“I guess Mears just thought that he didn’t want to spend time right now with a DWI bust. ’Specially since she’d parked it.” He shrugged.
I waved a hand. “When Linda comes back in, tell her I want to talk with her. But give Estelle and me a few uninterrupted moments first.”
Estelle had collapsed in one of the leather chairs in my office, hands folded over her stomach, head back and eyes closed.
I shut the door behind me. She opened her left eye and regarded me as I crossed to my desk and plopped down in the chair behind it.
“Of all the goddam things I could have predicted, this is about the last,” I said and heaved a huge sigh. “It just goes to show that when you think you have everything all planned out, you’d better think again.”
“What had you planned?” Her voice was quiet and distant.
I chuckled and leaned back so that I could lift a leg up and rest my boot on the edge of the desk. “You’re leaving next week, I turned in my retirement effective September one, Robert’s getting married, Linda’s waiting in the wings. I figured payback time. I could just dump all that in young Martin’s lap and let him figure out what the hell to do.”
Estelle put both hands over her face, her fingertips rubbing her eyes. After a few seconds, she moved her hands just enough so she could stare at the ceiling. “What will you do?” she asked.
“Sam Carter asked me to take the sheriff’s job until the election next fall.” If I thought that would surprise Estelle, I was mistaken. She didn’t reply, but nodded, just a tiny inclination of the head, eyes still closed. I wanted an answer, so I asked, “Does that make sense to you?”
“It’s the best idea Mr. Carter has had in years,” she said.
“I want you to be undersheriff, Estelle.”
This time, she opened her eyes. Her right eyebrow went up in that expression I’d come to know so well. She took a deep breath and pushed herself up in the chair. “Sir, we’re leaving Posadas next week. We’ve already started packing. Mama has been practicing driving her wheelchair back and forth from her bedroom to the front door in anticipation.” Her delightful smile lit up her face.
“I know you’re going,” I said. “I know that.” I swung the other boot up and crossed my legs. “I was a little irritated today when Sam was in such an all-fired hurry to make sure I took the job. He didn’t want you to have it, or any of the three sergeants. I don’t know what his agenda is.”
“I do,” Estelle said, her grin even wider. “Sam Carter’s brother-in-law is Sam Carter’s agenda.”
“Why don’t I know who this brother-in-law is?”
“He lives in Deming, sir. He’s retiring from the state police in July.”
“I see. You think he’s going to move here and run for sheriff?”
“Yes.”
“And how do you know this tidbit?”
“Martin Holman told me a week or so ago. The man’s name is Ellison Franklin. At one time he was chairman of his county’s Republican Club.”
“That would have put him head-to-head with Martin in the primary,” I said. “But that would have been three years from now. After this mess, the field is wide open.”
“Right.”
“So. None of that matters, since I’m not running in the election in November to fill the office and you’ll be in Minnesota. I want you as undersheriff for the rest of the week. How’s that for an offer?”
She chuckled, leaned forward, rested her elbows on her knees and ran both hands through her thick black hair. “Is this just to tweak Sam? Make him nervous? Are you sure his bigoted little heart can take it?”
“It’s for selfish reasons, mainly,” I said. “If you’re undersheriff, I won’t have to spend ten seconds training you. Any of the others will flounder some, and we don’t have time for that. And think of it this way: do this for me and you can write ‘undersheriff’ on your resume when you go job-hunting up in Genesee County, Minnesota.”
She smiled again and shook her head. “Maybe I can avoid job-hunting for a while,” she said. “Remember, Erma’s not going with us.” Erma Sedillos, our senior dispatcher’s younger sister, had been a full-time nanny for the Guzman clan for three years.
“But-” I began and stopped when my telephone buzzed. “Sure,” I said, and hung up.
Bob Torrez was at my office door before I had a chance to explain what the call was. In his hand was a manila folder, and trailing behind him was Linda Real.
“Sir,” Torrez said, “we’ve got the prints from the camera.”
I beckoned them in. “And how’s Mrs. Kellogh?” I asked by way of greeting Linda. She looked heavenward.
“Soused. We just dropped her and her daughter at their house. The car was off the right-of-way, so we just locked it and left it there. The daughter said it wouldn’t be a problem to come and get it later.”
“Wonderful.”
“And then I came back and heard about the film. I helped Sergeant Torrez get the prints ready. Sir, the department needs a new print drier. The old one is shot.”
“Uh-huh,” I said and glanced at Estelle. “So, Robert, what have you got?”
He had already opened the folder on my desk, and he handed me an eight-by-ten print. Linda Real reached across and pointed. “The surface gloss is blotched here and there. That’s the old drier,” she said.
“Thank you.” I leaned over so that I could focus the correct part of my bifocals on the print.
“That’s the first one on the negative,” Robert Torrez said. Estelle came around behind me so she could see the photos at the same time. “It looks like his brother-in-law posed by the airplane.”
“That is Philip Camp, sure enough,” I said. I reached out a hand for the next one. Instead, Torrez handed me a set of three.
The terrain in the photos was rugged, and in the first of the three, I could see the road cutting through the trees. “That’s taken from just beyond the mine,” Torrez said.
“And the others are from on top,” Estelle added.
“An aerial tour,” I muttered. “What the hell was he doing?” The next four photos were of prairie-open, rolling prairie. At least, that was my guess. “Are these out of focus, or is it me?”
“Some of them are really bad,” Linda said.
“That,” Torrez said, tapping one of the photos with his index finger, “is Boyd number-two. One of Johnny Boyd’s windmills and stock tanks. I recognize the sharp turn of the two-track just to the south of it.”
“I don’t even see the windmill,” I said. “Where is it?”
Torrez pulled a pen from his pocket and used it as a pointer. I grimaced and shook my head. “I’ll take your word for it.”
“And this looks like the country just to the north of where the plane eventually crashed,” Torrez said. “This black line is one of the boundary fences. Or a section fence. Something like that. It’s a fence, anyway. And those”-he leaned close and jabbed at the tiny figures with the tip of the pen-“are cattle.”
“Whoopee,” I said. I straightened up, and my back popped with an audible crack. “You need to tie these things down and go over them inch by inch with the stereo viewer. I can’t see much detail, but maybe you’ll turn up something. There’s no reason for Martin Holman to be taking aerial photographs of creosote bushes and cattle on a gusty, bumpy afternoon…or at any time, for that matter. We need some hint of what he was about. That’s half of it.”
Torrez glanced at me, questioning.
“The trouble here, folks,” I said to the three of them, “is that the odds of there being any connection-any at all-between what Martin Holman was trying to see yesterday afternoon and the bullet that killed his pilot are slim and none.” I picked up one of the photos again and looked at it. “Unless there’s something here that we’re not seeing.”
“Maybe we could blow up each negative, a little at a time. You’ve got a pretty good enlarger in the darkroom,” Linda Real said.
“Why don’t you do that,” I said. “That film is evidence, so make sure it stays in the department’s possession at all times. It doesn’t leave the building for any reason, and it doesn’t leave your possession unless it’s locked in the evidence locker.” I reached out a hand and took Linda’s in mine. It was tiny-and clammy with excitement. “Which means that as of now, your soul is ours, my dear. Welcome aboard.”