From airline employees in Los Angeles, the agency collected statements confirming that Clarke had boarded the aircraft with the diamond case locked to his left wrist, and that he had fended off security people who wanted to open it for inspection, explaining that those carrying diamonds-like security messengers-couldn't unlock such cases. The key to do that had been delivered by another messenger to the person who would receive them, count them, weigh them, and sign receipts for them.
From National Park Service employees, guides who worked in the canyon, from Arizona police, from a half-dozen Havasupai citizens who had been involved in recovering bodies and parts of the shattered aircraft, the agency learned that Clarke's body had not been recovered for identification. They also learned that one of a party of tourists who had been on a guided raft float down the Colorado eleven days after the disaster had seen a body part, a forearm, in driftwood debris below one of the rapids. He had not been able to reach the driftwood through the current but had taken photographs from a nearby outcrop. When a party of guides managed to be back there two weeks later to recover the arm, it was gone, as was part of the collected flotsam the man had seen with it. A search downstream proved fruitless.
The agency reported that the man who shot the photographs was now dead but his family had kept prints and negatives as a sort of macabre souvenir of what had been, at the time, the worst airline disaster in history. Copies were made and provided to Simmons and her mother, and now Joanna kept copies in her purse. They were the only photographs she had of her father. The Clarke family relatives had refused her requests for old family pictures.
In the final report, the agency provided a collection of interviews with a number of people-mostly Havasupai, some Grand Canyon National Park employees, some professional guides, some tourists passing through-who spoke of reports about a man, described generally as having long gray or white hair, being slender, wearing worn or ragged clothing, having claimed to have found a severed arm in the Colorado River, or recovered it from a drift of flotsam. While these stories varied in many details, most of those interviewed agreed that the man had been on what is called the "south side" of the river-below the most tourist-popular South Rim-and downstream from where the Little Colorado River Canyon connects to the Grand Canyon. They also seemed in various ways to suggest that he was a hermit, some sort of eccentric, perhaps a religious fanatic. Two of these proposed that he was a Havasupai shaman who had disappeared about twenty years earlier and was remembered as a visionary with a talent for finding lost children, missing animals, anything lost.
The way Joanna saw it, an important element of these fragmentary "hermit reports" was the mention in three of them that this strange fellow had considered himself either a priest or the guardian of a shrine. One report included his description of what happened when sunlight reached this shrine: "He said when this happened it `responded to the Father Sun with a dazzling light,' but he said this occurred only late in the morning with the sun almost overhead."
To Joanna, "dazzling light" suggested the sun striking diamonds, which perhaps decorated this odd man's shrine. But more important was the dating of these third-hand reports. In one the person being interviewed said he had met this hermit only three years earlier. Another had placed his conversation with the man "probably about July, two years back."
Thus it was reasonable to think he was still alive. And the man who could help her find this hermit was just ahead. The white sedan was slowing, turning down tracks that led to the rim of the mesa, led to the edge of the long, long drop down into the canyon. Probably led to the starting point of the Hopi trail that headed down to the Salt Shrine.
Joanna stopped at the turnoff point, watched and waited until the white sedan disappeared behind a screen of junipers. Then she followed slowly. Give them just enough time to get their bottom-of-the-canyon gear out of the car. Her plan was to get there just before they started their descent. What then? She would decide when she had to.
But there was the white sedan, parked. The two men still in it. The passenger-side door opened, was jerked closed again. Joanna parked, snatched up her binoculars, and stared. Some sort of struggle seemed to be going on. Then it ended. She could make out what must be Tuve's head against the passenger-side window, and part of the driver's face. He was talking.
Joanna got out, holding her pistol behind her. She walked slowly to the rear of the white sedan, keeping to the driver's side, keeping out of the line of sight of the man she presumed was Sherman, glad for the silence of the hiking shoes she was wearing. She could hear his voice now through the open car window, loud and angry. She slid along against the side of the sedan now, seeing Billy Tuve huddled against the opposite door, face down.
Sherman was moving his right hand up and down, a gesture of some sort. He was staring at Tuve, still talking. The right hand held a pistol. Joanna looked down at her own pistol, smaller than the police model Sherman was waving. She cocked it, made certain the safety was off. Very quietly she took the required two more steps, stood at the open car window, thrust her pistol through it, pressed the muzzle against Sherman's neck, said, "Mr. Sherman, drop that pistol on your lap."
"What?" Sherman said, in a strangled voice. He tried to turn his head.
Joanna jammed her pistol under his ear, said, "Drop it. Now. Or die."
Sherman dropped his pistol. Said, "I'm police. Who the hell are you? Let me get my badge out."
"Take that pistol of yours by the end of the barrel with your left hand," Joanna said, keeping the pressure of her gun against his ear. "Then reach around and hand it to me. Butt first. Otherwise I pull the trigger and you've got a bullet in your head."
"Be cool," Sherman said. "Be easy." He reached over with his left hand, took the pistol barrel between thumb and first finger, and handed it back to her-butt first.
Joanna had reached her own left hand into her jacket pocket and extracted a dainty little handkerchief. With that she accepted Sherman's pistol, glanced at it, noticed it wasn't cocked.
"I know who you are," Sherman said. "You're that woman who's trying to get her hands on that big Clarke estate," he said. "Or maybe you're someone working for her."
"And you are a private eye named Sherman," Joanna said. "What are you doing here?"
"He was going to kill me," Billy Tuve said. He had turned and sat facing her, back pressed against his door. "He said if I didn't take him down our Salt Trail, he'd shoot me and throw me over the edge and let the coyotes eat me."
"Little bastard's lying," Sherman said. "He promised me. I wasn't going to shoot him."
"Tell me who you're working for," Joanna said. "I already know, but I want to confirm it. So don't lie."
Sherman was facing her now, looking into the muzzle of her pistol, held just too far from him to reach if he decided to try.
"His name's Chandler," the man said. "Bradford Chandler. Runs Skippers Agency, I think it is." Joanna considered this. "Chandler hired you," she said. "Who hired him? And what's he supposed to do?"
Sherman made a face, bit his lower lip, considered. "You probably already know about the lost jewelry," he said.
"Keep talking."
"Chandler wants it."
Joanna nodded. Said, "And."
Sherman shrugged. "You think there's more to it than that?"
"I know there's more to it than that. You already mentioned the estate. But you haven't told me who hired this Bradford Chandler."
"Look," Sherman said, his voice sounding angry now. "I'm an officer of the law. Who the hell do you-"
Joanna jammed the pistol against his left eye socket.
"All right, all right," Sherman squeaked. "Chandler was pretty coy about it. I think it's a law firm."
"Name," Joanna said.
"Probably Plymale," Sherman said. "I think that's it. And it's involved with some foundation he's running."
The pistol muzzle was still uncomfortably in Sherman's eye socket. She had released the pressure, but now she restored it.
r /> "I hope you don't want me to believe that old man is just after the diamonds," she said.
Sherman's head was pressed back against the car seat. "No. No," he said. "Somebody else is after the diamonds, but mostly they're after some bones. Want to get the bones for the DNA. For proof in some lawsuit. Hell of a lot of money involved. And some woman is after the bones, too, and this Indian here with me, he's supposed to know where to find them. He was-"
"What's the name of the woman?" Joanna asked.
"Craig," Sherman said. "Joanna Craig, I think."
Joanna removed her pistol from Sherman's face, cocked Sherman's pistol, carefully keeping her handkerchief over the hammer.
"Anything else you can tell me?"
"That's it," Sherman said. "But I can sure as hell tell you you're not going to get away with this. Treating an officer-"
But by then Joanna had thrust Sherman's heavy pistol through the window, jammed it against his rib cage, and pulled the trigger.
14
Bradford Chandler had done all the things he needed to do at the South Rim entrance to the Grand Canyon. He'd checked into a very comfortable suite in the Grand Hotel, made a just-in-case visit to the Grand Canyon airport to check on the availability of charter fliers, reserved a jeep for a guided tour, filled out all the required U.S. Park Service paperwork for touring down into the depths, and collected a little information about the do's and don'ts of canyon tripping. One of the do's was a reminder that this was the "monsoon season" in the mountain west, a season of thunderstorms, and that these tended to produce quick, brief, and dangerous flash floods sweeping down the subsidiary canyons leading down to the Colorado River.
As was his custom, he had picked the most attractive young female Park Service employee there as his source of information, quickly noted from her ID tag that her name was Mela, and turned on his prep-school charm. He was supposed to meet his aunt here, he told this young lady. She was Mrs. Joanna Craig. But, alas, he was late. Could she tell him if Mrs. Craig had already checked in to get the required permits and some advice? The young lady, trained to be helpful to tourists, probably didn't need the encouragement of the Chandler charm. She checked.
Yes, Mela said, a Ms. Joanna Craig had indeed checked in for a visit down into the canyon.
"It was yesterday," she said, returning Chandler's smile. "You're even later than you thought."
"Maybe I can still catch her," he said. "Is she staying at that big hotel?" He dug his notebook from his jacket pocket, flipped through pages long enough to suggest a search. "We're planning to go down the Hopi Salt Shrine Trail. Did she say anything about that? Did she say which trail she would be taking?"
Chandler left with a no to both questions and a warning from the Park Service aide that going down the Salt Trail would require dealing with the Hopi authorities. It was restricted for Hopi religious use and it probably would not be possible for him to go down there. His next stop was the hotel. Yes, a Ms. Joanna Craig was registered. He dialed her room number from the house phone. No answer. No need for his "Sorry, wrong number" excuse. That accomplished, he drove to a tourist parking lot and found himself a place to sit with shade and a view. There he waited for his cell phone to ring and get the word from Sherman that would begin the final phase of this project.
Sherman had called earlier, reporting success. He had located the home of Tuve's mother, found Tuve there, identified himself as a deputy sheriff sent to take Tuve back to Gallup to clear up some problem about bonding him out. Then Sherman said he'd told Tuve that he didn't believe he'd killed the man at the Zuni shop, that he wanted to help Tuve find the old man who had swapped him the diamond and thereby prove his innocence.
"Cut it short," Chandler had said. "Where is he now?"
"Out taking a leak," Sherman said. "We can talk?"
"Well, make it quick. Where do we meet?"
Sherman had said he didn't know yet. "He says he has to go down something they call the Salt Trail to get close to the place he met this bird, but he says nobody can go down without doing the proper religious things. You need to understand I'm having trouble talking him into it. So far, the best he'll agree to is to show me the place on the rim where the trail starts. He says he'll do the blessing thing with us, give us some pollen and prayer sticks to use to protect us from the spirits, but he won't go down with us."
"The hell he won't! What's wrong with you, Sherman? I understood you know how to get reluctant people to do what they don't want to do."
"He says it's not his fault. Says their Guardian Spirits keep people who aren't supposed to be there from using that trail." Sherman chuckled. "He says these spirits are sort of like us humans, except they have two hearts, still talk to the animals, have all sorts of powers. And they'll make us fall over the edge, rocks drop on us, snakes biting us, that sort of thing. Says he'll help us but he won't go down with us. Anyway, he's going to guide me to a parking place at the rim now, where the climb down starts, and when I get there, I'll let you know. It can't be very far from the South Rim entrance. You want me to wait for you there? What's the plan?"
"Look, Sherman. It won't do a damn bit of good to climb down there if he's not going down with us. We have to have him there to be our guide."
"I told him that. Then he said it would be easy for us, and he told me exactly how to get from the end of the trail to the place he was sitting when the man showed up with the diamond, and the other directions we'll need."
"Let's hear 'em," Chandler said.
Sherman explained the directions-the number of feet from water's edge, number of paces down the river, number of paces around a corner of the cliff to the mouth of a drainage slough where he thinks the old man lives, number of minutes Tuve said it took the man to return.
"I think we could do it without him," he said.
"Maybe we could," Chandler said, "but there's too much money riding on this for us to settle for maybe."
"I wasn't intending to settle for any maybe, either," Sherman said. "He'll take us down."
Chandler said, "Yeah?" Emphasis on the skeptical sound.
"Come on, Chandler," Sherman said. "You already reminded me I had a rep for getting people to do what they didn't want to do. You need to remember I ran a police department criminal investigation unit. I haven't forgotten the old tricks. I learned what would get cooperation out of all sorts of people. People a lot tougher than this dumb little Indian."
Hearing Sherman say that restored a lot of Chandler's confidence. The man did have a reputation, a bad one in some circles, for his skill at getting reluctant suspects to reveal where bodies had been hidden, the identities of cohorts, and other crucial information-facts that helped the cause of law enforcement far more than the prospects of the persons accused.
"All right, then," Chandler had said. "How about the other stuff on that list I gave you. What did you find out about the woman who bonded Tuve out?"
"She's interesting," Sherman said. "Her name-the one she's using, anyway-is Joanna Craig, from New York, and from what I've been hearing from various people in the law-and-order business, she was out here a couple of times earlier trying to find her father's grave."
Sherman waited a response to that. Got none.
"Probably the woman you told me about," he added.
"Go on," Chandler said.
"Doesn't that surprise you?"
"Not much," Chandler said.
"It surprised me," Sherman said. "It makes me uneasy when I don't know what I'm poking into."
"Well, the man we're working for told me there's a lawsuit involved in this somehow. An old inheritance dispute. Nothing we need to know about. Just tell me more about the woman."
"Well, she said her dad's name was Clarke and he was killed in that collision of the two airlines that killed so many people back in the 1950s. She told people she was looking for where her daddy was buried. Wanted to visit the grave."
"But she didn't find it?"
"Guess not," Sherman said. "I think
that collision, and the fires that followed it, left a real mess. Had to gather up body parts in bags. And a lot of them burned."
Remembering Sherman's attitude brightened Chandler's mood. He relaxed, enjoying the cool shade, enjoying the amazing, incredible view. Like every other adult American, he had seen so many dazzling photographs of this canyon that it had become a clich‚. But Chandler was thinking those photographs had never captured what he was seeing now. He was struck by the mind-boggling immensity of this hole worn out of the earth crust, officially 277 miles of it on the guide book map he had bought, from the Glen Canyon Dam to Lake Mead, not just one canyon but hundreds of them, cutting through layers and layers and layers of stone and other minerals, lava flow and ocean-bottom sediment being hurried into the Colorado River and onward toward the Pacific by the inexorable force of gravity and running water. He was thinking suddenly of his terminal year as a college student, just before his macho appetite for sexual adventures got him arrested and then expelled, thinking of the geology class, of old Dr. Delbert projecting color slides of these same cliffs on the screen and trying to lead them upward from the pale yellow strata near the bottom he called Tapeats Sandstone. "Over that," he said, "is Bright Angel Shale. That gray on top of that is Muav Limestone." And upward, through other layers, colors, ages, with Dr. Delbert jabbing the screen with his pointer, until they finally reached the dark strip of Hermit Shale, and into the Coconino Sandstone and the Toroweap Formation.
Tony Hillerman - Leaphorn & Chee 17 - Skeleton Man Page 12