"Are we returning home, patron?"
"For a time." gilbbkt dug through the sheaf of National Crime Information Center reports on the people who had been interviewed and questioned since the investigation began. There were no hits for arrests or convictions until he reached Bucky Watson. In the early seventies, Bucky had served eighteen months in a California state prison for drug dealing.
Gilbert reached for the telephone just as Chief Kerney appeared in the doorway.
"Chief," he said, pulling his hand away from the receiver.
"Sergeant," Kerney replied with a smile.
"I understand you've been assigned as my partner."
"I'll try not to cramp your style," Gilbert said, smiling back.
"Do you have anything new on Carlos Ruiz?"
"Nada. We don't even know where he is."
"What about Enrique De Leon
"Nothing."
"Fletcher met a man last night named Vicente Fuentes. He's pretty sure Fuentes is a Mexican national.
He said you have a snapshot of him that was taken at the O'Keeffe Museum benefit."
"Has Fletcher been playing detective again?" Gilbert asked, handing the photograph to Kerney.
"It would seem so." Kerney looked at the photograph and froze.
"What is it?"
"Enrique De Leon he said, tossing the picture on the desktop.
"Have this photo enlarged and cropped. Give it to every officer in the district. I want De Leon located ASAP. Hit Rancho Caballo hard. Put an entire team on it."
Gilbert slid the NCIC hit on Bucky across the desk.
Kerney scanned it.
"What eke do you have on Watson?"
"He's been funneling millions into Rancho Caballo through a company called Matador Properties, and getting it back in accelerated repayments."
"Put somebody on it to do a full probe," Kerney said.
"We need to know if Watson is linked to De Leon "Sherman Cobb and Roger Springer are officers in Rancho Caballo."
"Dig into it," Kerney said.
"Is that all?" Gilbert asked as Kerney stood in the doorway.
Kerney grinned.
"Try not to piss off Roger Springer again for a while."
"Don't make me wait for the other shoe to drop, Chief," Gilbert said.
"Give me the full skinny."
Tve been ordered to reprimand you."
Gilbert sighed.
"What should I expect?"
"Nothing. I refused to comply. What did you do to Springer, anyhow?"
Gilbert laid out the specifics.
"Springer's reaction sealed it," he concluded.
"If he wasn't screwing Amanda Talley on his uncle's office carpet, I'll eat my hat."
"Very slick. Sergeant," Kerney said.
"Slightly over the edge, but slick nonetheless."
Gilbert smiled at the compliment.
"I won't do it again, promise. Any word from Belize on the Amanda Talley double?"
"Yes, indeed," Kerney replied.
"The Belize authorities reported that Amanda Talley fell overboard from an excursion vessel and has presumably drowned. The body hasn't been recovered."
"This could turn into a very interesting day."
"It already has."
"Chief, can I borrow your unit, if you're not using it?
Mine's in the shop."
Kerney tossed him the keys.
"While you're out, check in on Fletcher occasionally, will you?"
"Sure thing," Gilbert said.
"Thanks for going to bat for me."
"What got into you with Springer?"
"It's a long story."
"Maybe you can tell me about it over a beer when the case is wrapped up."
"I'd like that," Gilbert said. kerney returned to the conference room and found a telephone message from Addie Randall, asking him to come to the Socorro hospital maternity ward to talk with her. He was about to call her back when Andy walked in looking very unhappy. He sat down, scratched his cheek, and scowled.
"Well, do you have to fire me?" Kerney asked.
"If the governor's chief of staff had his way, you'd be out the door on your ass for refusing to reprimand Sergeant Martinez."
"Did you get raked over the coals?"
"Big time. It's not nice to upset the governor's nephew. I told the chief of staff to put the request to terminate you and transfer Martinez in writing over Harper Springer's signature. I also told him if I was ordered to do it, he could have my shield."
"You put it on the line, didn't you?" Kerney said.
Andy grunted.
"It didn't win me any popularity contests at the Roundhouse."
"But the troops will love it when the word gets out," Kerney predicted.
He looked at the message in his hand.
"Can I use the helicopter for a quick trip to Socorro? I've got one last interview to conduct in the Gillespie murder case."
"Do it. Get out of my sight. Today, you'd be nothing but an albatross around my neck."
"You get so irritable when your butt gets chewed."
"I know it," Andy said.
"Don't waste time in Socorro.
I want these cases cleared before we both get the boot."
"Is that likely?" Kerney asked.
"Politics is the art of the possible." the state police helicopters and all the fixed wing aircraft were tied up on assignments until mid-mo ming When he finally boarded a chopper, Kerney expected to reach Socorro in under an hour. Instead, he found himself stranded at the Los Lunas Airport, fifty miles north of his destination. A winter squall had moved across the central plateau, bringing sleet, freezing rain, and wind gusts of fifty knots an hour.
By radio, Kerney asked for ground transportation, but all available units were out handling fender benders on the interstate.
The morning passed as he waited in the chopper with the pilot and listened to the sleet and rain pelt against the metal skin of the aircraft. There were no public facilities at the airport, and nowhere to go; Santa Fe and Albuquerque were socked in under heavy fog.
Every ten minutes the pilot checked by radio on weather updates. A young man with an easy, laid-back attitude, the kid had plucked two stranded hunters out of a remote canyon near the Colorado border before flying down to pick Kerney up for the trip to Socorro.
The pilot cracked chewing gum, hummed to himself, and kept looking for a break in the cloud cover.
"If the wind lets up and I see a hole, we can slip right through.
Chief," he promised.
During his tour in Vietnam-maybe about the time this kid was born, if he stretched it a bit-Kemey had decided that chopper pilots were a totally insane breed of adrenaline junkies. Over the years, his opinion hadn't changed.
"You think so?" Kerney asked.
The pilot nodded emphatically and rubbed his nose.
"No sweat. A little less wind, a little more sky, and we can cut right through the squall. Most of these low-level disturbances come in pulses. I can usually find a window to get through. But I've got to get airborne to see it."
Kerney knew that seasoned chopper pilots, aside from being crazy, were highly competent. They had to be to survive in such unforgiving flying machines.
"How long have you been a pilot?" he asked.
"Six years. Three in the army and three with the state police."
Kerney latched his seat belt.
"Find your window and get me to Socorro," he said.
"You got it, Chief," the kid replied as he hit the starter switch. after three abortive attempts and two hours in the air, Kerney arrived at the Socorro Airport a little green around the gills, where an obliging city cop waited to drive him to the hospital.
At the hospital, he almost ran over Nita Lassiter on his way to the maternity ward. She looked tired and her eyes were red from crying.
"What are you doing here?" she demanded.
"Did Addie have her baby?"
"A girl, early this morning. The adoption agency has guardianship.
Addie signed the papers." She searched Kerney's face with her eyes.