"Who owned the bank?" Kerney queried.
"Another scoundrel," Jim replied.
"Calvin Cox.
Karen's granddaddy. Is this a good story, or what?"
"A very good story," Kerney agreed.
"So Elderman got control of Padilla's land through Calvin Cox, turned around, and sold a chunk of it to the feds."
"Right," Molly agreed.
"Elderman Meadows.
There was no tax auction. We think Calvin Cox covered the tax liability until the proceeds from the land sale came through. Elderman probably paid through the nose for the service, but he walked away a rich man after selling out to the government." She glanced at Jim.
"Are you rich?"
Stiles grinned.
"No, but my grandparents were, and my parents are well off. I guess that makes me part of the landed gentry."
"Dirty money," Molly said, wrinkling her nose.
Stiles nodded his head enthusiastically.
"It's how the west was won."
Molly wrinkled her nose again in disgust at the idea.
"I don't like it any more than you do, really," Jim said.
Molly's smile returned.
"You'd better not." She turned her attention back to Kerney.
"That's about it. What I asked for from state archives should fill in some of the blanks."
"Did you find any reference to a place called Mexican Hat?" Kerney asked.
"Nothing," Molly answered.
"It could be one of those local place-names that never got recorded."
"How about the Cox family? I've haven't heard one word spoken about Eugene's wife."
"Be patient, Mr. Kerney," Molly replied.
"Research takes time." She uncrossed her legs, slid off the bed, and kissed Jim on the lips.
"Gotta go. I'll pick up my laptop when I stop by to see you tonight."
"See ya," Jim said.
"And thanks."
"It's going to cost you."
"I certainly hope so."
"Shut up, Jim," Molly said sweetly as she waved and left.
Jim smiled, his eye fixed on the empty doorway.
"Nice-looking younger babe," Kerney noted.
"I knew you were going to say that," Jim replied with a laugh.
"Doesn't she do good work?"
"Is that what you like about her?"
"No comment."
Kerney and Stiles spent the next ten minutes going over what they knew.
"Old Jose Padilla may have been right about his father's death," Jim said.
"It's too bad he didn't make it."
"He may have left us enough to work with. Let's see what Molly digs up."
Jim nodded enthusiastically.
"She's something, isn't she?"
"A gem," Kerney agreed. It was clear Jim was in love.
The car that had been with him since he left Deming followed at a discreet distance as Kerney pulled out of the hospital parking lot.
The campus of Western New Mexico University, a tidy complex of buildings situated on a hill near downtown Silver City, was quiet and nearly deserted.
At the administration building, Kerney learned that no information about students could be released without written parental permission. In the business office, he had better luck. After a little cajoling, a billing clerk agreed to pull up financial information on a computer screen and let Kerney read it. None of the Lujan kids, including the oldest one who had graduated, had received student loans, and all payments for tuition, housing, and fees had been made in full and on time by checks written against the account of Steve and Yolanda Lujan. Kerney found that pretty amazing for a couple who lived on the income of a secretary and a seasonal worker with the forest service. Lujan must sell a hell of a lot of flagstone, landscape rock, and firewood during the off-season in order to pay the freight for three kids in college.
The car following Kerney in Silver City was nowhere to be seen on the drive back to Reserve. He pulled to the shoulder of the road near the town limits and waited for it to reappear. It never showed up. Whoever was following him had either switched cars or dropped the surveillance.
The Lujans lived in a settlement south of Reserve called Lower San Francisco Plaza, where the river squeezed into a confined channel and rushed through the mountains toward Glenwood before veering west to Arizona. A bridge crossed the river below the settlement, and a paved road twisted through the high country up to Snow Lake. The plaza, a collection of a half-dozen widely scattered houses and double-wide mobile homes, was one of the last remaining Hispanic enclaves in the county that hadn't passed into Anglo hands. -erney drove from house to house until he found the Lujan residence, a sprawling, un stuccoed adobe dwelling hidden by stacks of seasoned and fresh-cut firewood, piles of flagstone, and mounds of landscape rock on wooden pallets. From the look of it, Lujan had quite an inventory built up, which certainly wasn't putting cash into his pocket.
The property was enclosed by a chain-link fence and steel panel gate.
Inside the fence sat a one-ton truck outfitted with a winch, hydraulic tailgate, and dual rear tires. A load of green pine had been dumped next to a commercial log-splitter. Two vehicles, a late-model Pontiac Grand Am in cherry condition and a beat-up full-size Ford Bronco, were parked facing the front porch. A chained German shepherd sprawled between them. The dog barked angrily as Kerney stepped through the open gate.
Steve Lujan waited on the porch and watched Kerney approach.
"What the hell do you want?" he asked.
"What's your dog's name?" Kerney countered as he walked to the animal.
It stopped barking and sniffed Kerney's hand.
"Loco," Lujan answered. Small-boned and lean, Lujan stood in a defiant pose with his legs spread and his arms crossed. His bushy mustache completely covered his upper lip.
"Does he bite?" Kerney asked cordially.
"Only when I tell him to," Steve replied.
"What are you doing here?"
"Would you mind answering a few questions?"
Steve considered the request.
"I don't have to tell you nothing."
"I know that."
"I've got nothing to hide," he said gruffly.
"Come inside."
Steve led him through the front room, past a big screen television set, expensive-looking reclining chaise rockers, sofa, oak-veneer end tables with ceramic lamps, and a gun cabinet filled with hunting rifles, and into the kitchen. Yolanda was at the sink.
She turned and nodded abruptly at Kerney. A dumpy woman, dressed in leggings and a loose top that covered a thick waist, she had a testy expression.
"Hello, Yolanda," Kerney said.
She cleared her throat and shot a glance at her husband before responding.
"Hello."
Steve settled into a chair at the kitchen table, crossed his legs, and reached for a pack of cigarettes.
"Sit down."
"No thanks. I'll only stay a minute."
Lujan tapped a smoke on the table, lit up, and glanced at Yolanda.
"What do you want to ask me?"
He pulled back his head to look up at Kerney.
Yolanda took the cue, turned back to the sink, and began rinsing off the dinner dishes.
"Where were you when Jim Stiles got shot?"
Steve blew smoke in Kerney's direction and uncrossed his legs.
"Day off. I was cutting wood on a mesa. I always cut wood or haul rock on my free time. I've got a bunch of regular customers down in Silver City. I sell about fifty cords every fall and winter."
"What's the going rate for a cord?" Kerney asked.
"It depends on the weather," Lujan replied.
"Between a hundred and a hundred and twenty. You need some wood? I'll cut the price by twenty dollars a cord if you load and haul it yourself."
"I'll pass, but thanks for the offer." Kerney did a rough calculation in his head. Lujan would be lucky if he cleared three thousand dollars on the wood after expenses.
"Did anybody go with you yesterday?"