When the Devil Doesn't Show: A Mystery

BOOK: When the Devil Doesn't Show: A Mystery
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To my father,

thank you for showing us the world

 

CONTENTS

Title Page

Copyright Notice

Dedication

Author’s Note

Chapter 1

Chapter 2

Chapter 3

Chapter 4

Chapter 5

Chapter 6

Chapter 7

Chapter 8

Chapter 9

Chapter 10

Chapter 11

Chapter 12

Chapter 13

Chapter 14

Chapter 15

Chapter 16

Chapter 17

Chapter 18

Chapter 19

Chapter 20

Chapter 21

Chapter 22

Acknowledgments

Also by Christine Barber

About the Author

Copyright

 

AUTHOR’S NOTE

The Spanish words used in this book reflect New Mexico’s unique Spanish dialect, and, as such, do not share all of the characteristics of the better-known, modern-day Spanish. For instance, most Spanish speakers today would say
“mi hijo”
when referring to their son, while Spanish speakers from Northern New Mexico would say
“mi hito.”

Additionally in the book, the term “Hispanic” is used instead of “Latino” when referring to someone from Northern New Mexico who is of Spanish descent. While Latino is the term most used in the rest of the country, Hispanic is the commonly used local term.

 

CHAPTER ONE

December 20

The devil was wearing a black cowboy hat with red plastic horns when he came out onto the balcony. The crowd started booing, and he waited for a moment for the noise to stop before yelling at them in Spanish to be quiet.

Below him in the dark, a hundred or so people filled the Santa Fe plaza. The block-wide area, lined on four sides by pueblo-style buildings, was packed with snow, as it had been since the end of October. The leafless trees were draped with Christmas lights and porch posts were wrapped in evergreen branches.
Farolitos
lined the sidewalks and roofs, the candles glowing orange through the paper bags that held them, making the buildings look like triple-tiered birthday cakes.

The devil yelled at them louder, telling the crowd the inn was closed. The people, with a few last hisses and growls, moved en masse to the next balcony, a half block away. They followed behind strumming guitar players and a choir singing in Spanish, all led by a couple dressed as Mary and Joseph. The crowd carried slender white candles that dripped wax onto the snow.

“Daddy, I’m freezing,” said Therese Montoya, eleven, not looking up from her cell phone as she texted. Gil Montoya unbuttoned his coat and wrapped it and his arms around his youngest daughter as she stood in front of him, careful to keep his parka sleeves clear of the candle she was holding. The candles had been handed out to the crowd by a local museum as part of their effort to keep the tradition of Las Posadas alive. The outdoor folk play, which told a revised version of the Nativity story, used to last for nine nights when Gil was a child. Now most of the mountain villages had followed Santa Fe’s lead, shortening the play so it was over within forty-five minutes.

The crowd stopped in front of a trading post on the southwest side of the plaza, where another devil, this one in a red cape and mask, came out onto the balcony above. The booing got louder, but this devil hissed back and stomped his feet at the crowd. The icicles hanging under the balcony shook but didn’t break. The devils were playing the conscience of the innkeepers who’d denied lodging to Mary and Joseph on Christmas Eve. They were the villains of Las Posadas, which had been brought over to New Mexico by the conquistadors in the sixteenth century and reenacted every year since.

Gil looked over at his wife, Susan, whose face had a soft glow from the candle she was holding while she chatted with her aunt. His eldest daughter, Joy, thirteen, seemed to be the only one who was paying attention to the play. “What are they singing?” she asked. Gil strained to make out some of the words. He listened for a moment before saying,
“Hermosa Senora … Danos tus auxilios … O Madre Divina.”

“En Ingles,”
Joy said.
“Por favor.”
The girls didn’t speak Spanish. Like most local teenagers, all they could understand were a few words of the Castilian dialect spoken in Northern New Mexico.

“Loveliest of Ladies, grant us your protection on this divine night,” Gil said.

“That’s beautiful,” Susan said, slipping her arm through his.

Gil had been home for dinner the last twenty-one days. It was a family record. There had been no murders in Santa Fe since the beginning of November, meaning he had been able to keep regular work hours. In that time, he had become less of a detective and more of an administrative assistant, clearing out paperwork and helping with reports. He was surprised how much he liked the normalcy of it. But he knew it wouldn’t last. Santa Fe averaged eight homicides annually. This year there had only been three, but there were still eleven days to go before New Year’s Day.

*   *   *

The fire was an orange pinprick across a dark plain dotted with piñon and juniper trees. The glow could have been the angry red of a campfire, except Lucy Newroe knew better. It was a burning home.

She watched the distant flames through the front windshield of the ambulance as it left the fire station. It was 5:23
P.M
. Full dark. Yet she could see the shadows of mountains on the horizon and, behind them, muted stars, smudged out by a high haze of cirrus clouds.

In front of the ambulance, the fire engine turned onto the highway. The words P
IÑON
V
OLUNTEER
F
IRE AND
R
ESCUE—
S
ANTA
F
E
C
OUNTY
were a blur of gold and reflective red on the vehicle’s side. The tanker truck carrying the water they would use to fight the fire followed behind the ambulance—a convoy of lights and sirens making its way down the dead quiet highway.

Gerald Trujillo, who was in the driver’s seat beside her, keyed the radio, saying, “Santa Fe dispatch, Piñon Medic One responding to the structure fire on Calle del Rio.” His voice was calm, as always. Lucy could hear the three firefighters who had hitched a ride with them laughing in the back of the ambulance.

“It’s time to do a surround and drown,
que no
?” She couldn’t make out who had said that.

“I don’t want to be a hero. I just want to get there,” another voice said.

“Hell, I want to be a hero.” More laughing.

She was tapping her leg hard against the passenger door, making the window rattle. Gerald looked over at her but didn’t comment.

As they pulled up a winding driveway, Lucy got her first look at the house, which seemed strangely intact. She didn’t see any flames coming out of the front picture windows. The fire must be in the back of the house. Their headlights swept across the front of the house, which was painted the usual Santa Fe adobe beige with the usual wooden beam vigas jutting out from the roof and the usual chile
ristras
hanging near the huge carved front doors.

Lucy hopped out of the ambulance and into a drift of snow that went up to her knees. She did her best to stomp most of it off her combat boots before pulling her firefighting gear out of a side compartment. The firefighters in the back of the ambulance piled out with a loud “Let’s play,” and another set of laughs. But their voices were tense. More fire trucks came up the driveway, with firefighters jumping out even before their vehicles had stopped. Some pulled hoses off the truck beds while others started gearing up, snapping helmets and pulling on gloves. The scene quickly became a cacophony—sirens, yelling, motors, pumps. One truck turned on its roof-mounted stadium lights, instantly bleaching everything in brightness and creating elongated shadows that reached out to the dark trees around them. Lucy tried to ignore it all and concentrate on one thing: Gerald Trujillo’s voice.

“What’s the first thing you need to know before we go into that house,” he was saying over the noise.

“I don’t…” Lucy was trying to put her heavy yellow bunker pants on over her clothes. Left foot in left boot.

“We need to know if there’s someone inside,” Gerald yelled. Lucy nodded. Right foot in right boot.

“What if we have no way of knowing if someone is inside?” he asked. He was already pulling on his bunker coat. The reflective stripes glowed in the undulating flashes from the emergency lights.

“We proceed as if there is a victim inside by doing a left-hand search,” she said as she zipped up her pants and struggled into the red suspenders—firefighter red suspenders.

“Right,” Gerald said. “At this point, Command says they don’t know if anyone’s inside, so we go in. But what’s our main problem?”

“We don’t know how many people could be in there. We could be searching for seven people or just the family dog,” Lucy said, zipping on her recycled bunker jacket and slapping closed the Velcro. The department couldn’t afford new equipment, so the coat was one that had sat in a box of used gear until she pulled it out. The smell of the jacket always made her a little nauseated: burned plastic in a wet campfire. It was the smell of all the fires the previous owners of the jacket had fought.

“What else do we need to know?” Gerald asked as he pulled a two-inch-diameter attack hose off the bed of the engine.

She couldn’t think. Her long hair kept getting in her face as she pulled on her fire retardant hood. “I guess something about what the house is made of?”

“Right. This is a new house made with stucco, so it won’t burn that fast, but our main problem is the roof.”

She remembered something about that from the firefighting class she had finished two weeks ago. Something about roof joists. All she could think then was,
What’s a roof joist?

Lucy pulled on her heavy fireproof gloves and yanked a SCBA out of a compartment on the side of the fire truck. She slipped the air tank on like a backpack and pulled the rubber breathing mask over her face, cutting off her peripheral vision and her ability to breathe until she was able to connect with the air hose from the tank. She felt for the tank on her back, trying to grab the hose connected to it, but the heavy gloves made her fumble. Gerald was suddenly in front of her, a hand on her shoulder. He guided her hands to the air hose, which she pulled to her face mask and snapped in place. She took a grateful deep breath, making the seal on her mask whoosh as she breathed in air from the tank. She clicked the clasp of her fire helmet closed. The other firefighters scurrying around her like worker bees wore the traditional red fire helmets, but she and Gerald both had blue helmets with
EMT
emblazoned across the side.

Gerald got on his handheld radio, and said, “Command, this is the interior team. We are ready to go.”

A voice came back, “Interior team, you are cleared to go in. The fifteen minutes has started.”

Lucy looked up and tried to focus on the other firefighters on scene, who would stay outside the house, fighting the flames from the exterior. Only she and Gerald would go in, and they were going in for one reason: to look for survivors. They had only fifteen minutes to do their job. The fifteen-minute rule was in place for two very practical reasons: because their tanks held only fifteen minutes of air and because a house on fire would become too unstable after that.

Another voice came over the radio, “Interior team, this is RIT. We are on standby. Stay safe.”

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