Missings, The (11 page)

Read Missings, The Online

Authors: Peg Brantley

Tags: #Literature & Fiction, #Mystery; Thriller & Suspense, #Mystery, #Police Procedurals, #Thrillers & Suspense, #Suspense

BOOK: Missings, The
10.27Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub


Babysit
? You are acting like a
culo
, Great Detective Murillo. If I didn’t need the information, if I could trust you for one moment to find my sister’s murderer, I would tell you to let me out now. And you know exactly how far you would get with our new friend.”

Elizabeth Benavides’s face glowed a deep umber. Her eyes flashed between him and Maria Sanchez. When they landed back on Daniel he could not meet her hostile glare. He worked a swallow down his throat while he eased into a parking space in front of the coffee shop.

“Please, Ms. Benavides… Elizabeth. I appreciate everything you bring to this interview. I apologize for being so abrupt. But my job is to make sure the right questions get asked in the right way in the event we end up in court, and to ask the questions that will most likely lead us to whoever murdered your sister, and possibly Maria Sanchez’s husband.”

She gave a slight jerk of her head but seemed to calm down a little. Daniel sighed.

Settled in a private corner of the coffee shop with two Cuban coffees and a French roast, Daniel began by asking Maria about her husband. His name, where they lived, all the details they didn’t have. He asked if she had a picture of José, and she removed one from a well-worn billfold. A young man smiled into the camera. Daniel turned it over.
7/11
. They didn’t need much more confirmation. He slid the photograph across the table to Maria.

“I’m so sorry,” Daniel said.

Tears filled the young woman’s eyes and spilled down her cheeks. She wiped them away and sat silently for a moment. A small nod of her head.

In Spanish she said, “I knew my José would not leave me. I knew it. You will find his murderer, yes?”

Chapter Thirty-One

Aspen Falls Police Department

Sunday, September 23

The next morning, Chase felt an almost palpable current run through the meeting room. The murder board finally reflected a few more answers than questions.

He shared what he and Terri had found, a distinct pattern of uninsured Hispanic patients in the ER receiving unnecessary blood tests, including Rachelle Benavides. He’d also scheduled an interview with the transplant coordinator at Memorial for Monday.

Daniel told them about Maria and José Sanchez. His hand flew over the murder board while he spoke.

“Two men offered Sanchez two thousand dollars for one of his kidneys about two months ago. Maria Sanchez never met them but she saw them talking to her husband once. She’s meeting with Dobson this afternoon to try and come up with a couple of sketches.”

Chase took a sip of coffee. “Can’t we get Carol Myers? She builds a much stronger bond with people than Dobson. We get better sketches.”

“Carol is on assignment in Colorado Springs until next week. I didn’t think you’d want to wait.”

“You’re right. I don’t.”

“How did you get to Maria again?” Terri asked.

Daniel blushed. “Elizabeth Benavides introduced us.”

Terri smiled.

“Anyway, when Sanchez balked at giving up one of his kidneys they sweetened the pot. Said they had a source to get them legal papers. Not just Sanchez, but his wife as well. For a price.”

“Let me guess,” Chase said. “Two thousand dollars.”

“That’s right. And Maria Sanchez said they added another little threat to the mix.”

Chase and Terri waited.

Daniel quit writing on the whiteboard and turned to look directly at them. Put his hands on the table and leaned down. “Maria Sanchez said the two men made it clear that if her husband didn’t accept their generous offer, they would still get what they needed from him.”

Chase pushed back from the table and paced the room. “So they went along with the plan and Sanchez sold a kidney for two grand. Did he try and buy some papers?”

“Maria says yes. Of course they never saw anything.”

“We should get his autopsy results back tomorrow. We know he had a nephrectomy but we don’t know if that had anything to do with why he died.”

“His wife said he hadn’t been feeling well. Thought a walk would help. Guess the guy liked to hike in the hills.” Daniel finished changing the header for DB #4 to read José Sanchez.

“Terri, you go back to your contact at the ER,” Chase said. “What’s her name again?”

“Leslie James.”

“Yeah. Can you trust her?”

“She’s never given me any reason not to.”

“Someone in the ER has either been poorly trained or else that individual is involved in this somehow. The ER is a link, and I think James is more likely to talk to you than me.”

“You got that right, after the way you threatened her the first time you met.”

“What’s that?” Daniel asked, a smile tugging at his face.

“Never mind.” Chase checked out the board. “Is there any way you and Elizabeth can find out the name of the guy they found in the dumpster? See if there’s any kind of connection to her sister?”

Terri’s cell phone rang and she dug it out of a pocket. Without a word to either Chase or Daniel she stepped out of the room. Both detectives opted to pretend they’d seen nothing.

Daniel tossed the marker on the table. “I’ll call Elizabeth and set something up.” He shook his head. “She’s kind of hard to control.”

“She might be hard to control but at least we can keep her safe. And her contacts within the Hispanic community have already proven invaluable to us. Without her we may never have heard from Maria Sanchez.”

Daniel didn’t say anything.

“Am I right?”

Daniel took a deep breath. When he exhaled, Chase heard a “Yeah,” but would have sworn there were some other words included.

Chapter Thirty-Two

Aspen Falls Memorial Hospital

Monday, September 24

Chase was standing in the drab waiting room for the administrative wing of the hospital when a strange woman seemed to come out of nowhere. He extended his hand, fighting the sudden surrealism she stirred up.

“Thanks for meeting with me on such short notice, uh”—Chase glanced at the business card in his hand and took special care to pronounce the name—“Ms. Berdichevsky.”

“Call me Birdie.” The woman smiled and bounced on her feet while she shook his hand. Short and dressed in green from head to toe, she made him think of the forest fairies in his kids’ story books. She could as easily have her free arm crooked around a tree trunk as the bunch of manila folders she carried. Birdie’s reddish-brown hair reminded Chase of one of those weed and stick arrangements Bond kept experimenting with in their foyer. He guessed the green scarf clamped around the odd woman’s head served a greater purpose than accessorizing her outfit. A musky, spicy scent filled the air around her, as if set off by undulating exotic plants. He thought it smelled interesting and was grateful it didn’t make him sneeze.

Birdie worked as the organ procurement liaison with the hospital. She’d agreed to give Chase a crash course in the business side of organ donation if he would agree to actually meet a few of the people behind the statistics. He made it clear that while he wanted to get as much background information as possible, he didn’t have the luxury of spending hours in the hospital.

Without divulging any connection to a current case, he let her know time was of the essence.

Chase did his best to keep up with her bounce-hop gait as they moved down the brightly lit corridor.

Birdie waved him on. “Leslie James tells me you need some more information on transplanted people.” Her English was heavily accented. She twisted toward him and he half expected her to leap in the air. This woman broadcast an undeniable high level of energy. Exhausting almost. She grinned. “I am your girl and I will have you out of here in less than an hour with your questions filled.”

Chase always tried to build a broad spectrum of knowledge related to his cases. Little pieces of information had helped close more than one in the past. Ever since David’s death, he’d wanted to understand more about organ donation. The visit to this particular floor of Aspen Falls Memorial made all kinds of sense—both personal and professional. He had asked Leslie James not to tell anyone the reason for his visit. As far as anyone else was to know, he was there for a quick VIP tour.

They stopped in front of a bank of elevators. Three other people joined them while they waited. Conversation stilled but Birdie kept up a steady pulse with her feet—heels and toes, heels and toes.

Polite elevator conversation ended when they exited on the fifth floor. And Birdie’s high energy gave way to quiet dedication. If Chase hadn’t seen it for himself, he wouldn’t have believed the transformation. The woman who almost drove him to distraction in less than three minutes paused, took a deep breath, and gazed into his eyes. “I am going to show you a few people who are waiting for miracles. If they say no to talking to you, it’s no all the way.”

Her manner calm and focused, even as her English proved more of a grasp and a grin, she opened the first folder and glanced quickly at its contents. File closed, she glided in slow motion ahead of Chase, but just beneath the surface he could sense a tiger continued to pace. And bounce.

They entered a lobby area void of people. An older woman sat behind the nurse’s station with a phone pressed against her ear. She waved distractedly at Birdie and motioned toward a set of automatic doors. They walked through them in silence.

This room had several people in it. Most sat in comfortable chairs reading books and magazines. One gentleman lay on a bed, eyes closed. Every one of them in their own world and every one of them hooked up to a machine.

Birdie turned to him. “This is one of the more or minus twenty dialysis centers in Colorado and the only local to give a patient the choice between home and a center for life needs.” She spoke in the low voice of an art museum docent. “Each one of these people breathes because they go through this workout several times a week. Each one of them will die sooner than they were made for if they do not get a kidney. Each one of them is on the waiting list. Each one of them hopes to be transplanted.”

Birdie angled across the room toward a middle-aged man who sat in a reading chair, soft light spilling over his head and broad shoulders. Chase saw the book cover. A Harry Potter but he wasn’t sure which one. By the size of the tome, he guessed it was one of the earlier ones.

As they neared, the man looked up and a smile split his face. “Bir-die.” His voice resonated a deep bass as he spun her name like a song. Warm and welcoming, he radiated hospitality. “What a pleasure to see you.”

“Mitchell, I’d like you to meet Chase Waters Detective. I am giving him a bit of a trip this morning and you are one of the spotlights.”

Mitchell laughed, deep and sonorous, and Chase knew he’d like to spend more time in this man’s company. A sense of humor when his life depended on a machine? When his days no longer belonged to him but to this room? He must be an amazing person.

“Well, Chase Waters Detective, if Birdie vouches for you, then I’m at your disposal.” His eyes shone with an inner light.

They spent the next ten minutes talking. And to Chase’s surprise—laughing. Mitchell, or Mitch, had just celebrated his sixty-second birthday. Traveling had once been high on his agenda and he hoped it would be again. He and his wife had set foot in many countries, and most continents.

A father of two and grandfather to one, Mitchell loved to play golf, the saxophone, and cards—particularly whist—in that order.

Chase and Mitch shared some musical favorites—from Sarah Vaughn to Charlie Parker—and their conversation never lulled. And yes, with that voice of his, he’d been a professional announcer—on both radio and television. But kidney failure had forced him into early retirement. He missed his life but determined to make the most of each day where he focused on his friends and whatever small joys he could find.

Chase found himself wishing for a little more time with Mitchell, and at his new friend’s invitation, planned to have some follow-up visits where they could talk some more.

“You two hit each other off. I knew this.” Birdie seemed pleased but subdued.

Her flip-side persona still rattled him, yet somehow it worked. Her intense animation transformed into huge compassion when dealing with people whose lives had been stolen, and her hard edges smoothed out when she sucked some of their tragedy into her own body by being near them. Like some weird reactive chameleon, she had an innate sense of the best way to approach people without being phony.

“So, what’s the story? When will Mitchell get his kidney?”

She nodded. Swallowed. Started walking down the hallway. Without looking in his direction she said, “Twenty people die today in this great country waiting to be transplanted.
Twenty
. Today twenty and tomorrow twenty. And most of those twenty wait for kidney kind of miracle.” She stopped and stared at Chase dead-on. “Mitchell will never have old life. He here to live two more years. Bottoms.”

“But surely in two years—”

“There are larger people up the waiting list than Mitch. People who might die tomorrow. And then there is the problem to match. It happens, but most days for most people it does not. People are more than one hundred fifteen thousand on the waiting list right now. Facebook helped but not enough. New adds to be transplanted rise twice faster than what people choose to give. Mitch does not look good to live.”

Chase wondered what he’d do in Mitch’s place. He thought about the dark pit he’d fallen into after David’s death. About the rubble and destruction he’d carefully walked around—in an attempt to avoid dealing with any feelings. There were differences between what he’d gone through and Mitch’s situation, sure. An uncomfortable awareness settled over him as suspicion grew about where his attitude would fall. He knew he’d be back to visit Mitch at his earliest opportunity—after this case wrapped up. He had a lot to learn.

Birdie took Chase to visit two more people in the hospital. On the way, she filled him in on statistics, ins-and-outs, and details of organ donation, including ethical conflicts that exist even in legitimate operations. All of it in her off-key, but sometimes better than good, English.

Other books

Cottage Daze by James Ross
A Kind of Grace by Jackie Joyner-Kersee
Friends and Lovers by Tara Mills
Night Shifters by Sarah A. Hoyt
Love Story by Jennifer Echols
Dead Heat by James Patterson