"You want something to drink?"
"Sure, give me a Perrier with a slice of orange in it."
"You got it," he said and reached under the bar.
"Ice?"
"Yeah. Lot of people hear him?"
"Pony?"
"Yeah."
"When he threatened Steve Buckman?"
"It's my only hundred," I said.
The bartender grinned.
"Can't blame me for trying," he said. "Sure, lot of people heard him. Bar was full. All the regulars."
"J. George?" I said.
"Taylor?"
The bartender glanced at Bebe across the room and lowered his voice.
"Yeah he was here, and his crew. Barnes, Brown, the mayor."
"Who else?" I said.
"Christ what am I, a computer? Billy Bates was here with his wife. Mr. and Mrs. Gordon. Ratliff the producer. Tom Paglia."
He put my Perrier down on the little doily. I put a ten on the bar. He grinned.
"On the house," he said.
The woman across from Bebe stood up. They shook hands. The woman took some of the papers and left. I moved over to her table as Bebe was sliding the remaining papers into her briefcase. She looked up as I sat down across from her.
"Well, hello," she said.
"Hello."
"I just sold a nice Spanish-style ranch to that woman," Bebe said. "She's from Flagstaff. Sick of the snow, I guess."
"Hideous," she said. "Nearly everybody wants to sell, and nobody wants to buy, unless they're from out of town and don't know about the Dell."
"And you don't feel obligated to tell them."
"No, I don't," she said. "Real estate prices are dropping like a stone. They used to be really high, because there was nowhere to expand."
"You're in the middle of nowhere," I said. "Why can't you expand?"
"It's all desert," Bebe said. "We've expanded to the limit of our water supply already."
"What if you had enough water?"
"The Dell would ruin sales anyway."
"What if the Dell were gone?"
Bebe smiled at me.
"I'd be selling real estate from early in the morning to really late at night," she said.
"Anybody buying property these days?"
"George made a couple of sales to some developer," she said. "I think they'll lose their shirt."
She paused and smiled and shrugged.
"But they're consenting adults," she said.
"Caveat emptor," I said.
The papers were stashed in her little black briefcase. She zipped the top closed and looked up at me from under her eyebrows.
"I was a little fuzzy, the last time I saw you," she said. "I shouldn't drink on a light breakfast."
"None of us should," I said. "But sometimes we do."
"Did we have a good time?" she said.
I tried to put a lecherous gleam in my eyes. It wasn't hard. I was good at lecherous.
"How quickly they forget," I said.
"Was I alright?"
"You certainly were," I said.
I wasn't as good at enthusiasm. But she didn't seem to notice.
"I hate not remembering. Maybe we should go over it again sometime."
"Be my pleasure," I said.
"That's what they tell me," Bebe said.
"Did you know that Mary Lou knew both Dean Walker and Mark Ratliff in Los Angeles?"
"I knew about Mark," Bebe said. "I don't think I knew that about Dean Walker."
"You told me that Mary Lou Buckman was sleeping with both of them."
"And probably some others," Bebe said. "I knew you'd have trouble believing it. Men are so stupid."
"How do you know?"
"About Mary Lou?"
"And Walker and Ratliff," I said.
"Dean Walker is merely surmise," Bebe said, "and intuition."
"And Ratliff?" Bebe smiled.
"Pillow talk," she said.
I nodded and we smiled knowingly. Two insiders. Intimates.
"You mean I'm not the only one?" I said.
"Almost."
"He say anything else about her?" I said.
"Mark? About Mary Lou? Oh yes. Actually it was little annoying. He'd be in bed with me. You know, afterwards. And he'd be blabbing on about how he loved Mary Lou and had followed her to Potshot and would wait forever if he had to… crap like that."
"You didn't believe him?" I said.
"Mark's a Hollywood person," she said. "It's hard believe a word he speaks."
"And he wasn't waiting for her celibately," I said.
Bebe was good at lecherous gleaming, too.
"Not likely," she said. "But as soon as he was through boffing me, he'd talk about her."
"So, she was always on his mind," I said.
Bebe grinned.
"She was always on his mind."
Chapter 49
I CALLED CAWLEY Dark and talked with him for fifteen minutes. Then I hung up and went out onto the front porch where Tedy Sapp was taking orders and mixing drinks. The sun had set, quite flamboyantly, and the blue twilight was settling around us the way it does. Bernard J. Fortunato had fixed up a tray of cheese and crackers and was passing it around.
"Bernard went in today and rented the hotel room," Hawk said. "Street side."
"I told him straight when I reserved it what I wanted," Bernard said.
"You see the room?" I said.
"Bet your ass."
"So Vinnie's in the window with a rifle," Hawk said.
"Room looks right down on the broad's office," Bernard said.
"Mary Lou's?"
"Yeah. Buckman Outfitters."
"So we'll be sure to brace them there," I said. "In front of her storefront."
"You want us to be surreptitious?" Hawk said.
"Surreptitious?" Sapp said.
Hawk shrugged.
"I educated in head start," Hawk said.
"Really worked," Sapp said.
"No reason to be covert," I said.
"You too?" Sapp said.
"Nope," I said. "I'm a straight Anglo white guy of European ancestry. We're naturally smart."
"You missed Bernard," Sapp said.
"Tall straight Anglo white guy," I said.
"Hey," Bernard said.
"Perfect," Sapp said.
"So we all got shotguns but Vinnie," Hawk said.
"Sure," I said. "The town fathers hired us to do this. Cops won't interfere."
"You know that?" Vinnie said.
"They haven't so far," I said. "What are you going to use from the window?"
"The Heckler," Vinnie said.
"Good choice," I said.
"Of course it is," Vinnie said.
"I will use a handgun," Chollo said. "Giving me a shotgun is like asking Picasso to paint with a broom."
Vinnie nodded.
"Just what I need," I said. "A couple of divas."
I looked at Bobby Horse.
"I suppose you want a bow and arrow," I said.
"Kiowas are flexible," he said.
We were quiet. Sapp went around refreshing drinks.
"Try the blue cheese," Bernard said. "Nice lingering bite to it."
I looked at Hawk.
"J. George Taylor talked with me today," I said. "Asked me not to annoy Mary Lou."
"Well, then, you better not," Hawk said.
"Then I had a club soda with Bebe Taylor," I said.
"I thought you was going to introduce me," Hawk said.
"I thought you liked a challenge," I said.
"Out here getting laid a challenge," Hawk said.
"She said that it was hard to sell real estate because of the Dell."
"Un-huh."
"She said everybody wants to sell, and nobody wants to buy. Real estate prices are dropping like a stone."
"Sure," Bernard said. "That's the old law of supply and demand. So what?"
Hawk sat back in his chair and put his feet up on the railing. He had a small drink of gin and tonic.
"So the natural price for property here been artificially lowered," he said.
"By the Dell."
"So who benefits from that?" Hawk said.
"Anybody wants to pick up some nice bargains."
Hawk nodded.
"Wouldn't be the Dell," he said.
"They acquire it, the property values won't increase," I said.
"Less they targeting the ex-con market."
"Maybe they don't care about that," Sapp said. "Maybe they just like living off the carcass."