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Blue Heaven Part 8

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"Someone who knows Tom Boyd says he can have a violent temper," the sheriff said. "He's a bodybuilder, right? Maybe some steroid use? Would you say he has a violent temper, Miz Taylor?"

SHERIFF CAREY asked questions for another half hour. She answered them honestly, and could see how the sheriff was building a case against Tom. No, she didn't know he'd been arrested twice for a.s.sault. No, she didn't know Tom's ex-wife had accused him of beating one of his children. How could she not know that, she asked herself. She felt stupid, duped. Again.

"I don't think it was Tom," she said, finally, after the sheriff stood up and slipped his notebook in his pocket. "If it was him, wouldn't he have taken his fly rod back? Isn't that the reason you've come up with why he would even try to find my children?"

"I thought of that, too," Carey said, clamping on his hat. "But it could be your kids lost it before he got there. Or he just couldn't find it in the dark. We'll have to ask him about that," he said ominously.

"I just can't believe it," she said.



Carey stood there, silent, as if he had more to say before he left. She looked up.

"Tom didn't show up for work this morning," Carey said. "His supervisor said he didn't call in, either. Tom's not at his house, and no one saw him come home last night. His truck is still missing. He was supposed to turn it in last night, but he didn't."

"His UPS truck?" she said incredulously.

For the first time, the sheriff almost smiled. "You'd think we'd find a vehicle that distinctive easy enough, wouldn't you?"

"I just can't ..." She didn't finish, knowing she had said it before.

"I think we'll get this thing wrapped up pretty quickly," the sheriff said. "I hope and pray it will be for the best, but we just don't know. We hope like h.e.l.l we can find him and bring your kids back, unharmed."

She watched him, waiting for the other shoe to drop.

"I wish I had more men to work this, Miz Taylor. I've only got four deputies for the whole county. Three of 'em are up there on Sand Creek right now, searching it with a state crime-scene team that arrived this morning. I'm starting to get calls from all over. Newspaper reporters, even some producer from Fox News in Spokane. Missing kids are big news, you know. If we can tie Tom Boyd to your kids, we can issue an Amber Alert, but it doesn't meet that standard yet. I looked it up. The first criterion is that law enforcement must confirm that an abduction has taken place. We don't know it to be true. We can't just go panicking everyone this early."

"This early?" she said, astonished.

"Miz Taylor, it hasn't even been twenty-four hours. We don't even consider a person missing until then. Not that the newspeople care. I'm stalling them for now, but they're keeping me busy. Luckily, though, I have an ace in the hole."

"What do you mean?" she asked.

Now, he grinned outright. "Four experienced, seasoned investigators have volunteered to help us. They showed up this morning and asked what they could do. After I talked with 'em, I gave them the authority to run with it, and already things are happening. We're lucky as h.e.l.l."

She was confused. "Who are they?"

"LAPD's finest," he said. "Retired cops who've worked dozens of situations like this. They told me they want to serve their new community and keep it safe. Within a couple of hours they helped me establish a command center, and they're the ones who figured out Tom Boyd. We're d.a.m.ned glad to have them here, Miz Taylor."

She nodded. For the first time, she felt a lift of encouragement.

"I know you want to stay by the phone," he said, looking around the kitchen. "I think you should, too. But you need some help around here. Some support. Is there anyone we can call to stay with you?"

She had no relatives nearby, and few friends. Sandy was on a cruise with her husband and family. She thought of Jim Hearne, the banker who had always been kind to her, but knew how improper that would seem.

"That woman, Fiona Pritzle, keeps offering to come stay with me," Monica said. "But I don't think I want her help."

Carey agreed. "I'll ask one of the volunteer investigators to come over, if you don't mind. We want to cover all the bases. If someone contacts you with a report on your kids, we want to know right away. We want to screen the call. And, if someone has your kids ..."

"I don't mind."

"His name is Swann. Ex-Sergeant Swann."

"I know him," Monica said dully.

"Yes, he told me that. He wanted me to ask you if you minded if it was he."

She thought of Swann's kind face and manner, his sonorous voice. He had been obscure, though, and so set in his ways. She felt he was always watching her as a cop watched a subject, not the way a man watched a woman.

"It's okay," she said. "He's a clean freak. Very organized. He'll probably help me out with all of this."

The sheriff snorted and reached out his hand.

"We'll do our best to find your kids, Miz Taylor. I'll ask Mr. Swann to bring you something to eat. I'll call the doctor to come by again as well."

Sat.u.r.day, 10:14 A.M.

SORRY TO KEEP you waiting," Jim Hearne said to Eduardo Villatoro as he slipped back behind his desk. "That was a local rancher. A friend of mine. A good man."

Villatoro settled into the chair the rancher had just used, his briefcase on his knees. He watched as Hearne gathered up a thick file with the name RAWLINS on the tab and put it on the credenza behind him. Digging in his breast pocket for a card, he leaned forward and handed it to Hearne.

Hearne read it, a glimpse of recognition in his clear blue eyes. "Detective Villatoro of the Arcadia, California, Police Department, now I remember. You called and asked for a meeting a few weeks ago. All the way from Southern California."

"Thank you for meeting with me. I've retired from the department since then."

"Congratulations," Hearne said, his face showing what he was thinking, that the meeting wasn't official after all but of a personal nature. And maybe a waste of Hearne's time.

Hearne said, "Have you ever been to North Idaho before? We say North Idaho, not northern Idaho, by the way."

"I see."

"So, have you ever been here?"

"No."

"How do you like it so far?"

"It's very green," Villatoro said, thinking: It's very white.

"Yeah, it's our little piece of heaven," Hearne said.

Villatoro smiled. "It's a very pretty place. Very peaceful, it seems."

Hearne said, "It usually is. We've got a problem going on this morning, though. You probably saw the poster out there. A couple of local kids are missing."

Villatoro had observed it all: the women who arrived with the poster, the loud one with the little-girl voice who told everyone in the bank what had happened, the conversation between the loud woman and the rancher who had left Hearne's office.

"I hope the children are okay," Villatoro said. "I've been struck by how intimate it all is, how local. It's like the town thinks their children are missing. It warms my heart to witness such an att.i.tude."

Hearne studied him. Probing for insincerity, Villatoro guessed.

"We do tend to take care of our own," Hearne said. "Maybe it's not like that in L.A.?"

"L.A. is too big," Villatoro said. "It's not as bad as people make it out to be, though. There are some neighborhoods where people look out for one another. But it's just so easy to get swallowed up."

Hearne seemed to be thinking about that, then he looked at Villatoro's card again.

"So, if you're no longer with your police department, what can I do for you? Are you looking to retire here?"

Villatoro looked at Hearne blankly. For a moment, it didn't register what Hearne had said or why he had said it. "No," he said, alarmed, holding up his hand. "No, no. I've got another matter."

"Oh, then I'm sorry. I just a.s.sumed."

"I want to complete an investigation I worked on for years. It led me here."

Hearne sat back. "What are you still investigating?"

Snapping open the locks on his briefcase, Villatoro slipped five sheets of paper out of his file and handed them across the desk. They were back and front photocopies of hundred-dollar bills.

The serial numbers for the bills were typed on each one, followed by a series of bank routing numbers that had been highlighted by a yellow marker. Hearne recognized the routing number.

"These came through my bank," Hearne said. "Are they counterfeit?"

"No, they're real."

Hearne raised his eyebrows, as if saying "So?"

Villatoro said, "As you know, there are authorities who electronically scan currency as it flows through the system to check for marked or counterfeit bills. It isn't a perfect system, but when it registers a hit, they increase the frequency of scanning to determine origin. When there are several hits from a single bank, it may be something significant."

"Meaning?"

"I'll start at the beginning. Eight years ago, there was an armed robbery at a horse racing track in my town, which is-or was-outside of Los Angeles. Millions in cash was taken, and a man died during the commission of the crime, one of the guards. As you can guess, it was an inside job, and the employees were convicted and sent to prison by the LAPD. I was a.s.signed to the case and served as the liaison between my small department and the LAPD, which had many more detectives and much greater resources. We turned the investigation over to them even though I objected at the time. It was a decision made by my chief, who is a great lover of outside experts."

"Hold it," Hearne said. "Was this the Santa Anita robbery? I read about that."

"Santa Anita Racetrack." Villatoro nodded. "One of the largest employers in Arcadia. My wife worked there at the time and knew many of the employees, as did everyone in town. Yes-$13.5 million in cash was stolen."

"Isn't that where Seabiscuit ran?"

Villatoro said, "Yes. There's a statue of him there."

"My wife made me read that book, and I loved it. We saw the movie, too. I didn't like it as much. I guess they just can't make a good movie about a horse. Horses are too subtle."

Villatoro said, "Do you know about horses?"

"I used to ride in the rodeo," Hearne said. "I do love horses. I miss being around them."

Villatoro said, "Back to the robbery."

"Sorry, go ahead."

He cleared his throat and continued. "Of course, all of the employees who were convicted claimed innocence, but the evidence was too compelling. I've read the court records myself, and I would have convicted them as well if I'd had a vote. One of the former employees gave up the others and testified against them all.

"But there is a big problem. None of the cash was ever recovered, and not one of the people convicted has yet to come forward and say anything, even though they could probably bargain their way out of jail. And for seven years, these people have kept quiet."

"d.a.m.n," Hearne said. "That's a long time. They must be tough."

Villatoro waved his hand. "They're not so tough. My wife says the people in prison just weren't the types to do this kind of crime, for what that's worth. To me, though, it's good information. I've met them and talked to them. They're desperate to get out, and they swear they have nothing to tell us."

Hearne frowned.

"We keep waiting," Villatoro said. "I interviewed them every few months, hoping one of them would tell me where the money went. For a long time we thought they'd buried it somewhere. They will get out, probably, in five or six years, maybe more, and I suppose for that kind of reward they could wait. But it doesn't seem like they know. I really feel, in my heart, that if they knew where the money was, they would tell me. One of them should have broken by now, or found G.o.d, or just wanted to get out."

"What about the guy who testified against them?"

"Ah," Villatoro said, sighing. "He is no longer with us. He was the victim of a convenience store robbery in L.A. less than a year after the trial. He was there buying milk and was caught in a cross fire between the owner of the store and the criminal who tried to rob it."

"And whoever shot him wasn't caught?"

"Alas, no."

"Interesting," Hearne said. "So what does that all have to do with me and my bank?"

Villatoro gestured toward the photocopies of the hundred-dollar bills. "At the time of the robbery, the cas.h.i.+ers and accountants at the racetrack had a rather efficient procedure for counting the money and accounting for all of it, but an incomplete method for recording the cash. The racetrack didn't have marked bills, like your bank surely does, or dye pacs. You can imagine the sea of cash that washes in during a big day, every twenty minutes or so when bettors come to the windows. The robbery occurred after one of the biggest races of the year, the Southern California Breeders' Cup. It's all computerized, of course, but the cash still needs to match the computer at the end of the day, so it's hand-counted in the back. That takes time. Once the cash matches the computer, armored cars take the cash away to the bank. In the kind of rush they are in to get the cash into the cars, there was no way to mark or record the money in any comprehensive way. The best they could do, at the time, was to randomly record serial numbers. In this case, they recorded the serial number of every fiftieth hundred-dollar bill. Now it's done by scanners, but then it was by hand."

Hearne was listening closely, and urged Villatoro on.

"In the end, we had the serial numbers for 1,377 hundred-dollar bills. The rest were other denominations, or credit card receipts. But most of it was cash, and most of it was in small, circulated bills. Quite literally untraceable."

Hearne looked down at the photocopies of the bills on his desk.

"For three years, not a single hundred-dollar bill with a recorded serial number was reported. Not a one," Villatoro said. "Then one came in that had been routed through four different banks. But the bank of origin was yours. We did nothing because one bill means nothing. It could have pa.s.sed through a dozen people or merchants during that time. I made a copy, though, and kept it in my file. You have a copy of that one there in front of you. Two others surfaced over the years, one from California, then Nevada, the other from Nebraska. There appeared to be no link at all.

"Two months ago, though, four more turned up," Villatoro said. "All four originated from your bank. Those are the four sheets on top. Once this happened, I sensed there might be something to it. I took this information to my liaison contacts in the LAPD, but as far as they were concerned the case was closed. They'd moved on. My department was very small, with only four detectives. We didn't have the budget to send me around the country to follow this up, and my mandatory retirement date was approaching. No other detective wanted to take up the case after I left. But these bills bothered me, and they bother me still. It is my only link to the money stolen, and therefore the criminals. You see, Mr. Hearne, Arcadia is a peaceful place, or at least it used to be. There have never been more than four murders in a year there. Our average for the thirty years I was in the department was two homicides. Only two. And these weren't heinous, mysterious crimes, usually a domestic or easily solved homicide. The bank guard homicide is the only unsolved murder still on our books, and it was a.s.signed to me. I just can't leave without trying to solve it, even if it is on my own time."

Hearne studied the bills, waiting for more.

"I think someone who has access to at least some of the Santa Anita money lives in this area and banks with you," Villatoro said. "I'd like to try and find out who that might be."

"How do you propose to do that?"

Villatoro smiled. "I would like to look at your accounts. Primarily those that were opened four years ago that are still active. I think I may find a name that will jump out at me. Especially if I can trace the name back to California. Then I will have narrowed it down."

Hearne made a face. "You know we can't just turn over a list of our customers to you. That's illegal."

Villatoro nodded his head. "Yes, I know that. But if I can get the proper authorities to request access, I hope you will be cooperative. That's all I ask. And, of course, if you have any idea at the outset who the person might be."

Shaking his head, Hearne handed the photocopies back to Villatoro. "I have no idea. We have hundreds of new accounts, and I'd bet a quarter of them came from California. I really wouldn't have a clue, and if I did, I'm not sure I'd be at liberty to tell you."

"A man died in the robbery, Mr. Hearne. A man with a wife and two children."

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About Blue Heaven Part 8 novel

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