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"Mr. Walker, I presume?" Ames asked. As Brandon had expected, the outrageous pink tie was absolutely blemish-free, but the man's handshake was firm. Tennis or handball, more than running a television remote for exercise, Tennis or handball, more than running a television remote for exercise, Brandon decided. Ames's straight-toothed smile seemed genuine enough and his gaze refreshingly direct. Brandon decided. Ames's straight-toothed smile seemed genuine enough and his gaze refreshingly direct.
Still Brandon wasn't ready to drop his guard. "Yes," he allowed. "That's me."
"Have a seat. Would you care for a drink?"
A gla.s.s containing a half-consumed c.o.c.ktail sat in front of Ralph Ames, along with a leather-bound menu and a thin file folder that he had closed as the hostess approached the table.
When in Rome... Brandon thought. "Sure," he said, taking the indicated chair. "Campari and soda will be fine." Brandon thought. "Sure," he said, taking the indicated chair. "Campari and soda will be fine."
Brandon wasted no time. He waited only as long as it took the hostess to go confer with a member of the wait-staff. If this was something he wanted no part of, it would be easier to leave after accepting a single drink than it would be after an entire lunch.
"What's this all about, Mr. Ames?" he demanded.
The man handed over a business card that said "Ralph Ames, Attorney at Law." The card listed two separate office addresses, one in Seattle and one in Scottsdale. So not a televangelist then but an attorney, which in Brandon Walker's opinion, was probably worse.
"Do you ever play Powerball?" Ralph Ames asked.
"You mean as in the multistate lottery?"
"Yes, that's correct."
A waiter arrived with Brandon's Campari. He dropped off the drink and backed away, while a courteous busboy delivered a basket of fresh bread.
Brandon sipped his drink and considered his answer. "I spent too many years being a cop to be into legalized gambling. I know a few Indian tribes are making a killing at it. The income is helping change economic outlooks on some of the reservations, but no, lotteries aren't for me."
Ralph Ames smiled. "Nor for me," he agreed. "But one of my clients was-in a big way. Her name was Hedda Brinker. She was German. Her husband, Toby, was Dutch, both of them Jews. They managed to escape Europe just ahead of the n.a.z.is. They met on the boat coming over and married within weeks of arriving in New York. They came to Arizona and bought a dairy farm in what's now pretty much downtown Scottsdale. Toby's been gone for years, but he was cagey. He hung on to the land long enough to make money hand over fist in real estate."
"The widow had all the money she needed, but she still played Lotto?" Brandon asked.
"That's right. You may have read about her in the papers. She hit it big-a $178 million jackpot-and hers was the only winning ticket."
Their waiter made a tentative approach. Ralph Ames waved him away.
"So the lady was loaded twice over. What does this have to do with me?" Brandon asked.
"I'm coming to that. Hedda and Toby Brinker had a single daughter-an only child named Ursula-who was born in 1938. Ursula was bright, outgoing, and popular. She was a cheerleader, student-body treasurer, and valedictorian of her cla.s.s. She was murdered by person or persons unknown during spring break of her junior year at Arizona State University in Tempe."
Brandon shifted uneasily in his chair. "I'm sorry to hear that," he said. "Having money isn't everything." He paused and then asked, "The case was never solved?"
Ralph Ames shook his head. "Never. It's still open even now."
"That's too bad."
"According to Hedda, Toby always believed that whoever did it was well connected-better connected than they were-and that the reason the killer was never caught was due to some kind of cover-up, but even the private investigators Toby hired-and he hired several-were never able to come up with an answer or even with a viable suspect. And they didn't find any evidence of a cover-up, either."
"If the father's own investigators couldn't solve it, you sure as h.e.l.l don't expect me to do it more than forty years later," Brandon put in. "If that's what you're after, it's wishful thinking."
"Not you personally," Ralph Ames agreed, "but it's possible the case will be solved eventually. Stranger things have happened. But to get back on track-as you can well imagine, Ursula's death haunted Toby. According to Hedda, he never got over it. The Brinkers were my father's clients. When Dad retired, they came to me. After Toby's death, and since they had no living heirs, Hedda talked to me several times about the Vidocq Society. Ever heard of it?"
"Sure," Brandon returned. "They're someplace back east-Philadelphia, I think. As I remember, it's a group made up mostly of retired cops and FBI agents and forensics folks who get together occasionally and decide whether or not to follow up on some cold case or other."
Ralph Ames nodded. "That's right. Hedda saw a television program about them, and she was really interested. She tried to get them to take on Ursula's case. They took a pa.s.s."
"So?"
"She asked if I thought she had enough money to start the same kind of thing on this side of the country-on the West Coast, actually from the Mississippi on," Ames replied. "I told her I didn't think she had sufficient funds to attempt such a major undertaking."
"And then she won the jackpot."
"That's right. She didn't collect the first proceeds until after she had gone to the trouble of creating a 501 C nonprofit for the money to be paid into. It's called The Last Chance. Membership in TLC is by invitation only. We search out and encourage partic.i.p.ation by mostly retired police investigators and forensics experts-people we believe will be motivated by the idea of helping fix the unfixable. We choose people we think share our goals and objectives.
"Investigators volunteer their services and expertise, although TLC handles their expenses, pays for laboratory facilities and a.n.a.lyses. TLC also supplies clerical and other support personnel. There are monthly meetings-mostly in Phoenix but sometimes in Denver-where people come and make presentations about their particular cold cases. The presenters are usually family members who understand that their local law enforcement agencies are either unwilling or unable to invest additional a.s.sets on what they regard as a dead-end investigation. Sometimes two or three TLC members will tackle a case. Other times, the group will vote to approach it en ma.s.se.
"G. T. Farrell was a young campus cop at Arizona State University when Ursula Brinker was murdered. Over the years he stayed in touch with Hedda and Toby. He's one of our founding members, and he wanted to know if you-"
Brandon Walker could barely believe his ears. Here was someone offering him a hand off the sc.r.a.p heap of life-someone who thought Brandon Walker still had what it took in terms of experience and expertise to make a difference.
"Don't say another word," Brandon Walker said, finishing off his Campari. "I'm in. Next time you see Geet Farrell, tell him I owe him big."
"Tell him yourself," Ralph Ames replied. "The next meeting is two weeks from now at the Westin in Denver. I'll have the TLC travel agent contact you about flight arrangements."
Ames picked up his menu and drew a pair of reading gla.s.ses out of his pocket. "Since that's out of the way," he added, perusing the selections, "how about some lunch?"
Of course it had been a snap decision, and Brandon had beaten himself up about it later on. He had lunged at Ralph Ames's ego-salvaging proposal like a drowning sailor grabbing for a lifeline, and later wondered if he'd appeared too desperate. Brandon doubted Ralph Ames had even the dimmest concept of being cast off and ignored-how living a forgotten half-life made you second-guess everything you'd ever done.
But six months later, Brandon Walker knew that, snap decision or not, hooking up with Ralph Ames and TLC hadn't been wrong. It had given him his life back-his life and purpose, both. And now, thanks to Fat Crack Ortiz, Brandon Walker had the responsibility for a case that needed to be shepherded into and through The Last Chance.
He was surprised by how excited he felt and, at the same time, how guilty. As he carried the iced-tea-laden tray back into the living room, he was only too aware that his own rush of newfound happiness came as a direct result of someone else's long-term hurt and heartbreak.
Brandon Walker suddenly had a job to do and a case to work on-a real case. Emma Ortiz and Hedda Brinker had nothing in common but their two murdered daughters. And because of them, Brandon Walker had returned from the dead.
Maria Elena Dominguez lay naked on the bed and waited, drowning in despair. She had no way to tell time. In this darkened room with no windows and only a tiny pinp.r.i.c.k of light over the corner toilet, she didn't know if it was night or day. She didn't know if she'd been here for weeks or months or years. All she knew was that at some time, the overhead light would flash on, temporarily blinding her. Then the latch would click, the door would creak open, and once again she would be plunged into a living h.e.l.l. naked on the bed and waited, drowning in despair. She had no way to tell time. In this darkened room with no windows and only a tiny pinp.r.i.c.k of light over the corner toilet, she didn't know if it was night or day. She didn't know if she'd been here for weeks or months or years. All she knew was that at some time, the overhead light would flash on, temporarily blinding her. Then the latch would click, the door would creak open, and once again she would be plunged into a living h.e.l.l.
She had been glad to see Senor the Doctor at the bus that sunny afternoon in Nogales, which now seemed so very long ago. She had been thrilled to think that he and his wife-the woman with the bright green eyes and beautiful silver hair-were the ones who were taking her in. And he had been so kind to her as they left the bus station behind and drove across the border at Nogales in a shiny black car that smelled of what had to be new leather. The seat had felt soft as a feather lingering against the bare skin of her legs.
There had been no question about her papers. In fact, no one had even bothered to look at them. Instead, the guard had leaned down, peered across the seat at her. He then smiled, saluted the driver, and waved them on. That was all there was to it. Minutes later they were gliding along far faster than the lumbering bus, only this time they traveled on a fine wide roadway-a wonderfully smooth highway-that stretched out ahead of them like a length of gray satin ribbon. And for the first time in her life, Maria Elena was riding in a car where the air flowing out of the vent was so impossibly cool that she shivered with cold.
Senor the Doctor had asked if she was hungry or thirsty. When she had nodded yes, he had reached behind the seat and produced a basket containing a sumptuous feast-bananas and chunks of sharp yellow cheese. When she had eaten her fill, he produced a thermos.
"Do you drink coffee?" he had asked.
"Si," she said, although it had been years since she had any. She poured it herself into the top of the thermos. She savored the aroma that boiled up into her nostrils from the steam. And when she tasted it, the coffee was sweet and dark on her tongue, just the way her mother had made it. And that was all she remembered. When she awakened next, she was in this room and on this bed. And the doctor, who knew for sure that she and her friends did not have AIDS, took what she had kept from the drug dealers and killers at El Asilo Seguro. The doctor took that, and far more besides, enjoying her suffering and laughing at her when she cried out in pain. she said, although it had been years since she had any. She poured it herself into the top of the thermos. She savored the aroma that boiled up into her nostrils from the steam. And when she tasted it, the coffee was sweet and dark on her tongue, just the way her mother had made it. And that was all she remembered. When she awakened next, she was in this room and on this bed. And the doctor, who knew for sure that she and her friends did not have AIDS, took what she had kept from the drug dealers and killers at El Asilo Seguro. The doctor took that, and far more besides, enjoying her suffering and laughing at her when she cried out in pain.
He always brought her food-for afterward. She didn't know if he intended it as a punishment or a reward. Hoping to starve to death and put an end to her misery, Maria Elena at first had tried not eating the food and had flushed it down the toilet that sat, squat and ugly as a gray ghost, in the dimly lit far corner of the room. But something had gone wrong. The toilet had backed up, and Senor the Doctor had figured out what she was doing. He had beaten her then-beaten her with a thin, sharp strap-until she'd been left with b.l.o.o.d.y welts all over her body. After that, he watched her while she ate, making certain she swallowed every morsel.
Lying naked, shackled, and miserable on the bed, Maria Elena grieved for herself and also for her friend, for Madelina. She knew now that for Madelina, too, there had been no nice family waiting in the United States. Perhaps Senor the Doctor had simply tired of her. Or perhaps she had been lucky-really lucky-and died. There would be no meeting of two old friends at some pretty place someday. And the old times they might have discussed if they had met-the bad times in Colima and at El Asilo Seguro-had been heaven on earth compared to this.
And what of Senora Duarte? Maria Elena wondered. Did she know what would become of the "lucky" girls she was sending to their supposed patrons, their benefactors? It was a question that haunted Maria Elena. She had struggled with it alone in the dark until she had finally reached a conclusion that had plunged her even deeper into despair. Of course, Senora Duarte had known. She had known everything. She was part of it. And that was why it had all happened so fast and with no warning. Once a girl was chosen, she went away that very day, without ever going back to the other children, without leaving any hint of what had happened or where she was going with the others-the unchosen ones-who remained. Maria Elena wondered. Did she know what would become of the "lucky" girls she was sending to their supposed patrons, their benefactors? It was a question that haunted Maria Elena. She had struggled with it alone in the dark until she had finally reached a conclusion that had plunged her even deeper into despair. Of course, Senora Duarte had known. She had known everything. She was part of it. And that was why it had all happened so fast and with no warning. Once a girl was chosen, she went away that very day, without ever going back to the other children, without leaving any hint of what had happened or where she was going with the others-the unchosen ones-who remained.
No, she and Madelina and who knew how many others had disappeared without a trace, just as Maria Elena's mother and brother had disappeared that day in Chiapas. Once Maria Elena had hoped and prayed to Mother Mary that Mama and Pepe were still alive. Now she prayed that they were dead. And she prayed that she might die, too. It was her only hope.
Four.
At the end of a long, sleepless night, Erik LaGrange sat sipping coffee on his patio and welcomed the sun as it edged up over the Rincons. It was Sat.u.r.day morning. He didn't have to go in to work today, which meant he could put off facing the music until Monday at least.
You're only thirty-five, he told himself again, as he had countless times overnight. he told himself again, as he had countless times overnight. Losing a job isn't the end of the world. You've got no wife, no kids, no responsibilities. You can go somewhere else and start over. So what's the problem? Losing a job isn't the end of the world. You've got no wife, no kids, no responsibilities. You can go somewhere else and start over. So what's the problem?
The problem was, Erik knew he'd be going job hunting with no references and with the added burden of a huge black spot on his reputation. In even the best of times, nonprofit development jobs weren't easy to come by. With corporate and private giving down, jobs like the cushy one he'd had for the past five years were now, as Grandma Johnson would have said, scarce as hen's teeth. And since he'd spent most of those five years s.c.r.e.w.i.n.g his boss's wife...
Grandma Johnson would have had more than a little to say on that subject as well. "You should have thought about that a long time ago" was the most likely one. Undoubtedly, she would have added something about making one's bed and lying in it.
Erik missed Gladys Johnson dreadfully-her cheerful disposition, her way of always looking on the bright side of things, and yes, even that sometimes very sharp Scandinavian tongue of hers. She had read Erik the riot act often enough as he was growing up, but he had never doubted that those scoldings were rooted in love.
Grandma had been Erik's rock. True north on his compa.s.s. The only parent he had ever known or needed or wanted. She had been everything to him-mother/father, aunt/uncle, sister/brother. And, until he made it into junior high, she had also been his best friend. He could remember riding in the car with her singing along with one of her well-worn ca.s.sette tapes. Erik's favorite had always been the one where Helen Reddy sang "You and Me Against the World." The song was supposedly about a mother and her little girl, but Erik always pretended the song had been written just for his grandma and him.
Right then, though, Gladys Johnson and her sage advice-which had grown even wiser the older Erik got-had been gone from his life for ten years. There was no way she could dose him with a firestorm of well-earned criticism for his foolishness and then help see him through to the other side of the problem. No, in this case, Erik was going to have to manage all by himself.
Down on Skyline, a car horn honked impatiently. Overhead, a noisy jet streaked toward a landing at Davis Monthan Air Force Base several miles away. The jarring background noises sliced through Erik's reverie and intruded on his thoughts.
"That's what's wrong with living in the city," Grandma Johnson had told him countless times. "With all the traffic and noise, I can't hear myself think. That's when I wish I was back on the island, where it was just me and the woods and the water. Then, all I could think or dream about was how boring it was and how much I wanted to get away. Now I wish I could go back."
Isle Royale was a long d.a.m.ned way from Tucson, Arizona, but remembering Grandma's voice made Erik know what he needed to do-hear himself think. Hurrying into the house, he grabbed up his knapsack. He loaded it up with sunscreen, several bottles of water, and some food-a couple of sandwiches, some cheese, and a package of dried apricots. Then he donned thick socks and hiking boots and headed out the door.
Outside, Erik paused beside his pickup and considered whether or not he should drive the Tacoma to the trailhead. Even though he had truck keys in his pocket, he finally decided against it. These days, leaving a vehicle-a company vehicle, at that-parked at a trailhead was pretty much an open invitation to have it broken into and/or stolen. Besides, the trailhead to Finger Rock was only a mile or so from the Catalina foothills home he was house-sitting for Professor Raymond Rice and his wife, Frieda, who were off on a year-long sabbatical in France.
After all, Erik thought, Erik thought, driving somewhere to go on a hike seems pretty dumb. Since the point is walking, why not start from here? driving somewhere to go on a hike seems pretty dumb. Since the point is walking, why not start from here?
And so he did. Erik trudged off alone in the early-morning sunshine with the sky clean and blue above him. A few rock doves, a flock of quail, and a single watchful roadrunner noticed his solitary departure. So did a neighborhood dog or two, who barked briefly as he pa.s.sed. In that upscale neighborhood people valued their privacy. Individual homes were set at least an acre apart and screened by carefully planted collections of native shrubbery and looming saguaros. As a consequence, none of Erik's neighbors saw him go.
Since Erik's pickup came and went from the driveway several times during the course of the day, those same privacy-loving neighbors a.s.sumed that the young man who was staying at the Rices' place was spending a quiet Sat.u.r.day going in and out and running errands just like everyone else. None of them saw or noticed anything at all out of the ordinary that day. For Erik LaGrange, that would make all the difference.
Fifteen miles across town, on the edge of the Tucson Mountains, Brandon Walker, too, had spent a sleepless night. But his lack of sleep was due to an entirely different reason. For the first time in years, former sheriff Brandon Walker was excited-too excited to sleep. He had spent the entire night going over the previous day's conversation with Emma Orozco and wondering what the h.e.l.l he was going to do about it. on the edge of the Tucson Mountains, Brandon Walker, too, had spent a sleepless night. But his lack of sleep was due to an entirely different reason. For the first time in years, former sheriff Brandon Walker was excited-too excited to sleep. He had spent the entire night going over the previous day's conversation with Emma Orozco and wondering what the h.e.l.l he was going to do about it.
He had come back into the living room carrying a tray of iced tea to find Emma staring up at one of Rita Antone's best baskets-a two-foot-wide medallion featuring the Tohono O'odham's sacred symbol, the Man in the Maze. Usually the design was woven onto the white yucca background in a tough black fiber harvested from devil's-claw pods. For this particular basket, however, Rita had crafted the maze by using yucca root, which, without benefit of any dye, resulted in a rusty red hue that resembled dried blood. That, of course, was what made this particular basket so valuable and so special, as Rita had once explained.
"For this basket," Nana Dahd Dahd had told Brandon Walker, "the yucca had to die." had told Brandon Walker, "the yucca had to die."
Emma Orozco stared up at the basket as if hoping that somewhere in the sacred curves of bloodred pattern she could find her own answers as well.
Brandon offered the tray of drinks. Emma murmured her thanks and daintily accepted an icy gla.s.s of tea while declining both lemon and sugar. Brandon helped himself to generous doses of both and then settled back into his favorite armchair.
He had lived with and among the Desert People for a long time-long enough to know that among the Tohono O'odham, direct questions were viewed as impolite. Rather than ask something that would be regarded as rude, he limited himself to making a single observation.
"You waited a long time to talk about this."
Emma nodded. "It was a bad time," she said. "When it was over, Henry, my husband, said we should just forget about it. It's not good to dwell on the past."
Brandon nodded and said nothing. Emma continued. "But Henry's dead now," she added. "I'm Roseanne's mother, and I want to know."
Brandon didn't look at Emma directly. That, too, would have been considered rude behavior on his part, but as she spoke, he studied her reflection in the entryway mirror. Coming here and digging up the past in the presence of a stranger and a Mil-gahn Mil-gahn-a white man-besides, showed a great deal of courage and strength of character on Emma's part. To do so meant that, in both regards, she was going against hundreds of years of tradition and a lifetime's worth of teaching as well. He watched as she gripped the handle of her walker as if the plastic-covered metal might somehow help stiffen her resolve in the same way it helped hold her upright.
"Mr. Ortiz said you belonged to some kind of group that looks into old cases...into old murders." She stumbled over the last word.
Other people might have been surprised to hear the word murder murder stick in Emma Orozco's throat more than thirty years after the fact. Brandon Walker was not. He knew how events like that-like the death of a child-might disappear from public view after a few days of newspaper and television coverage. But for the parents of a dead child, the loss is permanent, indelible. It becomes the central issue of existence, not just for mothers and fathers, but for sisters and brothers as well; for husbands and wives and children. That sudden death is a watershed. From that moment on, life's perspective shifts. Everything dates from either before or after. This was as true for Brandon as it was for Emma Orozco; for he, too, had lost a child. stick in Emma Orozco's throat more than thirty years after the fact. Brandon Walker was not. He knew how events like that-like the death of a child-might disappear from public view after a few days of newspaper and television coverage. But for the parents of a dead child, the loss is permanent, indelible. It becomes the central issue of existence, not just for mothers and fathers, but for sisters and brothers as well; for husbands and wives and children. That sudden death is a watershed. From that moment on, life's perspective shifts. Everything dates from either before or after. This was as true for Brandon as it was for Emma Orozco; for he, too, had lost a child.
"Yes," he supplied in answer to Emma's comment. "The organization Mr. Ortiz told you about is called The Last Chance, TLC for short. It's a private organization that was started a few years ago by a Mil-gahn Mil-gahn woman named Hedda Brinker from Scottsdale-a woman not unlike yourself whose daughter was murdered in Tempe in 1959." woman named Hedda Brinker from Scottsdale-a woman not unlike yourself whose daughter was murdered in Tempe in 1959."
Emma's dark eyes sought Brandon's. "Did they ever find out who did it?" she asked.
"No," Brandon replied. "That's what Hedda Brinker was hoping might happen when she started TLC-that someone would finally solve her own child's murder." He shrugged. "Maybe someday we will," he added. "But right now the stated purpose of TLC is to help other people."
"People like me?" Emma asked.
Brandon nodded. "Yes," he said. "People just like you."
"How much does it cost?" Emma asked. "I have some money. I can pay..."
"It's expensive," Brandon answered. "But it costs you nothing. Hedda created a charitable organization that pays all the costs."
Emma reached for her purse, an ugly boxy vinyl one with a broken strap and brittle, damaged corners. At first Brandon thought she was going to offer him money after all. Instead, she dug out a ball-point pen and a small spiral notebook-the same kind of notebook Brandon himself had carried during his days as a homicide detective. Emma flipped through the notebook to a blank page. She handed the notebook to Brandon, who rose from his chair to take it.
"Please," Emma said softly. "Please write down this nice white lady's name for me. Tomorrow when I go to Ma.s.s, I will say a rosary for her and light a candle."
Brandon Walker smiled to himself. He had never met Hedda Brinker. She had died more than two years earlier of congestive heart failure, but he imagined it would have come as a surprise for that "nice white lady" who was also Jewish to know that she was being prayed for and having candles lit by an equally nice Tohono O'odham lady who was a practicing Catholic.
He handed the pen and notebook back to Emma. She carefully filed both of them away in her purse. She clicked it shut, then waited for some time without speaking, staring once more at the Man in the Maze. Again Brandon Walker was the one who broke the silence.
"Perhaps you should tell me about your daughter."
Emma's gnarled fingers tightened around the handle of her walker. "Henry and I had two daughters," she said softly. "The older one, Andrea, we called Mithol-mad Mithol-mad-Kitten. The younger one, Roseanne, the shy one, we called Tachchuithch Tachchuithch..."
"Beloved," Brandon supplied without needing Emma to translate.
For the first time Emma looked at the Mil-gahn Mil-gahn man-really looked at him. He was tall and well-built. His graying hair was cut short. Compared to Tohono O'odham faces, his was sharp and angular, but his eyes were soft and looked at her with a kindness she had not expected from someone who had once been a detective-and a sheriff. man-really looked at him. He was tall and well-built. His graying hair was cut short. Compared to Tohono O'odham faces, his was sharp and angular, but his eyes were soft and looked at her with a kindness she had not expected from someone who had once been a detective-and a sheriff.