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She swung the car into the alley behind the pharmacy. The single dumpster was neatly closed, not a sign of refuse on the ground. The back door of the pharmacy was tightly closed.

“If Mr. Trombley found the histamine misplaced on the shelf, that’s one thing. But he wouldn’t put it back in the wrong place. I can’t imagine him misplacing something like that, as organized as he is. I mean, except for a trifle of dust, those shelves are arranged in perfect order. There’s no reason to make a mistake. But on the other hand, if the thief tiptoed back into the drug store to return the bottle, that’s way too clever. Too calculating.”

“Maybe one and the same,” I said. “A clever calculator.”

Estelle shook her head. “But that bothers me, sir. If the thief crept in to return the bottle, he would have put it back where he got it, would he not? Why would he put it somewhere else, where it’s certain to draw attention?”

“That’s the way we Monday quarterback it, sweetheart. He might have run out of time and just put it down in the first spot. A quick dart in and out, figuring that old man Trombley would just shake his head and wonder why he misplaced his inventory.”

She drove around the store from the alley and turned into the small parking lot out front. Two other vehicles were parked there, including Trombley’s silver Cadillac. By the time we got out of the county car, Trombley stood in the pharmacy’s doorway, waiting.

“You’re out bright and early,” he said affably. “Your deputy Mears and another guy were here earlier, sorting through the dumpster. You’re going to have to start paying those guys a living wage. I would have mentioned all this to Mears, but I got busy, and then they had already left before I found the bottle.”

“We appreciate the prompt call,” Estelle said.

“Well, I’m going to have to apologize.” The pharmacist held the door for both of us and then followed us inside. The gal at the front register-I should have remembered her name, but didn’t-smiled warmly.

“We’re going to be in the back for a while, Gwen,” Trombley said, and the nickname activated my snoozing memory-Gweneth Barnes, a recent graduate of Posadas High School and the youngest daughter of Lester Barnes, the county highway department supervisor.

“How are you doing this morning, Miss Barnes?” I asked as I passed the register. I wondered if, at age eighteen or whatever, she was in the first year of a fifty-year career behind that counter.

“Hi,” she replied, and her smile brightened. Estelle had paused inside the front door to examine the racks that featured various pamphlets, flyers, the Posadas Register, and two of the metro dailies. The undersheriff dallied a bit, eyes roaming around a store that she’d seen a hundred times before.

“Gwen, you’ve been putting in the hours,” Estelle said, and the girl shrugged agreement. “Are you working every day now?”

“Sure am,” she said brightly.

“Without Gwen, my world would come to a stop,” Trombley laughed. He waited for us at the back of the store, obviously impatient.

“Did you work all day yesterday as well?” Estelle asked the girl.

“Yes, ma’am. I worked all week.”

“Nine to five?”

Gweneth nodded. “Just half days on Saturdays, though.” Guy Trombley had returned down the aisle, as if to be close at hand should the interrogation of his young clerk turn serious.

“Now, let me show you what I mean,” Trombley said, as Estelle turned her attention toward the rear of the store. We followed him back, past the bandages, laxatives, vitamins and whatnot. “I’m beginning to feel a little foolish,” he said over his shoulder. “You know, you didn’t mention when you were here earlier that all this had to do with George Payton’s death.” He stopped by the padded bench where customers could plop down to wait for their prescriptions. A small rack off to one side included magazines that were now closer to historical documents, as well as another selection of those ubiquitous folders touting area attractions that the Chamber of Commerce circulated.

“What’s the deal, anyway?” Trombley asked, regarding us both critically.

“I’m not at liberty to say at this point,” Estelle said, and her tone had taken on an edge that even Guy Trombley understood, reluctant as he might be to admit to a woman’s authority.

“No, I suppose not.” He shrugged and opened the door to a narrow hallway leading to the back of the store, then turned left into the compounding room. Sure enough, the small, dark bottle nestled in centered perfection in its assigned spot, label turned outward. Trombley started to reach for it again, but Estelle touched his arm. “I already touched it,” he offered.

“This isn’t where you found it,” she said, and it wasn’t a question.

“No…no, of course not.” Guy would remember perfectly well that Estelle had taken meticulous photographs of the vacant spot, complete with the ring of dust visible on the shelf. “Now, I came in here not twenty minutes ago, and the bottle of histamine diphosphate was sitting right here.” He touched the front corner two shelves above, just inside the doorway, a small spot next to a white cardboard box. “Sitting right here. Completely out of order. No wonder I didn’t see it.”

“Did you inadvertently leave it there after using it last time?” Estelle asked.

I saw a little flush travel up Trombley’s neck. “Come now. Why would I do that,” he snapped. “In the first place, as I told you earlier, the last time I compounded histolatum was nearly six months ago. Sometime along the way, I would have noticed that the bottle was out of place and returned it. Second, when I do compound, I work in that area over there,” and he pointed at the far end of the small room. The Formica countertops were spotless, with one area that was completely enclosed. The pharmacist would have to work with his arms inside rubber access gloves, much like a mechanic’s sandblaster booth.

“Why would I formulate there, and then return the bottle here,” and he rapped the shelf, “when where it belongs is even closer, down there.”

“Good point,” I said.

“I just don’t understand any of this,” Trombley said. “Now you’re saying that someone first took the histamine, and then, when they finished with it, returned it to the pharmacy-good heavens, why would anyone do such a thing? Why not just throw it away?” His eyebrows lifted at his own brainstorm. “That’s why the dumpsters, then.”

“It’s the ‘how’ that’s interesting,” I said. “It’s not like this store is left untended.”

The flush shot up Trombley’s neck again. “Of course it’s not left untended,” he snapped. “I’m here, or Harriet is, or Gwen, out front. There are two other girls who work for me as well, part-time.”

“I need to take the bottle of histamine with me for a short time,” Estelle said. “I hope that won’t put you out.”

“Of course not,” Trombley said. “I’ll dial in and get another, just in case. I don’t expect a call for it, but you never know.” He reached out toward the bottle, but Estelle beat him to it.

“I’ll get it, sir.” If he was surprised to see that she already had an evidence bag with her, he didn’t say anything, watching in silence as she first filled out the short label and then nudged the bottle into the bag with the tip of her pen. Next in hand was the small digital camera, and she snapped several shots of the spot where the bottle had been stashed upon its return. I ambled out of the compounding room, admiring the view of mops and buckets by the back door.

I could see that it wasn’t closed tightly, and as if reading my mind, Trombley said, “The door to the alley is always locked, if that’s what you’re thinking.”

I rested my boot on the bottom corner and pushed a bit, and the door slid open. “Most of the time it’s locked, anyway,” I said. The pharmacist had reached his own fork in the road, where he could either continue to bluster his way through this, or give in and join us. Apparently he chose the latter, because he let out a long sigh and leaned against the wall.