The Eagle Catcher

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The Eagle Catcher Page 4

by Margaret Coel


  Rita was staring down the hall, and he realized she had been expecting her son. “I thought for sure he’d come home last night, but he never showed up,” she said. “Mom and I were here all night—Mom’s too old for campin’ out, and I’d just as soon sleep in my own bed. But Harvey loved the camp life. Part of him was living in the Old Time, you know.”

  She dabbed at her eyes again before hurrying on, her voice rising. “When Anthony didn’t come home, I figured he must’ve gone back to the powwow grounds to fix things up with Harvey. I was gettin’ ready to take Mom out there this morning when the grandmothers and Will Standing Bear and a couple policemen came drivin’ up, and they told us what happened ...”

  Rita lowered her face into her hands and began sobbing. Father John stepped across the hall and put his arms around her. “I’m so sorry,” he said, feeling his own grief and anger wash over him like a hot breeze, trying to comfort himself as well as her with the words.

  After a moment she pulled away and, leaning against the wall again, let out a long breath. “I’m scared the police are gonna think Anthony—” She stopped a moment. “Anthony would never hurt Harvey. I mean, Harvey was the only father he’d ever had, you know.” There was a question in her voice, as if she were wondering if he did know.

  “I understand,” he said. A look of relief crossed Rita’s face. She had never told him about it, but Harvey had. How Rita had run off with some Indian who had been passing through the reservation. How he had left her in Denver, pregnant and scared out of her wits. And how Harvey had gone to Denver and brought her home. It was right after his divorce, he’d said, and he’d been happy to help his sister raise her child.

  “The police aren’t going to blame Anthony, not without witnesses, or some evidence that Anthony was in the tipi at the time Harvey was killed,” Father John said, hoping to allay her fears and, at the same time, reassure himself. “They need hard evidence that would stand up in court, like fingerprints or hair samples or—”

  “The knife,” Rita interrupted. She was twisting the tissue into a rope, and her hands were shaking. “The grandmothers said he was knifed.”

  “That’s what it looks like,” Father John said softly. There was no telling what gossip the grandmothers had passed on.

  “Oh, my God,” Rita said, dropping her face into her hands. Just as he was about to put his arms around her again, the screen door slammed, and heavy footsteps bounded up the stairs.

  “Anthony!” Rita screamed, flinging herself past Father John and rushing down the hallway.

  “Who killed him?” Anthony said, demanding an instant answer, an explanation that would make sense out of the senseless. His voice was low and hoarse. Close to six feet tall, muscular and lanky at the same time, he seemed to fill up the landing at the top of the stairs. Except for his yellow T-shirt and ragged blue jeans slit open at the knees, he could have been a warrior in the Old Time, with eyes as black and determined as slate, a hooked, defiant nose, prominent cheekbones, and blue-black hair that fell over his forehead with its own insistency. He scanned the elders and grandmothers in the living room, the women crowding around the kitchen doorway, before fixing his eyes on his mother.

  Rita stopped and stood still, as if to take him in and make sure he was really there. Then she ran forward again, stretched out her arms and gathered him to her, cradling him like a little boy. Her head and shoulders were shaking, and Father John knew she was sobbing silently.

  “I stopped for gas up at Ethete,” Anthony said, pulling slightly away from his mother’s grasp while still patting her shoulder, “and Jake Littlehorse told me ...” He stopped abruptly. The words refused to be uttered.

  After a moment, he said, “I’m gonna get whoever did this, Mom, no matter what I have to do.” The house had gone quiet except for the faint clack-clack-clack of the screen door knocking in the wind.

  5

  FATHER JOHN DESCENDED the stairs and retrieved his cowboy hat from the bench. He had promised to come back later. Now Anthony needed to be with his family. In any case, Father John didn’t know what he would say. He didn’t understand why Harvey had been murdered in his tipi. He didn’t have the answers. Just platitudes, that’s all he had, about being sorry, about Harvey being a good man, a damn good man. Harvey and his family deserved more than platitudes.

  He squinted into the fiery sunlight as he stepped outside onto the concrete stoop, setting the screen door firmly in place behind him. The sky had turned sapphire blue with wisps of white clouds floating and banking against one another, like sailboats skimming the surface of the sea. The afternoon sun spilled its heat over the stoop, and a hot, steady breeze rustled the leaves of the lone cottonwood tree in the front yard and swept across the small patch of grass.

  The grandmothers still clucked over Harvey’s patch of grass. Father John had often overheard them as they stitched patterns of beads onto shirts and moccasins at the St. Francis meeting hall. The idea of pouring water onto something that didn’t belong here and didn’t want to grow here! He thought of what Harvey had told him: how he’d planted grass around the cottonwood so Anthony could have a cool, shady place to play when he was little, until he got tall enough to ride the horses out on the ranch.

  Father John made his way down the concrete steps and along the driveway, his boots scrunching against the gravel. Anthony’s jeep blocked the driveway, like a marker hugging its place on a Monopoly board. Arapahos were still milling about, although the crowd seemed smaller and the line of pickups shorter out along Little Wind River Bottom Road. His throat felt as dry as the little puffs of dust he was kicking up, and as scratchy as a tumbleweed He needed a drink. He wished he’d helped himself to a cup of coffee in the kitchen.

  A few years back he would have had the answers, and they would have tripped off his tongue as easily as the sunlight glinted off the pebbles in the driveway. Smooth and glib he’d been, full of the certainty and clarity of fifteen years of Jesuit training. Shored up with all the arguments of the great philosophers from Aristotle to Aquinas, Kant to Kierkegaard. Tested in monographs and disputations, in endless discussions over dinner in the refectory every evening. He could have expounded at length on how God was First Mover and Creator, how all created things acted according to their natures, how free will defined the nature of human beings. He could have explained philosophically how someone, acting with free will, had chosen to murder Harvey.

  So what? Harvey was dead—that was the fact of the matter, and no philosophical theory on how murder comes into the world would have comforted Harvey’s family. It didn’t even comfort him. He’d learned a lot about faith since he’d been at Wind River Reservation, mostly about how it was something other than an intellectual exercise. There were no words, no lofty concepts, that could take away the pain. Faith was living with the pain.

  He was about to get into the Toyota pickup out on the side of Little Wind River Bottom Road when a BIA patrol car slowed alongside him. Its red brake lights flashed on and off as the car turned in to the driveway and rocked to a stop. The jeep he’d seen this morning at the powwow grounds pulled in behind, its rear bumper hanging into the road. Doors flung open, and Art Banner lifted himself from the patrol car as the FBI agent, Jeff Miller, jumped from the jeep,

  The two agents of law and order walked back onto the road toward him, their arms swinging like martinets: Miller in dark suit with jacket open and red tie hanging dead center; the police chief in light-blue shirt and navy-blue slacks wrinkled with sweat, as if he’d been wearing them for days.

  “Anthony Castle inside?” The agent threw his head back toward the ranch house.

  Father John felt his muscles tense, the way they had on the pitcher’s mound, when everything depended on the next throw of the ball. All his senses shifted into high gear as he gripped the rim of the opened door on the Toyota. “Anthony’s with his family.” He drew out the words, giving himself time to assess the situation.

  “We’ve got some questions. It’s best he comes
to Lander,” Miller said, squaring his shoulders and looking steadily at Father John.

  “Why Lander?”

  Banner wedged himself between the fed and Father John. “We just need some questions answered, that’s all. No sense disturbing the family.”

  “Anthony doesn’t know anything about his uncle’s murder.” Father John stepped out from the door and slammed it hard, deliberately punctuating his words. He walked to the front of the pickup, eyes locked on Miller. It was this FBI agent who needed convincing. “Anthony wasn’t even around.”

  Miller folded his arms across his middle. “Oh, he was around all right. No doubt you know all about that big fight he and his uncle got into last night. Twenty, thirty witnesses saw it. Big coincidence, wouldn’t you say, that Harvey got stabbed afterward? Coroner estimates time of death sometime between midnight and six this morning.”

  “Anthony left the powwow grounds,” Father John said, keeping his voice steady, reasonable.

  “We think he came back,” said the agent.

  Some of the Arapaho men who had been standing in the driveway walked out onto the road and lined up like bodyguards behind Banner and Father John.

  Miller ignored them. “We got the murder weapon. BIA police found a hunting knife out on the grounds behind Harvey’s tipi. Hidden in some sagebrush.”

  “We think it might be the murder weapon.” Banner jumped in. “We won’t know for sure ’til the lab tests it.”

  “Maybe Anthony can identify it,” Miller said, his voice thick with sarcasm. “It’s got his initials on the handle.”

  A strong dislike for this white man rose like bile in Father John’s throat. He heard the Arapahos behind him gulping in air, and he hoped everybody stayed calm. “Could be a coincidence,” he said hurriedly.

  “Yeah. Coincidences all over the place.” Miller kept his eyes locked on Father John’s.

  “Will you do us a favor and tell Anthony we wanna talk to him?” Banner took another step in front of the fed, almost blocking him altogether.

  Father John switched his gaze to the police chief. He understood what the Indian was about. Banner didn’t want to insult Harvey’s family by coming into their home with some cockamamie suggestion that Anthony had something to do with the murder. And there was no way he wanted to deal with the wrath of Anthony’s grandmother. Arapaho grandmothers would put a she-wolf to shame when it came to protecting their young.

  “Okay,” Father John said almost under his breath. There was only one reason he would do this: maybe he could soften the blow a little for Anthony, explain the situation to Maria and Rita. He didn’t want the family upset any further.

  “There’s an explanation for all this,” he said, starting toward the driveway. He said it for the fed’s benefit.

  Father John took the stairs two at a time. From the landing he spotted Anthony sitting cross-legged on the living room carpet next to Maria’s rocker. Catching the young man’s eye, he motioned to him.

  Anthony sprang upward like a whipcord unknotting itself. He strode across the living room, his eyes on Father John. “What?” he asked.

  Father John turned and walked halfway down the hallway to where he and Rita had stood a few minutes ago. Then he faced the young man. Keeping his voice low, he said, “Banner and the new FBI agent want you to come to Lander for questioning.”

  Anthony blinked and shifted his weight from one foot to the other. “They think I had something to do with Harvey’s murder?”

  Father John placed a hand on the Indian’s shoulder to steady him for what he had to say next. “They found a hunting knife with your initials on it.”

  “No.” Anthony rocked backward as if he’d been hit by a strong gust of wind. Shaking off Father John’s hand, he whirled around and drove one fist against the wall. Several women poked their heads through the kitchen door, eyes wide with surprise and fear.

  “Take it easy,” Father John said, gripping the young man’s shoulder again. He could feel the tenseness there.

  Anthony’s breath came fast and hard. “Give me a couple more minutes with grandmother,” he said.

  “What’s going on?” Rita asked. Father John could hear her puffing as she followed him down the stairs. He stepped back and pushed open the screen door for her. He saw the fear in her eyes as they stepped out onto the concrete stoop.

  He began explaining how the police had to question everybody and wanted Anthony to come to Lander, when suddenly Banner sprinted across the lawn, radio in hand, antenna pulled out. Father John felt as if he’d been bit by lightning. Jesus, why hadn’t he seen it coming? He swung himself over the metal railing and dropped about five feet onto the ground, sending shock waves reverberating up his spine. Then he started running after the chief.

  Rounding the comer of the house, Father John saw Anthony zig-zagging through the hay field out back with Miller right behind. The agent was losing ground, his legs pedaling furiously through the stalks of hay. He would never catch Anthony. All of a sudden the Indian stumbled and pitched forward, as if one foot had caught the edge of a prairie dog hole. He was scrambling to right himself when the agent tackled him, and they both went down. Banner caught up and threw himself onto the pile. A cloud of dust rose over the three figures in the flattened hay.

  Just as Father John reached them, his heart pounding against the walls of his chest, they struggled to their feet, the older men pulling Anthony up. Anthony’s face had turned the dark red of dead leaves about to drop off an aspen tree. Both Banner and Miller were huffing. A couple of buttons on Banner’s shirt had popped off. His shirtails hung loose over his uniform slacks, and little beads of sweat stood out on his forehead. Miller’s navy blazer, smeared with gray-green dust, was bunched under his armpits. His red tie looped over one shoulder.

  “I’m arresting you,” Miller said, gulping air between his words, “on suspicion of murder.”

  Banner pulled a set of handcuffs out of his pocket and snapped them around one of Anthony’s wrists. It took both Banner and Miller to pull Anthony’s other arm around in back and close the handcuffs on that wrist.

  “What’s going on?” Father John tried to keep his voice calm, but he knew he was shouting. “He’s got rights here.”

  “Yeah, he’s got rights,” Miller said, planting himself directly in front of Anthony. Then he began rattling off rights with about as much involvement as a printer zapping inked words onto a sheet of paper.

  Rita pushed past the small crowd of Arapahos gathering around. “Don’t take him away,” she screamed, locking one hand on Banner’s arm.

  “Don’t make this any harder than it is, Rita,” the police chief said under his breath. He shook off the woman’s hand as he and Miller propelled Anthony around the house and toward the driveway.

  “Figured he’d make a break out back,” Miller said to the small crowd circling them. He seemed well satisfied with himself. Father John pushed his way past the others and strode alongside the fed, looking beyond him to the young Arapaho, as if the white man weren’t there. “You don’t have to say anything,” he said to Anthony. “Not without a lawyer.”

  Suddenly Anthony jerked away from his captors, squared his shoulders, and threw his head back. Father John half expected him to bolt down the driveway. He felt his own muscles tense before he realized that wasn’t Anthony’s intention. He was merely claiming, if not his liberty, his freedom. “Call Vicky, will you?” Anthony asked.

  “You got it,” Father John said, hoping the Arapaho lawyer was around this weekend. It wasn’t like her to miss a celebration like the powwow.

  Nobody spoke as the group continued past the small, silent knots of Arapahos in the driveway, stunned looks on their faces. Banner steered Anthony into the back seat of the patrol car, then slammed the door. Before he could get in behind the steering wheel, Rita burst past the others. “You can’t take him,” she screamed.

  The chief stopped, one foot still on the driveway, the other in the car, and leaned over the top. ‘Take i
t easy, will ya, Rita? We’re gonna get this cleared up fast as we can.”

  Exchanging a quick glance with Father John, Banner slid into the driver’s seat. The FBI agent hurried to his jeep a few feet behind. Several women gathered around Rita as the vehicles backed out of the driveway, spitting gravel from under the rear tires.

  Maria and Will stood on the concrete stoop gripping the railing like a rope between their hands. “Where they takin’ my grandson?” the old woman asked as Father John mounted the stairs.

  “Lander.” He didn’t want to say “jail.”

  “He’ll be with white people,” Maria said. Father John understood her fear. Anthony was about to be swallowed into an alien, official white world. Suddenly the old woman straightened herself upright and took a long breath as she reached for Father John’s arm. “You gotta help him.”

  “I’ll do everything I can,” Father John said, hoping the old people wouldn’t sense how scared he felt right now. It occurred to him that the fed had intended to arrest Anthony all along. Taking him to Lander for questioning—that was just a ploy. Miller would have arrested him as soon as they got there. But Anthony had forced his hand by running out the back door. God, what if Miller had gone for his gun? Anthony could’ve been killed.

  “We’ve got to get a lawyer,” Father John said. “Anthony asked me to call Vicky Holden.”

  Maria dropped her hand from Father John’s arm. Both she and Will were quiet a moment. Finally the elder spoke, measuring out his words. “Yes. Hisei ci nihi is the grand-daughter two generations away of Chief Black Night. You call her, Teenenoo Hiiinooni’it. Tell her that Our People need her now.”

  6

  VICKY HOLDEN HEARD the muffled, distant sound of the phone ringing as she lifted her suitcase through the tailgate of the Bronco. She hurried up the sidewalk, pulling the suitcase on its little metal wheels while, at the same time, fitting the strap of a leather bag into the crook of her shoulder. The ringing stopped just as she reached the porch that fronted the small brick bungalow she’d called home the last couple of years. To hell with it, she thought. Whoever it was could call again. She wasn’t ready to talk to clients yet. Four days in downtown Denver at a trial lawyers’ meeting hadn’t exactly been a snooze on the beach.

 

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