Before She Dies

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Before She Dies Page 5

by Steven F Havill


  The deputy had cause to panic. Linda Real’s face, neck, and left shoulder were punctured by so many holes that Mears needed six hands to stop the gush of blood. Estelle Reyes-Guzman slipped into the backseat of the patrol car and leaned over the front seat back, cradling Linda’s head while Mears and I tried to compress the multiple wounds on her left shoulder, neck, and face. After what seemed an eternity the first ambulance did arrive and I heard Bishop shout, “Over here.”

  A moment later a head peered into the car. “That one alive?” the EMT barked.

  “Yes, just.”

  “Ah, here we come,” he said as the second ambulance slid in behind the first. Mears, Estelle, and I stepped back as the EMTs took over.

  “What a goddamned mess,” I said. I looked at Deputy Mears’s pale face. “Take your car on up the road about a quarter mile and block the oncoming lane. No one comes through. No one.” He nodded but didn’t move. I took him by the arm. “Tom…do it now. And find out from Gayle what the deputy’s last radio call was and get back to me.”

  “Yes, sir,” he said with a start. To Estelle I said, “Let’s get an inventory and then get ’em out of here.”

  She nodded. There were nine civilians present, and by the time we took IDs, statements, and inventories and marked where each vehicle had been parked, Sergeant Robert Torrez and Sheriff Martin Holman had arrived.

  We needed the manpower to control that circus, and every time I caught a glimpse of Estelle’s taut face I knew just what she was thinking. Whoever had pulled the trigger on Enciños and Real had picked a perfect spot. There had been no passersby to witness the shooting, no neighbors to hear the shots.

  And the nearest telephone, when a motorist finally did stumble onto the carnage, was at a crowded saloon seven miles from town. That assured that the spectators would arrive well before any law, trampling any evidence there might have been into the fine New Mexico sand.

  In less than two minutes, the handheld radio on my belt squawked. The news from Deputy Tom Mears wasn’t what I wanted to hear. If Paul Enciños had stopped a vehicle, he hadn’t radioed in. The last transmission Gayle Sedillos had recorded in the log back in Posadas was at 10:53 P.M., when the deputy had radioed that he was stopping at Chavez Chevrolet-Oldsmobile to talk with a motorist. He had given no name or license then, either.

  That coincided with the information on the deputy’s own patrol log. The clipboard rested on Enciños’s briefcase in the middle of the front seat. The blood-spattered top page offered only a cryptic account of the deputy’s last hours. He hadn’t documented either the stop at Chavez or any event thereafter.

  I felt a hand on my elbow. “Bill…” Sheriff Holman pulled gently, ushering me to one side. “Listen. Cassie isn’t sure they are going to be able to…resuscitate him.” Cassie Gates, the best EMT in Posadas County, wasn’t usually wrong.

  I nodded. “I know, sheriff.”

  “Maybe if they can get him back to the hospital in time…” His voice trailed off as he watched the first ambulance’s door slam shut. After a deep sigh he shrugged his shoulders a little straighter and looked at me. “What do you want me to do?”

  “Control things at the hospital, Martin.” I ticked off a list while he jotted notes in the little blue spiral. “Make sure both sets of parents are notified. Paul’s father lives in Scottsdale, I think. I’m not sure where his mother is now.”

  “She’s up in Albuquerque,” Holman muttered.

  “And get a hold of Paul’s ex-wife.”

  “Tiffany,” Holman said.

  “She lives over in the Mesaview Apartments. And Linda. I’m not sure. I think she told me once that her mother was living in Las Lunas.”

  “I’ll take care of it.” He snapped the little book shut, confident now that he had somewhere to go, something to do. “Anything else? Do we know who he stopped?”

  I shook my head. “No, we don’t. But right now the most important thing is what’s going on at the hospital.” As Sheriff Holman turned to go, I added, “And Martin…”

  “Yes?”

  “Keep the lid on over there. Frank Dayan will want to talk with Linda.”

  Holman frowned and walked back to me, standing so that our faces were less than a foot apart.

  “If she lives, then she’s the only witness to what happened here,” he said, grasping the obvious more quickly than usual. The back door of the second ambulance slammed shut and then that vehicle too pulled away.

  “If she regains consciousness, we have to talk with her. And that means before anyone else,” I said.

  Holman nodded. “I’ll be at the hospital.”

  “I’ll have one of the deputies there as soon as I can. In the meantime, if anything breaks, call me. Take my recorder in case Linda is able to speak with you. If she says anything at all, tape it. The recorder is in my briefcase on the front seat of my car.”

  He walked briskly back toward his car, caught in the winking of a dozen red lights. I saw the huge, dark figure of Sergeant Bob Torrez herding spectators east along the highway, well away from the scene. The routine of the drill would keep our minds occupied, at least.

  The spectators would be individually interviewed and then escorted, one by one, down the macadam to where their vehicles were parked. They would be allowed to pull directly back onto the highway, their tire tracks in the sandy shoulder marked with a red surveyor’s flag.

  Eventually the entire fleet would be gone, leaving only the bullet-pocked patrol car parked on the north shoulder of the road. Then we would put a half mile of state highway under a microscope if we had to.

  Maybe one of the rubberneckers had seen something. Maybe one of them had overheard someone say something at the Broken Spur Saloon. Maybe.

  I left Bob Torrez and Bing Burkett, one of the first state troopers to arrive, to work the witnesses. Estelle was setting up her camera gear on the pavement beside Enciños’s patrol car.

  “Do you need any help?”

  “You could hold the flashlight for me, sir.”

  I swung the beam over the patrol car and counted seven holes in the driver’s door, doorpost, and roof.

  “I’ll take close-ups of those in the morning when it’s light,” Estelle said. “I want the side of the car and the macadam beside it right away.”

  By the time we finished two hours later, the list of evidence was painfully short. Paul Enciños had been driving county patrol car 308. The tire tracks showed that he had pulled his patrol car off the pavement in a normal fashion. Another set of tracks was printed clearly in the sand several feet in front of 308. The origin of the tracks was obscured by both the patrol car and dozens of bootprints. Whether the tracks belonged to the killer’s car was anyone’s guess.

  The driver’s door of 308 was open, and that’s the way Francisco Peña had found it when he’d happened by sometime after eleven that night. Peña worked for rancher Herb Torrance. He traveled from his line shack the nine miles down County Road 14 to the state highway and the Broken Spur Saloon often.

  It had been Peña who’d raced to the Broken Spur and called Posadas. Peña said that when he’d driven by the scene, the car door was open. The engine was idling, the four-way flashers were blinking, and Deputy Enciños was on the ground by the back tire. Another person was inside the car.

  The first pool of Paul Enciños’s blood began four inches in front of the back tire and extended east for seventeen inches, part of the pool smeared by the deputy’s upper left arm.

  Another larger pool of blood actually touched the tread of the back tire where the tire rested on the macadam, extending around and under the car in a crescent. What appeared to be a blood smear on the bodywork of the patrol car began just to the rear of the wheel-well opening, extending down to the chrome strip above the rock guard.

  The deputy had managed to exit the patrol car, but Linda Real never moved from her seat. “The killer fired at Linda through the driver’s side window,” Estelle said.

  “I don’t understand w
hy Paul didn’t call in, Estelle. I mean we harp and harp on that.” I’m sure Estelle heard the helplessness in my voice, but there were no easy answers.

  “I don’t know, sir.”

  “Somebody does,” I said.

  Chapter 8

  Sunday slipped into Monday morning. Roadblocks on State 56 just north of the border at Regal produced nothing. Throughout most of the morning, deputies and troopers stopped just about everything with wheels in an area whose radius grew with the day. Our best efforts produced nothing. We had no idea what we were looking for.

  At ten that morning, I sat morosely at my desk, staring across my small office at the chalkboard in the corner. I’d just left the hospital, where any extra people were just a nuisance. In an effort to clear my weary brain, I’d holed up in my office for a few minutes, trying to think of anything we’d missed.

  On the chalkboard I had drawn a representation of the shooting scene. It was simple enough…a child could have drawn it. One section of empty two-lane highway and a patrol car—and two victims. That was all.

  We didn’t have a single set of tracks that we could conclusively link to the crime, although Bob Torrez had made a plaster of paris cast of the tracks in the sand in front of the county car. We had another set from across the highway, imprints no more than three feet long before they’d been obliterated by one or more of the sightseers. Torrez had cast those, too.

  The killer had left behind no shell casings. From hurried conversations at Posadas General Hospital, we knew that the weapon that had killed Paul Enciños and desperately wounded Linda Real was a shotgun. The odds-on favorite would be a 12 gauge, statistically the most common by a wide margin. The killer’s weapon had sprayed them with number 4 buck, lead pellets roughly .24 caliber in size and 21 to the ounce. A 12-gauge three-inch magnum would blast out 40 of the things at each jerk of the trigger.

  We did not know where Paul Enciños had been standing, or even if he was, when the first shot was fired. Our guess was that Linda Real never moved from her seat during the incident…and certainly didn’t move once the killer started pumping shots into the patrol car.

  Gayle Sedillos appeared in the doorway. “Sir, Lionel Martinez is on the phone.” I waved a hand in dismissal and Gayle smiled faintly. She was tired, too, but I needed her expertise for a few hours more. “He wants to know when you’re going to open the highway.”

  I sighed and reached for the phone. “What’s up, Lionel?”

  Martinez was a man of infinite patience. He ran his State Highway Department District with good humor and tact, even when overloaded semis beat his new, expensive pavement to rubble and tourists constantly complained that there were no shaded, plumbed, padded rest areas out in the middle of desolation.

  We’d put a cork in one of his highways and left it there.

  “Sheriff, I need to know when your department is going to open Fifty-six.”

  I took a deep breath, trying to think of something tactful to say. “I don’t know, Lionel.”

  “You can’t give me some idea?”

  “Not yet.”

  “We’ve got a flock of angry snowbirds who aren’t takin’ kindly to using Herb Torrance’s road to go around you folks.” I could imagine the gigantic, waddling RVs trying to negotiate the narrow, dusty, rutted county road that would take motorists around our roadblock.

  “They’re going to have to stay angry, Lionel. Tell you what. Don’t take any shit from anybody. If they want to bark at someone, send ’em to see me.”

  Lionel chuckled and then his voice grew serious. “Is there anything else we can do for you?”

  “I wish there were.”

  “No progress yet?”

  “No.”

  “Is the young lady going to make it?”

  “I don’t know. She was in surgery all night. Last word I had is that she’s still out.”

  “I never would have thought something like this would happen here, sheriff.”

  “Yeah…well,” I started to say, then stopped. I let it slide.

  “You know, Paul Enciños was family.”

  “I didn’t know that.”

  “Sure. He was second cousin to my wife. You know Rosie Salazar?”

  “Yes.”

  “Rosie’s sister Celsa was Paul’s mother. She died here not so long ago.”

  I wasn’t in the mood to pursue the complicated lineage. Paul Enciños had lived in Posadas County most of his life and I wouldn’t have been surprised to learn he was related in one way or another to half the county. It would make for a hell of a lynch mob when we caught the son of a bitch who killed him.

  “I had forgotten that,” I said, and glanced up as Gayle Sedillos appeared in the doorway again and tapped her ear.

  “I’ll keep in touch, Lionel,” I said, and as soon as I started to hang up Gayle said, “Estelle needs you out on Fifty-six. And she asked if you’d bring the county’s cherry picker.”

  “The cherry picker?” I looked at Gayle stupidly.

  She held out her right hand, palm up, and raised her arm. “You know, the cherry picker they use to fix electric lines and things like that.”

  “I know what it is, Gayle. I was just trying to imagine what Estelle would want with it. There’s not much higher than cholla cactus out where she is.”

  Gayle shrugged. “That’s what she said.”

  “Then that’s what she’ll get.”

  Twenty minutes later I was driving west on 56 with the county’s utility truck rumbling along behind me. One of our reserve officers met us at the roadblock, and five hundred yards after that I stopped, the county truck edging up behind me so that its massive front bumper was only inches from the back of 310. The driver, Nelson Petro, sat patiently with both hands locked on the steering wheel while I got out to confer with Estelle.

  “I need to show you what we’ve found, sir,” she said. I caught the eagerness in her tone. I looked toward Enciños’s patrol car and saw the webbing of heavy nylon fishing line attached to the car in several places. The nylon lines stretched from the car across the highway, converging to a single spot five feet above the ground, tied to the top of a wooden pole driven into the hard soil of the highway shoulder. A camera tripod rested on the north side of the highway’s center line, and several more nylon lines ran from points inside the car to it.

  Ignoring the spiderweb of lines, Estelle walked quickly to where her briefcase perched on the hood of Bob Torrez’s patrol car. Torrez leaned against the car, his arms folded. “First, we got lucky,” she said, and handed me a plastic bag. I looked at the attached evidence tag and then turned the bag so I could see the shell casing inside clearly.

  “Twelve gauge,” Sergeant Torrez said quietly. “Winchester-Western, number four buck.” He straightened a little, towering over me by a head. “Recently fired.”

  “Has to be it, then,” I said. “Where was it?”

  Bob indicated the south side of the highway where the dense rabbitbrush and kochia choked the shoulder. “Twenty-eight inches from the pavement.” I saw the small red flag off to one side of the wooden web-stake.

  “Sharp eyes,” I said.

  “Luck, sir,” Estelle said. “I almost stepped on it when I was adjusting the camera tripod.”

  “Sharp eyes,” Bob Torrez added. He was right, of course. Estelle rarely did anything by accident.

  “Any others?”

  “No, sir. Just the one,” Estelle said.

  “But at least three shots were fired, maybe more.”

  “That’s right, sir. But this tells us something we didn’t know. Number one, the killer probably picked up the spent shell casings that he could find. The other two may have landed on the macadam. They would be easy.”

  “In the dark, it would have been a tough search to find this one,” I said, and dropped the plastic bag back in Estelle’s briefcase.

  “He…or she, maybe…took the time to pick up spent shells, but missed this one, because it was kicked out to the side.”

>   “And that eliminates any shotgun that ejects its shells straight down, sir,” Torrez said.

  “In all likelihood,” Estelle added quickly. “Let me show you.” I followed her across the macadam to the far shoulder. The red surveyor’s flag was nestled in the midst of a thick, healthy rabbitbrush. The wind was cooperating and the spiderweb of fishing lines stretched silently, reflecting the sunlight.

  “If the killer had been standing here,” and she pointed at the wooden pole, “off the shoulder of the highway, a shotgun that ejects downward wouldn’t have flung the casing more than seven feet to the right, into the bush,” she said. “And if the killer inadvertently kicked it, it wouldn’t have flown around here, to land nearly at the back side of the bush.”

  “Unlikely that it would. So, you’ve got a casing. Maybe we’ll be lucky and be able to lift a readable print. And if you’ve got a side-eject shotgun, that eliminates only about one percent of the shotguns on the market.” I looked at Estelle thoughtfully. “It’s a good start.”

  I turned and gazed at the strings. I imagined the muzzle of the shotgun pointed across the road, and my eye followed the shimmering strands of fishing line as they angled across the highway.

  “Let me show you what I want to do,” Estelle said, and I followed her back across the road. She stepped close to Enciños’s car and pointed at the roof. “One of the pellets glanced off the roof, right here, just above the center pillar between the front and back doors.”

  I saw a four-inch scar—at first only a faint lead mark on the paint and then becoming deeper until it actually showed a trace of bare metal. The end of a piece of nylon line had been carefully taped to the roof of the car so that it lay in the missile track.

  “That’s not going to be exact,” Estelle said, “but it gives us a starting point.” She indicated another hole, this one in the top window frame of the back door. “This one is a relatively clean puncture of the first two layers of metal. Enough to establish a probable angle.” She turned and pointed back across the highway, along the stretched lines.

 

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