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  He looked at the dock on the kitchen stove, picked up the cordless phone, and called Officer Russell Thorpe at home.

  "Wake up, rookie," Gabe said when Thorpe answered.

  "I need you to run some paperwork down to Chief Kerney in Santa Fe.

  Pick it up at my place."

  "Then what?"

  "Since you've just volunteered to work on your days off, call me when you get back. We'll do one more sweep of the mesa. I still think we may have missed something."

  "Ten-four."

  Thorpe picked up the reports, departed, and Gabe headed out. He took the paved road past the county detention center and followed it to where the pavement ended. Several miles in on the dusty dirt road he passed through San Geronimo.

  Once a prosperous ranching community, in the late nineteenth century the village had spawned Las Gorras Blancas, the White Caps. It was a secret militant organization of Hispanic ranchers determined to drive out the Anglo settlers who had encroached on the old Mexican land grant with the help of corrupt politicians.

  Wearing white hoods to conceal their identities. Las Gorras Blancas raided at night, burning barns and haystacks, ripping down fences, and shooting the land grabbers' livestock. They staged midnight rallies on the Las Vegas Plaza, circulated petitions to the citizens, and even had a leader elected to the territorial legislature.

  But they couldn't stop the bleeding away of the land to the Anglo newcomers, and by the turn of the century much of it was gone forever.

  Gabe thought about the recent rise in property crimes and wondered if, a century later, a modern version of Las Gorras Blancas was riding again. It was worth thinking about; land prices were climbing and the few old Hispanic families left in the valley were having a hell of a time paying their property taxes. Maybe somebody had gotten pissed off enough to start ripping off the latest wave of Anglo immigrants.

  The morning sky changed from hot pink to flat gray as the sun broke above the horizon and disappeared behind a low, thick cloud.

  Chief Kerney had asked Gabe to check out the owner of the cabin to the north of his property. He turned onto the dirt track that led to Carl Boaz's cabin in the meadow. Finding out about Boaz had been easy.

  His property had been added to the fire department response grid map after the cabin had been built. Supposedly, Boaz lived there with a girlfriend and her young son.

  If Gabe hadn't been driving a 4 x 4 state police Ram Charger, he would have stopped and walked in-the road was that bad. He made the last turn near the top of the hill and saw two crows sitting on the top of a steel gate. Above, several more circled lazily at low altitude.

  He looked at a mound on the ground, and looked again.

  He got out, walked to the mound, and bent over it.

  A dead man looked up at him with blank eyes. Cold nighttime temperatures had left the body covered with frost. The bullet hole in his forehead was perfectly round, and his face was tattooed with pinpoint hemorrhages from powder burns.

  He'd been shot at very close range. Gabe put on a pair of plastic gloves, tilted the body slightly, searched the back pockets for a wallet, found it, and looked for a driver's license. Issued by the state of California, it identified the dead man as Carl Boaz.

  Gabe stayed low, keyed his hand-held radio, and called in the crime.

  The crows didn't move from the gate until he returned to the vehicle.

  Then they hopped away a few yards and perched on the top strand of the wire fence.

  He crouched behind the open door and scanned the meadow with binoculars. Approaching the cabin would be risky. He would have to cover at least a hundred yards of open space from the gate to the cabin. There might be an armed hostage taker barricaded inside one of the structures with captives.

  He saw no movement, but stayed put for a few minutes before getting a tarp out of the back of the 4x4 and covering the corpse. He didn't want crows feasting while he waited for backup.

  He called for assistance, positioned himself at the rear of the vehicle where he had the most protection, and kept scanning the cabin and greenhouse. All the preliminary work-photographing, measuring, and evidence collection-could wait until he was sure the area was secure.

  The crows flapped lazily off the wire, circled above him, and cawed.

  There would be no free lunch for them today.

  Kerney's bedroom phone rang. He reached for it and checked the time: it was seven o'clock. He listened to the dispatcher's report, asked for a helicopter to stand by, and hung up.

  "What is it?" Sara asked as she sat up in the bed and pulled the sheet up over her breasts.

  "Cold?"

  "No, modest."

  "I don't think so."

  "Are you going to tell me or not?"

  Kerney looked at Sara, wondering how she could look so sexy on such little sleep. They had stayed awake and talked through most of the night, catching each other up. Kerney now knew about the firefight in the DMZ that had led to her meritorious promotion, and the Distinguished Service Medal. Kerney thought the honors were richly deserved.

  "A homicide at a cabin near my property," he said.

  "Want to go with me?"

  "Doesn't that sound romantic?" Sara said as she stretched out and put the pillow over her head.

  "Is that a no?"

  Sara muttered something.

  "What?"

  Sara took the pillow off her face.

  "I'll pass. I'm going back to sleep and then I'm going shopping. I haven't bought any new clothes in almost two years, and I need a few things to wear. Besides, I drove straight through from Cheyenne yesterday, just to get here last night."

  "Do you want me to find you another tour guide for the day?"

  "Are you trying to pawn me off to somebody eke so soon?"

  "No way." Kerney sat up and swung his legs to the floor.

  "I'll leave you a key and be back in time to take you out to dinner."

  "Pick a nice place to eat; I plan to be dressed to kill.

  Are you in a hurry to leave?"

  "The chopper will wait for me."

  Sara kicked off the bed covers.

  "Not sleepy anymore?"

  "Not that sleepy," Sara replied.

  "Come here."

  Kerney saluted and followed orders.

  Several hours into the preliminary investigation of Carl Boaz's murder, Gabe saw the chopper carrying Chief Kerney come over the mesa and land in the meadow.

  From the porch he watched Kerney walk toward him.

  He limped badly for a few steps before smoothing out his gait.

  Gabe knew Kerney's knee had been shattered in a gunfight with a drug dealer. It had happened some years ago when Kerney was with the Santa Fe PD. It wasn't the only time the chief had used deadly force. In high-risk situations, the man knew how to keep his cool and survive.

  In his twenty years as a cop, Gabe had never been under fire. He wondered how he'd stack up if he had to put it on the line.

  Gabe had assigned Russell Thorpe the job of receiving evidence and recording the personnel entering the crime scene. He watched Thorpe intercept Kerney halfway across the meadow and hold out a clipboard with a sign-in sheet. Kerney signed it and spent a minute talking to the officer before moving on.

  Down at the greenhouse, Ben Morfin, the district narcotics agent, was conducting an inventory of marijuana plants. He was at one thousand and counting.

  "Bring me up to speed. Sergeant," Kerney said when he reached Gabe.

  "Carl Boaz, age thirty-five, died last night from a single gunshot wound to the head, fired at close range.

  There are no wants or warrants on the victim and no record of any arrests. Boaz held a doctorate in philosophy from a California university. Seems he dropped out of academia and went into organic gardening, specializing in the commercial cultivation of marijuana."

  Kerney raised an eyebrow.

  "How much?"

  "When the tally is done, I'm guessing it will exceed two thousand
plants. It could be a seven-figure cash crop."

  "Is there any tie-in between Boaz and the skeleton on the mesa?"

  "Just the dog so far. Chief. There's a snapshot in the cabin of Boaz, his ex-girifriend, her son, and the dog you found on the mesa. Want to know the dog's name?"

  "Tell me."

  "Buster."

  Kerney laughed.

  "Are you making this up?"

  "No way."

  "I guess every kid should have a dog named Buster, no matter who he lives with. Tell me about Boaz's ex-girlfriend."

  "Her name is Wanda Knox. She moved back to California about a month ago, and started writing Boaz letters telling him he was a self-absorbed asshole. She also wanted him to ship Buster and her son's bicycle out to the coast. Boaz kept a journal. Chief. He sold drugs at Southern California colleges before he decided to go into the production end of the business. I've got a list of his dealers and his contacts."

  "DBA will like that."

  Gabe nodded in agreement.

  "Boaz also noted in his journal that somebody by the name of Rudy owed him four hundred dollars. No last name. I think Rudy may be a local; the entry was made six weeks ago. There's an earlier entry from last September showing that Rudy paid Boaz the same amount."

  "Porwhat?"

  "Unknown, but I have my suspicions. I found the route the poacher took to haul the wood out. It comes right through the meadow. I think Boaz gave the poacher access to the dear-cut area and got paid for it."

  "Boaz didn't cut the wood himself?"

  "His truck tire tracks don't match up with any of the impressions we found on the route. Also, there is no evidence that he hauled wood out to cut and split here-no chips, no sawdust, no bark. At least not in quantity."

  "So we need to find Rudy."

  "Do you want me to start canvassing?"

  "Not yet. Give me Wanda's current address before I leave. I'll ask the California authorities to locate and question her. Maybe she knows who Rudy is, and how to find him."

  "Can I give you some questions for Wanda to pass along to the California police?"

  "Sure thing."

  Td like some help. Chief, if you can spare the manpower."

  "Two agents will be up from Santa Fe in the morning, and I've already cleared it with your captain to assign the district narcotics officer to work with you.

  They're yours as long as you need them."

  "Thanks. Do you want the tour?"

  "I do."

  "There's something I want to show you in the greenhouse.

  Boaz had a little cactus garden, separate from his marijuana crop. Just a single, small variety of twenty plants. I've never seen it before.

  Neither has the narcotics agent. We think it might be used to produce some exotic type of hallucinogenic."

  "Lead on," Kerney said.

  By noon Sara was completely burned out on the frilly, fringed, beaded, cutesy, embroidered western fashions she'd seen in virtually all of the downtown boutiques near the plaza. The streets were filled with late-season skiers, dumping around in their boots and parkas with half-day ski passes dangling from jacket zippers, busily shopping Santa Fe.

  Several blocks away on a side street in a lovely old brick Victorian house, she found a clothing store that had what she wanted: simple, elegant silk tops in earth-tone colors, a wonderful full-length, long-sleeved brown dress with a high neckline that looked very sleek when she put it on, and new designer jeans that made her look equally slinky. After so many months in starched fatigues and tailored military uniforms, the fabric felt satiny and sensual against her skin.

  She didn't wince at all when she paid the bill, although the prices were outrageous. It was her treat to herself for two years of doing without in South Korea.

  She asked the sales clerk where she might buy some sexy lingerie, and got directions to a nearby store along with a knowing smile.

  "You've got that right," Sara said as she picked up her bags and walked away. The woman's laugh followed her out the door.

  At the lingerie shop, she took her time and came away with some tasty little items that were comfortable to wear yet decidedly provocative.

  She made her beauty salon appointment just in time, and spent a wonderful hour letting Patrick somebody-or-other pamper, condition, and trim her hair.

  Back at Kerney's apartment. Shoe met her at the door, sneaker firmly in his mouth, tall wagging, still looking mangy as hell. She gave him a scratch under the chin, and he followed her into the bedroom. She dumped the packages on the bed and checked the alarm dock on the nightstand. Kerney wouldn't be back for hours.

  Sara looked at Shoe and decided the dog needed some TLC. She fanned through the Yellow Pages and found a pet grooming business that could take Shoe right away. She got directions to the shop, grabbed the new leash and collar Kerney had bought, and loaded the dog into her Jeep Cherokee.

  "Come on. Shoe," she said, as she backed out of the driveway.

  "Let's get you cleaned up. That way we can both knock Kerney's socks off."

  After taking the tour of the crime scene, Kerney pitched in and gave Sergeant Gonzales a hand. He spent several hours helping Gabe systematically search the cabin, which yielded further information on Wanda Knox and her son. He now had a very good photograph of the woman, plus a small address book Wanda had left behind with the names and addresses of friends and relatives in Southern California.

  Back at state police headquarters in Santa Fe, Kerney prepared a brief summary of the known facts pertaining to the Boaz murder case, typed up questions for Wanda Knox, and photocopied the address book.

  According to the letters sent to Boaz, Wanda currently lived in Arcadia, California. Kerney checked her address against a map. Arcadia was close to Pasadena, and many of the entries in the address book showed friends and family living either in Arcadia, Pasadena, or surrounding communities.

  He called the Arcadia PD, talked to the chief, told him what he needed, and got quick agreement to have a detective follow up as soon as Kerney faxed the information.

  "If Ms. Knox can't positively identify a man named Rudy, ask your officer to do an Identi-Kit," Kerney said.

  The kit was used to produce a facial likeness of a person based on verbal descriptions furnished by a witness.

  "That's no problem," the chief said.

  "Anything else?"

  "A list of names of anyone else she knew or met in New Mexico would be helpful."

  "You've got it. How's the weather out there?"

  "High fifties, windy, and blue skies," Kerney answered.

  "Jesus, what I'd give to see blue skies again. We've had solid smog for two months."

  Kerney faxed the information to Arcadia, cleared some paperwork off his desk, and checked the wall dock.

  If he hustled he could get to the real-estate appraisal company before closing time.

  Capital City Land Survey and Appraisal was located on De Vargas Street in a building that faced the Santa Fe River Park. The window in Donald Preston's office gave a nice view of the park and the duster of buildings across the way that denned the downtown city core.

  Preston sat behind a map-covered desk. On the floor were an assortment of surveying instruments and two metal field satchels.

  Somewhere in his forties, Preston had a prominent nose, thick lips that he rubbed together before speakng, and a florid complexion.

  "I just did the valuation assessment on your property," Preston said.

  "We're working up the final report to send to the estate executor this week."

  "I'm really here on a different matter," Kerney said.

  He showed Preston his shield and sketched out the facts of the skeleton discovered on the mesa.

  Preston's eyes widened.

  "I walked right by that grove of trees."

  "When did you do the appraisal?"

  "The week before last. I went out with my land surveying team."

  "Were you with them all the time?"

&n
bsp; "No, only the last day. The team was on-site for a good three or four days before I got there."

  "Who was on the team?"

  "Bill Kemp, Johnny Nelson, and jude Mondragon."

  "Did they mention seeing anyone during the survey?"

  "If they did, I didn't hear about it."

  "Did you see anybody while you were on the property?"

  "Not a soul."

  "Did you see a dog?"

  "I didn't see a dog."

  "Did you come across any old campsites, discarded clothing, or litter?"

  Preston shook his head.

  "I saw nothing like that."

  "Did you see any woodcutters or loggers on the road?"

  "No, but I sure saw the clear-cut area in the canyon on the west boundary. I'm including it in my report."

  "Did you inform Mr. Lynch?"

  "No. It's not unusual to find logging on private property, although whoever did the cutting sure chewed up the area."

  "Have you done other appraisals in the valley recently?"

  "Three, as a matter of fact. The Horse Canyon Ranch owner bought some parcels contiguous to her property. Each was about three hundred acres."

  "Was there any woodcutting on those parcels?"

  "Nope."

  "Are Mondragon, Kemp, and Nelson here?"

  "They should be in the back room."

  "Do you mind if I speak with them?"

  "Not at all."

  Brief conversations with Preston's employees resulted in no additional information about the crimes. As a matter of personal interest, Kerney asked to see the surveys of the parcels bought by Alicia Bingham, the Horse Canyon Ranch owner. Except for the Boaz cabin property and the National Forest land on the west boundary, his ten sections were surrounded by Bingham's holdings.

  Already late for this dinner date with Sara, Kerney thanked the men for their assistance and drove home in a hurry. He entered the house and stared at Shoe in disbelief.

  The dog was almost unrecognizable. His hindquarters had been clipped, his belly shaved, his paws and legs trimmed, and his coat glistened.