silence poured over the crowd. There was a screech of a microphone.
âWelcome to the Arapaho spring arts-and-crafts fair.â An Indian in blue jeans and a red western shirt, a cowboy hat pushed back on his head, strode into the center of the hall, trailing the mike cord across the tiled floor. He rattled off a string of names, thanking the elders and grandmothers for their hard work so that folks could buy traditional Arapaho art for their homes. âLetâs give a big handââhe raised one hand in the airââfor the kids from Arapaho school that are gonna demonstrate the traditional dances.â
The crowd began to cheer as the drums started up. The high-pitched voices of the singers floated above the thud. Slowly the line of kids moved into the center of the hall, moccasined feet tapping in precise steps. They wore tanned hide dresses and shirts decorated with tiny tin bells that jangled as they danced. The boys held staffs, the girls, elaborate fans made of feathers.
As Father John stepped back to let the kids pass, he saw the bulky, dark figure of Chief Banner framed in the entrance. The chief gestured with his head toward the outdoors, then backed away. Father John waited for the last kid to dance past before he went outside.
Banner was standing next to a white police car parked in front of the hall, hands jammed into the pockets of his navy-blue uniform jacket. The silver insignias on his collar and cap glinted in the sunshine.
âI figured youâd be here,â he said as Father John approached. âYou gotta tell me everything you know about the missing Indian.â
âYou found him?â
The chief gave a quick nod. âBen Holden took a half-dozen warriors up to Bear Lake this morning after the guy didnât get back from a vision quest. Found his body in a boulder field below the spirit cliff. Looks like heâs been dead a couple days.â
âWho is he?â
âNobody from around here. Arapaho from Oklahoma. Nameâs Duncan Grover. Age about twenty-five.â The chief glanced away a moment. âFremont County Sheriffâs Department brought the body out. This is their investigation, with Bear Lake being county land. Got a detective on it named Matt Slinger.â
Father John understood. There was a jurisdictional maze that the law enforcement agencies in the area had to navigate. Who was in charge depended upon where a crime took place.
âWhat do you know about Duncan Grover, John?â The chiefâs eyes bore into his.
âLook, Banner,â Father John began, âthis isnât something I can talk about.â
Banner moved closer. The odor of stale coffee hungbetween them. âYou do know what really happened up there, donât you?â
âWhat does the detective say happened?â
âThe detective? You wanna know what the white detective and the white coroner say? They say Duncan Grover jumped off the cliff. Committed suicide.â
âSuicide!â Father John could feel his heart speed up. He turned away a moment. They had it all wrong. The killer was going to walk away, and other people were going to die. Thereâs gonna be more murders.
He looked back at the Indian watching him with narrowed eyes. âWhat makes them think it was suicide?â
âBody was two hundred feet below the ledge,â the chief said. âIf heâd accidentally stepped off, he probably wouldnât have fallen more than ten, fifteen feet before he wouldâve been stopped by a big outcropping. But he flew over the outcropping, which took some force. They say he jumped.â
âAnd you donât think so,â Father John said after a moment.
âI donât think any warriorâs gonna go on a vision quest at a sacred site like Bear Lake, where the spirits are all around, then throw himself off the cliffs.â Bannerâs voice was tight with fury.
Father John was quiet a moment.