The First Eagle

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The First Eagle Page 4

by Tony Hillerman


  Howe shook his head. “I asked him. He said Nez just started showing the symptoms. Said he had him on preventive doxycycline already because of the work they do, but he gave him a booster shot of streptomycin and rushed him right in.”

  “You don’t believe that, do you?”

  Howe grimaced. “I’d hate to,” he said. “Good old plague used to be reliable. It’d poke along and give us time to treat it. And, yeah, that was Woody’s article. Sort of don’t worry about global warming. The tiny little beasties will get us first.”

  “Well, as I remember it, I agreed with a lot of it,” Shirley said. “It’s downright stupid the way some of you doctors prescribe a bunch of antibiotics every time a mama brings her kid in with an earache. No wonder—”

  Howe held up a hand.

  “Save it, Shirley. Save it. You’re preaching to the choir here.” He nodded toward the sheet on the gurney. “Doesn’t Mr. Nez there just prove we’re breeding a whole new set of drug-resistant bugs? The old Pasteurella pestis, as we used to call it in those glorious primitive days when drugs worked, was duck soup for a half dozen antibiotics. Now, whatever they call it these days, Yersinia pestis I think it is, just ignored everything we tried on Mr. Nez. We had us a case here where one of your Navajo curing ceremonials could have done Nez more good than we did.”

  “They just brought him in too late,” Shirley said. “You can’t give the plague a two-week head start and hope to—”

  Howe shook his head. “It wasn’t two weeks, Shirley. If Woody knows what the hell he’s talking about, it was more like just about one day.”

  “No way,” Shirley said, shaking her head. “And how would he know, anyway?”

  “Said he picked the flea off of him. Woody’s doing a big study of rodent host colonies. National Institutes of Health money, and some of the pharmaceutical companies. He’s interested in these mammal disease reservoirs. You know. Prairie dog colonies that get the plague infection but somehow stay alive while all the other colonies are wiped out. That and the kangaroo rats and deer mice, which aren’t killed by the hantavirus. Anyway, Woody said he and Nez always took a broad-spectrum antibiotic when there was any risk of flea bites. If it happened, they’d save the flea so he could check it and do a follow-up treatment if needed. According to Woody, Nez found the flea on the inside of his thigh, and almost right away he was feeling sick and running a fever.”

  “Wow,” Shirley said.

  “Yeah,” Howe agreed. “Wow indeed.”

  “I’ll bet another flea got him a couple of weeks ago,” she said. “Did you agree on the autopsy?”

  “Yeah again,” Howe said. “You said you know the family. Or know some Nezes, anyway. You think they’ll object?”

  “I’m what they call an urban Indian. Three-fourths Navajo by blood, but I’m no expert on the culture.” She shrugged. “Tradition is against chopping up bodies, but on the other hand it solves the problem of the burial.”

  Howe sighed, rested his plump buttocks against the desk, pushed back his glasses and rubbed his hand across his eyes. “Always liked that about you guys,” he said. “Four days of grief and mourning for the spirit, and then get on with life. How did we white folks get into this corpse worship business? It’s just dead meat, and dangerous to boot.”

  Shirley merely nodded.

  “Anything hopeful for that kid in Room Four?” Howe asked. He picked up the chart, looked at it, clicked his tongue and shook his head. He pushed himself up from the desk and stood, shoulders slumped, staring at the sheet covering the body of Anderson Nez.

  “You know,” he said, “back in the Middle Ages the doctors had another cure for this stuff. They thought it had something to do with the sense of smell, and they recommended people stave it off by using a lot of perfume and wearing flowers. It didn’t stop everybody from dying, but it proved humans have a sense of humor.”

  Shirley had known Howe long enough to understand that she was now supposed to provide a straight line for his wit. She wasn’t in the mood, but she said: “What do you mean?”

  “They made an ironic song out of it—and it lived on as a nursery rhyme.” Howe sang it in his creaky voice:

  “Ring around with roses,

  pockets full of posies.

  Ashes. Ashes.

  We all fall down.”

  He looked at her quizzically. “You remember singing that in kindergarten?”

  Shirley didn’t. She shook her head.

  And Dr. Howe walked down the hall toward where another of his patients was dying.

  Acting Lieutenant Jim Chee of the Navajo Tribal Police, a “traditional” at heart, had parked his trailer with its door facing east. At dawn on July 8, he looked out at the rising sun, scattered a pinch of pollen from his medicine pouch to bless the day and considered what it would bring him.

  He reviewed the bad part first. On his desk his monthly report for June—his first month as administrator in charge of a Navajo Police sub-agency unit—awaited him, half-finished and already overdue. But finishing the hated paperwork would be fun compared to the other priority job—telling Officer Benny Kinsman to get his testosterone under control.

  The good part of the day involved, at least obliquely, his own testosterone. Janet Pete was leaving Washington and coming back to Indian country. Her letter was friendly but cool, with no hint of romantic passion. Still, Janet was coming back, and after he finished with Kinsman he planned to call her. It would be a tentative exploratory call. Were they still engaged? Did she want to resume their prickly relationship? Bridge the gap? Actually get married? For that matter, did he? However he answered that question, she was coming back and that explained why Chee was grinning while he washed the breakfast dishes.

  The grin went away when he got to his office at the Tuba City station. Officer Kinsman, who was supposed to be awaiting him in his office, wasn’t there. Claire Dineyahze explained it.

  “He said he had to run out to Yells Back Butte first and catch that Hopi who’s been poaching eagles,” Mrs. Dineyahze said.

  Chee inhaled, opened his mouth, then clamped it shut. Mrs. Dineyahze would have been offended by the obscenity Kinsman’s action deserved.

  She made a wry face and shook her head, sharing Chee’s disapproval.

  “I guess it’s the same Hopi he arrested out there last winter,” she said. “The one they turned loose because Benny forgot to read him his rights. But he wouldn’t tell me. Just gave me that look.” She put on a haughty expression. “Said his informant was confidential.” Clearly Mrs. Dineyahze was offended by this exclusion. “One of his girlfriends, probably.”

  “I’ll find out,” Chee said. It was time to change the subject. “I’ve got to get that June report finished. Anything else going on?”

  “Well,” Mrs. Dineyahze said, and then stopped.

  Chee waited.

  Mrs. Dineyahze shrugged. “I know you don’t like gossip,” she said. “But you’ll probably hear about this anyway.”

  “What?”

  “Suzy Gorman called this morning. You know? The secretary in the Arizona Highway Patrol at Winslow. She said one of their troopers had to break up a fight at a place in Flagstaff. It was Benny Kinsman and some guy from Northern Arizona University.”

  Chee sighed. “They charge him?”

  “She said no. Professional courtesy.”

  “Thank God,” Chee said. “That’s a relief.”

  “May not be over, though,” she said. “Suzy said the fight started because Kinsman was making a big move on a woman and wouldn’t stop, and the woman said she was going to file a complaint. Said he’d been bothering her before. On her job.”

  “Well, hell,” Chee said. “What next? Where’s she work?”

  “Works out of that little office the Arizona Health Department set up here after those two bubonic plague cases. They call ’em vector control people.” Mrs. Dineyahze smiled. “They catch fleas.”

  “I’ve got to get that report out by noon,” Chee said. He’
d had all the Kinsman he wanted this morning.

  Mrs. Dineyahze wasn’t finished with Kinsman. “Did Bernie talk to you about Kinsman?”

  “No,” Chee said. She hadn’t, but he’d heard a rumble on the gossip circuit.

  “I told her she should tell you, but she didn’t want to bother you.”

  “Tell me what?” Bernie was Officer Bernadette Manuelito, who was young and green and, judging from gossip Chee had overheard, had a crush on him.

  Mrs. Dineyahze looked sour. “Sexual harassment,” she said.

  “Like what?”

  “Like making a move on her.”

  Chee didn’t want to hear about it. Not now. “Tell her to report it to me,” he said, and went into his office to confront his paperwork. With a couple of hours of peace and quiet he could finish it by lunchtime. He got in about thirty minutes before the dispatcher buzzed him.

  “Kinsman wants a backup,” she said.

  “For what?” Chee asked. “Where is he?”

  “Out there past Goldtooth,” the dispatcher

  said. “Over near the west side of Black Mesa. The signal was breaking up.”

  “It always does out there,” Chee said. In fact, these chronic radio communication problems were one thing he was complaining about in his report. “We have anyone close?”

  “Afraid not.”

  “I’ll take it myself,” Chee said.

  A few minutes after noon, Chee was bumping down the gravel trailing a cloud of dust looking for Kinsman. “Come in, Benny,” Chee said into his mike. “I’m eight miles south of Goldtooth. Where are you?”

  “Under the south cliff of Yells Back Butte,” Kinsman said. “Take the old Tijinney hogan road. Park where the arroyo cuts it. Half mile up the arroyo. Be very quiet.”

  “Well, hell,” Chee said. He said it to himself, not into the mike. Kinsman had gotten himself excited stalking his Hopi poacher, or whatever he was after, and had been transmitting in a half intelligible whisper. Even more irritating, he was switching off his receiver lest a too-loud response alert his prey. While this was proper procedure in some emergency situations, Chee doubted this was anything serious enough to warrant that sort of foolishness.

  “Come on, Kinsman,” he said. “Grow up.”

  If he was going to be backup man on whatever Benny was doing, it would help to understand the problem. It would also help to know how to find the road to the Tijinney hogan. Chee knew just about every track on the east side of the Big Rez, the Checkerboard Rez even better, and the territory around Navajo Mountain fairly well. But he’d worked out of Tuba City very briefly as a rookie and had been reassigned there only six weeks ago. This rugged landscape beside the Hopi Reservation was relatively strange to him.

  He remembered Yells Back Butte was an outcrop of Black Mesa. Therefore it shouldn’t be too difficult to find the Tijinney road, and the arroyo, and Kinsman. When he did, Chee intended to give him some very explicit instructions about how to use his radio and to behave himself when dealing with women. And, come to think of it, to curb his anti-Hopi attitude.

  This was the product of having his family’s home site added to the Hopi Reservation when Congress split the Joint Use lands. Kinsman’s grandmother, who spoke only Navajo, had been relocated to Flagstaff, where almost nobody speaks Navajo. Whenever Kinsman visited her, he came back full of anger.

  One of those scattered little showers that serve as forerunners to the desert country rainy season had swept across the Moenkopi Plateau a few minutes before and was still producing rumbles of thunder far to the east. Now he was driving through the track the shower had left and the gusty breeze was no longer engulfing the patrol car in dust. The air pouring through the window was rich with the perfume of wet sage and dampened earth.

  Don’t let this Kinsman problem spoil the whole day, Chee told himself. Be happy. And he was. Janet Pete was coming. Which meant what? That she thought she could be content outside the culture of Washington’s high society? Apparently. Or would she try again to pull him into it? If so, would she succeed? That made him uneasy.

  Before yesterday’s letter, he had hardly thought about Janet for days. A little before drifting off to sleep, a little at dawn while he fried his breakfast Spam. But he had resisted the temptation to dig out her previous letter and reread it. He knew the facts by heart. One of her mother’s many well-placed friends reported that her job application was “favorably considered” in the Justice Department. Being half-Navajo made her prospects for an assignment in Indian country look good. Then came the last paragraph.

  “Maybe I’ll be assigned to Oklahoma—lots of legal work there with that internal fight the Cherokees are having. And then there’s the rumble inside the Bureau of Indian Affairs over law enforcement that might keep me in Washington.”

  Nothing in that one that suggested the old pre-quarrel affection. It had caused Chee to waste a dozen sheets of paper with abortive attempts to frame the proper answer. In some of them he’d urged her to use the experience she’d gained working for the Navajo tribe’s legal aid program to land an assignment on the Big Rez. He’d said hurry home, that he’d been wrong in distrusting her. He had misunderstood the situation. He had acted out of unreasonable jealousy. In others he’d said, Stay away. You’ll never be content here. It can never be the same for us. Don’t come unless you can be happy without your Kennedy Center culture, your Ivy League friends, art shows, and high-fashion and cocktail parties with the celebrity set, without the snobbish intellectual elite. Don’t come unless you can be happy living with a fellow whose goals include neither luxury nor climbing the ladder of social caste, with a man who has found the good life in a rusty trailer house.

  Found the good life? Or thought he had. Either way, he knew he was finally having some luck forgetting her. And the note he’d eventually sent had been carefully unrevealing. Then came yesterday’s letter, with the last line saying she was “coming home!!”

  Home. Home with two exclamation points. He was thinking of that when Kinsman’s silly whispering had jarred him back to reality. And now Kinsman was whispering again. Unintelligible muttering at first, then: “Lieutenant! Hurry!”

  Chee hurried. He’d planned to pause at Goldtooth to ask directions, but nothing remained there except two roofless stone buildings, their doorways and windows open to the world, and an old-fashioned round hogan that looked equally deserted. Tracks branched off here, disappearing through the dunes to the right and left. He hadn’t seen a vehicle since he’d left the pavement, but the center track bore tire marks. He stayed with it. Speeding. He was out of the shower’s path now and leaving a rooster tail of dust. Forty miles to the right the San Franciscos dominated the horizon, with a thunderstorm building over Humphrey’s Peak. To the left rose the ragged shape of the Hopi mesas, partly obscured at the moment by the rain another cloud was dragging. All around him was the empty wind-shaped plateau, its dunes held by great growths of Mormon tea, snake weed, yucca, and durable sage. Abruptly Chee again smelled the perfume that showers leave behind them. No more dust now. The track was damp. It veered eastward, toward mesa cliffs and, jutting from them, the massive shape of a butte. The tracks leading toward it were hidden behind a growth of Mormon tea and Chee almost missed them. He backed up, tried his radio again, got nothing but static, and turned onto the ruts toward the butte. Short of the cliffs he came to the washout Kinsman had mentioned.

  Kinsman’s patrol car was parked by a duster of jumpers, and Kinsman’s tracks led up the arroyo.

  He followed them along the sandy bottom and then away from it, climbing the slope toward the towering sandstone wall of the butte. Kinsman’s voice was still in Chee’s mind. To hell with being quiet. Chee ran.

  Officer Kinsman was behind an outcrop of sandstone. Chee saw a leg of his uniform trousers, partly obscured by a growth of wheat-grass. He began a shout to him, and cut it off. He could see a boot now. Toe down. That was wrong. He slid his pistol from its holster and edged closer.

  From b
ehind the sandstone, Chee heard the sound boots make on loose gravel, a grunting noise, labored breathing, an exclamation. He thumbed off the safety on his pistol and stepped into the open.

  Benjamin Kinsman was facedown, the back of his uniform shirt matted with grass and sand glued to the cloth by fresh red blood. Beside Kinsman a young man squatted, looking up at Chee. His shirt, too, was smeared with blood.

  “Put your hands on top of your head,” Chee said.

  “Hey,” the man said. “This guy. . .”

  “Hands on head,” Chee said, hearing his own voice harsh and shaky in his ears. “And get facedown on the ground.”

  The man stared at Chee, at the pistol aimed at his face. He wore his hair in two braids. A Hopi, Chee thought. Of course. Probably the eagle poacher he’d guessed Kinsman had been trying to catch. Well, Kinsman had caught him.

  “Down,” Chee ordered. “Face to the ground.”

  The young man leaned forward, lowered himself slowly. Very agile, Chee thought. His torn shirt sleeve revealed a long gash on the right forearm, the congealed blood forming a curved red stripe across sunburned skin.

  Chee pulled the man’s right hand behind his back, clicked the handcuff on the wrist, cuffed the left wrist to it. Then he extracted a worn brown leather wallet from the man’s hip pocket and flipped it open. From his Arizona driver’s license photo the young man smiled at him. Robert Jano. Mishongnove, Second Mesa.

  Robert Jano was turning onto his side, puffing his legs up, preparing to rise.

  “Stay down,” Chee said. “Robert Jano, you have the right to remain silent. You have the right to. . .”

  “What are you arresting me for?” Jano said. A raindrop hit the rock beside Chee. Then another.

  “For murder. You have the right to retain legal counsel. You have the right—”

  “I don’t think he’s dead,” Jano said. “He was alive when I got here.”.

  “Yeah,” Chee said. “I’m sure he was.”

  “And when I checked his pulse. Just thirty seconds ago.”

 

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