Cactus Heart | страница 14
4
I climbed into the BMW, slid in Coltrane’s Blue Train CD and took Seventh Avenue downtown. Dammit, I liked the car. Somewhere, the cold autumn wind was whipping leaves down streets scented with chimney smoke: the genuine fall of our movie-and-TV-seeded collective memory. But in Phoenix, it was seventy-five degrees and intensely sunny. The desert did change with the seasons, but the transformation was very gradual: autumn was a sweet mildness in the late afternoon, a change in the quality of light, a wistful abbreviation of the day. You had to pay attention.
When I hit Indian School, the cell phone rang.
“So, David,” a woman’s voice said, “I hear you got into some trouble last night.”
“I didn’t think Pulitzer Prize winners got up this early,” I said to Lorie Pope of the Arizona Republic.
She laughed without humor. “Yeah, well, the fad-du-jour over here is re-engineering the newsroom into ‘teams,’ where we all get to rotate into the cops beat. It’s supposed to make everyone feel equal. I feel like I’m twenty-one years old again.”
“I remember when you were twenty-one.”
“And I remember you, my love,” she sighed in her husky alto. “But I digress. So what about it? A robbery downtown last night? The heroic Chief Peralta saving the distressed 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 isn’t just another body drop here in sunny Phoenix. Tell me something I can put in the paper.”
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, “You know how Peralta is. Go through the public information officer.”
“They’d just send me to that damned sheriff’s Web site for a press release.”
“Or buy me a drink off the record.”
“That interesting, huh?” she said. “So how about tonight? Or do you have plans with that X-er girlfriend, whatshername, Ashley?”
“Lindsey.”
“Whatever.”
“You ever hear about the Yarnell kidnapping?”
“Sure,” she said.
“What do you know about it?”
“You’re the historian, David. Weren’t they grandsons of Hayden Yarnell? Twin brothers, right? I think a guy was finally caught.”
“Jack Talbott,” I said. “He 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.”