J. Black - The Survivors Club

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Detective Tess McCrae investigates a grisly crime scene in the ghost town of Credo, Arizona. To an ordinary investigator, the evidence suggests a cartel drug hit. But Tess, with a nearly faultless photographic memory, is far from ordinary, and she sees what others might miss: this is no drug killing. Someone went to gruesome lengths to cover up this crime. The killer’s trail leads Tess from Tucson to California; from anti-government squatters in the Arizona mountains to the heights of wealthy society, including the rich and powerful DeKoven family, who've dominated Arizona commerce and politics since the 1800s. But as Tess follows the trail of gore and betrayal, perfect and indelible in her memory, she uncovers far more than one man’s murder, and solves much more than one isolated crime. Apple-style-span The Survivors Club
New York Times

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George Hanley was a deliberate man.

She looked through the wall calendar and saw a few notations.

“Danny, check this out.”

Danny ducked his head in. “What?”

She motioned to the calendar. “Nice handwriting. What is that? The Palmer Method? My dad wrote like that.”

One on April 8, with the notation: “finance adv.”

“Financial advisor?” Danny said.

Another notation at the end of April: “SABEL.”

“What’s that?” Danny asked.

Tess typed the letters into her phone and got the answer. “Southern Arizona Buffelgrass Eradication League. Says here it’s a group ‘dedicated to ridding southern Arizona of a highly flammable invasive species of grass.’”

“Jesus. That’s a mouthful.”

“He must have belonged to the group.” Tess photographed the calendar and then took it down. They went through each month, Danny peering over her shoulder.

There were several notations. In January, there was a line across three days and the word “Conference.” In May, another line through three days, and the notation, “LA.” And under that, “look at wading pool.”

“Wading pool?” Danny looked at Tess. “You think…?”

“I dunno.”

“Hey, I know he’s old, but they say that never goes away. You think he was hanging out around the city wading pool trolling for kids?”

“It could mean anything. Maybe he has grandkids, and he was planning on buying them a wading pool for Christmas.”

“Do Pat and Bert have kids?”

Something else to ask them.

Their search went downhill from there. They switched rooms. Now Tess took the living room and kitchen and Danny took the bedroom, bathroom, and linen closet.

The first thing Tess saw was a dog’s water bowl and dish, both empty and sitting in the kitchen sink. “He had a dog?” she called to Danny.

“Looks like it. He’s not here now.”

Tess called the Scofield residence and Bert answered.

“Your father-in-law has a dog.”

“Adele. I took her to the pound this morning.”

“This morning?”

“I picked her up last night.”

Before the crime scene tape went up. “That was quick.”

“I couldn’t leave her there. She was my responsibility.”

“And you took her to the pound today?” Tess was hardly ever surprised at the things people did. Still, this was cold.

Bert must have sensed her disapproval, because he said, “Pat’s allergic to dogs. I don’t know what you think we should have done.”

Then he disconnected.

Tess looked at the bowls sitting in the sink, and thought how fortune can change at a moment’s notice. One minute the dog had an owner who apparently adored her. The next, she was in the dog pound, facing death.

Tess hadn’t liked the Scofields before. Now she disliked them even more.

Danny was in the hallway. “What was that?”

“Bert took Hanley’s dog to the pound.”

“Oh? That was quick.”

It wasn’t her job to like the survivors of a homicide. Her job was to serve justice.

Her job was to get the bad guys. As she stepped out onto the walkway for some air, a cool breeze hit. Down at the far end of the building, she saw a young man holding a bag of trash coming down the steps. He headed out across the parking lot to the Dumpster.

Nobody heard or saw anything. Some people had known Hanley to say “hi” to, but he was so recent to the apartments that he had made little, if any, impression.

Tess stared out at the freeway, trying to figure out what an old man like George Hanley would have to do with drug runners or coyotes .

Thirty rounds fired from a rifle—probably an AK-47, the weapon of choice for all of them—Sinaloa, Alacrán, Zetas, the Javelinas—and he’d been shot from five feet away.

Why use so much firepower on an old man?

“So, what you think, guera ?”

“You know what it looks like.”

Danny nodded.

The killer or killers had left footprints—mostly sneaker prints, called “running w’s” because of the tread. There had been no attempt to cover up the footprints, because whoever killed Hanley didn’t care. Whoever killed Hanley had left the casings—all thirty of them—because he didn’t care.

He wasn’t covering up anything.

In fact, it was just the opposite.

Whoever did this appeared to be making an example of George Hanley. Everything played into that—the thirty rounds, the spent casings, the footprints all over the place, and God knew, there were probably fingerprints, too—somewhere. More than that, there was the duct tape on George Hanley’s mouth—to shut him up.

Don’t talk. A message.

“What do you think about the duct tape?” Tess asked Danny.

Danny kept his eyes forward, tracking the tractor-trailer rigs slowing down on the freeway for the exit. Their engines growling through the gears. “My guess, the guy put it on him after he was dead.”

Tess agreed. She thought the tape had been affixed to Hanley’s mouth as an exclamation point.

“I think the guy who killed him was ready for him,” Danny added. “Maybe caught him by the doorway and walked toward him, shooting.”

That was how Tess saw it, Hanley being pushed back by the hail of bullets and falling into the wall of the ruin.

Then whoever killed Hanley drove his car to a ravine a half mile down the road from the ghost town, rolled it to the edge, pushed it over, and torched it. Accelerant had been used. Tess made a note to ask any ranchers or squatters in the neighborhood if they saw the fire the night before. No one had called it in, but the people around here minded their own business.

The object of this kind of killing was to terrorize. But who was there to terrorize in this situation?

George Hanley was a retired cop who owned a dog and gave tours of Credo. What would anyone in a group like Alacrán or Sinaloa want with him?

Plata o plomo ,” Danny said.

Plata o plomo . Tess had heard the popular narcocorrido before—a song that glorified the drug runners and cartels. Plata o plomo was the choice in Mexico: silver or lead. Go along with us and you will be paid handsomely; go against us and you will get bullets.

A wind sprang up out of nowhere, blowing sand across the empty parking lot and making the yellow tape shiver. Then it was gone. Another semi shifted down, the sound familiar in the west and comforting. Tess glanced at Danny. “How’s Theresa?”

Nada . The doc might induce labor if it goes on much longer.”

“Fingers crossed,” Tess said.

“One way or the other, guera ,” Danny said. “You know what they say: what goes in’s gotta come out.”

The warped humor of Danny Rojas.

CHAPTER 5

They split up. Danny would be testifying at a homicide trial just before lunch, and would probably be gone for most of the day.

Tess followed Ruby Road to the end of the blacktop and her plain-wrap Tahoe clunked over the washboard road. It was a long, bone-jarring drive.

This was Border Patrol country. It was rare for Santa Cruz County to send anyone out here—certainly not on patrol. She was alone.

She passed the gate to the ghost town of Credo on the left. The gate was a continuation of wire fence. A wire loop held the gate and the fence post together. The ranch gate could be unlooped and dragged across the road to make way for cars.

Tess noticed a van from the medical examiner inside the fence. She decided to come back when they were gone. When she went back to the crime scene she wanted quiet and a chance to think. She drove around the bend and up another hill.

Around another bend there would be a couple of trailers and an even more primitive camp.

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