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“Three ten, PCS.”

I lifted the mike. “Go ahead.” I recognized Aggie Bishop’s voice. Howard’s wife, who worked occasionally as a matron for the department, had been dragged in to cover dispatch while we used part-timer Ernie Wheeler on the road. She wasn’t very good at it, but she was better than a dead radio. I hoped she wasn’t spreading her flu through the office.

“Three ten, Dr. Guzman called just a few minutes ago.”

“Ten-four.” I waited for Aggie to make up her mind about what she wanted to say. Life at the Bishop home must have been fascinating. A one paragraph conversation between Howard and Aggie would last all week.

Fifteen seconds passed, and I keyed the mike. “PCS, go ahead.”

“Three ten, a Dr. Guzman called.” She spaced out the words and spoke considerably louder into the radio.

“Ten-four,” I said again, and chuckled in spite of myself. “What…does…he…want?”

“Oh. Three ten, is Estelle…is Detective Reyes-Guzman with you?”

“Negative.”

“Ah, three ten, do you know…” and she stopped dead in the water, wanting to use one of those wonderful ten codes that spill from cops’ lips with such abandon. But Aggie didn’t have a clue. I could picture her, leaning across the desk, looking at the ten-code chart that was faded to uniform brown on top of the radio housing. “Do you know her ten-twenty location? Where she is?”

“Negative, PCS.” I glanced at my watch. At 5:13, the streets of Posadas were both rolled up and blanketed in gloomy twilight. I didn’t suggest that she try to call Estelle at home, since it seemed obvious to me that the good doctor would have tried that himself, first.

It took less than a minute to go around the block and pull into the hospital’s parking lot. I had no intention of grilling Linda Real again that day. She had told me all she could, and probably couldn’t tell me what we most urgently needed to know. And I didn’t want to face another confrontation with her mother. But if Francis Guzman had important information for us, I wanted it fast and firsthand.

I hustled inside. The main hallway and lobby of the hospital was deserted. Even the reception desk, usually manned by someone from the auxiliary, was empty. I hastened down the hall past radiology, the lab, physical therapy, and all those other little smelly holes where friendly folks with million-dollar machines pry secrets out of a patient’s most private corners.

When I reached the nurses’ station I glanced toward the intensive care ward. Patrolman Tom Pasquale from the village department was taking another turn staring at floor tiles and loving every minute of it.

“Are you lost?”

I turned. Helen Murchison had padded up behind me, and she leaned one hand on the Plexiglas shelf in front of the glass partition of the station.

“Ah, Helen. Is Francis Guzman handy?”

“He’s in surgery.”

“For long?”

Helen raised an eyebrow. “I don’t know. The ambulance just brought in someone who tried to put an ax through his ankle.”

I winced, and Helen started to smile, then thought better of it. “So he’s tied up,” I said.

“Yes.”

“He left a message to call him.”

Helen took a deep breath, signaling that she was much put upon by all this. “I believe,” she said, “that he was wondering where his wife was.”

“She’s not home?”

“Evidently not.”

A mental image of Sofia Tournal as a baby-sitter flashed through my mind. Perhaps she would start el kid off on Blackstone. In Spanish, of course.

“I’ll run on down to the emergency room and see if I can catch the good doctor.”

She shook her head. “Dr. Guzman won’t be able to talk to you just now, though.”

“I’ll catch him when he finishes.”

She nodded. “And Bill…”

“Yes?” I was surprised at being called anything but “sir” or “sheriff” by Helen Murchison.

“Thanks again for the help with Mrs. Real earlier.” She lowered her voice to a hoarse whisper. “She’s dreadful.” As if that one indiscretion was all she could allow herself for that week, Helen nodded curtly and stalked off.

She was right, though. Francis Guzman couldn’t talk to me for several minutes. I sat down outside the emergency room and waited while the physician repaired the magnificent damage that George Payson had done to himself with a camp hatchet while trying to split kindling for an evening fire.

In short order, the yellow plastic chair in which I sat metamorphosed into a lumpy rock, and my initial complacent acceptance of inconvenience drifted toward concern mixed with irritation.

Squirming didn’t help, so I got up and walked to the door, looking out into the gathering darkness. An ambulance sat under the portico, its four-way flashers pulsing.

I glanced at my watch, and then walked to the pay phone beside the drinking fountain. I dialed Estelle’s home phone and waited for ten rings before the receiver was lifted.

“Hello?” The voice was soft and distant.

“Senora Tournal? This is Bill Gastner.”

“Ah. Good evening, senor.”

“I don’t mean to disturb you, but has Estelle called?”

“No, senor, I have not seen Estelle since…since before lunch, you know.”

“The minute she comes in, would you ask her to call the sheriff’s office?”

“Certainly. And senor, I believe Francisco is at the hospital.” Her heavy accent stressed the last syllable, elegantly.

“I saw him,” I said, not trying to explain that it had been a quick glimpse through the Plexiglas of the emergency room doors. In the background I could hear the sort of ruckus caused by a tower of wooden blocks crashing to the Guzman’s living room floor, followed by a fourteen-month old’s screech of delight. “You’re entertaining the squirt, eh?”

She laughed. “Ah, el kid. He is a charmer, no?”

“Indeed. The baby-sitter had to go home?”

“Yes. She left shortly after lunch, senor. I told Francis that perhaps I could manage this one afternoon.”

“Charge the good doctor a fancy dinner,” I said, and Sofia chuckled. “Will you please tell Estelle to call me?”

“I will do that, senor. And perhaps later we can all meet for dinner. Everyone is so…occupado. No, you say, ‘busy.’” Senora Tournal didn’t sound busy-she sounded serene. Hell, one of us had to be.

After I hung up, I dug out another quarter. I suppose I could have saved a few cents by using the radio in the car, but I despised public announcements. Half the county listened to the police scanner, listened to business that was none of their own. I dropped in the quarter. Aggie Bishop answered after three rings.

“Aggie, this is Gastner again,” I said. “Has Estelle checked in with you yet?”

“No sir, she sure hasn’t.”

“Crap,” I said.

“Sir?”

“No, nothing, Aggie. Are you doing all right?”

“I guess so, sir. Gayle said she was going to come in around eight to relieve me.”

“Fine. Look, I’m going to stop at Don Juan’s for some food, so I’ll be there for a bit. Then I’ll come on down. If you need anything, ring the restaurant. All right?”

“Yes, sir.”

“And Aggie…if Estelle calls, tell her I want to see her right away, if not before. Tell her where I am.”

“I sure will.”

The drive across Posadas to North Twelfth Street took only four minutes. By then, it was dark. I pulled into the parking lot of the Don Juan de Onate Restaurant and parked beside a monstrous RV with Utah plates. That and a white school bus with Chihuahuan tags and several dozen pairs of skis in the top rack were the only vehicles. I hesitated, not sure I wanted to put up with a score of noisy adolescents inside the restaurant, all of them doubly excited to be in a foreign country and headed for the ski slopes up north.

I did go inside, though, and found myself a dark, quiet corner. I told the hostess that I was expecting a phone call and she promised not to forget me. After ordering a beef burrito plate with green chili, sour cream, beans, and rice, I settled back in the imitation leather booth with a basket of chips and a bowl of salsa. I ate two chips, then turned sideways on the seat so I could look out the window and watch what passed for traffic on Bustos Avenue.