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Joanna Brady #10
Avon
July 2003
Featuring: Jonas Piedmont Beaumont
400 pages
ISBN: 0380804700
EAN: 9780380804702
Paperback (reprint)
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Chapter One
As Sheriff Joanna Brady drove through the last thicket of
mesquite, the house at High Lonesome Ranch lay dark and
still under a rising moon. Usually her daughter Jenny's
two dogs -- Sadie, a bluetick hound, and Tigger, a half
golden retriever/half pit-bull mutt -- would have bounded
through the undergrowth to meet her. This time, Joanna
surmised, they had chosen to accompany Butch on his
appointment with the contractor at the site of the new
house they were planning to build a mile or so away.
Butch had bugged out of St. Dominick's immediately after
the service, while he and Joanna waited for the sanctuary
to empty. "I'll stay if you want," he had whispered. "But
I really need to go."
"Right," she had told him. "You do what you have to. I'll
be fine."
"I'll stop by the house and do the chores first," he
said. "Don't worry about that."
Joanna had simply nodded. "Thanks," she said.
By then Yolanda Ortiz Cañedo's grieving husband, her two
young sons, her parents, brothers and sister were walking
out of the church through two lines of saluting officers
made up of both police and fire department personnel.
Joanna could barely stand to watch. It was all too
familiar, too close to her own experience. As her green
eyes filled with tears, Joanna glanced away, only to catch
sight of the prisoners. That forlorn group -- eleven
county prisoners, freshly barbered and dressed in civilian
clothes -- stood in respectful silence, under the watchful
eyes of two jail guards and Ted Chapman, the executive
director of the Cochise County Jail Ministry.
Ted had come to Joanna's office the day after the young
jail matron had died of cervical cancer at a hospice
facility in Tucson. "Some of the inmates would like to go
to the services," Chapman had said. "Yolanda Cañedo did a
lot of good around here. She really cared about the guys
she worked with, and it showed. She helped me get the jail
literacy program going, and she came in during off-hours
to give individual help to prisoners who were going after
GEDs. Some of the people she helped -- inmates who have
already been released -- will be there on their own, but
the ones who are still in lockup wanted me to ask if they
could go, too. The newer prisoners, the ones who came in
after Yolanda got sick, aren't included, of course. They
have no idea who she was or what she did."
"What about security?" Sheriff Brady had asked. "Who's
going to stand guard?"
"I already have two volunteers who will come in on their
day off," Chapman answered. "You have my word of honor,
along with that of the prisoners, that there won't be any
trouble."
Joanna thought about how good some of the jail inmates'
words of honor might be. But then she also had to consider
the notebook full of greetings -- handmade by jail
inmates -- that the Reverend Chapman had brought to
Yolanda and her family as the young woman had lain gravely
ill in the Intensive Care Unit at University Medical
Center in Tucson. Sheriff Brady had been touched by the
heartfelt sincerity in all those clumsily pasted-together
cards. Several of them had been made by men able to sign
their own names at the bottom of a greeting card for the
very first time. Other cards had names printed by someone
else under scrawled Xs. Their good wishes had seemed
genuine enough back then. Now, so did the Reverend
Chapman's somewhat unorthodox request.
"How many inmates are we talking about?" Joanna had asked.
"Fourteen."
"Any of them high-risk?"
"I don't think so."
"Give me the list," Joanna had conceded at last. "I'm not
making any promises, but I'll run the proposition by the
jail commander and see what he has to say."
In the end, eleven of the proposed inmates had been
allowed to attend the service. in his eulogy, Father
Morris had spoken of Yolanda Cañedo as a remarkable young
woman. Certainly the presence of that solemn collection of
inmates bore witness to that. And, as far as Joanna could
tell, the prisoners' behavior had been nothing short of
exemplary.
They stood now in a single straight row. With feet splayed
apart and hands clasped behind their backs, they might
have been a troop of soldiers standing at ease. Seeing
them there, dignified and silent in the warm afternoon
sun, Joanna was glad she had vetoed the jail commander's
suggestion that they attend the funeral wearing handcuffs
and shackles.
Chief Deputy Frank Montoya came up behind her then. "Hey,
boss," he whispered in her car. "They're putting the
casket into the hearse. Since we're supposed to be
directly behind the family cars, we'd better mount up."
Nodding, Joanna left the inmates to the care of the two
guards and Ted Chapman and walked back toward Frank's
waiting Crown Victoria. Even in heels, the five-foot-four
sheriff felt dwarfed as she made her way through the crush
of uniformed officers. A light breeze riffled her short
red hair.
"Looks like the members of Reverend Chapman's flock are
behaving themselves." her chief deputy observed, as he
started the Civvie's engine.
"So far so good," Joanna agreed.
"But they're not coming to the cemetery?"
Joanna shook her head. "No. Having them at the church is
one thing, but going to the cemetery is something else. If
there's any confusion, I was afraid one or more of them
might slip away."
"You've got that right," Frank agreed. "We don't need to
give your friend Ken Junior anything else to piss and moan
about."
"Since when does he need a reason?" Joanna returned.
Ken junior, otherwise known as Deputy Kenneth Galloway,
was Sheriff Brady's current problem child. He was the
nephew and namesake of another Deputy...