“I can’t tell you yet.”
“Did Butch relay a message? They won’t let Hannah in to see him, you know. They say she isn’t old enough for visiting hours. So I’m guessing he wants to tell her something through you. Am I right?”
Joe closed his eyes. What he was about to do felt like the toughest thing he’d ever done. He wished Marybeth was there cheering him on instead of making it harder. But she didn’t know.
He said, “Just keep her there, please.”
37
WHEN JOE ENTERED HIS HOUSE, HANNAH ROBERSON looked up from the board game she was playing with Lucy with fear in her eyes. Lucy looked puzzled as she turned her head from her friend to Joe.
“Hannah,” Joe said, “do you want to take a walk?”
She nodded and gathered herself up.
“Dad—what’s going on?” Lucy asked.
“It’s okay,” Hannah said to Lucy. “I’ll be back in a minute.”
“Dad,” Lucy said, annoyed.
Marybeth intervened from the kitchen. “Lucy, your dad needs to talk to Hannah.”
Joe gave Marybeth a look of appreciation, and Marybeth arched her eyebrows in a gesture asking him what was going on.
Joe held up a single finger to Hannah, indicating she should wait for a moment, then took Marybeth aside in the kitchen. He leaned close to his wife and said, “That girl is going to need our help. She’s going to need your help, Marybeth.”
Then he told her.
In reaction, Marybeth’s eyes got big and filled instantly with moisture as if twin tear duct valves had been opened. She covered her mouth with both of her hands.
She whispered, “My God . . .”
Joe said, “I’m hoping you can work with her. You’ve told me caring for horses and riding can be therapeutic. Maybe that will help her.”
“It might help some,” Marybeth said, “but this might be too big to overcome.”
Joe said, “We thought April’s problems were too big to overcome, but look at her now. You’ve worked miracles with her.”
Marybeth looked back at Joe with doubt in her eyes.
—
NATE WAS IN THE FIELD behind their house with Sheridan, looping a pigeon wing lure through the air on a string. Sheridan’s kestrel was in the smoky sky, circling, then diving at the lure. Joe heard Sheridan cry with glee, then Nate’s deep laugh.
Hannah followed him through the backyard gate and Joe closed it behind them.
“This way,” he said, gesturing toward the road.
She followed as if her feet were weighted down, as if she was making her trip to the gallows.
—
“THIS ISN’T EASY for either of us,” Joe said to her.
She nodded, her eyes large and frightened.
Joe said, “You know that your father will go to prison, maybe for the rest of his life. You know that, right?”
She nodded. “I hate it.”
“Hannah,” Joe said, “I found the .22 rifle in the trunk of your car. You really need to get rid of it somewhere no one will ever find it.”
Tears filled her eyes, but she didn’t move or speak.
“The forensics team knows the agents were killed by .22 slugs. They assume they came from your dad’s .223, but they may figure it out at some point.”
Because she seemed frozen in place, Joe reached back and grasped her arm gently and guided her on.
He said, “You and Butch were target-shooting when those agents showed up, weren’t you?”
“It was just me,” she said, in a tone barely above a whisper. “Dad was doing something with the tractor.”
Her voice trembled with sobs as she told Joe how happy she’d been that her dad was finally back, and how he smiled when she told him she’d like to go with him that afternoon to their property.
“Tell me exactly what happened,” Joe said.
She said, “The younger man got out of the car first and started walking toward my dad. He had a gun. When I looked over at Dad’s face, I saw he didn’t know what was going on. Dad looked scared and angry, and I thought that man was going to hurt him. I had the .22 in my hands and . . . I just shot him. When he fell down, the older man started to reach into his jacket and I shot him. Dad yelled at me to stop, but it was too late. I still can’t believe I did it.
“I didn’t think,” she said, crying. “I just started pulling the trigger. I didn’t want to kill them. I just wanted to make them go away.”
“They didn’t identify themselves?” Joe asked.
“No. All they said was, ‘Are you Butch Roberson?’”
Joe pulled her into him and let her cry.
“My dad was finally back with us and he was happy again,” she sobbed. “I wanted him to stay and for everything to be normal. But when those men showed up and I saw that look on my dad’s face . . .”
She was clutching him and crying and Joe didn’t know what to do with his hands.
“Afterward,” Joe said, “the two of you drove out to Big Stream Ranch and you dropped Butch off and took his pickup home. Then you got in your own car and drove it here. Do I have that right?”
“He didn’t want me to get in trouble,” she said, her voice muffled in Joe’s shirt. “He made me promise I’d never tell anyone. He said he wanted me to have a second chance.”
“Does your mother know?”
“Oh God, no,” she cried. “Please, oh God, don’t tell her.”
Joe stroked her back.
“Are you going to take me to jail?” she asked.
“No. Your dad made me promise him I wouldn’t when I figured it out. He’s already confessed and he’s not going to take it back. I just told Marybeth. She’s agreed to try and help you deal with this, but you need to promise me you’ll try and that you’ll listen to her.”
“I promise,” Hannah said. “What about Lucy? She’s my best friend.”
“That’ll be up to you,” Joe said, wishing he had Marybeth’s counsel on how best to answer that question.
“Does anyone else know?” she asked.
Joe sighed heavily. “The only other person who was in a position to have seen what happened wasn’t home that afternoon.”
“So I’m not going to jail or prison?”
“I’m not law enforcement anymore.”
He looked toward the house and saw Marybeth at the window, her hand again covering her mouth. Joe feared he’d asked of Marybeth too much.
“Your dad is giving up everything for you,” Joe said. “His freedom, his reputation, and his future. You need to keep your promise to him and make him proud.”
“I will, I will,” she wailed.
—
JOE STAYED WITH HANNAH until she regained control of herself, then said, “Go back to the house now.”
“Thank you,” she said.
“He’s a good dad,” Joe said.
“He’s the best.”
Joe watched her slowly walk back, her shoulders still heaving. Marybeth met her at the door.
Then he dug out his cell phone. It was time to return a call to Governor Rulon.
He needed a job.
AFTERWORD AND ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
The premise of this book is based on a true story.
The author thanks Mike and Chantelle Sackett of Nordman, Idaho, not only for their courage in their battle with the EPA in a situation similar to the one portrayed in the book but also for graciously sharing their story. Readers outraged by the abuse of authority may consider a donation to the Pacific Legal Foundation (http://www.pacificlegal.org), who defended the Sacketts and won a remarkable landmark 9–0 U.S. Supreme Court Decision in 2012.
Special thanks also to Bob Krauter, Hugh Hewitt, Jake Budd, Mark and Suzi Dunning, and Mark Nelson, all of whom provided insight, contacts, settings, and assistance.
My sincere appreciation to Laurie Box, Becky Reif, Molly Donnell, Roxanne Box, Jennifer Fonnesbeck, and Don Hajicek for their support at home; Ivan Held, Michael Barson, and Tom Colgan, and the legendary Neil
Nyren (who wisely dialed me back) at Putnam; and the amazing Ann Rittenberg in New York.
FEDERAL LANDOWNERSHIP (TOP 12 STATES)
STATE
TOTAL SQUARE MILES
% OWNED BY FEDERAL GOV.
1. Nevada
61,548
87.6
2. Utah
35,723
68
3. Alaska
244,627
67
4. Idaho
34,520
65.2
5. Oregon
34,084
55.5
6. California
49,842
49.9
7. Wyoming
30,902
49.7
8. Arizona
32,228
44.3
9. Colorado
25,851
38.9
10. New Mexico
28,143
36.2
11. Washington
13,984
32.8
12. Montana
29,718
31.9
Source: National Wilderness Institute
ALSO BY C. J. BOX
THE JOE PICKETT NOVELS
Force of Nature
Cold Wind
Nowhere to Run
Below Zero
Blood Trail
Free Fire
In Plain Sight
Out of Range
Trophy Hunt
Winterkill
Savage Run
Open Season
THE STAND-ALONE NOVELS
Back of Beyond
Three Weeks to Say Goodbye
Blue Heaven
C. J. Box, Breaking Point
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