He rolled his eyes. “Power? Jesus.”
“We’re here.” Lara nodded to the object rising up among the ironwood trees before them. A desert watering station.
The station consisted of no more than a 60 gallon barrel of water seated on a steel bed, the word ‘agua’ stenciled into the plastic hull. A pole rose thirty feet from the bed topped by a blue flag that dipped and sawed in the wind coming over the plain. A beacon for any unlucky soul wandering the wasteland of the Chihuahua desert, four miles from the Mexican border.
Lara climbed out and approached the tanks, checking the spigot and then the water level. “Still full,” she hollered back to Mason.
Mason stretched as he swung out of the vehicle. “Does it look like it’s been used recently?”
“No.” She examined the spigot again before circling around the water station. “No garbage or debris. No one’s been here since our last patrol.”
Mason watched the shadow of a bird pass over the scrub. “I don’t know if that’s a good thing or a bad thing.”
“Mark it in the good column,” Lara said. “Means no one’s needed it.”
The watering station was one of five set up in an arc through this leg of the county, a man-made oasis for migrants desperate enough to cross the border in this inhospitable country of sagebrush and grit. Since the tightening of the border, migrants were forced into this diabolical terrain more and more, resulting in a staggering number of deaths from exposure and dehydration.
The water stations had been set up by an organization called Humane Borders in an effort to reduce the death toll. The organization that Lara was a part of was a local outfit called Luna County Rescue that patrolled the scrubland for any migrants stranded in this unforgiving climate. She had joined the outfit two months ago and found the work to her liking, the people amiable and welcoming. She had also proved herself to be an outstanding tracker with an almost uncanny knack for finding half-dead migrants hidden amongst the scrub and rock.
“Let’s get on to the next one.” Mason turned to climb back into the truck. “Slow day means we can knock off early, hit Larry’s Hideaway before happy hour ends.”
Lara made no reply. Mason looked back and saw her standing near the tanks with her back to him. Looking out over the vast expanse of all that horizon. “Lara? You coming?”
“Something’s here,” she replied without turning around.
“Survivor?”
“Maybe.” She marched forward, boots crunching the grit of the desert floor. Nary a glance back or gesture to follow, just striding through the dwarf scrub.
“Another hunch?” Mason shook his head but followed all the same. He didn’t like the way Lara spooked out like this, just marching off to chase ghosts no one else could see. Anyone else, Mason would have ordered back to the truck but he’d learned to keep his trap shut with Lara and just follow her lead. Nine times out of ten, she’d be onto something.
They had patrolled together for over a month and Mason didn’t know the first thing about her. And it wasn’t for lack of trying. No matter how hard he pried or overshared his own business, Lara never gave up any personal details. He had no idea if she was married or where she came from or if she had family somewhere. Quiet didn’t describe the woman on that score. Worst of all, she never laughed. He’d spun out his best stories and favorite jokes but all he got was nada. Mason was determined though. He’d crack her smile if it killed him.
It was mid-day and the sun was punishing and Lara considered running back to the truck for the hat she’d left on the seat. A faint trace of scent was tickling her nose, drawing her further out into the wasteland. It wasn’t far, whatever it was, and she already knew there was no need to hurry, no need to run. Descending into the gravel wash of a dry creekbed, she halted and looked down at the thing that had lured her here.
“What’d you got?” Mason came up behind her, boots slurring the loose pebbles. “We need medical?”
“No.” Lara held up a warning hand to slow him. “Too late for that.”
Bodies left out in the unrelenting New Mexican sun bloated rapidly after death, the gases within expanding and gurgling. The body at Lara’s feet looked more like an enormous foul cocoon than anything that was human. The skin was burnished black in places, dark purple in others.
“Oh Jesus. I hate bloaters.” Mason stopped in his tracks and kept his distance from the thing in the dust.
Lara hovered over the body, studying it without touching anything. The only indication of the sex were the clothes, the face distended beyond proportion. Nothing with pockets and thus no chance of identification hidden inside. “She couldn’t have been out here that long, the way the body’s bloating like this.”
“How long you think?” Mason watched Lara scrutinize the corpse with a neutral wash over her face. Not an even upturned nose. How she managed that, he hadn’t a clue. His own stomach would often flip and churn if he got more than ten yards from a bloater. Lara? Like it was nothing, like she did this every day.
“Two days. Maybe three.” Lara stepped back and circled the body, eyes hawking the ground for anything. There, by the woman’s foot, was a small rosary in the grit. The beads coiled in the dust like a tiny rattlesnake. She hunkered down to pick it up.
“Don’t touch it, Lara.” Mason took two steps back, as if anticipating an explosion. “That body pops, the stench gas’ll knock you out.”
“Your phone got any bars?”
He dug out his cell paced around for a signal. “And here I’d thought we’d be home before sundown. Stupid me.”
Lara squatted on her heels, trying to gauge the excruciating end of this poor sojourner’s life. There was no canteen or plastic water jug anywhere in sight. Dehydration was an awful way to die. Slow and draining. She wouldn’t wish it on her worst enemy.
Old habits are hard to break and this habit, this puzzling over a dead body to determine its departure from this realm, was a strong one. Nine months ago, it had been her job to puzzle out crimes as a detective with the Portland Police Bureau over a thousand miles away in the damp capital of Oregon. The habit remained but everything else had changed drastically, not the least of which was that she was on the run from that very same police force. Since relocating to New Mexico, Lara Mendes had been living under the assumed name of Lara Quesada. And Quesada could no more resist a challenge than Mendes could so they both scrutinized the victim for any detail it might provide.
Something didn’t sit right. Lara stepped back from the body to gain perspective, thinking she had missed something in her initial examination. Whatever it was, it sent alarm bells ringing up her spine. It took two heartbeats to realize it wasn’t the corpse that was ringing the bells. It was something else, out there in the scrub. Hidden and waiting to die. Something that triggered her preternatural sense of smell.
Still pacing back the ground, Mason looked up to see his team-mate marching swiftly through the ocotillo. “Yo, Quesada! Where you going?”
She didn’t answer. Lara broke into a run, northeast into the wide void of the desert.
“Shit.”
Mason ran after her, cursing the whole way. Another spookshow turn of hers. Like one wasn’t enough for today. He’d had his fill of dead bodies and wished momentarily that he’d called in sick today or at least requested another member for today’s patrol. Lara’s spooky spells were not fun. He abandoned the call altogether and broke into a full sprint to catch up, hollering between breaths for her to stop.
She stopped and became still.
“Don’t tell me you sniffed out another one?” It was meant as a joke but when he drew level with Lara, no word of a lie, he saw her nostrils twitching.
“Someone’s here,” she said. Her eyes scanned the horizon, as if the culprit was about to pop from the ground like a jack-in-the-box.
Mason ran his eyes over the hard scrabble terrain. Nothing but nothing was out there. “How can you tell? I don’t see anything.”
He watched her nose tw
itch again and then her head dialed ten degrees east. “There.”
She was off like a shot, diving into the shade of a rocky outcropping. Digging for something under the red shale. When he caught up, Lara Quesada was dragging something from the shadows.
“Not another bloater,” he cringed. “Please.”
“Breather. Run back to the truck, get the med kit. Now!”
He couldn’t believe it. A girl, maybe seven or eight years old, curled tight into a ball like a frightened turtle but her eyes were open. Traumatized and scraped raw but alive. A breather, not a bloater. “Holy shit,” he muttered.
“Mason!” Lara snapped. “Give me your phone first. Then get the water!”
It broke the spell. He tossed his phone to Lara and broke full tilt for the truck, praying like mad that they could save the sand-gritted child left to die on the desert floor.
2
“AMY?”
Zero response. A pencil dropped, hitting the scuffed floor of the classroom. A boy in the back yawned.
“Amy Gallagher?”
Amy Gallagher fixed her gaze out the window in a glassy-eyed stare, oblivious to the classroom around her and the teacher trying to get her attention. Mr. Swan, English. Someone laughed, another muttered the words ‘space cadet’.
A million miles from the classroom, Amy was snapped back to the present by a sharp poke to her spine. She turned to see Gabby ready to stab her again. “Snap out of it,” Gabby hissed. “He’s talking to you.”
Amy swung her eyes to the front of the room. A reedy man in a gray cardigan leaned against the desk, looking at her. As did everyone else in the room. Mr. Swan smiled at her with restrained contempt. “Good morning, Amy. Nice of you to join us.”
Amy slid down her chair. “Sorry.”
“We were discussing the nature of evil in the Scottish play. The role it plays within MacBeth himself.” Mr. Swan nodded at a student to Amy’s right. “Devon here was saying that there is no evil, just psychoses. How did you put it, Devon?”
The boy shrugged. “Calling it evil is an easy-out for MacBeth. Seeing witches and stuff. It’s shifting the blame away from him when in fact, all the murderous acts come from his ambition. Calling it evil just muddies the issue, makes it easier to dismiss his own involvement.”
“Yeah but there are witches,” countered a girl in the next row. “The weird sisters. Banquo sees them too, not just MacBeth.”
Mr. Swan nodded gravely before turning a cool eye back to Amy. “So, Amy. What do you think? Was the evil real or was MacBeth simply excusing his own murderous ambition?”
Amy slouched further down, eyes on her desk, wishing it would all go away.
“Miss Gallagher,” Swan huffed. “Try and stay with us.”
Amy raised her eyes to his. “Talia’s right. Devon’s blowing psycho-babble up your butt. As usual.”
“Elaborate, please.”
“True evil exists.” She swung her gaze back to the window. “Monsters are real. And sooner or later, they get us all.”
Someone snorted up a laugh and another guffawed. Devon sat smug in vindication as the class laughed off Amy’s reply. Gabby withered in humiliation. Amy returned her gaze to the window, her expression blank and uncaring. The term ‘space-cadet’ muttered through the class for a second time.
“Your sign is a little crooked.”
“What?” Amy asked.
Gabby leaned up against the lockers. “The sign on your back. The one with the big target.”
“Funny.” Amy tossed her tattered Shakespeare text into the locker where it flopped open at the bottom. Students filed past them in the hallway, dragging their feet between the bells.
“Why do you make it harder on yourself?” Gabby posed. “Especially in Swan’s class. He grades on participation.”
“And? You care why?”
Gabby rolled her eyes. “Your grades are bad enough. Don’t give the dude ammunition to sink you.”
“What’s the point?” A student passed by, brushing Amy’s shoulder. Amy flinched as if stung. “I can’t stand this place anymore.”
Gabby blew her bangs from her eyes, watching Amy dart her head around as if expecting to get jumped. Her patience was running thin, her options dwindling about how to help Amy deal. The girl had gone through something terrible and lost her dad. Exactly what she’d gone through, Amy had never said (a sore point that she tried her best not to resent) but Gabby had spent the last three months trying to be there for her. Amy’s grief was incomprehensible and, at times, exhausting. Give her time, Gabby had scolded herself. Amy will come around, things will get back to normal. But that wasn’t happening. Something fundamental had snapped within Amy during the Christmas break and the girl had never been the same. Gabby’s experience of grief was limited, a cat that had died when she was eleven, so she was no expert but something wasn’t right. Amy was getting worse, not better, as if she was drifting away from everything that was normal. To make matters worse, Amy didn’t seem to care either.
Amy flinched again as another student brushed too close to her. Gabby didn’t know if this twitchy jumpiness was a natural part of grieving or if this was exclusive to Amy. “Easy, amigo. No one’s coming after you.”
Amy drooped her shoulders and let out a sigh. She exuded fatigue. “Wanna blow off the rest of the day?”
“I would love to but we can’t.”
Amy stared into her locker. “I don’t want to be here, Gab.”
“The staff don’t even want to be here.”
The bang, when it came, was loud and sharp. The crack popped Gabby’s ears and then all went blurry as she was yanked hard to the floor. Pulling her friend down, Amy kicked and skidded away as if she was on fire, her face pale as flour. Terror writ large in her eyes.
“Amy, stop! Let go.”
Laughter in the hallway. People lurching and howling as the sulfur tang of a detonated firecracker hung in the air. The shredded hull of the cherry bomb still smoking on the floor.
“Amy,” Gabby hissed, trying to peel her friend’s grip from her arm. “It’s just another firecracker. It’s okay.”
While the crowd howled and fist-bumped, Amy panted for breath. The naked terror in her face drained slowly as Gabby pried her arm free from her fingers. “It’s just a stupid prank.” Gabby stood and brushed herself off. She looked through the faces in the hallway and spotted a leering grin. “You’re a fucking asshole, Devon!”
Teachers scrambled into the hallway, demanding to know what was going on. Students shuffled away, claiming ignorance. Gabby took Amy’s hand and hauled her to her feet. “Time to book. Get up.”
“My knees are jelly,” Amy coughed.
“Walk it off.”
Amy felt herself propelled forward as Gabby pushed her towards the exit. The teachers buzzed and tittered around the paper remnant of the kiddie explosive like blowflies on a scrap of meat.
~
Amy’s hands were still shaking so Gabby took the keys and unlocked the door for her. They dropped their bags in the foyer and shuffled into a kitchen with an enormous fridge and a high end industrial range under a stainless steel hood. Tastefully appointed and kept spotless, much like the rest of Amy’s mother’s house. Cheryl Kessler, the former Cheryl Gallagher while married to Amy’s father, did not believe in skimping when it came to home decor or utility.
Amy dropped into a stool at the island while Gabby opened the double-doors of the refrigerator and studied its contents. “You want something?”
Amy propped her elbows onto the granite counter but said nothing.
Gabby poked around the shelves. “Maybe you should eat something. Let’s see, last night’s take-out. Tabouli salad. Froo-froo cheese.”
“I’m not hungry,” Amy muttered.
“Right. A drink, then.” Gabby plucked a large bottle of craft-brewed lager and popped the cap off with her Bic lighter. Plunked two glasses down before them.
“Don’t open Norm’s beer,” Amy said. “Cheryl will ha
ve a conniption fit.”
“Too late.” Gabby poured and pushed one glass into Amy’s hand. “Drink up. It’ll calm you down.”
They sipped their beer in silence for a moment. Gabby tapped her mismatched fingernails on the countertop. “I think you should go talk to someone.”
Amy simply closed her eyes.
“I know, I know,” Gabby continued. “You don’t want to but you’re getting worse. Not better. You’re jumpy and paranoid—”
“I’m not paranoid,” Amy stopped her.
Gabby twisted her lips into a sneer. “You’re constantly looking over your shoulder when we’re out somewhere. You clock every exit no matter where we go. You startle at the smallest noise. I keep waiting for this to pass, telling myself it’s some phase you’re going through but it’s not going away. Like today. What the hell was that?”
“What?” Amy shrugged. “It startled me.”
“No. See, I was startled. You were downright terrified, like a bomb had gone off. Your fingers left bruises in my arm you were grabbing me so hard.”
“I’m sorry.”
“This is what’s getting worse. These weird tics and the jumpiness. You need to talk to someone.”
“Enough already.”
Gabby sighed dramatically. “Something’s bottled up inside you and it’s coming out in weird ways. You gotta let it out before it screws you up completely.”
“It’s just grief. It does weird things to people. That’s all.”
“Then talk about it. Let it out.”
Amy wiped away the moisture beading on the side of her glass. Her friend wasn’t far off the mark. Sometimes there was so much bottled up she thought she would explode but there was no way to let it out. She shrugged again. “What’s there to say? I miss him. I wish he wasn’t dead. I’m sad he’s gone. That’s all there is to it.”
“Bullshit,” Gabby barked. “There’s a million more things to say. We’re supposed to be friends but you won’t even give an inch about the worst thing that’s happened to you? Don’t you trust me?”
Bad Wolf Chronicles, Books 1-3 Page 55