her back pockets, her eyes not quite focusing on mine.
“I thought we were. I didn’t know a whole lot back then,” I replied.
“Don’t let a prissy buttwipe like Deitrich get to you.”
“He doesn’t.”
“Oh, I can see that,” she said.
“I told him the witnesses I’d use against him. Not too cool,” I said.
She kept her expression flat and let her eyes slip off my face.
“Why would he try to involve me in his real estate and tax problems down in Houston?” I said.
“He wants to buy your good name.” When I didn’t reply, she said, “He hangs heads on walls. You were in the saddle with his wife. Stop thinking like a tree stump.”
Two days later the sheriff, Hugo Roberts, telephoned the office and asked me to walk across the street. “What for?” I asked.
“Got a man in here tells quite a story. Maybe you ought to hear it, counselor,” he said.
“I’m busy, Hugo,” I said.
“You gonna be a lot less busy when this ole boy blows your defense for Wilbur Pickett out the water.” He was still laughing, wheezing with pleasure, when he hung up the phone.
The sheriff’s office was behind the courthouse in the original sandstone and log jail that had been built when Deaf Smith was a frontier village in the 1870s. Hugo Roberts had not been elected but promoted into the office after his predecessor was murdered with an ax last year. He was pear-shaped, potbellied, and smoked constantly, even though one of his lungs had already been surgically removed. When I entered his office, the air was layered with smoke, the light through the windows a sickly yellow. Hugo sat behind a huge oak desk; the log walls were festooned with antique guns and the black-and-white photos of convicts our county had sent to Huntsville for electrocution or death by injection.
Hugo leaned back in his swivel chair, one booted leg on his desk, and aimed a finger at a tall, rawboned man with sideburns and a drooping left eyelid who sat in a straight-back chair with a straw hat hooked on one finger.
“This here is Bubba Grimes,” Hugo said. He sucked on his cigarette and blew a plume of smoke into the air. “Picked up Bubba for smashing beer bottles against the side of Shorty’s last night. Why would you do something like that, Bubba?”
“Hell, I don’t know. Seemed kind of dull. The music on the jukebox would make a corpse stop up his ears,” the man named Grimes said. His skin was grained and coarse and it creased like a lizard’s when he grinned.
“Tell Billy Bob what you told us,” Hugo said, and rested his eyes on me with anticipation.
“Ain’t much to it. Last Thursday I got a call from Wilbur Pickett. He said he had a mess of bearer bonds he wanted to get rid of. Said he was calling from the IGA pay phone by his house,” Grimes said.
“Why would he call you in particular?” I asked.
“I do a few investments for folks, mostly for working people don’t trust banks or brokerages. Not the kind of transaction Pickett had in mind, though. That’s what I told him, too—to take his business somewheres else,” Grimes said.
“We already checked with the phone company. There was a call made Thursday afternoon from the IGA to Mr. Grimes’s home in Austin,” Hugo said.
Grimes wore alligator boots, western-cut, striped slacks, and a dark blue shirt with roses sewn on it. The skin around his drooping left eye looked dead, like a synthetic graft, and I couldn’t tell if the eye had vision in it or not.
“I know your name from somewhere,” I said.
“I’m a pilot. Out of the country most of the time. I doubt we’ve met,” he replied.
“It’ll come to me,” I said.
“Billy Bob was a Texas Ranger and an assistant U.S. attorney. Got a memory like flypaper,” Hugo said. A column of dirty sunlight fell on his desk. His hand, which was round and small and the color of a cured tobacco leaf on the blotter, cupped a cigarette whose smoke leaked through his fingers. He grinned at me, his lips purple