The Lies that Bind

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Authors: Judith Van Gieson

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The
Lies That Bind

A N
EIL
H
AMEL
M
YSTERY
,
#5

Judith Van Gieson

THE
LIES THAT BIND

All rights reserved.

Copyright © 1993 Judith Van Gieson.

This book may not be reproduced in whole or in part, by other means, without permission.

First ebook edition © 2013 by AudioGO.

All Rights Reserved.

Trade ISBN 978-1-62064-462-1

Library ISBN 978-0-7927-9490-5

Cover photo © Henryk84/
iStock.com

For
Claire Zieger, my mother

Never believe anything because probability is in its favor.

—S
HAKYAMUNI
B
UDDHA

There is one thing that is terrible,

and that is that everyone has his reasons.

—J
EAN
R
ENOIR
,
The Rules of the Game

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

I'm grateful to Barbara Peters, Kevin Robinson, Dale Carter, Ph.D., and Dominick Abel for their help and advice. A special thanks to attorney Alan M. Uris for so generously sharing his knowledge of the law.

Although many of the places depicted in this novel clearly exist, none of its characters represents or is based on any person, living or dead, and all the incidents described are imaginary.

The
Lies That Bind

Contents

Chapter 1

Chapter 2

Chapter 3

Chapter 4

Chapter 5

Chapter 6

Chapter 7

Chapter 8

Chapter 9

Chapter 10

Chapter 11

Chapter 12

Chapter 13

Chapter 14

Chapter 15

Chapter 16

Chapter 17

Chapter 18

Chapter 19

Chapter 20

Chapter 21

Chapter 22

Chapter 23

Chapter
24

Chapter 25

Chapter 26

Free Preview of
P
ARROT
B
LUES:
A
N
EIL
H
AMEL
M
YSTERY, #6

M
ORE
M
YSTERIES BY
J
UDITH
V
AN
G
IESON

1

I
TOOK THE
high road from Taos, speeding on the straightaways, hugging the curves, dropping down from Talpa to Nambe. The low road follows the Rio Grande. El Camino Alto, the high road, is the forest path; I was in the mood for trees and green. The cumulonimbus billowed in the big western sky; the sun reached deep into Carson National Forest and made every pine needle shimmer. A raven landed on the yellow line, flapped its wings and flew away. The tank was full of gas; the radials gripped the road. For the moment, me, my Japanese import and the highway were one. For the moment, I could almost believe that nature's laws didn't apply to me, that I'd never grow old, never get fat, never have to stop to buy gas or pee, never wake up in the night and turn on
Love Connection,
never drink Cuervo Gold, smoke Marlboros or mix up a batch of Jell-O shots ever again. I'd been in northern Rio Arriba County, the lawless county, to fight a custody battle, and I'd won. The tape that spins messages in the back of my brain spun. “You've got the power,” it said.

It was the harvest season, the time of year when red chile ristras drip from the eaves, when you get rid of the old to make way for the new. I cruised through the high mountain villages of Peñasco, Las Trampas and Truchas, where time stopped a couple of hundred years ago and they still speak Cervantes Spanish, where the air is a cool clear stream, where stone houses mark one edge of the road and mountain drop-offs the other. Take a curve wide here, and you'll end up in a living room or the cumulonimbus.

I kept my hands on the wheel, my mind on the road, turned south on 84 at Nambe. In Pojoaque I passed the Indian restaurant that serves the best chalupa compuesta in Santa Fe County, but I didn't pull in; carne adovada burritos were waiting at home. Below the Santa Fe Opera, the road began to rise again. Purple asters and yellow chamisa bloomed in the ditches beside the road. In the far distance the tip of Santa Fe Baldy was covered with snow; its lower elevations were streaked with aspen gold. At seventy-five hundred feet, La Villa Real de Santa Fe de San Francisco de Assisi opened up before me like a jewel box spilling precious stones. It was late afternoon, and the lights were twinkling on, one by one. I dropped down alongside the white crosses of the National Cemetery, cut across town on St. Francis, turned south on I-25, which follows the path of El Camino Real, the royal road, which once linked old Mexico to new.

Between Santa Fe and Albuquerque I lost two thousand feet. Out here in the land that trees forgot, it's down to basics: sky, rocks, dirt, distance. There are few wildflowers on this stretch of lonesome highway and only two distinct seasons—lots of wind and none. Fall is no wind, when the dirt stays put and tumbleweeds settle down and get an address. It was twilight, the hour, some say, between
the
dog and the wolf. The sun lit a fire over the Jemez. The southern sky got dark enough that Sirius came out and Venus too. In fifty miles I'd be home. The Kid would be at my apartment, waiting in the living room or my bed.

I pulled a tape from the glove compartment and plugged it in. Van Morrison singing about “The Days Before Rock N' Roll,” the days before America woke up from its sexual, sensual slumber. He named the early rockers: Fats, Ray Charles, Jerry Lee Lewis, Little Richard, Elvis, the guys whose songs come out of the radio at night from places like Harlingen, Texas, and Tulsa, Oklahoma, to stab you with memories. There were women in the early days of rock 'n' roll too, but not often on the radio and not on this tape. Van Morrison's heroes were all men. I remembered a singer I saw a couple of years before in L.A., a big black woman rocking her way into middle age without missing a beat, but I couldn't remember her name. Two short words, and the first one began with an
E.
That was it.

The tape played out in Bernalillo. Night fell, and Venus and Sirius got lost in Albuquerque's ambient fluorescent glow. I turned off the interstate at Montgomery, got caught at a red light. It happened to be Halloween, El Día de los Muertos, when children dress up and pretend to be what they're not. A bunch of tricksters and clowns crossed the street, carrying their loot and their cap guns in their hands on their way to a party in the Lujan School playground. Some kids playing tag beneath the playground lights cast long shadows. A blindfolded pirate was
it
and was trying to tag someone else by the sound of a voice. “Marco,” the kid yelled. “Polo,” the other kids answered. It's a game that is usually played in swimming pools in the summer. Marco Polo is the background noise of summer, if you live in a complex with kids and a swimming pool. The pirate lunged at a bunch of grapes, the grapes sidestepped, the pirate fell on his face.

The light turned green, and I stepped on the gas. Three more stoplights, and I was home. The Kid, my lover and friend, had let himself in and was sitting on my bed, drinking Tecate and watching football on TV. Realizing recently that in a woman's life TV functions like romance novels, to induce sleep, I'd moved mine to the foot of the bed.

“Hi, Kid,” I said, sitting down on the bed beside him.

“Hola, Chiquita.” He gave me a kiss.

“You're watching football?”

“Yeah.”

“Why?”

“It's Monday night.” He shrugged. “Why not?”

The function of TV in a man's life is football. I'd always thought that one advantage to having a Latin American lover is that Latin Americans are not as obsessed with brute sports as American men. The Kid's game—soccer—is more delicate and subtle. The players aren't padded like gorillas, either, which
makes
it more fun to watch. The Kid has long, powerful soccer legs that are outstanding in shorts and were not bad stretched out in jeans on my bed. He'd been playing since he was a boy in Argentina and knew how to keep the ball in the air all afternoon if he wanted to. I watched him sometimes on the playing fields at Arroyo del Oso, bouncing the ball off his thighs and his head.

I made myself comfortable, picked up the remote and zapped off the TV.

“I was watching the game, Chiquita,” the Kid said.

“I hate football,” said I.

“I want to see if the Cowboys win.”

“It's a replay. The score is in the paper.”

“That's not the same as watching.”


I
won,” I said. So it wasn't the Supreme Court, but Ramona Chávez would get to keep her daughter and I had won. In Rio Arriba County too, where the law doesn't win that often.

“Good. I'm happy for you. Can I watch the game now?”

“No.” I held tight to the remote.

The look he gave me was semi-annoyed, but he was getting my drift. Power, it has been said, is the greatest aphrodisiac, and absolute power turns on absolutely. So does only a little bit. “You want to do
that
?” the Kid asked me.

“Yup.”

“Now?”

“Right now.” I reached across the bed and took the phone off the hook.

“Okay,” he said.

******

Later we got up and ate the carne adovada burritos he'd brought. As usual these days, there were two extras in the bag. “For La Bailarina?” I asked, mentioning his favorite lost cause.


Claro
,” said the Kid.

While he took them outside to the parking lot, I got ready for bed.

“I think it's going to rain soon,” he said when he came back in.

“Rain? In October?”

He shrugged. “I think so.”

As soon as we got into bed, the thunder cracked and drops began to pelt the window. Rainy nights are one of life's great pleasures, especially when you're in your bed. We don't get many of them in the Duke City and hardly ever in October. I thought about the raindrops pounding the tin roof of the car that sheltered La Bailarina in the parking lot, but I didn't feel guilty because I knew that even if the Kid had
tried
to coax her inside, she wouldn't have come. The parking lot was where she chose to be—on the outside but near enough to be looking in. She'd stay dry, I thought, but the trick-or-treaters would get soaking wet. It would drive them indoors—the tamer ones anyway. The troublemakers would still be out there. The Kid's breathing got slow and regular as he drifted into sleep. I punched his shoulder before he wandered too far down that lonesome highway.

“You awake, Kid?”

“Umm,” he mumbled.

“I want to ask you something.”


Dígame
.”

“Do you think I'd be any happier if I had a big car? If I went to work for a prestigious firm and made real money?”

“I think you're happy just the way you are.”

Lightning flashed, exposing one dark peak of the Sandias, then another. A large woman rocked her way across a stage in L.A.

“Etta,” I said.

“Who?”

“Etta James.” It was the name that had gotten lost in the back alleys of my brain, the name of the early woman rock-and-roller.

“Who's that?”

One disadvantage of having a Latino lover, and one who is younger besides, is that you don't know the same music. You can't push a button and call up the past by naming a singer or a song.


Nada
,” I said. “Forget it.”

******

When the alarm went off at seven-thirty, my first thought was that Eddie Chávez had tested the law and I had won. My second thought was that I had the power all over again. “You awake, Kid?” I whispered. He wasn't, but I kissed his shoulder and woke him. After
that
we slept again until the sun burst through the drapes and landed on my face. The red numbers on the digital clock flashed 8:45. “Shit,” I said, sitting upright. “I'll be late for my nine o'clock.”

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