"We've met” Mulder said dryly.
"You're kidding." Her right hand drifted down to brush at the case. "You know he was in the state pen, up by Santa Fe? Killed a man in a bar fight." Her left hand draw a line across her throat. Slowly. "Nearly cut his head off. I don't know how he got out. A good lawyer, I guess."
"Where are you going?" Scully asked.
"Vacation," Donna replied instantly.
"You take more clothes than Scully," Mulder said with a laugh.
"I'll be away for a while."
"Who takes care of the business? Nick?"
She shrugged. "Mostly, yeah."
Scully closed her notebook. "You have no control over what you receive from the Mesa? Or who buys them retail?"
"Nope. Nick chooses the pieces, I choose the shops. After that, it's the guy who has the most money."
Mulder pushed away from the wall. "What if somebody who didn't know any better just drove onto the reservation?"
"Nothing." Donna retrieved her case. "No one would talk to them, probably. Sooner or later, they'd get the hint and leave."
"And if they didn't?"
"You mean like me?" She laughed; it was false. "I'm pushy, Agent Mulder. I pushed too far. Chasing is all that would happen, believe me." She stood and looked none too subtly at the door. "I still say you should check Ciola. He has a knife and…" She shuddered for effect.
Scully rose as well. "Thank you, Ms. Falkner. We appreciate the time."
"No problem." She led them to the stoop. "If you don't mind, though, I have a plane to catch, okay?"
Mulder thanked her again, asked her to call Agent Garson if there was anything else she thought of before she left, and got behind the wheel, cursing himself soundly for forgetting to leave the windows down.
The sun out there, and an oven in here. He set the air conditioning to high and hurry up about it and drove off, taking his time, while Scully watched Donna Falkner in the outside mirror. When they turned the corner, Scully said, "She relaxed very quickly,"
"Yeah. Because we didn't ask her about what she thought we would."
"Which was?"
"Scully, if I knew that, I would have asked her."
She grunted disbelief; he knew what she was thinking. There were times when asking questions got you answers, but not necessarily when you wanted them. There were times when it was better to spin a web and see who tried to break free.
Donna was breaking free.
Once she got on that plane, New Mexico would never see her again.
Scully looked over. "How are you going to stop her?"
He gestured toward the backseat, asking her to grab his denim jacket. When she did, his portable phone fell out of the inside pocket.
"Garson?" she said.
"Material witness to an active investigation."
"But she isn't, Mulder."
"No, maybe not. But he can delay her long enough to miss her flight. Maybe discourage her enough to wait until tomorrow."
She called, discovered Garson couldn't be reached, and demanded to speak to an agent on duty. After convincing him they weren't kidding about Falkner, she asked where the Constella van was being held.
"Right here," she said when she hung up. "A lot behind a sheriff's substation."
"Why do you want to see it?"
"You wanted to see Ann Hatch, and look what it got us. I want to see that van."
Sometimes they made her too much like him.
"And what do you mean, I take too many clothes when I go on a trip?"
The substation was little more than a double-wide on cinder blocks, only a sign on the door announcing its function. The parking area in front was only big enough for four vehicles, and the tree that cast a weak shade over the building looked about ready to collapse at any second. Beyond the tree was another lot, fenced in with chain-link and topped with concertina wire. Within were a handful of cars, a pickup, and a van.
Sheriff Sparrow was outside waiting when Mulder pulled in off the street.
"Garson works fast," Scully said when they stopped.
"Your tax dollars at work."
Sparrow waved them over to a padlocked gate in the fence. "Looking for anything in particular?" he asked as the gate swung free and they walked in.
"You never know," Mulder told him.
The van was at the back, dusty enough to ward off the sun. Mulder shaded his eyes and looked through the side and front windows, then asked Sparrow for the key.
"What for?"
"To get inside." He rapped a knuckle against the sliding side door. "You never know."
Sparrow grumbled, complained that he'd left the keys inside, and headed back to the trailer.
"Mulder?"
She was on the passenger side, and he took his time joining her. The heat was brutal, worse than the day before, and he understood now why life was so deliberate in this part of the world. Anything faster than a crawl on a day like today meant sure heatstroke, and a tub packed in ice.
"So?"
She pointed to the side.
He looked and saw the dust; then he saw what lay under the dust.
He used a palm to wipe the metal clean, and yelped when the heat scorched him. "Damn!" He shook his hand, blew on it and pulled a handkerchief from his pocket.
"Be careful," she said. "It’s hot." When he gave her a look, she only shrugged and added, "Your tax dollars at work."
There were two large tinted windows, one in the sliding door, the other at the back. He shook the handkerchief out, then folded it in quarters to form a makeshift dusting pad. Hunkering down, balancing on his toes, he swiped at the dust and dirt first, to knock off what he could before he started rubbing.
"What the hell you looking for?" Sparrow said, tossing the keys to Scully.
"This was a rental," Mulder said without looking up.
"Yep. So?"
"New, then, right?"
"Probably." The sheriff leaned over him, squinting at the panel. "So?"
"So I guess Mr. Constella wasn't much of a driver."
He didn't have to rub. When the area was clear, he rose and took a step back, waiting for Sparrow to comment. He was also waiting to hear why the man hadn't noticed it days ago. Or, if he had, why he hadn't said anything.
From the window to the bottom of the frame, the paint had been scraped off, right down to bare metal. The dust had been thick, the van having sat here for more than a week in the sheriff's custody. A glint of that bare metal was what had caught Scully's attention.
"Well, I'll be damned." Sparrow hitched his belt. "Run up against a stone wall, boulder, something like that, looks like."
"I don't think so." Mulder ran a finger lightly over the surface. "No appreciable indentation, so there was no real collision."
Scully stepped in front of them and peered at it closely, shifted and sighted along the side to the rear bumper. "If there was, it wouldn't be in just this one place." When she straightened, she leaned close to the window. Touched it with a forefinger. Took the handkerchief and wiped the glass clean. "Scrapes here, too."
"Road dirt," Sparrow said. "You get it all the time out here, dust and all, going the speeds you do."
She ignored him for the moment, using the finger to trace the damage's outline, right to the strip above the window. "Whatever it was, it was big. Man-high, at least."
"Like I said, a boulder."
"Come on, Sheriff," Mulder said, having had enough of his forced ignorance. "Scully's right. A collision would have produced damage wider than this, and by the force of it, at the least this window would have been cracked, if not smashed."
He scratched under his jaw, and leaned close again.
"Agent Mulder, this is—"