An hour ago, in the dining hall behind the two dormitory buildings, the students’ thumbs had been a blur of motion over their phones. They hadn’t stopped texting until the van left cell-phone range on the drive into the mountains. “You know as well as I do,” Chuck told Clarence, “the kids would’ve spent the day tweeting and texting like mad.” He shoved his hand back in his jacket pocket. “No telling what Sartore’s going to make of it all.”
“As if he doesn’t already know.”
“I texted him.” Chuck hadn’t received a response from the professor before they’d left phone range. “I’ll call him as soon as we’re back this afternoon.”
Clarence clambered over a waist-high boulder protruding from the middle of the unimproved trail. “Sartore’s not the only one you’re avoiding today. What about Janelle?”
“Rosie was fine this morning, like last night never happened.”
“Except it did happen.” Clarence spun from the boulder and headed on down the trail. “You know Jan’s not at all okay with your coming up here today.”
Chuck threw his leg over the boulder. “She’s got the truck. The doctor said she could bring Rosie back for another look, no charge, if she needed to. But he was pretty clear that everything was okay. Said it was just a virus.” Chuck continued despite himself: “Young guy. Tall, blond hair, blue eyes. Very accommodating.”
“Ready to swoop in, was he?”
“I’m still not used to it.”
“Digame, hombre. Every dude lays eyes on her, it’s like they want to swallow her whole. Even now, with the ring on her finger. Objectification, isn’t that what they call it?”
“Ooo. Big word.” Chuck pushed himself off the boulder and followed Clarence along the trail. “You’d know all about that, wouldn’t you? What with all your pretty little objects.”
“Hey,” Clarence retorted. “We’re talking about my sister here.” He toed a loose piece of granite off the trail. “That’s how you won her over, you know. She was a person to you from day one.”
Chuck spun the gold band on his finger. “Still is. A fire-breathing one. And yes, I know full well I’m risking my life coming up here this morning.”
“Then why are we here?”
Chuck sighed. How could he admit to Clarence his real reason for adhering to schedule today? How could he confess to being that self-centered?
For the past two decades, as founder, CEO, and sole fulltime employee of Bender Archaeological, Inc., Chuck had bid for and worked archaeological assessment contracts on his own or, on occasion, with the temporary help of recent anthropology school graduates such as Clarence. Chuck’s contracts involved surveying and excavating sites of potential archaeological significance destined for development on federal, state, and Indian reservation lands. He left Durango for weeks at a time to complete the field portion of his work before returning home to prepare his final reports, cataloging the thousands of ancient artifacts he dug up and preserved on behalf of his clients before the bulldozers moved in.
Chuck’s work had provided him a decent living—and no small amount of notoriety within archaeological circles for his many significant discoveries over the years—straight through to the day a year and a half ago when his then-temp worker, Clarence, had introduced him to Janelle. Four months later, after a whirlwind courtship and Albuquerque City Hall marriage, Chuck discovered upon heading back out on the road that the satisfaction he’d once found in working alone in the field had disappeared. Instead, he ached for the companionship Janelle and the girls gave him, missed the cacophony they brought to his former solitary existence.
Clarence turned his head when Chuck didn’t respond. “I asked you a question, boss.”
Chuck looked past Clarence at the students—the six male members of Team Nugget and six women on Team Paydirt—as they made their way along the trail.
Silver-haired Ernesto Sartore, Chuck’s anthropology professor two decades ago at Fort Lewis College in Durango, had called in April from out of the blue to offer Chuck a job running a group of students through Fort Lewis’ eight-week field school in historical archaeology at the site of long-abandoned Cordero Mine, high in Rocky Mountain National Park.
“You’re the top graduate our School of Anthropology has ever produced,” Sartore told Chuck. “All your published papers, your finds displayed in museums across the country—you’re our rock star.”
“I’m not so sure about that,” Chuck demurred, pleased by the unexpected praise from Sartore, with whom he hadn’t been in contact for years.
He accepted Sartore’s offer when Janelle agreed to bring the girls and spend the summer with him in Estes Park, thanks to her scheduled summer leave from the school receptionist position she’d found upon moving to Durango after their marriage last fall. Chuck called Parker, an old high-school buddy from Durango, and secured the secluded cabin at the back of the Y of the Rockies complex for himself, Janelle, and the girls, and use of Raven House for the students, with Clarence and Kirina providing live-in supervision.
Upon the start of the field school in June, Chuck, for the first time in his life, experienced the satisfaction of coming home to family at the end of each work day, and his insistence on sticking to schedule this morning was born of that contentment. He’d brought the students up into the mountains as planned today despite—or, more accurately, because of—last night’s events; he wanted to assure no glitches during the final three days of the program put his plan to run another field school for Sartore next year at risk—he wanted to spend another contented summer with Janelle and the girls.
“You agree with Parker?” Chuck asked Clarence, changing the subject. “You think the thing with the blood isn’t that big a deal?”
Clarence stopped and faced Chuck in the middle of the trail. “Tell you the truth, more than the blood itself, what really confuses me is the anonymous phone call.”
Parker had told Chuck, and Chuck had told Clarence, that a 911 emergency phone bolted to a post in the grass fields at the center of the compound had been used in the middle of the night to alert the police to “something suspicious” next to Raven House. According to Parker, the unknown caller had spoken with a muffled voice, likely through a cloth wrapped around the receiver to avoid leaving fingerprints.
Clarence continued, “Somebody comes across some blood on the ground? That I can buy: a cook or dishwasher from Falcon House gets his hands on some chicken blood from the kitchen and dumps it on the ground—gross out your buddies, trick them into walking through it in the dark, snap a pic and put it online, whatever.”
“Sounds like something you’d do.”
“Sure. But if I did, I wouldn’t call the cops about it. And if someone else saw it on the ground and felt the need to report it, why’d they work so hard to hide who they were?”
“Maybe if they were tricked into stepping in the blood,” Chuck theorized, “and they wanted to get the person who did it in trouble without getting in any hot water themselves.”
“The whole thing’s strange, you ask me. Those cops, though?” Clarence blew a derisive jet of air through his lips.
“What about them?”
“So serious. They stayed till dawn—for a puddle of blood.”
“It’s Estes Park, population what, five thousand? Their whole careers are spent dealing with jaywalkers, shoplifters, people going thirty in a school zone. This is big stuff for them.”
“Still. Crime scene tape? Spotlights? All the pictures they took? I’m telling you, if this had happened in the South Valley, the cops wouldn’t even have shown up.”
“You saw me talking to the guy in charge, Hemphill, the one I heard on