Devil's Rock
Page 1
Copyright© 2010 Gerri Hill
Bella Books, Inc.
P.O. Box 10543
Tallahassee, FL 32302
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, without permission in writing from the publisher.
First Edition
Editor: Anna Chinappi
Cover designer: Linda Callaghan
ISBN: 978-1-59493-218-2
Also by Gerri Hill
Artist’s Dream
Behind The Pine Curtain
The Cottage
Coyote Sky
Dawn Of Change
Gulf Breeze
Hunter’s Way
In The Name Of The Father
The Killing Room
Love Waits
No Strings
One Summer Night
Partners
Sierra City
The Target
The Scorpion
About the Author
Gerri Hill has eighteen published works, including 2009 GCLS winner Partners and 2007 GCLS winners Behind the Pine Curtain and The Killing Room, as well as GCLS finalist Hunter’s Way and Lambda finalist In the Name of the Father. She began writing lesbian romance as a way to amuse herself while snowed in one winter in the mountains of Colorado and hasn’t looked back. Her first published work came in 2000 with One Summer Night. Hill’s love of nature and of being outdoors usually makes its way into her stories as her characters often find themselves in beautiful natural settings. When she isn’t writing, Hill and her longtime partner, Diane, can be found at their home in East Texas, where their vegetable garden, orchard and five acres of piney woods keep them busy. They share their lives with two Australian Shepherds and an assortment of furry felines. For more, see her website: www.gerrihill.com.
Chapter One
“You know, they say Sycamore Canyon is haunted.”
Andrea Sullivan wiped the sweat from her brow, her eyes squinting against the glare of the hot sun. “You don’t really believe that crap, do you?”
“There’s just a lot of weird shit that’s happened in this canyon.”
Andrea pulled her horse to a stop. “Are you going to tell me the UFO story again?”
Randy shook his head, his long blond hair tied back in its usual ponytail as he took a drink of water from the old-fashioned canteen fastened to his saddle. He wiped his mouth with the back of his hand before speaking. “Not just that. The Native Americans thought it was haunted too.”
“So because we find a body with her throat slashed, you assume it’s because of the canyon?”
“Two bodies. A week apart.”
“Don’t jump to conclusions. We don’t know if this second body is for real. Hikers have been known to mistake bear carcasses for humans before. You can’t assume it’s related. Besides, we haven’t found it yet.”
“Haven’t had a murder in the ten years I’ve worked here.”
Andrea urged her horse on. “And you probably still won’t get to work one. She was killed and dumped. That wasn’t the crime scene. Chances are the case will be handed off to someone else.”
“I bet you saw plenty of murders when you were in LA, didn’t you?”
“More than I can remember.” And plenty she couldn’t forget.
“Why won’t you ever talk about it?”
“It what?”
“Being a cop in LA. Must have been exciting.”
“A blast,” she said dryly. “Come on. We’re close. GPS says about two hundred more yards.”
“Hey, Andi. Wait up,” he said, trying to get the mule he led behind his horse to pick up the pace.
She ignored his request and rode on ahead, her horse following the trail without much direction from her. She’d only been on the Rim Trail a handful of times in the two years she’d been working for the sheriff’s department. Never in the middle of summer. She normally hiked the lower Dogie Trail, deep in the canyon. While most people found Sycamore Canyon to have a wildness to it—albeit in a weird sort of way, as Randy had said—she found peace here. With the shadows of the canyon drifting about, the outcroppings and spires seemed almost ghost-like from below. The sandstone walls changed colors with the shadows—orange, then red. Junipers, scrub oaks, mesquites and pinyons lined the rocks, taking hold where no tree should ever grow. Deep in the gut of the canyon, where spring water flowed, cypress and sycamore trees flourished. When she hiked alone in the canyon, the quiet was nearly overpowering. The canyon was wild and remote, yet it was where she found some peace.
It all looked different from up here along the rim though. The sun beat down, making the red rocks glow like hot embers in a campfire. There was a quietness in the air, the only sound that of their horses’ hooves as they crunched along the rock, and the occasional call of the ravens as they soared past, inspecting their progress. Rim Trail was an eleven-mile loop, but six miles into it, a side trail veered off that would take hikers farther into the wilderness, the red rock cliffs and canyons a challenge for even the most seasoned individual. That was one reason she suspected the body they were searching for wasn’t a victim of homicide. More likely a hiker who succumbed to the elements.
She was still twenty yards away when she smelled it. She glanced over her shoulder as Randy and the mule caught up to her.
“Jesus Christ,” Randy mumbled as he covered his mouth and nose with his shirt.
“Decomp,” she said. “That’s a smell I’d hoped to never encounter again.” She reined in her mount, then slid from the saddle. She didn’t want to spook the animal by walking upon a rotting corpse. Her handheld GPS guided her on and she too covered her mouth and nose. The stench was unbearable.
She stopped when she saw it. It was definitely not a bear.
“What is it?”
She walked closer, seeing the remnants of blond hair, although the face was nearly gone, the skin turned nearly black. The ribcage was exposed, the organs missing as was most of the flesh. What remained was being consumed by maggots and beetles. The arms and legs had been badly gnawed, most likely by coyotes. She took the small, digital camera from her pocket, taking pictures from different angles.
“I’m guessing blond female,” she said. “We’re missing part of a leg here,” she said, pointing where the right lower leg should have been. She took a closer picture of that. “Wild animals probably carried it off.” She looked up. “See if you can find it.”
“Are you serious? You want me to look for her leg?”
“We came up here to retrieve this body. Let’s try to bring all of it back.”
Randy shook his head. “No way. I’m not touching that. We can’t bring it down.”
She turned to him and put her hands on her hips. “So you want to just leave her here? Let the animals finish with her?”
“How the hell are we going to get her down?”
“The aluminum rack we brought.”
“Yeah. For a body. That’s...that’ll fall apart if we try to move her.”
“We don’t have a choice. Now put your gloves on.”
She shook her head, seeing the squeamish look on his face. He’d been a sheriff’s deputy for ten years. The other guys on staff had all been here at least six years. Yet they always turned to her for instruction. That wasn’t always the case. She was a woman and she was new to the area, new to the department. But it didn’t take long for them to realize her knowledge of law enforcement far surpassed their own. Sheriff Baker was the only one who didn’t defer to her. Not in public, anyway.
She tried not to think about what they were doing or how the bones were barely intact when they moved her. Not that she suspected this was a crime scene, but she tried to get as much physical eviden
ce as possible. The lab in Phoenix would give them cause of death. If it was a homicide, perhaps there was some usable trace evidence under and around the body.
“This is the grossest thing I’ve ever done in my entire life,” Randy said when they’d finished taping up the plastic tarp. The smell was only slightly better.
“Yeah, it ranks pretty high on my list too.” She stripped off the latex gloves she wore, stuffing them into a crease of the tarp. “Put yours there too. I’ll tape them down.” She motioned to the horses. “Go get the mule.”
Andrea led the way back down the trail, pulling the mule behind her. The last thing she wanted was for the mule to get spooked and take off. Not that she didn’t trust Randy, but his history with horses was legendary. They usually did what they wanted and he held on for dear life. She didn’t want the mule—and their body—to take off down the canyon.
“Hey, Andi, why’d you leave LA anyway?”
She looked over her shoulder. It was a question she’d heard numerous times in the last two years. You’d think her evasiveness would have given them a clue she didn’t want to discuss it. “I wanted to,” she said, using the answer she normally gave. Wanted to, needed to, had to.
“Yeah, but who leaves LA to come to Sedona, Arizona? It doesn’t make sense.”
“Why are you here?”
“Crystal’s an artist. This is where she wanted to come.”
“Right. You came from Las Vegas. Who’d leave Las Vegas to come to Sedona?”
He laughed. “Yeah, but I came for a woman. What’s your excuse?”
Chapter Two
“Heard back from Phoenix on that first body,” Sheriff Baker said, handing her a note. “Student.”
She skimmed over it. Sandy Reynolds, age twenty-one. University of Northern Arizona, Flagstaff. Reported missing by her roommate. “Last seen at a bar?”
“Yep. I’ve already called Flagstaff and handed it over. Sorry.”
She shrugged. “Oh well. I think Randy was more interested in working a homicide than I was. I’ve done my share.”
“Yeah. But it’s a shame your skills are wasted up here.”
She looked at him affectionately. She’d only known Jim the two years, but he’d become the father figure in her life that had been missing. Her own father would have been a few years younger than Jim. And while they didn’t resemble each other physically—her father had been a large, robust man—Jim was just as straightforward and honest with her as her own father had been. He was willing to hear her story without judgment. In fact, he was the only one here who knew the details of why she left LA.
“I don’t look at it as wasted,” she said. “I’ve loved my time here.”
He nodded and stuck the ever-present toothpick back in his mouth. “So what about this other one? Crawford thinks it might be linked.”
“How the hell would he know? I’m pretty sure he had his eyes closed the whole time we were bagging her. But if it is linked, then our timeline is all wrong. This one’s been out there at least three weeks, I’d guess. Sandy Reynolds was found after two days.”
“Sandy Reynolds was on a well-traveled trail in Oak Creek Canyon,” he reminded her.
“She was dumped. If this new one was dumped as well, the killer would have had a hell of a trek carrying a dead body.”
“So you’re thinking accident?”
“If it’s an accident, why hasn’t somebody missed her? Three weeks?”
“Not everyone leaves an agenda. We’ve learned that.” He shrugged. “Maybe she’s got no one to miss her.”
“Did Phoenix give you a time?”
“They’ll have a preliminary COD in a day or so, they said. Don’t know about ID.” He narrowed his eyes. “What does your gut tell you?”
She met his stare without flinching. “Before we found her, I was convinced it was a hiker who had a bit of bad luck.” She shrugged. “Now, after seeing her, I think they’re linked somehow. She was laid out too perfectly. Even after the animals had their way with her, you could tell she’d been placed there. Just like Sandy Reynolds.”
“But you just said it was too far for a dump.”
“If he was on horseback, just a couple of hours. I suppose he could have disguised the body as gear on the back of a horse.”
“That’d mean he’d have access to a horse.”
“Well, anybody can rent a horse,” she said.
He sat down across from her desk. “Did I ever tell you about Bigfoot being spotted in Sycamore Canyon?”
“Several times.” She smiled at the playful glint in his eyes.
“What about the UFO?”
“A hundred times.”
“You don’t believe me?”
“What? That two hikers shined their flashlights on a spacecraft that was flying over the canyon? Or the part about them being abducted for a day?”
“Yeah. Nobody believed them back then either. But under hypnosis, it all came out. Spacemen with big bald heads and almond-shaped eyes.”
“Right.”
“I kid you not,” he said. “True story.” He scooted his chair closer and she waited for the next part of his story, the one about him seeing the UFO. “Lived here my whole life, Andi. I’ve seen all sorts of things coming and going in the canyon. In the mornings, when the sun is just right, you can see it reflecting off of...stuff.”
“Like alien spaceships?”
“Exactly. Bright, shiny objects. Seen it myself,” he said. “Several times.”
At first, she’d thought that maybe they were just playing with the newbie when they told their stories. But no, the story of the two hikers being abducted by a UFO was legendary. So was the story of Bigfoot roaming the canyon. That story held more credence to her than the UFO. The Bigfoot legend was enough to scare sheepherders away and even some cattle ranchers back in the day. But she drew the line at UFOs.
“So, on our two dead girls, you want to go with the spacemen story or Bigfoot?”
“Oh, hell, I’m not that dense,” he said as he stood up. “I don’t really believe in Bigfoot.”
She laughed when she saw the twinkle in his eyes as he walked away. Another thing about Jim that reminded her of her own father—his playfulness. Her father used to tease her with his own stories, making up elaborate tales at bedtime. Maybe it had been an outlet for his stress or maybe he just genuinely enjoyed entertaining her, but those were memories she would always hold dear. She glanced at Jim as he filled his coffee cup, his smile still playing on his face. Yes, if he packed on about a hundred pounds and shaved that gray, wiry mustache, he could nearly pass for her father.
Randy Crawford came busting in the door just then, Joey Turner on his heels. He flashed a grin at Andrea, then hurried over to Jim.
“Sheriff? I heard on the radio when Sheila said Phoenix had called. What’s the word? Need me to go out again and—”
“Slow down, Randy. Damn, I never seen someone so excited about a murder before.”
“Well, it’s just that we’ve never had one here.”
“I know. And we still don’t. She was a student up in Flagstaff. She was last seen out at a bar. I’ve already turned it over to the PD up there.”
“Oh, man. You’re kidding? They don’t need us for anything?”
“Nope. She wasn’t killed here, just dumped.”
“Well, maybe we need to go back to the scene and see if there’s some evidence left behind.”
Andrea snorted. “You wouldn’t know trace evidence if it bit you in the ass.”
“No. That’s why I’d take you along. Then I could listen to all that forensic shit you talk about.”
It was true. She did tend to know more about the forensic side of police work than most, mainly because her best friend had worked in the crime lab. It was something she thought she’d want to do and spent nearly a year there, but she soon found she missed the action of being on the streets. Still, even with her limited exposure, forensic science was way over her head.
“Well, I’ve been back to the scene myself, Randy, so you can rest easy,” Jim said. “I didn’t see any of that trace stuff Andi talks about. Just rocks, gravel and sand.”
“Maybe you want to go up Rim Trail,” Andrea suggested. “Take Joey. You can collect some more evidence up there.”
“Hell, no. I’m not going near that spot again.”
“It could be the murder scene you’ve been waiting on,” Andrea teased.
“I’ll pass on that one.”
Chapter Three
It was an hour from daybreak and Andrea filled her water bottle, her routine so practiced now, she didn’t even think about it. Up before dawn, a quick fifteen minutes of yoga stretches, then out the door with a full water bottle, her trail runners already laced up and ready. Not that she actually ran the trails. But she liked the lightness of the shoes rather than the heaviness of the hiking boots she normally wore while working.
The Jeep that Jim had issued to her was old and dusty, with dents on both sides. But she loved it. The guys fought over the two new SUVs the county had purchased but she was happy with her Jeep, not even wanting to trade it in for the newer and now discarded trucks Randy and Joey used to drive. No, she was comfortable in this, the top down most days, loving the freedom of the wind, the sun.
She drove up Oak Creek Canyon, not venturing from her route. She parked in the same spot at the trailhead, pausing to stretch out her legs again before hurrying up the trail. The nightmares she’d lived with for so long were finally subsiding, but she didn’t want to jinx it by stopping. Each morning, she’d hike up the trail to the flat outcropping of rocks facing east. She’d stand still, waiting on the sun, her mind blank. As soon as color showed in the sky, she glided into her Tai Chi routine. At first, she was very disciplined in her routine, staying within the Taijiquan form as she’d first learned. As she became more comfortable with her body and her ability, she strayed from the practiced session, incorporating her own positions and movements. She feared a true Tai Chi master would cringe if they saw her now, but it worked for her. It kept her mind free, focusing on her body, the sun, the earth. Her reasons now for practicing it had nothing to do with the purity of the martial art form of Tai Chi and everything to do with her own psyche.