"Sorry to interrupt," I said.
"Is that you, Dave? Join us. We have plenty," Cisco said.
"I wanted to see Megan a minute. I'll wait out in my truck," I said.
The three of them were looking out into the darkness, the tossed salad and pink slices of steak on their plates like part of a nineteenth-century French still life. In that instant I knew that whatever differences defined them today, the three of them were held together by a mutual experience that an outsider would never understand. Then Boxleiter broke the moment by picking up a decanter and pouring wine into his goblet, spilling it like drops of blood on the linen.
Ten minutes later Megan found me in the front yard.
"This morning you told me I had Boxleiter all wrong," I said.
"That's right. He's not what he seems."
"He's a criminal."
"To some."
"I saw pictures of the dude he shanked in the Canon City pen."
"Probably courtesy of Adrien Glazier. By the way, the guy you think he did? He was in the Mexican Mafia. He had Swede's cell partner drowned in a toilet… This is why you came out here?"
"No, I wanted to tell you I'm going to leave y'all alone. Y'all take your own fall, Megan."
"Who asked you to intercede on our behalf anyway? You're still pissed off about Clete, aren't you?" she said.
I walked across the lawn toward my truck. The wind was loud in the trees and made shadows on the grass. She caught up with me just as I opened the door to the truck.
"The problem is you don't understand your own thinking," she said. "You were raised in the church. You see my father's death as St. Sebastian's martyrdom or something. You believe in forgiving people for what's not yours to forgive. I'd like to take their eyes out."
"Their eyes. Who is their, Megan?"
"Every hypocrite in this-" She stopped, stepping back as though retreating from her own words.
"Ah, we finally got to it," I said.
I got in the truck and closed the door. I could hear her heated breathing in the dark, see her chest rise and fall against her shirt. Swede Boxleiter walked out of the side yard into the glow of light from the front gallery, an empty plate in one hand, a meat fork in the other.
FOURTEEN
THE TALL MAN WHO WORE yellow-tinted glasses and cowboy boots and a weathered, smoke-colored Stetson made a mistake. While the clerk in a Lafayette pawnshop and gun store bagged up two boxes of.22 magnum shells for him, the man in the Stetson happened to notice a bolt-action military rifle up on the rack.
"That's an Italian 6.5 Carcano, ain't it? Hand it down here and I'll show you something," he said.
He wrapped the leather sling over his left arm, opened the bolt, and inserted his thumb in the chamber to make sure the gun was not loaded.
"This is the same kind Oswald used. Now, here's the mathematics. The shooter up in that book building had to get off three shots in five and a half seconds. You got a stopwatch?" he said.
"No," the clerk said.
"Here, look at my wristwatch. Now, I'm gonna dry-fire it three times. Remember, I ain't even aiming and Oswald was up six stories, shooting at a moving target."
"That's not good for the firing pin," the clerk said.
"It ain't gonna hurt it. It's a piece of shit anyway, ain't it?"
"I wish you wouldn't do that, sir."
The man in the Stetson set the rifle back on the glass counter and pinched his thumb and two ringers inside his Red Man pouch and put the tobacco in his jaw. The clerk's eyes broke when he tried to return the man's stare.
"You ought to develop a historical curiosity. Then maybe you wouldn't have to work the rest of your life at some little pissant job," the man said, and picked up his sack and started for the front door.
The clerk, out of shame and embarrassment, said to the man's back, "How come you know so much about Dallas?"
"I was there, boy. That's a fact. The puff of smoke on the grassy knoll?" He winked at the clerk and went out.
The clerk stood at the window, his face tingling, feeling belittled, searching in his mind for words he could fling out the door but knowing he would not have the courage to do so. He watched the man in the Stetson drive down the street to an upholstery store in a red pickup truck with Texas plates. The clerk wrote down the tag number and called the sheriffs department.
ON FRIDAY MORNING FATHER James Mulcahy rose just before dawn, fixed two sandwiches and a thermos of coffee in the rectory kitchen, and drove to Henderson Swamp, outside of the little town of Breaux Bridge, where a parishioner had given him the use of a motorized houseboat.
He drove along the hard-packed dirt track atop the levee, above the long expanse of bays and channels and flooded cypress and willows that comprised the swamp. He parked at the bottom of the levee, walked across a board plank to the houseboat, released the mooring ropes, and floated out from the willows into the current before he started the engine.
The clouds in the eastern sky were pink and gray, and the wind lifted the moss on the dead cypress trunks. Inside the cabin, he steered the houseboat along the main channel, until he saw a cove back in the trees where the bream were popping the surface along the edge of the hyacinths. When he turned into the cove and cut the engine, he heard an outboard coming hard down the main channel, the throttle full out, the noise like a chain saw splitting the serenity of the morning. The driver of the outboard did not slow his boat to prevent his wake from washing into the cove and disturbing the water for another fisherman.
Father Mulcahy sat in a canvas chair on the deck and swung the bobber from his bamboo pole into the hyacinths. Behind him, he heard the outboard turning in a circle, heading toward him again. He propped his pole on the rail, put down the sandwich he had just unwrapped from its wax paper, and walked to the other side of the deck.
The man in the outboard killed his engine and floated in to the cove, the hyacinths clustering against the bow. He wore yellow-tinted glasses, and he reached down in the bottom of his boat and fitted on a smoke-colored Stetson that was sweat-stained across the base of the crown. When he smiled his dentures were stiff in his mouth, the flesh of his throat red like a cock's comb. He must have been sixty-five, but he was tall, his back straight, his eyes keen with purpose.
"I'm fixing to run out of gas. Can you spare me a half gallon?" he said.
"Maybe your high speed has something to do with it," Father Mulcahy said.
"I'll go along with that." Then he reached out for an iron cleat on the houseboat as though he had already been given permission to board. Behind the seat was a paper bag stapled across the top and a one-gallon tin gas can.
"I know you," Father Mulcahy said.
"Not from around here you don't. I'm just a visitor, not having no luck with the fish."
"I've heard your voice."
The man stood up in his boat and grabbed the handrail and lowered his face so the brim of his hat shielded it from view.
"I have no gas to give you. It's all in the tank," Father Mulcahy said.
"I got a siphon. Right here in this bag. A can, too."
The man in the outboard put one cowboy boot on the edge of the deck and stepped over the rail, drawing a long leg behind him. He stood in front of the priest, his head tilted slightly as though he were examining a quarry he had placed under a glass jar.
"Show me where your tank's at. Back around this side?" he said, indicating the lee side of the cabin, away from the view of anyone passing on the channel.
"Yes," the priest said. "But there's a lock on it. It's on the ignition key."