The Wailing Wind - LightNovelsOnl.com
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"Actually I'm more interested in an old Halloween prank-if that's what it was."
Teresa Hano said, "Oh?" and looked puzzled.
"It was the night Mr. Wiley Denton shot that swindler at his house over near Gallup. That same night some kids from McGaffey were cutting across the fort and heard-"
"Yes, Yes," Mrs. Hano said. "And called the sheriff. Lot of excitement over that." The memory produced a happy smile. Excitement must be as rare at a closed-down army base as it was for a retired policeman.
"That wasn't a criminal case, of course," he said. "But I always wondered about it. Four teenagers hearing that crying or wailing and thinking it must be a woman. I know your security folks helped the deputy check around the next day and no one ever found anything. Has anything interesting turned up since then?"
"Not that I heard of," Mrs. Hano said.
"But since you mentioned the Doherty boy," Leaphorn said, "what was it he wanted to look at in the archives when he was out here?"
"The gold-mining stuff," Mrs. Hano said. She made a wry face. "We don't get many archive customers out here. And they come in two kinds. They're either students working on stuff in history or anthropology. Writing something about the 'Long Walk' you Navajos went on, or about the time we were keeping the Mexican Revolution refugees out here. Or wanting to look at the Matthews papers."
She had pulled open a drawer below the counter, extracted a ledger and flopped it open.
"Are the ethnography professors still going over the Matthews stuff?" Leaphorn asked. He'd done it himself when he was working on his master's thesis at Arizona State. Dr. Was.h.i.+ngton Matthews had been a surgeon at the fort in the 1880s and '90s, had learned the language and had written report after report on the religion and culture of the Navajos-pretty well laying the groundwork for scholarly studies of the tribe. But by now Leaphorn guessed the anthropologists had pretty well plowed the Matthews papers.
"Was.h.i.+ngton Matthews," Mrs. Hano said. "Your hataalii neez hataalii neez. Your 'tall doctor.' Haven't had any ethnographers rereading his stuff lately, but the gold hunters have discovered him."
"Really," Leaphorn said. "What'd he know about that?"
"Wrote a letter about some of the tall tales the prospectors coming in here were telling back then. I think that's it."
"Was Doherty one of them?"
"I guess indirectly," she said. "What he wanted was to see whatever that McKay fellow looked at. The man Mr. Denton shot."
"Doherty, too? From what I've read there are several reports in these files about the troubles the prospectors were having with us, and the Apaches and the Utes, and what they were reporting about their finds. Would Doherty run across the Matthews stuff looking through that? Sort of on a fis.h.i.+ng expedition?"
"I don't think so. I remember him real well because he came in here several times and he'd spend a lot of time reading and I didn't know him and I didn't want him slipping out with anything. But no. The first time he was here he asked about the Matthews letters, and if we had copies of his correspondence with a doctor back in Boston. He had the doctor's name and the dates with a bunch of filing cards in his briefcase. He pretty well knew what he wanted."
"You know, Mrs. Hano, I think I should take a look at that correspondence. Could you help me find it?"
She did.
The letter Doherty had wanted to see came out of a carton labeled "Box 3, W.M. Correspondence (copies)." Most of it was devoted to telling a friend at Harvard of the way in which one must go about his hobby of collecting Navajo history-of knowing the season and the place where certain stories should be told, and the social ritual of brewing the coffee, of preparing the "mountain tobacco" to be rolled in corn shucks and smoked, and of a.s.suring each of the elders a.s.sembled in the hogan that you really wanted to know the story he had to tell. Leaphorn found himself smiling as he read it, thinking how nothing had changed from that day in 1881. The old traditionalist still, as Matthews reported it, refrained from "telling the complete story," and would hold something back, pa.s.sing the account along to the next speaker, so that all of it would not emerge "from one man's mouth."
True as that material remained, it couldn't have been what had drawn Doherty here. That came on the final page. There Matthews reported that "many of these old fellows take great pleasure in misleading us whites, trying to see how gullible we will be. That, of course, makes it necessary for us belagaana belagaana who are serious about understanding their culture to make sure that we don't swallow stories which come just 'from one man's mouth.' who are serious about understanding their culture to make sure that we don't swallow stories which come just 'from one man's mouth.'
"One of their sources of private amus.e.m.e.nt are tales of how they have misled this plague of gold prospectors-the men who swarmed into these mountains with their greed inspired by the great discoveries in California and the Black Hills. For example, the records here at Wingate suggest the famous 'Lost Adams diggings,' of which I have told you previously, are 'two days travel' from the fort, and the equally notorious 'Golden Calf' bonanza was also said to be 'an easy day's ride' from our post here. Among the gold seekers, the universally accepted dogma is that the direction from here is south, over the Zuni Mountains. My old, old friend Anson Bai tells me, and the same comes from other mouths, that both of those gold deposits were actually found in the opposite direction-north of the fort toward Mesa de los Lobos and Coyote Canyon. They say this misdirection was provided deliberately by various Navajo guides partly because of these people's ineffable sense of humor and partly out of patriotism. They understand that the worst thing that can happen to a tribe is to have whites discover gold deposits on the tribe's land."
Leaphorn reread the letter, returned it to its place, and closed the box.
"You don't need a copy?"
"No thanks," Leaphorn said. "I can remember it."
"You read that last part?"
Leaphorn nodded.
"Like what happened to those tribes in California," Mrs. Hano said. "Pretty well exterminated. The Nez Perce, and the people up in the Dakotas."
Mrs. Hano was a Zuni married to a Hopi, Leaphorn remembered. But if he had her family properly sorted out, then one of her daughters married an Osage. Finding oil on Osage land had pretty well killed off that tribe.
"Mr. Doherty had you make copies of that letter. Is that right?"
"Just one," Mrs. Hano said. "He said he was in a hurry."
"Did he say why?"
Mrs. Hano shook her head. "None of my business, and I didn't ask. I remembered that Mr. McKay was in a hurry, too. He had someone waiting for him in his car."
"He did? Did he say who?"
"No. I noticed it was a woman, and I told him to bring her on in to be comfortable, and he said she was taking a nap and he didn't want to bother her."
"A woman? Young. Old. Indian. White. Did you recognize her?"
Mrs. Hano laughed. "Questions. Questions. I just got a glimpse. Just enough to think Mr. McKay might have had his wife with him." She gave Leaphorn a wry look. "Then when Mr. Denton killed Mr. McKay and Mr. Denton's wife went away, I got to thinking maybe it wasn't Mr. McKay's wife napping in his car."
8.
Before Leaphorn left the archives building, he hurried things along by getting Mrs. Hano to call the fort security number and have someone go down and unlock the gate on the road that led into the area where the TPL crews were converting rocket fuel into plastic explosive and, beyond that, into the infinity of bunkers.
The call turned out to be needless. The guard was a retired Gallup cop who recognized Leaphorn. He also was one of those who had earned a little overtime that Halloween night five years earlier helping the McKinley County sheriff's office in its fruitless hunt for what the guard called "those d.a.m.ned kids with their practical jokes."
And maybe the guard was right. Change the maybe to probably. What Leaphorn had learned in the archives had jarred his self-confidence. He seemed to have misjudged McKay, for starters. At least he wasn't the sort of con artist Leaphorn had presumed. And a huge doubt had clouded his certainty about Wiley Denton's missing wife. Maybe everyone was right about her except her parents, who had the good reason of loving her, plus Denton and himself. Maybe he really was a romantic, as both Emma and Louisa labeled him. Perhaps Denton could claim love, or love plus a frail ego that couldn't tolerate this betrayal, for his own self-deception. Or perhaps that same frail ego had triggered Denton into a double murder when he learned his wife had betrayed him.
Leaphorn drove past miles of bunkers, having intended to refresh his very rusty memory of the fort's layout and stimulate some new ideas. Instead he was concentrating on rea.s.sessing his old obsession with the fate of Linda Denton. If the woman in McKay's car had been Linda, if she had gone with McKay to tell Wiley she was leaving him for a new, young, and handsome lover, an enraged Denton might have shot them both. But then he could hardly expect even a very friendly local judge would slap his wrist on a self-defense plea. A double homicide including one's wife, a local girl, would have probably drawn a life term. So Denton shot both but hid Linda's body.
But no. Denton's housekeeper had been there. She'd called the police. She would have known.
Yet the newspaper ads urging Linda to come home looked exactly like a cover. Leaphorn went over it again without finding a logical way to make Wiley Denton a double murderer. Finally he drove up the slope where the southern boundary of the old fort had been expanded into the Zuni Mountains' foothills and parked at the ruins of a small prehistoric pueblo.
He'd been there when he was a very new cop. Someone had complained that an official at the base had excavated the site, a possible violation of the federal antiquities act. It wasn't Navajo Tribal Police business, but the Gallup Independent Gallup Independent had reported that Officer Leaphorn had just been awarded a master's degree in anthropology. Thus he was sent out to take a look, had reported the site was probably a very late Anasazi outpost with no genuine evidence of looting apparent. Nothing had come of it, except Leaphorn remembered the hilltop offered a superb view of the fort below and the red rock high country across Interstate 40 and the railroad to the south. This afternoon he needed something like that to look at to restore his spirits. had reported that Officer Leaphorn had just been awarded a master's degree in anthropology. Thus he was sent out to take a look, had reported the site was probably a very late Anasazi outpost with no genuine evidence of looting apparent. Nothing had come of it, except Leaphorn remembered the hilltop offered a superb view of the fort below and the red rock high country across Interstate 40 and the railroad to the south. This afternoon he needed something like that to look at to restore his spirits.
He parked, sat on the tumbled wall of the ruin, and tried to fit what he'd learned from Mrs. Hano into the puzzle of Linda Denton. He found that McKay had stopped being a closed case and had become a sort of mystery himself. Denton, too, seemed to have a different role in this odd conundrum. And maybe even young Mr. Doherty. Cowboy Dashee had given the impression that Denton might be the suspect of choice in the theory of the Doherty homicide the Bureau was developing. What did the Federals know that he didn't? Probably a lot.
The sun was low now, spreading the long shadow of this hill across the empty road below, and giving a shape to the rows of huge, half-buried quonset huts spread for miles below. He looked at them awhile, watched the shadows spread, counted the bunkers in one section, tried to estimate their number, and finally guessed at a thousand, more or less. But it told him only that he had to know more about McKay and Doherty and Denton before he could solve this nagging question of what had happened to a young woman named Linda.
9.
Yesterday had been as bad for Officer Bernadette Manuelito as it had been for Lieutenant Joe Leaphorn, retired. A lot of exercise and frustration, capped off with a painful blow to the self-confidence.
Bernie had spent the day trying to take a look into every canyon, arroyo, and wash that drained the west slope of the Chuska in the area prescribed by the mileage limit suggested by Thomas Doherty's Zip Lube sticker. While that territorial description included a relatively small area of mountain slope, it involved a lot of back-and-forth and up-and-down driving to locate drainages, and literally miles of walking. She had acc.u.mulated pretty much the same mixture of burrs and stickers on her pant legs and socks as had the late Mr. Doherty, with the exception of the goathead seeds of the puncturevine she'd seen in the rubber soles of his shoes. Thus she concluded that the drainages she'd explored lacked the cool damp spots where Doherty had been. Or, more likely, her entire idea was half-baked nonsense.
Bernie might have dropped her one-woman campaign as useless had it not been for the call she made to the dispatcher on her way home. Rudy Nez was dispatching again. Rudy said there were no calls or messages for her. Quiet day, in fact. A couple of driving-under-the-influence arrests, a domestic violence call, and so forth. And a couple of Feds had come in with Captain Nakai from Window Rock and had a meeting with Captain Largo, and the radio on unit nine was out of service again and Elliot called in for a backup out at Red Valley and then called in and said he didn't need it. And Sergeant Yazzie, from over at Crownpoint, he- "What did the Feds want?" Bernie asked.
"How would I know?" Rudy said, sounding a bit miffed. Among Navajos such interruptions are not done. One listens until the speaker completes his speech. One certainly doesn't break into the middle of sentences.
"I don't know how you'd know, Rudy," Bernie said. "But I'll bet you do know."
"I could guess," Rudy said. "Apparently they found a pinch or two of placer gold dust in Doherty's truck. On the floor mat probably, or under it, or maybe in his shoes. And they want Captain Largo to get us out checking the appropriate chapter houses to see if he's been doing any placer mining."
"They didn't say where they found this gold dust?"
"Not to me, they didn't. I already said that, didn't I? Maybe they told Captain Largo. Ask him." Nez was irked by that interruption, and she got no more out of him.
But she had enough to put the pieces together. Sergeant Chee had turned her Prince Albert can and its sandy contents over to the Federal Bureau of Investigation. Which is what he should have done. Had to do, in fact. Not doing that would be concealing evidence in a federal felony case. She imagined the scene; the FBI agent asking Chee how he had come into possession of the tin. Sergeant Chee saying that Officer Manuelito had turned it in. And the agent asking when this had happened, the agent asking why Officer Manuelito had not left the can at the scene of the murder, the agent asking if said officer had taken care to preserve fingerprints, the agent asking if Officer Manuelito's training had not taught her that such prints might be crucial in bringing the perpetrator of the crime to justice. She imagined Chee standing there, red-faced, embarra.s.sed, and angry at her for causing this. Sergeant Chee walking out of the office, wondering how the h.e.l.l Officer Manuelito could have been so stupid. But, of course, he had to turn it in. He was a cop, wasn't he. What else could he do?
But now it was today, not yesterday. She had awakened angry after a restless night spent reliving a dozen variations of the scene just described-angry and determined to keep trying to prove she was just as smart as they were. She was going to find the place where this Thomas Doherty had been when he was shot, and if she couldn't, then she was going to resign and go find herself a dull, boring job as a secretary, or a salesclerk, or something a long way from Jim Chee.
Therefore, here she was glumly and hopelessly checking the botany of drainages on the east slope of the Chuska Mountains. The first little canyon had been much like the last one yesterday-the same dry-country thistles, sandburs, chamisa, thorns. The second one she tried was larger, looked more promising. She had made a map for herself, thinking that if it worked for the Legendary Lieutenant Leaphorn it might work for her, and, according to her markings on that, this one was on the very margins of the distance she had allowed. It was connected somewhere downstream with the Coyote Canyon Wash, which drained the Remanent Mesa, or was it Mesa de los Lobos? Bernie was not yet accustomed to the English or Spanish t.i.tles maps put on landmarks. Anyway, it was deeper than the last one, which improved the chances for the seep water and afternoon shade that were needed to add the variety required for the seeds and stickers Doherty's socks and pant legs had encountered.
She followed a very marginal track in her elderly pickup until an unusually jarring dozen yards over boulders reminded her of the doubtful condition of her tires. There she pulled off to the side and walked. She'd found dampness in a place or two within the first quarter mile and some signs of truck tire tracks that didn't seem to match Doherty's tires. Not that she had looked at them when she had a chance, but Captain Largo had mentioned they were the same sort of Firestones he had on his pickup-and she had then looked very carefully at those.
Around an abrupt bend she saw a hogan. It was high enough up the slope to be safe from flash floods, built in the traditional octagonal shape of this part of Navajo Country, with its door facing properly eastward, a roof of dark-red tarpaper, and a rusty-looking chimney pipe jutting from the central smoke hole-the tarpaper and the pipe having by now become almost as traditional as the shape.
It was near noon but still chilly at this canyon bottom, and Bernie stood out in the warming sunlight while she examined the place-the stone building, a little shed, a fallen-down sheep pen, and a plank outhouse near the canyon bottom. The track she had been following seemed to end up the slope by the hogan, but no vehicle was there now. Nor was any smoke coming from the pipe, suggesting neither coffee nor anything else was brewing for lunch.
She walked up the track to the foot of the slope, went through the polite formula of shouting greetings, and waiting, and shouting again, and waiting, until the visitor was a.s.sured either that no one was at home, or, if they were, they didn't want to be bothered.
Finding the hogan was a disappointment. It seemed to make it less likely that Doherty would be finding his gold dust upstream from an occupied residence-as this one obviously would be when the occupants returned from where duty had taken them. Within a mile she found another seep-plenty of damp earth here but no puncturevines in view.
She had seen no vehicle tracks since the hogan. Now the canyon had become too narrow, too steep, and too rocky for anything on wheels, and she saw the first signs of that epic "summer of fire" that had swept through the high-country forests of the mountain West in 1999. The stems of fire-killed ponderosa pines lined the ridge above her. Ahead, the canyon was littered with the blackened trunks of fallen trees. Some places on the cliffs were splotched with the flame-r.e.t.a.r.dant chemicals dropped to check the blaze. Other sections, where the fire had spread through deep acc.u.mulations of dead brush, the rock was marked with broad streaks of black. Runoff from three seasons of rain had swept the sandy bottom clean, but above the runoff level new vegetation was restoring itself in some places, and others showed only the black and gray of soot and ashes.
All this was bad news to that segment of Bernie's brain that was hunting a murder site. The segment that was amateur botanist and enthusiastic naturalist was elated. She had before her a laboratory display of how much nature can recover in three years after a disaster. For example, she could see no sign that the chamisa that flourished around the hogan had made any comeback at all in the fire zone. The thread-and-needle gra.s.s was back, and so were the snakeweed, johnsongra.s.s, asters, and (alas) the sandburs. She hurried along up-canyon, finding more damp places, more seeps, more varieties of plants-including infant ponderosa, pinon, and juniper seedlings. What would be the elevation here, she wondered. Probably getting close to seven thousand feet. As the alt.i.tude increased, so had the precipitation. At this level the vegetation had been heavier, the residue of dead trees and brush thicker at canyon bottom and the fire more intense.
Bernie climbed over a barrier of broken boulders into a flatter stretch of streambed. On the shaded side of the canyon she noticed a seep where the stones were still s.h.i.+ny with moisture. Below that she found her first puncturevine by the usual method-stepping on its goathead thorns. She sat on the rocks to extract these from her boot soles, and noticed as she did that she'd smeared her hands with the same sort of soot she'd found on them at Doherty's truck.
It was there she saw the owl. It was perched on the limb of a fire-damaged ponderosa that leaned over the canyon some fifty yards upstream. Bernie sucked in her breath and stared. No Navajo child of her generation grew up without being told that the owl was the symbol of death and disaster. Told by someone that he flew at night to do his killing, and appeared in daylight only as a warning. Bernie had put that belief more or less behind her. Yet it was a large owl, it was looking at her, and something about this fire-blackened place had already made her uneasy. So she sat a bit, staring back at the motionless bird, and finally decided to ignore it. The next start it gave her came when she was much, much closer. She stopped again to inspect it and noticed it didn't look quite natural. It seemed to be tied to its limb. In fact, it was an artificial owl. The sort one buys to perch in fruit trees to keep birds from harvesting the cherries. Why put it there? The only reason that seemed possible to Bernie was to warn Navajos to stay away.
More evidence, Bernie thought, that this must be the canyon. This had to be it. But would Chee and Largo and the rest of them believe her? As she considered that question she noticed another oddity. The bottom sand ahead of her looked unnaturally flat and unnaturally divided into levels. She hurried upstream.
A sequence of logs had been dug into the streambed to form four little check dams-each about fifteen feet upstream and a foot or so higher than the one below. Clearly their purpose was to slow stream flow after rains, causing the current to drop more of its sand. Gravity being at work, the first stuff to sink would be the heavy gold particles. She was looking at a gold-panning sluice, and if she'd had a shovel and a bucket, she was pretty sure she could take home enough gold-rich sand to pay for the gasoline she'd used getting here. In fact, from where she stood, she could see the hole where, just a few days ago, Thomas Doherty had mined himself a little of the stuff for his Prince Albert can.
And she would do so herself-just enough in her jacket pocket to deflate any doubters, to restore her status as an equal among equals in the world of law enforcement. Officer Bernadette Manuelito, filled with that special form of joy and exuberance produced when despairing disappointment is abruptly replaced with utter success, trotted happily up the streambed, her tired legs no longer tired, and jumped over the half-buried log into the sand.
She would always wonder if that was why the shot missed her.
10.
It took Bernie some small fraction of a second to identify the mixture of sounds-the sharp crack of a bullet breaking the sound barrier as it zipped past her head, the sharp whack as it struck a few yards ahead, the bang of the rifle that fired it. Identification made, Bernie scrambled for cover in the rocks along the canyon wall.
She huddled there a moment, collecting her scattered wits and making an inventory of the situation. Bernie's scramble had taken her behind a great slab of fallen stone-a place that had the advantage of being unquestionably bulletproof and the disadvantage of offering no easy way out which provided good cover. She sat with her back against the stone, unsnapped the strap on her holster, removed the pistol, and looked at it. It was a standard-issue police revolver, which held six .38-caliber rounds. Bernie had qualified with a high score at the firing range, but she hadn't developed any fondness for the thing. It was heavy, bulky, and cold, and it symbolized the one side of police work that did not appeal to her. She had worked at it, imagining situations in which she shot someone (always a fiercely aggressive male) in defense of some innocent life. In these situations Bernie had managed to merely disable and disarm the aggressor, ignoring the standard police policy of not drawing your gun unless prepared to shoot it, and not shooting unless you shot to kill. Now she knew, or thought she knew, that she would shoot if this situation required it, and shoot for the middle of the man trying to kill her.
And who might that be? A man, of course. Bernie could not visualize a woman as sniper. Probably the same man who'd shot Thomas Doherty in the back-and probably for the same reason, which would be something involving this gold deposit. As Hostiin Yellow had warned her, white men will kill for gold. She thought of that warning. Hostiin Yellow had seemed unusually forceful and emphatic about it, but at the time she had pa.s.sed that off as a fond uncle trying to deal with a willful niece. Now it suggested he had some well-informed reason to think the canyon she was looking for was dangerous. Right as usual. She had a wise old uncle. Too bad Hostiin Yellow didn't have a wiser niece.
Bernie could think of nothing to do now except wait and listen. Which she did, ears straining against the silence, eyes alert for any sign of motion. Normally in such a canyon there would be a variety of birds around harvesting the autumn crop of seeds and dried berries. But the fire that had swept through here had left nothing to eat but ashes. This narrowed place in the canyon must have produced an intensely hot fire, fueled by a decades-deep acc.u.mulation of dead wood. Now that Bernie had a quiet moment to think of it, she deduced what had happened here. The same endless years that had deposited post-rainfall gold dust in the sluice had been depositing dead trash to hide it. Fire had reduced the trash to ash. Runoff had swept the ash from the stream bottom. The old secret lay exposed.
The ash deposits had survived where Bernie was huddling, too high to be cleansed by runoff water, and those weeds that thrive in the wake of forest fires had made scant progress. A few yards below, moisture from a seep had kept the soil damp. There the brown and gray were replaced by splotches of green. And there, ground-clinging puncturevines had spread-their tough-as-stone little seeds impervious even to such intense heat.
Bernie arose from the ash pile on which she'd been sitting, overcame an impulse to slip out to the damp area in search of Doherty's boot tracks-clinching proof that he'd been here, if not absolute evidence he'd been shot here. That impulse was squelched immediately by the image of someone looking at her over his rifle sights. She sat again. What to do?
She could wait here. When it got dark, she could slip up canyon, climb out-(Could she climb out? Probably, but doing it in the dark would be dangerous)-and then walk out. Out to where? The climb would take her to the top, so to speak and more or less, of Mesa de los Lobos. Southward there was the Iyanbito Refinery, but getting there meant climbing down the rampart of cliffs north of the Santa Fe Railroad and Interstate 40. No way. Miles to the east was the Church Rock uranium mine, if that was still operating. Rough country over the mesa to get there, but she could do it. About then, another mood overcame Bernie. Anger.
What was she doing, just sitting here like a wimp. She was a law enforcement officer, commissioned by the Navajo Tribal Police and deputized by the San Juan County sheriff's department. Someone had shot at her. Shooting at a cop was a felony. Her duty, clearly, was to arrest this felon, take him in, and lock him up. Why hadn't she brought her cellphone along? Not that it would work in this canyon. She had just proved that she deserved better than the total lack of respect she was receiving from Jim Chee, and Captain Largo, and everybody. How much respect would she deserve if she just sat here waiting for some of those men to come and rescue her? Or rescued herself and had to admit she had run away from her duty?
Bernie got up again, took a tight grip on her pistol, edged to the end of the slab, and looked around it. She saw nothing. Heard nothing. She studied every place she imagined a sniper might be hiding. Nothing suspicious. The man who had shot at her might be miles away by now. Probably was. Anyway, who wants to live forever. She took a deep breath, stepped away from her sheltering slab, and hurried over to the growth of puncturevine.
Preserved in the damp earth were boot prints, some crus.h.i.+ng tendrils of the weed. True, they were a common boot print pattern, but it was also true they had left the same pattern she'd memorized from the bottom of Doherty's boot. Another happy truth: The sniper hadn't taken another shot at her.
She walked over to the sluice, and from the bottom of the hole where she presumed Doherty had made his extraction, she scooped out a handful and dumped it into her jacket pocket. That done, she started walking very cautiously down-canyon, using cover when she could and with frequent stops to look and listen. When she reached the point from which she could see the hogan, she stopped a longer time. Still no sign of a vehicle there. She saw no sign of life. She heard nothing.
Her truck was just where she'd left it. In a little while she was pulling off the dirt road onto the asphalt of Navajo Route 9. There she stopped and just sat for a while, getting over a sudden onset of shakes before she drove home.
11.
For the first time since those awful p.u.b.erty years of high school, Jim Chee found himself trying to find the wisdom, if any, imparted by the "separation of the s.e.xes" part of Navajo mythology. As in the Old Testament or the New, the Torah, the Book of Mormon, the teachings of Buddha or Muhammad, or any of the other religious texts Chee had read in his philosophy of religions course at UNM, the complex poetry of the Navajo version of Genesis mixed lessons in survival as part of teaching your relations.h.i.+p with your Creator and the cosmos.
Hostiin Frank Sam Nakai, Chee's senior maternal uncle, had tried to explain this business of s.e.xual relations.h.i.+ps and gender responsibilities one night long ago-the same summer night he'd taken Chee into Gallup after his high school graduation. He'd parked in the bar-and-p.a.w.nshop section of Railroad Avenue about twilight since the primary lesson of the trip was to concern the social effects of alcohol. As the evening wore on, Nakai had pointed out a dozen or so normal-seeming individuals, a mix of Navajo, Zuni, and whites, men and women, plus a single middle-aged Hopi male-their only commonality being that Nakai had picked them as they entered one or another Railroad Avenue bar. The Hopi soon emerged and strode down the street unaffected. The stars came out, the cool evening breeze freshened, a Navajo couple emerged, angry, arguing loudly.