“Not too bad,” Joe said. “I need some stitches, I think.
Lost some blood.”
“You need the ambulance to take you in?” Tassell asked.
“No.”
Tassell turned to his deputies and gestured toward the third horse. “Untie the body and put it in the ambulance,” he told them. “Tell the driver to go straight to Dr. Graves’s.”
Joe walked slowly toward his pickup.
“You’re not driving yourself,” the sheriff called after him, exasperated. “What in the hell are you thinking?”
Randy Pope stepped out from the small crowd. He wore crisp jeans, new boots, a snapbutton shirt, and a denim jacket.
“I talked to Trey Crump,” Pope said. “He said to tell you you’re on administrative leave until the investigation of the shooting is concluded. As you know, it’s routine procedure.”
Joe nodded. “I figured that would happen.” Looking Pope over, he said, “Looks like you’ve been to the westernwear store.”
He ignored Joe’s comment. “He said to tell you to give him a call as soon as you could.”
“I planned to,” Joe said.
Pope stepped in close. “So was it a gunfight, like they say?”
“It was more like assisted suicide,” Joe said glumly.
“Smoke fired first.”
“Then you shot him?”
Joe nodded, too tired to speak.
Pope sighed and looked toward the darkening sky. Stars were beginning to poke through like needle pricks in dark fabric. “I need to work overtime just to keep up with the paperwork you generate,” he complained.
Tassell turned his SUV over to a deputy and drove Joe’s pickup, while Joe slouched in the passenger seat.
They were on the blacktop when the sheriff said, “This is Will Jensen’s truck, isn’t it?”
Joe nodded. “Mine burned up.”
The sheriff shook his head. “I heard about that. Things tend to happen around you, don’t they? Just like Barnum said they would.”
Joe didn’t respond.
“Will tried for years to build a case on Smoke, and in the three days you’re up there you kill the guy.”
“It wasn’t like that,” Joe said, but didn’t want to explain.
He was thinking about the contents of the last spiral notebook. How it was all coming together. How ugly it had been for Will at the end.
They drove in silence until Joe could see the lights of Jackson in the distance. It seemed as if he had lived there forever, not just a few days. The ambulance was stopped on the highway in front of them so that a long column of tourists on horseback could cross the highway en route to their guest ranch for the night. Tassell stopped directly behind it, the headlights of the pickup shining into the ambulance and illuminating the body wrapped in the ground tarp.
“There goes my budget for medical examinations for the fiscal year,” Tassell sighed.
After an examination, a blood test, twenty stitches in his side and eight in his arm, Joe was remanded to the hospital for a night of observation. He was given sedatives by a doctor whose name tag identified him as “Dr. Thompson,” who also wore a DayGlo button that read “ski bum.” The sedative was starting to dull the pain and bring him down. Before he went to sleep, he reached for the telephone at the side of his bed.
“Marybeth,” Joe said, thrilled at hearing the sound of her voice, “I just killed the only man in Jackson Hole I really understood.”
Thirty One
As he dressed the next morning, Joe tried to recall the conversation he’d had the night before with Marybeth, and snippets came floating back. It had been difficult to concentrate with the drugs kicking in, and the only thing that kept him awake during the conversation was the tone of her voice, which was urgent and somehow melancholy at the same time, as if she wanted to be angry with him but the circumstances prevented it. At the time, it was important for him to hear her voice, to touch base, to reestablish something. He needed her to be his anchor, to reel him back home from where he was. But she had other concerns. Sheridan was being difficult, having attitude problems, and life between Marybeth and her oldest daughter was getting tougher. “It’s a mother and daughter deal,” Marybeth said, as if Joe would understand that. In response, he offered to talk with Sheridan—they had a special rapport, he thought—but Marybeth said their daughter was already in bed.
He vividly remembered her telling him that Barnum was the 720 caller, the “720” being from a calling card, and that Nate had caught the exsheriff in the act in the Stockman’s Bar. The news of Barnum’s humiliation had swept through town, she said, and the old exsheriff was lying low, nowhere to be found. Joe cautioned his wife to watch out for Barnum.
“He blames me for his bad luck,” Joe said.
“Don’t worry,” she said, “Nate is around.”
“That’s good.”
“Yes,” she said, after a long pause, which led him to wonder. Then: “It is good, isn’t it?”