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“Bingo,” Estelle said softly, then added, “it’s something, sir. The first real lead we’ve had to follow. It may be just coincidence that the wrench we found is the same kind that comes as standard equipment on those vehicles, but it’s worth pursuing.”

Holman let out a high-pitched chirp of delight when the full import sank in. I smiled at Bishop. “Good job, Howard. Get on the horn to the Federales in Chihuahua and tell ’em what we’re looking for. If the killer was headed over the border, he’s had all the time in the world. He could be halfway to Mexico City by now. But they may turn something up.”

“I’ll have prints off the wrench in another few minutes,” Estelle said. “You might call Wilcox back and have APD dust down that ramp, if they haven’t already. We might get a match.”

Bishop nodded and I slapped Holman on the arm. “Let’s go talk with Nick Chavez.”

Holman glanced at his watch, ever the politician. I chuckled. “It doesn’t matter about the hour, Martin. This is the best time of day to work. You don’t have to worry about crowds.”

Chapter 14

At ten o’clock that Monday night, the streets of Posadas were deserted. Sheriff Holman and I drove west on Bustos Avenue past the park, and then turned south on Fourth Street.

Nick Chavez’s home was one of those cinder block things that were built in droves during the fifties when the mines showed signs of life. Contractors had bulldozed the field behind the high school and dumped enough concrete to make fifty or sixty slabs, then slapped the houses together. The three bedroom “homes,” as realtors were fond of calling them even when they were empty, came with all the options-metal windows that let in fine dust during every windstorm, flat roofs that only leaked when it rained, and stucco that began peeling even before the second summer of blistering New Mexico sun was over.

Nick could have afforded something more fancy, but his Fourth Street home had served him well, with additions sprouting and spreading as the years and the kids went by. A hundred yards from the front door was Pershing Street and Posadas High School’s football field. Eleven Chavez kids had graduated from PHS, the last just two years after my own youngest son.

For sixteen years I had been driving a Blazer that I’d purchased new from Nick Chavez…and for the past fifteen years he had never let slip an opportunity to try to sell me a replacement.

Somewhere deep in the house a television blared, but eventually the doorbell broke through the din. In a few minutes Nick Chavez opened the door, blinking against the harshness of the porch light. Any father with eleven children-even if they are all grown and flown-is going to jump to the worst conclusions at ten o’clock at night with two cops at the door. Nick put on a hospitable face.

“Hey, Bill,” he said. “Kind of past your curfew, isn’t it?” He grinned at Holman, who looked uncomfortable. “Sheriff, how you doin’?”

“Nick,” I said, “we’re in a bind. Can you spare us a little of your time?”

“Sure.” He held open the storm door and beckoned. “Come on in. Marty, are you tired of playin’ cops and robbers yet? You want a real job?” Martin Holman may have sold used cars at one time in his varied career, but he’d never voiced the slightest inclination to return to the lot. I knew his purchase order for election year campaign posters and cards had already gone to the printer. And when he stepped through the door, Holman squared his shoulders a bit and looked like a proper sheriff-trim build with broad shoulders, a little gray just beginning to creep into his neatly clipped sideburns. I always felt like an old worn-out basset hound standing next to him.

Nick Chavez closed the door and frowned. “I heard what happened yesterday. It’s hard to imagine who would do such an awful thing. How’s the young lady?”

Thanks to the efficient media, the entire world had heard one version or another of the shooting. I didn’t answer Nick’s question, but instead gestured toward the formal living room, untouched by humans except for regular dusting. “Can we talk in here, Nick?”

“Sure. Sure. Let me get you something to drink. Coffee?”

“No, thanks.” I shook my head.

“How about you, sheriff?”

Holman nodded. “That would be just right. Black.”

I sat on the edge of a flowered sofa while Holman prowled the room, examining Mrs. Chavez’s collection of porcelain figurines. She tended toward gnomes, elves, and other small, ugly caricatures. Holman picked up a casting of a leprechaun examining a rabbit’s injured paw and turned the figurine this way and that. He set it down carefully and picked up a business card that someone had placed on the mantel.

“Florie Gallegos for Assessor,” he read. “She’s been in office a hundred years.” After carefully replacing the card, he added, “You know that Estelle is going to run against me.” He said it as a statement, with just a hint of self-pity mixed with accusation creeping into his voice.

“She told me yesterday. We didn’t have a chance to discuss it.”

“Do you think it’s a good idea?” He thrust his hands in his trouser pockets and leaned against the fireplace mantel.

I took a long time to answer and finally settled for, “No.”

Holman’s eyebrows shot up and he started to say something. But Nick Chavez returned, carrying two mugs of steaming, fresh coffee. He set one down carefully on the small end table near my elbow.

“You say you don’t want any, but you really do,” he said. He handed Holman’s mug to the sheriff. “Spill any of that on the carpet and my wife will cut your heart out,” he grinned, then turned serious. “Now, what can I help you gentlemen with?”

I looked at Nick Chavez’s open, expectant face, round and friendly like one of the porcelain figurines. He settled his short, chubby body onto a chair that looked like something out of Wuthering Heights and clasped his hands between his knees.

“We’re chasing shadows, Nick,” I said.

“I don’t follow.”

I hesitated, then said, “This is just between us.”

He nodded vigorously. “Sure, sure.”

“We have reason to suspect that the deputy was shot after he stopped to assist a motorist. Maybe shot by that motorist, maybe by a third party.”

“Ay,” Nick said softly.

“We also have reason to think that one of the vehicles involved was both brand-new and disabled somehow.” I saw Nick’s eyes narrow a little. “Svenson Motors in Albuquerque reported a Chevy Suburban stolen sometime Saturday night. There is some circumstantial evidence that points to that as the vehicle involved. Maybe.”

“Maybe?”

I shrugged. “As I said, it’s circumstantial. Pretty thin. But it’s our only lead. That’s it. Period.”

Nick pursed his lips, then said, “A stolen Suburban is going to be hard to find, Bill. If he’s got some hours head start, he’s in Mexico by now, that’s for sure. Are you working with the Federales?”

“Yes. But they won’t turn up anything.”

Nick shrugged his sympathy for our frustrations with Mexican law enforcement. “What can I do for you, then?”

I sipped the coffee. He was right. The coffee was just what I needed. “How do you steal a locked vehicle without breaking anything?” Nick Chavez grinned and settled back in the chair. “You’ve got to protect your own inventory, Nick. You’re as much of an expert as anyone around.”

“The easiest way is to steal the key.” He made a little twisting motion with his right hand. “But other than that? We take the keys in at night. On some of the high-profile vehicles…like the Blazers and Suburbans…we use a steering wheel bar-lock. But I tell you…” He leaned forward. “Nothing works too good if someone really wants the vehicle. See, first of all, we all used to use window lockboxes. Everybody did. But the damn kids would break them and take the keys. So now, they pop a window and they’re inside.”