footage, man. It’s a file. And it’s mine.”
“The district attorney would probably dispute that. Are you licensed to fly that drone?”
“I don’t need a license.”
“You do for commercial work. And if I put it up on our website, or pay your data bill, you’re doing this for hire.”
Denny scowls in my direction. “So don’t pay me.”
“You’re missing the point, Denny.”
“No, I’m not. I don’t like the sheriff. And the chief of police I like even less. They hassle me all the time. Until they need me, of course. That time they had a car wreck down in a gully by Highway 61, they called me to fly down in there and check to see if anybody was alive. They were glad to see me then. And at the prison riot, too. Although they stole my micro SD cards and copied them. But any other time, they’re major A-holes.”
“I heard they have their own drone now.”
Once again, Denny snorts in contempt.
“You know what I’m thinking?” I say.
“Nope.”
“The next thing we need to know is where Buck’s truck is. He drives an old GMC pickup. It’s bound to be upstream from where he was found—unless something isn’t what it appears to be.”
Denny is nodding. “You want me to fly the banks and look for his truck?”
“Seems like the thing to do, doesn’t it? You got enough battery left?”
“Two is one, one is none.”
“What?”
“Navy SEAL motto. Meaning I brought some extras.” Denny leans over the fence and looks down the sharp incline of Front Street. “Looks like they’re loading him into the coroner’s wagon. Let the deputies get clear, and I’ll fly the drone back up here, change out my battery, and start checking the banks.”
“Sounds good. Let’s try the Mississippi shore first.”
“Yep.”
We stand at the fence together, looking down into Lower’ville, which on most mornings would be virtually empty (except in March, which is peak tourist season for our city). But on this May morning, death has drawn a crowd. Though they’re almost stick figures from our perspective, I recognize Byron Ellis helping the deputies slide the sheet-covered body from his gurney into the old Chevy. Watching them wrestle that mortal weight, I hear a snatch of music: Robert Johnson playing “Preachin’ Blues.” Turning back to the road, I look for a passing car but see none. Then I realize the music was in my head. “Preachin’ Blues” was one of the first songs Buck taught me on guitar. The harmless man lying beneath the coroner’s sheet with his skull cracked open salvaged my young life. The realization that he has been murdered—possibly on the river—is so surreal that I have to force it into some inaccessible place in my mind.
“Hey, are you okay?” Denny asks in a hesitant voice.
I wipe my eyes and turn back to him. “Yeah. Buck and I were close back when I lived here. When I was a kid.”
“Oh. Can I ask you something?”
He’s going to ask me about my brother dying, I think, searching for a way to avoid the subject. Seeing Buck pulled from the river has already knocked me off-balance. I don’t want to dwell on the nightmare that poisoned the river for me.
“Sure,” I reply, sounding anything but.
“I knew you won a Pulitzer Prize and all, when you were in Washington. But I didn’t realize what it was for. I was online last week and saw it was for something you wrote about being embedded in Iraq. Were you with the SEALs or somebody like that? Delta Force?”
A fourteen-year-old boy’s question. “Sometimes,” I tell him, relief coursing through me. “I was embedded in Afghanistan before Iraq, with the Marines. But in Iraq I was with private security contractors. Do you know what those are?”
“Like Blackwater and stuff?”
“Exactly. Most guys who do that work in Afghanistan are former soldiers: Rangers, Delta, SEALs. But a lot of them in Iraq were just regular cops back in the world, believe it or not. And lots of those were from the South. They go over there for the money. It’s the only way they can make that kind of paycheck. They earn four times what the regular soldiers do. More than generals.”
“That doesn’t seem fair.”
“It’s not.”
Denny thinks about this. “So what’s it like? For real. Is it like Call of Duty come to life?”
“Not even close. But until you’ve been there, you can’t really understand it. And I hope you never do. Only a few things in life are like that.”
“Such as?”
“That’s a different conversation. One for