Leaving him to call it in, Quarrie returned to his car and drove back to the highway once more. He kept his foot down hard, travelling east towards Paris before heading through Mount Pleasant, making for Winfield in Marion County.

It was not a place he had been to before and the rain arrived long before he pulled up where the railroad crossed at the bottom of Main Street. It was dark now, and after all day in the car he was stiff in the back as he waited for the freight train to pass.

A sheet of lying water on the street, it flared indigo under the lamps. All the stores were closed and few vehicles filled the spots between the twin rows of parking meters. Unsure where the police department was, he pulled up outside the pool room and asked a young man for directions. The man sent him another couple of blocks, then he made a right and a left before coming up on a station house that looked underfunded and rundown. A squat, flat-roofed building cast in old brick, it was hunched between two much smarter offices and that only added to the air of decay.

Parking the Riviera, Quarrie tickled the throttle one last time and the V8 shuddered into silence. He sat there yawning, then reached for his pack of Camels on the dashboard and stuffed it in his breast pocket. On the sidewalk he shook out a leg where cramping had set in and worked at the toe of his boot. The sign above the station house door was painted rather than electronic, and even the paint seemed a little weary. The rain still fell and with his hat at an angle he pushed open the door.

He was greeted by a fan trying to cut through the dampened heat where it perched atop a tired-looking file cabinet. A high desk out front with an overweight man in uniform squatting behind it, a low gate in the fenced-off section where two more cops in light blue shirts and black pants, lounged at a couple of desks. The typewriters looked pre-war, as did the stack of arrest report dockets. A door to his left read Chief, and Quarrie assumed the cells lay beyond the far door where a glass panel offered the glimpse of a corridor. The three cops cast their collective gaze from his pistols to where his tie was fastened with a longhorn pin.

‘Evening boys,’ Quarrie said. ‘Sorry it took so long to get here but I had to make a stop on the way.’

The chief’s door swung open and another man came out wearing the same black trousers and tired-looking shirt. His name tag said he was Billings, and he beckoned Quarrie inside.

An air-conditioning unit was flattened into the glass of the grimy window, and apart from that there was an ancient wooden desk with a swivel seat as well as an armchair that was moth-eaten and ugly. Behind the desk a rack of rifles was fixed to the wall. Another fan sat on another file cabinet but that looked as though it was broken. The chief indicated the armchair but Quarrie shook his head.

‘No, thanks,’ he said. ‘I’m just about seized up right now on account of being set on my butt all the way from Wichita Falls.’

Approaching fifty, the chief looked like he was carrying a few pounds he didn’t need; his hair greased high on his forehead with a single lock that wanted to droop between his eyes. He looked more than put-upon, as if the mayor had been giving him a real bad time, and seeing as how they had lost a cruiser and had a cop in the hospital, it was a fact he probably had.

‘That’s not all we got going on,’ he admitted when Quarrie probed. ‘This used to be a sleepy little spot on the map but I guess it’s not anymore.’

He nodded to the twin-rig gunbelt Quarrie was wearing. ‘You always port a pair like that? I’ve seen pictures of Rangers from the thirties and forties wearing a two-piece but you rarely get to see it anymore.’

‘Well,’ Quarrie said, ‘this is how it was with my godfather, Chief, and this is how it is with me.’

‘Your godfather a Ranger too then was he? Would I know him at all?’

‘Frank Hamer,’ Quarrie said. ‘He’s dead now but at one time there wasn’t a soul in Texas hadn’t heard of him.’

‘That’s a fact. Man who divided opinion for sure.’ Arms across his chest the chief looked a little speculative. ‘So Frank Hamer was your godfather, uh? Him that shot Clyde Barrow and settled the town of Navasota back when there was a shooting on the street every day. That place hasn’t been the same since he left and he left a long time ago.’

‘Yes, he did.’

‘He wore a twin rig too then? I didn’t know.’

‘He did back then, Chief. And I ain’t the only one still packing a pair. There ain’t that many of us and we work alone most always, and a set of twelve at the ready gives a man a little more confidence than six.’ Quarrie sat down in the chair now and the cushion sagged under his weight.

‘So anyway,’ the chief said. ‘We called you up on account of we had an officer down and now that officer is dead.’ His expression had grayed a little further. ‘His name was Michaels and he died at two o’clock this afternoon over in the hospital at Queensboro.’ Reaching to his top drawer he took out a bottle of cheap Bourbon. ‘I guess the least we could do is drink to him. You ready for one now that it’s dark out?’

Taking his cigarettes from his pocket Quarrie shucked one out and offered the crumpled pack. Shaking his head the chief found two dusty-looking glasses, poured the whiskey and passed a glass across.

‘The fallen,’ he said.

Quarrie drank and placed the empty glass on the arm of the chair. ‘So, what else you got going on, Chief? You said your guy wasn’t the whole story.’

‘No, he’s not. Just this afternoon we find ourselves with another dead body.’ The chief poured himself a second shot. ‘Woman name of Mary-Beth Gavin who’d only been here six weeks. Neighbor found her around the same time Michaels died down there in the hospital. Middle-aged and living on her own, beaten up bad she was. On that, sir, you can quote me.’

Quarrie sat forward. ‘Same perp you’re thinking then, are you?’

‘Could be. I don’t want to pre-empt anything you might come up with.’

‘But you think so?’

The chief gestured. ‘I’m not a detective, Sergeant, but the way Michael’s had his skull fractured and how she’s all busted up around the face.’

‘Where do you have her body?’

‘Right now they got her laid out at the funeral parlor over on 4th Street.’ Finishing his drink the chief got to his feet. ‘Nearest morgue is Queensboro, thirty miles south, and I didn’t want to bring her down there till you had a chance to take a look.’

They drove across town in his Plymouth, Quarrie peering through the windshield as they came to 4th Street, where lights still burned in the single-story building that housed the funeral parlor.

‘Nobody saw anything?’ he said.

The chief shook his head. ‘No sir, not at the Gavin house nor down at the railroad depot either.’

They got out of the car with the rain falling harder and Quarrie asked him what time Michaels had been found.

‘Not till the four-oh-five rolled in for Houston, though nobody was boarding the train. Engineer saw something lying on the ground at the far end of the platform and when he went to take a look he found the poor bastard stripped to his shorts.’

They walked up the steps to a wooden door with a glass panel in the center.

‘So,’ Quarrie said, ‘right now we got us a cop killer driving a Winfield City cruiser. Somebody must’ve spotted it, right?’

‘We’ve only had one call.’ The chief pushed open the door and they went into a small wood-panelled hallway. ‘Early this morning that rig was seen down the road at Henry’s Diner. One of ours was in there for breakfast apparently, only our patrol ends with the city and we got nobody living out that way.’

The dead woman was laid out on the embalming table. As far as Quarrie could tell she was in her early fifties, fully dressed she was covered with a white cotton sheet. Red hair, freckles scattered across her forehead, though her face was pulp. One cheekbone had been crushed completely, her nose little more than a flattened swelling, her eyes were purple around the lids. The already pale skin of her shoulders was paler still now that the life had left her.

‘Doctor’s been and gone,’ the chief told him. ‘Had him come out to the house as soon as the call came in.’

Quarrie was still considering the body.

‘Took her brain temperature and figured she’d been dead at least twelve hours.’

Stepping closer to the table Quarrie studied the bruise marks in blue and mauve that gathered at the base of the woman’s throat. ‘What time did you say this was reported?’

‘Around two thirty this afternoon.’

‘And your Officer Michaels, they found him at four this morning?’

The chief nodded. ‘You’re thinking he swung by the depot following his usual route and found himself with her killer?’

‘Could be.’ Quarrie still studied the dead woman’s neck. ‘Fingers,’ he said inspecting the bruising. ‘Crushed her windpipe with his fingers and that takes a lot of doing.’ He drew breath audibly through his nose. ‘I’ve seen a few strangled with cord or a length of chain, but not many killed with fingers.’ Eyebrow cocked he indicated the lower body.

The chief shook his head. ‘No sign of anything going on down thataway, or at least that’s what the doctor said. Guess it’ll be confirmed by the autopsy.’

Quarrie looked more closely at the dead woman’s mangled features. ‘Chief,’ he said, ‘I might be wrong but this kind of beating – looks to me like the perp was pretty pissed off. You see what I’m saying? A whomping like this, and to a woman – it smacks of anger. Is that how it looks to you?’

Glancing at the woman’s face the chief pursed his lips. ‘Sergeant,’ he said, ‘we haven’t had a murder in this town since God was in britches, so if that’s how it looks to you then that’s how it looks to me.’

With a smile Quarrie nodded. ‘What about her family? Have you been able to talk to anybody?’

‘Not so far. It’s like I said back at the station house: she showed up in town maybe six weeks back and rented a house over on Osprey. Kept herself to herself and from what the neighbor said it doesn’t sound like she had many visitors. No sign of any previous address in the house so we haven’t been able to trace a next of kin.’

Quarrie worked fingers across her jaw and remaining cheekbone where rigor mortis had thickened the skin. Moving around to the side of the table he considered her hands and specifically the fingernails. Trimmed short, they were not bitten but shaped with a pair of nail scissors and he could see where they had been filed with an emery board. There was no trace of nail polish and no hint of anything obvious hooked underneath.

‘Where did she work at?’ he said.

‘According to the neighbor she was a secretary for old man McIntyre. Got him a shop down on Orchard and Main. Maintains farm machinery and folk come from miles around on account of there ain’t anything his boys can’t fix.’ The chief let go a sigh. ‘I haven’t told him she’s dead yet. Gutted he’ll be; hates any kind of disturbance and this used to be—’

‘A sleepy little spot. You said.’

Outside Quarrie stood on the porch staring into bands of falling rain. All was quiet; nobody on the street, and when they drove back across town there was no one on Main Street either.

‘Always this way is she?’ he asked. ‘After dark I mean, or is it on account of the rain?’

Billings worked his shoulders. ‘Rain doesn’t make any difference. Apart from a few kids kicking off like they are right now, we’re not so busy come sundown.’

Osprey was a quiet residential street scattered with small one-and two-bedroom homes built in weathered clapboard that were either open onto the sidewalk or set behind fences of chain link. The Gavin house was even more dilapidated than the police department and whoever the landlord was he was clearly not big on maintenance. No fence, the yard overgrown with yellow grass where a single willow tree hunched like a porcupine with its bristles up.

Quarrie stood for a moment looking up and down the street. Silent apart from the rain, there was not so much as a cicada singing as the chief grabbed a cape from the trunk. He offered it to Quarrie but he didn’t mind the rain, and there was never enough of it up in the panhandle. It ran off his hat and splashed onto the already soaking sidewalk while he took a minute to consider the dead woman’s home.

‘Nobody heard anything?’ he said. ‘Last night when this was going down, nobody heard her scream?’

‘Not that anybody said.’ The chief stepped onto the sidewalk. ‘We started door to door this afternoon but we haven’t spoken to everybody.’

Quarrie approached the house along the overgrown footpath with a flashlight the chief had retrieved from the trunk. The stoop was cut from rough-looking wood and two of the steps were rotten, the edges turned to mush. He picked up a scraping of mud that seemed to have been deposited at an odd angle. Coasting the beam from the flashlight across the grass he saw where it was flattened in places and that was not due to the rain. Moving away from the stoop he looked more closely and picked out where the grass was splayed more deeply and shone the torch on the turned earth under the window.

‘Got you something there, do you?’ The chief spoke from where he was sheltering on the inadequate porch.

Close to the wall Quarrie made out a full-sized footprint that was partially hidden by weeds. Next to it was another print where a step had been taken, and that was almost as flat as the first one. It shouldn’t be. He knew tracks, had studied them for as long as he studied anything, and he could tell when a man was running or walking, when he was agitated and when he was calm. He knew when he was making a turn, or pausing to think about making one maybe. There was something about that print that seemed a little odd and it took a moment before he knew what it was. The first one made sense being as flat as it was, but with the second the angle was wrong. That kind of movement ought to leave a mark where only the ball of the foot flexed, but that’s not how it was. There was more of the print showing than there should be.

‘What is it?’ the chief said. ‘What you got there?’

‘Boot print,’ Quarrie told him. ‘US Army issue: I can tell that from the pattern on the sole because that ain’t changed since World War II and I wore a pair myself.’

‘You fight then, did you?’

‘Korea.’ Quarrie looked up at him. ‘Chief, I think your perp was standing right here checking out Ms Gavin through the window. He’s wearing a military boot and the left one’s got a nick in the heel. I can’t say about the right, but the way it’s flexed I’d say those boots have a steel shank running the length of the sole.’ Thumbing back his hat he dropped to his haunches. ‘That means the boots are second-phase. The eyelets are distinctive in that they’re screened to keep out water, and I can tell you that the cuff is made from nylon. In my day it was canvas but they changed it when they put the shank in.’

‘What’s the shank for?’

‘Punji stake mantraps.’ Quarrie rose to his full height. ‘Stops a grunt getting impaled if he steps on one. The sole is pretty rigid though, and on account of that it makes them much less flexible to walk in.’

Scratching his head the chief took his flashlight back and shone it on the ground himself.

‘You know all that from a couple of footprints?’

‘Sure.’ Quarrie was smiling. ‘Even ants leave tracks in their wake, Chief. I thought everybody knew that.’

The chief had the house keys. Opening the door he reached inside for the light switch. A Chinese-style paper shade clung around the inadequate bulb casting macabre looking shadows on the walls. No door to the living room, just a squared-off archway, Quarrie stood with his hands in his jacket pockets.

The living room looked like a bomb site, furniture thrown over, the table smashed; the cushions had been pulled from the couch.

Every drawer in the cheap bureau had been tossed and the contents tipped on the floor.

‘Somebody looking real hard for something,’ Quarrie said. ‘What’s missing? What did he take?’

The chief pursed his lips. ‘I don’t know. There’s no cash lying around, so if she had any he took that, but there’s jewellery still in the bedroom.’

Quarrie considered the body-shaped outline chalked on the wooden floor. He could see blood drying on a rug, blood on the walls, and more scattered in strings across the front of the bureau. A purse lay among the ruins of the broken table. Inside he found the victim’s driver’s license as well as a check book with a balance of eighty-seven dollars listed on the accounting slip.

He could tell by the amount of white powder still lying that the lab team had been through here already, but as he moved about the room he was careful just the same.

‘Chief, how many sets of prints did your boys raise?’

‘Seven,’ the chief said. ‘She lived on her own I guess, but this place is a rental.’

‘Seven?’ Quarrie said. ‘That’s a lot of fingerprints, even for rental. How many were fresh, were the lab boys able to tell?’

‘They weren’t absolutely certain, but they reckoned on probably two.’

Quarrie moved from the living room to the hall and bedroom. Again it was turned upside down, the mattress half on the bed and half on the floor, the drawers from the nightstand thrown over. The dressing table was trashed, all the drawers on the floor and their contents scattered. The jewellery box was open and had been rifled but there were some nice pieces lying there so robbery hadn’t been the motive.

‘Are you talking to the NCIC?’ he spoke to the chief where he hovered in the doorway.

‘Up there in Virginia, sure. Teletype of the prints already been wired.’

Quarrie nodded. ‘Do me a favor and ask them to have a copy sent to the Department of Safety in Amarillo.’

Outside again they stood on the porch where Quarrie lighted a cigarette and stared into the rain. He had looked through the rest of the house but found nothing that told him anything other than that whoever killed Mary-Beth Gavin had done it in a violent rage. She ought to have been screaming and somebody should have heard that. If this was Dallas or Houston he might accept the fact that it could have been ignored, but not in a town this small.

Back in the car he asked the chief to drive him over to the railroad depot and they parked close to where the fallen deputy’s body had been found. Any blood lying had long since been washed away by the rain and there were no traces of footprints or tire marks.

‘Part of his route,’ the chief explained. ‘Michaels patrolled this area every night and he always made a sweep of the depot.’

‘What about trains?’ Quarrie asked him.

The chief shrugged. ‘Nothing till the four-oh-five. Like I told you, it was the engineer that found him.’

Quarrie took a room in a family-run motel a block east of Main Street. There was a phone by the bed and he called Amarillo, leaving a message for Van Hanigan about the incoming teletype. Then he telephoned the ranch.

‘How you doing, kiddo?’ he said when his son came on the line.

‘I’m fine, Dad. When you coming home?’

‘Don’t know yet. Fact is it took me all day on the road and I only just got here. You can blame those students you see on the TV. On account of them I’m the only Ranger available to get over this way and that’s a pretty poor state of affairs.’

‘Yes, it is,’ James said.

‘So how was school today? Did you learn anything?’

‘Sure. Miss Munro told us we have to come up with a project on some kind of history.’

‘Did she now? So what’re you thinking of doing?’

‘Well sir, I talked to Pious and he said he’s going to help me.’

Sitting up straighter Quarrie reached for his cigarettes. ‘You-all going to write something about what happened to him? What went on in Korea?’

‘No, sir. I thought about that. I thought about how he saved your life that time too, the story you told Nolo and the others at the fish fry. Pious told me he don’t want that dragged up again, not even for a school project.’

‘So what’re you thinking?’

‘We talked about it and he figured I ought to do something on that train wreck up on the Red?’

‘Did he tell you what it was we found there?’

‘No, sir. What was it?’

Quarrie did not answer. Shaking a cigarette from the pack he rolled the wheel on his Zippo. ‘I tell you what,’ he said. ‘You go ahead and see what you come up with. When you got something I’ll tell you what we found up there and we’ll see if we can’t fit all the pieces together.’

‘OK, Dad,’ the boy said. ‘By the way, I asked Miss Munro about looking stuff up in the newspaper and she said they kept the records on some kind of fish.’

‘Fiche,’ Quarrie corrected with a smile. ‘F-I-C-H-E. It’s a piece of plastic, son. They shrink all the text and pictures down and transfer them onto the plastic. They call it a microfiche, James. What’s the name of the newspaper?’

‘Don’t know yet. I guess I’ll have to ask Pious.’

When he put the phone down Quarrie lay back with his boots crossed at the ankle. Thinking about what James had said he stared at the wall and all he could see was that skull where it hung in the river.