Bad Country: A Novel
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This first published novel is for my parents,
Ann Williams McKenzie and
Charles Benjamin McKenzie,
As they have suffered the longest with me for this.
CONTENTS
Title Page
Copyright Notice
Dedication
Begin Reading
Acknowledgments
About the Author
Copyright
As instructed, the man stopped at a certain landmark in the desert, stripped and used the cheap folding knife to cut his dusty khakis and T-shirt into small pieces. He tossed his old clothes bit by bit into a hard wind, unpacked the plastic trash bag and re-dressed in new clothes. He squatted in the skeletal shade of a creosote bush, sliced his last apple and chewed and swallowed each piece slowly then sipped bleach-treated water from a recycled milk jug through the heat of the day. Near sundown he cut the jug into small pieces and threw them and the knife into a steep-sided arroyo, took his bearings and then tore his map into small bits and broadcast these as he walked north. When he neared the meeting place he hustled through slanting shadows and hid behind the large boulder so that he could espy in both directions the sparse traffic on Agua Seco Road. As he waited his eyes strayed toward a solitary cloud towed north by invisible forces. A call and response from a pair of falcons hunting late he took as a good omen.
During the night a vehicle stopped in the middle of the turn-out. Muffled by closed doors and raised windows, the music from the SUV sounded like something the waiting man might hear when he stood outside a cathedral. When the vehicle shut down it was as if a trapdoor had opened on the surface of the world and all extant sound fallen through it. When a door unlatched, the dome light in the cab of the SUV illuminated a passenger in the backseat as a dark face under a white hat. The figure that emerged on the driver’s side had on a billed cap, dark glasses and a plastic coat that glimmered in the moonlight.
This is your ride, hombre. The command was a hoarse whisper aimed directly at the hiding place. Levántate. Into la luz.
The waiting man stepped into the glare of the headlights.
Tienes algo? the driver asked.
Nada, the man said. He spread his arms wide with his hands open. He had nothing but the new clothes on his back and the old boots on his feet, had no identification, no keys, weapons, cell phone or any paper with writing or numbers on it. He had no photographs of family, no money, no tattoos or identifiable scars, wore no jewelry and had never been arrested on either side of the border. He did not even know the name of his employer.
Eres Indio? the driver asked.
Si, soy Indio, the man said.
The man lowered his arms and waited for words that made more sense to him.
Has estado esperando mucho? the driver asked.
Si. Todo mi vida.
The bill of the driver’s gimme cap tilted down and then up.
I have been waiting my whole life for this too, the driver said.
The back door of the SUV opened and the man moved out of the headlights and toward his ride.
Adonde va? he asked.
Trabajar, hombre, said the driver. We go to work now.
Rodeo and his dog drove over “Elm Street,” which was but a collection of ruts and potholes, streambed cuts and corduroy stretches that led from the paved Agua Seco Ranch Road into a small dead end of southern Arizona called El Hoyo, The Hole.
Where the man and his dog lived was supposed to have been a full-service, upscale trailer park with concrete pads radiating like the segmented spokes of a big wagon wheel from the hub of an Activities Center, and wound through these spokes like a gourd vine a nine-hole golf course. But the investment venture had been mistimed and misplaced and so remained as only a concentric grid of blade-graded dirt roads marked at random intersections by unlikely green-and-white street signs now aimed into all compassed directions and bent by gravity to all angles of repose, mostly a collection of unpaid property taxes and dirt off the grid.
The old dog on the shotgun seat whined when he scented blood. Rodeo slowed as he approached the “gates” of his place, two jumbled piles of cinder block on either side of the dirt road with a sign advertising VISTA MONTANA ESTATES—AN ACTIVE LIFE COMMUNITY skewered on a splintered pole like a reminder note to do something later.
Cállate, Rodeo said.
The dog was quiet at his man’s command.
* * *
The corpse was facedown in the dirt, his jeans-clad legs widespread, boot toes pointed back, arms outstretched like a small, misguided Superman buried in a dead-end earthly mission. The back of his red, white and blue shirt was blown into shreds. Hung up on a piece of rebar, a pristine white straw cowboy hat twirled slowly in a breeze.
Rodeo sat for a long moment with a boot vibrating on the clutch pad, then he shifted the truck into neutral and stomped on the emergency brake. When the dog started barking Rodeo reached below the bench seat, pulled the 9mm from its stash site, jacked a load into the Glock and stepped out of the truck.
A cottontail hopped around a pile of vent bricks and froze and twitched and stared at the man with the gun. Rodeo waved his pistol but the rabbit moved toward the dead man where it sat trembling in the pool of congealed blood. Rodeo reached back through the open window and pounded the truck’s horn and the rabbit hopped away, his white paws tracing red across the desert. Vultures drifted overhead. Crows defined the margins of the crime scene by picking at spattered flesh and bone.
Rodeo reentered his vehicle, re-holstered his hideaway, calmed his dog, made a U-turn and headed back to the nearest place where cell phone reception was dependable.
* * *
Where you at, Garnet?
The voice of the Los Jarros County sheriff sounded in the cell phone like creek gravel sifted in a tin mining pan. Rodeo sat in the shade of the gas pumps island of Twin Arrows Trading Post, which establishment along with the handful of trailer houses scattered around it, passed as a village in a small county in Southern Arizona mostly uninhabited. He stared out the cracked windscreen of his truck at a sky that was bluewhite as an old blister.
I’m at the Store, Ray. Where you at?
I’m up to my ass in a crime scene right now over at the Boulder Turn-Out, so spare me the details if that’s possible.
Dead man by my front gates, said Rodeo.
Well, that’s a short story, said the sheriff. You know him?
I don’t know him, Ray. He’s a little man, probably Indio but probably not local. What have you got at the Boulder Turn-Out?
Some sort of death by misadventure, the sheriff said. And the body’s been here a while, so it’s tough for Doc Boxer to figure some theory out that will fit the evidence at hand.
What is the evidence, Ray?
Another dead Indian is the long and short of it.
What’s the official theory about these dead Indians in Los Jarros County, Ray?
We are understaffed and official theory–short about Major Crimes in Los Jarros County Sheriff’s Department recently, said the sheriff.
Rodeo said nothing.
You got some idea, Garnet? Official or otherwise?
State should send somebody down from Major Crimes Department to deal with my trouble out at the Estates, said Rodeo.
I doubt it’s just your trouble, Garnet, said the lawman. And I’m still the sheriff of Los Jarros County, so I’ll decide what needs to be done when I
see what this new trouble is.
What do you want me to do, Ray?
You just sit tight at the Store, said the sheriff.
* * *
Hypothetical … Rodeo said. He was on the pay phone outside Twin Arrows Trading Post talking to his lawyer, Jarred Willis, who was in his well-appointed office in downtown Tucson.
I got my own shit to do, Chief, so put me out of my misery already.
You know where my place in El Hoyo is at, said Rodeo. You hid a Jaguar XJ with Texas plates in my storage shed last year, a vehicle that was later found in East Tucson with a dead cholo and his pit bull in the trunk.
That car was never registered in my name so don’t get on one of your Indian warpaths or this will be a very short conversation, Tonto. The lawyer paused. So what’s got up in your Hole out there most recently?
A dead man nearby the front gates of my place, said Rodeo. And The Hole’s not someplace you get to be dead in usually unless it’s by starvation or dehydration.
And these were not the case?
Death by shotgun would be my guess.
You didn’t touch him?
No point, said Rodeo.
When was he killed, do you think?
When I was away on vacation this last week sometime.
How many times I got to tell you to call the cops first, Tonto? It just looks real bad when you call your lawyer first thing because modern law enforcement can track these cellular phone shit conversations like Pocahontas could track short white dick in deep dark woods.
This is a pay phone. Ray’s on the way.
Well, if you’re smart as all that, Chief, then you don’t need a lawyer, do you?
I’ve often wondered about that myself, said Rodeo.
Rodeo’s lawyer laughed really loud.
Well, play it straight as you usually do then, Chief. And remember Law Enforcement don’t do Citizens favors, so don’t admit nothing to Police and don’t let them anywhere without a warrant and don’t invoke your lawyer’s name until you are firmly behind bars.
Good to know my lawyer’s got my back like that.
Save the sarcasm for the rodeo clown you rode in on, cowboy, said Willis. And you got about thirty seconds left on your retainer to tell me if you been in any shit lately.
I did that thing in New Mexico a couple of months ago and then found a lost kid and a lost husband and did a bit of divorce snooping in the last several weeks. Rodeo paused for a moment. Then right before I went on vacation I served papers on several minor characters for A-2-Z Bailbonds, but no criminals. So it’s been nothing major or personal for a while.
Then the dead man in your driveway’s probably nothing major or personal, Tonto. So just stay out of trouble on this and let Law Enforcement do their business.
Can I call you if Law Enforcement hauls me in?
You’re welcome to drop by my office in the Old Pueblo if you bring beers, said Willis. But you’re too low-rent for me these days, Chief. And since this phone call took care of what was left of your retainer fee I’ll just have to say hasta la vista to you as a client.
The lawyer hung up before the private investigator could.
* * *
Rodeo pulled back the Mexican screen door and peered into the gloom of Twin Arrows Trading Post. The place smelled of dry rot and swamp cooler mold and cheap goods extracted from mothball storage, soured milk, spilled beer, stale cigarette smoke and of the old man scent of trouser piss and necksweat.
The plank floor of the Territorial Era store was warped by permanent dry heat and grooved by a century of footfall. The pressed-tin ceiling sagged against the weight of faded piñatas and unraveling Pancho Villa hats hanging from it. A large metal carousel packed with “Native American” and “Southwestern” and “Biker” T-shirts dominated the center of the room. Neon-colored polyester blankets and other tourist-trade goods were piled against a side wall catty-cornered to a rickety table where vintage computers were available to rent-by-the-minute.
The moneymaker of the store, a big glass-fronted cooler that advertised COLD BEER, hummed phatically. A bumper sticker on the side of this industrial-sized refrigerator promised FREE BEER TOMORROW. The fourth side of the room was a long glass-topped counter behind which the storekeep sat on a rolling stool.
Sa’p a’i masma, Luis. This simple greeting was the only phrase in Tohono O’odham Rodeo had memorized for the owner of the trading post, Luis Azul Encarnacion.
Rodeo took his usual seat on his usual barstool at the glass-topped counter that served both as display for wares and elbow space for regulars. His dog insinuated himself around his master’s legs and took his place in the spot under the bar rubbed shiny by his occupation over the past six years. The storekeep reached his good hand back to lift a cowboy coffee pot from an electric burner ring, poured coffee into a speckled mug and slid it toward the only customer in the store.
Glad you made it back to El Hoyo, Brother Rodeo, Luis said. I always think you’ll go away one day and won’t come back no more and then I won’t have nobody intelligent left to talk to in this hole in the world.
Where’s your Locals at? asked Rodeo.
They found a dead man at the Boulder Turn-Out this morning, so I think the Locals they are laying low in their trailers today.
There’s a dead man out at my place too, Luis.
This is bad country down here, brother. Luis made this statement without affect. People die here all the time. Especially us Indians. Luis held up a fifth of Patrón Silver. You need something stronger, brother?
Just coffee, Luis. You got any fresh?
That’s fresh in front of you from just two days ago.
Luis poured a swig of tequila into his own mug. Rodeo drank his old coffee. The pair shared a silence for a few minutes. As if suspended on strings, bottle flies bounced in the uneven flow of the swamp cooler. The dog snored.
Were you expecting somebody out in The Hole, brother? Some of your Wets coming through?
He’s nobody I know, said Rodeo. And he’s dressed up in new Walmart gear with no pack or trash bag, no candy bars, no water bottle even. So I don’t think he’s an Undocumented that came through La Entrada from the Sonora side. He was brought to my place from the American side.
Why would he be? asked Luis.
I don’t know, Luis.
Sheriff coming by here?
Ray said he was coming this way after he attended to the dead man at the Boulder Turn-Out, said Rodeo. He rubbed at his eyes. Who found that dead man?
The Bread Man came by here this morning and bought an Olde English so I guess he was having an early Forty at the Turn-Out and when he went to take a piss there was this dead man in the ditch behind the Boulder pretty rotted up. And there was another murder while you was gone on your vacation to the Whites, Luis said. Last week some Hand from Slash/M Rancho found a guy up under the overpass with his head half blowed off.
You keeping track of these on the wall?
Luis had painted a mural on the interior adobe wall behind the counter and labeled the map “AMexica”—West Texas, New Mexico, Arizona, SoCal, Chihuahua, Sinaloa, Sonora. The map was now mostly covered by newspaper clippings dealing with crime or Indian Affairs or Border Issues.
Nobody’s interested in nothing I got to say, said Luis.
You talked to Police lately?
Apache Ray, he’s high most the time now on oxy from Old Mexico, Luis said. You should run for sheriff, Rodeo. You got some connections with Statewide Law Enforcement and a certain sort of good reputation when you killed Charlie Constance. Ray, he’s having heart troubles I heard so he might not last long in his current position anyhow. And Sheriff Sideways likes you so he might even support you if you run.
Ray dropped me from his radar when Sirena dumped me and he’s had heart troubles for thirty years, said Rodeo. You should run for sheriff on the “Free Beer Tomorrow” slogan, Luis.
That slogan does play good with the Locals, Luis said.
The store was quiet th
en save for the steady thump of the swamp cooler cylinder and the asthmatic mumbling of the overworked refrigerator cooling down sweaty tallboys of malt liquor and broken up six-packs of “Ice” beer and “Drink Very Cold” wine, quart cartons of whole milk, blocks of margarine and Oaxaca cheese, boiled eggs in plastic sandwich bags. Rodeo picked up his coffee cup and took a polite sip, stared out a dirty plate glass window at a dozen thin beeves across the road testing the dust for edible vegetation.
* * *
A late model Crown Victoria Special Edition arrived ten minutes later and Sheriff “Apache” Ray Molina labored out of his green-on-white cruiser and moved toward the store. Though in the face he still looked like the third lead in a classic Western, the senior lawman had ridden a lot of wild horses, eaten a lot of tough steaks and drunk a lot of hard liquor in his day and so was flat in the ass, fat in the belly and his Southwestern patrician nose was webbed with broken veins. He pushed back the Mexican screen door with some care, and nodded at the entire room as if he might have a large audience even though only Luis and Rodeo were in the place.
I sent Deputy Buenjose over to your place to have a look-out, Garnet, the sheriff said. But I doubt he’s even got out of his car.
Where’s the medical examiner?
Doc Boxer’s at the Turn-Out with some State Patrol and CSI from Special Investigations Unit who are down here to help us out while we’re shorthanded.
Follow me out to my place then, Ray, said Rodeo. And have a look at the new addition to your troubles.
The sheriff tipped his hat at an invisible crowd and walked back to the county cruiser.
* * *
Rodeo pulled out a hip wallet thick with calling cards and IDs and scrimps of paper and old receipts. There was not much fungible in the wallet, but Rodeo thumbed through the various pockets and crevices in the trifold and managed to find an assortment of hideaway money, which he laid out on the countertop. Luis flattened the bills with his good hand.
With the price of gas these days this cash money won’t half fill one tank of that old horse you’re riding, said the storekeep. Luis tapped the glass countertop under which were assorted valuables, many of them from Rodeo, including several of his smaller firearms and rodeo prize buckles, much of Rodeo’s mother’s old turquoise and his diamond wedding ring. Pawn Shop is always open, brother.