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Authors: Renee Simons

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She pulled out the diary, savoring the feel of its buttery-soft leather beneath her fingertips. The book fell open to a page that seemed worn from repeated readings.

"Poor C. is in trouble," it said.
"The worst kind.
She can't tell her father; he'd kill the hapless fool who led her astray. Apparently, marriage is out of the question, tho.
she
wouldn't say why. I have heard of a young girl on the Mexican side of town who has been midwife to several of her country-women. I suggested C. talk to the partera. Maybe she knows a way out of this dreadful dilemma."
Dreadful indeed, Callie thought, at a time when having a child without benefit of marriage would have stigmatized a woman — and her child — for life. Several pages further on, Lucinda picked up her story.
"The partera was unable to help as C. is too far along. I fear for her. She is family and I would help her if I could. But we can tell no one and have little recourse in this situation. I have suggested she go away and have her baby in Europe, perhaps. Then she might put up the child for adoption. She has decided against my advice and will raise the baby alone, if Uncle J. refuses to help his daughter and grandchild.
Such a sad occurrence and even sadder choices.
But I do so admire her courage."
Callie dug into her memories of family history, but nothing Gram and Aunt Hatt ever told her tied into this incident. Who was Uncle J? And had the scandal caused a rift within the family? One so wide “C” and her child were ostracized? Or at least, never spoken of again?
"Couldn't be," she muttered. Gram never would have deserted her cousin. Not the Gram she'd known all her life, the woman who'd raised her after her parents' death, who'd been parent, friend, teacher and confidante.
Not that she would have qualified for sainthood. She had, after all, been capable of carrying a life-long anger toward the Morenos.
Most specifically, Fernando.
Of course, it was he who had incurred Gram’s wrath. His reaction to
Callie,
filled with pain and regret and something that had almost seemed like – longing – spoke of a sad history. He seemed to be the right age to have been a contemporary of Gram's and charming enough to have appealed to any young woman of the day.
Surely Dorotea couldn't have been the cause of anger; she seemed much younger than either Lucinda or Fernando. Unless, Callie thought, she'd come between them and stolen him away..
.
.
She paged forward.
"I have been a fool,"
Gram had written.
"Wasting my sympathy and caring on a snake in the grass, thinking that family counted for something, when, to certain people, it doesn't.
I would have done anything within my power to help her and her child, but she has just revealed the identity of its father. And tragedy of tragedies, he is none other than Mi Amore. Together they have betrayed me and it matters not which of them took the first steps toward the other. Father speaks of returning to St. Louis. Until now, I have fought him, but no longer. I shall leave this place willingly and would just as willingly leave behind my broken heart. If only I could.”
Although she still had no clue to “C’s” identity, she knew finally why Gram had sent her to be a thorn in Fernando Moreno’s side. Although she’d always implied that she wanted to avenge a wrong between families, in truth, a shattered romance lay at the core of her anger. Surely one of the other diaries would confirm her suspicions, either directly or by innuendo.
 
If the awful event not taken place, Lucinda might have spent the rest of her life in Blue Sky, perhaps even married her
amore
.
Callie looked down on the valley and felt a need to explore the place that would have been home to the person she, herself, might have been.

 

* * *

 

A trail crossed the
caldera
wall. Dozens of old mines pockmarked the rocky hillside. Here and there, rusting machinery left reminders of past glories and failures. Glad she'd worn jeans and a long sleeve denim shirt, she climbed an incline overgrown with sagebrush and mesquite.

At the first mine entrance Callie directed her light through the opening and looked inside. A chorus of shrieks and the throb of flapping wings greeted the intrusion of the powerful beam. Bats, she supposed with a shudder.

“Yuck.”

She backed out and tried several other openings in the rocky hillside until, finally, one yielded only silence.

As she leaned inside, she noticed faint scratches circling the upper part of the entrance. At roughly eye level, they seemed to be there more by design than accident. If only she had a magnifying glass, she could see the marks more clearly, she held the flashlight in one hand, the camera in the other and snapped off several photos of what seemed to be letters worked into the natural seams in the rock. Maybe enlarging the shots later on would tell her something.

She tucked the camera into her knapsack and knelt to search for other writings near the bottom of the opening. At the sound of a footstep behind her, she turned — directly into the path of a booted toe. A well-aimed kick to the temple sent her crashing against the edge of the mine entrance.

Pain filled her skull. Her shoulder and back throbbed where they’d slammed into the unyielding stone. On one knee, she held up her arm to deflect the next blow. Like a fist delivering a one-two punch, the offending foot struck again, first knocking her arm aside and then smashing into her jaw.

Through the brain-rattling impact and the fuzziness that came with it, she felt the weight of the flashlight in her hand. Maybe she could hit him with it. She tried to roll away but the cold rock at her back made escape impossible. She found herself wedged crosswise against the entrance to the mine.

"Here," the attacker’s voice whispered, "let me help you."

His hands reached for her. She doubled her knees against her chest, preparing to kick him. Before she could either strike or move out of his reach, the booted foot shoved her into the tunnel. She struggled to her knees again, hoping to make an end run around him. With a foot between her shoulder blades, he pancaked her into the dusty ground, deflating her lungs in a great "whoosh."

He nudged her over with his toe, sending her further into the dark interior. An inner voice ordered her to protect herself. Disoriented, bombarded by pain and unable to evade the danger, she could only curl in on herself again.

"That’s a good girl," he said in a voice heavy with his exertions. His hands pushed against her back. Like a bottle rolling off the edge of a shelf she tumbled down an incline and into the enveloping darkness.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Chapter Nine

 

 

Late in the afternoon after the late-night attack on The Mansion, Luc's buddy at the state crime lab handed him the evidence bags. Fluorescence examination disclosed a minute fragment of a print on the spray tip. They stared at the photo images projected on the viewer. The truncated curves wavered before Luc. Was this another trick of his faltering vision?

"If we had more, computer graphics could extrapolate and give us something to work with." Bryan shook his head. "I just don't think we have enough."

"Try. I need a line on whoever is harassing Ms. Patterson."

"I'll do my best. If I can put something together, I'll send you a report."

“Call me either way.”

Nick Forrest got in the first call. “You better get yourself out here, Sheriff. There’s something you need to see.”

“More vandalism?”

“Nope.
Just something real strange.”

“I’m on my way,” Luc said, slamming down the phone.

The short ride out seemed even shorter. He wondered if the prospect of seeing Callie again had anything to do with it. When she failed to appear, he didn’t know whether to be relieved or disappointed, but he did take note of
an emptiness
in the pit of his stomach.

Nick met him at the veranda steps. “It’s inside.”

“It?”

“Yeah, well, we pulled down an inside wall because of water damage. There’s a bundle of some kind.” He pointed a flashlight between two studs. “There.”

The beam circled an object Luc estimated to be about a foot by a foot-and-a-half. In shades of deep red and green, the cloth seemed heavy and rough-textured, woven, like a Native blanket or rug. The item was cylindrical and swaddled like an infant.

“Let’s get more light in here,” Luc said.

“A flood okay?” Nick’s voice behind him asked. “The outlet in here’s been disabled.”

“200 watts or better, if you have it.
I need to see details before moving this.”

From the equipment bag he’d brought with him, Luc selected an oversized evidence bag, a pair of surgeon’s gloves and a digital camera he used to snap photos of the bundle in its surroundings. The floodlight showed several marks in the plaster that would have to be analyzed later on. He photographed these as well. He diagramed the area and made notes of measurements and positions. When he’d satisfied himself that he’d documented everything, Luc walked to a corner where he had some privacy. SOP required a forensics expert to take charge of the remains in a case of unexplained death. He speed-dialed the Office of Medical Investigation in Albuquerque and kept watch over the bundle as Joe Barry came on the line. After the usual brief but friendly banter that marked their working relationship, Luc described their find.

“My gut tells me they’re human remains, a fetus, maybe, but I haven’t checked yet.
Didn’t want to disturb anything.
When can you get down here?”

 
“I have no problem trusting your gut,” Joe said. “Especially since we’re short- handed at the moment. Most of our people are at a regional conference so the rest of us are pulling double shifts.”

“How about I bring the remains to you? It isn’t by the book, but there’s been some suspicious activity here and I can’t take the chance of leaving them in situ.”

“I think there must be a Chapter on procedural adjustments in the event of emergencies. If not we’ll write one.” Barry chuckled. “You are hereby authorized to transport the remains as is to OMI. I’ll sign off on the order.”

“Thanks. I’ll see you in a couple of hours.”

Luc removed the carefully folded cloth package and sealed it inside the oversized evidence bag, which he labeled with date, time and initials before sealing and locking it in his carrying case.

“Dontcha’ wanna know what’s inside?”

Luc turned toward the voice. “We need to protect the contents. I’ll transport it to the medical investigations office.”

He looked at the contractor. “You’ll have to leave this wall open, Nick. In case we need to come back to it later.”

“No problem. We’ll work around it. Just let us know when you’re done.”

By the looks of things, the bundle had been hidden many years. Luc thought a few more minutes’ delay wouldn’t do any harm. He walked through the downstairs rooms, hoping to see Callie even though she’d said she was going to Albuquerque.

In the kitchen a small carton and a stack of unopened mail sat on the card table. He removed one book and riffled the pages of small, delicate handwriting. A word here or there registered, but violating someone's privacy for no reason seemed pointless and, his mother might have lectured, an ungentlemanly display of bad manners. He returned the book to its mates and looked around inside and out. Her keys were gone. So was her bike.

Luc located Nick. “Have you seen Callie?”

“Not since early in the morning.
She didn't say where she was going.
Probably just taking a walk or something."

"Her bike would be here and it isn't."

Nick turned to his men and called out, "Anybody
see
which way Ms. Patterson went?"

Vague expressions and shrugs greeted his question. One man pointed south and turned back to his work.

Luc noticed the freshly painted house front. "I'm glad you covered the graffiti, Forrest. It was a painful piece of filth."

"We didn't want it staring us in the face so my guys threw some paint on it. We just left that bit at the end so you'd have a color reference."

"Good thinking," Luc said with a nod. "I'll have another look around."

"Hey, do what you have to." Nick hefted his tool belt and started up the porch steps. "You need anything, just holler."

In the storage shed, Luc rummaged through piles, cans and boxes. None of the materials interested him, but a carton in the corner, partially hidden by several bunches of lathing strips, caught his attention. He placed it atop a stack of bundled roofing shingles.

The carton contained two dozen spray cans tightly packed in rows six cans long by four wide. All seemed to contain the same color - a florescent orange-red. At first glance, they appeared undisturbed, but a closer look showed that the fine layer of dust covering one of the caps had been disturbed.

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