The Big Gamble (29 page)

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Authors: Michael Mcgarrity

BOOK: The Big Gamble
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The whiskey bottle surprised Sal. He knew for a fact that Kerney wasn’t much of a drinker, that the bullet wound to his gut had chewed up some of his intestines, destroyed part of his stomach, and made him cautious when it came to booze, so he wondered what was up.
“What have you got, Lieutenant?” Kerney asked.
“Information on Silva, Barrett, and Rojas,” Molina said. “Plus some recent photographs of them.”
Kerney nodded. “Run it down for me.”
Molina spent ten minutes briefing Kerney, who looked at the photographs and listened silently, chin resting in his hand.
“You got questions, Chief?” Molina asked, as he closed his notebook.
“Not right now,” Kerney replied. “A lot has happened and things are moving fast. I want a midday meeting tomorrow with you, Piño, that APD sergeant, Vialpando, plus two of your best detectives. Officers who can write flawless arrest and search-warrant affidavits. We’ll put all the pieces we have together then and hammer out a plan of action. Set it up for me, will you?”
Molina nodded. “Want to tell me what’s been happening?”
“Let’s save it for the meeting.”
Sal eyed the chief. Although his instructions were clear, there was something different about Kerney’s tone. What was it? A blandness? A remoteness? Had the whiskey blunted Kerney’s usual upbeat disposition?
Molina decided to risk asking. “Are you all right, Chief?”
“Yeah, I’m good, Sal,” Kerney replied, pushing himself out of the chair. “Leave those photos behind, will you? I can use them in the morning.”
Molina dropped the photos on the coffee table, said good night, and left, convinced that something was troubling the boss.
Chapter 12
 
 
 
 
F
itful dreams and a dull headache woke Kerney earlier than usual. In the predawn darkness, he reviewed the material the Lincoln County Sheriff’s Department had sent up to Santa Fe: the autopsy report, forensic lab findings, and Clayton’s field notes on the excavation of Anna Marie’s body. Nothing had been uncovered that could tie Tyler Norvell, or any other unknown suspect, to the killing.
Kerney wasn’t surprised; the victim had been murdered elsewhere and moved, and too much time had passed between the murder and the discovery of the body, which made the chances of finding any trace evidence almost nil.
Without physical evidence tying Norvell to the crime, Kerney would have to build a convincing circumstantial case. Anna Marie’s letters and the fact that Norvell was in Santa Fe at the time of her murder put Kerney part of the way there. But he would need more persuasive information to convince the DA to approve an arrest affidavit for Norvell. He would have to develop the case in bits and pieces.
Kerney closed the files. Clayton had done a thorough job excavating Montoya’s remains. He wondered if praising his son’s good work would be worth the effort. Would Clayton simply respond with his usual cool disdain?
Kerney arrived for his follow-up interview with Helen Pearson curious to see how she’d held up overnight. Her hair was uncombed, her eyes were drained of emotion, and she moved in a distracted, almost awkward way.
“How long will this take?” she asked, her voice thin and troubled.
“Not long, I hope,” Kerney answered, still feeling the headache that had dogged him since waking. He hadn’t taken anything for it. The nagging throb kept his thoughts off Sara, so it served a good purpose.
The living room curtains, open yesterday, were closed, darkening the room. Helen Pearson sat in a chair where shadows hid her face. Kerney turned on a table lamp next to her and she blinked like a startled child caught doing mischief.
“Belinda Louise Nieto,” Kerney said. “Tell me about her.”
Pearson’s mouth tightened, twisted. “I didn’t know her.”
“What do you know
about
her?” Kerney asked.
“She was just before my time,” Pearson replied.
“And?”
“She’s dead.”
“You can do better than that.”
She thought about her answer, rubbing her lips together as if it would make the words come out. “She was an object lesson to keep the girls in line.”
“Why was that?”
“She booked dates on the side, held back money, met with clients who hadn’t been screened, broke appointments, rejected bookings with men who didn’t appeal to her, demanded additional payment for anything kinky, and sometimes refused to travel.”
“She was murdered for not following the rules,” Kerney said.
Pearson nodded. “The girls were told not to make the same mistakes Belinda did.”
“Who killed her?”
Pearson shifted away from the lamp as if the glare was somehow hazardous. “Everyone figured it had to be Luis Rojas, or someone he sent to do it.”
“Why?”
“Because he was the enforcer.”
“Just for the girls?” Kerney asked.
“And clients who misbehaved.”
“Were you warned about any other object lessons?”
“A girl in Houston, a client in Phoenix. There may be more, I don’t know. It’s been a long time since I’ve been in the life.”
“So, Denver isn’t the only base of operations.”
“No. There’s Phoenix, Houston, and El Paso, and probably a few more cities by now. Sex is a thriving business,” she added sarcastically.
“Albuquerque?”
“I don’t know.”
“Did you know a woman named Anna Marie Montoya?” Kerney asked.
“The murdered woman who went missing from here years ago?”
“Yes.”
“I never met her.”
“Did Norvell ever mention her to you?”
“Not that I recall.”
“Tell me about your clientele.”
The request made Pearson angry. “Will knowing who I fucked for a living get you off?”
“I left here yesterday amazed at how you’d turned your life around,” Kerney answered. “I’m still impressed.”
“Sorry,” Pearson said with a flicker of an apologetic smile. “It’s hard to think about all of this. The men I saw were wealthy, well-known celebrities, or prominent people in their home communities. One was a network television journalist, another was a professional basketball player. The list goes on and on. I even saw a city police chief from Texas for a time. Does that surprise you?”
“Not really. Anyone from New Mexico?”
“Just one man Tyler set me up with. That’s how I first came to Santa Fe. I spent three or four weekends with him over a period of about a year. His name was Raymond, but I think that was fictitious.”
“Why do you say that?”
“Anything more than an evening in a hotel room usually happened away from the client’s home turf. That means dinners out and being seen together without worry, a little shopping to buy the girl a present or two, taking in the sights. Raymond didn’t want to do any of that. We just stayed at Tyler’s house the whole time. Plus it was all a freebee. I was never paid a dime. Several other girls had the same experience with him.”
“I’d like you to look at some pictures,” Kerney said, handing over the photographs Sal Molina had left behind last night.
Pearson held the photos in the light. She shook her head at the one of Gene Barrett, identified Luis Rojas, and held up the last photo. “That’s Raymond.”
The image of archconservative state senator and attorney Leo Silva stared back at Kerney. According to Sal Molina, Silva was licensed to practice law in New Mexico, Colorado, Arizona, and Texas, and was affiliated with law firms in El Paso, Phoenix, Denver, and Houston.
He now knew that Piño and Vialpando were right, Silva was the fifth partner.
“I need you to write out a statement covering what we discussed yesterday and today,” Kerney said.
“All of it?”
“Yes.”
“Then what?”
“When the time comes, I’ll present it to the district attorney and ask that you be treated as a confidential informant. He might agree to avoid bringing you before a grand jury.”
“You can guarantee that?” Pearson asked.
“Not yet,” Kerney replied. “But if I gather a few more facts it might be possible.”
It took some time for Pearson to write her statement. Kerney sat with her at the kitchen table, refreshing her memory as needed. She kept her head down as she wrote, stopping to look up when Kerney spoke, absorbing what he said like a schoolgirl taking class notes. It made her look innocent and vulnerable.
Kerney decided there was a deep reservoir of goodness in Helen Pearson, and that she deserved to have her new life protected.
Kerney left Pearson and his headache behind with a promise to keep her informed. Outside, a stiff spring wind blew dust through the evergreens and rolled a few brittle leaves across the gravel driveway. Downtown, the thick stand of poplar and Russian olive trees surrounding the state capitol building swayed in the wind, bare branches clacking together in erratic patterns.
Bill Perkins, the legislative staffer who had pulled Norvell’s per diem reimbursement voucher at Kerney’s request, was in his office. A financial analyst, Perkins evaluated funding and appropriation requests for a number of state agencies, including the state police. Kerney had worked with Perkins during his tenure as deputy chief of the department.
A cheery fellow, Perkins had a shock of curly brown hair and an exceedingly high forehead. He gladly made a copy of the paperwork and handed it over. According to the document Norvell had signed, the senator left Santa Fe just about the time Montoya disappeared.
“Do you archive office records for individual legislators?” Kerney asked, slipping the copy into a pocket.
“Only official documents, not their personal stuff.”
“Who was Norvell’s secretary back then?” Kerney asked.
“I don’t know. Remember, office staffers for legislators are temporary personnel. They only work during regular or special legislative sessions. That information is in another office, and I’ll have to look it up.”
“I’ll wait,” Kerney said.
Perkins grinned. “Is that all you’re going to tell me?”
“Can you do it on the q.t.?”
Perkins made a gimme motion with his hand. “Come on, Chief, fill me in.”
“I wouldn’t want to damage Senator Norvell’s reputation by starting rumors that have no basis in fact,” Kerney said.
“It’s gotta be something.”
“Yes, it does.”
“Cops,” Perkins said, shaking his head and getting to his feet. “They never tell you anything. Hang on, I’ll pull the file.”
Perkins came back with a name and address. “Alice Owen,” he said. “She was a jewel. One of the best of the office staffers.”
“Was?” Kerney asked.
“Retired,” Perkins replied. “Hasn’t worked the sessions for five, maybe six years. I see her around town every now and then. She’s doing the grandmother thing and some charity work.”
 
Kerney rang the bell at Alice Owen’s house. The door opened partially, and a petite woman, probably in her seventies, with warm, intelligent brown eyes and gray hair cut short peered out at him.
“Yes?”
“Alice Owen?” Kerney asked, showing his shield. “May I ask you a few questions?”
“About?” Owen opened the door wider.
“Tyler Norvell.”
“I really don’t know the Senator very well,” Owen replied. “I only worked for him during the session right after his first election.”
“That’s the time frame I’m interested in.”
“Do you suspect that he’s done something wrong?” Owen asked.
“Would it surprise you if he had?”
Owen hesitated. “We didn’t hit it off particularly well. He was a young man who seemed quite full of himself. I’ve never found such people to be entirely trustworthy. What are your questions?”
“I’m trying to determine if he had any contact with a woman named Anna Marie Montoya.”
Owen shook her head. “Oh my, I couldn’t begin to know. So many people visit during the sessions, it’s really quite chaotic. Constituents and lobbyists just stop by and mill about hoping for a few minutes of a legislator’s time, or they drop off a letter or ask to use the telephone or make an appointment.”
“You kept no records of visitors?” Kerney asked.
“Of course I did,” Owen answered. “I maintained the appointment calendar and logged in all phone calls. But that didn’t include people who left no messages or were simply dropping something off.”
“Where would those records be?” Kerney asked.
“I have them,” Owen replied, “for all the sessions I worked over the years.”
She left Kerney waiting in the living room to search through some boxes. He spent his time looking at the photos of smiling children and grandchildren that were carefully grouped on tables and shelves around the room.
It made him think of the mess in his own family life, particularly Sara’s scolding and Clayton’s coldness. He tried to will back his headache to block off an overpowering desire to brood. Alice Owen saved him from the effort. She handed over a leather-bound appointment book and a loose-leaf binder. In the book he found an appointment for Anna Marie Montoya with a line drawn through it and a notation that the meeting had been canceled by
TN
. In the margin were the letters
WMPC.
Two copies of phone messages from Anna Marie were in the loose-leaf binder, both requesting that Norvell call her. All three were dated within weeks of her disappearance, but the canceled appointment was most recent.
With his finger on the appointment entry, Kerney showed it to Owen. “What do these letters mean?”
“Oh, that’s my personal shorthand,” Owen said. “They stand for ‘will make personal contact.’ ”
“Who will make personal contact? You?”
“Oh, no. It meant that I didn’t have to bother calling back to reschedule, the senator was going to do it himself.”
With the evidence in hand and resisting an impulse to hug Alice Owen, Kerney called Bill Perkins on his way to his unit and asked where he might find old telephone records from Tyler Norvell’s senate office.

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