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“Mr. and Mrs. Urioste, at any time did you see activity at the Estrada place next door to you? We’re talking about the period of time from early Wednesday morning until today. Did you notice lights, or activity around the truck? Anything that was out of the ordinary?”

Gordon Urioste grimaced, his rubbery face twisting into a caricature. “Look,” he said, “I knew that Hec took the truck a time or two, but it was just when he was going over to see his friends. Stuff like that. See, when the old man was alive, he said that he was going to give that truck to my son when Marty was old enough to drive. In the past couple of years, old Ray didn’t drive anymore. He couldn’t see good enough to make it out of the driveway.” Gordon shrugged. “I didn’t see the harm in letting Hec use it now and then. He’s careful. Old Ray kept it licensed and all, so it was legal.”

“So to speak,” Estelle added dryly.

“Well, he’s old enough to take care of himself. He’s got lots of friends here now, you know. You can’t keep a high school senior on a leash, for God’s sakes.”

“Much as we might like to,” Pam said.

“I mean, there’s a lot to see and do in this country,” Gordon added. “This year is the chance of a lifetime for Hector.” He stopped, and the righteous expression on his face told Estelle that he didn’t realize how inane he sounded. That chance of a lifetime could offer itself in many guises.

“Three people thought that they had the chance of a lifetime,” she said quietly. “Did you see lights on next door any time this past week? In the house?”

“Oh, no,” Gordon insisted. “Hec wouldn’t go inside that house.” He turned toward the boy. “That’s not what happened, is it? You weren’t inside over there. No wild parties, nothing like that.”

“We’re not talking about wild parties,” Estelle said. Hector didn’t respond.

“You know,” Gordon said, undeterred, and he twisted his head back to look up at his wife, who was standing behind him, hand on his left shoulder, “I don’t even know where the key to that place is.” He looked at Hector. “Do you? La llave?” he added unnecessarily.

“Yes.”

The direct answer startled Gordon.

“It is hung by the back door. Up high,” Hector said.

“You showed him how to get into the old man’s house?” Estelle asked. “Is that where you uncle stayed?”

“It is possible,” Hector whispered.

Tom Mears rose quickly. “I’ll alert the guys,” he said, and left the room, pulling his radio from his belt as he did so.

“It’s possible?” Estelle snapped. She bent down close to the boy, close enough to smell his fatigue, his fear. “Hector, listen to me. You’re helping this man. That makes you an accomplice. Do you understand what that means? Un cómplice?” She saw his eyes close a little, and saw the moisture at the corners. “Un cómplice, joven. Un cómplice en todas cosas…los tres asesinatos incluidos.”

Once more, Hector’s head settled into his hands. Estelle pulled one of the chairs over and sat down, so close that she could hear Hector’s breathing muffled in the palms of his hands.

“Tell me, Hector,” she whispered. “This isn’t something that you’re just going to walk away from, hijo. Tell me what we need to know. There must be no more killing.”

“He will, you know.” Hector’s voice was so soft that she could hardly hear it. She rested a hand on his arm and turned to the Uriostes.

“Will you wait outside, please?” As if now anxious to distance themselves from Hector and what he might have done, the couple left the conference room without hesitation or argument. When the door clicked shut, she tightened her grip on the boy’s arm. “Tell me, Hector.”

A long silence followed, and Hector’s breathing became so regular that at first glance he appeared asleep. “When we met in Culiacán,” he said finally, “he said that he had some unfinished business here.”

“Here? You mean in the United States, or specifically here, in Posadas.”

“He did not say. But I think he went somewhere the next day.”

“Do you mean Thursday? Or yesterday?”

He looked up, confused. “What is today?”

“Sunday.”

“Then it was Friday. Yes, Friday. He helped me put fuel in the airplane when we were finished with it that night. The night of the flight.” Hector snuffled what might have been a stifled laugh. “He thought it was funny, being able to take the airplane so easily-and then to be able to use the…tank? The gasoline tank at the school. After that, he spent the night in the home of the old man. I let him in.”

“Did he use the old man’s truck later on?”

“No. There was a motorbike in the shed behind the house. I never saw it, but he said it was there.” His eyes flicked to one side as if to say, I’m lying now.

“Who said it was there?”

“My…my uncle. He said so. He explored the house after I let him in, and then he went outside, he said. Outside to look into the little barn. It is behind the house. I did not go with him. My uncle, he said he would use the motorcycle, if he could make it run.”

“And did he?”

“I don’t know.” Again the sideways flick of the eyes intrigued Estelle. “He insisted that I go to school, each day-that I do not remain at home while he was there.”

Estelle reached for her cell phone at the same moment that it buzzed, and the electronic noise was startling and harsh in the quiet room.

“Guzman.”

“Estelle, we’re seeing evidence that someone stayed in the house.” Captain Eddie Mitchell’s voice was clipped and businesslike. “Slept here, probably. Had a little bit to eat…looks like convenience store pizza and chocolate milk. Nothing else.”

“Hector says that his uncle stayed there, Eddie. And he may have used a motorbike or motorcycle that’s in the back shed. Will you check on that?”

“Been there, done that. It isn’t there,” Mitchell said. “Just some oil stains and tire marks on the dirt floor. The kid says the bike was still there last he remembers?”

“Yes. But he says that he never saw it.” She watched Hector’s face as she talked. It was hard to tell if he was listening, or if he had drifted off to sleep. “He doesn’t know what condition it might be in. Or so he says.”

“It probably runs just fine. You remember about Cody Roybal? The crash out at the old drive-in theater?”

“Ah,” Estelle groaned. Mention of the bike hadn’t stirred the memory immediately, but now the name brought the episode back to the surface. Cody Roybal had received the motocross bike from his grandfather, Reynaldo Estrada-perhaps for a birthday, maybe high school graduation. Estelle couldn’t recall. But she did remember the tragedy at the theater, where Cody had been riding across the abandoned parking lot, lost control on one of the berms, and crashed.

The bike had slid harmlessly in the dust, barely scraping the paint, its knobby tires gouging the dirt. Cody had tumbled headfirst into the remains of one of the old drive-in’s speaker posts, the helmet he should have been wearing left at home to protect the end post of his bed. That had been two years before. Old Man Estrada had kept his grandson’s bike in the shed, unable to part with it.

“You there?” Mitchell asked as the silence grew.

“Yes.” Her mind raced with the possibilities. “Tapia isn’t going to Albuquerque,” she said. “Not on a dirt bike.” A myriad of doors opened, each one a new possibility. The motorcycle would open those doors for Tapia-and he had enjoyed three full days to find his way. “Who is with you, Eddie?”

“Abeyta and Taber.”

“Ay.” She closed her eyes, running down the dwindling list of available deputies.