“They must have already loaded the wolves in the airplane,” Tibbs said. “I wonder what kind of ruckus they make inside.”
“She’s opened the door and about to climb in,” Tibbs continued. “She started the engine. Oh-oh, there is fluid coming out of the engine. One of the hoses already broke.”
The Old Man felt himself tense up. The plan could go awry. If it did, they would have to stay until the job was done. The thought of that possibility nauseated him.
“It’s pouring out of the airplane,” Tibbs said. “I can’t tell whether her assistant can see it or not.”
“She’s going to check the gauges,” the Old Man speculated. “She’s going to know there’s something wrong.”
“The plane’s moving,” Tibbs countered.
The Old Man watched. The airplane was moving too quickly now for Tibbs to keep the binoculars on it. The Cessna built up speed on the runway. Both of them knew it still wasn’t too late for Emily Betts to notice the leakage and abort the takeoff. The sound of the engine wound up to a high pitch.
The Old Man held his breath and watched the airplane, and saw its shadow form below it as it moved down the runway. The shadow began to shrink, and then it shot away into the sagebrush. Emily Betts was airborne. Back at the hangar, the man who had helped Betts push the Cessna stood by the open door, watched the plane with a hand at his brow, and then went inside. The hangar door closed. He had obviously not noticed anything wrong.
They watched the Cessna turn south until it was a shiny white speck above the mountains.
The big black Ford was approaching the town of Augusta, Montana, from the north when the Old Man rolled his head over in the seat to address Charlie. The headrest pinched the bow of his dark glasses so that the lenses shifted on his face to the right, making his face look lopsided. He didn’t care.
“How many more, Charlie?” He asked.
Tibbs didn’t respond with his usual glare. He was always in an especially good mood when his plans worked out as intended.
“One,” Tibbs said. “Just one more.”
The Old Man let his breath whistle out through his teeth. “Thank God for that,” he said.
“You won’t mind this one,” Charlie said. “This one is a lawyer.”
The Old Man smiled, more at Charlie’s rare attempt at levity than the fact that the next target was a lawyer.
Tibbs turned and smiled an awkward smile back at the Old Man. “We’ve done good work. We’ve been losing for thirty years. We’ve just been sitting back and taking it and taking it and taking it because we think that somewhere, somehow the politicians or judges will wake up and set things right. But we’ve waited too long and we’ve been too quiet. We’ve let them have just about everything they want from us. It’s about damn frigging time our side went on the offensive. And you and me are the front line. We are the warriors,” Charlie’s voice hissed.
“We’ve opened a gaping hole in the front line of the environmentalists. All of those bastards with their sandals and little glasses and lawsuits and trust funds don’t even know what’s hit them yet. Now it’s up to our employers to take advantage of that gap in their front line and ram straight the hell through it. This is the first step in reclaiming our land, and our West.”
The Old Man was speechless. Since he had met Charlie Tibbs three months before, throughout the training and the traveling, Tibbs had not spoken this much in a single week. Charlie Tibbs was eloquent, determined, and filled with righteous vengeance and passion. He was also, the Old Man reflected, the most terrifying man he had ever met.
16
The next morning, Twelve Sleep County Attorney Robey Hersig looked up from his desk, saw Joe Pickett standing at his door with his hat in hand, and sighed theatrically.
“Joe, come on in and please close the door,” Hersig said, pushing his chair back. “You’re not going to like what I’m going to tell you.”
Joe entered and sat down in a worn hardback chair facing Hersig’s desk. The office was tiny and claustrophobic. Even with his knees tight up against the desk, Joe could still be hit by the door if someone opened it. Three of the four walls in the office were covered with bookcases of legal volumes. An old beige computer monitor, stained with fingerprints, sat lifeless on the desk. Behind Robey was his framed University of Wyoming Law School diploma and a photo of his young son holding a thirteen-inch brown trout. Hersig was in his first term of office but was well known throughout the county because his father and uncles were third-generation ranchers. Hersig had rodeoed in college until he broke both his pelvis and sternum at the Deadwood rodeo, which was when he decided to get serious about law school. Joe did not know Hersig well on a personal level, but they had gotten along professionally. Joe had come to Hersig with two previous cases. Hersig had aggressively prosecuted a local pilot who used a helicopter to herd elk into a clearing so his thirteen-year-old son could shoot them. In the second case, Hersig hadn’t had any qualms recommending high fines for a fisherman Joe caught with fifty-seven trout—fifty-one over the limit.
Hersig was tall and balding, with short salt-and-pepper hair and a close-cropped beard. He liked to wear his large rodeo buckles with his suit in court. He was methodical and persuasive, and the only criticism Joe had heard about him was that he was extra cautious, that he insisted the sheriff bring him only cases that were airtight.
“I was going to call you,” Hersig said.
“I was in the neighborhood and thought I’d see if you were in,” Joe explained. “I need to ask Sheriff Barnum a couple of things about that Stewie Woods incident.” Barnum’s paper-strewn office was down the hall in the county building.
“I hope to hell that’s the last exploding cow in my county,” Hersig lamented.
“So what is it that I’m not going to like?” Joe asked.
Hersig leaned back in his chair and put his boots up on the desk. He looked squarely at Joe.
“Jim Finotta is an asshole. Everybody knows that.”
Joe nodded.
“But we’re not going to take these poaching charges against him any further.”
Joe waited for a punch line. There wasn’t one. He felt anger start to well up, but he stayed measured.
“Yes?”
Hersig swung his feet down and leaned forward. “I went and talked to Matt Sandvick so we could prepare his affidavit. He denies that he ever did any work for Finotta and denies he even talked with you about the man. He no longer has that photo you told me about, and his records from June suddenly can’t be found.”
“I can’t believe it,” Joe said, stunned.
“You should have kept that picture, Joe,” Hersig said.
Joe looked away. Of course he should have. But he had taken Sandvick at his word.
“Did you tell Finotta that Sandvick was going to blow the whistle on him?” Hersig asked, cocking an eyebrow.
Joe thought for a moment, then: “Yup. I did tell him that when I saw him the other day.”
Hersig raised his hands in a “what can I do?” gesture.
“I trusted Matt,” Joe said.
“What’s not to trust about Matt?” Hersig said cynically.
“Finotta got to him, didn’t he?” Joe asked.
Hersig looked thoughtful. “Probably. But there’s not a whole hell of a lot we can do to prove it unless Sandvick changes his mind again. And believe me, if he changes his mind, Finotta will slaughter him in court and point out that Sandvick changed his story three different times. That’s not real credible.”
Joe shook his head. “What kind of a guy are we dealing with here? Finotta, I mean. Would he intimidate a witness over a poaching charge?” Joe knew that if Finotta were convicted, he would, at best, lose his hunting privileges and have to pay $10,000 in fines. Finotta could certainly afford that. Game violations were shamefully lenient compared to other crimes, Joe thought.
Hersig smiled ruefully. “You know about those big hunters he hosts every year. He’s got the governor, both senato
rs. Lawyers and judges from all over. It would be a real loss of stature if word got out that he was convicted for poaching. That’s a crime for low-lifes, not big-time lawyers and developers. It would get press attention and embarrass the hell out of Finotta in front of his big-shot pals. So you bet he’ll fight it. He’s the kind of guy who will work behind the scenes and call in all his chits to get what he wants. Finotta isn’t the kind of guy to just accept a bad hand.”
“Look, Joe,” Hersig said, “Finotta’s made most of his money by settling cases out of court. He’s merciless in working the system and putting pressure on people. He’s even been officially warned about intimidating those who plan to testify, but never brought up on charges, and no sanctions have ever been filed against him.”
Joe sighed. Then he thought of something.
“I still have the DNA sample of the dead elk,” Joe said eagerly. “We don’t need Sandvick if we can get that mount and prove that it’s a match.”
Hersig shook his head. “I thought of that. I brought it up with Judge Pennock and he won’t sign a warrant to go get that elk. He told me he thinks you’ve harassed Mr. Finotta quite enough.”
“He said that?”
“It’s a direct quote.”
Joe banged the desk with his knuckles. “Finotta is Pennock’s pal. Pennock has an interest in Elkhorn Ranches.” Finotta, Joe thought, played in a different league than he or Robey Hersig.
Hersig held up his hand to caution Joe. “It’s best not to cast aspersions on the judge in this office.”
“Shouldn’t Judge Pennock give this one to another judge? Isn’t this a conflict of interest?”
“Recuse himself, you mean?” Hersig said, raising his eyebrows. “Do you actually want me to suggest that to him?”
Joe read in Hersig’s expression that challenging Judge Pennock was absolutely the last thing Hersig wanted to do.
“Yup,” Joe said. “That’s exactly what I want to do. What about Judge what’s-his-name in Johnson County?”
“Judge Cohn?” Hersig placed both of his hands on his face and rubbed his eyes as if Joe were torturing him.
“There isn’t a person in Twelve Sleep County that wouldn’t think it was wrong for Judge Pennock to preside over a crime involving his business partner,” Joe said. “Even Pennock can understand that.”
“Joe—”
“So you need to ask Pennock to assign the case to another judge,” Joe said, and stood up.
Hersig looked up and spoke sharply. “Joe, what you’re talking about will get you in all kinds of trouble. You think Finotta is going to give up? He’s got a personal line to the governor, and to your director. I’ve got to tell you this case is really weak. You’ve got a witness who recanted and the only way you can prove anything is to get an order from a judge in another county to search the home of a Twelve Sleep County rancher and lawyer. Do you really think that mount will still be on the wall when you go to get it? My guess is that instead of that elk, there will be a charming English hunting print or some damn thing.”
Now Hersig stood up, his face softening. “Joe, I like you. You are one of the few good guys I know. But this has turned into one of those cases where a truck backs up to the courthouse and dumps a huge pile of steaming shit on the floor. My job would be to try to convince the judge and jury that somewhere in all of that shit a gem of a case is buried, if they’ll just be patient and get used to the smell. And to tell you the truth, if you were to keep pressing, it would start to sound a little like harassment.”
Joe listened. He was surprised how vehement Hersig was.
“Keep this up and I might be prosecuting you, Joe.”
“This just really makes me mad,” Joe said. “The guy killed the biggest elk in the Bighorns and left the meat.”
Hersig waved Joe away. “I know. I know. You already told me that. There’s just not much I can do here.”
Joe turned and fumbled to open the door without banging the chair he had been sitting in.
“Joe!” Hersig called after him.
Joe leaned back into the office.
“I hate to say this, but usually the assholes win.”
Joe stood silently for a moment, then put his hat on his head.
“Seems like, in this county, they do,” Joe said, and closed the door hard.
Sheriff O. R. “Bud” Barnum was in his office and Joe walked in as Barnum checked his watch.
“I’ve got a lunch meeting planned,” Barnum said, raising his heavy-lidded eyes. “You should have called ahead.”
“This will take five minutes,” Joe stated. The meeting with Hersig had battered him. He was humiliated, angry, and frustrated with how it had gone. He was mad at himself for trusting Sandvick and not anticipating how slick and effective Finotta could be. He wondered how much time Finotta had spent in the last week anticipating Joe’s moves and countering them, and wondered what Finotta was telling the judge, the governor, and the director of the agency about him.
Joe decided to start the conversation with the less incendiary topic and told Barnum about the branch in the tree and asked if it had been examined for blood, hair, or fiber. Barnum looked at Joe with barely disguised impatience.
“You’re here to ask me about one particular branch in a particular tree?”
“It’s in the shape of a fishhook,” Joe said.
Joe accepted how silly it sounded. But after the meeting with Hersig, his well of embarrassment was dry. Joe described the location of the tree, how the branch could almost certainly support the weight of a man, and how the branch was stained dark red. He left out his feeling of being watched that night.
Barnum shook his head slowly, as if Joe Pickett had disappointed him.
“So you’re cowboying again, huh?” Barnum asked. “Following up on my investigation like you did when those outfitters got killed?”
Joe fought the urge to bring up the fact that Barnum had botched that investigation and had reached the wrong conclusion well before Joe ever got involved.
Barnum stood up and looked at his watch again. “The state crime lab boys photographed, tested, and measured everything up there. I would guess they looked at your branch as well. However, I will ask my deputy to send them an e-mail to confirm that. Are we through?”
“We’re through except for one thing.”
“And that is?” Barnum asked, reaching for his jacket.
“I’m going to petition Judge Cohn in Johnson County for a search warrant for Jim Finotta’s residence,” Joe said flatly. “Then I’m going to arrest that son-of-a-bitch for poaching.”
This froze Barnum. Slowly, the sheriff swiveled his head toward Joe. Barnum’s eyes, which had seen just about everything, showed surprise.
“I just thought you ought to know, so that when you hear about the arrest, you can say you were officially forewarned,” Joe said calmly.
A crooked smile formed on Barnum’s face. “I’d sure miss that half a beef at Christmas,” he said. “But something tells me I don’t have much to worry about in that regard.”
Joe ignored the insult. “And when I bring him in I’m going to ask him how he knew about that exploding cow before I told him about it.”
There was a “closed” sign in the front window of Wolf Mountain Taxidermy and a hand-lettered sign taped to the inside of the front-door window.
Joe stopped to read it.
GONE FISHING UNTIL SEPT. 1.
CAN’T WAIT UNTIL HUNTING SEASON!
FOR RATES AND ORDERS, SEE
WWW.SANDVICKTAXIDERMY.COM
Joe slumped against the doorframe and looked down the empty Main Street of Saddlestring. At the end of the street, on the bridge, a knot of teenage boys were cheering on a buddy who was underneath them in the river. The boy had tied a rope to the railing on the bridge and was waterskiing in place on the fast summer runoff of the Twelve Sleep River. Joe suddenly felt very old.
Marybeth was at the master bathroom sink, cleaning her face for bed and thinking about t
he day, when Joe came and flopped down on their bed. He was in a foul mood.
“Finotta outmaneuvred me,” he said bluntly. “He was ten steps ahead of me all the time, and he got to Sandvick. I really screwed that one up by not getting that photo from Sandvick on the spot.”
Marybeth sighed inwardly. Sometimes her husband was a little too quick to take people at their word and it frustrated her. She hated it when he got taken advantage of. “You’re too trusting, Joe.” She looked at him in the mirror. “You’re not cynical enough sometimes.”
“I’m working on that.”
She turned, the washcloth still poised near her cheek. “Finotta is a reptile, but you need to give up on him right now, Joe. He could buy and sell us if he wanted to. And if he’s as bad as we think he is, you’ll get another crack at him some day.”
Joe grunted.
Marybeth thought of Ginger Finotta and about their aborted conversation in the library. She thought about the Tom Horn book, which hadn’t yet been returned.
17
Thermopolis, Wyoming
July 1
Through billows of sulfur-smelling steam, the Old Man watched and waited for Charlie Tibbs. The Old Man reclined on the mineral-slick steps of a very hot pool and closed his eyes. He willed the muscles in his neck and back to begin to loosen up and untie what he imagined as a series of complicated, technical knots. He sighed heavily, and slid forward another step so the hot water lapped at his chin.
They were in the Central Wyoming town of Thermopolis, hard against the border of the Wind River Indian Reservation. Thermopolis claimed to have the “largest hot springs in the world,” a claim based not on the number of spas or facilities but on the volume of hot water that poured from the earth.
The Old Man slid forward on the step and leaned further back. His mouth was now under water, then his ears. Total submersion created a static whooshing sound. He breathed slowly through his nose. He was big and white and the hair on his legs and chest riffled beneath the water like a bed of kelp. In addition to helping his sore back, the Old Man hoped the water would somehow purge his wracked, tormented soul. But that was a lot to ask of Thermopolis.