Bloodville
Page 13
Doc sopped up the last of his over-easy eggs with a piece of toast as the phone rang.
―I guess you're not coming to Albuquerque today,‖ Vee said.
―Hadn't planned on it. They's a hell of a pile of snow in the school yard.‖
―I know. We got snow dick-deep here in Albuquerque and the TV says you got it worse out there. Torrez said for you to give some thought to what we do next on the Budville deal since what you got from Budwister don't seem to be too helpful up to this point. He said you might as well do something useful while you sit around on your ass. Exact words.‖
―I thought he‘d assigned you to somethin‘ else.‖
―He did, but Bud Rice came up over coffee this morning.‖ ―What‘s Torrez want me to think about?‖
―Like maybe someone local did the killings. Bud wasn't exactly
popular with our Indian brothers, or much of anyone else that lives around Budville.‖
―That‘d mean Flossie and Nettie both know who did it.‖
―I guess you could look at it like that,‖ Vee said. ―But quite a few people come and go around there that Flossie might not know. You know, the teachers that live at the Laguna-Acoma High School teachers village, they come and go about every year. So do the teachers at the BIA school over in Old Laguna. The socialist workers and medical techs at the Indian Health Care Center and the section hands on the railroad turn over pretty often too, not to mention the construction workers up on the Interstate. No reason for Flossie to know all of them. Maybe somebody like that got greedy.‖
―Maybe not, too,‖ Doc said, ―but I'll give it a think, as old Uncle Penn used to say. What else?‖
―Bud spent six or seven years in state and federal court trying to stop Interstate 40 from being built, and then from opening up. Maybe he made some enemies.‖
―He probably made more friends than enemies,‖ Doc said. ―Hell, none of the business people wanted the Interstate in the first place, and the Indians as I recall, didn't much give a damn one way or the other, but I'd think if they was to take a position, it'd be against the new road. Besides, Bud's the one that muscled the feds into buildin‘ interchanges for Cubero and Los Cerritos. That shouldn't make anyone around Budville mad at him.‖
―You keep all them thoughts in mind because I know Torrez is gonna ask you about it sooner or later. I thought of something else we should‘ve checked out and I don't think anyone did. I know I didn't.‖
―What's that?‖
―Bud used to write down license numbers on the side of his gas pumps. That's why he carried that pencil stub around with him all the time.‖
―Why‘d he do that?‖
―He told me he only did it when he thought a car was suspicious for some reason or other. He figured if they skipped without paying for gas, he'd have a license plate number to call in. Wouldn't it be something if the killer's plate number was right there in front of the store all the time?‖
―That'd be somethin' all right. Hell, Vee, I can't sit around here all day knowin‘ about a thing like that. I‘m goin‘ to Budville.‖
―How are you gonna....‖
―Don't worry nothin' about it. I'll get there. I'll be in Albuquerque tonight. One way or another.‖
―As long as you're going to Budville anyway, you might ask Flossie if she'd provide you with Bud's wrecker call logs for the past couple of months. Maybe there's a motive in there.‖
―Right, Vee. See ya later.‖
Doc‘s state-owned Plymouth made deep tracks in the fresh snow on Hill Street until he reached Old 66 Avenue and turned east toward the Interstate 40 interchange. He made it to Budville with only the minor mishap of banging the right rear fender of the Plymouth into a guardrail post when he skidded on ice as he turned off the Interstate and on to the Old Road at the Chief Rancho Motel east of Grants. The llano between there and Budville seemed a giant field of cold white under a gray/black overcast sky surrounded by tree-mottled hills barely visible through billowing clouds of blowing snow. The road, plowed out a few hours before, was clear out on the flat but Doc broke through new snow in places where low hills sheltered the road from the wind and drifts piled up quickly. Traffic was light.
Some obliging State Highway Department snowplow operator had cleared the snow from the driveway of the Budville Trading Post. Doc stood at the counter and drank a cup of hot coffee with Flossie. Nettie sat quietly in her customary chair near the magazine rack, her face as pale and sickly as it had been when he questioned her more than a month before. She looked unwell and uncomfortable. Doc wondered if she was ill. He didn't ask.
Doc found it hard to visualize the night of the murders in that room, the hours he spent there with the gore and the stink, black fingerprint powder all over everything, taking measurements, drawing diagrams, lifting fingerprints, looking for the clue that would bring everything together and point the finger of guilt in the right direction. Flossie stood near where Bud's blood had soaked into the floorboards. The bullet hole in the far wall had been plugged and painted over. The bullet hole in the filing cabinet was still visible.
Spurlock didn't feel inclined to talk to Flossie about the status of the case, mindful of her resentment when Mat Torrez asked her about Bunting. Doc thought about asking if she remembered Herman showing her a photograph on the Sunday morning after Bud died but he didn't do that either. They talked about the snowstorm and Doc reported road conditions between Gallup and Budville. After a while Doc said, ―Agent Valverde told me Bud used to write license plate numbers down on the gas pumps out there. Is that a fact?‖
―He did that sometimes. When he thought somebody might skip without paying for gas.‖
―Do you reckon he wrote down a number on the night, you know, when...?‖
―When he got killed? I don't know. Like I said before, I was in the bathroom curling my hair. You notice, Nettie?‖
―He could have ... done but I didn't ... see him.‖
―You haven't noticed any new numbers on either one of the pumps since then?‖
―No. They all look about the same to me.‖
―You mind if I take a look?‖
―No I don't. Do whatever you think. I still want whoever did it to get caught. If it wasn't that man Bunting, then whoever did do it.‖
―We appreciate your help, Mrs. Rice. There is one other thing. Could you hunt out the wrecker log for the past few months, before November 18. No hurry. I can pick them up on my way back to Gallup tomorrow or Friday but we'd like to look them over.‖
―I'll do that, yes, and you be careful on that road out there, officer. It's about as bad as I've ever seen it.‖ As an afterthought, she said, ―Is that Mr. Torrez still working on Bud's case too?‖
―Captain Torrez. Yes ma'am. He's my boss.‖
―You tell him I said hello, would you? I enjoyed visiting with him. He stopped in one evening, right after Bud died, and I appreciated it. We had a nice talk.‖
―I'll tell him you said so, Mrs. Rice.‖
―But you know, he told me he‘d see that I got Bud‘s money, you know, the money you said he had in his pocket, six, seven hundred dollars, whatever it was. I never have got it.‖
―I‘ll check on that for you.‖
―I‘d appreciate it.‖
The old-fashioned gas pumps dated from the late 1930's. Faded red in color, with opaque white glass globes on top, they stood six feet tall on their concrete island and each advertised the Phillips 66 Oil Company. Doc found lists of numbers on both pumps, right beside apertures where hose nozzles attached when not in use. Some notations were faint, mere pencil marks and hard to read on the pale background. The paint was thin in places as if Bud sometimes erased numbers from his list. The officer copied down the ones he could read and guessed at the others. Most seemed to be from out of state. Before each was a notation such as Cal or Tex or Arz and then the letters and numbers of a license plate. After others were letters, some alone and some in groups, such as BW or RB. The entry at the t
op of the list on the east pump was different from the rest. It read:
46 F PU BY NL.
Spurlock drew a circle around it on his pad. He didn't have the slightest idea what it meant.
On the drive along I-40 from Budville to Albuquerque, dodging stalled cars and trucks stuck in snow banks, Doc thought about where the investigation was going and he admitted to himself that it wasn't going much of anywhere. The lead from Budwister still had promise, but not much. Billy Ray White had a dozen aliases and his rap sheet was long as a cow country barbwire fence. Most interesting was that the mug shots of Billy Ray White and Larry Bunting showed them to look as much alike as brothers. Their facial features were similar and they kept their hair cut and combed in the same style. They were within an inch of being the same height and within a year of being the same age. Nothing indicated their paths had ever crossed.
With Billy Ray White's file and photographs spread out in front of them, Spurlock and Mat Torrez had discussed how best to use the information. Doc was in favor of using White's photograph for a photo ID and trying for an arrest warrant.
―I understand that you‘d like to see this matter closed out,‖ Torrez had said. ―Yo también. But, let's make sure we do it correctly or we'll end up back behind the eightball again. Even if Flossie made another positive ID, I'm not sure we could get a warrant. Maybe Wilcoxson could manage it, but I doubt it. Her last identification didn't hold up, and that‘s all we have to connect this White, or whatever his name is, to these murders.‖
―I guess you're right, Cap, but damn I hate this pussyfootin' around. What do you want me to do?‖
―Send out a teletype to the western states. See if there have been any similar crimes within the past six months. Also, put out some feelers. Check with our counterparts in Louisiana. New Orleans. Check White's prison record. Find out as much about him as you can. When, and if, our investigation leads in his direction, we'll be ready.‖
Doc drove into Albuquerque as the afternoon light faded. He usually stayed at the Crossroads Motel on Central Avenue just across from the Presbyterian Hospital. The red neon ―No Vacancy‖ light blinked as he pulled into the driveway. He went into the office anyway. He thought maybe the clerk could suggest another place to stay, but the night manager couldn‘t help. With the snowstorm—the State Police discouraged travel in all directions—and Christmas less than a week away, not a motel in Albuquerque had a vacancy. The clerk said the Red Cross had cots available in the gym of Albuquerque High School a few blocks west on Central Avenue. Doc declined. He spent an uncomfortable night on the sofa in Captain Torrez's office.
CHAPTER V
As point man for the State Police investigation into the courthouse raid at Tierra Amarilla, the snowstorm was a major inconvenience for Captain Mat Torrez. Snow packed roads made it difficult for State Police agents to get in and out of the high mountain villages of northern New Mexico. The weather also made it hard for Mat to get out to Budville, and Dixie‘s Place, to see Karen McBride, but he managed it from time to time. Those trysts became important. Too often, Mat thought, when he wasn‘t with Karen, he spent his evenings alone in his house, a lonely place since his wife died, drinking vodka until he slept, often in a stupor.
Mat spent Christmas Eve with Nita. They ate dinner at Sadie's Mexican Kitchen on north Fourth Street. Mat felt proud squiring his daughter around town. A beautiful girl, he thought, blessed with onyx black hair, clear, dark eyes and smooth olive skin; her face broad and cheekbones high, she seemed always smiling. Mat marveled at how much she looked like her mother—even the way she dressed, in white cashmere sweater and charcoal gray skirt—and she had a way of saying things that reminded him even more of his late wife. He enjoyed being reminded of of Nita's mother. Their marriage provided Mat with the happiest years of his life.
The smell of chile and pork cooking in Sadie's made for a pleasant, homey, admosphere. They ate red chile enchiladas and drank Dos Equis beer before they went home to open gifts. Mat made hot buttered rum for both of them before he told Nita he'd be spending Christmas Day in Budville. Nita felt vaguely uncomfortable about the arrangement. She hadn't met Karen, didn't know anything much about her, but her father hadn't shown such interest in any woman since her mother died. On the other hand, Nita wanted to spend Christmas Day with her boyfriend, at his place, and her father's trip to Budville fit her purposes exactly. She didn't protest his absense.
Snow remained deep on the ground, but Christmas Day was sunny and warm and the mountain air in Budville was filled with the friendly smell of piñon and cedar smoke. Following a midafternoon meal with Grandma McBride, Mat and Karen went outside and threw snowballs at each other before they drove to room seven of the motel at Villa de Cubero. Karen had reserved it. They sat on the bed, each with a beer in hand.
―Ok, my captain,‖ Karen said, ―where are we going with this?‖
―I was hopeful that we might indulge ourselves in adult sexual prerogatives. Is that a possibility, do you think?‖
―I certainly hope so. But I meant where are we going with this whole thing. The first time we madly groped each other was in this very room only one month ago.‖
―Thirty-five days, to be exact.‖
―You've been counting days?‖
―Every one of them. This is the seventh time we‘ve shared this bed. I can provide you with more detail, if you‘d like.‖
―Not necessary,‖ she said. ―I remember. I spend most of my time thinking about you, too, Mateo Torrez. And us. And this bed. Is there another bed, somewhere, in my future?‖
―What is wrong with this one? I've come to enjoy and appreciate it very much myself. After only one month, are you making demands on me?‖
She elbowed him in the ribs. ―Thirty-five days. Yes I am. Grandma is getting close to winding up her business out here. Flossie wants to lease the bar to the guy that runs King's Cafe. Joe Garcia. She thinks he'll work a little harder to turn a profit, and she's probably right, too. I can't get very excited about the bar business. Neither can grandma.‖
―How soon will you be moving?‖
―I don't know. A couple of months. March. April. Before summer, anyway. Grandma's got a man interested in buying some of the horses, but she's not letting him touch a fetlock until the check clears the bank. She's talking about boarding the rest of them in Albuquerque. Besides, we've got to get the house in town opened up and ready to live in again.‖
―Where is it?‖
―Out on Rio Grande Road, past Camino del Pueblo.‖
―That's the high rent district, no?‖
―Well, yeah. Grandma is a little rich.‖
―A little rich? How much is a little rich? I mean.... It is not my business, but.... A little rich?‖
―She's not rich like the Beetles, or Elvis, but she could match quarters with, say, the Unsers, you know, the race car drivers.‖
―I know Bobby and Al Unser. They own property up in Rio Arriba County, not far from where I‘ve been spending a lot of my time lately. Investigating the shooting of Officer Nick Saiz, and all that. Reyes López Tijerina.‖
―You're avoiding my question. What about my bed?‖
―Cannot your abuela rica afford you una cama?‖
―Sure, but that's only a piece of furniture. I'm talking about our bed. Your‘s and mine.‖
―You are a brazen gringa. You are suggesting a liaison, no?‖
―And you are a mealy-mouth Mexican. Yes. I led you to this bed. Now you lead me to the next one. ¿Sí?‖
They stopped talking then, and he undressed her, and she him, and they made love well into the evening hours. Most lives contain but few truly memorable times and Christmas, 1967, was a day Mat Torrez cherished for what remained of his life.
Mat had much to think about as he drove home. He knew he didn‘t want to lose Karen but he didn't know how to make a commitment to her. He worried about Nita. He‘d never taken a woman home before and he had not the slightest idea how to tell his daughter he l
oved another woman. There'd been no one since his wife died and Nita had helped him keep loneliness at bay. But then Nita graduated from UNM at mid year and would be starting graduate school in January. He didn't know what she had in mind for the future—whether she‘d be leaving him—but he did know he didn't like her boyfriend. He supposed all fathers hated their daughter's boyfriends. Ah well, he thought, he‘d see Karen again on New Year's Eve. Maybe they could talk about the future then. Maybe they would accomplish more if they were not sitting on a bed when they discussed it. Maybe they could complete a conversation.
Agent Spurlock drove to Santa Fe on Saturday, January 13th to meet with Captain Mat Torrez for a confabulation on the Rice/Brown murders. On orders from Governor Dave Cargo, by way of Col. Sam Black, Torrez had paid scant attention to the Budville murders since January 3 when the dead body of Eulogio Salazar, the Rio Arriba County jailer and courthouse raid witness, was found in his pickup truck along a rural road near El Vado Lake in Rio Arriba County. The jailer had been beaten to death. Chief Sam Black took personal charge of the case.
―I‘ve never seen anyone‘s face beaten in like that,‖ he said after viewing the body. ―You couldn‘t even tell it was Eulogio. I‘ve seen a lot of guys beaten, but never nothing like this.‖
Legal and political considerations made the Salazar murder important in an election year. The jailer, wounded when the Rio Arriba County courthouse was raided by the so-called Alianzia the previous June, had announced his willingness to testify against Reyes Tijerina and other members of the group. Chief Black assigned 17 officers, including Captain Mat Torrez and Deputy Chief Martin Vigil, to work on the case full time. Governor Cargo took a personal interest.