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Once, before he began relying on the premade hamburger patties, one of them had choked on a chunk of gristle in the piece of meat he had given her. She had choked and gagged and finally spit it out, but he had forced her to eat it anyway. She had chewed and chewed and chewed for what seemed forever before she was finally able to choke it down. That was the ultimate power over someone-to know you could, if you wanted, force them to eat their own vomit.
That was actually what Larry liked most-having them fear him. The more his girls tried not to submit, the better he liked it. When he was with Gayle, she was the one who called the shots, but that was about her needs, not his. In the bas.e.m.e.nt, he was the one in control, but even there Gayle held the ultimate veto power. She would arbitrarily change girls on him. Just when he had one trained the way he wanted, Gayle would take her away. Then he'd have to do without until she came up with a replacement. Fortunately there was always a new girl available. Gayle would make a few inquiries, and within days or weeks, a new one would appear, drawn from the plentiful stock to be found at one of the many detention centers served by Medicos for Mexico.
Larry wondered sometimes about that first girl in Mazatlan-the one Gayle had served to him with her limbs bound by Gayle's own brightly colored scarves. After her "session," the girl had been given money and food and sent on her way, but all that had happened while Larry was in the shower. Gayle told him she had helped the girl dress and had taken her home, but now, given what had happened to the ones who had followed in her footsteps, Larry doubted that was true. The way Daniella was starting out-Larry had no difficulty remembering her name-she most likely would have turned into a two-bit wh.o.r.e. Gayle had probably done the little s.l.u.t an enormous favor by putting her out of her misery before she had a chance to grow up. As for the girls since then? For them, too, growing up had never been in the cards.
Carrying the plate of food-the hamburger patty, a spoonful of cold refried beans, and a chunk of stale tortilla-Larry went to the bas.e.m.e.nt door and unlocked it with the key he always carried on his belt. As soon as the door opened, he knew something was different. The emptiness of the place blew up around him-along with a coppery telltale odor he recognized at once. Even before he started down the stairs, he knew what to expect. Still, he was astonished by the carnage Gayle had left in her wake.
Usually when this happened, Larry had done something wrong. Either he'd made some kind of blunder at work or done something Gayle didn't approve of, and this was her way of punishing him for it. She never told him in advance when she was going to rob him of his latest plaything, and she never did it while he was home. Gayle would come to the house, use her own keys to gain access, and then leave the mess for him to find-and clear away-on his own.
Shaking his head, Larry returned to the kitchen and dumped the food into the garbage. Then he went out to the garage for the power washer he would need to take the bloodstains off the bas.e.m.e.nt's polished concrete floors and walls.
When she murdered Roseanne Orozco, Gayle Stryker had been cleaning up after her husband. One way or another, Larry had been cleaning up after Gayle ever since.
Gabe "Fat Crack" Ortiz sat in the warm sun and considered his life. By Tohono O'odham standards, he had lived to a ripe old age-seventy-two. More and more he was thinking about what Looks at Nothing had once told him. in the warm sun and considered his life. By Tohono O'odham standards, he had lived to a ripe old age-seventy-two. More and more he was thinking about what Looks at Nothing had once told him.
"I have lost my sight," S'ab Neid Pi Has S'ab Neid Pi Has had told his new protege as they raced toward Diana Ladd's Gates Pa.s.s home in Fat Crack's speeding tow truck. "I have not lost my vision." had told his new protege as they raced toward Diana Ladd's Gates Pa.s.s home in Fat Crack's speeding tow truck. "I have not lost my vision."
Only lately had he begun to have a partial understanding of what had happened eight years earlier, when Delia's great-aunt Julia Joaquin had come to see him. As one of the movers and shakers in the village of Little Tucson, the old woman was ushered into the tribal chairman's office with appropriate ceremony. Fat Crack had greeted her formally and in their native language. He'd been prepared for a certain amount of small talk, but Julia got straight to the point.
"Do you remember my sister's daughter, Ellie Chavez?" Julia asked. "And her little girl, Delia?"
Fat Crack had closed his eyes and remembered that little girl with her luminous brown eyes, watching him from the shadows of Sister Justine's garage as he labored to put the dead Falcon back together. He remembered how, later on, he had heard that Ellie Chavez had finally divorced her husband about the same time she graduated from college. He had also heard rumors that she'd taken a rich Anglo woman to be her lover, but Gabe Ortiz paid little attention to gossip.
"I remember them both," he said. "I knew them when Ellie was leaving to go to school-left and didn't come back."
Julia frowned. "Things were bad between her and Manny. When one of the sisters from Topawa found a way for Ellie to go to college, she didn't want to miss the chance. I lost track of Ellie years ago, but I've stayed in touch with Delia. Her mother has a doctorate now and lives somewhere back east."
"And Delia?" Fat Crack asked. "The last I heard she was going to law school."
Julia Joaquin nodded. "She works for the BIA in Washington, D.C."
"I'm glad to hear it," Fat Crack said. "We need good Indian lawyers in Washington."
"I'm worried about her, though," Julia said. "I'm afraid something's wrong. She's married now, to that Philip Cachora."
"Philip Cachora?" Fat Crack repeated. "From Vamori?"
"From Vamori originally," Julia said. "He met Delia at some fancy party in Washington."
Gabe Ortiz closed his eyes and considered the odds against such a thing happening. The idea that two people born a few miles apart on the same Arizona Indian reservation would meet, fall in love, and marry in a big city on the far side of the continent seemed highly unlikely.
"Philip Cachora has been gone for a long time, too."
"Even longer than Delia," Julia Joaquin agreed. "He went off to Santa Fe to become an artist. And I guess he did, too."
"Why are you worried?" Fat Crack asked.
"She doesn't say anything, but her letters are different now," Julia said. "And since you're going to Washington..."
When she mentioned that, Fat Crack finally understood part of the reason for Julia Joaquin's visit to his office. Tohono O'odham tribal chairman Gabe Ortiz, along with leaders from several other reservations in the Western states, was due to attend an Indian gaming conference to be held in Washington, D.C., the following month.
"She might not appreciate my interference," Fat Crack said uneasily.
"I don't expect you to do anything," Julia said quickly. "But I thought if you could just see her, maybe you could tell me if she's okay."
And that's when he understood the rest of it. The tribal council was sending the tribal chairman on a mission to Washington. Julia Joaquin was sending a medicine man.
"All right," he said. "I'll see what I can do. How do I reach her?"
Julia reached in her pocket, pulled out a piece of paper, and handed it over. On it was a street address but no phone number.
That was why, a month later, late in the day, Fat Crack found himself standing on Kalorama Street in front of a three-story walk-up. The information operator had informed him that the telephone number for Philip Cachora was unlisted, leaving Fat Crack no choice but to show up unannounced on Delia and Philip's doorstep.
Approaching the door of the building, Fat Crack rang the bell next to their name and waited for several minutes. Finally, when he was about to walk away, a disembodied male voice spoke through an intercom. "Yes?"
If this was Philip Cachora, his voice was strangely slurred. "Is Delia here?" Fat Crack asked.
"Who wants to know?"
"My name is Gabe Ortiz-a friend of hers from back home."
"I don't remember her mentioning you."
"She might have known me as Fat Crack."
"Fat Crack?" Philip repeated slowly. "The guy with the tow truck?"
"That's right."
"Just a minute. I'll be right down."
Less than a minute later, the front door opened. A slight young man-a blond teenager-burst out of the doorway and then hurried down the street at a half-trot, shoving in his shirttail as he went. A full minute later, another figure appeared at the door-this one recognizably Tohono O'odham.
Philip Cachora was a burly man in his midforties. He exhibited all the obvious traits of an urban Indian gone to seed. He stepped outside the front door and pulled it closed behind him. When he let go of the door, Philip stumbled and faltered. He had to place one hand on the building's outside wall to steady himself. His breath reeked of beer. The distinctive odor of marijuana clung to his hair and clothing.
"Delia's not home," he muttered.
"When do you expect her?"
Reflexively, Philip glanced at his watch, then shrugged. "Don' know," he mumbled thickly. "After. She's at a meeting somewhere."
Philip Cachora had been away from the reservation for a long time, but time and distance had yet to strip him of his distinctively Tohono O'odham manner of speech. "Why'dya want her?"
There was more than a hint of belligerence in his voice. Fat Crack Ortiz had dealt with enough p.i.s.sed-off drunks to read the signals and be wary. Philip was two decades younger and much heavier than him. That didn't make Philip tougher than Fat Crack, but it did make him dangerous.
Without having to be told, Fat Crack knew much of what was going on. It made him sad. All those years ago, Ellie Chavez had taken her young children and fled her abusive husband. By doing so she must have hoped to save them all. Despite Ellie's best efforts, her daughter had married a man much like her own father. No wonder her letters to Julia Joaquin had changed. She was probably too embarra.s.sed to admit that she was repeating her mother's mistakes.
"I was thinking about offering her a job," Fat Crack replied.
In actual fact, he hadn't been thinking about it until the words burst unbidden from his mouth. He had known for months that Elias Segundo, the current tribal attorney, was thinking about retiring due to ill health. It wouldn't have been right to start a job search for his replacement before Elias was ready, but now...
Philip looked at Fat Crack speculatively. "What kind of job?"
Before Gabe Ortiz could answer, a shiny black Saab nosed its way up to the curb and stopped in a pa.s.senger-loading zone. Leaving the car with its flashers blinking, an Indian woman wearing a smart red wool suit and matching high heels stepped out. Delia Cachora's long black hair was pulled back and fastened in a smooth bun at the base of her neck. She had grown into a strikingly attractive woman. What Fat Crack instantly recognized, however, were her wonderfully luminous eyes. Those hadn't changed.
"What's going on?" she asked, glancing apprehensively between the two men.
"Guy here wants to offer you a job," Philip muttered. "I'm going to buy myself a drink."
Delia was clearly embarra.s.sed by her husband's behavior. "I'm sorry," she said, holding out her hand. "Things have been a little rough for Philip lately, but I must apologize, Mr.-"
"Don't apologize," Fat Crack said. "My name's Ortiz, Gabe Ortiz. You might remember me as Fat Crack."
It took Brian Fellows half an hour to get from the Fast Horse Ranch crime scene investigation to Professor Rice's foothills address. Brian drove up Pontotoc Road and stopped in front of a low-slung faux-adobe house with bright blue trim. A maroon four-wheel-drive Toyota Tacoma pickup truck with a matching camper sh.e.l.l sat parked on half the driveway in front of a closed two-car garage. Jotting down the license number, Brian called it in to Records. Within a minute Sh.e.l.ley had an answer for him. The Tacoma was registered to Medicos for Mexico. If this was Erik LaGrange's company vehicle, it might explain why there was no vehicle registered in his own name. It was also possible that Brian would find Erik LaGrange himself inside the house. half an hour to get from the Fast Horse Ranch crime scene investigation to Professor Rice's foothills address. Brian drove up Pontotoc Road and stopped in front of a low-slung faux-adobe house with bright blue trim. A maroon four-wheel-drive Toyota Tacoma pickup truck with a matching camper sh.e.l.l sat parked on half the driveway in front of a closed two-car garage. Jotting down the license number, Brian called it in to Records. Within a minute Sh.e.l.ley had an answer for him. The Tacoma was registered to Medicos for Mexico. If this was Erik LaGrange's company vehicle, it might explain why there was no vehicle registered in his own name. It was also possible that Brian would find Erik LaGrange himself inside the house.
As Brian considered his next move, a woman at the house directly across the street came down her long graveled driveway hauling a wheeled garbage container behind her.
Brian got out of his car. At his approach, the woman placed both hands on her hips and regarded him suspiciously. "Can I help you?"
He offered her a glance at his identification wallet. "I'm curious about your neighbors, the ones who live here," he said, pointing.
"The Rices?" she asked. "Frieda and Ray are out of town right now. They're in Europe somewhere. They're not expected back until the beginning of fall semester."
"That's their truck, then?" Brian asked, pointing.
"Oh, no," the woman responded. "That belongs to their house-sitter. I don't know him except to see him on the street, but he seems like a very nice young man. Clean-cut. Quiet. Never causes any trouble. He seems to spend quite a bit of time with his mother. That's not something you see too often with most young people."
Brian paused long enough to write himself a note: "Check out LaGrange's mother."
When he looked back up, the woman was frowning. "There's nothing wrong, is there? I mean, he's not in any trouble or hurt or anything, is he?"
"No, ma'am," Brian said politely. "No trouble so far as we know. Just making a few routine inquiries. Thanks so much for your help."
Leaving his Crown Vic parked where it was, Detective Fellows walked up to the driveway, toward the Rices' front door. As he ambled past the parked pickup, Brian caught sight of a dark red smudge on the back b.u.mper. He had been in homicide long enough to recognize something that looked suspiciously like blood. On the shady side of the car he paused and felt the tires. Enough heat lingered in the rubber for Brian to be reasonably sure the truck had been driven sometime during the day.
Getting warmer, Brian thought to himself. Brian thought to himself. And not just the tires, either. And not just the tires, either.
He checked to make sure his weapon was well within easy reach, then he walked up to the front door and rang the bell. While he waited for someone to answer, he examined the door and casing. Both were painted blue, but at arm level he spotted yet another suspicious smear.
Brian Fellows rang the bell again and waited for the better part of a minute before giving up and returning to the Crown Vic where, once again, he called in to the department. "I may be onto something," he told Lieutenant James Lytle, the weekend supervisor in Investigations. "I'll need a second detective out here-a detective and a warrant. Tell PeeWee I'm sorry to spoil his day off."
While he waited for PeeWee Segura to show up, Brian called home as well. "I'm still on that case," he told Kath when she answered. "It's just starting to heat up. No telling when I'll be home."
As an experienced officer for the Border Patrol, Kath Fellows knew all about the vagaries of law enforcement. "Fair enough," she told him. "I won't wait up."
Thirteen.
Andrea Tashquinth climbed into Brandon's Suburban and shut the door. "I don't know why Mother's doing this," she said. "Bringing it up after all this time won't do any good."
"Your mother's looking for closure," Brandon told her.
"Closure?" Andrea repeated bitterly. "What's the point? Roseanne died, and the cops always thought my father did it. They never arrested him. n.o.body ever proved it, but it wrecked Daddy's life. People talked about him behind his back. He knew it. We all did." As she spoke, Andrea Tashquinth had been staring down at her lap. Now she looked up at Brandon defiantly.
"Mother told Sam-"
"Sam?" Brandon interrupted.
"My husband. He's the one who gave Mother a ride into town yesterday."
Brandon nodded, remembering the invisible son-in-law who had waited patiently outside their Gates Pa.s.s home for several long hours the previous day.
"Mother told him," Andrea resumed, "that you're doing this for free. I can't believe that's true. Mother doesn't have much money, Mr. Walker. She won't be able to pay you anything."
"As I told her yesterday, Ms. Tashquinth, your mother doesn't have to pay. Neither do you. TLC offers its services free to people like her. We take on old homicide cases and try to solve them. There's no charge-no financial charge, that is-but there is a cost," he added.
Andrea's dark eyes narrowed. "What's that?" she demanded.
"The cost is in pain for you, your mother, and for everyone else connected to your sister-the very real pain of bringing it up again. You may think you've forgotten all about it," he added, "but once you allow yourselves to remember, it'll be as real as if it happened yesterday."
Suddenly, amazingly, Andrea Tashquinth began to sob. "I know," she said. "It already is. I think about it every day because..." she added, "it's all my fault."
The story came out then in fits and starts. "I was almost two years older than Roseanne," Andrea said. "When I went to first grade, there weren't many jobs on the reservation and our parents were both migrant workers. They went away for months at a time. Whenever they were gone-to California or Washington or Oregon-Roseanne and I stayed at home with our grandmother-our father's mother-in Ak Chin Ak Chin."
"Arroyo Mouth," Brandon Walker responded in English.
Andrea cast him a sidelong glance. She wasn't accustomed to Mil-gahn Mil-gahn who spoke Tohono O'odham. Once again, just as it had with Andrea's mother the day before, Brandon's facility with the Desert People's native language allowed her to relax a little as she continued. who spoke Tohono O'odham. Once again, just as it had with Andrea's mother the day before, Brandon's facility with the Desert People's native language allowed her to relax a little as she continued.
"When I went off to school on the bus that first day, Roseanne cried and cried. Our grandmother was a mean old woman, and Roseanne didn't want to be left alone with her. When I came home, I told Roseanne there were kids her age in another cla.s.s, and she begged me to take her along. The next day, I told my grandmother that Roseanne was supposed to go, too. It was a lie, of course, but Grandmother didn't know any better. She let us go.
"When we got to school, everything was fine until Roseanne realized that she couldn't be in the same cla.s.s with me. She got scared and started to cry. She cried so hard that finally the princ.i.p.al came. He was a big man-a huge man. He picked Roseanne up and carried her under his arm like a sack of potatoes. She kicked and screamed the whole way down the hall. I went after him and kept telling him to put her down, put her down, but he didn't. He carried her all the way back to his office. He threw her into a closet-a coat closet with no light inside it-and slammed the door. Then he made me go back to cla.s.s. I heard her crying all the way down the hall.
"I didn't see her again until after school-until it was time for us to get on the bus. When she did, Roseanne's face was still wet like she had been crying the whole time. On the way home, I tried to get her to talk to me and tell me what happened. She wouldn't answer-wouldn't say a word. And she never talked again. Not to me, not to my parents, and especially not to anyone at school.
"She went to school because my father made her. She never answered questions in cla.s.s or turned in papers. My parents took her to a bunch of doctors, here and in Phoenix, too, but they couldn't find anything wrong. When the doctors couldn't help her, my father even took her to a medicine man. He said she was r.e.t.a.r.ded. There was nothing he could do-that's how she was."