Coming down that hill at thirty-five or forty miles a hour, Langsford must have put skid marks on the pavement. Waxman had flat-out missed them.
Tim's interest in the negatives jumped several notches. He dumped the bike parts in the box, resealed the lid, signed the evidence slip, and got back to district headquarters in a hurry. At the computer terminal, he scanned in the negatives and punched them up on the screen one at a time. He played with background colors until he had the right mix that highlighted the vehicle skid marks.
He looked, and looked again. The tread marks were thick and conspicuous on the outer side of the left front tire, and on the inner side of the right front tire, but otherwise barely discernible. What Waxman had taken to be skid marks was clearly a hard turn of the front wheels. But at what speed?
He punched up another image and the slender lines of the bicycle skid marks jumped out at him. He put the two photographs side-by-side on the screen, leaned back in his chair, and studied them intently before thumbing through the autopsy report. Then he factored in the new information and reworked Waxman's original calculations.
The new figures didn't work. He checked his wristwatch, printed hard copies of the negatives, and headed for the door. He needed to take new measurements at the site and visit with Marcos Narvaiz, the first volunteer firefighter on the scene, to see if he could fill in any of the remaining blanks.
Working the list of locals for preferred seating at the funeral services didn't yield anything of value. Death had cleansed Vernon Langsford of all human frailties, and Kerney found himself listening to cliched eulogies that gave no true sense of the man, the most notable ones coming from a sitting district court judge, a former district attorney, and a retired city police chief.
He called around to motels and bed and breakfast inns and located six of the eight out-of-town guests who were on Linda Langsford's list. He got to the Bitter Lake Bed and Breakfast just as Leonora Wister was leaving her Santa Fe-style cottage accommodations.
"Vernon was my first cousin," Leonora said, as she stood next to a late-model white Cadillac with Texas plates. "We grew up together."
"Were you close as children?" Kerney asked, trying not to stare at Leonora's blue gray curly hair. She clutched a large purse against her stomach in an attempt to hide her thick waist from view.
"Yes, until high school, when my family moved to San Antonio. After that, I would see him during occasional visits to Roswell."
"What kind of kid was he?"
"Wild," Leonora replied.
"In what way?"
"He became interested in girls at a very early age."
"Can you give me specifics?"
"Not really. Maybe Danny Hobeck can. He was Vernon's best friend all through school."
Kerney scanned his list. Hobeck was one of the out-of-town guests he'd been unable to locate. "Do you know where he's staying?"
"With his sister," Leonora replied.
Kerney asked for and got a name and address.
"How can prying into Vernon's childhood possibly help you catch his killer?" Leonora asked.
"I'm not sure it will," Kerney said.
Danny Hobeck was out renewing old acquaintance ships but his sister, Margie, was home. A thin, nervous woman in her late sixties with rounded shoulders and apprehensive eyes, she reluctantly let Kerney in.
He sat with her in a living room entirely given over to her three cats. There were scratching poles in each corner for the tabbies to use. Rubber mice, tennis balls, and pet toys were scattered across the oak floor. Next to the pet door that offered access to and from the front porch, three food bowls were lined up, each inscribed with a name-Frisky, Mellow, and Violet. Framed photographs of the cats were prominently displayed on top of a television set.
The tabbies padded back and forth across the room, tails upright, giving Kerney a wide berth.
"I understand Vernon and Danny were best friends," Kerney said.
"I wouldn't call it a friendship."
"What would you call it?"
"Vernon led Danny around by the nose," she said after some hesitation.
"You don't sound well-disposed toward Vernon."
"He wasn't a very nice boy."
"Care to tell me why you feel that way?" Kerney asked.
Margie leaned forward in her easy chair and snapped her fingers. One of the cats turned and jumped into her lap. She stroked it and said nothing.
"How much younger are you than Danny?" Kerney asked.
"Five years."
"Does he have a family?"
"Two grown children. His wife died last year."
"And your family?"
Margie recoiled slightly and wet her lips. "I never married."
"Will you be attending the funeral services?"
Margie scratched the cat's chin while the ignored felines converged at her feet. "No."
"Care to tell me why?"
She patted the arm of the chair and the animals jumped into her lap. "I don't want to go." She ran a hand over the yellow cat's back, and it arched and purred.
"Would Danny be able to tell me why you don't like Vernon?"
"He would never do that." Her tone was biting.
"When will he be back?"
"I don't know."
"I'll call for him this evening."
"He won't talk to you."
Kerney let himself out wondering why so many people in Langsford's life, past and present, needed to keep secrets.
"I remember that call," Marcos Narvaiz said. He poured Tim Dwyer a cup of coffee at his kitchen table, returned the pot to the stove, and ran a hand over his shaggy, curly gray hair.
"Tell me about it," Tim said.
"I was the first responder on the scene. The whole thing was a mess. Waxman did the best he could under the circumstances."
Narvaiz's house was in the high foothills on the highway to Ruidoso. It sat between the village post office and the volunteer fire department. Marcos served as fire chief, a position he'd held for ten years, and his wife ran the post office. Tim had worked many accidents with Marcos and knew him well.
"I know the victim was separated from the bicycle, but Waxman didn't get a photograph of where it came to rest," Tim said.
Marcos laughed. "He ran out of film after he did the three-sixty shots of the victim and the skid marks. You should have heard him cursing about it."
Tim pulled out Waxman's field drawing. "So where did the bicycle wind up?"
Marcos pointed to a spot. "About here."
"You're sure?"
"Yeah. I helped him inventory and bag the bike parts for evidence. He wanted the debris cleaned up fast so he could reopen the highway."
"How long was the debris trail?"
"The bike shattered on impact," Marcos said. "From the rear wheel to the handlebars, I'd say it was a good thirty feet."
Tim marked the spot on the field drawing Marcos had pointed to and nodded. "About the same distance Langsford was catapulted over the vehicle."
"What are you looking for?" Marcos asked. "It was a clear-cut hit-and-run."
"The driver's intent," Tim replied.
"What kind of magic do you use to figure that one out?"
"It's guesswork, and I can't prove it, but I think the driver deliberately ran into that bicycle."
"What if the driver was drunk?" Marcos countered.
"Even drunks hit the brakes and take evasive action before impact. Their reactions are way too late and slow, but they do it."
"You got the skid marks from the car," Marcos said.
"They're front-end yaw marks from a hard turn of the wheels into the cyclist," Tim said. "I calculated distance, speed, and zero skid resistance at the scene. The vehicle was traveling at sixty miles an hour. Langsford went flying, landed on his head, and bounced like a deflated rubber ball, according to the autopsy. His internal injuries were equivalent to falling from a three-story building."