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The inclusion of Bryan Day had been complicated. Robbie trusted no reporter, period. However, if they found what they were looking for, it would need to be properly recorded, and by someone outside his circle. Of course Day had been eager to tag along, but he had been forced to agree to a list of firm conditions that basically prevented him from reporting anything until so directed by Robbie Flak. If he tried, he and Buck the cameraman would in all likelihood be either beaten or shot, or both. Day and Buck understood that the stakes were high and the rules would be followed. Because Day was the station’s news director, he was able to slip away without leaving clues at the office.

“Can we talk?” Martha asked. They had been on the road for half an hour, and there were hints of orange in the sky ahead of them.

“No,” Robbie said.

“It’s been almost twelve hours since he died. What are you thinking?”

“I’m fried, Martha. My brain is not working. There are no thoughts.”

“What did you think when you saw his body?”

“It’s a sick world when we kill people because we assume we have the right to kill them. I thought he looked great, this handsome young man lying there asleep, no visible injuries, no signs of a struggle. Put down like an old dog by bigots and idiots too lazy and too stupid to realize what they’re doing. You know what I’m really thinking about, Martha?”

“Tell me.”

“I’ll tell you. I’m thinking about Vermont, cool summers, no humidity, no executions. A civilized place. A cabin on a lake. I can learn to shovel snow. If I sell everything and close my firm, maybe I can net a million. I’ll retire to Vermont and write a book.”

“About what?”

“I have no idea.”

“No one believes that, Robbie. You’ll never leave. You might take some time off, catch your breath, but before long you’ll find another case and get mad and file a lawsuit, or ten. You’ll be doing that until you’re eighty, and they’ll carry you out of the station on a stretcher.”

“I’ll never see eighty. I’m fifty-two now and I feel like a geezer.”

“You’ll be suing people when you’re eighty.”

“I don’t know.”

“I do. I know where your heart is.”

“Right now my heart is broken, and I’m ready to quit. A half-ass lawyer could’ve saved Donté.”

“And what could this half-ass lawyer have done differently?”

Robbie showed her both palms and said, “Not now, Martha. Please.”

In the car behind them, the first words were spoken when Boyette said, “Did you really watch the execution?”

Keith took a sip of coffee and waited awhile. “Yes, I did. It wasn’t planned; it just happened at the last second. I didn’t want to watch it.”

“Do you wish you hadn’t?”

“That’s a very good question, Travis.”

“Thank you.”

“On the one hand, I wish I had not watched a man die, especially a man who claimed to be innocent.”

“He is innocent, or was.”

“I tried to pray with him, but he refused. He said he doesn’t believe in God, though he once did. As a minister, it’s very difficult to be with someone who is facing death and does not believe in God or Christ or heaven. I’ve stood at hospital beds and watched my members die, and it’s always comforting to know that their souls are bound for a glorious hereafter. Not so with Donté.”

“Nor with me.”

“On the other hand, I saw something in the death chamber that should be seen by everyone. Why hide what we are doing?”

“So you would watch another one?”

“I didn’t say that, Travis.” It was a question Keith could not answer. He was struggling with his first execution; he couldn’t imagine the next one. Just hours earlier, seconds before he’d finally fallen asleep, the image of Donté strapped to the deathbed came into focus, and Keith ran through it again in slow motion. He remembered staring at Donté’s chest as it lifted slightly, then fell. Lifted, then fell. Up and down, barely noticeable. And then it stopped. He had just watched a man exhale for the final time. Keith knew the image would never go away.

The sky was lighter to the east. They crossed into Oklahoma.

Boyette said, “I guess that’s my last trip to Texas.”

Keith could not think of a response.

———

The governor’s helicopter touched down at 9:00 a.m. Since the media had received plenty of advance notice and were waiting anxiously, there was considerable debate among the governor and Barry and Wayne about the details of the landing. En route, they finally settled on the parking lot next to the football field. The media were informed and scrambled to Slone High School for this late-breaking development. The press box was badly damaged, charred, and smoldering. Firemen were still on the scene, cleaning up. When Gill Newton emerged from his chopper, he was met by state police, colonels from the Guard, and a few carefully selected and weary firefighters. He shook their hands warmly as if they were Marines returning from combat. Barry and Wayne were quick to survey the surroundings, and they organized the press conference so that the backdrop would be the football field and, most important, the burned-out press box. The governor was wearing jeans, cowboy boots, no tie, and a Windbreaker—a real working man.

With a troubled face but an enthusiastic spirit, he faced the cameras and reporters. He condemned the violence and unrest. He promised to protect the citizens of Slone. He announced he was calling in more guardsmen and would mobilize the entire Texas National Guard, if need be. He talked about justice, Texas style. He engaged in a bit of race-baiting by calling on black leaders to rein in the hooligans. He said nothing of the sort about white troublemakers. He ranted and raved, and when he was finished, he ducked away from the microphones without taking questions. Neither he nor Barry and Wayne wanted to deal with the Boyette matter.

For an hour he buzzed around Slone in a patrol car, stopping to drink coffee with soldiers and policemen, and to chat with citizens, and to survey, with a grim and pained face, the ruins of the First Baptist Church, and all the while the cameras were rolling, recording it all for the glory of the moment, but also for future campaigns.

———

After five hours, the caravan finally stopped at a country store north of Neosho, Missouri, twenty miles south of Joplin. After a restroom break and more coffee, they headed north, now with the Subaru in the lead and the other vehicles close behind.

Boyette was visibly nervous, the tic more active, his fingers thumping the cane. “We’re getting close to the turnoff,” he said. “It’s to the left.” They were on Highway 59, a busy two-lane road in Newton County. They turned left at the bottom of a hill, next to a gas station. “This looks right,” Travis kept saying, obviously anxious about where he was taking them. They were on a county road with bridges over small creeks, sharp curves, steep hills. Most of the homes were trailers with an occasional square redbrick from the 1950s.

“This looks right,” Boyette said.

“And you lived around here, Travis?”

“Yep, right up here.” He nodded, and when he did so, he began rubbing his temples. Please, Keith thought, not another seizure. Not at this moment. They stopped at an intersection in the middle of a small settlement. “Keep going straight,” Boyette said. Past a shopping center with a grocery, hair salon, video rental. The parking lot was gravel. “This looks right,” he said again.

Keith had questions, but he said little. Was Nicole still alive, Travis, when you drove through here? Or had you already taken her life? What were you thinking, Travis, when you drove through here nine years ago with that poor girl bound and gagged and bruised, traumatized after a long weekend of sexual assault?