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"Is Spud Cargill still out there?" Nate asked.

"As far as I know."

Nate nodded and seemed to be thinking about that.

"Why? Do you know something?" Joe asked.

There was a hint of a smile. "I know just enough to be dangerous. I overheard a lot of things in that jail-snippets between Barnum and his deputies and between Melinda Strickland and Barnum. And I could tell what they were thinking by what they questioned me about. Things are in motion to get those Sovereigns out of here. The sheriff and Strickland were convinced I was one of them, you know. Dick Munker even tried to get me to admit I was a soldier for the militia types. That whole sick crowd is real disappointed to find out that all the Sovereigns are guilty of at this point is hating the federal government-which isn't a crime-and staying too many nights in a campground. They're trying like hell to pin something on those people up there."

"Maybe now things will ease off," Joe said, hopeful.

"Don't count on it."

"No," Joe said sternly. "It needs to happen."

A set of headlights appeared on Bighorn Road from the direction of town. Absently, Joe watched the car approach and the headlights pool wider on the freezing road. It was Marybeth, and Sheridan.

"My wife's home," Joe said. "Would you like to come in? It's getting cold out here."

Instead of answering, Nate studied Joe, his eyes narrowing.

"What?" he asked, annoyed.

"You really are a good guy, aren't you?"

Joe's shoulders slumped. "Knock it off."

"I'm not kidding around," Nate said softly. "I've spent most of my life around hypocrites and assholes. McLanahan and Barnum types. Most of them haven't had a thimbleful of character. So it's just kind of heartwarming to see that there are still some good guys left."

Joe was grateful for the darkness because he knew his face was flushing.

"Are you drunk, Nate?"

Nate laughed. "I had a few. After I saw what they did to my cabin."

"They trashed it, all right. Sheridan and I put a bunch of your stuff back in your house." The minute Joe said it he cringed, because he knew what was coming.

"See!" Nate exclaimed, raising his arm and turning it as if showing Joe off to his peregrine. "See what I mean? You are a good man. With a good wife and good children!"

After what seemed like forever to Joe, Marybeth had pulled off the road and parked her car next to the Jeep. She got out with an armful of groceries. Sheridan walked around the car, her eyes fixed on Romanowski and the hawks. Joe could tell she was entranced.

Joe introduced Marybeth and Sheridan to Nate Romanowski.

"I was just telling your husband what a nice family you have," Nate said. "I'm happy to find people like you."

Marybeth and Joe exchanged glances.

"It's nice to meet you, Mr. Romanowski…"

"Call me Nate," he interrupted.

"… Nate," Marybeth amended, "But I've got to get these things in and get dinner started."

Nate shook his head ruefully. "And get dinner started," he repeated. "That's lovely."

"Would you like to join us?" Marybeth asked.

"Please?" Sheridan pleaded. "I'd like to ask you some questions about falcons and falconry."

Everyone looked to Joe.

"I already invited him in," Joe grumbled. While Marybeth prepared dinner in the kitchen, Joe listened as Nate Romanowski discussed his birds with Sheridan in the living room. Nate spread newspaper on the floor and borrowed two chairs from the table for the birds to perch on. He lowered the birds to the tops of the chairs, where they perched facing backward with their tail feathers down the chairbacks. Missy had taken Lucy to town in the van for dinner. If Nate thought the sight of two identically dressed females with a fifty-something age difference was odd, he didn't say anything.

Nate and the falcons seemed to fill the living room, Joe thought. Although the birds were no more than twelve inches tall on the chairbacks, they projected a much larger aura. Like Nate himself, they seemed to be creatures of a different, wilder, and more violent world.

While Sheridan sat enraptured, Nate explained the accessories on the birds themselves, from the tooled leather hoods that covered their eyes but not their hooked beaks, to the long, thin leather jesses that hung from their ankles. The jesses, Nate said, were how the falconer kept a bird secured on his hand. Gently, he lifted the peregrine on his gloved fist and showed Sheridan how he twined the jesses through his fingers. The grip of the jess in his hand, he said, provided balance and stability for the bird and also prevented it from taking flight or walking up his arm. At the end of the jess was a swivel and a leash.

"What if it tries to fly?" Sheridan asked.

"Then the bird just kind of flops around like a chicken," Nate answered. "You'd be surprised how much lift they've got and how much power. A scared falcon flapping his wings can almost pull you off your feet."

He held the peregrine close to Sheridan, letting her examine it.

"I feel sorry for it, having to wear that hood," Sheridan said, gently stroking the bird's breast with the backs of her fingers.

"Then let's get rid of it," Nate said, pulling two small strings and slipping the hood off.

The falcon cocked its head toward Sheridan, studying her with rapid, almost mechanical snaps of its head. The bird's eyes were preternaturally alert and piercing. Nate told Sheridan how those eyes worked, how they had more cell surface area inside than human eyes so they could see in the dark and catch movement, like a mouse, from more than a mile away.

"I've heard it said that if you look into a falcon's eyes you can see forever," Nate said softly, in his strange blunt cadence. "I've also heard it's bad luck, because looking into a falcon's eyes is like looking into your own black, murderous heart."

Sheridan's own eyes widened at that, and she looked to Joe.

Joe shrugged. "I've never heard either one of those."

Nate smiled mysteriously.

"One thing I do know is that you can tell the difference between a falcon that's wild and a falcon that's broken by the look in their eyes. I've seen it at aviaries and zoos. The falcons there look at you, but something is missing behind the stare."

After a moment, Sheridan said, "Why don't we put his hood back on?" And Nate did.

"How do you get these birds?" she asked.

"Some I trap them when they're young," he said, describing how he mountaineered on cliffs to find the aeries, or nests, to set the mesh webs. He would stay at the site, ready to pounce if a bird hit the trap. "Others I've rescued when they've been hit by a car, or shocked by high wires."

"Falconry is considered the sport of kings in some Middle Eastern countries," Joe added, nodding.

"How long can you keep them?" she asked.

"It's not how long you keep them. It's how long they decide to stay with you. They can fly away any time they want and never come back. So every time they come back, it's a precious gift."

"What do they hunt?"

Nate explained that while all falcons are hawks, not all hawks are falcons. He said that each bird had its particular specialty, and that falconers often chose the birds based on that. Red-tailed hawks, like the one on the chair, were best on rabbits and squirrels. Falcons were best on sage grouse, ducks, and pheasants-upland game birds. The mere silhouette of a falcon in the sky, he said, would make ducks on the water freeze or seek cover, because a duck in flight would be instantly intercepted and destroyed. Ducks knew the imprint of a falcon from birth, and knew to fear it.

"The peregrine, though, is unique: It will hunt just about anything. That's why peregrines are so prized, and why they were protected for so many years when it looked like they were going extinct. For a peregrine, its specialty is prey in general, and they can hunt ground game, upland game birds, or waterfowl.

"You can't just keep a raptor like a pet and be a true falconer," Nate said. "Falconry requires hours of patience, training, and communicating with your bird. The birds must be exercised daily and kept in top condition-to hunt well, and in case they leave. You have to think like a falcon, like a predator, but at the same time you can't dominate the bird. If you do that, you break it. If it's broken, it's ruined forever. It'll fly off for sure, and its defenses will never again be as sharp. You're imposing a death sentence on a falcon if you break it. So if you respect the bird, you'll work to keep that wild, sharp edge the bird naturally has."