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SKELETON MAN

TONY

HILLERMAN

While the collision of airliners central to the plot of this book was real and triggered the creation of the Federal Aviation Administration and its flight safety rules, the story and all of its characters are purely fictional. However, several of these fictional folks use names borrowed from generous donors to a fund to assist children stricken with cancer.

The author acknowledges the help of fellow writers Scott Thybony, Michael Ghiglieri, and Brad Dimick—three men who know that great canyon as well as anyone alive—and ethnologist Tandra Love, biologist William Degenhardt, and naturalist Ann Zwinger, whose Down Canyon is an American classic. Marty Nelson’s research work, as usual, was a huge help.

Contents

1 Lieutenant Joe Leaphorn, retired, had been explaining…

2 As Leaphorn remembered it, the August day he’d been…

3 The text of the message on Joanna Craig’s answering machine…

4 Bradford Chandler suddenly swiveled in his beach chair…

5 Within minutes after getting home from his meeting with…

6 Almost everyone liked Bernadette Manuelito. Always…

7 Joanna Craig was determined not to let her impatience…

8 The thunderstorm that had been moving steadily toward…

9 The thunderstorm was gone from Gallup now, drifting…

10 Brad Chandler had pulled his rental Land Rover into the…

11 The plan, carefully drawn up by Sergeant Jim Chee, involved…

12 Joe Leaphorn was listening to the coffee perking and…

13 Joanna Craig had followed Tuve on his homeward trip.

14 Bradford Chandler had done all the things he needed to…

15 Joe Leaphorn found he had a way to get in touch with…

16 “Girl,” the woman said, “you shouldn’t be here. Here it is…

17 Joanna Craig sat on a shelf of some sort of smooth, pale…

18 Bradford Chandler had come to a series of conclusions.

19 Sergeant Jim Chee was standing on the rocky shelf overlooking…

20 Successful skip tracers develop through endless practice…

21 Bernie Manuelito was still not at the Salt Woman Shrine…

22 When she had first found her way into it, what seemed to…

23 “I wasn’t raising my voice,” Joanna Craig said, in something…

24 Bernie had reacted fast at the first sound of the voices.

25 “Put it down,” Joanna Craig said.

26 The flashlight blinded Bernie.

27 The first time he had been to the bottom of the Grand…

28 “I think it would be safe enough,” Bernie said. “The…

29 Captain Pinto returned to the table the Navajo Inn diner…

About the Author

Also by Tony Hillerman

Credits

Copyright

About the Publisher

1

Lieutenant Joe Leaphorn, retired, had been explaining how the complicated happening below the Salt Woman Shrine illustrated his Navajo belief in universal connections. The cause leads to inevitable effect. The entire cosmos being an infinitely complicated machine all working together. His companions, taking their mid-morning coffee break at the Navajo Inn, didn’t interrupt him. But they didn’t seem impressed.

“I’ll admit the half-century gap between the day all those people were killed here and Billy Tuve trying to pawn that diamond for twenty dollars is a problem,” Leaphorn said. “But when you really think about it, trace it all back, you see how one thing kept leading to another. The chain’s there.”

Captain Pinto, who now occupied Joe Leaphorn’s preretirement office in the Navajo Tribal Police Headquarters, put down his cup. He signaled a refill to the waitress who was listening to this conversation, and waited a polite moment for Leaphorn to explain this if he wished. Leaphorn had nothing to add. He just nodded, sort of agreeing with himself.

“Come on, Joe,” Pinto said. “I know how that theory works and I buy it. Hard, hot wind blowing gets the birds tired of flying. One too many birds lands on a limb. Limb breaks off, falls into a stream, diverts water flow, undercuts the stream bank, causes a landslide, blocks the stream, floods the valley, changes the flora and that changes the fauna, and the folks who were living off of hunting the deer have to migrate. When you think back you could blame it all on that wind.”

Pinto stopped, got polite, attentive silence from his fellow coffee drinkers, and decided to add a footnote.

“However, you have to do a lot of complicated thinking to work in that Joanna Craig woman. Coming all the way out from New York just because a brain-damaged Hopi tries to pawn a valuable diamond for twenty bucks.”

Captain Largo, who had driven down from his Shiprock office to attend a conference on the drunk-driving problem, entered the discussion. “Trouble is, Joe, the time gap is just too big to make you a good case. You say it started when the young man with the camera on the United Airlines plane was sort of like the last bird on Pinto’s fictional tree limb, so to speak. He mentioned to the stewardess he’d like to get some shots down into the Grand Canyon when they were flying over it. Isn’t that the theory? The stewardess mentions that to the pilot, and so he does a little turn out of the cloud they’re flying through, and cuts right through the TWA airplane. That was June 30, 1956. All right. I’ll buy that much of it. Passenger asks a favor, pilot grants it. Boom. Everybody dead. End of incident. Then this spring, about five decades later, this Hopi fella, Billy Tuve, shows up in a Gallup pawnshop and tries to pawn a twenty-thousand-dollar diamond for twenty bucks. That touches off another series of events, sort of a whole different business. I say it’s not just another chapter, it’s like a whole new book. Hell, Tuve hadn’t even been born yet when that collision happened. Right? And neither had the Craig woman.”

“Right,” said Pinto. “You have a huge gap in that cause-and-effect chain, Joe. And we’re just guessing the kid with the camera asked the pilot to turn. Nobody knows why the pilot did that.”

Leaphorn sighed. “You’re thinking about the gap you see in one single connecting chain. I’m thinking of a bunch of different chains which all seem to get drawn together.”

Largo looked skeptical, shook his head, grinned at Leaphorn. “If you had one of your famous maps here, could you chart that out for us?”

“It would look like a spiderweb,” Pinto said.

Leaphorn ignored that. “Take Joanna Craig’s role in this. The fact she wasn’t born yet is part of the connection. The crash killed her daddy. From what Craig said, that caused her mama to become a bitter woman and that caused Craig to be bitter, too. Jim Chee told me she wasn’t really after those damned diamonds when she came to the canyon. She just wanted to find them so she could get revenge.”

That produced no comment.

“You see how that works,” Leaphorn said. “And that’s what drew that Bradford Chandler fellow into the case. The skip tracer. He may have been purely after money, but his job was blocking Craig from getting what she was after. That’s what sent him down into the canyon. And Cowboy Dashee was down there doing family duty. For Chee, the pull was friendship. And—” Leaphorn stopped, sentence unfinished.

Pinto chuckled. “Go on, Joe,” he said. “How about Bernie Manuelito? What pulled little Bernie into it?”