"Remember Bob Petty?"
"Sure. Couldn't get him to look through the telescope, but he was a good fisherman."
"I'm trying to find him. He took a one-way here two days ago. Left his wife and kids and job."
"Jesus. Didn't seem like the type."
"He isn't. Thing is, I don't have any idea why he came to Texas. As far as I know, the only time he's ever been here was that one time with me. He's never mentioned anything about the state, except you and those fucking catfish."
Rader smiled, slapped Paine on the shoulder. "We can't all be good at everything, Jack. If I remember correctly, you did have a nibble."
Paine said nothing.
"Well," said Rader, laughing, "if we get some work done, maybe we can get some viewing in tonight."
"Fine," Paine said. "You still got all those friends in this town you're always talking about?"
"Follow me," Rader said, handing Paine his bag and stretching to get up.
Paine waited on a red plastic seat while Billy Rader talked at the Avis counter. He was there a longtime. Whenever Paine looked at him, Rader seemed to be laughing, and the young woman he was talking to laughed back. Finally, the young woman left the counter and Rader followed her into an office. The door closed.
A half hour passed. When the door opened, Billy went back to the counter with the young woman. He leaned on it casually, laughed, and the young woman laughed.
Finally, Billy left the counter and came to where Paine was sitting.
"He didn't rent from Avis," Rader said.
Paine was about to say something when Billy held his hand up. "But he did from Budget. I had to wait for her to access the big computer in the back, with all the insurance stuff in it. The big companies share it. He rented a blue Chevy Cavalier and is staying at a Best Western in Fort Worth. We can get there in a half hour!'
Paine smiled in admiration.
"I told you we'd get to use the scope tonight," Rader said.
It was nearly 100 degrees outside the terminal. Paine looked at his watch. Six o'clock. Which meant it was five in Dallas. And 100 degrees.
"Humid, too," Rader said. "Been dripping like a pig for days. I told you it was hot last night. Seventy-five at three in the morning."
"It wasn't even this bad in Yonkers."
"Welcome to Texas!" Rader laughed.
They got into Billy's Ford Galaxy; air conditioning shot out at Paine as Rader gunned the engine.
"Jesus!" Paine said, relishing the cool.
"Feels good, doesn't it?" Billy said. "Let's hope the air conditioner in your friend's room is on."
They reached the motel in almost exactly half an hour, still arguing about what to listen to on the radio. Laughing, Rader won out, threatening to kick Paine out into the hot air unless Dwight Yokum stayed.
"Back in a minute," Rader smiled. He left the keys in the ignition so the radio would stay on.
Paine turned the knob off as soon as Rader was gone. Billy was back almost immediately. Bending to get into the car, he smiled, reaching over to snap the radio back on. "Room 414," he said.
They parked in front of the right stack of rooms, looked for the rented blue Cavalier, which wasn't there. When they had trudged the stairs to the fourth level, stopped before room 414 and knocked to no answer, Paine said, "He's not here."
"He didn't checkout of the motel," Rader said, producing a room key from his pocket, slipping it smoothly into the lock and snapping it open, "so who cares if he's here or not?"
"Is there anybody in Texas you don't know?" Paine asked, as they entered the room.
"Just the border guards," Rader answered, laughing, "because I've never left."
Paine snapped on the light.
The room looked recently lived-in. The sheets on one side of the double bed were rumpled; a pair of chinos was draped over the back of the desk chair. A new-looking gym bag was open next to the desk; inside were white socks, boxer shorts, a couple of open-necked shirts, one of them still in its plastic wrapping. The waste basket next to the desk had other opened wrappings in it: a toothbrush box, six-pack of white crew socks, underarm deodorant. The writing pad on the desk was unused.
Paine was checking the night table next to the bed when Rader called to him from the bathroom doorway.
"Don't think you're gonna like this, buddy."
Paine joined him.
Inside the bathroom was a lot of blood. It brightened the white tile around the tub like fresh paint; one smeared section at the back wall resembled a modernist painting, bold downward finger strokes ending in a nearly perfect bloody handprint. The hand that had made it was nearby, cocked away from the wall at a frozen angle. The rest of the body was attached to it except for the head, which was missing.
Rader flipped up the bloody toilet seat with the toe of his boot; inside, staring up at them dolefully from a pool of bloody water, was the missing head.
"Jesus Christ," Billy Rader said.
Paine said, "It's not Bobby Petty."
9
A cop named Landers talked with Billy Rader while Paine sat outside the office. Paine heard them laughing. After a while Rader came out, squeezed Paine on the shoulder, kept on walking toward the female dispatcher who had smiled and motioned to him from across the room.
"Come on in, Paine," Landers said, and Paine stood and entered the office.
Landers waited for him at the door, and closed it behind him. He walked around to his side of the desk, and they both sat down. Landers was short and thin, with a pinched, leathery face. He wore a light tan cotton suit with an open-necked shirt.
It was hot in the office. The window was halfway open, letting hot air in, and a rotating fan in one corner next to a row of old oak filing cabinets blew the hot air around.
"Well," Landers said, scratching his cheek before looking at Paine, "if you hadn't been with Billy Rader, you'd be in deep shit. Way I see it, you're still in shallow shit. But that's okay, as long as you do what I say."
"Billy's all right," Paine said.
"Billy?" Landers looked as though his train of thought had been interrupted. "Billy's the best fucking reporter in Texas. He's the only reporter I've ever known who spent time on the force, and the only one who knows what kind of crap we have to put up with. He's always been fair. You're lucky he's a buddy of yours."
"I am," Paine said.
"But you're still in shallow shit. You're from New York, and I don't like New York detectives down here, especially when they don't check in with me."
"I'm not from New York City. I'm from Yonkers."
Again, Landers's train of thought had been derailed. "That don't make a shit of difference to me. New York is New York."
"We like to think there's a difference."
Landers held up his hand. "Enough chitchat," he said. "Here's the deal, and the only deal. I want you out of Fort Worth tonight. And out of Fort Worth means out of the state of Texas. Billy told me what you're up to. If your friend shows up I'll call you. Right now your friend is in the deepest shit there is. He rented a hotel room, and then left it with a headless body in it. I don't know about New York, or Yonkers, but we don't like that kind of business in Texas. But you're not going to do anything about it. I am."
Paine sat silent.
"Is this getting through to you?" Landers asked.
"Sure."
"I'm not kidding, Paine. I find your ass in Texas tomorrow morning, and I'll haul you in on suspicion of murder. I can do it, and I'd enjoy it."
Paine stood, drew out one of his cards and dropped it on the desk. "You'll let me know if Bobby Petty shows up?"
Landers reached over, took the card, put it down in front of him. "As long as you're back at this New York number, I will." He stood, held out his hand. "Nothing personal, Paine. Especially as you're a friend of Billy's. We just do things our own way here."