need, my dear fellow,â Willoughby said, âis a pint of Slow Elk Oatmeal Stout and a deluxe blue cheese bison burger, on me of course, though Iâm still smarting from your snub.â
âTodayâs my fatherâs birthday. I like to make a few casts for him. Iâm sorry for not telling you earlier.â
âPerfectly understandable.â
Willoughby nodded to the waitress, and when the beers came, they toasted to Seanâs father.
âStill no one to play the piano?â Sean said.
Winston raised a pair of sculpted eyebrows. âYouâre in a mermaid bar and youâre worried about the piano player?â
âActually, I heard they might be getting someone from New Orleans,â Willoughby said.
âOh?â
Sean had had an affair of the soul, the body, too, though perhaps not the heart, with a piano bar singer from Mississippi shortly after heâd moved to Montana. The singer, who went by Velvet Lafayette and whose real name was Vareda Beaudreux, had read the etched letters on the ripple glass of his art studio at the Bridger Mountain Cultural Centerâ
Private Investigations
âtaken the sign literally, and hired him to find her brother, and then her brotherâs killer, when the man wound up drowned with a Royal Wulff trout fly hooked in hislower lip. No, it couldnât be her. Vareda had disappeared back into the Delta country from which she had come, but then she had mentioned singing in New Orleans once.
âYou wouldnât have caught the name?â he asked Willoughby.
âNo, it was just something the Queen of the Waters said in passing.â
âAh, queen of my heart,â Winston said.
âI believe the body part to which you refer lies somewhere south of the heart,â Willoughby corrected.
When Sean had entered the bar, the seven-thousand-gallon tank was empty, the mermaids who took turns taking dips changing shifts. Besides the Queen of the Watersâa copper blonde with Botticelli curls who had been coaxed from South Florida, where she swam with reef fish as a surprise treat for the patrons of a glass-bottomed boatâthe mermaids included the Parmachene Belle and the Chippewa Nymph. All had taken their names from fishing flies, and with the exception of the Queen, who was seeing Seanâs best friend, Sam Meslik, Sean knew more about the histories of the fly patterns than of the women who assumed their names.
Hearing a splash, he turned his head to see the Parmachene Belle enter the tank, trailing a fizz of bubbles. Her hair was platinum with dyed red streaks and her long white tail was scarlet-banded, the color combination of the trout fly. A muscular swimmer, she backflipped, bubbles blowing out of her nose, her candy-cane tail flowing. Sean turned his attention back his burger and the tableâs conversation, which was about the bison falling off the cliffs, the Palisades being only a few miles downriver from the clubhouse and even closer to the bar. Robin Cowdry had broken the news, which thanks to Peachy Morris was up and down the valley in the span of a day. Seanâs sympathy for the buffalo already being voiced by those at the table, he nodded along, and when his eyes returned to the glass, the Parmachene Belle had kicked to the front of the tank, where she stared incuriously at the patrons of the bar, who stared back as if they wereobserving an orangutan in a zoo. When a man raised his camera, she beckoned him closer with the waving hands of a belly dancer.
Sean felt his phone buzzing in his pants pocketâa surprise as this part of the valley was usually a dead spot for receptionâand walked outside to take the call. It was Katie Sparrow, the search dog handler who worked as a backcountry ranger in Yellowstone Park.
âIs dickhead one word or two?â she said by way of hello.
âUh, one, I think.â
ââCause Iâm writing a text, and it starts, âDear Dickhead, where