departure had led to the call, or something had happened that provoked both.
âWhat do you think?â he would have asked Emma. âWoman takes off for Farmington and drops off the world. Two days later somebody nasty turns her in for stealing pots. It could be sheâd done something to make him sore, and knew heâd find out about it and turn her in. So she took off. Or she went to Farmington, made him sore there, and took off. So what do you think?â
And Emma would have asked him three or four questions, and found out how little he knew about the woman, or about anything else to do with this, and then she would have smiled at him and used one of those dusty aphorisms from her Bitter Water Clan.
âOnly yearling coyotes think thereâs just one way to catch a rabbit,â sheâd say. And then sheâd say, âAbout next Tuesday the woman will call and tell her friends she ran away and got married, and it wonât have anything to do with stealing pots.â Maybe Emma would be right and maybe sheâd be wrong, and that didnât really matter. It was a game they had played for years. Emmaâs astute mind working against his own intelligence, honing his thinking, testing his logic against her common sense. It helped him. She enjoyed it. It was fun.
Had been fun.
Â
Leaphorn noticed it immediatelyâthe cold, stagnant air of abandoned places. He was standing beside Thatcher when Thatcher unlocked the door to the apartment of Dr. Friedman-Bernal and pushed it open. The trapped air flowed outward into Leaphornâs sensitive nostrils. He sensed dust in it, and all that mixture of smells which humans leave behind them when they go away.
The Park Service calls such apartments TPH, temporary personnel housing. At Chaco, six of them were built into an L-shaped frame structure on a concrete slabâpart of a complex that included maintenance and storage buildings, the motor pool, and the permanent personnel housing: a line of eight frame bungalows backed against the low cliff of Chaco Mesa.
âWell,â Thatcher said. He walked into the apartment with Maxie Davis a step behind him. Leaphorn leaned against the door. Thatcher stopped. âMs. Davis,â he said, âIâm going to ask you to wait outside for a while. Under this search warrant hereâ¦well, it makes everything different. I may have to take an oath on what was in here when I opened the door.â He smiled at her. âThings like that.â
âIâll wait,â Maxie Davis said. She walked past Leaphorn, smiling at him nervously, and sat on the porch railing in the slanting sunlight. Her face was somber. Again, Leaphorn noticed her striking beauty. She was a small young woman. Cap off now, her dark hair needed combing. Her oval face had been burned almost as dark as Leaphornâs. She stared toward the maintenance yard, where a man in coveralls was doing something to the front end of a flatbed truck. Her fingers tapped at the railingâsmall, battered fingers on a small, scarred hand. Her blue work shirt draped against her back. Under it, every line of her body was tense. Beyond her, the weedy yard, the maintenance shed, the tumbled boulders along the cliff, seemed almost luminous in the brilliant late-afternoon sunlight. It made the gloom inside Dr. Friedman-Bernalâs apartment behind Leaphorn seem even more shadowy than it was.
Thatcher walked through the living room, pulled open the drapes and exposed sliding-glass doors. They framed Fajada Butte and the expanse of the Chaco Valley. Except for a stack of books on the coffee table in front of the bleak brown institutional sofa, the room looked unused. Thatcher picked up the top book, examined it, put it down, and walked into the bedroom. He stood just inside the doorway, shaking his head.
âIt would help some,â he said, âif you knew what the hell youâre looking for.â
The room held a desk, two