Authors: Campbell Armstrong
14
Willie Drumm said, âI'm tired, Amanda. It's gotta be at least two hours since we heard the gunshot, and I haven't heard the dogs either. The smart thing would be to quit, come back in the daylight with more help, give the area a thorough search.'
Amanda stared into the dark beyond the headlights. Her eyes ached. She knew Drumm's proposal was sound, and if she'd been looking for anyone other than Isabel she would have agreed to call it a night.
âKeep in mind Sanchez was my case too, Amanda, and I worked it long and hard. So don't take what I have to say the wrong way, but some might call this compulsive behaviour.'
âMaybe that's what it is.'
âI know we owe the woman big time. I understand your feelings.' Drumm indicated the wall of dark, moving his hand in a gesture of hopelessness. âI heard of needles in haystacks, Amanda, but this â¦'
Amanda smoked a cigarette. She'd gone through almost a pack in the two hours since the gunshot. Two hours of ruts and ravines and cacti, 120 minutes or more in which she'd tried unsuccessfully to attribute the gunshot to another cause altogether â some jerk camper's kerosene stove exploding, a demented gold prospector's pick-up truck backfiring. There were all kinds of loonies drawn to the desert in the quest for gain, spiritual or material, God or gold.
But she was fooling herself. It had been a gunshot, unmistakable and dreadful. And just after the shot, she thought she'd heard a vehicle droning in the distance. She'd scanned the night but hadn't seen headlights. The landscape was pocked, hollows and canyons, a million hiding-places.
âI'm getting sick of cacti,' Willie Drumm said. âThey're starting to develop personalities. Any time now, one of them's gonna say
you again
?'
Amanda was hunched forward in her seat. She'd been locked in this position a long time. âGive it another twenty minutes, Willie. Then we'll go.'
âYou think you remember the way back to the road?'
âWe'll find it.'
Drumm edged the Bronco between stands of cacti. A jackrabbit ran mazily ahead of them. Once, a cactus wren darted in front of the vehicle, a feathered ball of light. Amanda barely noticed these disturbances. Her mind was elsewhere, probing her own private wasteland.
The Bronco bumped, thudded, bottomed out in a shallow arroyo Drumm had seen too late to avoid. âShit,' he said. He backed the vehicle up and the rear tyres span, and dust, thrown up by the wheels, clouded the air.
Amanda saw something then, metal and glinting. âThere,' she said. âWhat's that?'
Drumm parked, removed a flashlight from the glove box. He left the headlights on, and they illuminated a late-1970s Datsun with a punctured front tyre. Drumm opened the passenger door and switched on the flash. Inside the car was a clutter of discarded fast-food wrappers and styrofoam coffee cups and empty Camel Light packs and crumpled Kleenex.
Amanda looked at the debris. âFlash the back,' she said to Drumm.
Drumm moved the beam. In the back Amanda saw a heap of crushed clothing. Some of it was deadeningly familiar. A candy-striped blouse, a pair of jeans with a designer label, a blue T-shirt with a palm tree and the word Malibu.
âHers?' Drumm asked.
Amanda nodded. She noticed a small pink thing among the clothing and she reached for it and held it in the palm of her hand.
âWhat's that?' Drumm asked.
âA barrette. A hair-clasp.' Amanda wrapped her fingers round the thin strip of plastic.
Drumm played the light on the ground around the Datsun. âShe had a flat and decided to hoof it,' he said.
Amanda studied the ground. There were footprints scuffed by paw-marks. Drumm was the first to see the shoe, which he picked up. âYou don't run too good in high heels,' he said.
Amanda took the shoe and noticed it was missing the heel. She tried to reconstruct the scene, but she didn't like the pictures she was coming up with. Isabel runs, her heel snaps, the dogs are after her.
âYou want to keep going?' Drumm asked.
Amanda didn't. This was a trail she had no heart for. She felt empty and depressed. âSure,' she said.
Drumm trained the flashlight on the scuff of prints, Amanda followed. She didn't know how far she and Drumm walked: a quarter mile, a half, more. The desert was beyond measurement.
âShe comes this way.' Drumm stopped suddenly at the foot of an incline. There were indentations, disturbances, and blood.
Amanda squatted on her heels, picked up a handful of grainy dust and ran it through her fingers. She saw bloodstains in the grains, wet still.
âThis is where it ends,' Drumm said quietly. He swung the flashlight around the general area. âI see some tyre tracks over there.'
Amanda didn't look in the direction of the beam. She was thinking of dogs, wondering what it felt like to be hunted by them, trying to gauge hysteria, the sense of doom. This is where it ends. Drumm's sentence resonated in her head.
Drumm said, âThe dogs get her, they bring her down, then it happens. The gunman steps in and calls off the dogs. Boom.'
âAnd her body?' Amanda asked.
âHe removes it.'
âWhy not leave it here? You couldn't find a more isolated place for dumping a goddam corpse.'
âYou got me,' Drumm said. âWhat the hell. This whole goddam thing gets me. Two go in, two come out again.'
Two go in, two come out. Amanda listened to the desert, silent now, and eerie, where the dark land seamlessly met the dark sky.
15
During the trial of Victor Sanchez, Randolph Hanseimer, defence attorney, had tried to club Isabel Sanchez into submission. His tactics were crude, and once or twice Isabel had closed her eyes and swayed a little in the witness stand as if she were about to faint.
Aren't you just trying to get back at your ex-husband because he left you? Aren't you just mad at him for dumping you because you didn't live up to reasonable expectations as a wife? Isn't this just a seriously malicious case of sour grapes
?
Objection, objection, objection.
Amanda was replaying the trial in her head. She kept seeing Isabel in the stand, clenching her hands into small fists. Hanseimer tried to break her, but she always found the resolve to come back at him. The jury admired her. The jury saw an unassuming young woman abused beyond reason by a husband who was a cold-blooded killer.
Amanda stretched one arm across the bed. Her thoughts raced and her throat was raw from cigarettes and the desert still clung to her, the dread she'd felt, dread she was
still
feeling. Drumm's flashlight, the jackrabbit running, blood in the dust. The dogs, the goddam dogs: she kept hearing the way they yelped and whined. Isabel running from them, that fear, that solitude, just her and terror under an unyielding black sky.
She sat up. âTwo people I entrust to the Program. New names, identities, the whole Federal package. So what the hell were they doing back in Arizona?'
Rhees propped himself on an elbow. âMaybe they were lured back somehow.'
âLured?'
âWho would stand to get satisfaction from their deaths anyway?'
âOnly Victor Sanchez. Lured though? I don't see how.'
âSanchez wants revenge, but he wants it in a very special kind of way. What's the point of killing them in Idaho or wherever? That's remote. Better to draw them back here somehow and kill them where they're going to be discovered. Where
you're
going to know about it because it's your state, your own backyard so to speak. He's giving you the finger. He wants to show you he can cut through the Program like cream cheese, but he also wants you to be
aware
of it. He wants you to know that although you have him under lock and key on death row, he can still call the shots.'
She thought about this, then said, âExplain why we couldn't find Isabel's body. If Sanchez was giving me the finger, why wasn't the body left right there?'
âMaybe you just didn't see it in the dark. Maybe she wasn't killed.'
âDrumm's going back in the morning with some help,' she said.
âThen he'll find her. If she's there to be found.'
Amanda didn't want to think about Drumm and his search-party. She remembered the many hours she'd spent with Isabel in a hotel room on the outskirts of Phoenix, where she'd been sequestered during the trial. Armed guards at the door, unmarked cop cars in the parking-lot. She hadn't been taking any chances. She remembered how fragile Isabel had been. Her small face, dainty in its pale-brown perfection, had been taut most of the time. The atmosphere in the room had been a mix of tension and uneasy allegiance. It had been difficult for Isabel to testify against her husband, because even if the marriage had been a kind of crucifixion, even if Isabel had been hammered nail by nail into the splintered wood of matrimony, and Victor a bundle of unspeakable cruelties, there was still some stunted form of vestigial loyalty. At times Amanda had held Isabel, telling her she was doing the right thing, Victor belonged in jail and she could put him there for a very long time.
Don't think of it as betrayal, Isabel. I promise you'll be safe afterwards
.
Promise. Empty words, dry kindling.
She got out of bed, walked around the room, arms folded. She paused in front of a full-length mirror and caught her reflection in the faint moonlight. She looked frazzled, and she was 4 or 5 pounds too heavy, which was visible even under the oversized black T-shirt she wore. She turned away from the image and sighed.
Rhees was watching her. âSanchez has the key to all this. It's obvious.'
âThere isn't supposed to
be
a key, John. The doors are meant to be locked tight. Nobody is supposed to be able to open them.'
âSanchez found a way.'
âHow?'
Rhees scratched his jaw. âCome back to bed.'
âWe're talking about something so secret even a guy like Bascombe doesn't know how the machinery really works. We're talking about sealed documents and secret codes. You don't just pick up a phone and ask for information about the new names and whereabouts of witnesses.'
Rhees flipped the bedsheet back and patted a pillow. âLie down,' he said.
âOK. I'll lie down.' She stretched alongside him, held his hand and brushed it with her lips. But she couldn't relax, couldn't
begin
to relax. âI talked her into it, John. I persuaded her to go into court.'
Rhees stroked her forehead. âYou can't blame yourself.'
âI need to smoke. I know we have a rule about smoking in our bedroom but I'm about to break it.' She lit a cigarette. The sulphuric smell of the exploding match was awful. âShe wouldn't have testified if I hadn't forced her.'
âForced? It was her decision in the end. Nobody shackled her and led her inside the court, she went of her own free will.'
Amanda shook her head. âI bought her ticket. I put her on the justice train, which happened to be going nowhere.'
âNow you're choked up with remorse and you want to do something about it. But you'll be a damn sight better off going back to the cabin first thing in the morning and letting Drumm get on with it. Let Bascombe do what he has to do, you're out of it. It's not as if you have an official job these days anyway.'
âBascombe said the same.'
âHe's right. Now try to sleep.'
âHow the fuck can I sleep, for God's sake?'
Rhees opened the drawer of the bedside table and removed a prescription bottle, took the lid off, slipped a red and yellow capsule into his palm. âTake it.'
âI don't want it.'
âDo I have to stuff it down your throat?'
She opened her mouth reluctantly. He placed the capsule on her tongue and gently clapped a hand over her lips. She swallowed.
âGreat bedside manner,' she said. Dalmane again. She hadn't used it for weeks and weeks. She'd been working hard to relegate the Sanchez trial to a basement room at the back of her head, and she'd almost managed to bury it.
Rhees said, âI wonder what she ever saw in Sanchez.'
âThat's easy. She was young, naïve and poor, John. Sanchez is a handsome guy, wads of money, knows how to blind her with flash. Flash loses its allure, so he comes up with other ways of getting her attention. He was careless with lit cigarettes when she was around. Once, just for the hell of it, he cut off one of her nipples with a razor blade. This is not a pleasant man.'
She'd seen Sanchez day in day out for the best part of eight weeks in court, and what she remembered was the way he'd stared at her with a concentrated look of contempt. She remembered the trick he had of seeming not to blink. He emitted some very powerful waves of animosity, like a transmitter sending out a constant stream of malice. It had reached a point where she'd dreaded going into the courtroom and feeling the dangerous laser heat of his eyes.
âI don't mean this to sound callous, but you don't owe her,' Rhees said.
âI gave her my word, John.'
âYeah, but it wasn't you that broke it.'
âThat's not really the point,' she said. âI came to like Isabel.'
âI know you did â'
âShe survived a very damaging marriage, and she needed serious reassurance to go in that witness-stand. Thrown together in that kind of situation, you feel close to a person. We talked about a bunch of things: families, friends. We talked a lot about our fathers. I told her about the time Morgan gave me a brand-new car on my seventeenth birthday. The only birthday gift she could ever remember from her father was a cheap plastic barrette when she was twelve, which she kept. That made me feel kind of sad and kind of angry. I had this privileged upbringing I didn't ask for and she had nothing.'
Amanda felt the pill begin to kick in slowly. She could hear a slight echo around the edges of her words. There was a dryness in her throat. Rhees said something she didn't catch because she was drifting towards the peculiar numb darkness of drugged sleep.