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- 1
- This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents
- either are the product of the author's imagination or are used fictitiously.
- Any resemblance to actual events, locales, organizations, or persons,
- living or dead, is entirely coincidental and beyond the intent
- of either the author or the publisher.
- 1350 Avenue of the Americas
- New York, New York 10019
- Copyright 2000 by J.A. Jance
- Interior design by Kellan Peck
- ISBN: 0380977478
- All rights reserved, which includes the right to reproduce this book or portions
- thereof in any form whatsoever except as provided by the U.S. Copyright Law.
- For information address Avon Books, Inc.
- Library of Congress Cataloging in Publication Data:
- Jance, Judith A.
- Kiss of the bees / J.A. Jance.
- p. cm.
- I. Title.
- 2
- PS3560.A44K57 2000 9935465
- 813'.54--dc21 CIP
- First Avon Books Hardcover Printing: January 2000
- AVON TRADEMARK REG. U.S. PAT. OFF. AND IN OTHER COUNTRIES, MARCA REGISTRADA,
- HECHO EN U.S.A.
- Printed in the U.S.A.
- FIRST EDITION
- QPM 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
- www.avonbooks.com
- ror Kita ratolo, Pauline Henariclu, ana Jneli$a Juan
- Prolo quo
- JUNE 1976
- There were three of them--a viejo--an older man--and two
- younger ones--trudging up the sandy arroyo, each lugging two
- gallon-sized plastic containers of water. Mitch Johnson watched
- them through the gunsight on his rifle, wondering should he or
- shouldn't he? In the end, he did. He shot them for the same
- reason Edmund Hillary climbed Mount Everest--because they
- 3
- were there.
- The older one was still alive and moaning when Johnson
- stopped his Jeep on the rim of the wash to check his handiwork.
- It offended him that one shot had been so far off, hitting the man
- in the lower spine rather than where he'd meant to. The Marines
- had taught him better than that. He had the expert rifle badge to
- prove it, along with a Purple Heart and a bum leg as well.
- He slid down the crumbling bank of Brawley Wash. The
- sand was ankle-deep and powdery underfoot, so there was no
- question of leaving a trail of identifiable footprints. Besides, as
- soon as the rains came, the bodies would be washed far downstream,
- into the Santa Rita, eventually, and from there into the
- Gila. When the bodies showed up, weeks or months from now,
- Johnson figured no one would be smart enough to trace three
- dead wetbacks back to the son-in-law of a well-to-do cotton
- farmer with a prosperous place off Sandario Road.
- Z J.A. JANCE
- The three men lay facedown in the sand. The one who was
- still alive lay with his fist clasped shut around the handle of
- the water bottle. In the hot mid-June sun, water meant life.
- 4
- Approaching them, Johnson held his rifle at the ready, just in
- case. He walked up and kicked the bottle, shattering its brittle
- white plastic. The water sank instantly into the sand, like bathwater
- disappearing down a drain. Then slowly, systematically,
- he kicked each of the other five bottles in turn, sending their
- contents, too, spilling deep into the parched earth of the wash
- bed.
- Only when the water was gone did he return to the injured
- man. The guy was quiet now, no doubt playing dead and hoping
- there wouldn't be another shot. And there wouldn't be. Why
- bother? The man was already dead; he just didn't know it. Why
- waste another bullet?
- "Welcome to the United States of America, greaser," Mitch
- Johnson said aloud in English. "Have a nice day."
- With that he turned and walked away--limped away--leaving
- the hot afternoon sun to finish his deadly work. What he
- didn't see as he scrambled back up the side of the wash to his
- waiting Jeep was that he was not alone. There was one other
- person there in the wash with him--another wetback--armed
- with his own two gallons of water and with his own unquenchable
- 5
- belief that somehow life north of the international border
- would be better than it was back home in Mexico.
- For several minutes after the Jeep drove off in a plume of
- dust the fourth man didn't move, didn't venture out of his hiding
- place. Juan Ruiz Romero had been resting through the hottest
- part of the day in the sparse shade of a mesquite tree when
- the other three men passed by. Because groups are always easier
- to spot and apprehend than a single man traveling alone, Juan
- had stayed where he was, hidden and safe under his sheltering
- mesquite, as the trio walked unwittingly to the slaughter. Lying
- there quietly, Juan alone had heard and seen the Jeep come
- wheeling up the dirt road on the far side of the wash.
- Somehow, a strangled sob escaped his lips. Sure the gunman
- must have heard it and would turn on him next. Juan shrank
- back into the mesquite. He stayed there for some time, holding
- his breath and expecting another gunshot at any moment, one
- KISS OF THE BEES 3
- that would spill his own life's blood deep into the thirsty, waiting
- sand.
- With his heart beating a terrified tattoo in his chest, Juan
- 6
- watched the killer go up to each of the fallen men in turn,
- looking down at them, as if examining whether they lived or
- not. Juan saw the ferocity of the kicks that shattered the lifegiving
- water jugs. He witnessed the killer limp back up the bank,
- climb into his waiting Jeep, and drive away.
- For several long minutes after the Jeep had disappeared from
- view, a shaken Juan stayed where he was. At last, though, he
- ventured out, moving forward as tentatively as a spooked deer.
- By the time he reached the three motionless bodies, Juan was
- convinced that all three men were dead. How could they be
- anything else?
- He was standing less than two feet away when one of them
- stirred and moaned. Juan started at the sound, leaping backward
- as if dodging away from the warning rattle of an unseen snake.
- It took a moment for Juan to collect himself. Two of the
- men were dead then, he ascertained finally, when he could think
- clearly once again. One was still alive. One of the three still had
- a chance to live, and Juan Ruiz Romero was it.
- He straightened up and peered out over the rim of the wash.
- Far to the north, a dust plume from the fast moving but invisible
- 7
- Jeep still ballooned upward. To the south, although Juan had
- done his best to avoid them, were other people, including numerous
- officers from the Border Patrol. A few miles that way as
- well lay a fairly busy blacktop road that ran east and west. Juan
- had waited until after dark the night before and had used the
- protection of a culvert to duck under the highway. And far off
- to the east was an airfield of some kind. Airplanes had been
- coming and going from there all morning long.
- In those few moments, Juan was torn by indecision. The
- easiest thing for him--the cowardly thing--would have been to
- leave the dead and wounded where they were and walk away.
- All he had to do was turn his back on them and mind his own
- business. The old man would no doubt die anyway, no matter
- what someone did for him. He was old. Clearly his life would
- soon be over one way or the other. Juan's was just beginning.
- He had a job waiting for him in Casa Grande--a job arranged
- 4 J.A. JANCE
- by his mother's second cousin--if only he could get there before
- the foreman gave it away to someone else.
- But standing there, Juan had a flash of insight. He realized
- 8
- that what had happened to these three men was perhaps the
- very thing that had happened to Juan's own father. Some fifteen
- years earlier, Ignacio Romero had left home for the last time.
- He had planned to walk across the border fence west of Nogales
- just as he had done countless times before. Other years when
- Ignacio had gone north to look for work, he had faithfully sent
- money back home to his wife and seven children. And eventually,
- after the season was over, Ignacio would return home as
- well.
- On that last trip, though, Ignacio disappeared. There was no
- money, and no one ever heard from him again. He left behind
- an impoverished wife, seven starving children and a lifetime's
- worth of unanswered questions.
- Realizing this man, too, must have a family waiting for him
- back home in Mexico, Juan knelt beside him. Overhead, the
- broiling sun beat down on both of them, and Juan knew he had
- to hurry. He placed one of his own precious jugs of water well
- within reach of the other man's hand and closed his fingers
- around the handle. Then, without a word, Juan stood up and
- went for help.
- 9
- As he walked south, he knew full well what that foolhardy
- action meant and what it could cost him. He would probably
- be caught and deported, shipped back home without enough
- money to marry Carmen, the girl who was waiting for him there.
- He knew she would be disappointed. So was he, but he had to
- do it. He had no choice.
- If nothing else, he owed his father that much. And for that
- reason, and that reason alone, only two men died that afternoon.
- The third one--Leon Morales--lived. Unlike Ignacio Romero,
- Leon returned to his family in Mexico eventually, to the little
- town of Santa Teresa in Sonora. He went home crippled and
- unable to walk but with a compelling story to tell.
- When called upon to do so, Leon would relate the harrowing
- tale about how, as he and his grandsons had followed a wash
- north through the Arizona desert, they had been set upon by a
- bandido who shot them all, killing his grandsons and leaving
- Leon to die as well. He never tired of telling his enthralled
- KISS OF THE BEES S
- listeners about how he had been saved that day by an angel who
- appeared out of nowhere, gave him water to drink, and then
- 10
- brought help. Leon always finished the tale by explaining how,
- in America, a federate--a gringo federate--had found the bandido.
- After keeping Leon in the States long enough to testify, his
- would-be killer had been sent off to jail.
- Leon's was a good story, and he told it well. Well enough that, on long evenings
- in Santa Teresa's dusty cantina, a command performance of the old man's shocking
- adventure up north
- was always good for a cerveza. Or maybe even two.
- JULY 1988
- It was dark and hot and long after lights-out in the Arizona State
- Prison at Florence, but Andrew Carlisle was wide awake and
- working. Since he was blind, the dark didn't bother him. In fact,
- that was when he did most of his best work--after everyone else
- was asleep.
- Careful to make no noise that might attract the attention of
- a passing guard, he pulled out a single sheet of paper, placed it
- on the clipboard, and then clamped it in place with the template
- he had devised and that his father's money had allowed him to
- have built. The template consisted of a sheet of clear plastic that
- was large enough to cover an eight-andahalfbyeleven-inch
- piece of paper. It was punched through with lines of small
- 11
- squares. In the far left-hand margin was a column of holes. By
- moving a peg down the side of the sheet as he worked, it was
- possible for Carlisle to keep track of which line he was working
- on. He had to be sure to keep the tip of his pencil in the proper
- box so as not to use the same one twice.
- This process--laborious, slow, and cumbersome as it might
- have seemed to others--allowed Carlisle to write down his innermost
- thoughts with a privacy not to be had by users of the
- communal computers and typewriters available in the library.
- One at a time he filled the squares with small capital letters.
- It bothered him that the system made no allowances for revisions. That reality had
- forced him to develop a very disciplined style of writing.
- 6 J.A. JANCE
- june 18, 1988. after YEARS OF DILIGENT SEARCHING, I
- BELIEVE I HAVE FINALLY FOUND A SUITABLE SUCCESSOR, ONE
- WHO WILL--WITH A CERTAIN AMOUNT OF GUIDANCE--GROW
- TO BE A KIND OF EXTENSION OF ME; ONE WHO WILL TAKE
- ON MY BATTLES AND MAKE THEM HIS OWN. If I SHOULD SUCCEED
- IN MY ENDEAVOR TO CREATE A MODERN-DAY pygmalion,
- I WILL TAKE A WORTHLESS LUMP OF CLAY AND MOLD
- IT INTO SOMETHING MAGNIFICENT. wish ME LUCK, diana.
- 12
- if IT WORKS, YOU AND YOURS WILL BE THE FIRST TO KNOW.
- That said, Carlisle removed the paper from the clipboard and
- stashed it with a growing stack of similar sheets. The guards had
- long since grown accustomed to the fact that Andrew Carlisle
- kept a diary. They hardly ever asked to see it anymore. Still he
- resisted the temptation to be any more specific than that, just
- in case some nosy guard did decide to read through some of it.
- With the diary entry made, Carlisle settled down on his cot
- and tried to sleep. At first the doctor's words--his verdict,
- really--got in the way, but gradually, as he had done for years
- now, Carlisle used a daydream about Diana Ladd to help him
- conjure sleep. He saw her again as she had been that night when
- he forced himself on her in what should have been the sanctuary
- of her own bedroom. She was one of the last things Andrew
- Carlisle had seen before his vision was stolen from him, and he
- reveled at the image of her there on the bed--naked, terrified,
- and defeated. In those glorious moments, except for her stubborn
- silence, she had belonged wholly to him, just as all the
- others had--the ones who had gone before.
- The memory of that godlike moment washed over him like
- 13
- a sustaining wave, carrying him along on the crest of it, buoying
- him up. The only thing that would have made that moment any
- better would have been if she had cried out when he bit her, if
- she had whimpered and begged for mercy. She had not done so
- in real life, but in Andrew Carlisle's daydream, in these midnight
- recollections, she always did. Always.
- Knowing no one was there to see him do so, he grasped
- himself and used that powerful remembered image to summon
- a solitary orgasm. When it was over, as he lay with his breath
- coming fast and with sticky semen dribbling through his fingers,
- he thought of how much it felt like blood. He only wished that
- KISS OF THE BEES 7
- it was hers. It should have been. That was what he had intended.
- Why hadn't it worked?
- As usual, in the aftermath of that remembered high came
- the crushing remembrance of defeat as well. The two experiences
- were like Siamese twins. One never came without the
- other.
- The exact nature of his defeat--the how of it--was something
- that was never quite clear in Andrew Carlisle's mind, but
- 14
- he never allowed himself to dodge it, either. One moment she
- had been under his control. In those still-golden minutes in the
- bedroom he could have sworn he owned her very soul and that
- she would have done anything he said, yet somehow--a few
- moments later--she had overcome the temporary paralysis of
- her fear and had fought back. She fought him and won.
- Thirteen years had passed since that night. In the intervening
- time what Diana Ladd had done to him on the kitchen floor of
- her house in Gates Pass had become the central issue of Andrew
- Carlisle's life. More than anything, she was the one who got
- away. The fact that their battle had left him blind and with a
- mangled arm wasn't as important as the simple fact that she had
- somehow escaped him.
- However painful that realization might be, Andrew Carlisle
- never for even a moment allowed himself to forget it. She had
- been far tougher, far braver, and more resourceful than he had
- ever expected. Carlisle's proxy would have to be warned, in no
- uncertain terms, not to underestimate this woman. After all,
- look what she had done to him He was locked away in prison
- for the rest of his natural life--shut up with no chance of parole
- 15
- while she was still out there somewhere, free to do whatever
- she liked.
- Still courting elusive sleep, Andrew Carlisle tormented himself
- with wondering where Diana Ladd was at that very moment
- and what she might be doing. Right then, in the middle of the
- night, she was probably in that same little house down in Tucson,
- sleeping next to that asshole husband of hers, and reveling
- in the fact that one of her puny, stupid books had managed to
- edge its way onto the New York Times Best Sellers list.
- There was a special radio station, available to Carlisle because
- he was blind, that provided audio editions of newspapers on a
- daily basis. Carlisle listened to the broadcasts every day. Re8 J.A. JANCE
- cently, one of those had contained a feature article on Diana
- Ladd Walker and her newly released book.
- "I have a husband and kids and a career I love," she had
- said. "Most of the time I feel as though I'm living in a dream."
- Andrew Carlisle had heard those words, and they had galvanized
- him to action. Diana Ladd Walker was living the kind of
- life that had been forever denied him--one she had robbed him
- 16
- of through her own personal efforts. He felt as though every
- ounce of her success had been built on his own failure. That
- was unforgivable.
- You may think it's a dream right now, he thought as he finally
- drifted off to sleep, but with any kind of luck, I'll turn it into
- a nightmare.
- I
- I
- hey say it happened long ago that the whole world was covered
- with water. I'itoiElder Brotherwas floating around in the basket
- which he had made. After a time, Great Spirit came out of his
- basket and looked around. Everything was still covered with water,
- so I'itoi made himself larger and larger until shuhthagithe
- waterreached only to his knees.
- Then, while I'itoi was walking around in the water, he heard
- someone call. At first he paid no attention, but when the call came
- the fourth time, Elder Brother went to see who was shouting. And
- so I'itoi found Jeweth MahkaiEarth Medicine Manrejoicing
- because he was the first one to come out of the water.
- Elder Brother said, "This is not true." He explained that he
- 17
- himself was first, but Jeweth Mahkai was stubborn and insisted
- that he was first.
- Now I'itoi and Earth Medicine Man, as they were talking, were
- standing in the south. They started toward the west. As they were
- going through the waterbecause there was as yet very little land
- they heard someone else shouting.
- BanCoyotewas the one who was making all the noise. I'itoi
- went toward the sound, but Elder Brother went one way, and Ban
- went another. And so they passed each other. Coyote was shouting
- that he was the very first one out of the water and that he was all
- alone in the world.
- I'itoi called to Ban, and at last they came together. Elder Brother
- 10 J.A. JANCE
- explained to Coyote that he was not the first. And then the three--
- Great Spirit, Earth Medicine Man, and Coyote--started north together.
- As they went over the mud, I'itoi saw some very small
- tracks.
- Elder Brother said, "There must be somebody else around."
- Then they heard another voice calling. It was Bitokoi--Big Black
- Beetle--which the Mil-gahn, the Whites, call stinkbug. Bitokoi told
- 18
- I'itoi that he was the very first to come out of the water. I'itoi did
- not even bother to answer him.
- And then the four--Elder Brother, Earth Medicine Man, Coyote,
- and Big Black Beetle--went on together toward the east because,
- as you remember, nawoj, my friend, all things in nature go in fours.
- JUNE 1996
- Dolores Lanita Walker's slender brown legs glistened with sweat
- as she pumped the mountain bike along the narrow strip of
- pavement that led from her parents' house in Gates Pass to the
- Arizona Sonora Desert Museum several miles away. Lani wasn't
- due at her job at the concession stand until 9 a.m., but by going
- in early she had talked her way into being allowed to help with
- some of the other duties.
- About a mile or so from the entrance, she came upon the
- artist with his Subaru wagon parked off on the side of the road.
- He had been there every morning for a week now, standing in
- front of an easel or sitting on a folding chair, pad in hand, sketching
- away as she came whizzing past with her long hair flying
- out behind her like a fine black cape. In the intervening days
- they had grown accustomed to seeing one another.
- 19
- The man had been the first to wave, but now she did, too.
- "How's it going?" he had asked her each morning after the first
- one or two.
- "Fine," she'd answer, pumping hard to gain speed before the
- next little lump of hill.
- "Come back when you can stay longer," he'd call after her.
- Lani would grin and nod and keep going.
- This morning, though, he waved her down. "Got a minute?"
- he asked.
- KISS OF THE BEES 11
- She pulled off the shoulder of the road. "Is something the
- matter?" she asked.
- "No. I just wanted to show you something." He opened a
- sketch pad and held it up so Lani could see it. The picture took
- her breath away. It was a vivid color-pencil drawing of her, riding
- through the sunlight with the long early-morning shadows
- stretching out before her and with her hair floating on air behind
- her.
- "That's very good," she said. "It really does look like me."
- The man smiled, "It is you," he said. "But then, I've had
- 20
- plenty of time to practice."
- Lani stood for a moment studying the picture. Her parents'
- twentieth wedding anniversary was coming up soon, in less than
- a week. Instinctively she knew that this picture, framed, would
- make the perfect anniversary present for them.
- "How much would it cost to buy something like this?" she
- asked, wondering how far her first paycheck from the museum
- would stretch.
- "It's not for sale," the man said.
- Lani looked away, masking her disappointment with downcast
- eyes. "But I might consider trading for it," he added a moment
- later.
- Lani brightened instantly. "Trading?" she asked. "Really?"
- But then disappointment settled in again. She was sixteen years
- old. What would she have to trade that this man might want?
- "You're an Indian, aren't you?" he asked. Shyly, Lani nodded.
- "But you live here. In Tucson, I mean. Not on a
- reservation."
- Lani nodded again. It didn't seem necessary to explain to this
- man that she was adopted and that her parents were Anglos. It
- 21
- was none of his business.
- "I've tried going out to the reservation to paint several
- times," he told her, "but the people seem to be really suspicious.
- If you'd consider posing for me, just for half an hour or so some
- morning, I'd give you this one for free."
- "For free? Really?"
- "Sure."
- Lani didn't have to think very long. "When would you like
- to do it?" she asked.
- "Tomorrow morning?"
- 12 J.A. JANCE
- "That would work," Lani said, "but I'd have to come by
- about half an hour earlier than this, otherwise I'll be late for
- work."
- The man nodded. "That's fine," he said. "I'll be here. And
- could I ask a favor?"
- Lani, getting back on her bike, paused and gave him a questioning
- look. "What's that?"
- "Could you wear something that's sort of ... well, you
- know"--he shrugged uncomfortably--"something that looks
- 22
- Indian?"
- Lani grinned. "How about the cowgirl shirt and hat I wore
- for rodeo last year? That s what Indians all wear these days--
- cowboy clothes."
- "Whatever you decide," the man said. "I'm sure it'll be
- just fine."
- "I have to go," she told him, putting one foot on the pedal
- and giving the bike a shove as she hopped on. "Or else I'll be
- late today, too. See you tomorrow then."
- "Sure thing," he called after her, waving again as she rode
- away.
- Once Lani was out of sight, Mitch Johnson quickly began
- gathering up his material and stowing it back in the car. Soon
- the Subaru was headed back toward Gates Pass and toward the
- lookout spot up over the Walker house where he would spend
- the rest of the morning, watching and pretending to draw.
- How was that, Andy? he asked himself as he unpacked his
- gear once more and started limping up the steep hillside. It
- worked just the way you always said it would. Like taking candy
- from a baby.
- 23
- The dream that awakened David Ladd shortly before sunrise
- on the morning he was scheduled to leave his grandmother's
- house in Evanston was the same dream that had been plaguing
- him and robbing him of sleep for weeks. It had come for the
- first time the night before he was to take his last law school
- exam--his final final as he thought of it--although he knew that
- the hurdle of passing the bar was still to come.
- The recurring nightmare was one he'd had from time to time
- over the years, but the last time was so long ago that he had
- nearly forgotten it. In the dream he was standing alone in the
- KISS OF THE BEES B
- dark--a terrible soul-numbing blackness without even the comfort
- of a single crack of light shining under the door.
- He listened, waiting endlessly for what he knew must
- come--for the sound that would tell him the life-and-death battle
- had begun, but for a long time there was nothing at all from
- beyond that closed door but empty, breathless silence. Once
- there had been other living people trapped in the dark prison
- with him. Rita Antone had been there with him, as had the old
- priest, Father John. But they were both dead now--dead and
- 24
- gone--and Davy Ladd was truly alone.
- Finally, from outside the terrible darkness, he heard a faint
- but familiar voice calling to him from his childhood. "Olhoni,
- Olhoni."
- Olhoni1 Little Orphaned Calf--his secret Tohono O'othham
- name--a name David Ladd hadn't heard spoken in years. Only
- Rita Antone--the beloved Indian godmother he had called Nana
- Dahd--and his sister Lani--had called him that. For years Nana
- Dahd had used Davy's Indian name only when the two of them
- were alone and when there was no one else to hear. Later on
- she used it in the presence of Davy's baby sister as well.
- Once again Nana Dahd's song flowed through the darkness,
- bolstering him, giving him courage:
- "Listen to me, Little Olhoni.
- Do not look at me, but do exactly as I say."
- David Ladd held his breath, straining to hear once again the
- comforting chanted words of the Tohono O'othham song Rita
- had sung that fateful day while the life-and-death battle between
- his mother and the strange bald-headed man had raged outside
- that closed and locked root cellar door. The man who had burst
- 25
- into their home earlier that afternoon was Mil-gahn--a white,
- but in the song Rita had used to summon I'itoi to help them, she
- had called Andrew Carlisle by the word Ohb. In the language of
- the Tohono O'othham--the Desert People--that single word
- means at once both Apache and enemy.
- Nana Dahd's war chant had cast a powerful spell, instilling
- a mysterious strength in Davy and in other members of the
- embattled household. That strength had been enough to save
- them all from the Ohb's evil that awful day. Davy, Rita, the
- 14 J.A. JANCE
- priest, Davy's mother, and even the dog, Oh'o--Bone--had all
- been spared. At least, they had all lived. And at age six going
- on seven, Mil-gahn though he was, it had been easy for Davy
- Ladd to believe that I'itoi--Elder Brother--had interceded on
- their behalf; that the Spirit of Goodness had heard Nana Dahd's
- desperate cry for help; that he had descended from his home on
- cloud-shrouded Baboquivari to help them vanquish their enemy.
- Twenty years later, that was no longer quite so easy to accept.
- Even so, a grown-up David Ladd strained to listen and to
- gather strength from Rita's familiar but almost forgotten words.
- 26
- She had chanted the song in soft-spoken, guttural Papago--a
- language the evil Ohb hadn't been able to speak or understand.
- Back then Nana Dahd's war song had served the dual purpose
- of summoning I'itoi to help them and also of telling a terrified
- little boy exactly what he had to do--what was expected of him.
- But at the point where Rita's song should have been rising
- to a crescendo, it dwindled away to nothing. And now, with
- Nana Dahd gone, Davy was once again alone in the dark--a
- helpless, terrified child listening from one side of a door while
- on the other his mother fought for her life against the evil Milgahn
- intruder.
- In his dream, David waited--for what seemed like hours--
- for the shocking roar of gunfire that would signal the beginning
- of the final stage of that deadly battle. But the gunshot never
- came. Instead, for no apparent reason, the door fell silently and
- inexplicably open, as though it had been unlatched by a ghost,
- or by a sudden stray gust of wind.
- In real life, when the door had crashed open, the Ohb had
- been lying on the floor, screaming in rage and agony, with his
- face burned beyond recognition by a pan full of overheated
- 27
- bacon grease. His skin had blistered and bubbled, leaving his
- features horribly distorted like a strange wax mask that had been
- left to melt in the searing sun. Injured and bleeding, Davy's
- mother had stood over the injured man, still clutching the smoldering
- frying pan in her one good hand.
- A terrified Davy had fled that awful scene. He had escaped
- through the slick, grease-spattered kitchen just as he had been
- ordered to do. Pushing open the sliding glass outside door, he
- had opened the way for his dog to get inside. Bone, outraged
- and bent on protecting his humans from the intruder, had hur-
- KISS OF THE BEES 15
- tied into the room, going straight for the injured Ohb's vulnerable
- throat.
- Twenty years later in David's dream, the heavy cellar door
- fell open silently on an equally silent kitchen. And on the floor,
- instead of a defeated evil Ohb, Davy saw his sister. Lani hadn't
- even been born on the day Andrew Carlisle broke into the house
- in Gates Pass, and yet here she was, lying still and bloody, in
- the middle of the room. Without moving forward to touch her, without even emerging
- from the darkness of his cellar prison, David Ladd knew just from looking at her
- that Dolores Lanita
- 28
- Walker was dead.
- He had awakened from the awful dream with his heart
- pounding and with his bedclothes soaked in sweat. He could
- barely breathe. For a while, he thought he was having a heart
- attack--that he was actually dying. Later that night, a jovial and
- not overly sympathetic emergency room physician told Davy
- that what had happened to him was an ordinary panic attack.
- Nothing serious at all, the doctor assured him. With the pressure
- of law school finals and all that, Davy was probably overstressed.
- Nothing to worry about, the doctor said. He'd get over it.
- The stress of those final exams was long gone. He had spent
- the last few weeks working around his grandmother's place,
- painting the things that needed painting, refinishing furniture,
- clearing out dead tree branches, and generally making himself
- useful. He did it in no small part to repay his grandmother,
- Astrid Ladd, for the many kindnesses she had offered him during
- the years he had been in Chicago going to school. The whole
- time he had lived there, he had stayed in the small chauffeur's
- apartment over his grandmother's garage.
- He had hoped that a few days of hard physical labor would
- 29
- help relieve whatever was causing the panic attacks, but as he
- lay in bed, gasping for breath that early Friday morning, he knew
- it hadn't worked.
- Brandon Walker was cutting wood. Cutting and stacking
- wood. Once a week--on Friday afternoons--a ramshackle old
- dump truck would arrive. Filled to the rim with a drying tangle
- of creosote, greasewood, palo verde, and mesquite, the truck
- would turn off Speedway, rumble down a steep incline, and then
- labor slowly up a rock-scattered sandy track that led to a house
- 16 J.A. JANCE
- perched on a mountainside in Gates Pass west of Tucson,
- Arizona.
- Out behind the house with its six-foot-high river-rock wall,
- the truck would disgorge another sorry load of doomed desert
- flora. For months now, Brandon Walker had waged a dogged
- one-man war, working to salvage the throwaway wood that had
- been bulldozed off the desert to make way for yet another thirsty
- golf course. He knew he was powerless to stop the burgeoning
- development that was eating away the beautiful Sonora Desert
- that he loved, but by cutting and stacking the wood, Brandon
- 30
- felt as though he was somehow keeping faith with the desert.
- In some small way he was keeping what the bulldozers destroyed
- from simply going to waste.
- Late on those Friday afternoons, the empty dump truck
- would pull away, leaving behind its ruined mound of wood.
- Throughout the following week, Brandon would pull one log
- after another out of the snarl, saw it, and stack it. He had bought
- a gasoline-powered grinder that chewed up the smaller branches
- into chips. Someone had told him that those could probably be
- used as mulch, so each day he gathered the leavings into a growing
- mountain of shredded wood chips. The mound of drying
- chips and the stack of wood grew along the outside of the rock
- wall that stretched around the backyard perimeter of Brandon
- and Diana Ladd Walker's secluded desert compound.
- The hard physical labor was good for him. He had sweated
- off the flab that was the natural outgrowth of four four-year
- terms as sheriff. His blood pressure was down, as were his triglycerides
- and his cholesterol. He ignored the fact that some of
- his neighbors thought him peculiar. During the hours when
- 31
- other men his age and in his position might have been out
- whacking endless golf balls around artificially grassy courses,
- Brandon fought his solitary battle with himself and with that
- week's messy jumble of wood, gradually bringing the dead mesquite
- and palo verde to order, even if he wasn't able--with a
- chain saw and ax--to work the same miracle on his own life.
- Brandon worked on the wood in the early morning hours
- while the sun was still relatively cool. He put in another shift
- in the late afternoons and evenings, just before sunset. During
- the middle of the day, he slept.
- It was funny that he could go into the bedroom in the late
- KISS OF THE BEES 17
- morning after a quick shower, tumble onto the bed, and fall fast
- asleep. At night he tossed and turned, paced and thought, and
- did everything but sleep. At regular bedtimes, as soon as he lay
- his head on the pillow, his mind snapped into overdrive, tormenting
- him with every perceived or imagined flaw in his life.
- During the day, with the sun on his back and with the sweat
- pouring off his face, he knew how lucky he was. Diana's increasing
- success meant that, after losing the election, there was no
- 32
- need for him to eat humble pie and go looking for another job.
- He'd even had offers. Roswell, New Mexico, had tried to entice
- him there with the job of police chief--a position he had been
- more than happy to turn down.
- As soon as it was time to go to bed at night, however, his
- cup was half empty rather than half full. In the dead of night,
- Diana's growing monetary success merely underscored his own
- overriding sense of failure, his belief that he had somehow not
- been good enough or provided well enough. Diana never said
- anything of the kind, of course. She never even hinted at it. In
- the cold light of day he could see that his nighttime torment
- was merely a replay of his mother's and his ex-wife's old blamegame
- tapes. At night, however, that clear-cut knowledge disappeared
- the moment he turned out the lights.
- In the darkness he wrestled with the reality of being fifty
- years old and let out to pasture. On his fortieth birthday, he
- had counted himself as one of the luckiest men in the world.
- He had a wife who loved him and, according to his lights, a
- reasonably well-blended family--his two sons, Diana's son,
- Davy, and the baby, Lani. The icing on the cake had been his
- 33
- job. The chance to be elected sheriff had fallen into his lap in
- a way he hadn't anticipated, but the job had suited him. He had
- been damn good at it.
- Now, ten years later, most of his "dream" life was gone,
- wiped out of existence as if it had never existed in the first place.
- The job had disappeared with the results of the last election. Bill
- Forsythe was the new Pima County sheriff now, leaving Brandon
- Walker as an unemployed fifty-year-old has-been. He still had
- Diana, of course, but there was a cool distance between them
- now--probably one of his own making and one he doubted
- they'd ever bridge again. Careerwise, she had moved beyond
- him--beyond anything either one of them had anticipated. She
- 18 J.A. JANCE
- no longer needed him, certainly not the way she had in the
- beginning. As for the kids--the boys were pretty much lost to
- him. Tommy was gone--dead, most likely; Quentin was a lying,
- cheating, boozing ex-con; and Davy was off in Chicago being
- beguiled by his paternal grandmother's money and the myth of
- his long-dead father. In this bleak landscape, Brandon Walker's
- only consolation, his sole ray of sunshine, was Lani--the baby
- 34
- he had once argued fiercely against adopting.
- Now, though, laboring over the wood, he felt the need to
- distance himself from her as well. She was sixteen and still dependent,
- but she wouldn't be for long. She had a job now and
- a driver's license. It was only a matter of time before she, too,
- would grow up and slip away from him.
- And when that happened, Brandon wondered, would there
- be anything left for him, anything at all? Well, maybe that neverending
- mountain of wood, waiting to be chopped and stacked
- and salvaged. There would probably always be plenty of that.
- He worked until it was too hot to continue, then he went
- in, showered, and threw himself onto the bed. Only then, at
- eleven o'clock in the morning, was he able to fall asleep.
- From his perch high up on the mountain, Mitch Johnson had
- a perfect view of the Walkers' river-rock compound in Gates
- Pass. He liked to think of it as a God's-eye view. If he'd had a
- rifle in his hand right about then instead of a damned stupid
- sketch pad, Brandon Walker standing out by his woodpile would
- have been an easy shot. Bang, bang, you're dead. But as Andy
- 35
- had pointed out, killing Brandon Walker wasn't the point. Destroying
- him was. If the United States was going to continue to
- survive as a nation, people who contributed to that destruction--
- people who helped the job-eating illegal scum--had to be destroyed
- themselves.
- "Mr. Johnson," Andy had asked him once, early on, "why
- do you suppose the cat toys with the mouse?"
- Mitch Johnson had already learned that Andrew Carlisle was
- sometimes an irascible teacher. Even his most oddball question
- required a thoughtful response. "I suppose because it's fun," he
- had answered.
- "For whom?" Andy had persisted.
- "Certainly not for the mouse."
- KISS OF THE BEES 19
- "Don't be so sure. You see, in those moments, the mouse
- must have some moments of clarity, when it may possibly see
- through its own terror and imagine surviving. Continuing.
- There's a real beauty in that, a sort of dance. The mouse tries
- to escape. The cat blocks it. The mouse tries again, and the same
- thing happens. As long as the mouse keeps trying, it hasn't lost
- 36
- hope. Once it does, the cat becomes bored and simply eats it.
- End of story."
- They lay on their bunks in silence for a while, Mitch Johnson
- in the upper bunk and Carlisle in the lower so he could get to
- the toilet more easily during the night.
- Mitch didn't want to seem stupid, but he couldn't see where
- Andy was going on this one. "So what's the point?" he finally
- asked.
- "Did you enjoy shooting those guys in the back?" Andy
- asked.
- A peculiar intimacy existed between the two men that Mitch
- Johnson was hard-pressed to understand. If somebody else had
- asked that question, Mitch would have decked the guy, but because
- it was Andy asking, Mitch simply answered. "Yes," he
- said.
- "But wouldn't it have been better," Andrew Carlisle asked,
- "if they'd had the chance to ask you--to beg you--not to do it
- and you did it anyway? Wouldn't that have been more fun?
- Have you ever done it that way?"
- "What do you mean?" Mitch said. "I did it the way I did
- 37
- it. I shot them and that's it."
- "But it doesn't have to be," Andrew Carlisle told him. "You
- have a mind, an imagination. All you have to do is rewrite the
- scenario. Change your mind and change your reality. Close your
- eyes and see them walking again. Only this time, instead of
- pulling the trigger, you call out to them. You order them on
- their hands and knees. It was hot, wasn't it? The middle of
- summer?"
- "Yes, almost the end of June."
- "So imagine them on their hands and knees in the sand, with
- the hot earth blistering their skin. They're going to beg you not
- to shoot them. Plead with you to let them stand up again so
- they'll have the protection of their shoe leather between their
- skin and the sand. But if you wait, if you don't let them up off
- 20 J.A. JANCE
- their hands and knees, eventually, they'll belong to you in the
- same way the mouse belongs to the cat, you see. In exactly the
- same way."
- In the upper bunk, Mitch Johnson closed his eyes and let
- Andrew Carlisle's almost hypnotic voice flow over him. Mitch
- 38
- was right there again, standing on the bank of Brawley Wash,
- calling down to the wetbacks marching ahead of him.
- "Stop," he shouted at them, and they did.
- "Down1" he ordered. "Get down on your hands and knees."
- And they did that, too, all three of them groveling in the burning
- sand before him, all of them scraping their faces in the dirt. This
- must be what it feels like to be a king, Mitch thought. Or maybe
- even a god.
- "Please," the older one said, speaking to Mitch in English
- rather than in Spanish. "Please, let my grandsons be. I'll do
- whatever you want. Just let my daughter's boys go free. Let
- them go."
- "What would you do, old man?" Mitch asked him.
- "Anything. Whatever you say."
- "Put the barrel in your mouth."
- For Mitch, that was such a sexually charged image that it
- almost broke the spell, but Andy's voice, washing over the whole
- scene, kept the images in play. Reaching up tentatively, the old
- man took the barrel of the gun and lovingly, almost reverentially,
- put it into his own mouth. And with the grandsons cowering
- 39
- there on the ground, and with the old man's eyes full on his
- face, Mitch Johnson pulled the trigger.
- "And this time," Andrew Carlisle finished, "you can be sure
- the bastard is dead. What do you think?"
- Mitch opened his eyes, unsure of what had happened but
- with the tracks of a wet dream still hot on his belly and between
- his legs.
- "It beats jacking off, doesn't it?" Andrew Carlisle asked.
- Yes, it does, Mitch meant to say, but, for some strange reason,
- he was already asleep.
- Diana Ladd Walker was at work in her study. On that Friday
- morning she was supposed to be writing, working on the outline
- for her next book, Den of Iniquity. What she was doing instead
- was fielding phone calls. The month before her previous book,
- KISS OF THE BEES 21
- Shadow of Death, had won a Pulitzer. Even though the book
- had been out for nine months, the whirl of publicity surrounding
- the prize had pushed the book into numerous reprints. Not only
- that, it was back on the New York Times Best Sellers list as well,
- sitting at number eight, for the third week in a row.
- 40
- Which is why, at a time when Diana should have been writing,
- she had been sucked instead back into book-promotion
- mode. She had left her desk and was on her way to shower
- when the phone rang again.
- "It's me," Megan Wright announced. Megan was a publicist
- working for Diana's New York publisher, Sterling, Moffit, and
- Dodd. She was young--not more than twenty-five--but she was
- businesslike on the phone and brimmed with a kind of boundless
- energy and enthusiasm that suited her for the job.
- "I'm calling with your weekend's marching orders," Megan
- continued. "I just wanted to double-check the schedule."
- Obligingly, Diana hauled out her calendar and opened it to
- the proper page.
- "First there's the University of Arizona Faculty Wives Tea
- this afternoon at two o'clock."
- "I know," Diana observed dryly. "As a matter of fact, I was
- on my way into the bathroom to shower and dress when the
- phone rang."
- "I'll hurry," Megan said. "And then there are the two appointments
- for tomorrow. I'm sorry about filling up your Saturday,
- 41
- but I didn't have any choice. Tomorrow's the only time I
- could schedule the Monty Lazarus interview. Don't forget, he's
- the West Coast stringer for several different magazines, so it's
- an important interview. My guess is he'll be pitching the story
- to all of them."
- "Where's that interview?" Diana asked. "I wrote down his
- name but not where I'm supposed to meet him."
- "In the lobby of the La Paloma Hotel at noon. I don't have
- either an address or a map. Can you find it, or will you need
- a driver?"
- Tucson may have been totally foreign territory to Megan, but
- Diana had lived in the Tucson area for more than thirty years.
- "Noon, La Paloma," Diana repeated as she jotted the words into
- the correct slot on the calendar under the name, "Monty
- Lazarus."
- 20 LA.JANCE
- their hands and knees, eventually, they'll belong to you in the
- same way the mouse belongs to the cat, you see. In exactly the
- same way."
- In the upper bunk, Mitch Johnson closed his eyes and let
- 42
- Andrew Carlisle's almost hypnotic voice flow over him. Mitch
- was right there again, standing on the bank of Brawley Wash,
- calling down to the wetbacks marching ahead of him.
- "Stop," he shouted at them, and they did.
- "Downl" he ordered. "Get down on your hands and knees."
- And they did that, too, all three of them groveling in the burning
- sand before him, all of them scraping their faces in the dirt. This
- must be what it feels like to be a king, Mitch thought. Or maybe
- even a god.
- "Please," the older one said, speaking to Mitch in English
- rather than in Spanish. "Please, let my grandsons be. I'll do
- whatever you want. Just let my daughter's boys go free. Let
- them go."
- "What would you do, old man?" Mitch asked him.
- "Anything. Whatever you say."
- "Put the barrel in your mouth."
- For Mitch, that was such a sexually charged image that it
- almost broke the spell, but Andy's voice, washing over the whole
- scene, kept the images in play. Reaching up tentatively, the old
- man took the barrel of the gun and lovingly, almost reverentially,
- 43
- put it into his own mouth. And with the grandsons cowering
- there on the ground, and with the old man's eyes full on his
- face, Mitch Johnson pulled the trigger.
- "And this time," Andrew Carlisle finished, "you can be sure
- the bastard is dead. What do you think?"
- Mitch opened his eyes, unsure of what had happened but
- with the tracks of a wet dream still hot on his belly and between
- his legs.
- "It beats jacking off, doesn't it?" Andrew Carlisle asked.
- Yes, it does, Mitch meant to say, but, for some strange reason,
- he was already asleep.
- Diana Ladd Walker was at work in her study. On that Friday
- morning she was supposed to be writing, working on the outline
- for her next book, Den of Iniquity. What she was doing instead
- was fielding phone calls. The month before her previous book,
- KISS OF THE BEES 21
- Shadow of Death, had won a Pulitzer. Even though the book
- had been out for nine months, the whirl of publicity surrounding
- the prize had pushed the book into numerous reprints. Not only
- that, it was back on the New York Times Best Sellers list as well,
- 44
- sitting at number eight, for the third week in a row.
- Which is why, at a time when Diana should have been writing,
- she had been sucked instead back into book-promotion
- mode. She had left her desk and was on her way to shower
- when the phone rang again.
- "It's me," Megan Wright announced. Megan was a publicist
- working for Diana's New York publisher, Sterling, Moffit, and
- Dodd. She was young--not more than twenty-five--but she was
- businesslike on the phone and brimmed with a kind of boundless
- energy and enthusiasm that suited her for the job.
- "I'm calling with your weekend's marching orders," Megan
- continued. "I just wanted to double-check the schedule."
- Obligingly, Diana hauled out her calendar and opened it to
- the proper page.
- "First there's the University of Arizona Faculty Wives Tea
- this afternoon at two o'clock."
- "I know," Diana observed dryly. "As a matter of fact, I was
- on my way into the bathroom to shower and dress when the
- phone rang."
- "I'll hurry," Megan said. "And then there are the two appointments
- 45
- for tomorrow. I'm sorry about filling up your Saturday,
- but I didn't have any choice. Tomorrow's the only time I
- could schedule the Monty Lazarus interview. Don't forget, he's
- the West Coast stringer for several different magazines, so it's
- an important interview. My guess is he'll be pitching the story
- to all of them."
- "Where's that interview?" Diana asked. "I wrote down his
- name but not where I'm supposed to meet him."
- "In the lobby of the La Paloma Hotel at noon. I don't have
- either an address or a map. Can you find it, or will you need
- a driver?"
- Tucson may have been totally foreign territory to Megan, but
- Diana had lived in the Tucson area for more than thirty years.
- "Noon, La Paloma," Diana repeated as she jotted the words into
- the correct slot on the calendar under the name, "Monty
- Lazarus."
- U J.A. JANCE
- "And don't worry about a driver," Diana continued. "Believe
- me, I can find La Paloma on my own."
- "Mr. Lazarus likes to take his own pictures, so you'll need
- 46
- to go prepared for a photo shoot. I warned him that he'll have
- to finish up no later than four, though, so you'll have time
- enough to get back home, change, and be at the El Dorado
- Country Club for the Friends of the Library banquet at six. Mrs.
- Durgan, your hostess for that event, called just a few minutes
- ago to make sure your husband will be attending. She wanted
- to know if she should reserve a place at the head table. Brandon
- is going, isn't he?"
- "He'll be there," Diana said grimly. "If he isn't, I'll know
- the reason why."
- "Good," Megan said, sounding relieved. "I told her I was
- pretty sure he was planning to attend."
- When the phone call finally ended, Diana headed for the
- shower once more. On her way through the bedroom, she found
- Brandon sound asleep on the bed. She tiptoed by without waking
- him. No doubt he needed it. He barely slept at night these
- days, passing the nighttime hours prowling the house or pacing
- out on the patio. The midday naps he took between woodcutting
- shirts were pretty much the only decent rest he seemed to get.
- Closing the door between the bathroom and bedroom, she
- 47
- undressed and then stood in front of the mirror, observing her
- reflection. She wasn't that bad looking for being a couple of
- years over the half-century mark. The face and body reflected
- back at her bore an amazing resemblance to what her mother,
- lona Dade Cooper, had looked like just before she got so sick.
- In the past few years Diana had put on some weight, especially
- around the hips. Her softly curling auburn hair had two
- distinct streaks of white flowing away from either temple. But
- her skin was still good, and with the help of a little makeup
- she'd look all right, not only for today's afternoon tea, but also
- for the photo shoot and banquet tomorrow.
- Stepping into the shower, though, she was still chewing on
- what was going on between Brandon and her. It was too bad
- that if she was going to win some big prize that it had to be for
- Shadow of Death, a book Brandon had never wanted her to write
- in the first place. Not only that, it was unfortunate that what
- should have been her finest hour, the pinnacle of a writing career
- KISS OF THE BEES 23
- that spanned more than twenty years, should come at a time
- when Brandon, after being tossed out of office, was at his very
- 48
- lowest ebb.
- The last month and a half, in fact, had been pure hell. She
- and Brandon had been at one another's throats ever since the
- engraved invitation had arrived, summoning them both to the
- awards festivities in New York.
- Brandon had backed away from the gold-embossed envelope
- with both their names on it as though that rectangular piece of
- paper were a coiled rattlesnake.
- "No way1" he had declared. "No way in hell1 I'm not going
- to New York for that, not in a million years^"
- "Why not? It'll be fun."
- "For you, maybe. People are interested in you; they want to
- meet you. And while you're busy talking, someone will turn to
- me and say, 'What is it you do, Mr. Walker? Are you a writer,
- too?' And when I tell them I used to be sheriff but I don't do
- anything anymore, their eyes will glaze over and pretty soon
- they'll wander away. It's a ball doing that. I love it."
- Diana had winced at the sarcasm in his voice, but she also
- knew the perils of playing second banana. She had felt the same
- way about attending political gatherings--the rubber-chicken
- 49
- luncheons and living room campaign coffee hours--back when
- Brandon had been a candidate for public office. But she had
- gone. She had kept her mouth shut, she had put on her good
- clothes and company manners, and she had gone. She had served
- as the proper political wife and had behaved the way political
- wives the world over are expected to behave.
- Part of what had made that easy to do was the fact that she
- had believed so strongly in what Brandon Walker stood for. She
- had backed his plans for cleaning up the sheriffs department,
- for getting rid of the crooks and putting an end to the graft
- and corruption.
- To be fair, back when she was first published, he had been
- there for her, as well. Those first few book tours when he had
- sometimes been able to join her for a few days at a time had
- been a ball. Back then, his going to functions with her had been
- easier for him because he had been more sure of his own place
- in the scheme of things. The ego damage associated with losing
- the election--from being booted out of a job he loved--seemed
- ll, J.A. JANCE
- to have knocked the emotional pins out from under him. It was
- 50
- almost as though there had been a death in the family, and the
- grieving process had left him lost and directionless.
- But to Diana's way of thinking, the main problem with the Pulitzer and everything
- associated with it was that the accolades were all coming to Diana over Shadow of
- Death, a book Brandon
- Walker had opposed from the very beginning.
- "Don't bring all that stuff up again," he had warned her on
- the day Andrew Carlisle's letter had arrived from the Arizona
- State Prison. "Let sleeping dogs lie."
- But she hadn't followed his advice. She had gone ahead and
- written the book anyway. And now, based on that, Diana Ladd
- Walker's stock had shot way up in the world of publishing.
- Sandy Hawkins, Diana's editor at Sterling, Moffit, and Dodd,
- was downright ecstatic. Requests for interviews and public appearances
- were flowing in. Meanwhile, Diana's marriage was in
- the toilet.
- She and Brandon had argued bitterly over the trip to New
- York, with him citing any number of plausible but nonetheless
- phony excuses for not going. He didn't have a tux. With only
- one of them working, he couldn't see squandering all that money
- on his airfare. He hated being locked up in an airplane seat
- 51
- without enough room for his long legs. Most of all, in his opinion,
- Lani shouldn't be left home on her own, not with the endof-school
- party season heating up.
- "Why don't you say what you mean?" an exasperated Diana
- had demanded finally when she tired of arguing. "Why don't
- you just admit it? You don't want to go."
- Brandon complied at once. "You're right," he had said. "I
- don't want to go."
- "Finel" Diana had stormed. "Suit yourself, but one of these
- days you're going to have to get over it, Brandon. One of these
- days you're going to have to realize that losing that election was
- not the end of the world."
- She regretted her outburst almost immediately, but she had
- retreated to her office without an apology while Brandon had
- made tracks for his damned woodpile. And two weeks later,
- when Diana Ladd Walker flew off to New York, she had done
- so alone, with the quarrel between them still unresolved. A
- KISS OF THE BEES 25
- month and a half later, his role as "author consort" was still a
- bone of contention.
- 52
- When the invitation came for her to speak at the annual
- Friends of the Library banquet, there had been yet another firefight.
- This time, though, Diana had dug in her heels.
- "Look," she had told him. "I can see your not going to the
- faculty tea. If I could get out of that one myself, I would. But
- the library banquet is something for the whole community, the
- community that elected you to office for sixteen years. People
- expect you to be there. I expect you to be there. We're married,
- Brandon. I don't want to spend my life out in public as one of
- those married singles."
- "But I hate all that crap," he argued. "I hate standing around
- with a drink in my hand, looking like a sap, and listening to
- some little old lady talk about something I've never heard of."
- "Get over it," Diana had snapped back at him. "If you were
- tough enough to face down armed crooks in your day, you ought
- to be able to stand up to any little old lady in the land."
- Stepping out of the shower, Diana stood toweling her hair
- dry. Suddenly, out of nowhere, something her mother had told
- her once came back to her as clearly as if she had heard the
- words yesterday instead of thirty years earlier.
- 53
- lona Dade Cooper had been at home in Joseph, Oregon,
- dying of cancer. Diana, away at school at the University of Oregon
- in Eugene, had finally been forced to drop out temporarily
- to care for her. Diana had been sitting in the chair next to her
- mother's bed telling of her secret ambition not only to marry
- Garrison Ladd but also to become a writer.
- "You can't have it all, you know," lona had said quietly. "If
- you try to do too much, something is bound to suffer."
- Standing in the bathroom thirty years later, Diana had to
- swallow a sudden lump in her throat. She remembered arguing
- the point with her mother back then, telling lona passionately
- exactly how wrong she was.
- "These are the sixties," Diana had said with the absolute
- conviction of a know-it-all twenty-one-year-old. "Women are
- moving into their own now, Mother. Everything is possible,
- you'll see."
- lona Dade Cooper had died a few months later without
- seeing anything of the kind. And Diana, now several years older
- Z6 J.A. JANCE
- than her mother had lived to be, was forced to acknowledge
- 54
- that lona's assessment was one hundred percent accurate.
- Mom, you were right, after all, Diana Cooper Ladd Walker
- admitted to herself. You really can't have it all.
- 2
- low in that long ago time the earth--jeweth--was not yet firm
- and still as it is today. It was shaking and quivering all the time.
- That made it hard for the four to travel. So Earth Medicine Man--
- Jeweth Mahkai--threw himself down and stopped the shaking of
- the earth. And that was the first land.
- But the land was floating around in separate pieces. So Earth
- Medicine Man called to the Spider Men. Totkihhud O'othham
- came out of the floating ground and went all over the world spinning
- their webs and tying the pieces of earth together. And that is how
- we have it today--land and water.
- Then I'itoi wanted to find the center of the earth. So he sent
- Coyote toward the south and Big Black Beetle to the north. He said
- they must go as fast and as far as they could and then return to him.
- Bitokoi--Big Black Beetle--was back quite a while before
- Ban--Coyote--returned. In this way I'itoi knew that he had not
- yet found the center of the earth.
- 55
- Then Spirit of Goodness took Bitokoi and Ban a little farther
- south and sent them off once more. Again Big Black Beetle came
- back before Coyote, so I'itoi moved still farther toward the south.
- On the fourth try Bitokoi and Coyote came back to I'itoi at
- exactly the same time. In that way Elder Brother knew he was
- exactly in the center of the world. Because the Spirit of Goodness
- should be the center of all things, this was where I'itoi wished to be.
- And this center of all things where Elder Brother lives is called
- 28 J.A. JANCE
- Tohono O'othhani Jeweth, which means Land of the Desert
- People.
- Mitch Johnson waited on the hill, watching and sketching,
- until Brandon Walker went inside around ten-thirty. By then he
- had several interesting thumbnail drawings--color studies--that
- he'd be able to produce if anyone ever questioned his reason for
- being there.
- "You see, Mitch," Andy had told him years ago, "you always
- have to have some logical and defensible reason for being where
- you are and for doing whatever it is that you're supposedly
- doing. It's a kind of protective coloration, and it works the same
- 56
- way that the patterns on a rattlesnake's back allow it to blend
- into the rocks and shadows of the land it inhabits.
- "The mask that allowed me to do that was writing. Writing
- takes research, you see. Calling something research gave me a
- ticket into places most people never have an opportunity to go.
- Drawing can do the same for you. You're lucky in that you have
- some innate ability, although, if I were you, I'd use some of the
- excess time we both seem to have at the moment to improve
- on those skills. You'll be surprised how doing so will stand you
- in good stead."
- That was advice Mitch Johnson had been happy to follow,
- and he had carried it far beyond the scope of Andy's somewhat
- limited vision. Claiming to be an artist had made it possible to
- park his RV--a cumbersome and nearly new Bounder--on a
- patch of desert just off Coleman Road within miles of where
- Andrew Carlisle had estimated it would most likely be needed.
- The rancher he had made arrangements with had been more
- than happy to have six months' rent in advance and in cash,
- with the only stipulation being that Mitch keep the gate closed
- and locked.
- 57
- "No problem," Mitch had told the guy. "I'm looking for
- privacy. Keeping the gate locked will be as much of a favor to
- me as it is for you."
- And so, Mitch Johnson--after sorting through his catalog of
- fake IDs, took up residence on an electricity-equipped corner of
- the Lazy 4 Ranch under the name of M. Vega, artist. He was
- there, he told his landlord, to paint the same scenes over and
- KISS OF THE BEES 29
- over, in all their tiny variations through the changing seasons of
- the year.
- The Bounder had been parked on the ranch for two months
- now. Long enough for locals to accept that he was there. He
- worried sometimes that he might possibly run into someone who
- had known him before, in that old life, so he mostly stayed away
- from the trading post and did all his shopping--including buying
- periodic canisters of butane--at stores on the far northeast side of town.
- And that's where he headed that particular morning--to
- Tucson. If he was going to have company for a day or two,
- he needed to have plenty of supplies laid in--extra food and
- 58
- water both.
- "It's a good plan, Mitch," Andy had told him. "My part is
- to make sure you have everything you need to pull it off and
- to get away afterward. Yours is to follow that plan and make
- it work."
- When Andy's voice came to him out of the blue like that,
- so clearly and purposefully, it was hard to remember the man
- was dead. It took Mitch back to countless nighttime conversations
- when their quiet voices had flowed back and forth in the
- noisy privacy of their prison cell. That was when and where they
- had first crafted the plan and where they had refined it.
- And now, putting that long-awaited plan into action, Mitch
- Johnson felt honor-bound to do it right. The emotional turmoil
- about to be visited upon Brandon and Diana Walker's complacent
- lives would make a fitting memorial for Andy Carlisle, the
- only real friend Mitch had ever had. It would mean far more
- than any marble slab Mitch might have had erected in a
- cemetery.
- Sitting up on the mountain, watching Brandon Walker labor
- over his wood, Mitch wished it would be possible to burn it up,
- 59
- to turn all that carefully stacked wood into a spectacularly blazing
- inferno. But even as the thought passed through his mind,
- Mitch dismissed it. Doing that would be too much like firing a
- warning shot across a ship's bow.
- Brandon Walker deserved no such advance notice from Mitch
- Johnson, and Diana Ladd wouldn't be getting one from Andy,
- either. One day their lives would be going along swimmingly,
- and the next day everything would turn to shit. That was one
- 30 J.A. JANCE
- of the basic realities of life--something that happened to everyone
- sooner or later.
- The last time Mitch saw Andrew Carlisle had been some
- eight months earlier. The man was too weak to walk by then,
- so the guard had brought him back to the cell in a wheelchair.
- "Here's some company for you, Johnson," the guard said,
- opening the barred door and shoving the chair into the cell.
- "We've got so many cases of flu in the infirmary right now, the
- doc thought he might be better off here than there. Can you
- handle it?"
- "It's not exactly news," Mitch told the guard. "Of course I
- 60
- can handle it."
- The guard had left the wheelchair just inside the door. Mitch
- had pushed it over next to the bunk and lifted Carlisle out of
- the chair and onto the narrow bed. Illness had ravaged his body
- so there was very little left of him. He couldn't have weighed
- more than a hundred and twenty pounds.
- "I hear you're getting out," Carlisle croaked. "Congratulations."
- Mitch shook his head. It was difficult for him to speak. He
- hadn't expected that he and Andy would become friends, but
- over the years they had. Now he felt a sudden sense of grief at
- the prospect of losing that friend not just to Mitch's own release,
- but also to death. Andrew Carlisle was clearly a dying man.
- "When do you leave?" Andy asked.
- "Tomorrow," Mitch said. "I'm sorry," he added. "Sorry to
- leave you alone after all this time."
- "Oh, no," Andy told him. "Don't be sorry about leaving. I'll
- be out, too, before very long. They gave me two consecutive
- life sentences, but I'm going to fool the bastards. I'm only going
- to serve one.
- Mitch laughed at that. One of the things he had always enjoyed
- 61
- was Andy's black humor.
- "As for leaving me alone," Andy added cheerfully, "I spend
- so much time in the infirmary anymore that it hardly matters.
- Besides, the sooner I go, the sooner you'll be able to get our
- little job done and get on with your own life."
- They were both quiet for a long time after that. Mitch was
- thinking about Andy's veiled reference to his trust fund monies.
- KISS OF THE BEES 51
- Maybe Andy was, too. Andrew Carlisle was the one who broke
- the silence.
- "You will keep your end of the bargain, won't you, Mitch?"
- The voice was soft and pleading. The two men had lived side
- by side, sharing the same cell, for seven and a half years. In all
- that time, through years of terrible illness and unremitting pain,
- Mitch Johnson had never heard the man beg.
- "Yes, Andy," Mitch answered quietly. "I gave you my word,
- and I intend to keep it."
- "Thank you," Andrew Carlisle said. "So will I."
- Mitch Johnson had known from the beginning that Andrew
- Carlisle was HIV positive, since that day in 1988 when Warden
- 62
- Clint Howell had called him into his office, sat him down in a
- chair, and offered him a cup of coffee. Inmates didn't usually
- merit that kind of hospitality, but Johnson had brains enough
- not to question it aloud.
- "We've got a little problem here," Howell said, leaning back
- in his chair.
- More than one, Mitch thought, but again he said nothing.
- "It's one I think maybe you can help us with," Howell
- continued.
- The indiscriminate use of the words "we" and "us" reminded
- Mitch of his first grade teacher, Mrs. Wiggins, back
- home in El Paso, Texas.
- "What's that?" Mitch asked, keeping his tone interested but
- properly deferential.
- "One of our inmates has just been diagnosed HIV positive,"
- Howell told him. "He wants you to be his cellmate."
- "Like hell he doesT' Mitch returned. "I'm not going anywhere
- near him."
- "Please, Johnson," Howell pleaded. "Hear me out. He's specifically
- asked for you, but only if you're willing."
- 63
- "Well, I'm not. Can I go now?"
- "No, you can't. We're too overcrowded here for him to be
- left in a cell by himself, and if I put more than one HIV-positive
- prisoner in the same cell, then those damned bleeding-heart lawyers
- will be all over me like flies on shit. Cruel and unusual
- punishment and all that crap."
- 32 J.A. JANCE
- "What about cruel and unusual punishment for me?" Johnson
- asked.
- "Do me a favor," Howell said. "Talk to him here in my
- office. I'll have him brought in, and the two of you can discuss
- the situation. After that, you decide. Wait right here."
- Moments later, a guard led Andrew Carlisle into the room.
- Johnson had never met him before, but as soon as he saw the
- blind man with his one bad arm in a permanent sling, he knew
- who it was. Andrew Carlisle was legendary in Florence for being
- the best jailhouse lawyer in the joint. Other people had to look
- up the points of law and read them to him aloud, but when it
- came to writing up paperwork, no one could top him.
- "Hello, Mr. Johnson," Carlisle said, as the door closed behind
- 64
- the departing guard.
- "I won't do it," Mitch said. "Go fuck yourself."
- "We're not here to discuss sexual gratification, Mr. Johnson.
- I asked for you specifically because I have a business proposition
- which I believe will be of some interest to you. I believe I can
- offer you something that you want."
- "What's that?" Mitch Johnson asked.
- "An education, for one thing," Andrew Carlisle answered
- calmly. "And revenge, for another."
- "Revenge?"
- "Against Sheriff Brandon Walker and his wife, Diana."
- A brief silence followed that statement. Mitch was taken
- aback. He hadn't made a secret of his long-simmering hatred of
- Brandon Walker. The case against Mitch Johnson had been built
- by Walker while he was still an ambitious homicide detective in
- the Pima County Sheriff's Department. Sending Mitch Johnson
- to prison had made Walker's reputation in the local Hispanic
- community.
- For twenty-some years Sheriff Jack DuShane's political machine
- had called the shots. Anglos killed Mexicans and Indians
- 65
- with relative impunity. The way cases were investigated dictated
- how they were prosecuted as well. More often than not, Anglos--especially
- ones who could afford to pay the freight--got
- offc()r were charged with reduced offenses. Non-Anglos usually
- ' couldn't afford the bribes.
- The tide had started to turn with Andrew Carlisle's second
- trial. Everybody knew by then that the former professor had
- KISS OF THE BEES 33
- gotten away with murdering the drunk Indian girl, but there was
- nothing anyone could do about it. Except maybe use him as an
- example. A year later, when DuShane tried to intervene on
- Mitch Johnson's behalf, Walker had blown the whistle on all of
- it. In the process of shipping Mitch Johnson off to prison for
- fifteen years to life, Walker had won himself a reputation as a
- crusading and even-handed lawman. When the next election
- came around, he won office in a landslide, collecting an astonishing
- eighty percent of the county's non-Anglo vote in the
- process.
- "Who told you about that?" Mitch asked finally.
- Carlisle smiled. "I make it my business to know what goes
- 66
- on in this place. I've been keeping track of you for years, for as
- long as you've been here. From everything I've been able to
- learn about you, I'd say you're a very smart man--smart enough
- to know a good deal when you see one."
- "What kind of a deal?"
- "I may be a prisoner here," Carlisle said, "but I'm also relatively
- well off. I inherited my father's entire estate, you see. And
- since I'm not using any of the money--interest or principal--it's
- accruing at an amazing rate. I can show you the figures if you
- want. When I die, I can either leave the whole thing to charity
- or I can leave it to you."
- "Why would you give any of it to me?"
- "Because I think you'll agree to my terms."
- "Which are?"
- "Number one, that you agree to be my cellmate for the
- remainder of whatever time we both have here together."
- "And number two?"
- "You become my star pupil. I'm a teacher, you see, not only
- by training, but also by virtue of personal preference. I have a
- good deal of knowledge that I would like to impart to someone
- 67
- before I die, a philosophical legacy in addition to the monetary
- one. Then, once I've taught you what I know, you go out into
- the world and use that knowledge on the two people who are
- responsible for sending us both here."
- "What exactly do you mean?"
- Carlisle sighed. "Don't be obtuse, Mr. Johnson. Brandon
- Walker and his wife, Diana. Walker cost you your wife, your
- son, and your standing in the community. The woman who is
- % J.A. JANCE
- now Walker's wife, Diana Ladd Walker, is responsible for the loss of both my sight
- and the use of one of my arms. Once I was locked up in here, I eventually contracted
- AIDS, so before
- long, she'll be costing me my life as well. I don't see how it
- could be any clearer than that. I want them to suffer, in the
- same way you and I are suffering."
- "You want me to kill them?"
- "Oh, no, Mr. Johnson. Not at all. I firmly believe that between
- the two of us, we'll be able to devise something much
- better than that, something far more imaginative."
- "What's number three?"
- "There is no number three, Mr. Johnson. Only numbers one
- 68
- and two. What do you think, or would you like to see some of
- the accounting figures before you make your decision? I can
- show you what's involved right now, although there's no way
- to tell how much money there will be in the long run. Obviously
- we have no idea how long this will take, do we?"
- Again there was a long silence. "This is on the level?" Mitch
- asked finally.
- "Absolutely," Carlisle answered. "I could hardly be more
- serious."
- "That's all?"
- "Yes."
- "Then, Mr. Carlisle," Mitch Johnson said, "you've got yourself
- a deal."
- What had started out way back then as a straight business
- deal had become for Mitch both a point of honor and pride. By
- the time he completed the project it would seem to all the world
- that Andrew Carlisle had somehow returned from the grave to
- wreak his revenge on the people who had destroyed him. It
- would give Andy the kind of immortality he had always craved
- in life.
- 69
- In the meantime, Mitch Johnson would be left alone, free to
- walk off into the sunset and disappear. That kind of heroic image
- appealed to Mitch. It was one of the time-honored icons of the
- Old West.
- He had no difficulty casting himself in the mold of one of
- those old-fashioned hired guns. None of them would ever have
- turned their backs on a friend in need, regardless of whether
- that needy friend happened to be dead or alive.
- KISS OF THE BEES 35
- Neither would Mitch Johnson. After all, a promise is a promise
- unless, as in this case, it turned into a mission.
- Gabe Ortiz, tribal chairman of the Tohono O'othham Nation,
- left Sells early in the morning for an all-day meeting with the
- Pima County Board of Supervisors. At issue was the county's
- most recent set of requirements designed to delay the next
- scheduled expansion of the tribe's booming casino. Gabe's appearance
- would be more ceremonial than anything, since most
- of the actual arguing would be handled by Delia Chavez Cachora,
- the recently appointed tribal attorney.
- Gabe's main responsibility would be to sit there looking attentive
- 70
- and interested, which might prove difficult in view of
- the fact that he'd had so little sleep the night before. It was
- times like this when the countervailing pressures of. being both
- tribal chairman and medicine man proved to be almost more
- than he could handle.
- Before the blind medicine man, S-ab Neid Pi Has--Looks At
- Nothing--had died, years earlier, the canny old shaman had
- taught Gabe "Fat Crack" Ortiz a number of important things,
- including the meaning of those particular words, medicine
- man--mahkai. Looks At Nothing had explained the obligations
- involved as well.
- As a confirmed Christian Scientist, Gabe initially had been
- prepared to pass off most of what the old man said as superstitious
- nonsense. As the months went by, however, Looks At
- Nothing had taught Fat Crack to listen to the voice inside himself,
- to pay attention, and then to act on the resulting knowledge.
- It was through using what Looks At Nothing taught him that
- Gabe's business and political ambitions had prospered. Most of
- the time the guidance that came to him was in the form of a
- gentle nudge, but in the case of Diana Ladd's book, it had been
- 71
- more like the blow of a hammer.
- Wanda had bought him a copy of Shadow of Death at a booksigning
- in town. Diana had autographed it, wishing Gabe a
- happy birthday in her personalized inscription. And then Wanda
- had taken the gift-wrapped book home and kept it put away
- until Gabe's sixty-fifth birthday.
- She had given it to him at small family birthday party at
- their daughter's home in Tucson. As soon as Gabe held the book
- 36 J.A. JANCE
- in his hand, even before he unwrapped it, he knew something
- was wrong. Something evil seemed to pulsate from inside the
- gaily wrapped package. Breaking the ribbon and tearing off the
- paper, a sense of dread seemed to fill the whole room, blurring
- the smiling faces of his children and grandchildren, obscuring
- Wanda's loving, watchful eyes.
- "Diana signed it for you," Wanda said.
- Gabe fumbled the book open to the title page and read the
- words that were written there in vivid red ink. "Gabe," the
- inscription said. "Happy Birthday. Here's a piece of our mutual
- history. I hope you enjoy it. Diana Ladd Walker."
- 72
- "Do you like it?" Wanda asked.
- "Yes." Gabe managed a weak smile, but as soon as possible,
- he put the book down. When the party was over and as he and
- Wanda were getting ready to leave, the grandkids had gathered
- up the presents and what was left of the birthday cake for
- Wanda and Gabe to take back home to Sells with them. Fiveyear-old
- Rita, the baby, had come racing to the door carrying
- the book. Afraid that whatever evil lurked in the book might
- somehow infect her, Gabe had reached down and snatched it
- from her hand.
- Tears welled in her eyes. "I only wanted to carry it," she
- pouted. "I wouldn't drop it or anything. I like books."
- "I know, baby," he said, bending over and giving the child
- a hug. "But this one is very special. Let me carry it, okay?"
- "Okay," she sniffed. "Can I carry your hat then?"
- For an answer, Gabe had put his huge black Stetson on her
- head. It had engulfed the child, falling down over her eyes, covering
- everything down to her lips, which suddenly burst into a
- wide grin.
- "I can't see anything," she said.
- 73
- "That's all right," Gabe had said, reaching out and taking
- her hand. "I'll lead you to the car."
- "What's wrong?" Wanda asked, once they were in the Ford.
- "You got mad at Rita for just touching the book."
- "I wasn't mad," Gabe returned, although his protest was
- useless. After all their years together, Wanda knew him far too
- well for him to be able to get away with lying.
- "It's the book," he said. "It's dangerous. I didn't want her
- near it."
- KISS OF THE BEES 37
- "How can a book be dangerous?" Wanda asked. "Rita's just
- a little girl. She can't even read."
- Gabe did not want to argue. "It just is," he said.
- "So what are you going to do?" Wanda asked. "Take the
- book to some other medicine man and have him shake a few
- feathers at it?"
- With that, Wanda had squeezed her broad form against the
- door on the far side of the car. She had sat there with her arms
- crossed, staring out the window in moody silence as they started
- the sixty-mile drive back to Sells. It wasn't a good way to end
- 74
- a birthday party.
- Looks At Nothing had taught Gabe Ortiz the importance of
- understanding something before taking any action. And so, in
- the week following the party, he had read the book, Shadow of
- Death, from cover to cover. It was slow going. In order to read
- it he had to hold it, and doing that necessitated overcoming his
- own revulsion. It reminded him of that long-ago day, when, as
- a curious child, he had reached into his Aunt Rita's medicine
- basket and touched the ancient scalp bundle she kept there.
- Ni-thahth Rita had warned him then about the dangers of
- Enemy Sickness. Told him that by not showing proper respect
- for a scalp bundle he could bring down a curse on her--as the
- scalp bundle's owner--or on some member of her family. She
- had told him how Enemy Sickness caused terrible pains in the
- belly or blood in the urine, and how only a medicine man trained
- in the art of war chants could cure a patient suffering from that
- kind of illness.
- It was late when Fat Crack finally finished reading. Wanda
- had long since fallen asleep but Gabe knew sleep would be impossible
- for him. He had stolen outside, and sat there on a chair
- 75
- in their ocotillo-walled, dirt-floored ramada. It was early summer.
- June. The month the Tohono O'othham call Hahshani Bahithag
- Mashath--saguaro-ripening month. Although daytime
- temperatures in the parched Arizona desert had already spiraled
- into triple digits, the nighttime air was chilly. But that long
- Thursday night, it was more than temperature that made Gabe
- Ortiz shiver.
- It was true, he had known much of the story. In the late
- sixties, his cousin, Gina Antone, his Aunt Rita's only grandchild,
- had been murdered by a man named Andrew Carlisle. Diana
- 38 J.A. JANCE
- Ladd, then a teacher on the reservation, had been instrumental
- in seeing that the killer, a once well-respected professor of creative
- writing at the university, had been sent to prison for the
- murder. Six years later, when the killer got out and came back
- to Tucson seeking revenge, he had come within minutes of killing
- both women--Diana Ladd and Rita Antone--and Diana's
- son, Davy, as well.
- That much of the story Gabe already knew. The rest of it--
- Andrew Carlisle's childhood and Diana's, the various twists of
- 76
- fate that had put their two separate lives on a collision course--
- were things Fat Crack Ortiz learned only as he read Diana's
- book. Knowing those details as well as the background on Andrew
- Carlisle's other victims made Fat Crack feel worse instead
- of better. Nothing he read, including the knowledge that Andrew
- Carlisle had died of AIDS in the state penitentiary at Florence
- a few months earlier, did anything to dispel his terrible
- sense of foreboding about the book and the pain and suffering
- connected with it.
- Gabe Ortiz was a practical man, given to down-to-earth
- logic. For an hour or more he approached the problem of the
- book's danger through the teachings of Mary Baker Eddy. When,
- at the end of several hours of consideration he had made no
- progress, he walked back into the house. Careful not to disturb
- Wanda, he opened the bottom drawer of an old wooden teacher's
- desk he had salvaged from the school district trash heap.
- Inside one of the drawers he found Looks At Nothing's buckskin
- medicine pouch--the fringed huashomi--the old medicine man
- had worn until the day he died.
- In the years since a frail Looks At Nothing had bequeathed
- 77
- the pouch to Gabe, he had kept it stocked with sacred tobacco,
- picking it at the proper time, drying, storing, and rolling it in the
- proper way. Gabe had carefully followed the sacred traditions of
- the Peace Smoke, using it sparingly but to good effect, all the
- while hoping that one or the other of his two sons would show
- some interest in learning what the medicine man had left in
- Gabe's care and keeping. Unfortunately, his two boys, Richard
- and Leo, nearly middle-aged now, were far more interested in
- running their tow-truck/auto repair business and playing the guitar
- than they were in anything else.
- Back outside, seated on a white plastic chair rather than on
- KISS OF THE BEES 39
- the ground, as the wiry Looks At Nothing would have done,
- Gabe examined the contents of the bag--the medicine man's
- World War II vintage Zippo lighter and the cigarettes themselves.
- He had thought that he would light one of them and
- blow the smoke over the book, performing as he did so the
- sacred act of wustana, of blowing smoke with the hope of illuminating
- something. But sitting there, he realized that what was
- needed for wustana was a living, breathing patient. Here he had
- 78
- only an object, the book itself.
- Rather than waste the sacred smoke, Fat Crack Ortiz decided
- to try blowing from his heart instead. He remembered Looks At
- Nothing telling him once that the process was so simple that
- even an old woman could do it.
- Holding the book in his hands, he began the chant, repeating
- the verses four times just as he had been taught.
- I am blowing now to see what it is that lives here,
- What breathing thing lies hidden in this book.
- There is a spirit in here that sickens those around it,
- That is a danger to those around it.
- I want to see this strength so I will know what kind of thing it is.
- So I will know how to draw it out of where it is hiding
- And how to send it away to that other place,
- The place where the strength belongs.
- As Gabe did so, as he sang the words of the kuadk--observing
- the form and rhythms of the age-old chant of discernment,
- he began to figure it out. As time passed, he began to see the
- pattern. Without quite knowing how, he suddenly understood.
- The evil Ohb--Fat Crack's Aunt Rita's enemy--was back.
- 79
- The wicked Mil-gahn man who, twenty-one years earlier, had
- somehow become a modern-day reincarnation of an ancient
- tribal enemy, was coming once again. Somehow the dreaded
- Apache was about to step out of the pages of Diana Ladd Walker's
- book and reenter their lives.
- Gabe remembered reading in a newspaper article several
- months earlier that Andrew Carlisle was dead. That meant that
- if he was not coming in person, certainly the strength of the
- Ohb was coming, bringing danger to all of those people still alive
- who had once been connected with Diana Ladd and with Rita
- 40 LA. JANCE
- Antone--the woman Gabe called Ni-thahth, his mother's elder
- sister--in that other, long-ago battle. The fact that Carlisle was
- dead meant nothing. His spirit was still alive, still restless, and
- still bent on revenge.
- Time passed. When Gabe at last emerged from his selfinduced
- trance, the stars were growing pale in a slowly graying
- sky. Stiffly, Gabe Ortiz eased his cramped body out of the uncomfortable
- plastic chair. Before going back into the house to
- 80
- grab a few hours of sleep, he limped out to where the cars were
- parked and put both Looks At Nothing's deerskin pouch and
- Diana Ladd's offending book in the glove compartment of the
- tribal chairman's Ford sedan.
- Once, long ago, when Looks At Nothing had first told him
- that Gabe had the power to be a great shaman, Gabe had teased
- the Gohhim O'othham--Old Man. He had laughed off the medicine
- man's prediction that one day Fat Crack, too, would be a
- great mahkai--a medicine man with a tow truck. That idea had
- struck him as too funny, especially since it came from a man
- who clung stubbornly to the old ways and who looked down on
- all things Anglo--with the single notable exception of that aging
- Zippo lighter.
- Looks At Nothing had much preferred walking to riding in
- a truck. Gabe wondered now what the old shaman would say if
- he knew his deerskin pouch and sacred tobacco would be riding
- to town the next day in a two-year-old Crown Victoria. Looks
- At Nothing would probably think it was funny, Gabe thought,
- and so did he.
- A few minutes later, still chuckling, he eased himself into
- 81
- bed. As he did so, Wanda stirred beside him.
- "It's late," she complained. "You've been up all night."
- "Yes," Gabe said, rolling his heavy body next to hers, and
- resting one of his hands on her shoulder. "But at least now I
- can sleep."
- The sentence ended with a contented snore. Within minutes,
- Wanda fell asleep once more as well.
- Lani had told the man that she would be late for work if
- she arrived any later than seven. That wasn't entirely true. The
- first two hours she spent at the museum each day, from seven
- to nine, were strictly voluntary. She went around on the meanKISS OF THE BEES 41
- dering paths, armed with a trash bag and sharp-pronged stick,
- picking up the garbage that had been left behind by the previous
- day's visitors.
- During those two hours, doing mindless work, she was able
- to watch the animals from time to time and simply to be there
- with them. Working by herself, without the necessity of talking
- with anyone else, she remembered the times she had come here
- with Nana Dahd and with her brother Davy.
- Nana Dahd. Dahd itself implies nothing more than the somewhat
- 82
- distant relationship of godmother, but for Davy and Lani
- both, Rita Antone had been much more than that. Diana Ladd
- Walker may have owned the official title of "Mother" in the
- family, but she had come in only a distant second behind the
- Indian woman who had actually filled the role.
- Ambitious and forever concentrating on her work, there was
- a part of Diana Ladd Walker that was always separate from both
- her children. While Diana labored over first a typewriter and
- later a computer, the child-rearing joys and responsibilities had
- fallen mainly on Rita's capable and loving shoulders.
- By the time Lani appeared on the scene, Davy was already
- eleven years old and Rita's health was becoming precarious. Had
- Davy not been there to pitch in and help out, no doubt it would
- have been impossible for Nana Dahd to look after a busily curious
- toddler. In a symbiotic relationship that made outsiders wonder,
- the three of them--the old woman, the boy, and the baby--
- had made do.
- Long after most males his age would have forsaken the company
- of women, Davy stayed around. He, more than anyone,
- understood what it was Nana Dahd was trying to do, and he
- 83
- was willing to help. Whenever he wasn't in school, he spent
- most of his waking hours helping the woman who had once
- been his baby-sitter care for his little sister.
- When the three of them were alone together in Rita's apartment--with
- the old woman in her wheelchair and with Lani on
- her lap while Davy did his homework at the kitchen table--it
- seemed as though they existed in a carefully preserved bubble
- that was somehow outside the confines of regular time and
- space.
- In that room they had spoken, laughed, and joked together,
- speaking solely in the softly guttural language of the Tohono
- 4Z J.A. JANCE
- O'othham. It was there Lani learned that Nana Dahd's childhood
- name had been E Waila Kakaichu, which means Dancing Quail.
- Rita Antone's dancing days were long since over, but Lani's were
- only beginning. The child danced constantly. Her favorite game
- consisted of standing in the middle of the room, twirling and
- pretending to be siwuliki--whirlwind. She would spin around
- and around until finally, losing her balance, she would fall laughing
- to the floor.
- 84
- Just as Rita had given Davy his Indian name of Olhoni--
- Little Orphaned Calf--Nana Dahd gave Lani a special Indian
- name as well, one that was known only to the three of them.
- In the privacy of Rita's apartment, the Tohono O'othham child
- with the Mil-gahn name of Dolores Lanita Walker became Mualig
- Siakam. Rita told Lani that the words mualig siakam meant
- Forever Spinning.
- There in Nana Dahd's room, working one stitch at a time,
- Rita taught Davy and Lani how to make baskets. Davy had been
- at it much longer, but Lani's tiny and surprisingly agile fingers
- soon surpassed her elder brother's clumsier efforts. When that
- happened, Davy Ladd gave up and stopped making baskets
- altogether.
- Rita taught Davy and Lani the old stories and the medicinal
- lore Rita had learned from her own grandmother, from Oks Amichuda--Understanding
- Woman. Had Rita been physically able,
- she would have taken her charges out into the desert to show them the plants and
- animals she wanted them to understand. Instead, the three of them spent hours almost
- every weekend at
- the Arizona Sonora Desert Museum, with Davy pushing Nana
- 85
- Dahd's chair along the gently graded paths and with Lani
- perched on the old woman's lap.
- For Rita, every display in the museum was part of her comprehensive
- classroom. As they went from one exhibit to another,
- Rita would point out the various plants and tell what each was
- good for and when it should be picked. And on those long afternoons,
- if it was still wintertime, so the snakes and lizards were
- unable to hear and swallow the storyteller's luck, Rita would
- tell stories.
- Each animal and plant came with its own traditional lore.
- Patiently, Nana Dahd told them all. Some tales explained the
- how of creation, like the spiders stitching together the floating
- KISS OF THE BEES 43
- pieces of earth. Others helped explain animal behavior, like the
- stories about how I'itoi taught the birds to build their nests or
- how he taught the gophers to dig their burrows underground.
- There were stories that did the same thing for plants, like the
- one about the courageous old woman who went south to rescue
- her grandson from the warlike Yaquis and was rewarded by
- being turned into the beautiful plant, the night-blooming cereus.
- 86
- And there were some, like the stories of how Cottontail and
- Quail both tricked Coyote, that were just for fun.
- As the children learned the various stories, Rita had encouraged
- them to observe the behavior of the animals involved and
- to consider how the story and the animal's natural inclination
- came together to form the basis of the story. What was observable
- and what was told combined to help the children learn to
- make sense of their world, just as those same stories had for the
- Tohono O'othham for thousands of years.
- Rita--her person, her stories, and her patient teaching--had
- formed the center of Lani Walker's existence from the moment
- the child first came to Gates Pass, from the time before she had
- any conscious memory. When Rita Antone died, the day before
- Lani's seventh birthday, a part of the child had died as well, but
- there on the paths of the museum the summer of her sixteenth
- year--wandering alone among the plants and animals that had
- populated Nana Dahd's stories, Lani was able to recapture those
- fading strains of stories from her childhood and breathe life into
- them anew.
- And each day at nine o'clock, when she finished up with one
- 87
- shift and had an hour to wait before the next one started, she
- would make sure she was near the door to the hummingbird
- enclosure. For it was there, of all the places in the museum,
- where she felt closest to Nana Dahd. This was where she and
- Davy had been with Rita on the day Lani Walker first remembered
- hearing Rita mention the story of Kulani O'oks--the great
- Medicine Woman of the Tohono O'othham.
- "Kulani," Lani had repeated, running the name over her
- tongue. "It sounds like my Mil-gahn name."
- And Rita's warm brown face had beamed down at her in a
- way that told Lani she had just learned something important.
- Nana Dahd nodded. "That is why, at the time of your adoption,
- I asked your parents to make Lani part of your English name.
- 44 J.A. JANCE
- Kulani O'oks and Mualig Siakam are two different names for
- the same person. And now that you are old enough to understand
- that, it is time that you heard that story as well."
- Whenever Lani Walker sat in the hummingbird enclosure,
- all those stories seemed to flow together. Kulani O'oks and Mualig
- Siakam were one and the same, and so were Dolores Lanita
- 88
- Walker and Clemencia Escalante.
- Four different people and four different names, but then
- Nana Dahd had always taught that all things in nature go in
- fours.
- Fat Crack and Wanda Ortiz, Rita Antone's nephew and his
- wife, had stopped by the Walker home in Gates Pass on their
- way home from Tucson that warm September day. Wanda
- Ortiz, after years of staying at home with three kids, had gone
- off to school and earned a degree in social work from the University
- of Arizona. Her case load focused on "at risk" children on
- the reservation, and she had ridden into town earlier that day
- in an ambulance, along with one of her young charges.
- "It's too bad," Wanda said, visiting easily with her husband's
- wheelchair-bound aunt in Diana Walker's spacious, basket-lined
- living room. "She has ant bites all over her body. The doctor
- says she may not make it."
- At seventy-one, Rita Antone could no longer walk, having
- lost her left leg--from the knee down--to diabetes. She spent
- her days mostly in the converted cook shack out behind Diana
- and Brandon Walker's house. The words "cook shack" hardly
- 89
- applied any longer. The place was cozy and snug. It had been
- recently renovated, making the whole thing--including a once
- tiny bathroom--wheelchair-accessible. Evenings Rita spent in
- the company of Diana and Brandon Walker or with Davy Ladd,
- the long-legged eleven-year-old she still sometimes called her
- little Olhoni.
- On that particular evening, Brandon had been out investigating
- a homicide case for the Pima County Sheriffs Department.
- Diana excused herself to go make coffee for the unexpected
- guests while Davy lay sprawled on the floor, doodling in a notebook
- and listening to the grown-ups talk rather than doing his
- homework. Rita sat nearby with her owij--her awl--and the beKISS OF THE BEES 45
- ginnings of a basket in hand. She frowned in concentration as a
- long strand of bear grass tried to escape its yucca bindings.
- "Ant bites?" Rita asked.
- Wanda Ortiz nodded. "She was staying with her great-grandmother
- down in Nolle. Her father's in jail and her mother ran
- off last spring. Over the summer, the other kids helped look
- after the little girl, but they're all back in school now. Yesterday
- afternoon, the grandmother fell asleep and the baby got out. She
- 90
- wandered into an ant bed, but her grandmother is so deaf, she
- didn't hear the baby screaming. The other kids from the village
- found her in the afternoon, after they came home on the bus.
- "Someone brought her into the hospital at Sells last night,
- but she's still so sick that this morning they transferred her to
- TMC. I came along to handle the paperwork. By the time I
- finished, the ambulance had already left, so Gabe came to get
- me."
- "How old is the baby?" Rita asked.
- "Fifteen months," Wanda answered.
- "And what will happen to her?"
- "We'll try to find another relative to take her, I guess. If
- not ..." Wanda Ortiz let the remainder of the sentence trail
- away unspoken.
- "If not what?" Rita asked sharply. It was a tone of voice
- Davy had seldom heard Nana Dahd use. He looked up from his
- drawing, wondering what was wrong.
- Wanda shrugged. "There's an orphanage up in Phoenix that
- takes children. If nobody else wants her, she might go there."
- "Whose orphanage?" As Rita asked the question, she pushed
- 91
- the awl into the rough beginning of her new basket and set her
- basket-making materials aside.
- "What do you mean, whose orphanage?" Wanda asked.
- "Who runs it?" Rita asked.
- "It's church-run," Wanda replied. "Baptist, I think. It's very
- nice. They only take Indian children there, not just Tohono
- O'othham children, but ones from lots of different tribes."
- "But who's in charge?" Rita insisted. "Indians or Anglos?"
- "Anglos, of course," Wanda said, "although they do have
- Indians on staff."
- Diana walked back into the living room carrying a tray. "Indians
- on staff where?" she asked as she distributed cups of cof-
- 46 J.A. JANCE
- fee. In view of the fact that Rita Antone made her home with s
- a Mil-gahn family, Wanda Ortiz was a little mystified at Rita's
- obvious opposition to the idea of Indian children being raised
- by Anglos. After all, Rita had raised Davy Ladd, hadn't she?
- "Running an orphanage for Indians," Wanda Ortiz told
- Diana. "We were talking about the little girl I brought to TMC |
- this morning. Once she's released, if we can't find a suitable
- 92
- relative to take care of her, she may end up in a Baptist orphan- a
- age up in Phoenix. They're really very good with children." ,?
- "Do they teach basket-making up there?" Rita asked, peering m
- at her nephew's wife. "And in the wintertime, do they sit
- around and tell I'itoi stories, or do they watch TV?"
- "Ni-thahth," Gabe objected, smiling and respectfully addressing
- his aunt in the formal Tohono O'othham manner used
- when referring to one's mother's older sister. "The children out
- on the reservation watch television, and those are kids who still
- live at home with their parents."
- "Someone should be teaching them the stories," Rita insisted
- stubbornly. "Someone who still remembers how to tell them."
- After that, the old woman lapsed into a moody silence. By
- then Rita Antone and Diana Ladd had lived together for almost
- a dozen years. Diana knew from the expression on the old woman's
- face that Rita was upset, and she quickly went about turning
- the conversation to less difficult topics. She wouldn't have mentioned
- it again, but once Gabe and Wanda left for Sells and after
- Davy had headed off to bed, Rita herself brought it up.
- "That baby is Hejel Wi i'thag," Rita Antone said softly. "She
- 93
- is Left Alone, just like me." Orphaned as a young child and
- then left widowed and with her only son dead in early middle
- age, Rita had been called Hejel Wi i'thag almost her whole life.
- "And if they take her to that orphanage in Phoenix," Rita
- continued fiercely, "she will come back a Baptist, not Tohono
- O'othham. She will be an outsider her whole life, again just
- like me."
- Diana could see that her friend was haunted by the specter
- of what might happen to this abandoned but unknown and unnamed
- child. "Don't worry," Diana said, hoping to comfort her.
- "Wanda said she was looking for someone--a blood relative--
- to take the baby. I'm sure she'll find someone who'll do it."
- KISS OF THE BEES V
- Rita Antone shook her grizzled head. "I don't think so,"
- she said.
- A week later, Fat Crack Ortiz was surprised when his Aunt
- Rita, who usually avoided using telephones, called him at his
- auto-repair shop at Sells.
- "Where is she?" Rita asked without preamble.
- "Where's who?" he asked.
- 94
- "The baby. The one who was kissed by Ali-chu'uchum O'othham--by
- the Little People, by the ants and wasps and bees."
- "It was ants, Ni-thahth," Fat Crack answered. "And she's
- still in the hospital in Tucson. She's supposed to get out tomorrow
- or the next day."
- "Who is going to take her?" Rita asked.
- "I'm not sure," Gabe hedged, even though he knew full well
- that Wanda's search for a suitable guardian for the child had so
- far come to nothing.
- Rita correctly interpreted Fat Crack's evasiveness. "I want
- her," Rita said flatly. "Give her to me."
- "But, Ni-thahth," Gabe objected. "After what already happened
- to that little girl, no one is going to be willing to hand
- her over to you."
- "Why?" Rita asked. "Because I'm too old?"
- "Yes," Fat Crack's answer was reluctant but truthful. "I suppose
- that's it. Once the tribal judge sees your age, she isn't going
- to look at anything else."
- Rita refused to take no for an answer. "Give her to Diana,
- then," she countered. "She and Brandon Walker are young
- 95
- enough to take her, but I would still be here to teach her the
- things she needs to know."
- Gabe hesitated to say what he knew to be true. "You don't
- understand. Diana and Brandon are Anglos, Rita. Mil-gahn.
- They're good friends of mine as well as friends of yours, but
- times have changed. No one does that anymore."
- "Does what?"
- "Approves those kinds of adoptions--adoptions outside the
- tribe."
- "You mean Anglos can't adopt Tohono O'othham children
- anymore?"
- "That's right," Gabe said. "And it's not just here. Tribal
- courts from all over the country are doing the same thing. They
- 48 J.A. JANCE
- say that being adopted by someone outside a tribe is bad for
- Indian children, that they don't learn their language or their
- culture."
- There was a long silence on the telephone line. For a moment
- or two Fat Crack wondered if perhaps something had gone
- wrong with the connection. "Even the tribal judge will see that
- 96
- living in a Baptist orphanage would be worse than living with
- us," Rita said at last. After that she said nothing more.
- Through the expanding silence in the earpiece Fat Crack understood that, from sixty
- miles away, he had been thoroughly outmaneuvered by his aunt. Anglo or not, living
- with the Walkers
- was probably far preferable to living in a group home.
- "I'll talk to Wanda," he agreed at last. "But that's all I'll
- do--talk. I'm not making any promises."
- Mitch Johnson drove to Smith's, a grocery store on the corner
- of Swan and Grant. Once there, he stood in the soft-drink
- aisle wondering what he should buy. With one hand in the
- pocket of his jacket, he held one of the several vials of scopolamine
- between his fingers--as if for luck--while he tried to decide
- what to do.
- What do girls that age like to drink early in the morning? he
- wondered. Sodas, most likely. He chose several different kinds--
- a six-pack of each. Maybe some kind of juice. He put two containers
- into his basket, one orange and one apple. And then, for
- good measure, he threw in a couple of cartons of chocolate milk
- as well. Andy had warned him against using something hot, like
- coffee or tea, for instance, for fear that the boiling hot liquid
- 97
- might somehow lessen the drug's impact.
- And it did have an impact. Mitch Johnson knew that from
- personal experience.
- One day in August of the previous year, Andrew Carlisle
- had returned from another brief stay in the prison infirmary
- holding a small glass container in his hand.
- "What's that?" Mitch had asked, thinking it was probably
- some new kind of medicine that would be used to treat Andrew
- Carlisle's constantly increasing catalog of ailments.
- "I've been wondering all this time exactly how you'd manage
- to make off with the girl. I think I've found the answer." Andy
- KISS OF THE BEES 49
- handed the glass with its colorless liquid contents over to Mitch.
- He opened it and took a sniff. It was odorless as well as colorless.
- "I still don't know what it is," he said.
- "Remember that article you were reading to me from the
- Wall Street Journal a few weeks ago? The one about the Burundianga
- Cocktail?"
- "That's what the drug dealers down in Colombia used to
- relieve that diplomat of his papers and his money?"
- 98
- Carlisle smiled. "That's the one," he said. "And here it is."
- Over the years, Andy had clearly demonstrated to Mitch that
- sufficient sums of money available outside the prison could account
- for any amount of illegal contraband inside.
- "Where did you get it?" Mitch asked.
- "I have my sources," Andy answered. "And you'll find plenty
- of it with your supplies once you're on the outside. It isn't a
- controlled substance, so there were no questions asked. But it
- made sense to me to make a single large buy rather than a series
- of small ones."
- "But how exactly does it work, and how much do I use?"
- "That's the sixty-four-thousand-dollar question, isn't it,"
- Andy had replied. ' 'There may be a certain amount of trial and
- error involved. You should use enough that she's tractable, but
- you don't want to use so much that she loses consciousness or
- even dies as a result of an overdose."
- "You're saying we should do a dry run?" Mitch asked.
- "Several dry runs might be better than just one."
- Mitch thought about that for a moment. Andy's health was
- so frail that he certainly couldn't risk taking anything out of
- 99
- the ordinary.
- "I guess I'd better be the guinea pig then," Mitch said. "No
- telling what a shot of this stuff would do to you."
- Andy nodded. "We won't give you that much," he said reassuringly.
- "Just enough to give you a little buzz so you'll know
- exactly what it feels like."
- "When should we do it?"
- "This afternoon. You'll have a soda break with a little
- added kick."
- That afternoon, at three o'clock, Mitch Johnson had served
- himself up a glass of scopolamine-laced Pepsi. They used only
- half the contents of that one-ounce bottle. From Mitch's point
- 50 J.A. JANCE
- of view, it seemed as though nothing at all happened. He didn't
- feel any particular loss of control. He remembered climbing up
- on the upper bunk and lying there, feeling hot and a little
- flushed, waiting for the effects of the drug to hit him. The next
- thing he noticed was how everything around him seemed to
- shrink. Mitch himself grew huge, while a guard walking the corridor
- looked like a tiny dwarf. When Mitch came to himself
- 100
- again, he was eating breakfast.
- "What happened to dinner?" he asked Andy irritably. "Did
- something happen and they skipped it?"
- "You ate it," Andrew Carlisle told him.
- ' 'The hell I did. I lay down here on the bed just a little while
- ago . . ." Mitch stopped short. "You mean dinner came and
- went, the whole night passed, and I don't remember any of it?"
- "That's right," Andy said. "This stuff packs a hell of a wallop,
- doesn't it? Since the girl is physically so much smaller than
- you are, you'll have to be careful not to give her too much. It
- makes you realize why some of those scopolamine-based cold
- medicines caution against using mechanical equipment, doesn't it?"
- They had been silent for some time after that. Mitch Johnson
- was stunned. Fifteen hours of his life had disappeared, leaving
- him no conscious memory of them.
- "Did I do or say anything stupid while I was out of it?"
- "Not stupid," Andy replied. "I found it interesting rather
- than stupid."
- "What do you mean?"
- "I've always wondered whether or not those three wetbacks
- 101
- were the first ones. And it turns out they weren't."
- Mitch shoved his tray aside. "What the hell do you mean?"
- "You know what I mean, Mitch. I'm talking about the girl.
- The 'gook,' I believe you called her. The one you raped and then
- blew to pieces with your AR-sixteen."
- Mitch Johnson paled. "I never told anyone about that," he
- whispered hoarsely. "Not anyone at all."
- "Well," Carlisle said with a shrug. "Now you've told me, but
- don't worry. After all, what are a few secrets between friends?"
- ]
- A,
- fter I'itoi found the center of the world, he began making men
- out of mud. BanCoyotewas standing there watching. I'itoi told
- Ban that he could help.
- Coyote worked with his back to I'itoi. As he made his men, he
- was laughing. Because the Spirit of Mischief is always with him,
- Coyote laughs at everything.
- After a while I'itoithe Spirit of Goodnessfinished making
- his mud men and turned to see why Coyote was laughing. He found
- that Ban had made all his men with only one leg. But still Coyote
- 102
- continued to laugh.
- At last, when they had made enough mud men, I'itoi told Coyote
- to listen to see which of all the mud men would be the first
- to speak.
- Ban waited and listened, but nothing happened. Finally he went
- to I'itoi and said, "The mud men are not talking."
- But I'itoi said, "Go back and listen again. Since the Spirit of
- Mischief is in your men, surely they will be the first to speak."
- And this was true. The first of the spirits to speak in the mud
- men was the Spirit of Mischief. For this reason, these men became
- the Ohb, the Apachesthe enemy. According to the legends of the
- Desert People, the Ohb have always been mean and full of mischief,
- just the way Coyote made them.
- When all the mud men were alive, I'itoi gathered them together
- and showed them where each tribe should live. The Apaches went
- 5Z J.A. JANCE
- to the mountains toward the east. The Hopis went north. The Yaquis
- went south. But the Tohono O'othham--the Desert People--
- were told to stay in that place which is the center of things. And
- that is where they are today, nawoj, my friend, close to Baboquivari,
- 103
- I'itoi's cloud-veiled mountain. And all this happened on the First Day.
- At four o'clock in the afternoon, Gabe Ortiz climbed into
- his oven-hot Crown Victoria, turned on the air-conditioning, and
- sat there letting the hot air blow-dry the sweat on his skin. He
- loosened his bola tie and tossed his Stetson into the backseat,
- then he leaned back and closed his eyes, waiting for the car
- to cool.
- All the back-and-forth hassling was enough to make Gabe
- long for the old days, before the election, when most of his
- contacts with the whites, the Mil-gahn, had been when he towed
- their disabled cars or motor homes out of the sand along Highway 86
- and into Tucson or Casa Grande for repairs.
- Why was it that Anglo bureaucrats seemed to have no other
- purpose in life than seeing that things didn't happen? Delia Chavez
- Cachora was a fighter when it came to battling the guys
- in suits, but even she, with her Washington D.C.-bureaucrat
- experience, had been unable to move the county road-improvement
- process off dead center. Unless traffic patterns to the tribal
- casino could be improved, further expansion of the facility, along
- with expansion of the casino's money-making capability, was
- 104
- impossible.
- Delia was bright and tough--a skilled negotiator whose verbal
- assertiveness belied her Tohono O'othham heritage. Those
- traits, along with her D. C. experience, were what had drawn
- Gabe Ortiz to her during their first interview. He was the one
- who had championed her application over those of several
- equally qualified male applicants. But the very skills that made
- Delia an asset as tribal attorney and helped her forward tribal
- business when it came to dealing with Anglo bureaucracies
- seemed to be working against her when it came to dealing with
- her fellow Tohono O'othham.
- Gabe had heard it said that Delia Chavez Cachora sounded
- and acted so much like a Mil-gahn at times that she wasn't really
- "Indian" enough. She was doing the proper things--living with
- KISS OF THE BEES 55
- her aunt out at Little Tucson was certainly a step in the right
- direction--but Gabe knew she would need additional help. He
- had developed a plan to address that particular problem. Delia
- just didn't know about it yet, although he'd have to tell her soon.
- Davy Ladd was a young man, an Anglo who had been raised
- 105
- by Gabe Ortiz's Aunt Rita. A recent law school graduate, Davy
- was due back in Tucson sometime in the next few days. By the
- time he arrived, Delia would have to know that Gabe had hired
- Davy to spend the summer months and maybe more time beyond
- that working as an intern in the tribal attorney's office.
- Gabe thought it would be interesting to see how Delia Chavez
- Cachora dealt with an Anglo who spoke her supposedly
- native tongue far better than she did. Not only that, Gabe was
- looking forward to getting to know the grown-up version of his
- late Aunt Rita's Little Olhoni.
- Next to his ear, someone tapped on the window. Gabe
- opened his eyes and sat up. Delia herself was standing next to
- his car, a concerned frown on her face. "Are you all right?" she
- asked when he rolled down the window.
- "Just resting my eyes," he said.
- "I was afraid you were sick."
- Gabe shook his head. "Tired," he said with a smile. "Tired
- but not sick."
- "Are you going straight home?" she asked. "We could stop
- and get something to drink."
- 106
- "No, thanks," he said. "You go on ahead. I have to visit
- with someone on the way."
- "All right," she said. "See you Monday."
- As she walked away from the car, Gabe noticed she was
- stripping off her watch and putting it in her purse. When Gabe
- had asked her about it, she had told him that on weekends she
- tried to live on Indian time; tried to do without clocks and all the
- other trappings of the Anglo world, including, presumably, the evils
- of air conditioning, he thought as she drove past him a few minutes
- later with all the windows of her turbo Saab wide open.
- Gabe put the now reasonably cool Ford in gear and backed
- out of his parking place. Instead of heading for Ajo Way and
- the road back to Sells, he headed north to Speedway and then
- west toward Gates Pass and the home of his friends, Brandon
- and Diana Walker.
- 54 J.A. JANCE
- It wasn't a trip Gabe was looking forward to because he
- didn't know what he was going to say. However, he knew he
- would have to say something. It was his responsibility.
- "Brandon?"
- 107
- Over the noise of the chain saw, Brandon hadn't heard the
- car stop outside the front of the house, nor had he noticed Gabe
- Ortiz materialize silently behind him. Startled by the unexpected
- voice, Brandon almost dropped the saw when he turned
- around to see who had spoken.
- "Fat Crack]" he exclaimed, taking off his hat and wiping his
- face with the damp bandanna he wore tied around his forehead.
- "The way you came sneaking up behind me, it's a wonder I
- didn't cut off my leg. How the hell are you? What are you doing
- here? Would you like some iced tea or a beer?"
- Now that he was tribal chairman, Fat Crack was a name
- Gabe Ortiz didn't hear very often anymore, not outside the confines
- of his immediate family. The distinctive physiognomy that
- had given rise to his nickname was no longer quite so visible,
- especially not now when he often wore a sports jacket over his
- ample middle. The dress-up slacks, necessary attire for the office
- and for meetings in town, didn't shift downward in quite the
- same fashion as his old Levi's had. Still, he reached down and
- tugged self-consciously at his belt, just to be sure his pants
- weren't hanging at half-mast.
- 108
- "Iced tea sounds good," Gabe said.
- The two men walked into and through the yard and then on
- inside the house. With the book fresh in his mind, Gabe looked
- around the kitchen. It had been completely redesigned and upgraded
- since the night of Andrew Carlisle's brutal attack. The
- wall between the root cellar, where Rita Antone and Davy Ladd
- had been imprisoned, had been knocked out, as had the wall
- between the kitchen and what had once been Rita's private quarters.
- The greatly enlarged kitchen now included a small informal
- dining area. The cabinets were new and so were the appliances,
- but to Gabe's heightened perceptions a ghost from that other
- room--the room from the book--still lingered almost palpably
- in the air. The damaged past permeated the room with evil in
- the same way the odor of a fire lingers among the ruins long
- after the flames themselves have been extinguished.
- KISS OF THE BEES 55
- Acutely aware of that unseen aspect of the room, Gabe
- looked at the other man, trying to gauge whether or not he
- noticed. As Brandon bustled cheerfully around the kitchen, he
- seemed totally oblivious. A full pitcher of sun tea sat on the
- 109
- counter. He filled glasses with ice cubes from the machine in
- the door of the fridge, added the tea, sliced off two wedges of
- lemon, and passed Gabe the sugar bowl and a spoon along with
- the tall glass of tea and a lemon wedge.
- "How are you?" Gabe asked. Spooning sugar into his tea,
- he was thankful Wanda wasn't there to tell him not to.
- Brandon shrugged. "Can't complain. Doesn't do any good if
- I do. Now to what do I owe this honor?" Brandon sat down
- across the table from his guest. "Not some hitch with Davy's
- internship, I hope. He should be leaving for home within the
- next day or two."
- Gabe took a sip of tea. "No," he said. "Everything's fine
- with that."
- "What then?" Brandon asked.
- The two men had been friends for a long time. Fighting the
- war with Andrew Carlisle and living through the courtroom battles
- that followed had turned Brandon Walker and Gabe Ortiz
- into unlikely comrades at arms. And their political ambitions--
- Gabe's within the tribe and Brandon's in the county sheriffs
- department--had led them along similar though different paths.
- 110
- Gabe had stood for election to the tribal council for the first
- time at almost the same time Brandon Walker took his first run
- at Pima County sheriff. Both of them had won, first time out.
- With Gabe working in the background of tribal council deliberations
- and Brandon running the sheriff's department, the two
- men had managed to create a fairly close working relationship
- between tribal and county law enforcement officers. Gabe's elevation
- to chairman had happened only recently, after Brandon
- Walker had been burned at the polls and let out to pasture.
- With Brandon Walker no longer running the show at the sheriffs
- department, the spirit of cooperation that had once existed between
- Law and Order--the Tribal Police--and the Pima County
- Sheriffs Department was fast disappearing.
- "Is Diana here?" Gabe asked.
- Frowning, Brandon looked at his watch. When he left office,
- they had given him a gold watch, for Chrissakes. He hated the
- 56 J.A. JANCE
- damn thing and everything it symbolized. He wore it all the
- time in the vain hope that daily doses of hard physical labor
- would eventually help wear it out.
- 111
- "She should be home in a little while. She had to go to some
- kind of shindig over at the university. A tea, I think. I must have
- been a good boy, because she let me off on good behavior, thank
- God," he added with a grin.
- Gabe didn't smile back. With instincts honed sharp from
- years of being a cop, Brandon recognized that non-smile for what
- it was--trouble.
- "What's the matter, Gabe? Is something wrong?"
- Gabe Ortiz took a deliberate sip of his tea before he answered.
- Convincing other people of the presence of an unseen
- menace had seemed so easy last night when he had been in tune
- with the ancient rituals of chants and singing. Now, though, the
- warning he had come to deliver didn't seem nearly so
- straightforward.
- "I came to talk to you about Diana's book," he managed
- finally.
- "Oh," Brandon Walker said. "Somehow I was afraid of
- that."
- "You were?" Gabe asked hopefully. Perhaps he wasn't the
- only one with a powerful sense of foreboding.
- 112
- "When she first came up with the idea for that book, I tried
- my best to talk her out of it," Brandon said. "I told her from
- the very beginning that I didn't think it was a good idea to
- rehash all that old stuff. Which shows how much I know. The
- damn thing went and won a Pulitzer. Now that it's gone into
- multiple printings, the publisher is turning handstands. Months
- after it came out, the book is back on the New York Times Best
- Sellers list and moving up." He stopped and gave his visitor a
- sardonic grin. "I guess I was a better sheriff than I am a literary
- critic--and I wasn't too hot at that."
- For a moment they both sipped their tea. Brandon waited to
- see if Fat Crack would say what was on his mind. When nothing
- appeared to be forthcoming, Brandon tried priming the pump.
- "So what is it about the book?" he asked. "Is there something
- wrong with it? Did she leave something out or put too
- much in? Diana's usually very good with research, but everybody
- screws up now and then. What's the scoop, Fat Crack? Tell me."
- KISS OF THE BEES 57
- "Andrew Carlisle's corning back," Gabe said slowly.
- Walker started involuntarily but then caught himself. "The
- 113
- hell he is, unless you're talking about some kind of instant replay
- of the Second Coming. Andrew Philip Carlisle is dead. He died
- a month and a half ago. In prison. Of AIDS."
- "I know," Gabe replied. "I saw that in the paper. I'm not
- saying he's coming back himself. Maybe he's sending someone
- else."
- "What for?"
- "I don't know. To get even?"
- Brandon leaned back in his chair. Most Anglos would have
- simply laughed the suggestions aside. Gabe was relieved that
- Brandon, at least, seemed to be giving the idea serious
- consideration.
- "Most crooks talk about getting revenge, but very few ever
- do," he said finally. "Either in person or otherwise."
- "He did before," Gabe said.
- That statement brooked no argument. Brandon nodded. "So
- what do we do about it?"
- For an answer, Gabe pulled Looks At Nothing's deerskin
- pouch out of his pocket. "Remember this?" he asked, opening
- it and removing both a cigarette and the lighter.
- 114
- A single glimpse of that worn, fringed pouch threw Brandon
- Walker into a sea of remembrance. He waited in silence as Gabe
- lit one of the hand-rolled cigarettes. And once he smelled a whiff
- of the acrid smoke, that, too, brought back a flood of memories.
- The last time Brandon had seen the pouch was the night
- after Davy Ladd's Tohono O'othham baptism. Back then the customs
- of the Desert People had been new and strange. The old
- medicine man, with help in translation from both Fat Crack and
- the old priest, had patiently explained some of belief systems
- surrounding sickness, both Traveling Sickness--Oimmedtham
- Mumkithag--and Staying Sickness--Kkahchim Mumkithag.
- According to the medicine man, traveling sicknesses were
- contagious diseases like measles, mumps, or chicken pox. They
- moved from person to person and from place to place, affecting
- everyone, Indian and Anglo alike. Traveling sicknesses could be
- treated by medicine men, but they also responded to the efforts
- of doctors, nurses, and Anglo hospitals.
- 58 J.A. JANCE
- Staying sicknesses, on the other hand, were believed to affect
- only Indians and could be cured only by medicine men. Both
- 115
- physical and spiritual in nature, staying sicknesses resulted from
- someone breaking a taboo or coming in contact with a dangerous
- object. By virtue of being an unbaptized baby, Davy himself had
- become the dangerous object that had attracted the attentions
- of the Ohb-infected Andrew Carlisle. As a cop investigating a
- case, Brandon had been little more than an amused outsider as
- he observed Diana Ladd complying with the requirements of
- Looks At Nothing's ritual cure.
- The prescription had included seeing to it that Davy Ladd
- was baptized according to both Indian and Anglo custom. Father
- John, a frail old priest from San Xavier Mission, had fulfilled
- the Mil-gahn part of the bargain by baptizing Davy into the
- Catholic Church of Diana Ladd's Anglo upbringing. Looks At
- Nothing, aided by ceremonial singers, had baptized Davy according
- to the ritual of the Tohono O'othham. In the process the
- boy was given a new name. Among the Tohono O'othham Davy
- Ladd became Edagith Gogk Je'e--One With Two Mothers.
- "But I thought you told me staying sicknesses only affect
- Indians," Brandon had objected.
- "Don't you see?" Looks At Nothing returned. "Davy is not
- 116
- just an Anglo child. He has been raised by Rita as a child of her
- heart. Therefore he is Tohono O'othham as well. That's why two
- baptisms are necessary, Anglo and Indian both."
- "I see," Brandon had said back then. Now, after years living
- under the same roof with Rita, Davy, and Lani, Brandon understood
- far more about Staying Sickness than he ever would have
- thought possible. For instance. Eagle Sickness comes from killing
- an eagle and can result in head lice or itchy hands. Owl Sickness
- comes from succumbing to a dream in which a ghost appears,
- and can result in fits or trances, dizziness, and "heart shaking."
- Coyote Sickness comes from killing a coyote or eating a melon
- a coyote has bitten into. That one can cause both itching and
- diarrhea in babies. Whenever one of the kids had come down
- with a case of diarrhea, Rita was always convinced Coyote Sickness
- was at fault.
- Now, though, sitting in the kitchen of the house at Gates
- Pass, Brandon Walker smelled the smoke and was transported
- back to that long ago council around the hood of Fat Crack's
- KISS OF THE BEES 59
- bright red tow truck. It was at the feast after the ceremony,
- 117
- after Rita and Diana and Davy Ladd had all eaten the ritual
- gruel of white clay and crushed owl feathers. There had been
- four men in all--Looks At Nothing, Father John, Fat Crack, and
- Brandon Walker--who had gathered in that informal circle.
- Brandon remembered how Looks At Nothing had pulled out
- his frayed leather pouch and how he had carefully removed one
- of his homemade cigarettes. Brandon had watched in fascination
- as the blind man once again used his Zippo lighter and unerringly
- ignited the roll of paper and tobacco. Before that, Brandon
- had been exposed only once to the Tohono O'othham custom of
- the Peace Smoke, one accomplished with the use of cigarettes
- rather than with the ceremonial pipes used by other Indian
- tribes. He knew, for example, that when the burning cigarette
- was handed to him, he was expected to take a drag, say
- "Nawoj"--which means friend or friendly gift--and then pass it
- along to the next man in the circle.
- It had seemed to Brandon at the time that the cigarette was
- being passed in honor of Davy's successful baptism, but that
- wasn't true. The circle around the truck had a wholly separate
- purpose.
- 118
- Only when the cigarette had gone all the way around the
- circle--from medicine man to priest, from tow truck driver to
- detective and back at last to Looks At Nothing--did Brandon
- Walker learn the rest.
- "He is a good boy," Looks At Nothing had said quietly,
- clearly referring to Davy. "But I am worried about one thing.
- He has too many mothers and not enough fathers."
- Not enough fathers? Brandon had thought to himself, standing
- there leaning on a tow truck fender. What the hell is that
- supposed to mean? And what does it have to do with me?
- Obligingly, Looks At Nothing had told them.
- "There are four of us," the shaman had continued. "All
- things in nature go in fours. Why could we not agree to be
- father to this fatherless boy, all four of us together? We each
- have things to teach, and we all have things to learn."
- Brandon recalled the supreme confidence with which the
- medicine man had stated this position. Out of politeness, it was
- framed as a question, but it was nonetheless a pronouncement.
- No one gathered around the truck that warm summer's night in
- 60 J.A. JANCE
- 119
- the still-eddying smoke from the old man's cigarette had nerve
- enough to say otherwise.
- Twenty-one years had passed between then and now. Two
- of Davy Ladd's four fathers were dead--Father John for twenty
- years and Looks At Nothing for three years less than that. One
- of the two mothers, Rita Antone, was gone as well.
- Of the six people charged by the medicine man with Davy
- Ladd's care and keeping, only three remained--Diana Ladd
- Walker, Fat Crack Ortiz, and Brandon Walker.
- "That's the pouch that belonged to the old blind medicine
- man, isn't it?" Brandon asked.
- Fat Crack, nodding, passed the cigarette to Brandon. "Nawoj,"
- Fat Crack said.
- At Diana's insistence, Brandon Walker had quit smoking
- completely years ago. When he took that first drag on the ceremonial
- tobacco, the sharp smoke of the desert tobacco burned
- his throat and chest. He winced but managed to suppress a
- cough.
- "Nawoj," he returned, passing the cigarette back to Gabe.
- For a time after that, the two men smoked in utter silence.
- 120
- Only when Brandon with typical Anglo impatience was convinced
- that Fat Crack had forgotten how to speak, did Gabe
- Ortiz open his mouth.
- "I finished reading Diana's book last night," he said at last.
- "It gave me a bad feeling. Finally I took the book outside and
- sang a kuadk over it."
- "A what?" Brandon asked.
- "Kuadk. One of the sacred chants of discernment that Looks
- At Nothing taught me. That's how I learned the evil Ohb is
- coming back."
- Brandon frowned. "Even though he's dead."
- Fat Crack nodded. "I can't see the danger, I just know it's
- coming."
- Brandon shook his head. There was no point in arguing.
- "What are we supposed to do about it?" he asked.
- "That's what you and I must decide."
- Brandon Walker sighed. Abruptly he stood up and walked
- back to the counter to fetch the pitcher of tea. In the process, he
- seemed to shake off the effects of the smoke and all it implied.
- KISS OF THE BEES 61
- 121
- "What do you suggest?" he asked irritably. "In case you
- haven't noticed, I'm not the sheriff anymore. I'm not even a
- deputy. There's nothing I can do. Nothing I'm supposed to do."
- Realizing that Brandon Walker was no longer in touch with
- the spiritual danger, Gabe attempted to respond to the physical
- concerns. "Maybe you could ask the sheriff to send more patrols
- out this way," he suggested.
- "Why? To protect us from a dead man?" Brandon Walker
- demanded. "Are you kidding? If I weren't a laughingstock already,
- I sure as hell would be once word about that leaked out.
- I appreciate your concern, Gabe. And I thank you for going to
- all the trouble of stopping by to warn us, but believe me, you're
- wrong. Andrew Carlisle is dead. He can't hurt anybody
- anymore."
- "I'd better be going, then," Gabe Ortiz said.
- "Don't you want to stay and see Diana? She should be home
- before long."
- Fat Crack shook his head. If Brandon wouldn't listen to him,
- that meant that the evil here in the kitchen would grow stronger
- still. He didn't want to sit there and feel it gaining strength
- 122
- around him.
- "I'll be late for dinner," he said. "It'll make Wanda mad."
- When he stood up, his legs groaned beneath him. His joints
- felt stiff and old as his whole body protested the hours he had
- spent the night before seated in that uncomfortable molded plastic
- chair. Wanda had picked up a whole set of those chairs on
- sale from Walgreen's at the end of the previous summer. Now
- Gabe understood why they had been so cheap.
- "Do me a favor, nawoj, my friend," Gabe Ortiz said, limping
- toward the door. "Do something for an old man."
- "You're not so old," Brandon Walker objected. "But what
- favor?"
- "Think about what I said," Gabe told him, slipping the deerskin
- pouch back into his pocket.. "And even if you don't believe
- what I said, act as though you do."
- "What's that supposed to mean?"
- "Be careful," Gabe answered. "You and Diana both."
- Brandon nodded. "Sure," he said, not knowing if he meant
- it or not.
- Outside, Gabe Ortiz paused with his hand touching the door
- 123
- 62 J.A. JANCE
- handle on the Crown Victoria. "What are you going to do with
- all that wood out there?" he asked.
- "Oh, that." Brandon shrugged. "Right now I'm just cutting
- it, I guess," he said. "I haven't given much thought to what
- we'll do with it. Burn some of it over the winter, I suppose.
- Why, do you know someone who needs wood?"
- "The ladies up at San Xavier sure could use it," Gabe answered.
- "The ones who cook the popovers and chili. Most of
- the wood is gone from right around there. They have to haul it
- in. And the chips would help on the playfield down at Topawa
- Elementary. When it rains, that whole place down there turns
- to mud."
- "If somebody can use it, they're welcome to it," Brandon
- said. "All they have to do is come pick it up."
- "I'll have the tribe send out some trucks along with guys to
- load it."
- "Sure thing," Brandon said. "They can come most anytime.
- I'm usually here."
- As soon as Gabe Ortiz's Crown Victoria headed down the
- 124
- road, Brandon Walker returned to his woodpile. A reincarnated
- Andrew Carlisle? That was the most ridiculous thing he'd ever
- heard. Still, there was one point upon which Brandon Walker
- fully agreed with Fat Crack Ortiz--writing Shadow of Death had
- been a dangerous undertaking.
- Four years earlier, on the day the letter arrived from Andrew
- Carlisle, Brandon Walker and Diana Ladd had already been together
- for seventeen years. They had come through the trials
- and tribulations of raising children and stepchildren. Together
- they had survived the long-term agonies of writing and publishing
- books and dealt with the complexities and hard work of
- running for public office. There had been difficulties, of course,
- but always there had been room for compromise--right up to
- the arrival of that damned letter. And from that time since, it
- seemed to him they had been locked in a downward spiral.
- That was Brandon's perception, that things had been hunkydory
- before the letter and had gone to hell in a handbasket
- afterward, although in actual fact everything wasn't absolutely
- perfect beforehand. They had already lost Tommy by then, and
- KISS OF THE BEES 63
- 125
- Quentin had already been sent to prison on the drunk-driving
- charge. But still . . .
- The letter, ticking like a time bomb, had come to the house
- as part of a packet of publisher-forwarded fan mail. Diana had
- opened the envelope and read the oddly printed, handwritten
- letter herself before handing it to her husband.
- my dear Ms. walker,
- after ALL THESE YEARS IT MAY SURPRISE YOU TO HEAR
- FROM ME AGAIN. further, IT MAY COME AS NEWS TO YOU
- TO KNOW THAT I HAVE RECENTLY BEEN DIAGNOSED AS SUFFERING
- FROM AN INEVITABLY FATAL DISEASE [AIDS). I AM
- WRITING TO YOU AT THIS TIME TO SEE IF YOU WOULD BE
- INTERESTED IN WORKING WITH ME ON A BOOK PROJECT THAT
- WOULD CHRONICLE THE CIRCUMSTANCES THAT BROUGHT
- ME TO THIS UNFORTUNATE PASS.
- I HAVE ALREADY ASSEMBLED A GOOD DEAL OF INVALUABLE
- MATERIAL FOR SUCH A PROJECT, BUT I AM OFFENDED
- BY THE RULES CURRENTLY IN EFFECT THAT MAKE IT IMPOSSIBLE
- FOR CONVICTED CRIMINALS TO REAP ANY KIND OF FINANCIAL
- REWARDS FROM RECOUNTING THEIR NEFARIOUS
- 126
- DEEDS, INCLUDING WRITING BOOKS ABOUT SAME. because
- SOMEONE SHOULD BE ALLOWED TO MAKE AN HONEST BUCK
- OUT OF SUCH AN UNDERTAKING, I AM WILLING TO TURN
- THE ENTIRE IDEA, ALONG WITH MY ACCUMULATED MATERIAL,
- OVER TO A CAPABLE WRITER--WITH NO STRINGS
- ATTACHED--TO DO WITH AS HE OR SHE MAY CHOOSE.
- you ARE UNIQUELY QUALIFIED TO WRITE SUCH A BOOK,
- AND I BELIEVE THAT OUR TWO DIVERGING POINTS OF VIEW
- ON THE SAME STORY WOULD MAKE FOR COMPELLING READING,
- EVEN IF WE BOTH KNOW, GOING INTO THE PROJECT,
- EXACTLY HOW IT WILL ALL TURN OUT.
- during MY YEARS OF INCARCERATION HERE IN florence,
- I HAVE FOLLOWED YOUR FLOURISHING (pardon THE
- UNINTENTIONAL ALLITERATION) CAREER WITH MORE THAN
- CASUAL INTEREST. this HAS BEEN DIFFICULT AT TIMES SINCE
- IT TAKES TIME FOR NONFICTION WORK TO BE TRANSLATED
- INTO EITHER "talking books" OR braille. [as A RELA-
- 64 J.A. JANCE
- TIVE "LATECOMER" TO THE WORLD OF BLINDNESS, braille
- CONTINUES TO BE SLOW-GOING AND CUMBERSOME FOR ME.)
- 127
- the MATERIAL I NOW HAVE IN MY POSSESSION IS IN THE
- FORM OF TYPED NOTES AND TAPES. I THINK, THOUGH,
- SHOULD YOU DECIDE TO TAKE ON THIS PROJECT, THAT A
- SERIES OF FACE-TO-FACE INTERVIEWS WOULD BE THE MOST
- EFFECTIVE WAY OF KICKING THINGS OFF.
- whatever YOUR DECISION, PLEASE LET ME KNOW AS
- SOON AS POSSIBLE IN VIEW OF THE FACT THAT WITH THIS
- DISEASE TIME MAY BE FAR MORE LIMITED THAN EITHER ONE
- OF US NOW SUSPECTS.
- regards,
- andrew philip carlisle
- Just holding the wretched letter in his hand had made Brandon
- Walker feel somehow contaminated. And angry.
- "Send this thing back by return mail and tell him to shove
- it up his ass," he had growled, handing the letter back to Diana.
- "Where does that son of a bitch get off and how come he has
- your address?"
- "Andrew Carlisle always had my address," Diana reminded
- her husband. "Our address," she corrected. "We haven't moved,
- you know, not since it happened."
- 128
- "Did he send it here directly?"
- "No, it came in a packet from my publisher in New York."
- "If you want me to, I'll call the warden and tell him not to
- let Carlisle send you any more letters, whether they go to New
- York first or not."
- "I'll take care of it," Diana had said.
- "You'll tell him not to write again?" Brandon asked.
- "I said I'd handle it."
- Looking at his wife's determined expression, Brandon suddenly
- understood her intention. "You're not going to write back,
- are you?"
- Diana stood there for a moment gazing down at the letter
- and not answering.
- "Well?" Brandon insisted impatiently. "Are you?"
- "I might," she said.
- "Why, for God's sake?"
- KISS OF THE BEES 65
- "Because he's right, you know. It could be one hell of a good
- book. Usually it takes at least two books to tell both sides of
- any given story. This would have both in one. Not only that,
- 129
- my agent and my editor both told me years ago that anytime I
- was ready to write a book about what happened, Sterling, Moffit,
- and Dodd would jump at the chance to publish it."
- "No," Brandon said.
- "What do you mean, no?"
- "Just what I said. N-0. Absolutely not. I don't want you
- anywhere near that crackpot. I don't want you writing to him.
- I don't want you interviewing him. I don't want you writing
- about him. Forget it."
- "Wait a minute," Diana objected. "You can't tell me what
- I can and what I can't write."
- "But it could be dangerous for you," Brandon said.
- "Being sheriff can be dangerous, too," she told him. "What
- happens when it's time for the next election and you have to
- decide whether or not to run for office again?"
- "What about it?"
- "What if I told you to forget it? What if I told you that you
- couldn't run for office because I said your being sheriff worried
- me too much? What if you couldn't run because I refused to
- give my permission? What then?"
- 130
- "Diana," Brandon said, realizing too late that he had stepped
- off a cliff into forbidden territory. "It's not the same thing."
- "It isn't? What's so different about it?"
- "That's politics ..."
- "And I don't know anything about politics, right?"
- "Diana, I--"
- "Listen, Brandon Walker. I know as much or more about politics as you do about writing
- and publishing. And if I have the good sense to stay out of your business, I'll thank
- you to
- have the good sense to stay out of mine."
- "But you'll be putting yourself at risk," Brandon ventured.
- "Why would you want to do that?"
- "Because there are questions I still don't have answers for,"
- Diana had replied. "I'm the only one who can ask those questions,
- and Andrew Carlisle is the only one who can provide
- the answers."
- "But why stir it all up again?"
- 66 J.A. JANCE
- "Because I paid a hell of a price," Diana responded. "Because
- more than anyone else in the whole world, I've earned
- the right to have those damn answers. All of them."
- 131
- She had left then, stalked off to her office. Within weeks--
- lightning speed in the world of publishing contract negotiations--the
- contract had come through for Shadow of Death, although
- the book hadn't had that name then. The original
- working title had been A Private War.
- And it had been, in more ways than one. From then on,
- things had never been quite the same between Brandon and
- Diana.
- Diana heard the whine of the chain saw as soon as she pulled
- into the carport alongside the house and switched off the Suburban's
- engine. Hearing the sound, she gripped the steering wheel
- and closed her eyes.
- "Damn," she muttered. "He's at it again."
- Shaking her head, Diana hurried into the house, determined
- to change both her clothes and her attitude. The literary tea was
- over, thank God. It had been murder--just the kind of stultifying
- ordeal Brandon had predicted it would be. Listening to the saw,
- Diana realized that it would have been nice if she herself had
- been given a choice of working on the woodpile or dealing with
- Edith Gailbraith, the sharp-tongued wife of the former head of
- 132
- the university's English Department. Compared to Edith, the
- tangled pile of mesquite and creosote held a certain straightforward
- appeal.
- Edith, social daggers at the ready, had been the first one to
- inquire after Brandon. "How's your poor husband faring these
- days now that he lost the election?" she had asked.
- Diana had smiled brightly. At least she hoped it was a bright
- smile. "He's doing fine," she said, shying away from adding the
- qualifying words "for a hermit." As she had learned in the past
- few months, being married to a hermit-in-training wasn't
- much fun.
- "Has he found another job yet?" Edith continued.
- "He isn't looking," Diana answered with a firm smile. "He
- doesn't really need another job. That's given him some time to
- look at his options."
- "I'd watch out for him, if I were you," Edith continued.
- KISS OF THE BEES 67
- "Don't leave him out to pasture too long. American men take
- it so hard when they stop working. The number who die within
- months of retirement is just phenomenal. For too many of them,
- 133
- their jobs are their lives. That was certainly the case with my
- Harry. He mourned for months afterward. I was afraid we were
- going to end up in divorce court, but he died first. He never did
- get over it."
- Nothing like a little sweetness and light over tea and cakes,
- Diana thought, seeing Brandon's frenetic work on the woodpile
- through Edith Gailbraith's prying eyes. And lips. With unerring
- accuracy, Edith had zeroed in on one of Diana Ladd Walker's
- most vulnerable areas of concern. What exactly was going on
- with Brandon? And would he ever get over it?
- Driving up to the house late that afternoon, she still didn't
- have any acceptable answers to that question. The only thing
- she did know for sure was that somehow cutting up the wood
- was helping him deal with the demons that were eating him
- alive. Having left Edith behind, it was easy for Diana to go back
- home to Gates Pass prepared to forgive and forget.
- "Go change your clothes and stack some wood, Diana," she
- told herself. "It'll do you a world of good."
- In the master bedroom of their house Diana slipped out of
- the smart little emerald green silk suit she had worn to the tea.
- 134
- She changed into jeans, boots, and a loose-fitting T-shirt. When
- she stopped in to pick up a pair of glasses of iced tea, she noticed
- the two glasses already sitting in the kitchen sink and wondered
- who had stopped by.
- She took two newly filled glasses outside. Brandon, stacking
- wood now with sweat soaking through his clothing, smiled at
- her gratefully when she handed him his tea. "I'm from Washington,"
- she joked. "I'm here to help."
- As a victim of many hit-and-run federal bureaucrats, the quip
- made Brandon laugh aloud. "Good," he said. "I'll take whatever
- help I can get."
- Without saying anything further, he handed her a piece of
- chopped log, which she obligingly carried to the stack. They
- worked together in silence for some time before Brandon somewhat
- warily broached the subject of the university tea. "How
- was it?" he asked.
- Diana shrugged. "About what you'd expect," she said. "By
- 68 J.A. JANCE
- holding it at the Arizona Historical Society instead of someplace
- on campus or at the president's residence, they managed to make
- 135
- it clear that as far as they're concerned, I'm still not quite okay."
- "You can't really blame them for that," Brandon said. "Andrew
- Carlisle isn't exactly one of the U. ofA.'s more stellar exprofessors.
- You can hardly expect them to be good sports about
- what they all have to regard as adverse publicity."
- In writing Shadow of Death, Diana hadn't glossed over the
- fact that Andrew Carlisle had used his position as head of the
- Creative Writing Department at the University of Arizona to
- lure Diana's first husband. Garrison Ladd, into playing a part in a
- brutal torture killing. Members of the local literary community--
- especially ones in the University's English Department who had
- known Andrew Carlisle personally and who still held sway over
- the university's creative writing program--were shocked and appalled
- by his portrayal in the book. They were disgusted that a
- book one Arizona Daily Sun reviewer had dismissed as nothing
- more than "a poor-taste exercise in true crime" had gone on to
- be hailed by national critics and booksellers alike as a
- masterwork.
- "You were absolutely right not to go," Diana added, bending
- over and straightening a pile of branches into a manageable armload.
- 136
- "The vultures were out in spades. Several of the women
- took great pains to tell me that although they never deign to
- read that kind of thing themselves, they were sure this must be
- quite good."
- "That's big of them," Brandon said. "But it is quite good."
- Diana stopped what she was doing and turned a questioning
- look on her husband's tanned, handsome face. "You mean
- you've actually read it?"
- "Yes."
- "When?"
- "While you were off in New York. I didn't want to be the
- only person on the block who hadn't read the damn thing."
- When she had been writing other books, Brandon had read
- the chapters as they came out of the computer printer. With
- the manuscript for Shadow of Death he had shown less than no
- interest. When the galleys came back from New York for correction,
- she had offered to let him read the book then, but he had
- said no thanks. He had made his position clear from the beginKISS OF THE BEES 69
- ning, and nothing--not even Diana's considerable six-figure advance
- 137
- payment--had changed his mind.
- Hurt but resigned, Diana had decided he probably never
- would read it. She hadn't brought up the subject again.
- Now, though, standing there in the searing afternoon heat,
- cradling a load of branches in her arms, Diana felt some of the
- months of unresolved anger melt away. "You read it and you
- liked it?" she asked.
- "I didn't say I liked it," Brandon answered, moving toward
- her and looking down into her eyes. "In fact, I hated it--every
- damned word, but that doesn't mean it wasn't good, because
- it is. Or should I say, not bad for a girl?" he added with a
- tentative smile.
- The phrase "not bad for a girl" was an old familiar and
- private joke between them. And hearing those words of praise
- from Brandon Walker meant far more to Diana than any Pulitzer
- ever would.
- With tears in her eyes, she put down her burden of wood
- and then let herself be pulled close in a sweaty but welcome
- embrace. Brandon's shirt was wet and salty against her cheeks.
- So were her tears.
- 138
- "Thank you," she murmured, smiling up at him. "Thank
- you so much."
- By mid-afternoon, Mitch Johnson's errands were run and he
- was back on the mountain, watching and waiting. The front yard
- of the Walker place was an unfenced jungle--a snarl of native
- plants and cactus--ocotillo, saguaro, and long-eared prickly
- pear--with a driveway curving through it. One part of the drive
- branched off to the side of the house, where it passed through
- a wrought-iron gate set in the tall river-rock wall that surrounded
- both sides and back of the house.
- Late in the afternoon what appeared to be an almost new
- blue-and-silver Suburban drove through an electronically opened
- gate and into a carport on the side of the house. Mitch watched
- intently through a pair of binoculars as the woman he had come
- to know as Diana Ladd Walker stepped out of the vehicle and
- then stood watching while the gate swung shut behind the
- vehicle.
- /0 J.A. JANCE
- She probably believes those bars on that gate mean safety, Mitch
- thought with a laugh. Safety and security.
- 139
- "False security, little lady," he said aloud. "Those bars don't
- mean a damned thing, not if somebody opens the gate and lets
- me in."
- Using binoculars, Mitch observed Diana Ladd Walker's progress
- as she made her way into the house. She had to be somewhere
- around fifty, but even so, he had to admit she was a
- handsome woman, just as Andy had told him she would be. Her
- auburn hair was going gray around the temple. From the emeraldgreen
- suit she wore, he could see that she had kept her figure.
- She moved with the confident, self-satisfied grace that comes from doing what you've
- always wanted to do. No wonder Andrew Carlisle had hated Diana Ladd Walker's guts.
- So did Mitch.
- A few minutes after disappearing into the house she reemerged,
- dressed in work clothes--jeans, a T-shirt, and hat and
- bringing her husband something cold to drink.
- How touching, the watcher on the mountain thought. How
- sweet1. How stupid1.
- And then, while Brandon and Diana Walker were busy with
- the wood, the sweet little morsel who was destined to be dessert
- rode up on her mountain bike. Lani. The three unsuspecting
- people talked together for several minutes before the girl went
- 140
- inside. Not long after that, toward sunset, Brandon and Diana
- went inside as well.
- In the last three weeks Mitch Johnson had read Shadow of
- Death from cover to cover three different times, gleaning new
- bits of information with each repetition. Long before he read
- the book, Andy had told him that the child Diana and Brandon
- Walker had adopted was an Indian. What Mitch hadn't suspected
- until he saw Lani in the yard and sailing past him on her
- bicycle was how beautiful she would be.
- That was all right. The more beautiful, the better. The more
- Brandon and Diana Walker loved their daughter, the more losing
- her would hurt them. After all, Mikey had been an angelic-faced
- cherub when Mitch went away to prison.
- "What's the worst thing about being in prison?" Andy had
- asked one time early on, shortly after Mitch Johnson had been
- moved into the same cell.
- KISS OF THE BEES 71
- Mitch didn't have to think before he answered. "Losing my
- son," he had said at once. "Losing Mikey."
- His wife had raised so much hell that Mitch had finally been
- 141
- forced to sign away his parental rights, clearing the way for
- Mikey to be adopted by Larry Wraike, Lori Kiser Johnson's second
- husband.
- "So that's what we have to do then," Andy had said
- determinedly.
- This was long before Mitch Johnson had taken Andrew Carlisle's
- single-minded plan and made it his own. The conversation
- had occurred at a time when the possibility of Mitch's being
- released from prison seemed so remote as to be nothing more
- than a fairy tale.
- "What is it we have to do?" he had asked.
- "Leave Brandon Walker childless," Andy had answered.
- "The same way he left you. My understanding is that one of his
- sons is missing and presumed dead. That means he has three
- children left--a natural son, a stepson, and an adopted daughter.
- So whatever we do we'll have to be sure to take care of all
- three."
- "How?" Mitch had asked.
- "I'm not certain at the moment, Mr. Johnson," Andy responded.
- "But we're both quite smart, and we have plenty of
- 142
- time to establish a plan of attack. I'm sure we'll be able to come
- up with something appropriately elegant."
- For eighteen years--the whole time Mitch was in prison--
- he sent Mikey birthday cards. Every year the envelopes had been
- returned unopened.
- Mitch Johnson had saved those cards, every single one of
- them. To his way of thinking, they were only part of the price
- Brandon and Diana Walker would have to pay.
- 4
- 'ecause everything in nature goes in fours, nawqj, there were four
- days in the beginning of things. But these four days were not like
- four days are today. It may have meant four years or perhaps four
- periods of time.
- On the Second Day I'itoi went to all the different tribes to see
- how they were getting along. And Great Spirit taught each tribe the
- kind of houses they should build.
- First, I'itoi went to the Yaquis, the Hiakim, who live in the
- south. It was very hot in the land of the Yaquis, so he showed them
- how to dig into the side of a hill and to make houses that would
- be cool.
- 143
- When Great Spirit went south, Gopher--Jewho--and Coyote--
- Ban--followed him because, as you remember, everything must follow
- the Spirit of Goodness. And while I'itoi was digging into the
- side of the hill to show the Hiakim how to build their houses, Gopher
- and Coyote stood watching. And soon, Jewho and Ban began
- digging as well. Every minute or two, as they worked, they pulled
- their heads out of the holes they were digging to see how Elder
- Brother did it.
- Presently I'itoi stopped to rest. When he saw what Gopher and
- Coyote were doing, he laughed and said. "That is a good house for
- you. And that, nawoj, is why the gophers and coyotes have lived
- that same way ever since.
- * * *
- KISS OF THE BEES 73
- Moments after Lani stepped into the house, the phone rang.
- "Davy1" she exclaimed, her voice alive with delight as soon as
- she heard her brother's greeting. "Where are you? When will
- you be home?"
- "I'll be leaving Evanston tomorrow morning," he said. "I
- won't be home until sometime next week."
- 144
- "In time for Mom and Dad's anniversary?" she asked.
- "What day is it again?" David asked.
- "Saturday," she told him. "A week from tomorrow."
- "I should be there by then. Why? Is there a party or
- something?"
- "No, but wait until you see what I'm getting them. There's
- a guy I met on the way to work. He's an artist. I'm going to pose
- for him tomorrow morning, and he's going to give me a picture."
- "What kind of pose?" David asked.
- "He wants me to wear something Indian," Lani said. "I'm
- going to wear the outfit I wore for rodeo last year."
- "Oh," David Ladd said, sounding relieved. "That kind of
- pose."
- "What kind of pose did you think?" Lani asked.
- "Never mind. Is Mom there?"
- "She's outside with Dad. Want me to go get her?"
- "Don't bother. Just give her the message that I'm leaving in
- the morning, so she won't be able to reach me. Tell her I'll
- call from here and there along the way to let her know how
- I'm doing."
- 145
- From the moment Lani had come to the house in Gates Pass,
- Davy Ladd had been the second most important person in her
- young life, right behind Nana Dahd. The bond that existed between
- the two went far beyond the normal connection between
- brother and sister. Even halfway across the continent Lani sensed
- something was amiss.
- "What's wrong?" she asked.
- David Ladd was more than a little concerned about driving
- cross-country alone. Under normal circumstances, it wouldn't
- have bothered him at all. In the course of his years of going to
- school at Northwestern, he had made the solo drive several
- times. Now, though, he was living with the possibility of another
- panic attack always hanging over his head. What would happen
- if one came over him while he was driving alone down a free74 J.A. JANCE
- way? He had called home, looking for reassurance, but obviously
- the edginess in his tone had communicated itself to his little
- sister. That embarrassed him.
- "It's no big deal," he said. "I've just been having some trouble
- sleeping is all."
- Lani laughed. "You? Mom always said you were the worldclass
- 146
- sleeper in the family, that you could sleep through
- anything.
- "Not anymore," Davy replied somberly. "I guess I must be
- getting old." He paused. "So are things all right at home? With
- Mom and Dad, I mean?"
- "Sure," Lani said. "Mom's getting ready to start another
- book, and Dad's still cutting up wood like mad."
- "And how about you?" Davy added. "How are things going
- with the new job?"
- "It's great," Lani answered. "There's that hour in the morning,
- between shifts ..." She stopped. "Hey, maybe when you're
- back here, you could come over to the museum in the afternoons
- sometimes. I can get you in for free. The two of us could
- spend the afternoon there together, just like we used to, with
- Nana Dahd."
- "I'd like that, Mualig Siakam," David Ladd said softly, drifting
- back into the world of their childhood names and squeezing
- the words out over an unexpected lump that suddenly rose in
- his throat. "I'd like that a lot."
- "Mr. Walker?"
- 147
- Quentin Walker, slouched in front of a beer on his customary
- stool, was drinking his way toward the end of Happy Hour at
- El Gato Loco, a dive of a workingman's bar just east of the
- freeway on West Grant Road in Tucson. At the sound of his
- own name, one Quentin didn't necessarily bandy about among
- the tough customers of El Gato, Quentin swung around on his
- stool and studied the newcomer over the rim of his draft beer.
- "Yeah," he said without enthusiasm. "That's me."
- "Long time no see."
- Quentin was more than moderately drunk. He had been sitting
- at the smoke-filled bar since five, working his way through
- his usual TGIF routine--shots of bourbon with beer chasers. He
- squinted up at the newcomer, a tall, spare man who, even in
- KISS OF THE BEES 75
- the shadowy gloom of the nighttime bar, still wore sunglasses
- and a baseball cap pulled low on his forehead. Only when the
- man finally reached up and removed the sunglasses did recognition
- finally dawn.
- "Why, Mitch JohnsonF' Quentin exclaimed. "How the hell
- are you?"
- 148
- "I'm out, same as you," Mitch answered with a grin as he
- settled on the next stool. "Which means I'm fine. You?"
- Quentin shrugged. "Okay, I guess. What'll you have to
- drink?"
- "A beer," Mitch said. "Bud's okay."
- Quentin signaled the bartender, who brought two beers and
- another shot as well. When Mitch paid for all three drinks,
- Quentin nodded his thanks. He hadn't really planned on another.
- By the time Happy Hour finished at seven, he was usually
- juiced enough that he could stagger the three blocks up the
- street to his grubby apartment. There, if he was lucky and drunk
- enough both, he'd fall into bed and sleep through the night.
- Maybe it was just the geography of it, of being back so near to
- where it had all happened. Whatever the cause, in the months since he'd left prison
- and returned to Tucson, sleep without the benefit of booze was a virtual impossibility.
- He went to bed
- more or less drunk every night. That was the only thing that
- held his particular set of demons at bay.
- "I heard about Andy," Quentin said. "Read about it in the
- paper, that he died, I mean. It's too bad ..."
- "I'm sure he was more than ready to go," Mitch replied.
- 149
- "He'd been sick for a long time. He was in a lot of pain. I think
- he had suffered enough."
- Quentin cast a bleary, questioning stare at the man seated
- next to him. Mitch had seen that look before and understood
- it. He had seen it on the faces of countless guards and fellow
- prisoners. They were all searching his face for signs of the awful
- lesions that had made Andrew Carlisle's grotesque face that
- much worse toward the end. Everyone was waiting to see when
- the same visible marks of AIDS--symptoms of his impending
- death--would show up on Mitch's body as well. For all of
- them--guards and prisoners alike--it was a foregone conclusion
- that the telltale marks of Kaposi's sarcoma would inevitably
- appear.
- 76 J.A. JANCE
- Mitch alone knew that those conclusions were wrong. He
- and Andy Carlisle had been cell mates and friends for seven and
- a half celibate years. Although the rest of the prison population
- may have thought otherwise, their relationship had been intellectual
- rather than sexual. Originally there had been some of
- the trappings of teacher and student, but eventually that had
- 150
- evolved into one of fully equal co-conspirators--with the two of
- them aligned against the universe.
- Their long-term interdependence and mutual interests had
- merged into a closeness that, outside prison, might well have
- been mistaken for a kind of love. And in a way, it was. It had
- been a private joke between them that the universal presumption
- of physical intimacy between them had given Mitch Johnson
- a certain kind of protection from attack that he had very much
- appreciated. Originally that physical security had meant far more
- to Mitch than Andrew Carlisle's promised monetary legacy.
- Once the former professor was in the picture, no one ever again
- attempted to mess with Mitch Johnson, no one at all.
- "Believe it or not, still no symptoms, if that's what you're
- looking for," Mitch said, answering Quentin's unasked question.
- Embarrassed, Quentin's eyes dodged away from Mitch's unflinching
- gaze. "Sorry," he mumbled.
- "It's okay," Mitch said.
- For a time the two men were silent while Quentin stared
- moodily into his beer. "I didn't mean to insult you ..."
- "Forget it," Mitch said. "It's nothing. I'm used to it by now."
- 151
- Quentin shook his head. "You two were the only ones up
- there who ever helped me, you know," he muttered. "You and
- Andy. And of all the people there, you two should have been
- the very last ones. I mean, with everything my family did to
- you . . ."
- "It's all water under the bridge, Quentin," Mitch reassured
- him. "That was then, and this is now."
- "But you don't know how bad it was for me," Quentin continued,
- undeterred. "That first year after I got sent up was a
- nightmare. I was young and stupid and the son of a sheriff, for
- God's sake, and I thought I was so tough. But I wasn't, not
- nearly tough enough. Everybody in the joint was after my ass,
- or worse. Those guys had me six ways to Sunday. They turned
- KISS OF THE BEES 77
- me into nothing but a piece of meat." He shuddered
- remembering.
- "If you and Andy hadn't taken me under your wings, I don't
- know what would have happened to me. I'd probably be dead
- by now."
- "Don't give me any of the credit," Mitch cautioned. "It was
- 152
- Andy's idea, not mine."
- "But why did he do it? I've always wondered about that. All
- he had to do was put out the word that I belonged to him and
- that was it. After that nobody else ever touched me. I was scared
- shitless that he would . . . that someday he'd make a demand
- and I'd have to come across, but he never did."
- "No," Mitch agreed. "Andy wasn't like that. That's the part
- nobody understood about him."
- "Not even with you?" Quentin asked.
- "No, not even with me."
- "So why then?" Quentin continued. "Why did he protect
- me without demanding anything in return?"
- "Because that's the way he was," Mitch answered. "Because
- Andrew Carlisle was a remarkable man."
- "It's the nicest thing anybody ever did for me," Quentin
- Walker's blood alcohol level had taken him to the edge of maudlin.
- He ducked his head and swiped tears from his eyes.
- Mitch looked away and pretended not to notice. "He helped
- me the same way he did you," he said quietly. "He taught me
- how to survive, no matter what. In the end, he was the one
- 153
- who gave me a reason to go on living."
- "Hell of a guy," Quentin murmured, raising his beer glass
- in a toast. "Here's to Andy. May he rest in peace."
- Again they were both silent for a moment. "I suppose you've
- read your stepmother's book about him?" Mitch said finally.
- Quentin Walker scowled into his glass. "Are you kidding?
- Whatever that bitch has to say about him, I'm not interested.
- Just because she had a problem with Andrew Carlisle doesn't
- mean I did, too."
- Mitch clicked his tongue. "Your stepmother may be famous,
- but it doesn't sound as though she's one of your favorite people."
- Quentin shook his head. "Are you kidding? She's got my
- dad wound so tight around her little finger, it's a wonder the
- man can even breathe on his own."
- 78 J.A. JANCE
- "One of those blended families that isn't quite working,"
- Mitch Johnson observed.
- Quentin Walker had come back to Tucson from prison to a
- kind of internal exile. He was right there in town with them,
- but he wanted nothing whatever to do with Brandon Walker
- 154
- and his "second" family. He had seen his mother a few times,
- but the second time he hit Janie Walker Fellows Hitchcock up
- for a loan, Quentin's goody-goody half-brother, Brian Fellows,
- had barred the door. Now Quentin was only allowed to speak
- to his mother in person and in the presence of either her nurse
- or of Brian himself.
- Working construction, Quentin had developed a reputation
- as a loner. He caught rides to and from work with various coworkers,
- but having discovered how people reacted to the news
- that he was fresh out of the slammer, he now kept that information
- strictly to himself. He resisted all suggestions of possible
- friendship and relied on various neighborhood bartenders when
- he needed a shoulder to cry on.
- In all those lonely months, Mitch Johnson's was the first truly
- friendly face he had encountered. Here at last was someone who,
- however distant, qualified as a friend; someone who could be
- counted on to understand the depths of Quentin's own miserable
- existence. Here was a kindred spirit, an ex-con himself, who
- didn't automatically regard Quentin as some kind of repulsive
- monster. Grateful beyond measure, the younger man warmed to
- 155
- this prison acquaintance in the same boozy way he might have
- approached an old classmate at a high school reunion.
- For months, for years, in fact, Quentin had kept his feelings
- locked behind a dam of self-pity. Now, as the floodgates opened,
- he spilled out his sad tale, wallowing in the injustice of it all.
- "Tommy and me didn't get blended," Quentin replied bitterly.
- "Sliced and diced is more like it. Or else pureed right out
- of existence."
- "Tommy's your brother then?" Mitch Johnson asked.
- Quentin considered for a moment before he answered. "He
- was my little brother. The two of us always ended up taking a
- backseat to Davy, my stepmother's kid, and even to Lani, once
- she came along. They got everything, and we got nothing."
- "Lani's the Indian girl your dad and stepmother adopted?"
- Quentin frowned. "How did you know that?"
- KISS OF THE BEES 79
- "It's in the book," Mitch said quickly. "In your stepmother's
- book. You're all in it. You said Tommy was your little brother.
- I don't remember the book saying anything about him being
- dead."
- 156
- "Tommy's missing," Quentin answered firmly. "He's been
- missing for years. He disappeared between his freshman and
- sophomore years in high school. After all this time, I suppose
- he's dead. Nobody's heard from him since."
- Quentin ducked his head and took another quick sip of beer.
- "Sorry," he added. "I didn't mean to end up spilling out all this
- family crap."
- "It's okay," Mitch returned. "Families are like that, especially
- for people like us. All you have to do is screw up once and then
- you find out the whole idea of 'unconditional love' is a crock of
- shit. The people who are supposed to love you usually turn out
- to be the ones who break your heart. That's why friends are so
- important. A lot of times, friends are it. They're all you end
- up with."
- Once again Quentin gave Mitch a searching, sidelong look.
- "You mean you're in the same boat?"
- Mitch nodded. "Pretty much," he said. "If it's any consolation,
- there's a whole lot of that going around."
- "As in misery loves company?"
- "More or less."
- 157
- Quentin gave a bleak laugh and lifted his almost empty glass.
- "Here's to friends, then," he said.
- "To friends," Mitch agreed, touching his still almost full glass
- to Quentin's nearly empty one. Quentin raised one finger and
- called for another beer.
- "So what are you up to these days?" Quentin asked as they
- waited for the bartender to deliver the order.
- "For the last couple of months," Mitch Johnson said quietly,
- "I've been looking for you."
- "Looking for me?" Quentin asked, as though he couldn't
- quite believe it.
- Mitch nodded. "I probably wouldn't have found you now if
- it hadn't been for your mother."
- "Which one, my stepmother or my real mother?"
- "Your biological mother," Mitch answered.
- 80 J.A. JANCE
- "You mean you actually made it past the screen and talked
- to her?"
- "What screen?"
- "My brother, Brian. My half-brother. He doesn't let me anywhere
- 158
- near Mom if he can help it. He claims I upset her. What
- he really means is she might end up slipping me some cash.
- Brian wants to keep all that for himself."
- "Your brother must not have been home," Mitch replied,
- "because I talked to her directly. She's the one who told me
- where you were living."
- "You still haven't told me how come you were looking for
- me in the first place."
- "Andy told me once that you claimed to have found some
- pottery--some Indian pottery--out on the reservation. Is that
- true?"
- Quentin had been chatting easily enough. Now, though, he
- pulled back. "What if it is?" he asked.
- Mitch ignored the sudden shift in mood. "One of the things
- Andy did for me before he died," Mitch continued, "was to give
- me the benefit of some of his contacts. I may have found a
- possible buyer for those pots of yours--if they're legit, that is."
- The conversation ground to a momentary halt. "How much
- money?" Quentin asked finally, looking up.
- Mitch shrugged. "That depends on quality and quantity of
- 159
- the merchandise, of course. But before my buyer will deal on
- any pots, he wants me to take a look at them. He wants me to
- see the pots as well as where you found them."
- Before Mitch could even finish the sentence, Quentin Walker
- was already shaking his head. "No way" he said. "No way in
- hein I can maybe bring them out for you to see them, but you
- can't go there to look at them. It's not possible."
- "Why not?"
- "You just can't, that's all."
- "But I can make it worth your while," Mitch said.
- Reaching into his pocket, he pulled out his wallet. He removed
- several bills and laid them on the bar. "Believe me,
- Quentin, there's a lot more where this came from. It's our
- chance to make some big bucks."
- Quentin looked at the money blankly for some time, as
- though lost in thought. "What's this?" he asked at last.
- KISS OF THE BEES 81
- "What does it look like?" Mitch Johnson smiled. "It's a small
- down payment, Quentin. But remember, seeing the material on
- site is part of the deal. This is the first half. You get the same
- 160
- amount as soon as you show me the spot. After that, it's a sixtyforty
- split of whatever my buyer pays."
- Mitch knew very well the kind of hand-to-mouth existence
- Quentin Walker had lived since being released from prison. He
- had expected the man to leap at the opportunity to make some
- fast money. Mitch found Quentin's apparent reticence somewhat
- surprising. He waited impatiently while the younger man
- stared down at the bills without touching them.
- "Drywalling money's that good then?" Mitch asked in an
- effort to move things forward.
- Tentatively, almost as if afraid they might bite, Quentin
- Walker reached out and moved the bills closer to him. He leaned
- down and examined them in the dim light of the bar. An unfamiliar
- picture stared back at him from the topmost one. Quentin
- may not have recognized Grover Cleveland's likeness right off
- the bat, but the numbers in the corner of the bill were easily
- identifiable--a one and three zeros.
- "There's more where that came from."
- Not quite believing what he was seeing, Quentin thumbed
- through the other bills. "Five thousand dollars?" he mouthed
- 161
- silently.
- Mitch nodded. Quentin glanced furtively around the bar.
- Most of the customers were engrossed in the San Diego Padres
- baseball game blaring from the television set at the far end of
- the bar. As the bartender pulled himself away from the game
- and started toward them with the next round, Quentin snatched
- the bills off the counter and stuffed them into his shirt pocket.
- Watching him, Mitch suppressed a sigh of relief. The surge
- of power he felt was almost sexual in nature. It reminded him
- of that first time he had invited Lori Kiser to go on a date--a
- picnic in Sabino Canyon. She had said yes, even though they
- both knew at the time that she was saying yes to far more than
- just a picnic. There had been an implicit understanding in her
- saying yes that day, in the way she had blushed when she answered.
- Her yes was to the picnic, but it was also to something
- else. To going to bed with him, probably before the day was
- 82 J.A. JANCE
- over. They had gone on the picnic. Mitch had taken a blanket
- along, just in case, and he had been absolutely right.
- Sitting in the bar with Quentin Walker, Mitch sensed that
- 162
- this was the same thing. By taking the money, Quentin knew
- he was agreeing to break the law. Again. What he couldn't possibly
- know was exactly which laws he would end up breaking.
- "When do you want to go?" Quentin was asking.
- Now it was Mitch's turn to pull himself out of a reverie in
- order to answer. "How about tomorrow evening?"
- He forced himself to ask the question casually, even though
- he knew from his scheduling discussion with Megan in New
- York that this was the one time when he could be reasonably
- sure that Brandon and Diana Walker were going to a banquet
- together. That meant they would both be away from the house
- for a predictable period of time.
- Already more than a little drunk, Quentin tried to think his
- way through all the various ramifications. There were risks involved
- in selling the pottery, but that much money--ten thousand
- tax-free dollars--almost made the risks worthwhile. At
- least, it made them seem far less significant.
- "I suppose that would work," Quentin said. "In fact, it'll
- probably be better if we go there in the dark. Fewer people will
- see us if we go then. This place is a secret, you know. I want
- 163
- to keep it that way. Not only that, it won't be nearly as hot."
- "All right," Mitch agreed. "What time?"
- "Five?"
- "I already have another afternoon appointment. Five may be
- pushing it. Let's make it six. Where should we meet?"
- "Here," Quentin said. "I don't have wheels at the moment."
- "No problem," Mitch assured him. "Meet me out front. You
- can ride with me." He stood up and staggered slightly, waiting
- for his permanently damaged knee to steady under his weight.
- Quentin noticed and seemed to relax. "At least I'm not the
- only one who's had one too many."
- "I guess not," Mitch said agreeably. "See you tomorrow."
- He limped outside and climbed into his waiting Subaru. He
- sat there for a few moments, eyeing the bar's vivid neon lights
- and thinking. Originally the plan had simply been to do the girl
- in her parents' house and to leave a drunken Quentin there to
- take the blame. In that basic plan, the pots had been intended
- KISS OF THE BEES 83
- as nothing more than bait, something off the wall enough to
- dupe Quentin into going along with the program.
- 164
- In the months since Mitch had been out of prison, however,
- he had been doing some research. He had learned that these
- pots--if they actually existed--were probably worth a fortune
- in their own right. And if he could have Quentin Walker and
- his pots as well, why not go for broke?
- The original plan had been a perfectly good one, and it gave
- every indication of working in a totally predictable fashion. That
- didn't mean, however, that it couldn't be improved upon. After
- all, Andy hadn't left Mitch so much money that he couldn't do
- with a little more.
- See you tomorrow, sucker, Mitch thought, as he turned the
- key in the ignition. We'll have so much fun that you won't be able
- to believe it.
- Once Mitch Johnson left the bar, Quentin Walker wasted
- no time in summoning the bartender once again. "Let me have
- one for the road," he said. "Jack Daniels on ice. A double."
- "Why the sudden change?" the bartender asked. "Did you
- win the lottery or something?"
- "Damn near," Quentin replied, trying his best not to sound
- too enthusiastic. He patted his shirt pocket, checking to make
- 165
- sure the five bills were still there. They rustled crisply beneath
- his hand. He hadn't dreamed them, then; hadn't made them up.
- He hadn't made up Mitch Johnson, either.
- The money was good. In fact, the money was great, better
- than he would have dreamed possible. The only problem was
- taking Mitch Johnson up to the cave.
- The prospect of doing that left Quentin almost sick with
- fear. There must be a way around it, he thought as the bartender
- delivered his next drink. There just has to be. All he needed
- was a good solid shot of whiskey to clear his head.
- Not long after that, Quentin left the bar. He was afraid that
- if he stayed around too long, he might shoot his mouth off and
- tell somebody about the money. In this neighborhood, walking
- around with a wad of money on you was almost as bad as being
- handed a death warrant.
- Glancing warily over his shoulder, Quentin staggered the
- block and a half to his alley-fronting apartment. It would have
- 84 J.A. JANCE
- been a crying shame if somebody had hit him over the head and
- rolled him on his way home.
- 166
- A hell of a crying shame!
- Brandon waited until he and Diana were getting ready for
- bed before he brought up the subject of Fat Crack's visit. They
- had been having so much fun together out chopping and stacking
- wood that he hadn't wanted to spoil things by bringing it
- up. And then again, during dinner, he hadn't wanted to mention
- anything at all about Andrew Carlisle in front of Lani.
- He was just gearing up to say something when Diana beat
- him to the punch. "What did Fat Crack want?" she asked.
- "It drives me crazy when you do that," Brandon told her.
- "When I do what?"
- "When you read my mind. I was about to tell you, and then
- you asked me before I had a chance to spit out the words."
- "Well?"
- Brandon Walker took a deep breath. "He came to talk to
- us--to me, really--about Andrew Carlisle."
- Diana finished slipping her nightgown on over her head.
- "What about Andrew Carlisle?"
- "Fat Crack says he's coming back."
- "Andrew Carlisle is dead."
- 167
- "That's exactly what I tried to tell Fat Crack when he was
- here," Brandon explained. "It didn't make any difference. He
- says he's read your book and it convinced him that, dead or not, Andrew Carlisle's
- still after us. That he's after you." "That's ridiculous," Diana said at once. "It
- doesn't make
- any sense."
- "Maybe not, but I can tell you Fat Crack is serious as hell
- about this. He wanted me to call up the department and ask
- Bill Forsythe to send more patrols out this way."
- "To protect us from a dead man," Diana said.
- "Right."
- "What did you tell him?"
- "That Bill Forsythe would laugh himself silly at the very
- idea."
- "Good, because that's exactly what would happen."
- "But still," Brandon cautioned, "maybe it would be better
- KISS OF THE BEES 85
- if you didn't run around by yourself too much for the next little
- while. What are you doing tomorrow?"
- "I have that interview, the one New York set up out at La
- Paloma, but first I go to the beauty shop for hair, nails, and
- 168
- makeup. There's a photo shoot along with the interview. And
- then in the evening, there's the dinner. You're already going
- to that."
- "If you want me to, I'll be happy to go along in the morning
- as well," Brandon offered.
- "To the beauty shop and the interview?" Diana asked incredulously.
- "Have you lost your marbles?"
- "I love you, Diana," Brandon said. "Sure it sounds crazy,
- but Fat Crack scared hell out of me. If anything happened to
- i
- you . . .
- "Nothing's going to happen," Diana said firmly. "And if you
- wouldn't go with me to the damn Pulitzer banquet, you sure as
- hell are not going to come hold my hand in the beauty shop or
- bird-dog me through an interview. That's final."
- "But--"
- "No buts," she said, shaking her head. "I could have used
- you at the ceremony, but the beauty shop is absolutely off limits.
- I'd say that's true for both of you," she added with a smile.
- "You wouldn't be caught dead there, and neither would Andrew
- 169
- Carlisle."
- Back home in his RV on Coleman Road, Mitch Johnson tried
- to sleep but couldn't. He was too excited. He felt like a little
- kid again, and thinking Christmas Eve would never end, that
- morning would never come, and it would never be time to unwrap
- the few presents that his impoverished parents had somehow
- managed to put under their scrawny tree.
- His own son, Mikey--Michael Wraike, as he was now
- called--had never known the kind of grinding poverty that had
- shaped his biological father. Raised in the affluence provided by
- his hotshot developer stepfather, Mike was now a tall, handsome,
- rangy kid, a student at the University of Arizona, who
- had attended his stepfather's funeral service with no idea that
- his natural father--his real father, as Mitch liked to think of
- himself--was standing in the fifth row only a few yards away.
- Mitch had known that going to the funeral was risky, espe-
- 86 J.A. JANCE
- cially since Lori's relatives would be there right along with her
- dead husband's. But using the makeup techniques Andy had
- taught him, Mitch had taken great pains to disguise himself.
- 170
- Obviously it had worked. He had held his breath when Lori's
- Great Aunt Aggie had plopped her ample butt down on the
- pew beside him.
- Even though being so near her made him nervous as hell, he
- nonetheless had to smile to himself at the realization that after
- years of good living, Lori had gone to fat as well, just like her
- well-fed auntie.
- Aunt Aggie had given Mitch the benefit of one of her cursory
- and universally disapproving glances. Then, with no hint of recognition,
- she had sighed and settled back in the pew, turning
- her attention to the beginning of the service.
- Larry Wraike's funeral was, of course, a closed-casket affair.
- That may have been a surprise to Aunt Aggie and a few of the
- other attendees. It was no surprise to Mitch Johnson. He had
- made a very conscious effort to make sure that would be the
- case.
- y.
- "Greedy targets are easy targets," Andy had told him once.
- In Larry Wraike's case, that had proved absolutely true. Using a
- 171
- simple electronic device that altered his voice, Mitch had called
- his wife's second husband at his plush office at Stone and Pennington
- in Tucson to give him some unwelcome news.
- "The problem is, Mr. Wraike, that the land you've developed
- wasn't yours in the first place."
- "Now wait just a goddamned minute here!" Larry had sputtered.
- "I don't know who the hell you think you are, but--"
- "I think you'd better hear me out," Mitch interrupted. "As
- I understand it, there's been a mistake of some kind, back in
- D.C. Kiser Ranch Estates is actually supposed to be part of the
- reservation."
- "But that's impossible. It's been in my wife's family for
- years."
- "Illegally," Mitch said.
- "But the Kiser land isn't anywhere near the reservation. This
- doesn't make sense."
- "Since when does anything that happens in Washington have
- to make sense? Here's the deal. A few people out on the reserva-
- KISS OF THE BEES 87
- tion--a very few--are aware of this situation. And they're prepared
- 172
- to forget it--for a price, that is."
- "For a price?" Wraike protested. "They can't do that.
- That's blackmaill"
- "My principals would prefer you didn't call it blackmail,"
- Mitch Johnson said smoothly. "They'd like me to meet with you
- to discuss a possible settlement. If I were you, in advance of that
- meeting, I'd make damned sure I didn't mention a word of this
- to a soul."
- There was a long silence on the phone. "A meeting where?"
- Wraike asked at last, and Mitch Johnson knew he had him.
- They had met in a darkened bar in Nogales, Arizona. It had
- been an easy thing to slip a dose of scopolamine into his drink.
- Larry was so upset at the thought of losing his real estate empire
- that he never suspected a thing, never saw through Mitch's simple
- disguise that made a much older man out of a middle-aged
- one.
- It was only later when the makeup was gone and as the drug
- started to wear off that he recognized who Mitch was. Even
- then Wraike didn't tumble to the full extent of his danger.
- That was something Mitch regretted now, as he sat looking
- 173
- up at the stars over Kitt Peak. He had rushed things. He hadn't
- made sure Larry Wraike was fully aware of what was going on
- before it happened. Mitch had only himself to blame that he
- hadn't taken time enough to savor the moment.
- "So whaddya want, Mitch? Money?" Larry had asked. "I
- have plenty of that. We can make a deal."
- Mitch shook his head. "No deals," he said.
- Larry Wraike's mumbled, half-drugged offer of a deal constituted
- his last words. Moments later, Mitch shoved a fist-sized
- gag into the man's mouth. Looking down at his trussed and
- helpless victim, Mitch peeled off his own clothes and set them
- out of harm's way. That was another piece of Andy's sage advice.
- No sense in getting blood anywhere it wouldn't be easy to
- wash off.
- When Mitch turned back to the bed, he was holding the
- knife. As soon as he saw it, Larry's eyes bulged with fear. He
- thrashed on the bed, trying to get loose, but Mitch's expert knots
- held firm. It would have been fun to tease him with the knife
- 88 J.A. JANCE
- for a while, to prick the son of a bitch here and there, just to
- 174
- get his attention.
- That was where the scheduling problem came in. Without
- realizing how long it would take for the drug to wear off, Mitch
- had hired a young prostitute to show up later in the afternoon.
- Now her scheduled arrival was less than an hour away. By the
- time she showed up and let herself in with the room key Mitch
- had thoughtfully provided, Mitch had to be finished with
- Wraike--finished, cleaned up, and long gone.
- "It can be a beautiful thing if you do it right," Andy had
- said. "It's almost like a dance. All you have to do is touch them
- with the tip of the knife, and you can watch their flesh try to
- crawl away from it. A knife has far more nuances than a gun.
- "Given your history, I can understand your peculiar fascination
- with what an exploding shell can do to the human anatomy.
- But let me ask you this: When you shoved the barrel of your
- rifle up that little gook girl's twat, you couldn't feel her heart
- beating, could you?"
- Still shocked that Andy had used the effects of the drug dose
- to trick him into revealing his darkest secret, Mitch Johnson had
- shaken his head.
- 175
- "I didn't think so. With the tip of a knife, though, if you
- hold it right here in the hollow of someone's neck, you can feel
- their pulse," Carlisle said. "It comes right up through the handle
- with a vibration that's so faint you can barely feel it. And the
- more scared they are, the better you can feel it. There's nothing
- quite like it," he had added, twisting his distorted lips into what
- could only have been a smile of remembrance.
- "There's nothing like it at all. And then, after you let them
- know that you own them, that there's nothing they can do,
- that's when it gets personal. You stand there and you're God,
- and all you have to decide is where to cut them, where to draw
- the first blood. Just wait," he added. "You won't believe how
- great it feels."
- "Like getting your rocks off?" Mitch asked.
- "No," Andy Carlisle had said. "Better than that. Much
- better."
- And so, with his rival lying naked on the bed, Mitch tried
- touching the tip of the knife against the hollow at the base of
- Larry Wraike's throat. The thrashing stopped. Larry lay there
- KISS OF THE BEES 89
- 176
- still as death beneath the weight of the knife. The only thing
- that moved were his eyes. They swung back and forth between
- Mitch's face and the slightly trembling blade.
- Mitch held the knife delicately. The vibration that came
- through the bone handle reminded him of a time long ago when,
- as a twelve-year-old, he had plucked a tiny baby bird out of a
- nest. He had held it in the palm of his hand for several minutes,
- feeling the frantic beating of its heart and wings against his skin.
- He didn't remember how long he held it. What he did remember
- was that eventually the damned thing pecked him, bit him
- so hard that it drew blood. When that happened, he simply
- closed his fist around it, crushing out that little bit of life as if
- it had never existed.
- That had been a very clear and simplified lesson in the ethics
- of crime and punishment. The bird had hurt him, so he killed
- it. This was the same thing.
- Moving the tip of the knife away from Wraike's throat,
- Mitch was gratified to see the man's heartfelt sigh of relief. As
- the stark tension drained out of Larry's body, Mitch felt a sudden
- stiffening in his own. He almost laughed aloud at the sensation.
- 177
- Some idiot psychology major had once done a series of interviews
- at the prison, asking some of the more violent offenders
- if there was any correlation for them between sex and violence.
- If Mitch ever ran into that broad again, he'd have to be sure
- to tell her that for him the answer was a definite yes.
- "You do know why I'm doing this, don't you?" he asked.
- Larry shook his head frantically.
- "Would you like me to tell you?"
- This time Larry's answering nod was equally frantic. Mitch
- wasn't so much interested in having this one-sided conversation
- as he was in stretching the moment. He could not, in his whole
- life, ever remember having anyone listen to him with quite such
- rapt attention.
- "You cheated me," Mitch said with no particular animosity.
- By the time they reached that point, Mitch Johnson had moved
- far beyond anger. He was simply delivering information, allowing
- Larry to understand the gravity of his mistake. Maybe, in another
- lifetime, he wouldn't make the same fatal error a second time.
- "The deal was all set," Mitch continued reasonably. "All
- either one of us had to do was wait for old man Kiser to kick
- 178
- 90 J.A. JAN(E
- off. He was already sick, so it wouldn't have taken long. Once
- he did, we both would have made out like bandits. Instead, you
- waited until I was locked up and then you moved in and took
- your share and mine as well. To top it all off, you ended up
- fucking my wife, too. That wasn't a nice thing to do, Larry. It
- just wasn't right."
- Around the gag and behind it, Larry's lips and tongue tried
- vainly to form words. He might have been agreeing with Mitch's '^|
- assessment. He might even have been trying to say he was sorry,
- but as far as Mitch was concerned, it was far too late for apologies.
- After eighteen years, sorry didn't exactly cut it.
- In the end it was the sexual injustice of Larry Wraike's actions
- that ruled the day. That, even more than the money, dictated
- the final result. That was why the first cut--the one that
- bled the most--was directly between Larry Wraike's legs. Mitch
- stood back and watched for a while, watched the man writhe
- and squirm and bleed and try to scream. And then, when Mitch
- lost interest in that, just as he had with the bird, and because
- he was worried about the time element, he went ahead and
- 179
- finished him off.
- Larry Wraike was dead long before Mitch took the knife and
- began carving up his face. Andy would have called that gratuitous.
- It might even have been more than Andy himself would
- have done. If so, it was a way for Mitch to prove to himself that
- he had graduated, that he had moved beyond being Andrew
- Carlisle's student. He was, in fact, a talented killer in his own
- right, out to get a little of his own back from those who had
- wronged him in the past.
- It took only a matter of seconds to mangle Larry Wraike's
- face. Afterward, while Mitch was showering, he laughed to think
- of Lori being called into a coroner's office to identify the bloody
- remains. Other than Lori and a few cops, not many people
- would see what he had done, but the thought of Lori seeing her
- husband that way made Mitch happy.
- She was, after all, the only one who mattered.
- As expected, Mitch himself was miles away from the motel
- when the teenaged prostitute from the other side of the border
- let herself into the room and discovered the body. Despite her
- frenzied screams and her subsequent protestations of innocence,
- 180
- KISS OF THE BEES 91
- she and her pimp would be going on trial soon, down in Santa
- Cruz County, for the savage murder of Larry Wraike.
- Mitch Johnson had made it back to his RV on Coleman Road
- without any questions asked. And if any homicide cops from
- Nogales ever went looking for the old man who had met with
- the victim in a bar a few hours before his death, they never had
- any luck finding him.
- Nope, as far as Larry Wraike was concerned, Mitch Johnson
- got away clean.
- More relaxed now, Mitch stood up, stretched, and went inside,
- but he still didn't feel like sleeping. Instead, he took out a
- sketchbook and went to work.
- "What was the author's name again?" Noreen Kennedy, the
- prison librarian, had asked.
- "Nicola'ides," Mitch Johnson answered. "He's Greek."
- "And the name of the book?"
- "The Natural Way to Draw."
- Noreen was a firm believer in the importance of rehabilitation.
- "You're studying art, then?" she asked.
- 181
- Mitch smiled diffidently. "I've always been interested in art,"
- he said. "But there was never enough time to do anything about
- it. Now I've got nothing but time. This book is supposed to be
- the best there is."
- The book arrived eventually, courtesy of an inter-library loan.
- And it was every bit as good as Mitch had been told it would
- be. With a pencil and a cheap sketchbook, he went to work
- doing the exercises. The book contained a year-long course of
- study. Unfortunately, the checkout period was limited to two
- weeks.
- "Could you order it for me again, Mrs. Kennedy?" he asked,
- the day he returned it to the library. "In two weeks' time, I
- barely got started. What I really need is my own copy."
- "I don't know," she said. "I'll see what I can do."
- It was a month before Mitch received a summons to the
- library. Noreen Kennedy, who was almost as wide as she was
- tall, smiled broadly at him. "You'll never guess what I found,"
- she said, holding up a shabby volume Mitch instantly recognized
- as a much-used copy of the Nicola'ides book.
- "I got it from a used-book dealer in Phoenix who's an old
- 182
- 92 J.A. JANCE
- friend of mine," she said. "We went to Library School together.
- Jack said he's had it in inventory for years and he only charged
- me five bucks. Can you afford to buy it, or should I just go
- ahead and put it in the collection?"
- "I'd really like to have my own copy, if you don't mind,"
- Mitch said.
- "I thought you would," Noreen said, handing it over.
- The book had been a godsend. When Mitch was sketching,
- the hours seemed to fly by. As the months went past, it was
- easy to recognize the increasing skill in the way he executed the
- exercises. While he sketched, Andrew Carlisle talked. It was as
- though he had an almost physical need to share his exploits with
- someone. Mitch Johnson became Andy's chosen vessel.
- Andy's bragging about the tapes was how Mitch first heard
- about them. At first it made him uneasy that Andy had taken
- such pains to make a record of all he had done, but in the long
- run, Mitch realized that recordings were just that--mechanical
- reproductions. They didn't allow for any artistic license. Painting
- did.
- 183
- There was a locked storage unit under the bed in the
- Bounder. In it were two 1 S-by-24-inch canvases. Each oil painting
- was of Larry Wraike, one before and one after. The first was
- of a moderately handsome overfed businessman in a well-pressed
- suit, the kind of dully representative portrait that an overly
- proud wife might have commissioned in honor of some special
- occasion. An art critic seeing the second painting would have
- assumed, mistakenly, that this was an imaginative rendition of a
- soul in torment.
- Only Mitch Johnson knew that that one, too, was fully representational.
- He thought of them as a matched pair--"Larry
- Wraike Before" and "Larry Wraike After."
- Half an hour after returning to the RV, when he held the
- unfinished drawing up to a mirror to examine it, the artist was
- pleased with the likeness. Anyone who knew Quentin Walker
- would have recognized him. The picture showed him sitting
- slump-shouldered, his elbows resting on the bar, his eyes morosely
- focused on the beer in the bottom of the glass in front of
- him. Quentin Walker Before.
- Looking at the picture, though, Mitch Johnson realized
- 184
- something else about it--something he had never noticed before
- KISS OF THE BEES 95
- that moment--how very much the son resembled the father.
- That hadn't been nearly so apparent when Quentin first showed
- up in Florence as it was now. He had come to prison as nothing
- but a punk kid. The hard years in between had matured and
- hardened him into what Brandon Walker had been when Mitch
- first knew him.
- "Well, I'll be damned1" Mitch said to the picture reflected
- back from the mirror. "If you aren't your daddy's spitting image,
- Mr. Quentin Walker. Imagine that1."
- 5
- I he
- hey say it happened long ago that the weather grew very hot--
- the hottest year the Tohono O'othham had ever known. And all
- this happened in the hottest part of that year.
- For many weeks the Indians and the animals had looked at the
- sky, hoping to find one cloud that would show them that Chewagi
- O'othham--Cloud Man--was still alive. There was not a cloud.
- The water holes had been dry for a long time. The Desert People
- 185
- had gone far away to find water. The coyotes had followed the
- Indians. The wolves and foxes had gone into the mountains. All the
- birds had left. Even Kakaichu--Quail--who seldom leaves his own
- land, was forced to go away.
- Gohhim Chuk--Lame Jackrabbit--had found a little shade. It
- was not much, just enough to keep him from burning. The tips of
- his ears and his tail were already burned black. And that, nawoj,
- is why that particular kind of Jackrabbit--chuk chuhwi--is marked
- that same way, even today.
- As Gohhim Chuk--Lame Jackrabbit--lay panting in his little
- bit of shade, he was wondering how he would manage the few days'
- journey to a cooler place. Then he saw Nuhwi--Buzzard--flying
- over him.
- Now it is the law of the desert to live and let live, that one
- should only kill in self-defense or to keep from starving. The animals
- forget this law sometimes when their stomachs are full and when
- there is plenty of water, but when the earth burns and when everyKISS OF THE BEES
- 95
- one is in danger, the law is always remembered. So Lame Jackrabbit
- did not run away when he saw Buzzard circling down over him.
- 186
- Buzzard knew the law of the desert as well as Lame Jackrabbit did.
- Nuhwi flew in circles, lower and lower. When he was low
- enough, he called to Lame Jackrabbit. "I have seen something very
- odd back in the desert," Nuhwi said. When he was high up over
- the part of the desert which was burned bare, he told Lame Jackrabbit,
- he saw on the ground a black place that seemed to be in motion.
- He had circled down hoping it was water. But it was only a great
- crowd of Ali-chu'uchum O'othham, the Little People.
- As you know, nawoj, my friend, the Little People are the bees
- and flies and insects of all kinds. Buzzard said these Little People
- were swarming around something on the ground. He said Nuhwi
- and Gohhim Chuk must carry the news together because it might
- help someone. It is also the law of the desert that you must always
- help anyone in trouble.
- Lame Jackrabbit agreed that what Buzzard had seen was very
- strange. Little People usually leave early when the water goes away.
- Lame Jackrabbit said he would carry the news.
- But Gohhim Chuk, whose ears and tail were burned black,
- being lame, could not travel very well. So he found Coyote and told
- him what Nuhwi--Buzzard--had seen.
- 187
- Ban--Coyote--was puzzled too. He said he would carry the
- message on to the Tohono O'othham--the Desert People.
- It was still dark when Lani's alarm buzzed in her ear. She
- turned if off quickly and then hurried into the bathroom to
- shower. Standing in front of the steamy mirror, she used a brush
- and hair dryer to style her shoulder-length hair. How long would
- it take, she wondered, for her hair to grow back out to the
- f length it had been back in eighth grade, before she had cut it?
- From first grade on, Lani Walker and Jessica Carpenter had
- been good friends. By the time they reached Maxwell Junior
- High, the two girls made a striking pair. Lani's jet-black waistlength
- hair and bronze complexion were in sharp contrast to
- Jessie's equally long white-blond hair and fair skin. Because they
- were always together, some of the other kids teasingly called
- them twins.
- Their entry into eighth grade came at a time when Lani
- Walker needed a faithful ally. For one thing, Rita was gone. She
- 96 J.A. JANCE
- had been dead for years, but Lani still missed her. When coping
- with the surprising changes in her own body or when faced with
- 188
- difficulties at home or in school, Lani still longed for the comfort
- of Nana Dahd's patient guidance. And there were difficulties at
- home. In fact, the whole Walker household seemed to be in a
- state of constant upheaval. Things had started going bad when
- her older stepbrother, Quentin, had been sent to prison as a
- result of a fatality drunk-driving accident.
- Lani had been too young to realize all that was happening
- when Tommy disappeared, but she had watched her grim-faced
- parents deal with the first Quentin crisis. She had been at the
- far end of the living room working on a basket the night after
- Quentin Walker was sentenced for the drunk-driving conviction.
- Brandon had come into the house, shambled over to the couch,
- slumped down on it, and buried his face in his hands.
- "Five years," he had groaned. "On the one hand it seems
- like a long time and yet it's nothing. He killed three people, for
- God's sake1 How can a five-year sentence make up for that,
- especially when he'll probably be out in three?"
- "That's what the law says," Diana returned, but Brandon
- remained unconvinced and uncomforted.
- "Judge Davis could have given him more if he had wanted
- 189
- to. I can't help thinking that it's because I'm the sheriff ..."
- "Brandon, you have to let go of that," Diana said. "First you
- blame yourself for Quentin being a drunk, and now you're taking
- responsibility for the judge's sentence. Quentin did what he did
- and so did the judge. Neither one of those results has anything
- at all to do with you."
- Lani had put her basket aside and hurried over to the couch,
- where she snuggled up next to her father. "It's not your fault,
- Daddy," she said confidently, taking one of his hands in both of
- hers. "You didn't do it."
- "See there?" Diana had smiled. "If Lani's smart enough to
- see it at her age, what's the matter with you?"
- "Stubborn, maybe?" Brandon had returned with a weak
- smile of his own.
- "Not stubborn maybe," Diana answered. "Stubborn for
- sure."
- So the family had weathered that crisis in fairly good shape.
- The next one, when it came, was far worse. As near as Lani
- KISS OF THE BEES 97
- could tell, it all started about the time the letter arrived from a
- 190
- man named Andrew Carlisle, the same person Nana Dahd had
- always referred to as the evil Ohb. Within months, Diana was
- working on a book project with Andrew Carlisle while Brandon
- stalked in and out of the house in wounded silence.
- Lani was hard-pressed to understand how the very mention
- of Carlisle's name was able to cause a fight, but from a teenager's
- point of view, that wasn't all bad. The growing wedge between
- her parents allowed Lani Walker to play both ends against the
- middle. She was able to get away with things her older brother
- Davy never could have.
- It was during the summer when Lani turned thirteen that
- the next scandal surfaced concerning Quentin Walker. Still imprisoned
- at Florence, he was the subject of a new investigation.
- He was suspected of being involved in a complex protection
- racket that had its origins inside the prison walls. By the time
- school started at the end of the summer, a sharp-eyed defense
- attorney had gotten Quentin off on a technicality, but all of
- Tucson was abuzz with speculation about Brandon Walker's possible
- involvement with his son's plot.
- The whole mess was just surfacing in the media the week
- 191
- Lani Walker started eighth grade. At home the inflammatory
- newspaper headlines and television news broadcasts were easy
- to ignore. All Lani had to do was to skip reading the paper or
- turn off the TV. At school that strategy didn't work.
- "Your father's a crook." Danny Jenkins, the chief bully of
- Maxwell Junior High, whispered in Lani's ear as the yellow
- school bus rumbled down the road. "You wait and see. Before
- long, he'll end up in prison, too, just like his son."
- Lani had turned to face her tormentor. Red-haired, rednecked,
- and pugnacious, Danny had made Lani's life miserable
- from the moment he had first shown up in Tucson two years
- earlier after moving there from Mobile, Alabama.
- "No, he won't1." Lani hissed furiously.
- "Will, too."
- "Prove it."
- "Why should I? It says so on TV. That means it's true,
- doesn't it?"
- 98 LA. JANCE
- "No, it doesn't, s-koshwa--stupid," she spat back at him. "It
- just means you're too dumb to turn off the set."
- 192
- "Wait a minute. What did you call me?"
- "Nothing," she muttered.
- She turned away, thinking that if she ignored him, that
- would be the end of it. Instead, he grabbed a handful of her hair
- and yanked it hard enough that the back of her head bounced off
- the top of the seat. Tears sprang to her eyes.
- "Leave her alone, Danny," Jessica Carpenter ordered. "You're hurting her."
- "She called me a name--some shitty Indian name. I want to
- know what it was."
- Lani, with her head pulled tight against the back of the seat,
- clamped her lips shut. But just because Lani stayed quiet, didn't
- mean Jessica Carpenter would.
- "I'm telling," Jessica yelled. "Driver, driver! Danny Jenkins
- is pulling Lani's hair."
- The driver didn't bother looking over her shoulder. "Knock
- it off, Danny," she said. "Stop it right now or you're walking."
- "But she called me a name," Danny protested. "It sounded
- bad. Koshi something."
- "I don't care what she called you. I said knock it off."
- Danny had let go of Lani's hair, but that still wasn't the end
- 193
- of it. "Why don't you go back to the reservation, squaw," he
- snarled after her as they stepped off the bus. "Why don't you
- go back to where you belong?"
- She turned on him, eyes flashing. "Why don't you?" she
- demanded. "The Indians were here Erst."
- Nobody liked Danny Jenkins much, although over time his
- flailing fists had earned him a certain grudging respect. But now,
- the kids who overheard Lani's retort laughed and applauded.
- "You really told him," Jessica said approvingly later on their
- way to class. "He's such a jerk."
- Going home that afternoon, Lani and Jessica chose seats as
- far from Danny as possible, but after the bus pulled out of the
- parking lot, he bribed the girl sitting behind Lani to trade places.
- When Lani and Jessica got off the bus twenty minutes later,
- they found that a huge wad of bubblegum had been plastered
- into Lani's hair.
- They went into the bathroom at Jessica's house. For an hour,
- KISS OF THE BEES w
- the two of them struggled to comb out the gum, but combing
- didn't work.
- 194
- "It's just getting worse," Jessica said finally, giving up. "Let's
- call your mother. Maybe she'll know what to do."
- Lani shook her head. "Mom and Dad have enough to worry
- about right now. Bring me the scissors."
- "Scissors," Jessie echoed. "What are you going to do?"
- "Cut it off."
- "You can't do that," Jessie protested. "Your hair's so long
- and pretty ..."
- "Yes, I can," Lani told her friend determinedly. "And I will.
- It's my hair."
- In the end Jessica helped wield the scissors. She cut the hair
- off in what was supposed to be a straight line, right at the base
- of Lani's neck.
- "How does it look?" Lani asked as Jessica stepped back to
- eye her handiwork.
- Jessie made a face. "Not that good," she admitted. "It's still
- a little crooked."
- "That's all right," Lani said. "It'll grow out."
- "So will mine," Jessie said, handing Lani the scissors.
- For a moment, Lani didn't understand. "What do you
- 195
- mean?"
- "Cut mine, too. People tease us about being twins. This way,
- we still will be."
- "But what will your mother say?" Lani asked.
- "The same thing yours does," Jessica returned.
- Fifteen minutes later, Jessie Carpenter's hair was the same
- ragged length as Lani's. Before they left the bathroom, Lani gathered
- up all the cuttings into a plastic trash bag. Instead of putting
- the bag in the garbage, however, she loaded it into her backpack
- along with her books.
- "What are you doing?" Jessica asked.
- "I'm going to take it home and use it to make a basket."
- "Really? Out of hair?"
- Lani nodded. "Nana Dahd showed me once how to make
- horsehair baskets. This will be an o'othham wopo hashda--
- people-hair basket."
- Hair had been the main topic of conversation that night at
- 100 J.A. JAN(E
- both the Walker household and at the Carpenters' just up the
- road.
- 196
- "Whatever happened to your hair?" Brandon Walker demanded.
- "It looks like you got it caught in the paper cutter
- at school."
- "It was too long," Lani answered quietly. "I decided to cut
- it off. Jessie cut hers, too."
- "You cut it yourself?"
- Lani shrugged. "Jessie cut mine and I cut hers."
- Silenced by a reproving look from Diana, Brandon shook his
- head and let the subject drop, subsiding into a gloomy silence.
- The next day was Saturday. With the enthusiastic approval
- of Rochelle Carpenter, Jessie's mother, Diana collected both girls
- and took them to her beauty shop in town to repair the damage.
- "You both look much better now," Diana had told them on
- the way back home. "What I don't understand is why, if you
- both wanted haircuts, you didn't say something in the first place
- instead of cutting it off yourselves."
- Jessie kept quiet, waiting to see how Lani would answer.
- "We just decided to, that's all," she said.
- Since Lani didn't explain anything more about the fight on
- the bus, neither did Jessie. As for Diana, she was so accustomed
- 197
- to the vagaries of teenagers that she let the matter drop.
- Several weeks later, Lani emerged from her bedroom carrying
- a small flat disk of a basket about the size of a silver dollar.
- Diana Ladd had spent thirty years on and around the reservation.
- Over those years she had become something of an expert on
- Tohono O'othham basketry and she recognized that her daughter,
- Rita Antone's star pupil, was especially skilled. As soon as Diana
- saw this new miniature basket, she immediately recognized the
- quality of the workmanship in the delicate pale-yellow Papago
- maze set against a jet-black background.
- "I didn't know you ever made baskets like this," Diana said,
- examining the piece. "Where did you get the horsehair?"
- "It's not horsehair," Lani answered. "It's made from Jessie's
- hair and from mine. I'm making two of them, one for each of
- us to wear. I'm going to give Jessie hers for her birthday."
- Diana looked at her daughter. "Is that why you cut your
- hair, to make the baskets?"
- KISS OF THE BEES 101
- Lani laughed and shook her head. "No," she said, "I'm making
- the baskets because we cut our hair."
- 198
- "Oh," Diana said, although she still wasn't entirely sure what
- Lani meant.
- It was another month before Jessie's maze was finished as
- well. Each of the baskets had a tiny golden safety pin fastened
- to the back side. Lani strung a leather thong through each of
- the pins, tied her necklace around her neck, and then went to
- Jessica's house carrying the other basket in a tiny white jeweler's
- box she had begged from Diana.
- "It's beautiful," Jessie said, staring down at the necklace.
- "What does it mean?"
- "It means that we're friends," Lani answered. "I made the
- two baskets just alike so we can still be twins whenever we
- wear them."
- "I know that we're friends," Jessie giggled. "But the design.
- What does that mean?"
- "It's a sacred symbol," Lani explained. "The man in the
- maze is I'itoi--Elder Brother. He comes from the center of the
- earth. The maze spreads out from the center in each of the four
- directions."
- In the years since then, the black-and-gold disk had become
- 199
- something of a talisman for Lani Walker. She called it her kushpo
- ho'oma--her hair charm. The original leather thong had been
- replaced several times over. Now when she wore it, the basket
- dangled from a slender gold chain Lani's parents had given her
- on the occasion of her sixteenth birthday.
- The people-hair charm served as a reminder that some people
- were good and some were bad. Lani didn't wear it every
- day, only on special occasions--only when she needed to. There
- were times when she was nervous or worried about something--
- as on the day she went to the museum to apply for the job, for
- instance--that she made sure the necklace went with her.
- Having the basket dangling around her neck seemed to give
- her luck. Every once in a while, she would run her fingertips
- across the finely woven face of the maze. Just touching the
- smooth texture seemed to calm her somehow. In a way Lani
- couldn't quite explain, the tiny basket made her feel more secure--almost
- as if it summoned Nana Dahd's spirit back and
- brought the old basket maker close to her once more.
- 10Z J.A. JANCE
- 200
- Corning out of the bathroom with her hair sleek and dry,
- Lani looked at the clothing she had laid out on a chair the night
- before--the lushly flowered Western shirt with pearl-covered
- snaps, a fairly new pair of jeans, shiny boots, and a fawn-colored
- cowboy hat. Walking past the chair, Lani went to her dresser
- and opened her jewelry box. She smiled as the first few bars of
- "When You Wish Upon a Star" tinkled into the room.
- Taking her treasured maze necklace from its place of honor,
- she fastened it around her throat.
- Mr. Vega--that was the name the artist had signed in the
- bottom right-hand corner of the sketch, [M. Vega)--had asked
- her to wear something Indian. Of all the things Lani Walker
- owned, her o'othham wopo hashda--people-hair basket--was
- more purely "Indian" than anything else.
- Mr. Vega might not know that, but Lani did, and that's
- what counted.
- David Ladd was still reeling from the effects of yet another
- panic attack that Saturday morning as he finished packing his
- things into his new Jeep Cherokee for the long road trip back
- to Arizona. Even though it was a bald-faced lie, he had told his
- 201
- grandmother, Astrid Ladd, that he wanted to get an early start
- that morning.
- As expected, Astrid came out of the main house to watch
- the loading process. She stood in the driveway between the main
- house and the carriage house, leaning on her cane and shaking
- her head as he closed the rear hatch on his carefully packed load.
- "All done?"
- Davy nodded. "I should probably hit the road pretty soon."
- "This early?" Astrid objected. "You can't do that. I wanted
- to take you to the club one last time before you go. Not only
- that, if you're going to be driving all that way by yourself, it's
- important for you to keep up your strength. You should start
- out with a decent breakfast under your belt."
- What David knew but didn't mention to Astrid right then
- was that on the first day of his trip he would be driving only as
- far as downtown Chicago. There, just off North Michigan Avenue
- on Pearson, he and Candace Waverly--his girlfriend of six
- months' standing--planned to spend their farewell night enKISS OF THE BEES 103
- sconced in a deluxe suite at the Ritz Carlton. It was a graduation
- gift from Candace to Davy, compliments of the Gold ArnEx
- 202
- card Richard Waverly provided for his darling daughter.
- "Sure, Grandma," David said, accepting his grandmother's
- invitation gracefully, as he had known in advance that he would.
- "I suppose I can stay long enough to have breakfast," he added.
- Evanston, the town, is dry. Evanston, the golf club--across
- the line in Skokie--is definitely wet. That was the other thing
- David Ladd was both smart and discreet enough not to mention.
- The reason Astrid Ladd wanted to have breakfast at the golf
- club--which she did several times a week--had less to do with
- the quality of the food than it did with the inevitable Bloody
- Mary or two that would accompany her order of eggs Benedict.
- At seventy-eight, Astrid Ladd was old enough to still observe
- the strictures against solitary drinking. According to her longheld
- beliefs, only problem drinkers drank alone. Astrid and her
- late husband, Garrison Walther Ladd II, had been part of the
- fashionable drinking set their whole married life. Living in a dry
- town, they had done their drinking at home, in other people's
- homes or in private clubs. David's grandfather had been dead
- for five years now. He had hemorrhaged to death, dying as a
- result of esophageal varices which were most likely related to all
- 203
- those years of social drinking.
- With her husband and best tippling buddy gone, Astrid Ladd
- still wanted to drink, but she was terrified of being caught in
- the very unladylike trap of drinking alone. As a consequence,
- she spent her days plotting a vigorously active social calendar
- that usually involved suckering some poor unsuspecting chump
- into driving her out to the club early for her daily ration of
- grog. Later on, she would prevail on somebody else to chauffeur
- her home.
- On this hazy, and already hot summer morning in early June,
- David Ladd drove both ways. Leaving behind his upstairs carriage
- house apartment with its magnificent view of Lake Michigan,
- he pulled up to the side entrance of his grandmother's
- oversized mansion in Astrid's aging but equally oversized 1988
- DeVille. She came out onto the porch and stood waiting, leaning
- heavily on her cane, while David hustled out of the car and
- helped her into the rider's side.
- "I can't believe you're done with school already," Astrid said
- m J.A. JANCE
- as he eased her into the leather seat. "Three whole years1 The
- 204
- time just flew by, didn't it? I'm going to miss you desperately,
- Davy. You don't know how much."
- Actually, Davy did know. The drafty old house was far too
- big for Astrid. In fact, most of the upstairs and part of the
- ground floor had been closed off for years, since long before
- Davy appeared on the scene. Several times during his sojourn at
- Northwestern, David Ladd had hinted to his grandmother that
- maybe it was time for her to consider unloading the family
- home. He suggested that she might enjoy moving into a more
- reasonably sized condo, one that didn't require nearly as much
- upkeep. Astrid had dismissed the idea out of hand, and after the
- second rejection Davy hadn't mentioned it again.
- "And I'm going to miss that lovely Candace," Astrid continued.
- "I probably shouldn't, but I can't help thinking of her as a
- granddaughter.''
- That wasn't news. Astrid Ladd had never been one to keep
- her feelings or opinions to herself. Her unbridled enthusiasm for
- Candace Waverly--of the Oak Park Waverlys, as Astrid was fond
- of adding when introducing Candace and Davy to one of her
- upscale friends--was also well known.
- 205
- "I'm going to miss her, too," David managed.
- "How much?"
- "What do you mean, how much?"
- "You know what I mean," Astrid said slyly. "Are you or are
- you not going to give her a ring before you leave town?"
- Astrid Ladd had promised her grandson a free ride at Northwestern's
- law school if he wanted to go there to study. That
- "free ride" had included everything--tuition, books, living expenses,
- food, a place to stay, laundry privileges, and even a car--
- but it had been far from free. The cost had come in terms of
- three years spent living his life under Astrid Ladd's watchful
- scrutiny, under her eye, ear, and thumb. Astrid's far too conscientious
- mothering as well as Chicago's uncompromising
- weather--summer and winter both--were the main reasons
- David Ladd was anxious to go back home to Arizona.
- Candace Waverly was the single reason he wanted to stay
- in Chicago.
- "No, Grandma," he said. "No ring. We're not ready for
- that yet."
- 206
- KISS OF THE BEES 105
- "But you told me that you're . . . what did you call it?"
- "Going out," David supplied. "But that doesn't mean
- we're serious."
- "I wish it did," Astrid said wistfully. "Because I'm willing to
- help, you know."
- Davy kept his eyes on the road. "Grandma," he said patiently,
- "you already put me through law school. And you just
- gave me a Jeep Grand Cherokee for graduation. How much
- more help could you be?"
- "You'd be surprised, Davy," Astrid Ladd said determinedly.
- "There are one or two more things I could do."
- "Grandma, believe me, you've done enough."
- They turned off Sheridan Road onto Dempster. Astrid
- waited until they stopped for a light. "Hold out your hand,"
- she commanded.
- Sighing, David Ladd obeyed. With a deft twist, Astrid removed
- a knuckle-sized diamond ring from her finger and
- dropped it into the palm of her grandson's hand. "You could
- give Candace this," she said.
- 207
- "That's your engagement ring, Grandma," Davy protested.
- "I can't take that." He tried returning it to her. Astrid took it,
- but instead of keeping it, she leaned over and dropped it into
- his shirt pocket.
- "Why not?" she returned. "Who else is there? You're my
- grandson and my only living heir. Who else would I leave it to
- but you? That's why I don't want to sell the house, either. I plan
- to give it to you and Candace as a wedding present, you see."
- Her voice broke. She sounded close to tears. With a lump
- in his own throat, David almost drove the DeVille into a passing
- truck. "You can't be serious, Grandma," he protested.
- "I'm serious as can be, Davy. If you pass the bar in Illinois
- and go into practice, in five years, you'll make partner, especially
- with Richard Waverly's connections. You and Candace will need
- an address like mine to help establish your place in the community.
- You'll need to fix it up some, decorate it to suit you and
- all that, but that'll be a lot less expensive than buying new."
- "Grandmother," David Ladd said carefully, wanting to be
- firm, but not wanting to hurt her feelings. "I don't want to
- practice law here. I want to go home, to Arizona."
- 208
- Astrid tossed her head. "I can't imagine why," she said
- 106 J.A. JANCE
- crossly. "I don't know how regular people can tolerate living in
- that godforsaken place. I remember when your grandfather Garrison
- and I went out there for your father's memorial service--
- it wasn't even a funeral, mind you. It was so ungodly hot. I
- don't know when I've ever been more miserable."
- It would have been simple to talk about the weather. David
- Ladd was an expert on that. He had suffered more from both
- heat and cold during his three years in Illinois than he could
- ever remember enduring in the desert back home. Although this
- was only the second week of June, Chicago was already soldiering
- through the first real heat wave of summer.
- During the previous week, afternoon daytime temperatures
- had hovered in the mid-nineties with humidity much the same--
- mid-nineties. And although the humidity was that high, the
- weather forecasts held no hope of rain or relief. Davy was looking
- forward to Arizona. At least there, the heat was honest.
- When the summer rainstorms came, evening temperatures could
- drop as much as twenty degrees in a matter of minutes. In Chicago,
- 209
- the sweltering, smothering heat never let up. And rain,
- when it came, seemed to make things worse, not better.
- At that moment, however, David Ladd couldn't afford the
- luxury of a digression into weather. His grandmother had issued
- a serious challenge, one that had to be met head-on.
- "It's a wonderful offer, Grandma," he said at last. "It really
- is, and it's a wonderful house. But I can't see myself living
- there."
- "You can't?" She sounded shocked. "Why not?"
- "Because it wouldn't ever be really mine," David answered.
- "I wouldn't feel like I had earned it."
- "That's not it," Astrid said sharply. "It's because of your
- mother, isn't it? Diana has always resented me, and now she's
- turned you against me, too."
- "That's not true, Grandmother. Not at all."
- David turned into the club entrance and then stopped at the
- front door to let Astrid out. The place wasn't all that full, so
- there were plenty of parking places. Even so, by the time he
- made it into the dining room, Astrid had already finished her
- first Bloody Mary and had started on the second.
- 210
- David Ladd sighed. For a farewell celebration, it was not an
- auspicious beginning.
- KISS OF THE BEES 107
- Lani Walker left a note for her parents on the kitchen table.
- "Have fun at the banquet. Remember, Jess and I are going to
- that dueling bands concert at the Community Center tonight.
- Her parents are giving us a ride both to and from. I shouldn't
- be too late, but don't wake me for breakfast. Tomorrow's my
- day off."
- The Tucson Mountains loomed in deep shadows against a
- rosy sky when Lani rode her bike up to Mr. Vega's parking
- place. She had worried overnight that maybe he wouldn't show
- up, but he was there with his easel already set up by the time
- she braked the mountain bike next to his station wagon.
- "Nice hat," he said. "And nice shirt, too, but you're right.
- Those clothes make you look more like a cowgirl than an
- Indian."
- "Hardly anybody wears feathers anymore," Lani told him.
- "And most of the people who go around in leather ride
- motorcycles."
- 211
- "Point taken," he said, with a mock salute. "I think maybe
- I'll have you sit over here on this rock with the saguaro in the
- background. By the way, do you want anything to drink before
- we get started? I brought along orange juice just in case you
- didn't have time for breakfast."
- Lani took off her hat and smoothed her windblown hair.
- "Some orange juice would be great," she said. She settled onto
- the rock and tried to get comfortable while he brought her a
- glass of juice.
- "What do I need to do?" she asked.
- "Relax and try to look natural," he said.
- "That's a lot easier said than done," Lani said, taking a long
- drink of the juice, hoping it would settle her nerves. "I don't
- like having my picture taken, either. That might be part of what
- was wrong with the kids you tried to draw out on the reservation.
- When the white man first came west and tried taking pictures
- of Indians, people believed that the photographer would
- somehow end up capturing their spirits."
- "No kidding." Mr. Vega was busily sketching with a stick of
- charcoal now, pausing every few moments and studying Lani's
- 212
- face. "And you're saying that some people out on the reservation
- still believe that's true?"
- 108 J.A. JANCE
- "Probably some of them do," she said.
- Lani had no idea how much time passed. She was aware of
- a sudden buzzing in her head, like the angry hum of thousands
- of bees. Her first thought was that she was dreaming, that something
- had brought to mind the old story of Mualig Siakam.
- "Mr. Vega," she said, reaching out to steady herself as the
- mountains around her spun in a dizzying circle.
- "What's the matter?" he asked. Mr. Vega left his easel and
- walked toward her.
- "I don't know," she said. "I feel strange, like I can't sit up,
- like I'm going to fall over. And hot, too."
- "Here," he said, reaching out to her. "Let me help you."
- The last thing Lani felt was Mr. Vega's arms closing tightly
- around her and lifting her off the ground. Weaker than she could
- ever remember feeling in her life, Lani let her head drop heavily
- against his chest.
- "I don't know what's the matter with me," she mumbled.
- 213
- "I'm so tired, so sleepy."
- "You're okay," Mr. Vega said soothingly as he carried her
- toward the back of the Subaru. "You close your eyes and relax
- now, Lani. Everything's going to be just fine."
- He knows my name, Lani thought. How come he knows my
- name? Did I tell him?
- She couldn't remember telling him, but she must have. How
- else would he have known?
- Thirsty as hell, Manny Chavez woke up under a mesquite
- tree. Fighting his way through an alcohol-induced fog, he sat up
- and tried to figure out where he was. He remembered stopping
- off at the trading post at Three Points sometime after dark. He
- had gone there with a terrible thirst and the remains of his
- paycheck. Now the sun was high overhead, but the thirst
- remained. ,.
- The rockbound walls of Baboquivari rose up out of the desert
- far to the south while Kitt Peak was directly at his back a few
- miles away across the desert. From the looks of the mountain
- looming over him, Manny figured he was probably somewhere
- off Coleman Road.
- 214
- Frowning, he tried to remember how he had come to be
- there. He had ridden to Three Points with his son, Eddie, and
- KISS OF THEBES
- some of Eddie's friends. They had bought some beer--several
- cases--and some Big Red-fortified wine--and then they had
- gone off somewhere in the desert, off the reservation rather than
- on it, to drink it in peace. Now that Delia, Manny's daughter,
- had returned to the reservation, Manny could no longer afford
- to be picked up by Law and Order. Delia had come to the jail
- and bailed him out once, but Manny's pride still writhed in
- shame at the name she had called him.
- "Nawmk1." she had spat at him. "Drunkard1."
- Delia had been away from the reservation for so long that
- he was surprised she still remembered any of the language. But
- that particular word was probably indelibly printed in Delia's
- brain, imprinted there by Elite, Delia's mother.
- Feeling a lump under him, Manny rolled over and was relieved
- to find that a pint bottle--still half-full--lingered in his
- hip pocket. He unscrewed the top and took a long swig, hoping
- that the wine would help clear his head. It didn't, but at least
- 215
- it did help slake his thirst. Struggling to his feet, he walked out
- to a small clearing where mounds of empty cans and bottles as
- well as the deep impressions of tire tracks told him where Eddie's
- truck had been parked.
- Unfortunately, it wasn't there anymore. For some reason,
- Eddie and his friends had taken off, leaving Manny alone. In the
- early morning cool, the desert was very still. Far to the north,
- he could hear the occasional whine of rubber tires on pavement.
- From the sounds of distant vehicles speeding by, it probably
- meant the highway wasn't all that far, especially not as the crow
- flies. Striking out across the low-lying desert, Manny headed for
- Highway 86.
- Once he hit that, someone was bound to pick him up and
- give him a ride back home to Sells. There he'd be able to find
- Eddie and asked him why he had taken off and left Manny there
- alone. It wasn't a nice thing for a son to do to his father, even
- if the father did happen to be drunk.
- Quentin Walker woke up fairly early that Saturday morning,
- hung over as hell and in a state of blind panic. What if someone
- had broken into his rented room overnight and stolen the
- 216
- money? Or worse, what if the money didn't exist at all? What
- if it was a figment of his imagination--a drunken delusion of
- 110 J.A. JANCE
- some kind? Thinking about it, though, Quentin didn't believe
- he had been that drunk when Mitch Johnson showed up in the
- bar looking for him.
- And it turned out the money was there after all, still hidden
- in the toe of his mud-spattered work boots, exactly where Quentin
- had left it before going to bed. He took the bills out and
- examined them again. One by one he held them up to the light
- from the grimy bedroom window. There was nothing about the
- bills that smacked of counterfeit. The vertical, copy-proof strip
- was there--the one feds had announced they were putting in
- bills to counter the counterfeiters.
- Quentin's inspection proved that the bills were real enough,
- but they also posed a real dilemma. Existing from paycheck to
- paycheck as he did, Quentin Walker had no bank account.
- Somebody who dressed and looked the way he did couldn't very
- well walk into the nearest Wells Fargo bank branch and make a
- five-thousand-dollar deposit with five bills. If somebody like him
- 217
- turned up in a bank with that kind of money, the teller was
- bound to notice and remember. While he was there or after he
- left, people would wonder and ask questions. Pretty soon, his
- parole officer would be asking questions, too.
- On a week-to-week basis, Quenton cashed his paychecks in
- the bars he frequented--usually ones in his immediate neighborhood--places
- he could walk to. Quentin had lost both his pickup
- truck and his driver's license in the aftermath of that damned
- dwi accident that had landed him in the state prison.
- Cashing a paycheck was one thing, but nobody in a bar was
- going to fork over change for a thousand-dollar bill. Besides,
- even if they had that kind of cash in a safe, changing the money
- in a bar in that marginal neighborhood was far too risky. Somebody
- might see what was going on and decide to relieve him of
- ^e cash the moment he stepped back outside. Quentin Walker
- i<new too well that not all bartenders were honest.
- Unable to decide how to proceed, Quentin stood for some
- time holding the bills in his hand. Finally he stuffed them into
- his pocket and then moved from the tiny bedroom of his fur- "ished apartment to the
- equally tiny kitchen. He opened the ^rigerator and took out the remainder of the
- loaf of bread that
- 218
- he kept there to protect it from marauding cockroaches. There
- were only two slices of bread left in the loaf. His first instinct
- KISS OF THE BEES 111
- was to throw them out. He had the two dried crusts in his hand
- and was ready to drop them in the garbage when he realized
- what a mistake that would be. The slices of bread themselves
- were the makings of the perfect hiding place.
- Quentin took the bills out of his pocket and placed them
- between the two slices of bread, folding them small enough so
- no pieces of paper showed on the outside of the bread. Then
- he put his freshly assembled money sandwich back inside the
- plastic bread bag. Convinced that his hiding place was absolutely
- brilliant, he shoved the plastic bag into the small frost-filled
- freezer compartment of his refrigerator and shut the door.
- Enormously pleased with himself, Quentin left the apartment,
- locked the door, and then walked as far as the McDonald's
- on the other side of the freeway. There, he splurged on breakfast.
- He treated himself to coffee, orange juice, and two Egg
- McMuffins.
- Over breakfast, Quentin's worries about taking Mitch Johnson
- 219
- to the cave surfaced once again with a vengeance. If he had
- still owned his truck, it wouldn't have been a problem. He could
- simply have driven out to the cave well in advance and checked
- things out for himself. If there was a problem, he could take
- care of it ...
- The answer came to him like a bolt out of the blue. He
- could buy a car. One of the major roadblocks to buying a car
- had always been a chronic lack of money. In order to buy a car
- on time--in order to get a loan--it was necessary to show proof
- of insurance. Without it, no bank in the universe would even
- let him drive an uninsured car off the lot. With his driving record,
- car insurance was something else Quentin Walker didn't
- have and wasn't likely to get.
- But now he had the money--as much or even more than he
- would need--to buy a car. And if he was paying cash for something
- like that, the people at the dealership probably wouldn't
- even blink at the thousand-dollar bills, as long as the total
- amount was less than the ten-thousand-dollar limit that would
- cause all kinds of scrutiny.
- With growing excitement Quentin paged through the automotive
- 220
- section of an abandoned Arizona Sun he grabbed off a
- neighboring table. He wanted to find something that would be
- rugged enough to suit his needs and cheap enough to fit his budget.
- 112 J.A. JANCE
- He circled three that seemed like possibilities--an '87 Suzuki Samurai
- soft-top, a rebuilt 1980 Ford Bronco, and a '77 GMC Suburban--all
- of them in the thirty-five-hundred range. That would
- just about do it--use up his little windfall, leave him some
- change, and get him some wheels all at the same time.
- By the time he headed back to his apartment to shower, the
- day had taken on a whole new promise. He was finally going to
- have something to show for all his years of struggle. And if he
- ever ran into either of his so-called brothers again--Davy Ladd
- or Brian Fellows--he would tell them both to go piss up a rope.
- Diana was lying awake in bed when she heard the side gate
- open and close as Lani mounted her bike and left for work.
- Glancing at the bedside clock, Diana was surprised by how early
- it was--just barely five-thirty. Why was Lani leaving for work
- so early when her volunteer shift didn't start until seven?
- Next to her, Brandon seemed to be sleeping peacefully for a
- 221
- change, so Diana was careful not to wake him as she crept out
- of bed herself. Wrapping a robe around her, she padded silently
- down the tiled hallway, through the living room, and into the
- .^kitchen to start a pot of coffee. She found Lani's note on the
- kitchen table.
- Diana read it and tossed it back on the table. She didn't
- remember any discussion about Lani's going to a concert. That
- meant Lani had asked her father for permission rather than her
- mother. But then why wouldn't she? Despite Brandon's toughguy
- act and protestations to the contrary, the girl had had him
- buffaloed from the very beginning.
- "Being foster parents is one thing," he had told his wife the
- night before Clemencia Escalante was due to arrive at their
- house after being released from Tucson Medical Center. "Obviously
- the poor little kid needs help, and I don't mind pitching
- in. But just because Rita managed to bend the rules enough to
- have Clemencia placed with us on a foster child basis doesn't
- mean it's going to lead to a permanent adoption. It won't, you
- know. It'll never fly."
- "But Rita wants her," Diana said.
- 222
- "Regardless of what Rita wants, she's seventy years old right
- this minute," Brandon pointed out, taking refuge in what
- KISS OF THE BEES 113
- seemed to him to be obvious logic. "And considering it was
- neglect from an elderly grandparent that sent the poor little tyke
- to the hospital in the first place, nobody in the child welfare
- system is going to approve of Rita as an adoptive parent."
- "I wasn't talking about Rita adopting her," Diana said quietly.
- "I was talking about us."
- Brandon dropped his newspaper. "Us?" he echoed.
- Diana nodded. "It's the only way Rita will ever be able to
- have her."
- "But Diana," Brandon argued. "How long do you think Rita
- will be around? She already has health problems. In the long
- run, that little girl will end up being our sole responsibility."
- "So?" Diana answered with a shrug. "Is that such an awful
- prospect?"
- Brandon frowned. "That depends. With your work and my
- work, and with the three kids we already have, it seems to me
- that our lives are complicated enough. Why add another child
- 223
- into the mix?"
- "We have yours, and we have mine," Diana returned quietly.
- "We don't have any that are ours--yours and mine together."
- "A toddler?" Brandon said. He shook his head, but Diana
- could see he was weakening. "Are you sure you could stand
- having one of those underfoot again?"
- Diana smiled. "I think I could stand it. I can tell you that I
- much prefer toddlers to teenagers."
- "In case you haven't noticed, most toddlers turn into teenagers
- eventually."
- "But there are a few good years before that happens."
- "A few," Brandon conceded.
- "And Rita says she'll handle most of the child-care duties.
- She really wants this little girl, Brandon. It's all she's talked
- about for days--about how much she could teach her. It's as
- though she wants to pour everything into Clemencia that she
- was never able to share with her own granddaughter."
- "Diana, replacing one child with another doesn't work. It
- isn't healthy."
- For the space of several minutes, Diana was silent. "Living
- 224
- your life with a hole in it isn't healthy, either," she said finally.
- "Garrison Ladd and Andrew Carlisle put that hole in Rita's life,
- Brandon. Maybe you don't feel any responsibility for Gina An114 J.A. JANCE
- tone's death, but I do. And now I have an opportunity to do
- something about it."
- "And it's something you really want to do? Something you
- want us to do?"
- "Yes."
- Again there was a long period of silence. "I guess we'll have
- to see," he said finally. "I'll bet it doesn't matter one way or
- the other what we decide because I still don't think the tribal
- court will go for it."
- "But we can try?"
- "Diana," he said, "you do whatever you want. I'll back you
- either way."
- Brandon made a point to come home from work early the
- next afternoon when Wanda Ortiz arrived with Clemencia.
- Diana went to answer the door, leaving Brandon and Rita in the
- living room. Brandon was sitting on the couch and Rita was in
- 225
- her wheelchair when Wanda carried the screaming child into
- the room.
- "She's been crying ever since we left the hospital," Wanda
- said apologetically, setting the weeping child down in the middle
- of the room. "Too many strangers, I guess."
- Clemencia Escalante looked awful. Most of her woefully thin
- body was covered with scabs from hundreds of ant bites. A few
- of those had become infected and were still bandaged. She stood
- in the middle of the room, sobbing, with fat tears dripping off
- her chin and falling onto the floor. She turned in a circle, looking
- from one unfamiliar face to another. When her eyes finally settled
- on Rita, she stopped.
- "lhab--here," Rita crooned softly, crooking her finger.
- "Come here, little one."
- Still crying but with her attention now riveted on Rita's kind
- but wrinkled face, Clemencia took a tentative step forward.
- "Come here," Rita said again.
- Suddenly the room was deathly quiet. For a moment Diana
- thought that the child was simply pausing long enough to catch
- her breath and that another ear-splitting shriek would soon follow.
- 226
- Instead, Clemencia suddenly darted across the room, throwing
- herself toward Rita with so much force that the wheelchair
- rocked back and forth on its braked wheels. Without another
- sound, Clemencia clambered into Rita's lap, burying her face in
- KISS OF m BKS 115
- the swell of the old woman's ample breasts. There the child
- settled in, clinging desperately to the folds of Rita's dress with
- two tiny knotted fists.
- Shaking his head in wonder, Brandon Walker looked from
- the now silent child to his wife. "Well," he said with a shrug,
- squinting so the tears in his eyes didn't show too much. "It looks
- as though I don't stand a chance, do I?"
- And he didn't. From that moment on, the child named
- Clemencia Escalante who would one day be known as Dolores
- Lanita Walker owned Brandon Walker's heart and soul.
- t
- A
- }fter traveling a long way, Coyote reached a village where there
- was a little water. While Ban was hunting for a drink, an old
- Indian saw him. Old Limping Man--this Gohhim O'othham--
- 227
- still talked the speech all I'itoi'.s' people understood. So Coyote told
- him what Buzzard had seen in that part of the desert which was
- so badly burned.
- Old Limping Man told the people of the village. That night the
- people held a council to decide what they should do. They feared
- that someone had been left behind in the burning desert.
- In the morning, Gohhim O'othham and a young man started
- back over the desert with some water. They traveled only a little
- way after Tash--the sun--came up. Through the heat of the day
- they rested. When Sun went down in the west, they went on.
- The first day there were kukui u'us--mesquite trees, but the
- trees had very few leaves, and those were very dry.
- The next day it was hotter. There were no trees of any kind,
- only shegoi--greasewood bushes. The greasewood bushes were almost
- white from dryness.
- The third day they found nothing but a few dry sticks of melhog--the
- ocotillo--and some prickly pears--nahkag.
- The fourth day there seemed to be nothing left at all but rocks.
- And the rocks were very hot.
- The two men did not drink the water which they carried. They
- 228
- mixed only a little of the water with their hahki--a parched roasted
- KISS OF THE BEES 117
- wheat which the Mil-gahn, the Whites, call pinole. This is the food
- of the Desert People when they are traveling. While they were mixing
- their pinole on the morning of the fourth day, Old Limping Man looked
- up and saw Coyote running toward them and calling for help.
- The carpenter who had helped refit the Bounder had questioned
- why Mitch needed a complex trundle-bed/storage unit
- that would roll in and out of the locker under the regular bed.
- "It's for my grandson," Mitch had explained. "He goes fishing
- with me sometimes, and he likes to sleep in the same kind of
- bed he has at home."
- "Oh," the carpenter had grunted. The man had gone ahead
- and made the bed to specs, tiny four-posters and all, and now,
- for the first time, Mitch was going to get to use it. Leaving Lani
- Walker asleep on the bed above for a moment, he pulled the
- trundle bed out of the storage space and locked the four casters
- in place. Then, with the bed ready and waiting, Mitch turned
- his attention to the girl.
- She was limp but pliable under his hands. Undressing her
- 229
- reminded him of undressing Mikey when he'd fall asleep on his
- way home from shopping or eating dinner in town. One arm at
- a time, he took off first her shirt and then the delicate white
- bra. The boots were harder. He had to grip her leg and pull in
- one direction with one hand and then pry off the boot with the
- other. On her feet were a pair of white socks. Mitch was glad
- to see that her toenails weren't painted. That would have spoiled
- it somehow in a way he never would have been able to explain.
- After the socks came the jeans and the chaste white panties.
- Only when she was completely naked, did he ease her down
- onto the lower bed.
- Just as he had known it would be, that was a critical moment.
- He wanted her so badly right then that he could almost
- taste it. His own pants seemed ready to burst, but he knew
- better. That was the mistake Andy had made. Mitch Johnson
- was smart enough not to fall into the same trap.
- "I've spent years wondering about it," Mitch remembered
- Andy saying time and again. "I had her under control and then
- I lost it."
- You lost control because you fucked her, you stupid jerk, Mitch
- 230
- wanted to shout. How could anyone as smart as Andy be so
- 118 J.A. JANCE
- damned dumb? Why couldn't he see that what he had done to
- Diana Ladd had made her mad enough to fight back? In doing
- that, Andy had lost his own concentration, let down his guard,
- and allowed his victim to find an opening.
- But if Andy wasn't brainy enough to figure all that out for
- himself, if he had such a blind spot that he couldn't see it, who
- was Mitch to tell him? After all, students--properly subservient
- students--didn't tell their teachers which way was up, especially
- not if their teachers were as potentially dangerous as Andrew
- Philip Carlisle.
- In her dream Lani was little again--four or five years old.
- Her mother had just dropped Nana Dahd, Davy, and Lani off
- in the parking lot of the Arizona Sonora Desert Museum. Davy
- was pushing Rita's chair while Lani sat perched on Nana
- Dahd's lap.
- It was a chill, blustery afternoon in February, the month the
- Tohono O'othham call Kohmagi Mashad--the gray month. Davy,
- along with other Tucson-area schoolchildren, was out of school
- 231
- for the annual rodeo break, but as they came through the parking
- lot, they wheeled past several empty school buses.
- "You see those buses?" Nana Dahd. asked. "They're from
- Turtle Wedged, the village the Mil-gahn call Sells. Most of the
- children from there are Tohono O'othham, just like you."
- Not accustomed to seeing that many "children like her" together
- in one place, Lani had observed the moving groups of
- schoolkids with considerable interest and curiosity. They were
- mostly being herded about by several Anglo teachers as well as
- by docents from the museum itself.
- They were in the hummingbird enclosure when Nana Dahd
- began telling the story of the other Mualig Siakam, the abandoned
- woman who would eventually become Kulani O'oks--the
- great medicine woman of the Tohono O'othham. As Nana Dahd
- began telling the tale, one of the schoolchildren--a little girl
- only a year or two older than Lani--slipped away from the group
- she was with and stopped to listen. Drawn by the magic of a
- story told in her own language, she stood transfixed and wideeyed
- beside Nana Dahd's wheelchair as the tale unfolded. Rita
- had only gotten as far as the part where Coyote came crying to
- 232
- the two men for help when a shrill-voiced Mil-gahn teacher,
- KISS OF THE BEES 119
- her face distorted by anger, came marching back to retrieve the
- little girl.
- "What do you think you're doing?" the teacher shouted. Her
- loud voice sent the brightly colored hummingbirds scattering in
- all directions. "We're supposed to leave soon," the woman continued.
- "What would have happened if we had lost you and you
- missed the bus? How would you have gotten back home?"
- Instead of turning to follow the teacher, the child reached
- out and took hold of Nana Dahd's chair, firmly attaching herself
- to the arm of it and showing that she didn't want to leave. "I
- want to hear the rest of the story," the little girl whispered in
- Rita's ear. "I want to hear about Mualig Siakam."
- "Well?" the teacher demanded impatiently. "Are you coming
- or not? You must keep up with the others."
- As the woman grasped the child by the shoulder, Nana Dahd
- stopped in mid-story and glanced up at the woman's outraged
- face. "You'd better go," she warned the little girl in Tohono
- O'othham.
- 233
- But the little girl deftly dodged away from the teacher's
- reaching hand. "Are you Nihu'uli?" she asked, taking one of
- Rita's parchment-like hands into her own small brown one. "Are
- you my grandmother?"
- Lani never forgot the wonderfully happy smile that suffused
- Nana Dahd's worn face as she pressed her other hand on top of
- that unknown child's tiny one.
- "Are you?" the little girl persisted just as the teacher's fingers
- closed determinedly on her shoulder and pulled her away. With
- a vicious shake, the woman started back up the trail, dragging
- the resisting child after her and glaring over her shoulder at the
- old woman who had so inconveniently waylaid her charge.
- Rita glanced from Davy's face to Lani's. "Heu'u--Yes," she
- called after the child in Tohono O'othham. "Ni-mohsi. You are
- my grandchild, my daughter's child."
- Confused, Lani frowned. "But I didn't think you had any
- daughters," she objected.
- "I didn't used to, but I do now." Rita laughed. She gathered
- Lani in her arms and held her close. "Now I seem to have
- several."
- 234
- The dream ended. Lani tried to waken, but she was too tired,
- her eyelids too heavy to lift. She seemed to be in her bed, but
- 120 J.A. JANCE
- when she tried to move her arms, they wouldn't budge, either.
- And then, since there was nothing else to do, she simply allowed
- herself to drift back to sleep.
- Breakfast took time. It was almost eleven by the time David
- was actually ready to leave the house. Predictably, his leavetaking
- was a tearful, maudlin affair. Yes, Astrid Ladd was genuinely
- sorry to see him go, but she was also half-lit from the three
- stiff drinks she had downed with breakfast.
- David knew his grandmother drank too much, but he didn't
- hassle her about it. Had she been as falling down drunk as some
- of the Indians hanging around the trading post at Three Points,
- David Ladd still wouldn't have mentioned it. Over the years,
- Rita Antone had schooled her Olhoni in the niceties of proper
- behavior. Among the Tohono O'othham, young people were
- taught to respect their elders, not to question or criticize them.
- If Astrid Ladd wanted to stay smashed much of the time, that
- was her business, not his.
- 235
- "Promise me that you'll come back and see me," Astrid said,
- with her lower lip trembling.
- "Of course I will, Grandma."
- "At Christmas?"
- "I don't know."
- "Next summer then?"
- "Maybe."
- Astrid shook her head hopelessly and began to cry in earnest.
- "See there? I'll probably never lay eyes on you again."
- "You will, Grandma," he promised. "Please don't cry. I have
- to go."
- She was still weeping and waving from the porch when
- David turned left onto Sheridan and headed south. He didn't
- go far--only as far as the parking lot of Calvary Cemetery, where
- both David Ladd's father and grandfather were buried. He rummaged
- in the backseat and brought out the two small wreaths
- of fresh flowers he had bought two days ago and kept in the
- refrigerator of his apartment until that morning.
- Knowing the route to the Ladd family plot, he easily
- threaded his way through the trackless forest of ornate headstones
- 236
- and mausoleums. He didn't much like this cemetery. It
- was too big, too green, too gaudy, and full of huge chunks of
- KISS OF THE BEES 121
- marble and granite. Davy had grown up attending funerals on
- the parched earth and among the simple white wooden crosses
- of reservation cemeteries. The first funeral he actually remembered
- was Father John's.
- A Mil-gahn and a Jesuit priest, Father John was in his eighties
- and already retired when Davy first met him. He had been there,
- in the house at Gates Pass and imprisoned in the root cellar
- along with Rita and Davy, on the day of the battle with the evil
- Ohb. Father John had died a little more than a year later.
- In all the hubbub of preparation for Diana Ladd's wedding
- to Brandon Walker, no one had noticed how badly Father John
- was failing. And that was exactly as he had intended. The aged
- priest had agreed to perform the ceremony, and he used all his
- strength to ensure that nothing marred the joy of the happy
- young couple on their wedding day. Of all the people gathered
- at San Xavier for the morning ceremony, only Rita had sensed
- what performing the ceremony was costing the old priest in
- 237
- terms of physical exertion and vitality.
- Honoring his silence, she too, had kept quiet about it--at
- least to most of the bridal party. But not to Davy.
- "Watch out for Father John, Olhoni," Nana Dahd murmured
- as she straightened the boy's tie and smoothed his tuxedo in
- preparation to Davy's walking his mother down the aisle. "If he
- looks too tired, come and get me right away."
- The admonition puzzled Davy. "Is Father John sick?"
- "He's old," Rita answered. "He's an old, old man."
- "Is he going to die?" Davy asked.
- "We're all going to die sometime," she had answered.
- "Even you?"
- She smiled. "Even me."
- But Father John had made it through the wedding mass with
- flying colors. He died three days later, while Brandon and Diana
- Walker were still in Mazatlan on their honeymoon. The frantic
- barking of Davy's dog, Bone, had awakened Davy in the middle
- of the night.
- Keeping the dog with him for protection as he peered out
- through a front window, Davy saw a man climbing out of a big
- 238
- black car parked in the driveway. As soon as the man stepped
- 122 J.A. JANCE
- up onto the porch, Davy recognized Father Damien, the young
- priest from San Xavier.
- Even Davy knew that having a priest come to the house in
- the middle of the night could not mean good news. He hurried
- to the door. "What's wrong?" he demanded through the stillclosed
- door as the priest's finger moved toward the button on
- the bell.
- "I'm looking for someone named Rita Antone," Father Damien
- said hesitantly, as though he wasn't quite sure whether or
- not his information was correct. "Does she live here?"
- "What is it, Davy?" Rita asked, materializing silently out of
- the darkness at the back of the house. H
- "It's Father Damien," Davy answered. "He's looking for
- you." |
- Nana Dahd unlocked the dead bolt and opened the door.
- "I'm Rita," she said. |
- The priest looked relieved. "It's Father John, Mrs. Antone,"
- he said apologetically. "I'm sorry to bother you at this hour of
- 239
- the night, but he's very ill. He's asking for you."
- Rita nodded. "Get dressed right away, Davy," she said. "We
- must hurry."
- They left the house a few minutes later. There was never
- any question of Davy's staying at the house by himself. Ever
- since Andrew Carlisle had burst into the house on that summer
- afternoon, there had been an unspoken understanding between
- Rita and Diana that Davy was not to be left alone. On their
- way to town. Rita rode in the front seat with the priest while
- Davy huddled in the back.
- "Where is he?" Nana Dahd asked.
- "He was at Saint Mary's," the priest answered. "In the intensive
- care unit, but this afternoon he made them let him out.
- He's back at the rectory."
- At the mission, Rita took Davy by the hand and dragged him
- with her as Father Damien led the way. They found Father John
- sitting propped up on a mound of pillows in a small, cell-like
- room. He lifted one feeble hand in greeting. On the white chenille
- bedspread where his hand had rested lay Father John's rosary--his losalo--with its
- black shiny beads and olive wood crucifix.
- 240
- Davy Ladd was an Anglo--a Mil-gahn--but he had been
- KISS OF THE BEES ffi
- properly raised--brought up in the Indian way. He melted quietly
- into the background while Rita sank down on the hardbacked
- chair beside the dying man's bed. Out of sight in the
- shadowy far corner of the room, Davy sat cross-legged and listened
- to the murmured conversation, hanging on every mysterious
- word.
- "Thank you for coming, Dancing Quail," Father John whispered.
- His voice was very weak. He wheezed when he spoke.
- The air rustled in his throat like winter wind whispering through
- sun-dried grass.
- "You should have called," Rita chided gently. "I would have
- come sooner."
- Father John shook his head. "They wouldn't let me. I was
- in intensive care. Only relatives ..."
- Rita nodded and then waited patiently, letting Father John
- rest awhile before he continued. "I wanted to ask your forgiveness,"
- he said. "Please."
- "I forgave you long ago," she returned. "When you agreed
- 241
- to help us with the evil Ohb, I forgave you then."
- "Thank you," he said. "Thank you so much."
- There was another long period of silence. Nodding, Davy
- almost drifted off to sleep before Father John's voice startled
- him awake once more.
- "Please tell me about your son," the old man said quietly.
- "The one who disappeared in Korea. His name was Gordon, I
- believe. Was that the child? Was he my son?"
- Rita shook her head. There was a small reading lamp on the
- table beside Father John's bed. The dim light from that caught
- the two tracks of tears meandering down Rita's broad wrinkled
- cheeks.
- "No," she answered. "I lost that baby in California. When I
- was real sick, a bad doctor took the baby from me before it
- was time."
- There was a sharp intake of breath from the man on the
- bed, followed by a fit of coughing. "A boy or a girl?" Father
- John asked at last when he could speak once more.
- "I don't know," Rita said. "I never saw it. They put me to
- sleep. When I woke up, the baby was gone."
- 242
- "When I heard about the murder, I assumed Gina was ..."
- Again Rita shook her head. "No. Gina was my husband Gor-
- 1Z4 J.A. JANCE
- don's granddaughter, not yours. Gordon took care of me when
- I was sick in California that time when I lost the baby. If it
- hadn't been for him, I would have died, too. Gordon was a good
- man. He was a good husband who gave me a good son."
- "Gordon Antone." Father John said the name carefully, as
- if testing the feel of the words on his lips. "Someone else I must
- pray for."
- "Rest now," Rita said. "Try to get some sleep."
- Instead Father John reached out, picked up the rosary, and
- then dropped it into the palm of Rita's hand before closing her
- fingers over it.
- "Keep this for me," he urged. "I have used it to pray for
- you every day for all these years. I won't need it any longer."
- Without a word, Rita slipped the beads and crucifix into her
- pocket. Father John drifted off to sleep then. Eventually, so did
- Davy. When he awakened the next morning, the room was
- chilly, but Davy himself was warm. Overnight someone had put
- 243
- a pillow under his head and had covered him with a blanket.
- Rita, with her chin resting on her collarbone, still sat stolidly in
- the chair beside Father John's bed, dozing. She woke up a few
- minutes later. The priest did not.
- At age seven, this was Davy Ladd's first personal experience
- with death. He had thought it would be scary, but somehow it
- wasn't. He knew instinctively that in the room that night he had
- shared something beautiful with those two people, something
- important, although it would be years before he finally figured
- out exactly what it was.
- In the three years David Ladd had been in Chicago, he had
- come to Calvary Cemetery often in hopes of establishing some
- kind of connection between himself and the names etched into
- the marble monuments of the Ladd family plot. The worldly
- remains of Garrison Walther Ladd II and III lay on either side of
- a headstone bearing his grandmother's name. The only difference
- between Astrid's grave marker and the other two was the lack
- of a date.
- Respectfully, David put the wreath on his grandfather's grave
- first. He had come to Chicago several times to visit his grandparents,
- 244
- first as a youngster and later as a teenager, flying out by
- himself over holidays along with all those other children being
- KISS OF THE BEES 125
- shuttled between custodial and non-custodial parents during
- school vacations. The flight attendants who had been designated
- to transfer him from plane to plane or from plane to the Ladds
- had always assumed that Davy was the product of a cross-country
- divorce. And some of the time he had gone along with that
- fiction, making up stories about where his father lived and what
- he did for a living. That was easier and far more fun than telling
- people the truth--that his father was dead.
- Finished with his grandfather's grave, David turned to his
- father's. Breakfast with Astrid had lessened the impact of the
- latest visitation of the recurring dream. Vivid and disturbing, it
- had come to him every night for over a week now. Each time
- it came, he awakened the moment he saw his sister's lifeless
- body in the middle of the kitchen floor. And when his eyes
- opened, his body would launch off, sweating and trembling, into
- yet another panic attack.
- Night after night, the two events came together like a pair
- 245
- of evil twins--first the dream and then the panic attack. One
- followed the other as inevitably as night follows day. Davy went
- to bed at night almost as sick with dread at what was bound to
- come as he would be later when it did. As the days and virtually
- sleepless nights went by, anticipating the attacks became almost
- as shattering as the attacks themselves.
- Up to that moment in the cemetery, the attacks themselves
- had always happened at night, in the privacy of his own room
- and always preceded by the dream. But right then, kneeling beside
- the marker bearing the name of Garrison Walther Ladd III,
- David felt his pulse begin to quicken. Moments later, his heart
- was hammering in his chest, knocking his ribs so hard that he
- could barely breathe. His hands began to tingle. He felt dizzy.
- Not trusting his ability to remain upright, David sank down
- on the ground next to his father's headstone and leaned against
- it for support. He tried to pray. As a child, the old priest, Father
- John, had taught him about the Father, the Son, and the Holy
- Ghost. And Rita had taught him about I'itoi.
- But right then, in Davy's hour of need, there in the hot, still
- air of that Chicago cemetery, all he could hear through the trees
- 246
- was the sound of traffic buzzing by on Lake Shore Drive. From
- where Davy sat, both Heavenly Father and Elder Brother seemed
- impossibly remote.
- 126 J.A. JANCE
- David had no idea how long the attack lasted. Eventually his
- breathing steadied and his heartbeat returned to normal. Weak
- and queasy, he returned to himself bathed in his own rank sweat.
- Nothing to worry about, the doctor had said after running
- all those tests weeks before. After learning that Davy was about
- to embark on a cross-country drive, the emergency room physician
- had declined to prescribe any sedatives or tranquilizers that
- might have caused drowsiness.
- "If you're still having difficulties when you get back home
- to Arizona," the doctor had told him, "you should consult with
- your family physician." I
- If I get home, David Ladd thought. What if one of these
- spells came over him in the middle of a freeway somewhere
- when he was driving by himself? What would happen then? J
- David staggered to his feet. Still somewhat unsteady, he
- stood for some time, staring down at his father's grave. This was i
- 247
- one of the reasons he had come to Evanston in the first place, ||
- one of the reasons he had accepted his grandmother's generous |
- offer and applied to Northwestern. He had hoped that by com- 9
- ing here, he might somehow come to understand his father's
- side of the story. After all, he had grown up and spent most of
- his life hearing his mother's version of those long-ago events.
- But the laudatory tales about Davy's father that his grandmother
- told him were no help. Davy sensed that there was no
- more truth in them than there had been in his own mother's
- clipped, bare-bones answers in the face of her son's never-ending
- curiosity. And as for visiting the grave itself? That had told him
- less than nothing.
- Shaking his head, David Ladd turned and walked away, wondering
- what to do with the solitary hours before the threeo'clock
- check-in time at the hotel. But by the time he reached
- the car, he had an answer.
- Almost without thinking, he drove to the Field Museum of
- Natural History. There he wandered slowly through galleries of
- lighted displays that told the stories, one after another, of vanished
- and vanquished Native American cultures.
- 248
- David Ladd blended into the throngs of tourists that surged
- like herds of grazing buffalo through the museum's long hallways.
- Most were Anglos of one kind or another, with their loud
- voices and bulging bellies. For most the displays were clearly
- KISS OF THE BEES 127
- something foreign and outside their own experience. A few of
- the visitors were Indian. They came to the displays with a sense
- of understanding and a reverence that here, at least, their past
- still existed.
- And standing in the midst of all those different people, David
- Ladd felt doubly alone. Cheated, almost. He was a blond-haired,
- blue-eyed outsider. He felt no connection, no sense of brotherhood,
- with the Mil-gahn tourists with their Bermudashorts-clad
- legs and their ill-behaved children. But here in this place, he felt
- no connection to The People--to the Indians--either.
- Then, almost as though she were standing beside him, he
- heard Rita Antone's voice once more, speaking to him out of
- the distant past. She sat at a kitchen table with the fragrant,
- newly dried bear grass and yucca laid out on the table. There
- was a fistful of grass in one hand. Her awl--her owij--was poised
- 249
- but still in her other hand. The raw materials for Rita's next
- basket lay arrayed on the table, but the old woman's real workbench
- was forever her ample, apron-covered lap.
- "The center must be very strong, Olhoni," she had said, "or
- the basket will be no good."
- Whenever Rita had started a basket, she always said something
- like that. The words reminded him of the words that usually
- accompanied taking the Holy Sacrament. The words were
- almost always the same, and yet they were always different.
- With tears misting his eyes, David Ladd fled the museum. I
- have lost the center of my basket, he thought despairingly. I don't
- know who I am.
- With Lani Walker there in the Bounder with him, Mitch
- tried to keep Andy's failure clearly at the forefront of his mind.
- Much as he wanted her, much as he physically ached to use that
- slender body, he was equally determined to deny himself the
- pleasure. Andrew Carlisle had allowed his base nature to overwhelm
- his intellect. Mitch Johnson had no intention of making
- the same mistake.
- Watching Lani sleeping peacefully on the bed, Mitch's physical
- 250
- need for her was so great that he forced himself to turn his
- back on her and walk away. That was the only reasonable thing
- to do--put some distance between himself and what he knew
- to be an invitation to disaster.
- 128 J.A. JANCE
- For a time he busied himself with his art materials, setting
- up his easel and getting out his paper. He waited until he was
- once more fully under control before he turned to look at her
- once again, before he allowed himself to gaze down at her. Her
- long dark lashes rested softly on bronze cheeks. It surprised him
- to notice, for the first time, that here and there on the bronze
- skin of her body were occasional light spots, reverse freckles,
- almost. He wondered vaguely what might have caused those
- blemishes, but he didn't worry about them long. It was time to
- tie her, to use the four matching, richly colored teal-and-burgundy
- scarves he had bought for that precise purpose.
- He had bought them in four separate stores, paying for them
- in cash. "It's for my mother's birthday," he had told the first
- saleslady, who waited on him at Park Mall. "For my Aunt Gertrude's
- eightieth," he told the second one in a store at El Con.
- 251
- "For my next-door neighbor," he explained, smiling at the third
- salesclerk in the first store in Tucson Mall. "She takes care of
- my two dogs when I'm out of town." By the fourth store Mitch
- was running out of imagination. It was back to his mother's
- birthday.
- As an artist, Mitch Johnson possibly could have done without
- the scarves altogether and painted them in later from either
- memory or imagination. But when it came to this particular
- picture, Mitch Johnson was a perfectionist. He wanted to do it
- right. He took care to arrange the scarves properly, so that it
- was clear they were restraints, holding the girl against her will,
- but beautiful restraints nonetheless. He arranged the loose ends
- of the scarves in drapes and folds around her as an opulent
- counterpoint to the naked simplicity of the girl's body. Contrast,
- of course, is everything.
- He also spent a considerable period of time creating just the
- right angle and perspective. For that he finally settled on three
- pillows. Two he used to raise her head and neck enough so that
- both her face and that funny necklace at the base of her throat
- were clearly visible. The third pillow went under her buttocks,
- 252
- raising her hips high enough so that what lay between her spread
- legs was fully visible. To Mitch, anyway.
- That was the whole tantalizing wonder of this particular
- pose. Had Mitch been an ancient Greek sculptor, he would have
- opted for the use of fig leaves, perhaps. The painters of the
- KISS OF THE BEES 129
- Renaissance had gone in for the strategic drape of robes to conceal
- what shouldn't be seen. Mitch was a purist. He wanted to
- use the girl's own body to create the desired illusion. Nicolai'des
- had taught him to look for edges and to draw those.
- Afraid the shock of cold water might awaken her, he dampened
- his fingers with warm water from the tap. Then he petted
- the wild tangle of soft black pubic hair, teasing and coaxing it
- into place. He used the hair itself to create a concealing veil
- until it curved around and over what he wanted to hide from
- any other casual viewers if not from himself. No one else would
- be able to see under it, but any person viewing the picture would
- know unerringly that the artist himself had drunk his fill.
- His hand still reeked with the heady, musky smell of her
- when, weak-kneed, he returned to his easel and began to work
- 253
- on the quick gesture sketch, using broad lines and circles to
- capture the general form of her.
- As the charcoal scraped comfortingly across the paper, he
- felt himself settling down once more. As he worked, the chorus
- of an old Sunday-school hymn came unbidden to his mind.
- "Yield not to temptation, for yielding is sin." Smiling to himself,
- he sang as many of the words as he was able to remember.
- The strange combination of drawing and humming didn't
- amount to quite the same thing as taking a cold shower, but the
- physical effect on his body was much the same. At least his
- damned persistent hard-on went away, enough so that he was
- able to concentrate on what he was doing.
- David Ladd left the Field Museum and went directly to the
- Ritz. Carrying one small suitcase, he left the car with the attendant
- and walked inside. He figured he was still too early to check
- in, but Candace had told him to stop by the concierge desk to
- check for a message whenever he arrived.
- "Why, Mr. Ladd," the concierge said with a welcoming
- smile. "Welcome to the Ritz. I'm so glad you could join us
- today. Your wife left a note here for you and asked that I give
- 254
- it to you as soon as you arrived."
- His wife? Blushing furiously, David took the note and retreated
- to a chair at the far end of the lobby before he tore open
- the envelope. Inside were a note and a room key.
- 130 J.A. JANCE
- David,
- I had some last-minute shopping to do. I'll be back as soon as
- I can. Our room is 1712. See you there.
- Love,
- Candace
- So he already was checked in. Pocketing the note and palming
- the key, David headed upstairs. Leave it to Candace to figure
- a way around those 3 P.M. check-in rules, he thought with a
- rueful grin, but he was supremely grateful. Not only was he
- emotionally drained by his dealings with Astrid Garrison and
- his trip to the museum, he was rummy from days of almost
- no sleep.
- Upon entering the room, he was surprised to see four suitcases,
- two arranged on the bed as well as one on each of the
- room's two folding metal luggage racks. Four suitcases did seem
- 255
- a little much for an overnight at the Ritz, especially since the
- bathroom was already fully stocked with robes, hair dryer, and
- a selection of toiletries. Evidently the female side of the Oak
- Park Waverlys didn't believe in traveling light.
- Hoping he had time for a quick nap, he closed the blackout
- curtains and then undressed. Before stripping off his shirt,
- he discovered Astrid's diamond engagement still lurking in his
- pocket. He had meant to give the ring back to his grandmother
- before he left, but he had forgotten.
- Shaking his head, he put the ring on the nightstand along
- with his watch. He thought about leaving a wake-up call so he
- could be showered and dressed before Candace's arrival. In the
- end he decided to sleep until he woke up or Candace arrived,
- whichever came first. Lying down on the bed, he tried to relax,
- but that wasn't easy. He was smitten by an attack of conscience.
- If you don't want to marry her, he thought, then what the
- hell are you doing here?
- Hopefully screwing your brains out was the short answer, he
- decided, grinning ruefully up at the darkened ceiling overhead.
- But for that--for plain old getting your rocks off--most any
- 256
- place would do, from Motel 6 up. The Ritz had been Candace's
- idea. And even if Candace had sold him on the proposition that
- KISS OF THE BEES Bl
- this special night on the town was both a graduation and a goingaway
- gift from her, he had the distinct feeling that Candace's
- daddy's law firm was actually picking up the tab.
- Despite Astrid Ladd's none-too-subtle lobbying, things
- weren't all sweetness and light between David Garrison Ladd
- and Candace Eugenia Waverly.
- They had met the previous December, when they had both
- been participants in what they still laughingly referred to as the
- wedding from hell. Candace had been maid of honor and David
- best man at a pre-Christmas wedding that had fallen victim to
- an unseasonal but vicious mid-December blizzard. The storm
- had stalled prospective guests--including most of the groom's
- family--at airports all over the country while O'Hare and Midway
- airports were shut down for four solid hours.
- As "best" people, Candace and David had both had their
- hands full. Candace had been stuck baby-sitting a somewhat
- hysterical bride and her mostly hysterical mother while David
- 257
- was closeted with an exceedingly nervous groom who had been
- close to bagging the whole idea well before the snow started
- falling. By the time they finally made it through the wedding,
- the maid of honor and best man were comrades-in-arms.
- From that beginning, it was a simple step for Candace to
- invite her new friend to her parents' traditional Christmas party
- the following week--the night before David Ladd was due to
- fly home to spend his winter vacation with his family in Tucson.
- The prospect of meeting the Oak Park Waverlys--as Astrid
- Ladd soon took to calling them--wasn't nearly as daunting to
- David Ladd as it would have been had he gone straight there
- from his mother's and stepfather's place in Gates Pass. Following
- Candace's directions through the still ice-rutted streets, he arrived
- at a house that was much the same size as his grandmother's
- lakeshore mansion, only this one was alive with lights visible
- in every window of all three floors.
- The gateposts at the end of a long curving drive glowed a
- holiday welcome with hundreds of white Christmas lights. The
- house itself was outlined with thousands more. Handing his Jeep
- off to a valet-parking attendant, David rang the doorbell. One
- 258
- glimpse of the tux-clad butler who opened the door and relieved
- arriving guests of their coats made David more than happy that
- he'd gone to the trouble of renting a tuxedo himself.
- 13Z J.A. JANCE
- For fifteen or twenty interminable minutes he was there on
- his own, trying to make acceptable small talk with people he
- had never met and most likely would never see again. Just when
- he was ready to bolt back the way he had come, Candace appeared
- in a slick, low-cut red dress with a slit that came halfway
- up her thigh.
- "I see somebody put a drink in your hand," she said. "Have
- you tried the buffet?"
- "I was waiting for you. Are you hungry?"
- Candace made a face. "Not really. Mother uses the same
- caterer every year, although I've never quite figured out why.
- The food reminds me of those breakfast sausages they serve at
- hotels in England. They look great but they taste like they're
- made of sawdust."
- David couldn't help laughing at that. Encouraged by an appreciative
- audience, Candace continued. "My two older sisters
- 259
- and I learned early on to load up a plate and carry it around
- awhile just to keep peace in the family. I suggest you do the
- same, but you don't have to eat it. Later on, we'll go up to my
- room and order a pizza."
- "Order a pizza?" David echoed.
- "Sure. I have my own entrance. The delivery people know
- to bring it there instead of to the front door. My sisters and I
- have been doing it for years."
- "Your parents have never figured it out?"
- Candace grinned at him conspiratorially from behind her
- champagne flute. "Never. Come on. I'll introduce you to my
- folks, but don't breathe a word about the pizza. If you do, I
- won't let you have any."
- It turned out there was a whole lot more waiting for David
- Ladd in Candace Waverly's upstairs room than a thin-crust pepperoni
- and cheese. For one thing, it wasn't a room at all, but a
- three-room suite, complete with bedroom, sitting room, and Jacuzzi-equipped
- bath. And Candace Waverly wasn't particularly
- interested in staying in the sitting room.
- David Ladd had taken his time with school, changing majors
- 260
- several times before finally finishing his BA and deciding on law
- school. At twenty-seven, he certainly wasn't a virgin, but he hadn't
- encountered anyone like Candace Eugenia Waverly, either. Slipping
- out of her bright red dress along the way, she led him into her
- KISS OF THE BEES 153
- bedroom. Davy was still nervously fumbling with his cuff links
- when a naked Candace stepped forward to help him and to drag
- him, unprotesting, into her bed. Two frenetic hours later, she sat
- up in bed, propped herself upright on a mound of pillows, and
- matter-of-factly reached out for the phone to order a pizza. By
- then David Ladd had experienced several exotic sexual activities
- he had previously only imagined. Or read about.
- Candace might look delicate and ladylike, but in bed she was
- anything but, and in the six months since, David Ladd had found
- himself deeply in lust if not in love. He and Candace spent a
- good deal of time together--as much as possible, considering his
- course load. And because of Astrid Garrison's prying eyes, most
- of their fun and games had happened in Candace's chasteappearing
- bedroom.
- The sex had been great. The problem was, David Ladd still
- 261
- didn't feel as though he was remotely in love. During the last
- few weeks, tension had been building as Candace Waverly dug
- in her heels over David's stated plan of returning to Tucson to
- go to work.
- "I don't see why you're taking this internship out on an
- Indian reservation," she had pouted one day early in May as
- the two of them sat sipping late-evening lattes in downtown
- Evanston's Starbucks.
- With an important paper due in two days, this wasn't exactly
- the time for Davy to work his way around such a complex issue.
- Candace already knew that David's sixteen-year-old sister was
- adopted and that she was a full-blooded Native American.
- School-trained as a disciple of cultural diversity, Candace hadn't
- batted an eyelash when David had given her that bit of information,
- but she had cautioned him that he maybe ought not mention
- it to her folks. Like the secret Christmas-party pizza, as
- well as some of the other things that went on in Candace's
- upstairs bedroom--this was something Candace's mother might be better off not knowing,
- and it made David Ladd wonder if the elder Waverlys of Oak Park might be somewhat
- bigoted
- when it came to dealing with Indians.
- 262
- Maybe Candace was, too, for that matter, he thought as he
- grappled with how to make her understand exactly what the
- internship meant to him. Should he try to tell her about Nana
- Dahd? By working on the reservation he hoped, in some small
- 134 J.A. JANCE
- way, to repay Rita Antone for all she had done for him, all she
- had meant to him, but the words to explain that refused to
- bubble to the surface.
- "I'm smart," he said at last, knowing it sounded limp and
- probably stupid as well. "I speak the language, and I think I can
- make a contribution."
- "You mean make a contribution like people do in the
- Peace Corps?"
- It wasn't at all like the Peace Corps, but David didn't know
- where to begin explaining that, either. Peace Corps volunteers,
- armed with the very best intentions, went off and spent a few
- years of their lives ministering to the unfortunate before returning
- to their real homes, jobs, and lives. As far as David Ladd
- was concerned, the people on the Tohono O'othham, with all
- their history and tradition, were in his blood. They were a part
- 263
- of him. He had learned about them at Rita's knee and in the
- teachings of both Looks At Nothing and Fat Crack. They were
- his real life far more than the years of exile in Evanston had
- ever been.
- "But what kind of a job would the internship lead to?" Candace
- had continued. "Is there any kind of career path? And do
- they pay anything?"
- At twenty-five, Candace was two years younger than David.
- She had a good job in Human Resources at her father's firm--
- a job that probably paid far better than anything she could have
- found on her own with nothing more than a BS in psychology.
- Out of school for four years herself, she talked about someday
- returning to school for a graduate degree. In the meantime, she
- still lived at home and drove the bright red Integra her parents
- had given her for Christmas to replace the Ford Mustang convertible
- that had been her college-graduation present. The kind
- of grinding poverty that existed on the Tohono O'othham was so
- far outside the realm of Candace Waverly's sheltered Oak Park
- existence that there was no basis for common ground. Had
- David Ladd attempted to explain it to her, she probably still
- 264
- wouldn't have understood.
- "The tribe doesn't pay much," David allowed with a short
- laugh. "And I doubt there's much room for advancement."
- "But would you make enough to start a family?" she asked.
- That sobered him instantly. "Probably not," he said.
- KISS OF THE BEES B5
- "Well then," Candace continued in a tone that sounded as
- though there was no further basis for discussion. "Daddy will
- be glad to give you a job. I know because I already asked him.
- He's always looking for smart young men."
- "But, Candace," David had objected. "I don't want to work
- in Chicago. I want to go home--to Tucson."
- "But what's there?" she had shot back at him. "And what
- would 1 do for a job? Nobody knows me there."
- Behind them, the espresso machine had hissed a noisy cloud
- of steam into the air. The sound reminded David Ladd of quicksand
- pulling someone under. No doubt he should liave made a
- clean break of it right then, but the paper was due and finals
- were bearing down on him and he didn't want to provoke a
- confrontation.
- 265
- "I'll think about it," he said. "I'll think it over and let you
- know."
- "You goddamned gutless wonder," he berated himself now,
- lying there on the bed in the darkened room at the Ritz Carlton.
- Honesty's the best policy.
- Honesty's the best policy. Growing up, those were words
- he'd heard early and often from his stepfather. He had been
- only seven the first time he had heard them spoken, but he
- remembered the incident as clearly as if it had happened
- yesterday.
- "That old lady's not just an Indian," his stepbrother had
- shouted. "She's a witch."
- From the very beginning, Quentin Walker was always able
- to get Davy's goat, and there was nothing that drove the younger
- boy wild faster than someone saying bad things about Rita
- Antone.
- "She is not."
- "Is to. And I can prove it."
- "How?"
- "Look."
- 266
- Quentin pulled something black out of his pocket. As soon
- as Davy saw it, he recognized the scrap of black hair. He knew
- what it was and where it had come from.
- In the bottom drawer of the dresser in her room, Nana Dahd
- kept her precious medicine basket. Rita had told Davy the story
- 136 J.A. JANCE
- a hundred times about how her grandmother. Understanding
- Woman, had given Rita the basket to take with her when the
- tribal policeman carted her off to boarding school. Back then
- she had been a little girl named Dancing Quail. Davy had wept
- at the part of the story where, on the terrifying train trip between
- Tucson and Phoenix, clinging to the roof of the moving
- train, Dancing Quail had lost the precious spirit rock, a geode,
- that Understanding Woman had given her granddaughter to protect
- her on the journey. Not only was the rock lost, but later,
- once she arrived in Phoenix, the basket itself had been confiscated
- by school matrons who had a ready market for such
- profitable artifacts. Years later, when Rita was sent from the
- reservation in disgrace, Oks Amichuda once again gave Rita a
- basket to take with her. This one, although far inferior to the
- 267
- first, nonetheless contained yet another spirit rock, a child's fistsized
- chunk from that same geode.
- Years later, working as a domestic in a Mil-gahn house in
- Phoenix, Rita had stumbled across that original medicine basket,
- complete with all its contents, sitting in a glass display case. On
- the night she fled the house for faraway California, Rita had
- * exchanged the one basket for the other.
- Having heard the stories countless times, David recognized
- at once that the hank of human hair in Quentin's hand was
- one of Rita's medicine-basket treasures--her great-grandfather's
- scalp bundle.
- "You shouldn't have that. Nobody's supposed to touch it,"
- Davy said. "Put it back."
- "What's she going to do to me if I touch it?" Quentin
- taunted. "Turn me into a toad?"
- "I said put it back."
- "Who's gonna make me?"
- Quentin was four years older than Davy and almost twice as
- big, but Davy flew at him with such ferocity that the older boy
- 268
- was caught off-guard. He fell down, cracking his head on the
- rock wall behind him while Davy pummeled his unprotected
- face with flailing fists. Once Quentin recovered from the initial
- shock, the fight was short but brutal. Davy took the brunt of
- the physical damage. When the battle was over, his nose was
- bloody, his shirt had been torn to pieces, and one bottom tooth
- dangled by a thread.
- KISS OF THE BEES li/
- Brandon had arrived in time to put an end to the hostilities.
- He lined all four boys up in order of size. His own sons, Quentin
- and Tommy, were at the head of the line, followed by Davy
- and then by Brian Fellows, Quentin and Tommy's half-brother.
- Janie, Brandon Walker's first wife, had been three months
- pregnant with Brian when she divorced Brandon in order to
- marry Don Fellows, Brian's father. Janie's second marriage didn't
- last any longer than her first one had. Don Fellows disappeared
- into the woodwork when Brian was three. By the time Brian was
- four, he would come and stand forlornly on the porch, watching
- whenever Brandon came by to take his own sons for an outing.
- Over time, that lost, affection-starved look had worn down
- 269
- Brandon Walker's resistance. By the time Davy appeared on the
- scene, Brian came along with Quentin and Tommy as often as
- not. Brian was a few months younger than Davy. He was small
- for his age and still prone to wetting the bed. Quentin and
- Tommy jeeringly called him "the baby." Brandon Walker often
- referred to him as "the little guy."
- "All right now," Brandon Walker growled on the day of the
- fight over the medicine basket. "Tell me what happened, and
- remember, honesty's the best policy. I want the truth."
- "I was trying to help him learn to ride my bike," Quentin
- said. "The big one, not the one with training wheels. He fell,
- and so did I. The bike landed on top of me."
- The lie came so easily to Quentin's lips that the two younger
- boys, Brian and Davy, looked at one another in shocked amazement.
- Meanwhile Brandon moved down the line to his second
- son. "Is that right, Tommy? Remember, what I want from you
- is the truth."
- Tommy nodded. "Yup," he said. "That's what happened."
- Next Brandon leveled his gaze on Davy. "What do you have
- to say, young man?"
- 270
- Davy shrugged his scraped shoulder and hung his head.
- "Nothing," he said. :
- "And you, Brian?"
- "Nothing, too," he said.
- Convinced he still didn't have a straight answer but unable
- to crack the four boys' united front, Brandon turned back to
- Davy. "Do me a favor, Davy. Stick with the training wheels for
- a while, son. Thank God that's only a baby tooth. If it were a
- 138 J.A. JANCE
- permanent one, your mother would kill us both. Go see Rita.
- She'll help clean you up."
- The last thing Davy wanted to do was see Rita right then.
- Part of him wanted to tell her what had happened. But he didn't
- know what to say. For a week he kept quiet, watching Nana
- Dahd's broad features for any sign that she had discovered her
- loss.
- The next weekend, when the three boys again came to visit,
- Brandon took the two older boys to see Rocky, a movie that was
- deemed too old for Brian and Davy.
- As soon as the two younger boys were left alone in Davy's
- 271
- room, Brian Fellows unzipped his knapsack. "Look," he whispered,
- emptying the contents of his bag out onto the bottom
- bunk.
- On top of the heap were the extra clothes Brain always had
- to bring along in case he had an accident. But underneath the
- clothing, scattered on the bedspread, lay a collection of items
- most people would have dismissed as little-boy junk--the denuded
- spine of a feather; a shard of pottery with the faint figure
- of a turtle etched into the red clay; a chunk of rock, gray on
- one side and covered with lavender crystals on the other; the
- hank of long black hair; Rita's owij--her basket-making awl;
- Rita's lost son's Purple Heart. Last of all, Davy spied Father
- John's losalo--the string of rosary beads--that the old man had
- given Rita the night he died.
- For a moment Davy gazed in wondering, hushed silence at
- the medicine basket's missing treasures. "Where did you get
- them?" he asked finally.
- "I stole them," Brian said casually. "Quentin had them hidden
- in his sock drawer, and I stole them back."
- "When he finds out, he'll kill you."
- 272
- "No, he won't," Brian answered. "He'll only beat me up.
- He does that all the time. It's no big deal."
- For the first time in his life, Davy Ladd realized he had a
- friend, a real one--a friend whose name wasn't Rita.
- "But Tommy and Quentin are so mean," Davy said. "Aren't
- you afraid of them?"
- "Not really," Brian replied with a cheerful shrug. "They're so
- afraid of getting caught, they never hurt me enough so it shows."
- 1
- -oyote had listened to the council in the village before Old Limping
- Man and Young Man started on their journey across the desert.
- Ban had decided that anything important enough to take men back
- into the burning lands was worth examining. When Coyote's stomach
- is full of food and water, his curiosity is very active. So Ban
- had gone ahead of the two men to find out for himself what it was
- that Buzzard had seen and Jackrabbit had told him about.
- But now in that burning desert, Coyote was running for his
- life. The Ali-chu'uchum O'othham--the Little People--were after
- him--the bees, flies, ants, wasps, and insects of all kinds. Gohhim
- O'othham--Old Limping Man--could still speak the language of
- 273
- I'itoi which all the animals and all the Little People understand.
- He called out to the Pa-nahl--the Bees--and to the Wihpsh--the
- Wasps--to ask what was the trouble.
- The Little People were very angry, but they stopped. They told
- Gohhim O'othham that the two men must go with them and that
- they must keep Coyote away. But there was no danger from Coyote
- anymore. Ban was too busy rubbing his sore nose in the dirt.
- And so the two men--Old Limping Man and Young Man--
- followed Ali-chu'uchum--the Little People. After a time the men
- saw a strange cloud made up of the flying ones--the bees and flies
- and wasps. They looked down and saw the ground covered with
- moving specks. And the moving specks were ants of all kinds--big
- and little, brown and black.
- 140 J.A. JANCE
- The word of the coming of the men became known. The cloud
- of Little People spread out and parted. Then the man saw a woman
- lying with her eyes closed. The woman was being kissed by the
- wings of hundreds of bees. They were fanning her and keeping her
- cool, and all the while Pa-nahl--the Bees--were singing very softly.
- At first the men were afraid. They knew that while the Little
- 274
- People are very, very wise, they are also very quick-tempered. But
- Old Man listened to the song the bees were singing. The song was
- a prayer for help for this woman who was their friend. So the two
- men went to the woman and gave her water.
- The woman moved and spoke, but the men could not understand
- what she said. She did not open her eyes. They gave her pinole and
- water. Then they raised her up and began the return trip to the
- distant village.
- Driving to his appointment, Mitch Johnson couldn't help
- gloating. All morning long he had made a conscious effort not
- to rush, even though the clock had been ticking inevitably
- toward his scheduled appointment with Diana Ladd Walker.
- Gradually--vaguely, at first--the girl's form had taken shape on
- the paper. The perspective was masterful--graphic without
- being anatomical. He wanted her to be sexy in this one. The
- dissection part, the one that peeled away the outside layers--
- would come later.
- For Mitch, one of the most difficult aspects of the drawing
- came when it was time to detail the girl's softly rising and falling
- chest. With Lani sound asleep, the virginal breasts had gone so
- 275
- soft and flaccid they were almost flat. The only solution for that
- was for Mitch to touch them and caress the nipples until they
- stood at attention. The difficulty and thrill of that was bringing
- the body to wakeful attention without necessarily disturbing the
- girl. If she had awakened and started struggling and fighting right
- then, it might have done irreparable harm to the pose. It would
- have spoiled the whole mood, destroyed the magic exhilaration
- of creation.
- But of course, the full force of the drug was still upon her,
- and she hadn't awakened. Lying there still as death, she had
- stirred only slightly beneath his touch, an unconscious half-smile
- on her lips as though, even in sleep, Mitch's tender caress on
- her body somehow pleasured her. That almost drove him crazy.
- KISS OF THE BEES 141
- Breathing hard, Mitch once again retreated to the safety of his
- easel, forcing himself to regard her inviting body as an artistic
- challenge, as an enticing morsel to be avoided at all costs rather
- than as defenseless territory begging to be conquered and
- exploited.
- And the fact that he could do that--put her on paper without
- 276
- giving in to the raging river of temptation--left him with a
- feeling of power and incredible superiority. Touching her body
- without immediately tearing into it was something Andy Carlisle
- never could have done. Mitch had the pleasure of knowing right
- then that he was a better man than his teacher. Godlike, Andy
- had tried to mold Mitch in his own image, but in this instance
- the created had moved beyond his creator.
- After the breasts it had been time to do the face and hair.
- If anything, he wished the girl's hair had been a little longer
- than it was. That way the dark edge of the hair would have
- concealed some of the breasts rather than simply falling across
- the shoulders. But that couldn't be helped. This was to be a
- study of the actual girl, and so he copied the line of hair exactly
- as it presented itself.
- The final item on his morning's agenda had been the necklace.
- Mitch had been around Tucson long enough to know that
- the maze design on her necklace had something to do with Indians,
- but he wasn't exactly sure what. He took great pains to see
- that he got it right, that he copied it exactly. You never could
- tell when . . .
- 277
- As soon as the thought came to mind, it had left him shivering.
- That was a way to top Andy's tapes, something Andy
- never would have conceived of. Andy had talked a good game--
- murder as art--but he wouldn't have had the skill to execute
- such a breathtaking idea.
- Mitch would re-create the design on the flat plane of the
- girl's belly, carving it into her flesh so that slowly oozing blood
- would be the actual ink. That meant Mitch would have to do
- that final act while the girl was still alive--maybe drugged again
- so she wouldn't move and mess things up. One question in
- Mitch's mind was whether or not, working free-hand with an
- X-Acto knife, he would be able to get the nested concentric
- circles right. The other difficulty would be placement. The most
- 14Z J,A. JANCE
- artistically unifying concept would be to use that fine little belly
- button of hers as the head of the man in the maze.
- That would see Andy's goddamned tapes and raise him one
- better.
- It was on that note that he walked into the hotel to meet
- with Lani Walker's mother.
- 278
- With her hair, nails, and makeup all professionally attended
- to, Diana Ladd Walker headed for La Paloma and the scheduled
- Monty Lazarus interview. His wasn't a byline she recognized,
- but that didn't mean anything. The magazines he wrote for were
- name brand, and Megan had been delighted to schedule an interview
- with him.
- As Diana wended her way through Tucson's relatively light
- summertime traffic, she smiled at the idea that she was going to
- a fashionable hotel to be interviewed by a reporter with a national
- audience. As a general rule, interviews were something to
- be endured rather than enjoyed. Still, considering Diana's humble
- origins, the very fact that she was being interviewed at all
- had to count as its own peculiar miracle.
- Diana Cooper Ladd Walker had spent her early life in the
- clean but shabby caretaker's quarters at the garbage dump back
- in Joseph, Oregon, Diana's mother had scrubbed and fussed and
- worked to keep the place up, but it had remained indelibly "the
- old Stevens place"--a run-down one-house slum that was theirs
- to use only as long as Max Cooper managed to hang on to his
- unenviable position as Joseph's garbageman.
- 279
- The job was anything but glamorous. Other than the house,
- it paid little more than a pittance, but it kept a roof over their
- heads. With a marginally motivated and often drunk husband,
- it was the best lona Dade Cooper could hope for. Max kept
- both the job and the house for years--far longer than anyone
- expected--but only because lona carried more than her share of
- the load. Max owned the official title of garbageman. lona did
- most of the work--his and hers both.
- As a child Diana hadn't been blessed with many friends. The
- few she did have usually found dozens of excuses to explain
- why they could never come play at her house. For years Diana
- had searched for ways to make her house more acceptable,
- more welcoming.
- KISS OF THE BEES W
- Once when she was ten or so, she had sat at the kitchen
- table after dinner, poring through the exotic pages of one of the
- several Sears and Roebuck catalogs that came to the house each
- year with her mother's name on them.
- "Look at these," Diana had said, pointing to a set of sheer,
- frilly pink curtains. The curtains could be purchased as part of
- 280
- a set along with a matching bedspread. "Wouldn't those look
- nice in my bedroom?"
- Diana's question had been intended for her mother's ears,
- but at that precise moment, lona had stepped across the kitchen
- to the pantry where she was just taking off her apron. Before
- she could finish hanging up her apron and return to the table,
- Max Cooper had banged down his beer bottle and then leaned
- toward Diana. He peered over her shoulder, glowering at the
- page in the catalog.
- "Won't matter none," he announced morosely. With a quick jab, he grabbed the catalog
- out of Diana's hand and dropped it into lona's box of kitchen firewood. "Curtains
- or no, you can't
- make a silk purse out of a sow's ear. And all those hoitytoity
- girls from school still won't have nothin' to do with you. You
- know what they say," he added with a leer. "Once a garbageman's
- daughter, always a garbageman's daughter."
- He had leaned back on his chair then, watching to see if she
- would try to rescue the catalog from the trash heap which, of
- course, she did not. Even at that age, she already knew better
- than to give Max Cooper's meanness the kind of satisfaction
- he wanted.
- 281
- In the books Diana had devoured every day--fictional stories
- peopled by the likes of Nancy Drew and Judy Bolton and the
- Dana girls--the heroines had slick rooms, speedy little roadsters,
- loving parents, and enough money to do whatever they liked. If
- they wanted something, they bought it themselves or some nice
- relative gave it to them. Diana Cooper's life wasn't like that.
- She never had a matching set of curtains, sheets, and pillowcases
- until after she had been married and widowed and was living
- alone in the little rock house in Gates Pass.
- She had left the catalog where her father threw it, but she
- had never forgotten what he had done. And she had never forgiven
- him either.
- Now, driving toward her interview with Monty Lazarus,
- 144 J.A. JANCE
- Diana Ladd Walker was struck once more by how far she had
- come from those bad old days. It was a long way from the
- garbageman's house in Joseph, Oregon, to the lobby of the La
- Paloma in Tucson, Arizona. A damned long way.
- When she pulled into the covered driveway in front of the
- hotel, a valet-parking attendant stepped forward to open the
- 282
- door and claim her car. "Are you checking in?" he asked, helping
- her out of the seat.
- "No," she said. "I'm here for a meeting."
- "Very good," he said, handing her a claim ticket.
- She stood for a moment watching as he took the Suburban
- and drove it out of sight. The miracle was that she didn't feel
- as though she were out of her league or that she had somehow
- overreached herself. No, she was here at a first-class hotel, and
- she felt totally at ease.
- Smiling, Diana smoothed her dress and started inside, nodding
- a thank-you to the attendant who opened the door.
- Not only was it a long way from Joseph to here, she thought,
- but every single step had been worth it.
- As she entered the room a tall, gaunt-looking man with a
- headful of bushy red hair, slightly stooped shoulders, and an
- engaging grin rose and came toward her. "Mrs. Walker?" he
- asked.
- Diana nodded and held out her hand. "Mr. Lazarus?" she
- asked.
- "That's right," he said with a courtly bow. "Monty Lazarus
- 283
- at your service." He led her toward a low, comfortable-looking
- couch. "I've managed to corral this little seating area for just
- the two of us. I thought it might be nicer for talking than the
- restaurant would be. Would you care for a drink?"
- "A glass of wine might be nice. A drink sometimes helps
- take the edge off."
- "In other words, you're not looking forward to this."
- She smiled and shook her head. "About as much as I look
- forward to having a root canal," she told him.
- For some strange reason, that answer seemed to tickle his
- funny bone. Monty Lazarus laughed aloud.
- "The lobby bar isn't open yet," he said. "You hang on right
- here. If you'll excuse me for a few seconds, I'll go get you that
- KISS OF THE BEES 145
- glass of wine, then I'll do my best to make this as painless an
- interview as possible."
- Diana sat back, closed her eyes, and waited, forcing herself
- to relax, to forget how nervous being on the subjective side of
- an interview always made her feel.
- "Have you ever been to a bullfight?" Andy had asked
- 284
- Mitch once.
- "A long time ago," Mitch answered. "Down in Nogales back
- in the early seventies. Lori and I went together. I wasn't especially
- impressed."
- "The Nogales ring wasn't noted for the quality of its fights,"
- Andy replied. "It's like small-town sports everywhere. The bush
- leagues. You get the young guys who aren't quite good enough
- to make it in the majors and a few major-league has-beens that
- aren't tough enough to cut the mustard anymore. But bullfighting,
- if it's done right, is a thing of beauty.
- "The bullfighter has to be able to kill. That goes without
- saying, but the art of it is all in the cape-work, in the bullfighter
- controlling the drama with his cape. The whole point is to bring
- the bull's horns so close that physical injury or even death are
- less than a fraction of an inch away and yet, when the fight is
- over the bull is always dead, and usually, the bullfighter walks
- away unscathed. It's fascinating to watch."
- Mitch Johnson remembered every word of that conversation,
- and he had taken them all to heart. This was his capework,
- then. He had set up the interview and the whole Monty Lazarus
- 285
- fabrication just to prove to himself that he could do it, that he
- could take the girl, do whatever he wanted with her, and still
- talk to her mother with complete impunity. There was power
- in that.
- Mitch stood at the bar waiting for the bartender to finish
- dealing with some kind of inventory issue. Even that slight suspension
- in the action was annoying. Now that the interview was
- about to begin, his whole body was alive with anticipation. The
- moment when Diana Ladd Walker had come across the room
- toward him was already one of the high points of his life. He
- would never forget the cordial smile on her face as he rose to
- meet her or the way she had held out her hand in greeting. The
- touch of her fingers had been absolutely electrifying because, like
- 146 J.A. MNCE
- the poor, unfortunate bull, Diana Ladd Walker didn't suspect a
- thing.
- She had no idea that her precious daughter belonged to the
- man whose hand she was shaking. She didn't have a glimmer
- that he had spent almost the entire morning with Lani Walker
- spread out before him as a visual feast for his sole enjoyment.
- 286
- The girl was his, both physically and artistically. Lani was a
- prisoner of his charcoal and paper as surely as her hands and
- feet were secured to the trundle bed's sturdy little corner posts.
- Diana Ladd Walker had no idea that her interviewer had spent
- several delightful morning hours being alternately tortured and
- exhilarated by the process of re-creating that delectably innocent
- body on paper; that, by controlling his aching to take Lani--
- because it would have been so easy to do so--he had reveled in
- the rational victory of denying that physical craving, that fundamental
- bodily urge. So far Mitch's violation of Lani Walker had
- been mainly intellectual, but that wouldn't last forever.
- "Sorry about the delay, sir," the bartender said. "Can I help
- you now?"
- "A glass of chardonnay for the lady," Mitch Johnson said.
- "And a glass of tonic with lime for me."
- For the first half hour of the Monty Lazarus interview, the
- questions followed such a well-worn track that Diana could have
- given the answers in her sleep.
- "How long have you been writing?" he asked.
- "Twenty-five years, give or take."
- 287
- "You must have studied writing in school, right?"
- Diana shook her head. "No," she said. "I applied for the
- creative writing program here at the university, but I wasn't
- admitted. I became a teacher instead."
- "That's right," Monty said. "I remember something about
- that from the book. Your husband was admitted using material
- you had actually written while you weren't allowed in, and Andrew
- Carlisle turned out to be the instructor."
- Diana nodded. There didn't seem to be anything to add.
- "Did you and he ever talk about that?" Monty asked.
- "About what?"
- "About the fact that he had admitted the wrong student,
- KISS OF THE BEES K7
- that he had given your place to someone who turned out to
- have far less talent."
- "We never discussed it," Diana said. "There wasn't any
- need. After all, I won, didn't I?"
- "What do you mean by that?"
- "Professor Carlisle didn't let me into his class, but I got to
- be a writer anyway."
- 288
- "Where did you go to school?"
- "The University of Oregon," she answered. "I got my M.Ed.
- from the University of Arizona."
- Monty Lazarus continued to ask questions that reeked of
- numbing familiarity. Diana had answered the same questions
- dozens of times before, including two weeks earlier on "The
- Today Show."
- "How did you sell your first book?"
- "I submitted it to an agent I met at a writer's conference up
- in Phoenix."
- "And how long have you been writing full-time?"
- "Until I married my husband Brandon, my second husband,
- I had a full-time teaching job out on the reservation and only
- wrote during the summers. That's Tohono O'othham--spelled
- t-o-h-o-n-o new word o'-o-t-h-h-a-m, by the way. The school
- where I taught is in Topawa, south of Sells, about seventy or so
- miles from here. After Brandon and I married, I cut back to
- substitute teaching. I did that for about three years, and I've
- been writing full-time ever since."
- As Diana went through the motions of answering the questions,
- 289
- it occurred to her that if Monty Lazarus had actually read
- her book, he would have known the answers to some of those
- questions without having to ask. She remembered dealing with
- many of them as part of the "back" story in Shadow of Death.
- She bit back the temptation of mentioning to her interviewer
- that it might have been a good idea for him to do his homework.
- It wasn't at all smart to tell an interviewer how to do his job,
- not unless she wanted a hatchet job to appear in the periodical
- in question. Instead, Diana Ladd Walker answered the questions
- with as much poise and humor as she could muster.
- Having filled several pages with cryptic notes, Monty Lazarus
- finally put down his pen. "Okay," he said. "Enough of that.
- Now, let's turn to the more personal stuff.
- 148 J.A. JANCE I
- j
- "Where do you live?" i
- "Gates Pass, west ofTucson." I
- "For how long?" I
- "Since 1969. I moved there right after my first husband died. 1
- Brandon Walker came to live there after we got married in I
- 290
- 1976." Ill
- "Where were you from originally?" 3
- "Joseph, Oregon," she said. "My father ran the town garbage 4
- dump. We lived in the caretaker's house the whole time I was |
- growing up." |
- "So yours is pretty much one of those Horatio Alger stories," ;
- Monty Lazarus offered.
- Diana smiled. "You could say so."
- "And do you have children?"
- "Yes."
- For the first time in the whole interview, she felt suddenly
- wary and uneasy. That was stupid, because she had answered all
- these same questions time and again. She took a deep breath.
- "In 1975 I was a widow raising an only son, a six-year-old
- child. In 1976, Brandon and I married. He had two children, two
- sons. In 1980 we adopted a fourth child, our daughter, Lani."
- "Four," Monty Lazarus repeated. "And where are they all
- now?"
- Maybe knowing that question would automatically follow the
- first one was the source of some of her anxiety. She opted for
- 291
- putting all the cards on the table at once.
- "The two older boys were Brandon's. My one stepson disappeared
- years ago while he was still in high school."
- "He ran away from home?"
- "Yes. At this point, he's missing and presumed dead. His
- older brother got himself in trouble and ended up in prison in
- Florence. I believe he's out now, but I have no idea where he's
- living. We don't exactly stay in touch. The two younger ones,
- my son David, and our daughter, Lani, are fine. David just graduated
- from law school in Chicago, and Lani is a junior at University
- High School right here in Tucson."
- Monty shook his head sympathetically. "It's tough," he said.
- "Raising kids is always a crapshoot. So it sounds as though you're
- running about fifty-fifty in the motherhood department."
- KISS OF THE BEES 149
- "I guess so," Diana agreed. Fifty-fifty wasn't a score she was
- proud of. She would have liked to do better.
- Monty Lazarus glanced down at his watch. "Yikes," he exclaimed.
- "We've been at this for over an hour. I'll go flag down >
- a waitress. Can I get you anything? Another glass of wine,
- 292
- maybe?"
- Diana shook her head. "I'd better switch to iced tea," she
- said. "No sugar, but extra lemon."
- As Monty Lazarus sauntered away, Diana was left mulling
- his sardonic words about raising kids. Crapshoot. That just about
- covered it.
- Tommy, Brandon's younger son, had walked out of their lives
- one summer afternoon between his freshman and sophomore
- years in high school. Over the years they had gradually come to
- terms with the idea that Tommy was probably dead--he had to
- be. The situation with Quentin wasn't nearly as clear-cut. Diana
- sometimes thought they would have been better off if Quentin
- had died as well.
- The moment she met Quentin Walker, Diana recognized he
- was both smart and mean. Even as a ten-year-old, his conversation
- had shown intermittent flashes of intellectual brilliance. No,
- lack of brainpower had never been one of Quentin's problems.
- Curbing his tongue was, his tongue and his temper. He was
- manipulative and arrogant, angry and unforgiving. Not only that,
- by the time he was in high school, he had already developed a
- 293
- severe drinking problem.
- Five years earlier, he had been driving drunk. He had crashed
- his four-wheel-drive pickup into a compact car, a Chevette, killing
- the woman driver and her two-year-old child. As if that
- weren't bad enough, the woman was six months pregnant. The
- baby was taken alive from his dead mother's womb, but he, too,
- had died three days later.
- Brandon was still sheriff at the time of the trial, and the
- whole ordeal had been a nightmare for him. Not that he was
- responsible. Quentin was an adult and had to deal with his own
- difficulties. Brandon Walker's whole life had been committed to
- law and order, yet here was his son, a repeat drunk-driving offender,
- who had blithely killed three people. And when the
- judge had shipped Brandon Walker's son off to Florence for five
- 150 J.A.JANCE
- years on two counts of vehicular homicide [the dead unborn
- fetus didn't count), it had almost broken Brandon's heart. It had
- seemed at the time that things couldn't get any worse. And then
- they did.
- Three years and a half years after he was locked up, shortly
- 294
- after Diana had started work on Shadow of Death, Brandon had
- come home from work and told her the latest bad news in the
- Quentin Walker department. ^
- The moment Diana caught a glimpse of his face as Brandon'
- stumbled into the house, she knew something was terribly
- wrong. His face was so gray she initially thought he might be
- having a heart attack.
- "What's happened?" she had asked, hurrying to his side.
- "What's going on?"
- Shaking his head, he walked past her proffered embrace,
- opened the refrigerator door, pulled out a pair of beers--one for
- each of them. He sank down beside the kitchen table and buried
- his face in his hands. Concerned, Diana sat down beside him.
- "Brandon, tell me. What is it?"
- "Quentin," he groaned. "Quentin again."
- ," "What's he done now?"
- "' "He's hooked up with a gang of extortionists up in Florence,"
- Brandon answered. "They've been operating out of the
- prison, supposedly accepting bribes on my behalf. It's a protection
- racket. They've been telling people that if they don't pay
- 295
- up, something bad is going to happen to their building or business,
- without any cops being there to take care of things. In
- other words, if the marks don't fork over, they don't get any
- patrol coverage."
- "But that's outrageous1" Diana exclaimed. "They're claiming
- you're behind it?"
- "That's right."
- "But that's the whole reason you were elected in the first
- place," Diana protested. "To clean things up and put an end to
- that kind of crap."
- "Right." Brandon, staring into the depths of his beer bottle,
- answered without looking Diana in the eye.
- "How did you find out?
- "Hank Maddern told me."
- KISS OF THE BEES 151
- "Hank1." Diana echoed. "He's been retired for years. How
- did he find out?"
- "One of the deputies--Hank wouldn't say which one--went
- to him with it and asked for advice as to what he should do
- about it. The deputy evidently thought I was in on it." Brandon's
- 296
- voice cracked with emotion. It took a minute or so before he
- could continue.
- "Considering the well-known history of graft and corruption
- during Sheriff DuShane's watch, you can hardly blame the guy
- for thinking that. Thankfully, Hank and I go back a long way.
- He came straight to me with it."
- "What are you going to do?"
- Brandon sighed. "I already did it," he said. "I went straight
- to Internal Affairs and told them to check it out on the off
- chance that some of my officers are involved. I told them I'll
- cooperate in any way necessary, and that they should do whatever
- it takes to get to the bottom of it."
- "What'll happen to Quentin?" Diana asked.
- Brandon shook his head. "We're talking felonious activity,
- Diana. If the prosecutor gets a conviction, he'll spend a couple
- more years in prison. And when you're already in the slammer,
- what's another year or two? He won't give a damn, but it's going
- to be hell for us. Our lives will have to be an open book. We'll
- have to turn over all our bank records. The investigators will
- want to know just exactly how much money came in, where it
- 297
- came from, and where it's gone. I told them to have a ball.
- We've got nothing to hide."
- In the bleak silence that followed that last statement, Brandon
- Walker slipped lower in his chair, leaning his weight against
- an arm that had dropped onto the table. "No matter what we
- did for that kid, it was never enough."
- Diana reached out and put one hand over her husband's.
- "I'm sorry," she said.
- He nodded. "I know," he murmured. "Me, too."
- "It's not your fault, Brandon," Diana said. "You did everything
- you could."
- He looked up at her then, his eyes full of hurt and outrage.
- And tears. "But he's my son, for Chrissakes1." he croaked. "How
- the hell could my own son do this to me? How could he go
- against everything I've ever stood for and believed in?"
- 152 J.A. JANCE
- "Quentin isn't you," she said. "He made his own
- choices ..." '
- /
- "All of them bad," Brandon interjected.
- 298
- ". . . and once again, he's going to have to suffer the
- consequences."
- Even as Diana uttered the too pat words, she knew they
- were a cop-out. She was hurt, too, but the real agony belonged
- solely to Brandon. After all, Quentin was his son. With Tommy
- evidently out of the picture for good, Quentin was the only
- "real" son Brandon Walker had left, which made the betrayal
- that much worse.
- For years they had listened while Janie, Brandon's ex-wife,
- made one excuse after another about why Quentin and Tommy
- were the way they were. In Janie's opinion, the critical missing
- ingredient had always been Brandon's fault and responsibility,
- one way or the other, although whenever Brandon had tried
- to exert any influence on the kids, Janie had continually run
- interference. Any attempt on Brandon's part to discipline the
- boys had met with implacable resistance from their mother.
- Diana had seen from the beginning that it was a lose/lose situation
- all the way around.
- "Can you imagine what Janie's going to say when she gets
- wind of this? She's going to blame me totally, just like she did
- 299
- with the accident."
- "You're the sheriff," Diana had said. "You have to do your
- job. Remember, Quentin's a big boy now--a grown-up. If he's
- turned himself into a criminal, then it's on his head, not yours."
- But that wasn't entirely true. Quentin was the one who was
- prosecuted for his part in the extortion scheme, and a slick lawyer
- got him off but when the next election came around, Brandon
- Walker lost. His opponent, Bill Forsythe, managed to imply
- that there had to be some connection between Quentin's illegal
- but unproven activities and his father, the sheriff.
- Diana thought that Brandon could have and should have
- fought back harder against the Forsythe campaign of character
- assassination, but somehow his heart wasn't in it. When the fight
- ended in defeat, he retreated into the Gates Pass house and lived
- in virtual seclusion while focusing all his energies and frustration
- on cutting and stacking wood.
- KISS OF THE BEES 153
- Monty Lazarus returned to Diana trailed by a waitress bearing
- a tray laden with glasses of iced tea as well as a bowl of salsa
- and a basket of chips.
- 300
- "I thought I'd order a little food--something to keep up our
- strength," he grinned. "Now where were we? Oh, that's right.
- You were telling me about your daughter. University High
- School. That's a prep school of some kind, isn't it?"
- Diana nodded.
- "So she must be smart."
- "Yes. She hopes to study medicine someday."
- "And pretty?"
- Once again she felt that vague sense of unease, but she shook
- it off.
- "I suppose some people would say so," Diana said dismissively.
- "But aren't we getting a little off track?"
- "You're right," Monty Lazarus said. "Have some chips and
- salsa. When I'm hungry, my mind tends to wander."
- Buying the car had been fun for Quentin Walker. Early on
- he had settled on a faded orange, '79 Ford Bronco 4-by-4 XLT,
- with alloy wheels, a cassette deck, towing package, a newly rebuilt 302
- engine, and a slight lift. He'd had to go through the
- usual car-buying bullshit with that cocky bastard of a salesman
- 301
- who acted like he was working for a Cadillac dealership instead
- of hawking beaters at a South Tucson joint called Can Do Deals
- Used Cars.
- Winston Morris, in his smooth, double-breasted khakicolored
- suit and tie, had taken one look at Quentin's mud-spattered
- boots and figured him for some kind of low-life without a
- penny to his name. Quentin had willingly put up with all the
- crap, waiting for the inevitable moment when Winston would
- finally get around to saying, "What's it going to take to put you
- in this car today?"
- Quentin had leaned back in his chair and casually crossed one
- leg over the other. "You've got it listed at forty-two hundred. I'll
- give you thirty-five, take it or leave it."
- The sad look that came over Winston's face was as predictable
- as his initial closing question. "You can't be serious. We're
- in this business to sell cars, not give them away."
- But when Quentin got up to leave, the bargaining had begun
- 154 J.A. JANCE
- in earnest. Quentin ended up paying thirty-six fifty. But the
- most fun came when the dickering was done and Winston had
- 302
- said, "How do you intend to pay for this?"
- That was the supreme moment, the one Quentin had been
- salivating over all morning. Nonchalantly, he had reached for his
- wallet and opened it. One by one he drew out four of the thousand-dollar
- bills and laid them down on the desk in front of the
- salesman. "You can give me change, can't you?"
- The look on Winston's face as he scooped up the four bills
- had been well worth the price of admission. He had taken the
- money and disappeared into his sales manager's office. He was
- in there for a long time. No doubt, everybody there was busy
- trying to figure out whether or not the money was counterfeit.
- Eventually, though, he came back out and finished up the
- paperwork.
- Leaving the lot, Quentin still felt good. After not driving a
- car for six years, it was strange to be back behind the wheel
- again, odd to be in his own vehicle. Knowing what would most
- likely be waiting for him in the desert, he stopped at a grocery
- store and picked up a six-pack of beer, a flashlight, and several
- spare batteries, as well as a large box--an empty toilet-paper
- box. Then he headed out of town.
- 303
- The good mood lasted for a few miles more, but as soon as
- he crossed the pass and could see the mountain ahead of him,
- a pall of gloom settled over him. He popped open the first can
- and took a sip of beer, hoping to hold off the blanket of despair
- that was closing in on him.
- If only his father hadn't made him take Davy out to the
- charco that day. Then, none of the rest of it would have
- happened.
- "Do I have to?" Quentin had whined to his father on the
- phone. "Me and Tommy have better things to do today than
- haul Davy Ladd out into the desert to put a bunch of plastic
- flowers on something that isn't even a grave."
- "Listen here, young man," Brandon Walker said. "We're not
- talking options here. Where did you get that car you're driving?"
- "From Grandma," Quentin conceded grudgingly. "You
- bought it for us from Grandma Walker."
- "That's right. Diana and I both bought it for you," Brandon
- KISS OF THE BEES 1S5
- corrected. "As long as we're paying for gas and insurance, you'd
- better straighten up and help out when required to do so. Is
- 304
- that clear?"
- "I guess," Quentin said. "But do we have to do it today?"
- "Yes. Today is the anniversary of Gina Antone's death. Rita's
- too busy with Lani to take care of the shrine herself and it would
- be too hard on her anyway, so Davy's agreed to do it for her.
- It's very important to Rita that the work be done today."
- "Well, I'm not doing any of it."
- "Nobody's asking you to. Davy will do whatever needs
- doing. Brian will probably help out too, if he can come along."
- Now that Quentin was being slightly more agreeable, Brandon
- was willing to be conciliatory as well. "I'll send along enough
- money so the four of you can stop off at the trading post and
- have a hamburger or a burrito on your way back. How does
- that sound?"
- "Okay, I guess," Quentin said.
- Showing off, Quentin had driven the aging '68 New Yorker
- like a maniac on the way out to the reservation. Tommy was
- game for anything, but Quentin was waiting to see if he could
- scare either Davy or Brian into telling him to slow down. Neither
- one of them said a word. The bad part came, though, when
- 305
- they turned off Coleman Road and headed for the charco.
- Quentin was still going too fast when they came around a
- blind curve that concealed a sandy wash. He jammed on the
- brakes. Seconds later, the Chrysler was mired in sand up to its
- hubcaps. By then they were only half a mile or so away from
- the charco and the shrine. Brian and Davy had set off with their
- flowers and candles. Meantime, Quentin left Tommy to watch
- the car while he hiked out to the highway to find someone to
- pull the Chrysler out of the sand.
- That took time. He was gone over an hour. When he came
- back with a guy with a four-wheel-drive pickup and a chain,
- Tommy was nowhere to be found. The car was out of the sand,
- the guy with the pickup was long gone, and Brian and Davy
- were back from doing their shrine duties before Tommy finally
- showed up.
- "Where the hell have you been?" Quentin growled.
- "I got bored," Tommy told him. "But you'll never guess
- what I found. There's a cave up there," he said, pointing back
- 156 J.A. JANCE
- up the flank of Kitt Peak. "It's a big one. I tried going inside,
- 306
- but when it got too dark, I came back." He wrenched open the
- passenger door, opened the glove box, and took out the flashlight
- Brandon Walker insisted they keep there in case of trouble.
- "Come on," he said. "I'll show you."
- "We can't do that," Davy said.
- "Can't do what?"
- "Go in the caves on loligam," Davy told him. ;
- "Why not?"
- "Because they belong to the Indians. They're sacred."
- "That's bullshit and you know it1" Tommy said. "Caves belong
- to everybody. What about Colossal Cave? What about Carlsbad
- Caverns? Besides, it's Kitt Peak anyway, not 'chewing
- gum.' "
- "loligam i" Davy repeated, but by then Tommy was already
- headed back up the mountain. Quentin paused for a moment.
- He himself wasn't wild about exploring caves, but the idea of
- doing something Davy was against proved to be too much of a
- temptation. "If Tommy's going, I'm going," he said. With that,
- Quentin set off after his brother. ^
- ".'' "Why are the caves sacred?" Brian asked as he and Davy
- 307
- trudged reluctantly up the mountain after the others.
- "Nana Dahd told me that it's because that's where I'itoi goes
- for summer vacation," Davy answered. "But Looks At Nothing
- told me once that back when the Apaches attacked the village
- that used to be here, the village called Rattlesnake Skull, the
- only people who lived were some little kids who hid out in a
- cave. Later on, the Tohono O'othham found out that one of the
- girls from Rattlesnake Skull had betrayed her people to the Ohb.
- Some hunters went looking for her. When they found her, they
- brought her back and shut her up in one of the caves on the
- mountain to die."
- With three older brothers, Brian Fellows was used to having
- his leg pulled. "Is that the truth or is that just a story?" he asked.
- Davy Ladd shrugged. "I don't know," he said. "Looks At
- Nothing told it like it was the truth, but maybe it is just a story."
- They had followed the older boys to the entrance of the cave
- and then waited outside until the flashlight gave out, forcing
- Tommy and Quentin to emerge.
- KISS OF THE BEES 157
- "It's beautiful in there," a gleeful Tommy reported. "Unbelievable1.
- 308
- It's too bad you're both chickens."
- "We're not chickens,' Davy said quietly.
- Quentin laughed. "Yes, you are. Come on, chickychicky.
- Let's go have that hamburger. I'm starved."
- During the next couple of weeks, Tommy had persuaded
- Quentin to spend every spare moment exploring the cave. When
- they ran out of money for gas and flashlight batteries, they stole
- bills from their mother's purse. And even Quentin was forced
- to agree it was worth it. The cave was magnificent--magnificent
- and awful at the same time. It was so much more than either
- of them had imagined and yet it was terribly frustrating. They
- had found something wonderful and amazing, beautiful beyond
- all imagining. Gleaming wet stalactites hung down like thousands
- of rocky icicles. Stalagmites rose up out of watery pools
- like so many gray looming ghosts. Here and there, pieces of
- crystal reflected back light like a thousand winking eyes. Tommy
- was dying to share their discovery.
- "You know what'll happen if anybody finds out," Quentin
- had warned his brother. "They'll kick our asses out of there and
- we'll never get to go back."
- 309
- "Will they ever open it up? Maybe charge admission like
- they do at Colossal Cave?"
- "Don't be stupid, Tommy. You heard what Davy said. It's
- sacred or something."
- It wasn't the first time Quentin and Tommy had squared off
- against the rest of the world. The two of them had been keeping
- secrets--some worse than others--all their lives. They were used
- to it, and they kept this one, too.
- Three weeks after finding the cave, they ventured far enough
- inside the first chamber to locate the narrow passage that led to
- the second. The first room had been so rough and wet that it
- was almost impossible to walk in it. Starting in the passage, the
- second one seemed dryer, and it had a dirt floor, as though
- someone had gone to the trouble of covering the rough surface
- so it would be easier to walk on it.
- Inside the second chamber they had discovered the rock slide
- barring most of what had once been a second entrance to the
- cavern. And over against the far wall, much to both their horror
- 158 J.A. JANCE
- and fascination, they had found the scattered pieces of a
- 310
- human skeleton.
- "Hey, look at this?" Tommy said, picking up a bone and
- flinging it across the cave. "Maybe they left this guy here to
- guard these pots and to cast a spell over anybody who tries to
- take them."
- Tommy Walker's imagination and his fascination with magic
- had always outstripped his older brother's. "Shut up, Tommy,"
- Quentin said. "And leave those bones alone. What if they still
- carry some kind of disease or something?"
- Shrugging, Tommy leaned down and picked up the first pot
- that came to hand. In the orange glow from the flashlight it
- looked gray or maybe beige. A black crosshatch pattern had been
- incised into the surface.
- "I'll bet something like this would be worth a lot of money,"
- he said thoughtfully. "How about if we take it to the museum
- over at the university and try to unload it? Whaddya think of
- that idea?"
- "It might work," Quentin had agreed. "With all the gas
- we're buying these days, our budget could use a little help."
- ^ Together they had discussed which pot might best serve their
- 311
- immediate monetary purposes, settling eventually on the one
- Tommy had picked up in the first place. Carrying the pot in
- one hand and his flashlight in the other, Tommy had started
- back toward the main cavern. Quentin was several feet behind
- him, so he never saw exactly what happened. All he knew was
- he heard a noise, like something falling. He also heard the pot
- breaking into what sounded like a million pieces. When he came
- around the corner, Tommy was nowhere in sight.
- "Tommy," he yelled. "What happened? Where'd you go?"
- For an answer, he heard only dead silence, broken occasionally
- by the drip of water.
- "Tommy, come on now. Don't play games," Quentin said,
- fighting back a sudden surge of fear. "This is no time for jokes.
- We have to get out of here and head home. It's getting late."
- But still there was no answer. None at all.
- Slowly, carefully, Quentin had begun to search the area.
- After ten minutes or so, he found the hole, almost killing himself
- in the process. Just off the path they had used to get to the
- passage, there was something that looked like a shadow. But
- KISS OF THE BEES 159
- 312
- when Quentin shone his light that way he found instead a shaft,
- some twenty feet deep, with Tommy lying still as death at the
- bottom with his feet in a murky pool of water.
- "Tommy1." Quentin shouted again. "Are you all right? Can
- you hear me?" But Tommy Walker didn't answer and didn't
- move.
- Terrified, Quentin raced out of the cave. In honor of their
- spelunking adventures, the two boys had managed to amass a
- fair collection of discarded rope. Gathering an armload of rope,
- Quentin dashed back up the mountain. Inside the cave, working
- feverishly, he managed to rappel himself down the side of the
- shaft. Once there, he was relieved to find that Tommy was still
- alive, still breathing.
- "Tommy, wake up. You've gotta wake up so we can get out
- of here." But there was no response. Finally, desperate and not
- knowing what else to do, Quentin tied the rope around his unconscious
- brother's chest--fastening it under both his arms so it
- wouldn't slip off. Then he climbed back up to haul Tommy out.
- It had worked, too. With almost superhuman effort and after
- a half-hour struggle, Quentin finally dragged Tommy's dead
- 313
- weight up out of the shaft. He heaved him out of the hole and
- rolled him onto the jagged floor of the cave like a landed fish,
- but by then Tommy Walker wasn't breathing anymore. He
- was dead.
- "Goddamn it1" Quentin had screamed, gazing down at his
- brother's still and rapidly cooling form. "How dare you go and
- die on me1. How dare you1."
- He had started to go for help even then, but halfway to the
- car the second time, he changed his mind. What if, in the process
- of pulling Tommy up and out, Quentin had done something
- to him--what if he had broken something else, caused some
- other damage that hadn't happened in the fall? What if it was
- Quentin's fault that his brother was dead? And maybe it was
- anyway. After all, Quentin was the one who had driven them
- there in the first place. It was Quentin's car, Quentin's driver's
- license, and Quentin's gas.
- And finally, because he didn't know what else to do; because
- he didn't know how to go about beginning to face the enormous
- consequences of what he had done, he climbed into the car and
- drove away. He went home. Later that night, when Janie asked
- 314
- 160 J.A. JANCE
- where Tommy was, Quentin said he didn't know. He claimed
- he had no idea.
- And a day later, Quentin Walker had reluctantly agreed,
- right along with everyone else, that for some unknown reason
- his brother Tommy must have run away.
- From that day on, no amount of drinking ever held the awful
- memories quite at bay. In his sleep, Quentin Walker often
- dreamed about his brother lying limp and lifeless on the floor
- of the cave. And now, after all the intervening years, for the
- first time, Quentin Walker was headed back there.
- He didn't know for sure if Tommy's body was still in the
- cave. It probably was, but by the time Mitch Johnson arrived
- on the scene, it wouldn't be there anymore. Quentin couldn't
- afford for Tommy to be found now. Back at the beginning, when
- it first happened, people might have believed it was an accident.
- If they found out about it now, who would believe that story,
- especially if it was coming from Quentin Walker, from somebody
- who was an ex-con?
- Tommy Walker had been missing all these years, and his
- 315
- brother Quentin was determined that he stay that way--missing
- forever.
- ' 8
- k
- - _ the two men led the woman back toward the village, many of
- the Little People went away, but there was always a swarm of bees
- or wasps to guard the woman. On the fourth day of the journey,
- the woman pointed to the sky and began to dig holes in the ground.
- And the bees were very excited. They sang, "Rain, rain, rain1."
- In two more steps of Tashthe Sunin what the Mil-gahn
- would call hours, the clouds appeared, and the rains came. The two
- men filled their water baskets and were glad. But the happiest of
- all was Jeweththe Earth.
- When the rain was over, the two men wanted to continue on,
- but the woman would not go. So the two men left the woman some
- pinole and went back to their own people. After a time the Indians
- returned to their own country. When they came to the place where
- the two men had left the strange woman, they found many houses.
- This kihhimthis villagehad been built by people from the south.
- They said they had come to be near the great Medicine Woman of
- 316
- the Tohono O'othham. Gohhim O'othhamOld Limping
- Manwas curious and asked where this Medicine Woman lived.
- The people of the village took him to a house made of sticks of
- ocotillo and covered with mud. There were two rooms in this house.
- The inside room was dark with an odd noise in ita strange kind
- of buzzing.
- When Kulani O'oksMedicine Womancame out, Old Limping
- Man saw it was the same woman whom the Little People had
- !6Z J.A. JANCE
- saved. And so this great Medicine Woman, whose name was Mualig
- Siakam--Forever Spinning--told Old Limping Man how she
- had been among strangers in the south. When she had returned
- alone to join her own people, the Tohono O'othham, she found
- her home village deserted. All the Desert People were gone. There
- was no water. The animals had gone too, and so had all the birds.
- And so this woman, who had been left alone in the burning
- desert, sent up a prayer for help. Pa-nahl--the Bees--were the first :
- to come. The Bees sent for help and brought Wihpsh--the Wasps.
- Then came Mumuwali--the Flies, Komikam--the Beetles, and Totoni--the
- Ants. They all came to help her, all the Little People who
- 317
- had not yet left the burning desert.
- The woman said the Little People had told her to go to sleep
- and they would watch over her. That was all she knew.
- As the endless questions droned on, Diana was more than
- slightly bored. Megan, her publicist in New York, had given her
- such glowing advance notices on Monty Lazarus that Diana had
- expected him to be someone who would come up with an original
- take on the standard author interview. Then, just when she
- was about to decide the whole thing was destined to be a flop,
- Monty surprised her.
- Sitting back in his chair, studying her over his glasses and
- under steepled flngers, he finally asked one of the questions she
- had been waiting and wanting to answer.
- "Tell me," he said. "After all this time, what made you
- finally decide to write this book?"
- "I wanted answers," she said. "And some closure."
- "After almost twenty years?"
- "It's twenty-one now. It was seventeen when I started. That's
- the thing about being a victim of violent crime. I don't think
- you ever get over it, not completely. If you let your guard down,
- 318
- the memories are always there, just under the surface, waiting
- to come flooding back and zing you when you least expect them.
- I thought that by facing Andrew Carlisle down, by once and for
- all confronting everything he did to me, that I could put it in
- the past. I thought that maybe I'd be able to finally reach the
- other side of the nightmare and gain some perspective."
- "Did it work?"
- KISS OF THE BEES 163
- "I don't know. The jury's still out. I still dream about him
- sometimes."
- "About the rape itself? We could talk about that if you like."
- After all the innocuous questions that had gone before, that
- ope rocked her. It meant that Monty Lazarus had read Shadow
- of Death after all. Diana felt blood warming her cheeks.
- "I've talked about the rape all I'm going to--in the book
- itself. Megan was supposed to tell you that subject was off limits.
- '^Jot only that, if you've already read the book, why did you ask
- rfie all those other questions?" she asked. "You must have
- known the answers to most of that stuff."
- Monty Lazarus smiled. His eyes were very blue--a startlingly
- 319
- intense sky blue that was almost the color of Garrison Ladd's.
- Almost the color of Davy's.
- "When you're writing, how many drafts do you do on a
- book?" Monty asked.
- Diana shrugged. "I don't know for sure. Three--four maybe.
- I can't tell. Every time I open up a chapter on the computer, I
- end up changing something. Maybe it's nothing more than shortening
- a sentence here and there or breaking up a paragraph in
- a different way so the words look better on the page. Sometimes
- I find places where I've used the same word twice within two
- or three lines. At that rate, everything's a different draft."
- "And you're polishing as you go."
- "Yes, always."
- "Do things ever change in all that polishing?"
- "Well, probably, but--"
- "You see," Monty Lazarus said with a smile, "the reason I
- like to do in-depth interviews is that I want to hear what the
- person is saying in his or her own words--without all the polishing.
- Without all the real feelings and emotions cleaned up
- and taken out. Those are the things that never show up on the
- 320
- pages of a book.
- "For instance, a little while ago we were talking about your
- marriage to Brandon Walker. When I asked how long you'd been
- married, you said twenty years. Were you aware, though, that
- when you told me that, there was a little half-smile playing
- around the corners of your mouth?"
- "No," Diana conceded. "I wasn't aware of that."
- "And when I asked you about your children and you started
- 164 J.A. JANCE
- discussing your stepchildren, you looked as though you'd put
- what you thought was a piece of candy in your mouth and
- discovered, too late, that it was really dog shit. See what I
- mean?"
- Diana smiled. "Yes," she said. "I suppose I do."
- Monty Lazarus smiled in turn and then leaned back in his
- chair, regarding Diana thoughtfully over the low coffee table
- between them. "I want you to tell me a little about the process
- of this book. Did you seek out Andrew Carlisle, or was it the
- other way around?"
- "He asked me," Diana said. "He wrote to me in care of
- 321
- my publisher."
- "Let me get this straight. The man who killed your husband,
- and raped you, wrote you a letter and asked that you write his
- story? And despite everything that had happened before, despite
- all that history, you still agreed?"
- "Shadow of Death tells both stories," Diana corrected. "His
- and mine."
- "I'd have to say that the book is generally pretty unflinching,"
- Lazarus said. "Blazingly so at times, but there's a gap that
- I find puzzling." .3
- "Which gap is that?"
- "You barely mention the interviews themselves," Monty
- Lazarus said. "I'm assuming they took place in the state prison
- up at Florence, since that's where Carlisle was incarcerated. Is
- that true?"
- "Yes," Diana said. "In the visiting room up there to begin
- with. Then later on, when he was hospitalized for symptoms
- related to AIDS, they let me interview him in the infirmary."
- "But why didn't you talk about that?" Lazarus persisted. "It :||
- seems to me that's an important part of the story, for the victim
- 322
- to triumph over the perpetrator, as it were. For you to see your
- tormentor laid low--blind, crippled, horribly disfigured, and finally
- dying of AIDS. I'm surprised you didn't share that satisfaction
- with your readers, that sense of vindication."
- "I didn't write about satisfaction or vindication because they
- weren't there," Diana answered quietly.
- "They weren't?" Monty Lazarus asked. Then, after a moment,
- he added, "I'm sorry. I didn't mean to put words in your
- KISS OF THE BEES 165
- mouth. What did you feel then, when you met him again after
- all those years?"
- "Horror," Diana said simply.
- "Horror?" Lazarus repeated. "At the way he looked? Because
- of the burns on his face and chest? Because of his mangled
- arm?"
- Diana shook her head. "No," she replied. "It had nothing at
- all to do with the way he looked. It was because of what he
- was--what he stood for."
- "Which was?"
- "Evil," she said. "Outside catechism classes, I had never actually
- 323
- met the devil before, somebody who could pass for Satan.
- I was afraid that if I wrote about him that way, no one would
- believe me. He seemed to have an almost hypnotic effect on
- people, certainly on my first husband. If Andrew Carlisle told
- Garrison Ladd that black was white and vice versa, I think Gary
- would have gone to his death trying to prove it was true."
- "I see," Monty said, writing something down in his notebook,
- but Diana Ladd Walker wasn't at all sure he understood.
- In fact, she wasn't entirely sure she did, either.
- The morning of Diana's first scheduled interview with Andrew
- Carlisle had dawned clear and dry and hot. Already dressed
- for work himself, Brandon Walker lounged in the doorway between
- their bedroom and the master bath, drinking a cup of
- coffee and watching as his wife carefully applied her makeup.
- "I could always take the day off and come along with you,"
- he offered. "That way I'd be right there in case anything went
- wrong."
- "Nothing's going to go wrong, Brandon," Diana said, trying
- to sound less anxious than she felt. "It isn't as though I'll be
- alone with him. There are guards. There'll be other visitors in
- 324
- the room as well. I'll be fine."
- For a time after that, Brandon Walker sipped his coffee in
- silence. "Are you going to try to see Quentin while you're
- there?"
- Diana put down her mascara brush. Her gaze met Brandon's
- in the neutral territory of the bathroom mirror's steamy reflection.
- "I could," she said finally. "Do you want me to?"
- Brandon's older son had been locked up in the state peniten-
- 166 J.A. JANCE
- tiary at Florence for months now. On occasion, Brandon and
- Diana had talked about driving up there to see him, but each
- time, Brandon had changed his mind and backed out at the
- last minute.
- "I guess," he said hollowly. "I do want to know how Quent's
- doing. I just can't bring myself to go there to see him. Still, no
- matter what he's done, he's also my son. Nothing's going to
- change that. Since we've already lost Tommy, we can't very well
- just abandon Quentin, can we?"
- Brandon looked away, but not before Diana glimpsed the
- anguished expression on his face. She tried to read that look,
- 325
- tried to fathom what was behind it. Betrayal? Despair? Pain?
- Anger?
- "No," Diana agreed at last. "I don't suppose we can. I can't
- promise I'll see Quentin today. It depends on whether or not
- there's enough time left in visiting hours after the interview with
- Carlisle is over. If they'll let me, though, I will."
- "Thanks, Di," Brandon said gruffly. "I appreciate it."
- And it turned out that there had been enough time for Diana
- Ladd Walker to see both prisoners that day. She had been waiting
- in the Visitation Room, amidst a group of other women
- who, armed with whatever difficulties were besetting them on
- the outside, had come either to rail at or to share their woes
- with their husbands or boyfriends or sons. Diana had brought
- only a yellow pad and a pencil, along with a pervasive sense
- of dread.
- As one door after another had clanged shut behind her,
- Diana felt a sudden resurgence of that long-ago fear. In her ignorance,
- she had thought of the house in Gates Pass as a safe
- haven, yet Carlisle had found a way inside the house and had
- 326
- attacked her there, despite her careful precautions and numerous
- locked doors. Maybe, here in the prison, despite the reassuring
- presence of guards and iron bars, her presumed safety might
- once again prove illusory.
- Andrew Carlisle was here, and so was Diana Walker. She
- was already locked inside the same complex. Soon the two of
- them would be within the same four walls. Would she be able
- to stand it? For the first time, Diana's courage wavered. At that
- moment it would have taken only the smallest nudge from Brandon
- to convince her to walk away and forget the whole project.
- KISS OF THE BEES 167
- Quaking, fighting an almost overpowering urge to bolt and
- run, Diana followed the escorting guards into the grimly functional
- prison Visitation Room. It was lit by sallow, artificial light
- that gave everyone in the place a jaundiced, sickly look. The
- walls were posted with rules and regulations, many of them
- made illegible by layers of graffiti. The chairs in the room were
- all bolted to the floor. It was a hard, desperate place where
- people with no hope waited to see loved ones who had even less.
- The guard leading Diana took her directly to the far side of
- 327
- the room, where the wall was made of thick Plexiglas so yellowed
- and scratched that looking through it seemed more like
- peering through a veil of smutty L.A. smog than anything else.
- Directed to a chair, Diana sat and waited.
- The last time she had seen Andrew Carlisle had been years
- earlier at his double murder trial. One of his arms--the one
- Bone had snapped in two at the wrist--had been encased in a
- heavy plaster cast, and his face had still been swathed in bandages.
- The prison warden had told Diana in advance of that first
- visit that the injured arm had been permanently damaged, leaving
- him with only limited use of his fingers.
- The mangled arm was one thing--more Bone's doing than
- Diana's. What she dreaded seeing was his unbandaged face, the
- one into which she had flung a frying pan full of searing-hot
- bacon grease. That grease had been Diana's last desperate line
- of defense against Andrew Carlisle's brute force and sharp knife.
- The grease had worked far better than she could have hoped.
- He had fallen on the slick floor, clawing at his scorched face and
- howling in agony.
- This day, though, when Carlisle was led into the room, there
- 328
- was no such mummylike mask to lessen the horrible impact of
- what she had done to him. The guard brought him into the
- room, seated him on a chair across from Diana, and then placed
- the intercom receiver, one used to communicate through the
- Plexiglas barrier, in his good hand. All the while, Diana could
- only sit and stare. The third-degree burns had molded his once
- chiseled features into a grotesquely twisted, lumpy grimace.
- They had also ruined his eyes. Andrew Carlisle was blind.
- No amount of anticipation could have prepared Diana for the
- way he looked. It stunned her to think that she had intentionally
- inflicted that kind of injury on another human being. Still, faced
- 168 J.A. JANCE |
- with the same set of circumstances, she knew she would have made the same decision
- and fought him again with the same ferocity.
- "I'm told I'm quite ugly these days," Andrew Carlisle said '
- into the intercom mouthpiece as Diana picked up hers to listen, 'f
- "They're supposedly doing remarkable things with skin trans- plants and plastic surgery
- these days, but not for convicted killers 1 with AIDS. Nobody exactly jumped to the
- plate and offered to
- get me the best possible care back then, or now, either, for that H
- matter. Come to think of it, I wonder? Doesn't denying someone
- proper medical care constitute cruel and unusual punishment?
- 329
- What do you think? Maybe I could take the Pima County Sheriffs
- Department to court and sue them for damages." i,
- "I have no idea," Diana said. "That's up to you." ;
- He laughed then. "You sound quite sure of yourself, Ms. |
- Walker. Have you changed much then since I saw you last?" a ?
- '' Changed how? " }
- "Anything," he replied. "You haven't turned into one of
- those born-again Christians, by any chance, have you?"
- "No." ^
- "Good." He sounded relieved. "After you agreed to come
- see me, I started worrying that maybe you had transformed your- ;
- self into one of those religious zealots. They are all eager to
- come pray over me to save my immortal soul. Some of them i
- even want to grant me forgiveness."
- Diana took a deep breath and managed to find her conversational
- sea legs. "No," she said. "You don't have to worry about
- that, Mr. Carlisle. I've never forgiven you, and I never will."
- "Good," Andrew Carlisle replied. "Very good. I'm delighted
- to hear it. Now, tell me about the way you look."
- "What about the way I look?"
- 330
- "Are you very different from the way you were that night j
- we were together? You're the last person I ever saw or ever will "
- see," he added, as his puckered mouth twisted into an oddly
- one-sided smile. "As a consequence, Ms. Walker, I remember
- everything about that night as vividly as if it had happened yesterday
- or the day before. I remember every detail about you,
- and I would suppose that you remember me in much the same
- way. We were both operating in what the experts call a nondrug-induced
- altered state of consciousness."
- KISS OF THE BEES 169
- "N/.y hair is turning gray," Diana answered, carefully keeping
- her voice even. "I'm over fifty. I wear glasses. Two pairs of
- glasses actually--one for distance and one for reading."
- "I'-n far more interested in your body," Andrew Carlisle said.
- Some blind people seem to gaze off into the far distance
- when they speak. Andrew Carlisle's opaque, sightless eyes
- seemed to pry directly into Diana's very being. She could barely
- breaths. An involuntary shudder ran up and down her spine
- while a hot flush covered her face. She wanted nothing more
- than to race to the door. She wanted out. She longed to be away
- 331
- from '.his monster, to be back outside in the straightforward
- discomfort of the hot desert air.
- This must be what Brandon was trying to warn me about, she
- thought, fighting back panic.
- When Brandon had said she would be putting herself at risk,
- he must have seen that even though Andrew Carlisle would not
- be able to harm her physically, he might still be able to invade
- her mind and infect her soul.
- Pulling herself together, Diana sat up straight and squared
- her shoulders. When she spoke, she willed her voice not to
- quave'.
- "Let's get one thing straight, Mr. Carlisle," she said. "I'm
- the one calling the shots here. If you want to do this project,
- we're going to do it my way. Basic ground rule number one is
- that we don't talk about that night. Not now, not everT'
- "But that's pretty much the whole point, isn't it?" Carlisle
- said, smiling his ruined smile. "Everything that happened before
- led up to it, and everything afterward led away from it."
- "That night isn't my point," Diana returned. "And I'm the
- one writing the book. If you don't like it, hire yourself another
- 332
- writer."
- "Hire?" Carlisle croaked. "What do you mean, hire? I already
- told you I can't afford to pay you anything."
- "I'm being paid, all right," Diana answered. "My agent has
- pitched the idea to my editor in New York. The book I'm writing
- will be written, and I will be paid. The only question is
- whether or not any of your point of view actually appears in
- print. That depends on how well you behave, on whether or not
- you agree to do things my way."
- Diana suspected that Andrew Carlisle was a vain man who
- 170 J.A. JANCE
- was prepared to go to any length in order to be immortalized
- in print. He must have realized that Diana Ladd Walker was his
- best chance for getting there. In this case, Diana's instincts were
- good. Her threat of cutting his perspective out of the project
- immediately delivered the required result.
- "All right," he agreed grudgingly. "I won't mention it again.
- So where do we start?"
- "From the beginning," Diana said. "With your family and
- your childhood. Where you were born and where you grew up.
- 333
- I'd also like to interview any living relatives."
- "Like my mother, you mean?" he asked.
- Diana remembered being told that Andrew Carlisle's mother
- had been there in the yard at Gates Pass the night of her son's
- attack. Myrna Louise Spaulding had ridden down to Tucson
- from her home in Tempe with a homicide detective named
- G. T. Farrell. At the time Diana had been too preoccupied with
- everything else to notice. Later on, during the trial, Myrna Louise
- had been conspicuous in her absence. Diana had mistakenly
- assumed the woman was dead.
- "You mean your mother's still alive?" Diana asked.
- "More or less. She lives in one of those marginal retirement
- homes in Chandler. From the sound of it, I'd say it's a pretty
- awful place, but I doubt she can afford any better."
- "Does she come here to see you?"
- "Not anymore. She used to. The first time I was here. Still,
- once a year, on my birthday, she sends me a box of chocolates.
- See's Assorted. I've never bothered to tell her I hate the damn
- things. She's my mother, after all, so you'd think she'd remember
- that I never liked chocolate, not even when I was little."
- 334
- "If you don't like the chocolates she sends you, what do you
- do with them, then?" Diana asked. "Give them away?"
- Carlisle grinned. "Are you kidding? The guy in the cell next
- to me would kill for one of 'em, so I flush them down the toilet.
- One at a time. It drives him crazy."
- Another shiver of chills flashed through Diana's body.
- "Getting back to establishing ground rules," Andrew Carlisle
- continued. "How do you want to do this? We could probably
- sit here chatting this way, or else I could let you review some
- of the material I've already put together. Some of it is taped,
- some is on disk. I could print it out for you. That way, you
- KISS OF THE BEES 171
- could take it with you, go over it at your leisure, and then you
- could come back later so we could discuss it."
- "How did you get it on disk?" Diana asked.
- He gestured with his damaged arm. "I've learned to be a
- one-handed touch typist," he said. "Fortunately, this is one of
- those full-service prisons. Inmates are allowed to have access to
- computers in the library so they can prepare their own writs. I
- do that, by the way. Compose writs for those less fortunate
- 335
- than myself--the poor bastards who mostly can't read or Vvrite.
- Someone else has to do the editing and run the spellchecker.
- In a pinch, you could probably do that."
- "I suppose we can try it that way." Diana did her best to
- sound reluctant, although in truth she was delighted at the prospect
- of any option that might spare her spending unlimited periods
- of time, shut up in this awful room, sitting face-to-face with
- this equally awful man.
- "When can you have the first segment done?" she asked.
- "A week or so," he said. "Sorting out the details of my
- childhood shouldn't take too long. It wasn't particularly happy
- or memorable. I doubt there'll be very much to reminisce
- about."
- Diana raised her hand and beckoned to the guard. "I think
- we're through here," she said.
- The guard glanced at his watch. "There's still plenty of
- time," he said. "Would you like to see your stepson, then?"
- "Yes, please," Diana said.
- Ten minutes after Andrew Carlisle was led from the room,
- the guard returned with Quentin Walker in tow.
- 336
- "Oh," he said, his face registering disappointment as soon as
- he saw her. "It's you. I was hoping it was my mother. What do
- you want?"
- A year and a half in prison had done nothing to diminish
- Quentin Walker's perpetual swagger.
- "I came to see someone else, but I thought I'd stop by and
- check on you to see if there's anything you need."
- "What exactly do you have in mind?" Quentin returned.
- "An overnight pass would be great. Better yet, how about commuting
- my sentence to time served? That would be very nice.
- And you might bring along a girl next time. Since I'm not married,
- I don't qualify for conjugal visits, but I'll bet my dear old
- 172 J.A.JANCE
- dad could pull a string or two and help me keep my manhood
- intact."
- "I don't think so," Diana replied. "Your father's not involved
- in this in any way. I was thinking more in terms of books or
- writing material."
- The superior smile on Quentin Walker's face shifted into a
- chilly sneer. "Writing and reading materials?" he asked. "Are
- 337
- we suddenly focused on educating poor lost Quent? Trying to
- make up for the difference between what you guys did for precious
- little Davy and that baby squaw you dragged home and
- what you two did for Tommy and me? I don't think it's going
- to work. Let's say it's too little, too late."
- If sibling rivalry was bad, Diana realized, stepsibling rivalry
- was infinitely worse.
- "This has nothing to do with David and Lani," she said
- evenly. "And I didn't come here to argue." She stood up. "Why
- don't we just forget I asked."
- "Good idea," Quentin returned. "We'll do that. I don't need
- anything from you, not now and not ever."
- "Good," Diana said. "At least that makes our relationship
- clear."
- "So that's how you did it then?" Monty Lazarus asked. For
- a moment Diana wasn't sure what he was asking. "He gave you
- access to the material he had written?"
- "Yes."
- "But there's not really any acknowledgment of that in your
- book, is there? Shouldn't there have been?"
- 338
- The question was a sly one, and Monty Lazarus kept his eyes
- focused on her face as he asked it. Realizing she was about to fall
- victim to a case of ambush journalism, Diana tried to play dumb.
- "I'm not sure I understand what you're saying."
- "If you used Andrew Carlisle's written material, shouldn't
- you have said that instead of passing it off as your own work?"
- It took real effort to hold off a reflexive tightening of the
- muscles across her jaw. "It is my own work," she said coldly.
- "All of it. I did my own research, conducted my own
- interviews."
- "Sorry," Monty Lazarus said. "I didn't mean any offense."
- KISS OF THE BEES 173
- The hell you didn't, you bastard1 Diana thought. She took a
- careful sip of her iced tea before she trusted herself enough to
- speak. "Of course not," she said.
- Her reaction was so blatant that it was all Mitch Johnson
- could do to keep from bursting out laughing. And if she was
- prickly when it came to questions concerning her literary integrity,
- he wondered what would happen when they veered off into
- more personal topics.
- 339
- "What kinds of interviews?" he asked.
- "I tracked Andrew Carlisle's mother down at her retirement
- home up in Chandler. I thought hearing about him from her
- might help me understand him better. But he was already several
- moves ahead of me there."
- Mitch Johnson knew exactly what Diana Ladd Walker was
- leading up to--the tapes, of course. He and Andy had discussed
- Andy's giving them to her in great detail, long before it happened. But he had to
- ask, had to convince her to tell him. "What are you talking about?" he asked.
- "Andrew Carlisle was a master at mind games, Mr. Lazarus,"
- Diana answered. "At the time we started the project, I still
- didn't understand that."
- "Games?" he repeated. "What kind of games are we talking
- about?"
- "Andrew Carlisle was toying with me, Mr. Lazarus, the same
- way a cat torments a captive mouse."
- So am I, Mitch Johnson thought, concealing the beginnings
- of an unintentional smile behind his iced-tea glass.
- "In the beginning," Diana continued, "I don't think he had
- any intention of my writing the book."
- 340
- "Really. That's surprising," Monty returned. "Why, then, did
- he bother to write to you in the first place?"
- "Of all his victims," she said slowly, "I'm the one who got
- away. Not only that, even before this book, I had achieved a
- kind of prominence in writing that Andrew Carlisle could never
- hope for. I think that ate at him for years. After all, I'm somebody
- he didn't consider worthy of being one of his students."
- "That's right," Monty Lazarus said. "I remember now. Your
- husband was admitted to the writing program Professor Carlisle
- 174 J.A. JANCE
- taught, but you weren't. Your husband--your first husband, that
- is--was he a writer, too? Did Garrison Ladd ever have anything
- published?"
- "No," she answered. "He never did."
- "But he was enrolled in Carlisle's class at the time of his
- death. Presumably he was working on something, then. What
- was it?"
- Diana shook her head. "I have no idea," she answered. "I'm
- pretty sure there was a partially completed manuscript, but I
- never read it. The thing disappeared in all the confusion after
- 341
- Gary's death. I don't know what happened to it."
- "Wouldn't it be interesting to know what was in it?"
- Mitch asked the speculative question deftly like a picador
- sticking a tormenting pic into the unsuspecting bull's neck. And
- it did its intended work. It pleased him to see her struggle with
- her answer. She took a deep breath.
- "No," she said finally. "I don't think knowing that would
- serve any useful purpose at all. Whatever Gary was writing, it
- had nothing at all to do with Andrew Carlisle's focus on me, ;
- which, in my opinion, boils down to nothing more or less than
- professional jealousy."
- Oh, no, Mitch wanted to tell her. It's far more complex than
- that. Instead, Monty Lazarus looked down at his notes and
- frowned. "Let's go back to something you said just a minute
- ago, something about Carlisle being a couple of moves ahead of
- you. Something about him never really intending for you to
- write the book. If that was the case, what was the point?"
- "He was hoping to humiliate me publicly," Diana answered.
- "I think he thought he could get me to make a public commitment
- to writing the book and then force me to back out of it.
- 342
- But it didn't work. I wrote the book anyway."
- For the first time, Mitch was surprised. Diana's answer was
- right on the money. Andy had told him that he didn't think
- she'd have guts enough to go through with it. That was another
- instance, one of the first ones Mitch had noticed, where Andy
- Carlisle's assessment of any given situation had turned out to be
- dead wrong.
- "It still doesn't make much sense," Monty said, making a
- show of dusting crumbs of tortilla chips out of his lap.
- KISS OF THE BEES 175
- Diana knew it did make sense, but only if you had all the
- other pieces of the puzzle. Monty Lazarus didn't have access to
- those. No one did, no one other than Diana. Those were the
- very things she had left out of the book, the ugly parts she had
- never mentioned to anyone, including Brandon Walker.
- She had absolutely no intention of telling the whole story to
- Monty Lazarus, either. Those things were hers alone--Diana
- Ladd Walker's dirty little secrets. Instead, she tossed off a toocasual
- answer, hoping it would throw him off the trail.
- 343
- "Let's just say it was a grudge match," Diana said. "Andrew
- Philip Carlisle hated my guts."
- Almost a month after that first interview with Carlisle up in
- Florence, Diana was still waiting for the first written installment,
- which had taken far longer for him to deliver than he had said
- it would.
- Davy was home from school for a few weeks. Over the
- Fourth of July weekend, Diana and Brandon had planned to take
- Lani and Davy up to the White Mountains to visit some friends
- who owned a two-room cabin just outside Payson. The four-day
- outing was scheduled to start Thursday afternoon, as soon as
- Brandon came home from work. Fate in the form of a demanding
- editor intervened when the Federal Express delivery
- man came to the door at nine o'clock Thursday morning. The
- package he delivered contained the galleys for her next book,
- The Copper Baron's Wife, along with an apologetic note from her
- editor saying the corrections needed to be completed and ready
- to be returned to New York on Tuesday morning.
- "I'd better stay home and work on them," she said to Brandon
- on the phone that day when she called him at his office.
- 344
- "You know as well as I do that I can't do a good job on galleys
- when we're camped out with a houseful of people up in Payson.
- I have to be able to concentrate, but you and the kids are welcome
- to go. Just because I have to work doesn't mean everybody
- else has to suffer."
- Brandon had protested, but in the end he had taken Lani
- and Davy and the three of them had gone off without her. Once
- they were piled in the car and headed for Payson, Diana had
- locked herself up with the galleys and worked her way through
- the first hundred pages of the book before she gave up for the
- night and went to bed. The next morning, when she went out
- 176 J.A. JANCE
- to bring in the newspaper, she found an envelope propped
- against the front door. Although it was addressed to her, it
- hadn't been mailed. Someone had left it on the porch overnight.
- Curious, she had torn the envelope open and found a cassette
- tape--that and nothing else. No note, no explanation. She had
- taken the tape inside to her office and popped it into the cassette
- player she kept on the bookshelf beside her desk.
- When the tape first began playing, there was no sound--
- 345
- none at all. Distracted by a headline at the top of the newspaper,
- Diana was beginning to assume that the tape was blank when
- she heard a moan--a long, terrible moan.
- "Please," a woman's voice whispered. "Mr. Ladd,
- please ..."
- Diana had been holding the newspaper in one hand and a
- cup of coffee in the other. As soon as she heard her former
- husband's name, she dropped both the paper and the cup. The
- paper merely fell back to the surface of the desk. The cup, however,
- crashed to the bare floor, shattering on the Saltillo tile and
- sending splatters of coffee and shards of cup from one end of
- the room to the other. |
- ' >, Diana leaned closer to the recorder and turned up the volume.
- "Mr. Ladd," the girl's voice said again. "Please. Let me
- go."
- "No help there, little lady," a man's voice said. "He's out
- cold. Can't hear a word you're saying." -m
- The voice was younger, but Diana recognized it after a moment.
- Andrew Carlisle's. Unmistakably Andrew Carlisle's
- and . . . the other? Could it be Gina Antone's? No. That wasn't
- 346
- possible^ It couldn't be1
- But a few agonizing exchanges later, Diana realized it was
- true. The other voice did belong to Gina Antone all right, to ,
- someone suffering the torments of the damned, a
- "Please, mister," the girl pleaded helplessly, her voice barely
- a whisper. "Please don't hurt me again. Please ..." The rest of
- what she might have said dissolved into a shriek followed by a
- series of despairing sobs.
- "But that's what you're here for, isn't it? Don't you remember
- telling us that you were taking us to a bad place? It turns out
- you were right. This is a bad place, my dear. A very bad place."
- There was a momentary pause followed by another spineKISS OF THE BEES 177
- tingling scream that seemed to go on forever. Diana had risen
- to her feet as if to fend off a physical attack. Now she slumped
- backward into the chair while the infernal tape continued to
- play. Gradually the scream subsided until there was nothing left
- but uncontrollable, gasping sobs.
- "My God," Diana whispered aloud. "Did he tape the
- whole thing?"
- Soon it became clear that he had. It was a ninety-minute
- 347
- tape, forty-five minutes per side. Halfway through the tape, the
- girl began passing out. It happened over and over again. Each
- time he revived her--brought her back to consciousness with
- splashes of water and with slaps to her face so he could continue
- the terrible process. Sick with revulsion, Diana realized he was
- orchestrating and prolonging her ordeal so the whole thing
- would be there. On tape. Every bit of it, even the horrifying
- finale where, after first announcing his intentions for the benefit
- of his unseen audience, Andrew Carlisle had bitten off Gina
- Antone's nipple.
- Shaken to the core, Diana listened to the whole thing. Not
- because she wanted to but because she was incapable of doing
- anything else. She sat in the chair as though mesmerized, as
- though stricken by some sudden paralysis that rendered her unable
- to make the slightest movement, unable to reach across to
- the tape player and switch it off. Unchecked tears streamed
- down her face and dripped unnoticed into the mess of splattered
- coffee and broken china.
- And when it was finally over, when Gina Antone's awful
- death was finished at last and the recorder clicked off, Diana
- 348
- leaned over and threw up into the mess of coffee and broken
- cup,
- For a while after that she still couldn't move. Carlisle had
- made it last that whole time. He had tortured the girl for a
- carefully calculated ninety minutes. And that was just the part
- he had taped. From the sound of it there must have been some
- preliminaries that had occurred even before that. And for inflicting
- that kind of appalling torture, for premeditating, planning,
- and savoring every ugly moment of that appalling
- inhumanity, what had happened to Andrew Carlisle?
- A superior court judge had allowed him to plead guilty to a
- charge of second-degree manslaughter. The torture death of
- 178 LA. JANCE
- Gina Antone hadn't even merited a charge of murder in the first
- degree. The State of Arizona had extracted a price of six short
- years from Andrew Carlisle in exchange for Gina Antone's suffering.
- Six years. After that, he had been allowed to go free.
- Free to kill again.
- Stunned, Diana sat for another half-hour, trying to decide
- what to do. There was no sense in turning the tape over to the
- 349
- authorities. What would they do with it? What could, they do?
- Preposterously light or not, Andrew Carlisle had already served
- a prison term in connection with Gina Antone's death. Double
- jeopardy would preclude him from being tried again for that
- same crime.
- So should she keep the tape? Comments made by Andrew
- Carlisle during the tape seemed to make it clear that Diana's
- former husband, Garrison Ladd, had been present at the crime
- scene but drunk and passed out during most of that terrible
- drama. Twenty-two years after the fact, Diana Cooper Ladd
- Walker finally had some understanding of her former husband's
- involvement in Gina Antone's death. It would seem that Garrison
- hadn't been actively involved in what was done to Gina, but
- that didn't mean he was blameless. Mr. Ladd. Gina had called
- him by name. No doubt he was the one she knew. That meant
- Garrison was probably the one who had lured her into the truck
- in the first place.
- When he did that, when he had offered her a ride, had he
- known what was coming or not? There was no way of unraveling
- that now, and listening to the tape again or a hundred times, or
- 350
- having someone else listen to it wouldn't have provided an adequate
- answer to that haunting question.
- Getting out of the chair at last, Diana set about cleaning up
- the mess of vomit, spilled coffee, and broken pottery. Down on
- her hands and knees, for the first time ever she was grateful that
- Rita was dead. Had Gina's grandmother still been alive, Diana
- would have had to face the moral dilemma of whether or not
- to play the tape for the old woman. With Rita dead, that wasn't
- an issue.
- But what about Davy? What would happen if he heard it?
- That thought hit her like a lightning bolt. Diana's son--Garrison
- Ladd's son--was still alive. If he ever came to know what was
- KISS OF THE BEES 179
- on that tape, it would tell him far more about his father than
- he ever needed to know.
- Finally, there was Brandon to consider. He had headed the
- investigation into Gina Antone's death and he had eventually
- arrested Andrew Carlisle. The plea bargain that had followed
- the arrest had been negotiated behind Brandon Walker's back.
- If he had to endure listening to the grim recorded reality of Gina
- 351
- Antone's death, Diana knew Brandon would be devastated. Me
- would blame himself for the unwitting part he had played in
- allowing Andrew Carlisle to slip off the hook and escape what
- should have been a charge of aggravated first-degree murder.
- Thinking about what exposure to the tape would do to both
- Brandon and Davy was what finally galvanized Diana Ladd
- Walker to action. Brandon was already carrying around a big
- enough load of guilt. His son Quentin was in prison due to a
- fatality drunk-driving charge. As another source of free-flowing
- guilt in Brandon Walker's life, that tape was the last thing he
- needed.
- With a fierce jab of her finger, Diana ejected the offending
- tape. She popped it out of the player and then carried it out to
- the living room. It was the first weekend in July. At eight o'clock
- in the morning, the air conditioner was already humming along
- at full speed when Diana knelt in front of the fireplace and
- opened the flue. Carefully, she laid a small fire with kindling at
- the bottom, topped by a layer of several wrist-thick branches of
- dried ironwood.
- Once the kindling was lit, she sat on the raised hearth and
- 352
- waited until the ironwood was fully engulfed before she tossed
- the tape into the crackling flames. As the heat attacked it, the
- clear plastic container began to curl and melt. Like a snake shedding
- its skin, the magnetic tape slithered off its spindle and escaped
- the confines of the dwindling case. The tape writhed free,
- wriggled like a tortured creature, burst into flames, and then
- withered into a glowing chain of ash.
- Only when there was nothing left of the tape and container
- but a charred, amorphous blob of melted plastic did Diana turn
- her back on the fireplace. Hurrying into the bathroom, she showered
- and dressed. Then, after raking the remainder of the fire
- apart, she left the house and drove straight to Florence. That
- day, Diana Walker Ladd was the first person inside the Visitation
- 180 J.A. JANCE
- Room when the guard opened the door at ten o'clock in the
- morning.
- Andrew Carlisle was led to his side of the Plexiglas divider
- a few minutes later. "Why, Mrs. Walker," he said, sitting down
- across from her. "To what do I owe this unexpected honor? I
- don't remember our setting an appointment for today." >
- 353
- "We didn't, you son of a bitch," she said.
- He brightened. The puckered skin around his mouth
- stretched into a pained imitation of a smile. "I see," he said.
- "You must have received my little care package."
- "Why did you send it to me?"
- "Why? Because I wanted you to know what this was all
- about." '
- "That's not true. You wanted someone to know the truth fl
- about what you did and what you got away with. You wanted
- to gloat and rub somebody's nose in it."
- "That, too," he conceded. "Maybe a little."
- "Where was it all this time?"
- "The tape? That's for me to know and for you to find out,"
- Andrew Carlisle answered.
- "Who brought it to my house? Who dropped it off? And
- how many more ugly surprises do you have in store for me?"
- "One or two," he answered. "Or does that mean you're
- quitting?"
- "No," Diana told him. "It doesn't mean I'm quitting. You
- think this is some kind of a game, don't you? You think this is
- 354
- a way to get back at me for what I did to you. Well, listen up,
- buster. I'm not a quitter. I'm going to write this damned book.
- By the time I finish, you're going to wish you'd never asked me
- to do it."
- "That sounds like a threat."
- "It is a threat."
- "In other words, you're abolishing the ground rules."
- "I'm writing this book regardless."
- "That will make the process far more interesting for me. 1m
- More hands-on, if you'll pardon the expression. Especially when
- it's time to talk about the time we spent together."
- "Go fuck yourself, Mr. Carlisle^" She stood up, turned her
- back on him, and stalked over to the door. She had to wait in
- front of the door for several long moments before a guard
- KISS OF THE BEES 181
- opened it to let her out. While she was standing there she
- glanced back. Behind the Plexiglas barrier he was doubled over.
- And even though she couldn't actually hear him without benefit
- of the intercom--the sound nonetheless filled her head and
- echoed down the confines of the prison hallway long after the
- 355
- heavy metal door had slammed shut behind her.
- That ghostly sound was one she would never forget. It was
- Andrew Philip Carlisle. Laughing.
- 9
- i hue Mualig Siakam and Old Limping Man were talking, some
- Indians came carrying a child. The child seemed asleep or dead.
- The people said she had been that way for a long time. They laid
- the child on the ground in the outer room of Medicine Woman's
- house.
- Mualig Siakam took a gourd which had pebbles in it that rattled.
- She took some small, soft white feathers, and she took a little
- white powder. Then she sat down at the head of the child and she
- began to sing.
- The Indians could not understand Medicine Woman's song because
- she used the old, old language which is the one I'itoi gave
- his people in the beginning. All the animals understand this language,
- but only a very few of the old men and women remember it.
- As Medicine Woman sang, she rattled the gourd which had on
- it the marks of shuhthagi--the water--and of wepgih--the lightning.
- For a long time Mualig Siakam sang alone, but when the
- 356
- people who were sitting around had learned the song, they sang
- with her.
- And then Medicine Woman took some of the white feathers and
- passed them softly over the child's mouth and nose. She passed the
- feathers back and forth, back and forth. Sometimes she passed the
- feathers down over the child's chest. Then again she passed them
- back and forth across the child's face.
- And the face of the child changed. Her body moved. Medicine
- KISS OF THE BEES 183
- Woman gave a silent command to the child's mother, who brought
- water. The child drank, and everyone looked very pleased.
- The next morning Old Limping Man went to the house of Mualig
- Siakam. Medicine Woman was feeding the child, who was sitting
- up. And that day, the child's people took her home.
- Halfway to the highway, walking in scorching midday heat,
- Manny Chavez took a detour. The wine was gone. He was verging
- on heatstroke. In the end it was thirst and the hope of finding
- water that drove him off-track.
- Under normal circumstances, no right-thinking member of
- the Desert People would have gone anywhere near the haunted,
- 357
- moldering ruins of the deserted village known as Ko'oi Koshwa--
- Rattlesnake Skull. An Apache war party, aided by a young To- hono O'othham woman,
- a traitor, had massacred almost the entire village. The only survivors, a boy and
- a girl, had sought
- refuge in a cave on the steep flanks of loligam several miles away.
- More recently, in the late sixties, a young Indian girl named
- Gina Antone had been murdered there. Anthony Listo, now
- chief of police for the Tohono O'othham Nation, had been a
- lowly patrol officer during that investigation. From time to time,
- he had been heard to talk about the girl who had been lured
- from a summer dance to one of the taboo caves on loligam,
- where she had been tortured and killed. Her body had been left,
- floating facedown, in the charco--a muddy man-made watering
- hole--near the deserted village itself.
- A whole new series of legends and beliefs had grown up
- around that murder. The killer, an Anglo named Carlisle, was said to have been Ohbsgam--Apachelike.
- People claimed that the killer had been invaded by the spirits of the dead Apaches
- who had attacked Rattlesnake Skull Village long ago.
- All the caves on loligam were considered sacred and offlimits.
- They had been officially declared so in the lease negotiations
- when the tribe allowed the building of Kitt Peak National
- 358
- Observatory. In the aftermath of Gina Antone's death, however,
- the caves close to Ko'oi Koshwa became taboo as well. People
- said Ohbsgam Ho'ok--Apachelike Monster--lived there, waiting
- for a chance to steal away another young Tohono O'othham girl.
- Parents sometimes used stories about the bogeyman S-mo'o
- 184 J.A. JANCE
- O'othham--Hairy Man--to scare little boys back in line. On girls
- they used Ohbsgam Ho'ok.
- Manny Chavez, thirsty but no longer drunk, considered all
- these things as he headed for the charco near what had once
- been Rattlesnake Skull Village. It was late in the season. Most
- of the other charcos on the reservation were already dry and
- would remain so until after the first summer rains came in late
- June or July. But no one ran any cattle near Ko'oi Koshwa. Without
- livestock to reduce the volume of water, Manny reasoned
- that he might still find water there--at least enough to get him
- the rest of the way to the highway.
- Earlier, as Manny walked, he had heard and seen a fourwheel-drive
- vehicle making its way both up and down part of
- the mountain. Suspecting the people inside of being Anglo
- 359 rockclimbers,
- Manny had given the tangerine-colored older-model
- Bronco a wide berth. He'd be better off on the highway, trying
- to hitch a ride in the back of an Indian-owned livestock truck,
- than messing around with a earful of Mil-gahn. ;
- Now, though, as Manny approached the charco, he was surprised
- to see that same vehicle parked nearby. A man--an Anglo
- armed with a shovel--was digging industriously in the dirt.
- Manny may have been nawmki--a drunkard--but he was also
- Tohono O'othham, from the top of his sand-encrusted hair to the
- toes of his worn-out boots. The thought of this Mil-gahn blithely
- digging for artifacts on the reservation offended Manuel Chavez.
- "Hey," he shouted. "What are you doing?"
- The man with the shovel stopped digging and looked up.
- "You can't dig here," Manny said. "This is a sacred place."
- For a moment the two men stared at each other, then the
- Anglo, who was much younger than Manny, climbed out of the
- hole he was digging in the soft sand. He came at Manny with
- the shovel raised over his shoulder, wielding it like a baseball bat.
- There was no question of Manny standing his ground. He
- 360
- looked around for a possible weapon. Off to his right was a
- small circle of river rock surrounding a faded wooden cross, but
- the rocks were too far away and too small to do him any good.
- Turning away from the Mil-gahn's unreasoning fury, Manuel
- Chavez tried to run. He tripped and fell facedown in the sand.
- The first blow, the only one he felt, caught him squarely on
- the back of the head.
- KISS OF THE BEES 185
- David Ladd lay in the darkened hotel room waiting to fall
- asleep and grappling with the overwhelming fear that another
- panic attack would come over him and catch him unawares. The
- plague of attacks and dreams had left him feeling shaken and
- vulnerable. He knew now that another attack was inevitable.
- The only question was, when would it come? What if it happened
- while he was with Candace? What would she think of
- him then? He was young, strong, and supposedly healthy. This
- kind of thing wasn't supposed to happen to people like him, but
- it was happening.
- At last, emotionally worn and physically exhausted, David
- Ladd fell into a deep and dreamless sleep. Sometime later, he
- 361
- was jarred awake by the sound of a key in the lock and then by
- the opening door banging hard against the inside security chain.
- "David," Candace called through the crack in the door. "Are
- you in there?"
- Groggily, he staggered over to the door and unlatched the
- chain. "It's you," he mumbled.
- Dropping several shopping bags to the floor, Candace stood
- up on tiptoe and kissed him. "Who else did you think it
- would be?"
- "I was just taking a nap," he said. "I'm still half asleep. I'll
- go take a shower and see if it wakes me up."
- "Sure," Candace said. "Go ahead."
- He had finished his shower, shut off the water, and was just
- starting to towel himself dry when Candace knocked softly on
- the door. "Can I come in?"
- "Sure," he said, wrapping the towel around his waist.
- Candace burst into the room wearing little more than a glowingly
- radiant smile on her face.
- "Oh, Davy," she said, throwing both arms around his neck
- and crushing the soft flesh of her warm breasts against his damp
- 362
- chest. "I love it. It's absolutely gorgeous. And it fits perfectly.
- How did you know what size?"
- For a moment or two, David Ladd didn't understand what
- was going on or grasp what she was talking about. Then, catching
- a glimpse of Astrid Ladd's ring on Candace Waverly's finger,
- he realized she had found it just where he had left it--on the
- nightstand table with his watch.
- 186 J.A. JANCE
- Crying and kissing him at the same time, Candace seemed
- totally oblivious to the droplets of water on his still-wet body.
- "And the answer is yes," she whispered, with her lips grazing
- his ear. "Yes, yes, yes! Of course, I'll marry you, even if it means
- living in your one-horse hometown."
- Marry! At the sound of the word, David Garrison Ladd's legs
- almost buckled under him. For the length of several long kisses
- he was too stunned to reply. And by the time Candace's impas,^
- sioned kisses subsided, it was pretty much too late. By then she'
- was leading him back across the artificially darkened room to
- the bed.
- Sinking down on the mattress, she pulled David down on
- 363
- top of her naked body, drawing him into her while her eager
- hips rose up to meet him. That wasn't the time to tell her that
- this was all a terrible mistake--that he had never planned to
- give her Astrid Ladd's ring in the first place. He did the only
- thing that made sense under the circumstances--he kissed her
- back.
- Other than that, he kept his mouth shut. And after their
- lovemaking, while he was drifting on a pink haze, she snuggled
- close and kissed his chest. "What a wonderfully romantic surprise,"
- she murmured. "But I have a surprise for you, too."
- "What's that?"
- Candace reached over on the nightstand and picked up a
- piece of paper. A check. "What's that?" he asked.
- "Look at it," she said. "It's made out to both of us."
- When he looked at it more closely, David Ladd's eyes
- bulged. It was a personal check in the amount of twenty-five
- thousand dollars, made out to David Ladd and Candace Waverly
- Ladd and drawn on a joint account belonging to Richard and
- Elizabeth Waverly.
- "What's this?" David asked.
- 364
- "A bribe," Candace answered with a grin. "For eloping.
- Daddy says it'll only work as long as Mother knows nothing
- about our engagement and hasn't had time to plan anything until
- it's too late. Once she gets wind of it and starts arranging things,
- the deal is off. He's already married off two daughters, and he
- doesn't want to do another one. And I don't blame him."
- "Eloping," David Ladd echoed. "What are you talking
- about? Us? When?"
- KISS OF THE BEES 187
- "Today, dummy," she said, snuggling under his chin and
- nuzzling his neck. "Right now. I thought you'd catch on as soon
- as you saw all the suitcases. I have it all figured out. We can
- drive through Vegas on our way to Tucson and get married
- there. It's not that far out of the way. I already have a dress
- and everything."
- "What about your job?" David Ladd mounted one small but
- clearly futile objection.
- "With Dad's firm? What about it? I got laid off," Candace
- beamed. "Yesterday afternoon. So not only do I get the time
- off, I can collect unemployment benefits, too. Isn't that a great
- 365
- deal?"
- "It's great, all right," David Ladd muttered while that postcoital
- pink haze disintegrated into a million pieces around him.
- He managed to infuse the words with a whole lot more enthusiasm
- than he felt, although "great" wasn't exactly the word he
- would have chosen.
- "And I love the ring," Candace continued. "It's gorgeous."
- "I'm glad you like it" was all David could manage. After all,
- what else could he say?
- After making a quick trip down the Sasabe Road to take a
- report on a one vehicle/one steer accident in which only the
- steer had perished, Deputy Brian Fellows stopped off at the
- Three Points Trading Post to buy himself a much-needed Coke
- to get him through the rest of his long afternoon shift.
- As summer heated up, daytime temperatures on the arid
- Sonoran Desert made working the night shift suddenly far preferable
- to working days. One of the local radio stations held an
- annual contest, offering a prize to the listener who successfully
- guessed the correct day, time, and hour when the "ice broke on
- the Santa Cruz." Loosely translated, that meant the day, hour,
- 366
- and minute the thermometer finally broke one hundred for the
- year. From that time on, from the moment daytime temperatures
- crossed that critical century mark until well into September, Brian, along with any
- number of other low-totem-pole deputies, found himself working straight days.
- With school out for the summer, the trading post was full
- of ten or so kids--two Anglo and the rest Indian--milling around
- between the banks of shelves. Brian smiled down at them. The
- 188 J.A. JANCE
- Anglos grinned back, while the Indians shied away. The deputy
- liked little kids, and it hurt his feelings that the Tohono O'othham
- children were frightened of him. Because he knew some of the
- language, he tried speaking to them in Tohono O'othham on occasion.
- That always seemed to Spock them that much more.
- Was it the color of his skin? he wondered. Or was it the uniform?
- Maybe it was a combination of both.
- Back in his county-owned Blazer, he sat looking up and down
- Highway 86, watching passing vehicles made shimmering and
- ghostlike by the waves of heat rising off the blacktop. This quiet
- Saturday afternoon there didn't seem to be much happening in
- his patrol area, which covered Highway 86 west from Ryan Field
- 367
- to the boundary of the Tohono O'othham Reservation, and along
- Highway 286 from Three Points south to Sasabe on the U.S./
- Mexican border.
- It was boom time once again in the Valley of the Sun. Tucson
- and surrounding areas in Pima County were experiencing a
- renewed population growth, but this part of the county--the
- part included in Brian's patrol area--wasn't yet overly affected.
- Sometimes he would be called out to an incident on Sandario
- Road that led north toward Marana. There he could drive for
- miles without seeing another human or meeting another vehicle.
- The same held true for Coleman Road at the base of the Baboquivaris.
- And the back and forth chatter on the radio seldom
- had much to do with the area assigned to Deputy Brian Fellows.
- Those long straight stretches of highway leading to and from the
- reservation yielded more drunk drivers than other parts of the
- county. They also had more than a fair share of auto accidents.
- Those mostly happened at night on weekends.
- Brian had been a deputy four full years. Other officers who
- had come through the academy after him were already starting
- to move up while Brian was still stuck in what was--in terms
- 368
- of departmental advancement--the equivalent of Outer Mongolia.
- But Brian was resigned to the fact that it could have been
- much worse. If Bill Forsythe had wanted to, he could have figured
- out a way to get rid of Brian Fellows altogether. In fact,
- considering Brian's close connection to Brandon Walker, it was
- a little surprising that the ax hadn't fallen in the wake of Brandon's
- departure.
- Still, Brian didn't dwell on the unfairness of it all. He was
- KISS OF THE BEES 189
- too busy being grateful. After all, he was doing what he had
- always wanted to do--being a cop and following in Brandon
- Walker's footsteps. As for the rest? Nothing much mattered.
- Brian was single and living at home. Taking care of his disabled
- mother in his off-hours pretty much kept him out of the dating
- game, so the low pay scale for young deputies didn't bother him
- all that much, either.
- There were times when Brian was struck by the irony of his
- position. He was persona non grata with the current administration
- of the Pima County Sheriff's Department because of his
- relationship to the previous sheriff, who was, after all, no blood
- 369
- relation but the father of Brian's half-brothers.
- Tommy and Quentin had been four and five years older than
- Brian, and they had been the banes of the younger child's existence.
- But if it hadn't been for them, Brian never would have
- met their father, a man who--more than any other--became
- Brian's father as well.
- None of the other boys--Davy Ladd included--had ever
- seemed to pay that much attention to anything Brandon Walker
- said or did. In fact, they all seemed to be at odds with him
- much of the time. Not Brian. For him, the former Pima County
- sheriff, even in defeat, had always been larger than life--the
- closest thing to a superhero that ever crossed the path of that
- little fatherless boy.
- "How's it going, Mr. Walker?" Brian Fellows had asked several
- months earlier, when he had stopped by the house in Gates
- Pass on his way back from patrol.
- Brandon, working outdoors in his shirtsleeves, had looked up
- to see Brian Fellows, a young man he had known from early
- childhood on, step out of a Pima County patrol car.
- "Okay," Brandon said gruffly, reaching down to pull out another
- 370
- log of mesquite. "How about you?"
- "Pretty good," Brian replied, although the answer didn't
- sound particularly convincing.
- "How's your mother?"
- Brian's mother, Janie Walker Fellows Hitchcock Noonan, had
- been Brandon Walker's first wife. Years earlier, when Brian was
- a sophomore at Tucson High, his mother had been in what
- should have been a fatality car wreck. She had been paralyzed
- 190 , J.A. JANCE
- from the waist down. Janie's boyfriend du jour--a lush who had
- actually been at the wheel of the car and who had walked away
- from the accident without a scratch--had skipped town
- immediately.
- In subsequent years, most of the responsibility for his mother's
- care had fallen on Brian's narrow but capable young shoulders.
- Some people rise above physical tragedy. Janie Noonan
- wasn't one of those. She was a difficult patient. For months she had railed at Brian,
- telling him that if he didn't have guts enough to use a gun to put her out of her
- misery, the least he could do
- was bring her one so she could do the job herself.
- By now Janie was fairly well resigned to her fate. She appreciated
- 371
- the fact that Brian had stayed on, patiently caring for
- her when most young men, under similar circumstances, would
- have moved out. That didn't mean she treated him any better,
- though. Janie had grown into a helpless tyrant. In the absence
- of her other two sons, Brian became her sole target, but he was
- used to that. It seemed to him that his mother had simply taken
- up the role formerly filled by his older brothers, Quentin and
- Tommy.
- "Nobody likes a Goody Two-shoes," Quentin had told him
- on more than one occasion. "They think you're nothing but a
- stupid little wimp."
- The difference between Brian Fellows and his best friend,
- Davy Ladd, was that Davy would usually rise to Quentin's challenge
- and fight back, regardless of the bloody-nosed consequences.
- Brian was a survivor who kept his mouth shut and let
- the taunts wash over him.
- By now, though, at age twenty-six, he was tired of being a
- "good boy." He was beginning to see that there wasn't much
- percentage in it, although he didn't really know how to be anything
- else other than what he was.
- 372
- "Mom's about the same," he said, answering Brandon Walker's
- question in a matter-of-fact manner that didn't brook
- sympathy.
- Looking at this handsome young man in his deputy sheriffs
- uniform, Brandon couldn't help remembering a much younger
- version of the same young man, a little lost boy who had stood
- forlornly on the front porch of his ex-wife's home each time
- KISS OF THE BEES 191
- Brandon had come by to pick up his own two sons, Quentin
- and Tommy.
- Brandon no longer remembered where they had been going
- that day--maybe to a movie, maybe to the Pima County Fair,
- or maybe even to a baseball game. What he hadn't forgotten
- was the solemn, sad-eyed look on Brian's face that had changed
- instantly to sheer joy the moment Brandon asked him if he
- wanted to come along.
- "You're not taking him, are you?" Quentin had demanded,
- his voice quivering in outrage.
- Brandon's older son had a surly streak. Of all the kids, he
- had always been the sullen one--the spoiled brat with the chip
- 373
- on his shoulder. Janie had seen to that.
- "Why shouldn't I?" Brandon asked.
- "Because he's a pest," Quentin spat back. "And a baby, too.
- He'll probably wet his pants or have to go to the bathroom a
- million times."
- Brian had wavered on the porch for a moment, as if afraid
- that Quentin's argument would carry the day. When Brandon
- didn't change his mind, the boy had raced into the house to ask
- Janie for permission to go along. Moments later, he had come
- charging back outside.
- "She said it's all right. I can go1" Brian had crowed triumphantly,
- racing for the car.
- "I get to ride shotgun1." Quentin had snarled, but Brian
- hadn't cared about that. The backseat was fine with him. At that
- point he would probably have been grateful to sit in the trunk.
- "You'll take turns," Brandon had told Quent, trying to instill
- in him a sense of sharing and fair play. And that was how it
- worked from then on--the boys had taken turns. But Brandon
- Walker's lessons in enforced sharing had been lost on Quentin.
- Rather than teaching him how to be a better person, Brandon
- 374
- Walker's kindness to Quentin's half-brother fostered an ugly case
- of burning resentment that spanned the whole of Brian Fellows's
- childhood.
- "How about a cup of coffee or glass of iced tea?" Brandon
- had asked finally, emerging from a tangled skein of memory.
- Brian's face had brightened into almost the same look Brandon
- remembered from that day on the porch.
- "Sure, Mr. Walker," he responded. "Coffee would be great."
- 192 J.A. JANCE
- In all those intervening years, while the other three boys had
- gone through their various stages of smart-mouthed rebellion,
- Brian had never called Brandon anything but a respectful "Mr.
- Walker."
- Shaking his head, Brandon led the way into the house. One
- of his main regrets at losing the election had been missing the
- chance to watch this promising young man mature into the outstanding
- police officer he would someday be. That was something
- else Quentin had cost him--the opportunity of seeing
- 'little' Brian Fellows grow into Brian Fellows, the man.
- "People at the department are asking about you," the young
- 375
- deputy said, as he settled onto a chair at the kitchen table.
- "You don't say," Brandon replied gruffly. "Well, go ahead
- and tell them I'm fine. On second thought, don't tell them anything
- at all. If you're smart and want to get anywhere in Bill
- Forsythe's department, you won't even mention my name, much
- less let on that you know me."
- After Brandon poured cups of coffee, the two men were
- quiet for a few moments. Brandon didn't mean to pry, but in
- the end he couldn't resist probing.
- "How are things going out there?" he asked. "I mean, how
- are things at the department really going?"
- Brian shrugged. "All right, I guess. But there are lots of people
- who miss you. Sheriff Forsythe's"--Brian paused, as if
- searching for just the right word--"he's just different, I guess.
- Different from you, that is," he finished somewhat lamely.
- "You bet he is," Brandon replied, not even trying to keep
- the hollow sound of bitterness out of his voice. "The voters in
- this county wanted different. As far as I can see, they got it."
- Once again the two men fell silent. For a moment Brandon
- Walker felt vindicated.
- 376
- A parade of boyfriends and briefly maintained husbands had
- wandered through Janie's life and, as a consequence, through
- the lives of her three sons as well. One of them--Brian no longer
- remembered which one--had told him that children should be
- seen but not heard. Brian had taken those words to heart and
- had turned them into a personal creed. What had once been a
- necessary tool for surviving Quentin's casual and constant brutality
- had become a way of life. Brian Fellows answered questions.
- He hardly ever volunteered information, although Brandon
- KISS OF THE BEES 193
- Walker could tell by looking at him that the young man was
- clearly troubled about something.
- "So what brings you here today?" the older man asked at
- last.
- Brian ducked his head. "Quentin," he answered.
- "What about Quentin?"
- "He's out," Brian answered. "On parole."
- 'Where's he living?"
- "Somewhere in Tucson, I suppose. I don't know for sure
- where. He hasn't come by here, has he?"
- 377
- Brandon shook his head. "He wouldn't dare."
- Brian sighed. "He has been by the house a couple of times,
- wanting money and looking for a place to stay. I had to make
- him leave, Mr. Walker, and I thought you should know what's
- going on."
- "What is going on?" Brandon asked.
- Brian swallowed hard. "He came by to hit Mom up for
- money, for a loan, he called it. She had already written him two
- checks for a hundred bucks each, before I caught on to what
- was happening. She can't afford to be giving him that kind of
- money. She still has some, but with the nurse and all the medical
- expenses, it's not going to last forever. I don't know what to do."
- "Go to court and get a protection order," Brandon Walker
- said at once. "Janie has given you power of attorney so you can
- handle her affairs, hasn't she?"
- Brian nodded. "Yes."
- "As her conservator, you have a moral and legal obligation
- to protect her assets."
- With a pained expression on his face, Brian nodded again.
- "But Quentin's my brother," he said.
- 378
- "And he's my son," Brandon replied. "But that doesn't give
- him a right to steal from his own mother."
- "So you don't think I did the wrong thing, by not letting
- him stay at the house?"
- With his heart aching in sympathy, Brandon looked at the
- troubled young man sitting across from him. "No," he had said
- kindly. "I don't blame you at all, and neither will anyone else.
- With people like Quentin loose in the world, you have a responsibility
- to protect yourself. If you can, that is. And believe me,
- 194 J.A. MNCE
- Brian, since I happen to be Quentin's father, I know that isn't
- easy advice to follow."
- Months after that last courtesy visit to Gates Pass, Brian was
- sitting in his air-conditioned Blazer next to the trading post at
- Three Points, sipping his Coke and wondering how soon his
- friend Davy would be home when the call came in over the
- radio. An INS officer was requesting assistance. The dispatcher
- read off the officer's location.
- "Highway 86 to Coleman Road. First left after you cross off
- the reservation. It gets confusing after that. The INS officer says
- 379
- just follow her tracks. You're looking for a charco."
- "By the way," the dispatcher continued. "Are you fourwheeling
- it today?"
- "That's affirmative," Brian said, putting the Blazer in gear.
- "Good," the dispatcher told him. "From the sounds of it, if
- you weren't, I'd have to send in another unit."
- With lights flashing and siren blaring, Brian Fellows sped
- west on Highway 86. At first he didn't think anything about
- where he was going. He was simply following directions. It
- wasn't until he turned off the highway that he recognized the place as somewhere
- he had been before. He had gone to that same charco years earlier, the summer Tommy
- disappeared. The
- four of them had gone there together--Quentin and Tommy,
- Davy Ladd and Brian.
- By then, though, he was too busy following the tracks to
- think about it. Kicking up a huge cloud of dust, he wheeled
- through the thick undergrowth of green mesquite and blooming
- palo verde. He jolted his way through first one sandy wash--the
- one where Quentin had gotten stuck--and then through another,
- all the while following a set of tracks that could only have
- been left by one of the green Internationals or GMC Suburbans
- 380
- the Immigration and Naturalization Service sends out on patrol
- around the desert Southwest, collecting illegal aliens and returning
- them to the border.
- Brian spotted the vehicle eventually, an International parked
- next to the shrine he remembered, Gina Antone's shrine. The
- small wooden cross, faded gray now rather than white, sat crookedly
- in the midst of a scattered circle of river rocks.
- Maybe while Davy's home, Brian thought, parking his Blazer,
- KISS OF THE BEES 195
- we can come out here with flowers and candles. We can paint the
- cross and fix the shrine up the same way we did before.
- It was nothing more than a passing thought, though, because
- right then, Deputy Brian Fellows was working. When he stepped
- out of the Blazer, there was no sign of life. "Anybody here?"
- he called.
- "Over here," a woman's answering voice returned from
- somewhere in the thick undergrowth. "And if you've got any
- drinking water there with you, bring it along."
- Brian grabbed a gallon jug of bottled water out of the back
- of the Blazer and then started in the direction of the woman's
- 381
- voice. "Watch out for the footprints," she called to him. "You're
- probably going to need them."
- Glancing down, Brian saw what she meant. Something heavy
- had been dragged by hand through the sandy dirt, leaving a deep
- track. A single set of footprints, heading back toward the charco,
- overlaid the track. As instructed, Brian Fellows detoured around
- both as he made his way into a grove of mesquite. Ten yards into
- the undergrowth he came to a small clearing where a woman in
- a gray-green uniform was bending over the figure of a man. He
- lay flat on his back, with his unprotected face fully exposed to
- the glaring sun. A cloud of flies buzzed overhead.
- "What happened?" Brian asked.
- The woman looked up at him, her face grim. "Somebody
- beat the crap out of this guy," she said.
- Brian handed over his jug of water. By then he was close
- enough to smell the unmistakable stench of evacuated bowels,
- of urine that reeked of secondhand wine.
- "He's still alive then?" Brian asked.
- "So far, but only just barely. I've called for a med-evac helicopter,
- but I don't think he's going to make it. He can't move.
- 382
- Either his back's broken or he's suffering from a concussion, I
- can't tell which."
- The man lying on the ground, dark-haired and heavyset,
- appeared to be around sixty years old. The large brass belt
- buckle imprinted with the traditional Tohono O'othham maze
- identified him as an Indian rather than Hispanic. One whole side
- of his face, clotted with blood, seemed to have been bashed in.
- 196 J.A. JANCE
- His eyes were open, but the irises had rolled back out of sight.
- He was breathing, shallowly, but that was about all.
- "Thanks for the water," the woman said, opening the jug
- and pouring some of it onto a handkerchief. First she wrung out
- some of the water over the man's parched lips and swollen
- tongue, then she laid the still-soaking cloth on the injured man's
- forehead. That done, she sprinkled the rest of his body as well,
- dousing his bloodied clothing.
- "I'm trying to lower his body temperature," she explained.
- "I don't know if it's helping or not, but we've got to try."
- It was all Brian could do to kneel beside the injured man
- and look at him. His mother's condition had taught him the real
- 383
- meaning behind the awful words "broken back." He wasn't at
- all sure that keeping the man alive would be doing him any
- favor. What Brian Fellows did feel, however, was both pity and
- an incredible sense of gratitude. If the man's back was actually
- broken or if he had suffered permanent injury as a result of
- heatstroke, someone else--someone who wasn't Brian--would
- have to care for him for the rest of his life, feeding him, bathing
- him, and attending to his most basic needs.
- "What can I do to help?" he asked.
- "Keep the damn flies and ants away," the woman told him.
- "They're eating him alive."
- Brian tried to comply. He waved his Stetson in the air,
- whacking at the roiling flies, and he attempted to pluck off the
- marauding ants that peppered the man's broken body. It was a
- losing battle. As soon as he got rid of one ant, two more appeared
- in its place.
- "Because there's water in the charco, a lot of undocumented
- aliens come this way, especially at this time of year," the woman
- was saying. The name tag on the breast pocket of her uniform
- identified her as Agent Kelly.
- 384
- "I usually try to stop by here at least once a day," she continued.
- "I saw the tracks in the sand and decided to investigate.
- When I first saw him, I was sure he was dead, but then I found
- a slight pulse. When I came back from calling for help, his eyes
- were open."
- Suddenly the man groaned. His eyes blinked. He moved his
- head from side to side and tried to speak.
- "Easy," Agent Kelly said. "Take it easy. Help is on the way."
- KISS OF THE BEES 197
- Brian leaned closer to the injured man. "Can you tell us
- what happened?" he asked. "Do you know who did this?"
- The man trained his bloodshot eyes on Brian's face. ". . .
- Mil-gahn," he whispered hoarsely.
- The sound of the softly spoken word caused the years to peel
- away. Brian was once again reliving those carefree days when he
- and Davy had been little, when they had spent every spare moment
- out in the little shed behind Davy's house, with Brian
- learning the language of Davy's old Indian baby-sitter, Rita Antone.
- When they were together, Davy and Rita had spoken to
- one another almost exclusively in Tohono O'othham--they had
- 385
- called it Papago back then--rather than English. Over time Brian
- Fellows had picked up some of the language himself. He knew
- that the word Mil-gahn meant Anglo.
- "A white man did this?" Brian asked, hunkering even closer
- to the injured man.
- "Yes," the man whispered weakly in Tohono O'othham. "A
- white man."
- "He hit you on purpose?" Brian asked.
- The man nodded.
- "Do you know who it was?" Brain asked. "Do you know
- the man's name?"
- This time the injured man shook his head, then he murmured
- something else. Brian's grasp of the language was such
- that he could pick out only one or two words--hiabog--digging,
- and shohbith--forbidden.
- "What's he saying?" Agent Kelly asked.
- "I didn't catch all of it. Something about forbidden digging.
- I'll bet this guy stumbled on a gang of artifact thieves, or maybe
- just one. The Indians around here consider this whole area sacred,
- from here to the mountains."
- 386
- "That's news to me," Agent Kelly said.
- Overhead they heard the pulsing clatter of an arriving helicopter.
- "They've probably located the vehicles, but they'll have
- trouble finding us. I'll stay here with him," she directed. "You
- go guide them in."
- The helicopter landed in the clearing near where the cars
- were parked. After directing the emergency medical technicians
- on where to go, Brian went back to his Blazer and called in. "I
- need a detective out here," he said.
- 198 J.A. JANCE
- "How come?" the dispatcher wanted to know. "What's '
- going on?" ^
- "We've got a severely injured man. He may not make it."
- "You're talking about the drunk Indian the Border Patrol ;!
- found? We've already dispatched the helicopter--" '
- "The helicopter's here," Brian interrupted. "I'm asking for a j
- detective. The guy says a white man beat him up." '
- "But he's still alive right now, right?"
- "Barely." j
- "Go ahead and write it up yourself, Deputy Fellows. The ;
- 387
- detectives are pretty much tied up at the moment. If one of 'em ",
- gets freed up later, I'll send him along. In the meantime, this i
- case is your baby." The dispatcher's implication was clear: a ;
- deputy capable of investigating dead cattle ought to be able to j
- handle a beat-up Indian now and then.
- Brian sighed and headed back toward the charco. Brandon
- Walker was right. With Bill Forsythe's administration, the people ^
- of Pima County had gotten something different, all right. ',
- In spades, j
- 'i
- From somewhere very far away, Lani heard what sounded
- like a siren. She opened her eyes. At least, she thought she
- opened her eyes, but she could see nothing. She tried to move
- her hands and feet. She could move them a little, but not much,
- and when she tried to raise her head, her face came into contact
- with something soft.
- Where am I? she wondered. Why am I so hot?
- Her body ached with the pain of spending hours locked in
- the same position. She seemed to be lying naked on something
- soft. And she could feel something silky touching her sides and
- 388
- the bare skin of her immovable legs and arms. A cool breeze
- wafted over her hot skin from somewhere, and there was a pillow
- propped under her head.
- A pillow. "Maybe I'm dead," she said aloud, but the sound
- was so dead that it was almost as though she hadn't said a word.
- "Am I dead?" she asked.
- The answer came from inside her rather than from anywhere
- outside.
- If there's cloth all around me, above and below and a pillow,
- too, she thought, I must be in a casket, just like Nana Dahd.
- KISS OF THE BEES w
- * * *
- For weeks everyone, with the possible exception of Lani, had
- known that Rita Antone was living on borrowed time. The
- whole household knew it wouldn't be long now. For days now,
- Wanda and Fat Crack Ortiz had stayed at the house in Gates
- Pass, keeping watch at Rita's bedside night and day. When they
- slept, they did so taking turns in the spare bedroom.
- Over the years there had been plenty of subtle criticism on
- the reservation about Rita Antone. The Indians had been upset
- 389
- with her for abandoning her people and her own family to go
- live in Tucson with a family of Whites. There had also been
- some pointed and mean-spirited criticism aimed at Rita's family
- for letting her go. The gossips maintained that, although Diana
- Ladd Walker may have been glad enough to have Rita's help
- while she was strong and healthy and could manage housekeeping
- and child-care chores, they expected that the Mil-gahn
- woman would be quick to send Rita back to the reservation once
- she was no longer useful, when, in the vernacular of the Tohono
- O'othham, she was only good for making baskets and nothing
- else.
- Knowing that Rita must have been involved, ill will toward
- her had flourished anew among the Tohono O'othham in the
- wake of Brandon and Diana Walker's unconventional adoption
- of Clemencia Escalante. Not that any of the Indian people on the
- reservation had been interested in adopting the child themselves.
- Everyone knew that the strange little girl had been singled out
- by I'itoi and his messengers, the Little People. Clemencia had
- been kissed by the ants in the same way the legendary Kulani
- O'oks had been kissed by the bees. Although there was some
- 390
- interest at the prospect of having a new and potentially powerful
- Medicine Woman in the tribe, no one--including Clemencia's
- blood relatives--wanted the job of being parents to such a child.
- By now, though, with Rita Antone bedridden and being lovingly
- cared for by both her Indian and Anglo families, the reservation
- naysayers and gossips had been silenced for good and all.
- On that last day, a sleep-deprived Fat Crack came into the
- kitchen where Diana and Brandon were eating breakfast. Gabe
- helped himself to a cup of coffee and then tried to mash down
- his unruly hair. It was still standing straight up, just the way he
- had slept on it, slumped down in the chair next to Rita's bed.
- ZOO J.A. JANCE
- "She's asking for Davy," Fat Crack said. "Do you know
- where he is?"
- Diana glanced at her watch. "Probably in class right now,
- but I don't know which one or where."
- "Let me make a call to the registrar's office over at the university,"
- Brandon had told them. "Once they tell us where he
- is, I'll go there, pick him up, and bring him back home."
- Fat Crack nodded. "Good," he said. "I don't think there's
- 391
- much time." H'l
- Forty-five minutes later, Brandon Walker was waiting in the ^
- hall outside Davy's Anthropology 101 class. As soon as Davy
- saw Brandon, he knew what was going on.
- "How bad is it?" he asked.
- "Pretty bad," Brandon returned. "Fat Crack says we should
- come as soon as we can."
- They had hurried out to the car which, due to law-enforcement
- privilege, had been parked on the usually vehicle-free pedestrian
- mall.
- "I hate this," Davy said, settling into the seat, slamming his
- door, and then staring out the window.
- "What do you hate?"
- *''' "Having old people for friends and having them die on me.
- First Father John, then Looks At Nothing, and now Rita."
- At age ninety-five, Looks At Nothing had avoided the threat
- of being placed in a hospital by simply walking off into the
- desert one hot summer's day. They had found his desiccated
- body weeks later, baking in the hot sand of a desert wash not a
- thousand yards from his home.
- 392
- "I'm sorry," Brandon said, and meant it.
- At the house, Davy had gone straight into Rita's room. He
- had stayed there for only ten minutes or so. He had come out
- carrying Rita's prized but aged medicine basket. His face was
- pale but he was dry-eyed. "I'm ready to go back now," he said.
- He and Brandon had set out in the car. "She gave me her
- basket," Davy said a few minutes later.
- "I know," Brandon said. "I saw you carrying it."
- "But it's not mine to keep," Davy added.
- Brandon Walker glanced at his stepson. His jaw was set, but
- now there were tears glimmering on his face. "I get to have
- KISS OF THE BEES 201
- Father John's rosary and Rita's son's Purple Heart. Everything
- else goes to Lani. It isn't fairl"
- Brandon was tempted to point out that very little in life is
- fair, but he didn't. "Why, then, did she give it to you today?"
- he asked.
- "Because Lani's only seven, or at least she will be tomorrow.
- She can't have the rest of it until she's older."
- "When are you supposed to give it to her?"
- 393
- Davy brushed the tears from his face. "That's what I asked
- Rita. She said that I'd know when it was time."
- Brandon pulled up in front of the dorm, but Davy made no
- effort to get out. Instead, he opened the basket, picked through
- it, and removed two separate items, both of which he shoved
- in his pocket. Then he put the frayed cover back on the basket.
- "Dad," he said. "Would you do me a favor?"
- "What's that?" Brandon asked.
- "I can't take this into the dorm. No one would understand.
- And somebody might try to steal it or something. You and Mom
- have a safety deposit box down at the bank, don't you?"
- "Yes."
- "Would you mind putting this in there and keeping it? I
- mean, if it isn't really mine, I don't want to lose it. I need to
- keep it safe--for Lani."
- "Sure, Davy," Brandon said. "I'll be glad to. If you want me
- to, I'll drop it off this morning on my way to the department."
- "Thanks," Davy said, handing the basket over. "And tell Fat
- Crack that I'll come back out to the house as soon as I'm done
- with my last class. I should be done by three at the latest."
- 394
- But Rita Antone was gone long before then. She died within
- half an hour of the time her little Olhoni left, taking Understanding
- Woman's medicine basket with him.
- Nine years later, the bank had gone through several different
- mergers and had ended up as part of Wells Fargo. The bank had
- changed, but not the medicine basket, at least not noticeably.
- Maybe it was somewhat more frayed than it had been a decade
- earlier, but the power Oks Amichuda had woven into it years
- before still remained and still waited to be let out.
- The day after Nana Dahd died was the worst birthday Lani
- ever remembered. It seemed to her that a terrible empty place
- 202 J.A. JANCE
- had opened up in her life. The cake had been ordered well in
- advance, and everyone had tried to go through the motions of
- a party, just as Rita would have wanted them to. When it came
- time to blow out the candles, however, Lani had fled the room
- in tears, leaving the lighted candles still burning.
- Brandon was the one who had come to find her, sitting in the
- playhouse he had built for her in the far corner of the backyard.
- "Lani," he called. "Come here. What's the matter?"
- 395
- She crept outside and fell, weeping, against him.
- "Nana Dahd's dead, and Davy's mad at me," she sobbed. "I
- wish I were dead, too."
- "No, you don't," he said soothingly. "Rita wouldn't want
- you to be unhappy. We were lucky to have had her for as long
- as we did, but now it's time to let her go. She was suffering,
- Lani. She was in terrible pain. It would be selfish for us to want
- her to stay any longer."
- "I know," Lani said, "but ..."
- "Wait a minute. What's that in your hand?"
- "Her owij," Lani answered. "Her awl. She gave it to me
- yesterday. She said I must always keep making baskets."
- "Good."
- "But why was Davy so mean to me?" Lani asked. "I called
- him at the dorm and asked him if he was going to come have
- cake with us. He said he was too busy, but I think he just didn't
- want to. He sounded mad, but why would he be? What have
- I done?"
- "Nothing, Lani," Brandon said. "He's upset about Rita, the
- same as you are. He'll get over it. We just have to be patient
- 396
- with each other. Come on, let's go back inside and have some
- of that cake."
- Obligingly Lani had followed him into the house. The candles
- were already out. She managed to choke down a few bites
- of cake, but that was all.
- Three days later, at the funeral at San Xavier Mission, Lani
- was shocked to see Rita lying in the casket with her head
- propped up on a pillow.
- "But Nana Dahd doesn't like pillows," Lani had insisted,
- tugging at her father's hand. "She never uses a pillow."
- "Shhhh," Brandon Walker had said. "Not now."
- On the face of it, that was all there was to it. There was
- KISS OF THE BEES w
- never any further discussion. Brandon's "not now" became "not
- ever," except for one small thing.
- From that day on, Dolores Lanita Walker never again used
- a pillow.
- Not until now.
- n the Fourth Day I'itoi made the Sun--Tash. And Elder Brother
- went with Tash to show him the way, just as Sun travels today.
- 397
- For a long time Tash walked close to the earth, and it was very
- hot. Juhk O'othham--Rain Man--refused to follow his brother,
- Chewagi O'othham--Cloud Man--over the land, and Hewel
- O'othham--Wind Man--was angry and only made things hotter
- and dryer.
- All the desert world needed water. The Desert People were so
- thirsty and cross that they quarreled. When u'uwhig--the Birds--
- came too near each other, they pulled feathers. Tohbi--Cottontail
- Rabbit--and Ko'owi--Rattlesnake, and Jewho--Gopher--could
- no longer live together. So Jewho became very busy digging new
- holes.
- When the animals had quarreled until only the strongest were
- left, a strange people came out of the old deserted gopher holes.
- These were the PaDaj O'othham--Bad People--who were
- moved by the Spirit of Evil. They came from the big water in the
- far southwest, and they spread all over the land, killing the people
- as they came until every man felt that he lived in a black hole.
- The Desert People were so sad that at last they cried out to the
- Great Spirit for help. And when I'itoi saw that the PaDaj O'othham were in the land,
- he took some good spirits of the other world and made warriors out of them.
- 398
- These good spirit warriors chased the Bad People but could neiKISS OF THE BEES Z05
- ther capture nor kill them. And because his good soldiers from the
- spirit world could not destroy the Bad People, who were moved by
- the Spirit of Evil, I'itoi was ashamed.
- "That must have been very interesting," Monty Lazarus
- was saying.
- Diana snapped to attention and was embarrassed to realize
- that she had once again allowed her mind to wander. Talking
- and thinking about Andrew Carlisle still had the power to do
- that. She had thought that writing the book about him would
- have cleared the man out of her system once and for all. Her
- continuing discomfort during this interview seemed to suggest
- that wasn't the case.
- She wondered if she'd said anything stupid. Whatever she
- had said, no doubt Mr. Lazarus would quote her verbatim.
- "I'm sorry," she said. "I guess I'm getting tired. What was
- interesting?"
- "Interviewing Andrew Carlisle's mother."
- Diana didn't remember when the interview had veered into
- discussing Myrna Louise, but it must have. "Right," she said.
- 399
- "It was."
- "She's still alive then?" Monty asked.
- "Not now. She died within weeks of the time I saw her. It's
- a good thing I went to see her when I did. Other than talking
- to Andrew Carlisle himself, my interview with Myrna Louise
- was one of the most important ones I did for the book. I was
- nervous about seeing her after what I'd done to her son--leaving
- him blind and crippled. I had no idea how she'd respond to me.
- Just because a court had ruled I had acted in self-defense didn't
- mean that would carry any weight with the man's mother.
- "Didn't you say in the book someplace that he tried to kill
- her once?"
- Diana nodded. "He did, but she got away. What I found
- strange was that she didn't seem to hold it against him. She told
- me that there wasn't any point in carrying grudges and that he
- was her only reason for still hanging on. She said that if she was
- gone, he wouldn't have anyone at all."
- "So when you went to interview her, how did it go?" Monty
- Lazarus asked.
- 206 J.A. JANCE
- 400
- "It was fine," Diana said. "Myrna Louise Carlisle Spaulding
- Rivers couldn't have been more gracious."
- The first time Diana had met Myrna Louise, it was midmorning
- in the somewhat grubby lunchroom of the Vista Retirement
- Center in Chandler, Arizona. Andrew Carlisle's mother,
- with a walker strategically stationed nearby, was seated on a
- stained bench shoved carelessly up to a chipped table in the far
- corner of the room. She looked up at her visitor from a game'
- of solitaire played with a deck of sticky, dog-eared cards.
- "You must be Diana Walker," Myrna Louise said as Diana
- walked up to the table. "I've seen your picture before. On
- your books."
- "Thank you for agreeing to see me," Diana said.
- Myrna Louise smiled. "I didn't have much choice, now, did
- I? I'm not going anyplace soon. I figured I could just as well."
- Her hair, an improbable color of red, was thin and wispy.
- Her face may have been made up with a once-practiced hand,
- but now there were a few slips. A dribble of mascara darkened
- one cheek, and some of the too-red lipstick had smeared and
- edged its way up and down into the wrinkled creases above and
- 401
- below her lips. The teeth were false and clicked ominously when
- she spoke, as though threatening to pop out at any moment.
- "Anyway," she added. "I wanted to meet you. I wanted
- to apologize."
- "Apologize? For what?"
- "For my son, of course. For Andrew. He was a good boy
- when he was little. Good and so cute, too. I used to have the
- curls from his first haircut, but I finally threw them away when
- I moved here. Carlton made me get rid of them."
- "Carlton?"
- "Carlton Rivers, my late husband. My latest late husband.
- Anyway, when I told him about what Andrew had done--or
- rather, what he had tried to do--he said I should just forget
- about him. He said I should forget I'd ever even had a son. He
- said I should leave him in prison and let him rot. Andrew tried
- to kill me, you see. The same day he tried to kill you, as a
- matter of fact. I got away, though. When he got out of the car
- at that storage place, I just drove myself away. You should have
- seen his face. He couldn't believe it--that I was driving. I almost
- KISS OF THE BEES 207
- 402
- couldn't believe it myself. I'd never done it before--driven a car,
- that is. Not before or since."
- Diana took a deep breath. "You're not responsible for your
- son's actions, Mrs. Rivers. There's no need for you to apologize
- to me."
- "A reverend comes by and conducts church services here
- every Sunday," Myrna Louise continued as though she hadn't
- heard Diana's response. "I tried to talk to him about Andrew
- once or twice after I found out about the AIDS business. I suppose
- you know about that?"
- Diana nodded.
- "I asked him if he thought that was God's way of punishing
- Andrew. You know, an eye-for-an-eye sort of thing. Just like he
- lost his eyesight over what he did to you."
- "God didn't throw the bacon grease," Diana said. "I did."
- "But God's responsible for the result, isn't he?" Myrna Louise
- insisted. "If God had wanted it to work that way, he could
- have just burned him, but he wouldn't have been blind. Don't
- you see?"
- "Not exactly," Diana said.
- 403
- "Well, anyway, now I hear you're writing a book about
- him."
- "Yes, although it's not just about him. It's about all the people
- whose lives he touched. Whose lives he changed."
- "Or ended," Myrna Louise added sadly. "It serves him right
- that he doesn't get to write his own book. He asked you to do
- that, to write it?"
- "Yes."
- "That's hard for me to believe, but I don't suppose anything
- about Andrew should surprise me anymore. I would think he
- would have wanted to write it himself, even if he couldn't get
- it published. He's still angry with me about the manuscript,
- you know."
- "What manuscript?"
- "Of his book. The book he wrote when he was in prison the
- first time."
- "And what happened to it?" Diana asked.
- "I burned it," Myrna Louise said thoughtfully. "One page at
- a time."
- "There aren't any copies left?"
- 404
- 208 J.A. JANCE
- "Not that I know of."
- "And what did your son call this book?"
- Myrna Louise shook her head. "I don't remember the name
- of it now. After all these years, I guess I've managed to forget
- what it was exactly, although I remember the title had something
- to do with Indians. I didn't read the whole thing, just parts
- of it. It was awful. I couldn't believe anyone could write such
- terrible stuff. The things his main character did to other characters
- were just awful. It made me feel filthy just having in my
- hands. But of course, I know now that he must not have made
- some of that up."
- "What do you mean, he didn't make it up?" Diana asked.
- "That he had actually done some of those things himself.
- And that there were others."
- "Other what?" Diana asked.
- "Other victims," Myrna Louise answered. "Ones the police
- knew nothing about."
- For several moments after that, Diana didn't trust herself to
- speak. She was thinking about the ashes of the cassette tape she
- 405
- had swept out of the fireplace and thrown into the garbage can
- before Brandon and the kids came home from Payson. If there
- were other victims, did that also mean there were other tapes?
- "You told me a little while ago that he tried to kill you the
- same day he attacked me."
- "He didn't exactly try," Myrna Louise corrected. "He was
- going to. He planned to, but I drove away before he had a
- chance."
- "Did he have a tape recorder or tapes with him that day?"
- Myrna Louise pursed her lips. "It's really hard for me to talk
- about this," she said. .^
- "About what?" ^
- "About the tape recorder."
- Diana felt a chill run up and down her spine. "So there was
- a tape recorder?"
- "Yes," Myrna Louise answered. "Yes, there was."
- "What happened to it?"
- "That's the part I don't want to talk about. When the detectives
- found it under the car seat in Jake's Valiant--my second
- husband's Valiant--I told them it was mine and they let me
- 406
- KISS OF THE BEES 209
- keep it. If you write into your book that it was really Andrew's,
- I might still get in trouble over it. For concealing evidence."
- "What did you do with the tape recorder, Mrs. Rivers?"
- Diana asked. "It could be very important."
- "I pawned it," Myrna Louise answered. "Andrew asked me
- about it later, about what had happened to it. I told him the
- detectives took it. So, please, it's better if you don't say anything
- about it at all. It could raise all kinds of ruckus."
- "When you took the recorder, were there any tapes with it?"
- "Only some blanks. A whole package of blanks."
- "But none that had been used?"
- For a long time after that, Myrna Louise Rivers didn't answer.
- She had gathered up the deck of cards from the table and
- sat there absently shuffling them. Finally she reached for her
- walker and stood up.
- "Excuse me, Mrs. Rivers," Diana said. "I haven't had a
- chance to ask you ..."
- "We have to go back to my room now," Myrna Louise said.
- "They'll be setting up for lunch in a few minutes anyhow, so
- 407
- we'll need to be out of the way. But I want to give you
- something."
- Vista Retirement Center was laid out in a quadrangle. The
- front wing of the building was the common area with the dining
- hall, a recreation area, library, and lobby. One of the side wings
- was the convalescent wing. The two other wings were devoted
- to patients who were still well enough to come and go on their
- own. The wings were connected by shaded breezeways, but in
- the 110-degree heat, the shade didn't make that much
- difference.
- By the time they reached Myrna Louise's room in the far
- back wing, Diana was worried the woman was going to faint
- with exertion. She sank down on the side of the bed, breathing
- hard.
- "I'm not much good in all this heat," she gasped at last when
- she could speak. "Sit down. Let me catch my breath."
- A wall-unit air conditioner grumbled under the screened
- window, but the air flow didn't make a dent in the hot dusty
- air of that small, spartan room. In addition to a bed, the room
- contained a single easy chair, a dresser with a small television
- 408
- set on it, and a kitchen table with two chairs. A door led to a
- 210 J.A. JANCE
- tiny bathroom. The place was grim enough that it reminded
- Diana more of a monk's cell or prison accommodations than it
- did a retirement home. Diana sank into the chair and waited
- until a winded Myrna Louise Rivers was finally able to speak.
- "There are some shoe boxes on the top shelf of the closet,"
- the woman managed at last. "If you wouldn't mind bringing me
- the bottom one, I'd appreciate it."
- Diana did as she was told. In the closet she found three shoe
- boxes stacked one on top of the other. From the weight of the
- first two, it seemed likely that they contained shoes. The third
- one seemed to hold something as well, but it felt far too light
- to be a pair of shoes. When Diana shook the box slightly, it
- gave a muffled rattle, as though whatever was inside had been
- packed in tissue paper.
- Taking the box over to the bed, she handed it to Myrna
- Louise. The woman's gnarled, liver-spotted hand shook as she
- reached out to take it. "That's the one," she said.
- Holding it on her lap for a few moments, she gazed off into
- 409
- space as though her thoughts were far away from this grim place
- where she was living out her final years. She sat with one hand
- resting on the lid as if she were unwilling to open it.
- "I send him candy, you know," she murmured thoughtfully.
- "Every year on his birthday, I see to it that he has a box of
- chocolates from me. I know he gets them although he never
- sends thank-you notes. Andrew never was big on thank-you
- notes, you see. The problem is, it's hard for me to connect the
- person I'm sending the candy to--the person who is my son--
- to this."
- She gave the shoe box a desultory pat. "It doesn't seem possible
- that the little boy I used to make birthday cakes for is the
- same person. Does that make sense?"
- Diana nodded and said nothing.
- "He came back home the day before all that happened,"
- Myrna Louise continued thoughtfully. "He had been gone overnight
- in Jake's car. I didn't ask him where he had been--I never
- asked him that, because he would have told me it was none of
- my business. But when he came home, he was wearing this."
- Carefully she removed the lid. Inside the shoe box Diana
- 410
- saw a splash of vivid-pink material. Slowly Myrna Louise lifted
- the fabric from the box and unrolled it, revealing a bright pink
- KISS OF THE BEES 211
- silk pantsuit. Something hard and small was at the very center
- of the roll of material--something Myrna Louise deftly covered
- with one hand before Diana could glimpse what it was.
- "That's a woman's pantsuit, isn't it?" Diana asked. "Why
- was your son wearing that?"
- "It's beautiful, isn't it," Myrna Louise said, passing the top
- to Diana so she, too, could finger the delicate material.
- "And expensive," Diana added. "But you still haven't told
- me why was he wearing it."
- "At the time he said it was like kids playing dress-up, but I
- realized later that it was a disguise he wore when he left that
- hotel in Tucson after he killed that man, that guy who worked
- in the movies,"
- Johnny Rivkin's name leaped to the forefront out of the longburied
- past. He had been the second victim in Andrew Carlisle's
- three-day reign of terror after he was released from prison in
- June of 1975. Rivkin, a noted Hollywood costume designer, had
- 411
- met Andrew Carlisle at a well-known gay watering hole, a
- pickup joint, in downtown Tucson. After meeting in the bar at
- the Reardon Hotel, Rivkin had invited Carlisle to join him for
- a drink in his hotel suite at the Santa Rita a few blocks away.
- That casual invitation had ended several hours later with Johnny
- Rivkin's throat slit.
- "When Andrew brought this into my house," Myrna Louise
- was saying, "I was upset. I hated seeing him dress like that because
- he wasn't queer--at least I didn't used to think so. But it
- was made of real silk. I had real silk myself once, back when I
- was married to Howie--Andrew's father. But not since. And I
- guess I must have been a little envious, too. So when that police
- officer came to see me that night in Tempe ..."
- "Detective Farrell?" Diana asked, remembering G. T.
- "Geet" Farrell, the Final County detective who had joined forces
- with Brandon Walker and Fat Crack in trying to track down
- Gina Antone's newly released killer.
- Myrna nodded. "That's right. That's the one. When he came
- by asking me questions, I knew they were going to take Andrew
- away and lock him up again. So when I went down the hall to
- 412
- use the bathroom, I took this out of Andrew's closet and put it
- in mine. I didn't think he'd mind.
- "Everything happened that night. For months afterward, I
- Z1Z J.A. JANCE
- just left it there in my closet without daring to touch it. Then
- one day I was invited to go to a senior singles dance and I decided
- to try it on. I thought if I had the sleeves and pants shortened,
- maybe it would fit. That's when I found this," she said.
- "It was there in one of the jacket pockets the whole time."
- Myrna Louise moved her hand. There, in her lap, lay a single
- cassette tape.
- Without having to listen to it or even touch it, Diana Ladd
- Walker knew exactly what it was. In that moment, though, she
- found herself able to be grateful for one small blessing. In 1968,
- when Gina died, and again in 1975, VCRs and video cameras
- had been invented, but they weren't available to everyone.
- And most especially Diana was grateful that they weren't
- available to Andrew Philip Carlisle.
- Mitch Johnson tried to listen carefully while Diana told him
- about the interview with Myrna Louise. What interested him
- 413
- most of all was what she left out. Again, there was no mention
- of Andy's tape. So he had been right about that. She had kept
- that part of their exchange a secret--not only in writing the
- book but probably also in what she told those closest to her.
- That was all right, she wouldn't be able to keep that secret
- forever. Not after tonight. ;!
- The other item of interest was what she said about Myrna
- Louise's death. She had said a stroke. When word of Myrna
- Louise's death had come to the prison, Andy had laughed at the
- incompetent ninnies who ruled it as death by natural causes.
- "Why is that so funny?" Mitch had asked.
- "Because they're wrong. Because I made arrangements to
- have someone slip her a little something."
- As well as Mitch knew Andy by then, the whole idea was a
- little startling. "Your own mother?" Mitch asked.
- "Why not?" Andy returned. "Once she handed Diana's little
- care package over to my hired-hand delivery boy, there was no
- sense in her hanging around. After all, that damned rest home
- was costing a fortune. And don't pretend to be so shocked,
- Mitch. After all, it's in your own best interests." |
- 414
- "Minel"
- "You bet. Myrna Louise's rent at that retirement home was
- coming directly out of my pocket--and yours, too." ;
- KISS OF THE BEES 2B
- "I suppose you're right," Mitch had said. "But you arranged
- the whole thing from here?"
- "Sure," Andy said. "If you've got enough money, hiring
- decent help is no problem."
- Mitch continued going through the motions of seeming to
- listen intently and of taking notes, but he was losing interest.
- There comes a time in every bullfight when it's time to end the
- capework and uncover the sword. His purpose was to leave
- Diana Ladd Walker with something to think about later on.
- Something that would, in the aftermath of what was about to
- happen between Lani and Quentin, leave her questioning all her
- smug assumptions about the kind of person she was and how
- she had raised her children.
- He waited until she paused. "Listening to you now and remembering
- the way you describe Andrew Carlisle's mother in
- the book, you make her sound perfectly ordinary."
- 415
- "She was perfectly ordinary," Diana said. "That's what I
- wanted to show about her. Myrna Louise Rivers was far less
- educated than her son and hadn't had the benefit of all the
- advantages that accrued to him from his father's side of the
- family. People like to believe that monsters beget monsters, but
- she wasn't a monster, not by any means. I think it's far too easy
- for society to believe that killers inherit their evil tendencies
- from their parents and then pass them along to their own children.
- As I said in the book, I don't believe that's true."
- "Is that the case in your own situation as well?"
- Diana frowned. "What do you mean?"
- "In the case of your stepson, Quentin. You don't feel that
- his upbringing had anything to do with what happened to him
- or to the other son, the one who ran away?"
- Mitch was delighted to see the angry flush that flooded Diana
- Walker's face. "No," she said firmly. "Quentin Walker and
- Tommy Walker were both responsible for their own actions."
- "But isn't it possible that your relationship with their father
- closed those two boys out somehow and that's why they ended
- up going so haywire?"
- 416
- Gleefully, Mitch saw the muscles on Diana's jawline contract.
- "No," she said. "I don't think that at all. By the time I
- met them, both those boys were headed in the wrong direction.
- 214 J.A. JANCE
- There was nothing their father and I could do to change that
- course."
- Maybe it didn't seem like much of a seed, but once Brandon
- and Diana Walker were trying to come to grips with the fact
- that their son Quentin had murdered his sister Lani, it would
- give them something more to think about, f |
- Monty Lazarus made a show of glancing at his watch. "My "^^3
- God!" he exclaimed. "Look at the time. I promised Megan that
- I'd have you home in plenty of time for your dinner. Based on
- that, I booked another appointment. I'm supposed to meet some
- friends, and I'm about to be late. Would you mind if we finished
- this up and shot the pictures sometime tomorrow?"
- If Diana Ladd Walker had posed for a photo right then,
- the camera probably would have captured exactly what she was
- thinking--that it would have given her the greatest of pleasure
- to shove the camera right back down Monty's arrogant goddamned
- 417
- throat.
- . "That would be fine," she said, trying not to let her relief
- show at finally escaping this interminable interview. Maybe by
- tomorrow she could find a way to be reasonably civil to this
- jackass.
- "What time?"
- "Say two o'clock."
- "All right. And where? Out at the house?" " |"No.
- Not your place. I have some locations in mind. I'll call a
- you in the morning and let you know where to meet me."
- "Fine." Diana got up and started away, but before she went
- too far, she remembered her manners. "Thanks for the |j
- refreshments." H g
- "Think nothing of it," Monty Lazarus said with an ingratiat- if |
- ing smile. "It was my pleasure." 'li I
- The EMTs immediately went to work attempting to stabilize
- their patient. Agent Kelly and Deputy Fellows suddenly found
- themselves with nothing to do. Sent packing from the scene of
- all the action, the two officers retreated to the spot where their
- vehicles were parked.
- 418
- Agent Kelly was a short, sturdy blonde with closely-cropped
- hair, gray-green eyes, and an easy smile. Brian had no idea how
- KISS OF THE BEES 215
- long she had been out in the baking sun with the injured man,
- but her face was flushed. The shirt of her green uniform was
- soaked with sweat.
- Opening the door to her van, she put the two empty water
- jugs--both his and hers--on the floorboard of the front seat, and
- then she pulled out another. Screwing open the cap, she held
- the jug over her head and poured, letting the water spill down.
- Once she was thoroughly soaked, she handed the gallon jug over
- to Brian. "Live a little," she said.
- After a momentary hesitation, Brian followed suit. "My
- name's Katherine Kelly, by the way," she told him as he gave
- the jug back to her. "Kath for short. We didn't exactly have
- time for official introductions before." She held out her hand.
- Before, when they had been working together and dealing
- with a crisis, Brian had been totally at ease. Now his natural
- reticence reasserted itself, leaving him feeling tongue-tied and
- dim-witted. "Brian Fellows," he managed awkwardly.
- 419
- If Kath Kelly suffered any social difficulties, they didn't show.
- "Did you call for a detective?" she asked.
- Brian nodded. "I did, but they're not sending one," he said.
- "Everybody's busy, so I'm told. They told me to write it up
- myself, but the way Dispatch said it, you can tell they'd as soon
- I dropped the whole thing. After all, the guy's just an Indian."
- Kath Kelly's gray-green eyes darkened to emerald. "There's
- a lot of that going around in my department, too," she said. "So
- are you going to drop it?"
- "No, I'm going to take Dispatch at their word and investigate
- the hell out of this. Crime-scene investigation may not be my
- long suit, but I've done some."
- "I can help for a while, but as soon as the helicopter leaves,
- I'll have to get back on patrol. Before I forget, you don't look
- much like an Indian. Where'd you learn to speak Tohono
- O'othham?"
- "From one of my friends, in Tucson," he said.
- "Really." Kath smiled. "Pretty impressive," she said. "I speak
- French fluently and Spanish some, but I couldn't understand a
- word that poor guy was saying. It's a good thing you showed
- 420
- up. Is that why they have you working this sector of the county,
- because of your language skills?"
- Brian shook his head. "Hardly," he answered with a short
- 218 J.A. JANCE
- way earlier in the day. That was one thing about living at the
- end of a dirt road. You learned to read tracks.
- She expected to find Brandon still outside, laboring over his
- wood. Instead, after hanging her car keys up on the pegboard
- just inside the kitchen doorway, she wandered on into the living
- room, where she found a showered, shaved, and nattily dressed
- Brandon Walker sitting on the couch reading a newspaper. Two
- champagne glasses and an ice bucket with a chilled bottle of ,a3"~
- Schramsberg sat on the coffee table in front of him. *|
- "What's this?" Diana asked. ai
- "A little surprise," he said. "Could I interest you in a drink?"
- Nodding, Diana sank gratefully down on the couch beside
- him. "How was it?" he asked.
- "Awful. It seemed like it went on forever," she replied. "And
- it's not over yet. We ran out of time to do the pictures. Those
- are scheduled for two o'clock tomorrow afternoon."
- 421
- "After spending half of today, you're still not done? What's
- this guy doing, writing an article or a biography?" ||| ^
- Diana laughed. Just being home and watching Brandon pour
- the sparkling liquid into one of the glasses made her feel better.
- "As a matter of fact, it may be a little of both. Monty Lazarus
- has an unusual approach to doing an interview. Calling it round- |B
- about is giving it the benefit of the doubt.
- "So what have you been up to all afternoon, and what's
- the big occasion? I haven't seen you this dressed up or happy
- in months." '
- 'm
- Brandon handed her a glass and then touched his to hers.
- "To us," he said. s
- "To us," she nodded.
- Brandon took a sip. "I spent most of the afternoon loading
- up three livestock trucks full of wood," he answered. "Fat Crack
- told me yesterday that he thought he knew someone who could
- use it. Today Baby Ortiz came by with a bunch of other Indians,
- and we loaded up three truckloads to take to the popover ladies
- over at San Xavier.
- 422
- As a toddler, Gabe's older son, Richard, had wandered
- around with his diapers at half-mast, much the way his father
- always wore his low-riding Levi's. It hadn't taken long for people
- to start calling him A'ali chum Gigh Tahpani--Baby Fat Crack.
- KISS OF THE BEES 219
- Now forty years old and half again as wide as his father, most
- people simply called him Baby.
- "Baby says he thinks the wood chips might help with the
- mud problem on the playfield down at Topawa."
- "And whoever's going to use the wood will come get it?"
- Diana asked.
- "That's right. They'll come load it and haul it away." Brandon
- laughed. "I'll bet you thought you were going to be stuck
- with that mountain of wood permanently, didn't you?" he
- teased.
- "It was beginning to look that way," Diana agreed.
- "It makes me feel good that someone's going to get some
- benefit out of all my hard work," Brandon added seriously. "And
- as for my being dressed to the nines, I thought I'd straighten up
- and give the Friends of the Library a real treat, show up as
- 423
- author consort in full-dress regalia."
- He put one arm around Diana's shoulder and pulled her
- close. "It's also an apology of sorts. I've been a real self-centered
- jerk of late, haven't I?"
- "Not as bad as all that," she answered with a laugh.
- They sat for several minutes, enjoying their champagne and
- the comfort of a companionable silence. "What time do we have
- to be at the dinner?"
- Diana looked at her watch. "Megan said six, but we don't
- really have to be there until seven."
- "You mean we have two whole hours all to ourselves?"
- She smiled at him over her glass. "Wait a minute," she said
- coyly. "Are you suggesting what I think you're suggesting?"
- Brandon shrugged. "You saw Lani's note. She said she was
- going directly to the concert ..."
- One of the first and most ongoing casualties of the loss of
- the election had been to their sex life. Diana had managed to
- put it out of her mind, but now that Brandon was actually suggesting
- making love, she wasn't about to turn him down.
- Diana stood up and started for the bedroom. "Here goes my
- 424
- hairdo and makeup," she said.
- "I didn't think about that," Brandon said. "If you don't
- want to . . ."
- Stopping in the bedroom doorway, she turned and smiled.
- "Nobody said anything about not wanting to," she said. "It just
- ZZO J.A. JANCE
- means that I'll go to dinner with the natural look. It's a lot more
- like me than this is. Now come in and close the door," she
- added. "And go ahead and lock it. Lani said she wouldn't be
- home before the concert, but let's not take any chances."
- As Mitch Johnson drove back toward the RV, he was almost
- wild with anticipation. He had come through the interview with
- flying colors, done his capework admirably, but the next segment
- of the adventure would contain the two parts of the plan Andy
- had lobbied for so adamantly. The rest of the program he had
- been content to leave entirely in Mitch's hands, to let the person
- with the ultimate responsibility for putting the plan into action
- noodle out the details. But for Andy, this was the sine qua non.
- "If you can manage to lay hands on the girl," Andy had said,
- "whatever else you do to her, be sure her mother knows that
- 425
- it's coming from me. Understand?"
- Understand? Of course, Mitch had understood. How could
- he have spent seven and a half years living with Andy Carlisle
- and listening to the man obsess about women's breasts without
- understanding? The trick was doing what Andy wanted without
- being caught.
- Women's breasts and what Andy had done to them had been
- his undoing, at least part of it. Somebody had lost the
- toothmarks from Gina Antone's mutilated body, but the detectives
- had matched the ones on the dead woman at Picacho Peak
- and the ones on Diana Ladd and had used them as part of the
- evidence that sent Andrew Carlisle to prison for the second time.
- Andy had talked about that constantly, about how once a woman's
- breast was exposed to him, he was physically incapable of
- not biting it.
- "So what's the problem here?" Mitch had asked one day,
- when he was feeling particularly brave and when he felt as
- though Andy had beaten the subject to death. "Didn't your
- mother ever nurse you?" he had asked. "How come, when you
- talk about tits, it's only in terms of mangling them or biting
- 426
- them off instead of using them the way God intended?"
- "What my mother did or didn't do is none of your damned
- business." Andy said the words in a way that made Mitch's
- blood run cold. He knew at once that he had stepped over some
- invisible line, and he sincerely wished he hadn't.
- KISS OF THE BEES 221
- "Sorry," he said quickly. "I didn't mean to insult your
- mother. It's just that sucking on a woman whose boobs are overflowing
- with milk can be a beautiful thing. I thought maybe you
- might have tried it."
- "No," Andy had responded. "I never have."
- "Damn," Lori muttered.
- Half-asleep, Mitch rolled over on his side to face her.
- "What's wrong?"
- "Mikey didn't eat," she said. "He already fell back to sleep.
- He barely touched the one side, and I'm soaking wet on the
- other."
- Mitch reached out and cupped Lori's swollen breast in one
- hand. She was right. The leaking milk had soaked her nightgown
- from armpit to waist.
- 427
- "If you'd let me, maybe I could take some of the pressure
- off."
- "Never mind," she said. "I'll go get the breast pump."
- "No, don't," he said. "Let me do it. Please. It won't hurt
- anything. Mikey won't know."
- Lori didn't answer right away, but she didn't move his hand,
- either. Finally she sighed. "All right," she said. "I guess it would
- be all right, just this once."
- There was no need to unbutton the gown because she slept
- with it open. Mitch did have some trouble unfastening the nursing
- bra. He had seen her do it, of course, but watching it done
- from the inside out wasn't the same as doing it from the outside
- in and in the dark as well. At last, though, he ran his hand over
- her damp naked breast. The distended nipple lay erect and inviting
- beneath his grazing fingertips.
- "If you're going to do it," Lori said, "don't take all night."
- Whenever he'd had the chance to watch Lori nurse, he'd
- observed the strange mixture of anticipation and dread with
- which she greeted Mikey's clamping his hungry lips over her
- nipple. Sometimes she'd make a sound that was almost like the
- 428
- sigh of satisfaction Mitch's grandmother used to make after taking
- a sip of too hot coffee.
- Raising up on his elbows, Mitch leaned over and clamped
- on. As his lips closed around her nipple, he felt her body tense
- and instantly afterward go limp as the sweet, hot milk shot into
- Ill J.A. JANCE
- his mouth. It gushed out at him, shooting all the way to the
- back of his mouth, teasing his tonsils, almost triggering his gag
- reflex, but he fought that down and concentrated on sucking,
- on draining her without ever gripping her with his teeth.
- There was more milk inside her than he expected, but at
- last that one was empty. He sat up to find that in the dark she
- had deftly unfastened the other side, and now, giggling, she
- pulled him down onto that one, too, holding him by the back
- of the neck, pressing him against her, groaning with pleasure as
- his now aching jaws relieved the pressure on that sore breast
- as well.
- Ever since they had brought Mikey home from the hospital
- three weeks earlier, Mitch had been intensely curious about the
- process. For weeks he had begged Lori to let him taste her, but
- 429
- what had never crossed his mind was that the process might
- pleasure her as well. The fact that she was enjoying it almost as
- much as he did unleashed months of pent-up sexual deprivation.
- When he let go of her nipple, she was still laughing so hard that
- at first she didn't seem to notice that he was prying her legs
- apart. But she did notice.
- "No, Mitch," she said. "It's still too soon. The doctor ..."
- By then Mitch Johnson wasn't interested in what the doctor
- had said or in what Lori wanted, either. He desperately craved
- the solace her body had to offer. He craved it and he took it.
- He had barely shoved himself home when his aching need exploded
- inside her like a burst of Fourth of July fireworks.
- Afterward as he drifted in a mellow haze, he realized she
- was crying. "What's wrong now?" he asked.
- "You raped me." She didn't say it loud, but he knew she
- meant it.
- "No, I didn't," he said. "You wanted it as much as I did.
- You were asking for it."
- "You raped me," she repeated dully. "I told you no and you
- did it anyway."
- 430
- "I did not rape you," he declared. "How could I? You're
- my wife."
- As far as Mitch Johnson was concerned, the subject was
- closed. In Tucson, Arizona, in 1975, Lori Kiser Johnson didn't
- try pressing charges because she knew they wouldn't stick. What
- she did do, however, was far more effective. From then on, she
- KISS OF THE BEES 223
- never said yes to Mitch again, not when it came to sex. Oh, he
- did get a piece of tail now and then, but only when he took it.
- And there was never any response. She lay beneath him whenever
- he did it, dry and unmoving, letting him inside her because
- she didn't seem to have any choice in the matter, but making
- sure neither one of them enjoyed it.
- Considering that turn of events, it was hardly surprising that
- a few months later Mitch was out in the desert shooting hell out
- of a bunch of wetbacks. As frustrated as he was, who wouldn't?
- As Mitch turned left on Coleman Road, he saw a huge cloud
- of dust come roiling up out of the desert about a half mile away.
- A moment later a helicopter emerged from the cloud and set
- off toward town. That struck him as odd--worried him a little--
- 431
- but clearly it had nothing to do with him. Two miles down the
- road, behind a locked gate, the Bounder sat in undisturbed, solitary
- splendor exactly as he'd left it.
- When he stopped the car, he got out and stood for a moment
- listening. The only sound was the steady thrum of the air conditioner.
- He had created an extra duct that ran through the storage
- unit. It was hot, and it wouldn't have done to have Lani Walker
- baked to a crisp or suffocated before he had his chance at her.
- He stood there observing the Bounder and the vast tract of
- empty desert around it. He was almost sorry to leave this place.
- It had been good to him, had allowed the creative juices to flow.
- But it was time. He had other places to go, other fish to fry,
- including the stupid-ass second lieutenant from Asheville, North
- Carolina, who had led his platoon into a Vietcong trap and permanently
- fucked up Mitch's knee.
- Like it or not, it was almost time to abandon the desert.
- Mitch had already called his landlord to say he was moving and
- had notified the power company, telling them to shut off the
- juice as of Wednesday. His would be a planned exit. There
- would be no question about him deciding to leave after all the
- 432
- shit hit the fan.
- If anyone had seen him standing there, they might have
- thought he was simply admiring the landscape. What he was
- really doing was seeing how long he could keep from opening
- the door. Would she be awake or not? Her reaction to the drug
- had been so pronounced that he worried now that she might
- m J.A. MNCE
- still be groggy. That would be too bad. The moment she saw
- his face, he wanted her to know. Anything less than that
- wouldn't be enough.
- It had been fun toying with Diana without her having the
- foggiest idea of what was really going on. But with Lani it was
- different. Diana had said she was a smart girl, and Mitch Johnson
- desperately wanted that to be so. He wanted her to be smart
- enough to realize what was happening. To Mitch's way of thinking,
- knowing in advance, foreseeing the possibilities and dreading
- them, were the only things that would place Lani Walker any
- higher on the evolutionary ladder than the dumb little bird he
- had crushed in his fist years earlier.
- Finally, taking a deep breath, he walked up to the door and
- 433
- put his key in the Bounder's custom-made dead bolt. Then he
- opened the door and stepped inside.
- "Honey, I'm home," he called as he pulled the door shut
- behind him.
- While Candace was in the bathroom getting ready to go to
- dinner, Davy paced the room. It wasn't just the ring. It was
- everything. There was a hole in the pit of his stomach. His palms
- were wet. Sweat was already soaking through his clean shirt.
- And the only thing he could think of was that something was
- wrong--terribly wrong--at home.
- Finally, feeling numb, he picked up the phone and dialed.
- His mother answered, sounding annoyed or sleepy, he couldn't
- tell which.
- "Is Lani there?" he asked.
- "She's not home from work yet," Diana said. "And she's
- supposed to go straight from work to a concert with Jessica
- Carpenter. Why, is something wrong?"
- "No," Davy mumbled. "I just wanted to talk to her."
- "What about?" Diana asked. "You sound worried."
- David Ladd's mind raced, trying to find a plausible reason
- 434
- for calling that had nothing to do with what he was feeling. "It's
- a secret," he said, as inspiration struck. "It's about your anniversary
- present. But that's all right. I can talk to her tomorrow."
- "Give me your number," Diana said. "I'll leave her a note
- in case she does come home before the concert."
- Blushing to the roots of his light-blond hair, David Garrison
- KISS OF THE BEES 225
- Ladd looked down at the phone on the nightstand and read his
- mother the number of the Ritz Carlton in Chicago, Illinois. He
- put down the phone praying fervently that Lani wouldn't stop
- by the house before the concert.
- "Who was that?" Candace asked when she came out of the
- bathroom. "I thought I heard you talking to someone on the
- phone."
- "I just called home to give the folks a progress report," he
- lied. "My mother worries about me, and I wanted her to know
- that everything is fine."
- Deputy Fellows was used to working on his own. After Kath
- Kelly left, it took some time for him to get his mind back on
- 435
- the job, but eventually he did. He made plaster casts of what
- footprints he found. He combed the area again, looking for clues.
- And three separate times he retraced the path of the dirt track
- from the place where the attack had taken place to the spot
- where Kath Kelly had found the injured man lying in the dirt.
- It was a long way. Almost a hundred yards. The question
- was why the killer would drag his victim anywhere at all? Eventually
- the answer became clear. The attack had been a reaction
- to being discovered rather than a premeditated crime. As such,
- the attacker didn't view himself as a killer. Rather than finish
- his victim off, he had simply dragged the injured man away, and
- hopefully out of view, expecting nature to take its course.
- That meant that the real crime and also the key to the attacker's
- real intentions and identity had something to do with the
- digging back on the edge of the charco. At four o'clock in the
- afternoon, Brian went back to his truck, took a long drink from
- the last of his water, and collected his shovel. At four-ten, he
- started to dig.
- Digging is a solitary occupation done with an implement that
- has changed little from ancient times to modern. The act of
- 436
- shoving a sharp spade into the dirt and then extracting a heaping
- shovel leaves plenty of time for reflection.
- With the scattered remains of Gina Antone's shrine mere
- feet away from him, pieces of Brian Fellows's own life intruded
- into his thoughts about the case he was working on. Most people
- would have said that Brian came from a "troubled background."
- He had found respite from his half-brothers' constant taunting
- 226 J.A. JANCE
- only at school and during those precious hours when he had
- managed to escaped Janie's chaotic household to spend time at
- the Walker place in Gates Pass.
- As Davy Ladd's faithful shadow, Brian had been welcome in
- places where he never would have been able to venture otherwise.
- He had walked, wide-eyed, into the dimly lit adobe hut
- where a blind medicine man named Looks At Nothing had lain
- confined to a narrow cot. The blind man had been sick, dying
- of a lingering cough, but he had nonetheless continued to smoke
- his strange-smelling cigarettes, lighting them one after another,
- with a cigarette lighter that somehow never once burned his
- fingers.
- 437
- Those Tohono O'othham people--Rita, Looks At Nothing,
- Fat Crack, all of them--had been unfailingly kind to little Brian
- Fellows in a way his own family--mother, stepbrothers, and successive
- "daddies"--never had.
- And now, as he worked in the hot sun with his shovel, he
- felt as though he was protected somehow from the restless spirits
- that Davy Ladd had once told him inhabited this place. He had
- barely come to that conclusion when his shovel bit into something
- hard. Not wanting to break it, he tossed his shovel aside
- and then got down on his knees to dig in the sand by hand.
- Almost immediately, his hand closed around something long
- and smooth and straight. When he pulled whatever it was free
- of the dirt, he saw at once that it was a bone. A leg bone of
- some kind, he thought. Maybe from a weakened cow that had
- once become trapped in the muddy charco and drowned. He
- dug some more and was rewarded with another long bone and
- what looked like a rib of some kind. Up until he found the rib,
- he kept thinking the bones belonged to an animal. The rib, however,
- had a very human look to it. Then his hands closed around
- something round and smooth and hard. The hair rose on the
- 438
- back of his neck. Letting go of the skull, he didn't even bother
- to finish pulling it free of its earthen prison.
- Instead, he climbed out of the hole, walked back to his
- Blazer, and called in. Fortunately, the dispatcher on duty earlier
- had gone home for the day. "Where've you been, Fellows? I was
- about to send someone out looking for you."
- "Great," Brian said. "If you're sending somebody, how about
- a homicide detective? Have him come equipped with shovels
- KISS OF THE BEES 227
- and some water--especially the water. I'm about to die of
- thirst."
- "A homicide detective. Why? What have you got? The last
- I heard you were working on an assault. Did the guy die?"
- "Not as far as I know," Brian Fellows said. "That guy was still alive when they loaded
- him into the helicopter. But somebody else out here is dead as a doornail."
- "Dead?" the dispatcher returned. "Who is it?"
- "How should I know?" Brian answered. "That's why I need
- a homicide detective."
- "I'll get right on it," the dispatcher said. This time Deputy
- Fellows was relatively sure the man meant what he said.
- 439
- It was about time.
- 11
- s
- Jo I'itoi gaye orders to chase the evil ones to the ocean. When
- they reached the shore of what is now the Gulf of California, Great
- Spirit sang a song. As I'itoi sang, the waters were divided, and the
- Bad People rushed in to go to the other side. Then Elder Brother
- called the waters together again, and many of the PaDaj O'othham--the
- Bad People--were drowned, but some reached the other
- side.
- Great Spirit again tried to have his good warriors kill those evil
- ones that had escaped the waters, but the warriors would not. And
- I'itoi--Spirit of Goodness--felt so ashamed that he made himself
- small and came back from the other side through the ground, under
- the water.
- Many of his people returned with I'itoi, but some could not,
- and these were very unhappy, for the PaDaj O'othham who had
- not been destroyed were increasing.
- Then I'itoi's daughter said she would save these good Indians
- who were not happy. She took all the children to the seashore, where
- 440
- they sat down and sang together. This is the song that I'itoi's daughter
- and A'ali--the Children--sang:
- 0 white birds who cross the water,
- 0 white birds who cross the water,
- Help us now to cross the water.
- We want to go with you across the water.
- KISS OF THE BEES 229
- Kohkod--the Seagulls--heard the song. They came down and
- studied I'itoi's daughter and the children. Then Kohkod flew up
- and circled around, singing:
- Take these feathers that we give you
- Take these white feathers that we give you--
- Take the feathers floating round you
- And do not fear to cross the water.
- So the Indians took the white feathers that the seagulls gave
- them. They bound the feathers round their heads and crossed the
- water safely. That is why, nawoj, my friend, the Tohono O'othham
- keep those white feathers--the stoha a'an--very carefully, even
- to this day.
- Candace and David had a beautiful dinner together in the
- 441
- hotel dining room. The champagne Candace ordered was Dom
- Perignon. "It's okay," she said, sending a radiant smile in Davy's
- direction over the top of the wine list. "Daddy said we could
- have whatever we want. It's on him."
- "Exactly how much did Bridget and Larry's wedding set your
- folks back?" David asked once the sommelier left the table.
- Bridget was Candace's next older sister. Her wedding had taken
- place two months before Davy and Candace met.
- Candace shivered. "You don't even want to know," she said.
- "It was a complete circus. She had nine attendants."
- David gulped. "Nine?"
- "The reception was a sit-down dinner for three hundred at
- the club. It was awful. 'Ghastly' is the word Daddy used. He
- was a little drunk before it was all over that night. I remember
- him taking me aside and telling me that night that no matter
- what, he wasn't going to go through that again."
- The waiter returned carrying a champagne bucket. Candace
- winked at Davy. "All Daddy's doing is making good on that
- promise."
- The wine was served with all due ceremony. "I finished reading
- 442
- your mother's book last night," Candace Waverly said over
- the top of her glass a few moments later. "You hardly ever talk
- about that, you know. I remember your saying once that your
- mother was a writer, but until she won that big prize last month,
- 230 J.A. JANCE
- and until Mom saw her on 'The Today Show,' I didn't know
- she was an important writer. My dad only reads boring stuff like
- The Wall Street Journal and Barren's, but still he's dying to meet
- her. So's Mother."
- "She'll probably be in Chicago on tour sometime," David
- said without enthusiasm. "Maybe she can meet your folks then."
- "What do you think of it?"
- "What do I think of what?" David Ladd asked. "Of her
- going on tour? Of her meeting your parents?"
- Candace glared at him in mock exasperation. "No, silly. Of
- her book."
- In fact, like his stepfather, David Ladd had avoided reading
- Shadow of Death like the plague, and for many of the same
- reasons. For the first seven years of his life, Davy had been an
- only child, the son of a woman obsessed by her dream of becoming
- 443
- a writer. In the beginning, maybe Davy hadn't had to contend
- with sibling rivalry as such, but there had always been
- competition for Diana Ladd Walker's attention. All his life
- David had felt as though he was forever relegated to second
- place, first behind Diana's typewriter, and then behind Brandon
- Walker and Lani and a succession of ever smaller computers.
- With that foundation, it wasn't at all surprising that Davy
- regarded his mother's increasing success in the world of writing
- with a certain ambivalence. When it came to Shadow of Death,
- however, ambivalence turned to active abhorrence. He resented
- the idea that his mother would have anything at all to do with
- Andrew Carlisle--with the monster who had single-handedly
- brought so much destruction on the Ladd family. Andrew Carlisle
- was the single individual who bore ultimate responsibility
- for the death and subsequent disgrace of David Ladd's father,
- Garrison. Once released from prison, Carlisle had come back to
- Tucson. In a binge of vengeance, he had brutalized and raped
- David's mother while Davy himself remained imprisoned and
- helpless behind a locked root-cellar door.
- Whatever innocuous words Diana Ladd Walker may have
- 444
- used to tell her side of that story, the one thing they couldn't
- absolve Davy of was the fact that he hadn't helped her. After
- all, what kind of a son wouldn't save his mother? Whenever
- David Ladd thought of those long-ago events, it was always with
- an abiding sense of shame and failure. He had let his mother
- KISS OF THE BEES 231
- down, had somehow forsaken her, leaving her defenseless in her
- hour of need. What could be more shameful than that?
- For years Davy had fantasized about that day. In those imagined
- scenarios, he always emerged from the cellar and did battle
- with the evil Ohb. In those daydreams, Davy Ladd always fought Andrew Carlisle and
- won.
- In writing Shadow of Death, Davy doubted his mother had
- taken his feelings on the subject into account. By reporting what
- happened in a factual manner--and Diana was always factual--
- she had no doubt held up Davy's glaring inadequacy for all the
- world to see. Everyone who read the book--even Candace--
- would know about David Garrison Ladd's terrible failure in the
- face of that awful crisis.
- "I haven't read it," he said after a long interval.
- 445
- Candace looked shocked. "You haven't? Why not?"
- David Ladd thought about that for a minute more before he
- answered, fearing that just talking about it might be enough
- to bring on another panic attack and send his heart racing out
- of control.
- "I guess you had to be there," he said finally. "Maybe my
- mother doesn't mind reliving that day, but I do. I don't ever
- want to be that scared or that powerless again."
- "But you were just a child when it happened, weren't you?"
- Candace objected.
- David nodded. "Six, going on seven," he said.
- "See there?" Candace continued. "You're lucky. Most kids
- never have a chance to see their parents doing something
- heroic."
- "Heroic1." David echoed. "Are you serious? Stupid, maybe,
- but not heroic. She could have had help if she'd wanted to.
- Brandon Walker wasn't my stepfather then, but I'm sure he
- offered to help her, and I'm equally sure she turned him down.
- The other thing she could have done was pack up and go someplace
- else until the cops had the guy back under lock and key."
- 446
- "Still," Candace returned, "she did fight him, and she won.
- He didn't get away with it; he went to prison. So don't call your
- mother stupid, at least not to me. I think she was very brave,
- not only back then--when it happened--but also now, for talking
- about it after all these years and bringing it all out in the
- open."
- Z32 J.A. JANCE
- David didn't want to quarrel with Candace, not in this elegant
- dining room populated by fashionably dressed guests and
- dignified waiters. "I guess we're all entitled to our opinions," he
- waffled, "You can call her brave if you want to. I still say she
- was stubborn."
- Candace grinned. "So you could say that you come by that
- honestly."
- David nodded. "I guess," he said.
- They lingered over dinner for the better part of two hours,
- savoring every morsel. Then they went back up to their room
- and made love. Afterward, Candace fell asleep while Davy lay
- awake, waiting to see if the dream would come again, and worrying
- about what he would do if that happened.
- 447
- How the hell could he be engaged and about to elope, for
- God's sake? He liked Candace well enough, but not that much.
- No way was he in love, and yet her suitcases were all packed
- and waiting by the door. And her father's bribe--her father's
- astonishingly generous twenty-five-thousand-dollar bribe!--was
- safely stashed in the side pocket of Candace Waverly's purse.
- Davy rolled over on his side. Candace stirred beside him,
- sighed contentedly in her sleep, and cuddled even closer. The
- soft curls on her head tickled his nose and made him sneeze.
- All his life David Ladd had pondered the mystery of his
- parents' relationship. He had never met his father. Everything
- he had heard about Garrison Ladd from his mother had been
- steeped in the dregs of Diana's disillusion and hurt. As a teenager,
- David had often asked himself if it was possible that his
- parents had ever loved one another. If not, if they had never
- been in love, why had they gotten married in the first place?
- What had caused them to disregard their basic differences in
- favor of holy matrimony?
- Now, lying next to Candace, he was blessed with an inkling
- of understanding. Perhaps Garrison and Diana had been swept
- 448
- along on a tide of misunderstanding and confusion neither one
- of them had nerve enough to stop. Perhaps they had woken up
- married one day without really intending to. David had read a
- book once called The Accidental Tourist. And now here he was
- about to become an accidental bridegroom.
- And it would happen, too. Candace would see to it. Unless
- KISS OF THE BEES 233
- Davy himself had brains and guts enough to do something to
- stop it.
- David Ladd had been brought up by Rita Antone, by a
- woman raised in a non-confrontational culture. Among the Tohono
- O'othham, yes is always better than no.
- He wondered, as he drifted off to sleep, if someone had told
- Candace Waverly that little secret about him, or if she was simply
- operating on instinct. Probably instinct was the correct answer,
- he thought.
- As far as he could tell, women were like that.
- Mitch hadn't thought that the girl would still be so far out
- of it, but she was. She lay quietly, making hardly any protest
- when he donned a pair of latex gloves and scrubbed her whole
- 449
- body with a rough, sun-baked towel--parts he had touched and
- some parts he hadn't--making sure that no traces of his own
- fingerprints lingered anywhere on her skin.
- It took time to make the tape, asking her leading questions
- in a way that elicited mumbled but predictable answers. By the
- end of that, though, Mitch was concerned that it would soon be
- time to leave for town to keep the date with Quentin. Still Lani
- Walker dozed on and off. That frustrated Mitch no end. What
- he required from her--what he wanted more than anything--
- was awareness and fear. Without those, what he was doing just
- wasn't good enough. He knew he would have to treat her with
- scopolamine once more before they left for town--a much
- lighter dose this time--but in the meantime . . .
- Taking out a pair of rubber-handled kitchen tongs he had
- purchased new for that sole purpose, he laid the metal teeth on
- the burner of the stove, turned on the fire, and set them to heat.
- He didn't take them off the flame until the rubber handles were
- starting to smolder.
- When Mitch returned to the bed, he found Lani Walker
- sleeping peacefully once again. He stood for a moment looking
- 450
- down at her and feeling godlike, observing the smooth skin of
- her body, flawless still, except for those few white marks. He
- had the power to leave that body flawless or to mar it forever.
- There was never any real question of whether or not he would
- do it. There was only one decision left to make--choosing which
- one he would take.
- 234 J.A. JANCE
- "Lani!" he called out sharply. "Lani, wake up."
- The long lashes fluttered open, but the dark eyes that looked
- questioningly up at him were vague and confused. There was
- no still comprehension in them, still no fear.
- "Watch this," he said.
- For ease of use, Mitch had left the tape recorder sitting on
- the floor beside the bed with the controls set on pause. With
- his gloved left hand, he reached down and punched the "record"
- button, then he slammed his good knee into her abdomen. The
- force of the blow sent the wind rushing out of her. Holding her
- pinioned to the bed with the full weight of his body, he clamped
- the scorching teeth of the tongs into the fullness of her right
- breast, an inch and a half on either side of the tender brown
- 451
- nipple.
- Even tied hand and foot, Lani bucked so hard beneath him
- that she almost pitched him off her. He had to grab hold of her
- waist with his free hand to keep from being thrown onto the
- floor. Even that far away, the fierce heat from the searing tongs
- warmed the skin of Mitch's own face. The shockingly sweet
- smell of singeing flesh filled his nostrils.
- It was a magic moment for Mitch. Feeling that naked body
- writhe in agony beneath his was as good as any sex he ever
- remembered. But the best part about it was the scream. That
- was far more than he could have hoped; better than anything
- he had ever imagined. Hearing Lani Walker's shriek of torment,
- it was all Mitch could do to hold back an answering moan of
- his own, one of exquisite pleasure rather than pain.
- At last she lay still beneath him. As soon as she did so, he
- unclasped the tongs. He had to force the metal free from the
- charred skin. Around the wounded flesh, a wave of shocked
- goose bumps slid across her body. Mitch was surprised to see
- them. Who knows? he thought. Maybe it did as much for her as
- it did for me.
- 452
- Reaching down, he quickly switched off the tape before she
- had a chance to say something that might somehow lessen the
- impact of that beautifully unearthly scream. Her sudden stillness
- was so complete that for a moment Mitch was afraid she might
- have fainted, thus depriving him and putting a temporary end
- to his fun. But no, when he looked down, her watery, tear-filled
- KISS OF THE BEES 235
- eyes were wide open, staring up at him in outraged, accusing
- silence.
- Mitch Johnson wanted her to speak to him then, but she did
- not. If nothing else, he would have liked her to beg and plead
- with him not to hurt her again, but she didn't do that, either.
- After that one shrill, involuntary cry, no further sound escaped
- Lani Walker's lips, not even a whimper.
- As the girl studied him, Mitch thought about Eve in the
- Garden of Eden. Like Eve growing beyond her mindless goodness,
- Lani had emerged from the cocoon of her drug-induced
- slumber. Willingly or not, she had now tasted the forbidden
- fruit. The dark, burning eyes she focused on him had been forever
- robbed of their trusting innocence.
- 453
- "Welcome to the real world, babe," Mitch Johnson said,
- then he turned and walked away.
- He held the tongs under running water from the faucet long
- enough to cool them down, until the fierce heat sizzled away,
- first into steam and then into nothing. Once they were cool
- enough, he put them back in the shopping bag they'd come in
- originally. Then he rewound the tape to the beginning, returned
- it to the plastic carrying case, and put that in the bag as well.
- This one's for you, Andy, he thought. It's a promise I made
- and one I kept. Somehow I doubt Diana Ladd Walker will like it
- as much as you would. In fact, she won't like it at all, but it's
- something she and Brandon Walker will never forget, not as long
- as they live.
- The pain was so blindingly intense that for a time Lani wasn't
- aware of anything else. The whole universe seemed centered in
- the seared flesh of her wounded breast. It overwhelmed her
- whole being. There were no words that encompassed that awful
- hurt, no thoughts that made such inhuman cruelty understandable.
- At last, though, through her unseeing anguish, Lani became
- aware of the man standing over her, aware of his eyes pressing
- 454
- in on her and of her nakedness under that invasive gaze. She
- squirmed, as if hoping to escape that look, but the scarves binding
- her hands and legs held her fast. The only way to combat
- that look was to stare back at him, holding his gaze with her
- own.
- Z36 J.A. JANCE
- Studying him, she was suddenly aware that he wanted something
- more from her, as if what he had already taken wasn't
- enough; as if he longed for something else in order to achieve
- real satisfaction.
- Trying to imagine what that could be somehow took her
- mind away from the searing pain arcing through her body like
- the burning blue flash of her father's welding torch. And then,
- as clearly as if she had read his thoughts, she knew. Standing
- there, clothed in his presumed superiority, he was waiting for
- her to speak, to say something. It was almost as though he
- needed her to acknowledge his brutality and then bow before it.
- Her only weapon was to deny him that satisfaction. She kept
- quiet, biting her lips to hold them together. After a long moment,
- he melted out of her line of vision, leaving her to ride
- 455
- out the terrible pain alone and in utter silence.
- But somehow she wasn't alone. The vision came surging at
- her out of the past the moment she closed her eyes.
- Lani was five years old again, standing naked in front of the
- mirror in her parents' bathroom. She had pawed through her
- mother's makeup and found the tube of concealer, the white
- lipstick-looking stuff Diana sometimes put under her eyes before
- she applied her other makeup.
- Carefully, looking down at her body rather than watching
- her reflection in the mirror, Lani drew a perfect pair of halfmoons
- on her flat chest, encircling the little brown knob of flesh
- that would someday grow into a nipple.
- Then, pulling on her nightgown, she went racing through the
- house. She wanted to show someone her handiwork, but her
- parents were out. Instead, she went searching for Rita Antone.
- She found Nana Dahd in her room at the back of the house,
- working on a basket.
- "Look," Lani crowed, pulling up her nightgown. "Look at
- what I did. Now I can be just like Mommy."
- Rita's face had gone strangely pale and rigid the moment she
- 456
- saw the circle Lani had drawn on her body.
- "Go wash," she ordered, in a terrible voice Lani Walker had
- never heard before. "Go wash that off. Do not do it again!
- Ever!"
- "But why can't I be like Mommy?" she had said later, after
- she had showered for a second time. Once again dressed for bed,
- KISS OF THE BEES 257
- she had come back to Nana Dahd's room to say good night and
- hoping to make some sense of what had happened.
- "Shhhh," Nana Dahd had told her. "Your mother looks like
- that because the evil Ohb did something to her. Because he hurt
- her. You shouldn't say such things. Someone might hear you
- and make it happen."
- Now someone had. s .
- Lani's eyes came open. The pain wasn't any less. If anything,
- it was worse. She looked down at the angry welt of seared flesh.
- It was red now and blistered, but someday it, too, would be a
- pale white scar, almost the same as the one that encircled the
- nipple on her mother's right breast.
- And that was the moment when, without being able to say
- 457
- how, Lani knew this was the same thing. Lani had learned from
- reading her mother's book that Andrew Carlisle had been
- blinded and terribly disfigured by the bacon grease Diana Ladd
- had thrown at him. And she remembered a few weeks earlier,
- when her mother had told her father at dinner that it had said
- in the paper that Andrew Carlisle was dead.
- Mr. Vega had worn his hair long and in a ponytail when he
- had been out on the mountain, painting. This man's hair was
- very short. He was neither blind nor disfigured, but he was
- somehow connected to the evil Ohb.
- Knowing that, Lani had a blueprint of what to do.
- "I'm going to untie you now."
- Once again the man was standing over her. "Actually, 'untie'
- isn't the word. Do you see this knife?"
- In one hand he held a long narrow knife. The blade was
- very long and it looked sharp. "I'm going to cut you loose,"
- he continued. "If you don't behave, I'll use it on you. Do you
- understand?"
- Lani nodded again.
- "All right then."
- 458
- One at a time, he cut through the strands of silk that had
- held her captive. As soon as he set her limbs free, the pins and
- needles in her arms and legs--the cramps in her shoulders and
- hips--were bad enough that the new pain took some of Lani's
- attention away from the pulsing throb in her breast.
- "Get up now," he ordered.
- 238 J.A. JANCE
- She tried to stand and then fell back on the low bed with a
- jarring thud. "I can't," she said. "My legs are asleep."
- "Well, sit there, then." He turned away for a moment and
- came back holding out a cup. "Drink some of this," he said,
- sounding almost solicitous. "That must hurt, and maybe this will
- help deaden the pain."
- Lani had figured out by then that he must have drugged her,
- that he must have put something in the orange juice she had
- drunk that morning or whenever it was when she was supposedly
- posing for him. And if he had drugged her once, no doubt
- he was going to do it again.
- She reached up as if to take the cup. Instead of taking it,
- though, she slapped it out of his hand, gasping with pain at the
- 459
- shock of the cold water slicing across her burned flesh, searing
- it anew.
- "Why, you goddamned bitch]" he muttered. "There's still
- some fight left in you, isn't there. But believe me, there's plenty
- more where that came from."
- He walked as far as the kitchen. She saw him pouring something
- into a fresh cup of water, then he came back. This time,
- before he gave her the cup, he knotted his other hand into the
- hair at the back of her neck, yanking her head backward.
- "This time you'll drink it like a good girl, or I'll hold you
- down and pour the stuff down your goddamned throat. Got it?"
- She nodded.
- He placed the cup in her hand, and this time she drank it
- down. When she gave it back to him, he checked to make sure
- it was empty.
- "That's better," he said. "You swallowed every drop. Here
- are your clothes now. Get dressed."
- Concerned about fingerprints, he had rinsed out her clothing
- earlier that morning, but hadn't bothered to dry them. How
- could he? He didn't have a dryer, and if he had hung them on
- 460
- the clothesline, someone might have noticed. They were still a
- sodden lump when he tossed them into her lap.
- "I can't wear these," she said. "They're wet."
- "So? This isn't a fucking Chinese laundry," he told her. "Go
- naked if you want to. It sure as hell doesn't matter to me.
- After a struggle, she finally managed to pull on the jeans.
- The shirt hurt desperately whenever it touched the burned spot
- KISS OF THE BEES 239
- on her breast, but at least the man couldn't look at her anymore.
- Without further protest she pulled on the wet socks and forced
- on the boots.
- "Come on now," he said impatiently. "Off we go."
- With her legs shaking beneath her, she staggered across the room. A few feet away,
- she stopped beside the easel. There in front of her was a picture--a picture that
- was undeniably of her.
- Mr. Vega saw her stop beside the picture and look. "Well,"
- he said. "What do you think? Is this the kind of thing you had
- in mind for your parents' anniversary present?"
- "Tohntomthadag1." she said.
- "You were talking Indian, weren't you," he observed. "What
- do those words mean?"
- 461
- Lani Walker shook her head. She never had told Danny Jenkins
- that s-koshwa means "stupid." Not caring what he might
- do to her, she didn't tell Mr. Vega that in Tohono O'othham, the
- single word she had spoken, tohntomthadag, means "pervert."
- In the forty minutes between the time Brian Fellows called
- Dispatch for assistance and the arrival of the detective, Brian
- stayed in the Blazer. Working on a metal clipboard, he started
- constructing the necessary paper trail of the incident. He began
- with the call summoning him to assist Kath Kelly and had
- worked his way up to unearthing the bones when he realized
- how stupid he was. Rattlesnake Skull, the ancient village that
- had once been near the charco, had been deserted for a long
- time, but it had probably been inhabited for hundreds of years
- before that. It made sense, then, that there would be nothing so
- very surprising about finding a set of human remains in that
- general area. In fact, it was possible there were dozens more
- right around there.
- Brian Fellows was still considered a novice as far as the Pima
- County Sheriffs Department was concerned. He cringed at how
- that kind of mistake might be viewed by some of the department's
- 462
- more hard-boiled homicide dicks, none of whom would
- be thrilled at the idea of being dragged away from a Saturdayafternoon
- poolside barbecue to investigate a corpse that turned
- out to be two or three hundred years old.
- Brian was putting together his backpedal routine when a
- dusty gray departmental Ford Taurus pulled up beside him.
- 240 J.A. JANCE
- When the burly shape of a cigar-chomping detective climbed
- out of the driver's seat, Brian breathed a sigh of relief. Clan
- Leggett. Of all the detectives Brian might have drawn, Clan Leggett
- would have been his first choice. Clan was one of the oldtimers,
- someone who had been around for a long time. Clan had
- grown up in law enforcement under Brandon Walker's leadership.
- He had a reputation for doing a thorough, professional job.
- Tossing his clipboard to one side, Brian clambered out of the
- Blazer and hurried forward to meet the man.
- "So what have you got here, Deputy Fellows?" Leggett
- asked. He handed Brandon a plastic water jug and then paused
- to light a half-smoked cigar while Brian gulped a long drink.
- "Dispatch tells me they sent you out here to investigate a dead
- 463
- steer," he continued once the cigar was lit. "They claim you
- turned that steer into first a beating and now a homicide."
- "I never said it was a homicide," Brian corrected, hoping to
- salvage a smidgeon of pride. "And it isn't even a whole body. I
- dug up some human bones is all. If it turns out to be some
- Indian who's been dead a few hundred years, you'll probably
- think I'm a complete idiot."
- "Suppose you show me where these bones are and let me
- take a look for myself. Afterward, depending on the results, we
- can take a vote on Deputy Brian Fellows's powers of observation
- and general reliability."
- "This way," Brian said. He led Detective Leggett over to his
- small collection of previously unearthed skeletal remains.
- "There's a skull down there too," the young deputy said. "Down
- there, toward the far end of the hole. As soon as I realized what
- it was, I left it there for fear of destroying evidence."
- Leggett blew out a cloud of smoke, held the cigar so he was
- downwind of both the cigar and the smoke and upwind of the
- bones. He stood there for a moment, sniffing the air. Finally, he
- stuffed the cigar back in his mouth.
- 464
- "Thank God whoever it is has been dead long enough that
- he or she doesn't stink," he said. Reaching into his pocket, he
- pulled out a second cigar and offered it to Brian. "Care for a
- smoke?" he asked.
- Brian shook his head. "No, thanks," he said.
- Leggett shrugged and stuffed the cigar back in his pocket.
- "Just wait," he said. "If you're in the dead-body business long
- KISS OF THE BEES 241
- enough, you'll figure out that there are times when nothing beats
- a good cigar. At least, that's what I keep telling my wife."
- Clearly amused by his own joke, Leggett was still chuckling
- as he pulled on a pair of disposable latex gloves and then
- dropped to his hands and knees in the dirt. Chomping down on
- the lit cigar, he held it firmly in place while he used both hands
- to paw away loose sand. Brian kept his mouth shut and watched
- from the sidelines.
- It wasn't long before Clan Leggett picked up a small piece
- of bone and tossed it casually onto the pile with the others.
- "Looks like a finger to me," he mumbled.
- Still saying nothing, Brian waited anxiously for Leggett to
- 465
- locate the skull. Eventually he did, pulling it out of the dirt and
- then holding it upside down while sand and pebbles drained out
- through the gaping holes that had once been eyes and nose.
- When the skull was finally empty, Clan Leggett examined it for
- some time without saying a word. Finally, with surprising delicacy,
- he set it down on the ground beside the hole, then he
- stood for another long moment, staring at it thoughtfully while
- he took several leisurely puffs on his cigar.
- Brian Fellows found the long silence difficult to bear, but he
- didn't say a word. Lowly deputies--especially ones who intend
- to survive in the law enforcement game--learn early on the importance
- of keeping their mouths shut in the presence of toughguy
- homicide detectives. Finally, Leggett looked up at Brian and
- gave him a yellow-toothed grin.
- "Well, Deputy Fellows," Leggett said, "it looks to me like
- you're in the clear on this one." He knocked a chunk of ash off
- the end of the cigar, but Brian noticed he was careful none of
- it landed in the hole or on any of the recently disturbed dirt
- around it.
- Brian had been holding his breath. Slowly he let it out. "Why
- 466
- do you say that?" he asked.
- "Because, if this guy had been dead for a couple hundred
- years, I doubt his head would have five or six silver fillings. I
- doubt the Indians who lived around here back then were much
- into modern dentistry."
- "No," Brian agreed. "I suppose not. Can you tell what
- killed him?"
- Leggett shook his head. "Much too soon to tell," he said.
- 244 J.A. JANCE
- "Smarts, does it, little girl?" he asked.
- The Bounder was air-conditioned; the Subaru had been sitting
- in the afternoon sun. The interior of the box was stifling as
- he heaved her inside, sending her body sprawling along the
- rough, splintery bottom. There were ventilation holes in the
- sides--that was, after all, the point of the thing. He put canvases
- inside it to dry. That meant that once he turned on the airconditioning
- in the car, the temperature inside the box would
- reduce some, too. Enough to keep her from croaking, most
- likely. Not enough for her to be comfortable.
- Mitch had slammed the tailgate shut and was headed for the
- 467
- driver's seat in the Subaru when he saw a set of blue flashing
- lights snaking across the desert floor from Tucson. His heart
- went to his throat. A damned cop car1. Surely they hadn't already
- discovered the girl was missing. How could they?
- Close to panic, he almost had a heart attack when the car
- slowed at the turn-off to Coleman Road and then again as the
- pair of headlights came speeding toward him. By then he could
- hear the siren wailing through the still desert air.
- What the hell do I do now? he wondered. Really, there wasn't
- any choice. He would have to gut it out. Bluff like hell and
- hope for the best, but in the meantime, he started the engine
- on the Subaru and then turned on both the radio and the air
- conditioner at full blast. That way, if the girl was still aware
- enough to make any noise, chances were the cop wouldn't
- hear her.
- Moments later, with his heart pounding in his throat, he saw
- the headlights take a sharp turn to the left a mile or so north
- of where the Bounder was parked. He could still see the blue
- lights flashing, but behind them there was only the pale red glow
- of taillights.
- 468
- "Whewl" Mitch said aloud. "I don't know what the hell that
- was all about, but it was too damn close for comfort."
- Wanda and Fat Crack were getting ready to go to the dance
- at Little Tucson. They had always enjoyed going to summertime
- dances, although Wanda liked it less now than she had before
- her husband's elevation to tribal chairman. Before when they
- went to dances, they danced. Now, often as not, she was left to
- KISS OF THE BEES ZA5
- dance with one of her sons or grandsons while Gabe went about
- the never-ending business of politicking.
- "Did you tell her yet?" Wanda asked, as she watched Gabe
- fasten the snaps on his cowboy shirt.
- They hadn't been talking about Delia Cachora, but Fat Crack
- knew at once who and what Wanda was asking about. Wanda
- had disapproved of his bringing Delia back to the reservation,
- after thirty years away, to take on the assignment of tribal
- attorney.
- "We need somebody who knows how to go head-to-head
- with all those Washington BIA bureaucrats," Gabe had told his
- wife back then while the tribal council was wrangling over the
- 469
- decision. "If she can handle those guys, she can take on Pima
- County and the State of Arizona."
- As Gabe expected, Delia Chavez Cachora did fine when it
- came to dealing with Mil-gahn paper-pushers. Where she fell
- short of the mark was in relating to the people back home, the
- ones who had never left the reservation. And that was part of
- the reason Fat Crack had hired David Ladd to serve as her intern.
- Schooled by Gabe's Aunt Rita and old Looks At Nothing,
- Davy had forgotten more about being a Tohono O'othham than
- Delia Cachora could ever hope to know.
- When Gabe didn't answer, Wanda knew she was right.
- "You'd better tell her pretty soon," she warned. "Davy's supposed
- to be here next week, isn't he? She may be real mad
- when she finds out."
- Looking in the mirror, Gabe slipped a turquoise-laden bola
- tie on over his head. He sighed as he pulled it tight under his
- double chin. "You're right," he said. "She'll be mad as hell.
- Maybe I'll tell her tonight, if I have a chance. If she's there.
- That way she'll have time to get used to the idea before Monday
- when I have to see her at work."
- 470
- The shrug Wanda sent in her husband's direction as well as
- the derisive look said as clearly as if she had spoken that Wanda
- Ortiz didn't think Delia Cachora would be over the issue of
- Davy Ladd anytime soon.
- "She'll be at the dance, all right," Wanda told her husband.
- "If her Aunt Julia has anything to say about it, Delia will be
- working in the feast house."
- * * *
- 246 J.A. JANCE
- The painful shock of scraping along the rough wooden floor
- shattered Lani's druggy haze and brought her back to agonizing
- awareness. But it's better to hurt, she thought. At least that way
- I know what's going on.
- The blindfold had caught on a splinter of wood and had been
- pulled loose as she slid across the floor. When she realized the''
- scarf was gone and opened her eyes, she knew it was daylight
- from the light leaking in through the ventilation holes. The inte.
- rior of the box felt like a heated oven. Moments later, a car
- engine started and she could feel a tiny breath of cool air blowing
- across her damp clothing. The car started, but for some time it
- 471
- didn't move.
- There in the dark and alone, without the man watching her
- and gloating, there was no need to hold back the tears. Lying
- flat on her back, she gave in to both the pain and to her growing
- despair, letting the tears flow. She couldn't understand why this
- calamity had befallen her, or what she could do about it.
- Somehow, in her aching grief, Lani raised one hand to her
- throat. There, beneath her fingers, she felt the smooth, woven
- surface of the basket, the o'othham wopo hashda she had made
- from her own hair and from Jessie's.
- What if her hair charm, her kushpo ho'oma, fell into the
- hands of this new evil Ohb? Lani had woven the maze, the
- ancient sacred symbol of her people, into the face of the medallion.
- It was bad enough that Mr. Vega had copied the basket
- onto that awful picture of his, the one he had drawn of her
- while she slept, but Lani was suddenly determined that, no matter
- what, he would not have the basket itself.
- Struggling in the dark, she worked desperately to unfasten
- the safety pin that kept the woven brooch on the slender gold
- chain. Even as her fingers struggled with the pin, Lani could feel
- 472
- the drug cloud begin to wrap itself around her, dulling her senses
- at the same time it soothed the terrible throbbing of her
- wounded breast.
- She fought the drug with all the resources she could muster.
- And even though she couldn't hold it off forever, she did manage
- to keep it at bay long enough to slip the precious woven disk
- into the safety of her jeans pocket.
- Only then did she give in and let the enveloping sleep overtake
- her. Whatever the drug was, Lani hated it because it had
- KISS OF THE BEES 247
- made her helpless and turned her into a victim. At the same
- time, she loved it, too, because while she slept, the searing band
- of pain that was now her right breast no longer hurt her. The
- drug put her mind to sleep and the pain as well.
- Her last waking thought was that Mr. Vega was right. The
- drug was awful, but it did help.
- David Ladd fought his way up out of the nightmare with the
- awful scream still ringing in his ears. Throwing off the covers, he
- sat up in bed, shaking all over and gasping for breath.
- "David1" Startled out of a sound sleep, Candace sat up in
- 473
- bed beside him. "For God's sake, what's the matter?"
- "It was a dream," he managed, through chattering teeth, but
- already the punishing heartbeat was pounding in his head and
- chest. Another attack was coming. Helplessly, he fell back on
- the pillows.
- Scrambling out of bed, Candace reached for the phone. "I'll
- call a doctor."
- "No, please. Don't do that," Davy begged.
- "But David ..."
- "Please. Just wait1 It'll go away in a few minutes. Please."
- He held out one trembling hand. Reluctantly, Candace put
- down the phone and grasped his hand. With a worried frown
- on her face, she settled back down on the bed beside him. For
- the next several minutes she leaned over him, murmuring words
- he could barely hear or understand but ones that somehow comforted
- him nonetheless. Eventually the terriBed beating of his
- heart began to slow. When his breathing finally steadied, he was
- able to speak.
- "I'm sorry, Candace. I didn't mean for you to . . ."
- Realizing that the immediate crisis was past, her solicitous
- 474
- concern turned to a sudden blast of anger. "So what are you on,
- David Garrison Ladd?" she demanded. "Crack? Speed? LSD?
- All this time you've had me fooled. I never would have guessed
- that you did drugs."
- "But I don't," David protested. "I swear to God1"
- "Don't give me that," she snapped back at him. "I've been
- around enough druggies in my life to know one when I see one."
- "Candace, please. It's nothing like that. You've got to believe
- me. This has been happening to me for weeks now, every time
- ZA8 J.A. JANCE
- I go to sleep. First there's an awful dream and then--" He broke
- off, ashamed.
- "And then what?" she demanded.
- "You saw what happens. My heart beats like it's going to
- jump out of my body. I can't breathe. I come out of it soaked
- with sweat. The first time it happened I thought I was having a
- heart attack. I thought I was going to die."
- "You should see a doctor," Candace said.
- "I did. He told me I was having panic attacks. He said they
- were brought on by stress and that eventually I'd get over
- 475
- them."
- "I've heard about panic attacks before," Candace said. "One
- of the girls in the dorm used to have them. Isn't there something
- you can take?"
- "Nothing that wouldn't be dangerous on a cross-country
- drive," David told her. "All of the recommended medications
- turn out to be tranquilizers of some kind."
- "Oh," Candace said. "And how long has this been going
- on?"
- "For a couple of weeks now, I guess," David admitted
- sheepishly.
- "And why didn't you tell me before this?"
- David shrugged his shoulders. "I was embarrassed. I didn't
- know what you'd think about me if I told you."
- "And it's always the same thing? First the dream and then
- the panic attack?"
- "Yes," David said, "pretty much, but ..." The rest of the
- sentence disappeared as he gazed off into space.
- "But what?"
- David swallowed. His voice dropped. Candace had to strain
- 476
- to hear him. "I used to dream about the day Andrew Carlisle
- came to the house and attacked Mother. But now the dreams
- are different."
- "Different how?"
- "Different because Lani is in them. At the time all that happened,
- Lani wasn't even born. This one was different, and it was
- the worst one yet."
- Getting up off the bed, David walked over to the window
- and stared outside at Chicago's nighttime skyline. He stood there
- in isolation, his shoulders hunched, looking defeated.
- KISS OF THE BEES 249
- "You said this dream was worse than the others," Candace
- said. "Tell me about it."
- David shook his head and didn't speak.
- "Please tell me," Candace urged, her voice gentler than it
- had been. "Please."
- David shuddered before he answered. "I was certain the first
- attack was over," he said at last. "Mother was in the kitchen
- because I could already smell the bacon cooking. Burning, really.
- Then the door to the cellar fell open, just the way it always
- 477
- does in the dream, except this time, the room was empty except
- for Bone, my dog. He was there in the kitchen, licking up the
- bacon grease, but the house itself was quiet and empty, as
- though everybody had left."
- "Where did they go?"
- Davy swallowed. "I'm coming to that. I called Bone to come,
- and the two of us went from room to room, trying to figure out
- where everybody had gone. I checked every room but there was
- nobody to be found, until the last one, Lani's. They were in
- there, Lani and the evil Ohb. He had her on the bed and he
- was--"
- Davy broke off and didn't continue.
- "He was raping her?" Candace supplied.
- Davy shook his head. "I don't know. I couldn't see. All I
- know is he was hurting her, and she was screaming." He put
- his hands over his ears as though Lani's scream were still assailing
- them. "It was awful."
- "It was a dream," Candace said firmly. "Forget it. Come
- back to bed."
- "But Rita, our baby-sitter, always said that dreams mean
- 478
- something. When I was a freshman in high school, I went out
- for JV football. One day Lani was taking a nap and she woke
- up crying, saying that I was hurt. Mom was trying to tell her it
- was nothing but a dream when the school nurse called to say
- that she thought my ankle was broken and that Mom needed to
- come pick me up."
- "You're saying you think Lani might be hurt?"
- Davy shook his head. "I don't know what I'm saying. All I
- know is, that scream was the worst thing I've ever heard."
- "She never called us back tonight, did she?" Candace said
- thoughtfully.
- 250 J.A. JANCE
- Davy shook his head. "No," he said. "She didn't."
- "So let's try again." Ever practical, Candace sat up in bed,
- plucked the telephone receiver out of its cradle and handed it
- over to Davy. "It's only a little after nine there," she said matterof-factly.
- "Maybe somebody will be home by now. What's the
- number?" she said.
- Grateful beyond measure that Candace hadn't simply dismissed
- 479
- him as crazy, David Ladd held the phone to his ear while
- she dialed, then he waited while it rang. "The damned machine
- again," he said finally, handing the receiver back to her. "Go
- ahead and hang up."
- "Leave another message," Candace ordered. "Tell Lani or
- your parents, either one, to call you back as soon as they get
- home."
- Eventually the beep sounded in his ear. "Hi, Mom and Dad,"
- he said. "I'm still trying to get hold of Lani, but I guess nobody's
- home. Give me a call. You already have the number. Bye."
- He put down the phone. Candace was looking up at him.
- "Better?" she said.
- David nodded.
- "Lie back down, then."
- He did as he was told. Moments later Candace snuggled
- close, her naked leg against his, her fingers brushing delicately
- across the hair of his chest.
- "Whatever happened to Bone?" she asked. "I've read your
- mother's book, but I don't remember her saying what happened
- to the dog."
- 480
- "Poor old Oh'o," Davy said. "I haven't thought of him for
- years. When we first moved to Gates Pass he was my only friend
- and playmate. Nana Dahd always used to say that the first word
- I spoke was goks--dog--the day she brought him home as a
- gangly puppy."
- "What kind of dog was he?"
- "A mutt, I'm sure. He looked a lot like an Irish wolfhound--
- he was that big, long-haired, and scraggly--but he could jump
- like a deer."
- "What was it you called him again?"
- "Oh'o. In Papago ... in Tohono O'othham . . . that means
- bone. And that's what he was when Rita first brought him home,
- skin and bones. But he was a great dog."
- KISS OF THE BEES Z51
- "What did he die of?"
- "Old age, I guess. The year I turned thirteen. His kidneys
- gave out on him. My friend Brian Fellows and I carried him up
- the mountain behind the house and buried him among the rocks
- where the three of us all used to play hide-and-seek. Bone always
- loved being It."
- 481
- "I guess he really messed up the guy's arm. His wrist,
- anyway."
- "Andrew Carlisle's wrist?"
- Candace nodded. "From what your mother said in the book,
- when you let him into the kitchen, he went after the guy tooth
- and nail."
- "He did?"
- "Yup. He wrecked it. She talked about that in one of the
- scenes that takes place in the prison, about how when she saw
- him again after all those years, his face was all scarred up from
- the bacon grease. She talked about his arm then, too, about how
- he had to wear it in a sling."
- "Well, I'll be damned," David Ladd said. "I never knew that
- before, or if I did, I've forgotten."
- Slowly, almost unthinkingly, Candace's fingers began to
- stroke the inside of Davy's thigh. "Stick with me, pal," she said.
- "I'll teach you everything I know."
- She seduced him then, because she thought he needed it.
- Because it was the middle of the night and because they were
- both awake and young and had the stamina to do it more than
- 482
- once a night. Afterward, as David Garrison Ladd drifted off into
- the first really restful sleep he'd had in weeks, he felt as though,
- for the first time in his life, he had made love.
- 12
- Y
- ou will remember, nawoj, that when I'itoi divided the water and
- saved his people, the Tohono O'othham, from the Bad People,
- some of the PaDaj O'othham escaped.
- Now these Bad People lived in the south, and they were very
- lazy. They were too lazy to plant their own fields, so they came into
- the Land of the Desert People and tried to steal their cropstheir
- wheat, corn, and beans, their pumpkins and melons.
- The Tohono 0''othham fought these Bad People and drove them
- away, but after a time, the beans and corn which the Bad People
- had stolen were all gone. The PaDaj O'othham were hungry again.
- They knew the Desert People were guarding their fields, so they
- decided to try a new way to steal the crops.
- Near the village Gurii Put VoDead Man's Pondwhich we
- now call San Miguel, the corn in the fields was ready to harvest.
- One morning HawaniCrowwho was sitting in a tree, saw the
- 483
- Bad People coming up out of the ground and begin cutting the grain.
- Crow was so astonished that he called out, "Caw, caw, caw1."
- This made the people who were living on the edge of the field look
- up. When they saw their crop disappearing into the ground, they
- cried out for help.
- U'uwhigthe Birdscarried the call for help because the Desert
- People were always good to the Da'a O'othhamthe Flying
- Peopleand never let them go hungry or thirsty. And very soon the
- Indians gathered and drove the Bad People back into the ground.
- KISS OF THE BEES ZH
- But the bean fields were trampled, and the corn was badly
- damaged.
- It was almost dark before the relief deputy showed up. Detective
- Leggett parked him in the middle of the road about
- twenty yards from the charco. "You stay right here," he said. "I
- don't want anyone coming up and down this road until we can
- get a crime scene team in here tomorrow morning. You got
- that?"
- "Got it," the deputy said.
- By the time Clan Leggett and Brian Fellows grabbed a bite
- 484
- of dinner and then turned up at TMC, Manuel Chavez had
- already been wheeled off to surgery. The clerk on the surgery
- wing was happy to glean that one bit of information, that John
- Doe now had a name. She called the information back down
- to Admitting.
- "That John Doe who just went into surgery is from Sells,"
- she told someone over the phone. "That means he's Indian instead
- of Hispanic, so you might want to update your records."
- The clerk covered the mouthpiece with her hand and turned a
- questioning look on Clan Leggett.
- "Has anyone notified the family?"
- Clan shook his head. "Not yet."
- "Are you going to?"
- "We're trying," Detective Leggett told her, then he looked
- at Brian. "I'm going outside to have a smoke," he said. "Since
- you're the guy who told me you speak Tohono O'othham, you
- can do the honors."
- Obligingly Brian Fellows stood up and went in search of the
- nearest pay phone. He placed a call to the Tohono O'othham
- tribal police and spoke to an officer named Larry Garcia who
- 485
- spoke English just fine.
- "Sure, we know Manny Chavez," Larry told Brian Fellows.
- "What's he done now?"
- "Somebody beat him up pretty badly," Brian replied. "He's
- in surgery at TMC right now. Can you guys handle next-of-kin
- notification?"
- "We'll try," Larry said. "He's got both a daughter and a son.
- We should be able to find one of them. What's your name
- again?"
- 254 J.A. JANCE
- "Brian Fellows. I'm a deputy with Pima County. I'll be here
- at the hospital for a while longer. Let me know if you locate
- someone, would you?"
- "Sure thing," Larry said. "No problem. Give me your
- number."
- Brian gave him the surgical clerk's extension, then went outside
- and found Detective Leggett stationed beside an overflowing
- breezeway ashtray, smoking one of his smelly cigars.
- "What's the scoop?" he asked. "Any luck?"
- "The tribal police are working on it," Brian replied. "They'll
- 486
- let us know."
- "I've been standing out here thinking," Clan Leggett said.
- "When you first contacted me, we thought the guy was digging
- up some kind of artifact. Maybe poor Manny Chavez made the
- same mistake. For the time being, let's assume, instead, that the
- first guy was burying something, specifically that pile of bones.
- Why would somebody go to all the trouble of doing that?"
- "Because he had something to hide," Brian offered.
- ' 'And what might that be? Maybe our grave digger had something
- to do with the first guy's crushed skull. Think about it.
- We're talking the same MO as with Manny Chavez. Whack 'em
- upside the head until they fall over dead."
- Brian nodded. "That makes sense," he said.
- "So we've for sure got assault with intent on this gravedigging
- guy and maybe even an unknown and consequently unsolved
- homicide thrown in for good measure. That being the
- case, I'm not going to let this thing sit until morning. I'm going
- to go back out to the department and raise a little hell. I asked
- for a crime scene investigation team for tonight, but all I got
- was a deputy to secure the scene and the old 'too much overtime'
- 487
- song and dance. I want faster action than that. If I play
- my cards right, I'll be able to get it. In the meantime, you hang
- around here and wait for the next of kin. Once they show up,
- get whatever information you can, but if the doc says we can
- talk to Manny himself, you call me on the double."
- "Will do," Brian replied.
- He went back into the waiting room and settled down on
- one of the molded-plastic chairs. While he sat there and waited
- for one or the other of Manny Chavez's kids to show up, Brian
- finished filling out his paper. As he worked his way down the
- KISS OF THE BEES 255
- various forms, Brian was once again grateful that Clan Leggett
- had taken the call. The deputy was glad not only for his own
- sake, but also for the sake of Manny Chavez's unnotified relatives,
- whoever they might be. There were plenty of detectives
- in Bill Forsythe's sheriffs department who wouldn't have given
- a damn about somebody going around beating up Indians--
- plenty who wouldn't have lifted a finger about it.
- Fortunately for all concerned, Clan Leggett wasn't one of
- those. He was treating the assault on Manny Chavez as the serious
- 488
- crime it was--a Class 1 felony. Not only that, Brian thought
- with a smile, the investigation Clan was bent on doing would
- no doubt necessitate interviewing everyone involved. Including
- a good-looking Border Patrol agent named Kath Kelly.
- Time passed. Brian lost track of how long. He was sitting
- there almost dozing when the clerk woke him up, saying there
- was a phone call for him.
- "Deputy Fellows?" Larry Garcia asked.
- "That's right."
- "I just had a call from one of my officers. He's on his way
- to Little Tucson. There's a dance out there tonight. We're pretty
- sure Delia Cachora, Manny's daughter, will be there. Once they
- find her, it'll take an hour or more for them to get her into
- town. Will you still be there, at the hospital?"
- Detective Leggett had given Deputy Fellows his marching
- orders. "Most likely," Brian told him. "Have her ask for me."
- Quentin Walker was more than half lit and still in the bar
- at seven o'clock when Mitch Johnson finally showed up at El
- Gato Loco. Among the low-brow workingmen that constituted
- El Gate's clientele, the well-dressed stranger sporting a pair of
- 489
- dark sunglasses stuck out like a sore thumb.
- "You're late," Quentin said accusingly, swinging around on
- the barstool as Mitch sidled up beside him.
- "Sorry," Mitch returned. "I was unavoidably detained. I
- thought you said you'd be waiting out front."
- "I was for a while, but it was too hot and I got too thirsty
- waiting outside. Want a drink?"
- "Sure."
- "Well, order one for me, too. I've gotta go take a leak."
- The beer was there waiting on the counter when Quentin
- Z56 J.A. JANCE
- returned frorn the bathroom. Corning back down the bar, Quentin
- tried to walk straight and control his boozy stagger. He didn't
- want Mitch to realize how much he'd already been drinking, to
- say nothing of why. Quentin still couldn't quite believe he had
- killed that damned nosy Indian, but he had, all because he had
- walked up and caught Quentin red-handed with Tommy's bones
- right there in front of God and everybody.
- Now, Quentin was looking at two potential murder charges
- instead of one. Jesus! How had that happened to him? How
- 490
- could he have screwed up that badly? The one thing he didn't
- want to lose sight of, though, was how much the money from
- those damned pots would mean to him now.
- Nobody knew Quentin Walker owned a car. It would take
- days, weeks, maybe, for all the paperwork to make its way
- through official channels. With a proper vehicle and a grubstake
- of running money, Quentin might even be able to make it into
- the interior of Mexico. He could leave via that gate on the reservation,
- the one he had heard so much about from Davy and
- Brian. It was supposed to be an unofficial border crossing where
- Indians whose lands had been cut in half by the Gadsden Purchase
- could go back and forth without the formality of border
- guards of any kind.
- When Mitch Johnson had first shown up with his offer to
- buy the pots, Quentin had been intrigued more than interested.
- Now, though, that very same offer of money was of vital importance.
- The last thing Quentin wanted to do was to Spock Mitch
- into calling the whole thing off. If Mitch walked away, taking
- with him those five bills with Grover Cleveland's mug shot on
- them, then Quentin Walker could be left high and dry, without
- 491
- the proverbial pot to piss in. He would have no money and
- nowhere to run, and he'd be stuck with two possible murder
- raps staring him in the face. Nobody was ever going to believe
- that Tommy's death had been an accident.
- "How about something to eat?" Quentin suggested, thinking
- that food might help sober him up. "The hamburgers here
- aren't bad."
- "Sure," Mitch Johnson said easily. "I'll have one. Why the
- hell not? We're not in any hurry, are we?"
- Shaking his head, Quentin leaned his arms against the edge
- KISS OF THE BEES 257
- of the bar to steady himself. "Not that I know of," he said. "I
- do have some good news, though."
- "What's that?" Mitch asked.
- "I used some of the money you gave me to buy myself some
- wheels. I picked up a honkin' big orange Bronco XLT. It's a
- couple years old, but it runs like a top. If you want, we could
- drive out to where the pots are in that. I don't know what kind
- of vehicle you're driving, but the terrain where we're going is
- pretty rough, and the Bronco is four-wheel-drive."
- 492
- Mitch Johnson had to fight to keep from showing his disappointment.
- He had been planning all along that he'd be getting
- back almost a full refund of that initial five thousand bucks he
- had given Quentin. And he had less than no intention of giving
- the little creep his second installment. After all, once Quentin
- Walker was dead, he wouldn't have any need of money--or of
- a car, either, for that matter.
- Instead of bitching Quentin out--instead of mocking him for
- his stupidity--Mitch was careful to mask his disappointment.
- "So, you bought yourself a car?" he asked smoothly. "What kind
- did you say?"
- "A Bronco." To Mitch, Quentin's answer seemed unduly
- proud. "It's the first time I've had wheels of my own in years.
- It feels real good."
- "I'll bet it does," Mitch Johnson agreed.
- After that exchange, Mitch sat for a long time and considered
- this changed state of affairs. His plan had called for the next
- part of the operation to be carried out in the Subaru. That way
- he would have the canvas-drying crate to use to confine either
- Lani and/or Quentin, should the drugs somehow prove unreliable.
- 493
- The idea of changing vehicles added a complication, but the
- whole point of being competitive--of being able to capitalize on
- situations where other people faltered--was being flexible
- enough to go with the flow. The idea was to take the unexpected
- and turn it from a liability into an advantage.
- "Hang on here a minute," Mitch said to Quentin. "And if
- my food comes before I get back, you leave my hamburger
- alone."
- "Sure thing," Quentin said.
- Mitch walked out to the far corner of the parking lot where
- 258 i.A. JANCE
- he had left the Subaru. There, he unlocked the tailgate, opened
- the wooden crate, and checked on Lani, who appeared to be
- sleeping peacefully. Putting on his rubber gloves, he removed
- Lani's bike from the crate. Hurriedly he wheeled it over to the
- orange Bronco parked nearby, an orange Bronco with a temporary
- paper license hanging in the window next to a prominently
- displayed as is/no warranty notice. Predictably, the Bronco
- wasn't locked. Mitch hefted the mountain bike into the spacious
- cargo compartment and then went over to secure the Subaru.
- 494
- "Sweet dreams, little one," he said to a sleeping Lani as he
- once again closed up the crate. "See you after your brother and
- I finish up at the house."
- When Mitch went back inside, the food had been served.
- Mitch ate his lousy hamburger and watched Quentin wolf his.
- There was something about the man that wasn't quite right.
- There was a nervous tension in him that Mitch didn't remember
- from the night before, but he put his worries aside. Whatever
- was bothering Quentin Walker, that little dose of scopolamine
- Mitch had dropped into Quentin's first beer would soon take
- the edge off. In fact, Mitch's only real concern was that Quentin
- was far more smashed than he should have been. With Quentin
- drunk, Mitch worried that even a little bit of Burundianga Cocktail
- might prove to be too much.
- The overheated afternoon had cooled into a warm summer's
- evening when Quentin and Mitch Johnson finally left the bar.
- Quentin blundered first in one direction and then in the other
- as he attempted to cross the parking lot. He finally came to a
- stop and leaned up against the Bronco to steady himself.
- "Geezr' he muttered. "That last beer was a killer. Hey,
- 495
- Mitch," he said. "You wouldn't mind driving, would you? The
- food didn't do me a bit of good. I'm having a tough time here.
- I can give you directions, no problem, but with my record, I
- can't afford to be picked up DWI."
- "No problem," Mitch said. "Where are the keys?"
- It took time for Quentin to extract the keys from his pocket
- and hand them over.
- "You don't mind, do you?" Quentin whined.
- Mitch shook his head. "Not at all," he said. "After all,
- friends don't let friends drive drunk."
- * * *
- KISS OF THE BEES 259
- Detective Clan Leggett was pissed as hell. "What do you
- mean, you've recalled him?" he demanded.
- "Just that," Reg Atkins, the night-watch commander, returned
- mildly. "We can't send a team of crime techs out there
- until Monday morning. You know as well as I do that Sheriff
- Forsythe won't authorize any overtime right now, at least not
- until the start of the new fiscal year. Overtime is to be scheduled
- only in cases of dire emergency. One busted Indian and a pile
- 496
- of bones don't qualify, at least not in my book. And in case
- you're wondering, the same thing goes for deputies. Brian Fellows
- is off the clock as of fifteen minutes ago and the guy you
- sent out to Coleman Road just got called to a car fire out by
- Ryan Field."
- Less than six months from retirement, Clan Leggett was a
- member of the old guard. As someone who still owed a good
- deal of loyalty to the previous administration, he was a pain in
- Sheriff Bill Forsythe's neck. Anybody else in his position might
- have shut up and let things pass. Not Clan Leggett. He was an
- unrepentant smoker, a loner, and a rocker of boats.
- "You called them off?"
- "Damned straight. If you think we're going to have a deputy
- camped out by a charco all weekend long, you're crazy as a
- bedbug."
- "But I want those bones examined."
- "Well, go get them and bring them back to the lab yourself,
- if you're so all-fired excited about them. There are plenty of
- people to work on them if you ever get them here."
- Without another word, Clan Leggett stormed out of Reg Atkins's
- 497
- office. Ever since Brandon Walker had been voted out of
- office, this kind of shit had been happening--especially to older
- guys, the ones who had been around long enough to know the
- real score. He had been a rookie deputy toward the end of Sheriff
- DuShane's term in office. There had been lots of crap like
- this back then. It looked as though things had come full circle.
- But if Sheriff Bill Forsythe thought he was going to run Clan
- Leggett off a day before his scheduled retirement day, he was
- full of it. And he wasn't going to he bamboozled out of properly
- investigating these two possibly related cases.
- At the charco even though the deputy was long gone, nothing
- seemed to be disturbed. Since Deputy Fellows had already made
- Z60 J.A. JANCE
- plaster casts, Clan Leggett simply drove as close as he could to
- the pile of bones without getting stuck in the sand. After extracting
- a trouble light from the trunk, he examined the grisly
- pile by the trouble light's eerie orange glow.
- There was nothing but partial skeletal remains here now, but
- Detective Leggett realized this had once been a living, breathing
- human being. A person. Somebody's loved one. As such, whoever
- 498
- it was deserved some respect, certainly more than being
- tossed haphazardly in the trunk of an unmarked patrol car.
- "Sorry about this," Clan said aloud, addressing the skull
- whose empty eyes seemed to stare up at him. "But this is the only way I can think
- of to find out who you are and what happened to you."
- After that murmured apology, he put on his disposable
- gloves and loaded the bones into three separate cardboard evidence
- boxes. It was the best Clan Leggett could do.
- He took the boxes back to the department and then lugged
- the surprisingly lightweight stack into the crime lab. "What's
- this?" the lab tech asked, opening the top box and peering
- inside.
- "It's what's left of a body," he told her. "When you take
- them out of the box, I want every single one of them dusted
- for prints."
- "Come on, Detective Leggett. Fingerprints?"
- "I'm an old man who's about to retire," Clan Leggett told
- the thirty-something technician. "Humor me, just this once.
- And while you're at it, fax a dental photo over to that BioMetrics
- professor at the U. Who knows, we might just get a hit
- 499
- on his Missing Persons database."
- As tribal chairman, Gabe Ortiz could easily have gone
- straight to the head of the line at the feast house in Little Tuc- son. But that
- wasn't Fat Crack's style. Instead, an hour or so before the Chicken Scratch Band
- was scheduled to play, he and
- Wanda were standing in line waiting to be admitted to the feast
- house along with their bass-guitar-playing son, Leo, and everyone
- else who was waiting to eat.
- Gabe could remember a time, seemingly not that long ago,
- when all the guys in the band had been old men. Times had
- changed. The problem was, the members of the band had always
- KISS OF THE BEES Z61
- stayed pretty much the same--middle-aged. That was still true.
- What was different was that Gabe Ortiz was well into his sixties
- and one of the band members was his unmarried, thirty-eightyear-old
- son.
- They filed into the feast house and took seats at the tables.
- Moments later, Delia Cachora herself showed up carrying plates.
- She set two plates down in front of Gabe and Wanda and then
- went back for more.
- Leo caught his father's eye. "When are you going to put in
- 500
- a good word for me with that new tribal attorney?" he asked.
- "What do you want me to tell her?" Gabe asked. "That
- you're a good mechanic? You've never worked on a Saab in
- your life."
- Leo laughed. "I could learn," he said.
- Delia Chavez Cachora had returned to the reservation driving
- a shiny black Saab 9000. In the reservation world where
- Ford and Chevy pickups ruled supreme, Delia's car had created
- quite a stir--especially when word leaked out that the Saab's
- leather seats were actually heated. In the Arizona desert, heated
- seats were considered to be a laughably unnecessary option.
- After months of driving in gritty dust, its once shiny onyx exterior
- had acquired a perpetually matte-brown overlay.
- "Why don't you talk to her yourself?" Wanda asked impatiently.
- "She won't bite."
- "I knew her in first grade," Leo said. "But I don't think
- that counts."
- Delia returned to the table with two more plates, one of
- which she put in front of Leo Ortiz.
- "Delia," Gabe said, "this is my son, Leo. He says you were
- 501
- in first grade together. He wants you to know that he's a pretty
- good mechanic."
- Leo Ortiz shrugged. "You never can tell when you might
- need a good mechanic," he said with a laugh. "Or a bass guitar
- player, either."
- Delia Cachora studied Leo Ortiz's broad face as if searching
- for a resemblance between this graying, portly man and some
- child she had known in school thirty years earlier. "I'll bear that
- in mind," she said. Then she headed back to the serving line to
- collect more plates.
- 262 J.A. JANCE
- Wanda looked at her husband. "Are you going to talk to
- her?" Wanda asked.
- Fat Crack nodded. "After," he said.
- Wanda sighed, then she turned her attention on her son. "I
- don't know why you're so interested in her," she sniffed disapprovingly.
- "Julia Joaquin, her auntie, tells me Delia can't even
- make tortillas."
- Leo caught his father's eye and winked. "Plenty of women
- can cook," Leo said, "but I'll bet Delia Cachora can do lots of
- 502
- other things."
- Gabe Ortiz laughed at his son's gentle teasing, but it surprised
- him somewhat that Delia Cachora would turn out to be
- the kind of woman who would interest either one of his two
- sons, who, at thirty-eight and forty, respectively, were both
- thought to be aging, perpetual bachelors. If Leo did in fact find
- Delia attractive, by the time Gabe finished telling her about
- Davy Ladd's upcoming arrival, Leo's chances would be greatly
- reduced from what they were right then. Gabe had put the
- unpleasant task off for far too long already. It was time.
- He waited until that group of feast-goers had finished eating.
- Then, on his way out, Gabe stopped by the dishwashing station
- where the tribal attorney stood over a steaming washtub of water
- with soapy dishwater all the way up to her elbows.
- "Delia," Gabe said quietly. "I need to talk to you."
- "Right now?"
- "Whenever you have time," Gabe answered. "I'll wait
- outside."
- Wanda walked over to the dance floor with Leo while Fat
- Crack lingered outside the door to the feast house. Several minutes
- 503
- later, Delia Cachora joined him.
- "Is something wrong?" Delia asked anxiously. "You look
- worried."
- Gabe was worried. The business with Andrew Carlisle had
- kept him awake for most of two successive nights now. His only
- regret was that his state of mind showed so clearly to outside
- observers.
- Fat Crack shook his head. "There's nothing wrong with
- you," he said. "But there is something I need to talk to you
- about." He led her away from the feast house, through the lines
- of parked cars, through groups of people gathered informally
- KISS OF THE BEES 263
- around the backs of pickups, laughing and talking. When they
- reached the Crown Victoria, Fat Crack opened the door and
- motioned her inside.
- "Whatever it is, it must be serious," Delia said.
- "Not that serious. I wanted to talk to you about a friend of
- mine. A sort of cousin, actually. My aunt's godson. His name's
- David Ladd."
- In the world of the Tohono O'othham--where even the most
- 504
- direct conversational route is never a straight line--this was a
- straightforward way of beginning.
- "What about him?" Delia asked.
- "I've offered him a job."
- The car was silent for a moment. "David Ladd," Delia repeated
- at last. "That doesn't sound like a Tohono O'othham
- name."
- "It isn't," Fat Crack admitted. "Davy is Mil-gahn. He was
- my aunt Rita's godson--a foster son, more or less."
- "Why are you telling me about this?" Delia asked. "Is there
- some legal problem?"
- Gabe Ortiz took a deep breath. "I've offered him an internship,"
- he said. "In your office. He just graduated from law
- school at Northwestern. He'll be home sometime next week and
- able to start work the week after that. I've hired him as your
- special assistant while he's studying for the bar exam. As an
- intern, we won't have to pay him all that much, and I thought
- that while you're preoccupied by negotiations with the county,
- he'll be able to help out with some of the day-to-day stuff."
- Delia's reaction was every bit as bad as Gabe Ortiz had expected.
- 505
- "Wait just a damn minute here1" she exclaimed, turning
- on Gabe with both eyes blazing. "Are you saying you've hired
- an Anglo to come work in my office without telling me and
- without even asking my opinion?"
- "Pretty much."
- "My understanding was that the tribal attorney always hires
- his or her own assistants," Delia said.
- "The tribal attorney works for me," Gabe reminded her impassively.
- The fact that he was using his tribal council voice on
- her infuriated Delia Chavez Cachora even more.
- "But you already told me, he's Mil-gahn," she objected.
- "An Anglo."
- 264 J.A. JANCE
- Gabe Ortiz remained unimpressed. "So? Are you prejudiced
- against Anglos, or what?"
- At thirty-eight, having fought her way through years of prejudice
- in Eastern Seaboard parochial schools, Delia Cachora knew
- about racial prejudice firsthand. From the wrong end.
- "What if I am?" she asked. "I'm sure there are plenty of
- Indian law school graduates we could hire while they're waiting
- 506
- to pass the bar exam. Besides, I can't hire anyone anyway. We
- talked about that a couple of months ago. I'm already over
- budget."
- "I'm hiring Davy Ladd out of a special discretionary fund,"
- Gabe said. "One that comes straight from my office. The money
- to pay him won't be coming out of your budget, it'll be coming
- out of mine."
- "In other words, he's coming, like it or lump it."
- Gabe Ortiz nodded. "I suppose that's about it," he said.
- "But wait until you meet him. He's an unusual young man. I
- think you'll like him." '
- "I wouldn't count on it," Delia muttered. She opened the
- car door. "In fact, I wouldn't count on that at all."
- Delia started out of the car and would have walked away,
- but just then a tow truck, red lights flashing, followed by a Law
- and Order patrol car, pulled up and stopped directly in front of
- the Crown Victoria. Gabe's other son, Richard, climbed down
- from the truck.
- "Here they are," he was saying to the officer piling out of
- the patrol car.
- 507
- As Gabe climbed out of the Crown Victoria, he immediately
- recognized Ira Segundo, a young patrol officer for the Tohono
- O'othham tribal police. "What's the matter, Ira?" Gabe asked.
- "I'm looking for Mrs. Cachora," Ira said. "Baby told me she
- might be here with you."
- "I'm Delia Cachora," she said, stepping forward. "What's
- wrong?"
- "It's about your dad," Ira Segundo said. "There was a problem
- over off Coleman Road. He's been hurt."
- A curtain of wariness more than concern settled over Delia's
- face. Since she had returned to the reservation, her father and
- her younger brother, Eddie, had only come to see her to ask for
- money. "What about him?"
- KISS OF THE BEES 265
- "It happened at a charco over by where Rattlesnake Skull
- used to be--"
- "By Rattlesnake Skull?" Gabe Ortiz interrupted.
- Ira nodded. "We think maybe there was a fight of some kind.
- He must be hurt pretty bad. They air-lifted him to TMC."
- "You should be telling my brother this instead of me," Delia
- 508
- said. "He's the one who lives with him, but he's probably off
- drunk somewhere. I'll go get my car."
- "No, Delia," Gabe said. "Get in. I'll give you a ride." Gabe
- Ortiz turned to his son. "Richard, I'm leaving you to take your
- mother home from the dance when she's ready to go. Ira, I want
- you to put on your flashers and lead us into town."
- "Sure thing, Mr. Ortiz," Ira said.
- Still angry, Delia wanted to object, but something about the
- way Gabe issued the orders stopped her. She did as she was told
- and climbed back into the Crown Victoria. "I don't know why
- you're doing this," she said, once Gabe was back inside and had
- started the engine. "It's my father, and I'm perfectly capable of
- driving myself."
- Already Gabe was threading his way through the army of
- parked cars. In the reflected glow of the dashboard lights, Delia
- was surprised by the grim set of his face.
- "You've been away from the reservation a long time," he
- said, sounding suddenly tired. "Have you ever heard of Rattlesnake
- Skull?"
- "Never," she said. "I gather from what he said that it's a
- 509
- deserted village."
- They were out of the parking lot now, and the lights on the
- patrol car were flashing in front of them. "Right," Gabe said.
- "It is deserted, but a lot has happened there over the years.
- Before you go see your father and before you meet Davy Ladd,
- you should hear abuut some of it. I'm probably the only one
- who can tell you."
- When the banquet was finally over, Brandon and Diana
- Walker drove west across town. The evening had been surprisingly
- fun, and Diana was still giggling.
- "You were absolutely great," she told Brandon. "I don't
- know why you've ever been spooked at the idea of talking to
- 266 LA. JANCE
- little old ladies. You charmed the socks off every one that got
- within spitting distance of you."
- Brandon grinned. "There's nothing like a little sex in the
- afternoon to give a guy's sagging ego a boost. But it turns out
- they were a pretty nice bunch of little old ladies ..."
- "And men," Diana added.
- "And a few men," Brandon corrected. "The difference between
- 510
- the people we met tonight and most people is that the
- ones at the banquet all think I'm lucky to be able to be retired
- at age fifty-four. Everybody else thinks I'm either crazy or some
- kind of laggard."
- "They haven't seen your woodpile," Diana said.
- Their mood was still light, right up until they drove up to
- the house in Gates Pass. "Damn it," Brandon said. "It looks like
- Lani left every light in the house burning. One of these days
- she'll have to pay her own utility bills. It's going to come as a
- real shock."
- Brandon hit the automatic door opener and the gate on the
- side of the house swung open. "She also left her bike in the
- middle of the damn carport. What on earth is she thinking of?"
- Diana sighed, dismayed to hear Brandon's mood change from
- good to bad in the space of a few yards of driveway. "Stop the
- car," she said. "I'll get out and move the bike out of the way."
- She pushed the bike up to the front of the carport, giving
- Brandon enough room to park his Nissan next to her Suburban.
- No doubt the fragile mood of the evening was irretrievably broken.
- One way or another, children did that to their parents with
- 511
- astounding regularity.
- The back door was unlocked, which most likely meant that
- Lani was home, but that was something else that would annoy
- her father. When Lani was home alone, she was supposed to
- keep the front and back doors locked.
- Shaking her head, Diana went inside and discovered that
- Brandon was right. Almost every light in the house was blazing,
- but the note for Lani that Diana had left on the counter--the
- Post-it containing Davy's phone number and telling Lani to call
- him back--was still on the counter, exactly where Diana had
- left it.
- Through years of mothering teenagers, Diana Ladd Walker
- had discovered that looking in the sink and checking the most
- KISS OF THE BEES 267
- recent set of dirty dishes was usually a good way of getting a
- handle on who all was home, how long they'd been there, and
- whether or not they had dragged any visitors into the house
- with them.
- The evidence in the sink this time left Diana puzzled. Other
- than the pair of champagne glasses she and Brandon had left
- 512
- there earlier in the afternoon, there was nothing but a pair of
- rubber-handled kitchen tongs. Knowing it wasn't hers, Diana
- picked the utensil up and examined it under the light. The gripper
- part was somewhat scorched. It looked as though it had
- been used to cook meat of some kind, but there was nothing in
- the kitchen--no accompanying greasy mess--that gave Diana
- any hint of what that might have been.
- As Diana automatically moved to the phone to check for
- messages, she could hear Brandon walking through the rest of
- the house, calling for Lani and switching off lights as he went.
- When Diana punched in the code, she found there were a total
- of five messages waiting for her. That bugged her. It was Saturday
- night. Couldn't she and Brandon even go out to dinner without
- having the whole world phone in their absence?
- The first message was timed in at three twenty-one. "Lani,"
- a female voice said. "This is Mrs. Allison from the museum. If
- you aren't able to take your shift, you should always call in as
- soon as possible to let us know. I know tomorrow is scheduled
- to be your day off. If for some reason you aren't going to be able
- to make your next shift on Monday, please call in on Sunday if
- 513
- you can. If I'm not there, leave word on the machine."
- Lani hadn't made it to work? That didn't make sense. She
- had left for work. How could it be that she was absent? The
- next message, at six-eleven, moments after Diana and Brandon
- had left for the banquet, was from Jessica Carpenter.
- "Lani, what are you going to wear? Call me and let me
- know."
- "That figures," Diana muttered as she erased that one.
- The one after that was more worrisome. "Lani," Jessica Carpenter
- said. "I thought you were going to be here by now. Mom
- has to go someplace after she drops me off, and if we don't
- leave in a few minutes, she'll be late. She says I should leave
- your ticket at the box office. I'll put it in an envelope with your
- name on it."
- Z68 J.A. JANCE
- The next message, at nine-fifteen, was another one from
- Davy. "Hi, Mom and Dad. I'm still trying to get hold of Lani,
- but I guess nobody's home. Give me a call. Bye."
- The last one was from Jessica once again. "It's intermission
- and you're not here. Are you mad at me or sick, or what? I'll
- 514
- try calling again when I get home."
- Brandon came back into the kitchen just as Diana was putting
- down the phone. "Still taking messages?" he said.
- "Lani didn't go to work," Diana said. "And she didn't go to
- the concert, either."
- "Didn't go to the concert?" Brandon echoed. "Where is she
- then? I've gone through the whole house looking for her."
- "Hang on," Diana told him. "I'll call the Carpenters and see
- if she ever showed up there."
- The phone rang several times and then the answering machine
- came on. Diana left a message for them to call her as soon
- as possible. "Nobody's home," she told Brandon. "Maybe
- they're all still at the concert."
- "But Lani's bike is here. Where would she be if her bike's
- here?"
- Brandon looked grim. "Something's wrong. I'll go back
- through the house and check again. Maybe I missed something.
- Do you have any idea what she wore when she left the house
- this morning?"
- Diana shook her head. "I heard the gate shut, but I didn't
- 515
- see her leave."
- This time they got as far as Brandon's study. Before, Brandon
- had simply reached into the room and switched off the light
- without bothering to look into the room itself. Barely a step
- inside the door, he stopped so abruptly that Diana almost collided
- with him. "What the hell!"
- Sidestepping him, Diana was able to see into the room herself.
- A fine spray of shattered glass covered most of the floor. In
- the center of the glass lay several broken picture frames. Looking
- beyond that, Diana saw that the wall behind Brandon's desk--
- his Wall of Honor as he had called it--was empty. All his service
- ' plaques, his civic honors--including his Tucson Citizen of the Year
- and the Detective of the Year award--the one he'd received from
- Parade Magazine for cracking a dead illegal alien case years before--
- were all on the floor, smashed beyond recognition.
- KISS OF THE BEES 269
- "Oh, Brandon!" Diana wailed. "What a mess. I'll go get the
- broom--''
- "Don't touch anything and don't come into the room any
- farther until we get a handle on exactly what's happened here.
- 516
- It looks to me as though whoever it was broke into my gun
- case, too."
- Diana's stomach sank to her knees. She had to fight off the
- sudden urge to vomit. "What about Lani ..."
- Brandon turned toward her, the muscles working across his
- tightened jaw. "Let's don't hit panic buttons," he advised. "The
- first thing we should do is call the department and have them
- send somebody out to investigate." Walking back to the kitchen,
- he picked up the phone. "Did you notice anything else out of
- place?" he asked as he dialed. After all those years with the
- department, the number of the direct line into Dispatch was
- still embedded in his brain as well as his dialing finger.
- Diana thought for a minute. "Only that set of tongs over
- there in the sink. It looks as though somebody used it to cook
- meat or something, but I can't tell what."
- Alicia Duarte was fairly new to Dispatch, but she had been
- around the department long enough that Brandon Walker's
- name still carried a good deal of weight. Her initial response was
- to offer to send out a deputy.
- "A deputy will be fine," Brandon told her. "But I think we're
- 517
- going to need a detective too. There's a good chance that our
- daughter has disappeared as well, and the two incidents are most
- likely related."
- "Sure thing, Sheriff Walker," Alicia said, honoring him with
- the title even though it was no longer his. "I'll get right on it."
- Brandon put down the phone and then walked over to wrap
- his arms around Diana. "You heard what I said. Someone is on
- the way, although it'll take time for them to get here."
- "What if we've lost her?" Diana asked in a small voice.
- "What if Lani's gone for good?"
- "She isn't," Brandon returned fiercely. It wasn't so much
- that he believed she wasn't lost. It was just that when it came
- to his precious Lani, believing anything else was unthinkable.
- Brandon's initial reluctance about adopting Clemencia Escalante
- disappeared within days of the child's noisy entry into the
- 270 J.A. JANCE
- Walker household. He was captivated by her in every way, and
- the reverse was also true. It wasn't long before his daily return
- from work was cause for an ecstatic greeting on Clemencia's
- part. When he was home, she padded around at his heels, following
- 518
- him everywhere, always underfoot no matter where he
- was or what he was doing.
- When it came time to work on turning their temporary appointment
- as foster parents into permanent adoptive ones, Brandon
- had forged through the reams of paperwork with cheerful
- determination. Later, during caseworker interviews, he was
- charming and enthusiastic. But when the time came to drive out
- to Sells to appear before the tribal court for a hearing on finalizing
- the adoption, he was as nervous as he had been on the day
- he and Diana Ladd married.
- "What if they turn us down after all this?" he asked, standing
- in front of the mirror and reknotting his tie for a third time.
- "What if we have to give her back? I couldn't stand to lose her
- now, not after all this."
- "Wanda seems to think it'll go through as long as we have
- Rita in our corner."
- The four of them rode out to Sells together. Rita and the
- baby sat in the backseat--Clemencia sleeping in her car seat and
- Rita sitting stolidly with her arms folded across her lap. She said
- very little, but everything about her exuded serene confidence.
- 519
- They found Fat Crack waiting for them in the small gravel parking
- lot outside the tribal courtroom. While Brandon and Diana
- unloaded the baby and her gear, Rita turned to her nephew.
- "Did you do it?" she asked Fat Crack, speaking to him in
- the language of the Tohono O'othham. "Did you look at her
- picture through the divining crystals?"
- "Heu'u--yes," Fat Crack said.
- "And what did you see?"
- "I saw this child, the one you call Forever Spinning, wearing
- a white coat and carrying a feather, a seagull feather."
- "See there?" Rita said, her face dissolving into a smile. "I told you, didn't I?
- She will be both."
- "But--"
- "No more," Rita said. "It's time to go in."
- Molly Juan, the tribal judge, was a pug-faced, no-nonsense
- woman who spent several long minutes shuffling through the
- KISS OF THE BEES 271
- paperwork Wanda Ortiz handed her before raising her eyes to
- gaze at the people gathered in the courtroom.
- "Both parents are willing to give up the child?" she asked
- 520
- at last.
- Wanda Ortiz nodded. "Both have signed terminations of parental
- rights."
- "And there are no blood relatives interested in taking her?"
- "Not at this time. If the Walkers' petition to adopt her is
- denied, my office has made arrangements to place Clemencia in
- a facility in Phoenix."
- "Who is this then?" Molly Juan asked, nodding toward Rita.
- "This is Mrs. Antone--Rita Antone--a widow and my husband's
- aunt," Wanda replied.
- "And she has some interest in this matter?"
- Ponderously, Rita Antone wheeled her chair until she sat
- facing the judge. "That is true," Rita said. "I am Hejel Wi
- i'thag--Left Alone. My grandmother, my father's mother, was
- Oks Amichuda, Understanding Woman. She was not a medicine
- woman, although she could have been. But she told me once,
- years ago, that I would find one, and that when I did, I should
- give her my medicine basket.
- "Do you know the story of Mualig Siakam?"
- Molly Juan nodded. "Of course, the woman who was saved
- 521
- by the Little People during the great famine."
- Brandon Walker leaned over to his wife. "What the hell does
- all this have to do with the price of tea in China?"
- "Shhhh," Diana returned.
- "Clemencia has been kissed by the ants in the same way the
- first Mualig Siakam was kissed by the bees," Rita continued.
- "Clemencia was starving and might have died if the ants had
- not bitten her and brought her to my attention. Some of her
- relatives are afraid to take her because they fear Ant Sickness. The Walkers are
- Mil-gahn, so Ant Sickness cannot hurt them. And I am old. I will die long before
- Ant Sickness can find me.
- "The Walkers are asking for her because everyone knows
- that I am too old to care for her by myself, just as her own great
- grandmother was. But I know that this is the child Oks Amichuda
- told me about--the very one."
- ' 'And you think, that by keeping her with you, you can help
- her become a medicine woman?" Molly Juan asked.
- m J.A. JANCE
- Rita looked at Fat Crack. "She already is one," Rita said.
- "She may not be old enough to understand that yet, and I will
- not tell her. It's something she must learn for herself. But in the
- 522
- time I have left, I can teach her things that will be useful when
- the time comes for her to decide."
- Rita started to move away, but Judge Juan stopped her.
- "Supposing you die?" she asked pointedly. "What happens
- then? If Clemencia is living with a Mil-gahn family, who will be
- there to teach her?"
- "The Walkers have a son," Rita answered quietly. "His Milgahn
- name is David Ladd. His Indian name--the one Looks At
- Nothing gave him when he was baptized--is Edagith Gogk Je'e--
- One With Two Mothers."
- Molly Juan pushed her wire-framed glasses back up on her
- nose and peered closely at Rita. "I remember now. This is the
- Anglo boy who was baptized by an old medicine man years ago."
- Rita nodded. "Looks At Nothing and I both taught Davy
- Ladd things he would need to know, things he can teach Clemencia
- as she gets older even though the medicine man and I
- are gone."
- ."How old is this boy now?"
- .'.^"Twelve."
- "And he speaks Tohono O'othham?"
- 523
- "Yes."
- "But what makes you think he would be willing to serve as
- a teacher and guide to this little girl?"
- "I have lived with David Ladd since before he was born,"
- Rita said. "He is a child of my heart if not of my flesh. When
- he was baptized, his mother--Mrs. Walker here--and I ate the
- ceremonial gruel together. He is a good boy. If I ask him to do
- something, he will do it."
- That was when Judge Molly Juan finally turned to Diana and
- Brandon Walker. During the course of the proceedings, in an
- effort to keep the restless Clemencia quiet, Diana had handed
- the child over to Brandon. By the time the judge looked at them,
- Clemencia had grasped the tail of Brandon's new silk tie in one
- tiny fist and was happily chewing on it and choking him with it
- at the same time.
- "Sheriff Walker," Molly Juan said, "it sounds as though your
- family is somewhat unusual. What do you think of all this?"
- KISS OF THE BEES 273
- Still holding the child, Brandon got to his feet to address the
- judge. "Clemencia is just a baby, and she needs a home," he
- 524
- said. "I hate to think about her being sent to an orphanage."
- "But what about the rest of it, Sheriff Walker? I know from
- the paperwork that your wife taught out here on the reservation
- for a number of years. She probably knows something about the
- Tohono O'othham and their culture and beliefs. What about
- you?"
- Brandon looked down at the baby, who lay in his arms smiling
- up at him. For a moment he didn't speak at all. Finally he
- looked back at the judge.
- "On the night of my stepson's second baptism," he said
- slowly, "I stood outside the feast house and smoked the Peace
- Smoke with Looks At Nothing. That night he asked three of
- us--Father John from San Xavier Mission; Gabe Ortiz, Mrs. Antone's
- nephew; and myself--along with him to serve as Davy's
- four fathers. It seems to me this is much the same thing.
- "If you let us have her, my wife and I will do everything in
- our power to see that she has the best of both worlds."
- Judge Juan nodded. "All right then, supposing I were to
- grant this petition on a temporary basis, pending final adoption
- proceedings, have you given any thought as to what you would
- 525
- call her?"
- "Dolores Lanita--Lani for short," Brandon answered at once.
- "Those would be her Anglo names. And her Indian name would
- be Mualig Siakam--Forever Spinning."
- "And her home village?" Judge Juan asked.
- "Ban Thak--Coyote Sitting," he answered. "That is Rita's
- home village. It would be hers as well."
- "Be it so ordered," Judge Juan said, whacking her desk with
- the gavel. "Next case."
- B
- I
- . hen all the people near the village o/Gurii Put VoDead Man's
- Pondwere told to come to a council so they could arrange for the
- protection of their fields. Everything that flies and all the animals
- came with the Indians to the council. And everybody promised to
- watch carefully so that the Bad People of the south should not again
- surprise them.
- When PaDaj O'othham had eaten all the corn which they had
- stolen, they were soon hungry again. So they began once more to
- think of the nice fields of the Desert People. They began to wish they
- 526
- could steal the harvest, but they did not know how to accomplish
- this because, as you know, the Indians and their friends, the Flying
- People and all the animals, were on guard.
- Then a wise old bad man told PaDaj O'othham what to do.
- Now when the Desert People held that council to arrange for
- the protection of their fields, they were so excited that they called
- only the people who live aboveground. So this wise old bad man
- told PaDaj O'othham to call all the people who live under the
- ground,: Ko'owithe Snakes, Nanakshelthe Scorpions, Hiani
- the Tarantulas, Jewhothe Gophers, Chichdagthe Gila Monsters,
- and Chukthe Jackrabbits. The Bad People said they would
- give all these people who live under the ground good food and beautiful
- clothes if they would go through the ground to the fields of the
- Desert People and fight the Tohono O'othham while the Bad People
- stole the crops.
- KISS OF THE BEES 275
- Chuk--Jackrabbit--did not like this plan. The Indians had
- always been good to Chuk, and. he did not want to fight them. But
- Jackrabbit did not know what to do.
- Some bumblebees were sitting in a nearby tree. Hu'udagi--the
- 527
- Bumblebees--told Chuk to run with all his speed to the Desert
- People and tell them how PaDaj O'othham were planning to steal
- their harvest. The Bumblebees said they would tell U'uwhig--the
- Birds.
- So Jackrabbit ran. He went in such a hurry that he took longer
- and longer jumps. As he jumped longer and longer, his legs grew
- longer and longer. That is why, my friend, even to this day, Jackrabbit's
- legs are so much longer than the legs of his brother rabbit,
- Tohbi--the Cottontail.
- Lani awakened in the dark. She was hot. Salt, leached from
- her sweat-stained shirt, had seeped into the raw wound on her
- breast. The smoldering pain from that was what had wakened
- her, and it seemed to expand with every breath, filling her eyes
- with tears. Her whole body was stiff. Her back ached from lying
- on what seemed to be uneven grooves in the floor beneath her.
- While she had been asleep, she had been dreaming again,
- dreaming about Nana Dahd. In the dream Lani had been a child
- again. She and Rita had been walking together somewhere, walking
- and talking, although that was impossible. By the time Lani
- 528
- first knew Rita Antone, Nana Dahd was already confined to a
- wheelchair.
- Lani emerged from Rita's comforting presence in the dream,
- and she longed to return there, but this time when she wakened,
- she didn't seem to emerge gradually. There was no lingering fog
- of confusion the way there had been before. She knew at once
- that she was a prisoner and that she had been drugged. Perhaps
- the man named Vega had given her a much smaller dose this
- time, or perhaps some of the effect had been evacuated out of
- her system--sweated out of her pores by the perspiration that
- soaked her clothing.
- Lani felt around her, trying to assess the hot, dark cage in
- which she was imprisoned--a huge wooden crate from the feel
- of it. Her searching fingers reached out and touched sturdy walls
- a foot or so on either side of her. They refused to give or even
- so much as creak when she tried pushing against them. Then
- 276 J.A. JANCE
- she pounded on the wood until her knuckles bled, but if anyone
- heard, no one came to her aid.
- The darkness around her at first seemed absolute, but at last
- 529
- she noticed rays of yellow light penetrating the darkness. The
- light, as if from street lights, told her that it was still night. She
- was near a road. She could hear the muffled roar of traffic--the
- sounds of heavy trucks, anyway. Periodically the box shook with
- what had to be the earth-shaking rumble of a nearby passing
- train.
- For a while Lani tried yelling for help, but the heavy wooden
- box swallowed the sound, locking the noise inside with her. Her
- shouting, like the pounding that had preceded it, brought no
- help. No one would come, she realized at last. Rescue, if it came
- at all, would have to come from inside, from Lani herself. Otherwise,
- she would simply lie in this overheated box until the heat
- got to her or until she died of thirst or starvation.
- As she had done countless times in the past, she reached up
- to her throat to touch her kushpo ho'oma--her hair charm--only
- to discover it was missing. At first, when her fingertips touched
- only the naked gold chain, she thought she had lost the medallion
- and she was bereft. Seconds later, though, she remembered
- taking it off and putting it in her pocket--hiding it there in
- hopes of keeping it out of the hands of the evil man who had
- 530
- hurt her so badly.
- It was still there in her pocket, exactly where she had hidden
- it. That reassured her. At least Vega hadn't stripped off her
- clothes again, hadn't discovered where she had hidden the
- charm, so perhaps, this time, he had left her alone.
- She had no idea how long she had been asleep. From that
- moment early in the morning--some morning--when she sat
- down on the rock for him to begin sketching her until now could
- have been one day or several, for all she knew. For one thing,
- she had been out of it long enough for him to draw that second
- picture. Just thinking about that--about lying there naked in
- front of him all that time, for what must have been hours--
- made her wince with shame. And if Lani didn't remember any
- of that, there might be other things the man had done to her
- that she didn't remember, either.
- She lay very still and tried to sense the condition of her body.
- Other than the damaged breast and what felt like a series of
- KISS OF THE BEES 277
- splinters in her back, she seemed to be intact. If he had raped
- her, she would feel it, wouldn't she? There was a sudden feeling
- 531
- of relief that deserted her a moment later. Of course he hadn't
- raped her. Not yet. That was why she was still here. That was
- what awaited her once he came back--that and more.
- In that moment, Lani saw it all with appalling clarity. Of
- course Vega would return for her. He had no intention of her
- staying in the box forever until she died of heat prostration or
- thirst or starvation. He had locked her in the crate for a reason--
- so she would be available to him, helpless and waiting, when it
- was time for whatever came next.
- Sooner or later, Vega would come back for her. Closing her
- eyes in the darkness, she saw him again, with an almost gleeful
- smile on his face, standing over her with the overheated tongs
- in his hand. Vega was a man who enjoyed inflicting pain. When
- he came back, Lani knew full well that he would hurt her again.
- Had she been standing upright, that awful realization might
- have tumbled her to the ground. As a child Lani had heard
- the stories of Ohbsgam Ho'ok--Apachelike Monster--who lived
- around Rattlesnake Skull and who carried young girls away with
- him, never to be seen again. Vega was like Ohbsgam Ho'ok. They
- were different only in that Vega was real. He was a bully--
- 532
- strong and mean and powerful. Lani was alone and helpless.
- "The best thing to do with a bully is to ignore him," Davy
- had told Lani once. After yet another run-in with Danny Jenkins
- at school, she had turned to her older brother for advice.
- "Those guys thrive on attention," Davy had continued.
- "That's usually all they want. If you treat 'em like they don't
- exist, eventually they melt into the woodwork. The only way to
- get the best of them is to try to understand them, to figure out
- what their weaknesses are. Then, the next time they come after
- you, you'll know what to do."
- Following Davy's suggestions, Lani had made a show of ignoring
- Danny Jenkins all the while she studied him. It didn't
- take long for her to realize that he was desperately afraid of not
- being accepted, of not fitting in. Bullying was his sole defense,
- his weapon against being bullied himself. Once Lani understood
- all that, she had been able to use that knowledge to turn Danny
- Jenkins into a friend.
- But how could she understand someone like Mr. Vega? And
- 278 J.A. JANCE
- did she want to? How was it possible to comprehend a person
- 533
- who was capable of such cruelty? Trying to find a more comfortable
- position for her aching back, she settled herself on the rough
- floor and pulled the cloth of the shirt away from the singed skin
- of her breast. Then she closed her eyes and tried to think.
- Just like Danny Jenkins, Vega thrived on power and on other
- people's pain. He had hurt her, yes, and he would do so again,
- but hurting her wasn't the real point, or, at least, not the only
- one. She sensed that what he had done and would do to her
- constituted a means to an end rather than an end in itself. His
- real purpose was to hurt her parents. She didn't understand the
- why of that, but she knew it to be true. Vega wasn't Andrew
- Carlisle, but there was some connection, some bond between
- them. Vega was fueled by the same kind of rage and lust for
- revenge that had caused the evil Ohb to invade the house in
- Gates Pass long before Lani was born.
- So that was most of what she knew. Vega was angry and
- cruel and hot-tempered. Bagwwul--one easily angered. That
- word, which Rita had taught her, seemed to come to Lani'
- through the coils of the basket pressed tightly in the palm of
- her hand. She remembered Vega's fierce anger when she had
- 534
- slapped away the cup he was holding out to her; how he had
- yanked her hair back as he forced her to drink the second one.
- Anger was one of Vega's weak spots. He demanded obedience
- but had to enforce that obedience with either drugs or
- some other form of restraints. That meant he was also chu ehbiththam--a
- coward. Only cowards attacked their enemies when
- they were helpless and unable to fight back. His outrageous
- physical assault on Lani had been staged when she was tied hand
- and foot, when she could do nothing to defend herself.
- Obedience. Lani thoughts strayed back to that word and
- stayed there. And once again, out of the past or out of the
- basket, Lani heard Rita's voice, singing to her:
- "Listen to what I sing to you,
- Little Olhoni. Listen to what I sing.
- Be careful not to look at me
- But do exactly as I say."
- Do exactly as I say.
- KISS OF THE BEES Z79
- Lani hadn't even been born on the day of the battle with
- the evil Ohb, but she heard the words to that life-saving war
- 535
- chant as clearly as if she herself had been locked in the longago
- darkness of that root cellar along with Rita and Davy and
- Father John.
- Perhaps the two darknesses--the one in the root cellar and
- the one here inside Vega's stifling wooden crate--were exactly
- the same thing.
- "That dollhouse looks just like my dad's," Quentin said, taking
- a confused look around as they pulled up the long curving
- driveway of the Gates Pass house. "What are we doing here?"
- "Dropping off your sister's bicycle," Mitch told him.
- Lani Walker's knapsack had yielded a garage-door opener and
- a door key as well. "Take a look in that paper bag over there,"
- he said. "The gate-opener-door and house key are both inside.
- Get 'em out, would you?"
- Quentin seemed dazed and stupefied. His rumbling movements
- were maddeningly slow, but he did as he was told.
- "How'd you get these?" he asked, holding up both the key and
- the opener once he had finally succeeded in retrieving them.
- "I already told you. Lani gave them to me so we could bring
- the bike back," Mitch answered. "What did you think, that I
- 536
- stole them? And don't just sit there holding the damn thing.
- Press the button, would you?"
- Obligingly, Quentin pressed the button, and the wroughtiron
- electronic gate swung open. Quentin started to hand the
- opener over to Mitch. "Keep it," Mitch told him. "We'll need
- it again on the way out. Now drag the bike out of the back.
- Where does it go, do you know?"
- Quentin shrugged. "Right here in the carport, as far as I
- know."
- By the time Quentin finally managed to unlock the back
- door, Mitch Johnson was fairly dancing with anticipation--like
- a little kid who has waited too long to go to the bathroom. After
- watching the house for weeks, Mitch Johnson was ready to be
- inside. He had always planned on invading Brandon's home turf
- as part of the operation. As the door finally opened, Mitch felt
- almost giddy. All those years he had been moldering in prison,
- 280 J.A. JANCE
- Brandon Walker had been living here in what he believed to be
- a safe haven. Well, it wasn't safe anymore.
- Carrying the bag with its few remaining goodies, it didn't
- 537
- take long to distribute them. Mitch directed Quentin to leave
- the tongs in the kitchen sink and the cassette tape under his
- stepmother's pillow.
- Quentin seemed puzzled. He held the tape up to the light
- and examined. "What's this for?" he asked.
- "It's just a little something Lani wants your dad and stepmom
- to have. It's their anniversary pretty soon, isn't it?"
- "I guess so," Quentin agreed. "So how do you know Lani?"
- "We met at her job," Mitch said. "At the museum."
- Mitch couldn't help being a little in awe of Quentin's capacity.
- Based on how much booze he had probably drunk, that little
- bit of scopolamine should have laid the guy low. As it was,
- Quentin Walker's mental faculties were noticeably dim, but he
- was still walking and talking.
- "Why are we doing all this?" Quentin asked, leaning up
- against the doorway to steady himself. "And why's it so hot?"
- "I already told you," Mitch said. "It's a favor for your sister."
- ^.- "Oh," said Quentin.
- The last room they entered was Brandon Walker's study.
- Quentin had told Mitch that was where Brandon Walker kept
- 538
- his guns, and that was what they went looking for--Brandon's
- gun cabinet. While Quentin pawed through the top desk drawer,
- searching for the key to the locked cabinet, Mitch Johnson surveyed
- the room. He was fine until he saw the framed plaque
- hanging on the wall along with any number of other awards.
- The 1976 Detective of the Year award had been presented
- to Detective Brandon Walker by Parade Magazine as a result of
- his having solved a homicide case, one in which two men were
- murdered and another was severely injured.
- The plaque on the wall didn't say that, didn't reveal all those
- details. It didn't have to. Mitch knew them by heart. This was
- the award--the recognition--that had come to Brandon Walker
- for arresting Mitch Johnson himself. For arresting a man who
- was engaged in the wholly honorable pursuit of protecting God
- and country from the invading hordes. Those wetbacks had been
- illegal trespassers on U.S. soil, intent on taking jobs away from
- real Americans who were out of work. Mitch was the one who
- KISS OF THE BEES 281
- should have been given a medal for getting rid of that kind of
- scum--a medal, not a jail sentence.
- 539
- The rage that hit Mitch Johnson on seeing that framed award
- went far beyond anything he had ever imagined. Years of pentup
- frustration boiled over when he saw it. That was the worst
- part of the whole operation, the moment of his greatest
- temptation.
- Years ago, in similar circumstances, Andy had simply fallen
- victim to Diana's body, losing his focus and purpose both, in
- satisfying his biological cravings. By resisting the pull of Lani's
- tight little body, by not tearing into her when it would have
- been so easy, Mitch Johnson had already proved to himself that
- he was a better man than his mentor. Seeing that plaque sitting
- smugly on the wall was far worse for Mitch than merely wanting
- to be inside some stupid woman's hot little twat.
- What Mitch wanted to do in that moment was take a gun--
- any gun would do, but preferably an automatic--and mow
- through every picture in the place. It would have been easy.
- Even as the thought crossed his mind, Quentin Walker was in
- the process of handing Mitch a Colt .357 that would have
- blasted the whole room to pieces. And brought cops raining
- down on them from miles away.
- 540
- Taking a deep, calming breath, Mitch caught himself just in
- time. He dropped the weapon into his pocket. "What's all this
- shit?" he said, gesturing.
- "What?" Quentin asked. "The stuff on the wall?"
- Mitch nodded, not trusting himself to speak.
- "Dad used to call it his Wall of Honor."
- "Knock it down," Mitch said. "Knock that crap down and
- break it."
- "All of it?" Quentin asked, staring from frame to frame.
- "Why not?" Mitch told him. "Your father never did anything
- for you, did he?"
- "No, he didn't," Quentin agreed, reaching for the first piece,
- a framed diploma from the University of Arizona. "Why the
- hell shouldn't I?"
- Raising the diploma over his head, Quentin smashed it to
- pieces in a spray of glass in the middle of the floor. While Quentin
- worked his way down the wall, Mitch took the Detective of
- the Year Award off the wall. He studied it for a moment with
- 282 J.A. MNCE
- his fingers itching to do the job, but that wouldn't have worked.
- 541
- Quentin's prints wouldn't have been on the frame.
- "Do this one next," Mitch said, handing it over. Even as he
- watched the piece smash to pieces on the tiled floor, he gave
- himself full credit and gloated over the victory. His was the
- triumph of rational thought over base emotions.
- Had Quentin Walker's mental faculties been a little less impaired,
- he might have noticed that from the moment they
- climbed inside his newly purchased Bronco, Mitch Johnson had
- been wearing latex gloves. Quentin wasn't. y
- He didn't notice; didn't even question it. To Mitch's way of
- thinking, that made all the difference.
- Do exactly as I say, Lani was thinking.
- As the phrase spun through her mind, she suddenly realized
- that the words to Nana Dahd's war chant, the ones she had sung
- to Davy so long ago in order to save his life, were also important
- to Lani--to save her life as well.
- She remembered Mr. Vega's instant fury the moment she
- had disobeyed him. Obviously whatever drug he had given her--
- both earlier on the mountain and later at his house--was something
- that produced compliance, that made her do whatever he
- 542
- said. If Lani was going to save herself--and it was unlikely anyone
- else would--then she had to make sure that he didn't give
- her any more of it. She would have to watch for a chance to
- get away. If the opportunity presented itself, she would be able
- to take advantage of it only so long as she remained clearheaded.
- That was the moment when she heard the tailgate of the
- Subaru swing open. A moment later she heard someone fiddling
- with the outside of the crate, as though they were opening a
- padlock hasp. Lani had been lying with the tiny people-hair
- medallion clutched in her hand, gleaning as much comfort as
- she could from the tightly woven coils. Now, though, before
- Vega opened the door on the crate, she stuffed the tiny basket
- back into the pocket of her jeans. Then she forced herself to lie
- still, closing her eyes and slowing her breathing. By the time the
- door swung open, Lani Walker appeared to be sound asleep.
- "Come on, sweetheart, rise and shine," Vega said, grabbing
- her by the ankle and dragging her once again across the rough,
- KISS OF THE BEES Z83
- splintery floor of the crate. "Wake up. We're going for another
- little ride."
- 543
- Yanked upright, Lani found herself standing between the Subaru
- and an idling sport utility vehicle, an old Bronco. A sleeping
- man was slumped against the rider's side door. "Come on
- around to the other side," Vega ordered. "Can you walk on your
- own, or am I going to have to carry you?"
- Lani, planning on acting dazed, didn't have to fake stumbling.
- Her legs felt rubbery beneath her--rubbery and strangely
- disconnected from her brain and will. When she staggered and
- almost fell, Vega grabbed her hair, hard, and held her up with
- that. The pull was vicious enough that tears came to her eyes,
- but it also helped clear her head. In a moment of quiet, she
- heard a readily identifiable squeak and realized that the fist knotted
- in her hair was encased in a rubber glove.
- Desperate to get away, she looked around. They were standing
- in one corner of a large gravel parking lot. There were no
- other people visible anywhere. The only other vehicles were
- parked next to the darkened hulk of a building half a block
- away--too far to try running there for help.
- After a moment, Vega slammed shut the tailgate of the Subaru,
- twisting the key to lock it once more. Lani considered
- 544
- screaming, but just as they started around the back of the
- Bronco, with Lani's hair still knotted painfully in Vega's gloved
- fist, another train rumbled past on the track that bordered the
- edge of the lot. With all that noise, there was no po.int in attempting
- to scream for help, not even out in the open. Over
- the racket of the train, no one would have heard her anyway.
- Vega wrenched open the driver's door to the Bronco and
- shoved her inside. "There you go," he said. "You sit in the
- middle. That way I'll be able to keep an eye on you."
- The unexpected push sent her piling across the bench seat
- and rammed the tender flesh of her already throbbing breast
- against the steering wheel of the car. Another intense jolt of
- pain shot through her body. She managed to suppress a shriek.
- Even so, a yelp of pain escaped her lips. On the far side of the
- car, the sleeping man stirred and looked at her.
- "Hey, what's this?" he mumbled sleepily. "What's going
- on?"
- Quentin1 What was he doing here?
- 284 J.A. JANCE
- 545
- "It's too soon, Quentin," Vega said. "Go back to sleep. I'll
- let you know when it's time to wake up."
- With his head dropping back to his chin, Quentin did as he
- was told.
- The odor of beer was thick in the car, and Quentin was
- snoring softly. A hundred questions whirled through Lani's
- mind, but she asked none of them. Asking questions or showing
- too much interest in what was going on around her was probably
- an invitation to another drink of whatever Vega had given her
- earlier. Maybe he had fed some of the same stuff to Quentin.
- "I suppose you're a little surprised to see him, aren't you?"
- Vega said, climbing in behind Lani and shifting the Bronco into
- gear. "We're just having a little family reunion tonight. Your
- brother helped me drop off a few presents for your parents.
- Now the three of us are going for a ride. We have some errands
- to run."
- Vega's earlier ugly mood seemed to have lifted. He was in
- high spirits, whistling under his breath as he drove out of the
- lot onto Grant and from there onto eastbound I-10. Whatever
- had happened during the interval while Lani had been locked
- 546
- in the car seemed to have left him feeling particularly happy.
- "Your brother's here," Vega said, instinctively answering
- Lani's unasked question, "because Quentin's a good friend of
- mine."
- Assuming from the way he made the statement that no reply
- was necessary, Lani kept quiet. Seconds later, however, an iron
- grip clamped shut on her leg, just above her left knee. As the
- muscular fingers dug into her flesh, she squirmed under the punishing
- grip but resisted the urge to cry out.
- "Did you hear me, little lady?" he demanded. "I said Quentin's
- a good friend of mine."
- "Yes," Lani said. "I heard."
- "But don't put too much store in it," he added. "Because
- I'll kill the son of a bitch in a second if you don't behave. Do
- you understand me? Whether Quentin lives or dies is up to you.
- If you try to run, or if you make any trouble at all, I'll kill him,
- no questions asked. Do you understand?"
- Lani nodded her head. "Yes," she said quietly. "I
- understand."
- KISS OF THE BEES Z85
- 547
- And she did, too. If Vega said he would kill Quentin, then
- he would, friend or not.
- "I don't make idle threats, you see."
- "No," Lani said. "I know you don't."
- Once again, Nana Dahd's war chant came whirling into Lani
- Walker's heart out of the darkness of that locked, long-ago
- root cellar.
- "Listen to what I sing to you,
- Little Olhoni. Listen to what I sing.
- Be careful not to look at me
- But do exactly as I say."
- For a moment it seemed to Lani that Rita herself was riding
- in the truck with them, telling Lani what she had to do to
- survive. Lani realized then that she was right. The two sets of
- darkness and the two evil Ohbs were somehow merging into
- one. And the advice Nana Dahd had once given Davy Ladd was
- the same advice Rita was giving Lani now in the Bronco.
- "I'll do it," Lani said quietly. "I'll do exactly what you say."
- It might have sounded to Vega as though she were speaking
- to him, answering him, but in Lani Walker's heart and in her
- 548
- mind's eye, she was actually speaking to Nana Dahd.
- The words formed clearly enough in her head, but when it
- came time actually to speak them, they came out fuzzy and
- disjointed. Like her rubberized legs earlier when she had struggled
- to walk, the lingering effects of the drug still interfered with
- Lani's ability to use her tongue. That was evidently exactly what
- Vega expected.
- He loosened his clawlike grip around her leg and gave the
- top of her thigh a possessive pat. It was all Lani could do not
- to dodge away under his touch.
- "Good girl," Vega said. "Your mother told me you were
- smart. I'm glad to see some evidence that it's true."
- Vega had spoken to Lani's mother, to Diana? When? How?
- Lani wondered. And what was it he had said earlier about dropping
- something off at the house? Something about presents?
- What presents?
- Lani cringed then, thinking about the terrible picture she had
- seen on his easel, the one he had drawn of her, the one with
- 286 J.A. JANCE
- her body naked and with her legs spread open to the world.
- 549
- What if he had taken that one to her parents? Or else, what if he
- had done something to them? Her heart quailed at the thought.
- "Why did you go to my house?" she asked.
- Vega reached in his pocket and pulled out a key, one Lani
- recognized. "Why wouldn't I?" he said. "You gave your brother
- your key so he could return your bike for you."
- By then the Bronco was on 1-19 and starting off at the exit
- to Ajo Way. It seemed to Lani that they were headed for the
- reservation while off to the right, hidden behind a single barrier
- of rugged mountain, lay Gates Pass and home. Or whatever was
- left of home.
- "You didn't hurt my parents, did you?" she asked at last.
- Vega frowned. "You're awfully full of questions at the
- moment."
- "Did you?" Lani insisted.
- He turned his face toward her, his face glowing ghostlike in
- the reflected headlights of an oncoming vehicle.
- "I haven't hurt them yet," he said. "But then, it's probably
- a little too early. Don't worry, though, they'll be getting your
- message before long."
- 550
- j',"What message?" Lani asked.
- "Don't you remember? You made it yourself, a very special
- tape for both your mother and father."
- A tape? Lani could remember nothing about a tape, nothing
- at all. "I don't remember any tape," she said.
- Vega grinned and patted her again. "It's all right if you don't
- remember," he said. "But what I can tell you is that once they
- hear it, neither one of your parents is ever going to forget it,
- not as long as they live."
- The patrol car, lights flashing, had barely stopped at the end
- of the driveway when the Walkers' telephone started to ring.
- While Brandon went to meet the deputy, Diana raced for the
- phone, hoping beyond hope that the caller would be Lani. It
- wasn't.
- Jessica Carpenter's mother, Rochelle, was on the phone. "I
- got your message," she said. "I hope you don't mind my calling
- this late. We saw the emergency lights as I was bringing Jessie
- home from the concert. Lani's all right, isn't she?"
- KISS OF THE BEES 287
- "Lani seems to be missing," Diana said, fighting to force the
- 551
- words out around the barrier of a huge lump that threatened to
- block her throat. "Jessie hasn't seen her then?"
- "Not all day," Rochelle Carpenter said. "The last time they
- talked was last night. Jessie said Lani was all excited about something
- she was doing for you this morning before work, something
- about an anniversary present."
- Diana caught her breath at the thought that maybe this was
- a clue, something that might lead them to Lani or at least tell
- them where to start looking. "Could I talk to Jessie?" Diana
- asked. "If we could find out what that was, maybe it would help
- us find her."
- Moments later, a subdued Jessica Carpenter came on the
- phone. "I'm sorry, Mrs. Walker. I hope Lani's going to be okay."
- "Just tell me what you know about what Lani was doing
- earlier this morning."
- "What if it ruins a surprise?"
- "Please," Diana said. "That's a risk we'll have to take."
- "It was something about a picture. Lani said she had met a
- man who was going to paint a picture of her to give to you and
- Mr. Walker for your anniversary. When we talked last night, she
- 552
- was all excited and asked me what I thought she should wear."
- "Did she tell you what she decided?" Diana Walker asked.
- "What she wore in February when she was one of the rodeo
- princesses. That pretty flowered shirt, her cowboy hat, her boots.
- I don't know for sure if that's what she wore, but she said she
- was going to."
- The phone trembled in Diana's hand. She was listening to
- Jessie Carpenter's voice but she was thinking about Fat Crack's
- warning about the danger from Shadow of Death, the warning
- Diana had laughed off and dismissed without a thought. Was
- Lani's mysterious disappearance somehow connected to that?
- "Her rodeo clothes?" Diana managed to mumble in return.
- "Did she say why she chose those?"
- "Something about the man, the artist, wanting her to look
- like an Indian."
- The doorbell rang. "I'd better go. Someone's at the door,"
- Diana said hurriedly. "Thank you, Jess. I'll pass this information
- along to the deputy."
- But Jessie Carpenter wasn't quite ready to be off the phone.
- 288 J.A. JANCE
- 553
- "You don't think anything bad has happened to Lani, do you,
- Mrs. Walker?"
- Hot tears stung the corners of Diana's eyes. "I hope to God
- nothing has," she said.
- By the time Diana put down the phone in the kitchen and
- headed for the living room, Brandon was already escorting Detective
- Ford Myers into the house, leading him to the same
- couch where Deputy Garrett was already seated with his notebook
- in hand.
- Diana's heart fell as soon as she saw Detective Myers. Why
- him? she wondered.
- Ford Myers had gotten himself crosswise of Brandon very
- early in the course of their professional lives. The two of them
- had gone head-to-head on more than one occasion over the
- years, but once elected sheriff, the civil service protections Brandon
- himself had instituted had made getting rid of Myers tough.
- As a result, Myers had stayed on, growing more and more
- disgruntled.
- During that critical election campaign, when Brandon had
- been running against Bill Forsythe in the aftermath of the Quentin
- 554
- Walker protection-racket allegations. Detective Myers had
- been one of several members of the department who had been
- openly critical of Brandon Walker's administration.
- "What seems to be the problem?" Myers was saying as Diana
- walked into the room.
- "It's our daughter," Brandon answered. "Her name is Lani.
- Full name Dolores Lanita Walker. She's sixteen. She left for
- work on her bike around six o'clock this morning and never
- arrived. Tonight she was supposed to go to a concert with a
- friend of hers from up the street. Lani didn't show for that,
- either."
- "That's the last time you saw her?" Myers asked. "This
- morning?"
- "We didn't actually see her then," Brandon answered. "She
- left us a note. We didn't worry about her all day because we
- thought she had gone to work at the Arizona Sonora Desert
- Museum. This evening, though, when we came back from dinner,
- her supervisor from work had called and left a message.
- Mrs. Allison said on the phone that when she was going to miss
- a shift like she did today that she needed to call in."
- 555
- KISS OF THE BEES 289
- "You've spoken to this Mrs. Allison?"
- Brandon shook his head, but plucked the Post-it note with
- Lani's handwritten message on it and handed it over to the detective.
- "Not yet," Brandon said, as the detective perused the
- note. "As you can see, she had plans to go to a concert this
- evening."
- "What kind?" Myers asked. "One of those rock concerts?"
- "I doubt it. She goes in more for country western. You could
- talk to her friend, Jessica Carpenter. She could tell you what
- kind of concert it was."
- "And you said Lani rides her bike to work?"
- "That's right. She could drive one of the cars, but she prefers
- the bike. When my wife and I came home a little while ago,
- though, the bike was back home, lying in the middle of the
- carport. Her bike was here, but Lani wasn't. Every light in the
- house was on."
- The detective glanced at Deputy Garrett. "A break-in then?"
- Myers asked.
- Garrett shook his head. "I haven't been able to find any sign
- 556
- of it so far. Either the doors were left unlocked--"
- "They weren't," Brandon interrupted.
- "Or whoever it was let themselves in with a key. Other than
- a gun--a Colt .357--nothing else seems to be missing, although
- there is some glass breakage in Sheriff Walker's study."
- "Where was the Colt?" Myers asked.
- "Locked in my gun cabinet," Brandon answered.
- "And was that broken into?"
- Garrett shook his head. "Again, whoever it was must have
- used a key," the deputy said.
- "The key was in my desk drawer," Brandon said.
- Ford Myers raised his eyebrow. "So whoever it was knew
- where to look. You said something about breakage, Deputy Garrett?
- What's that all about?"
- "Plaques, diplomas, and framed certificates," Garrett answered.
- "That kind of thing."
- "Anything else missing besides the gun?" Myers continued.
- "Money? Jewelry?"
- Brandon shook his head. "We haven't really checked that
- yet," he said. "We called for a deputy before we went snooping
- 557
- around."
- 290 J.A. JANCE
- Myers nodded. "I see," he said. "Now, tell me," he continued,
- "have you two been having any trouble with your daughter
- recently?"
- "Trouble?" Diana asked, interjecting herself into the conversation
- for the first time. "What do you mean, trouble?"
- "Boy trouble, for instance," Myers said with a casual shrug
- of the shoulders. "Hanging out with the wrong crowd. Problems
- with drugs or alcohol."
- Diana was shaking her head long before he finished. "No,"
- she declared. "Absolutely noti Nothing like that. Lani's a fine
- kid. An honors student. She's never given us a bit of trouble."
- Myers stuffed his notebook into his pocket and then glanced
- at Deputy Garrett. "How about if I have the deputy here show
- me the damage in your office."
- Brandon's face was tight with suppressed anger. "Sure," he
- said. "That'll be fine."
- As the two officers started out of the room, Diana made as
- if to follow them, but Brandon stopped her. "We'll wait here,"
- 558
- he said.
- As soon as Garrett and Myers were out of earshot, a furious
- Diana Walker turned on her husband. "What the hell does he
- mean, hanging out with the wrong crowd?"
- "Hush. Don't let him hear you," Brandon said. "You know
- where the SOB is going with all that, don't you? I do. I'll bet
- he's going to call this a family disturbance. He'll say Lani's a
- runaway. He's not going to lift a finger until he has to. He'll go
- by the book on this one, one hundred percent. Guaranteed."
- Diana was outraged. "Not lift a finger? What do you mean?"
- "Hide and watch," Brandon told her. "I've seen it before.
- Nobody plays the official rules game better than Ford Myers. I
- think maybe he invented it."
- They were sitting waiting in grim silence a few minutes later
- when Myers sauntered back into the room. "If you have any
- jewelry or cash in the house, you might want to check it," he
- suggested.
- "We don't keep cash around," Brandon said. "And not that
- much jewelry. But I'm sure Diana will be glad to check."
- Wordlessly, Diana got up and walked into the bedroom.
- 559
- Nothing appeared to be out of place. Her jewelry box was where
- it belonged and nothing seemed to be missing. Fighting back
- KISS OF THE BEES . 291
- tears, she walked on down the hall and checked Lani's bedroom.
- Jessica was right. The flowered cowboy shirt, Lani's Stetson, and
- Tony Lama boots were all gone from the closet. Diana returned
- to the living room just as Myers was getting ready to leave.
- "I checked," she said. "Everything is here, except for the
- outfit Jessica said Lani was planning to wear. That one is gone."
- "Good enough, Mrs. Walker," Myers said. "Deputy Garrett
- and I will be shoving off for the time being. If you still haven't
- heard anything from Lani by tomorrow morning, call in after six
- and we'll go ahead with the Missing Persons report at that time."
- "I can tell you what clothes Lani was wearing when she left
- the house," Diana said. "In case you're interested, that is."
- "That information should go into the Missing Persons report
- when you make it." Myers smiled. "Chances are, though, it
- won't even be necessary. Most of the time, these kids turn up
- long before the twenty-four-hour deadline. I'm sure your husband
- can tell you how it works, Mrs. Walker. By allowing that
- 560
- day's worth of grace time, we can cut down on unnecessary
- paperwork. Right, Mr. Walker?"
- "Right," Brandon said.
- "And as far as the gun theft and the vandalism is concerned,
- on a low-priority residential robbery like this, I won't be able to
- schedule someone to come out and lift prints until regular work
- hours next week. And besides, that may not prove necessary,
- either."
- "What do you mean?" Diana asked. "Why wouldn't it be
- necessary?"
- Myers shrugged. "What if the whole thing turns out to be a
- family prank of some kind? If your daughter took the gun herself
- on a lark, just to do a little unauthorized target practice, it might
- be better not to have those prints on file, don't you think?"
- "But Lani wouldn't--" Diana began.
- "Sure," Brandon said, urging Detective Myers and the deputy
- out the door. "I see what you mean. Thanks for all your
- help."
- Diana was fuming when Brandon turned to face her. "Why
- did you let him off the hook like that?" she demanded. "Lani
- 561
- doesn't even like guns. She would never--"
- "I let Detective Myers off the hook because he has no inten-
- 292 J.A. JANCE
- tion of doing anything, and I do." With that, Brandon Walker
- stalked toward the kitchen, with Diana right on his heels.
- "What?" she asked. "What are you going to do?"
- "I could lift prints myself, but that might screw up some
- prosecutor's chain of evidence," Brandon said, picking up the
- phone. "So instead, I'm going to make a few calls. There are
- some people in this world who owe me. It's time to call in a
- few of my markers."
- Fingerprints were Alvin Miller's life. From the time an ink
- pad showed up as a birthday present for his sixth birthday party,
- he had found fingerprints endlessly fascinating. He had left a
- trail of indelible red marks across the face of his mother's new
- Harvest Gold refrigerator and dishwasher. His mother had confiscated
- the damn thing after that and thrown it in the garbage.
- By the time Alvin was sixteen, he had turned an Eagle Scout
- project into a volunteer position as an aide in the latent fingerprint
- lab for the Pima County Sheriff's Department. Upon high
- 562
- school graduation, he had transformed his volunteer work into
- a paying job. Now, at age thirty-four and without benefit of
- more than a few college credits, he was the youngest and least
- formally educated person in the country to be placed in charge
- of a fully automated fingerprint identification system.
- The civil service protections former sheriff Brandon Walker
- had instituted over the years kept his successor from doing politically
- based wholesale firings, but Bill Forsythe wasn't above finding
- other ways of unloading what he considered deadwood. One
- of the people he wanted out most was Alvin Miller. To have
- some of the best, most up-to-date equipment in the Southwest
- in the hands of an "uneducated kid" was more than Forsythe
- could stand. He wanted somebody in that position with the
- proper credentials--somebody people around the country could
- look up to, somebody about whom they would say, "Now
- there's a guy who knows what he's doing."
- Since his election, Sheriff Forsythe had hit Alvin Miller
- where it hurt the worst--in the budget department, chopping
- both money and staff. The "automated" part of AFIS sounds
- 563
- good, but the part that precedes the automation--enhancing the
- prints so the computer can actually scan and analyze them, is a labor-intensive,
- manual process. Forsythe had cut so far back on KISS OF THE BEES 293
- staffing the fingerprint lab that it should have been impossible
- for it to function--would have been impossible--had the lab
- been left in any hands less capable or dedicated than those of
- Alvin Miller.
- He worked night and day. He put in his eight hours on the
- clock and another eight or so besides almost every day, Saturdays
- and Sundays included. Only forty hours a week went on the
- clock; a whole lot more than forty were freebies.
- Because Alvin had so much hands-on practice, he was incredibly
- quick at manually enhancing those prints. He could read
- volumes into what looked like--to everyone else's untrained
- eyes--indecipherable circles and smudges. When it came to fingerprints,
- Alvin found each was as unique as he'd always heard
- snowflakes were supposed to be. And once he had dealt with a
- print, he remembered much of what he saw. Twice now, he had
- managed to make a hit--fingering a current resident in the Pima
- County Jail for another unrelated crime before feeding the information
- 564
- into the computer.
- When Carley Fielding, Pima County's weekend lab tech,
- called earlier that evening to see what she should do with the
- three boxes of bones Detective Leggett wanted printed, Alvin
- Miller happened to be in and working. Lifting fingerprints off
- human bones was nothing Alvin had ever done before. The prospect
- was interesting enough to take him away from whatever he
- had been working on before.
- It turned out that bones were easy to process. It didn't take
- long for Alvin to figure out that more than one person had
- handled the bones. Some had done so with gloves on, but only
- one had handled them bare-handed. Alvin sorted through one
- set of dusted prints after another until he was convinced that
- he had found the best possible one.
- That was where he was when his phone rang. "Al?" a familiar
- voice asked. "What the hell are you still doing there working
- at this time of night?"
- "Sheriff Walkeri" Alvin Miller exclaimed. A pleased smile
- spread over his face as he recognized his former boss's voice.
- "How's it going?"
- 565
- "Not all that good. I need some help."
- "Hey, if there's something I can do," Al Miller told him,
- "you've got it."
- 294 J.A. JANCE
- "I know," Brandon Walker said. "And as it turns out, there
- is something you can do, Al, because I just happen to have a
- houseful of fingerprints that need to be lifted."
- "What house?" Alvin Miller asked.
- "Mine."
- "The same one you lived in before? The one out in Gates
- Pass?"
- "That's it. But I don't want to get you in trouble with your
- new boss by taking you away from something important."
- "Don't worry about it," Alvin Miller said with a grin. "My
- new boss isn't going to say a word. As far as Bill Forsythe and
- his damned time clock are concerned, I'm not even working
- tonight. That being the case, I can come and go as I damned
- well please. See you in twenty minutes or so, give or take."
- Once Brandon was off the phone with Alvin Miller, Diana
- took her turn and tried dialing the number Davy had left on his
- 566
- message. She was surprised when a faraway desk clerk told her
- that she had dialed the Ritz-Carlton. She was even more surprised
- when the voice of a sleep-dulled young woman answered
- the phone. Moments later Davy's voice came through the receiver
- as well.
- "Hi, Mom," he said. "How's it going?"
- Just hearing her son speak brought Diana close to tears. She
- had to swallow the lump in her throat before she could answer.
- "Not all that well at the moment," she said. "Lani's missing."
- "What?" Davy asked.
- "Lani's gone," Diana said bleakly.
- "What do you mean, gone?"
- "I mean she's not here. She never showed for that concert
- with Jessica, and she didn't show up for work today, either."
- "Maybe she went to visit somebody else. Have you checked
- with her other friends?"
- "We're checking," Diana said, "but I thought you'd want to
- know what was going on."
- "You don't think she's been kidnapped, or something, do
- you?" Davy demanded. "Shouldn't somebody contact the FBI?"
- 567
- "Brandon is handling it."
- "What can I do to help?" Davy asked urgently.
- KISS OF THE BEES 295
- "Nothing much, for right now," Diana answered. "I just
- wanted you to know, that's all."
- "Thanks," he said. "Are you and Dad going to be all right?"
- Diana felt herself choking on the phone. "We'll be okay,"
- she said. "But hurry home. Hurry as fast as you can. And call
- every night so we can keep you posted."
- "I will," Davy said. "I promise."
- A stricken David Ladd handed the phone over to Candace.
- "I was right," he said. "Something awful has happened. Lani's
- gone."
- Candace was the one who put the phone back in its cradle
- and switched on the light. "Gone where?" she asked.
- Davy shrugged. "Nobody knows."
- "Your parents think she's been kidnapped?"
- "Maybe, but they're not sure. Candace, I've never heard my
- mother this upset. She never even asked who you were." While
- he spoke, Davy had crawled out of bed and was starting toward
- 568
- the bathroom.
- "What are you doing?" Candace asked.
- "I'm going to shower and get dressed."
- "But why?"
- "So I can leave. You heard me. I told Mom I'd be there as
- soon as I can. If I go right now, I can be halfway to Bloomington
- before morning rush hour starts."
- "We," Candace said pointedly. "If we leave right now. Besides,
- it's Sunday; there isn't going to be a rush hour."
- David nodded. "I meant we," he said.
- "Doesn't that seem like a stupid thing to do?" Candace
- asked.
- "Stupid? Didn't you hear what I said? This is a crisis, Candace.
- My family needs me."
- "I didn't say going was stupid. Driving is. Why not fly?"
- Candace asked. "We can put the tickets on my AmEx. If we
- take a plane, we can be in Tucson by noon. Driving, that's about
- as long as it would take us to make it to the Iowa state line."
- "What about the car? What about all my stuff?"
- "I'll call Bridget," Candace said decisively. "She works only
- 569
- a few blocks from here. If we leave the parking claim ticket at
- the desk, she can come over on Monday after work, pick up the
- car, and take it home with her. She and Larry can keep it with
- 296 J.A. JANCE
- them until we can make arrangements to come back and get it
- later. In the meantime, we can take a cab to the airport. That's
- a lot less trouble than fighting the parking-garage wars."
- Candace wrestled a city phone book out of the nightstand
- drawer and started looking through it.
- "What are you doing?" David asked.
- "Calling the airlines to find the earliest plane and get us a
- reservation."
- David looked at her wonderingly. "You'd do this for me?
- Go to all this trouble?"
- She looked at him in mock exasperation as the "all lines are
- busy" message played out in her ear. "David," Candace said,
- "we're a team. I've been telling you for months now that I love
- you. If there's a crisis in your life, then there's a crisis in mine,
- too."
- Just then a live person somewhere in the airline industry
- 570
- must have come on the phone. "What's your earliest flight from
- Chicago to Tucson?" she asked. There was a long pause. "Six
- a.m.?" she said a moment later.
- Looking at the clock on the nightstand, Candace groaned.
- "Not much time for sleep, is there? But that's the one we need.
- Two seats, together, if you have them." There was a pause. "The
- return flight?" She glanced questioningly in David's direction. "I
- don't know about that. I guess we'd better just leave the return
- trip open for now."
- After making arrangements to pay for the tickets at the
- counter, Candace put down the phone. "Don't you think we
- ought to try to sleep for another hour or so? We don't want
- to get there and be so shot from lack of sleep that we can't
- help out."
- Obligingly, Davy lay back down on the bed, but he didn't
- crawl back under the sheets because he didn't expect to fall
- asleep again. He did, though. The next thing he knew, the alarm
- in the clock radio next to his head was going off. It was fourthirty.
- From
- the light leaking out of the bathroom and from the
- 571
- sound of running water, he could tell that Candace was already
- up and in the shower. Moments later, David Ladd was, too.
- He was standing under the steaming spray of water when he
- KISS OF THE BEES 297
- remembered his dream from the day before--the dream and
- Lani's horrifying scream.
- Rocked by a terrible sense of foreboding, Davy braced himself
- against the shower wall to keep from falling. He knew now
- that the scream could mean only one thing.
- Dolores Lanita Walker was already dead.
- 14
- hen the Indians heard the bad news--that PaDaj O'othham
- were coming again to steal their crops--they held another council.
- Everybody came. U'uwhig--the Birds--told their friends the Indians
- about a mountain which was not far from their village and
- quite near their fields. The people went to this mountain, and on
- the side of it they built three big walls of rock.
- Those walls of rock are there, even to this day.
- Then all the women and children went up on top of the mountain,
- behind the walls of rock. But the men stayed down to protect
- 572
- the fields.
- Soon the bad People of the South came once again.
- The Wasps, the Scorpions, and Snakes were leading them. But
- Nuhwi--the Buzzards--and Chuk U'uwhig--the Blackbirds--and
- all the larger birds were on guard. Nuhwi--Buzzard--would catch
- Ko'owi--Snake--and break his back. Tatdai--Roadrunner--
- watched for the Scorpions, and Pa-nahl--the Bees--fought
- Wihpsh--the Wasps.
- So at last the Bad People were driven away. The Desert People
- returned to their village and their fields. They built houses and were
- very happy. A great many of the Bad People had been killed in this
- fight, so it was a long time before they felt strong enough to fight again.
- But after a while they were very hungry. And Wihpsh--the Wasps--
- carried word to them that the Indian women were once again filling
- their olios and grain baskets with corn and beans and honey.
- KISS OF THE BEES 299
- This time PaDaj O'othham waited until it was very dry and
- hot. Then they started north.
- This time Shoh'o--Grasshopper--had listened to the plans of
- 573
- the Bad People. Shoh'o started to jump to reach his friends, the
- Desert People, and warn them. The harder and faster Grasshopper
- jumped, the longer grew his hind legs. Still he could not go fast
- enough. So he took two leaves and fastened them on and flew. Before
- he arrived, he wore out one pair of leaves and put on another pair.
- To this day Shoh'o--Grasshopper--still carries one large thin pair
- of wings, and another thin small green pair.
- One minute Deputy Fellows was wide awake, staring at the
- doors to the ICU waiting room. The next minute, Gabe Ortiz
- was shaking him awake.
- "Brian?"
- Brian's eyes flicked open. It took a moment for the face in
- front of his to register. "Fat 0-ack1" he exclaimed. "How the
- hell are you, and what are you doing here?"
- "Delia Cachora, Manny Chavez's daughter, works with me
- out on the reservation. When we heard about her father, I offered
- to drive her into town."
- Brian glanced around the waiting room. No one else was
- there. "Where is she?" he asked.
- "A nurse took Delia in to see him," Fat Crack said. "How
- 574
- does it look?"
- Brian shook his head. "Not good," he said. "It's his back.
- Broken."
- "How did it happen?" Gabe Ortiz asked. "I heard it had
- something to do with Rattlesnake Skull."
- Brian nodded. "At the charco. It sounds as though he came
- across someone--an Anglo--digging up bones there by the water
- hole. We think Mr. Chavez thought the guy was digging up
- ancient artifacts and tried to stop him. The guy attacked Mr.
- Chavez with a shovel."
- Fat Crack was shaking his head when an Indian woman in
- her mid- to late thirties emerged from behind the doors to the
- ICU. "He's still unconscious," she said, addressing Gabe Ortiz.
- "No one knows when he'll come out from under the anesthetic.
- His condition is serious enough that somebody had a priest come
- around and deliver last rites. The nurse said he was really bent
- 300 J.A. JANCE
- out of shape about that. My father stopped being a Catholic a
- long time ago."
- Blushing, Brian stood up. "You must be Delia Cachora. I'm
- 575
- Deputy Fellows," he said. "I'm sorry. I'm afraid the priest business
- is all my fault. When we found your father, he was saying
- something over and over in Tohono O'othham. I thought he was
- calling for a priest--pahl. It turns out he was saying pahla."
- "Shovel," Fat Crack supplied.
- Brian Fellows nodded. "That's right. Shovel. I'm sorry if the
- priest upset him."
- Delia Chavez Cachora gave him a puzzled glance. "Where
- did you learn to speak Tohono O'othham?" she asked.
- "From a friend of mine," he answered. "Davy Ladd."
- Delia's reaction was instantaneous. Without a word, she
- turned away from both men and stalked from the waiting room.
- Brian turned to Gabe.
- "I'm really sorry about all the confusion. I guess she's upset.
- The problem is, I'm supposed to try to talk to her. The detective
- left me the job of asking her some questions, but it doesn't look
- like that's going to work. Was it the priest stuff?" Brian asked.
- "Or do you think it was something I said?"
- Gabe Ortiz smiled and eased himself into the chair next to
- the one where Brian had been sitting earlier. He folded his arms
- 576
- across his broad chest and closed his eyes.
- "No, Brian," Gabe replied. "I believe it was something I
- said. Sit down and take a load off. Delia's upset at the moment,
- but if we just sit here and wait, eventually she'll come around."
- Quentin had told Mitch to wake him up as soon as they got
- to the turnoff to Coleman Road. It bothered Mitch a little that
- where they were going was so damned close to where the
- Bounder was parked. He had chosen that particular spot because
- there, on the edge of the reservation, was about as far from
- town as he could get. But it was natural that the edge of the
- reservation, rather than the middle of it, was where Quentin
- would have discovered his treasure trove of Native American
- pots.
- Still, as long as Mitch played his cards right, it didn't matter
- that much. He glanced toward Lani. Obviously he had measured
- out a better dosage this time. The amount of drug Mitch had
- KISS OF THE BEES 301
- used, combined with his threat to kill Quentin, was working
- well enough. Lani Walker was docile without being comatose.
- That might prove beneficial. If the terrain was as rough as Quentin
- 577
- claimed it would be, Mitch would probably need Lani to
- be able to climb on her own power rather than being carried
- or dragged.
- Quentin himself was Mitch's biggest concern as they drove
- west toward the reservation. Would he be able to rouse Quentin
- enough when the time came to get him to do what was needed?
- If not, he might have to do an on-the-fly revision of his plan
- and let the pots go. They had been gravy all along--an extra
- added attraction. What was not optional was how he left Quentin
- and Lani once Mitch was ready to walk away. He would
- arrange the bodies artfully.
- Lani would be found right alongside the remains of her killer.
- The scenario would be plain for all to see. After murdering and
- mutilating his sister, the record would show that Quentin
- Walker had taken his own life.
- How do you suppose you'll like them apples, Mr. Brandon
- Walker? Mitch Johnson grinned to himself. It should give you
- something to think about for the rest of your goddamned natural life.
- The turnoffwas coming up. "Okay now," Mitch said to Lani.
- "Nap time's over. Wake him up so he can give me directions."
- 578
- Lani turned to Quentin. "Wake up," she said. He didn't stir.
- "Come on, girl," Mitch said, once again grasping her lower
- thigh. "I know you can do better than that!" He didn't bother
- to tighten his grip. He didn't have to. Obviously, Lani Walker
- had learned how to take orders.
- "Come on, Quentin," she said, shaking her brother's shoulder.
- "You have to wake up now."
- Quentin tried to dodge the commanding voice. He didn't
- want to wake up. He was enjoying his sleep. There was no
- reason for him not to. And who the hell was this woman who
- was so damned determined to wake him up?
- He opened his eyes and tried to focus on the face hovering
- in front of his. When the world spun on its axis, Quentin shut
- his eyes immediately. He tried to shut his ears as well.
- "Quentin1" Another voice this time. A male voice. "Wake
- the hell up and get busy1"
- 302 J.A. JANCE
- Mitch. Mitch Johnson, and he sounded pissed. Quentin
- struggled to open his eyes. "Where are we, Mitch?" Quentin
- mumbled, not quite able to make his tongue and mouth work
- 579
- in any kind of harmony. "Whazza problem?"
- "The problem is we're almost to Goleman Road, and I don't
- know what the hell to do next."
- "Doan worry 'bout a thing," Quentin murmured, closing his
- eyes once more. "Just lemme sleep a little longer."
- "Wake him upV Mitch demanded. "Slap him around if you
- have to, but get his eyes open."
- Quentin felt a small hand on his shoulder, shaking him. He
- opened his eyes once more.
- A woman's face--a girl's, really--hovered anxiously over
- him. It took a matter of seconds for the dark hair and eyes to
- arrange themselves into a recognizable creature. As soon as that
- happened, Quentin could barely believe it. Lani! The shock of
- recognition stunned him and brought him out of his stupor,
- although as soon as he tried to sit up, a fierce attack of vertigo
- once again sent the interior of the Bronco whirling around him.
- "What the hell is she doing here?" Quentin demanded. "I
- said I'd take you to the cave. Bringing someone else along wasn't
- part of the bargain, especially not her."
- Quentin didn't like being around his sister. Lani was almost
- 580
- as weird as that old Indian hag named Rita who used to take
- care of her when she was little. Lani had funny ways about her,
- ways of knowing things that she maybe shouldn't have, just like
- Rita. If Quentin had been able to, he would have climbed in
- the backseat right then, just to put some distance between them.
- "She's your sister, isn't she?" Mitch returned mildly. "I
- didn't think you'd mind if I brought her along for the ride."
- "Mitch," Quentin said, speaking slowly, trying to make his
- lips and brain work in conjunction, trying to make it sound as
- though his objection were more general and less personal.
- "Don't you understand anything? She may be my stepsister, but
- she's also an Indian. Once the tribe hears about my pots, they'll
- raise all kinds of hell."
- "Lani's not going to say anything to anybody, are you, Lani?"
- Once again, Vega's warning fingers caressed the top of her
- leg. Dreading his viselike grip, Lani flinched under the pressure
- of his hand and shook her head.
- KISS OF THE BEES 305
- "No," she said at once. "I won't tell anybody. I promise."
- The turnoff to Coleman Road was coming up fast. Mitch
- 581
- Johnson switched on his signal. "Now what?"
- "Go about half a mile up. There's a road off to the left. A
- few yards beyond that, there's a wash off to the right. Turn there."
- "Up the wash?"
- "Right," Quentin said, grateful that his tongue and lips
- seemed to be working better now, although he felt like hell.
- This was one of the worst hangovers he'd ever encountered.
- "Before we turn off, though," he continued, "you'll need to
- stop and let me drive. The trail isn't marked. You won't know
- where to go."
- Mitch glanced dubiously across the seat. "You're sure you
- can drive?"
- "What do you think I am, drunk or something?" Quentin
- asked irritably.
- "Definitely or something," Mitch Johnson whispered under
- his breath.
- Lani sat quietly between the two men--between her brother
- and the man Quentin had just called Mitch. At least she now
- knew what the M stood for in Vega's signature. Mitch.
- As the Bronco's heavy-duty tires whined down the pavement,
- 582
- Lani looked up at the shadow of mountain looming above
- them. loligam's stately dark flanks were silhouetted against a
- starry sky.
- They were going after pots. If they had been found here on
- the reservation, they were actually Tohono O'othham pots that
- might have been hidden inside the mountain for hundreds of
- years. Perhaps they had remained hidden from view in one of
- the sacred caves on I'itoi's second favorite mountain.
- She remembered once listening to Davy and Brian Fellows
- talking about the day Tommy and Quentin Walker had found a
- big limestone cave out on the reservation.
- "They didn't go inside, did they?" Lani had asked.
- Davy shrugged. "Of course they did."
- "But that's against the rules," Lani had objected indignantly.
- "Nobody's supposed to go inside those caves. They're sacred.
- You should have stopped them."
- 504 J.A. JANCE
- Davy and Brian had both laughed at her. "What's so funny?"
- she had demanded. "Why are you two laughing?"
- "Fortunately, you're much too young to remember growing
- 583
- up with Quentin and Tommy. When we were all kids, those
- two were a pair of holy terrors. As far as they were concerned,
- rules were made to be broken."
- "So what happened?"
- "As far as I know, they went there just that once," Brian
- said. "It wasn't long after that when Tommy ran away. If Quentin
- went back out to the reservation to go exploring the cave by
- himself, he never mentioned it."
- "If they went inside the cave, maybe that's what happened
- to Tommy."
- "What?" Brian asked.
- "Maybe I'itoi got him," Lani said.
- Brian shook his head. When he spoke, the laughter had gone
- out of his voice. "Don't ever say anything about this to your
- dad," he said seriously, "but from the rumors I heard, I'd say
- drug-dealing is what got Tommy. What I've never been able to
- understand is why it didn't get Quentin, too."
- As they turned up Coleman Road, Lani felt a growing certainty
- that the place where they were going was the same cave
- Brian and Davy had talked about. Off to the left was the dirt
- 584
- track that led off to Rattlesnake Skull charco, the place they used
- to go every year to redecorate the shrine dedicated to Nana
- Dahd's murdered granddaughter.
- "We shouldn't go there," Lani said softly, unable to keep
- herself from issuing the warning. Even someone as cruel as Mitch
- Vega deserved to be warned away from danger.
- "See there?" Quentin yelped angrily, glaring at her. "I knew
- you shouldn't have brought her."
- "Shut up, Lani," Mitch said.
- Lani closed her eyes and tried to hear Rita's words. Listen to me and do exactly
- as I say.
- Alvin Miller was a talented guy who was able to do his work
- in a seemingly focused fashion, all the while carrying on a reasonably
- intelligent conversation with whoever happened to be
- within earshot.
- In this case, as he carried his gear into Brandon and Diana
- KISS OF THE BEES 305
- Walker's house in Gates Pass, Brandon was giving Alvin an earful.
- He had responded to former Sheriff Walker's call for help
- without asking for any specific details on the situation. Now,
- though, Brandon was venting his frustration over the way Detective
- 585
- Ford Myers was--or rather was not--handling the disappearance
- of Brandon's sixteen-year-old daughter, Lani.
- Other than having been one once, Alvin wasn't especially
- wise to the ways of teenagers. Nonetheless, he did see some
- merit to Detective Ford's inclination to go slow and not push
- panic buttons. Although Alvin sympathized with his former
- boss, he could see that the whole thing might very well turn
- out to be nothing but a headstrong teenager pulling a stunt on
- her too trusting parents. After all, armed or not, most missing
- kids did turn up back home eventually.
- So Alvin listened and nodded. Betweentimes, he went to
- work. "What all would you like me to check for prints?" he
- asked.
- "Lani's bicycle," Brandon answered. "That's outside in the
- carport. There's a pair of rubber-handled tongs in the kitchen
- sink. And back in my study, somebody went to the trouble of
- breaking up a couple thousand bucks' worth of customframing."
- For
- comparison purposes, Alvin took prints from both Brandon
- and Diana Walker as well as prints from places in the daughter's
- 586
- room that would most likely prove to belong to Lani
- herself. He packed up the tongs, the bicycle, and the better part
- of the picture-frame display. Alvin knew he'd be better off dusting
- those in the privacy of his lab. What he couldn't take back
- to the department with him was the house itself and furniture
- that was too big to move.
- "Where did you say you kept the key to the gun cabinet?"
- "In the desk." Brandon had been following Alvin from room
- to room, watching the process with intent interest. As Alvin
- settled down to dust the desktop, Brandon left the room. The
- print--one with a distinctive diagonal slash across the face of
- it--leaped out at Alvin the moment he delicately brushed the
- graphite across the smooth oak surface.
- Alvin Miller could barely believe his eyes. He knew he had
- seen that same print, or else one very much like it, on the wallet
- Clan Leggett had brought in earlier and on several of the bones
- 306 J.A. JANCE
- in the detective's boxed collection. For a moment, Alvin was
- too flustered to know what to do.
- He was here in Brandon Walker's home collecting prints as
- 587
- an unofficial favor to an old friend. The problem was, if he was
- right, if this print and the other one were identical, then Alvin
- Miller had stumbled across something that would link the newly
- discovered bones with the break-in here at the Gates Pass house.
- Not only that, connecting those two sets of dots could put him
- in the middle of a potentially career-killing cross fire between
- two dueling detectives--Dan Leggett and Ford Myers.
- In addition, if Lani Walker was somehow involved in an assault
- and a possible homicide, the chances of her disappearance
- being nothing but ordinary teenaged rebellion went way down.
- Whatever was going on with her was most likely a whole lot
- more serious than that. The same went for Brandon Walker's
- missing .357.
- Feeling as though he'd just blundered into a hive of killer
- bees, Alvin considered his next move. For the time being, saying
- anything to Brandon Walker was out, certainly until Alvin actually
- had a chance to compare those two distinctive prints. In the
- meantime, he took several more reasonably good prints off the
- desktop and drawer.
- "Getting any good ones?" Brandon Walker asked, reappearing
- 588
- in the door to his study.
- "Some," Alvin Miller allowed, "but my pager just went off."
- That was an outright lie, but it was the best he could do under
- the circumstances. "I'll stop here for now. I'll come back tomorrow
- sometime. Just don't touch anything until I do. The stuff
- I've already picked up I'll work on in the lab."
- "Sure thing, Al," Brandon Walker said. "I appreciate it."
- Alvin Miller drove straight back to the department. There,
- after simply eyeballing the two dusted prints, he picked up the
- phone and dialed Clan Leggett's home phone number. "Who's
- calling?" Leggett's wife asked in a tone that indicated she wasn't
- pleased with this work-related, late Saturday-evening phone call.
- "It's Alvin Miller. Tell him I'm calling about the prints."
- "So there were some?" Leggett asked, coming on the phone.
- "Did you get a hit?"
- "Not yet. I haven't had a chance to run them yet, but there's
- a problem."
- KISS OF THE BEES 307
- "What kind of problem?" Clan Leggett asked.
- "How well do you get along with Detective Myers?"
- 589
- "He's a jerk, why?"
- "Because I've got a match between one of your prints and
- prints on a case he's working. Actually, a case he hasn't quite
- gotten around to working on yet."
- "This is beginning to sound complicated."
- "It is. The matching print came from the top of the desk in
- Brandon Walker's study in his home office. Somebody broke
- into the place, smashed up some of his stuff, and stole a gun.
- But the real kicker is that Lani Walker, Sheriff Walker's sixteenyear-old
- daughter, is among the missing and has been since early
- this morning. Myers refused to take the MP report because of
- the twenty-four-hour wait. Claimed it was probably just kid
- bullshit. But with the matching print ..."
- "You think her disappearance may be linked to our assault
- case from this afternoon?"
- "Don't you?" Alvin asked. "It's sure as hell linked to your
- bones and wallet."
- Detective Leggett considered for a moment. "So how did
- you get dragged into all this? Into the Walker thing, I mean?"
- 590
- "Myers told Brandon Walker that the soonest anybody could
- come check for prints was Monday, and Walker called to see if
- I could do it any earlier. I couldn't very well turn the man down,
- now could I?"
- "Ford Myers is going to be ripped when he finds out," Leggett
- said. "He'll be gunning for you."
- Alvin Miller laughed. "That's nothing new. He already is."
- "So what are you going to do with the prints you have?"
- "Get them ready, scan them into the computer, and run
- them."
- "Tonight? How long will it take you?"
- "An hour or so to get them ready. After that, it's just a
- matter of waiting for the computer to do its thing. Do you want
- me to give you a call later on if I get a hit?"
- "You'd better," Clan Leggett said. "But do me one favor."
- "What's that?"
- "Don't tell Ford Myers until I give you the word."
- "Don't worry," Alvin Miller said. "Why should I? After all,
- 308 J.A. JANCE
- he isn't expecting fingerprint results before Monday morning. Do
- 591
- you want me to call you there and let you know what I find?"
- "Don't bother. I'm heading back out."
- "Where are you going?"
- "Back over to the hospital to see if Brian Fellows has had a
- chance to talk to Mr. Chavez."
- A few yards beyond the turnoff to the Rattlesnake Skull
- charco, Mitch swung the wheel sharply to the right. Pulling over
- to the side, he stopped. "Time to switch into four-wheel drive,"
- he said.
- Quentin reached for the door handle. "How'd you know this
- was it?" he asked.
- "I can see your tracks heading off across the wash, dummy,"
- Mitch Johnson replied. "And if I can see them, so can the rest
- of the world."
- Lani was dismayed to see that once on his feet, Quentin
- could barely stand upright. She stayed in the car while Quentin
- struggled with the hubs. Finally Mitch ordered Quentin back
- into the truck, the backseat this time.
- "You come with me," he said to Lani. Once she was on her
- feet, he handed her a branch he had broken off a nearby mesquite.
- 592
- "I want you to follow behind the truck," he said. "Brush
- out the tire tracks, and yours, too. Do you understand?"
- Lani nodded.
- "And if you do anything off the wall, if you try to run, not
- only will I shoot your brother with his father's own gun, I'll
- come get you, too. Is that clear?"
- "Yes."
- Lani watched Mitch climb back into the truck, knowing that
- he was wrong about that. Quentin Walker was Brandon Walker's
- son, her father's son, but as far as Lani was concerned, Davy
- Ladd was her only brother. Still, she couldn't stand the thought
- that some action of hers, even an action that might save her
- own life, could cost Quentin his. She didn't like him much and
- she owed him nothing. And had she turned and fled into the
- desert right then, she might very well have managed to hide
- well enough and long enough to get away.
- But how would she feel when she heard the report of gunfire,
- a shot that would come from her father's own gun, one that
- KISS OF THE BEES 309
- would snuff out Quentin's life? It didn't matter if he was
- 593
- drugged or just drunk. Either way, he was almost as incapable
- of defending himself against Mitch as Lani had been earlier.
- While Mitch backed up and turned the Bronco to head off
- across the wash, that was Lani's dilemma--to run and try to
- save herself or to stay and try to save Quentin's life as well as
- her own. There was a part of her that already knew Mitch's real
- intention was to kill them both. He had no reason not to.
- The Bronco bounced across the wash and then paused on
- the far side. "Come on," Mitch yelled out the window. "Hurry
- it up."
- The moment Lani Walker heard his voice, shouting at her
- over the idling rumble of the Bronco, she made up her mind.
- Brother or not, she would try to be Quentin's keeper. If they
- both lived, she might once again be able to tell her parents in
- person that she loved them. If not, if she and Quentin were
- both doomed and if seeing her parents again was impossible,
- then she was determined to leave some word for them, some
- farewell message. Slipping one hand into the pocket other jeans,
- Lani pulled out her precious O'othham basket. Resisting the
- temptation to press its reassuring presence into her palm once
- 594
- more, she dropped it, allowing it to fall atop the small hump of
- rocky gravel that formed the shoulder of the road.
- If someone happened to find the basket and was good enough
- to give it to Lani's parents, then perhaps Diana and Brandon
- Walker would understand that it was a last loving message sent
- from Lani to them. If not--even if the carefully woven hair
- charm came to no other end than to grace Wosho koson's--Pack
- Rat's--burrow--Lani could be assured the sacred symbol of the
- Tohono O'othham, the maze, would not be defiled by Mitch's
- evil Ohb touch. He might manage to claim other trophies, including
- some ancient Indian pots, but Lani's basket would never
- be his.
- Fighting back tears, Lani bent herself to her assigned task,
- wielding the makeshift broom. As she scraped the tire tracks out
- of the sand, Lani realized that with every stroke she was also
- erasing any hope that some rescuer might find them in time.
- That meant she and Quentin would most likely die. If it
- came down to a fight between her and Mitch, there could be
- little doubt of the outcome. He would win. Lani and Quentin
- 310 J.A. JANCE
- 595
- would die, but the terrible pain in her breast told her that in
- the hands of someone like Mitch Vega, there might be far worse
- things than death.
- That awful knowledge came over Lani in a mind-clearing
- rush, calming her fears rather than adding to them. Perhaps she
- would not be able to save either Quentin's life or her own from
- this new evil Ohb, but by leaving the basket behind, she had at
- least saved that.
- As long as those few strands of black and yellow hair stayed
- woven together, then some remnant of Lani's own life would
- remain as well, for she had woven her own spirit into that basket--her
- own spirit and Jessica's and Nana Dahd's as well.
- No matter what he did, Mitch would never be able to
- touch that.
- For some time after Alvin Miller left, Brandon and Diana
- simply sat in the living room together, sharing many of the same
- thoughts, but for minutes at a time, neither of them spoke.
- "Should we call Fat Crack?" Diana asked at last.
- "I don't see what good that would do," Brandon said.
- "But what if . . ."
- 596
- "If what?"
- Diana paused for a moment before she answered. "What if
- he's right and this is what he meant yesterday when he was
- talking about the evil coming from my book?"
- "How could it be?" Brandon returned. "I don't see how
- Lani's disappearance now can have anything to do with Andrew
- Carlisle showing up here twenty-one years ago."
- "I don't either," Diana said. "Forget I even mentioned it."
- Again they were quiet. "What if we've lost her forever, Brandon?
- What if we never see her again?"
- Swallowing hard, Brandon Walker leaned back and rested his head on the chair. He
- had already lived through this agony once when they lost Tommy. It had never occurred
- to him that he
- might lose a second child.
- "Don't say that," he said. "We'll find her. I know we'll
- find her."
- But even as he said the words, Brandon's own heart was
- drowning in despair. He had heard those same platitudes spoken
- KISS OF THE BEES 311
- by other grieving parents about other missing children, some of
- whom had never been heard from again.
- 597
- "At six o'clock sharp, I'm going to be on the phone to the
- department, raising hell. Ford Myers may not be the one who
- comes out here to take the Missing Persons report, but someone
- sure as hell will be, or I'll know the reason whyF'
- Diana glanced at her watch. It was ten of one. "Maybe we
- should go to bed. Even if we can't sleep, it would probably do
- our bodies some good if we lay down for a while."
- Brandon looked at Diana. Other than having kicked off her
- shoes, she was still wearing the dress she had worn to the banquet,
- but she looked bedraggled. Her hair had come adrift. Brandon
- was startled by the dark shadows under her eyes and by the
- bone-weary strain showing around the corners of her mouth.
- "You're right," he said quickly, standing up and helping her
- to rise as well. "If there's a phone call, we can take it in the
- bedroom just as easily as we can take it here."
- They walked into the bedroom together. Brandon stripped
- to his shorts while Diana undressed and hung up her dress. The
- bed was still in disarray as a result of their afternoon lovemaking.
- As Brandon set about straightening the covers, a plastic cassette
- tape slid out from under Diana's pillow.
- 598
- "What's this?" he asked, picking it up. Other than the manufacturer's
- label, there was no marking on it of any kind. "Did
- you leave this tape here, Di?" he asked.
- Diana, dressed in a nightgown, came out of her walk-in
- closet. "What tape?" she asked.
- "This one," Brandon said, holding it up so she could see it.
- "I found it under your pillow."
- Diana Ladd Walker swayed on her feet and groped for the
- door-jamb to keep from falling. Her face turned deathly pale.
- "Where did that come from?" she whispered.
- "I told you. I found it under your pillow. Maybe it's a message
- from Lani."
- "No." Diana said. Shivering, she looked at the tape and
- shook her head. "No, it isn't."
- But Brandon's mind was made up. "She probably decided to
- leave us a tape instead of a note," he said.
- Tape in hand, Brandon was already on his way to the living
- room, headed for the stereo deck with the built-in cassette
- 312 J.A. JANCE
- player. Diana came after him. "It's not from Lani, Brandon.
- 599
- Don't play it."
- The brittle note of warning in her voice was enough to cause
- him to turn and look at her in alarm. "Why not?" he asked.
- "Don't play it," she said again. "Please don't."
- Brandon looked at his wife impatiently. "What's gotten into
- you?" he asked.
- "The tape isn't from Lani," Diana said. "It's from Andrew
- Carlisle. I know it is."
- Disgusted and impatient, Brandon turned to the stereo. As
- he inserted the tape into the player, he glanced back at his wife.
- "You and Fat Crack," he said. "Dead men don't do tapes. How
- could he?"
- Hunching her shoulders and doubling over as if in pain,
- Diana Walker sank down on the couch. "Brandon, listen to me.
- It is from Carlisle. You don't want to play it."
- "Diana, if there's a chance this is going to help us locate
- Lani, of course we're going to play it," he said.
- As the sound filled the room, they both recognized Lani's
- voice almost at once, but it was muffled and difficult to understand,
- as if it had been recorded from a great distance. Pressing
- 600
- the remote volume control, Brandon turned it up several
- notches.
- "What was that?" he said, frowning with concentration.
- "Didn't it sound as though she said something about Quentin?"
- Still bent over and staring at the floor, Diana shook her head
- and said nothing. Brandon hit the "stop" button, rewound the
- tape a few rotations, and then hit "play" once more.
- And he was right. It was Lani's voice, louder now, but still
- fuzzy and indistinct, saying her brother's name over and over.
- "Quentin," she was saying. "Quentin, Quentin, Quentin."
- "What the hell does Quentin have to do with all this?" Brandon
- asked.
- Almost like a sleepwalker, Diana got up off the couch and
- walked over to where Brandon was kneeling in front of the
- stereo. "Shut it off," she begged, leaning against him, putting
- both hands on his shoulders. "Please, Brandon. Don't listen to
- any more of it. You don't understand. I can't stand to listen to
- any more."
- "Diana," Brandon said curtly. "This is bound to help us find
- KISS OF THE BEES 313
- 601
- Lani. We've got to listen to all of it--every single word. Be quiet
- now for a minute so I can hear what they're saying."
- Trying to decipher the tape over Diana's continuing objections,
- Brandon punched the volume control one more time. And
- that was where it was when the unearthly scream came tearing
- through the speakers.
- The sound ripped into Diana's whole being, robbing her legs
- of the strength needed to stand upright. Her beseeching hands
- went limp on Brandon's shoulders and slid down his back. While
- Brandon stared uncomprehendingly at the now silent speaker,
- Diana dropped to her knees, leaning against him.
- "Oh, my God," she sobbed. "He's killed her. I know Andrew
- Carlisle's killed her."
- Slowly, an ashen Brandon Walker turned around to face her.
- Grasping his wife by the shoulders, he shook her. "You knew
- what was coming, didn't you? That's why you didn't want me
- to play the tape. How did you know?"
- It was a question, but the way he said the words turned it
- into an accusation. At first Diana didn't answer. "How?" he
- demanded again.
- 602
- "We've got to call Fat Crack," she murmured. "He's the
- only one who can help us now."
- She reached out then as if to cling to him, but he moved
- away from her. The sudden fury rising in Brandon Walker's soul
- was so overwhelming that he no longer dared allow himself to
- touch her.
- "It's got nothing to do with Andrew Carlisle!" he snarled
- back at her. "You heard what she said. Quentin was the one
- who was with her. Whatever happened just then, Quentin is
- the one who did it, the little son of a bitch. And once I lay
- hands on him ..."
- The rest of the uncompleted threat hung in the air as Brandon
- got to his feet and headed for the kitchen. Diana was still
- sitting there when he returned. Without another word, he
- ejected the tape from the player and then put both it and the
- carrying case into a paper bag.
- When he headed for the kitchen once again, Diana got up
- and followed him. "Where are you going?" she asked, when he
- took his car keys down from the PegBoard.
- "I'm going to take these to the department so Alvin Miller
- 603
- 314 J.A. JANCE
- can check them for prints. Then I'm going to ask him to run
- Quentin's prints as a comparison."
- "Lani's dead, isn't she?" Diana said.
- Brandon Walker bit his lip and nodded. The agony in that
- scream left him little else to hope for.
- "Yes," he said at last. "I suppose so."
- For a moment husband and wife stood looking at each other.
- The fury Brandon had felt earlier was gone. "You knew what
- was coming, didn't you?" Diana nodded wordlessly. "How?"
- "There were others."
- "Others?"
- Diana looked away then, refusing to meet his eyes. "Other
- tapes," she answered.
- "Of other murders?"
- "Yes."
- "But you never mentioned anything about it."
- Diana shook her head, still refusing to meet her husband's
- probing gaze. "They were so awful, I never told anyone about
- them, not even you. I didn't want anybody else to know or to
- 604
- have to listen."
- "You mean like snuff films, only on audio?" Brandon's voice
- trembled as he asked the question. He felt suddenly slack-jawed.
- "You mean you've heard them?"
- "Yes." Diana took a deep breath. "Two of them. There was
- one of Gina Antone's death. The other was about that costume
- designer that he killed in downtown Tucson. This one makes
- three."
- "But that's Andrew Carlisle. Lani was talking to Quentin.
- To my son."
- "Quentin and Carlisle were in prison together," Diana suggested
- quietly, in a voice still choked with emotion. "Carlisle
- had an almost hypnotic effect on Gary Ladd. He was there with
- Gina when she died, and I'm sure that's why he killed himself.
- Maybe Carlisle did the same thing to Quentin."
- The anger that had been holding Brandon upright collapsed
- inside him and sent him lurching drunkenly into Diana's arms.
- Still holding the paper bag in one hand, he used his other arm to
- pull Diana against his chest while he buried his head in her hair.
- "We're going to need help," he murmured. "Go get dressed
- 605
- now, Diana," he said, pushing her away. "I'll start the car and
- KISS OF THE BEES 315
- we'll go do whatever it is we have to do. We'll take this thing
- to the department. We'll take it to the FBI Missing and Exploited
- Children unit. If it's the last thing I ever do, I'm going
- to find Quentin and put him away."
- "I'm sorry," Diana said. "I'm so sorry."
- "Not nearly as sorry as I am," he murmured back, wiping
- the tears from his eyes. "Not nearly."
- The ICU waiting room Clan Leggett returned to was far more
- crowded than when he had left it several hours earlier. Off to
- one side of the room sat a group of Indians that included an
- attractive woman in her mid- to late thirties, a solidly built man
- in his mid- to late forties, and an elderly woman. The three of
- them were talking together in low voices.
- In the middle of the room, Deputy Brian Fellows snoozed in
- a chair next to another Indian, a portly man somewhere in his
- sixties, who was also dozing.
- Leggett stopped in front of Brian Fellows's chair. "What's
- happening?"
- 606
- Brian's chin bounced off his chest. Blinking, he straightened
- in his chair. "Sorry about that, Detective Leggett. I must have
- fallen asleep."
- "So I noticed. What's going on?"
- "That's Delia Cachora over there," he said. "The younger
- woman. The older one is Delia's aunt, Julia Joaquin. And that's
- Julia's son, Wally Joaquin. And this," Brian added, motioning
- toward the man seated next to him, "is a friend of mine named
- Gabe Ortiz."
- Clan Leggett nodded politely and held out his hand. "Any
- relation to the Tohono O'othham tribal chairman?"
- Fat Crack straightened himself in the chair. "I am the tribal
- chairman," he said. "Mr. Chavez's daughter, Delia, works for
- me," he added as if to explain his presence. "I gave her a ride
- into town."
- "Has anyone been able to talk to him yet?"
- Brian shook his head. "Not as far as I know, although you
- might try talking to Ms. Cachora."
- "Let's do it then," Clan Leggett said. "Come over and introduce
- me. There's no time to lose."
- 607
- "Why? What's wrong?"
- 316 J.A. JANCE
- Clan Leggett shook his head. "You're not going to believe
- it," he said. "Lani Walker's turned up missing, and she may be
- involved in all this."
- As soon as he made that last statement, Clan noticed that
- Gabe Ortiz came to attention, but the detective was too focused
- on Delia Cachora to wonder at the connection. "I'm Detective
- Clan Leggett from the Pima County Sheriffs department," he
- said, stopping in front of the trio of Indians and not waiting for
- Brian to make introductions. "I'm in charge of investigating the
- assault against your father. It's important that we ask him some
- questions as soon as possible. When's the last time you tried to
- speak to him?"
- "It was almost an hour ago now. Why? What's so important?"
- Delia asked.
- "We're working on what may be a related case. I need to
- know if there's anything he can tell us about the attack. We're
- wondering if his assailant acted alone or if there was someone
- else involved."
- 608
- "Lani Walker isn't involved," Gabe Ortiz declared forcefully.
- "She couldn't be. I've known her since she was a baby. She
- would never do anything like this."
- Accustomed to Gabe Ortiz's usually soft-spoken ways, Delia
- looked at the tribal chairman in some surprise. "You think a
- woman is involved in the attack on my father?"
- "It's possible," Clan said.
- Delia stood up and leveled another questioning look in Gabe
- Ortiz's direction. "I'll go check," she said. "The problem is,
- even if he's awake, they probably won't allow anyone in other
- than family. Do you want me to ask whether or not a woman
- was there?"
- Clan shook his head. "Don't put words in his mouth. Just
- ask if he remembers anything about it, especially whether or not
- his attacker was operating alone."
- Delia left. The waiting room was silent for a long moment
- after the doors swung shut behind her. "Lani didn't do it," Gabe
- said again.
- Brian Fellows nodded. "I know her, too, Clan. The Lani I
- know wouldn't harm a fly."
- 609
- Clan Leggett turned to face Gabe. "Mr. Ortiz," he said, "we
- have a fingerprint from the bones that matches one found in the
- KISS OF THE BEES 317
- Walkers' house. I said she may have been involved. What I didn't
- say is that her involvement may have happened under duress."
- "Duress? What does that mean?"
- "It means Lani Walker may have been kidnapped," Clan Leggett
- said. "No one has seen her since she left to go to work
- sometime around six yesterday morning. She didn't show up for
- her shift or for a concert date with a friend yesterday evening."
- "Kidnapped?" Brian Fellows echoed.
- Delia came to the door and motioned to her elderly aunt.
- "He's talking, but in Tohono O'othham. I don't remember
- enough of that to be able to understand."
- Again the people left in the waiting room drifted into silence.
- Gabe Ortiz walked across the room and sat down in a chair,
- burying his face in his hands. "Mr. Ortiz seems very upset about
- all this," Clan Leggett observed. "Is he related to Lani Walker
- somehow?"
- Brian Fellows nodded. "He and his wife are Lani's
- 610
- godparents."
- "Oh," Clan Leggett said. "That explains it then."
- A few minutes later, Julia Joaquin emerged from the ICU.
- Walking stiffly, she passed directly in front of the waiting detective
- and deputy, going instead to where Gabe Ortiz was sitting.
- Clan Leggett and Brian Fellows trailed after her.
- "Manny only remembers seeing a man, not a woman," the
- old woman said, speaking to the tribal chairman, addressing him
- softly in Tohono O'othham rather than English. "The man was
- tall and skinny--a Mil-gahn. And he was driving an orange truck
- of some kind."
- "The girl wasn't there?" Gabe asked.
- Julia Joaquin shook her head. Gabe Ortiz sighed in obvious
- relief.
- "What are they saying?" Clan Leggett asked, and Brian translated
- as well as he could.
- "Manny Chavez's back is broken and he may be paralyzed,"
- Julia Joaquin continued, still addressing Gabe Ortiz, rather than
- any of the others. "Do you know of a medicine man who is
- good with Turtle Sickness?"
- 611
- "I do not," Gabe answered. "But I will find out."
- "Thank you," Julia said. She turned to the detective just as
- Brian finished translating once more.
- 318 J.A. JANCE
- "Turtle Sickness?" Clan Leggett repeated.
- Julia Joaquin nodded.
- "How can you call it a sickness? Somebody hit him in the
- back with a shoveH"
- "Turtle Sickness--paralysis--comes from being rude," she
- explained firmly. "My brother-in-law has always been a very
- rude man."
- Just then Delia Cachora returned to the waiting room. "Aunt
- Julia told you what you needed to know?" she asked.
- Clan Leggett nodded. "She certainly did," he said.
- Gabe stood up and took Julia Joaquin's hand in his. "I'm
- glad the ant-bit child wasn't there."
- Julia nodded. "I am, too," she said.
- "Ant-bit child?" Delia Cachora asked. "What are we talking
- about now?" She seemed almost as puzzled about that as Clan
- Leggett was about Turtle Sickness.
- 612
- Julia Joaquin turned to her niece. "There was an old blind
- medicine man, years ago, who was always telling people that an
- ant-bit child would someday show up on the reservation and
- that she would grow up to be a powerful medicine woman."
- Delia glanced warily at Detective Leggett. "Aunt Julia," she
- cautioned, but Julia Joaquin disregarded the warning.
- "Kulani O'oks," she continued. "She was the woman who
- was kissed by the bees. Looks At Nothing said the ant-bit child
- would be just like her, that she would save people, not harm
- them, not even someone like Manny."
- "Thank you," Gabe Ortiz said to Julia. "I'm sure you're
- right."
- The tribal chairman left then. Clan Leggett handed Delia
- Cachora a business card. "I'd appreciate it if you'd keep us
- posted on your father's condition," he said. "In the meantime,
- Deputy Fellows and I will head back out to the department to
- see if there's anything else we can do."
- The two officers left the waiting room together. Once outside, Clan Leggett stopped
- long enough to light a cigar. "So Lani Walker's supposed to be a medicine woman when
- she grows
- up," he said. "That one takes the cake. Have you ever heard
- 613
- anything like it in your life?"
- As the cloud of smoke ballooned around Detective Leggett's
- head, Brian Fellows realized there was a certain olfactory resem-
- KISS OF THE BEES 319
- blance between that and wiw--the wild tobacco Looks At Nothing had always used in
- his evil-smelling, hand-rolled cigarettes. The smell brought back a string of memories,
- including Rita
- Antone saying much the same thing Julia Joaquin had just said,
- that Davy's new baby sister would one day grow up to be a
- medicine woman. It came as no surprise to him that Looks At
- Nothing would have been the original source of that story, and
- it hardly mattered that the old medicine man had been dead for
- years before Lani Walker came to live in the house in Gates Pass.
- "Actually, I have," Brian Fellows said. "I've heard it before
- from any number of people."
- "The medicine-woman part?"
- Brian nodded.
- With the cigar now lit, Clan Leggett waved the flaming
- match in the air until the fire went out. "And you believe it?"
- Clan asked.
- "As a matter of fact I do," Brian Fellows said.
- 614
- With a quizzical frown on his face, Detective Leggett stared
- hard at the young deputy. "I think you're all nuts," he said at
- last. "From the tribal chairman right on down."
- After laboring up the steep mountainside for what seemed
- forever, Mitch finally parked the Bronco in a grove of mesquite.
- By the time Lani reached the truck, Quentin and Mitch were
- both outside, with Quentin directing Mitch as they placed several
- pieces of camouflaged canvas from the back of the Bronco
- over the top of the vehicle.
- Quentin was still none too steady on his feet, but he was
- clearly proud of his ability to plan ahead. "This way, nobody
- will be able to spot it," he said. "Not from down below, and
- not from up above, either."
- "Great," Mitch said. "Which way now?"
- "Up here," Quentin said. He staggered off across the brushcovered
- slope, somehow managing to stay upright. "The entrance
- is hard enough to spot during the daylight, but don't
- worry. We'll find it."
- "You go next," Mitch ordered, shoving Lani forward behind
- Quentin. "I'll bring up the rear."
- 615
- For what seemed like a very long time, the three of them
- clambered single-file on a diagonal up and across the flank of
- 320 J.A. JANCE
- mountain. Mitch and Quentin both carried flashlights, but they
- opted to leave them off, for fear lights on the mountain might
- attract unwanted attention. Instead, the trio accomplished the
- nighttime hike with only the moon to light the path. After half
- an hour or so, Quentin suddenly disappeared. One moment he
- was there in front of Lani, the next he was gone. Looking down
- the side of the mountain, she expected to see him falling to his
- death. Instead, his unseen hand reached out and grabbed hers.
- "In here," Quentin said, dragging her into what looked like
- an exceptionally deep shadow. "It's this way."
- Only when she was right there in front of it was Lani able
- to see Quentin crouching just inside a three-foot-wide hole in
- the mountain. "Watch yourself," he added. "For the next fifteen
- yards or so we have to do this on hands and knees."
- Plunged into total darkness, Lani crawled forward into the
- damp heart of the mountain. At first she could feel walls on
- either side of her, but eventually the space opened up and the
- 616
- rocks underneath gave way to slimy mud. A light flickered behind
- her and was followed by the scraping of someone else coming
- through the tunnel. Moments later Mitch emerged, flashlight
- in hand. Standing up, he shone the light around them. When
- he did so, Lani was dumbfounded.
- They were standing in the middle of a huge, rough-walled
- limestone cavern with spectacular bubbles of rock surging up
- from the floor and with curtains of rock flowing down from
- above. The place was utterly still. Other than their labored
- breathing, the only sound inside the cavern was the steady drip
- of water.
- Dolores Lanita Walker had grown up hearing stories of Elder
- Brother and how he spent his summers in the sacred caves on
- loligam. Rita had taught her that the Desert People, sometimes
- called the People With Two Houses, were called that because.
- they had two homes--a winter one on the flat and a cooler
- summer one high up in the mountains. It made sense then that
- I'itoi, the Tohono O'othham's beloved Elder Brother, would do
- much the same thing. In the winter he was said to live on Baboquivari--Grandfather
- Place Mountain. But in the summertime
- 617
- he was said to come to loligam--Manzanita Mountain.
- Lani had spent all her life being told that caves like this were
- both dangerous and sacred; that they were places to be avoided.
- KISS OF THE BEES %1
- Now, though, looking around at the towering, ghostly walls, lit
- by the feeble probing of Mitch's flashlight, Lani Walker felt no
- fear.
- She felt not the slightest doubt that this was a sacred, holy
- place. And since it was summer, no doubt I'itoi was somewhere
- nearby. That made this a perfectly good place to die.
- By the time David Ladd emerged from the bathroom shaved,
- showered, and dressed, Candace's suitcases were zipped shut and
- stacked beside the door. Candace herself was on the phone with
- her sister, Bridget.
- "Thanks, Bridge," Candace was saying. "You know I
- wouldn't ask you if it weren't an emergency. And yes, we'll let
- you know what's going on as soon as we know exactly what it
- is ... Sure, that'll work. We'll leave the parking receipt in an
- envelope for you at the front desk," she said. "Just drive the
- Jeep home. We'll make arrangements to come get it later."
- 618
- While Davy finished throwing the few things he had brought
- to the room into his small bag, Candace gave him a quick
- thumbs-up, all the while staying tuned to the telephone
- conversation.
- "Sure I know Mom will kill me," Candace replied. "But
- another wedding like yours would kill Dad, so there you are ...
- No, we don't need a ride to O'Hare. I've already called for a
- cab. It'll be here in a few minutes, so I'd better go. Tell Larry
- thanks for being so understanding about me waking you up at
- this ungodly hour."
- "You'd better decide what you're going to leave and what
- you're going to take," David suggested when Candace put down
- the phone.
- "Oh," she said. "I'll take them all. Two checked and two
- carry-ons. What about you?"
- David looked down at his single bag. What he'd brought
- upstairs for one night wasn't enough to see him through more
- than a couple of days. "I'd better go down to the garage and
- see about repacking," he said.
- "Sure, go ahead," Candace told him. "I'll call for a bellman
- 619
- and meet you down in the lobby."
- In the parking garage, Davy hauled out one other suitcase to
- take, along with the shirt and shaving gear he had taken upstairs.
- m J.A. JANCE
- That'll do, he thought. At least until I can get back here to pick
- up the rest of my stuff.
- He closed and locked the door and started to walk away,
- then he stopped and went back. Unlocking the cargo door, he
- rummaged through the boxes until he found the one he was
- looking for. It was a small wooden chest Astrid Ladd had given
- him, one that Davy's father had made in wood shop while he
- was still in high school and had given to Astrid as a gift. "Happy
- Mother's Day, 1954" had been burned into the bottom piece
- of wood.
- Astrid had given Davy the box only three days earlier, and
- it contained only two items--Rita Antone's son's purple heart
- and Father John's losalo--his rosary. David Ladd stuffed the purple
- heart in the outside pocket of his suitcase, then stood for a
- moment staring down at the olive wood crucifix and the string
- of black beads. He had been only five years old, but he still
- 620
- remembered the day Father John had taught him to pray.
- His mother had opened the front door and discovered Bone
- staggering around drunkenly outside. She had no idea what was
- wrong with the animal but Father John, who had come to the
- house to give Davy his first-ever catechism class, did.
- "That dog's been poisoned," Father John had told them.
- "We've got to get him to a vet."
- Before they could even lead Bone to the car, the hundredpound
- dog collapsed in helpless convulsions. It took both Davy's
- mother and the priest to lift him, carry him to the priest's car,
- and load him inside. Davy had wanted to go along, but Diana
- had turned him back, ordering him to stay with Rita.
- Worried about the poor dog, Davy was in tears as Father
- John started the car. Before driving out of the yard, however,
- the priest stopped the car beside the devastated child.
- "Remember how we were talking about prayer a while ago?
- the priest asked, rolling down the window. "Would you like me
- to pray for Bone?"
- "Yes," Davy had whispered. "Please."
- "Heavenly Father," the priest had said, bowing his head.
- 621
- "We pray that you will grant the blessing of healing to your
- servant. Bone, that he may return safely to his home. We ask
- KISS OF THE BEES 523
- this in the name of the Father, of the Son, and of the Holy
- Ghost. Amen."
- David Ladd had learned a good deal more about prayer since
- that fateful day long ago, when God had spared not only his
- dog but the rest of the family as well. He had learned, too, what
- Father John meant when he said that the answer to prayer could
- be either yes or no.
- Davy had never forgotten the priest's powerful lesson, and
- it came rushing back to him now, out of the distant past. Closing
- his fist around the smooth crucifix, David Ladd closed his eyes,
- envisioning as he did so both his parents and his little sister, Lani.
- "Heavenly Father," he whispered. "We pray now for the
- blessing of healing for your servants Brandon, Diana, and Lani
- Walker and for Davy Ladd and Candace Waverly. See us all
- safely through this time of trouble in the name of the Father,
- of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost. Amen."
- Then, putting the rosary in his shirt pocket so he could feel
- 622
- the beads through the thin material of his shirt, David Ladd
- locked the Jeep Cherokee, picked up his suitcase, and headed
- home.
- 15
- I he
- he people went to the mountain, where they had fought before,
- but this time Tho'agthe Mountainwas covered with snakes and
- scorpions and Bad People.
- U'uwhigthe Birdshad all gone away to a distant water
- hole, so they were not there to help their friends, the Desert People.
- Many of the Tohono O'othham were killed, among them many
- women and children.
- Tho'agthe Mountainfelt so bad when so many of his friends
- were being killed that he opened holes in the rocks so the Desert
- People could see through. That is why he is called Wuhi Tho'ag
- which means Eye Mountain. And you can see the eyes in this mountain
- today, just as you can see the walls of rock.
- At last Wuhi Tho'ag called to his brother mountain, Baboquivari,
- for help. Baboquivari, who watches over everything, answered.
- Wind Man, whose home is on Baboquivari, called his brother
- 623
- Cloud Man to help. Cloud Man came down low over the fighting
- and made cradles for the Indian children, and Wind Man carried
- the children in the cloud cradles to Baboquivari, where they were
- safe.
- The fighting grew worse, and I'itoi was ashamed of his people.
- So Great Spirit spoke. Heavy dark clouds came down over the
- mountain where they were fighting, so that no one could see.
- In these big black clouds Hewelthe Windcarried many of
- the Desert People safely to the valley of Baboquivari.
- KISS OF THE BEES 325
- The Tohono O'othham were so bloody from fighting that they stained the clouds and
- the mountains all red. That is why, even to this day, about the top of the great
- mountain
- peak, Baboquivari, nearly always there are a few clouds. And
- these clouds are not white, but are colored a little with blood. This,
- nawoj, you may see for yourself.
- Scrabbling across the steep flank of the mountain with only
- the moon to light the path, Mitch Johnson had twisted his bad
- knee and almost tumbled down the mountainside himself. Now,
- crawling through the entryway with his flashlight in hand, a
- stabbing pain in Mitch's leg caused beads of sweat to pop out
- 624
- on his forehead. Hurting himself wasn't something he had
- counted on, but he wasn't about to let it stop him, either, not
- after all the years of planning and waiting.
- Mitch had expected a hole in the mountainside, but once he
- made it into the cavern itself and sent the thin beam of his
- flashlight probing the distant ceiling and walls, he was awestruck.
- The cave was huge.
- "It's something, isn't it?" Quentin said as he joined them.
- "Whatever you do, watch where you step. It's slicker 'an snot
- in here, and there's a hole over here just to the right that's
- a killer. It'll break your neck if you fall into it. And there's
- snakes, too."
- There wasn't much in life that scared Mitch Johnson, but
- snakes did. "Rattlers?" he asked.
- "That's right. I killed a diamondback just outside the entrance earlier this afternoon,"
- Quentin was saying. "It was a big mother, and I threw the body down the side of the
- mountain.
- The problem is, where there's one snake, there's usually
- another."
- While Mitch carefully scoured the surrounding area for
- snakes, Quentin once again took his position at the head of the
- 625
- line, picking his way through the forest of stalagmites that thrust
- themselves up out of the limestone floor.
- "This way," Quentin said. "There's sort of a path here."
- If there was a path, Lani couldn't see it. The rocks were so
- slippery that she was having some difficulty walking.
- "I thought you said somebody lived in here," Mitch comm J.A. JANCE
- plained as he gingerly negotiated the rough and treacherously
- slick floor of the cavern. "How could they?"
- "Not here," Quentin said. "In the other room."
- Paying close attention to every twist and turn in the path,
- Lani listened to everything--not just to the words Quentin and
- Mitch were exchanging, but to what the mountain was saying
- as well. There seemed to be other voices there too, and Lani
- strained to hear them. Maybe this was where the Bad People
- lived, the PaDaj O'othham who had come time and again to
- steal the crops from the Desert People and to do battle with
- I'itoi.
- She had thought Mitch Vega to be a messenger of Davy's Evil Ohb, but maybe the Ohb
- were really part of the Bad People. Maybe that's why they had come to this underground
- place.
- Maybe the people who said I'itoi lived in loligam's sacred caves
- 626
- were wrong and had been all along.
- The thought of being in the presence of the Bad People
- plunged Lani back into despair. Behind her Mitch heard her
- sharp intake of breath.
- His clawlike fingers clamped shut across the top of her shoulder.
- "What is it?" he demanded. "What did you see? A snake,
- maybe? Where?"
- He shone the flashlight directly into Lani's eyes, temporarily
- blinding her and then turning away as he scanned the ground
- around him. But something had happened in that moment as
- his face pressed so close to hers that Lani could feel his hot
- breath on her skin. She had heard something in his voice that
- hadn't been there before and her heart beat fast when she realized
- what it was--fear. Not a lot of it. No, just the tiniest trace.
- But still, it was fear, and knowing Mitch Vega was afraid gave
- Lani something else that hadn't been there before--hope, and
- the possibility that maybe somehow, someway, she would
- survive.
- She looked again at Quentin. The walk up the mountain
- seemed to have sobered him some. At least his movements were
- 627
- steadier. If Mitch had given him some of the drug, perhaps that
- was wearing off as well. Maybe, between the two of them . . .
- The thought that Quentin's dose of scopolamine might be
- wearing off too soon was worrisome to Mitch Johnson. He
- KISS OF THE BEES 327
- needed the right combination of mobility and control. It was
- important to have Quentin able to get around under his own
- steam, but it was also important for his thinking capabilities to
- be somewhat impaired.
- Following Quentin and Lani through the cavern, Mitch was
- shocked when Quentin suddenly seemed to melt into a solid
- rock wall, taking Lani with him. Mitch, limping hurriedly after
- them, had to pause and examine the wall with the beam from
- his flashlight before discovering a jagged fissure in the rock. After
- squeezing through the narrow aperture, he found himself in a
- long narrow shaft that seemed to lead off into the interior of
- the mountain, away from the much larger cavern behind them.
- Yards ahead, Mitch could see Lani Walker disappearing around
- a curve.
- As soon as Mitch stepped into the passage, the ground underfoot
- 628
- was different--smoother, but slicker as well. Here, the
- rocky floor had been painstakingly covered with a layer of dirt
- that constant moisture kept in a state of goopy muck. It was
- possible there had once been stalactites and stalagmites, just as
- there were in the other room. If so, they had been cut down
- and carted away, making the narrow shaft passable.
- Hurrying after the others, Mitch rounded the curve and was
- suddenly conscious of a slight lifting in the total darkness that
- had surrounded him before. Now his flashlight probed ahead
- toward a hazy gray glow. At first Mitch thought that maybe
- Quentin had lit a lantern of some kind. Instead, as Mitch entered
- a second, much smaller, chamber, he realized this one was lit--
- almost brilliantly so--by a shaft of silvery moonlight slanting into
- the cave from outside, from a narrow crack at the top of a huge
- pile of debris.
- Mitch had thought that the passageway was leading them
- deeper into the mountain. Instead, they had evidently angled off
- to the side, to a place where the shell of mountain was very thin.
- "There used to be another entrance here," Quentin was saying,
- pointing the beam of his light up toward the narrow hole
- 629
- at the top of the debris. "At one time this was probably the
- main entrance. I figure it used to be larger than the one we
- came in, but it looks like a landslide pretty well covered it up.
- All that's left of it is that little opening way up there."
- Not only was there more light here but, because of the pres5a J.A. JANCE
- ence of some outside air, the second chamber was also slightly
- warmer and dryer. Here the texture of the dirt underfoot
- changed from mud to the caliche-like crust that forms in desert
- washes after a summertime flood.
- "You said you came out here earlier today?" Mitch asked.
- Quentin nodded.
- "Why? What were you doing?"
- "Just checking things out," Quentin said. "Making sure nothing
- had happened to any of this stuff since the last time I was here. It turns out nothing
- did. The pots are all still here. Come take a look." As Quentin spoke, he aimed the
- beam from his
- flashlight at something in the far corner of the room. "What do
- you think?" he added.
- Mitch Johnson thrust Lani aside and hurried past her. There
- on the floor, half-buried in the dirt, lay the shiny white bones
- 630
- of a human skeleton. And around those bleached bones, spilled
- onto their sides as though having been investigated by 'some
- marauding, hungry beast, lay a whole collection of pots--
- medium-sized ones for holding corn and pinon nuts, grain and
- pinole, and larger ones as well--the kind used for carrying water
- and for cooking meat and beans.
- "It doesn't look like all that much to me," Mitch said, "but
- the guy I told you about wants them, so we'd better pack 'em
- up and get 'em out of here."
- "You can't," Lani Walker said. Those were the first words
- she had spoken since Mitch had dragged her out of the Bronco
- down by the wash. She hadn't intended to say anything at all,
- but the words came choking out of her in spite of her best effort
- to hold them back.
- Mitch swung around and looked at her. "We can't what?"
- "Take the pots," she answered. "It's wrong. The spirit of the
- woman who made them is always trapped inside the pots she
- makes. That's why a woman's pottery is always broken when
- she dies, so her spirit won't be trapped. So she can go free."
- "Trapped in her pots? Right!" Mitch scoffed. "If you asked
- 631
- me, it looks more like she was trapped in the mountain, not in
- her damn pots. Now sit down and shut the hell up," he added.
- "I don't remember anybody asking for your opinion."
- Without a word, Lani sank down and sat cross-legged on the
- caliche-covered floor. When Mitch looked back at Quentin, he
- KISS OF THE BEES 329
- was staring at the girl while a puzzled frown knotted his
- forehead.
- "What's she doing here anyway?" he asked. "I don't
- understand."
- "She just came along for the ride, Quentin," Mitch said jokingly.
- "For the fun of it. Once we get all these pots out of here,
- the three of us are going to have a little party." Mitch paused
- and patted his shirt pocket. "I brought along a few mood-altering
- substances, Quentin. When the work's all done, the three of us
- can have a blast."
- "You mean Little Miss Perfect here takes drugs, too?" Quentin's
- frown dissolved into a grin. "I never would have guessed
- it. Neither would Dad, I'll bet. He'll have a cow if he ever
- finds out."
- 632
- Lani started to reply, but before she could answer, a swift
- and vicious kick from the toe of Mitch's hiking boot smashed
- into her thigh. She said nothing.
- "Tripping out is for dessert," Mitch said quickly. "First let's
- worry about the pots."
- "How are we going to carry them out?" Quentin asked.
- "In your backpack."
- "But we only have one."
- "You should have thought of that before. I guess you'll have
- to do it by yourself then, won't you?"
- "By myself?"
- "Sure," Mitch responded. "You're the one getting paid for
- it, aren't you?"
- "But if everybody does their share ..." Quentin began.
- "I said for you to do it," Mitch said, his voice hardening as
- he spoke. "If the damned pots don't get down the mountain
- to that car of yours, you don't get your five thousand bucks,
- understand?"
- Obligingly, Quentin slipped off his backpack, went over to
- the corner, and loaded three of the larger pots into it. "That's
- 633
- all that'll fit for right now," he said.
- "That's all right," Mitch said. "Make as many trips as you
- need to. We have all the time in the world."
- As Quentin turned to leave, Mitch breathed a sigh of relief.
- The drug was still working well enough. With Mitch's knee act330 J.A. JANCE
- ing up, he needed Quentin's physical strength to haul the pots down the mountain
- to the car. After that, all bets were off.
- As Quentin took flashlight in hand and started back through
- the passage, Lani sat on the floor of the cave, staring at the
- bones glowing with an eerie phosphorescence in the indirect
- haze of moonlight.
- Looking at the skeleton, Lani knew immediately that the
- bones belonged to a woman of some wealth. The pots alone
- were an indication of that. Most likely there had been baskets
- once as well, but those, like the woman's flesh, had long since
- decayed and melted back into the earth--leaving behind only
- the harder stuff--the clay pottery and the bones. And one day,
- Lani's bones would be found here as well. Unknown and unrelated
- to one another in life, she and this other woman would be
- sisters in death. Lani took some small comfort in knowing that
- 634
- she would not be left there alone.
- Across from her, Mitch sat down on something hard, something
- that supported his weight--a rock of some kind. In the
- moments before he switched off his flashlight, Lani realized he
- was rubbing his knee, massaging it, as though he had twisted it
- perhaps. It was a small thing, but nevertheless something to
- remember.
- Sitting cross-legged on the hard ground, Lani reached out one
- arm, expecting to rest some of her weight on that one hand. Instead
- of encountering the dirt floor, her hand blundered into one of the
- remaining pots--one of the smaller ones. As Lani's exploring fingers
- strayed silently around the smooth edge of the neck of the pot, a
- powerful realization shot through her, something that was as much
- chehchki--dream--as it was understanding.
- This pot had once belonged to Oks Gagda--to Betraying
- Woman. Lani knew the story. She had heard the legend from Nana
- Dahd and from Davy as well. The legend--the ha'icha ahgidathag--of
- Betraying Woman--was a cautionary tale that told how a
- young girl whose birth name had long since disappeared into oblivion
- had once fallen in love with an Apache--an Ohb. When an
- 635
- enemy war party had attacked her village, the girl had betrayed
- her people to their dreaded enemy. Much later, the bad girl was
- brought back home and punished. According to the legend, I'itoi
- KISS OF THE BEES 331
- locked her in a cave and then called the mountain down around
- her, leaving her to die alone and in the dark.
- Lani had lived all her life with those beloved I'itoi stories
- and traditions, but there was a part of her that discounted them.
- Over the years she had stopped believing in them in much the
- same way she eventually had stopped believing in Santa Claus.
- Although legends of Saint Nicholas and the I'itoi stories as well
- may both have had some distant basis in fact, by age sixteen
- Lani no longer regarded them as true. The stories and the lessons
- to be learned from them were part of her culture but not necessarily
- part of her life.
- She had been eight years old when Davy broke the bad news
- to her, that Santa Claus didn't exist. Nana Dahd was gone by
- then, so Lani hadn't been able to go to her for consolation. For
- the first time, without Rita there to comfort her, Lani had turned
- to her mother--to Diana Ladd Walker. And it was in her mother's
- 636
- arms that she had learned that the wonder and magic of
- Christmas hadn't gone out of her life forever.
- Feeling the cool, smooth clay under her fingertips, Lani felt
- the return of another kind of magic. Oks Gagda--Betraying
- Woman--did exist. She had been locked in a cave by the falling
- mountain just the way Nana Dahd had said. But now Lani knew
- something about that story that she had never known before.
- Betraying Woman had been locked in a cave with two entrances.
- If she had known about the other entrance, she might have
- simply walked away, rather than staying to endure her punishment.
- In a way she would never be able to explain to anyone
- else, Lani Walker grasped the significance of what had happened.
- Oks Gagda had willingly chosen to remain where she was,
- choosing the honor of jehka'ich--of suffering the consequences
- of her wickedness--rather than taking the coward's path and
- running away.
- A wave of gooseflesh raced across Lani's body. She had left
- her people-hair basket behind, but I'itoi had sent her another
- talisman to take the basket's place. Carefully, making as little
- noise as possible, she lifted the small sturdy pot from where it
- 637
- had sat undisturbed for all those years and placed it, out of sight,
- in the triangular space formed by her crossed legs.
- "What are you doing over there?" Mitch demanded, shining
- a blinding beam from his flashlight directly in her eyes.
- 332 J.A. JANCE
- "Nothing," Lani said. "Just trying to get comfortable."
- "You stay right where you are," Mitch warned. "No funny
- business."
- Lani said nothing more. Covering the perfectly round opening
- of the pot with the palm of her hand, Lani closed her eyes.
- With the cool rim of clay touching her skin, Lani let the words
- of Nana Dahd's long-ago song flow silently through her whole
- being.
- Do not look at me, Little Olhoni 7
- Do not look at me when I sing to you
- So this man will not know we are speaking
- So this evil man will think he is winning.
- Do not look at me when I sing, Little Olhoni,
- But listen to what I say. This man is evil.
- This man is the enemy. This man is Ohb.
- 638
- Do not let this frighten you.
- Whatever happens, we must not let him win.
- I am singing a war song, Little Olhoni.
- ,.A hunter's song, a killer's song.
- '^'^1 am singing a song to I'itoi, asking him to help us.
- Asking him to guide us in the battle
- So the evil Ohb does not win.
- Do not look at me, Little Olhoni,
- Do not look at me when I sing to you.
- I must sing this song four times,
- For all of nature goes in fours,
- But when the trouble starts
- You must listen very carefully
- And do exactly what I say.
- If I tell you to run, you must run,
- Run fast, and do not look back.
- Whatever happens, Little Olhoni.
- You must run and not look back.
- Remember in the story how I'itoi made himself a fly
- And hid in the smallest crack when Eagleman
- 639
- Came searching for him. Be like I'itoi,
- KISS OF THE BEES 333
- Little Olhoni. Be like I'itoi and hide yourself
- In the smallest crack. Hide yourself somewhere
- And do not come out again until the battle is over.
- Listen to what I sing to you, Little Olhoni.
- Do not look at me but do exactly as I say.
- Lani paused sometimes between verses to listen. Outside the
- cave's entrance, cool nighttime air rustled through the manzanita,
- making a sighing sound like people whispering--or like a'ali
- chum--little children--gossiping and sharing secrets. Maybe it.
- was that sound that brought Betraying Woman back to Lani's
- attention. Not only had she been left to die in the cave, her
- spirit was still there, trapped forever in the prison of her unbroken
- pots.
- "Pots are made to be broken," Nana Dahd had told her time
- and again. "Always the pots must be broken."
- And that was why, in Rita's medicine basket, there had once
- been a single shard of pottery with the figure of a turtle etched
- into it. The piece of reddish-brown clay had come from a pot
- 640
- Rita's grandmother, Oks Amichuda--Understanding Woman--
- had made when she was a young woman. After Understanding
- Woman's death, Rita herself had smashed the pot to pieces,
- releasing her grandmother's spirit. The only thing Rita had saved
- was that one jagged-edged piece.
- For just a moment, in that dim gray light, Lani thought she
- saw the pale figure of a woman glide behind the man who called
- himself Mitch Vega. Lani saw the figure pause and then move
- on.
- The shadowy shape was there for such a brief moment that
- at first Lani thought, perhaps, she had made her up. But then,
- as Lani kept on singing, a strange peace enveloped her. She felt
- perfectly calm--as though she were being swept along in the
- untroubled stillness inside a whirlwind. And since Lani understood
- by then that, like Betraying Woman, she was going to die
- anyway, there was no longer any reason for her to remain silent.
- "Why do you hate them?" she asked.
- "Hate who?" Mitch returned.
- "My parents," Lani answered. "That's why you've done all
- this--drugged me, drugged Quentin, brought us here. That's the
- 641
- 5% J.A. JANCE
- reason you drew that awful picture of me, as well. To get at my
- parents, but I still don't understand why."
- "It's not your parents," Mitch said agreeably enough. "It's
- your father."
- "My father? What did he do to you?"
- "Did your father ever mention the name Mitch Johnson to
- you?"
- "Mitch Johnson? I don't think so. Is that you? I thought your
- name was Vega."
- "Mitch Whatever. It doesn't really matter, does it?" He
- laughed then. The brittle laughter rattled hollowly off the walls
- of the cave. "That's a pisser, isn't it1. Brandon Walker cost me
- my family, my future, and twenty years out of my life, but I'm
- not important enough for even the smallest mention to Brandon
- Walker's nearest and dearest."
- "What did my father do to you?" Lani persisted.
- "I'll tell you what he did. He locked me up, and for no good
- reason. Those goddamned wetbacks are sucking the lifeblood out
- of this country. They were wrecking things back then, and it's
- 642
- worse now. All I was trying to do was stop it."
- The word "wetbacks" brought the story back. "You're him,"
- Lani said.
- "Him who?"
- "The man who shot those poor Mexicans out in the desert."
- "So your father did tell you about me after all. What did
- he say?"
- "He wasn't talking about you," Lani answered. "He was talking
- about the award. I was dusting in his study and I asked him
- about some of his awards. The Parade Magazine Detective of
- the Year Award was--"
- "He was talking about his damned award?"
- Lani heard the change in the tenor of his voice, the sudden
- surge of anger. The lesson she should have learned when she
- had slapped the drug-laden cup away from her lips seemed so
- distant now, so far in the past, that it no longer applied. What
- difference did it make? He was going to kill her anyway.
- "That's why they gave it to him," she said quietly. "For
- sending you to prison. You killed two people and wounded another.
- I think you got what you deserved."
- 643
- KISS OF THE BEES 335
- "Shut up," Mitch Vega-Johnson snarled. "Shut the hell up.
- You don't know the first goddamned thing about it."
- Listen to me, Little Olhoni, and do exactly as I say.
- Once again Nana Dahd's song came to mind and she began
- to sing quietly--jupij ne'e. She whispered the strength-giving
- words, not loud enough for Mitch to hear, but loud enough that
- they might fall on the ears of Betraying Woman, that they might
- reach out to that other trapped spirit who had spent so long
- shut up in the cave.
- When Mitch had taken her prisoner and when he had hurt
- her, he had caught her unawares. Lani had learned enough about
- him now to realize that he was simply waiting for Quentin to
- finish loading the pots. When that task was accomplished, Mitch
- would come after Lani again--after Lani and Quentin both.
- Minute by minute, the danger was coming closer, and singing
- Nana Dahd's song was the only way Lani knew to prepare for
- it, to achieve ih'in. This time, when he came after her, she would be ready. Perhaps
- she would not escape--escape did not seem possible--but with the help of I'itoi and
- of Betraying Woman,
- Lani would meet her fate in a way that would make Nana Dahd
- 644
- proud. In the face of whatever Mitch Vega-Johnson had to offer,
- Lani would be bamustk--unflinching.
- That was the other thing Siakam meant--to be a hero, to
- endure. Nana Dahd had given her that word as part of her name.
- Dolores Lanita Walker was determined that, no matter what,
- she would somehow live up to the legend of that other Mualig
- Siakam, to the other woman from long ago, the one who had
- been Kissed by the Bees.
- Driving to the department, Brandon and Diana Walker said
- very little. Brandon had always thought that having a child die
- a violent death had to be a parent's worst nightmare. But it
- turned out that wasn't true, because having one child murdered
- by another was worse by far. There was no way for him to come
- to grips with the enormity of the tragedy, so he took refuge in
- action and drove.
- Pulling into the familiar parking lot, he was struck by the
- difference between then and now, between when he used to
- 336 J.A. JANCE
- park in the slot marked reserved for sheriff. Back then, he
- would have walked into the building to issue orders and direct
- 645
- the action. Tonight, instead of calling the shots, he was corning
- in as a family member--as the father of both victim and perpetrator.
- Instead of being able to tell people what to do, he was
- going to have to ask, maybe even beg, for someone to help him.
- Shaking his head at his own powerlessness, he parked the
- car in a slot marked visitor.
- "What are we going to tell them?" Diana asked, as they
- headed for the public entrance.
- Brandon was still carrying the paper bag that held the cassette
- tape and plastic case. "Before I tell anybody anything, I'm
- going to try to get these to Alvin. That way he can start lifting
- prints. Once he's done with the tape, we'll try to get someone
- to hold still long enough to listen to it."
- "Will they believe it?"
- "That depends," Brandon told her.
- "On what?"
- "On the luck of the draw," he answered. "With any kind of
- luck, Detective Myers will still be home in bed."
- Walking into the reception area, the young clerk recognized
- Brandon Walker immediately. "What can I do for you?" he
- 646
- asked.
- "I'm looking for Alvin Miller," Brandon answered.
- The clerk frowned. "I doubt he's here. I'm not showing him
- on the 'in' list."
- "Do me a favor," Brandon said. "Try calling the fingerprint
- lab and see if he answers."
- And he did. Within minutes, Alvin Miller had come out to
- the reception area to escort Brandon and Diana back to the lab.
- "What's going on?" he asked.
- Brandon handed over the bag. "Do me a favor," he said.
- "We need prints lifted off these."
- "All right," Alvin returned.
- "Then I'll need something else."
- "What's that?"
- "You can call up prints by name, can't you?"
- "Sure," Alvin answered. "If the prints went into the system
- with a name, then we can get them out that way, too. Whose
- name are we looking for?"
- KISS OF THE BEES 337
- "My son's," Brandon Walker said, his voice cracking as he
- 647
- spoke.
- "Your son's?"
- Brandon nodded. "His name is Quentin--Quentin Addison
- Walker. He's only been out of Florence for a matter of months,
- so his prints should be on file."
- Without another word, Alvin Miller walked over to a computer
- keyboard and punched in a series of letters. The whole
- lab was silent except for the air rushing through the cooling
- ducts and the hum of fans on various pieces of equipment. For
- the better part of a minute, that sound didn't change. Then,
- finally, with a distinctive thunk, a printer snapped into action.
- Eventually, the print job was complete. Only when the lab
- was once again filled with that odd humming silence did Alvin
- reach out to retrieve the printed sheet from the printer. Preparing
- to hand it to Brandon, he glanced at it once. As soon as he
- did so, he snatched it away again and held it closer to study it
- more closely.
- "Holy shitF' Alvin exclaimed.
- "What is it?" Brandon asked.
- "I haven't run the prints yet," he said. "I was just about
- 648
- done enhancing them, but I recognize one of these. Has your
- son been out to visit you recently?"
- "My son and I are currently estranged," Brandon Walker said
- carefully. "He hasn't been anywhere near Diana's and my house
- since before he was sent to prison. Not as an invited guest,"
- he added.
- "But this print--the one right here on the end," Alvin said,
- handing the sheet over to Brandon at last. "That's the same print
- I took off the desk in your office and also off one of the pieces
- of broken frame."
- Brandon looked down at the piece of paper in his hand. The
- last print, the one in the corner, had a diagonal slice across it.
- Nodding, he handed the set of prints back to Alvin.
- "He almost cut his thumb in half with my pocket knife when
- he was eight," Brandon said quietly. "He took my pocket knife
- outside and was showing off with his little brother when it happened.
- You'll probably find the same prints on the tape and tape
- case as well."
- 338 J.A. JANCE
- "You think your son Quentin has something to do with your
- 649
- daughter's disappearance?"
- Brandon Walker sighed. In the space of a few minutes' time,
- the former sheriff seemed to have aged ten years.
- "With my daughter's murder," he corrected. "It's all on the
- tape, but before you turn it over to a detective, I want it checked
- for prints. Diana's and mine are on there along with whatever
- others there are. You understand, don't you, Alvin?" he asked.
- "I need to know for sure." He glanced in Diana's direction. "We
- both need to know."
- "Right," Alvin said.
- He took the bag and carried it over to his lab area, where
- he carefully dusted both the tape and the case with graphite,
- bringing out a whole series of prints. Then, using a magnifying
- glass, he examined the results for several long minutes.
- Finally, putting down the glass, he turned back to Brandon
- and Diana. "It's here," he said. "On the case, at least."
- Brandon Walker's eyes blurred with tears. His legs seemed
- to splinter beneath him.
- "I was afraid it would be," he said. "We'd better go out
- front and talk to a detective. I'm sure whoever's assigned to this
- 650
- case will need to hear that tape as soon as possible."
- "How come?" Alvin Miller asked. "What's on it?"
- Brandon Walker took a deep, despairing breath before he
- answered. "We believe . . ." he said, fighting unsuccessfully to
- keep his voice steady, "... that this is a recording of our daughter's
- murder."
- Together, Diana and Brandon Walker started toward the
- door. "Ask to talk to Detective Leggett," Alvin Miller called
- after him. "He doesn't know it yet, but it turns out he's already
- working this case."
- By the time Davy and Candace picked up their tickets at the
- counter and then went racing through the terminal to the gate,
- they were both worn out. Once aboard America West Flight 1,
- bound for Tucson, Candace fell sound asleep. Davy, although
- fidgety with a combination of nerves and exhaustion, fought
- hard to stay awake. They were flying in a 737, and Davy was
- stuck in one of the cramped middle seats, sandwiched between
- Candace, sleeping on his left, and a bright-eyed little old lady
- KISS OF THE BEES 339
- on the right. The woman was tiny. Her skin was tanned nutbrown.
- 651
- The skin of her lips and cheeks was wrinkled in that
- distinctive pattern that comes from years of smoking. Rattling
- the pages, she thumbed impatiently through the in-flight
- magazine.
- David sat there, bolt upright and petrified, worried sick that
- if he did fall asleep, he would instantly be overtaken by yet
- another panic attack. If, as the emergency room doctor had insisted,
- the attacks were stress-induced, then Davy figured he was
- about due for another one. There was, after all, some stress in
- his life.
- His experience with Candace in the hotel earlier meant that
- he was no longer quite so concerned about what she would
- think of him when another attack came along. What would other
- people think, though? The lady next to him, for instance, or the
- flight attendants hustling up and down the aisle, dispensing orange
- juice and coffee, what would they do? He could imagine
- it all too well. "Ladies and gentlemen," one of them would
- intone into the intercom. "We have a medical emergency here.
- Is there a doctor on board?"
- Stress. Part of that came from finishing school and going
- 652
- home and getting a real job without even taking whatever had
- happened to Lani into consideration. In the years while Davy
- was attending law school in Chicago, he had held himself at
- arm's length from his family back home. Somehow it seemed to
- him that there wasn't room enough in his heart for all of them
- at once--for the Arizona contingent and for the Ladd side of
- the family in Illinois. To say nothing of Candace.
- Looking at her sleeping peacefully beside him, Davy couldn't
- quite believe she was there. In his scheme of things, Candace
- had always been part of his Chicago life, and yet here she was
- on the plane with him, headed for Tucson. Not only that, she
- was going there with Astrid Ladd's amazingly large diamond
- engagement ring firmly encircling the ring finger on her slender
- left hand.
- Davy hadn't exactly popped the question. Nevertheless, they
- were engaged. Candace was planning a quick wedding in Vegas
- while Davy squirmed with the knowledge that his mother and
- stepfather had barely heard her name. He hadn't told them any
- 340 J.A. JANCE
- more about her than he had told them about his other passing
- 653
- romantic fancies. It hadn't seemed necessary.
- Now, given the circumstances, telling was more than necessary.
- It was essential and tardy and not at all one-sided. Just as
- he hadn't talked about Candace to his parents, the reverse was
- also true. There was a whole lot he hadn't told Candace, either.
- The lush lifestyle in which Candace Waverly had grown up
- in Oak Park, Illinois, was far different from what prevailed in
- the comparatively simple house in Gates Pass. And if Candace's
- experience was one step removed from the Tucson house, it was
- forever away from Rita Antone's one-room adobe house--little
- more than a shack, really--which had been Nana Dahd's ancestral
- home in Ban Thak.
- Coyote Sitting, Davy thought. Just the names of the villages
- were bad enough. Hawani Naggiak--Crow Hanging; Komkch'eD
- e Wah'osidk--Turtle Wedged; Gogs mek--Burnt Dog. Davy
- knew them equally well in English and in Tohono O'othham,
- but what would Candace think when he tried to explain them
- to her?
- Conflicting geography was one thing. What about when he
- started dealing in the crossed wires of personalities? There had
- 654
- been no particular need to tell Candace much about being raised
- by Rita Antone, who in turn had been raised by her own grandmother,
- Understanding Woman. Over time Davy had mentioned
- a few things, of course, but only the simple, straightforward
- parts, not any of what Richard Waverly, Candace's father, would
- derisively call the woo-woo stuff.
- Davy had never mentioned Looks At Nothing's Peace
- Smoke, for instance. He hadn't told Candace or any of her family
- how the blind old medicine man from his childhood would
- light his foul-smelling wild tobacco with a flame sparked by his
- faithful Zippo lighter. He hadn't told them about Looks At
- Nothing's spooky way of knowing things before they happened
- or of the blind man telling others what he had "seen" in his
- divining crystals.
- How would Candace and her family react to a discussion of
- medicine men and divining crystals--and medicine baskets, for
- that matter? Or try scalp bundles on for size. The one from
- Rita's medicine basket--an Ohb scalp bundle, no doubt--was
- KISS OF THE BEES 3A1
- the main reason Rita's medicine basket was still sitting in his
- 655
- parents' safety deposit box eleven years after Rita's death.
- Davy was sure now that the scalp bundle had been the primary
- reason Rita had insisted that it be kept out of Lani's hands
- until she was old enough to handle it with proper respect. Davy
- cringed at the idea of sitting down and trying to explain to Richard
- Waverly how improper handling of a scalp-bundle could
- bring on a bout of Enemy Sickness, the best cure for which was
- a medicine man singing scalp-bundle songs at night.
- Old Man Waverly will just love that one, Davy thought.
- And yet, those things--which he could imagine Candace and
- her family not quite understanding--were far too much a part
- of Davy's life and experience for him to dismiss them. The stories
- about I'itoi and Earth Medicine Man were as deeply woven
- into Davy's background as Aesop's Fables and the Brothers
- Grimm were into Candace's. How would somebody raised on
- watered-down versions of Little Red Riding Hood and Cinderella
- respond to having her son or daughter hear about how I'itoi
- chopped the head off the monster Eagleman's baby?
- Almost without realizing what he was doing, Davy reached
- into his pocket and pulled out Father John's rosary. At age
- 656
- twenty-seven, David Ladd closed his eyes and saw in his mind's
- eye those three aged adults who had played such important roles
- in his childhood--Rita, Looks At Nothing, and Father John.
- They were all so very different and yet, despite those differences,
- they had drawn a healing circle of love around him--a little halforphaned
- Anglo boy--and held him safe inside it.
- How had they done that? And if, from the vantage point of
- being that well-loved child, Davy himself couldn't answer that
- question, how in God's name would he ever be able to explain
- it to anyone else, including Candace Waverly?
- By then the beads were laid out across his palm. He began
- slowly, one bead at a time, silently moving his lips as he recited
- the words. "Holy Mary, Mother of God, pray for us sinners now
- and at the hour of our death. Amen."
- Halfway through the process, probably somewhere over Colorado,
- someone tapped on his right arm. Startled, he looked up.
- The lady next to him was smiling a benignly cheery smile.
- "I know just how you feel," she said. "I used to be afraid
- of flying, too, young man. But they have classes for that kind of
- 342 J.A. JANCE
- 657
- thing these days. I took one at Pirna Community College a few
- years back. You might look into taking one yourself. Those
- classes don't cost very much, and they help. They really do."
- Blushing furiously, Davy dropped Father John's losalo back
- into his pocket. "Thank you," he said. "I'll try to look into it
- as soon as I have a chance."
- Leaving the hospital. Fat Crack Ortiz stopped by the Walker
- house in Gates Pass long enough to see that no one was home.
- After that he headed the Crown Victoria toward Sells. No doubt
- the dance was still going strong, but he didn't even pause at the
- Little Tucson turnoff. Instead, he drove on home.
- When he had warned Brandon Walker of danger the day
- before, it hadn't occurred to him that the danger in question,
- the evil emanating from Diana's book, might fall on Lani. He
- had expected Diana herself to be the target, never Lani.
- Once he reached the house, he was grateful to discover that
- Wanda still wasn't home. Although she tolerated his medicineman
- status, she certainly wasn't thrilled by it. Gabe went straight
- to the wooden desk and retrieved Looks At Nothing's medicine
- pouch. Then he went outside. Using a stick of mesquite, he
- 658
- stood in the middle of the dirt-floored patio and used the stick
- to draw a circle around himself. Then he eased himself down
- on the hard ground in exactly the way the old blind medicine
- man would have prescribed.
- With the porch light providing the only light, he opened the
- pouch and took out a rolled cigarette made from wiw--wild
- tobacco--that Fat Crack had carefully gathered and rolled into
- the ceremonial cigarettes. Digging further, he located Looks At
- Nothing's old Zippo lighter, which had become almost as much
- a part of the duajida--the nighttime divination ceremony--as
- the billowing smoke itself. Then, opening a second, smaller bag
- made of some soft, chamois-like material, Fat Crack peered inside
- at the crystals he knew were there.
- In all the years Fat Crack Ortiz had been in possession of
- the medicine pouch, he had seldom touched the crystals or taken
- them out of their protective bag. But if any occasion called for
- the use of Looks At Nothing's most powerful medicine, this was
- it. Lani Walker was in danger. The old medicine man had been
- dead long before Rita Antone's ant-kissed child had been born.
- KISS OF THE BEES 343
- 659
- Nonetheless, his influence, even from the grave, had directed
- almost every aspect of Lani's young life, from her unusual adoption
- to the things she had been taught by the people who had
- been placed in charge of caring for her.
- The responsibility of caring for the child had been left to a
- number of people, but Looks At Nothing's medicine pouch had
- been entrusted to Fat Crack alone. The treasured pouch had
- come to him with the understanding that the Medicine Man
- with the Tow Truck would save it for Looks At Nothing's real
- successor. For a time, while the children were young, Fat Crack
- had fooled himself into believing that the mantle would fall to
- one or the other of his own two sons--to either Richard or Leo.
- And then, when Rita had insisted on taking Clemencia Escalante
- to raise, she had told her nephew that perhaps the ant-marked
- baby was the one Looks At Nothing had told them about. Over
- the years, Fat Crack had come to believe that was true.
- Carefully, patiently, Fat Crack unknotted the drawstring that
- held the chamois bag closed. Holding out an upturned hand, he
- dumped the collection of crystals into his palm. There were four
- of them in all. As soon as Fat Crack saw the four of them winking
- 660
- back the reflected glow of the porch light, he had to smile.
- Four crystals made sense. After all, as everyone knows, all things
- in nature go in fours.
- Arranging them side by side, Fat Crack laid the crystals and
- the cigarette and lighter out on the spread leather surface of the
- pouch, then he reached into his hip pocket and pulled out his
- wallet. Carefully he thumbed through the school pictures of his
- own children and grandchildren until he found the one Lani had
- given him the year before at Christmas.
- He lit the cigarette and let the smoke swirl around him in
- the late-night breeze. There was no one sitting in the circle with
- him, but Fat Crack raised the cigarette and blew a puff of smoke
- in each of the four directions, just as Looks At Nothing had
- taught him, saying "Nawoj" as he did so.
- While the cigarette still glowed in his fingertips, Fat Crack
- lifted up the first crystal and held it over Lani's picture. Nothing
- happened. It was the same with the second crystal and with the
- third as well.
- The sky was gradually lightening in the east and Fat Crack
- was already thinking how foolish he must look sitting there on
- 661
- Wi J.A. JANCE
- the ground when he picked up the fourth crystal and held it
- over the picture. What happened then was something he could
- never explain. It simply was. The picture on the paper changed
- ever so slightly until something else superimposed itself over
- Lani's smiling face.
- At first Fat Crack thought he was seeing the head of a rattlesnake,
- its jaws open wide to swallow something, its fangs fully
- exposed. This was not a snake's head. It was, in fact, a snake's
- skull--ko'oi koshwa. Then, as Fat Crack leaned down to examine
- the picture more closely, he realized the picture underneath the
- skull seemed changed as well. In the slowly eddying smoke, he
- saw that Lani's eyes were missing. Instead of eyes smiling back
- at him, there were only empty sockets.
- The message from the divining crystals was clear. If Lani
- Walker wasn't already dead, she soon would be.
- Fat Crack's hands shook as he carefully returned the crystals
- and lighter to the medicine pouch. He was just closing it and
- trying to decide what to do with this newfound, awful knowledge
- when the headlights from Richard Ortiz's tow truck flashed
- 662
- across the yard. With an agility that surprised Fat Crack even as
- he did it, he heaved his hefty frame up off the ground and
- hurried toward the truck. He reached the rider's door just as
- Wanda climbed out and turned to tell Richard goodbye.
- "Oi g hihm," Fat Crack said to his son, hoisting himself up
- into the seat Wanda had just vacated. Literally translated, oi g
- hihm means "Let's walk." In the everyday language of the reservation,
- however, it means "Let's get in the pickup and go."
- "Where are you going?" Wanda demanded, catching the
- door before Gabe had a chance to close it.
- "To Rattlesnake Skull Charco," he said. "Call Brandon
- Walker and tell him to meet me there. Tell him that's where
- we'll find Lani. Tell him to hurry before it's too late."
- "What's wrong with Lani?" Wanda Ortiz asked in alarm. "Is
- she hurt, sick? What's going on?"
- "She's been kidnapped," Fat Crack answered without hesitation.
- "I believe she's been taken by someone connected to the
- evil Ohb. If we don't find her soon, that person is going to kill
- her, if he hasn't already."
- Wanda nodded and stepped back from the truck. "I'll call
- 663
- the Walkers right away," she said.
- KISS OF THE BEES 345
- Richard Ortiz shifted the tow truck into reverse. "We're not
- talking more of that old medicine-man nonsense, are we?" he
- asked dubiously.
- This was no time for a philosophical discussion. "Shut up
- and drive, Baby," Fat Crack told his son. "And while you're at
- it, put the flashers on."
- "You think it's that serious?"
- "You bet," Fat Crack told him. "It's a matter of life and
- death."
- Quentin had come back to the cavern, picked up the secondload
- of pottery, and had gone to carry it back down the mountain.
- Soon he would be back for the third and last load. Lani
- knew that was when Mitch Johnson would make his move. That
- was when he would kill them.
- But even with death looming closer, Lani no longer felt
- frightened. The whispered words of Nana Dahd's war chant
- were helping Lani to remain calm in the face of whatever was
- to come. And the pot was helping her as well. Still undetected
- 664
- by either Quentin or Mitch, it lay nestled between her legs.
- Stroking the cool, hard clay seemed to offer as much comfort
- as Nana Dahd's song. The presence of the pot seemed to take
- up where the people-hair basket had left off.
- Across the darkened cave, Mitch Johnson was talking, his
- voice droning on and on, as much to himself as to Lani. When
- she finally started paying attention, he was talking about Quentin's
- reaction to the drug. "Scopolamine's interesting stuff, isn't
- it? Sort of like a combination of drug and hypnosis. I guess those
- guys down in Colombia aren't so stupid after all."
- "That's what you used on us?" Lani asked.
- "Andy claimed that scopolamine poisoning makes 'em hot
- as hell. red as a beet, mad as a hatter, and blind as a bat."
- In that throwaway remark Lani almost missed the crucial
- name--Andy. Her heart lurched inside her chest. All night long
- she had been forging spiritual links between this man and the
- evil Ohb. Now, though, for the first time, there was some outside
- confirmation that connections between Andrew Carlisle of
- old and this new evil Ohb did exist. Lani had to know for sure.
- "Who's Andy?" she asked, swallowing an entirely new lump
- 665
- of fear that rose dangerously in her throat.
- 346 J.A. JANCE
- "Did you say 'Who's Andy?' " Mitch Johnson asked in mock
- disbelief. "You mean here you are, smart enough to go to University
- High School, but you're not smart enough to figure all
- this out for yourself?"
- "Who's Andy?" Lani repeated.
- "A friend of mine," Mitch Johnson told her. "It turns out
- he was a friend of your mother's as well. If you've read your
- mother's book, then you know a whole lot about him. His name
- was Carlisle. Andrew Philip Carlisle. Ever heard of him?"
- Sitting there in the dark, Lani's body was covered by another
- wave of gooseflesh. She felt sick to her stomach. It was true,
- then. She was shut up in the darkened cave with a man named
- Mitch Johnson, but she was there with Andrew Carlisle as well,
- with the vengeful spirit of the evil Ohb who had raped and
- tortured her mother.
- "That's why you burned me, isn't it?" she said. Her voice
- seemed very small. In the emptiness of the darkened cave, it
- was hardly more than a whisper. "You did it for him."
- 666
- "So maybe you aren't so dumb after all. This way your
- mother is bound to make the connection, but there won't be
- any tooth impressions for someone to take to court the way
- there were with Andy."
- Andy. It was hard for her to comprehend that word. How
- could a person who was "Andy" to Mitch Johnson also be Andrew
- Carlisle, the monster who had frequented the stories of
- Lani Walker's childhood? She had spent long winter evenings,
- snuggled in Rita's lap, hearing the story again and again. Lani
- had loved hearing how two women, the priest, the boy, and the
- dog had overcome the wicked Mil-gahn man. Again and again
- Nana Dahd had told the powerful tale of how I'itoi had helped
- them defeat the enemy who was, at the same time, both
- Apachelike and not-Apache.
- "I don't suppose you ever met him," Mitch continued.
- "You're much too young. He was already in prison for the second
- time long before you were born, but if you had met him, I
- think you would have been impressed. To put it in terms you
- might understand--the Indian vernacular, as it were--I'd say he
- was a very powerful medicine man."
- 667
- Lani knew something about medicine men--especially about
- Looks At Nothing, who had been a friend of Rita's. And Fat
- KISS OF THE BEES 347
- Crack Ortiz was a medicine man as well. Whatever powers they
- had weren't used for evil or for hurting people. Mitch Johnson's
- sarcastic remark burned through Lani's fear and changed it to
- anger, like a powerful magnifying glass focusing the rays of the
- sun to ignite a piece of paper.
- "You can call him a medicine man if you like," she said
- softly. "I call him ho'ok."
- "Ho'ok," Mitch Johnson repeated. "What does that mean?"
- "Monster," Lani replied.
- For a moment after she said it, there was no sound in the
- dark stillness of the cave, then there was a short hiccup followed
- by a hoot of raucous laughter.
- Except it didn't sound like laughter to Lani Walker. In the
- dark it reminded her of something else--of the rasping, unearthly,
- bone rattling sound a cornered javelina makes when it
- gnashes its teeth.
- 16
- 668
- low this is all that is known o/Mualig Siakam. She was one of
- the greatest of all the medicine women in all the Land of the Desert
- People. She lived to be very, very old. And she taught some of her
- songs to a few men.
- Some women tried to learn the songs, but the buzzing of the bees
- joined with the song in the heads of the women and made them
- afraid. Because they were afraid, the women would not let sleep
- come. Sleep was necessary in order to know all the powers which
- one does not see, and which are used in healing.
- The Indians would take a new baby many miles to see Great
- Medicine Woman, and Mualig Siakam would sing over the baby. She
- would sing over it with the white feathers of goodness which would
- help guard its spirit from meanness. And she would feed the baby a
- little of the very fine white meal which would make its body strong.
- But sometimes Great Medicine Woman would refuse to sing.
- Then the people knew there was no hope for the child.
- If the people grew angry and tried to make Mualig Siakam sing
- over such a child, Great Medicine Woman would scold. She would
- ask them what right they had over Tash--the Sun--and Jeweth--
- the Earth--and all of I'itoi'.s' gifts. Then she would go into the
- 669 dark
- inner room of her house, and the Pa-nahl--the bees--would begin
- to roar with anger.
- When that happened, all the people--even Old Limping Man--
- would go away.
- KISS OF THE BEES 549
- * * *
- Alvin Miller wasn't used to doing his work in front of a live
- audience, but that night the lab was jammed with onlookers.
- The Walkers were there along with Deputy Fellows and both
- detectives on the case, Leggett and Myers. At the last moment
- Sheriff Forsythe even showed up, probably summoned by Detective
- Myers.
- "All right," Forsythe said, looking around the room. "What
- exactly's going on here?"
- Brandon Walker looked at the man who had replaced him.
- "My daughter's missing," he said. "We're afraid she may have
- been kidnapped."
- Forsythe glowered at Detective Myers. "Kidnapped. I
- thought you said this was a Missing Persons case. And what's
- 670
- all this about bones?"
- Miller came across the room and handed the papers over to
- the sheriff. "This set of prints matches individual prints we took
- off the collection of bones Deputy Fellows discovered out near
- the reservation yesterday afternoon as well as items from the
- break-in at the Walker residence last night that Detective Myers
- was called to investigate."
- Slipping on a pair of reading glasses, Bill Forsythe studied
- the report. "Quentin Walker," he read aloud. Then he looked
- up at Brandon. "Your son?"
- Brandon nodded. "I want you to call in the FBI," he said.
- "The FBI1." Forsythe exclaimed. "For a little domestic thing
- like this? Not on your life. Chances are your son and daughter
- were drinking or something, just the way Detective Myers
- said . . ."
- Brandon turned to Alvin. "Do you still have that tape recorder
- here?"
- Miller nodded. "Yes."
- "I want you to play the tape," Brandon said.
- "But I haven't finished lifting--"
- 671
- "Play it," Brandon ordered. "That's the only way they're
- going to believe what we're up against."
- A few seconds later, Lani Walker's voice was playing to all
- the people crowded into the lab. "Quentin," she was saying.
- "Quentin, Quentin, Quentin."
- "Your daughter?" Forsythe asked.
- 350 J.A. JANCE
- Brandon Walker nodded. By the time the scream tore
- through the room, Diana Walker was sobbing quietly into her
- hands.
- "You're right," Sheriff Forsythe said, when Alvin Miller finally
- switched off the tape player. "It's time to pull out the
- stops."
- Breathing a sigh of relief, Brandon Walker reached out and
- squeezed Diana's hand.
- Quentin Walker had deposited his second load of pottery in
- the back of the Bronco and was on his way back to the cave for
- the third and last one when he saw the flashing red lights turn
- off Highway 86 onto Coleman Road.
- Climbing up and down was hard physical labor. His head
- 672
- was far clearer now than it had been when he started out. Even
- though there was no chance of the people in the police car
- seeing him, he froze where he was and waited for it to go past.
- But it didn't. Instead, it slowed and turned left, heading for
- the charco.
- Blind panic descended on Quentin Walker. Someone's found
- Tommy, he thought. And now the cops are coming for me.
- For the space of thirty seconds, he stood paralyzed by fear
- and indecision. And then, without a thought for the other people
- in the cave--without even recalling their existence, to say
- nothing of the third batch of pottery--he turned and ran back
- down to the Bronco. There was a single car key in his pocket.
- Sweeping the camouflage cover off the top, Quentin clambered
- into the vehicle and shoved the key home in the ignition.
- Switching on the engine, he gunned it, testing the power,
- trying to remember exactly how he had come to be here on the
- mountain. Dimly he remembered driving up here, but it had
- seemed lighter then. In the dark, he was hard-pressed to remember
- how to reverse course and get back down.
- He began trying to turn the Bronco around. There was little
- 673
- room for maneuvering inside that little clump of mesquite trees,
- especially when he didn't dare turn on the headlights. Those would certainly attract
- the attention of the cops with their flashing red lights. Even now, the cop car was
- headed straight for
- the charco.
- Realizing that's where the cops were heading drove Quentin
- KISS OF THE BEES 351
- into a frenzy. The next time he backed up, he high-centered on
- a boulder he hadn't been able to see in the rearview mirror.
- Even with four-wheel drive, the Bronco didn't come loose the
- first two times he tried to go forward. The third time, he really
- goosed it, slamming the accelerator all the way to the floor,
- giving the Bronco every bit of power he had.
- And it worked. Too well.
- With a roar and a spray of pebble-sized rocks, the Bronco
- shot forward--through the grove of mesquite and right over the
- edge of a limestone cliff that had lain, shrouded in darkness, just
- beyond the sheltering trees.
- Quentin mashed desperately on the brakes, trying to stop,
- but by then it was too late. The Bronco was already airborne.
- It came to earth the first time twenty yards from where it had
- 674
- taken off. It landed nose-first and then bounced end for end.
- With the screech of tortured metal and to the accompaniment
- of breaking glass, it turned over and over. The battered remains
- finally came to rest, roof down, in the soft sand of the wash
- that skirted the bottom of the mountain. There was no fire, no
- explosion, only a cloud of dust that rose up into the nighttime
- sky and then silently dispersed.
- Not having fastened his seat belt, Quentin Walker was
- thrown clear the first time the Bronco rebounded off the unforgiving
- mountainside. He flew through the air like a rag doll and
- then landed with a bone-jarring thump into a sturdy thicket of
- low-lying manzanita.
- Quentin never saw Mitch Johnson come scrambling up over
- the landslide debris and out the crack of that second entrance,
- never heard him yelling into the gradually graying nighttime sky.
- "Come back here, you rotten son of a bitch1"
- Lani heard the engine turn over and stutter to life. The sound
- was faint but distinct. Other than the Bronco, there was no
- vehicle within hearing distance.
- Mitch Johnson roared out his dismay. "Goddamn it! What
- 675
- the hell does he think he's doing?" Moments later, Johnson hurtled
- himself toward the pile of debris that blocked the second
- entrance. As he scrambled up it toward the crack at the top,
- loose rocks and pebbles rained down. A few of them smashed
- into Lani's legs and arms. Grabbing the pot, she scrambled to
- 352 J.A. JAN(E
- safety, stopping only when her body was pressed against the far
- side of the cave.
- She could hear Mitch Johnson shouting at Quentin. For a
- moment, until the rocks quit falling, Lani stayed where she was.
- She might have remained there longer, but something outside
- herself urged her to action.
- Now's your chance. Run1
- Responding to that silent command, Lani stood and tried to
- walk. Her feet had fallen asleep. When she tried to stand on
- them, they were unfeeling boards beneath her. Seconds later
- they were alive with a thousand needles and pins.
- Halfway across the floor of the cavern, she realized what she
- was doing and stopped cold. She had been trapped there in the
- cave with Mitch Johnson as surely as the spirit of Betraying
- 676
- Woman had been caught in her unbroken pottery. Now Lani
- had a chance to escape, but if the pots remained, so would Oks
- Gagda, imprisoned in her pottery long after the debt for betraying
- her people had been repaid.
- Turning back toward the half-buried skeleton and her cache
- of pots, Lani was determined that the spirit of Betraying Woman
- would at last be set free.
- Lani fell to her knees and felt around the dirt surface until
- she located the last half dozen pots--the ones Quentin hadn't
- been able to fit into either his first or second trips to the Bronco.
- Setting the one little pot aside, reserving it in case she needed
- to use it as a weapon, Lani set about breaking the other pots.
- One at a time, she heaved them against the rock wall, hearing
- them splinter to pieces.
- At last only the little one remained. Lani reached down and
- picked it up. She started to take it with her, but reconsidered.
- If even one pot remained, Betraying Woman would still be
- trapped. Hating to do it, but knowing she had to, Lani raised
- her arm high overhead and smashed that pot as well.
- There were tears in her eyes as Lani turned back toward the
- 677
- interior of the cave. She was truly alone now. Her first instinct
- was to follow Mitch Johnson up over the pile of debris, but
- what if he was still out there? What if she came out on the
- other side only to run straight into him. No, her only chance
- was to find the passage that led into the outer cavern.
- KISS OF THE BEES 353
- In a sudden panic, she realized she had lost track of the exact
- location of the opening of the passage.
- The moon had long crossed the peak of the mountain, leaving
- the cave in total darkness. There was no light--at least there
- shouldn't have been. But as Lani searched the darkness for which
- way to go, a light did appear. Not a ray of light, and not a beam
- either. It looked more like a shadow glowing in the dark. It
- seemed to hover there on the far side of the cave before disappearing
- into nothing.
- Some people have claimed that what Lani saw was little
- more than a cloud of dust set loose by Mitch's scrambling feet.
- But for Lani, for someone steeped in the ancient legends of I'itoi
- and in the traditions of the Tohono O'othham, there was no
- doubt about what she had seen.
- 678
- The phosphorescent cloud came from the pots, all right, but
- not from dust. Freed now from her clay prison, Oks Gagda herself
- had come to show Lani the way.
- Setting off across the dirt floor of the cave once again with
- more confidence than the darkness warranted, Lani walked to
- the place where it seemed to her the cloud had disappeared.
- She held one arm in front of her to keep from running into the
- rock wall, but that wasn't necessary. At the very spot where the
- cloud had disappeared, the passageway into the outer cavern
- opened up before her.
- She paused there for a moment, wondering. If Betraying
- Woman had deceived her own people, could her guidance now
- be trusted? But there were no other options. One step at a time,
- Lani set off down the passage. Any moment, Mitch Johnson
- might return to the cave to find her, bringing the spirit of his
- friend, Andrew Carlisle, with him, but Lani Walker was no
- longer alone. Elder Brother himself was with her and so was
- Betraying Woman.
- Lani had reached the point in the passage where she felt rather than saw the walls
- open out around her. She was just congratulating herself on getting that far when
- she heard cursing
- 679
- and scraping coming from the front entrance of the cave. Mitch
- Johnson was coming back. For one heart-stopping moment, she
- froze. There was nothing more she could do. Mitch had her
- trapped in the cave. Now he would surely kill her. Or worse.
- Either way, she had come to the end of her endurance.
- 354 LA. JANCE
- Out of the depths of Lani's despair, Nana Dahd's comforting
- words returned to the girl once more:
- "Remember in the story how I'itoi made himself a fly
- And hid in the smallest crack when Eagleman
- Came searching for him. Be like I'itoi,
- Little Olhoni. Be like I'itoi and hide yourself
- In the smallest crack. Hide yourself somewhere
- And do not come out again until the battle is over.
- Listen to what I sing to you, Little Olhoni.
- Do not look at me but do exactly as I say."
- Lani Walker was already inside a crack in the mountain; already
- in a cave very much like Eagleman's cave, with a pile of
- bones moldering in the far corner just the way the bones of the
- people Eagleman had eaten had moldered in the corner of his
- 680
- cave. And there were cracks inside this crack. The curtains of
- falling stalactites and the growing mounds of stalagmites that she
- had glimpsed with Quentin's flashlight earlier all offered places
- where I'itoi could possibly have hidden and where Lani might
- hide herself as well.
- Lani Walker had grown up in two worlds, understanding
- much of each. She knew instinctively that the Mil-gahn, Mitch,
- might look at the pile of debris and immediately assume that
- she had followed him out, climbing up and out. It might not
- occur to him that she would stay inside the mountain; that without
- benefit of a light she would have nerve enough to trust
- herself to I'itoi's power and move into the enveloping darkness
- rather than away from it.
- With him scrabbling through the one passage and with Lani
- trapped in the other, there wasn't a moment to lose. Halfway
- down the passage, the man-made earthen covering yielded once
- more to bare, jagged rocks. She could feel the sharp edges under
- the soles of her boots. She remembered that just before Quentin
- had ducked into the passage, she had glimpsed the walls of the
- huge cavern receding far into the mountain.
- 681
- Clinging to the dank, wet wall and using it as a guide, she
- turned left from the mouth of the passage and fled along the
- side of the cavern, into the heart of the mountain.
- Into the heart of I'itoi's sacred mountain, she told herself. That
- KISS OF THE BEES 555
- is where I am going. Either I will be safe there, or that is where I
- will die.
- Hardly daring to breathe, she scraped along, still clinging to
- the wall, testing each tentative stepping place before she put her
- weight down. She came to the first break in the wall. Feeling
- around it with both arms, she realized it was a stalagmite, one
- three feet wide and about that tall, rising up from the floor of
- the cave. It wasn't large, but perhaps it was large enough to hide
- her. She ducked behind it just as the first jagged beams from
- Mitch's flashlight flickered into the cave and then slid across the
- otherworldly surface of the far wall.
- Lani pressed herself against the sheltering stalagmite and held
- her breath. She didn't dare peek out for fear the beam from the
- light might reveal her face glowing white in the darkness. She
- marked his progress by watching the bouncing ray of his flashlight
- 682
- as he came across the room and by the curses and moans
- that accompanied his every step. She couldn't make out exactly
- what he was saying, but every once in a while the word "knee"
- surfaced and there was something about "cops."
- Perhaps, in clambering up and over the debris, he had reinjured
- the knee that had been bothering him earlier. That would
- explain the knee part. As for the cops, Lani couldn't imagine
- what he meant. It didn't seem possible that there would be
- police officers outside looking for her. How could there be? How
- would anyone know where to look?
- After what seemed an eternity, Mitch disappeared into the
- second passageway. Lani was tempted to stay where she was,
- but since this was the first hiding place she had found and the
- one nearest the opening to the second cavern, it was also most
- likely the first place Mitch Johnson would look when he came
- searching for her again. She would have to do better than that.
- Hoping the noise of his own movements would mask hers,
- she crept on, trying to suppress the ragged breaths that threatened
- to catch in her throat and ignoring the sweat that trickled
- down the back of her neck. Two steps farther, her foot slipped
- 683
- off a sharp edge into a pool of icy water. The splash sounded
- like an explosion in her pounding ears, but when she stopped
- still and waited, there was no answering sound from the other
- room. Perhaps he hadn't heard it.
- Barely able to breathe, she moved on. A dozen more steps
- 356 J.A. JANCE
- into the mountain, she found a gap between two stalagmites and
- burrowed her way into that, stopping only when she came up
- against solid rock.
- Closing her eyes against the darkness, she let Nana Dahd's
- comforting words spill over her soul:
- Be like I'itoi, Little Olhoni.
- Be like I'itoi and hide yourself
- In the smallest crack. Hide yourself somewhere
- And do not come out again until the battle is over.
- Listen to what I sing to you, Little Olhoni.
- Do not look at me but do exactly as I say.
- Trying to obey Nana Dahd's instructions, Lani pressed herself
- even deeper into the crack in the wall. She had just eased her
- way down into a reasonably comfortable sitting position on another
- 684
- low-slung stalagmite when she heard the roar of rage in
- the other room. She cringed. Now it's coming, she thought.
- Now the evil Ohb knows I'm gone.
- Summoned by Sheriff Bill Forsythe, a loose coalition of officers
- from several jurisdictions converged on the Walker home in
- Gates Pass. They were just starting to work when the doorbell
- rang and Brandon went to answer it. Standing there was FBI
- Agent in Charge, Brock Kendall. After years of working together,
- Kendall and Brandon Walker had gone from being colleagues to
- becoming friends.
- Kendall held out his hand. "I heard you were having some
- trouble," he said. "How does that old saying go? I'm from Washington
- and I'm here to help."
- Brandon Walker's face cracked into a pained grin. "Thanks,
- Brock," he said. "Come on in."
- "How bad is it?"
- Walker shook his head. "The worst," he said. "About as bad
- as it can get."
- "And the perpetrator may be Quentin, your own son?"
- As a father, Brandon could barely stand to answer that question.
- 685
- "Yes," he said. "That's the way it looks."
- Even with Brian Fellows and Clan Leggett doing the briefings,
- it still took precious time to bring all the players up to speed.
- KISS OF THE BEES 357
- Brandon Walker tolerated the seemingly interminable interviews
- as best he could because he knew they were necessary. And he
- understood that a meticulous crime scene investigation conducted
- by FBI-trained personnel was equally essential. Even so,
- it was hard not to fall prey to the thought that nothing much
- was happening.
- At six o'clock in the morning he went into the bedroom.
- Diana, fully dressed, lay on the bed, staring dry-eyed up at the
- ceiling. "What's happening?" she asked.
- "Brock Kendall is here, on an unofficial basis, of course, unless
- it starts looking like someone crossed state lines or until he
- can clear the way under missing and exploited children. Detective
- Leggett just sent out for a search warrant for Quentin's
- apartment over on Grant. Dan's a thorough kind of guy. He
- isn't going to make a move until he has all his ducks in a row."
- "If Lani's already dead, what difference will being thorough
- 686
- make?" Diana asked despairingly.
- "Don't say that," Brandon returned. "Don't even think it."
- "You heard the tape," Diana said. "What else is there to
- think? And why would Quentin do such a thing? What did Lani
- ever do to him? Is it jealousy? Is that what this is all about? We
- would have done exactly the same things for Tommy and Quentin
- that we did for Davy and Lani if they had ever shown the
- slightest interest. And every time we tried to do something, Janie
- was right there saying it wasn't good enough for them. No matter
- what we did, it wasn't enough."
- "Shhhh," Brandon said, laying a finger on Diana's lips. They
- were as parched and dry as if she had been running a fever. "It
- isn't Janie's fault that Quentin's gone off his rocker," Brandon
- said. "Don't waste your time blaming her, and don't blame us
- either."
- "That's what you're saying then? Quentin's gone crazy and
- what's happened has no connection to the book? Nothing tonight
- has anything to do with the danger Fat Crack warned
- us about?"
- Brandon slumped wearily against the headboard on his side
- 687
- of the bed. "I can't see what the connection would be," he said.
- "Insanity is the only thing that makes sense."
- Just then there was a tap on the door. A young deputy poked
- his head inside the room. "Brock Kendall was trying to use your
- 358 J.A. JANCE
- phone a few minutes ago. He said there's evidently a message
- on your answering machine. He said you should probably listen
- to it just in case it happens to be a ransom demand. We're in
- the process of setting a trap on your line. This call must have
- come in before that."
- Brandon played back the message. Using the speaker phone,
- they both listened to Wanda Ortiz's voice.
- "Gabe and Baby just left for Rattlesnake Skull Charco,"
- Wanda said. "He wants you to meet him there. He says that's
- where you'll find Lani."
- By the time the message ended, Brandon had already slipped
- his shoes back on and was bent over tying them. "What are you
- going to do?" Diana asked.
- "You heard Wanda. Fat Crack wants me to meet him at
- Rattlesnake Skull Charco, and that's where I'm going."
- 688
- Diana started to slide off the bed. "If that's where she is,
- I'm going too."
- "No, you're not."
- "Why not?" Diana demanded, slipping on her own shoes.
- "Why the hell shouldn't I? Lani's my daughter, too."
- Brandon didn't want to say the real reason, that he was afraid
- of what they would find at Rattlesnake Skull Charco--afraid of
- what they would see. He couldn't seem to do much, but at least
- he could spare Diana that.
- "One of us needs to be here to answer the phone," he said.
- "What if a ransom call does come in?"
- Diana's voice rose, verging on hysteria. "There's not going
- to be any ransom call. You know that. You just--"
- "Please, Diana," Brandon said huskily. He reached out and
- touched her, letting his fingers graze gently down the curving
- line of her cheek. "Please stay here. I can't order you to stay,
- but do it because I need you to, Di. Because I'm asking."
- Diana sank back down on the bed. "All right," she said.
- "I'll stay."
- "Thank you," Brandon said. He started toward the door.
- 689
- "You'll take the cell phone?"
- "It's already in my pocket."
- "Call the moment you hear anything," Diana added. "The
- moment you find her. Promise me you'll call, no matter how
- bad it is."
- KISS OF THE BEES 359
- Brandon stopped at the door and looked back at his wife. "I
- promise," he said. "No matter how bad."
- Leaving Diana alone, he hurried out into the living room.
- "What's up?" Brock Kendall asked.
- "Hitch up the wagons. We need to go out to the place where
- they found those bones yesterday afternoon. According to Gabe
- Ortiz, that's where we'll find Lani--at Rattlesnake Skull
- Charco."
- Brian Fellows leaped to his feet. "I can take you there," he
- offered. "It's not easy to find but--"
- "I've been there before," Brandon Walker said. "It's the
- same place where we found Gina Antone all those years ago.
- Besides, Brian, I want you to stay here."
- Disappointment washed over the young deputy's face. He
- 690
- started to argue. "But I--"
- "Most of the other officers here are strangers, Brian," Brandon
- Walker said. "You're family. I'd like you to be here to be
- with Diana just in case. To give her some emotional backup. I
- only pray she won't need it."
- "All right, Mr. Walker," Brian said. "If that's what you want
- me to do, I'll be glad to stay."
- Brandon had left the Suburban parked out in front of the
- house. "Gabe Ortiz," Brock Kendall was saying as they climbed
- in. "That name sounds familiar. Who is he again?"
- "A friend of the family," Brandon answered. "He's also the
- Tohono O'othham tribal chairman."
- "But what does he have to do with all this, and how would
- he know that's where Lani might be?"
- "He's a medicine man," Brandon answered, heading for the
- door. "He knows stuff. Don't ask me how, but he does."
- Sitting in the mouth of the cave, watching the flashing red
- lights in the desert below, Mitch Johnson fought his way through
- an initial attack of panic. He was convinced that the lights had
- nothing to do with him. What he couldn't understand was why
- 691
- the hell they didn't finish up whatever it was they were doing
- and go away. The little Indian slut was still missing, but he was
- beginning to think that maybe she hadn't made it out of the
- cave after all.
- He couldn't believe he had screwed up that badly, but there
- 360 J.A. JANCE
- was no one to blame but himself. He had counted too heavily
- on the drugs to control Quentin. He had kept the Bronco's ignition
- key in his pocket, but Quentin must have had a spare. He
- had raced out of the cave in a rage when he heard the Bronco
- start up without taking the precaution of securing the girl first. When he first
- discovered that Lani was missing, he had figured she had simply followed his own
- path up and over the landslide
- debris in the smaller cavern and out to the steep surface of
- the mountain.
- Now, though, he wondered if that was true. Had she gone
- that way, she, too, would have seen the lights. If she had gone
- straight there, hoping to be rescued, wouldn't her appearance
- have provoked an almost instantaneous reaction? By now the
- mountainside would have been crawling with cops ready to use
- Mitch Johnson for some high-tech nighttime target practice. No
- 692
- doubt a bunch of eager-beaver searchers would have combed
- every inch of the surrounding terrain. One of them was bound
- to have stumbled across the crumpled hulk of Quentin Walker's
- Bronco.
- No, as the still night slid into early morning, as the sky
- brightened in the east, and as the flashing red lights stayed right
- where they were, Mitch grew more and more convinced that
- Lani Walker was still somewhere inside the cave and probably
- freezing her cute little tush off as well.
- He had already decided on a back-up plan of action. All he
- had to do was make it to the Bounder. Even with his knee acting
- up again, he could walk that far. Then, if he drove into town,
- hooked on to the Subaru, he could drive off into the sunset and
- no one would be the wiser. He understood, however, that a plan
- like that would work only so long as Lani Walker wasn't alive
- to point an accusing finger in his direction.
- Which meant that, inside the cave or out of it, Mitch Johnson
- had to find her first.
- Had time not been an issue, he could simply have settled
- into the passage and waited. Eventually Lani would be faced
- 693
- with two simple courses of action: she would either have to
- come out or starve to death.
- Mitch's real difficulty lay in the fact that time was an issue.
- By now the Walkers knew something was up and had probably
- called for reinforcements. And so, after checking the flashing
- KISS OF THE BEES 561
- lights one last time, Mitch Johnson turned back into the first
- passageway. He did so with only one purpose in mind--to find
- Lani Walker and kill her.
- Somewhere over southeastern Colorado, Davy Ladd finally
- did fall asleep. The next panic attack hit while the Boeing 737
- was cruising over central New Mexico. An observant flight attendant
- realized something was wrong and quickly moved the little
- old lady out of the way to an empty seat several rows forward.
- As the dream started, it was similar to the others. The evil
- Ohb was there once again, armed with a knife, and chasing Lani
- and Davy through miles of mazelike tunnels. Once again he was awakened, gasping and
- sweating, by Lani's chilling scream. "Something's happening," David said when he
- could finally
- speak again as he sat mopping rivulets of sweat off his face with
- a fistful of napkins the flight attendant had provided.
- 694
- "What do you mean?" Candace asked.
- "Something's happening, and it's happening now," Davy
- declared.
- "How do you know that?"
- "I don't know how I know, I just do."
- Candace reached in her purse, pulled out a credit card, and
- removed the air-to-ground phone from its holder in the seat
- ahead of them. "Call," she said, running the magnetic strip
- through the slot to activate the phone. "Call and find out."
- "Hello?" Diana answered. Her voice wasn't as strong or as
- clear as it usually was on the phone. Whether that stemmed
- from nerves or weariness, Davy couldn't tell. "Mom? It's Davy."
- "Where are you?" she asked. "Still in the hotel?"
- "No," he answered. "We're on a plane somewhere over New
- Mexico. Maybe even Arizona by now. What's happening?"
- "All hell has broken loose. There are investigators all over
- the house tearing the place apart. They've been here for hours
- and--" Diana stopped. "You're flying?" she asked as what Davy
- had said finally penetrated.
- "Yes."
- 695
- "And you'll be here soon?"
- "Yes. The plane should be on the ground in about half an
- hour. We'll rent a car and--"
- "Oh, Davy1" Diana whispered into the phone. "Thank you.
- 362 J.A. JANCE
- I can't believe it. This is an answer to a prayer. But don't rent
- a car. Brian's here with me right now. I'll have him come to the
- airport and meet you at the gate. What flight?"
- "America West, flight number one, from Chicago. And,
- Mom?" he added. "I'm not alone."
- "You're not?"
- "No. My fiancee is with me," David Ladd said, reaching out
- and taking Candace's hand. "Her name is Candace, Mom.
- You're going to love her."
- The unrelenting cold of the larger cavern had crept into
- Lani's body, bringing with it a strange lethargy that robbed her
- of purpose--of the will to fight as well as of the will to live.
- The first time Mitch had gone cursing through to the outside in
- search of her, she had tried leaving one hiding place in favor of
- a better one.
- 696
- She had barely ventured beyond the sheltering cover of the
- stalagmite when she lost her footing and fell. She came to a stop
- with one leg hanging out over a void. Unable to tell how deep
- the hole was, she broke off a small splinter of icicle-shaped rock
- and dropped it over the edge. It fell for a long, long time before
- finally coming to rest.
- Shaken, Lani had crawled back into her original hiding place
- and there she stayed. At first she tried to maintain her connection
- to Nana Dahd's song, but gradually the cold robbed her of
- that as well. The words slipped away from her. She could no
- longer remember them. She had almost drifted off to sleep when
- Mitch Johnson returned to the cave once more.
- "Come out, come out, wherever you are," he called. "You
- can't hide from me forever."
- The sound of Mitch Johnson's voice jarred Lani to alert consciousness.
- She had hoped to convince him that she had left the
- cavern. Now, however, as the beam from his flashlight began
- flickering here and there across the far wall of the cavern, probing
- one shadowy hollow after another, she realized that wasn't
- true. With the light moving ever closer, Mitch was searching for
- 697
- her--searching systematically. Fortunately for Lani, he had
- started on the far side of the cave, but gradually he was working
- his way closer. It was only a matter of time before the revealing
- light found its way into Lani's shallow hiding place.
- KISS OF THE BEES 363
- In this unequal contest where one opponent had light and
- the other did not, Lani knew there was no hope. And it wasn't
- just the light either. He had other advantages as well--a gun for
- sure and probably even a knife. Once Mitch found her, it would
- all be over. There would be no further possibility of escape. If
- only there were some way . . .
- No longer able to summon Nana Dahd's war song, Lani
- shrank back against the wall, trying to make herself as small a
- target as possible. As she did so, she felt something brush against
- the back of her neck. A bat1. It was all she could do to keep
- from screaming as the invisible wings ruffled her hair and fluttered
- across the skin of her cheek.
- Possibly the bat was as startled by Lani's presence as she was
- by the wings fluttering past her. Soaring on across the chamber,
- the disoriented creature must have swooped past the man as well.
- 698
- "What the hell1." Mitch Johnson exclaimed while, at the
- same time, the flashlight fell to the rocky floor, rolled, flickered
- briefly, and then went out.
- "Damn it anyway1." Mitch bellowed. "Where the hell did
- it go?"
- Lani Walker closed her eyes in prayer, although the darkness
- both inside and outside her head remained the same.
- "Thank you, little Nanakumal," she said silently to the bat,
- wishing that she, like the Mualig Siakam of old, could speak
- I'itoi's language well enough so the animal could understand her.
- "Thank you for stealing the evil Ohb's light."
- With her heart pounding gratefully in her chest, she waited
- to see if Mitch Johnson was carrying a spare flashlight. She could
- hear him scuttling around in the dark. And then, just when she
- was beginning to think she was safe, she heard a distinctive
- scraping. Suddenly a match flared.
- Mitch's fall had taken him several yards from where he had
- been before. The flame of the match flickered in a part of the
- cave where Lani hadn't expected to see it. Not only that, in her
- eagerness to return to her hiding place, she had gone too far.
- 699
- Instead of being completely sheltered by the stalagmite, she had
- moved a few critical inches to the other side.
- "Why, there you are, little darling," he said. "Come to
- Daddy."
- And then the match went out.
- 364 J.A. JANCE
- * * *
- Brian was waiting at the gate when Candace and Davy finally
- stepped off the plane. He grinned when he saw Davy. "You
- guys must have been at the very back of the bus."
- "Close," Davy said. "Candace, this is Brian Fellows, my best
- friend. Brian, this is Candace Waverly. We're engaged." ;
- Suppressing a blink of surprise, Brian nodded again, taking
- charge of one of Candace's bags while she carried the other, a
- "Your mother mentioned something to that effect, but things "
- are so chaotic right now, I'm not sure the information's really j
- penetrated." I
- "What's going on?" }
- "It's a very long story," Brian said. "And if you don't mind, ';
- I think I'll wait until we're in the car before I tell it to you." j
- 700
- "It's that bad?" Davy asked. ;
- "It ain't good," Brian replied.
- On the way down the concourse and while they waited for
- the luggage, Candace chattered on and on about how brown
- everything was and about how small the airport was compared
- to O'Hare. She seemed oblivious to the seriousness of the situation,
- but Davy had seen the bleak look in Brian's eyes.
- Brian had gone home and traded the Blazer for his personal
- car, a low-slung Camaro. The mountain of luggage didn't come
- close to fitting in the trunk. Candace finally clambered into a
- backseat already piled with two leftover suitcases.
- "All right," Davy said to Brian as soon as they were all in
- the car. "Tell me."
- As Brian related the story, Davy became more and more
- somber. Tommy and Quentin had been the banes of Davy's
- childhood just as they had of Brian's. In fact, it was the older
- boys' casual meanness that had, in the beginning, united the
- younger two. Mean or not, though, Brandon Walker's sons were
- still part of both families. To have to accept one of the two as
- Lani's killer was apalling.
- 701
- "You're sure he did it?" Davy asked.
- "I heard the tape," Brian replied. "Believe me, it was pretty
- damned convincing."
- "How's Mom taking it?"
- "About how you'd expect," Brian said. "Not very well."
- "And Brandon?"
- KISS OF THE BEES 365
- "He's better off than your mother is. At least he's able to
- do something about it. The last I saw of him, he was on his
- way out to Rattlesnake Skull Charco with Brock Kendall, an
- FBI agent."
- "Rattlesnake Skull? Why there?"
- "To meet Fat Crack. Wanda Ortiz called and said that according
- to Gabe, that's where we'll find Lani."
- "Is that where we're going?" Davy asked.
- "No. We're supposed to go to the house."
- "If the charco is where the action is, that's where I want to
- be," Davy said. "Let's go there."
- Brian cast a dubious look across the front seat toward his
- friend. "All right," he said. "But first let's drop Candace off at
- 702
- the house."
- "No way," Candace Waverly said from the backseat. "Where
- did you say you're going?"
- "To a charco to see if there's anything we can do to help."
- "What's a charco?" Candace asked.
- "A stock tank," Brian answered.
- "A retention pond," Davy said at the same time.
- Candace sat back in Brian's cramped rear seat and crossed
- her arms. "If you're going to the charco, I'm going too," she
- announced.
- Davy looked at Brian. "I guess that's settled then," he said.
- "I guess it is," Brian agreed.
- "How can it be so empty?" Candace asked, as Brian's fully
- loaded Camaro swept west along Highway 86.
- "Empty," Brian repeated. "You should have seen it years ago
- when Davy and I were kids. That's when it was really empty.
- There are lots more people living out here now than there used
- to be."
- Candace looked out across the seemingly barren and endless
- desert and didn't believe a word of it.
- 703
- Davy, meantime, seemed preoccupied with something else.
- "You told me about finding bones at the charco, and about
- Quentin's fingerprints showing up on some of them. What I
- don't understand is why Quentin would have taken Lani there.
- It doesn't make sense."
- "Nobody says it has to make sense," Brian told him. "All I
- 366 LA. JANCE
- know is Fat Crack said that's where your dad should look and
- that's where he's looking."
- "Who said that?" Candace asked.
- "A friend of ours," Davy answered quickly. "His name's
- Gabe Ortiz. He's actually the tribal chairman."
- "He's an Indian, then?"
- "Yes."
- "But it sounded like Brian called him by some other name."
- "Yes." Davy rolled his eyes. "Gihg Tahpani," he said. "Fat
- Crack."
- "So is Fat his first name and Crack's his last?"
- Candace asked the question so seriously that Brian burst out
- laughing while Davy was reduced to shaking his head. Obviously
- 704
- he had failed miserably in preparing Candace for the culture she
- was stepping into.
- "Fat Crack is a first name," Brian explained good-naturedly.
- "But it's also sort of a friendly name--a name used between
- friends. So when you meet him, and until you know him better,
- you probably ought to call him plain Mr. Ortiz."
- They turned off onto Coleman Road. "What kind of shoes
- do you have on?" Brian asked, looking at Candace's face in
- the mirror.
- "Heels. Why?"
- "I was just over this road in a Blazer yesterday. If the Camaro
- doesn't high-center on the first wash, I know it will on the
- second."
- "On the what?"
- "Wash. It's a dry riverbed. A sandy riverbed. We're going to
- have to walk from here, so the car doesn't get stuck."
- "That's all right," Candace said. "I have some tennis shoes
- in my roll-aboard."
- Brian pulled over on the side of the road. The suitcase in
- question was one of the ones that had wound up in the backseat
- 705
- with Candace. While she dug through it to find her tennis shoes,
- Davy and Brian stood outside the car, waiting and looking off
- up the road toward the charco. Finding her shoes, Candace
- kicked off her heels and then moved to the front seat. She was
- sitting there tying her shoes when she saw something strange on
- the shoulder of the road a few feet away.
- As soon as she had her shoes tied, she walked over and
- KISS OF THE BEES 367
- picked up a small medallion with a strange black-and-white design
- woven into it. "Hey, you guys," she called to Brian and
- Davy, who were waiting for her on the other side of the road.
- "Come see what I found."
- Davy sauntered over. As soon as he saw what was in her
- hand, though, his jaw dropped. "Where did you get that?" he
- demanded.
- "It was right here. Along the side of the road . . ."
- "Brian, come here, quick. Fat Crack's right. Lani's been
- here. Look1."
- Sprinting across the road, Brian Fellows stopped in his tracks
- the moment he caught sight of the basket. "You're right," he
- 706
- said. "She has to be here somewhere ..."
- The three of them were standing there in stunned silence,
- staring up the mountain, when they heard a cry. "Help."
- The voice was so faint that at first they all thought they had
- imagined it. Then it came again. "Help. Please."
- Brian Fellows was the first to start off up the mountain. Davy
- followed directly on his heels, with Candace bringing up the
- rear.
- Tackling the mountain straight on, with no zigzagging to ease
- the ascent, made the going slow and difficult. From time to time
- they had to pause for breath, but each time they did, the voice
- was a little stronger. "I'm here. In the bushes."
- "It sounds like Quentin, doesn't it?" Davy asked.
- Nodding grimly, Brian Fellows drew his weapon. He was
- wearing a bulletproof vest. Neither Candace nor Davy were.
- "You'd better drop back and let me go on by myself."
- "Like hell," Davy said. "Come on."
- Frozen in terror, Lani crouched against the wall. The stalagmite
- that had once provided shelter was now a trap. If she
- moved away from behind it, he would see her and shoot her.
- 707
- She could hear him out there, crawling ever closer to her hiding
- place. She could hear him breathing in the dark. Now that he
- had located her, he came forward without bothering to squander
- any more of his precious matches, trusting that she would stay
- exactly where he had seen her last.
- And the truth was, she didn't have any choice. She was so
- cold and had sat in one position for so long that her legs ached
- 368 J.A. JANCE
- with cramps. The pressure was so great that she was tempted
- to come flying out of her hiding place and make straight for
- what had to be the passage to the outside. But she didn't do it.
- Even as the thought crossed her mind, she realized that the
- darkness in I'itoi's sacred cave was far stronger than Mitch's
- matches. If he'd had plenty of them, he would have been using
- them by now instead of scrabbling along in the dark. And without
- light, the power of darkness and the power of bats was far
- greater than the evil Ohb's.
- Deep in the cave, Lani had met Nanakumal. By touching
- her, Bat had taken away Lani's fear of the darkness and had
- infused her with his power. From now on Dolores Lanita Walker
- 708
- would still be Forever Spinning to some, but in her own heart
- she knew that she was changed. As soon as the bat's wings
- grazed her skin she was also someone else. From that time on,
- Lani would call herself Nanakumal Namkam--Bat Meeter,
- knowing that Bat Strength and Ant Strength would both be part
- of her strength.
- Suddenly Lani's spirit was alive again, like one awaking from
- a deep sleep or else from death itself. Something Nana Dahd
- had told her was called e chegitog. The cold no longer mattered.
- She had come into her own just the way Nana Dahd had told
- her she would someday. No matter what Mitch Johnson did to
- her, he couldn't take that away.
- The song spilled into her mind without her even being aware
- she was thinking about it.
- 0 little Nanakumal who lives forever in darkness,
- 0 little Nanakumal who lives forever in I'itoi's sacred cave
- Give me your strength so I will not be frightened,
- So I will stay in this safe place where the evil Ohb cannot come.
- For years Betraying Woman has been here with you.
- For years your strength has kept her safe
- 709
- Waiting until I could come and set her free
- By smashing her pottery prison against the rocky wall.
- Keep me safe now too, little Nanakumal
- Keep me safe from this new evil Ohb.
- Teach me juhagi--to be resilient--in the coming battle,
- So that this jiawul--this devil--does not win.
- KISS OF THE BEES 369
- 0 little Nanakumal who lives forever in darkness,
- Whose passing wings changed me into a warrior,
- Be with me now as I face this danger.
- Protect me in the coming battle and keep me safe.
- Brian was the one who found Quentin Walker, found him
- trapped faceup and helpless in a bed of manzanita. Knowing at
- once that his half-brother was too badly hurt to pose any danger,
- Brian bolstered his weapon.
- "What happened?" he asked.
- "I didn't do it," Quentin sobbed. "Tell Dad I didn't do it."
- "Didn't do what?" Brian asked.
- "I didn't kill Tommy. He fell. He fell in the cave. I tried to
- help him. I swear. But he died anyway."
- 710
- Davy, who had stopped to help Candace up a ledge, arrived
- just in time to hear the last sentence.
- "Lani's dead?" he demanded.
- When Quentin looked up at Davy, his eyes wavered as
- though they wouldn't quite focus. "Lani's not dead," he said.
- "Tommy's the one who's dead. He's been dead a long, long
- time."
- "But where's Lani?"
- "Lani? How should I know where Lani is?"
- Davy reached down and grabbed the neck of Quentin's shirt.
- He would have shook him, too, if Candace hadn't stopped him.
- "Leave him alone, David," she gasped, fighting to regain her
- breath. "Can't you see he's hurt?"
- Letting go of the shirt, Davy turned and looked up the
- mountain. "She has to be in the cave," he said. "I'll go. You
- two stay here with Quentin."
- "Lani1 It's Davy. Where are you?"
- Davy1 For a moment, Lani thought she must be dreaming.
- It was impossible. Davy was in Chicago. He couldn't be here.
- "Lani1." he called again. "Can you hear me? Are you in
- 711
- here?"
- She heard him then, heard the sound of movement in the
- passageway. It was true. Davy was here. He had come to find
- her, to save her. Instead, he was crawling directly into the arms
- of Mitch Johnson. Somehow she had to stop him.
- 370 J.A. JANCE
- "Davy," she screamed. "Go back! Don't come in here. He'll
- kill you. Go back."
- The cavern reverberated with a hundred echoes and then fell
- silent. There was no further sound of movement from the
- passageway.
- "Thank God you're alive," Davy called back. "But it's okay,
- Lani. We found Quentin down the mountain. He can't hurt
- you anymore."
- Once again there was movement in the passageway. "The
- killer's still in here, Davy. It's not Quentin1" Lani howled. "Go
- back, Davy, before he kills us both."
- "Davy!" Mitch Johnson called out. "Did you say Davy? Not
- little Davy Ladd. Come on in, Davy. I won't hurt you. I won't
- hurt anybody. You're right. It was all Quentin."
- 712
- Now there was movement again, but not in the passageway.
- Now it was in the cave itself. "Keep talking, little girl," Mitch
- Johnson whispered hoarsely. "Just keep talking. I'll find you, you
- little bitch, if it's the last goddamned thing I do."
- Another match flickered to life.
- "Lani," Davy demanded. "What's going on in there? Who's
- in there with you?"
- For a moment Lani was quiet. Mitch Johnson was an implacable
- enemy--more determined to find and destroy her than he
- was concerned about his own capture.
- Nana Dahd had told Lani more than once that the Tohono
- O'othham only kill to eat or to save their own lives. In relating
- the story of the evil Ohb, Rita had always said how proud she
- was that, in the moment when Diana Ladd might have killed
- Andrew Carlisle, she had chosen instead to spare him, trusting
- his punishment to the Mil-gahn system of criminal justice.
- In a moment of understanding that went far beyond her
- years, and far beyond anything Mitch Johnson had told her, Lani
- understood that somehow, still alive and in prison, Andrew Carlisle
- had taken that piece of Tohono O'othham honor and turned
- 713
- it into something evil. He had used it cheawogid--to infect--
- someone else with the same evil that had fueled and driven him.
- Nana Dahd had died too soon to know how wrong she was.
- But Lani knew. The telltale cheposid--the brand--Mitch Johnson
- had burned into her breast was proof enough that, as long as he
- lived, so did Andrew Carlisle.
- KISS OF THE BEES 371
- Those thoughts streaked through Lani Walker's mind as she
- sat bat-still in the cave, watching the momentary light of the
- match flickering in the darkness and listening as Mitch came
- stumbling toward her. Had she screamed again, the echoes might
- have thrown him off and sent him in the wrong direction, but
- suddenly she knew that was the wrong thing to do. Instead of
- hiding from the evil Ohb, Bat Meeter wanted him to find her.
- "I'm here," she said quietly, pulling herself to her feet. "I'm
- waiting." A storm of needles and pins shot down her numbed
- legs. She had to cling to the stalagmite to keep from falling, but
- she held her ground.
- "Lani1" Davy shouted. "Please. What's going on?"
- "He has a gun, Davy," she said, speaking slowly in Tohono
- 714
- O'othham. "His name is Mitch--Mitch Johnson. The evil Ohb
- sent him here. He wants to kill us both."
- "Speak English, you little bitch," Mitch Johnson swore.
- "You're a goddamned American, speak English."
- He was only a matter of yards away from her now, creeping
- along the wall on the same path Lani had followed, as that
- match, too, flickered and burned itself out. Pulling herself
- around the rock, she stood directly in his path.
- "You'll have to come get me, Mitch," she taunted. "I'm
- right here. I'm waiting."
- Grunting with effort, she tugged off one of her boots.
- "Here," she said. She tossed the boot a few feet in front of her.
- The explosion that followed reverberated back and forth inside
- the cavern. Clinging to the cold stalagmite, grateful for its solid
- presence, Lani thought there had been a dozen shots instead of
- only one.
- She had ducked her head and closed her eyes, so the flash
- of light hadn't affected her. But her ears were roaring. From far
- away she could hear Davy calling to her. "Lani1 Lani1. Are you
- all right?"
- 715
- "I'm still here, Mitch," Lani said again, not raising her voice,
- barely speaking above a whisper. "I'm here and I'm waiting."
- Carefully judging the distance, she pulled off the second boot
- as well, tossing it slightly behind her and to the left. She heard
- him rush forward, close enough that she felt him brushing past
- her as she ducked back behind the stalagmite once more. There
- 372 J.A. JANCE
- was another explosion of gunfire, another ear-shattering roar.
- And then nothing.
- For a second or two Lani thought she really had gone deaf.
- She was afraid that the silence that suddenly surrounded her
- would always be there, that it would never lift. But then, from
- very far away, she heard Davy calling again, pleading this time.
- "Lani, please. Answer me. Are you all right?"
- There was a groan--little more than a moan, really. It came
- from beyond Lani's hiding place. From beyond and below it.
- From the bottom of the hole into which Lani herself had almost
- fallen.
- She heard the sound and was chilled. It meant that down
- there somewhere, far beneath the surface of the cave, the evil
- 716
- Ohb was still alive. He had taken her bait. The boot had done
- its work, but the fall hadn't killed him. Even now she could
- hear movement as he struggled to rise from where he had fallen.
- Lani knew with a certainty that she had never known before
- that as long as Mitch Johnson lived, every member of Diana and
- Brandon Walker's family would be in mortal danger.
- Coming out from behind the stalagmite, Lani felt around her
- in the dark. She remembered being told once that limestone
- caves are fragile--that the formations break off easily and that
- they need to be protected from human destruction.
- "I'm okay, Davy," she called. "But don't come in right now.
- I think he's hurt, but he may still be able to shoot. We need
- help. Go get someone with guns and lights and bulletproof
- vests."
- "You're sure you'll be all right?"
- "I'm fine," she answered. "Go now. Please go1"
- She heard Davy shuffling back down the passageway just as
- Mitch Johnson groaned again. Feeling her way around the floor
- of the cavern, she located another stalagmite, one that was much
- smaller than the hulking giant behind which she had hidden.
- 717
- This one was about a foot in circumference and three to four
- feet high.
- "Ants are very strong," Nana Dahd had told her. "When
- they have to, they can carry more than their own weight."
- Positioning her back against the large stalagmite, she pushed
- against the smaller one with both her feet and all her might.
- She pushed as hard as she could, straining until stars of effort
- KISS OF THE BEES 375
- blazed inside her head. At first it seemed as though the rock
- would never come loose. But then she remembered who she
- was--Mualig Siakam--a powerful medicine woman, someone
- who, with the power of her singing, could determine who would
- live and who would die.
- Had Mitch Johnson been a little baby, surely the Woman
- Who Was Kissed by the Bees, Kulani O'oks, would have refused
- to sing.
- Pushing again, Lani Walker felt the stalagmite give way
- slightly, rocking gently and trying to come loose from its moorings
- like a giant baby tooth in need of pulling. She pushed again
- and the rock was looser.
- 718
- All things in nature go in fours. It was the fourth push that
- broke the huge rock free. She felt it tottering toward her and
- she had to push it yet again to send it tumbling in the other
- direction. She heard it scrape across the lip of the hole. Then,
- for a space of several seconds, there was no sound at all, then
- there was a muffled bump as the limestone boulder hit something
- soft and came to rest.
- Holding her breath, Lani listened. In the whole of the cave,
- except for the steady drip of water, there was no other sound,
- no other being. Mitch Johnson was dead. In the emptiness of
- his passing, Lani realized that the spirits of Betraying Woman
- and Andrew Philip Carlisle had disappeared as well. The three
- of them had joined huhugam--those who are gone.
- This time, they would not come back.
- "Lani, I'm here," Davy shouted. "Brian is with me. Are you
- all right?"
- "I'm fine," she called back. "It's safe to come in now. The
- evil Ohb is dead."
- 17
- T
- 719
- hey say it happened long ago that after the Tohono O'othham
- defeated the PaDaj O'othham--the Bad People--the Desert People
- settled in to live near Baboquivari--I'itoi's sacred mountain--which
- is the center of all things. Much later, when the first Mil-gahn, the
- Spaniards, came, they mistakenly called the Tohono O'othham the
- Bean Eaters after some of the food the Indians ate. And even later,
- other Mil-gahn--the Anglos--came to call them Papagos.
- But the Desert People have always preferred to call themselves
- Tohono O'othham. They have lived forever on that same land
- near the base of Baboquivari. There they have raised wheat and
- corn, beans and pumpkins and melons. There they learned to make
- chu-i--flour, and hahki--a parched roasted wheat that is also
- called pinole. There they learned to make baskets in which to store
- all the food they raised.
- Other people knew that the Indians who lived in the shadow of
- Baboquivari were a good people--that they were always kind to
- each other. It was that way then, and it is the same today.
- Together, Davy Ladd, Brian Fellows, and Lani Walker made
- their way on hands and knees down the long passageway to the
- hidden outside entrance. Only when the two men helped the
- 720
- girl to her feet did they realize that other than a pair of bloodied
- socks, her feet were bare.
- "Where are your shoes?" Brian asked. "You can't be out
- KISS OF THE BEES 375
- here on the mountain in bare feet. I'll go back and look for
- them."
- "No," she said. "Don't bother. I'll be fine."
- The morning sky was blue overhead. Lani stretched out her
- bare arms and let Task's warm rays begin to thaw her chilled
- body. She was standing on her own when a sudden dizzying
- spell of weakness overtook her, causing her to sink down onto
- the warm ground itself.
- Concerned, Davy knelt down beside her. "Are you all right?"
- "A little dizzy is all."
- "How long is it since you've had anything to eat or drink?"
- "I don't know," Lani said. "I don't remember." For her, time
- had stopped the moment she sat down to pose for the man she
- thought was Mr. Vega.
- Brian stood up. "I have a Coke down in the car, and a blanket,
- too. Wait here while I go get them."
- 721
- "Did he hurt you?" Davy asked quietly after Brian had hurried
- away.
- Lani looked down at her chest. There was a stain on her
- flowered cowboy shirt where the wound on her breast had
- seeped into the brightly colored material. The stain barely
- showed. "Not too badly," she said.
- A moment later she glanced up at Davy with a puzzled
- frown on her face. "What day is it?" she asked. "How did you
- get here so fast, and how long have I been gone?"
- "It's Sunday," he answered. "Candace and I flew in from
- Chicago early this morning."
- "Sunday?" Lani repeated. "You mean I lost a whole day?"
- Davy nodded. "You disappeared yesterday morning on your
- way to work. You never made it."
- She looked at him and frowned. "And who's Candace?"
- Davy ducked his head. "My fiancee," he said. "We're engaged.
- But tell me what happened. Did he run you off the
- road? What?"
- "I went to pose for him," she said. "He was going to let me
- have a painting to give to Mom and Dad for their anniversary.
- 722
- It was stupid. I see that now. He offered me orange juice and
- he put something in it, something that knocked me out. He did
- the same thing to Quentin. What about Quentin? Is he dead?"
- Davy shook his head. "Not yet. He's halfway down the
- 376 J.A. JANCE
- mountain, and he's hurt. It looks pretty bad to me. Brian is going
- for help. Dad and Brock Kendall are over at the cJharco. They'll
- have to bring in a helicopter. We won't be able to carry him
- out on a stretcher."
- "How did you and Brian know where to look Tor me?"
- Davy looked off down the mountain. Before -he answered,
- he found it necessary to brush something from his eye. "Candace,"
- he croaked. "Wanda Ortiz had called the hiouse and left
- word for Dad to meet him at Rattlesnake Skull. Brian met Candace
- and me at the airport and brought us along out here. We
- were getting ready to walk over to the charco to find Dad when
- Candace sat down to tie her shoes and found this."
- Reaching into his shirt pocket, Davy pulled out the tiny
- people-hair basket and placed it in Lani's hand. As her fingers
- closed over the precious kushpo ho'oma--her hair charm--tears
- 723
- of gratitude filled her eyes.
- "But how did you know to look in the cave?'' she asked a
- moment later.
- Davy shrugged. "Brian and I saw it years ago on the same
- day Tommy first found it. Since the cave was right here and
- since we knew Quentin was involved, it was logical that's where
- you might be, that maybe he'd take you there." He paused.
- "According to Quentin, the cave is where Tommy died. He fell
- into a hole."
- The same hole, Lani thought at once. It has to be the same
- hole. "Do you remember the story of Betraying Woman?" she
- asked.
- "Yes."
- "This is her cave, Davy," Lani said softly. "That old story
- Nana Dahd. used to tell us was true. After the Tohono O'othham
- captured her, they brought her back here and locked her inside
- the mountain along with all her pots--her unbroken pots. Quentin
- had found the pots and was planning to sell them, at least
- he thought he was going to sell them. I broke them. All of them.
- Or at least as many as I could find."
- 724
- "Afterward, when I was there in the dark and didn't know
- which way to go, kokoi--a spirit--showed me the way out. I
- think Betraying Woman's spirit led me to the passageway. Do
- you believe that? Is that possible?"
- "Yes," Davy replied. "I believe it."
- KISS OF THE BEES 377
- Lani laughed. "Probably you, but nobody else," she said. "I
- was in there for a long time," she continued. "At first I was so
- scared I could barely think, but then somehow I remembered
- the words to Nana Dahd's old war chant, the one she sang to
- you that day in the root cellar. Do you remember? Repeating
- those words over and over helped me--made me feel brave,
- and strong.
- "Later on, when the song quit working and I was scared
- again, a bat came to me in the dark. It touched my skin and
- taught me not to be afraid of the darkness. The bat showed me
- how the darkness could work against the evil Ohb. The next
- time I sang after that, the song wasn't Nana Dahd's anymore. It
- was my own song, Davy, but it worked the same way hers did.
- You believe that, too, don't you?"
- 725
- "Yes," Davy Ladd said. "I do believe it."
- For a time he looked off across the wide expanse of desert.
- "It's happened, hasn't it, Kulani O'oks," he added quietly, with
- a rueful smile that was, at the same time, both happy and sad.
- "You've become Medicine Woman, Lani, just like the Woman
- Who Was Kissed by the Bees, just as Nana Dahd said you would.
- I guess it's time I got her medicine basket out of safekeeping
- and gave it to you."
- "Her medicine basket?" Lani asked.
- Davy nodded. "She gave it to me the day she died," he
- answered. "But only to keep it until you were ready. Until it
- was time for you to come into your own."
- Davy watched Lani's face. He expected her to brighten--to
- be his little sister again, delighted by some unexpected surprise.
- Instead, she frowned. He reached out to her, but she drew away
- from him.
- "What's wrong?" he asked.
- "I have killed an enemy," she said. "I will need to undergo
- e lihmhun in order to be purified. While I am here alone for
- sixteen days, I'll have plenty of time to make my own medicine
- 726
- basket. There are only two things from Nana Dahd's basket that
- I would like to have--the scalp bundle and that single broken
- piece of Understanding Woman's pottery. The rest of it should
- go to you, Davy, to Nana Dahd's little Olhoni."
- Davy Ladd ducked his head to hide his tears. "Thank you,"
- he said.
- 378 J.A. JANCE
- The first glimpse Brandon Walker had of his future daughterin-law,
- Candace Waverly, she was on her hands and knees, huddled
- close to Quentin Walker's badly injured body. With her
- face close to his, she was comforting him as best she could while
- they waited for the med-evac helicopter to show up and fly him
- off the mountain.
- Brandon Walker and Brock Kendall had left the charco and
- were heading for Gates Pass when the call came telling them
- that Lani had been found. The Pima County dispatcher reported
- that Lani was all right but that Brandon's son, Quentin, had
- been severely injured.
- When it came time to climb loligam, the months of woodcutting
- served Brandon Walker well. He might have been fiftyfive
- 727
- years old and considered over the hill by some, but he scampered
- up the steep mountainside without breaking a sweat, leaving
- Brock Kendall in the dust.
- "Who are you?" Brandon demanded, looking down at the
- young woman crouched beside Quentin. He immediately assumed
- that she was somehow connected to the injured man.
- "And what the hell has this son of a bitch done to his sister?"
- "You must be Mr. Walker," Candace said.
- Brandon nodded.
- "I'm Candace Waverly," she said. "Your son David's fiancee.
- Quentin wanted me to give you a message. He said to tell you
- that he didn't kill Tommy. He said it was an accident, that
- Tommy fell in a hole in the cave. By the time Quentin was
- finally able to get him out, Tommy was dead. Quentin didn't
- tell anyone what really happened because he was sure people
- would think it was all his fault."
- "Tommy?" a winded Brock Kendall gasped as he finally
- reached the limestone outcropping. "I thought we were here
- about Lani. What's this about Tommy?"
- All the way out from Tucson, Brandon Walker had agonized
- 728
- over how he would treat his son, over what he would say. As a
- father, how could he forgive Quentin for hurting Lani? And now
- there was responsibility for Tommy as well?
- Brandon's legs to folded under him. He dropped to the
- ground and buried his face in his hands. This was too much--
- way too much. More than he could stand.
- KISS OF THE BEES 379
- "Dear God in heaven, Quentin," Brandon Walker sobbed.
- "How could you do it? How could you?"
- "Take it easy, Mr. Walker," Brian Fellows murmured, appearing
- out of nowhere and placing a comforting hand on Brandon's
- heaving shoulder. "Quentin didn't do it. He didn't take
- Lani, and he didn't hurt her."
- Brandon quieted almost instantly. "He didn't? Who did
- then? Who's responsible for all this?"
- "The man's name is Mitch Johnson," Brian answered.
- "Mitch Johnson1." Brandon exclaimed. It took only seconds
- for the name to register. "The guy I put away years ago for
- shooting up those illegals?"
- "That's the one."
- 729
- "Where is the son of a bitch? I'll kill him myself."
- "You don't have to," Brian said softly. "I think Lani already
- did it for you."
- Pima County Detective Clan Leggett was used to calling the
- shots when it came to conducting interviews. He would have
- preferred talking to Lani Walker in the air-conditioned splendor
- of the visiting FBI agent's Lincoln Town Car, but the medicine
- man--the one Brandon Walker called Fat Crack--refused to let
- the girl come down off the mountain. loligam was well inside
- reservation boundaries. The road where the Town Car was
- parked was not. Short of escorting Lani down to the car at gunpoint,
- Leggett wasn't going to get her to leave.
- And so the detective took himself up the mountain to her.
- He found Lani and Fat Crack sitting together off to one side of
- the entrance to the cave. Lani was still wrapped in a blanket, as
- though the increasing heat of the day still hadn't penetrated to
- the chilled marrow of her bones. She sat watching in somber
- silence while several deputies trudged down the mountainside
- lugging the stretcher holding the crushed earthly remains of one
- Mitch Johnson.
- 730
- Detective Leggett was still mildly irritated with Mr. Tribal
- Chairman, Gabe Ortiz. After all, it was the medicine man's message,
- sent via his wife, that had pulled Brandon Walker, Brock
- Kendall, and a number of other operatives off on an early-morning
- wild-goose chase to Rattlesnake Skull Charco. As a police
- officer, Leggett didn't put much stock in medicine men even if
- 580 J.A. JANCE
- Ortiz's prediction of where they would eventually find Lani
- Walker had been off target by a mere mile or two.
- "If you'd excuse us for a little while," Detective Leggett said
- to Gabe Ortiz, "I'll need to ask Miss Walker a few questions
- now."
- Lani motioned for Gabe to stay where he was. "I'd like Mr.
- Ortiz to stay," she said.
- "If Mr. Ortiz were your attorney, of course, he'd be welcome
- to stay, but I'm afraid regulations don't make any provisions for
- medicine men ..."
- "I'm not an attorney, but I am the tribal chairman and this
- is tribal land," Gabe Ortiz said with quiet but unmistakable
- authority. "I am here as Lani's elder and as her spiritual adviser.
- 731
- Since this is my jurisdiction, if she wants me to stay, I stay."
- Leggett may not have been much of an advocate of ethnic
- diversity when it came to medicine men, but the words "tribal
- chairman" struck a responsive chord.
- "Of course," he said agreeably, turning back to Lani. "Since
- Miss Walker wants you here, you're more than welcome to
- stay." ^'.
- The interview, conducted in the full glare of what was now
- midday sun, took an hour and a half. When it was over, Clan
- Leggett's shirt and trousers were soaked through with sweat, and
- he was so parched he could barely talk. Lani still sat swathed in
- her blanket.
- Despite her ordeal, Lani answered his questions with a poise
- that was surprising to see in someone so young. She responded
- to simple and complex questions alike with calm clarity. Her
- harrowing version of Mitch Johnson's physical assault with the
- kitchen tongs was enough to make Leggett feel half sick, but
- Lani recounted her ordeal without seeming to be affected by
- what she was saying. Her steadiness made Leggett wonder if she
- was really as fine as she claimed or if, perhaps, she might still
- 732
- be suffering from shock.
- "That's about it," he said, closing his notebook after the last
- of his questions. "I think we probably should get you into town
- and have you checked out by a doctor."
- "No," Gabe Ortiz said firmly. "Lani has killed an enemy.
- She can't go to town. She has to stay out here by herself, away
- KISS OF THE BEES 381
- from her village and family, until she finishes undergoing the
- purification ceremony."
- "How long will that take?" Leggett asked, imagining as he
- did so an evening's worth of cedar drumming.
- "Sixteen days," Gabe Ortiz answered.
- "Sixteen days? Even though it's most likely self-defense,
- there'll have to be an inquest or maybe even a preliminary
- hearing."
- "They will have to wait for the sixteen days," Gabe Ortiz
- told him.
- Leggett looked around at the empty desert. "She's going to
- stay here? In the middle of nowhere?"
- Ortiz nodded. "I've already sent my son off to pick up a tent
- 733
- and whatever other supplies she may need. I myself will bring
- her food and water. Her wounds will be treated in the traditional
- way."
- For the first time in the whole process, Lani Walker's eyes
- filled with tears. "Thank you," she said.
- Diana met Brandon at the door when he came home from
- the hospital late that evening. "Is Quentin going to make it?"
- Brandon paused long enough to hang his keys up on the PegBoard.
- "Probably," he said.
- "And the bones?"
- Brandon sank down beside the table and Diana brought him
- a glass of iced tea. "I called Dr. Sam," he said. "He ran the
- dental profile through his computer. The bones they found at
- Rattlesnake Skull belong to Tommy, all right."
- Dr. Sam was short for Swaminathan Narayanamurty, a professor
- of biometrics at the University of Arizona. Together Dr.
- Sam and Brandon Walker had come up with the idea of amassing
- a database of dental records on reported Missing Persons from
- all over the country. Brandon Walker's effective lobbying before
- a national meeting of the Law Enforcement and Security Administrators
- 734
- had enabled Dr. Sam to gain some key seed money
- funding years earlier. That initial grant had grown into a demonstration
- project.
- During the election campaign, Bill Forsythe had brought that
- project up, implying that Brandon's interest in the project had
- been based on personal necessity because of his own son's unex-
- 382 U JANCE
- plained disappearance rather than on sound law enforcement
- practices. Personal or not, the connection had been strong
- enough that on this warm summer Sunday, Dr. Sam had been
- only too happy to interrupt a week-long stay in a cabin on
- Mount Lemmon to run the profile of the skull Clan Leggett had
- retrieved from Rattlesnake Skull Charco.
- "Detective Leggett says he thinks Quentin was in the process
- of moving the bones out of the cave for fear Johnson would see
- them, when Manny Chavez stumbled into the area. Quentin
- must have panicked and attacked the man."
- "I'm sorry," Diana said. "About Quentin and Tommy."
- "Don't be sorry about Tommy," Brandon told her. "At least we know now that it was
- over quickly for him, that he didn't suffer. It's closure, Di. It's something I've
- lain awake nights worrying
- 735
- about for years."
- The doorbell rang. "Oh, for God's sake," Brandon grumbled
- irritably. "Who can that be now?"
- A moment later, a sunburned Candace Waverly appeared in
- the kitchen doorway. "It's Detective Leggett," she said. "He was
- wondering if he could see you two for a few minutes."
- Wearily, Brandon rubbed his whisker-stubbled chin. "Sure,"
- he said. "Send him on in."
- "Sorry to bother you," the detective said, placing a worn
- Hartmann briefcase on the kitchen table. "I know you've both
- had a terrible two days of it, but I wanted to stop by and show
- you some of this before I turn it over to the property folks."
- Opening the case, he pulled out a pair of latex gloves. While
- he was putting them on, Diana glanced at the loose piece of
- paper--a faxed copy of a mug shot--that lay fully exposed in
- the open briefcase. A sharp intake of breath caused both men to
- look at her with some concern as all color drained from her face.
- "Diana, what's the matter?" Brandon demanded. "What's
- wrong?"
- Diana's hand trembled as she reached out and picked up the
- 736
- paper. "It's him," she moaned. "Dear God in heaven, it is him1"
- The paper fluttered out of Diana's hand. Brandon caught it
- in midair and studied it himself. "That's Mitch Johnson, all
- right," he said.
- "It may be Mitch Johnson, but it's Monty Lazarus, too,"
- KISS OF THE BEES 385
- Diana whispered. "He looked older and he wore a red wig, but
- I'd recognize him anywhere."
- "Monty Lazarus1." Brandon repeated. "The reporter who interviewed
- you?"
- "Yes."
- Confused, Detective Leggett looked from husband to wife.
- "Who the hell is Monty Lazarus?" he asked.
- Brandon put both hands protectively on Diana's shoulders
- before he answered. "The publicity department at Diana's New
- York publisher set her up to do an in-depth interview yesterday
- with someone named Monty Lazarus who was supposedly a
- stringer with several important magazines. Except it turns out
- he isn't a stringer at all. He isn't even a writer. He's Mitch
- Johnson, ex-con, somebody who vowed that he'd get me one
- 737
- day for sending him up."
- Leggett shook his head. "It's actually worse than that," he
- said. "These are documents I've just now removed from Mitch
- Johnson's motor home out on Coleman Road."
- Saying that, he handed Diana Walker a pair of gloves and a
- pair of manuscript boxes. One was packed to overflowing while
- the other was less than half-full.
- "You might want to take a look at these, Mrs. Walker, but
- put on gloves before you do it. Fingerprints and all. Meantime,
- Brandon, there's something I need to show you out in the car."
- Brandon Walker followed Leggett out to the driveway where
- the detective popped the trunk on his Ford Taurus. There, illuminated
- in the slanting rays of the late afternoon sun, lay Mitch
- Johnson's awful charcoal nude of Dolores Lanita Walker.
- "Where did this god-awful thing come from?" Brandon
- choked.
- "From Mitch Johnson's motor home," Kendall answered. "I
- smuggled it out. Along with this one, too." He took out a second
- sketch, one of Quentin Walker. ' 'Neither one of these is on any
- of the evidence lists. I brought them here so you'd have a chance
- 738
- to get rid of them."
- "Thank you, Clan," Brandon Walker said gratefully. "I'll take
- care of them right away."
- With Brandon carrying Lani's picture by the corners, holding
- it as though it were the rancid carcass of some long-dead thing,
- and with Clan Leggett lugging the sketch of Quentin, the two
- 384 J.A. JANCE
- men walked into the backyard. There Brandon grabbed an armload
- of chopped firewood from his never-ending stack and threw
- several branches into the barbecue grill. Minutes later, the two
- offending pictures had been reduced to a pile of paper-thin
- ashes.
- "That's that," Brandon said, dusting soot from his hands and
- onto his pant legs.
- "There are two other pictures," Clan Leggett said quietly.
- "Of Lani and Quentin?"
- "No," Leggett said somberly. "If there are others of them,
- we haven't found them yet. The two pictures I'm talking about
- are of someone else. They're titled 'Before' and 'After.' "
- "They're both of the same man," Leggett replied. "Before
- 739
- and after a murder. Unless I'm sadly mistaken, the victim will
- turn out to be Mitch Johnson's ex-wife's second husband. That
- big-time developer who got carved up down in Nogales a few
- months back."
- "Larry Wraike?" Brandon Walker croaked in surprise. "But
- I thought a prostitute did that."
- "So did everybody else," Leggett replied. "Me included."
- The two men went back inside. In the kitchen they found
- Diana sifting through a stack of papers. Her haunted eyes met
- Brandon's the moment he stepped into the room.
- "Fat Crack was right," she said. "The danger did come from
- my book."
- "What do you mean?" Brandon asked.
- "Some of this is Andrew Carlisle's personal diary, Brandon,"
- she told him, holding back the single detail that some of the
- passages had been addressed directly to her, that even back in
- 1988, Carlisle had intended that someday Diana Ladd Walker
- would read what he had written.
- "Carlisle and Mitch Johnson were cellmates for years up in
- Florence," Diana continued. "It's all here in black and white. It
- 740
- started the first day when I went to Florence to interview Carlisle
- for the book. That's when Carlisle found out Quentin was up
- there, too. They targeted him that very day, Brandon. They set
- him up, and that's what this whole thing is about--revenge.
- Andrew Carlisle was still after me and Mitch Johnson was after
- you. Lani was the perfect way to get to us both. And that's
- not all."
- KISS OF THE BEES 385
- "Not all?" Brandon echoed. "How could there be more?"
- "This," Diana said. She held up what seemed to be the title
- page of a manuscript.
- "What is it?" Brandon asked.
- "Do you remember when Garrison died I told you the manuscript
- he was working on disappeared?"
- Brandon nodded.
- "This is it," Diana said. "I recognized the typeface from his
- old Smith-Corona the moment I saw it. It's called A Death Before
- Dying. It's supposedly a work of fiction about a college instructor--a
- handsome man--presumably happily married to a lovely
- wife. Gary didn't have sense enough to change things very much.
- 741
- The husband taught freshman English; the wife was an elementary
- school teacher."
- "So?" Brandon asked a little impatiently. "I've heard you say
- yourself that first novels are always autobiographical."
- Diana nodded. "They are, and there was an ugly secret running
- just below the surface of this one. All the while the teacher
- thinks she's happily married, the husband is carrying on with
- another professor--a male professor. Believe me, it's a very special
- relationship to which the young wife proves to be an unyielding
- obstacle."
- "You're saying Garrison and Carlisle had something going,
- something sexual?"
- Diana nodded. "I think so," she said.
- "That would make sense then," Brandon said. "It would certainly
- explain some of the hold Carlisle wielded over the man."
- "Some of it," Diana agreed. "The kicker is here, though, on
- the very last page. The last written page because the manuscript
- is clearly incomplete. The last scene is mostly a dialogue between
- the two men. They're sitting in a bar, talking. Planning exactly
- how they're going to unload the inconvenient presence of that
- 742
- meddlesome wife."
- "You?" Brandon asked.
- Diana nodded. Her voice sounded far more self-possessed
- than she felt. "If I had gone to the dance with them that night,"
- she said, "my guess is I would have been the one who died at
- Rattlesnake Skull Charco, not Gina Antone."
- 386 LA. JANCE
- For sixteen days and nights Lani Walker stayed in the tent
- Baby and Fat Crack Ortiz had erected for her near the base of
- loligam. She spent her days weaving a rectangular medicine basket.
- When it was finished, the lid fit perfectly. Lani held it up
- to the light and studied the final product with no small satisfaction.
- It was not as well done as one of Nana Dahd's own baskets,
- but it would do.
- Each evening, about sunset, Gabe Ortiz would arrive by himself,
- bringing with him an evening meal and the next day's saltfree
- food. The traditional dictates of the enemy purification process--e lihmhun--specify
- a period of fasting and of avoiding
- salted food.
- 743
- On the final day of her purification exile, with the medicine
- basket complete, Lani took a flashlight and ventured into Betraying
- Woman's cave one last time. There, shoved up against
- the stalagmite behind which she had hidden for hours, Lani
- found one of her two missing boots. She picked it up and took
- it with her when she continued on into Oks Gagda's burial
- chamber.
- This time when Lani entered the earthen-floored chamber,
- there was a feeling of utter emptiness about it. The spirits--
- kokoi--that had once inhabited the place were no longer there.
- Careful not to touch or disturb the decaying bones, Lani placed
- the shoe beside Betraying Woman's bones as a kind of memorial,
- then she stepped over to the wall where all the broken pieces
- of blasted pottery lay in a dusty heap. Kneeling down, Lani
- picked up one shard of clay after another, examining each in
- turn, looking for one that would speak to her, the one that was
- worthy of inclusion in Lani Walker's newly woven medicine
- basket.
- The fragment she finally settled on was all black, inside and
- out. She chose it because the fine black texture reminded her
- 744
- of the touch of the bat's wings against her skin. Pocketing her
- treasure, Lani was about to stand up and leave when she caught
- sight of something else reflected in the glow of the flashlight,
- something that would have remained completely hidden had she
- not moved several pieces of the pottery.
- When Lani saw the tiny bones, she thought at first that she
- had discovered the skeleton of a tiny baby. It wasn't, though.
- KISS OF THE BEES 387
- When she picked it up and the bones fell apart, she realized that
- what she had found was the moldering skeleton of a bat's wing.
- Awareness made the hair on the back of her neck stand on
- end. I'itoi had given her a sign. Dolores Lanita Walker was Mualig
- Siakam--Forever Spinning, and Kulani O'oks--Medicine
- Woman as well. But she was also Nanakumal Namkam--Bat
- Meeter. Elder Brother had led her to this place and had shown
- her it was true.
- Why not four names? Lani thought with a laugh. After all, all
- things in nature go in fours.
- On that last night, Pat Crack brought along Looks At Nothing's
- medicine pouch. After Lani and he had eaten, the medicine
- 745
- man drew a circle on the ground, a line that encircled both man
- and girl. The two of them settled down on the ground inside
- the circle.
- "It's time for your first Peace Smoke," he told her. "Davy
- and Candace flew out of Tucson for Vegas this afternoon.
- They're supposed to get married tomorrow, but before he left,
- Davy brought me these. He said they belong to you."
- Opening the medicine pouch, he pulled out two items and
- handed them to her. She recognized them at once -as the treasures
- from Nana Dahd's old medicine basket--the piece of pottery
- with the distinctive turtle design etched into the clay and
- the precious scalp bundle.
- "Thank you," Lani said. Opening her basket, she put the
- two additions inside and closed the lid.
- "What else do you have in there?" Fat Crack asked.
- "Nothing much," Lani said. "My people-hair charm. A finger
- from a bat's wing. And a piece of Betraying Woman's pottery."
- "Bring it," Fat Crack said. "The piece of pottery, I mean.
- After we have the Peace Smoke, you and I will study the pottery
- together."
- 746
- Using Looks At Nothing's old Zippo lighter, Fat Crack carefully
- lit the wiw. And then, one puff at a time, they smoked the
- bitter-tasting wild tobacco, passing the lit cigarette back and
- forth, saying "Nawoj" each time it changed hands.
- "How is Quentin?" Lani asked.
- "Out of the hospital," Fat Crack replied. "But he checked
- himself into a drug and alcohol rehab program."
- 388 LA. JANCE
- "Will he be better?" Lani asked.
- Fat Crack shrugged. "Maybe," he said. "He has let go of the
- secret of his brother's death. Secrets like that can be very bad.
- They eat at you. Perhaps now, he'll be able to get better."
- "Perhaps," Lani agreed.
- They were quiet again. Far off to the east, flickers of lightning
- touched the horizon. The summer rains were coming. They
- would be here soon--by the end of the week at the latest. In a
- way, Lani was sorry that when the deluges began she would be
- living back inside the house in Gates Pass with a regular roof
- over her head rather than a canvas tent.
- Lani Walker wasn't a smoker--not even of regular cigarettes.
- 747
- By the time the last of the wild tobacco smoke had eddied away
- into the nighttime air, she felt lightheaded.
- "Have you ever heard of divining crystals?" Fat Crack asked.
- His voice seemed to come to her from very far away.
- "I've heard of them," she said. "But I've never seen any."
- Fat Crack reached into the medicine pouch and pulled out
- the chamois bag. Untying it, he held open Lani's hand and
- poured the four crystals into it.
- "Looks At Nothing said I should keep them until I found a
- successor worthy of them," he said. "It was through using these
- that I knew to look for you near Rattlesnake Skull that morning.
- Now I want you to try it."
- "Me?" Lani asked. "But I don't know what to do."
- "Take your piece of pottery," Fat Crack directed. "Look at
- it for a time through each of the different crystals and tell me
- what you see."
- One at a time, holding them up to the firelight, Lani examined
- the pottery through each of the first three crystals. "I'm
- not seeing anything," she said, when she put down the third.
- "It's not going to work."
- 748
- "Try the last one," Fat Crack urged.
- This time, instead of putting the crystal down, Lani continued
- staring at it for a long time. First a minute passed, and then
- another. Finally she looked up at him.
- "The Apache warrior--Ohb-s-chu cheggiadkam--came back
- here looking for his lover, didn't he? He came looking for Betraying
- Woman. Somehow his spirit found its way into Andrew
- Carlisle."
- KISS OF THE BEES 389
- Fat Crack nodded. "That's right," he said. "And into Mitch
- Johnson as well."
- "And now they're free?"
- "Yes," Gabe Ortiz answered. "When you broke Betraying
- Woman's pots after all this time, you set all of them free."
- Gabe reached out. One at a time he picked up each of the
- four divining crystals and returned them to the bag. When the
- bag was tied shut, he placed the crystals--chamois bag and all--inside
- Lani's medicine basket.
- "They belong to you now, Bat Meeter," he said with a smile.
- "They are a gift from Looks At Nothing to you, from one wise
- 749
- old siwani to a young one. Use them well."
- Acknowledgements
- I
- he author gratefully acknowledges the work of Dean and
- Lucille Saxton and their invaluable book, Papago/PimaEnglish
- Dictionary, and Harold Bell Wright for his wonderfully vivid retelling
- of Tohono O'othham legends in Long Ago Told. She also
- expresses her thanks to Special Collections at the University of
- Arizona Library for making available materials that otherwise
- would have been impossible to obtain. Without these crucial
- contributions, this book would not exist.
|