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Then they’d had a falling out over a business transaction. This had been about the time the Sykes clan had assumed command. The Squires family, no doubt holding their noses, had thrown in with the Sykeses. This was the youngest Squires, David, husband of the dead woman in the trunk of the Edsel. He wore dark glasses and looked like an assassin.

“Aw, David, I’m sure sorry about this,” Cliffie said.

“What the hell are they doing here?”

He meant us.

“Just talking, I guess.”

“Well, I don’t want them here.”

Much as he was no doubt enjoying himself, even Cliffie had to wonder about a lawyer who would draw down on a judge he frequently appeared before.

“Get them out of here, Cliff. Now.”

“Yessir, David.” To us: “I guess I have to ask you folks to leave.”

Squires was already walking over to the car where two of our town’s finest were pawing all over everything without first dusting for fingerprints.

Cliffie doffed his hat again and started to turn away. Then he turned back to us. “Oh, McCain, I seen you outside with that busted taillight stuff. We’ll take care of that.

Now I’d better see to Mr. Keys.”

After I got one of the mechanics to put on my spare, I walked the Judge back to the courthouse.

It was so warm it was hard to imagine that jack-o’-lanterns were only a month away, the smell of fresh-carved pumpkin in the kitchen and scarecrows ready to stalk the twilight land, crows on their ragged shoulders and eerie bogeyman gleams in the vacancy of their eyes. That’s why I always kept a Ray Bradbury paperback near my bed. It’s fun to be scared that way.

When we got to the courthouse I remembered an article I’d recently read in The Iowan about an 1851 trial held in the original version of this Greek-revival building. Seems Black River Falls had been visited by a gang of outlaws on the run from Missouri. They took a liking to the place and stayed for a week or so. They drank, they gambled, they fought. They were in and out of jail.

During a card game, a hayseed of eighteen accused the gang, rightly, of cheating. The leader of the gang shot and killed him. All who had seen it insisted that the boy had lunged at the outlaw. The judge said it would be hard to indict the gang leader, even though the boy had been unarmed. Two nights later, the boy’s seventeen-year-old sister confronted the gang leader and shot him dead.

A trial was held; there was a hung jury. The judge said the girl committed murder, and to be true to the law you have to convict her; the jurors reluctantly did so. But that night the judge himself appeared at the rear of the jail where the young woman was being kept. He’d outfitted a horse for her, and he gave her enough money and provisions to make it to Minnesota. The girl was never seen again, and no one ever went after her. Her name had been Helen, and she grew so mythic in the minds of the settlers that they called their county Helena.

“You saw him squirm?”

“I saw him squirm. That was a great idea, Judge, asking him if he wanted me to pitch in.”

“He’ll take it under consideration.”

“He wasn’t too happy when I called him Cliffie.”

“And Squires wasn’t very happy to see us.”

“He sure wasn’t.”

“It was one of the few times he could challenge me and get away with it.”

When we reached the steps, she said, “I want to humiliate Sykes, McCain.”

“I figured you did.”

“I want to really rub his face in it.”

It was the only way a Whitney could get back at a Sykes these days. A series of embarrassments.

“Do I have time for a beer first?”

“One,” she said. “And no more.”

“How about two?”

“Two and you’ll be asleep. You’re a terrible drinker, McCain.”

She strode up the courthouse steps, used her Saturday key on the door, and went inside.

Three

Elmer’s Tap is a working-class tavern where my dad and I play shuffleboard two or three times a week. Elmer, the owner, refuses to let rock and roll be put on his jukebox so the music runs to Teresa Brewer, Frankie Laine, and The Four Lads. I’m old enough to appreciate that kind of music but it’d still be nice to have Little Richard rattle the windows once in a while.

On a football Saturday when the

Hawkeyes had a home game, most of

Elmer’s regulars were in Iowa City in the stands.

Elmer is in his late sixties but still strong enough to throw around large kegs of beer. Thirty years ago he was the state executioner. This was when he lived in Fort Madison, where the hangings were done. He won’t talk about it unless he’s drunk, which isn’t often, and then he’s clinical about it. He keeps a hangman’s noose tacked to the wall above his cash register.

Sentimental, I guess. Every once in a while you’ll catch him staring off into the past, that window we all carry around with us, and you wonder if he’s thinking about what it was like, killing those men, and if he ever sees them in his dreams. He was a swabbie in the war, with the anchor tattoos to prove it. Maybe they ward off evil dreams of trapdoors flying open.

The stools along the bar were empty. Elmer was washing glasses, a cigarette in the corner of his mouth, the smoke stinging his eyes so that he kept blinking. He was a scrawny man with thick glasses. He was also a Taft Republican.

One night my dad and I made the mistake of telling some of the regulars that we didn’t think much of Joe McCarthy. A couple of the drunker ones tried to pick fights with us, but Elmer broke it up and said there were three things you should never discuss: “Politics, religion, and the size of your dick, ‘cause you don’t want to make everybody jealous.” Words to live by.

“How they hangin’, McCain?” he managed to say around his cigarette. He didn’t seem to know anything about the Squires woman. I decided to let him find out on his own. I didn’t want to go through it all again.

“Oh, pretty good. How about a Falstaff in the bottle?”

With a soapy hand, he jerked the cigarette from his mouth and dropped it to the floor, where he proceeded to smash it with his foot as if it were a particularly pesky bug.

He got me my beer.

“Shit,” he said. “You hear that?”

The radio said it was halftime and the Hawkeyes were down by seven.

“This was supposed to be a Rose Bowl year.”

Then: “How come you don’t like sports, anyway?”

“My heart can’t take the excitement.” I’d always preferred books. This may have explained my distrust of Joe McCarthy. Why couldn’t he have been a Baptist? Why did he have to embarrass the rest of us Irish Catholics?

He smirked and shook his head and then said, “That buddy of yours is puttin’ them away.”

I looked along the opposite wall where the booths ran all the way to the back. I didn’t see anybody.

“He’s on the inside of the last booth so you can’t see him. Cronin. Somethin’s really got him down.”

I was going to be Jeff Cronin’s best man in less than a month. What was going on?

I decided to find out. I picked up my beer and went back there.

The booth was wood. It had been painted a few years back. A few of the dirty words scrawled into it I didn’t understand. But they sure sounded foul.

I sat down. He didn’t seem to see me.

Just stared at his beer. His head was bobbing. He’d had enough to start losing muscular control.

“Jeff?”

He looked up. “Hi.”

“You all right?”

“Pretty drunk, actually.”

“Yeah. I kind of noticed that.”

Jeff Cronin was a big guy. Everybody always said he should have played football but he was slow and clumsy. His father bred horses, and horses were Jeff’s love. He was one of four local veterinarians. He wore a blue sweatshirt. His blond hair was ragged. He hadn’t shaved. “Marriage is off, buddy.”