'May I talk now?' Eve asked. 'This is bullshit, Montalvo.'
'In a minute.' Montalvo reached into his jacket pocket and drew out an envelope. 'Nalia died trying to prove that Diaz was playing games with the militia and betraying you. She didn't find that proof before she was caught and killed. Diaz buried it and it took me years to unearth it.' He tossed the envelope on the desk in front of Armandariz. 'Along with a few more-recent documents that prove that Diaz is still double-dealing whenever it suits him. He's being very careful but when the prize is worth it, he's selling you out.'
'Proof?' Armandariz's face was white with rage. 'You come and bring me these forgeries. Diaz is a friend to us. We would have had to disband if it hadn't been for his help.'
'No forgeries.' He glanced at Manuel. 'Don't let him destroy them before he checks. It took me a hell of a long time and a small fortune to find that evidence.'
'I'll do what I please.' Armandariz's voice was shaking. 'Lies. You tell me lies.'
Montalvo stepped back. 'Eve?'
That's right, infuriate the man and then leave it up to me to convince him, she thought in frustration. 'I don't know anything about those papers. Montalvo didn't think it best to share them with me. I wouldn't have wanted to be involved anyway.' She put the leather box on the table. 'This is the only part of the business I wanted anything to do with.' She unfastened the box and lifted the lid. 'I wanted to bring your daughter home.'
'My daughter is in Australia.'
'Your daughter was murdered and thrown into a swamp,' she said bluntly. 'By the time Montalvo was able to find her body, there was no body. Only a skeleton. He was lucky to find those bones intact, considering the passage of time and the water and wildlife in that kind of habitat.'
'She's in Australia.'
'Your daughter's skull is in this box.'
He looked away from the box. 'No.'
'I don't have the slightest doubt about it.' She carefully lifted the reconstruction from the box and set it on the table. 'Now, dammit, look at her. You gave life to Nalia. Don't you dare reject her.'
'My daughter is not dead.'
'Look at her.'
He slowly turned his head. She could see him flinch as his gaze focused on the skull. 'A pretty statue. You could have carved it from a likeness in a photo.'
'But I didn't. I measured the depth points and then I built up the face around them. Only after I finished did I ask for a photo. I took three-dimensional shots of the reconstruction and then superimposed them on the photo.' She pulled out a disc and crossed to the computer in front of Armandariz and popped
'I've no wish to-'
'Watch it. I didn't bring her home to have you turn your back on her. Watch the image as it covers the reconstruction.'
'I don't want to-'
Manuel stepped closer. 'Don't be a coward, Antonio. Watch it happen.'
'Shut up,' he said harshly. 'This is my concern.'
'It's all our concern if it means we've been betrayed. I'm willing to fight and die, but I won't go blindly. I've been at your side for twenty years. But you shouldn't expect that of me.'
Armandariz hesitated and then swung his gaze to the computer screen. 'Show me.'
'I don't have to do anything. The program does it all.' She watched the slow superimposition. Even after all these years it always amazed her. It was rather like a ghostly hand blending the two images together. 'The similarity ratio is ninety-six percent. That's exceptional.'
Armandariz didn't take his gaze from the screen. 'Not if you were looking at the photo as you did the reconstruction.'
'But I wasn't looking at it.' She paused. 'I told Montalvo you'd believe what you want to believe. I can't make you see anything you don't want to see.' She pointed at the superimposition on the screen. 'That woman is Nalia. She died trying to help all of you. It's not right for you to throw everything she did away. Her life should mean something. Her death should mean something.'
'She's not dead.' His gaze never left the screen. 'She's not dead.'
'It's Nalia, Antonio,' Manuel said gently. 'I know that face. Her cheekbones are just like yours. The eyes are deep-set like yours. I've watched the two of you together since she was a child.' His eyes glittered with moisture. 'For God's sake, I grew up with her. It's Nalia.'
'Proof,' Armandariz said hoarsely. 'We have no proof.'
'Montalvo sent a tooth off for DNA confirmation,' Eve said. 'It will take time. He hoped the reconstruction would convince you. Diaz has found out I was doing the reconstruction and will be moving.'
'Convince me without proof?'
'Look in the mirror. Your friend is right. Your bone structure and Nalia's are very similar.' Her lips twisted. 'Do you want me to reel off the probable tissue depth of every point in your skull? I could do it. I became so accustomed to working on Nalia that she seemed part of me. She became… my friend. It's a pity you weren't a friend to her.' She took out the disc from the computer. 'Do you ever dream about her, Armandariz?'
'No.'
'You will from now on.' She turned back to the reconstruction. 'Because you know you're wrong. You're not going to be able to lie to yourself any longer.' She picked up the reconstruction and started to put it in the box. 'Let's go, Montalvo. I can't do-'
'Stop.' Armandariz was staring at the skull. 'Leave her.'
She went rigid. 'I can't do that. She's in my care.'
Armandariz looked at Montalvo. 'I'm keeping her, Montalvo.'
Montalvo's gaze narrowed on Armandariz's face. 'Why?'
'I'm keeping her.'
'That's not good enough.'
'Leave her.' Manuel stepped forward. 'I'll see that nothing happens to her. I'll consider it my duty.'
'We need to bring her to a final resting place,' Eve said. 'She's not a card to be traded about.'
'I know.' Montalvo was studying Armandariz's expression. 'Very well, we'll leave her for the time being. I'll come back for her tomorrow.'
'Screw you,' Armandariz said. 'I'm keeping her. You took her away from me once. I won't let it happen again.'
'Tomorrow.' He took Eve's elbow and urged her toward the entrance. 'Don't argue, Eve.'
'Don't tell me that.' She glanced angrily back over her shoulder at Armandariz. 'This isn't a pretty statue of your daughter. This is part of her body. If you can't believe that, then give me the reconstruction.'
Armandariz didn't answer, his gaze once more fastened on the skull.
'He does believe it,' Manuel said as he stepped closer and placed his hand on Armandariz's shoulder. 'Give him his time with her.'
Eve hesitated, studying the older man's expression. His lips were tight, his face pale and strained, and his eyes… She whirled and strode ahead of Montalvo out of the tent.
'Is he right?' she asked Montalvo as soon as they were a few yards away. 'Does Armandariz believe us?'