Mo didn’t give me the gun. He jerked around, trying to get up, trying to untangle himself from the blanket. Keeping my bulk between the squirming kid and the lieutenant behind me, I stepped forward, grabbed his right arm and yanked it out from under him, driving his face into the railcar’s flooring. With my left, I palmed the.45, twisting it from his fingers and tossing it backward between my legs. Mo let out an anguished howl as I snapped a set of cuffs on his right wrist. With a yank, I pulled his left arm behind him as well, and in seconds he was helpless, belly down in the aisle. Burkhalter had holstered his gun, and now handed me another set of long-chained cuffs for the boy’s ankles. With the final click of the stainless steel locks, I straightened up. Glancing toward the back door, I saw conductor Bruce Hammer standing with Iola Beauchamp, their faces grim. I gave them both a little salute of gratitude.
As Burkhalter led the hobbled Mo down the stairs, out into the cool, fresh desert night and finally to one of the county Suburbans, I took a brief statement from Ms. Beauchamp. The Amtrak folks wanted their train to roll. They were in no mood to chat. Although she was clipped and all business, in her eyes I could see a touch of sympathy for Mo Arnett.
She explained succinctly how she had seen Mo sleeping at that four top, an enormous puddle of drool leaking onto the table. “I mean, he looked just plain worn out, you know. I felt sorry for him, and there’s plenty of blankets, so I fetched him one,” she said. “That’s when I saw the gun in his waistband.” After that, the decision to isolate and call the nearest police had been simple enough. The Coconino Sheriff’s Department had received-and thankfully read-the BOLO.
After I finished with the Amtrak folks, with names and addresses and the like, they didn’t waste any more time. Train #3 had been delayed long enough. I saw plumes of diesel shoot upward from the two engines, and the Santa Fe Chief started to roll, spooky quiet. In the back of Burkhalter’s Suburban, Mo Arnett twisted his head around to watch-whether as a train aficionado or a sorrowful fugitive wishing he were westbound, I couldn’t tell.
“What were you going to do out in California?” I asked as Mo settled back awkwardly.
“I don’t know,” he managed, not sounding like much of a fan of anything.
Chapter Thirty-nine
As it turned out, The Great State of Arizona did not want Maurice “Mo” Arnett. They were entirely satisfied that I had conducted the arrest, nailing a fugitive from New Mexico’s justice. Our DA and theirs chatted, no doubt made promises, and the great wheels of the legal system turned and groaned and spat Mo out in record time. As the tires of Jim Bergin’s Cessna cleared the runway at Winslow, heading home to Posadas, the sun was working on its zenith, burning ferociously through the Cessna’s tinted Plexiglass. I managed a wonderful cat nap, Estelle sifted through notes, and I doubt if the miserable Mo even shut his eyes.
Mo sat in the left rear, directly behind Bergin. The boy was a sorry sight, wrists cuffed and then along with his ankles chained to the seat frame now that we were airborne. Since I’d slapped the cuffs on him, he hadn’t bothered with a song of denial. He hadn’t sung-or said, or sobbed-a word. He slumped in the crowded little seat, now and then snuffling snot and leaking tears. He held a barf bag between his knees, but hadn’t used it. He was so fatigued and stressed that he didn’t take any pleasure in rubbing hips with Estelle Reyes. Perhaps her own quiet presence only served to remind Mo what he was going to miss for a long, long time.
Jim Bergin did the talking, and although the day was clear and the air smooth, he filed IFR. The FAA certainly knew 592 Foxtrot Gulf’s location every step of the way. About 90 minutes later, I awoke with a jolt, looking down to see the western hip of Cat Mesa outside of Posadas. Taking care not to yank a muscle out of true, I cranked around and looked back first at Mo and then at Estelle. She almost smiled, and except for a trace of dark circles under her elegant eyes, she didn’t look the worse for a sleepless night. Mo wouldn’t return my gaze, but kept his eyes locked on the rugged terrain below. I’d have given a lot to know what thoughts were roaming through that young brain.
“You got yourself a welcome party.” Bergin pointed.
I looked down and saw the airport with two police cars parked on the apron, lights flashing. As we turned into the downwind leg for runway 28, I saw another vehicle as well, a white pickup truck tricked out with contractor’s tool boxes and headache rack.
“Oh, that’s just what we need,” I muttered. I felt motion behind me, and watched as Estelle unlocked Mo’s ankle chain. I had explained to her in Arizona that the prisoner was to be free of restraints that locked him to the aircraft during both take-off and landing-and I hadn’t needed to mention it again. That was a marvel to me, since my own memory was as full of holes as a garden colander.
“Posadas Unicom, Cessna five niner two foxtrot gulf is downwind, two eight.” Jim’s greeting was enunciated clearly, and I’m sure boomed out of the outside speakers above the door of his FBO. For ordinary civilians unused to the world of aviation, there’s something official about the landing process for an airplane. A car just slips into the driveway and stops. But it always seemed to me that airplanes have this ritual, this governmental procedure that gives them some kind of mystique.
We banked steeply into base, and then final approach, Jim announcing our presence again so that some other airplane didn’t try and share the same bit of airspace. The fat tires touched the asphalt a hundred yards beyond the threshold so gently that the transition from flight to ground was seamless. Jim had plenty of time to brake for the first intersection to the taxiway.
“Posadas traffic, niner two foxtrot gulf is clear the active,” Bergin radioed, and then glanced at me. “Stewardess service is shitty, but we made it.” He taxied to the far side of the pumps, well away from the reception committee, and shut down. As the prop ticked to a stop, he jerked a thumb rearward. “Best to exit toward the rear.” He nodded ahead. “Even if it ain’t spinnin’, it’s a bitch to crack your skull against that prop.”
Airplanes aren’t my choice for graceful exits, but I made it without bruise or laceration. Without being asked, Estelle had a secure grip on the chain leading to Mo’s handcuffs, and she handed the kid off to me. I got rid of the chain, leaving Mo with just cuffs behind his back. I slipped an arm through his.
I guessed that this was the moment the boy had been dreading the more than any other-stepping out of the plane, his life essentially over by his way of thinking, but still having to face mom and pop.
Mom Mindi remained in the truck, but Mark Arnett had joined Deputy Robert Torrez and Sheriff Eduardo Salcido. Salcido was firm on both feet, so apparently he’d come to an understanding with his doctors. I didn’t have to worry about Bobby saying more than he should to Arnett. He’d honed his taciturnity to a fine art. The sheriff, and I loved him like a brother and respected his judgment in most things, could be chatty.
As the prisoner, Estelle, and I left the airplane, the sheriff moseyed forward. He wasn’t concerned about Mark Arnett, but Bob Torrez was. The tall deputy circled behind the sheriff to within easy arm’s reach of Mo’s father. When fifty feet separated us, Salcido stopped abruptly and turned, blocking Mark Arnett with a hand on his chest. “Give us some space,” he said, and then removed his hand and motioned to Torrez, who remained with Arnett as the Sheriff then continued toward us.
“Any troubles?” the sheriff asked.
“None whatsoever,” I replied. “Mo was cooperative every step of the way.” Well, almost. “I appreciate Schroeder clearing the way for us so promptly.”
“You bet,” Salcido mused, but he was gazing at Mo Arnett with interest. “Have things been explained to you, son?” The boy said nothing, but managed a slight nod. “Do you understand them?” Another nod. Salcido pushed out his lower lip, still regarding the boy. “Okay, then.” He glanced at his watch. “The arraignment is set for four o’clock this afternoon. That gives us a little time to clean him up and get the paperwork in order. Schroeder said he’d be with us this afternoon with Ruth Wayand.”