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Felicia said, “I’m afraid. Afraid to know.”

“We’ll have to find him before we know anything,” I said. I looked at Paul Two Bears. “What does he look like, Two Bears?”

“I never saw him,” the youth said. He took a small snapshot from his jacket. “My father had this picture. It’s our only one, and it’s twenty years old or more.”

It was a photo of a youth in Levi’s, boots and stetson, standing beside a pinto pony. The wide brim shaded his face, and it was hard to tell how dark he was. Beside the horse, he seemed about five-feet-seven-or-eight, and his skin was shining smooth. He resembled none of the men I knew in the case, but twenty hard years had passed. A lot had happened to Ralph Blackwind, but you can usually see the man of forty in the youth of twenty-two or so.

Usually, but not always, no. Some men change a great deal between twenty and forty, especially with hard living and weight, and the young Indian in the photo was whip thin. Still, if he was anyone I knew, there should have been a hint at least, a feeling. Unless-?

“Was his face changed by the war, or later?”

“Not the war so much, my father said, but by his escape from North Korea, and by prison later,” Paul Two Bears said. “The escape changed his whole expression, and his face was beaten in prison fights. My father said he was badly scarred in the prison break, too.”

No one I knew in the case had serious scars. I thought about all the money he had sent to Pine River. A man with a lot of money, scars on his face, and a need to hide.

“Was he very dark?”

“No, his mother was half-Caucasian,” Ralph Two Bears said. “My grandfather’s last wife. Ralph was born when the old man was fifty-four. His hair wasn’t black, either. Dark brown, going gray even fifteen years ago, my father said.”

“What color eyes?”

“Dark brown, like all of us.”

I nodded. “All right, I’ll go back and see if I can follow Francesca’s trail. You want to stay here, Felicia?”

She thought, looked around the inside of the hogan. “No, I’ll go back with you. I suppose I want to know, and I want my mother and fath

… Dad Crawford, to know what I’ve found here. Later, maybe… I can come back.”

Paul Two Bears said, “I’ll come with you.”

That was the way we left Pine River, the three of us.

21

We landed at Kennedy early in the cold afternoon. I walked Felicia and Paul Two Bears to their Allegheny Airlines flight for Dresden. I didn’t ask her what she planned, or give her any advice. I had a hunch she already knew her plans. She wasn’t a halfway girl anymore.

I caught a taxi to Forty-second and Fifth Avenue-the Main Library. I got the microfilm for The New York Times for the whole month of October 1957. Carl Gans had named a date, too, as he died-October tenth. I ran the film through the viewer. The story was on page three on October eleventh, as I realized Carl Gans had known it was. Trying to tell me fast at the end.

An attempted holdup, that might have been more of an attempted business extortion, had been foiled the night before at the Emerald Room by the heroic action of one Raul Negra, a kitchen helper. (That was the name Carl Gans had used, had said that Francesca had asked about-Raul Negra.)

Four men had entered the restaurant just at closing time. They shot the bouncer, Carl Gans, in the leg, killed a bodyguard of the owner, Commissioner Abram Zaremba, lined up the staff, and started to smash the place and rob the registers. Raul Negra, unseen in the kitchen, had crawled out unobserved by the gunmen, picked up the dead bodyguard’s gun, and started shooting. With incredible skill and accuracy, the Times said, Negra used the tables as cover, and shot down all four of the gunmen without being scratched himself.

The police commended Negra, who was a Mexican national and spoke no English, and who said he had learned to shoot in the Mexican army. Commissioner Zaremba, whose lawyer spoke for the hero, rewarded the man with an immediate ten thousand dollars, and a better position’ in his Chicago office. That was all, and though I looked at every issue for another month, there was no further mention of heroic Raul Negra. He seemed to have faded away-I bet he had, and fast.

I didn’t doubt who Raul Negra had really been, or why he spoke no English to the police, and had Zaremba’s lawyers talk for him. He had acted the way a trained, experienced soldier would have, using all the skills learned in a hard war, and all the skills of an Indian who had crossed two thousand miles of populated country without once being seen, or even suspected, by the police-the same way the Apache Masai had not so very long ago.

The reward money coincided exactly with the first money that arrived at Pine River. I wondered what else Abram Zaremba had done for “Raul Negra.” A job, the newspaper said, but what job, and had it been in Chicago? Or had Ralph Blackwind used the rest of that ten thousand dollars to repair, and heavily change, his scarred face, and work a lot closer to Dresden and New York?

The Dunstan house was as I had left it days before, except that one car was gone. I parked my rerented car, and walked up to the door for the third time. This time, Harmon Dunstan opened the door himself.

“Don’t you ever stop, Fortune?”

“When it’s finished. The police checked you out for the murder of Carl Gans?”

“Yes. I had no alibi, neither did Grace. She’s not home.”

“I don’t want her,” I said, and pushed him back into that polished living room. He was small, and dark, but strong enough. “You knew Carl Gans, didn’t you?”

“I never met him, no.”

“But you met Raul Negra. Fifteen years ago.”

He went to the bar, poured his inevitable drink.

I said, “When did Ralph Blackwind become Raul Negra?”

Dunstan looked for a cigarette. I let him look; There was no hurry. He was going to have to talk now.

“It’s not scandal you were scared about, or even involvement,” I said. “It was hiding an escaped prisoner who had killed a prison guard, and maybe the man found in the Catskill lake, too. He came to his old captain-who maybe owed him a big favor or two.”

It was a guess in the dark, but it was the key that opened him up. I had guessed right.

“He saved my life twice in Korea,” Dunstan said, the words coming in a rush now, as if pent up since the night Francesca Crawford had died. “He came here five months after he escaped. He’d been lucky, he said, a freak fluke that they just about believed he was dead, and he was able to work his way back to Pine River like a ghost the way he had made it out of North Korea. He never told me just what had happened, but he’d realized that when it took the police so long to find that body in the lake, they couldn’t be sure just who it was in the lake. He had a real chance, as long, as he made no mistakes. That’s why he left Pine River, he could be found there.

“He went to L.A., but was nearly spotted. So he got fake Mexican papers as Raul Negra, and came to me. The police had been around to me a lot, I didn’t think they’d come again, and I owed Ralph. I gave him a job in my stockroom. But the police did come again, and Ralph decided it was too risky, and left. I haven’t seen or heard from him since-almost fifteen years. I don’t regret what I did, but I’d hidden a fugitive murderer, and I’ve been scared ever since the Crawford girl came around and then was killed.”

He gulped at his drink. “What I did was a crime. I’ve worked too hard and long to build my business. I won’t lose it. It’s all I have.”

“You’ve got a wife, too, but you chase women.”

“A wife, but no woman,” Dunstan said. “Maybe that was why I helped Ralph then, too. He’d had a raw deal from a woman. But he was a man, he fought. I never could. I’ve got a good business, lots of money, a good home, but I had no luck with my woman, not even back then, and there’s nothing I could ever do about it.”

He sat down on a bar stool. “You see, I love Grace. I always have. I want her, but she never wanted me-not the way I want her to want me. She makes a good home, a comfortable life. A good companion and hostess, and nothing else.”