Authors: James D. Doss
Combined with the light rain, this sudden silence enhanced the escalating sense of gloom.
As the tires whispered along the wet streets, Sarah began to feel sorry for the pleasant young man, and ashamed of her self-centered behavior. By way of apology, she made this observation: “It’s a very pretty pickup, Mr. Kydmann. And it runs really smooth.” She appended this addendum: “You did a very nice job on it.”
“Why thank you, Sarah.” The driver’s smile went off like a flashbulb in a coal mine.
To show her approval, Daisy patted Sarah on the knee.
The teenager resorted to stern self-examination:
I’m not a kid anymore. It’s time I started acting like a grown-up.
With
this resolution, Miss Melancholy began to feel measurably better. She assured herself that by and by, things were going to be just fine.
More precisely, GCPD Officers Eddie “Rocks” Knox and E. C. “Piggy” Slocum. On this rainy evening in Granite Creek, they constituted one half of the on-duty law-enforcement staff. When the newly painted red pickup passed, both cops took a hard look at the license plate. As Piggy jotted the number down on his duty pad, Knox said, “Is that who we think it is?”
“Uh-huh. And he’s got a couple a passengers.”
“Well would you look at that.” Knox shook his head. “That reckless cowpuncher just run a red light.”
“Looked yaller to me.”
“Pig—if I say that light was red, it was
red.
”
“Okay, Rocks.” Piggy had aimed a portable radar transponder at the pickup. “Mr. Radar says he’s doin’ thirty-nine in a thirty-five zone.”
“The man is a danger to innocent pedestrians and law-abiding motorists.”
Officer Slocum jutted his double chin. “Then let’s go get ’im.”
Knox turned the headlights on, eased unit 240 out of the alley, hung back about a block behind the pickup.
Big Rhubarb
Jerome Kydmann, who could see a coyote a mile away on a twilight prairie, had spotted the police car as he passed the dark alley and was eyeing it in the rearview mirror. As he eased the pickup into Granite Creek’s downtown business district, the black-and-white suddenly picked up speed, closed on him. When the red and blue lights began to flash, he didn’t even blink. And he didn’t slow down. When the siren made a gut-wrenching yelp-yelp that caused Sarah to practically jump off the seat, the driver’s heart did not miss a beat. A thin, ready-for-action smile creased his youthful face.
Cool customer, the Kyd.
Neither was Daisy Perika alarmed.
Sarah Frank, who had been intermittently hugging her cat all the way from Daisy’s remote home at the mouth of Cañón del Espíritu, squeezed Mr. Zig-Zag so hard that the poor animal let out a yowl. “What was that?”
Daisy snorted. “Your dumb cat.”
“No, I mean behind us.”
“Nothin’ to worry about.” The Kyd sneered. “Just some cops.”
When they were about even with the Silver Mountain Hotel, the siren yelped again.
Kydmann pulled the truck to the curb.
Sarah turned to squint at the flashing lights. “What’s wrong?”
“Who knows?” As the black-and-white pulled in behind him, Kydmann cut the ignition. “Maybe I got a taillight out.” In the mirror mounted on the driver’s door, he watched Eddie Knox and E. C. “Piggy” Slocum emerge from their unit, approach the pickup from both sides. He lowered his window and advised Daisy to do the same, which she did.
Knox’s broad, muscular frame blocked Kydmann’s open window.
Piggy used a five-cell flashlight to illuminate the inside of the cab.
Daisy swatted at it. “Don’t you shine that thing in my eyes!”
The chubby cop withdrew the flashlight.
Knox addressed Kydmann as if the well-known Columbine cowboy were a stranger. “Sir, could I please see your driver’s license and registration?”
The driver produced the requested items, gave them to the cop.
Knox shone a penlight on the documents, returned them. “Sir, you was violating the posted speed limit. And you ran a red light.”
“I didn’t know I was speeding, Eddie. But if you say I was, I won’t argue. But I’m
danged
sure I didn’t run no traffic light.”
“I saw you do it.” Knox stuck his face halfway into the cab. “You callin’ me a liar?”
“Naw, Eddie—I wouldn’t do that. Let’s just say you made a mistake.”
“And just what’s
that
supposed to mean?”
From the expression on his face, it looked like the Kyd was getting steamed. “Maybe you’re a little bit color-blind.”
“Now I don’t like the sound of that remark!”
“Okay—then try this on for size: You’re incompetent.”
Knox’s reply was barely above a whisper. “What did you say?”
“You’re an incompetent
boob
—and you don’t hear so good. Maybe it’s time you retired, Eddie.”
“That does it, big-mouth—haul your butt outta the truck!”
The cops on both sides opened the doors.
The Kyd came out swinging. His right hook barely missed Knox’s head but came close enough to knock the copper’s hat off.
Energized by this example, Daisy let out a wild-eyed war whoop and took a healthy whack with her wooden staff, which landed on Piggy’s shoulder.
Sarah screamed, hugged her cat so hard that his eyes popped.
MUCH MORE
could be said about the Kyd and Knox struggling and scuffling in the wet street, Daisy getting bear-hugged by Piggy whilst aiming vicious kicks that just missed landing on the copper’s shins, about Sarah’s frightful wails—but to avoid dwelling on gratuitously violent details, we shall skip approximately thirty-eight seconds of the scandalous encounter and fast-forward to the point where the hardy law-enforcement officers have prevailed.
AS KNOX
frog-marched the Wyoming Kyd into the lobby of the Silver Mountain Hotel, the cowboy’s hands were pinned behind his back, his wrists restrained with plastic “handcuffs.”
Officer Slocum was close behind, helping Daisy up the curb. For this favor, she whacked him one on the leg with her walking stick. Piggy snatched the club away, deftly restrained the old woman with plastic strips on her wrists.
Sarah Frank, who had snatched her cat from the pickup (which was to be impounded by GCPD!) was yowling, weeping copiously.
As soon as the arrestees were in the hotel lobby, where a few well-dressed guests and gape-mouthed employees viewed the vulgar scene with no little alarm, Knox stood Daisy and
the Kyd back-to-back, used another plastic strip to fasten their wrists firmly together, and bellowed, “That oughta hold you!”
Sarah warned the police officers that if either one of them so much as laid another finger on Aunt Daisy she would scratch his eyes out. They knew she meant it and she dang well did—
literally.
We are talking two pairs of cop eyeballs dangling on optic nerves—gouged-out eye sockets oozing blood! Sarah had not been so flat-out furious since a sly-eyed old coyote had attempted to kill and eat her cat. Matter of fact, she was even angrier than that.
Officer Knox put in a radio call to GCPD dispatch, requested a female officer to assist with the arrest of a “hostile offender” of the same gender. (Watch his happy face droop into a petulant scowl as he is informed by the dispatcher—loud enough for bystanders to hear—that no officers are available.) Worse still, he was advised that he and Officer Slocum were to respond
immediately
to a silent alarm at the Cattleman’s Bank and Trust. The policeman shouted at the dispatcher, “What’ll I do with these prisoners we just arrested?” Secure them as best as you can, he was advised, and (though not precisely in these words) to make haste to the Cattleman’s Bank and Trust.
BEFORE HE
and Slocum left to put the kibosh a possible bank robbery in progress, Knox used still more plastic strips to fasten the glowering Indian and her red-faced cowboy partner to a sturdy iron gate that deterred thieves’ access to a small room where guests’ luggage was temporarily stored. After the policemen had departed, the hotel lobby was so quiet that a local used-car salesman insisted that he had
actually heard
a bit of cigar ash fall onto the two-inch-thick red carpet: “Cross my heart and hope to die—it made a kinda little
puff.
”
Daisy broke the silence with this command: “Sarah, reach into my purse and get my keys.”
Though puzzled about how keys might be of any use in the
present situation, the girl complied. On the brass ring, in addition to a quarter pound of mostly useless old brass keys, was a Swiss Army knife with black handles. Aha! Sarah opened the scissors and attempted to cut the plastic handcuffs. No dice.
Daisy explained that while the little scissors were fine for small jobs, such as trimming a cat’s whiskers, they were not up to this task. Sarah opened the blade. No problemo. In about three and a half jiffies, the deed was done and the alleged felons were free as the prairie breeze singing in the piñon trees.
Seeing as how Officer Knox had relieved him of the ignition keys, the Kyd revealed his intention to “go hot-wire the pickup.” The escapee advised his female conspirators to lie low until he honked the horn, then to hit the street at a dead run, pile into the F-150, and hang on for dear life. He aimed to aim the mountain lion hood ornament toward the Columbine and “not stop for flash floods, earthquakes, or tornadoes!”
Daisy shook her head, said that she had not lived so many years just to get killed dead by a reckless cowboy who was more likely to wrap that red truck around a telephone pole than get them safely to Charlie Moon’s ranch. She and Sarah would get away the best they could. If they hitchhiked back to her home on the res, the Ute police would protect them from such bone heads as Knox and Slocum, which paleface
matukach
cops didn’t have no whatchamacallit (jurisdiction) on the res.
After the Kyd wished the spunky womenfolk luck and showed them his back, Sarah Frank voiced her opinion that the ladies’ room was a good place to lie low while they figured out what to do next. Daisy, who had urgent need of the facility, agreed, and as soon as her bladder was relieved, she announced that she was awfully hungry and determined to find some eats that would stick to her ribs. Maybe a bean burrito with lots of cheese.
Absolutely desperate to be elsewhere, and quickly, Sarah suggested that they could find something nutritious at a convenience store in Durango or Ignacio.
Daisy’s appetite could not wait. Accompanied by Sarah (who was protesting that they should be a long way from the
hotel when the police returned) and the male cat (who was purring contentedly), the Ute elder marched out of the ladies’ room, straight across the hotel lobby, and right up to the entrance to the Gold Nugget Ballroom, where a tastefully lettered sign advised potential customers that the dining-dancing area was currently reserved for members of the Rocky Mountain Birdwatchers’ Society. Daisy addressed a tall, well muscled, immaculately dressed man whose apparent assignment was to discourage hungry diners from entering. “Hi ya, spud. Take us to a nice table.”
Pierre Brigance raised his clefted chin an extra notch. “Excuse me, madam, but I am obliged to inquire—are you a bona fide birdwatcher?”