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Terry’s lips moved, but with the sirens coming down Leslie Canyon Road and with the increasing roar of the fire in the background, Joanna couldn’t hear a word.

“What did you say?” she asked, leaning closer. “I couldn’t hear you.”

“Tell Jenny…”

“Tell Jenny what?”

“Take good care of Kiddo.”

“Of Kiddo. What do you mean? I didn’t buy that horse.”

Terry Buckwalter shook her head. “No,” she managed. “Mr. Brady did.”

The E.M.T.’s showed up and took charge then. Joanna moved away and went looking for Ernie Carpenter. He talking to the hysterical woman, who was still clutching her shivering dog.

As Joanna walked up to them, she heard the woman say, “Buster never bites. He must have been scared to death. You’re sure he didn’t hurt you?”

“No, ma’am,” Ernie said. “I’m fine. Not hurt in the least.” He saw Joanna coming. Grinning at her, he gave her a thumbs-up sign. “Thanks to Sheriff Brady here, all Buster for his trouble was a mouthful of Kevlar vest.”

TWENTY-ONE

Terry Buckwalter died of her injuries before she ever made it to Cochise County Hospital in Douglas. It took Joanna and Ernie Carpenter the whole remainder of the day just to fill out the requisite reports. By the time seven-thirty rolled a round, Joanna was ready to bail out on her dinner engagement with Butch Dixon, but she relented finally and agreed to go after all.

Showered and shampooed and wearing fresh clothes, she picked him up at the Grand Hotel just after eight-thirty.

“Our reservation is for nine,” he told her. “Everybody said that the best place around is the Rob Roy. That’s where we’re going.”

“Suits me,” she said. “Now that I think about it, I’m close to starving.”

They drove in silence for several minutes, long enough for her to maneuver the Eagle out of town and onto the high-way. She was driving her personal car. The Blazer, with its shattered windows, glass-shredded upholstery and headliner, was currently out of commission.

“How was your day?” she asked.

“Jenny and I had a great time, Butch answered. When I dropped her and her gear off at her friend’s house, I think we were a real hit. Your daughter is now the envy of the neighborhood.”

“Good,” Joanna said.

“And how’s Jenny’s mother? I’ve heard rumors that it’s been a little rough in the law-and-order game today.”

The words rushed out then, tumbling over themselves in Joanna’s need to unburden herself. Had Jenny been around, she would have had to censor what she said, to tiptoe around some of the uglier implications. It was good to have someone grown-up to talk to, someone who cared enough to listen.

“I’m sorry,” she said at last, when she finished. “I shouldn’t be running on and on like this, but I’m trying to make sense of it all. I’m glad we finally figured out who did it, but I’m embarrassed, too, that I fell for so much of Terry’s story. I shouldn’t have.”

“Why wouldn’t you?” Butch said. “You’re a truthful person. You tend to believe what other people tell you. That’s a fault in all the liars of this world, not a fault in you.”

“Still, you’re probably bored to tears.”

“Not at all,” he replied. “I’m trying to add it all up. It turns out that Joanna Brady is smart but naive. She’s also sweet and tough. She’s a good mother and a good friend. She’s full of raw courage backed up by a certain amount of sheer bluff.”

Joanna laughed then. “It sounds as though you think I’m an ordinary schizophrenic.”

“No,” Butch Dixon said quietly. “Not ordinary in any tense of the word. I think you’re downright enchanting.” Embarrassed, Joanna could think of nothing else to say. They drove on into the parking lot of the Roll Roy in total silence.

Even at nine o’clock, the place was still hopping. Joanna and Butch were shown into the bar to wait for their table to be set. Butch looked around at the golf memorabilia decorating the walls.

“Does the pro out here know what happened to his star golfer?” Butch asked.

Joanna nodded. “As soon as Detective Carbajal and Dick Voland came back from Elfrida, Ernie sent his assistant out here to give Peter Wilkes the bad news. I guess he was pretty broken up about it.”

They ordered wine-a bottle of Cabernet Sauvignon. “What are you going to do about the horse?” Butch asked.

Joanna shrugged. “Take him, I guess. What choice do I have? Jim Bob and Eva Lou don’t have anyplace to keep Kiddo. I do.”

“But don’t you resent that? Your father-in-law interfering like that-giving Jenny that kind of birthday present without even consulting you about it beforehand?”

Joanna thought for a minute before she answered. “I guess I do resent it,” she admitted. “But I know what’s going on. Jim Bob and Eva Lou are just trying to make up for Andy’s being gone. I guess we all are,” she added.

The barmaid brought the wine and was just in the process of removing the cork when Joanna caught sight of her mother. Eleanor Lathrop and George Winfield emerged from the dining room. While George stopped off to visit with someone in the vestibule, Eleanor headed for the rest room.

“Excuse me for a minute,” Joanna said to Butch. “That’s my mother. I need to talk to her.”

When Eleanor stepped out of the stall in the bathroom a minutes later, she was astonished to find her daughter using there, leaning against one of the washbasins. “Why, Joanna!” Eleanor exclaimed. “What on earth are you doing here?”

“Waiting for you,” Joanna said. “I’m here with a friend saw you and George Winfield come out of the dining room.

Eleanor was clearly flustered. “I’m sorry, Joanna. I meant all you and talk to you about this. I’m embarrassed that didn’t have-”

“Mother,” Joanna interrupted. “Don’t worry about it.”

“Don’t worry?” Eleanor echoed. “But I should have. It’s-”

“What you do or don’t do isn’t any of my business,” Joanna said. “It’s your life. Live a little.”

“But-”

“No buts, Mother,” Joanna said firmly. “Now come on. There’s someone waiting for me out in the bar, someone I’d you to meet.”

“Is it a he?” Eleanor asked.

Joanna laughed. “Yes, Mother, a he. His name is Butch on. He’s a friend of mine.”

George Winfield and Eleanor stayed long enough to be introduced, but they left when the hostess arrived to tell Joanna and Butch that their table was ready.

“Have George and your mother been an item for long?” Butch asked.

“I’m only her daughter,” Joanna said with a laugh. “How would I know?”

They had an enjoyable dinner, so nice, in fact, that by the time Joanna dropped Butch off at the Grand Hotel, they had agreed on having a picnic lunch the next afternoon. When Joanna came hone and went to bed, she did so with a sense of completion. She had done her job. She had uncovered things about some of her neighbors and acquaintances that she would rather not have known. She had seen the disastrous results that came when people lied and cheated, but she had also tapped into parts of herself-the courage part Butch had talked about-that she hadn’t known existed.

When the phone woke her the next morning, she groaned as she picked it up. “What now?”

“Is it true?” Angie Kellogg asked.

“Is what true?”

“What I read in the paper. I stopped off for breakfast and picked up a newspaper while I was at it.”

“I’m not sure what’s in the paper,” Joanna mumbled, turning to look at the clock. It was five after seven.

“About the guy with the parrots,” Angie said. “I think Hacker is his name. Age twenty-seven. Is he for real?”

“As far as I know, yes.”

“But I’ve never seen parrots in the wild, only in cages.”