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“You’re saying he killed the woman in cold blood.”

“Maybe he didn’t mean to kill her. He probably took the powder out of some capsules and dropped it in her coffee. It wasn’t supposed to be enough to kill her—just enough to make her damned sick. He didn’t count on her getting in the car and passing out at the wheel and driving head-on, into a truck. How could he? He didn’t intend that, he only meant for her to get sick. Then he planned to send Jimmy Oto down to the prison to convince Joe that somebody was witching Maria. Then Jimmy was supposed to help Joe break out. Kendrick planted an idea in Joe’s head that Harlan Natagee had witched her and Harlan was working for you. The whole idea was to get Joe mad enough to kill you.”

“Nobody’s that devious,” Rand said. “I don’t believe it.”

“It’s not far-fetched. Kendrick wanted Joe to kill you because it would solve all his problems at once. It would get you off his back and he’d be free to go ahead into court and win the water case. And it would destroy whatever credibility Joe had left as a witness against him. Look at it—if Joe kills you, who’s going to believe him when he says he never killed Calisher?”

“I guess that makes a kind of sense,” Rand said, bemused. “I mean it’s one way to look at things, isn’t it. But all this sly business about dragging Harlan Natagee’s name into it and persuading the kid that Harlan was working for me—that just doesn’t follow.”

“It does. Because Kendrick had to cover his own tracks in case anything went wrong. He couldn’t afford to have you find out that he was trying to have you killed. You’d have thrown the Calisher case wide open and had him arrested. He had to be roundabout—he had to keep Joe in the dark. There was always the chance we’d catch Joe before Joe got to you and if that happened Kendrick had to be in the clear. So he arranged to put the suspicion on Harlan.”

“But what about Maria?”

“I told you I don’t think he meant her to die. But it worked to his advantage. It gave Joe more reason than ever to kill you. And it got a big financial load off Kendrick’s back. You don’t have to pay dead people.

“Victorio’s car puts Kendrick at the scene of the crime,” Watchman went on. “And I expect after we get a warrant we’ll find the Seconal and a hacksaw that matches the marks on Jimmy’s tie rod.”

Rand’s face was pale yellow against the somber books. “If that’s all the evidence you’ve got you won’t convict him on a jaywalking rap, let alone murder.”

“I think the hacksaw will turn up. It’ll connect him to the Oto murder. We may never prove in court that he was responsible for the deaths of Maria and little Joe but we’ll prove he killed Calisher. We’ll nail him cold on that one.”

“With what?”

“The evidence you give me.”

“Out of the goodness of my magnanimous heart?”

“Out of the Anglo-Saxon businessman’s enlightened self-interest, Mr. Rand. You’re wide open to prosecution. Extortion. Bribery. Withholding evidence in a felony case.”

“Prove that.”

“Do you think I can’t?” Watchman demanded.

Rand met his gaze. That he was not sure of his ground was clear enough; he knew the extent of Watchman’s knowledge but he wasn’t sure how much evidence Watchman could produce.

Watchman had to play the last cards.

He said, “You’ll still have some of your hide left intact if you use your head. Look: whatever happens to Kendrick, the tribe won’t go on using him to represent them. There’ll be another lawyer. It may be Tom Victorio. You won’t have a lever against him. He’ll drag you into court and you’ll lose every drop of water you’ve got up here.”

“That remains to be seen.”

“Come off it, Rand.”

Rand’s eyes flicked at him irritably.

Watchman said, “The tribe’s got an axe to grind too. It would be pretty good if they could nail down proof that all these sneak murders had been committed by a white man. That kind of thing’s damned important to them. I imagine you’d find a more sympathetic ear in Whiteriver if you went partway down that road with them.”

Rand stared at him, half in disbelief. “I didn’t take you for a cheap politician, Trooper.”

“I’m not talking about a frame. If an Indian had been guilty of any of this we wouldn’t be here talking about it. I’m giving you an incentive for telling the truth.”

Rand watched him through half-lidded eyes that failed to convey the indifference he was trying to display.

Watchman said, “A few years ago the Tribal Council offered you a compromise, didn’t they?”

“One acre-foot in ten,” Rand grated. “It wasn’t enough. Not near enough.”

“There’s a few thousand Indians down here, Mr. Rand. How many mouths have you got to feed on your ranch? I imagine the tribe thought it was a damned generous offer.”

“They thought so. I didn’t.”

“Maybe it’ll look a little better to you now, since it’s going to be a choice of one-tenth or nothing at all.”

Rand just watched him.

“You’d have to quit irrigating some fields. But your cows wouldn’t go thirsty. I don’t know how your white mind works but if it was me I’d rather have one-tenth of that water than none of it.”

“Assuming what you say is true, why should the tribe offer to renew the compromise if they think they can win a hundred percent of it in court?”

“I think they’d go along with it. Provided they had your help convicting Kendrick.”

“Convicting him hell. You haven’t got a scrap of evidence.”

“That’s why we’re still here talking, Mr. Rand, and not on our way to the nearest county jail.” Watchman decided there had been enough of this; he changed his tone. “When he goes down you’ll go with him unless you do something to prevent it right now. Later’s too late. You follow me? If you don’t get off Kendrick’s ship right now you sink with it. The last lifeboat’s being lowered right here in this room. Right now. Nobody’s going to be able to keep your name out of it, nobody’s going to protect your public image. It’s too late for that. But you can avoid prosecution.”

“Go on. I’m listening.”

“You know damn well I’ll get enough on him to send him up for the Jimmy Oto murder. Somebody must have seen him drive out of town in the direction of Cuncon the day he sawed through Jimmy’s axle rod. He wouldn’t have snapped his mouth shut and started bleating about a search warrant if that hacksaw was out of sight and if he didn’t have a Seconal prescription that’ll match the contents of the dead woman’s stomach, and if he didn’t have those payments recorded in his private check stubs. And I’ll tell you one other thing. As soon as all this leaks out of this building and the word gets around the Reservation it won’t be just Joe Threepersons who’s out there gunning for your hide. It’ll be every Apache in these mountains. Now you think that one over, Mr. Rand.”

“You bastard. Whether you had any proof or not you’d throw me to the wolves just the same.”

“Because you and I both know I wouldn’t be throwing an innocent man to the wolves. My conscience would get along just fine.”

“You’re a class-A son of a bitch. You’re supposed to operate according to certain rules, Trooper.”

“Oh I learned all about rules when I was a Navajo kid in a mission school, Mr. Rand. I learned exactly what you can do with the rules.”

“You’re a strange bastard to be a cop, that’s sure as God made little green apples, ain’t it.” Rand took a deep breath into his chest and held it there momentarily and let it out noisily. His attention bobbed around the cluttered cell and came back to rest against Watchman. Finally he spoke again. “Let’s put it in the form of a hypothesis. No admissions of fact.”

“Put it any way you want to,” Watchman said. “Just point me to the evidence.”