Robert hesitated for just a fraction of a second. “Yes.”
Estelle nodded and glanced at me. “Thanks,” she said, and Robert almost said another word but thought better of it. “I think we’re finished here,” she told me, more for Robert’s benefit than mine.
When we were out of earshot, she added, “Blabby kid, isn’t he?”
“Yes.”
Estelle grinned at my imitation. “I’d be willing to bet another twenty bucks he knows lots more than he lets on.”
“He’d have to. And did you happen to notice what else was interesting?”
Estelle frowned, and I felt an unprofessional twinge of pride that I had seen something she hadn’t. “What do you mean?”
I stopped and looked back up the trail. “He was wearing a gun.”
“Oh, that. Yes, I saw the bulge under his T-shirt when he came around the rock.” She twisted around and put a hand on the small of her back, where the gun had been.
“When you asked him if he’d seen the accident, he turned a little to face you. That’s when I saw it,” I said.
Estelle shrugged. “Probably half the people in New Mexico carry guns.” She looked back up the trail. “That’s kind of interesting, though. A gun in one hand, a Bible in the other.”
“Is that what the book was?”
“Uh huh.”
“Couldn’t read the title,” I said lamely. I concentrated on where I put my feet. It was easier going downhill, but I was top-heavy and needed to watch my step.
“If the child is Cecilia’s daughter, it’s going to be a mess trying to work through the social services department to get that kid out of the woods,” Estelle said. “Paul Garcia is working on finding Burgess’s relatives, if there are any. He should have turned something up by the time we get back.”
“And if there aren’t any?”
“Then we’ll have to work a court order of some sort.”
I nodded. “You’re running on a lot of assumptions.”
Estelle held a branch so it wouldn’t whip me in the face. “You think she should be living up here? Without her mother?”
“She didn’t seem to mind.”
“No, maybe not. I do though.” She stopped and stood for a minute with her hands on her hips, staring off into space. “Do you think that either Finn or Robert knows who tossed Cecilia Burgess?”
“No, I don’t. They would have said something if they did.”
“That’s what I was thinking.”
“And by the way,” I said, “I hate to tell you your job, but you didn’t I.D. Robert of the Rock. It might have been handy to know who the hell he is.”
“I know who he is,” Estelle replied and started off on the trail once more. I had to puff a little to catch up.
Chapter 7
The sun rolled down the edge of Chuparrosa Mesa west of San Estevan, and the wash of evening light blushed the sandstone layers below the rimrock into a dozen hues. The ceramic chimes beside the Guzmans’ front door hung motionless.
I exhaled and watched the plume of smoke curl through the chimes, to fan out and then disappear into the savinos, the peeled and smooth juniper poles that lay diagonally across the vigas to form the small porch roof. I closed the file folder and tipped my chair back until I could lean against the adobe wall.
“Robert Arajanian,” I said and tapped my index finger on the cover of the folder. “And you say that the guy who owns the trading post-Orlando Garcia-he knows him?”
Estelle Reyes-Guzman returned from the kitchen and handed me a mug of coffee. “Yes, he knew him by name. He’d had the opportunity to cash a couple of checks for the kid.”
“What kind of checks?”
“The only one he remembered for sure was one made out to Cecilia Burgess. It was her tax refund check. For just a few dollars, as far as Garcia remembers. Burgess had signed it over to Arajanian. Orlando Garcia didn’t seem to approve much. I got the impression that he thought Cecilia Burgess was wasting her time with both Arajanian and Finn.”
I opened the folder once more. “That seems to be a generally held view around here. Odd that she signed the check to the kid instead of her boyfriend Finn. Maybe the trio shares everything.” I read the file. “And Arajanian has quite a record.”
The folder had been delivered from Albuquerque earlier that afternoon by a deputy. It had been on Estelle’s desk when we returned from the hot springs, and it made interesting reading.
Robert Arajanian had experimented with the law when he was just fourteen…an assault charge filed by the parents of another high school student. I noticed the other youngster involved had been seventeen-either he’d been small for his age or a complete wimp. Or young Robert had been spectacularly aggressive. Less than a year later a charge of vehicular homicide had landed Robert Arajanian in a youth detention home for two years.
“Interesting that he wasn’t drunk for the vehicular charge…or at least there’s no mention here that he was,” I said. “The implication is that he used the damn car as a weapon.”
“He was drag racing and bumped the competition into a grove of pine trees.”
“Where’s it say that?”
“It doesn’t. I called Albuquerque while you were in the shower.”
“You don’t waste a second, do you?” I looked at the file again. “So he gets just two years for what is essentially murder.”
Estelle moved her Kennedy rocker so that she could put her feet up on a big planter that supported one sorry-looking beaver-tail cactus. She shrugged at my comment. Under New Mexico law two years was the most detention any kid got, no matter what the crime, as long as he wasn’t tried as an adult. I grunted with disgust. Murder could come pretty cheap.
After his release from the detention home, Robert Arajanian had remained clear of the law for four years. Two days before his nineteenth birthday, and eight months previous to his playing lookout on the hot springs rock, the kid had been charged with misdemeanor possession of marijuana and attempted burglary of an apartment in the Northeast Heights of Albuquerque. He’d pulled six months probation for the marijuana. The attempted burglary charge never went to court.
“Well, that’s neat,” I said. “He must be a slick talker, too, when the spirit moves him. The burglary complaint was withdrawn. His first chance at a good, solid felony as an adult and someone wimps out. So now he can possess a firearm legally. Otherwise, as a felon, he’d be in violation.”
“There probably wasn’t enough evidence to make the burglary charge stick. Who knows?”
“So,” I said. “All very interesting, but nothing yet on H. T. Finn.”
“Albuquerque didn’t have anything on him. It’s going to take a while to track him down, I suspect.” Estelle sounded disappointed-as always, hating unanswered questions.
“What do you think the odds are that either Arajanian or Finn or both pitched Cecilia Burgess over the embankment?”
Estelle grimaced impatiently. “Zero.”
“Really? Finn didn’t seem awash in grief at the news of the accident. In fact, he seemed to assume that she was already dead.”
She shrugged. “And he didn’t say anything about going into the city to visit her either, but what does that prove?”
“That he doesn’t like talking to strangers, especially the law, or that he doesn’t have a car.”
“He could hitchhike. The Indians do it all the time. Do you need more coffee?”
“No, thanks.” I sat silently as she got up and went inside. I heard the coffeepot clank against the stove burner, and she started talking before she was out of the kitchen.
“I don’t know why we’re even worrying about Finn and Arajanian anyway. What we need-” She was interrupted by the telephone. I heard her monosyllabic side of the conversation but what I heard was enough. When she hung up and returned to the porch, her face was sober.
“She died?”
Estelle nodded. “At six-sixteen p.m.” She glanced at her watch. “Twenty-two minutes ago
.”
“What’s your next step then?”
She sat down in the rocker and gazed off toward Chuparrosa Mesa. “Someone must have seen her shortly before she was struck. Did someone pick her up in the village? Was she walking up to the hot springs?”
“Late at night?”
“Who knows. And we don’t know what time she was hit either. She could have been lying there for some time. It had to have taken her some time to crawl up to the highway.”
“It’s hard to imagine, the way she was hurt.”
“Sheriff Tate said that they’re still in the process of running a complete background on her. He’ll let me know.” She made a face of frustration and leaned forward in the chair. “Not a single piece of evidence to tie in a vehicle of any kind, Tate said. No paint chips, no nothing. And…”
“And what?”
“And that’s not what really bothers me.”
“What does, then?”
“Daisy bothers me, sir.”
I said nothing and watched Estelle’s face as her agile brain sifted the facts.
She shook her head after a minute. “I hate to think of her up there with those two creeps.”
“We don’t know anything about Finn, Estelle. He says he’s the girl’s uncle. If he really is, the Department of Social Services will never give you a court order unless you can prove abuse or neglect or something like that. And if Finn’s lying to us, it’ll still take a while for a court order. And there’s one other possibility, too.”
“What’s that?”
“We don’t know for certain that the child is Cecilia Burgess’s daughter. We’re making an assumption just because her name is Daisy.”
“Come on, sir,” Estelle said in a rare display of contention. “Who else would she be? Coincidence is one thing, but that would be ridiculous. She even looks like Cecilia.”
I held up my hands in surrender. “I couldn’t tell you. And little kids all look alike to me. I’m just tossing it out as another possibility, that’s all. Farfetched, but a possibility. And maybe Finn is telling the truth. But trust Tate to dig it out. He’s a ferret.” I sighed deeply and stretched. “I’m glad it’s not my worry.”
Estelle looked at me over the top of her coffee cup. “Give me another dozen hours, and you’ll be so tied up in this case you won’t be able to sleep at night, let alone go home.” She grinned. “Como dos y dos son quatro, as mi madre would say. And besides, I need your help.”
“Yeah,” I laughed. “Another hike like today’s and you’ll be attending my funeral. You’ve got Deputy Garcia. Walk his young legs off.”
“Exactly,” Estelle said. “We’re going to find an eyewitness if we have to talk with every soul in this valley. Everybody. I asked Paul to talk with as many folks as he could, to see if anyone remembers catching a glimpse of a vehicle late last night. Especially a pickup.”
“There’s thousands of pickups around here.”
“We have to start somewhere.”
I nodded and listened to a long, plaintive growl from my stomach. “And when do we eat?”
“As soon as Francis comes home.”
I groaned. “My God! We have to wait on a country doctor? It’s apt to be midnight. I’ll be dead by then.”
Estelle laughed. “I’ll get you a beer, some chips, and salsa. That’ll tide you over. Really, he won’t be long.”
She got up and said over her shoulder as she disappeared into the house, “And I need to ask you a favor.”
“What’s that?”
“Just a second.” After a bit she returned and set the promised snacks on the porch floor beside my chair. She handed me the beer. “I need you to talk with somebody for me.”
“Who?”
“Father Nolan Parris. At the retreat house.”
I regarded Estelle with interest. “He’s the monk or friar or whatever you call ’em who was hanging out with Cecilia?”
“According to rumor.”
“He might know something. I wonder if he drives a truck.”
“A priest? No, I don’t think so.”
“Well,” I sighed, “it’s a place to start.”
Estelle grinned. “It’ll give you something to do.”
I shrugged, convinced for about thirty seconds that the reason Estelle Reyes-Guzman was asking me to talk with Parris was because of the vast years of experience I had under my belt. And then, looking across the porch in the failing light and seeing the last bits of summer sunshine play around the planes of her face, I realized Estelle’s request was astute. If she arrived at the Catholic retreat complex in uniform, there’d be talk. If she strolled in to visit in civvies, there’d be even more talk, all of the wrong kind. What could be more innocent than one old man visiting another?
“It’ll cost you several beers,” I said. I expected jocular agreement, but Estelle shook her head.
“We need to talk with Parris tonight.” She pulled a small photograph from her blouse pocket. It was a picture of Cecilia Burgess, the posed kind with the misty background that college yearbooks favor. “Make sure he looks at this.” She handed the picture to me. “See if you can get him to hold it just the way you are right now.”
I frowned. “Where’d you get this?”
“She lived in one of the small back rooms at the trading post when she wasn’t up at the springs with Finn. Garcia let me in. There wasn’t much there. Just some clothes and things. The picture was being used as a page marker in a children’s book.”
“And you want Parris’s prints?”
“I want a thumbprint.”
“Parris doesn’t have any kind of record where his prints were taken? Passport, anything like that?”
Estelle shook her head. “Not that we can find.”
“And what good will his prints do, anyway?”
“Remember the guardrail? The bloody prints, top and bottom? We assumed Cecilia Burgess somehow pulled herself over or under the rail.”
“You’re telling me the prints we saw aren’t hers…she had help?”
“That’s right. The prints aren’t hers. That’s what Sheriff Tate told me over the phone when he called to tell me Burgess died.”
“What about that guy who stopped and called on the CB radio? Maybe he tried to help her.”
“He said he didn’t. And he’s a state employee. Works in the Department of Revenue and Taxation. His prints were easy to doublecheck. He’s clean.”
“And no luck on what’s his name, with the Forest Service? He was there before you were.”
“Les Cook? He’s a cop. Not a chance.”
“Then someone else was there and split,” I said. Estelle nodded. “Might have been the driver of the vehicle, maybe someone else.” I cleaned off the photo with my handkerchief and carefully slid it in my pocket. “I’ll get Parris’s prints for you. And I suppose this means we’re going to have to walk all the way back up to the hot springs, too.”
“The prints don’t match Arajanian’s. Tate already checked for me. We don’t know about Finn. So yes, we need to go back.” I groaned at the thought of this exercise business becoming a habit.
Chapter 8
Estelle and I ate dinner without her hubby. Francis called from the clinic just about the time Estelle had to turn on some lights so we wouldn’t trip over the furniture. He’d been about to leave for home when an Indian woman walked through the door with a sick youngster.
The stoic little kid had been flinching from a middle ear infection for several days, and the infection had bloomed. When his temperature spiked through 104 degrees, the mother decided herbs weren’t enough. The kid had himself a fine case of infectious meningitis.
Estelle sighed with resignation when Francis told her he wouldn’t be home much before midnight. After the youngster was transferred to Albuquerque, Francis wanted to follow up with a visit to the pueblo to see with whom the kid had come in contact.
The two chatted for a few minutes, and when Estelle hung up I smiled. “Marry a doctor
and you starve to death.”
“Usually, it’s me who gets called out at all hours,” Estelle replied.
I leaned against the refrigerator and watched her cook. The kitchen was as tiny and cramped as the rest of the house, and I took it in at a glance. The row of bottles on the narrow windowsill above the sink surprised me-a whole alphabet of vitamins, minerals, and human fuel treatments. I reached over and picked up the largest, a collection of vitamin E capsules.
“I thought you always said that green chili cured all,” I said. She glanced my way and I put the bottle back.
“Francis wants to make sure the baby gets everything he needs,” she replied as offhandedly as if she’d remarked on the weather.
She laughed at the blank look on my face and went back to chopping onions.
“Well, congratulations,” I said. “When?”
“When what?”
“When’s it due?”
She took a deep breath. “February 10.”
I laughed. She even had that event pegged to the day. “That’s great. Does Sheriff Tate know?”
Estelle shook her head. “Francis and I agreed that I’d go on leave in October. That’s soon enough.”
“Then what?”
“We’re not sure. I don’t think I want to work.” She grinned widely. “I don’t think I want to face the wrath of mi madre. She’d never speak to me again if I left her grandson in a day-care center.”
“You two will work it out I’m sure,” I said. I picked up a loaded plate and carried it over to the table. She’d called it frijoles con something, and the food was so damn hot I accused her of serving it with a sauce of lit gasoline. But the spices-and the news about the pending kid-perked me up.
As we ate, our conversation kept circling back around to Cecilia Burgess and her boyfriends. Estelle wanted me to visit Father Nolan Parris, and there was no better time than that evening.
Shortly before nine, feeling fat from too much high-octane dinner, I arrived at the retreat complex just north of the village. As the crow flies the place was less than a mile from Estelle’s home.
The center included several small buildings clustered around a large three-story house. Monstrous cottonwoods shaded the complex and blocked out what little light there might have been from passing traffic, the moon, or even starshine.
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