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Desert Noir (9781615952236)




  Desert Noir

  A Lena Jones Mystery

  Betty Webb

  www.bettywebb-mystery.com

  Copyright © 2001 by Betty Webb

  First Trade Paperback Edition 2009

  10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

  Library of Congress Catalog Card Number: 2001086165

  ISBN: 978-1-615952-23-6 Trade Paperback

  All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in, or introduced into a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form, or by any means (electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise) without the prior written permission of both the copyright owner and the publisher of this book.

  Poisoned Pen Press

  6962 E. First Ave. Ste 103

  Scottsdale, AZ 85251

  www.poisonedpenpress.com

  info@poisonedpenpress.com

  Printed in the United States of America

  Dedication

  To Paul, who saved my life.

  Contents

  Dedication

  Acknowledgements

  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

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Chapter 28

  Chapter 29

  Epilogue

  More from This Author

  Contact Us

  Acknowledgments

  Many thanks to the Sheridan Street Irregulars: Sharon Magee, Sharon Geyer, Edward M. Dixon, Holly Newman, Denise Domning, Marcia Fine, Alexandra Soave, and Judy Starbuck. You guys saved me a ton of rewrites, and maybe a tree or two in the process.

  Thanks also to Sgt. Mike Anderson and Officer Mike Whitcomb of the Scottsdale Police Department, two good men who steered me away from my most egregious errors. Any errors which remain are mine alone.

  One key scene in Desert Noir could not have been written without the information found in Charles A. Lehman’s excellent Desert Survival Handbook (Primer Publishers, Phoenix)—no desert traveler should leave home without it. Lena’s singing of the “Corn Song” was adapted from a translation in The Papago and Pima Indians of Arizona, by Ruth Underhill, Ph.D. Lena’s knowledge of Pima creation myth comes from a wonderful book on Pima religion, The Short Swift Time of Gods On Earth, by Donald Bahr, Ph.D., Juan Smith, Willam Smith Allison and Julian Hayden. A personal thanks to Dr. Bahr for clearing up conflicting information on early Pima tattooing patterns.

  But the biggest portion of my gratitude is reserved for Paul, the man who saved my life.

  Chapter 1

  I was admiring the view from my second story window when the screaming started.

  Below me, sunburned tourists, plastic champagne glasses clutched in their hands, ambled along the sidewalk while in front of the Western Heart Gallery a Mariachi band swung into a Mex-Rock version of “Mi Rancho Grande .” Across the street, in flagrant cultural competition, two African tribal dancers made eight feet tall by stilts bebopped to the accompaniment of conga drums.

  A typical Thursday evening in Arizona.

  Typical, that is, if you lived in Old Town Scottsdale in July, when the Summer Spectacular Art Walk was in full swing and thousands of tourists from Maine, Minnesota, and Vancouver hoofed their way through the scores of art galleries that lined Old Town’s streets. They drank, they grazed, they bought. Even though I’d been taught the difference between good art and bad, the cynical part of me loved watching the tourists get fleeced. Arizona could use the additional sales tax, and if the tourists had more money than taste, hey, that was their problem. For free entertainment, you couldn’t beat the show. I tapped my foot in time to the congas and was getting ready to take another sip of Diet Coke when I heard a woman scream.

  “Ooooaaaahiiiiieee, sheeee’s d-d-ddeeeadddd!” The screams were coming from the Western Heart.

  Talk about stopping the party.

  Once a cop, always a cop, so I didn’t waste time on puzzlement. Adrenalin spiking, I snatched my snub-nosed .38 from my carryall and thundered down the stairs, taking them two at a time, ignoring the fact that I hadn’t been a cop in eight months. When I hit the landing, though, I remembered why I wasn’t a cop anymore. The bullet fragments lodged in my hip hurt like hell.

  “Deeeaaaad!” the woman still keened, and as I reached the street, gun waving, the tourists scattered.

  “What’s going on?” I yelled to no one in particular. Had something happened to my friend Clarice Kobe, owner of the Western Heart?

  The screaming woman picked that moment to emerge from the gallery. She was plump, in her fifties, her manicured hands and bone-colored linen dress smeared with blood.

  “She’s dead!” the woman sobbed. “Dead!” Then she pitched forward onto the hot cement, shredding her sheer pastel nylons and bloodying herself even further.

  As a bald, pot-bellied man stooped down and wrapped his beefy arms around her, I spotted a cellular phone dangling from his Gucci belt.

  “Call 911!” I snapped, then, holding my .38 high in the air, sidled past the two and into the gallery.

  Not wanting to take another bullet from the armed-and-desperate, I ducked behind a tabletop fountain shaped like a pregnant dolphin. The acrid scent emanating from it hinted that it flowed with wine, not water, but this was no time for a wine tasting.

  I lifted my head and shouted down into the gallery’s long, narrow length, “Drop your weapon and come out with your hands up!” My voice echoed back at me over the sound of trickling wine. All else was silence. No tell-tale rustlings. No ragged breathing, other than my own.

  Cautiously, I raised myself up until I could peek around the dolphin’s fat belly. Track lighting illuminated row after row of paintings of doe-eyed Indian maidens and craggy-faced cowboys, the usual overpriced Western clichés Clarice’s gallery was infamous for. Only one painting appeared remotely original, but not because of any talent on the artist’s part. Jay Kobe, Clarice’s estranged husband, had never displayed originality in his entire life, so why did this particular canvas project such impromptu energy? I squinted at it. Surrounded by a gilt frame more fitting for an Impressionist master than a contemporary hack, a solitary white horse stood on the edge of a cliff, the wind fluffing out its mane and tail until they blended into the overripe cumulus clouds behind it. Jay’s horse was no scraggly, range-roving mustang. Instead, it looked like someone’s pampered horse-show-circuit Arabian—with one peculiar difference.

  The horse sported red spots all over its body, spots of crimson so bright even the hokiest hack would avoid them. The spots began at its withers, oozed down the shoulder to the leg and from there, onto the gray granite cliff edge. In a marvelous feat of trompe d’oeil, the spots then spilled out over the frame’s edge and trickled down the buff-colored wall.

  I lowered my eyes to the floor beneath the painting, knowing what I would find there.

  “Oh, shit,” I muttered when I saw her.

  It was Clarice, all right, and as the woman outside had so loudly proclaimed, she was indeed dead. No one could possibly live with an eye bulging from its socket like that, or with a nose battered into mush, or with a neck twisted at such an ungainly angle.
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  Goddamn you, Jay! I cursed under my breath.

  But before I could go hunting for Clarice’s abusive husband, I had to first make absolutely sure. I lowered my gun and crept up to her body, careful to touch nothing but the artery at her neck. No pulse. Although her body was still warm, her skin looked waxy and her fingernails were pale. No rigor, though, so I estimated that she had probably been dead anywhere from two to five hours. Now I could smell the other signs of death, the released contents of the lower intestine, the emptied bladder. Poor Clarice. She had always been so fastidious.

  I swallowed the bile that rose in my throat and took a last look around. The killer had been careless. Two bloody footprints led away from Clarice’s body and out the blood-smeared back door to the alley. Both the footprints and the blood on the door appeared dry.

  I looked back at the front door, which had been standing open ever since the poor tourist from wherever had walked in. Something wrong about that. I pressed my lips together and thought. What? Then I got it. The front door, as well as the back, should have been locked. On Art Walk nights, Clarice always locked both doors at five o’clock, then she and the hired help readied the gallery for the big party. They poured champagne in the fountain, set out canapés, and did all the little things necessary to keep customers inside and spending. She didn’t unlock the door again until seven sharp.

  Then who had opened the door this evening? Surely not the killer. He would be more concerned with getting his ass out of there than keeping the tourist traffic flowing.

  But that was a problem for Scottsdale’s Violent Crimes Unit, not me.

  My police training standing me in good stead, I backed out of the gallery the same way I entered, not disturbing the crime scene any more than necessary. As the smell of hot concrete began to replace the scent of death, I heard sirens wailing towards me.

  In a little while, I’d be able to grieve for my friend, but now I had to tell the police what I knew. At least I wouldn’t have to talk to Jay, wouldn’t have to look at his vicious face until we got to the courtroom, wouldn’t have to slog through the reams of paperwork that were a homicide cop’s lot. Thanks to the felon who’d shot me eight months earlier, I didn’t have worry about any of those things.

  At least, that’s what I thought at the time.

  Chapter 2

  Jimmy Sisiwan, my partner at Desert Investigations and resident cyberhead, was tapping away at his keyboard as I staggered down the stairs from my apartment into our office, coffee mug in hand.

  “Want some?” I asked. I always like to start the morning with an argument. It gets my blood moving.

  “Lena, you know I don’t drink coffee. As he shook his head, his shoulder-length black hair rippled across his broad shoulders. Like so many Pima Indians his age, Jimmy had been raised with a Mormon family in Utah, but had recently returned to his roots on the Salt River Pima-Maricopa Reservation.

  “It’s decaf.”

  The Pima tribal tattoos that ran in four vertical lines across his forehead twitched. His Mormon family was still in shock over his reversion to traditional Pima appearance. His biological family—tattoo-free for the past one hundred years—was simply bewildered.

  “Decaf poison is still poison,” he nagged, as I knew he would. “Why don’t you try some of my prickly pear cactus juice? It’s loaded with Vitamin C.” Notwithstanding his footballer’s bulk, Jimmy’s voice was as light and musical as a woman’s.

  “I’m allergic to Vitamin C.”

  Ignoring Jimmy’s grunt of exasperation, I took another sip of the scalding coffee, then picked up the Scottsdale Journal lying on his desk. Only a week since Clarice’s murder and she had already been bumped to page six, although I guessed the coverage would pick up again when the trial began. Her husband had been arrested, all right. The bloody footprints found on the gallery floor matched a pair of Nikes found in the trash can behind his girlfriend’s house. When Jay Kobe admitted they belonged to him, he’d been charged with Murder One. He’d already been transferred from the Scottsdale Jail to the Madison Street Jail in downtown Phoenix where—as far as I was concerned—his battering ass could rot.

  Feeling my stomach churn with rage as I thought of Jay, I tried to calm myself with memories of Clarice. She’d been the first of the gallery owners to welcome me to Main Street, the only one who hadn’t been initially nervous about sharing the neighborhood with a private detective lured there by the reasonable rent. While I’d been intimidated by her rich-girl beauty, her democratic personality eventually won me over. As I remembered her generous smile and outgoing manner, I caught myself frowning at something that had bothered me at her funeral. Hardly anyone had been in attendance. Had Clarice devoted so much time to her art gallery that she’d neglected her family and friends? Still, it was unusual that people hadn’t turned out, given the sensational way she died.

  Refusing to think about it any more, I turned back to the front page of the paper and studied today’s headline. COYOTE BITES TODDLER! Underneath was a picture of a crying child, adults hovering around him in a nervous circle. The story’s sub-head read, NEIGHBORS DEMAND PROTECTION!

  “What the hell’s all this?” I pointed to the paper.

  Jimmy turned around, his mahogany eyes sad. “You know those new condos along Indian Bend Wash, just west of the new freeway?”

  I nodded. The Pima Freeway, which separated Scottsdale from the Salt River Pima-Maricopa Reservation, was named in honor of Jimmy’s tribe although recently, an effort had been launched to rename it the “John Wayne Highway.” Since Wayne had spent much of his movie career slaughtering Indians, the Pimas—who had always been peaceful farmers—were not amused.

  “Well, the freeway and that new development are poking into the coyotes’ territory,” Jimmy continued. “It’s annoying the javelinas, too. None of the animals out there have enough to eat now so they’re all starting to come into town, raid the Dumpsters.” He shook his head again. “We won’t have any wildlife left at all in a year or two. Maybe just a cactus wren or something flying down from the Tonto National Forest.”

  I feared he was right. “Maybe, maybe not. Maybe the wildlife rescue folks can do something about it.”

  “You wish. You know those people in the condos are always screaming rabies.”

  I did wish. All too often these days coyote corpses were seen lying alongside Scottsdale’s eastern border, sometimes even in the city itself. Only last month a Mercedes broadsided a young javelina as it oinked its way across the street in back of the IMAX Theater. Bit by bit, we were destroying the West.

  Suddenly I didn’t feel like arguing anymore. I sighed and looked out the front window past the big gold DESERT INVESTIGATIONS letters, hoping to catch a little pre-scorch sunshine. Instead, I was rewarded with the sight of a disheveled tourist propped against a lightpole coyly shaped to resemble a carriage lamp. If I wasn’t mistaken, that vomit-stained rag he wore was an Armani suit.

  “Pale face drink too much firewater,” I said.

  Jimmy laughed. “I’m surprised the cops haven’t scooped him up by now.” Then he returned his attention to the computer screen. He was trying to break into Seriad Inc.’s security system, all on the legal up-and-up. Since computer crime was such big business these days, large corporations paid big bucks to companies such as ours to see if we could find weaknesses in their systems. As it said on our business card, “If we can’t break in, no one can.” I still couldn’t get over how much money we were making.

  As if Jimmy’s words were father to the deed, a blue-and-white wheeled around the corner with its lights flashing and stopped in front of the drunk. Two uniforms got out, raised the man up, brushed him off, and gently helped him to the squad car. They probably wouldn’t arrest him, just take him back to his hotel. Jailed drunks don’t shop.

  I was getting ready to share this bit of social commentary with Jimmy when the office door opened and a lawyer walked in. You could tell he was a lawyer by his immaculate baby blue linen suit o
ver an even paler blue shirt, the whole business ornamented by a burgundy bow tie. Although gray as a badger and pushing sixty as hard as he could push, the man was lean and fit with a tennis player’s body. Money there, I thought. Big money.

  Big Money looked at Jimmy, then at me, eyeing the two-inch scar above my right eyebrow. Geez, two people with messed-up faces. “Are you Lena Jones?” “You don’t have an appointment.” I don’t like walkins, no matter how much money they represent.

  “I’m here on Clarice Kobe’s behalf.”

  I blinked. Why would a dead woman need a private detective? “Mister-whoever-you-are, I’ve met Clarice’s attorney and she didn’t look anything like you.” Big Money gave me a sour look. “Is there some place we can talk in private?” For a moment I was tempted to have Jimmy throw him out—which he could have easily done since Jimmy, like most Pimas, was a large man—but my curiosity won out over my irritation. Matching the attorney’s sour look with my own, I led him into the small office set aside for client consultations, and used exactly twice since Desert Investigations opened. Gesturing him into a chair, I moved to the bleached oak desk I’d bought in a fit of temporary insanity. I took another sip of my coffee but didn’t offer him any.

  “On Clarice’s behalf, you say?”

  He raised his shoulders. “In a manner of speaking. I’m actually here on behalf of Jay Kobe, her husband.”

  I stood up. “You’ve got three seconds to clear out of this office, then I call Jimmy.”

  The lawyer remained seated. “Whatever problems were between them, Clarice wouldn’t want her husband to go to prison for a crime he didn’t commit.”