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So this girl, with a criminal family, left Salinas and ended up here in River City. How long did she knock around before she ended up here? Or did she come straight to River City? Did she have friends here?

I thought about the last question. Probably not, I decided. Would she be staying at a motel for a month if she had friends in town? So chances were she came to town knowing no one.

Why? Was she running from something? Someone? Was she trying to leave her family behind? Start fresh? If so, why was she dancing at the Club Tip Top? And lying about it to her cousin?

I fished through my file and found a photocopy of the postcard. Her lie was written on the back with confidence. She wanted them to think she was making good. She was definitely trying to leave her family behind and start something new.

Matt Westboard’s field contact report said that she was a prostitute. I flipped to my copy of that report and read it again. He didn’t describe her flagging down cars or making contacts. Just walking back to her motel from the Tip Top. If she were wearing her work clothes, she’d look like a prostitute. I could see what Westboard would’ve thought. Dressed like a prostitute and walking right down the East Sprague corridor, smack in the middle of Hooker Row. After all, if it walks like a duck and talks like a duck…

I stood up and poked my head around the cubicle. Browning’s desk was empty. I used his phone to dial Westboard’s department voice mail and left a message for him to call me when got the chance. As I was reciting my telephone extension, I heard my own phone ring.

I hustled around the corner and grabbed it on the third ring. After four, it goes to voice-mail.

“Detective Tower.”

“Detective Tower? Detective Ernie Williams here, Salinas PD. I understand you’re investigating one of the Gonzalez girls.”

“Yeah. Serena Gonzalez. She was murdered.”

He whistled softly. “That’s too bad. She was one of the decent ones.”

“What do you know about her?” I asked.

“Let’s see. Well, she was about eighteen or nineteen. As far as I could tell, she stayed out of the family business.”

“Sergeant Kraemer said she had an arrest for shoplifting a few years ago.”

“Yeah, he mentioned that. But that was just a Simple Theft. No big deal, compared to the rest of her family.”

“I was wondering if she had a lot of contacts with police, even though they didn’t end up being arrests.”

Williams considered for a moment. Then he said, “I would guess she had a few more contacts than your average teenage girl, just because of her name and family. But I don’t remember her being in trouble much.”

“Any prostitution?”

“Huh? No, never. Why?”

“She was stripping at a bar here and living at a motel,” I told him. “Both are in our local red light district.”

“Well, the stripping part doesn’t surprise me. She was working at the Las Estrellas down here for a couple of months last year, after she turned eighteen.”

“Strip club?”

“Not really. Topless joint. Girls on stage strip off their top and wear thongs, but there’s no touching that goes on. It’s a fairly clean place.”

“The girls don’t hook out of there, then?”

“Nah. There’s better places for them to work for that.”

“How well did you know Serena?” I asked him.

“Oh, I don’t know. Okay, I guess. I spoke to her a few times on cases I worked. She was always polite, but dummied up about her family.”

“So she wasn’t part of their business, but she wouldn’t roll on them, either?”

“Exactly. Don’t get me wrong, she was no saint. I dumped out more than a couple of forty-ouncers that she and her friends were drinking. Plus, she was stripping. She just wasn’t into anything heavy, is all.”

As he spoke a uniformed patrol officer appeared at my desk. I glanced up at him. He was black. His uniform was creased sharply and his hair was shaved to a quarter inch. He smiled nervously and lifted his face to me in greeting.

I held up my hand, then showed him two fingers. He nodded and stepped a couple paces to the wall and sat down in a chair there.

“When did you see her last?” I asked Williams.

“I couldn’t tell you for sure. Her last computer entry for any contact is seven months old and that was as a witness to a fight. I know I haven’t seen her for at least four and a half or five months.”

I considered that. It sounded like she probably kicked around a bit before landing here in River City.

“Something else you should know, Detective. Her pops, Jorge, was mighty pissed at her for leaving, from what I heard.”

“Really? How pissed?”

“Very. He found out she was down in L.A. about three months ago and sent his oldest boy Javier down to get her. Apparently, she blew town first and he didn’t find her. Which just pissed Jorge off even more.”

“You think they’d hurt her, if they found her?”

“Not in a million years. Are you very familiar with the Mexican family structure?”

“Not really.”

“It’s very tight. And the girls are the jewels of the family. They’d drag her back kicking and screaming, but never hurt her.”

“How about someone else hurting her?” I asked. “She have any boyfriends? Stalkers?”

Williams laughed. “Boyfriends? Sure, lots of ‘em. At least, lots who were probably trying. But she doesn’t have any protection orders or domestic violence entries in our system here. And I never heard of anyone steady.”

“It was a long shot, anyway,” I admitted.

“How’d she die?” he asked.

I gave him the barest details.

He whistled again. “That’s a shame.”

“Yeah,” I answered. “Can I ask you a favor?”

“Go ahead.”

“Would you be able to do a courtesy interview for me down there?”

“I could, if you want. I can make notification for you, too, if you like.”

“That’d be great. I was going to call our chaplain’s service today for that.”

“No problem,” Williams said. “I’ll have our chaplain call up there to yours and get the details. Then I’ll go with him. But I have to tell you, Jorge and his boys aren’t going to tell me diddly. The most you’ll get is some very pissed off cholos up there, cruising your streets and looking for her killer.”

“I don’t want you to interview them. I want you to talk to Lucinda.”

“Lucinda?”

“I think so. Serena’s cousin.”

“You probably mean Lucia. That’s Jorge’s sister’s kid. She’s about fourteen. Why do want me to interview her?”

“I think Serena was writing to her. I found a postcard in her room addressed to her prima. That means cousin, right?”

“Yeah. Girl cousin.”

“Plus one of the girls at the bar said she didn’t talk about her family, except for her cousin Lucy or Lucinda or something. If she was writing to her, I might be able to fill in her travels before she arrived here in River City.”

“I see,” Williams said. “Yeah, I can do that. You know, Lucia’s mother is a real bruja vieja. Almost as bad as Jorge, with her Welfare scams.”

Bruja Vieja? What’s that?”

“Old witch. Anyway, I’ll catch Lucia at school, away from her family.”

“That’d be good. Thanks.”

“No problem. Call you in a day or two.”

We hung up and I turned to the patrol officer, who was already standing at my desk.

“Romeo McLaren,” he said, sticking out his hand.

I took it and he gave a firm shake. “John Tower. What’s up?”

He nodded toward the waiting area. I poked my head around my cubicle and saw Officer Glen Bates standing next to a blonde female in handcuffs. Bates was a veteran and an FTO.