it?â
âIâm assisting the investigating officer.â
She sighed and looked away. âMy father says Iâm not supposed to say anything to anybody, that itâll just lead to trouble with those people.â
âWell, seeing as how youâre an eyewitness to what may or may not have been an attempted homicide, I can get a subpoena and we can have this conversation down at the Hulett police headquarters or the Crook County sheriffâs office.â
âI found him, okay? I didnât witness anything.â
âOn the side of the road.â
âYeah.â
âWas he alone?â
âYeah.â
I turned and looked at the young woman. âCan you give me an indication as to what kind of condition he was in?â
âWhat do you mean?â
âWas he conscious, unconscious?â
âHe was unconscious.â
âDid he have anything with him on the motorcycle that you saw lying aroundâsaddlebags or anything like that?â
She took a long time to answer. âNo.â
I looked pointedly at her injured arm. âWas there anybody else on the motorcycle with him?â
âNo.â
I gave her the long pause Iâd learned from Lucianâthe one that crept like an epoch-eating glacierâjust to let her know I had my suspicions. âThen I guess Iâve got only one more question.â
âYeah?â
âWhen did you get his cell phone number?â
A voice sounded from behind me. âI think youâve answered enough of the sheriffâs questions, Chloe.â
I turned to see a fireplug of a man with a shaved head standing behind us, aiming what looked to be a sporting-clay over-and-under shotgun mostly at me. âMr. Nance?â
He strolled up a little closer, and I could see two men standing behind him in matching black polo shirts. âYouâre supposed to follow that with âI presume.ââ
I shrugged. âItâs late, and the guy who does my Sherlock Holmes is asleep.â
⢠⢠â¢
Next to big-game hunter Omar Rhoadesâs log palace back in the home county, and Versailles, Bob Nanceâs ranch house was just about the most extravagant place Iâd ever visited.
âWill you still be needing us, Mr. Nance?â The muscle in the black shirts continued to glance at me. âWe can stick around if you need us.â
Nance, with his back to the three of us, was mixing two drinks. âThatâs fine, Mr. Frick. I think weâll be okay.â
I watched as they left and turned back as Nance handed me one of the drinks. âIs the other oneâs name Frack?â
He ignored my joke. âVintage â66, thirty years in cask 559, and bottled on June eighteenth of 1996 at the Laphroaig distillery.â He handed me a tumbler, neat, and then adjusted the flames on the river-rock fireplace with a remote. âI know itâs summer, but I like the ambianceâa little like Dick Nixon in that regard.â He lifted his glass. âI hope you enjoy it.â
âI have to tell you this is the most civilized stickup in which Iâve ever taken part.â
He sat in an overstuffed leather chair, throwing his polished boots onto a matching ottoman. âWe strive to please.â
I took a sip of the amber liquid and was pretty sure that it was the finest stuff my palate would ever touch, and that if I wasnât careful Iâd be asleep by the time I finished it. The room was lined with bookshelves, and there was a gigantic burled-wood billiards table at the center, with red felt where he had laid the Krieghoff K-80 Pro Sporter. âNice placeâalmost as nice as mine.â
âIs yours log?â
I nodded. âYep, and I believe my whole house would fit in this one room.â
He smiled and glanced up at the timbers, a good forty feet in the air. âItâs kind of over-the-top, but you know how it is when you think youâre
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