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"Let your motor idle a little bit," he said.

"How'd you find them?"

"They were run off the road between the beer joint and Clayton Desmarteau's house. I think Mapes and Vidrine took them out of the truck at gunpoint and drove them into the woods. An old road leads off the main one and runs back to a garbage dump. They got out there and walked back to the stream. But the ground was probably covered with snow and frozen solid. I bet you could bust a pick on it in wintertime. Then they walked across a warm-water spring, where the ground stayed soft and wet year-round, and that's where they shot Desmarteau and his cousin."

"Tell me about the shell again."

"It came up in a shovelful of mud. I didn't even see it until I had stopped digging. It's bottlenecked, like a 7.62 round. Mapes has got a Tokarev. He had it in his hand at his girl's house down in the Bitterroot. I think he had it in Lafayette, too. He was trying to get to his open suitcase when I hit him with the chain. Look, it's enough for a search warrant. But it's got to be done right. You can bring the FBI in on it, let them coordinate it."

"Oh?"

"They can use kidnapping and interstate flight, or depriving a minority of his civil rights by taking his life. The locals might blow it. If Mapes gets a sniff of what's going on before they serve the warrant, he'll lose the Tokarev."

"I had to take a lot of heat because of that phone tap."

"I'm sorry."

"It hasn't quieted down yet."

"I was up against the wall. I don't know what else to tell you. You want me to hang up and call the sheriff's office?"

He waited a moment.

"No, don't do that," he said finally.

"I guess we've got a vested interest. This whole Indian thing started with Pugh, and Pugh's had a longtime involvement with Sally Dee. Give me the directions again."

I told him in detail once more. The shower had moved eastward across the fields, and rain was now clicking on the roof of the phone booth. An Indian boy on an old bicycle with fat tires rattled past me on the road, his face bent down against the rain.

"I'll call the FBI and the Teton sheriff's office," Nygurski said.

"Then I'll be out myself. I want a promise from you, though."

"What is it?"

"Other people take it from here on in. You're out of it. Absolutely."

"All right."

"I want your word. You don't go near Mapes."

"You have it, but you've got to get him with the Tokarev."

"I think you've made your point. But are you sure that's what you saw in his hand? I wonder why he didn't get rid of it."

"They were prize souvenirs in Vietnam. Besides, he always sailed out of everything he ever did."

"Where are you going to be?"

"On the road where their truck went into the ditch. We can walk in from there, or find the access road that leads back to the garbage dump."

"Did you hear anything more from Dio?"

"Nope. Except two of his goons broke Parcel's hand. He says he took a couple of gold ashtrays out of Dio's house."

"Bad guy to steal from. Purcel must not have pressed charges, because we didn't hear anything about it."

"He said something strange when I went to see him in the hospital yesterday. He said, "Our man's going to have a sandy fuck." Or maybe I misunderstood him. I think Dio has a girlfriend named Sandy. Anyway, it didn't make any sense to me."

"Where is he?"

"St. Pat's in Missoula."

"Maybe it's time we have a talk with him. I'll see you a little later this morning. In the meantime, congratulations. You're a good cop, Robicheaux. Get your badge back."

"You've been a good friend, too, Dan."

"And, lastly, keep your name out of my paperwork for a while."

I drove back up the road in the rain and parked by the stream where I had entered the woods at dawn. Then the clouds moved eastward and the rain drifted away over the land behind me, and in the distance the sheer red cliffs of the mountains rose into the tumbling plateaus of ponderosa. When I closed my eyes and laid my head back against the seat I heard robins singing in a lone cotton-wood by the stream.

The next morning I drank almost two pots of coffee and waited for the phone to ring. I had spent nearly all of the previous day at the murder site, the Teton sheriff's department, and the coroner's office. I watched three deputies finish the exhumation and put the bodies gingerly in black bags, I gave a statement to the FBI and one to the sheriff's office, I talked to the pathologist after he had opened up the brain pans of both Indians with an electric saw and had picked out the 7.62 slugs that had been fired at close range into the back of their skull. I had them contact the St. Martin Parish sheriff's office about Dixie Lee's deposition in which he claimed to have overheard Vidrine and Mapes talking about the murder of the Indians I told them where to find Mapes in the Bitterroot Valley, where his girlfriend worked in Missoula, the kind of cars he drove; I talked incessantly, until people started to walk away from me and Nygurski winked at me and said he would buy me a hamburger so I could be on my way back to Missoula.

So I drank coffee on the back steps and waited for someone to call. Dixie Lee went to work and came back in the early afternoon, and still no one had phoned.

"Ease up, boy. Let them people handle it," he said.

We were in the kitchen, and I was shining my shoes over some newspapers that I had spread on the floor.

"That's what I'm doing," I said.

"You put me in mind of a man who spent his last cent on Ex-Lax and forgot the pay toilet cost a dime."

"Give me a break on the scatology."

"The what?"

"It's not a time for humor, Dixie."

"Go to a meet. Get your mind off it. They got his butt dead-bang. You're out of it, boy."

"You have them dead-bang when you weld the door on them."

Finally I called Nygurski's office. He wasn't in, he had left no message for me, and when I called the Teton sheriff's office a deputy there refused to talk with me. I had become a spectator.

I sat down at the kitchen table and started buffing my loafers again.

"While you were gone yesterday I put all Clete's stuff in the basement," Dixie Lee said.

"Was that all right?"

"Sure."

"He'll probably get out in a couple more days. He's got one rib that's broke bad, though. The doc says he's got ulcers, too."

"Maybe he'll go back to New Orleans and get started over again."

"There was something funny in his jeep."

"What's that?" But I really wasn't listening.

"A pillowcase. With sand in it."

"Huh."

"Why would he put sand in a pillowcase?"

"I don't know."

"He must have had a reason. Clete never does anything without a reason."

"Like I say, I don't know."

"But it's funny to do something like that. What d'you think?"

"I don't care, for God's sakes. Dixie, cut me some slack, will you?"

"Sorry." ' "It's all right."

"I just thought I'd get your mind off of things."

"Okay."

"I want to see you loosen up, smile a little bit, start thinking about Louisiana, let them people handle it."

"I'll do all those things. I promise," I said, and I went into the bathroom, washed my face, then waited out on the front porch until it was time for Alafair to get out of school.

But he was right. I was wired, and I was thinking and acting foolishly. In finding the bodies of the Indians I had been far more successful than I had ever thought I would be. Even if the FBI or the locals didn't find the Tokarev, Mapes would still remain the prime suspect in the murder because of motive and Dixie Lee's testimony, and he could be discredited as a prosecution witness against me in Louisiana. No matter how it came out, it was time to pack our bags for New Iberia.