"Yeah. I heard Stiles call in that you'd found that old man. I listened for a minute and went back to sleep."
"You didn't get up to take a look?"
Lujan laughed.
"Look at what? I can't see anything through the forest canopy. I didn't start scanning the meadows until you reported finding a dead body. By then I was awake."
"Did you see anyone today in the vicinity of Padilla Canyon?"
Lujan pushed himself off the counter, got a pair of field glasses, gave them to Kerney, and pointed in the direction of Padilla Canyon.
"That's almost impossible for me to do. Take a look for yourself.
The canyon is hidden by timberland. You can't even tell it's there, except for a few small breaks in the cover. I can't see anything."
Kerney trained the glasses where Henry had pointed. The kid was right.
All he could see in the fading light was a faint gash of the deep ravine obscured by forest.
"Did you have any visitors?"
"Today? Just you."
"How often do you report in by radio?"
"Every hour I log onto the fire watch system.
That's during working shifts. I keep the scanner going and the radio on all the time."
Kerney handed Lujan the field glasses. It should be easy to verify Henry's schedule.
"Do you know a fast way to get from Mangas Campground to Padilla Canyon?" "Maybe fly?" Lujan suggested with a grin and a shrug.
"I haven't the foggiest. Hiking isn't something I'm into. Besides, some of the trails are new.
Not even on the map yet."
"But you can see some trails from here," Kerney proposed.
"Sure. I'll do a visual sweep if someone's reported lost or overdue.
Otherwise, I concentrate on general surveillance."
Next to the cot was a workbench with some tools and a partially disassembled portable shortwave radio-one of the old vacuum-tube models.
"I hear you're going to college," Kerney said.
"Yeah. I just finished my second year at Western New Mexico in Silver City."
Kerney looked at the workbench.
"What's your major? Electronics?"
"No, it's forestry. I bought the radio at a garage sale for ten bucks.
It doesn't work. I'm just tinkering with it to see if I can fix it. It passes the time when there's nothing good on the tube."
"Sounds like fun. Play any sports?"
"What? Oh, you mean my weights. I wrestled in high school. Don't have the time for it now, so I work out just to stay in shape."
"Good idea." It was dark outside. The blackness of the forest was vast, interrupted by the dim lights of the few small hamlets that shimmered like frail earthbound stars in the valleys. It was time to get going.
"How well do you know Amador Ortiz?" Kerney asked.
"He's my uncle," Henry replied.
"He helped to get me this job when I graduated from high school."
"Did he talk to you about seeing tire tracks in Padilla Canyon?"
"If he did, I don't remember it."
"Do you keep any guns up here?"
"I don't, but there's a twenty-two rifle behind the door. It belongs to the Forest Service. You can look at it if you like."
Kerney knew it hadn't been a twenty-two that put the hole in Jim's arm.
"That's not necessary.
Thanks, Henry."
"Come back and visit anytime. And tell Jim I'm sorry about what happened. Tell him to hang in there."
"I'll do that."
Henry walked Kerney to the deck, watched him climb stiffly down the ladder and get in his truck. He waved as Kerney drove out of sight.
Inside, he wrote down the time of Kerney's visit in his daily log, made a quick visual sweep with the field glasses, and started working on the shortwave radio.
Dr. Harrison Walker, ophthalmologist, surgeon, and former Army medic with two Vietnam tours to his credit, walked into the lobby of the Gila Regional Medical Center. Visiting hours were over, and the lobby was empty except for one man, sprawled in a chair, fast asleep. A pile of papers had spilled from his chest onto the cushion. From personal experience, Harrison Walker knew what it meant to keep a vigil for a buddy. If he was hurt, you had to be there for him, period. End of story. It was a code Walker believed in and liked to see practiced by others. He picked up the papers and glanced at them. Some were official documents and others were handwritten letters, all in Spanish.
The fatigue etched on Kerney's face made Walker reluctant to wake him up. From what Walker knew about the incident in Padilla Canyon, Kerney had found Stiles, treated his wounds, and carried him out most of the way on a badly damaged leg.
Walker shook the man gently awake.
"Mr. Kerney."
Kerney's eyes snapped open.
"Doctor," he replied, sitting up.
"Mr. Stiles is in his room, and his parents have gone home. You can have a couple of minutes with him. Then I'm going to kick your ass out and order you to get some rest."
Kerney smiled in agreement.
"How are his eyes?"
"The fragment cut a ligament and damaged the cornea in his left eye. It missed the optic nerve but partially detached the retina. I've repaired the damage.
The right eye was a breeze-mostly fine grains of rock dust with one small perforation. He can use it, although things may be fuzzy for a day or two.
He'll keep his vision."
"That's good news. Thanks, Doctor."
"Thank you for patching him up and helping to get him here quickly. It reduced the chances of further damage." Harrison stopped, studied Kerney's face, and shook his finger.
"I'm serious about you needing some sleep. You look like shit."
"Is that a medical opinion?"
"It's an expert medical opinion," Harrison retorted.
"You'd do well to act on it."
"I believe it."
Harrison held out the documents.
"You may need these."
"Thanks, Doc," Kerney said, taking the papers.
Kerney found Stiles awake in his bed, his left eye covered with a dressing wrapped around his head.
The surgical team had repaired the muscle damage in his arm. There were bouquets of flowers from the Fraternal Order of Police and the Game and Fish Department on the bedside table.
"You look like shit," Jim said, holding out his hand.
Kerney grabbed it and squeezed.
"I thought you couldn't see anything."
Jim grinned.
"I can see your ugly face. Dr. Walker said maybe all I'll need is physical therapy to strengthen the eye muscles."
"That's great." Kerney searched Jim's face. It was still a mess. At least two dozen shrapnel wounds had been repaired, some requiring stitches to close the lacerations.
"And the arm?"
"The bullet missed the bone. It's my face I'm worried about. I look like I have permanent chicken pox."
"You're not going to be pretty for a while," Kerney agreed.
"But then you never were."
"Thanks a lot."
Kerney sank into the chair next to the bed, grateful to be off his feet.
"You missed my parents. I wanted you to meet them."
"I just got here," he fibbed.
"Some other time."
"Count on it. My dad said my department wants to give me a commendation. Omar Gatewood called and told him. Can you believe it?
An award for getting ambushed."
"Let them do it."
"Are you serious?"
"You take a risk every time you put on a badge and gun. That counts."
"I suppose you're right." Jim's mouth was dry from the anesthesia. He took a sip of water.
"Did you bring my day pack?"
"It's in my truck. Do you need it?"
"No, you do. I picked up an empty beer can on the road to the mine.
It's in a plastic bag along with a pull tab. See if you can get any prints off them."
"That's a long shot."
"I know it. One more thing-when you pop open a cold one, do you pull off the tab before you take a drink?"