Steven Havill - Statute of Limitations
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- Название:Statute of Limitations
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- Издательство:Poisoned Pen Press
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- Год:2011
- ISBN:нет данных
- Рейтинг книги:3 / 5. Голосов: 1
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Statute of Limitations: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация
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Matty bandaged him quickly, and motioned for the second gurney.
“I don’t need that thing,” Gastner said.
“Oh, yes you do, honey,” Matty chirped. She had untangled the lines from an IV bag and paused, frowning at him. “You want to fight me for this needle?”
“No, ma’am.” He relaxed back against the wall, and closed one eye. “My head hurts.”
“No doubt,” Matty said. “You keep letting people batter it. But we’ll get you all fixed up. You going to mind riding in the same ambulance as Mike?”
“I’d be honored,” Gastner murmured.
Chapter Thirty-nine
Hank Sisneros groaned from his puddle on the floor as the gurney whisked past him with his son’s quiet form lashed on board, followed almost immediately by former sheriff Bill Gastner.
“Second unit is on the way,” Matty Finnegan said. She knelt beside Sisneros, glancing dismissively at the blood around his handcuffed wrists and the obviously dislocated thumb. She cut away his trousers, revealing the nasty blue-black-rimmed hole just behind his right kneecap, and the quarter-sized exit wound that had torn right through the large posterior ligament at the back of the joint. “You just lie still,” she said unnecessarily, but there wasn’t a lot of warmth and nurture in her tone.
Estelle Reyes-Guzman knelt beside the wounded man, and reached out with a towel to dab a bit of blood that threatened to run into his eye. He was breathing heavily, as if he’d just charged up a long flight of stairs.
“Why Janet?” Estelle said. He looked up at her quickly, but didn’t reply. “After all these years, did you think that she was going to tell someone about you and her? About that night in the car when the chief stopped you?” His eyes narrowed, but he was concentrating too much on the pain to speak, pain that was quickly chasing him sober. He let his weight carry him over on his left side until his forehead was touching the floor.
“What did Bill Gastner ever do to you?”
“He had to know,” Sisneros mumbled, but it was obvious he was having trouble forming the words. Between the slosh of alcohol in his veins and the shock from the ruined knee, it was surprising he was coherent at all. “All the old guys. They talk. They was all set to gang up on me. She woulda told ’em.”
“She? You mean Janet?”
Hank gurgled something unintelligible and then tried to straighten up. “I tried to explain it all to her. All she had to do was help me a little bit. Just a little bit. But she was too good for that….”
“Estelle?” She turned and saw Bob Torrez standing near the front door. “Bill wants to talk to you before the ambulance takes off.”
She rose quickly and went outside. Gastner’s gurney was still on the gravel as the EMTs loaded Sisneros.
“I don’t think he’s going to say much,” Gastner said, when Estelle appeared at his side. “This part’s simple. Like I said, he figured that it would look like Mike and I took care of business. That would really fix the blame for Janet’s death on Mike.” He shrugged. “He tried to talk Janet into helping him, but she wouldn’t do it. I think…I think …that maybe she threatened Hank. If he didn’t leave her alone, she was going to Mike with the whole story about what happened when she was a kid. That’s as far as I got with him. He isn’t much for conversation.”
Gastner reached up and touched his own forehead. “Something’s really loose up here with him,” he said. “Then Mike made a break for it, and that set him off. I got damn lucky, that’s for sure.”
“It all goes back to that night in 1990,” Estelle said. “It has to. When Chief Martinez caught him and Janet together. She was in the car with him.”
“That might be, but Christ…,” Gastner said, and he reached up and patted her hand as he felt his own gurney start to move. “Keep digging. Statute of limitations ran out on that sort of monkey business a long, long time ago.”
She went back inside just as the second ambulance arrived. The bandaging that padded Hank Sisneros’s wrecked knee was brilliant red, soaked through. His face was ashen with shock, his eyes half-closed and glassy. Sheriff Robert Torrez stood nearby, impassively watching the man try to find a less-than-agonizing way of supporting his battered body.
“They’re going to need the cuffs around front for the gurney,” she said, and Torrez nodded.
“We can do that.” He started to bend over, and Estelle touched his elbow.
“Let me,” she said. She bent close to Hank Sisneros, smelling his fetid breath, smelling the alcohol, smelling the blood. For several seconds, she just stared into his bloodshot eyes. “Why did you dump her?” she asked finally, her voice not much more than a whisper.
Sisneros was having trouble focusing, and his head lolled with each panting breath. Estelle reached out and caught him by the chin, forcing him to look at her. “Why did you dump her in the arroyo, Hank?”
A quick jerk of his lips might have been a smirk. “Hell,” he mumbled.
“Why, Hank? Why did you do that?”
“Figured she might as well be with her old man,” he said, and Estelle froze in place, her hand still locked on his chin, trying to force his eyes to focus on hers. “That’s where he ended up.” He coughed violently. “What’s good enough for him is good enough for the likes of her.”
“What’d he say?” Torrez said from behind her.
For a moment Estelle remained kneeling, supporting Hank Sisneros under the chin. Then she pulled her hand away, and the weight of his head ruined what little balance he had. He sagged back to the floor, weight against his cuffed wrists.
“I know where Brad Tripp is,” she said.
***
At first light on Monday morning, the cavalcade of vehicles, including a county dump truck pulling a flatbed trailer and backhoe, rumbled out of Highland Court to the arroyo, stopping short of the two county sheriff’s units that were parked near the edge.
Within an hour, the jumble of old cars, appliances, and other informal flood-control structures had been spread out and separated, and the first traces of human remains had been discovered under the massive rump of what had once been the inverted ’57 Oldsmobile “chrome king.”
“It wasn’t being caught with Janet that bothered Hank,” Estelle said as she stepped to the edge of the arroyo and looked down at the gravesite. “Maybe Janet had an inkling what happened to her father, maybe not. But Hank figured that with the records being opened up and reviewed, and with Janet dating Mike, the whole sorry mess would come to light somehow.”
She looked across at Bob Torrez. “The old guys would remember too much,” she said. “Or maybe he thought that Janet knew more than she did. Whatever it was, I think Hank Sisneros started stewing that if the records came to light, everything would lead back to Brad Tripp’s disappearance. He didn’t care about Janet. When Eduardo Martinez collapsed, Hank heard about it. He was at the motel, in town figuring to talk to Janet one more time. I’m willing to bet what happened to Eduardo is what gave him the idea. One down and a couple more to go. Eduardo and Bill Gastner are the only two old enough to remember anything. With Eduardo gone, knock off Bill Gastner and Hank would be home free…especially if he could get his hands on the records that he was so sure existed, and especially if he could focus blame on a son he didn’t care enough about.”
“That’s why he wanted the keys,” Torrez said.
“One brilliant idea that didn’t work. He thought that he could get into the sheriff’s department conference room himself, maybe.” Estelle turned to gaze back down the dirt lane. “Or more likely,” she said, “he was trying to talk Janet into one last favor for him. It’s a possibility that Brent or one of the other dispatchers wouldn’t pay a whole lot of attention to her if she came into the building.”
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