worth the trouble."
"There's got to be other country singers around. Why would a guy like Tilden Sheckly get bent out of shape over one that broke out of the stable?"
Milo opened his mouth, then closed it again. He looked like he was reorganizing what he wanted to say. " You don't know Sheck, Navarre. I told you he lets some of his wellbehaved artists like Julie Kearnes stick around after they're washed up. One of Sheck's less cooperative girls ended up at the bottom of a motor lodge pool. Freak swimming accident. Another male singer who tried to get out from under Sheckly's thumb was busted with a gram of cocaine in his glove compartment, got three years of hard time. The deputies in Sheck's county handled both cases. Half of the Avalon Sheriff's Department works security at the Paintbrush on their off hours. You figure it out." "Still—"
"Les and Sheck had a history, Tres. I don't know all the bloody details but I know they've been at each other's throats over one deal or another for years. I think this time Les went a little too far trying to twist Sheckly's arm. I think Sheckly finally decided to solve the problem the way Sheck knows best. I need you to tell me for sure."
I unwrapped a butterscotch and put it in my mouth. "Three conditions."
"Name them."
"First, you don't lie to me. You don't withhold anything again. If I ask you for a top ten list you give me eleven items."
"Done."
"Second, get better candy."
Milo smiled. "And third?"
"You bring in the police. Talk to the wife, set it up any way you want, put the best face on it, call it a silly necessity to your clients—but you level with SAPD about SaintPierre being gone. You have to get his name into the system. I won't poke around for two or three more weeks, then find out I've been failing to report another homicide. Or a killer."
"You can't seriously think Les—"
"You said Julie and Les were getting close. Julie is now dead. If the police start looking around and can't find SaintPierre, what are they going to think? You've got to level with them."
"I told you—I can't just go—"
I got my backpack off the floor and unzipped the side pocket.
It was an old green nylon pack, a holdover from my grad days at Berkeley. It served me well in investigative work. Nobody cares much about grad students with backpacks. Nobody thinks you might be carrying burglar tools or recorders or fat rolls of fiftydollar bills.
I took out Chavez's money and put it on his desk. Then I stood up to leave.
"Thanks for the chat, Milo."
Milo leaned back and pressed his palm to the centre of his forehead, like he was checking for a fever. "All right, Navarre. Sit down."
"You agree?"
"I don't have much choice."
The phone rang. Milo answered it with a "hello" that was mostly growl.
Then his entire disposition changed. The emotion drained out of his voice and his face paled to the colour of caffe latte. He leaned forward into the receiver. "Yes. Yes, absolutely. Oh—no problem. Les, ah— No, no, sir. What if—no, that's fine."
The conversation went on like that for about five minutes. Somewhere in the middle of it I sat back down. I tried not to look at Milo. He sounded like an overwhelmed tenyearold listening to Hank Aaron explain why he couldn't sign the kid's baseball card.
When Milo hung up he stared at the receiver. His fingers wrapped around the wad of money, almost protectively.
"Century Records?" I asked.
He nodded.
"It's getting hard on you."
"I didn't want to run the entire agency, Navarre. We've got seven other artists touring right now. I've got promoters breathing down my neck about deals Les didn't even mention to me. Now Century Records—I don't know how I'm going to hold the deal together when they find out Les is gone."
"So walk away."
Milo seemed to turn the words around in his head. They must have rolled unevenly, like rocks in a tumbler.
"What do you mean?"
"Let the agency collapse if it has to. You've got your law degree. You seem to know what you're doing. What do you need the charades for?"
Milo shook his head. "I need SaintPierre's clout. I can't do it on my own."
"Okay."
"You don't believe me."
I shrugged. "Somebody once told me my problem was thinking too small—that I should just take a chance and throw myself into the kind of work I really liked, the hell with what people said. Of