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The farmer heard Jerl’s car booming around the curves on the gravel backroad, ducked into the timber, and his popping eyes witnessed Jerl’s final act. The minute Jerl got back in his car and rounded a curve, the farmer went sliding and tumbling into the thicketed ravine where Pretty’s body had come to rest.

A final flicker of life twitched through Pretty’s china blue eyes. Her silken mane of yellow hair was a bloody tangle about her face as she tried to speak. The farmer dropped his ear close to her lips and caught her final words. She told him what had happened, as if there was any doubt in his mind.

The farmer ran a shortcut to the lodge, broke a window to let himself in, and phoned the sheriffs office in Comfort. Sheriff Collie Loudermilk had flashed the word to the sheriffs of neighboring counties. Roadblocks were set up in minutes.

With Jerl Brownlee in the net, Collie had sent me, his deputy, to fetch down the body. I’d brought the poor broken thing to Doc Weatherly’s, gritted my teeth, and dragged my feet to Comfort’s only decent cafe, wishing it was just for a cup of Mom Roddenberry’s good coffee.

Mom didn’t interrupt my tale once. She had a good grip on herself now. She took my words like the seasoned willow takes the slashing sleet. Her suffering was too deep to show on the surface.

We stopped in the shadow of the porch that rambled across the front of Doc Weatherly’s place. Mom Roddenbery lifted a hand and touched my cheek. “You’re a good young man, Gaither Jones, and I’m beholden to you for telling me the straight of it.”

“She was a sweet, human girl, Mom. She was tempted. And she tried to overcome. You always remember that”

“Yes, Gaither, I will.”

“And be sure we’ll get Jerl Brownlee, Mom.”

She lifted her eyes slow-like, and they were the hoar frost that rimes distant peaks. “Yes, that is all that’s left now, Gaither, justice: eye for eye, tooth for tooth. If Pretty is to rest easy in her grave, Jerl Brownlee must reap his due.”

I didn’t need to answer that one. We were both hill people.

“Again, I’m obliged to you, Gaither. Now, I know you got work to do. I’ll just ease inside alone to spend a last minute with my daughter.”

I watched her creep up the porch steps. Each one added about ten years to her narrow, bony shoulders. The door of the undertaking parlor opened, swallowed her. I turned, jammed my hands in the pockets of my tan twill, kicked some hollyhocks growing alongside the walk, and cussed my way back up the street to the office.

The short-range walkie-talkie, which the taxpayers begrudged Collie and me out of the mail order catalogue, was crackling when I walked in.

“Gaither, where in dad-blasted thunderation you been?” Collie Loudermilk howled through the static, sounding like a banshee.

“Playing pool and drinking beer,” I said sourly, looking across the street at that “Closed” sign on the cafe door. “You bringing in Jerl Brownlee?”

The walkie-talkie like to have spit fire. “He spotted my car blocking Miden Falls road, skidded off the curve, turned over twice, straight down the mountainside.”

“He’s hurt? Maybe bleeding to death?” I inquired happily.

“He bounced out healthy as a jackrabbit and with the same ideas. I’ve lost him, Gaither, somewhere in the gorges above Cat Track Holler. If we don’t flush him out of this wild country before nightfall, we lose him. He’s got the whole compass to aim at, a good chance of making it out of these mountains. If he does that well heeled as he is, next thing we know he may be playing with them French girls in that Riviera place.”

“I reckon you need me and Red Runner and Old Bailey,” I said.

“Naw,” Collie growled, “I’m just fiddling with this gadget in hopes of communing with a braying jackass! Will you stop wasting time?”

“You’re doing all the talking,” I said, and cut him off.

I grabbed the two dog leashes off the wall peg, and skedaddled out of the office, around the old brick building to the dog lot behind the jail. Old Bailey and Red Runner heard me rattling the gate open. They snuffled out of their kennels, long ears nearly dragging in the dust. Their baggy, forlorn eyes spotted the leashes, and a quiver went through both dogs. They perked up quick. I swear those bloodhounds can even smell out the prospect of smelling out a man.

A setting sun threw streamers of golden fire across the peaks in the west and twilight was settling in the valleys when me and the two dogs homed in on Collie Loudermilk’s location.

Collie is a skinny, sandy man who looks like he couldn’t last out a mountain winter in front of the fireplace, but he’s the kind of gristle that can dull a knife. He’s been sheriffing in Comfort for twenty years, and knowing him firsthand, it wouldn’t surprise me if it’s twenty more before I inherit his job.

While the hounds and I got our breath in the shadows of the gorges. Collie shook out a sports jacket that would have cost me a month’s pay.

“Lying loose in the back seat of Jerl Brownlee’s wrecked car,” Collie said. “Let’s hope it’s his and that he’s worn it recent before he pitched it back there.”

Collie squatted before the excited dogs, held out the jacket, and they took a good long whiff. I stayed with them, keeping the leashes slack, as they snuffled around for a few seconds. Then with a howl fair to curdle the blood, both dogs hit the ends of the leashes, almost jerking me off my feet.

We tracked Jerl up a long hollow where the briars were as thick as riled-up bees, and across a long stretch of naked shale, where only a dog’s pads had good footing. Collie slipped halfway across. He burned skin off his knees and elbows as he slid and rolled twenty feet down the slope. He got up cussing because I was holding up the dogs, waiting for him to climb back to us.

Beyond the shale. Jerl had jumped a spring-fed creek, which held us up for a good ten minutes, and crossed a soggy meadow. Then he’d stumbled onto the dim remains of an old logging trail and picked that route up through the timber.

I didn’t have a dry rag on me by this time. I was sweating so hard from the exertion. The dogs had lather on their flanks and wet tongues hanging from the sides of their mouths. Collie looked as fresh as a new-grown stinkweed, eyes anxious on the purple shadows that closed in about us.

As the dogs tugged me along. I began to lose track of the number of gullies we crossed, the patches of underbrush we slammed through. My legs felt as if they had fallen off, and I looked down in the failing light to make sure they were still there, like a pair of pump handles underneath me.

Then all of a sudden my glazing eyes glimpsed Collie’s shadow shooting out ahead of us. I still didn’t see the flicker of motion that had caught his attention. He splashed across a seep that would turn into a creek during a heavy rain, and dived into a canebreak. A minor hell erupted in there. Sawgrass and reeds rattled. A covey of birds sprayed out in all directions. Cattail fluff showered into the air.

Collie came out just as the dogs and I cleared the seep. He had Jerl Brownlee by the shirt collar, Jerl draped on the ground behind him.

“Got him, by gum,” Collie said, backhanding an ooze of blood off his nose.

“You done all right, Sheriff,” I said, nodding, “after me and the dogs cornered him for you.”

Jerl was about the most bruised, scratched, begrimed, and generally trail-weary young punk you’d ever want to see. Collie and I and Jerl’s rubbery legs finally got him back to the sheriff’s car. We put the dogs in front with Collie. I got in back to guard the prisoner, who didn’t look much like it was necessary. We’d come back for my car later.