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Authors: J. A. Jance

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BOOK: Dance of the Bones
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“I'm sure it'll be a while,” Dan said. “Don't worry. I'll hold down the fort here. I'm just glad you're safe.”

 

CHAPTER 15

YOU WILL REMEMBER,
NAWOJ
, MY
friend, that after I
'
itoi divided the water and saved the Tohono O
'
odham, some of the Bad ­People
—­
PaDaj O
'
odham
—­
escaped and went to live in the South. Now these bad ­people were very lazy
—­
too lazy to plant their own fields. They would come to the lands of the Desert ­People and steal their crops
—­
their wheat and corn, their pumpkins and melons. Each time they came, the Tohono O
'
odham fought the Bad ­People and drove them away, but after a while when the food was gone and the Bad ­People were hungry, they would come again.

By now the Tohono O
'
odham knew that they should put guards in their fields to protect their crops. One day near the village of Gurli Put Vo
—­
Dead Man
'
s Pond
—­
which the Milgahn call San Miguel, the corn was ready to harvest. That morning Hawani
—­
Crow
—­
was sitting in a tree and saw the Bad ­People coming up out of the ground. Soon they were cutting down all the corn. Crow was so astonished that he called

Caw, Caw, Caw!

The ­people in the village heard Crow
'
s warning. They came running and drove the Bad ­People away.

That is why the Tohono O
'
odham are always kind to Thah O
'
odham
—­
the Flying ­People
—­
and never let them go hungry or thirsty, because Crow sounded the alarm.

LANI WAS BOTH RELIEVED AND
a little disappointed when the first officer to arrive on the scene was one of the Shadow Wolves shift supervisors, Henry Rojas. She was disappointed because she wanted to get through whatever interviewing she needed to do with the investigating officers. But she was also relieved because Henry was someone she knew. He was a Navajo who hailed from New Mexico, while his wife, Lucy, was a Tohono O'odham nurse who worked at the Sells Indian Hospital. Lani knew them both because they lived in the hospital housing complex.

“I understand there's been a homicide,” Henry said.

“Two, actually,” Lani corrected.

It was hardly surprising that a Border Patrol vehicle was the first to arrive. Law enforcement agencies working on the reservation had the ability to monitor one another's radio traffic. Due to the long distances involved, if an officer got into some kind of trouble, people from other agencies who happened to be in the area could respond and render assistance.

“Any idea who the victims are?”

“There's a vehicle that may belong to one of the José brothers from Sells,” Lani answered, “but that's just a guess on my part. We didn't get close to the victims to attempt an identification because we didn't want to disturb the crime scene. Instead, we called it in and came here to wait.”

“What made you even think to look there?” Henry asked.

“I heard gunshots during the night,” Lani said. “Leo's son, Gabe, and I were camping out up on Kitt Peak. The shots seemed to be coming from somewhere down here, so we stopped to check.”

Henry looked questioningly at the backseat.

“Gabe's not here,” Lani explained. “He got his nose out of joint and went home during the night.”

“Walked?”

Lani nodded.

“Stubborn kid,” Henry observed.

“You can say that again,” Leo added.

“Whereabouts are the victims?”

Leo gestured with his head. “Over there,” he said, “by the charco.”

“Mind if I take a look?”

“It's a crime scene,” Lani said, “but it's not my call.”

The next several vehicles arrived in a caravan. Out in front was a black Suburban that screamed FBI and was FBI. Two agents, one male and one female, emerged from that car and came forward, credentials in hand, to introduce themselves—­Agents Angelica Howell and Joseph Armstrong. Behind them was a van belonging to the Pima County Medical Examiner's office. Next came a van with a Pima County Sheriff's Department logo on the door and a four-­man CSI team inside. At the very end of the line was a sedan belonging to Law and Order, the Tohono O'odham tribal police.

Henry reappeared, motioned for the others to follow, and then led the group of investigators off toward the charco. Leo and Lani stayed where they were.

“Are they going to want to question Gabe?” Leo asked.

“Probably,” Lani answered. “He left long enough before it happened that I doubt he saw or heard anything, but they'll probably want to check to be sure.”

“How long is this going to take?”

Lani sighed. “Probably a long time,” she said resignedly. “I don't think either one of us is going to make it home in time for lunch.”

Leo nodded. “I'd better call the garage and let them know that I won't be in until later.”

WHEN BRANDON CALLED THE NUMBER
Junior had given him, Amanda Wasser was home and answered the phone.

Her response when he introduced himself surprised him. “Brandon Walker,” she said. “I believe I recognize the name. Aren't you the original arresting officer, the one who took my father into custody?”

“Yes,” Brandon admitted. “That was me.”

“So what can I do for you, Mr. Walker?”

“John Lassiter reached out to me through his attorney, Oliver Glassman Junior. I volunteer with an organization called TLC, The Last Chance. We follow up on cold cases. Your father claims he wants TLC to look into Amos Warren's death, and he asked for me in particular.”

Brandon more than half expected Amanda would hang up on him. “Thank God,” she whispered into the phone. “Finally.”

“What do you mean finally?”

“JFA was happy to go after the prosecutorial misconduct angle, but I don't think any of them ever really believed my father was innocent. Of course, with him in prison, no one in law enforcement is interested in revisiting the case, either. Where are you? I mean, are you here in town?”

“Yes.”

“Why don't you stop by?”

Without waiting for a second invitation, Brandon drove straight there. The entrance to the development, not exactly a gated community, was half a mile beyond Wilmot on Speedway. Brandon understood enough about golf to know that courses are supposed to be green. That wasn't true here. The greens themselves were green, but that was all. Brandon knew that the cost of water had done in more than one Tucson area golf course, but the crazed golf-­cart-­driving players on this one didn't seem the least bit perturbed by the conditions on the course.

When he reached the address, he found a single-­level unit whose front yard had been turned into a bricked patio surrounded by gaily colored pots on metal stands. Each pot overflowed with a bouquet of colorfully blooming flowers. Amanda Wasser, seated on a bright red scooter, was parked beside one of them. Wearing a sun hat and gardening gloves, she was busily deadheading flowers.

“You must be Brandon Walker,” she said with a smile as she stripped off her gloves and held out a hand. “Welcome to my raised garden. Ordinary raised beds don't work for me anymore. I need something higher that gives me access both front and back. When I'm feeling well enough, I like to work the pots myself. When I'm not well enough, I have a yardman. Won't you have a seat? Would you care for coffee?”

“No thanks on the coffee,” Brandon said, taking a seat at a patio table with a fully unfurled umbrella. Next to the umbrella was a closed banker's box. “Just had some. What I'd really like is to know about your father.”

“John Lassiter is my birth father,” Amanda corrected. With that, she tossed her gloves into the scooter's basket, then rode over to join him at the table. “I consider the man who raised me to be my father. By the way, my adoptive parents are both deceased,” she added. “They died several years ago and only months apart. My birth mother perished in a car wreck, so as far as relatives are concerned, John Lassiter is the last of the Mohicans.”

“What can you tell me about him?”

“Only what's in public records and court records,” she said. “I know that he's in prison for murder and that he has MS. That's one thing we have in common—­MS. It's hereditary; it's also what started me off on the search for my birth parents in the first place. I'd been having symptoms, and my doctors suggested that I track down my birth family's medical history. I had always known I was adopted, but it came as a big surprise to me to learn that my birth father was in prison just up the road.”

“You grew up in Tucson, then?”

Amanda nodded. “I'm guessing that's why my parents kept that information from me—­because Florence isn't very far from here. But yes, I've lived in Tucson all my life. I attended Palo Verde High School and the University of Arizona. I'm still there by the way—­at the U of A. I'm a reference librarian in the main library.”

“I understand from Mr. Glassman that you're the one who brought JFA into the game. Did your father ask you to do that?”

She laughed at that, but it was laughter without humor. “Hardly,” she said. “I did that all on my own. Besides, when would he have asked? I've never met the man. He's in prison for life without parole, and he refuses to allow me to visit.”

Brandon was taken aback. “You've never met him?”

“Not once.”

“Then why did you go to the trouble of enlisting JFA's help?”

“I already answered that. John Lassiter is my last living relative—­the only one. If I can get him released from prison, maybe I'll have a chance to get to know him.”

“How did all this come about then?”

Amanda shrugged. “I'm a librarian. What can I tell you? When I learned who my birth father was and he then refused to see me, I started doing what librarians do best—­research. I went back through newspaper accounts of everything I could find related to Amos Warren's homicide and the resulting criminal trials. I also learned everything I could about John Lassiter and his circle of acquaintances.” She reached over, removed the top from the box, extracted a single item—­a book—­and moved the box in Brandon's direction. “This contains hard copies of everything I found. I've made digital copies as well.”

Peering inside, Brandon saw that the box was jammed with files.

“This is the only thing for which I don't have a digitized copy.”

She handed him the book. It was a paperback with a plain gold cover. The only words on the cover were
Lawmen Gone Bad,
by Randall Hardy
. Uncorrected proof.

“I thought that book was never published?” Brandon asked.

“It was, but only just. It was printed, but all the copies were bought up before they were shipped to the stores. It was pulled prior to publication,” Amanda explained. “Evidently pressure was brought to bear, and the copies that had been printed were shredded. This copy—­a galley copy—­survived. When I was doing my research, I read the complete papers from beginning to end. Somewhere along the way I stumbled on an item that mentioned Mr. Hardy was working on the book. I made a note of it in case it might be related. When I went looking for it later and could locate nothing about it, I tracked down Mr. Hardy himself.

“He was still living here in town at the time. He'd had several other books published after the first one disappeared. I made an appointment with him on the basis of asking for his papers to be donated to Special Collections at the U of A library. He seemed cordial enough and said I was welcome to what he had. When I made the mistake of asking about
Lawmen
in particular, he went ballistic. He said he'd burned everything that had anything to do with that ‘goddamned book,' quote unquote, and that he wished he'd never written it.”

“Slight overreaction?” Brandon asked.

Amanda nodded. “That sent me looking. The publisher was a local outfit that went out of business shortly after all this happened. That piqued my curiosity, too. I wondered if the two were related, and that sent me off on a search for the book itself. The book's initial print run was small, so there weren't many review copies printed either—­twenty to fifty at most. Fortunately for me, there are ­people out in the world of dead tree books who specialize in collecting review copies. I paid a lot of money for this one, but that's where I found the connections between the man who prosecuted John Lassiter and sent him to prison and John's onetime girlfriend—­Ava Martin.”

“I understand Jack DuShane is in here, too?”

Amanda nodded. “He's there as one of the bad guys. By the way,” she added, “you're notably absent.”

“Sheriff DuShane and I were never on the best of terms.”

“When I read the book, I realized that all those folks—­the sheriff, the prosecutor, the ­people running the call girls and the massage parties—­were thick as thieves, and I think they all joined forces to pin Amos Warren's homicide on John Lassiter. He was a guy with no connections, which made him an easy target. I went to the sheriff's department and tried to get someone to take a look at all this with a view to reopening the case.”

“And you got nowhere?”

“Correct, but maybe you'll have better luck.”

“Because I was sheriff once upon a time? I wouldn't count on it. Is your father aware of any of this?”

“I'm not sure. He might have heard about it through Mr. Glassman, but I certainly haven't shown it to him.”

“And did you reach any conclusions?”

“Yes, I did. I think Ava Martin bears some looking into. There's a file in there about her, too. I suggest you go through the material on your own and decide for yourself. Just for the record, though, you should be aware that there's at least one other unsolved homicide involved in this case. Kenneth Mangum was one of John's pals—­his best friend, actually. Kenneth testified on John's behalf at the first trial and was expected to appear at the second one, but he never showed. He apparently left Arizona and was living in Seattle under the name Kenneth Myers when he, too, was murdered.

BOOK: Dance of the Bones
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