Camish said, “You mean like paying taxes?”
“Yeah, I guess,” Joe said, grateful it was dark so no one could see him flush. “Folks can’t expect services and programs without paying for them somehow.”
Camish said, “Why the hell should we pay for things we don’t want and don’t get? Why should the government take our money and our property and give it to other people? What the hell kind of place has this become?”
Joe said, “It’s not that bad or that simple. This whole mountain range, for example. It’s managed by the U.S. Forest Service, a government agency. Taxes pay for that.”
“We do our part,” Camish said. “We keep the riffraff out.”
Caleb snorted a laugh.
Joe said, “You boys vandalized some vehicles and scared the hell out of some campers. Not to mention that elk you took.”
Joe saw a flash of anger in Camish’s eyes. He didn’t even look at Caleb, hoping Nate had him covered. Camish said, “We did that to keep people away. To spook ’em. We didn’t want to have to hurt somebody or take things too far, so we laid down a marker: Leave us alone. It’s our way of managing the place. We didn’t disturb or hurt anything that was perfect. Fish, deer, elk—whatever. If anything, we helped cull the herd. That’s management, too. It just ain’t done by bureaucrats sitting on their asses. Like the Forest Service, you know? Or you guys.”
Joe could feel Nate’s eyes on the side of his face, but he didn’t look over.
Instead, Joe said, “Diane Shober. Tell me about her.”
“Yeah,” Camish said. “I was expecting you might have recognized her that night. She thought so, too.”
Joe waited. He looked up and realized Caleb was trying to tell Camish something with his eyes. Caleb looked distressed.
Camish said, “I won’t get too far into it, but Diane felt like she needed a refuge, too. So we offered her one.”
Joe said, “I find that hard to believe.”
Camish said, “Believe whatever the hell you want. But sometimes it’s hard to see how much pressure is being put on a person. And how it’s pretty damned nice to find a place where no one expects you to live up to a certain standard.”
“Her fiancé?” Joe said.
“Yeah, him. But especially Daddy,” Camish said. “That man expected one whole hell of a lot. He lived his life through her, but she can’t stand him. He’s one of those parasites. He got rich taking other people’s property and money. We’d tangled before. She knew we didn’t like or respect the man. She knew we’d help her out.”
Joe nodded his head. “You had a common enemy,” he said, echoing Marybeth’s words.
“’Course we did,” Camish said. “He’s the developer who got our family property. Friend of a damned crooked Senator McKinty from Michigan and his no-good son.”
Joe sighed. He had no reason to disbelieve Camish, though he looked hard for one.
Camish turned to Farkus. “He’s the one sent them Michigan boys after us, right Dave?”
Farkus nodded, his eyes moving from Joe to Camish as if watching a tennis match.
Joe said, “You mean the senator? Are you saying a U.S. senator sent a private hit squad after you?”
“Naw,” Camish said. “Diane’s old man did that. They were supposed to take us out and take her back. And the way things work, I’d bet the senator and his son knew all about it, but nobody would ever be able to prove that. That’s how those folks are. We don’t want no part of those politicians anymore. That’s why we’re here.”
Joe thought: And when Shober heard about me, he tried to put me on the hunt for Diane, too, just for insurance.
“She stayed with you to rub her father’s nose in it?” Joe said.
Caleb shrugged as if to say, Why not?
And Camish said, “Why not?”
“Shober’s mother is worried about her. I don’t think she knows anything about what you’re accusing her father of.”
“Wouldn’t surprise me,” Camish said, shrugging.
“So was it you who sent the postcard to Mrs. Shober?”
Camish sighed. “That was a dumb idea. But Diane insisted. Like she made us agree to call her Terri Wade. Half the time we forgot. But when a woman gets something in her head . . .”
“Is she okay now?” Joe asked. “Diane Shober?”
Said Camish, as a slow smile built on his face, “If you want to—if you figure out how to get out of here alive, I mean—you can ask her yourself. I don’t mind. She won’t mind, I don’t think, as long as you don’t try to take her back with you. See, we got some caves up in the rimrocks. Indians used to live there, then outlaws. They’re sweet caves. Dave knows the way.”
Joe didn’t know what to say. He finally looked over at Nate. His friend mouthed, We have to talk. But because Joe knew what Nate wanted to talk about, he turned away.
Camish said, “We used to have a pretty good country. At least I think we did. Then something happened. It’s our fault ’cause we let it. We used to be a people who had a government,” he said, looking up, his eyes fierce again. “Now it’s the other way around.”
Joe didn’t respond.
“And we ain’t going back until things change. We want our property back and we want an apology. We want to see that senator go to prison. We want to see Brent Shober tarred and feathered. And most of all, we want to be left alone. Simple as that. And we ain’t going to argue about it, game warden. If you can promise us those things, we’ll put down our guns and come down with you. Can you promise them?”
Joe said, “I promise I’ll try.”
Camish snorted. “That’s the way it is with you people. Good intentions are supposed to be the same as good works.”
Joe had no reply.
Camish said, “Then it is what it is.”
31
OUT OF EARSHOT OF THE BROTHERS, NATE SAID, “THIS ISN’T what I signed up for, Joe.”
Joe said, “I know it isn’t.”
“We have a couple of options.”
Joe said, “I’m not sure we do.”
Nate had stood and backed slowly away from where the brothers and Dave Farkus sat by the fire. As he did, Caleb never took his eyes off him, and conspicuously tightened his fingers around the handgrip of the automatic rifle on his lap. Likewise, Nate didn’t turn his back on Caleb and he held the .454, muzzle down, near his side. Joe knew how fast Nate was with the revolver, and he guessed Caleb knew it, too. Joe had stood and joined his friend. The eastern sky was rose-colored, and the trees within the dark forest began to define themselves. It was less than an hour before sunrise.
Nate said, “We could get on our horses and ride away. Let the locals and the state boys and the feds finish this. We’re sort of signing the death warrants on these guys, but they know that and we won’t have blood on our hands. Of course, there’s the possibility these boys will make a stand. And who knows, they could win. Or maybe they’ll just fade into the timber if we leave. They’ve done a pretty good job at surviving up here so far. Maybe they’ll head north along the Continental Divide.”
Joe’s insides were on fire. He clamped his shotgun to his side with his arm and thrust his hands into his pockets to keep them from shaking.
Joe said, “I can’t ride away. As long as they’re up here, they’ll keep breaking laws. You know that. We rode by three dead bodies earlier tonight. Maybe you can say they deserved it, but that’s not for us to decide. More people will get hurt and die, and some of them will be innocent. Think of the traps these guys set. If we leave, they won’t stop.”
Nate said, “Nope, they won’t. But that doesn’t have to be our problem. This isn’t right, Joe. Let me put this as clearly as I can: We’re on the wrong side.”
Joe winced.