ears made me wonder if she ever moonlighted as the carnival’s gypsy fortune-teller. Instead of flowing skirts and veils, though, she wore well-cut jeans, high-heeled boots of red snakeskin, and a red silk shirt with the top buttons left open. Several gold necklaces encircled her throat and a diamond-crusted cross on one of them dipped down between her breasts. Danny Lincoln was staring at its resting place and breathing with his mouth open.

The tangle of small gold charms on her bracelet clinked and jingled against the Bible as Mrs. Ames placed her left hand on it and swore that she would tell the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth.

“You may be seated,” said my clerk.

“State your name and address,” said Chester Nance.

“Tallahassee Ames, currently of Gibtown—sorry, I mean Gibsonton, Florida.”

Puzzled, Nance looked at his notes again. “Didn’t you give the police officers a local address that night?”

“I might’ve told him I owned property in this county, but my legal residence is Florida.”

“I see.” Again he shuffled papers. “Please tell the court your occupation.”

“My husband and me, we own and operate Ames Amusement Corporation.” The witness chair was one step lower than mine, and when she looked up at me, her eyes were an unexpected deep clear blue. “Three rides, five games, two grab wagons.”

“Grab wagons?” I asked.

“Corn dogs, popcorn, cotton candy, soft drinks, okay? Grab and go food.”

“On July seventh of this year, where were you and your amusements?” asked Nance, virtuously staying on topic.

“Us and another outfit were set up over in the abandoned Kmart parking lot at the edge of town here for the Fourth of July.”

I hadn’t been to Widdington’s Fourth of July celebration since I was a teenager, but I knew they went all out— parade, fireworks, and a ten-day carnival to raise money for their rescue squad.

Under Nance’s questioning, Mrs. Ames described the events leading to last month’s incident. Her voice had the husky timbre of a heavy smoker.

According to her testimony, it was around eleven o’clock on a Thursday night. Average closing time for a weeknight. Widdington isn’t New York. It isn’t even Raleigh. The owner of the other rides had already shut down his Ferris wheel and Tilt-A-Whirl, and she herself was in the process of securing her guessing game when she realized there was trouble over at the Pot O’Gold, a contraption that sounded like a large, colorful sliding board.

“It’s basically a big plastic balloon shaped like half a rainbow, okay?” She gestured with her hands, and her charm bracelet tinkled like little gypsy bells. “One side looks like a big treetop with clouds over it. Inside, there’s a set of spiral steps that go up thirty feet to the top. When you come out of a door in the cloud, you’re on top of the rainbow. We’ve got an air compressor that keeps it inflated. The way it works is that you sit on a slide sack and try to land in the pot of gold at the bottom.”

She saw my raised eyebrow and smiled. “Well, actually, the pot’s padded and filled with gold-colored sponges that look like gold bars. If you land in the pot, though, you either get a prize or you get to slide again.”

“Sounds as if you probably hand out a lot of freebies,” I said.

“It’s a little harder than you might think,” she drawled. “But maybe you’d like to try it yourself in a few weeks. We’re booked to play the harvest festival over in Dobbs.”

“As to the night of July seventh?” said Chester Nance.

“My husband had gone on up to Virginia to check out a new elephant-ear trailer, okay? So it was just me and my two sons to look out for things.”

(At least I didn’t have to ask what an elephant ear was. Not with my weakness for fried dough. Hot and crispy, sprinkled with cinnamon and powdered sugar, it’s my biggest indulgence when the state fair comes to Raleigh every October.)

“I’d just snapped the locks when I heard Val yelling.”

“Val being your younger son?” asked Nance.

“Yeah. He’s only sixteen. Hasn’t got his full growth yet or he’d’ve busted them three’s butts.”

Hastily, Nance pushed on. “When you looked over to where he was, what did you see?”

“I saw them knock him over and start climbing up my rainbow on the outside, but the compressor was still going, so it was twisting enough that they couldn’t get a good hold. The plastic’s tough, but I was worried they might stomp a hole. Braz and me—”

“Braz is—?”

She gave an impatient toss of her head at having her narrative interrupted yet again. “Braz is my oldest boy, Val’s the youngest, Binga’s our Bozo, and Herve was the one working that ride, okay? The others had gone to the bunkhouse.”

Nance nodded and let her keep going.

“Braz and me, we ran over. I hollered for Binga to come help, too, but by the time we got there, that one”—she pointed to Vic Lincoln—“had his knife out and before we could get to him, he cut a slit ten feet long and let all the air out. Whole thing collapsed, okay? It was a miracle somebody didn’t break an arm or a leg.”

A Widdington town police officer who’d been there that night with his wife gave corroborating evidence as to the defendants’ presence, general belligerency, intoxication, and possession of knives. He hadn’t witnessed the incident, but since the Lincoln brothers and their friend Partin weren’t actually denying it, that point was moot.

When the prosecution rested, Vic Lincoln took the stand and the oath and asked if he could tell his story in his own words.

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