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Authors: C. J. Box

Shots Fired (12 page)

BOOK: Shots Fired
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Juan leaned forward and squinted over the wheel, as if it would help him see better.

“This is the kind of stuff we live with every day,” Clint said to Parker. “Me and Juan are out in this shit day after day. We don't sit in plush offices taking calls and sending bills. This is the way it is out here.”

Parker nodded, not sure what to say.

“The road forks,” Juan said to Clint in the backseat. “Which way do we go?”

“Left,” Clint said.

“Are you sure?”

“Goddammit, Juan, how many years did I spend out here on these roads?”

Juan shrugged and eased the pickup to the left. They couldn't see more than fifty feet in any direction. The wind swirled the heavy snow and it buffeted the left side of the pickup truck, rocking the vehicle on its springs when it gusted.

Parker said, “When this is over and you've got whatever it is you want, what then?”

Clint said, “I'm still weighing that one, counselor. But for now just let me concentrate on getting to the house.”

“It would be helpful to know what you've got in mind,” Parker said, clearing his throat. Trying to sound conversational.
“I mean, since I'm playing a role in this, I can be of better service if I know your intentions.”

Clint backhanded the lawyer with his free hand, hitting him hard on the ear. Parker winced.

“Just shut up until we get there,” Clint said. “I heard enough talking from you in that courtroom to last the rest of my pea-pickin' life. So just shut up or I'll put a bullet into the back of your head.”

Juan appeared to grimace, but Parker determined it was a bitter kind of smile.

Clint said to Parker, “You got the keys to that secret room old Engler has, right? The one he never let anybody into? The one with the books?”

•   •   •


H
OW FAR?”
J
UAN ASKED.
They were traveling less than five miles an hour. The snow was so thick, Parker thought, it was like being inside a cloud. Tall sagebrush just a few feet from the road on either side looked like gray commas. Beyond the brush, everything was two-tone white and light blue.

“What's in the road?” Juan asked, tapping on the brake to slow them down even further.

Parker looked ahead. Six or seven oblong shadows emerged from the whiteout. They appeared suspended in the air. They looked like small coffins on stilts.

The pickup inched forward. The forms sharpened in detail. Pronghorn antelope—part of the same herd or from another
herd. A buck and his does. They stood braced into the storm, oblivious to the truck. Juan drove so close to them Parker could see snow packed into the bristles of their hide and their goat-like faces and black eyes. The buck had long eyelashes, and flakes of snow caught in them. His horns were tall and splayed, the hooked-back tips ivory-colored.

“Fucking antelope,” Clint said. “Push 'em out of the way or run right over them.”

Instead, Juan tapped the horn on the steering wheel. The sound was distant and tinny against the wind, but the pronghorns reacted; haunches bunching, heads ducking, they shot away from the road as if they'd never been there.

Parker wished he could run like that.

“Few miles,” Clint said, “we'll pass under an archway. I helped build that arch, you know.”

“I didn't know that,” Parker said.

•   •   •


M
E AND
J
UAN,”
Clint said to Parker, “we've worked together for the past, what, twelve years?”

Juan said, “Twelve, yes. Twelve.”

“Some of the shittiest places you could imagine,” Clint said. “All over the states of Wyoming and Montana. A couple in Idaho. One in South Dakota. Most of those places had absentee owners with pricks for ranch foremen. They're the worst, those pricks. They don't actually own the places, so for them it's all about power. You give pricks like that a little authority
and they treat the workingman like shit. Ain't that right, Juan?”


Eees
right.”

Parker thought:
It's like we're the only humans on earth.
The world that had been out there just that morning—the world of vistas and mountains and people and cars and offices and meetings—had been reduced for him to just this. Three men in the cab of a pickup driving achingly slow through a whiteout where the entire world had closed in around them. Inside the cab there were smells and weapons and fear. Outside the glass was furious white rage.

There was a kind of forced intimacy that was not welcome, Parker thought. He'd been reduced to the same level as these two no-account ranch hands who between them didn't have a nickel to rub together. They had guns and the advantage, Parker thought, but they were smart in the way coyotes or other predators were smart, in that they knew innately how to survive but didn't have a clue how to rise up beyond that. He knew that from listening to Clint testify in court in halting sentences filled with poorly chosen words. And when Clint's broken-down ninety-eight-year-old grandfather took the stand, it was all over. Parker had flayed the old man with whips made of words until there was no flesh left on his ancient bones.

Clint likely couldn't be reasoned with—he knew that already. No more than a coyote or a raven could be reasoned with. Coyotes would never become dogs. Likewise, ravens couldn't be songbirds. Clint Peebles would never be a reasonable man. He was a man whose very existence was based on grievance.

•   •   •


T
HIS IS GETTING BAD,”
Juan said, leaning forward in his seat as if getting six inches closer to the windshield would improve his vision.
Thees
.

Parker gripped the dashboard. The tires had become sluggish beneath the pickup as the snow accumulated. Juan was driving more by feel than by vision, and a few times Parker felt the tires leave the two-track and Juan had to jerk the wheel to find the ruts of the road again.

“We picked a bad day for this,” Juan said.
Thees
.

“Keep going,” Clint said. “We been in worse than this before. Remember that time in the Pryor Mountains?”


Sí
. That was as bad as this.”

“That was
worse
,” Clint said definitively.

There was a metallic clang and Parker heard something scrape shrilly against the undercarriage of the truck.

“What the hell was that?” Clint asked Juan.

“A T-post, I think.”

“Least that means we're still on the road,” Clint said.

“Ay-yi-yi,”
Juan whistled.

“We could turn around,” Parker said.

“We could,” Juan agreed. “At least I could follow our tracks back out. As it is, I can't see where we're going.”

“We're fine, goddammit,” Clint said. “I know where we are. Keep going. We'll be seeing that old house anytime now.”

Parker looked out his passenger window. Snow was sticking
to it and covering the glass. Through a fist-sized opening in the snow, he could see absolutely nothing.

He realized Clint was talking to him. “What did you say?”

“I said I bet you didn't expect you'd be doing this today, did you?”

“No.”

“You're the type of guy who thinks once a judge says something, it's true, ain't you?”

Parker shrugged.

“You thought after you made a fool of my grandpa you were done with this, didn't you?”

“Look,” Parker said, “we all have jobs to do. I did mine. It wasn't personal.”

Parker waited for an argument. Instead, he felt a sharp blow to his left ear and he saw spangles where a moment ago there had been only snow. That voice that cried out had been his.

He turned in the seat, cupping his ear in his hand.

Clint grinned back. Parker noticed the small flap of skin on the front sight of the Colt. And his fingers were hot and sticky with his blood.

“You say it ain't personal, lawyer,” Clint said, “but look at me.
Look
at me. What do you see?”

Parker squinted against the pain and shook his head slowly as if he didn't know how to answer.

“What you see, lawyer, is a third-generation loser. That's what you see, and don't try to claim otherwise or I'll beat you bloody. I'll ask you again: What do you see?”

Parker found that his voice was tremulous. He said, “I see a
workingman, Clint. A good-hearted workingman who gets paid for a hard day's work. I don't see what's so wrong with that.”

“Nice try,” Clint said, feinting with the muzzle toward Parker's face like the flick of a tongue from a snake. Parker recoiled, and Clint grinned again.

“That man fucked over my grandpa and set this all in motion,” Clint said. “He cheated him and walked away and hid behind his money and his lawyers for the rest of his life. Can you imagine what my grandpa's life would have been like if he hadn't been fucked over? Can you imagine what my life would have been like? Not like this, I can tell you. Why should that man get away with a crime like that? Don't you see a crime like that isn't a one-shot deal? That it sets things in motion for generations?”

“I'm just a lawyer,” Parker said.

“And I'm just a no-account workingman,” Clint said. “And the reason is because of people like you.”

“Look,” Parker said, taking his hand away from his ear and feeling a long tongue of blood course down his neck into his collar. “Maybe we can go back to the judge with new information. But we need new information. It can't just be your grandfather's word and his theories about Nazis and—”

“They weren't just theories!” Clint said, getting agitated. “It was the truth.”

“It was so long ago,” Parker said.

“That doesn't make it less true!” Clint shouted.

“There was no proof. Give me some proof and I'll represent you instead of the estate.”

Parker shot a glance at the rearview mirror to find Clint deep in thought for a moment. Clint said, “That's interesting. I've seen plenty of whores, but not many in a suit.”

“Clint,” Juan said sadly, “I think we are lost.”

•   •   •

T
HE HEARING
had lasted less than two days. Paul Parker was the lawyer for the Fritz Engler estate, which was emerging from probate after the old man finally died and left no heirs except a disagreeable out-of-wedlock daughter who lived in Houston. From nowhere, Benny Peebles and his grandson Clint made a claim for the majority of the Engler estate holdings. Benny claimed he'd been cheated out of ownership of the ranch generations ago and he wanted justice. He testified it had happened this way:

Benny Peebles and Fritz Engler, both in their early twenties, owned a Ryan monoplane together. The business model for Engler-Peebles Aviation was to hire out their piloting skills and aircraft to ranchers in northern Wyoming for the purpose of spotting cattle, delivering goods, and transporting medicine and cargo. They also had contracts with the federal and state government for mail delivery and predator control. Although young and in the midst of the Depression, they were two of the most successful entrepreneurs the town of Cody had seen. Still, the income from the plane barely covered payments and overhead and both partners lived hand to mouth.

Peebles testified that in 1936 they were hired by a rancher
named Wendell Oaks to help round up his scattered cattle. This was an unusual request, and they learned Oaks had been left high and dry by all of his ranch hands because he hadn't paid them for two months. Oaks had lost his fortune in the crash and the only assets he had left before the bank foreclosed on his sixteen-thousand-acre spread were his Hereford cattle. He'd need to sell them all to raise $20,000 to save his place, and in order to sell them he'd need to gather them up. The payments to Engler-Peebles would come out of the proceeds, he assured them.

Benny said Fritz was enamored with the Oaks Ranch—the grass, the miles of river, the timber, and the magnificent Victorian ranch house that cost Oaks a fortune to build. He told Benny, “This man is living on my ranch, but he just doesn't know it yet.”

Benny didn't know what Fritz meant at the time, although his partner, he said, always had “illusions of grandiosity,” as Benny put it.

Fritz sent Benny north to Billings to buy fence to build a massive temporary corral for the cattle. While he was gone, Fritz said, he'd fly the ranch and figure out where all the cattle were.

Benny returned to Cody four days later, followed by a truck laden with rolls of fence and bundles of steel posts. But Fritz was gone, and so was the Ryan. Wendell Oaks was fit to be tied. Bankers were driving out to his place from Cody to take measurements.

Three days later, while Benny and some locals he'd hired on a day rate were building the corral, he heard the buzz of an
airplane motor. He recognized the sound and looked up to see Fritz Engler landing the Ryan in a hay meadow.

Before Benny could confront his partner, Fritz buttonholed one of the bankers and they drove off together into town. Benny inspected their monoplane and saw where Fritz had removed the copilot seat and broken out the interior divides of the cargo area to make more space. The floor of the aircraft was covered in white bristles of hair and animal feces. It smelled dank and unpleasant.

The next thing Benny knew, sheriff's deputies descended on the place and evicted Wendell Oaks. Then they ordered Benny and his laborers off the property by order of the sheriff and the bank and new owner of the ranch, Fritz Engler, who had paid off the outstanding loan balance and now owned the paper for the Oaks Ranch.

•   •   •

T
HE ARCH APPEARED
out of the snow and Juan drove beneath it. Parker was relieved to discover how close they were to the ranch house, and just as frightened to anticipate what might come next.

BOOK: Shots Fired
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