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Authors: Michael McGarrity

Tags: #Kerney, Kevin (Fictitious character), #Park rangers, #Vendetta

Mexican hat (24 page)

BOOK: Mexican hat
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Mexican Hat ■ 219

After a quick search to make sure nothing else was missed, Ker-ney closed the door, wiped his prints from the doorknob and the jack, and went back to the flatbed. In the rear of the truck some of the wood chips, pine needles, and small twigs left over from Lujan's last load were coated with a sticky substance. He picked up a chip. The underside was gritty to the touch. It was fresh-cut pine, grimy with rock granules, and smelling like motor oil. Lujan had recently hauled a machine with an engine that leaked, Kerney noted with satisfaction. None of the chain saws in the toolshed had a cracked casing, so it could have been that Lujan had hauled the ATV in his truck to the cabin.

Kerney scratched Loco's ear and thanked him for the tour, then climbed back over the fence.

A sheriff's patrol car pulled in behind him just as he was about to back away. Inwardly, Kerney groaned. If he got busted, he wasn't sure how he could explain away the charges he faced. He killed the engine, put both hands in plain view on the steering wheel, and watched the deputy in his rearview mirror, waiting to see what kind of action the man would take. He relaxed when the officer walked casually to him with no hint of wariness.

"Deputy," he said, forcing a smile. It was the same man who had been waiting for him at his trailer the night he returned from dinner with Phil Cox and his family.

"Sheriff needs to see you," the deputy said, smiling in return. In his thirties, the officer had a football player's thick neck, a body about to go to seed, rosy cheeks, and a nose that had been broken at least once.

"What's up?"

"Hell if I know. You can follow me into town." He looked at the locked gate. The German shepherd was barking loudly and stick-

2 2 0 ■ Michael M c G a r r i t y

ing his snout in between the gate slats. "I don't think the Lujans are home from work yet."

"I guess not. I'll catch them later," Kemey replied.

"Where you been all day? I've been looking for you since this morning."

"Really?" Kemey answered.

The deputy shrugged. "No matter. You've been found." He walked to his patrol car, called in his discovery, backed out, and motioned for Kemey to do the same.

THE MEETING with Gatewood consisted of the sheriff asking all the usual questions. In Omar's cramped, cluttered office, Kemey watched Gatewood's technique unfold. He talked about the "incident" at the trailer—a soft way to describe a murder bombing—and asked Kemey how well he knew Doyle Fletcher. Kemey answered directly, and Gate-wood moved on, asking if he had encountered hostility from anybody during his investigation.

"Not really," Kerney replied.

"Who did you talk to?"

Kemey gave him an abbreviated list of names, and Gatewood wrote them down.

"That's not a lot of people," Omar noted.

"I didn't have much time," Kemey reminded him.

"Too bad about you getting fired," Omar said with false sympathy. "Do you think the bombing was tied to your investigation?"

"What do you think?" Kemey countered.

"It could be. Or maybe you just pissed somebody off."

"I don't think I've been around long enough to make any enemies on my own account."

Mexican Hat ■ 221

"Some people don't need a lot of time to piss folks off. And working for the Forest Service is enough of a reason for some folks not to like you," Gatewood replied with a slow grin.

"Do you have particular folks in mind?"

"None in particular." Gatewood leaned back in his chair and stared down his nose. "So tell me something: what's keeping you here?"

"Inertia."

"No lady friend?"

Like maybe Fletcher's wife, Kerney thought. "No," he answered.

"Maybe a lady with a husband or boyfriend?" Omar nudged.

"No."

"Mind telling me where you where last night?"

"I stayed with Jim Stiles and his girlfriend."

Gatewood looked disappointed. "They'll vouch for you?"

"I don't see why not. Do you have any leads at all?"

"Not on the bombing, but we have a small break on the Padilla case," Gatewood answered, getting to his feet and walking to the office door. "The state police got a tip on that ATV you were looking for. Damn thing was stashed in an old Forest Service cabin up in the Mogollon Mountains. The tires match the tread evidence at the El-derman Meadows crime scene."

"Ownership?" Kerney inquired.

"Stolen about two years ago in Las Cruces." Gatewood held the office door open. "But we might get lucky if the lab boys can lift some prints. You'll stick around for a few days, won't you? Just in case we need to talk some more?"

"I will," Kerney replied, joining Gatewood at the door. "Carol

222 ■ Michael McGarrity

Cassidy told me you have a militia group operating in the county. Do you have any intelligence on them?"

Gatewood guffawed. "The militia is nothing more than a bunch of sword-rattling good old boys who like to play soldier."

"No political agenda?" Kerney prodded.

"Of course they have an agenda. Some time back they circulated—what do you call it?—a manifesto. They want the feds out of Catron County and the land returned to the people."

"Sounds like a good place to start," Kerney suggested.

Gatewood's eyes narrowed. "You just love to tell me how to do my job, don't you? For your information, I know every mother's son in the organization, and I've been talking to them on the telephone all day long. Nobody knows nothing."

"Seems like you've covered all the bases," Kerney said as he left Gatewood.

ALAN BEGAY was in his motel room when Kerney knocked.

"You didn't get a key?" he asked, when he opened the door.

"No. I'm not staying. I just stopped by to thank you for your offer."

"No sweat, man. Come in, if you can stand the mess."

The room had camping equipment strewn all over it. There were half a dozen large ice chests stacked in a corner along with boxes filled with bottles of nitric acid, filters, and unused plastic sample jars. A portable water pump and battery sat on the desk next to an assortment of meters and probes. The bed was strewn with maps, cameras, and lab report forms. At the foot of the bed were a pair of wading boots, a face shield, a lab coat, and lab gloves.

Mexican Hat ■ 223

"Tools of the trade," Begay said, as Kerney looked around. He cleared some papers off a chair and perched on the end of the bed. "Have a seat."

Kerney sat.

"You've got some questions you want to ask me?"

"Why do you think I have questions?"

"Because it was pretty dumb of me to be showing off this morning," Begay replied. "Made me look suspicious. I figured you'd want to at least check me out."

"I already have checked you out. I called your boss in Gallup."

"And?"

"You're a choir boy, according to your boss."

Begay laughed, his eyes twinkling. "Sure, he said that. If I'm such an upstanding citizen, what are you doing here?"

"You spend a lot of time in the backcountry. Maybe you've seen something."

"A lot of beautiful country and a few pissed-off ranchers is about all I see."

"What about official personnel?"

"Who do you have in mind?"

"Steve Lujan."

Begay nodded. "I know him. He works with Amador Ortiz. But I don't see him when I'm in the mountains."

"Anybody on an ATV?"

"Nope."

"Who have you seen on this trip?"

"Just one guy I never met before. I was working on the Negrito Creek last week, checking for mercury and zinc seepage from an old silver mine. He was at one of the private ranches in the Gila."

"Doing?"

224 ■ Michael McGarrily

"He didn't say. He flew in. The owner has a landing strip. I was half a mile downstream when the plane came over, so I hiked in to see what was up."

"It wasn't the owner?"

"No. This guy was much younger. In his thirties. The owner is an insurance millionaire from Detroit. Older man. Fifty-something, at least."

"You've met the owner?"

"Yeah, once, when he was out for an elk hunt."

"Tell me about the stranger."

"Like I said, mid-thirties, six feet, maybe a hundred and eighty. Blond hair with no sideburns. Pale complexion. The guy didn't look like he spent much time outdoors. Didn't say much. Talked with a real thick southern accent."

"Did you get a name?"

"No, I didn't. He was kinda huffy about me being there. I had to show him my ID."

"Thanks, Alan. You'd make a good police officer."

Begay grinned. "Think so?"

"Yes, I do."

Alan shook his head. "I'll stick to protecting natural resources. From what I saw of your trailer, it's a lot safer then being a cop."

Kerney laughed. "How about helping a cop for a few minutes?

"What do you need?"

"How well do you know Steve Lujan?"

"Not very well."

"Would he recognize your voice on the telephone?"

"I doubt it."

"Good. Thirty minutes after I leave I want you to call him and say that you saw someone breaking into the shed behind his house

Mexican Hat ■ 225

this afternoon. Keep it simple. Give him the message and hang up. Will you do that for me?"

"You want me to tell him what?" Begay asked, giving Kerney a quizzical look that didn't completely mask a half-formed smile.

Kerney carefully repeated the message he wanted delivered.

"Did the break-in really happen?" Alan asked.

"Yes."

"Okay, I'll do it, but where will you be when I call him?"

"I'll be watching to see what Steve does,"

"That's sneaky."

"That's police work," Kerney corrected.

DUSK CAME, and Kerney wondered if he had completely missed the boat about Steve Lujan. From a fire road in the hills behind the valley he watched Lujan's house through binoculars, waiting for Steve to make a move.

There were a few kids still riding bikes up and down the lane, popping wheelies in the dirt and practicing stunts, and Lujan's nearest neighbor had a barbecue grill going, but that was the extent of activity in the small collection of homes sprinkled in the valley west of the river.

At the Lujan residence, the Pontiac and Ford Bronco were parked inside the open gate. Lights burned inside the house. Loco was on his chain in the front yard, and there were occasional shadowy movements in the windows as people moved about. Finally, the kitchen went dark, a sure sign dinner was over. Ten minutes later, Lujan hurried out the front door, got into the Bronco, and drove away.

Kerney followed, staying a quarter mile back. Lujan traveled through Reserve to the state road that ran down to Glenwood and on

226 ■ Michael McGarrity

to Silver City. Kerney kept an eye out for a tail behind him, but the road was dark and empty.

Lujan passed through Glenwood and didn't slow down again until he reached the turnoff for the Leopold Vista Historical Monument, a wayside rest stop on the highway dedicated to the man who had established the Gila Wilderness.

Kerney watched the taillights of the Bronco make the turn and disappear behind the low hill that concealed the monument from the highway. With only one entrance, Kerney couldn't follow without being detected. He got a microcassette recorder from the glove box and left the truck far enough back from the entrance to avoid suspicion, parked in deep shadows under a cottonwood tree. He jumped the highway fence and walked around the hill to the back of the monument. The site faced a sweeping vista of mountains to the east, and was nothing more than a large parking lot with a sign that told about Aldo Leopold and the Gila. During the daytime, tourists could whip off the highway with camera in hand, snap a picture, and be on their way in fifteen minutes.

Three vehicles were in the lot: Lujan's Bronco, an expensive RV towing a compact car, and a light-colored Chevy Caprice, with the parking lights on.

Hunkered down, Kerney memorized the license number of the Caprice and watched.

At the RV, a man packed up a folding card table and some chairs while his wife waited inside the vehicle. The Bronco and the Chevy, at opposite ends of the lot, showed no signs of movement. Almost nervously, the man at the RV lashed the table and chairs to the back of his vehicle, hopped inside, fired up the engine, and drove away.

Lujan got out of the Bronco and started walking toward the

Mexican Hat ■ 227

Chevy. The driver cranked the motor, turned the Chevy directly at Lujan, flipped on the high beams, and froze him in the glare. Lujan yanked a hand over his eyes so he could see against the light,

A man's figure emerged from the car and stood behind the open door. Kerney turned on the recorder.

"What's so goddamn important?" the man said.

"I told you what happened," Lujan answered, moving closer.

"Yeah, you did. So what? Go home, call the sheriff, and report the break-in. That's all you have to do."

"No," Lujan countered. "I've had it. This is too fucking much. People breaking into my house and everything."

The man laughed. "You sorry son of a bitch, they broke into your storage shed, for chrissake, not your house."

"Same thing."

"I'll take care of it."

"How?" Lujan asked.

The man braced his arm on the top of the door and shot Lujan twice in the chest with a semiautomatic. He picked up the spent shell casings, walked to Lujan's body, and, satisfied with his solution, got in the Chevy and drove off.

Kerney checked out Steve Lujan's body. There were two rounds, center mass, in his chest. He turned on his heel and left the monument. When the killer walked into the light to make sure Lujan was dead, Kerney had gotten a good look. He was thirty-something, six feet tall with short blond hair, and he had spoken with a thick southern accent.

2 2 8 ■ Michael M c G a r r i t y

10

The sound of hard pounding at the motel door brought Kemey out of a deep sleep. He fumbled for the light, got up, peered out the window, and saw Jim Stiles. He unlocked the door and Stiles slipped inside, a worried look plastered on his face.

BOOK: Mexican hat
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