"I'm okay now."
"What happened?" he asked.
She told him about the creep who had served her the lawsuit papers.
"We had a guy downtown once," Jose said, "he went to serve this husband with divorce papers. He pops out from between two cars in this parking garage and before he can say anything, the husband buries a screwdriver in the guy's chest, said he had a window in his office that he could never get open. Guy went free, too. Partly because the window story checked out, but partly because I think the jury felt like that service guy got what he deserved, sneaking around like that."
"I gave him a pretty good gash with my nails," she said. "Where are you?"
"On my way back just now," he said. "Listen, Gage showed me where it happened. I waited until it got dark and went back in there by myself. I think I've got something, a shotgun slug. I took it out of a tree. If it's what killed Elijandro, there'll be bone and blood on it."
"How does that help?" Casey asked. "No one ever said Chase didn't shoot him."
"If he shot him with this, it's going to be hard to say it was an accident," Jose said.
He explained to her about turkey hunting.
"A slug you use for deer," he said. "That's it."
"Deer or a man."
"Or a man," Jose said. "Plus, Gage is lying. His face is a billboard. Even a Podunk cop would have saved the shell casing, and he would have questioned the senator and a lot of other people around him when he saw the little gap between two trees that he was supposedly shooting at the turkey through. And this report? It looks like a third-grader wrote it. This thing is like an anthill. Looks like a mound of dirt until you kick it over."
"They didn't do an autopsy, either," Casey said. "Some local funeral director signed the death certificate and they buried him quick."
"No autopsy?" Jose said. "How's all this gonna look when they get Gage on the stand? This thing is way too sloppy. He's either gonna have to spill what happened or get pegged as an accomplice. Big stiff white boy like that don't want to see the inside of no Texas jail."
"You think we can get this to a trial?"
"If it weren't a US senator, I'd say no doubt about it," Jose said. "With Chase? We need to tread light."
Neither of them said anything for a moment and Jose rolled down the exit ramp and turned onto the city street that would take him home.
"You okay?" Jose asked, stopping at a light.
"Sure," Casey said. "Fine."
"You want me to come over?"
When she didn't respond, he cracked his neck from side to side and shifted in his seat, his hands tight on the wheel.
Then she said, "No rashes, right?"
The light turned green. He grinned, whipping his truck around, and said, "Guaranteed."
In the morning, Jose woke to find Casey standing at the edge of the bed, fully dressed, tugging on his big toe.
"Look," she said, "I don't want to ruin a good thing."
Jose rubbed his eyes and sat up, his bare back against the headboard, gathering the sheets around his waist.
"That bad?" he said, peeking under the sheet.
She blushed and shook her head. She'd stacked her hair up in a tight bun and even the nape of her neck flushed.
"No," she said, drawing out the word and sitting on the edge of the bed. "But we've got this thing, this case, and there's a lot to it. If we're right, and something really happened, it's going to get worse before it gets better. A lot worse. I just don't want to get bogged down."
"I'm kind of supercharged after that," Jose said.
"I need you," Casey said, "as an investigator. I'd like to think we can put this to the side and keep going on the case, not get distracted."
"An occasional distraction is never a bad thing," he said, hugging his knees. "Right?"
"Maybe," she said, her expression giving nothing away. "Let's just not count on anything. If it happens, hey, okay. No expectations, that's all. You want breakfast?"
"You making it?"
"What did I just say about expectations?" she asked, arching an eyebrow, then cracking a smile. "There's a cafe on the canal."
After breakfast, Jose took his slug downtown to Dante Villa, a guy he knew in the police lab, while Casey visited her friend at the morgue.
Jose stood over Dante's shoulder as he punched up the digital image on his computer.
"You got a winner," Dante said. "Trace amounts of blood and bone."
"Is it old?"
"Not so old. A few weeks, I'm gonna guess."
"Can you do a DNA profile without anyone knowing?" Jose asked.
"You want to match it to something?"
"Eventually. Can you keep it semiofficial?"
"I can slip it in with some files I've got going, sure," Dante said, cleaning his glasses on a corner of his lab coat. "Preserve the chain of evidence, if that's what you mean. You might have to pay for the test. That way no one can bitch at me for doing it later on. Can I ask what you're going to do with all this?"
"This is one where, honestly," Jose said, "you're not going to want to know. If it turns back to bite me in the ass, you're better off sticking to the science."
"Something I'll see in the paper?"
Jose said, "More like CNN."
CHAPTER 28
TEXAS ISN'T LIKE A LOT OF PLACES," JESSICA SAID, PASSING A FILE across her desk to Casey. "We like autonomy, right? So you get some off-the-map town like Wilmer that can have the local funeral director designated as its coroner and even though we're half an hour up the road and technically they're in our jurisdiction, they call the shots."
Casey opened the file and examined the death certificate, her eyes coming to rest on the words "hunting accident."
"Meaning what?" Casey asked.
"Meaning, you see that guy Blake Morris's signature? Morris and Sons funeral directors? He's the ME."
"But he's not an ME, right?"
"In Wilmer he is."
"Without any investigation?" Casey asked.
Jessica shook her head. "I didn't say that. I'm sure they'll say he investigated. He probably looked at the body, heard the senator's story, the cops talked to the wife, who said your guy went out hunting with the senator, and bingo, case closed."
"That's not an investigation," Casey said.
" Texas style," Jessica said. "Hey, at least they did that. I told you, technically, they could have just had some doctor sign the death certificate."
"Instead, they had some funeral director do the same damn thing," Casey said.
Jessica shrugged.
"But you can open it up, right?" Casey asked. "Look more thoroughly?"
"You know any judges?"
"Most of them," Casey said.
"Any of them like you?"
"Why do you say it like that?"
"You know I like you," Jessica said, "but some people think you're a little pushy."
"Okay, I'll just sit on the curb and wait for someone to come by and ask me if I need any help."
"Don't take it that way, I'm just saying."
"Judge Remy," Casey said, "she'll help."
"We need her to order the exhumation," Jessica said, dangling the papers over her desk. "The wife's signature goes a long way, but the court still has to weigh in. She might want the DA to get behind it. Anyway, you get Remy to sign this, and we're in."
CHAPTER 29
EARRINGS THE SIZE OF FISHING LURES WERE A FEMININE COUNTER-balance to the steely gray in Judge Remy's short spiked hair. Her bright green eyes rested in her sagging gray face like two jewels. Around the judge's neck silver reading glasses hung from a pewter chain. When Casey finished the story, the judge used her glasses to examine some of the documents in Casey's file.
"Where is the DA on this?" she asked in a gentle Texas drawl that belied her reputation for harsh sentences.
"I presume he'll be behind it one hundred percent," Casey said.
"Presume?"
"We aren't drinking buddies," Casey said.
"Neither are we," the judge said, removing the glasses from her nose and waving them between Casey and herself before she let them fall into the folds of her robe, "but I get it."