being the crook that he is,â Low River said. âI brought my Colt along in case he needed persuading.â
âWhat did Gill do when you confronted him?â Joe asked.
âNever happened, man,â Low River grumbled. âWhen I got there, he was packing up his car like his house was on fire. He saw me and burned rubber. I burned rubber after him. I trailed him as far as the Dust Bowl Truck Stop, then he disappeared.â
âYou mean you lost him when he walked into the truck stop?â Joe asked.
âNo, man. I mean he drove around the back and went poof. Him, his car, everything,â Low River told him. âSo I headed back to his office, just in case Gill had spaced out and forgotten something.â
âYou have an interesting way of talking,â Phil said.
Low River grinned. âHey, Iâm fifty percent Cherokee but one hundred percent old hippie.â
Joe didnât feel quite as threatened by Henry Low River. âMr. Low River, would you mind . . .â Joe nodded toward the revolver.
âHm? Oh, yeah. This thing,â Low River said, looking at the revolver. âShows you what I know about firesticks. I ended up buying the wrong bullets.â
âYou mean . . . ?â Phil started to ask.
âYeah, itâs not even loaded,â Low River said with a grin.
âBut this is loaded,â a voice above them said.Sheriff San Dimas stood over them in the smokehouse, pointing his firearm at Low River. âDrop it, Henry.â
Joe had mixed feelings about being rescued from his situation. He now found it hard to believe that Low River could have hurt Toby Gill.
âMr. Low River has an explanation to cover everything,â he said to San Dimas, who was leading Low River away from the smokehouse in handcuffs.
âYeah, he usually does,â San Dimas remarked. Joe and Phil followed as San Dimas took his captive to the edge of a nearby river that ran behind the woods and began to walk along the bank.
âDonât be fooled, Joe. This guy is trouble. Last December, he slashed all four of Toby Gillâs tires.â
âHey, when the law wonât punish a criminal,â Low River said to San Dimas, âitâs up to the common citizen to do what can be done.â
âIn February,â San Dimas went on, âHenry blew up Tobyâs toolshed with a stick of dynamite.â
âYou never proved that,â Low River insisted with a grin.
âThe jokeâs over, Henry,â San Dimas said solemnly. Up ahead Joe saw a tow truck backing up to the edge of a river. Sticking out of the waterwas the rear fender and taillight of a cream-colored automobile.
âRecognize that car?â San Dimas asked Low River.
Low River stared, shaking his head, until he finally found his voice. âItâs Toby Gillâs.â
Low River told his storyâ-how he had followed Gill to the truck stop and lost him. As bad as Joe thought it looked for Low River then, it looked worse after the tow truck pulled Gillâs car onto the embankment. There was a bullet hole in the window of the driverâs side and another hole in the seat.
âIf Toby Gill was sitting in the driverâs seat when that shot was fired,â San Dimas said, âwe may have more than a kidnapping on our hands.â
âI donât know anything about this,â Low River said vehemently.
âYour neighbor remembers seeing this car drive up to your house at about two this afternoon,â San Dimas reported. âHe didnât see who was driving, but twenty minutes later he heard a gunshot. When he looked out his window, the car wasnât there anymore.â
âNo way, man! Iâm being framed!â Low River shouted.
Joe knew he should tell the sheriff about Mr. Low Riverâs pocketknife, but he decided to keep the information to himself for now.
As the tow truck hoisted up the rear tires ofGillâs
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