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An hour after dark, he realized that he had indeed forgotten something. The previous day's weather report had warned about low night temperatures, possibly even a frost, and now Romero felt a chill creep up his legs. He was grateful for the warm coffee. He hugged his chest, wis.h.i.+ng he'd brought a jacket. His breath vapor clouded the winds.h.i.+eld so much that he had to use a handkerchief to clear it. He rolled down his window, and that helped control his breath vapor, but it also allowed more cold to enter the vehicle, making him s.h.i.+ver. Moonlight reflected off lingering snow on the mountains, especially at the ski basin, and that made him feel even colder. He turned on the Jeep and used its heater to warm him. All the while, he concentrated on the dwindling traffic.
Eleven o'clock, and still no shoes. He kept reminding himself that it had been about this hour two nights earlier when he'd been forced to leave to find a rest room. When he'd returned twenty minutes later, he'd found the cowboy boots. If whoever was doing this followed a pattern, there was a good chance something would happen in the next half hour.
Stay patient, he thought.
But the same as had happened two nights earlier, the c.o.ke and the coffees finally had their effect. Fortunately, he had that problem taken care of. He grabbed the empty gallon jug from the seat beside him, twisted its cap off, positioned the jug beneath the steering wheel, and started to urinate, only to squint from the headlights of a car that approached behind him, reflecting in his rearview mirror.
His bladder muscles tensed, interrupting the flow of urine. Jesus, he thought. Although he was certain the driver wouldn't be able to see what he was doing, he felt self-conscious enough that he quickly capped the jug and set it on the pa.s.senger floor.
Come on, he told the approaching car. He needed to urinate as bad as ever and urged the car to pa.s.s him, to turn onto Old Pecos Trail and leave, so he could grab the jug again.
The headlights stopped behind him.
What in G.o.d's name? Romero thought.
Then rooflights began to flash, and Romero realized that what was behind him was a police car. Ignoring his urgent need to urinate, he rolled down his window and placed his hands on top of the steering wheel, where the approaching officer, not knowing who was in the car or what he was getting into, would be relieved to see them.
Footsteps crunched on the dirt road. A blinding flashlight scanned the inside of Romero's car, a.s.sessing the empty pizza box, lingering over the yellow liquid in the plastic jug. "Sir, may I see your license and registration, please?"
Romero recognized the voice. "It's okay, Tony. It's me."
"Who...Gabe?"
The flashlight beam hurt Romero's eyes.
"Gabe?"
"The one and only."
"What the h.e.l.l are you doing out here? We had several complaints about somebody suspicious sitting in a car, like he was casing the houses in the neighborhood."
"It's only me."
"Were you here two nights ago?"
"Yes."
"We had complaints then, too, but when we got here, the car was gone. What are you doing?"
Trying not to squirm from the pressure in his abdomen, Romero said, "I'm on a stakeout."
"n.o.body told me about any stakeout. What's going on?"
Realizing how long it would take to explain the odd-sounding truth, Romero said, "They've been having some attempted break-ins over at the church. I'm watching to see if whoever's been doing it comes back."
" Man, sitting out here all night - this is some p.i.s.s-poor a.s.signment they gave you."
"You have no idea."
"Well, I'll leave before I draw any more attention to you. Good hunting."
"Thanks."
"And next time, tell the s.h.i.+ft commander to let the rest of us know what's going on so we don't screw things up."
"I'll make a point of it."
The officer got back in his cruiser, turned off the flas.h.i.+ng lights, pa.s.sed Romero's car, waved, and steered onto Old Pecos Trail. Instantly, Romero grabbed the plastic jug and urinated for what seemed a minute and a half. When he finished and leaned back, sighing, his sense of relaxation lasted only as long as it took him to study Old Pecos Trail again.
The next thing, he scrambled out of his car and ran cursing toward a pair of men's shoes - they turned out to be Rockports - lying laced together in the middle of the road.
"Did you tell Tony Ortega you'd been ordered to stake out the Baptist church?" his sergeant demanded.
Romero reluctantly nodded.
"What kind of bulls.h.i.+t? n.o.body put you on any stakeout. Sitting in a car all night, acting suspicious. You'd better have a d.a.m.ned good reason for - "
Romero didn't have a choice. "The shoes."
"What?"
"The shoes I keep finding on Old Pecos Trail."
His eyes wide, the sergeant listened to Romero's explanation. "You don't put in enough hours? You want to donate a couple nights free overtime on some crazy - "
"Hey, I know it's a little unusual."
"A little?"
"Whoever's dumping those shoes is playing some kind of game."
"And you want to play it with him."
"What?"
"He leaves the shoes. You take them. He leaves more shoes. You take them. You're playing his game."
"No, it isn't like that."
"Well, what is it like? Listen to me. Quit hanging around that street. Somebody might shoot you for a prowler."
When Romero finished his s.h.i.+ft, he found a dozen old shoes piled in front of his locker. Somebody laughed in the lunch room.
"I'm Officer Romero, ma'am, and I guess I made you a little nervous last night and two nights earlier. I was in my car, watching the church across the street. We had a report that somebody might try to break in. It seems you thought I'm the one who might try breaking in. I just wanted to a.s.sure you the neighborhood's perfectly safe with me parked out there."
"I'm Officer Romero, sir, and I guess I made you a little nervous last night and two nights earlier."
This time, he had everything under control. No more large c.o.kes and coffees, although he did keep his plastic jug, just in case. He made sure to bring a jacket, although the frost danger had finally pa.s.sed and the night temperature was warmer. He was trying to eat better, too, munching on a burrito grande con polio from Felipe's, the best Mexican take-out in town. He settled back and listened to the radio call-in show on the Walkman. The program was still on the environmental theme: "Hey, man, I used to be able to swim in the rivers when I was a kid. I used to be able to eat the fish I caught in them. I'd be nuts to do that now."
It was just after dark. The headlights of a car went past. No shoes. No problem. Romero was ready to be patient. He was in a rhythm. Nothing would probably happen until it usually did - after eleven. The Walkman's earphones pinched his head. He took them off and readjusted them as headlights sped past, heading to the right, out of town. Simultaneously, a different pair of headlights rushed past, heading to the left, into town. Romero's window was down. Despite the sound of the engines, he heard a distinct thunk, then another. The vehicles were gone, and he gaped at two hiking boots on the road.
Holy...
Move! He twisted the ignition key and yanked the gears.h.i.+ft into drive. Breathless, he urged the car forward, its rear tires spewing stones and dirt, but as he reached Old Pecos Trail, he faced a hurried decision. Which driver had dropped the shoes? Which car? Right or left?
He didn't have any jurisdiction out of town. Left! His tires squealing on the pavement, he sped toward the receding taillights. The road dipped, then rose toward the stoplight at Cordova, which was red and which Romero hoped would stay that way, but as he sped closer to what he now saw was a pickup truck, the light changed to green, and the truck drove through the intersection.
s.h.i.+t.
Romero had an emergency light on the pa.s.senger seat. Shaped like a dome, it was plugged into the cigarette lighter. He thrust it out the window and onto the roof, where its magnetic base held it in place. Turning it on, seeing the reflection of its flas.h.i.+ng red light, he pressed harder on the accelerator. He sped through the intersection, rushed up behind the pickup truck, blared his horn, and nodded when the truck went slower, angling toward the side of the road.
Romero wasn't in uniform, but he did have his 9 mm Beretta in a holster on his belt. He made sure that his badge was clipped onto the breast pocket of his denim jacket. He aimed his flashlight toward a load of rocks in the back of the truck, then carefully approached the driver. "License and registration, please."
"What seems to be the trouble, Officer?" The driver was Anglo, young, about 23. Thin. With short sandy hair. Wearing a red-and-brown-checked work s.h.i.+rt. Even sitting, he was tall.
"You were going awfully fast coming over that hill by the church."
The young man glanced back, as if to remind himself that there'd been a hill.
"License and registration," Romero repeated.
"I'm sure I wasn't going more than the speed limit," the young man said. "It's forty there, isn't it?" He handed over his license and pulled the registration from a pouch on the sun visor above his head.
Romero read the name. "Luke Parsons."
"Yes, sir." The young man's voice was reedy, with a gentle politeness.
"P.O. Box 25, Dillon, New Mexico?" Romero asked.
"Yes, sir. That's about fifty miles north. Up past Espanola and Embudo and - "
"I know where Dillon is. What brings you down here?"
"Selling moss rocks at the roadside stand off the Interstate."
Romero nodded. The rocks in the back of the truck were valued locally for their use in landscaping. The lichen-like moss that speckled them turned pleasant muted colors after a rain. Hardscrabble vendors gathered them in the mountains and sold them, along with homemade bird houses, self-planed roof-support beams, firewood, and vegetables in season, at a clearing off a country road that paralleled the Interstate.
"Awful far from Dillon to be selling moss rocks," Romero said.
"Have to go where the customers are. Really, what's this all a - "
"You're selling after dark?"
" I wait until dusk in case folks coming out of Harry's Road House or the steak house farther along decide to stop and buy something. Then I go over to Harry's and get something to eat. Love his barbecued vegetables."
This wasn't how Romero had expected the conversation to go. He'd antic.i.p.ated that the driver would look uneasy because he'd lost the game. But the young man's politeness was disarming.
"I want to talk to you about those shoes you threw out of the car. There's a heavy fine for - "
"Shoes?"
"You've been doing it for several days. I want to know why - "
"Officer, honestly, I haven't the faintest idea what you're talking about."
"The shoes I saw you throw onto the road."
"Believe me, whatever you saw happen, it wasn't me doing it. Why would I throw shoes on the road?"
The young man's blue eyes were direct, his candid look disarming. d.a.m.n it, Romero thought, I went after the wrong car.
Inwardly, he sighed.
He gave back the license and registration. "Sorry to bother you."
"No problem, Officer. I know you have to do your job."
"Going all the way back to Dillon tonight?"
"Yes, sir."
"As I said, it's a long way to travel to sell moss rocks."
"Well, we do what we have to do."
"That's for sure," Romero said. "Drive safely."
"I always do, Officer. Good night."
"Goodnight."
Romero drove back to the top of the hill, picked up the hiking shoes, and put them in the trunk of his car. It was about that time, a little before ten, that his son was killed.
He pa.s.sed the crash site on the way home to Pecos. Seeing the flas.h.i.+ng lights and the silhouettes of two ambulances and three police cars on the opposite section of the Interstate, grimacing at the twisted wrecks of two vehicles, he couldn't help thinking, poor b.a.s.t.a.r.ds. G.o.d help them. But G.o.d didn't, and by the time Romero got home, the medical examiner was showing the state police the wallet that he'd taken from the mutilated body of what seemed to be a young Hispanic male.
Romero and his wife were arguing about his late hours when the phone rang.