others?â
âYeah.â
âThatâs the latest. But itâs hard to say exactly when. Never rains out here, so marks can last a long time.â
We followed the tracks across easy ground, not too rough or steep, even for a kid. This particular kid marched on ahead of us, but I had him in sight every moment, no worries about that. There was a little rise not far distant, with some saguaros growing on its slope. It was nice and quiet, not a trace of the whole big world of human noise.
âWhat if this was olden days and we were the Spanish?â Charlie said.
âBe pretty exciting.â
âDid the Nativeâdid the Indians have dogs?â
âYup.â
âBut not horses.â
âNope.â
âWhat if some of them came over that hill with their bows and arrows?â
âAnd we were the conquistadors?â
âYeah.â
âIâd say, âHi, Native Americans or Indians or whatever you want us to call you. Now weâre getting back on our boats and going home. Nice meeting you.âââ
Charlie laughed.
We crossed the little plain and started up the slope.
âSee that hole in the ground, up near the top?â Bernie said. âMeans weâve come to the right place.â
âWhere someone dug up the saguaro?â said Charlie.
âYeah.â
It got steeper. All at once this was going way too slow for me. I ran on aheadââWowâlook at him go!ââand came to the hole. A pretty big hole, about the size of the one left in the Parsonsesâ yard after theyâd taken the saguaro away. I scrambled over the dug-up rocks and dirt around the hole and looked down into it. Then I went still.
âChet?â Bernie called up to me.
Right away I knew what to do. I turned and ran down the slope, barking my head off.
âChet. Sit.â
I sat.
âCharlie, I want you to stay right here with Chet. Donât move. Iâll be right back. Okay, son?â
Charlie nodded. His eyes were open real wide. I could hear his little heart. Nothing to be afraid of. Chetâs beside you.
Bernie scrambled up the hill, reached the hole, gazed down. He went still, just like me. Ellie Newburg was down at the bottom of that hole, all twisted up, a round red hole in her forehead. As for holes in the earth, there were more of them on the next slope over. I picked up Shooterâs scent, but he wasnât around.
SEVEN
----
Y ou took him on a case?â Leda said. âWhat the hell is wrong with you?â
We were back in Ledaâs front yard, same people as before, except Malcolm was down here with her, and the face in the upstairs window was Charlieâs. Maybe just a small switch up, but it made me uneasy, hard to say why. And what was this? My tail starting to droop? I got it right back up there, stiff and straight, the tail of a total pro. As for Ledaâs question, wasnât the answer pretty clear? Nothing was wrong with Bernie, not a damn thing. Not now, not yesterday, not tomorrow. I got ready for the satisfaction of hearing him say all that to Leda, and in no uncertain terms, whatever those might be.
But thatâs not what Bernie did. He took a deep breath and said, âIt wasnât really taking him on a case. Well, sort of, except it was more or less an excuse for a nice drive in the desert. Um, a little picnic.â
âA little picnic?â Leda said. âToasting marshmallows around a dead body?â
Bernie stopped shuffling around. Not that heâd been shufflingâthat could never happenâbut he hadnât looked Leda in the eye. Now he did. A little muscle jumped in the side of his jaw. You didnât see that often. âThe case was about a stolen cactus. Do you think I had the slightest inkling of what weâd find out there?â
Leda started to say something, but Malcolm beat her to it. He was a tall dudeâtaller than Bernie, although a lot thinner,
Matthew Olney
Hilari Bell
Karim Miské
Suzanne Enoch
Fyn Alexander
Fiona McDonald
Beth Reekles
Jeannie Machin
Kristi Pelton
Raymond Carver