disturbed vegetation.”
“How can you be so sure that Lovett
“It’s what
“Could have been a deer or other wild animal.”
“Only if their hooves were shod in lug-heeled boots,” he retorted with a smirk, pointing to a cluster of visible footprints. “This is newly turned soil. I suspect that Dr. Lovett stomped on the loose earth after he refilled the hole.”
A bluejay perched in a nearby tree cawed, the harsh sound eerily similar to a rusty gate swinging on a hinge. Spooked, Edie glanced at her watch. Fourteen minutes had lapsed since they first arrived at the cottage.
“Yes, I know; the clock is ticking,” Caedmon remarked, accurately reading her thoughts. Unlimbering the digging tools from his shoulder, he handed her the pickax. Then, firmly planting his leather shoe on top of the shovel blade, he forcefully pushed down. “Hopefully, our would-be fossor dug a shallow grave.”
He did. Steel struck metal in under two minutes.
“Eureka!” she exclaimed, going down on her haunches to better examine the upturned object. “Looks like a metal toolbox. Ooh! And it’s
Caedmon grasped the container’s handle. “I suggest that we take our booty back to the cottage.”
“Good idea.” Standing upright, Edie furtively glanced at the turquoise trailer. “I’m probably being paranoid, but I’ve got a hinky feeling that someone’s snooping on us.”
CHAPTER 25
Tonto Sinclair lowered the binocs and set them on the dashboard. He’d parked the Ford F100 behind an abandoned single-wide. Out of sight. He figured that like the candypants foreigner who earlier trashed the joint, they were looking for buried treasure. White birds of an avarice feather. According to his buddy Bear Mathieson who ran the Gas ’N’ Go station, Hansel was an Englishman.
’Cause anyone familiar with tribal history knew that it was the English motherfuckers who triggered the Narragansett demise. History 101.
In need of a smoke, Tonto reached for the pack of Marlboros in his shirt pocket. With an impatient shake of the wrist, he loosened one from the pack and clamped his lips around the filter, sliding it from the pack.
It’d been hot as hell that July morning in ’03 when he pulled into the Charlestown smoke shop to buy a pack of Marlboros. He’d spent the previous night in the county lockup on a drunk and disorderly charge stemming from a verbal altercation that he’d had with a redneck who made the mistake of calling him a drunken, shiftless injun. The drunken part he owned up to; he
The fuse wasn’t any longer the next morning when he staggered into the reservation smoke shop, foul mood courtesy of a thin, lumpy mattress, a bad hangover, and a flatulent cellmate. He’d just handed a fiver to the gal behind the counter when a trio of Rhode Island state troopers suddenly stormed through the shop door. Two of the uniformed bastards had their weapons drawn. The third had a snarling German shepherd on a lead. Lips curved in a malicious grin, the head trooper yelled, “Everybody! Hands where we can see them!”
Endowed with an innate distrust of authority figures, Tonto made damned sure that the trooper who tried to arrest him—
In the end, everyone got hauled away in cuffs. Including a fifteen-year-old stock boy.
Although Tonto knew why he’d been arrested — aggravated assault against a state trooper — he had no friggin’ idea
Real quick, Tonto found out that prison does one of two things to a man: Either he becomes a better criminal or he becomes a better man. In his case, he became a better Narragansett. And wouldn’t you know, the road to redemption started with a pack of smokes.
He’d been at Moran about three weeks when a tree trunk of a Native named Annawon Tucker hit him up for a cigarette. Down to a half pack, he grudgingly obliged the request.
“Ever think about getting a new name?” the impertinent bastard asked.
Stuck with the moniker since he was kid, Tonto shrugged. “Beats the hell out of Felix.” A name he’d always despised, Tonto the lesser of the two evils. And what was he supposed to call himself, Running Turtle? Or some other dumb-ass Indian name?
“When you’re ready to man up and hit the Red Road, you let me know.” With that cryptic remark, Annawon took his leave.
A lot like the Yellow Brick Road except this one led to a traditional
But for some reason, Tonto couldn’t get the “invite” out of his head.
Maybe it was the thinly disguised insult about manning up. Maybe it was the boredom of being in prison. Whatever the reason, for the first time in his life, he was suddenly
It started out simple enough, Annawon regaling him with tribal history while they shared a few smokes. Those first lessons were all about the glory days, the Narragansett once a powerful tribe, ruled by “kings” who collected tribute from the lesser bands like the Wampanoag and the Niantics.
But all of that changed in the seventeenth century when the first white colonists arrived. From then on out, nothing went right for the Narragansett people.
First there was the smallpox epidemic of 1633. In 1643, the Narragansett invaded the Mohegan’s turf and got their asses kicked. Then, in 1676, they suffered monumental losses when they went to war against the English motherfuckers. To punish the Naragansetts’ defiance, the motherfuckers rounded ’em up in droves and shipped ’em off to sugar plantations in the Caribbean. By the time the nineteenth century rolled around, the few remaining Narragansett in Rhode Island became unwitting victims of the government’s “detribalization” policy, the reservation sold right out from under them. In 1978, after years of legal wrangling with the federal and state governments, the Narragansett were awarded eighteen hundred acres. Small recompense given the centuries of broken treaties and empty promises.
After one of these depressing history lessons, Tonto conversationally remarked to Annawon, “It’s like we’re a cursed people.”
“More truth in that than you realize. The day the white man stole Yawgoog’s Stone, that was the day the Light left the Narragansett people. We’ve been wandering around in the darkness ever since.”