The FBI agents hair was as thick and white as cotton, the capillaries in his jaws like pieces of blue and red thread. The iridescent spray from Hackberrys automatic sprinklers had already stained Risers pale suit, but his concentration on the flower beds seemed so intense he was hardly aware of it.
Hackberry dressed in a pair of khakis and a T-shirt and walked barefoot onto the back porch. There were poplar trees planted as a windbreak at the bottom of his property, and inside the shadows they made on the grass he could see a doe and her fawn watching him, their eyes brown and moist inside the gloom.
You guys get up early in the morning, dont you? he said to the FBI agent.
I work Sundays, too. Me and the pope.
What do you need, sir?
Can I buy you breakfast?
No, but you can come inside.
While the agent sat at his kitchen table, Hackberry started the coffeemaker and broke a half-dozen eggs in a huge skillet and set two pork chops in the skillet with them. You like cereal? he said.
No, thanks.
At the stove, Hackberry poured a bowlful of Rice Krispies, then added cold milk and started eating them while the eggs and meat cooked. Ethan Riser rested his chin on his thumb and knuckle and stared into space, trying not to look at his watch or show impatience. His eyes were ice-blue, unblinking, marked by neither guile nor doubt. He cleared his throat slightly. My father was a botanist and a Shakespearean actor, he said. In his gardens he grew every kind of flower Shakespeare mentions in his work. He was also a student of Voltaire and believed he could tend his own garden and separate himself from the rest of the world. For that reason, he was a tragic man.
What did you want to tell me, sir? Hackberry said, setting his cereal bowl in the sink.
There were two sets of prints on the Airweight thirty-eight the road gang supervisor gave you. We matched one set to the prints of Vikki Gaddis we took from her house. The other set we matched through the California drivers license database. They belong to a fellow by the name of Jack Collins. He has no criminal record. But weve heard about him. His nickname is Preacher. Excuse me, are you listening?
I will be as soon as I have some coffee.
I see.
You take sugar or milk? Hackberry said.
Ethan Riser folded his arms and looked out the window at the deer among the poplar trees. Whatever you have is fine, he said.
Go ahead, Hackberry said.
Thank you. They call him Preacher because he thinks he may be the left hand of God, the giver of death. Ethan Riser waited, his agitation beginning to show. Youre not impressed?
Did you ever know a sociopath who didnt think he was of cosmic importance? What did this guy do before he became the left hand of God?
He was a pest exterminator.
Hackberry began pouring coffee into two cups and tried to hide his expression.
You think its funny? Riser said.
Me?
You said you were at Paks Palace. I did some research. That was a brick factory where Major Pak hung up GIs on the rafters and beat them with clubs for hours. You were one of them?
So what if I was or wasnt? It happened. Most of those guys didnt come back. Hackberry scraped the eggs and meat out of the skillet onto a platter. Then he set the platter on top of the table. He set it down harder than he intended.
We hear this guy Preacher is a gun for hire across the border. We hear he doesnt take prisoners. Its a free-fire zone down there. More people are being killed in Coahuila and Nuevo León than in Iraq, did you know that?
As long as it doesnt happen in my county, Im not interested.
Youd better be. Maybe Collins has already killed Pete Flores and the Gaddis girl. If hes true to his reputation, hell be back and brush his footprints out of the sand. You hearing me on this, Sheriff?
Hackberry blew on his coffee and drank from it. My grandfather was a Texas Ranger. He knocked John Wesley Hardin out of his saddle and pistol-whipped him and put him in jail.
Whats that mean?
Mess with the wrong people and youll get a shitpile of grief, is what it means.
Ethan Riser studied him, just short of being impolite. I heard you were a hardhead. I heard you think you can live inside your own zip