Kiss the Bees bw-2 Read online

Page 6


  "Where is she?" Rita asked without preamble.

  "Where's who?" he asked.

  "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 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 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 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 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 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?"

  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 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 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 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 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?"

  3

  After I'itoi found the center of the world, he began making men out of mud. Ban-Coyote-was standing there watchin
g. I'itoi told Ban that he could help.

  Coyote worked with his back toI'itoi. As he made his men, he was laughing. Because the Spirit of Mischief is always with him, Coyote laughs at everything.

  After a whileI'itoi- the Spirit of Goodness-finished making his mud men and turned to see why Coyote was laughing. He found thatBan had made all his men with only one leg. But still Coyote 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."

  ButI'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 theOhb, the Apaches-the 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 to the mountains toward the east. The Hopis went north. The Yaquis went south. But theTohono 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,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 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 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 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."

  "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.

  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?"

  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.

  "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.

  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 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 sheriff's department-had led them along similar though different paths. 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 sheriff's department, the spirit of cooperation that had once existed between Law and Order-the Tribal Police-and the Pima County Sheriff's 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 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.

  "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.

 

    Unfinished Business Read onlineUnfinished BusinessMissing and Endangered Read onlineMissing and EndangeredMan Overboard Read onlineMan OverboardThe Old Blue Line Read onlineThe Old Blue LineTrial by Fury Read onlineTrial by FuryEdge Of Evil Read onlineEdge Of EvilField of Bones: A Brady Novel of Suspense (Joanna Brady Mysteries) Read onlineField of Bones: A Brady Novel of Suspense (Joanna Brady Mysteries)After the Fire Read onlineAfter the FireDeadly Stakes Read onlineDeadly StakesTombstone Courage jb-11 Read onlineTombstone Courage jb-11Justice Denied Read onlineJustice DeniedJ P Beaumont 16 - Joanna Brady 10 - Partner In Crime (v5.0) Read onlineJ P Beaumont 16 - Joanna Brady 10 - Partner In Crime (v5.0)Dance of the Bones Read onlineDance of the BonesExit Wounds Read onlineExit WoundsLeft for Dead Read onlineLeft for DeadPartner In Crime Read onlinePartner In CrimeBrandon Walker 02 - Kiss Of The Bees (v5.0) Read onlineBrandon Walker 02 - Kiss Of The Bees (v5.0)Name Witheld jpb-13 Read onlineName Witheld jpb-13Joanna Brady 01 - Desert Heat (v5.0) Read onlineJoanna Brady 01 - Desert Heat (v5.0)Proof of Life Read onlineProof of LifeRandom Acts Read onlineRandom ActsDay of the Dead bw-3 Read onlineDay of the Dead bw-3Shoot / Don't Shoot jb-3 Read onlineShoot / Don't Shoot jb-3Without Due Process Read onlineWithout Due ProcessFatal Error ar-6 Read onlineFatal Error ar-6Payment in Kind Read onlinePayment in KindLong Time Gone Read onlineLong Time GoneMinor in Possession Read onlineMinor in PossessionStand Down Read onlineStand DownJudgment Call Read onlineJudgment CallBetrayal of Trust jpb-20 Read onlineBetrayal of Trust jpb-20Hand of Evil Read onlineHand of EvilDevil's ClawJ Read onlineDevil's ClawJLying in vait jpb-12 Read onlineLying in vait jpb-12Day of the Dead Read onlineDay of the DeadWithout Due Process jpb-10 Read onlineWithout Due Process jpb-10Until Proven Guilty jpb-1 Read onlineUntil Proven Guilty jpb-1Field of Bones Read onlineField of BonesDevil’s Claw Read onlineDevil’s ClawRemains of Innocence Read onlineRemains of InnocenceInjustice for All Read onlineInjustice for AllWeb of Evil ar-2 Read onlineWeb of Evil ar-2Paradise Lost jb-9 Read onlineParadise Lost jb-9Improbable cause jpb-5 Read onlineImprobable cause jpb-5Skeleton Canyon Read onlineSkeleton CanyonNo Honor Among Thieves: An Ali Reynolds Novella (Kindle Single) Read onlineNo Honor Among Thieves: An Ali Reynolds Novella (Kindle Single)Dead to Rights Read onlineDead to RightsAlison Reynolds 01 - Edge Of Evil (v5.0) Read onlineAlison Reynolds 01 - Edge Of Evil (v5.0)Ring In the Dead Read onlineRing In the DeadRing in the Dead: A J. P. Beaumont Novella Read onlineRing in the Dead: A J. P. Beaumont NovellaClawback Read onlineClawbackKiss the Bees bw-2 Read onlineKiss the Bees bw-2Fire and Ice jpb-19 Read onlineFire and Ice jpb-19Downfall Read onlineDownfallDeadly Stakes ar-8 Read onlineDeadly Stakes ar-8Fatal Error Read onlineFatal ErrorName Withheld Read onlineName WithheldDuel to the Death Read onlineDuel to the DeathCold Betrayal Read onlineCold BetrayalBetrayal of Trust Read onlineBetrayal of TrustWeb of Evil Read onlineWeb of EvilOutlaw Mountain Read onlineOutlaw MountainShoot Don't Shoot Read onlineShoot Don't ShootA Last Goodbye Read onlineA Last GoodbyeAli Reynolds 08 - Deadly Stakes Read onlineAli Reynolds 08 - Deadly StakesHour of the Hunter: With Bonus Material: A Novel of Suspense Read onlineHour of the Hunter: With Bonus Material: A Novel of SuspenseTrial by Fire Read onlineTrial by FireExit Wounds jb-11 Read onlineExit Wounds jb-11Hand of Evil ar-3 Read onlineHand of Evil ar-3Failure to appear jpb-11 Read onlineFailure to appear jpb-11Tombstone Courage Read onlineTombstone CourageLong Time Gone jpb-17 Read onlineLong Time Gone jpb-17Kiss of the Bees w-2 Read onlineKiss of the Bees w-2Edge of Evil ar-1 Read onlineEdge of Evil ar-1Cruel Intent Read onlineCruel IntentImprobable Cause Read onlineImprobable CauseStill Dead Read onlineStill DeadDownfall (2016) Read onlineDownfall (2016)Justice Denied jpb-18 Read onlineJustice Denied jpb-18Damage Control Read onlineDamage ControlRattlesnake Crossing Read onlineRattlesnake CrossingDesert Heat Read onlineDesert HeatQueen of the Night Read onlineQueen of the NightJP Beaumont 11 - Failure To Appear (v5.0) Read onlineJP Beaumont 11 - Failure To Appear (v5.0)Until Proven Guilty Read onlineUntil Proven GuiltyMinor in possession jpb-8 Read onlineMinor in possession jpb-8Left for Dead ar-7 Read onlineLeft for Dead ar-7Payment in kind jpb-9 Read onlinePayment in kind jpb-9No Honor Among Thieves Read onlineNo Honor Among Thieves