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"You can ride with me."

"There is nothing for you to do there," Perry said.

"Don't start playing games with me and going behind my back, like you did with the Catron County militia."

"Why don't you want me to see Gatlin's body, Charlie?"

"Wise up, Kerney, or you'll get burned, big time."

"Don't you think this is all too quick and easy?"

Perry stood up and leaned in close to Kerney.

"I don't like you, never have. But I'll say this once and you'd better listen: This time you could lose a lot more than that shitty little seasonal job you had with the Forest Service."

Kerney tossed his hat on the desk.

"It's been a pleasure working with you again, Charlie."

"Yeah, right," Perry said. He dropped a folded paper on the conference table.

"That's a copy of the official FBI statement to the press. I'm releasing it in an hour. Want to be there?"

"I'll pass," Kerney said.

"It's your party. Have a good time."

Sal Molina had gone back out in the field. Kerney got him on the radio and told him the Terrell case had been closed by the FBI. Molina wanted specifics.

"Not over the radio," Kerney said.

"We can hook up later. Go to Perry's press conference. It starts in an hour. That way you'll know what I know."

"Ten-four."

Kerney read over the graveyard report that noted the last motel the agents had been seen at during their early-mo ming search for Terjo on Cerrillos Road. He got in his car and started checking the remaining motels from that point on along the strip, looking for Terjo.

February had suddenly turned unseasonably warm and the snow pack on the mountains was fast disappearing, along with the tourists who had traveled north to Taos looking for better skiing conditions.

Between stops Kerney wondered what was keeping Agent Applewhite so busy. She hadn't coordinated anything, as far as he could tell. Why would she be staying on in Santa Fe with Charlie Perry when she was supposed to be returning to Taos to resume an interrupted vacation with her husband? He wondered if it would be worth his time to try to get a line on the husband.

His last stop was at a motel near an outlet mall. He parked and tried to talk himself into taking Charlie Perry's advice and dropping the whole mess. He stared at the mall, and tried to think of other things.

Surrounded by acres of parking, the mall had a facade that combined elements of an oversized northern New Mexico hacienda with what appeared to be medieval castle battlements. The building consisted of retail shops around a large open-air courtyard, which shoppers entered through an enormous gate decorated with stylized buffalos, bracketed by two mock watchtower turrets. The watchtower motif continued around the perimeter of the structure, jutting up at different elevations. The walls had been stuccoed in two different colors, one of which, ugly mustard, reminded Kerney of dirty diapers.

The thought of dirty diapers made Kerney smile. Although it still felt unreal, in a little more than six months he would become a father. With Sara far away and seeing her so infrequently, to Kerney the relationship had felt more like a passionate love affair than a marriage. The baby would change all that, but Kerney wasn't sure how.

Of course, Sara would return to active duty after her maternity leave, but then what? She was exploring the possibility of landing an assignment in New Mexico after finishing up at the Command and General Staff College. But there was no guarantee she could swing it.

The idea that his wife could be stationed far away at an army post with their child while he stayed behind in Santa Fe held no appeal.

Through no fault of his own Kerney had missed out on raising one child, a son born to his college sweetheart, Isabel Istee, who'd kept the birth a secret from him for over twenty-five years.

While Kerney was in Vietnam as an infantry lieutenant, Isabel had returned to the Mescalero reservation in the Sacramento Mountains to give birth and raise her son as a single parent. She lived there still, as did her son Clayton, who was a tribal police officer, a husband, and the father of two small children.

The recent shock of discovering that he was both an instant father and grandfather still stunned Kerney on occasion. He pushed the random thoughts away and focused on Applewhite. It shouldn't be all that difficult to confirm her Taos vacation ski story, and it would ease his mind if it were true.

He made contact with Sal Molina.

"How did the press conference go?"

"Unbelievable, Chief," Molina said.

"Are you buying it?"

"For now. Applewhite's husband is supposedly in Taos."

"Yeah, I know. She made a big deal to me about how her vacation got screwed up by the Terrell case."

"Find out if she made any calls to her hubby."

"This doesn't sound like you're buying Perry's spin, Chief."

"It's just my natural curiosity at work, Lieutenant."

"It may take some time to track down her cell-phone provider," Molina said.

"Do it quietly and without radio transmissions."

"Ten-four."

Kerney went into the motel and talked to the desk clerk, who glanced at the stars on Kerney's uniform shirt collar and nodded his head vigorously at Terjo's photograph.

"Yeah, he was here. Two FBI agents came looking for him earlier. A man and a woman."

"And?" Kerney prompted, thinking that he'd been wrong about Applewhite.

She'd been given some work to do after all.

The man lifted a shoulder.

"I didn't see what happened. Nothing, I guess. There wasn't a commotion or anything like that."

"Did you give them a room key?"

"No, they said they'd come back if they needed one."

"Had Terjo checked out?"

"I don't know. He paid in cash. People who do that usually just leave the key in the room when they go."

"I'd like to see the room. Has it been cleaned?"

The man consulted a housekeeping schedule.

"Maybe. There's a girl working that wing now. She'll let you in. Room one sixty three."

The housekeeping cart stood on the walkway in front of the open door to Terjo's room. The bed had been stripped by an older, tired-looking Mexican woman who was running a vacuum cleaner. She switched off the machine when Kerney entered and dropped her head as if to avoid trouble.

Kerney spoke to her in Spanish.

"Was the room slept in?"

"Yes."

"Was it messy?"

"No more than any other room."

"Were there any signs of a fight or a struggle?"

"No." The woman reached into an apron pocket and held out a key ring.

"But I did find these on the carpet next to the nightstand."

Kerney took the keys, inspected them, thanked the woman, and left.

Terjo had left behind his truck keys, which wasn't what a man who should've been on the run and had stayed in town overnight would do.

Terjo had to have been thinking of getting his truck and maybe borrowing some money from his girlfriend.

Kerney jiggled the keys in his hand. Charlie Perry's story about not finding Terjo was pure bullshit. He wondered where Perry had Terjo stashed.

Charlie's reasons for the heavy warning to drop the case were now completely clear: everything related to the Terrell murder was being systematically sanitized.

Kerney knew it was probably in his best interest to accept the FBI's party line, walk away from the game, and get on with the task of running his department.

More than enough important issues were nipping at his heels demanding attention.

He also knew he couldn't let things slide that easily. *** Ignacio Terjo leaned forward to ease the discomfort of the muscle spasms and loss of feeling in his arms. His hands were handcuffed behind his back and after two hours of sitting in the backseat of the sedan, he was tense and agitated. He twisted his head to get limber, but it didn't help.