There was a long pause, and background noise increased. Somebody must’ve come in. I heard him talking and a mumbled reply, maybe from his partner, Nathan Moon. I could go a long while without seeing that fellow and never miss the man. Finally Jesse came back on the line, speaking cautiously.
“Yes, ma’am, I’ll take a ride over to check on your nephew. I don’t mind a bit, Miss Alice. No, it’s no trouble,” he added, although I hadn’t spoken.
“You’re good,” I said with a snicker. “You should do Vegas.”
“I will when you get me thrown off the force,” he muttered. “Who knew being a mentor would turn out like this? I’m on my way.”
I closed my phone with an audible click and glanced at Chance. “I think I may be wearing out my welcome with Officer Saldana.”
A smile pulled at the corners of his mouth. “His loss.”
The sky hung over us like a swathe of gauze. Unlike the almost blindingly bright and sunny other days, the air felt heavy this morning, sullen and threatening. In silence we followed the access road leading back to the trailer park where Marlowe lived.
Jesse managed to beat us there. We found him waiting in the tiny excuse for a front yard, beside the BEWARE OF DOG sign. Chance got out and went toward the porch and knelt as if he were listening to something I couldn’t quite make out. I studied Saldana’s grim expression and knew we were too late.
“Don’t go in,” he warned us. “I already called the forensic folks. It’s bad in there.”
“Pulled-apart-by-demons bad?” I ventured.
Shaking his head, he answered, “Shot-up-with-automatic-weapons bad. What did he say when he called you?”
I played the message for the third time. “I feel like shit. We
Saldana eyed me with an expression of pure dislike. I didn’t expect I’d be fending off his advances anytime soon. “You told him enough to interest him and get him in trouble, the poor dumb bastard.”
“You’re saying this is
“You think I’m not aware of that? Christ,
Oh. So that was it.
“Maybe you bent the letter of the law, but you had good intentions. You wanted to close the case and you thought—”
“Fuck what I wanted. A man is dead. Don’t talk to me about good intentions.” Saldana stalked to the end of the drive to wait for the coroner’s wagon, now driving down the dusty road toward us.
“We should get out of here. If Moon comes...” I trailed off when I realized Chance wasn’t listening to me.
With a sigh, I crunched over the gravel to see what had him so enthralled. At last he straightened with a tiny, blood-spattered dog in his arms. Butch had lost some of his attitude but not his red leather collar. Trembling, the Chihuahua curled deeper into Chance’s arms, as if he wanted to hide. He regarded us from damp, perplexed eyes, as if wondering how his day could possibly get worse.
“Shit,” I said. “We’re keeping him, aren’t we?”
Chance leveled his best look on me. “What do you think?”
Have Dog, Will Travel
The damn dog fit perfectly in my red spangled sari sling bag.
We left the scene just before the official vehicles arrived, and I had a feeling that was the last favor I could safely ask of Saldana. With guilt weighing on him, he might let his partner lock me up on principle, though it wouldn’t bring back Lenny Marlowe.
And Nathan Moon definitely didn’t like me. I guessed it was a case of genuine mutual antipathy. Sometimes people just scrape you raw, no logical reason for it.
“Any idea what streets start with ‘Hal’ around here?” Chance asked.
Butch nudged my hand with his head and I petted him absently. “Wonder if we could Google it.”
He eyed me. “You have a laptop hidden in your bag?”
“Smart-ass. I was thinking of going back to the house, but I guess you want to keep moving.” I didn’t blame him for that. We had targets on our backs, and I’d like to draw the fire away from Chuch if we could.
“Check the glove box. Maybe there’s a map.”
In my experience people rarely owned a map to the area where they lived, but I looked anyway. I was right. “Stop at the next gas station. We’ll buy one.”
“What do you suppose he saw that was worth killing him over?”
I could only guess. “The contents of those crates?”
“That seems like a safe bet. How’s Butch holding up?”
The dog whined in answer and buried his head in my handbag. “He’s stressed. I hope he’s not a piddler.”
We got off the highway and I went into an Exxon station. Chance filled up the Mustang while he waited, and I bought two Cokes as well as the map. I also picked up a plastic bowl, a bottle of water, and wet wipes for the dog. He didn’t much enjoy his makeshift bath, but I couldn’t carry him around looking like he belonged in an evidence locker. By the time I finished inside, the leaden sky opened up in an old-fashioned Texas downpour. I ran with my head low; Butch whimpered and disappeared into my purse.
My blouse became transparent when wet, something I hadn’t known before. Otherwise the sudden bath didn’t feel bad. It made a nice change from the constant heat.
“Got it?” Chance asked.
“Yeah.” I unfolded the map and looked for the listing of streets. “Shit, there’s a lot of them. It could be any of these.”
“Check the address and make a list of the streets that have the right range.”
“Good idea.”
After rummaging underneath Butch’s bony butt, I unearthed a pen and tore a page out of my day planner, not that I ever used it for anything but scrap paper. The dog watched with cautious interest as I jotted down names that potentially fit our criteria. One of them I tapped with a frown.
“What?”
“I don’t know. I can’t imagine they’re doing... whatever near a golf course. This looks like an upscale neighborhood. Wouldn’t those folks notice strange comings and goings and complain about it to somebody?”
He thought about it. “Depends. There comes a point where every house has such high security walls that the neighbors don’t have any idea what goes on inside. In poor areas, nobody gives a shit, and in expensive ones, you pay for privacy. It’s middle class neighborhoods where everybody knows each other’s business.”
“So we’re probably not looking for a building in a middle class zone?” I didn’t know how I could eliminate those without seeing them.
Butch barked once.
Chance glanced over at me. “What’s with him?”
I shrugged. “Who knows? I’m not a dog person.”
By the time I finished making my list and checking it twice, I had no idea who’d been naughty or nice. Six streets could potentially be the one we wanted, but I didn’t know Laredo well enough to rule any of them out just by looking at the map. I ran a hand through my long hair and decided I wasn’t coiffed right for detective work. I