Statute of Limitations pc-13

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Statute of Limitations pc-13 Page 29

by Steven F Havill


  That brought a sniff that could have been amusement. “We didn’t correspond at all, Sheriff.”

  “You’re a couple of years younger than Janet, is that correct?”

  “Four years. We weren’t close. Look, I don’t understand how she died, officer.”

  “What did Mike tell you?”

  “Just that Janet had gone to the bank on Christmas Day, and someone shot her while she was standing at the ATM.” What might have been a choked-off sniffle punctuated the sentence.

  “That’s basically what happened, ma’am. Any information you can give us about her background, about anything you might know, will be a help.”

  “I haven’t seen her since she was in the army,” Monica said. “We were never close. We never really wrote. She didn’t do e-mail, or anything like that.” She hesitated. “I have my family here. My life’s here.”

  “I see. You’re coming over for the funeral, though?”

  “I told the deputy that I probably would, but I don’t know for sure. The service is Wednesday, isn’t it? There’s a lot going on. I’m not sure that I can get off work.”

  “If you could…Mike said you might be able to come over tomorrow. There are some estate questions that I’m sure will come up. Mike and Janet weren’t married, and you’re the nearest relative for her estate.”

  Monica responded with a sigh.

  “Are either of your folks still alive?”

  “No. I don’t think so.”

  Estelle frowned. “You don’t think so? There’s some question?”

  “My mother died a few years ago. I don’t know where my father went after he and my mom were divorced. And I’m not sure that I really care a whole lot, officer. He isn’t part of my life now.”

  “Do you remember when your folks divorced?”

  “Of course I remember. A long time ago,” Monica said. “Look, those things happen. Mom was really, really hurt by the whole thing. She divorced him, and then he just left. Just left. So as far as I’m concerned, that’s that.”

  “Hurt by the whole thing,” Estelle repeated gently. “What whole thing would that be?”

  “Look, it’s ancient history. That part of my life is over. I just don’t care anymore. And I didn’t talk with Janet much over the years, but I think she felt the same way. Look, officer, some families are just really close, you know? Huggy huggy close. We weren’t. She wasn’t my best friend, or anything like that. That’s as simple as I can say it. Did you need anything else?”

  “I need to know what the ‘whole thing’ was, Monica.”

  “The whole thing?”

  “Why your mom and dad were divorced.”

  “I think…I think it would be easiest just to say that they didn’t much like each other any more,” Monica said. “That’s just about the size of it.”

  “When your dad lived over on Sixth Street in Posadas, in that little yellow house? Were you with him then?”

  “No. He bought that place after the divorce. He was going to fix it up, but then he just left. He wasn’t there all that long. No goodbye, no nothing. Just up and left. Janet told me that he put stuff in storage and then left.”

  “Stuff?”

  “Well, you know. His furniture and stuff like that. Maybe he was going to come back for it later. I don’t think he had much over there. I know that Janet visited him a few times, but I never did. Mom wouldn’t let me.”

  “So you never saw the inside of that place.”

  “No.”

  “Did you ever know Mike’s parents?”

  “Mike? Oh, the cop, you mean? Janet’s boyfriend? No, I didn’t know them. I didn’t even know him, let alone them. What was their name?”

  “Sisneros.”

  “That’s right. No…I didn’t know them. I don’t know them.”

  “Did you know Hank Sisneros? That would be Mike’s father.”

  “No, I didn’t. I didn’t have any reason to know him. Look, are you guys going to find the person who killed my sister?”

  “I certainly hope so, Mrs. Baylor. And we appreciate your help. When you come to Posadas, you need to stop by the sheriff’s office. There will be some civil paperwork for you to deal with. As the nearest relative.”

  “The cop can’t do that? This Mike guy?”

  “No, he can’t.” Even if we knew where “the cop” was. “Sergeant Bishop is our civil affairs officer. Ask for him. He’ll take you through it one step at a time,” Estelle added. “I’d like to talk with you again at that time.”

  “I suppose.”

  Estelle left her name and number, and when she hung up, Bill Gastner shifted restlessly in the chair. “That sounded productive.”

  “Ay,” she said. “How dare Janet interrupt their busy life by dying.”

  Gastner heaved himself to his feet. “You can’t always tell by a phone voice,” he said. “Lots of barriers go up.” He looked at the clock. “If you’re finished with me, I need to go home,” he said. “I have a few things to do. Then I need to get cleaned up for an evening soiree.”

  “Sorry, sir,” she said. “Someone once taught me that once things get rolling, there’s no letup. I don’t think anybody’s going to be relaxing much until we find Mike-and his father.”

  “You don’t need my help for that.” Estelle heard the fatigue in his voice. “It’s five fifteen now. What time do you want me to show up? Or do you want a raincheck?” He frowned at her. “You going to take some time to eat?”

  “Los hijos are expecting, you, Padrino.”

  “Ah,” Gastner said. “They just want a music critic.”

  “No doubt, sir. How about six thirty?”

  “I’ll pencil it in on my busy calendar. You’re sure there’s nothing you need me to do?”

  “I don’t think so. Right now, it’s hide and seek.”

  “It’s a small county. You’ll find ’em.”

  “I hope so, Padrino.”

  Chapter Thirty-seven

  “See you in a little bit,” Bill Gastner said. He paused, car door open and one boot out on the gravel of his driveway as he sifted through his keys for the one that fit the front door of his house. “Take a breather now. Give it a rest for a few minutes. Collect your thoughts. You’ve got every cop in the state on pins and needles now. Let them earn their pay.” He grinned. “God, I’m good at giving advice.”

  He turned and looked at Estelle, and the grin broadened. “You’re wired, sweetheart.”

  “Wired?”

  “Wound up. Poised for the chase. Ready to go. This doesn’t bode well for a relaxed dinner with family.” He glanced at his watch. “Six thirty. You got an hour to stew.”

  “Yes, sir. You, too.”

  He pointed at the front door. “I am home. No stewing for me. I gave that up a long time ago.” A grin twitched the corners of his mouth and he reached out and patted Estelle’s forearm. “This is going to work out.”

  “One way or another,” Estelle said. “It’s harder when it’s family.”

  “Ain’t that the truth.” Gastner’s hand tapped the doorsill as if he had something else to say, but then thought better of it. “Mike has a good heart,” he said. “Trust him a little bit.”

  She nodded.

  “Be careful, sweetheart.”

  “You bet.” He got out and shut the door, lifting his hand to the brim of his baseball cap in salute. Estelle watched him trudge toward the front door. The headlights weren’t much use in the late afternoon dusk, and she swiveled the spotlight this way and that, peering into dark corners of the courtyard. He keyed the massive, carved front door, and then turned to nod at her again. When the door closed behind him, she backed the car away and headed out on Guadalupe.

  At the intersection with Escondido, she turned right out of habit, letting the car drift east on Guadalupe through the winter twilight toward her husband’s medical clinic and pharmacy. The swing-by had become habit after two attempted break-ins during the past year. Situated in the quiet, dimly lit south en
d of town, on the back side of a five-acre lot that Bill Gastner had given to the Guzmans, the clinic and pharmacy could be an attractive target-at least until intruders ran into the heavily barred, small windows and comprehensive alarm system.

  One of the attempts had been made by a forty-seven-year-old vagrant who had been passing by on the interstate, huge knapsack laden with all his worldly possessions. He had paused at the Posadas exit to work his stranded, will work for food, god bless sign for a couple of hours, and later told the deputy who’d arrested him that he’d seen the clinic’s sign through a thin copse of elms. Nothing ventured, nothing gained, he had told the deputy as he was handcuffed and loaded into the back of the Expedition, his knapsack and sign crammed in behind the seat.

  Estelle pulled into the spacious macadam parking lot and swung around, her lights flashing on two vehicles. One was the new Subaru Outback that she knew belonged to Lonnie Duarte, the pharmacist whom her husband and Dr. Perrone had hired a month or two before. That Lonnie would be working at the drug store an hour after closing time on a Sunday afternoon wasn’t surprising.

  Parked beside Lonnie’s Subaru was a contractor’s late-model pickup, with heavy side boxes and a headache rack that supported two ladders and a selection of PVC pipe sections. Estelle stopped, her first thought being that the clinic had managed to operate only a month between visits from a plumber before something went wrong again with its copper and plastic innards. The new building had proven about as healthy as an overweight sixty-year-old on nine different medications.

  Swinging into the next space, she pushed the car’s gear lever into Park and activated her cell phone. “Ernie,” she said, when Wheeler answered at the sheriff’s department, “I’ll be at the clinic for a few minutes with Lonnie.” She was pleased to hear the sound of his voice. Maybe Gayle had been able to talk her husband into going home for a while.

  “Ten four,” the dispatcher said. “You coming back in here tonight?”

  “Probably-after dinner sometime. Why?”

  “Just wondered, is all.”

  She was about to break the connection when she hesitated, her tired brain finally interpreting what she was seeing. Posadas had at least two reputable plumbing contractors, and Drs. Guzman and Perrone had always made a point of hiring them. Why would they then call-or ask Lonnie to call-a contractor from Deming, especially for a nighttime emergency?

  “Ay,” Estelle whispered. Deming. She gazed at the truck for a long moment. What was the nature of coincidence? Deming, less than forty miles east, was the nearest city of any consequence.

  She glanced at the dashboard clock. At 5:36 p.m., the pharmacy had been closed for more than an hour…. If a contractor passing through had stopped for a refilled prescription, or a bottle of aspirin, he would have been long since on his way. That someone had found a plumber who would respond to a call on Sunday afternoon was in itself remarkable.

  “Ernie, run a plate for me, okay?”

  “You got it. Go ahead when you’re ready.”

  “I’m looking at New Mexico November Charlie Thomas seven one one.”

  “Just a sec,” Wheeler said, and then in the background she heard another call, this one on the radio. “Stand by, three oh two,” Wheeler responded.

  “Don’t make him wait,” she said. “I’m in no hurry.”

  “Yes, ma’am,” Wheeler said, and for the next few seconds he and Deputy Pasquale exchanged numbers, Pasquale snooping into dark corners and working traffic on State 56 just south of the village.

  After a moment, the dispatcher came back on the phone. “Estelle, November Charlie Thomas seven one one should show on a commercial vehicle, a white 2003 Chevy three-quarter ton. It’s registered to Bruce Wilcox, doing business as Peerless Plumbing and Heating.” He rattled off the address. “Negative wants or warrants.”

  “Thanks, Brent. I’ll be with the owner of that vehicle at the clinic. Apparently he’s inside with Lonnie.”

  “Ten four.”

  She pocketed the phone, picked up her heavy flashlight, and switched off the car, locking it behind her as she got put. Walking on the narrow sidewalk, she skirted the building and arrived at the front door. Through one of the narrow, grilled windows, she could see the top of Lonnie Duarte’s round, fuzzy-haired head back in the pharmacy. The rest of the store was dark. Lonnie reached up and made a notation in a large ring binder that lay on top of the counter. He was obviously alone, intent on his work.

  Estelle retraced her steps to the clinic’s side entrance, a plain, windowless door marked employees only. In a moment, she found the correct key and let herself in.

  Lonnie’s head appeared around the corner, and a broad smile of recognition lit up his pleasant features.

  “Well, hi there. Did you forget something?” he asked.

  “No, I don’t think so.” She closed the door behind her. “You’re working late.”

  “Always, always,” Lonnie said. “It amazes me how much paperwork there is, all the time.”

  Estelle nodded agreeably. “There’s a truck parked outside, next to your car.”

  “There is?”

  “A plumbing contractor’s truck. Was he in here earlier for something?”

  “No. No one like that. At least I don’t think so.”

  Estelle frowned. “He could have come in earlier…” She let the sentence trail off. If the plumber had come in earlier, he’d be gone by now. If the truck had broken down, someone would have towed it away.

  “Just wondered,” she said. “I was just swinging by and noticed it.”

  “I don’t know what to tell you,” Lonnie said. “Maybe it’s a Christmas present from a grateful patient.”

  “Don’t you wish. You have a good night.” Estelle left the same way she had come, and stood for a moment on the sidewalk, regarding the truck. Frowning, she backed away, moving out into the parking lot for a different perspective. With an electric jolt, the memory flooded back. This wasn’t the first time she had seen this truck-or at least one very much like it.

  At the Posadas Inn motel, a white utility truck had been one of the vehicles parked outside the rooms…just a few spaces down from Todd Willis’s battered loaner van.

  Moving quickly, Estelle returned to her own vehicle, dialing the office as she did so.

  “Ernie, are you clear for a minute?”

  “Yes, ma’am.”

  “Check the Deming phone directory for a listing for Bruce Wilcox, and also Peerless Plumbing and Heating, please.”

  “You got it.”

  She could hear him humming tunelessly as he scrolled through the electronic pages. “I have a Bruce and Alma Wilcox on Rincon Drive. Is that the one? It’s the only Bruce Wilcox listed.”

  “We’ll see.” He gave her the number, as well as the two listings for Peerless Plumbing and Heating. “Thanks, Ernie. What’s Tom’s twenty now? Still south of the Spur?”

  “He’s out at mile marker thirty-one on State 56. A confused tourist, I think. He was going to head on down and check both the saloon and a couple of places in Regál when he finished up. He says that one of Mike’s buddies lives down that way. Art Sanchez?”

  “Okay. When he’s clear, have Tomás start up this way.”

  “Where do you want to meet him?”

  “I’m not sure yet. Just have him stay central until I get back to you.”

  “You got it. Captain Mitchell is right over on Bustos. He and Lieutenant Adams are checking all the alleys and stuff. And Jackie’s over making sure the school complex is clear.”

  “That’s good,” Estelle said. “I’ll let you know.” When she dialed the number for Wilcox, the phone was answered on the second ring by an answering machine, and then almost immediately that was cut off. A brusque voice said, “Yup?”

  “Mr. Wilcox?”

  “That’s right.”

  “Sir, this is Undersheriff Estelle Guzman over in Posadas. I’m sorry to bother you so late.”

  “In Posadas, you said?”

>   “That’s right, sir.”

  “Well, what can I do for you?” He sounded as if he was eating something while he talked, and Estelle could hear a television in the background.

  “Sir, let me make sure I have the right party. Are you owner of Peerless Plumbing and Heating?”

  “Sure am.”

  “I was curious about one of your trucks that’s parked over here in Posadas.”

  “I beg your pardon?”

  “One of your trucks, sir.”

  “Marko, turn that thing down,” Wilcox shouted without bothering to cover the telephone mouthpiece. “Now, say again?” he said to Estelle.

  “One of your trucks is parked at a business here in town, and the driver isn’t with the vehicle. Does one of your staff live over here, or were they over here shopping? Something like that?”

  “I don’t think so,” Wilcox said.

  “How many employees do you have, sir?”

  “Just five of us at the moment. We’re a little short-handed. But listen, I don’t understand this thing about one of my trucks.”

  “A white 2003 Chevy three-quarter ton, sir. License November Thomas Charlie seven one one. It’s got toolboxes on the side of the bed, a couple ladders, and a small load of PVC pipe. It looks like somebody’s doing a job over here or something. Except no one’s around. The truck is untended.” She stepped out of her car, and walked the length of the white pickup. With a great deal of care, she reached out and opened the driver’s door. “It’s also unlocked,” she said. She leaned inside without making any contact and inhaled deeply. The smell of whiskey was pungent. As if her response was triggered by that aroma, she closed the truck’s door and then turned quickly in place, surveying the shadows of the parking lot.

  “Huh,” Wilcox said, and then there was silence for a heartbeat. “Oh…,” and he chuckled quickly. “I’m sorry-this just slipped my mind. One of the boys borrowed that to pick up some stuff over there the other day.” The relief at solving the mystery was palpable in his tone. “Hank had a couple of errands he needed to run up that way, and I loaned him the truck. He said he had some furniture to move. Something like that.”

 

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