Had the vehicle chewed another foot down the railing, Becky would have been decapitated. She was smart enough to figure that out for herself.
Paul and I popped her seat belt and helped her out. She grabbed my arm so hard with her sharp little fingers that I thought I was the one who would end up bleeding.
The twins and Mrs. Weatherford were trying to divide their attention between Becky and the man who’d caused the whole thing. Their dither was understandable. Chad Weatherford had been pitched clear of the mess, hitting a section of the steel guardrail and fracturing his right thighbone in about eighteen places.
With Becky and the twins safe, Donni Weatherford concentrated her efforts on hubby, giving her something to worry about other than the junk pile she’d made of their vehicle and their vacation plans. Through tears, she told me the family had been heading for San Diego, a long haul from home in Davenport, Iowa.
I didn’t ask her how she managed to check her kids out of school in the middle of February.
The ambulance arrived. Chad’s leg was field dressed and he was strapped onto a gurney for the four-minute trip to Posadas General Hospital. One of the EMTs and I assisted Donni, making sure she didn’t break anything or become tangled in any of the equipment when she climbed into the ambulance.
Deputy Tom Mears played taxi and took the youngsters to the hospital in his patrol car. Mrs. Weatherford thanked me profusely, as if she had first thought that we might leave her kids by the shoulder of the highway, battered, stranded waifs.
By the time I returned to the office and made a few phone calls, it was pushing seven. My stomach was growling, having been ignored all afternoon. I needed to stop by the hospital and if I then took time to go home to clean up and change as well, I’d risk being so late for dinner that I’d miss several courses. Estelle and her family would have to take me as I was-something they were used to.
Donni Weatherford was considerably more composed when I found her in the hospital’s tiny snack bar. I gave her the telephone number of the local insurance agent and recommended a motel that would put a courtesy car at her disposal.
I’m sure the kids thought being marooned in Posadas, New Mexico, was high adventure. That would wear thin in a day or two.
At 7:09, I walked through the front door of the Guzman’s modest adobe on South Twelfth Street. The aroma of Mexican food as only Estelle could cook it made me slobber.
“We just finished,” Francis said as he held open the door.
I stopped short, rested my palm on the butt of my revolver, and frowned at the young surgeon. “You’re finished, all right.”
He grinned and waved me in. “We’re glad you could make it,” he said. “Aunt Sofie was looking forward to seeing you again.” He paused for just a heartbeat and added, “We weren’t, of course.”
I hesitated. I’d forgotten the Guzmans had company-proper company no less. I held up my hands, sure that I still smelled of spilled gasoline. “You’ll have to take me as I am. I didn’t have time to go home and get all prettied up.” I shed hat and coat and then gun belt. “Where’s the kid?”
“In the dining room, making a mess,” Francis said. “Come on in.”
Francis Guzman Jr. was belted in his high chair; he was old enough to pound out percussion with a spoon but not so old that all the food found its way with regularity to his mouth.
Estelle and Francis’s aunt emerged from the kitchen and Estelle greeted me with a hug.
“You’ll have to excuse the aroma,” I said. “We had a mess on the interstate and I smell like gasoline and highway flares.”
“Serious?” Francis asked.
I shrugged, dismissing the incident.
“You remember Sofia from the wedding,” Estelle said, taking me by the elbow and guiding me around the kid, who was making a multicolored mess of his food.
“Of course,” I said. Sofia Tournal smiled warmly and extended her hand.
“It is so nice to see you again, sheriff,” she said. Her voice was husky and thickly accented. She must have been lost in the crowds of Guzman relatives during the wedding, for I would certainly have remembered her otherwise. Five years or so younger than my own sixty-three, the Guzman family resemblance was strong. When she smiled, which was often, the angular planes of her face softened. I had a feeling those features could just as easily form impressive storm clouds as well.
“I’m glad you could visit,” I said.
She nodded. “I was so sorry to have missed the bautizo-the christening-for the child,” she said, and smiled. Her teeth were perfectly even. If tooth genes from each side of the family joined forces, the kid would never see an orthodontist. “It was very kind of you to host it, padrino.”
“It was a lot of fun. My pleasure.”
“I’m sure it was. Had my husband not been ill…” She let a turning of the hand suffice for the rest.
“I thought we’d let the kid eat first, and then turn him loose so we can eat in peace,” Estelle said quickly.
“The kid,” Sofia said softly. The tiny wrinkles at the corners of her eyes deepened as she bent down to make a face at the youngster. He responded with an explosive laugh that sprayed applesauce on his aunt. She didn’t flinch. Compared to the splattered, smeared youngster, I was clean as the driven snow.
Dinner was one of those wonderful affairs that lasted all evening. After an hour, the kid decided we were too dull for his world. He sat in the middle of a sea of randomly shaped wooden blocks in the living room, building only he knew what. Each time the block tower toppled, he would shriek with delight. In twenty minutes, he toppled, too, curled in a tight ball on the sofa.
I had no desire to talk shop or recite an endless, tedious compendium of law enforcement war stories, but Sofia Tournal’s curiosity was that of a true lawyer. She probed, she prodded, she delved…and always she listened with her dark, thick eyebrows furrowed slightly in concentration.
Finally, with a hand delicately over her cup to halt the fifth refill of Estelle’s potent coffee, she looked across at me. “So, tell me…” and she rested her other hand against her cheek as if preparing for a long answer. “What do you think of Estelle’s decision, then?” She raised one eyebrow.
“Decision?” I asked. “To go back to school, you mean?”
Sofia turned as Estelle came back from the kitchen. “Maybe you have not discussed…” she started and then let the comment linger. I could see that Estelle was on the same mysterious wavelength. She knew exactly what Sofia Tournal was talking about, and I didn’t have a clue.
“I haven’t talked about it with him yet, tia. Just with you and Francis.”
I sat back and folded my hands on my belly.
“Well,” Sofia said. “This is a man who is used to being in the very center of things.” She beckoned to Estelle to sit back down. “You should discuss your decision with him, certainly.”
“Certainly,” I said, amused.
Estelle concentrated on the tablecloth for a full minute, tracing the lace design with the handle of a spoon. Neither Francis nor Sofia said a word. We waited. Finally Estelle chuckled. “This is harder than I thought, sir.”
“Oh? What’s harder? Fill me in. What’s the big mystery?”
She looked up at me, her clear, olive skin framed by raven black hair. But it was the eyes that as always drew my attention to Estelle-black, bottomless, calm, and assessing.
“I’ve decided to run for sheriff, sir.”
The room became so still I could hear the kid’s muttery little breaths in the next room.
It was Sofia who broke the silence. “This must be quite an adventure, don’t you think?
Adventure wasn’t the first word I would have chosen, but I desperately wanted to say the right thing when I opened my mouth.
“Instead of law school, or in addition to?” I asked.
“Before, maybe,” Estelle said. She frowned. “If I do, that is.”
I sat forward. “What do you mean, if you do? You just said you’d decided.”