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Shrewdly, Harry replied, “Whoever killed Frank complicated their lives. Snoop simply realized Frank’s body had been in that truck.” She finished her tea. “I’ll make up a basket and go down today.”

“If tomorrow is better, that’s fine. I know the weekends are about the only time you and Fair get to spend together.”

“He’s worn out. Had to deliver another foal late last night. I’ll be back so we can watch a movie tonight. He loves that.” She stood up. “Now you’ve got me all fired up. I’ll call you as soon as I get back.”

Two hours later, basket in hand, Harry and Tucker found Snoop at his usual post on the large planter. He waved to her as she approached.

“Lunch.” She sat next to him, placing the basket in his lap as people strolled by.

Opening one end, he peeked inside. “I smell bacon.”

“Bacon, avocado, turkey, and lettuce with Thousand Island dressing, and you get to choose between a Co-Cola, water, or sparkling grapefruit juice.”

“Sparkling grapefruit.” She handed him a light green ice-cold can, as well as a sandwich.

Tucker watched with soulful eyes as Harry unwrapped her own sandwich.

“Here, beggar.” She gave the corgi a tidbit.

They ate in the sunshine, the temperature now in the low sixties.

After a few chocolate-chip cookies, with their debris back in the basket, Harry sat, soaking up the sunshine. A full stomach aids good feelings. Snoop sat wordlessly next to her, watching people go by: the piercings, blue hair, cutoffs, as well as those who sported preppy looks.

She noted the painted bucket by his feet with carved letter openers, little boxes, nice things. “Snoop, heard about your discovery.”

“Yeah.”

“A shock, right?”

He nodded. “I’m standing there in the middle of people, the driver, some of the other work crew, Mr. Huber, Mr. Reese, the sheriff, the deputy, and I’m thinking, What if one of these guys killed ol’ Frank? Know what I mean?”

Put that way, she did know what he meant. “Makes a lot of sense. You were smart to shut up.”

“I ask myself, What did Frank know? He wasn’t killed for his money. Maybe somebody stabbed him because they believed his raving about the professor, but I don’t think so. But I think Frank knew something.”

“I expect you’re right, but it is hard to figure out what he might have known that got him killed.” She put her feet on the basket, Tucker watching every move.

“Well, as I figure it, he knew someone had killed the professor,” said Snoop. “He might even have known who or why. That’s one possibility. Another is that whatever Frank knew could cost someone a lot of money. He wasn’t killed over drugs, or women, or an argument, or anything like that. I mean, his death was neat, right?”

Harry turned to look at Snoop’s profile. His beard, while not long, needed attention; same with his hair. He looked like what he was, a man with no visible means of support who lives rough. It would be easy to discount him. She was glad she hadn’t, because Snoop was smart.

“Ever see anyone talking to Frank?” she asked.

“Yeah. People would pass by. Might have a word. Most looked the other way.”

“Snoop, anyone who was a repeat offender?” She half smiled.

He folded his arms over his chest, looked at his feet, then looked at her. “Nah. Just us down here. We talk to one another.” He breathed in, then added, “The crew bosses who hire us sometimes. That’s all I can think of.”

“Frank talk about money?”

“Just that he didn’t have any.” He grew silent, then said with some force, “Mrs. Haristeen, he was found under a tree planted by the landscaping company, he was in that truck dead or alive. Who knows? Whatever Frank knew had to affect those people. I’m not going on any more jobs out there.”

This comment made her sit up straight. “You worried? For yourself?”

Harry couldn’t steer clear. Her curiosity was getting the better of her.

May 3, 2015

Standing where the road splits into two driveways, right to Barracks Stud and Stables, and left to a private residence, Harry studied Google Maps on her phone. One was a larger view of the land, the other was close-up. Also in the truck were the most recent maps printed by the state.

The ground rose up to her right, while on the left it dipped away slightly. Satisfied that she had memorized the topography, she climbed back in the driver’s seat and headed to where The Barracks stables’ road also forks. The left went to the distant brick house owned by the Bishops, the right to the indoor riding arena and stables. It was on this road, the right, that the river birch had been planted. There was new sod surrounding the tree, rubber-wrapped wires in place to hold it steady for the first year of growth; she could see more land than at the gateway drive-in.

Mrs. Murphy, Pewter, and Tucker watched as Harry pulled her truck to the side again and got out, maps in hand.

The two-hundred-and-fifty-acre development to the north of this, Marshall Reese’s Continental Estates, was well screened—first, by the topography, which rose up, but also by a thick line of woods between the two properties. To the west of all this, open farmland abutted The Barracks. Not seen by the eye but clear on the map was a road at the edge of this farmland. This was a back way to the airport where the university trained its rowers on a reservoir. If one turned left, the airport was not far away. Development cut up the land west of this road, in contrast to the pristine farmland abutting The Barracks.

No back roads led into The Barracks. Whoever disposed of Frank’s body had to drive onto the property in the same way Harry did, which was to turn right off Garth Road, where two light blue signs announced Barracks activities. The right turn was onto Barracks Farm Road. As a development from the 1980s, Ivy Farms eventually took up some of the old prisoner-of-war land on the right of Barracks Farm Road. A car or truck on this road or in Ivy Farms wouldn’t seem out of place. Land Cruisers, BMWs, Mercedes station wagons, Tahoes, and Suburbans rolled down this way, along with trailers filled with horses. In summer, the traffic would be enlivened by Miatas, Jaguar convertibles, and Porsches lovingly garaged over the winter. Once at the Ivy Farms turn, if the driver cut the lights it would be easy to glide into The Barracks. And as no one lived at the arena, who would know? From the Bishops’ house, vehicle lights might be visible, so they’d be turned off, the truck and its contents would be hidden, especially if this took place between one and four in the morning.

Harry assumed the vehicle carrying Frank came from Continental Estates or from Huber’s fleet parking lot. Once back in her truck, Harry turned around and corrected herself. No. A landscaping truck would be parked at the nursery west of Crozet. It would not be left at the site.

She called Cooper to tell her.

“I’ve already been to Huber Landscaping,” said the deputy. “The trucks log in at night. The keys are locked in the office, and the trucks themselves are locked behind a chain-link fence.”

“So, Coop, someone got into the office to get the key?”

“Maybe. But if this was done by a worker, he could have been smart enough to get a key made on his lunch hour. These are simple keys, not like the ones that open doors from a distance. Work trucks. Basic. And someone working at Continental Estates, not for Huber, but a known person, trusted, might have access to a landscaping truck. Anyway, I asked you to question Snoop, but I didn’t tell you to go poking around.”

“You’re right,” she quickly agreed. “But it strikes me as odd that Frank was planted, literally, at The Barracks. Frank had been reading a lot about the Revolutionary War, and we know that was Ginger’s territory.”