Изменить стиль страницы

Better him than me, she thought.

Even so, Eleanor didn’t hang up immediately. “According to Marliss, there was another murder last night,” she added.

Here we go again, Joanna fumed. Another one of Marliss Shackleford’s notorious end runs.

“A suspicious death,” she corrected. “I suppose she asked you about that, too.”

“Not about the death specifically,” Eleanor replied. “She wanted to know if I had noticed how the crime rate has really taken off since you became Sheriff.”

That depends on who’s counting, Joanna thought. “What did you say?” she asked.

“I told her the truth,” Eleanor replied. “I said that no matter who’s in charge, the crime rate stays pretty much the same.”

Coming from Eleanor Lathrop Winfield, that lukewarm statement constituted a ringing endorsement.

“Thanks, Mom,” Joanna said.

“You’re welcome.”

Next Joanna dialed the county attorney’s office. Arlee Jones was a blowhard, deal-making good old boy.

“Glad to hear from you, Sheriff Brady,” he said cordially. “Wanted to keep you in the know.”

“About what?” Joanna replied.

“Remember Rob Majors?” Arlee asked. “That kid from San Simon?”

Joanna remembered Rob Majors all too well. He was a not-too-bright kid who had spent the summer earning college tuition money by carjacking travelers along I-10 and selling their stolen vehicles to migrant-smuggling crooks from Old Mexico. Joanna’s department had spent weeks and far too much valuable overtime before they had apprehended him. They had finally decoyed Majors into trying to lift a car driven by Terry Gregovich with Spike, his German shepherd sidekick, stationed in the backseat.

Majors had been taken into custody at the rest area just inside the Arizona/New Mexico border, but he wasn’t jailed until after emergency-room treatment of the numerous puncture wounds on his arm, compliments of an eighty-five-pound police dog.

“What about him?” Joanna asked.

“Thought you’d be relived to hear that I’ve brokered a deal. Rob Majors pleads guilty to a lesser charge, and he drops the police brutality charge against your K-9 officer.”

“How good a deal did he get?” Joanna asked. Arlee Jones’s plea bargains usually gave her a headache. This one was no exception.

“He pleads guilty to one count of first-degree assault and goes to Fort Grant until his twenty-first birthday.”

Joanna barely believed her ears. “The kid’s seventeen. You’re letting him off as a juvenile?”

“It’s the best I could do,” Jones said in an aggrieved tone. “At least it gets your Deputy Gregovich off the hook.”

“Thanks,” Joanna said. “That’s just what I wanted to hear.”

She hung up and was still burning with indignation when she dialed the number for Debra Highsmith, the newly installed principal at Bisbee High School. A student office assistant put the call through.

“This is Sheriff Brady,” Joanna said when Debra Highsmith answered. “I understand you called earlier.”

“That’s right. Thanks so much for returning the call,” Ms. Highsmith said. “We’re trying to do something a little unusual around here. I was wondering if you could help us out.”

“That depends,” Joanna said. “What are we talking about?”

“I attended an all-girls high school, and an all-girls college as well. This was back in the days when they still had such things,” Debra Highsmith added with a chuckle. “I’m trying to create an atmosphere that will challenge and motivate the young women here at Bisbee High. We want to get them thinking outside the box, as it were. For that we need really dynamic role models.”

Joanna waited silently for Debra Highsmith to cut to the chase.

“BHS career day comes up the end of next week,” Ms. Highsmith continued. “I must apologize for calling you at the last minute. I had made arrangements for an old college chum of mine, Althea Peachy, who works for NASA, to speak to our girls-only assembly. Unfortunately, Peaches found out just this morning that she has to testify before the House Appropriations Committee in D.C. next week. I was wondering if I could prevail on you to pinch-hit.”

Suppressing a sigh, Joanna reached for her desktop calendar. “What day?” she asked.

“Next Thursday. We’d like you to speak first thing in the morning – around nine or so. The boys will be in the gym having their own assembly. The girls will be in the auditorium.”

Joanna consulted her calendar. The morning after a night of Halloween pranks would be a bad day for her to be out of the office, but encouraging young people was also part of her job.

“All right,” she said, penciling it in. “Nine o’clock. Anything else I should know?”

“Well, there is one more thing,” Debra Highsmith added. “I need to let you know that we have a zero-tolerance policy about weapons here on campus.”

“Wait a minute,” Joanna objected. “I’m a sworn police officer, remember? You want me to come to your school and talk to students about the possibility of considering law enforcement as a career, but you don’t want me to wear my guns?”

“Right,” Debra Highsmith allowed. “It doesn’t make sense, but you know how paranoid school boards can be about such things these days. What if a student overpowered you, grabbed one of your weapons, and used it on some other student?”

“And what if one of your students shows up at school that day with a weapon of his or her own? What then?” Joanna returned. “Wouldn’t it be a good idea to have a properly trained and armed police officer on-site when all hell breaks loose?”

“I don’t make the rules,” Debra Highsmith returned. “I simply enforce them.”

That’s the same thing I always say, Joanna thought.

“All right,” she said. “Nine o’clock, on Thursday, November first, in the auditorium.”

She put down the phone and was still staring at it when her private line rang.

“You’re late,” Butch said. “It’s ten after twelve. You’re still in the office.”

“Sorry,” she said. “Time got away from me. I’ll be right there.”

Ten minutes later and twenty minutes after the appointed time, she pulled up in front of Daisy Maxwell’s café in Bisbee’s Bakerville neighborhood. Junior Dowdle, the developmentally disabled fifty-year-old ward of the restaurant’s owner, met Joanna at the door. He carried a pile of menus and sported a wide smile. “Time to eat?” he asked.

Junior had been abandoned by his caretakers a year earlier. Daisy and her retired postal worker husband, Moe, had taken him under their wing and assumed guardianship. Junior had blossomed under their care. Working in their restaurant, he took his tasks of clearing tables and washing dishes very seriously. Occasionally he was allowed to serve as host, passing out menus and accompanying guests to tables or booths.

Joanna stood in the doorway of Daisy’s and scanned the room for Butch. His Honda Goldwing was parked in front of the restaurant. Butch himself was nowhere to be seen.

“Back,” Junior said, pointing helpfully. “Back there. Reservation,” he added with an emphatic nod.

Following Junior Dowdle’s directions, Joanna made her way to the private back room that sometimes doubled as a meeting room for the local Rotary Club. Pushing open the door, she was surprised to find every available surface covered by unfurled blueprints.

Butch looked up when she entered. “There you are,” he said wryly. “I may be your husband, but do you have any idea how hard it is to book an appointment with you these days?”

She looked around the room. “What’s this?”

“Our new house,” he said. “Or what’s supposed to be our new house. The problem is, I can’t get you to sit still long enough to talk about and sign off on the plans. In other words, you and I are having a meeting – an official meeting. We’re still working through the permit process, but before construction can begin, all the decisions need to be made. Cabinets have to be ordered, plumbing fixtures, appliances, everything. So first we’ll have lunch. They made Cornish pasties today, so I ordered two of those. Then we’re going to go over each of these papers, one piece at a time.”