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“She’s been with Mike for a while now,” Estelle said.

“Now, yes. But when she was on her own, that’s where she lived.”

“There’s a sister, too. Mike says that she lives over in Kansas. He’s going to find the number and address for me.”

“No one’s contacted her yet about Janet?”

“No, sir. Do you remember anything about the sister?”

“Not a damn thing.” He frowned. “That may require several more of these.” A tiny fragment of green chile lay at one end of the empty platter, and he speared it with his fork. “Her folks,” he mused, and shut his eyes. Estelle wondered what mental process it was that sifted through half a century of memories and associations, searching for a single face or a single name. Bill Gastner had once described his memory as being like an enormous walk-in closet filled from floor to ceiling with trivia scribbled in fading ink on millions of 3 × 5 cards, a true ROM.

“Terry Tripp used to work for the electric company,” he said after a moment. “The mother. I think that’s where she worked. If it wasn’t too long ago, Kevin Tierney could tell you for sure. I don’t recall who was manager before him.” He closed his eyes again, perhaps watching the cascade of file cards. “She died of cancer. God, how long ago? I have no idea. Ten, fifteen years? Something like that?”

“How about Janet’s father?” Estelle asked. Gastner had pushed the plastic take-out box away, and she scooped it off the counter and put it in the sack of trash under the sink.

Gastner rested his chin in his hand, elbow on the counter. “This is interesting,” he said. “I haven’t thought about any of these folks for a long, long time.” He turned just enough so he could see Estelle. “You know, when Janet came into the Sheriff’s Office for the last time, whenever it was? Christmas afternoon? God…that’s yesterday. Anyway, I thought of her mother. I guess in part it’s because they looked a lot alike. I’m sure that at one time, I knew who Mr. Tripp was.” He shrugged and one hand sought out the bandage on the back of his head. “But that’s too long ago.”

“Ancient history,” Estelle said.

“Be careful with that ancient stuff,” Gastner said. “Mike didn’t know?”

“No. Eddie and I are both going to talk with him again today sometime.”

His dad was a piece of work,” Gastner said. “Mike’s, I mean. A joyous drunk might be a good way to put it. He was one of those guys who just plain loved alcohol. A real love affair with old Nancy Whiskey. And you know what? I don’t recall a single time when he was actually arrested for DWI, or public intox, or anything like that. You ask Bobby Torrez. There’s never been a cop who had it more in for drunken drivers than Bobby. You know that. But even he never managed to nail old Hank for anything.”

“Careful, or lucky, or both. Mike says his old man had a fine temper.”

“Well,” Gastner said, hunching his shoulders, “probably.” He sighed. “But he and Irene split up eventually. Mike’s mom. Irene? She dumped him, he dumped her, I guess it doesn’t matter. Old Nancy got in the way, is all.”

“And a few other issues, Mike says,” Estelle added.

“No doubt.” He squinted at the opposite wall. “She is Native American.”

“Zuni.”

“I knew that.” He frowned. “Brad Tripp,” he said suddenly. He pronounced the name and then fell silent.

“The father? Janet’s dad?”

Gastner nodded and his gaze shifted to the coffee maker. After a moment, he pushed himself off the tall kitchen stool and approached it. He leaned on the counter with one hand on each side of the Brewmaster as if trying to decide a strategy.

“Ask Bobby about Brad Tripp,” he said finally, and he smiled broadly at the memory. “Remember the old office, back before the county built the annex? Maybe that was before your time.”

“No. I was here then.”

“Well, Bobby hauled Brad in for something…. I don’t remember what it was. All I remember is that it involved Brad spending the rest of the night in the slammer. They were going up the stairs to the second floor, and old Brad decided that it might be a good idea to take a swing at Bobby.” Gastner turned around and leaned against the counter, arms crossed over his belly. “No one could figure out what Brad thought that might accomplish, including Brad, probably.”

“I remember the time,” Estelle said. “Everyone was talking about it the next day. I’d forgotten that’s who it was.”

“That’s it,” Gastner said. “A huge crash, and Brad lands at the bottom of the stairs in a crumpled heap. The dispatcher at the time was Miracle Murton, and he about jumps out of his skin. Murton asks Bobby what happened. ‘He fall down, go boom,’ is all Bobby would tell him. Miracle worried for days about whether he should be writing reports about what happened. He was afraid old Brad was going to sue Bobby, the county, and every living soul within shouting distance.”

He turned back to the coffee maker. “Goddamn good thing Brad didn’t break his neck. But he was drunk enough that he bounced pretty well. No injuries that showed.” He frowned at the coffeepot again. “Little squirt of a guy. I have no recollection what the incident was all about.” He shook his head with frustration, then hauled the bag of coffee beans out of the cabinet above the counter.

Estelle watched him go through the process of measuring and grinding the potent beans, and then filling the machine with enough water to supply coffee to a dozen troops. Everything accomplished without disaster, he stood and regarded the gadget thoughtfully. “Helps,” he said aloud, and flipped on the power switch.

He turned back to Estelle. “You want some tea or something?”

“No, thanks.”

“It’s still a puzzle,” he said, and watched as the first thin stream of coffee gurgled out the bottom of the filter basket. “I don’t remember what became of old Brad-assuming I ever knew in the first place. And all this ancient history isn’t getting us very far.”

“I think that the same person attacked both you and Janet,” Estelle said, and Gastner looked at her with surprise at the sudden change of subject.

“That’s interesting,” he said. “What makes you think so? I mean, other than that this is a tiny town…and that makes the odds a gambler’s choice that violent episodes in one day are connected.”

“Same MO, for one thing,” Estelle said.

Gastner frowned at that, but took a moment to slip out the filling carafe and pour a partial cup.

“In both cases, the intent was to kill,” she said, and saw Gastner’s eyebrow drift upward. He dumped too much sugar into his cup without bothering to stir it. “One shot to Janet’s head, execution style. One blow to yours, darn near in the exact same spot.”

“He didn’t shoot me, though.”

“No. I think he changed his mind at the last minute. Maybe he figured that if he shot you, that would tie the two events together for sure. He’s working on being pretty clever, sir. The assault on you is obviously a grudge motive-hit and run, no robbery, no burglary of the house, no auto theft. Someone from your past, making the score even.”

“And Janet?”

“It’s supposed to look like a robbery at an ATM-not the most imaginative thing. But then I think he changed his mind again somehow. He shoots Janet, makes it look like a robbery, and then for some inexplicable reason, takes the body and dumps her in the arroyo.”

“It makes sense if he wants to buy some time,” Gastner said.

“And that fits, sir. The key to Mike’s apartment was gone from her key ring. We don’t know how or why. And on top of that, there’s this: Mike owns a.22 pistol. It’s missing, and he can’t account for that.”

“Well, shit,” Gastner mused. “He’s missing a weapon?”

“Just the.22. An odd coincidence, maybe.”

“But see, none of those pieces fit. If the killer took the key…that’s what you’re thinking?”

Estelle nodded. “There’s that possibility, sir.”

“If he took the key, he wanted to use it. So he disposes of the body, which by his bizarre thinking might give him some extra time. He goes to the apartment. How does he know that Mike won’t be there?”