapter One
Lena
I put the phone down and turned to my partner, who was, as usual, tapping away on his keyboard. “You won’t believe who just called me.”
“Santa Claus,” he replied, not looking up. “The Tooth Fairy.”
“The Honorable Juliana Thorsson, that’s who.”
Jimmy stopped typing. “The politician? The one in Washington?”
“Congress is in recess, so she’s back in Scottsdale and wants me to come right over.”
He grinned, his white teeth gleaming against his dark face. “Trying to win your vote, huh?”
“She wouldn’t say.”
“There’s a politician for you.”
Six years earlier, Thorsson had been elected to the U.S. Congress on a platform slightly to the right of Attila the Hun. At the age of thirty-four, she had already served two terms in the Arizona Senate, where her Olympic Bronze in skeet shooting earned her instant popularity with gun-loving Arizonans. When naked pictures of our then-U.S. Congressman surfaced in the National Enquirer, she ran for his seat. The possessor of an immaculate reputation, she won in a landslide. Now she was touted as a possible senatorial candidate. After that, maybe even the presidency.
And for some mysterious reason, this political paragon had summoned me into her presence.
I looked out the window of Desert Invest
igations and saw no pedestrians trolling the Main Street art galleries. No wonder. July has always been a rough month here in Scottsdale, and this year promised to be one of the worst yet. Only nine in the morning and it was a hundred and three.
“Something else is interesting,” I told Jimmy. “The Honorable Juliana told me not to drive my Jeep, that it was too recognizable, which means she’s already researched me. Did you get the air-conditioning in your pickup fixed yet?”
“If I say I did, are you going to ask if you can borrow it?”
“I’ll have to borrow it regardless.”
“Then lucky you. I took it in Saturday and now it’s like Alaska in there. When are you supposed to see her?”
“As soon as I can get there.”
“Bring my baby back in the same condition you borrowed it, that’s all I ask.”
Jimmy Sisiwan has been an equal partner at Desert Investigations since it opened. A full-blooded Pima Indian who lives on the nearby reservation, he performs three-quarters of our revenue-earning work—background checks for the human resources departments of local companies. Only rarely does he share fieldwork with me, but that’s the way he likes it. Especially in July.
“Have fun,” he said, tossing me the keys to his Toyota.
By the grace of our landlord, Desert Investigations had been granted three covered parking spots painted with the warning FOR DESERT INVESTIGATIONS ONLY. ALL OTHERS WILL BE TOWED. My pictograph-decorated 1946 Jeep took one of the spots, Jimmy’s Toyota another, with an empty space left for a client. Or rather, it should have been empty, considering no clients had shown up. Yet there sat a nasty-looking black Hummer 2. For the third time in a week the space-hogging beast had parked so close to my Jeep that I checked my own baby for any dings on its custom-paint job. Lucky for the Hummer’s driver, there were none.
I don’t like Hummers on principle. They’re oversized, heavy, and present a threat to the environment. They’re also pretentious, a Scottsdale trait I am heartily sick of. Out of patience with the interloper, I hauled my pen and notebook out of my carryall, and in big block letters printed, PLEASE STOP PARKING HERE; IF YOU CONTINUE, YOUR CAR WILL BE TOWED AT YOUR EXPENSE.
After tucking the note behind Big Black Hummer’s windshield wiper, I hopped into Jimmy’s pickup and took off for the Honorable Juliana’s residence.
Although called “the West’s most Western town,” Scottsdale hasn’t lived up to that motto for decades. Long ago, strip malls had replaced cattle ranches when housing developments sprawled across once-pristine desert. Now, except for a few rare pockets, the city looked just like any other metropolis: overdesigned and overcrowded.
So much for truth in advertising.
A half-hour of bumper-to-bumper traffic later, I arrived at Arabian Run, a bland condo community situated on the site of a former horse farm. Nothing was left of the horses except the name and the black silhouette of a horse on the gate blocking off the development from the great unwashed. When I tooted my horn, a rotund guard emerged from the de rigueur security hut. I announced myself as Miss Brown, the name the Honorable Juliana told me to use. With that, he opened the iron gate and ushered Miss Brown and her borrowed Toyota pickup through.
The view that greeted me was of uninspired, uniform buildings lined up next to each other in ranks so unbroken that back East, they would have passed for government-assisted housing. This meant that unlike many politicians, Juliana Thorsson wasn’t filthy rich. Not yet, anyway. The big money would roll in when, and if, she became a U.S. senator. For now she remained ensconced in an area more middle-class than upper, in a modest condo instead of one of Scottsdale’s McMansions. But the landscaping was nice. I enjoyed a slow drive through curved asphalt streets made lush with planting of purple bougainvillea, pink oleanders, and here and there—as if to remind the residents they lived in Arizona—transplanted saguaros lifted their one hundred-year-old arms to the harsh July sky.
The Honorable Juliana’s condo faced the narrow greenbelt that wove its way through the complex. At first I couldn’t figure out why flags dotted the grass, then realized I was looking at a putting green. Par what? Two?
With the covered parking spaces reserved for tenants only, I parked on the street and put up Jimmy’s sunscreen. On the exterior the sunscreen said PALEFACE GO HOME; on the other, a picture of Geronimo loomed over the sentence: FIGHTING DOMESTIC TERRORISM SINCE 1492.
That Jimmy, such a card.
The congresswoman met me at the door. “Come in quickly so the cold air doesn’t escape,” she said, waving me through. She looked somewhat older than in her campaign posters, but younger than the last time I saw her on CNN arguing about immigration with Anderson Cooper. A natural honey-blond, she downplayed her Nordic good looks by dressing like a banker. Gray suit, plain white blouse, sensible black pumps, But at age thirty-six, she was still a beauty and the dowdy outfit couldn’t hide it.
As soon as I stepped into the frigid house, a small dog of indeterminate breed limped up to meet me. She wore a cast on her right front foreleg, and her back was shaved almost bald, revealing a map work of sutures. When I bent down to pet her, she backed away with a whine.
Thorsson scooped the poor creature up in her arms. “She wants to be friendly but she’s not ready yet.”
“Looks like she’s been through a lot.”
“You could say that. By the way, do you have a different sunscreen you could put on that truck? The whole point of my asking you to drive a vehicle other than your Jeep was to avoid notice.”
“You don’t think PALEFACE GO HOME sends a nice anti-immigration message?”
She gave me a sour smile. “I’ll put the dog in the bedroom, then step into the garage and get you another sunscreen to replace that anti-American message.”
Less than two minutes after saying hello I already doubted I’d take her on as a client, but business is business. Until I knew enough to issue a formal turndown, I’d listen to what she had to say.
Her brief absence gave me a chance to look around the large living room. Not fancy, but if she won the U.S. senatorial seat, that would change. Pale blue walls, pale blue carpet, pale blue sofa and chairs. If the air-conditioning hadn’t been blasting away to beat the band, I would still have felt cold. I noted with amusement that she didn’t own one gun cabinet, she owned three, each glass-fronted case filled with enough firepower to arm a small nation. In addition, a brass-fitted antique Winchester .22 hung over the sofa, flanked by two mounted elk heads. Apparently clay pigeons weren’t her only targets. Other than the guns, I saw few personal touches. No art, no books, no knickknacks, just a couple of family photos and a pile of newspapers on the table next to the sofa. She must have loved reading about herself.
Several freshly inked campaign posters stood against one wall, giving away the congresswoman’s future plans. THORSSON FOR SENATE! they announced. A WOMAN OF THE PEOPLE.
When Thorsson returned with a lizard-green sunshade extoling Geico Insurance, I went outside and made the switch. Despite my misgivings, I was curious about this Olympian-turned-politician.
“How about some iced tea?” she asked, when she let me inside again.
“Anything cold and wet would be much appreciated. It’s over a hundred degrees already.”
“Going to be a hot one.”
“Maybe as bad as 2007.” This is how Arizonans talk when they either have nothing interesting to say or are putting off what might turn out to be an unpleasant conversation.
“Nothing can be as bad as 2007, Miss Jones.”
“Don’t be so sure. Global warming, and all.”
She frowned. “Global warming is a myth perpetrated by left-wing scientists. Sugar in your tea?”
“I like it bitter.”
“Me, too.”
At least we agreed on something.
She waved toward the sofa. “Have a seat. I’ll be right back.�
�
Apparently she had already made the tea, because almost by the time my rump landed on a blue sofa cushion, she returned and handed me a tall frosted glass filled to the brim. After a taste, I pronounced it excellent.
She sat down on the chair next to a magazine rack filled with more newspapers, sipped at her own glass. “There’s nothing like cold tea on a hot day, is there?”
“No, there isn’t. Look, I have an appointment at eleven thirty, so I would appreciate it if we got this show on the road. Why am I here? By the way, how should I address you? Congresswoman? Honorable Juliana?” I smiled to take the sting out of the questions. It was never a good idea to annoy a politician.
“Plain Juliana would be fine, Miss Jones. I don’t stand on ceremony.”
“Then call me Lena.” I kept the smile plastered to my face.
“Do you read the papers, Lena? Watch the news?”
“Sure, but I try to stay away from the political stuff.” The minute the words were out of my mouth, I knew they were a mistake because they immediately elicited the kind of political mumbo jumbo that numbed my eardrums.
“I encourage all citizens to educate themselves on the issues, especially those which concern the great state of Arizona.”
“Can’t argue with that.” I finally stopped smiling. “Could we just get on with it?”
Regally, she inclined her head. “Of course. Before I called your office, I had you investigated. You were raised in foster homes. At the age of nine, one of your foster fathers raped you. After putting up with that for a while—there was something about a pet dog he threatened to kill if you told—you stabbed him. Almost killed him, too.”
Since I’d been a minor at the time, the newspapers had refrained from printing my name or photograph, so the fact that Juliana had managed to unearth that old criminal case came as a shock. But I wasn’t about to let her know it, so I shrugged.
“‘Almost’ being the operative word, Juliana. My foster father didn’t die, just went to trial. And kudos for your own investigative skills, although I imagine that for someone with your contacts, everything is ultimately accessible, sealed records or no. Still, why does what happened to me almost three decades ago matter in the here and now?”