What made the old fort interesting to those who persisted in hunting the several legendary gold mines of the adjoining territory was its checkered history. The so-called "fort" had originated about 1850 when the Americans were replacing the Mexicans as landlords of the territory. It was called Ojo del Oso then, after the spring where travelers had stopped and bears came down out of the Zuñi Mountains to get a drink. Next it was called Fort Fauntleroy, honoring a colonel who had served bravely in the Mexican war. But said colonel went south in 1860 to serve bravely in the Confederate Army, causing the name to be changed to Wingate, after an officer free of secessionist loyalties. During the efforts of Carlton to round up the Navajos into the concentration camp at Bosque Redondo and clear the Four Corners mountains for prospectors hunting the gold he coveted, it had been used as a sort of holding pen for Dineh families being herded eastward into captivity. It played the same role in reverse when President Grant let the tribe go home to their "Dine' Bike'yah," their land between the sacred mountains, in 1868.
The gold prospectors of the time had come often to the fort. They found a little gold here and there, but the huge bonanza discoveries always seemed to be "lost" before they could be exploited. They produced more legends than wealth. As Leaphorn recalled its history, the fort had been expanded from 100 square miles to 130 square miles in 1881 for reasons no one seemed to understand. It had been used as a sort of internment camp for Mexicans fleeing Pancho Villa during the Mexican Revolution, as a center for sheep research, as a vocational school for Indians, etc.; but its major role came as the place where the military could store immense amounts of high explosives that, as Leaphorn's uncle had explained it to him, "wouldn't kill nobody important if they blew away this whole part of the world."
There had been times when the fort was busy, with trains rolling in and out on the network of spur tracks from the main lines and hundreds of employees kept busy with the loading. But on this afternoon, as Leaphorn drove under the rusty iron arch over the main entrance, all was quiet. Two pickups were parked down a side street in front of a warehouse, and a car sat in front of the modest old headquarters building. Leaphorn parked beside it, went up the steps into the office, and looked around. He hadn't been here in years—since the first year he had been called in from Crownpoint and assigned to run the special investigations office in Window Rock. But nothing seemed to have changed.
A gray-haired woman arose from behind the counter, where apparently she had been filing something. She hadn't changed much either—had already been wrinkled and gray last time he'd seen her close up. Teresa Hano was her name. He was amazed that he remembered it.
"Good to see you again, Lieutenant," she said. "You law enforcement people seem to be taking a lot of interest in us all of a sudden. What brings you out here? And in plain clothes, too."
And now he was surprised she remembered him. He laughed, patted his denim jacket, said: "This is what I'm wearing all the time now. No more policeman."
"No?" she said. "I was guessing you're interested in the killing of the Doherty boy. If you were, I couldn't tell you anything much. Nothing I didn't already tell the fbi men."
"Actually I'm more interested in an old Halloween prank—if that's what it was."
Teresa Hano said, "Oh?" and looked puzzled.
"It was the night Mr. Wiley Denton shot that swindler at his house over near Gallup. That same night some kids from McGaffey were cutting across the fort and heard—"
"Yes, Yes," Mrs. Hano said. "And called the sheriff. Lot of excitement over that." The memory produced a happy smile. Excitement must be as rare at a closed-down army base as it was for a retired policeman.
"That wasn't a criminal case, of course," he said. "But I always wondered about it. Four teenagers hearing that crying or wailing and thinking it must be a woman. I know your security folks helped the deputy check around the next day and no one ever found anything. Has anything interesting turned up since then?"
"Not that I heard of," Mrs. Hano said.
"But since you mentioned the Doherty boy," Leaphorn said, "what was it he wanted to look at in the archives when he was out here?"
"The gold-mining stuff," Mrs. Hano said. She made a wry face. "We don't get many archive customers out here. And they come in two kinds. They're either students working on stuff in history or anthropology. Writing something about the 'Long Walk' you Navajos went on, or about the time we were keeping the Mexican Revolution refugees out here. Or wanting to look at the Matthews papers."
She had pulled open a drawer below the counter, extracted a ledger and flopped it open.
"Are the ethnography professors still going over the Matthews stuff?" Leaphorn asked. He'd done it himself when he was working on his master's thesis at Arizona State. Dr. Washington Matthews had been a surgeon at the fort in the 1880s and '90s, had learned the language and had written report after report on the religion and culture of the Navajos—pretty well laying the groundwork for scholarly studies of the tribe. But by now Leaphorn guessed the anthropologists had pretty well plowed the Matthews papers.
"Washington Matthews," Mrs. Hano said. "Your hataalii neez. Your 'tall doctor.' Haven't had any ethnographers rereading his stuff lately, but the gold hunters have discovered him."
"Really," Leaphorn said. "What'd he know about that?"
"Wrote a letter about some of the tall tales the prospectors coming in here were telling back then. I think that's it."
"Was Doherty one of them?"
"I guess indirectly," she said. "What he wanted was to see whatever that McKay fellow looked at. The man Mr. Denton shot."
"Doherty, too? From what I've read there are several reports in these files about the troubles the prospectors were having with us, and the Apaches and the Utes, and what they were reporting about their finds. Would Doherty run across the Matthews stuff looking through that? Sort of on a fishing expedition?"
"I don't think so. I remember him real well because he came in here several times and he'd spend a lot of time reading and I didn't know him and I didn't want him slipping out with anything. But no. The first time he was here he asked about the Matthews letters, and if we had copies of his correspondence with a doctor back in Boston. He had the doctor's name and the dates with a bunch of filing cards in his briefcase. He pretty well knew what he wanted."
"You know, Mrs. Hano, I think I should take a look at that correspondence. Could you help me find it?"
She did.
The letter Doherty had wanted to see came out of a carton labeled "Box 3, W.M. Correspondence (copies)." Most of it was devoted to telling a friend at Harvard of the way in which one must go about his hobby of collecting Navajo history—of knowing the season and the place where certain stories should be told, and the social ritual of brewing the coffee, of preparing the "mountain tobacco" to be rolled in corn shucks and smoked, and of assuring each of the elders assembled in the hogan that you really wanted to know the story he had to tell. Leaphorn found himself smiling as he read it, thinking how nothing had changed from that day in 1881. The old traditionalist still, as Matthews reported it, refrained from "telling the complete story," and would hold something back, passing the account along to the next speaker, so that all of it would not emerge "from one man's mouth."
True as that material remained, it couldn't have been what had drawn Doherty here. That came on the final page. There Matthews reported that "many of these old fellows take great pleasure in misleading us whites, trying to see how gullible we will be. That, of course, makes it necessary for us belagaana who are serious about understanding their culture to make sure that we don't swallow stories which come just 'from one man's mouth.'