social media trials and summary public executions.â
She cupped my face with her hands and kissed me. That always took away the darkness and made our little oasis a bright and hopeful place.
Afterward, we had cocktails, Beefeater martinis, stirred, with olives. It was one of our healing rituals against the crazy place that began outside the property line, where the voters were such fools that they had kicked my friend out of office. Cocktail time was sacred.
As we watched the last light outside the picture window, I told her what some sleep had enabled me to realize. I had kept saying that this was an ordinary diamond run. But it actually wasnât.
âThere were two guards, not one. In the past, Peralta had gone alone.â
I didnât know much about this part of our business, only that it was good money, plus the background that Peralta had given me.
Up until about 2000, the jewelers themselves had transported the diamonds. That stopped after a couple of robberies, including one where some Colombians had murdered a jeweler in the lobby of a Florida hotel and took his suitcase.
After that, many jewelers set up armed security teams in every state that picked up the diamonds, took them to the shows, and returned them to the jeweler at the airport.
But some firms hired two local guards to meet the jeweler at the airport outside the secure areaâwhere they could still carry their weapons. They would take the diamonds, worth anywhere from three hundred thousand to a million dollars, to Kay, Zales, and other stores for special shows. Then they would return them to the jeweler, waiting safely at the airport.
âThe companies didnât mind losing a guard but they didnât want to lose a jeweler.â
Then, around 2005, they cut back to one guard, I told Lindsey. A few months after we became private detectives, Peralta won a contract from Markovitz & Sons to transport diamonds in the Phoenix area. The most recent job before yesterday had been to take special-show diamonds to an invitation-only event at the Royal Palms Resort. Peralta told me Charlie Keating had been there.
âDonât forget the âsavings-and-loan kingpinâ part,â she said.
âPeralta said Charlie was still complaining that the feds wouldnât pay for his knee replacement when he was incarcerated in Lompoc.â
That transport had gone according to standard procedure. Peralta took the suitcase back to Sky Harbor and handed it to the jeweler, who went back into the secure area and discreetly examined the contents. I only knew the details because Peralta wanted to tell his Charlie Keating story.
âBut this time it was two guards,â she said.
âThatâs what the FBI told me. I assumed Peralta was going alone.â
Lindsey asked who had provided the second guard. I didnât know. Mann had told me that he was a private investigator.
âWho Peralta shot.â
âWinged,â I said.
âI can find out who he is.â
âLindsey, your computer snooping worries me.â
âNobody can catch me, Dave. Trust me.â
I knew she was the best. She had been the star of Peraltaâs cybercrimes unit and then she had spent a year in Washington working for Homeland Security. It still concerned me. The FBI would be all over us and in ways we couldnât tell.
She distracted me by suggesting fajitas for dinner. We sliced onions and peppers together in the kitchen. I made guacamole. Then I grilled the veggies, steak, and chicken inside the old chimneria in the backyard while she warmed the tortillas in the oven and assembled the salsa, shredded cheese, and sour cream.
I was way too full and loving it when Lindsey said, âI found Matt Pennington.â
Before I could learn more, the front door registered a knock. Three loud thumps. Whoever it was didnât bother to use the wrought-iron knocker.
Maybe it was a neighbor. Maybe it was the tamale women selling
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