business ties to Feet. The way I read it, that makes him fair game.'
'I'm really sorry to hear this, Dave.'
'An investigation clears as well as implicates people. His black employees seem to think well of him. He didn't call in a complaint about my talking to him, either. Maybe he's an all-right guy.'
'You disregarded my instructions, Dave.'
'I saw the bodies of both those girls, sheriff.'
'And?'
'Frankly I'm not real concerned about whose toes I step on.'
He rose from his chair and tucked his shirt tightly into his gunbelt with his thumbs while his eyes seemed to study an unspoken thought in midair.
'I guess at this point I have to tell you something of a personal nature,' he said. 'I don't care for your tone, sir. I don't care for it in the least.'
I picked up my coffee cup and sipped off it and looked at nothing as he walked out of the room.
Rosie Gomez was down in Vermilion Parish almost all day. When she came back into the office late that afternoon her face was flushed from the heat and her dark hair stuck damply to her skin. She dropped her purse on top of her desk and propped her arms on the side of the air-conditioning unit so the windstream blew inside her sleeveless blouse.
'I thought Texas was the hottest place on earth. How did anyone ever live here before air conditioning?' she said.
'How'd you make out today?'
'Wait a minute and I'll tell you. Damn, it was hot out there. What happened to the rain?'
'I don't know. It's unusual.'
'Unusual? I felt like I was being cooked alive inside wet cabbage leaves. I'm going to ask for my next assignment in the Aleutians.'
'I'm afraid you'll never make the state Chamber of Commerce, Rosie.'
She walked back to her desk, blowing her breath up into her face, and opened her purse.
'What'd you do today?' she asked.
'I tried to run down some of those old cases, but they're pretty cold now-people have quit or retired or don't remember, files misplaced, that sort of thing. But there's one interesting thing here-' I spread a dozen National Crime Information Center fax sheets over the top of my desk. 'If one guy committed several of these unsolved murders, it doesn't look like he ever operated outside the state. In other words, there don't seem to be any unsolved female homicides that took place during the same time period in an adjoining area in Texas, Arkansas, or Mississippi.
'So this guy may not only be homegrown but for one reason or another he's confined his murders to the state of Louisiana.'
'That'd be a new one,' she said. 'Serial killers usually travel, unless they prey off a particular local community, like gays or streetwalkers. Anyway, look at what jumped up out of the weeds today.'
She held up a plastic Ziploc bag with a wood-handled, brass-tipped pocket knife inside. The single blade was opened and streaked with rust.
'Where'd you find it?'
'A half mile back down the levee from where the girl was found in the barrel. It was about three feet down from the crest.'
'You covered all that ground by yourself?'
'More or less.'
I looked at her a moment before I spoke again. 'Rosie, you're kind of new to the area, but that levee is used by fishermen and hunters all the time. Sometimes they drop stuff.'
'All my work for nothing, huh?' She smiled and lifted a strand of hair off her eyebrow.
'I didn't say that-'
'I didn't tell you something else. I ran into an elderly black man down there who sells catfish and frog legs off the back of his pickup truck. He said that about a month ago, late at night, he saw a white man in a new blue or black car looking for something on the levee with a flashlight. Just like that alligator poacher you questioned, he wondered why anybody would be down there at night with a new automobile. He said the man with the light wasn't towing a boat trailer and he didn't have a woman with him, either. Evidently he thinks those are the only two reasonable explanations for anyone ever going down there.'
'Could he give you a description of the white man?'
'No, he said he was busy stringing a trotline between some duck blinds. What's a trotline, anyway?'
'You stretch a long piece of twine above the water and tie it to a couple of stumps or flooded trees. Then intermittently you hang twelve-inch pieces of weighted line with baited hooks into the water. Catfish feed by the moon, and when they hook themselves, they usually work the hook all the way through their heads and they're still on the trotline when the fisherman picks it up in the morning.'
I sat on the corner of her desk and picked up the plastic bag and looked at the knife. It was the kind that was made in Pakistan or Taiwan and could be purchased for two dollars on the counter of almost any convenience store.
'If that was our man, what do you think happened?' I said.
'Maybe that's where he bound her with the electrician's tape. He used the knife to slice the tape, then dropped it. He either searched for it that night or came back another night when he discovered it was missing.'
'I don't want to mess up your day, Rosie, but our man doesn't seem to leave fingerprints. At least there were none on the electrician's tape in the two murders that we think he committed. Why should he worry about losing the knife?'
'He needs to orchestrate, to be in control. He can't abide accidents.'
'He left the ice pick in Cherry LeBlanc.'
'Because he meant to. He gave us the murder weapon; it'll never be found on him. But he didn't plan to give us his pocket knife. That bothers him.'
'That's not a bad theory. Our man is all about power, isn't he?'
She stood her purse up straight and started to snap it shut. It clunked on the desk when she moved it. She reached inside and lifted out her.357 magnum revolver, which looked huge in her small hand, and replaced it on top of her billfold. She snapped the catch on the purse.
'I said the obsession is about power, isn't it?'
'Always, always, always,' she said.
The concentration seemed to go out of her eyes, as though the day's fatigue had just caught up with her.
'Rosie?'
'What is it?'
'You feel okay?'
'I probably got dehydrated out there.'
'Drop the knife off with our fingerprint man and I'll buy you a Dr Pepper.'
'Another time. I want to see what's on the knife.'
'This time of day our fingerprint man is usually backed up. He probably won't get to it until tomorrow.'
'Then he's about to put in for some overtime.'
She straightened her shoulders, slung her purse on her shoulder, and walked out the door into the corridor. A deputy with a girth like a hogshead nodded to her deferentially and stepped aside to let her pass.
When I was helping Batist clean up the shop that evening I remembered that I hadn't called Elrod Sykes about his invitation to go fishing out on the salt. Or maybe I had deliberately pushed it out of my mind. I knew that Bootsie was probably right about Elrod. He was one of the walking wounded, the kind for whom you always felt sympathy, but you knew eventually he'd rake a whole dustpan of broken glass into your head.
I called up to the house and got the telephone number that he had left with Bootsie. While Elrod's phone was ringing, I gazed out the screen window at Alafair and a little black girl playing with Tripod by the edge of a corn garden down the road. Tripod was on his back, rolling in the baked dirt, digging his claws into a deflated football. Even though there was still moisture in the root systems, the corn looked sere and red against the late sun, and