"How-"
Chee cut off the question. "I asked her how he knew it was a witch killing. She said the hands were stretched out like this." Chee extended his hands, palms up. "They were flayed. The skin was cut off the palms and fingers."
Wells raised his eyebrows.
"That's what the witch uses to make corpse powder," Chee explained. "They take the skin that has the whorls and ridges of the individual personality-the skin from the palms and the finger pads, and the soles of the feet. They take that, and the skin from the glans of the penis, and the small bones where the neck joins the skull, and they dry it, and pulverize it, and use it as poison."
"You're going to get to Begay any minute now," Wells said. "That right?"
"We got to him," Chee said. "He's the one they think is the witch. He's the City Navajo."
"I thought you were going to say that," Wells said. He rubbed the back of his hand across one blue eye. "City Navajo. Is it that obvious?"
"Yes," Chee said. "And then he's a stranger. People suspect strangers."
"Were they coming around him? Accusing him? Any threats? Anything like that, you think?"
"It wouldn't work that way-not unless somebody had someone in their family killed. The way you deal with a witch is hire a singer and hold a special kind of curing ceremony. That turns the witchcraft around and kills the witch."
Wells made an impatient gesture. "Whatever," he said. "I think something has made this Begay spooky." He stared into his glass, communing with the bourbon. "I don't know."
"Something unusual about the way he's acting?"
"Hell of it is I don't know how he usually acts. This wasn't my case. The agent who worked him retired or some damn thing, so I got stuck with being the delivery man." He shifted his eyes from glass to Chee. "But if it was me, and I was holed up here waiting, and the guy came along who was going to take me home again, then I'd be glad to see him. Happy to have it over with. All that."
"He wasn't?"
Wells shook his head. "Seemed edgy. Maybe that's natural, though. He's going to make trouble for some hard people."
"I'd be nervous," Chee said.
"I guess it doesn't matter much anyway," Wells said. "He's small potatoes. The guy who's handling it now in the U. S. Attorney's Office said it must have been a toss-up whether to fool with him at all. He said the assistant who handled it decided to hide him out just to be on the safe side."
"Begay doesn't know much?"
"I guess not. That, and they've got better witnesses."
"So why worry?"
Wells laughed. "I bring this sucker back and they put him on the witness stand and he answers all the questions with 'I don't know' and it makes the USDA look like a horse's ass. When a U. S. Attorney looks like that, he finds an FBI agent to blame it on." He yawned. "Therefore," he said through the yawn, "I want to ask you what you think. This is your territory. You are the officer in charge. Is it your opinion that someone got to my witness?"
Chee let the question hang. He spent a fraction of a second reaching the answer, which was they could have if they wanted to try. Then he thought about the real reason Wells had kept him working late without a meal or a shower. Two sentences in Wells's report. One would note that the possibility the witness had been approached had been checked with local Navajo Police. The next would report whatever Chee said next. Wells would have followed Federal Rule One-Protect Your Ass.
Chee shrugged. "You want to hear the rest of my witchcraft business?"
Wells put his drink on the lamp table and untied his shoe. "Does it bear on this?"
"Who knows? Anyway there's not much left. I'll let you decide. The point is we had already picked up this corpse Emma Tso's son-in-law found. Somebody had reported it weeks ago. It had been collected, and taken in for an autopsy. The word we got on the body was Navajo male in his thirties probably. No identification on him."
"How was this bird killed?"
"No sign of foul play," Chee said. "By the time the body was brought in, decay and the scavengers hadn't left a lot. Mostly bone and gristle, I guess. This was a long time after Emma Tso's son-in-law saw him."
"So why do they think Begay killed him?" Wells removed his second shoe and headed for the bathroom.
Chee picked up the telephone and dialled the Kayenta clinic. He got the night supervisor and waited while the supervisor dug out the file. Wells came out of the bathroom with his toothbrush. Chee covered the mouthpiece. "I'm having them read me the autopsy report," Chee explained. Wilson began brushing his teeth at the sink in the dressing alcove. The voice of the night supervisor droned into Chee's ear.
"That all?" Chee asked. "Nothing added on? No identity yet? Still no cause?"
"That's him," the voice said.
"How about shoes?" Chee asked. "He have shoes on?"
"Just a sec," the voice said. "Yep. Size ten D. And a hat, and…"
"No mention of the neck or skull, right? I didn't miss that? No bones missing?"
Silence. "Nothing about neck or skull bones."
"Ah," Chee said. "Fine. I thank you." He felt great. He felt wonderful. Finally things had clicked into place. The witch was exorcised. "Jake," he said. "Let me tell you a little more about my witch case."
Wells was rinsing his mouth. He spit out the water and looked at Chee, amused. "I didn't think of this before," Wells said, "but you really don't have a witch problem. If you leave that corpse a death by natural causes, there's no case to work. If you decide it's a homicide, you don't have jurisdiction anyway. Homicide on an Indian reservation, FBI has jurisdiction." Wells grinned. "We'll come in and find your witch for you."
Chee looked at his boots, which were still dusty. His appetite had left him, as it usually did an hour or so after he missed a meal. He still hungered for a bath. He picked up his hat and pushed himself to his feet.
"I'll go home now," he said. "The only thing you don't know about the witch case is what I just got from the autopsy report. The corpse had his shoes on and no bones were missing from the base of the skull."
Chee opened the door and stood in it, looking back. Wells was taking his pyjamas out of his suitcase. "So what advice do you have for me? What can you tell me about my witch case?"
"To tell the absolute truth, Chee, I'm not into witches," Wells said. "Haven't been since I was a boy."
"But we don't really have a witch case now," Chee said. He spoke earnestly. "The shoes were still on, so the skin wasn't taken from the soles of his feet. No bones missing from the neck. You need those to make corpse powder."
Wells was pulling his undershirt over his head. Chee hurried.
"What we have now is another little puzzle," Chee said. "If you're not collecting stuff for corpse powder, why cut the skin off this guy's hands?"
"I'm going to take a shower," Wells said. "Got to get my Begay back to L. A. tomorrow."
Outside the temperature had dropped. The air moved softly from the west, carrying the smell of rain. Over the Utah border, over the Cococino Rim, over the Rainbow Plateau, lightning flickered and glowed. The storm had formed. The storm was moving. The sky was black with it. Chee stood in the darkness, listening to the mutter of thunder, inhaling the perfume, exulting in it.
He climbed into the truck and started it. How had they set it up, and why? Perhaps the FBI agent who knew Begay had been ready to retire. Perhaps an accident had been arranged. Getting rid of the assistant prosecutor who knew the witness would have been even simpler-a matter of hiring him away from the government job. That left no one who knew this minor witness was not Simon Begay. And who was he? Probably they had other Navajos from the Los Angeles community stealing cars for them. Perhaps that's what had suggested the scheme. To most white men all Navajos looked pretty much alike, just as in his first years at college all Chee had seen in white men was pink skin, freckles, and light-coloured eyes. And what would the impostor say? Chee grinned. He'd say whatever was necessary to cast doubt on the prosecution, to cast the fatal 'reasonable doubt,' to make-as Wells had put it-the U. S. District Attorney look like a horse's ass.