restraining order and then her divorce from Jay Hopkins. And he'd represented Jay and Helen before, in a lawsuit they brought against Terry Vale."
"What'd they sue the mayor for?"
"Maybe he wasn't the mayor then. He owns the local furniture and carpet sales company. Jay Hopkins said the carpet Terry sold them wasn't stain resistant, and Terry wouldn't make good on the warranty."
"Hmm," I said. "I'm not sure what that all means." And I needed a cup of coffee before I even began to figure it out.
"It means," Tolliver said, "that Paul Edwards is in a position to know all the secrets of both families."
"Like?"
"Who Teenie's father really was, for one."
"Oh."
"And maybe he knows why Teenie and Dell were out in the woods that day. What could have made them go out to that place, on land that neither family owned, to be killed?"
"Who does own that land?"
"I guess we don't know."
"Could we find that out this morning?"
"Sure. We can go to the county clerk's office. But why should we go to the effort?"
"I'd rather have something to do than go back to the motel room and work crossword puzzles."
"Yeah, me, too." We worked out a plan for the day.
First thing after breakfast, we did our laundry in the Sudsy Kleen Laundromat, owned by (not to our surprise) Terry Vale. His representative at the Laundromat was a seamed old woman with a walker who dispensed correct change for the washers and dryers. She also sold little boxes of detergent and dryer sheets from behind a dilapidated desk. We learned by observation that the old woman also washed and folded laundry upon request. Sudsy Kleen did a great drop-off business.
This stout old woman performed a great service and did a good job, we decided, but she was determined to be as unpleasant as possible while she did it.
Initially, the fluffy white hair and the crocheted white sweater suckered me into believing I should be gently polite with this old bat. But when I asked for change for a dollar bill so I could feed the dryer, she drew in her breath as if I'd made a nasty suggestion. I stood transfixed, trying to figure out what I'd done. Dumbly, I held out the money. Granny Grump fumblingly took the dollar from my hand and examined it, since I was obviously a counterfeiter, I guess. Then she very slowly counted out the correct change, casting quick glances at me all the while as if she suspected I was going to snatch the money box and run. Her glasses glinted with every glance, just a quick flash in the overhead lights, as if she had bionic eyes. When I took the coins to my brother, I was half amused and half angry.
"She's charming, you need to go meet her," I said, in a conversational tone, dumping the quarters into the slots on the machine.
Tolliver glanced her way, started to say something, tried not to smile.
"I mean, it's just adorable when she glowers," I told him. "What a character! You just can't find old ladies like that anymore!"
"Shh," he said, but not as if he meant it.
I wasn't sure if she'd heard me or not - her expression of extreme disgust never changed. Was there something personal about us that she loathed? Or did she distrust us simply because we weren't from Sarne? Hard to tell. I wasn't sure I cared.
We finished washing and folding our clothes pretty quickly, since the Laundromat had few customers early in the morning. Maybe the dragon had driven all the self-serve customers away.
Our next stop was closer to the center of town. The county clerk's office was in the old courthouse in the square. It was the first time we'd actually entered the building. The ceilings were just as high as I'd imagined, and the windows just as huge; obviously this building predated the widespread use of air-conditioning. The room we entered was so disproportional, the distance from floor to ceiling to much more than from wall to wall, that I felt a little uneasy. I couldn't imagine working in such a room.
The two women who did work there were definitely surprised to see strangers come in, but the older of the two, a very round woman with dyed brown hair, immediately rose from her desk and came to the counter. When we asked to see a map of the county, she pointed silently to the wall behind us.
"Snake," I muttered to Tolliver after we turned around. There was