challenged men. Then again, Abel must have become used to it once he moved away.
Maybe that was why heâd returned to the compound.
He sputtered for a few seconds, then leaned over my desk, not noticing Jimmy rise quietly from his chair and begin toward him. âTell me where my daughter is or Iâllâ¦â
âGet your skinny white ass out of this office before I party on it.â Jimmy stood right behind him.
Abel Corbett twirled around and for a moment, it looked like he was going to throw a punch. But after taking note of Jimmyâs own height and considerably heavier bulk, he obviously thought better of it.
âThe lawâs on my side,â he squeaked, as he backed away from my partner.
I motioned toward the door. âLeave.â
He looked at me, then at Jimmy. He left.
âOh, Jimmy, what are we going to do?â My voice trembled, but I didnât care.
Jimmy thought a moment, then said, âI have this cousin, Donny, heâs in one of the reservation gangs, the Rez Bloods. His posse could take care of Abel for us.â
I didnât say anything. For a long while, neither did Jimmy. Then he sat back down and put his head in his hands. When he finally looked back up at me, he said, âWell, weâve got to do something.â
âYeah.â
He turned back to his computer and tapped fitfully at it. I tried to immerse myself in paperwork, but the names and numbers jumbled together until they looked like Cyrillic.
I studied them for probably another half hour, then gave up.
âJimmy?â
He turned around so quickly I knew heâd had the same trouble concentrating. âWhat?â
âI have to go back to Utah. The only way to prove Esther didnât murder Solomon Royal is for me to find out who did it. That Benson clown certainly wonât.â
To my surprise, Jimmy nodded. âIâll go with you.â
Shaking my head, I said, âWeâre in the middle of several investigations here, including that damned firebug and the microchip thefts. Someone has to handle them.â
He nodded. âThen take Dusty. That place is too dangerous for a woman alone.â
I rolled my eyes. âOh, please, not you, too. Besides, I havenât been able to reach Dusty for days. Thatâs why Iâll need a special favor from you. You used to live in Utah and you still have contacts up there.â
âYeah, my parents, for instance.â You donât often get a chance to hear a Pima turn sarcastic on you, but when they do, it can be cutting.
âThen help me find a place to stay near the compound, someplace even closer than the motel. But not Paiute Canyon. I have no way of knowing how much time itâll take me to figure out this mess, and Iâll need access to a phone and other modern conveniences. Hell, if you can somehow get me into the compound, that would be ideal.â
He scowled, another Pima rarity.
âJimmy? If you wonât help me, do it for Rebecca. And Esther.â
He picked up the phone.
Chapter 5
Jimmy worked his magic again, and two days later I was on my way back to the Arizona Strip.
The drive up I-17 toward Flagstaff was pleasant, watching the low Sonoran Desert evolve slowly to high chaparral, then miles and miles of sweet-scented Ponderosa pine. But once I turned out of Flagstaff on Route 89 to circumvent the Grand Canyon, the terrain morphed back into high desert. By the time Iâd looped around the canyon, took 89A over the mountains, then dropped back down to the Kaibab Indian Reservation, the scenery looked as bleak as the Sonoran on a very bad day.
Then the scenery flipped on me again when I cut north on 389 into Utah and headed up toward Zion National Park and West Wind Guest Ranch. As the Jeep bumped along the long dirt road leading to the ranch, I remembered what Iâd read about the area.
Rivaling the nearby Grand Canyon in beauty, Zion National Park had originally been home
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