damsels in a dramatic showdown. Then something about a chase and a couple of skeletons being found? A certain history-professor-turned-deputy involved. Something tells me it isnât just another body drop here in sunny Phoenix. Tell me something I can put in the paper.â
Idling at a red light, I flipped down the sun visor and used the mirror to check the damage to my face. Not too bad: a cut on my left cheek, ugly bruise under my left eye, a little swelling. Hurt like hell. The light changed and I said, âYou know how Peralta is. Go through the public information officer.â
âTheyâd just send me to that damned sheriffâs Web site for a press release.â
âOr buy me a drink off the record.â
âThat interesting, huh?â she said. âSo how about tonight? Or do you have plans with that X-er girlfriend, whatshername, Ashley?â
âLindsey.â
âWhatever.â
âYou ever hear about the Yarnell kidnapping?â
âSure,â she said.
âWhat do you know about it?â
âYouâre the historian, David. Werenât they grandsons of Hayden Yarnell? Twin brothers, right? I think a guy was finally caught.â
âJack Talbott,â I said. âHe was a handyman, who did work at the Yarnell place. He was arrested for some minor thing down on the border and they found some of the ransom money on him. But he never admitted to the kidnapping and they never found either the bulk of the ransom money or the twins.â
âSo, why are you telling me this?â
âI am preparing your mind,â I said. âIâll call later.â
Ten minutes later, I parked outside Phoenix Police Headquarters, a sterile monstrosity of the 1970s that uglies up the corner of Seventh Avenue and Washington Street. On the Washington side, about thirty protesters walked in a long circle, carrying signs: âStop killing us!â and âNO Police War on Minorities.â In a vacant lot off Van Buren Street last night a sixteen-year-old Hispanic kid decided to get in a gun battle with the cops. Nobody knew why. The newspaper said he was hit by sixteen bullets. Sixteen years and sixteen bullets. I limped around the corner, feeling the Advil I had taken for my ankle wear off, took the side entrance and checked in with the desk cop.
Half an hour passed before I was given a visitorâs badge and sent up to the investigations division. It took up most of a floor, but with its cubicles, computers, and neutral-tone decor, it looked more like an insurance office than a police station. A receptionist sent me back to a glass office where a man sat staring at a messy desk. All I could see was the top of his head: dark, straight, dry hair, parted on one side. The name-card on the door said, lt. augustus hawkins . He sure as hell didnât look like a Roman emperor.
I rapped on the doorjamb and stepped inside. âDavid Mapstone, MCSO.â
âI know who you are,â the lowered head spoke.
The bullshit cop hazing was well under way. The long wait downstairs. Now he would let me stand awkwardly while he balanced his checkbook or wrote to his girlfriend, or whatever. It was like dealing with a tenure committee and I was really bad at it.
I waited at least a minute before speaking. âLook, Hawkins, I donât want to be here any more than you want me to be. But Iâve got orders, same as you do.â
The dry, dark hair went back and a face rose up. A most ordinary, suburban face with thin, pale lips, and blotchy, pale skin. A face that would always be just a few hours ahead of needing a shave. Below the face was a wrinkled gray dress shirt and a goldish pattern tie with an enormous knot. The face regarded me and nodded grimly.
âYeah, well, right. Sit.â
I did.
âThis is a city case.â
âNo!â
âWe have a cold-case squad.â
âSeriously?â
âWe donât need your