"I'll have the coffee on."
"Lay out a cup for Officer Manuelito, too," Chee said. "This Doherty homicide is her case." He laughed. "In my opinion, that is. We'll be there in about forty-five minutes."
"Officer Manuelito is with you?"
"Yes," Chee said, with no explanation.
For Leaphorn, with half his lifetime spent with the Navajo Tribal Police and thus battle-scarred by years of dealing with various federal law enforcement agencies, no explanation was needed. Officer Manuelito had been chosen by the Federals as their designated scapegoat in the difficult Doherty homicide. The fact that she had screwed up the supposed crime site had not been erased by her discovery of the genuine crime site. The meeting to which Chee had been summoned probably had been instigated by a Bureau of Indian Affairs law-and-order bureaucrat, and would involve the criminal investigator assigned by the bia, someone from the fbi, someone in the top ranks of the Navajo Nation's justice department, and assorted others, and Chee had brought Bernie along to defend herself and explain how she had found where the victim had apparently actually been shot.
By the time Chee's car parked in Leaphorn's driveway, Louisa had the kitchen's dining table set for four.
Leaphorn's old mugs had been put back on the shelf and replaced by cups and saucers—and each of the four places she had set was equipped with napkin, spoon, and a plate for cookies.
Louisa had stopped by en route to Towaoc on the Ute Mountain Indian Reservation where she hoped to locate an elderly Ute purported to have an account from his maternal great-grandfather of Ute warfare with Comanche raiders in the 1840s.
"But that can wait," Louisa said. "If you don't mind, I'll hang around and find out what's going on with this mysterious murder of yours."
"It's not my murder," Leaphorn had said. But he couldn't think of a way to tell her that maybe it would be better if she went about her academic business and left homicide to the cops. Then, too, he wasn't actually a cop himself any longer.
When the real cops arrived, they didn't seem to care, either. In fact, Bernadette seemed pleased. She and Louisa had gotten along well, and Bernie was greeted with a hug. But Chee had a meeting to attend. He looked at his watch, then at Leaphorn.
"I talked to Mrs. Marvin McKay," Leaphorn said, getting right to the point, "and she said several things of interest. One. She said McKay didn't have a gun. Had never had a gun. Always said that carrying a gun was insane."
Chee nodded. Waiting. Knowing that Leaphorn knew he'd be skeptical.
"The gun the police found on the floor by McKay's body was a thirty-eight-caliber revolver. A heavy old Colt model with a medium-length barrel. Too big to go into his pants' pockets. I put it in the pocket of McKay's jacket—an expensive leather job. I could hardly force it in. Hard to get it out. Denton told me McKay pulled the pistol out of his jacket pocket as he was preparing to leave, carrying Denton's case with the money in it, and his own case. That would be hard to do, but possible, I guess."
He glanced at Chee, found him looking more interested and less skeptical.
"So we go to item two. No holes in the jacket. No blood on it. And no jacket on McKay's body when the law arrived. It was hanging on the back of a chair. It makes it seem sort of obvious that the shooting didn't happen while McKay was leaving."
He looked at Chee again, and at Bernie. Both nodded.
"So I'm left wondering why Denton lied to me about it. Which brings us to some other things." He described what Mrs. McKay had told him about the call from her husband, about Denton questioning McKay about the whereabouts of the mine and McKay giving him only a rough description. That led Leaphorn to the peculiar question of the two maps.
"If we believe Mrs. McKay, her husband told Denton he was selling him a map of a mine site on Mesa de los Lobos. But Denton told me McKay tried to sell him a location in the southeastern end of the Zuñi Mountains. I can't think of a reason she would have to lie about it. How about Denton? Any thoughts about why he'd want to mislead me about that?" Leaphorn asked. "Any ideas about that? Or any of this?"
Chee broke the extended silence.
"If we make this McKay homicide a premeditated murder, it looks to me like it makes connecting it with Doherty a lot more plausible. Or does it?"
"It might," said Bernie, "if we could find the motive for either one of them."
"Who owns the land?" Louisa asked. She rose and walked to the coffeepot.
"Have you run into anything at all," Chee asked, "that connects Doherty and McKay in the past? Anything that would have got him looking into the McKay stuff down at the sheriffs office beyond this Golden Calf business?"
"Not that I know of," Leaphorn said. "To tell the truth I haven't been thinking much about the Doherty homicide until now. Until wondering if it might help explain this funny business with Denton and the damned maps."
Louisa was back with Leaphorn's coffeepot. She poured them each a cup. "Have any of you checked into who owns the land all this map business is about?"
"I guess it could be owned by about anybody," Leaphorn said. "It's part of Checkerboard. Partly land reserved for the Navajo tribe that could be leased out. And some of it was granted to the railroad and then sold off into various ownerships. Part of it is Bureau of Land Management property, and that's probably leased for ranching. Maybe a little of it might be U.S. Forest Service, but I doubt that."
"You know," said Bernie, "I think Professor Bourbonette is asking a good question."
"Yes," said Leaphorn. "It might tell us something."
"I'll find out," Louisa said.
Leaphorn chuckled. "Louisa used to be a real estate operator. For a little while when she was in school," he said.
Louisa's expression suggested she did not like the tone of that. "When I was a student, and a graduate student, a teaching assistant, and an assistant professor," she said. "Doing what you do to make a halfway decent living in the academic world. I was in charge of checking titles, looking into credit, and some price estimating. So, yes, I know how to find out who owns property."
"Great," Chee said. "It wouldn't hurt to know that."
"Another question I want to bring up. See if you have any suggestions," said Leaphorn, who was eager to change the subject.
"Mrs. McKay said her husband told her he had what he called'some just-in-case backup insurance,' in case Denton was intending to cheat him. Anyone have any ideas about that?"
They discussed that while they drank their coffee. But no one came up with anything that seemed plausible to Leaphorn.
"And finally, how about this one. How did whoever killed Doherty get home again? I doubt if old Hostiin Peshlakai could have walked all the way from the Arizona border back to his hogan. And I doubt if Wiley Denton was much of a walker. If you agree with that, who was the accomplice and how did it work?" He gazed at Chee. "If Agent Osborne is about to make Peshlakai the official suspect, how did he solve that puzzle?"
Chee laughed. "I've been wondering about that myself. If the Feds have an answer, they haven't told me."
"Hostiin Peshlakai had a cellphone," Bernie said.
"What!" said Chee. "How do you know?"
"It was in a boot box on a shelf with some of his ceremonial things," Bernie said.
Chee looked abashed, shook his head. "I noticed that box," he said. "His pollen containers, his medicine bundle, other things. But I guess I didn't really look at it."
"Well," said Leaphorn, "that might solve the riddle for Peshlakai. Maybe he walked a mile or two from the truck and then called a friend to come and pick him up." He thought about that idea. "Or something like that."
"But I wonder how many of Peshlakai's friends have telephones," Bernie said.
"If you turn it around, Denton uses his cell phone to call George Billie, that man who works for him," Chee said.