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For a moment Parker regarded Estelle, and she could hear his index finger tapping on the counter. “I spoke with my son,” he said finally, as if that summed up the whole issue. When Estelle didn’t reply, he added, “He tells me that the officer fired a shot from his weapon.”

No question mark followed Parker’s remark, and Estelle remained silent.

“Is that true?” he persisted.

“Like the rest of the incident, that is under investigation by both our department and the State Police.”

“I want to know how this could happen.”

“So do I.”

“I should be able to talk with the officer,” Parker said. “If what my son says is true, and I have no reason to doubt that it is, your officer’s behavior put everyone in that parking lot in jeopardy.”

“And that means that you should be the investigating officer?” Estelle snapped. “Is that what this all means? I don’t think so.”

Parker appeared to swell and Estelle watched the color wash up from his white shirt collar.

“Now look,” he said, and then hesitated as he groped for words.

“Mr. Parker, unless there is something urgent that I can help you with at this particular moment, I have other issues that I need to attend to. Your son’s arraignment is at nine in the court chambers down the hall in the main building. I’m sure he’d appreciate you being there.”

As if on cue, the door of the officers’ workroom opened, and both Deputy Tom Pasquale and State Police officer Richard Black appeared. Black walked past them and nodded curtly at Parker. “Morning, sir.”

Deputy Pasquale had a thick folder of paperwork in his hand, and paused at the dispatch counter. “Are you headed out to the pass?” he asked Estelle, and nodded politely but without any apparent interest at Parker, who appeared to deflate a little at the abrupt appearance of the two uniformed officers.

“Yes. I’m running behind a little,” Estelle said.

“So all of this is just going to be swept under the carpet?” Parker said.

“No, sir,” Estelle said, “I imagine it will be all over the front page of every newspaper that will carry the story. I’m sure it will be the lead story on News at Five. I’m sure it’ll be the central topic of conversation for every group that gathers to discuss the behavior of today’s kids, or the ineptitude of today’s cops.” She cocked her head, appraising Parker. “And you’ll do your share, I’m sure.”

His eyes narrowed still further. “And I’m not sure that I care for your attitude, young lady.”

“Well, I tell you,” Estelle said, “I’m tired, you’re tired, and we’re both asking for the impossible, sir. Go get yourself some breakfast, and take one matter at a time. Your son’s arraignment is at nine. He’d appreciate your being there.” She rapped the divider again with the folder. “Excuse me.” Deputy Pasquale lingered near the door, and she nodded at him. “I’ll be out in a couple of minutes, Tom.”

Without waiting for a final parting shot from Elliot Parker, Estelle returned to her office and closed the door. Parker’s reaction was predictable-a man grasping at something that might take the public spotlight off his son’s behavior.

Settling into her chair, she opened the envelope and pulled out a sheaf of photocopied reports, along with a set of digital photographs that wiped Elliot Parker from her thoughts. Someone else had their own share of troubles, and Estelle was immediately curious about what tendrils might connect an incident in rural Catron County with her own border community.

The Catron County deputy’s incident report listed the victim’s name as John Doe. The death had occurred sometime Thursday afternoon, and had been discovered late in the day by a firewood contractor, Anthony Zamora. The preliminary report was handwritten in the investigating deputy’s tight, angular script:

Landowner Lucencio Zamora says that he gave permission to his brother Anthony and his crew to cut firewood on the Zamora ranch. Anthony Zamora states that he left the victim and another man alone to cut piñon and cedar in the woodlot near the ranch road off County 18-A.

When he checked at approximately 4:15 p.m., Anthony Zamora discovered the victim dead, apparently as a result of bleeding to death from a chain-saw injury to his inside left thigh. It appeared that the victim had been limbing when the bar kicked back. The chain cut the victim across the inside thigh on his left leg. It appears that the victim tried to stop the bleeding, but could not.

Anthony Zamora states that the second man was not in the area when he arrived, and might not have known about the accident. Mr. Zamora did not know the names of the two men, but states that he hired them in Reserve for day labor. He doesn’t know where the other man went, but he likely hitched out of the area.

A search of the body shows no documentation; a scrap of spiral notebook paper with a phone number was also found in the dead man’s jacket pocket.

Fidel Romero states that the men stopped at his store earlier in the day and inquired about work. He says that he believes the two were illegals, but didn’t think much about it.

The incident report, signed by Deputy Albert Romero, included a series of photographs. Estelle read the report again. If deputy Albert and store owner Fidel Romero were related, that made life a little more interesting.

The photographs included one panoramic shot showing that when the gnarly piñon tree in question had been chain-sawed down, it had propped itself up on broken limb wood. Several other trees had been cut in the immediate area and the ground was a welter of boot-trapping slash. The bright scars of freshly cut limbs dotted the felled piñon trunk for a dozen feet, to a point where the tree trunk was suspended two feet above the ground by the remaining broken limbs.

A close-up view showed the stub of a dead limb low on the left side. The stub had been deeply nicked by the saw’s chain, and a dark spatter of what could have been blood-there was too much for it to be bar oil-sprayed the bark and the ground nearby. The chain saw was still wedged upside down among the cut limbs, no doubt unmoved from where it had been flung.

Estelle shuffled the photos and looked hard at a third that showed the victim. He had crawled nearly a dozen feet, spraying the ground and himself with blood as he did so. Estelle grimaced, imagining the moments of panic. The young worker, perhaps twenty-five years old, had managed to prop himself up against a shaggy juniper. The wound in his leg, deep and ragged, would have been fatal in a few minutes at most. Blood loss must have been from a gusher, enough to render the victim immobile in seconds. By the time he had crawled even a few yards, he would have been dizzy and disoriented as his blood pressure plummeted. In a final slump, he had leaned back against the tree, both hands clutching his leg in a vain attempt to stop the pumping blood from his lacerated femoral artery.

“What a mess,” Estelle whispered. Where had his partner been at that moment? Standing rooted in panic? Ready to faint at the sight of the spurting blood? Even if the second man had been on the scene with his wits about him, the situation would have been desperate. A tightly cinched belt might have worked to stem the tide, but the accident had happened so far from medical help that time was their enemy.

Other photos showed a faded yellow pickup truck fifty yards away, its bed a third filled with neatly stacked firewood. A gas can and a plastic quart bottle of oil rested on the tailgate, along with a small blue cooler and a second chain saw.

Estelle scanned the photos again. The other woodcutter had fled, but he had not run for help. He had not even made an anonymous phone call-if the two men had owned a cell phone, which was unlikely at best. The man had simply abandoned his dying companion. “Why would you do that?” Estelle wondered aloud. An accident was an accident. What did it matter if the pair had indeed been illegals? One woodcutter could have bundled the other injured man into the truck, and driven for help. Judging by what Estelle could see of the wound, a mad dash to the clinic in the nearest tiny village would have been futile. The injured man would have drained out long before they had driven the seventeen miles of rough roads to the nearest nurse-practitioner or physician’s assistant. But you didn’t even try, she thought.