CHAPTER
25
Scavengers in flight can view large areas at once and also keep their eyes on other scavengers.
—The Turkey Vulture Society
Our impromptu supper party broke up around 9:30 and Dwight was silent on the short drive home. I knew he had to be thinking of all that Anne and Sigrid had told him, and I thought I knew where he’d wind up with those thoughts. Sure enough, when we reached the house, he did not cut off the engine.
“I’ll be back in about an hour,” he said.
“I’m coming with you.”
“No you’re not.”
“Dammit, Dwight! If you think I’m going to let you go alone to meet with someone who can kill with his bare hands, you can think again. Just let me check on the kids, see if they can stay another hour, okay?”
I got out, leaving the truck door open. “And if you drive off without me, I’ll roust out Bo Poole and half your deputies, I mean it, Dwight.”
He wasn’t happy, but he did wait while I went inside. Cal was already asleep and the kids were watching a scary movie that wouldn’t end till eleven, so they were willing to stay. Especially when I mentioned that there was a half gallon of Rocky Road ice cream hidden in the freezer under packages of peas. I made a quick detour back through the garage to get my .38 out of the locked toolbox in the trunk of my car. Daddy had given it to me back when I was still in private practice and driving all over that part of the state alone at night. Dwight made me get a permit once he realized I wasn’t going to give it up, but I probably don’t get it out more than once a year.
I tucked it into the deep pocket of my coat, a three-quarter-length car coat of thick black wool. What Dwight didn’t know wouldn’t hurt either one of us.
He was still frowning when I got back in the truck, and immediately started laying down conditions.
“I won’t speak unless spoken to,” I promised. “But let’s keep some space between us, just in case.”
For some reason, this amused him. “I really don’t think he’s likely to rush us or try anything physical.”
He described how Crawford had been unable to hoist himself up onto a table a few days earlier. “He says he fell down some stairs last year and broke both arms.”
I heard the slight emphasis on says. “You don’t think so?”
“Oh, I’m pretty sure his arms were broken,” Dwight said grimly. “He certainly doesn’t seem to have a lot of strength in the left one. But I doubt if he got hurt falling down some stairs.”
“So he couldn’t have been the one who broke that pilot’s neck?”
“Ordinarily, I’d say no, but we don’t know how badly he wanted the man dead. Assuming he did.”
“But he’s a spy?”
“He could be. Or an ex-spy.”
“Shouldn’t you tell the FBI?”
By the dashboard lights, I saw Dwight’s wry smile. “After they’ve made it very clear that they don’t want my help? If they haven’t tumbled to his interest in the airport, why should I tell them?”
“You’d let someone get away with murder before you’d swallow your pride?”
“It’s not always black and white, shug.”
I thought about that and what it could mean as we turned at the NutriGood intersection. The lights from a gas station at the edge of the highway beamed a dozen bright lights in every direction, polluting the darkness and washing out the stars. Why our county commissioners can’t make developers reduce the wattage on their lights and aim them downward is something I’ll never understand. They just look at me blankly when I corner one of them and ask.
When we reached the dirt-and-gravel road that led to the old Ferrabee place, I said, “You’ve never talked to me about when you were in Army Intelligence.”
“Sure I have.”
“You’ve talked about Germany, but not what you actually did there.”
He didn’t answer.
“Or why you got out.”
“Jonna hated the Army. She hated it as an enlisted man’s wife and she kept on hating it even after I was commissioned and started getting promoted.”
“So you got out because of her?”
He shrugged. “She thought it would save our marriage.”
“You’re evading the question,” I said quietly.
He didn’t answer until we reached the end of the road, where he stopped the truck, cut the headlights, and half turned to me in his seat. “Let’s just say that I got to a level where I didn’t like what I was seeing and I didn’t want to do the things I was going to be asked to do.”
“But you’ve stayed in touch with some of the people who stayed in.”
“Yes.”
“And they’ve told you something about the dead man. More than what you’ve told Anne and Sigrid.”
“Yes.”
“Things you’re not going to tell me?”
“Let it go, honey.”
There’s a time to push and there’s a time to back off.
“Okay,” I said.
He put the truck in gear, flicked on the lights, and we drove down to the old farmhouse. Crawford’s truck was parked out front, but there was no sign of light through the windows. Dwight pulled up only inches away from the porch and tapped the horn two or three times, then opened the door so that anyone inside the house could see by the interior cab light who we were.
A few minutes later, the door opened and Martin Crawford stepped out onto the porch. He was fully dressed in his heavy black jacket with his hat pulled low on his forehead as he peered out at us warily. “Bryant?”
“Sorry if we woke you, Crawford,” he said, one foot on the ground, the other on the edge of the floorboard, “but I need to talk to you, ask you a few questions.”
“They can’t wait till morning?”
The moon was about halfway to full, and when Dwight doused the lights, the stars overhead blazed out of the velvety sky. To the west, beyond the trees, we could see a faint glow of the lights from that service station, but the rest of the sky was pricked with twinkling points. Despite the moon, it was such a clear, high-pressure evening that I could even see the Milky Way swirling through the winter constellations. A cold wind blew up from the creek, though, and I hunched deeper into my wool coat as the cab’s heat was sucked away.
Crawford closed the door behind him and eased himself down to sit on the edge of the porch only a couple of feet away from Dwight.
“We had supper with your cousins tonight.”
In the moonlight, Martin Crawford’s face was a pale square beneath the brim of his black fedora. He didn’t speak.
“Anne’s remembered where she saw you before,” Dwight told him.
Silence.
“Somalia,” Dwight said.
Crawford took a deep breath and let it out so heavily I heard it from where I sat motionless.
“I was never in Somalia,” he said at last.
“She says you were. Almost twenty years ago. Mogadishu. A UN peacekeeping mission.”
“Really? We went out to dinner together? Had drinks?”
“You can play all the games you want, Crawford, but Anne knows what she saw.”
“You’re right. Forgive me. Stupid of me not to have shaved before meeting her again, but it was twenty years ago. She only saw my face briefly and not in full light.”
“I imagine every detail of that night is seared in her memory,” Dwight said mildly.
He didn’t answer. Cold was seeping into my bones and I drew my scarf up higher around my face. Crawford stood up as if to go back inside.
“It was kind of you to drive out and tell me this, Bryant, but I’m afraid your wife is getting chilled and I’m rather tired, so if you’ll excuse me…”
“A man was killed in a motel near here,” Dwight said. “He was a pilot.”
Crawford stopped with his hand on the doorknob.
“His neck was broken. Just the way you broke the neck of Anne’s guard.”
“Are you here to arrest me?”
“Should I be?”
He turned back to Dwight. “Now who’s playing games?”
“Not me. The FBI’s claimed jurisdiction.”
In the near darkness, I saw Crawford nod as if in professional sympathy. “Turf wars? They’re the same the whole bloody world over, aren’t they? So why are you here instead of them if it’s an FBI case?”
“It’s the boy. Jeremy Harper. He saw one of your photo files with an airplane on it. Anne thinks he may have copied it off your computer while you two were outside. It may have been what almost got him killed the same night someone killed that pilot. I was hoping you’d let me take a look. Help me figure out what it was.”
“Unless you have a search warrant, absolutely not,” Crawford said.
“Actually, I’m not real sure I need a search warrant,” Dwight drawled. “Our Constitution protects its citizens from unreasonable searches, but you’re not a citizen, are you?” He looked over his shoulder at me. “The feds might could come bustin’ in, but how you reckon you’d rule on that, Deb’rah?”
“Having never considered how our Bill of Rights might apply to a foreign national, I’d probably buck it up to a superior court judge,” I said.
Both men laughed. I wasn’t sure what was happening here, but I sensed an easing of tension between the two of them.
“I’ll see you tomorrow then,” Dwight said, drawing his leg back in the truck.
“I’ll count on it,” Crawford said. “Good night, Bryant. Judge.”
We were almost home before I finished working it out.
“You warned him!” I said. “You as good as told him that the FBI might be around to question him and impound his computer. Why?”
“He saved Anne’s life when he didn’t have to,” Dwight said quietly. “Probably at a serious personal risk. That has to count for something, don’t you think?”
The best thing about Dwight’s truck is the bench seat. So much more friendly than bucket seats. He reached over and drew me close to him. I leaned my head on his shoulder with my hand on his thigh and said, “I guess so.”
Dwight chuckled and gave me a quick kiss on the forehead. “Now aren’t you glad you didn’t need to shoot him?”
The Buzzard Table
Margaret Maron's books
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- Paris The Novel
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- Tethered (Novella)
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