A Texas Christmas. Diana Palmer
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Her next stop was Patrol South Division, in San Antonio, to talk to the arresting officer who’d taken Dunagan in for the attempted assault on a college woman a few months ago, Dave Harris. He was working that day, but was working a wreck when she phoned him. So she arranged to meet him for lunch at a nearby fast food joint.
They sat together over hamburgers and fries and soft drinks, attracting attention with his uniform and her pistol and badge, conspicuously displayed.
“We’re being watched,” she said in a dramatic tone, indicating two young women at a nearby booth.
“Oh, that’s just Joan and Shirley,” he said. He looked toward the women, waved and grinned. One of them flushed and almost knocked over her drink. He was blond and blue-eyed, nicely built, and quite handsome. He was also single. “Joan’s sweet on me,” he added in a whisper. “They know I always eat here, so they come by for lunch. They work at the print shop downtown. Joan’s a graphic artist. Very talented.”
“Nice,” she murmured, biting into the burger.
“Why are you doing a cold case?” he asked as he finished his salad and sipped black coffee.
“It ties in with a current one we’re working on,” she said, and related what Cash Grier had told her.
His dark eyebrows arched. “They never called a prime witness in the case?”
“Strange, isn’t it?” she agreed. “That would be grounds for a mistrial, I’d think, but I’ll need to talk to the city attorney’s office first. The man who was convicted has been in prison for almost a year.”
“Shame, if he’s innocent,” the patrolman replied.
“I know. Fortunately, such things don’t happen often.”
“What about the suspect in your current case?”
“A nasty bit of work,” she replied. “I can place him at the scene of the crime, and if there’s enough trace evidence to do a DNA profile, I think I can connect him with it. Her neighbors reported seeing him around her apartment the morning before the murder. If he’s guilty, I don’t want him to slip through the cracks on my watch, especially since Sergeant Marquez assigned me to the case as chief investigator.”
“Really? How many other people are helping you with the case?”
“Let’s see, right now, there’s me and one other detective that I borrowed to help question witnesses.”
He sighed. “Budget issues again?”
“Afraid so. I can manage. If I need help, the cold case unit will lend me somebody.”
“Nice group, that cold case unit.”
She smiled. “I think so, too.”
“Now about the perp,” he added, leaning forward. “This is how it went down.”
He described the scene of the assault where he’d arrested Dunagan, the persons involved, the witnesses and his own part in the arrest. Gwen made notes on her phone and saved the file.
“That’s a big help,” she told him. “Thanks.”
He smiled. “You’re very welcome.” He checked his watch. “I have to get back on patrol. Was there any other information you needed?”
“Nothing I can’t find in the file. I appreciate the summary of the case, and your thoughts on it. That really helps.”
“You’re welcome. Any time.”
“Shame about the latest victim,” she added as they got up and headed to the trash bin with their trays. “She was very pretty. Her neighbors said she went out of her way to help people in need.” She glanced at him. “We had one of your fellow officers on stakeout with us the other night. Sims.”
He paused as he dumped the paper waste and placed the tray in its stack on the refuse container top. “He’s not our usual sort of patrol officer.”
“What do you mean?” she asked, frowning.
“I really can’t say anything. It’s just that he has an interesting background. There are people in high positions with influence,” he added. He smiled. “But he’s not my problem. I think you’ll do well in the homicide unit. You’ve got a knack for sorting things out, and you’re thorough. Good luck on the case.”
“Thanks. Thanks a lot.”
He smiled. “You’re welcome.”
She drove back to the office with her brain spinning. What she’d learned was very helpful. She might crack the case, which would certainly give her points with Rick Marquez. But there was still the problem of what she knew and couldn’t tell him. She only hoped that Cash Grier would be able to break some ground with her sergeant.
Cash Grier had a thick ham sandwich with homemade fries and black coffee and then asked for a slice of Barbara’s famous apple pie and homemade ice cream.
She served it with a grin. “Don’t eat too much of this,” she cautioned. “It’s very fattening.” She was teasing, because he was still as trim as men ten years his junior, and nicely muscled.
He pursed his lips and his black eyes twinkled. “As you can see, I’m running to fat.”
She laughed. “That’ll be the day.”
He studied her quietly. “Can you sit down for a minute?”
She looked around. The lunchtime rush was over and there were only a couple of cowboys and an elderly couple in the café. “Sure.” She sat down across from him. “What can I do for you?”
He sipped coffee. “I’ve been enlisted to get some information to your son without telling him anything.”
She blinked. “That’s a conundrum.”
“Isn’t it?” He put down the coffee cup and smiled. “You’re a very intelligent woman. You must have some suspicions about his family history.”
“Thanks for the compliment. And yes, I have a lot.” She studied his hard face. “I overheard some feds who ate here talking about Dolores Ortíz and her connection to General Machado. Dolores worked for me just briefly. She was Rick’s birth mother.”
“Rick’s stepfather was a piece of work,” he said coldly. “I’ve heard plenty about him. He mistreated livestock and was fired for it on the Ballenger feedlot. Gossip is that he did the same to his stepson.”
Her face tautened. “When I first adopted him, I lifted my hand to smooth back his hair—you know,