She was short and solid, and the egg-shaped helmet of hair reminded Joe of something the English guards would wear outside Buckingham Palace. She wore a bright floral-pattern blouse, too-tight jeans, and scuffed red cowboy boots.
“I’m Kelli Ann Fahey,” she said, sweeping her open palm over the row of ATVs. “I own this place, and I can see you’re a hunter. I’ll bet you’re interested in something that will get you into the woods and help you drag that deer or elk out.”
“Something like that,” Joe said.
“This is a good time of year to buy one of these,” she said. “Hunters come here from all over the country and you’d be surprised how many of ’em want to dump their equipment instead of towing it back home to Ohio or wherever. So we have plenty of inventory.”
“I see that.”
“Anything you particularly have your eye on?”
Joe nodded toward a newer model green Polaris Sportsman. The body and frame were dinged, but it had four new knobby tires and was set up with saddlebags on the rear rack and a heavy-duty rifle scabbard across the front deck.
“Wow,” she said, stepping back as if to steady herself. “You just walked right up and picked out the best deal on the entire lot.
“No kidding,” she said. “This was just turned in by a local rancher. Hardly any miles, and enough horsepower to get you where you want to go and drag anything out. The rancher used that saddle thing for his irrigation shovel, but I bet it would be perfect for your hunting rifle.”
“That’s what I was thinking,” Joe said.
She reeled off the fuel capacity, wheel-base measurements, and four-stroke engine specifications. Then she mounted the ATV, started the engine, and cranked back on the accelerator on the handgrip. The engine whined until it was earsplitting and the air filled with acrid blue smoke. Then she shut it off.
“And,” she said, leaning forward and resting her elbows on the handlebars and hushing her voice to him as if sharing a secret, “I could let it go for five grand as long as you promise not to tell anybody that you practically stole it from me. If you tell the locals, they’ll bum-rush this place and want deals of their own.”
Joe liked Kelli Ann Fahey. She was a good saleswoman.
“I need to check first,” he said, raising his phone.
She smiled knowingly. “Tell your wife she can ride it to go to the store, or to the mailbox, or whatever. Tell her she’ll feel twenty years younger when she’s zooming this baby around the block.”
“I’ll be right back,” Joe said, walking to the edge of the lot.
“I’ll be in my office,” she said with a wink, and climbed off. “Let’s hope some other hunter doesn’t walk up and steal this out from under you while you’re negotiating with the home front.”
Chuck Coon was incredulous when Joe reached him. He said, “I listened to your message three times and I still can’t decide if you’re serious or delusional.”
Joe said, “I’m not sure, either.”
“Explain.”
“Okay,” Joe said, turning slightly to make sure Fahey was in her office and not two steps away, handing him a title to sign. “A couple of things. As you know, I decided to stay at the Whispering Pines because that’s where the DCI agent stayed. I am literally the only guest there. But it’s hunting season up here. As you know — or maybe you don’t — Wedell is one of those little towns that only has traffic during the fall. A lot of hunters aren’t that particular where they stay, so it seemed strange to me I was there by myself. This morning, I saw some hunters get turned away. There are a bunch of hunters at a place called the Black Forest Inn. That’s probably where the guys who got turned away ended up.
“The owner herself told me Wolfgang Templeton is her biggest referrer of business. Apparently, he likes to send people there who come here to do business with him in one form or another. She thinks he’s wonderful. Everybody does.”
“Can you trust her?” Coon asked.
“I don’t know,” Joe said. Then: “I doubt it.”
“Anyway…”
“The motel has seven cabins left, and the owner told me that after the fire Templeton sent his maintenance crew to make sure the wiring was okay in the remaining units. That got me to thinking.”
“Always dangerous,” Coon said sarcastically.
Joe ignored him. “Last night I talked to Marybeth on my cell phone inside my cabin. I mentioned the same names to her that I sent to you: Critchfield and Smith. Then this morning, Jim Latta got spooked when he saw those two coming down the road we were on and made me get out of his truck before they saw me.”
Coon said, “Couldn’t that have to do with the fact that you braced them last night? That you left your card on their window?”
“That’s what I thought at first, but I think there’s more to it than that,” Joe said. “I think Latta wanted to avoid a confrontation with them that would have been more than them just complaining. Chuck, I think the motel cabins are wired for sound and maybe video. I think they’re bugged. Somebody heard me talk to Marybeth and mention their names and let those two know about it.”
Coon paused. “So you think Templeton was listening? Is listening?”
“I have no idea who is on the other end,” Joe said. “But a few hours after I talked to Marybeth and went to bed, a vehicle showed up at the motel. I didn’t see it, but I heard it. I think someone was checking me out, making sure my pickup was still there and I was in my room.”
“That’s not much to go on,” Coon said sourly.
“I know that.”
“In fact, it sounds paranoid. No offense, of course.”
“All I know is what’s in my gut. Everybody I run into around this county seems to know something, and they all seem connected in unexplainable ways. I think they briefed Jim Latta bright and early this morning, which is why he was late to breakfast. I think the sheriff and the judge were at the restaurant to keep tabs on me and overhear what I said to Latta. And I think Latta took me out to the Sand Creek Ranch as much for Templeton to size me up as for me to meet Templeton.”
Coon sighed a long sigh. “So a big conspiracy is what you’re thinking. I don’t know. Nothing you told me is actionable.”
“Nope.”
“So what is it you’re up to, Joe? Remember our deal. Your job is to poke around and gather information. It sounds like you’ve let the place get to you.”
“I told you already,” Joe said. “I’m seeing if any of what I left on that message to you turns out to be true.”
“‘Lighting the match,’” Coon repeated.
“That’s what I do.”
“All the names you left on the recording may or may not be involved?”
“No idea,” Joe said. “But I wouldn’t be surprised if most of them were. And if I’m right about the cabin being bugged, this will smoke them out. It might start turning one against another.”
Coon said, “We could maybe send up one of our tech guys to check out the wiring in your room.”
“How long would that take?”
“A couple of days.”
“Forget it,” Joe said. “By then this will be over, one way or the other.”
“Joe,” Coon said, “you’ve implicated the local sheriff and the county judge. Not to mention your fellow game warden. And Templeton himself — his name came up. This is dangerous territory if that’s all you have on them.”
“It is,” Joe said. “But think about it. I haven’t made a single official charge at all. In fact, if that cabin isn’t bugged, I haven’t done anything but talk to myself and leave you a crazy phone message to the wrong person. What have I really done if I’m all wrong? Nothing, except to get you all hot and bothered.”