“IT WON’T TAKE that much time, Dev.” Bunch propped a gigantic shoe on the cold vanes of one of the radiators that flanked the arched window and its wrought-iron rail. The glass reached up from the office below and curved to a halt a foot from the ceiling. In its middle, a couple of panes were cranked open to catch any air, but all that came in was a whiff of diesel smoke from the trucks snorting in Wazee Street below. “You know what a missing persons case is: a few phone calls, a little legwork, and we find the guy sleeping at his girlfriend’s house.”
I knew what this missing persons case was, and a detective agency couldn’t survive with that kind of business. “How much did Mrs. Gutierrez say she’d pay?”
“She’s a friend of the family, Dev. She doesn’t have that much money. And it took a lot for her to get up the nerve to ask me in the first place. I can probably wrap the damn thing up in twenty-four hours flat.”
“Let her go to the cops. They’ll wrap it up for free.”
Bunch explained with exaggerated patience. “Mrs. Gutierrez doesn’t want to go to the cops. The kid is her cousin’s nephew or some crap like that, and he’s only been in the States a few months.”
“Meaning?”
“Meaning he’s an illegal. Meaning the cops are out!”
“Bunch, we haven’t had a decent case in over six months. We’re barely keeping our butts away from the alligators with a little insurance stuff, and even that’s falling off. Now you want to take a case for free?”
“Jesus. You know what you sound like? A goddamn accountant. Prissy, you know? Pursed-up lips like a puckered anus, telling the secretaries not to sharpen their goddamn pencils because it wears them out faster.”
“Dammit, Bunch!” That stung. It stung because it was true: I was beginning to feel like a prissy accountant. The in-box held half a dozen unopened envelopes with grinning plastic windows and fat with convenient preaddressed return envelopes. I didn’t have to open them to know what they wanted, and a glance at the return address was enough to tell me how much. It seemed that lately I spent more and more time totaling columns of figures and arriving at the same dismal conclusion.
Some security agencies feasted on bad times; they went into the skip-trace game and made a tidy profit on debt collections. The Vinny Landrum Agency was doing fine. But who except Vinny Landrum wanted to be like Vinny Landrum? Even as Bunch and I watched the old accounts close out and the new ones fail to appear, we held out against debt collecting. For one thing, we were too vulnerable in the debt we owed; for another, industrial security was our game, something we did better than the competition, and we were building our reputation on it. What would happen if we were out of the office chasing a deadbeat, or in court swearing the husband of wife A was screwing the wife of husband B, and had to turn down a big company?
But along with so many other businesses that relied on the oil money, which for years made Denver a boomtown, Kirk and Associates had fallen on hard times. And if the drying up of that oil and its wealth hadn’t brought a genuine bust, it sure as hell let the air out of a lot of bank accounts. Including ours. The insurance surveillance wasn’t regular and it didn’t pay nearly as well, but it did bring in enough to cover the rent. And the jobs were quick, leaving us free for that big call that never came. Fortunately, the corporation still had enough in the bank to provide half-salaries for Bunch and me. But the season was a dry one, and long. And now Bunch was talking about taking on charity work.
“Look, Bunch, you know we’re getting the leftovers because we’re available. If one of the insurance companies calls and we’re tied up on a nonpaying case, they’re going somewhere else. Just like that, they’re going to dial another number, and we lose them and any other cases they might bring. All for the sake of sweet charity.”
“You even talk like a goddamn accountant. How come you’re not squawking about the bottom line or the margin of profit?”
“Because I can’t find the bottom line anymore! And do you really want to hear about our margin of profit?”
“No.”
“Damn good thing.”
“But I’m tired of sitting on my butt waiting for the lame to walk and the dead to rise.”
That’s what most of this insurance work was: lurking around to catch accident victims who claimed permanent and total disability, yet who managed to change the tires on their cars or paint their houses or even jog along country lanes. All it took was a telephoto lens, some skill at cover and concealment—and a lot of patience, which, for world-class security agents, neither Bunch nor I seemed to have in sufficient supply. I, too, felt the drudgery of it. Still, it paid. I reminded Bunch of that.
He squashed one fist inside the palm of his other hand; his knuckles made a muffled rattle like pebbles dropped into a wooden barrel. “I told you, Dev. Mrs. Gutierrez is a friend of the family. Even if she can’t pay a cent, I’m not going to turn down a friend who asks for help.”
“Goddamn it, the kid’s probably back in Mexico! He’s homesick, he hopped a bus, he went back. That’s all.”
“He’s not from Mexico. He’s from El Salvador—the whole family is. They’re political refugees, and there’s not a damn thing left for him to go back to. Besides, the Mexicans don’t want him either.”
“Doesn’t he have a green card?”
“He doesn’t qualify. Our government says El Sal’s a fine place to live. Nobody should want to leave El Sal, they say.”
Bunch’s silhouette, as tall as mine but twice as wide, blotted out the view across the low brick warehouses and small factories of Wazee Street. Beyond them, the haze-faded mountains west of Denver lifted in ridges one behind the other. Earlier in the summer, the distant slopes were shadowed dark with pines and green grass fed by runoff. But this late in September, the runoff had ceased and the slopes had turned to patches of pale brown streaked here and there with darker smudges of forest. Above that, snowfields glimmered dusty white. They were big enough to survive until the next snows, and some of them had been around long enough to earn the name of glacier. But from this distance, it was hard to think of that white as cool and fresh. Instead, they were unreal places of escape—tantalizing but forbidden.
“I expect Costello to call soon, Bunch—”
“You’ve been saying that for a week.”
“—and when he does, it’ll be a twenty-four-hour surveillance. You know that.”
“Fine. When he calls you, you call me. I’ll come. Simple.”
“Why don’t you wait until we know for certain? Costello said he’d call this week and let us know.”
“Because he hasn’t called yet. Because he might never call. And because Mrs. Gutierrez is worried. Really worried, Dev. It’s been over ten days since she heard anything, and nobody knows what happened to him. Nobody at work, nobody at his apartment house. She telephoned his boss and even went by to talk to people in his apartment.”
“Oh yeah? When did she see him last?”
“A week ago Sunday. But he usually phones two or three times a week, drops by on weekends, has Sunday dinner with the family. That kind of thing. She’s the only relative he’s got in the States, and that’s one of the reasons he came to Denver. And why she feels responsible for him.”
“He just went to work and didn’t come back?”
“That’s what she says.”
“You’ve talked to the employer?”
“No, Devlin. I have not talked to the employer. What in the hell do you think you were bitching about just two minutes ago? That’s one of the things I want to do this afternoon—talk to the employer. But you’re telling me it’ll take too much out of your goddamn pocket.”
“Well, it can wait—” The ring of the telephone cut off my words, and I picked it up quickly. “Kirk and Associates.”
“This here is Drayton Coe?” The voice had a rising inflection and an accent that was soft on r’s and long on vowels. Virginia maybe, or Georgia. “I’m the vice president for facilities at Hally Corporation?”
I didn’t recognize either name, but he sounded as if I should. So I said, “Of course, Mr. Coe. What can we do for you?”
“We have this little problem of theft and vandalism of company property—I see you people do industrial security. Does that include putting in security devices and such?”
“It certainly can, sir. In fact, you couldn’t have called at a better time—our specialist in electronic surveillance just came in from another job. I can have him drive over right now and talk with you, if that’s all right.”
The drawling voice said that would be nice, and in fact, the sooner the better. Coe gave directions and I jotted them on a pad for Bunch. He glanced at the address and smiled. “It’s not too far away from where Mrs. Gutierrez’ nephew works.”
“Bunch—”
“Hey, prissy-purse, cool out. I can swing by there after I talk to this Drayton Coe. Won’t cost you a dime, and I can find out about Nestor.”
“Nestor?”
“That’s the kid’s name: Nestor Calamaro.”
The Hally Corporation, the Yellow Pages told me, was a firm that manufactured paper goods of all kinds and was located in Northwest Denver in what used to be a residential district for meat plant workers, when there had been a meat-packing plant and when there had been workers. I hoped that the job wouldn’t be one of those quick, low-profit installations of sensors and alarms—not a job to be scorned, but not one to rely on for a palpable income either.
Bunch left the office whistling; he would find out for certain what Mr. Coe and his company needed. I stayed behind with the bills and the silent telephone, and listed the items we could, if necessary, begin to sell off. Our fax machine, a Panasonic UF-250, was our last major purchase from what was—though we didn’t know it then—our final big job. It wasn’t doing much for us right now and, as the newest piece of office equipment, probably had the best resale value. In fact, I was dialing the office supply company to see what they’d offer when Uncle Wyn, game leg stumping heavily, knocked and opened the door.
“Jesus, Dev. It’s like a tomb around here. Business still that bad?”
“Still that bad, Uncle Wyn.” I got up and swung the desk chair around for him, and held it as he gingerly let himself down. The only visitors’ chair had soft cushions and a raked back and was too hard for him to get in and out of.
He grunted and propped his arthritic knee with the stout cane. “Going to rain sure as hell. I used to laugh at old cooters who claimed they could tell from their arthritis. But by God, I know now they were right. And this is what I get for laughing at them.”
“We could use some rain. The month’s been a dry one. Everyone’s complaining.”
“Don’t know what the hell everyone expects, living in a high desert like this.” With another grunt, he shifted his weight. “Now tell me outright, are you going to make it or not?”
That was the question I’d been asking myself off and on for weeks now. And I didn’t know the answer. “We’re skating on the edge, Uncle Wyn. I had a call yesterday from an insurance company canceling another job. But Bunch just went out to look at some possible installation work.”
“Lose much yesterday?”
“Well, it would have covered the overhead for another month.”
“I see.” He rubbed a finger across a scar on the back of his right hand, a memento from one of the thousands of cleats or foul balls that had bounced off him during his days as a professional catcher. “You need some help, I’m here.”
“Thanks, Uncle. I might call on you if things get bad enough. But we have a good chance to make it. It’s just that things could be a little better, that’s all.”
“I told you once, I’ll tell you again: I think it was dumb to pay me back so soon when you didn’t have to. If you hadn’t done that, you’d have a lot left in the bank—it could’ve been making money for you all this time for when you get in these slumps.”
“But it’s good to be free and clear, too. Even when there’s not that much that’s clear.” And when the failure of my business wouldn’t mean loss for our major investor.
“Hey, I wouldn’t put the squeeze on you. You know that.”
“I know, Uncle Wyn. And I didn’t mean it that way. I meant it feels good to me—I feel better about having debts paid off, no matter who it is I owe.”
“Yeah. Your daddy was that way too, God rest his soul. Me, I could owe somebody and lose no sleep over it. He couldn’t. It bugged him for some reason.”
My uncle had taken my father’s place when he was murdered, and in a way I had taken the place of Uncle Wyn’s children, who, following their own lives, had moved away to the East and West coasts.
“Trouble was, he also lost sleep when somebody owed him. Thought everybody ought to feel the way he did.” The heavy-featured head wagged back and forth. “Don’t sweat it, I say. You lend somebody a little, they don’t pay you back, you don’t lend them any more and they stay clear of you anyway. Cheap lesson, and you get rid of lousy company. Good deal all around.”
“Maybe it’s genetic. I’m the worrier. Bunch could care less. If we go bankrupt, he’ll whistle to the next job.”
“He’s got the right attitude.”
“His name’s not on the letterhead.”
“It wouldn’t make any difference if it was. He’s a good ol’ boy.”
He was that, and as an ex-professional football player, Bunch shared with Uncle Wyn a view of the world that I wasn’t privy to: life as a contest. A serious one, demanding full commitment perhaps, but fundamentally without any purpose except what the players themselves agreed to.
“I know you don’t like to hear this, Dev, but I could use you in my own business. I’m getting pretty old, and this damn arthritis … .” He caught the note of complaint in his voice and stopped. “Anyway, none of the kids are interested in it, you know that. But I’d like to keep the business in the family.”
“I appreciate the offer, Uncle. But it’s premature on two counts—one, you’re not ready for the retirement farm yet, and two, Kirk and Associates isn’t ready to quit yet.”
“Yeah. ‘Two counts.’ I keep forgetting you got some law school. Well, your old man was stubborn too. Ma said all us boys got Dad’s bullheadedness; I guess you got it too.”
The difference between stubbornness and foolishness was the outcome. If Kirk and Associates survived, I’d be labeled stubborn and maybe admired; if it folded, foolish. But as I’d told Uncle Wyn, we weren’t dead yet, and the telephone might ring any minute with a client who needed help and, more important, who could pay for that help.
But of course, it didn’t. The afternoon dragged on, and Uncle Wyn hung around as long as his arthritis would allow, talking baseball and relatives. When he left, I sat and gazed out the window at the snowfields that freckled the distant peaks and wondered if taking a vacation would save a few bucks. No. Camping in the office would be cheaper than camping in the hills, and I wouldn’t chance missing that telephone call.
Gradually, the sounds of Wazee Street below our window grew louder with the increasing restlessness of quitting-time traffic. Overhead, the sculptress who had taken the place of the piano teacher pushed her acrylic creations back and forth across her studio. I never did understand why they had to be moved periodically or why she preferred working in the afternoons and evenings, but the muted thunder of casters punctuated every day about this time. There had been a period when we were too busy to notice that the piano teacher’s business had collapsed and she had moved out and the sculptress had moved in. Now the occasional rumbles emphasized the silence of the office.
I had just trimmed the blinds against the afternoon sun when Bunch came back, wiping at his sweaty forehead with a wad of handkerchief.
“Good God, it’s hot. And not a sniff of breeze.”
“Uncle Wyn’s leg tells him it’s going to rain.”
“Hope to hell his leg’s right. But I wouldn’t bet the house and kids on it.”
“What’s the Hally Corporation want?”
Bunch shrugged and settled on the corner of the desk, which creaked in protest. “They’re not all that sure. Probably end up with a closed-loop system, the kind any home security outfit can install. If they want to do the job right, it’s going to cost a hell of a lot more than I think they’re willing to pay.”
Usually that meant the client would have a major retrofit—a lot of companies put up their facilities or bought cheap and then decided they wanted to add the kind of security system that should have been built into the structure initially. “Did you explain it to them?”
“Yeah, I explained it. But the guy’s a real asshole—the kind who knows everything and listens to nothing.” Bunch caught my expression. “Don’t look so worried, Dev. I was my usual smooth self. Yes, I explained the options—the quick fix versus the right way. He said he’ll talk it over with his boss or whoever and let us know. A day or two, he said.”
“He sounded over the phone like he was in a hurry.”
“Maybe so. But he sure slowed down when I gave him a ballpark figure. He’s got people stealing him blind from the grounds and warehouse, but he’s more worried about the security costs than the losses. Hell, it wouldn’t be the first time somebody went through the motions and called themselves covered.”
That was true enough. Penny-wise, and so on. “I suppose you went by the place where what’s his name, Nestor, works?”
“A packing plant over in Swansea. Apple Valley Turkeys. No valley, no apples, plenty of turkeys. Including the guy I talked to. Says Nestor just stopped coming to work. Never picked up his paycheck, never signed out of the retirement fund. Just flat disappeared.”
“How much did he leave?”
“Three hundred seventy-two dollars and fourteen cents. A week and a half’s pay, plus the seven hundred in the pension fund.”
We both knew what that meant: an unplanned disappearance. “Nothing in the John Doe file at Denver Police Department?”
“I thought you didn’t want me wasting time on this one.”
“A little legwork here, a couple phone calls there—that’s all it should take you, Bunch.”
“Boy, you never forget a thing you don’t want to forget.” He gazed down into the heavy traffic and whistled a half-audible tune between his teeth. “I just hope it’s not what I hope it’s not.”
“Did he have any enemies?”
“None the employer knew about, which means jack-shit. I didn’t get a chance to talk to any people he worked with. Guy wouldn’t let me on the floor.”
“Maybe we can do that tomorrow.”
“Oh?” I felt his gaze. “What’s this ‘we’ stuff, white man? Aren’t you afraid it might cost you a dime?”
“Damn. I forgot all about that.” Bunch was going to do what he wanted to anyway; if I was along, maybe I could keep the lost time to a minimum. Besides, I was bored out of my gourd too. “Can you find out who’s working homicide at DPD tonight?”
“I already did. It’s Ashcroft.”
I led the way to the door. “Let’s go talk to him.”
My car was an Austin-Healey 3000 whose temperament became volatile on hot days in heavy traffic. But if the old girl didn’t like the long idles of rush hour, Bunch liked her even less. For one thing, the car was too small for both of us; for another, he thought it was yuppie kitsch. “Next thing, you’ll be telling me what kind of goddamn running shoes to wear, or the right color patterns for my jogging suit.” I told him I liked the car for two reasons: one, it was too small for both of us, and two, yuppies didn’t drive museum pieces that looked so ratty. Besides, if I kept it moving enough so the undersized radiator could do its job, it was quick to dodge through the lumbering sedans and trucks and easy to park when there wasn’t much curb space available. Bunch preferred his Bronco, which he said was big enough to let him sit without hitting his head and heavy enough not to pull to one side when he rode alone. And I have to admit that as the Healey lurched over the dips near the Police Administration Building, the shocks groaned and thumped in an agony that questioned its service.
“Do you know Ashcroft?” In the several years since Bunch had left the force, a series of different administrations had speeded up changes in personnel.
“I met him in the patrol division, but he was over in District Four.” Bunch shrugged, his shoulder bobbing against mine. “He might remember me. We’ll see.”
I pulled the Healey into an open spot reserved for municipal judges. The courts closed at five, and the judges’ cars were gone by one minute after. Now a picket line of red and white warning signs watched over the empty curb. Down Fourteenth Street, a swirl of traffic swung around the greenery and Greek columns of Civic Center Park, with its winos and teenaged prostitutes of both sexes. Even this early they could be seen posing on the lawn just off the sidewalk, selling their flesh and hungrily eyeing faces in the stream of traffic that drained out of downtown. The main pickup time would come a little later, when dusk started to make details hazy, and the johns, bolstered by after-work drinks, felt less conspicuous in the dimness. But business was business, even in the sale of self, and a good hustler didn’t let a chance pass without trying. If luck was with them, they could turn enough tricks before prime time to cover the day’s overhead. Then the rest of the evening would be, so to speak, pure gravy.
Nearer, a man pushing a grocery cart of belongings shuffled across Fourteenth Street and slowly sought the shade of an alley. A few steps behind him and ignoring the blat and hurry of traffic, a black and white dog, tongue and tail drooping in the heat, followed closely. Bunch eyed the man, who was draped in a heavy coat despite the temperature. “What do you think trickled down on him?”
“It wasn’t what the politicians promised.”
“Come on now—that’s his chosen lifestyle: shopping cart chic.”
“Could be our chosen lifestyle if we don’t get a few clients. Paying clients.”
“Jesus. You and your one-track mind.”
Across the car-filled parking lot reserved for people the city paid, bands of black windows, like eye slits in a visor, emphasized the towering block of the holding jail and the slightly smaller monolith of the administration building. The few stray figures around its entrances were dwarfed by the weight of the concrete above, and—in a weak attempt to soften the expanses of bare stone slabs linking the two buildings—a fountain splashed feebly against the trapped and radiating heat. The facade spoke of rigidity and power and especially of an unimaginative adherence to fact and rule. It was a stifling and a restrictiveness that had driven Bunch out of the police and ultimately into Kirk and Associates. It was the same burden of bureaucracy and bullshit that had made me leave the Secret Service. As we approached the glowering overhang above the glassed-in lobby, I could sense Bunch tighten himself against its atmosphere.
Ashcroft waited for us in the offices of crimes against persons. A tall man with narrow, curving shoulders, he accepted the fact of private investigators but he didn’t relish it. “You gentlemen want to come this way?”
We followed him past the night clerk and into offices filled with two rows of metal desks. They were empty, the night shift already on the streets. Ashcroft, saying nothing, gestured for me and Bunch to find empty chairs.
“You gentlemen want to see the John Doe files, that right?”
“That’s right.” Bunch ignored the chairs and sat on one of the glass-topped desks. “How do you like the new chief, Ashcroft?”
The homicide detective glanced up from the file drawer. “Fine. I’m sure he’ll be a fine chief. You gentlemen got a description of your missing person?”
Bunch sighed—so much for old times and small talk—and nodded. “Hispanic male, medium height, slender build, twenty-six years old. Has a four-inch scar on the inside of his left forearm. Probably wearing a work shirt and blue jeans.” He handed the detective a tinted photograph of a young man smiling whitely at the camera. A scrawl in a lower corner read, “A mi tia con amor. Nestor.”
He hefted a pile of manila folders from the drawer and set them on a desk. “Here’s the Hispanic John Does. The photograph probably won’t help much—most of these were pretty messed up by the time we found them.”
“Right.” Bunch divided the stack into two piles and shoved one my way. The photograph in the first file showed a nude man lying face up on a gurney, suspended in a darkness that the flashbulb did not pierce. Puncture wounds made dark blotches in the paleness of his stomach, and part of his neck gaped open and glistened wetly in the flash. The face, distorted yet empty, showed lividity marks as well as the slightly double chin of a man older and heavier than Nestor. I turned to the next file.
It took a while; there were a lot of photographs and—as Ashcroft said—some of the faces pictured had lost a lot of detail. I was half aware of the silence of the large office, a silence intensified by the tiny buzzing of fluorescent lights and then broken by the occasional jangle of a telephone. Once in a while, another detective walked between the rows of desks and eyed us with brief curiosity before talking with Ashcroft. From down the hall, the quack of the duty clerk’s television set made a constant background murmur. Bunch was more practiced at this type of identification, and he finished first. Ashcroft, trailing a telephone wire, talked to someone about an investigation and refiled the cases as we finished.
“What about the metro and state lists?” Bunch asked.
Still talking on the telephone, Ashcroft nodded and pulled more manila folders from a rack to lay on the desk. These were verbal descriptions rather than photographs. Filed chronologically, the lists covered unidentified bodies found in the cities and municipalities that surrounded Denver, as well as elsewhere in the state and region. We turned up two whose descriptions and probable dates of death matched Nestor’s, one over in Alamosa and one north of Denver in Weld County.
“You gentlemen have any success?” Ashcroft finally hung up the telephone.
“A couple possibles.”
“Yeah?” The detective looked over my shoulder. Then he grunted, disappointed that the possibles weren’t from his case load. He gathered up the scattered folders and refiled them, then walked us back through the offices to the elevators. It was less courtesy than security, but now that we were leaving, he felt friendly enough to attempt a smile and some light banter. “You gentlemen can have the missing persons jobs. They’re nothing but headaches—a big waste of time.”
“That’s what I keep telling Bunch.”