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“Of course.”

“He’s got a knife stuck in him. Dead as a fish, man.”

I glanced over toward the corner of the parking lot and caught a glimpse of the body near the back bumper of the truck. Mitchell and Mears were in discussion, and I saw Mitchell point off toward the street.

“I think he got in a fight with somebody. I’m not sure who just yet,” the chief said.

“A fight in the bar?”

“I guess it started there,” Eduardo said. “Then I guess they came outside somehow.”

The absurd image of that in Martinez’s report skirted through my mind. They went outside somehow. I shook my head, trying to focus. “Who’d you talk to?”

“Well…” Martinez pointed off to his left, toward the side door of the Pierpoint, where a group of nervous patrons had gathered “…Lonnie Prior says he saw Mr. Finnegan leave the bar.”

I patted Eduardo on the elbow and strode over to Prior. He was a short, wiry man who didn’t do much of anything other than make a concentrated effort to turn his pension from the U.S. Post Office into liquid good times.

I beckoned him off to the side and he grudgingly complied, keeping his eyes on the action across the lot. “Lonnie, tell me what you saw.”

“Well, shit,” Lonnie Prior said. “Not much, you know.”

One of the Posadas Emergency Services ambulances screamed to a stop on Grande, lights pulsing. At the same time, Estelle Reyes-Guzman’s unmarked unit slipped up to the curb.

“Whatever that ‘not much’ is, I need to hear it,” I snapped, and Prior took a step backward as if I’d slapped him.

“I saw Finnegan inside, that’s all,” he said.

“At the bar or at a table?”

“The bar.”

“Where were you?”

“At the pool table in the back.”

“How’d you happen to notice him?”

Prior looked nervous. “Well, he was there when I come in, you know. You know. All the regulars, and stuff. He was just one of them sittin’ at the bar.”

“Did you speak to him?”

“No. Nodded, maybe. Just like to all the others.”

“And then?”

Prior might have been thinking hard, or he might have been concentrating on Estelle’s lithe figure approaching from the street.

“And then?” I prompted.

“He left sometime,” Prior said. “I glanced up and saw him go out the door.”

“With anyone?”

“Now that-” He stopped as Estelle walked up to me.

“Richard Finnegan,” I said to her. “He walked into someone’s knife. I haven’t been over there.”

She nodded and didn’t pursue the vague “someone’s knife.” Instead, she walked back out onto Rincon Street and circled around the crowd of people to reach the scene.

“Did you see him talking with anyone? Arguing? Anything like that?”

“Nothing that drew my attention,” Prior said finally.

“You didn’t see him leave in company with anyone?”

He shook his head. “But I was occupied,” he added.

“Who was sitting nearest him at the bar when you came in? Do you remember?”

Prior took a deep breath and looked off into the distance. “Let’s see. Alex Taylor is workin’ the bar.” He turned and looked at the others who had drifted toward the yellow ribbon like flies to flypaper. “Stubby Moore, over there. Emilio Garcia. His brother there too. Juan. Jim Burdick and his wife. They were all kinda there, but I don’t recall who was sitting where.”

“Thanks. Don’t go anywhere,” I said. I strode over to Jim Burdick, who was standing near the back bumper of one of the patrons’ vehicles, an arm protectively around his wife Peggy’s plump shoulders.

He still smelled faintly of automotive grease and his face was pale. He didn’t release his hold on his wife when he turned to greet me.

“Jim, who was Finnegan with tonight?” I said without preamble.

“He come in alone, as far as I know,” Burdick said.

“Did you talk with him?”

“I was going to. He’s ordered a rear axle seal for that truck of his, and I was about to tell him it come in today. But then he up and left, just all of a sudden.”

“Had he been talking to anyone?”

“No, not that I remember.”

“He looked like he wanted to say something to that rancher,” Burdick’s wife said.

“What rancher, Peggy?”

She looked up at her husband. “Who was that? Sitting at the table by the window? Remember? He was all by himself and when we came in, you kind of waved at him?”

“At the table?” Burdick said, puzzled.

“Right by the window.”

“Oh. That was Ed Boyd. But he left.”

“And then so did Mr. Finnegan,” Peggy Burdick said. “I remember, because I heard Mr. Finnegan mutter something. I couldn’t hear what it was. But I remember that he’d ordered a drink, and he left before Alex could get it to him. He tossed a couple bucks on the bar and just left.”

“Edwin Boyd was here?” I glared hard at Burdick.

“Yeah,” he said helpfully. “But he left.”

“I bet he did,” I muttered and spun around, only to crash into Neil Costace. I pointed across the lot at Estelle Reyes-Guzman’s figure as we both regained our balance. “Go get her,” I said. “Meet me at her unit right there.”

I slipped into Estelle’s sedan and grabbed the mike.

“Three-oh-three, three-ten.”

“Three-oh-three.”

“Tom, has there been any vehicular traffic past you in the last few minutes? Going northbound on Forty-three?”

“That’s negative, three-ten.”

“All right. I want you to go inside the Legion Hall and find Johnny Boyd. Tell him that I need to talk with him right now. We’ll be there in less than a minute.”

“Ten-four.”

Neil Costace and Estelle appeared at the car door, and I pushed myself out.

“Edwin Boyd,” I said and for the first time, saw a look of surprise on Estelle Reyes-Guzman’s face.

CHAPTER THIRTY-NINE

“What’s Johnny Boyd doing here?” Costace asked as we turned left at the end of Pershing Park and headed toward the American Legion Hall half a block ahead.

“He’s angry,” I said. “That’s my best guess. Instead of going home and stewing, and facing questions from Maxine, he came down to the Legion Hall to cool off.” I glanced around at Costace in the back seat. “And no doubt he’s telling some wonderful tall tales about what happened tonight.”

“They don’t have to be too tall,” Costace murmured. “And his brother is at one bar, he’s at another. It’s odd that they’re not drinking buddies.”

“Evidently they’re not,” I said. “Each to his own.”

Tom Pasquale had pulled his patrol car up so that he was parked nose to nose with Boyd’s truck, and in the wash of light cast by the sodium vapor light, I could see the young deputy standing beside Boyd. As we approached, a bright glow marked the end of Johnny Boyd’s cigarette. Estelle braked hard and pulled to a stop.

“Now what the hell is going on?” Boyd asked as we got out. A scant three blocks’ distance and a handful of trees in Pershing Park separated us from a view of the Pierpoint, and the winking emergency lights were clearly visible.

“Johnny,” I said, and reached out a hand to take the rancher by the shoulder. “Where did Edwin go tonight when he left the house?”

“Why?” The answer came out automatically, a standard response to questions that Johnny Boyd considered no one’s business but his own. And then he glanced to the south, toward the congregation of flashing lights. I saw the expression on his face change as he put two and two together. “What’s happened?”

“Richard Finnegan is dead, Johnny.”

He looked at me quickly. “What do you mean?”

“I mean just that. He’s dead. I don’t know the details, except that he was stabbed to death outside of the Pierpoint Bar and Grill just a little while ago.”

He took an involuntary step backward, and when he reached for the cigarette in his mouth, he fumbled it and it fell to the sidewalk in a cascade of sparks. Tom Pasquale was standing beside him and evidently thought the man had lost his balance. He reached out a hand to take Johnny by the elbow, and the rancher reacted as if he’d brushed against an electric fence.