'Way over there,' Quail said. 'Beyond the mountains.
Baskets are traded for it.'
Coyote set off to go get some meat of his own, but as soon as he left, he heard the quail laughing and saying, 'Look, Coyote has eaten his own tailfat.'
Coyote came back. 'What did you say?' he asked, but the quail wouldn't answer. Just then a cottontail came running by. 'What did the quail say?' Coyote asked.
'They said, 'Coyote has eaten his own tailfat.'
As soon as he heard this, Coyote knew he had been tricked, and he was very angry. He chased after the quail, who disappeared down a hole in which they had hidden a cactus all wrapped in feathers.
Coyote dug in the hole after them. When he pulled out the first quail, he asked, 'Did you do this to me?'
'No,' the quail answered. 'It wasn't me.'
Coyote dug further and pulled out another quail.
'Did you do this to me?'
'No,' the second quail answered. 'It wasn't me.' And so it went until he pulled out the very last one.
'Did you do this to me?'
But the last quail didn't answer. 'Ah-ha,' said Coyote, since you don't answer me, you must be the one,' and he bit hard on the quail, but he only hurt himself because that last quail was really the cactus.
And that, nawoj, is the story of how Quail tricked Coyote.
Andrew Carlisle was in no hurry to get home. Avoiding the freeway, he drove up the back way from Tucson to Tempe, coming into town through Florence junction and Mesa. He stopped at the Big Apple for 'a late breakfast.
As usual, the previous night's exertions left him feeling wonderfully alive and ravenously hungry.
He had been out of prison for only two days. Already two people were dead. One a day, sort of like multiple vitamins, he thought. It was only fair. He'd been saving up for a long time, but Margie Danielson and Johnny Rivkin had been mere appetizers, something to hold him until the main course came along.
Thinking about Margie Danielson made him remember the newspaper waiting in the car. He asked the waitress for one more cup of coffee and went out to retrieve The Arizona Sun. It was important to stay abreast of how the Picacho Peak investigation was going. If the cops suddenly moved away from their Indian suspect, if they somehow stumbled on a lead that would point them in the right direction Andrew Carlisle needed to know at once so he could take appropriate countermeasures.
He turned to the second section, the local news section, and the name Ladd jumped off the page at him. How lucky could he get? There he was, Garrison Ladd's own kid, complete with a picture and more than a few helpful details. Hardly able to contain his excitement, Carlisle read through the column. The names were all there, ones he'd thought he would have to search out, one by one, over a lengthy period of time-Rita Antone, Diana Ladd, and David Ladd. If the boy had been in a car accident, his name and address were now part of an active police report.
Carlisle knew from personal experience that, for a price, almost everything in the Pima County Sheriff's Department was up for sale.
Cash on delivery. Discretion advised.
Jubilant, he paid his bill, adding in an extra tip, and headed for Weber Drive. Maybe he'd take his mother out to celebrate that night.
She wouldn't have to know exactly what they were celebrating. He'd spend some of Johnny Rivkin's cash and take her someplace nice like Casa Vieja in old Tempe or maybe little Lulu's just up the street.
Myrna Louise was sitting in her rocker when he came into the house.
Fortunately, he had left the Hartmann bag in the car. His mother sniffed disapprovingly when she saw the pink pantsuit. 'You shouldn't dress like that, Andrew.
What will people think? Roger was right. You should have had that first haircut much sooner.'
Carlisle felt far too smug to let Myrna Louise draw him into that decades-old argument. 'Don't look so upset, Mama. Your neighbors won't even notice. They'll think your sister came to visit, or your cousin from Omaha.'
'I don't have a cousin in Omaha,' Myrna Louise insisted.
'It was just a figure of speech,' Andrew Carlisle told her.
'I don't know why this disturbs you so. It's like wearing a disguise.
Maybe you should try it sometime. It's fun, like playing dress-up.
Didn't you play dress-up when you were a child?'
'When I was a child,' she replied stubbornly, 'but not when I was fifty years old.'
Carlisle went into his bedroom. He saw at once that the stack of manuscripts was missing from the bookshelf.
Turning on his heel, he charged back down the hall to the living room.
'Where are they, Mama?' he demanded.
'Where are what?'
'Don't give me that. You know what I mean. Where are my manuscripts, the ones that came in the