"Who are you?" Brandon demanded, looking down at the young woman crouched beside Quentin. He immediately assumed that she was somehow connected to the injured man. "And what the hell has this son of a bitch done to his sister?"
"You must be Mr. Walker," Candace said.
Brandon nodded.
"I'm Candace Waverly," she said. "Your son David's fiancee. Quentin wanted me to give you a message. He said to tell you that he didn't kill Tommy. He said it was an accident, that Tommy fell in a hole in the cave. By the time Quentin was finally able to get him out, Tommy was dead. Quentin didn't tell anyone what really happened because he was sure people would think it was all his fault."
"Tommy?" a winded Brock Kendall gasped as he finally reached the limestone outcropping. "I thought we were here about Lani. What's this about Tommy?"
All the way out from Tucson, Brandon Walker had agonized over how he would treat his son, over what he would say. As a father, how could he forgive Quentin for hurting Lani? And now there was responsibility for Tommy as well?
Brandon's legs folded under him. He dropped to the ground and buried his face in his hands. This was too much-way too much. More than he could stand.
"Dear God in heaven, Quentin," Brandon Walker sobbed. "How could you do it? How could you?"
"Take it easy, Mr. Walker," Brian Fellows murmured, appearing out of nowhere and placing a comforting hand on Brandon's heaving shoulder. "Quentin didn't do it. He didn't take Lani, and he didn't hurt her."
Brandon quieted almost instantly. "He didn't? Who did then? Who's responsible for all this?"
"The man's name is Mitch Johnson," Brian answered.
"Mitch Johnson!" Brandon exclaimed. It took only seconds for the name to register. "The guy I put away years ago for shooting up those illegals?"
"That's the one."
"Where is the son of a bitch? I'll kill him myself."
"You don't have to," Brian said softly. "I think Lani already did it for you."
Pima County Detective Dan Leggett was used to calling the shots when it came to conducting interviews. He would have preferred talking to Lani Walker in the air-conditioned splendor of the visiting FBI agent's Lincoln Town Car, but the medicine man-the one Brandon Walker called Fat Crack-refused to let the girl come down off the mountain. Ioligam was well inside reservation boundaries. The road where the Town Car was parked was not. Short of escorting Lani down to the car at gunpoint, Leggett wasn't going to get her to leave.
And so the detective took himself up the mountain to her. He found Lani and Fat Crack sitting together off to one side of the entrance to the cave. Lani was still wrapped in a blanket, as though the increasing heat of the day still hadn't penetrated to the chilled marrow of her bones. She sat watching in somber silence while several deputies trudged down the mountainside lugging the stretcher holding the crushed earthly remains of one Mitch Johnson.
Detective Leggett was still mildly irritated with Mr. Tribal Chairman, Gabe Ortiz. After all, it was the medicine man's message, sent via his wife, that had pulled Brandon Walker, Brock Kendall, and a number of other operatives off on an early-morning wild-goose chase to Rattlesnake Skull Charco. As a police officer, Leggett didn't put much stock in medicine men even if Ortiz's prediction of where they would eventually find Lani Walker had been off target by a mere mile or two.
"If you'd excuse us for a little while," Detective Leggett said to Gabe Ortiz, "I'll need to ask Miss Walker a few questions now."
Lani motioned for Gabe to stay where he was. "I'd like Mr. Ortiz to stay," she said.
"If Mr. Ortiz were your attorney, of course, he'd be welcome to stay, but I'm afraid regulations don't make any provisions for medicine men…"
"I'm not an attorney, but I am the tribal chairman and this is tribal land," Gabe Ortiz said with quiet but unmistakable authority. "I am here as Lani's elder and as her spiritual adviser. Since this is my jurisdiction, if she wants me to stay, I stay."
Leggett may not have been much of an advocate of ethnic diversity when it came to medicine men, but the words "tribal chairman" struck a responsive chord.
"Of course," he said agreeably, turning back to Lani. "Since Miss Walker wants you here, you're more than welcome to stay."
The interview, conducted in the full glare of what was now midday sun, took an hour and a half. When it was over, Dan Leggett's shirt and trousers were soaked through with sweat, and he was so parched he could barely talk. Lani still sat swathed in her blanket.
Despite her ordeal, Lani answered his questions with a poise that was surprising to see in someone so young. She responded to simple and complex questions alike with calm clarity. Her harrowing version of Mitch Johnson's physical assault with the kitchen tongs was enough to make Leggett feel half sick, but Lani recounted her ordeal without seeming to be affected by what she was saying. Her steadiness made Leggett wonder if she was really as fine as she claimed or if, perhaps, she might still be suffering from shock.
"That's about it," he said, closing his notebook after the last of his questions. "I think we probably should get you into town and have you checked out by a doctor."
"No," Gabe Ortiz said firmly. "Lani has killed an enemy. She can't go to town. She has to stay out here by herself, away from her village and family, until she finishes undergoing the purification ceremony."
"How long will that take?" Leggett asked, imagining as he did so an evening's worth of cedar drumming.
"Sixteen days," Gabe Ortiz answered.
"Sixteen days? Even though it's most likely self-defense, there'll have to be an inquest or maybe even a preliminary hearing."
"They will have to wait for the sixteen days," Gabe Ortiz told him.
Leggett looked around at the empty desert. "She's going to stay here? In the middle of nowhere?"
Ortiz nodded. "I've already sent my son off to pick up a tent and whatever other supplies she may need. I myself will bring her food and water. Her wounds will be treated in the traditional way."
For the first time in the whole process, Lani Walker's eyes filled with tears. "Thank you," she said.
Diana met Brandon at the door when he came home from the hospital late that evening. "Is Quentin going to make it?"
Brandon paused long enough to hang his keys up on the Peg-Board. "Probably," he said.
"And the bones?"
Brandon sank down beside the table and Diana brought him a glass of iced tea. "I called Dr. Sam," he said. "He ran the dental profile through his computer. The bones they found at Rattlesnake Skull belong to Tommy, all right."
Dr. Sam was short for Swaminathan Narayanamurty, a professor of biometrics at the University of Arizona. Together Dr. Sam and Brandon Walker had come up with the idea of amassing a database of dental records on reported Missing Persons from all over the country. Brandon Walker's effective lobbying before a national meeting of the Law Enforcement and Security Administrators had enabled Dr. Sam to gain some key seed money funding years earlier. That initial grant had grown into a demonstration project.
During the election campaign, Bill Forsythe had brought that project up, implying that Brandon's interest in the project had been based on personal necessity because of his own son's unexplained disappearance rather than on sound law enforcement practices. Personal or not, the connection had been strong enough that on this warm summer Sunday, Dr. Sam had been only too happy to interrupt a week-long stay in a cabin on Mount Lemmon to run the profile of the skull Dan Leggett had retrieved from Rattlesnake Skull Charco.
"Detective Leggett says he thinks Quentin was in the process of moving the bones out of the cave for fear Johnson would see them, when Manny Chavez stumbled into the area. Quentin must have panicked and attacked the man."