tennis shoes and placed them in an evidence bag. He was resting on one knee now, his stomach hanging over his belt, his broad shoulders about to split his suit coat. He squinted up at Amberâs silhouette framed against the window, the tautness of her shirt against her breasts. His eyes drifted to the bed, where the sheets and covers had slid off the mattress onto the floor.
âItâs true Indians do it dog-style?â he said.
âAsk your wife,â she replied.
McComb threw the bagged shoes to his partner and laughed. âKeep your eye on American Horse,â he said.
McComb ripped a sheet loose from the bed, then dumped the contents of Johnnyâs chest of drawers on the mattress, poking through socks and underwear. âIâm not married,â he said.
âIâm shocked,â she replied.
âIf heâs dirty, youâre probably going down with him. Your old man will be hard put to bail you out of this one.â
âWhy is it I think youâre full of shit?â she asked.
He surveyed the room and pulled his collar off his neck, as though it chafed him. âIâd like to help you with any troubles that might come out of this,â he said.
He was positioned between her and the door, massive, the bulk of his shoulders like small sacks of cement. She could hear him breathing through his nose, smell his hair oil and the body heat and odor of testosterone in his clothes. He took a business card from his shirt pocket and lifted her hand and slipped the card between her fingers. She could feel the sharp edges of his calluses against her palm. âYou get jammed up, just call me,â he said. âI grew up in a midwestern farm town, just like your old man did. Weâre the same kind of people.â
He tried to keep his eyes respectful, his expression neutral. But she saw his tongue touch his bottom lip, the slackness in his jaw, the flush in his throat, the way his stare dipped momentarily.
She crumpled the card, letting it drop into a trash basket as she brushed past him into the front of the house. Behind her, she heard him make a sound like he had bitten a word in half.
âWhat did you say?â she asked, turning toward him.
âMaybe one day youâll learn who the good guys are.â
âI canât wait. In the meantime, kiss my ass,â she said.
Outside, the air was clear and bright, the mountains a deep blue-green against the sky. Johnny American Horse was still sitting on the edge of his porch, his legs crossed, his coned straw hat slanted forward. âYou really think I snuffed that guy at the hospital?â he said to McComb.
âI think youâll do anything you can goddamn get away with,â McComb said. He picked up the evidence bag containing Johnnyâs tennis shoes from the hood of his cruiser. He shook the bag and grinned. âSize ten and a half. I think we might have a match.â
Johnny stared into space, his hands pressed between his thighs, his face in shadow. He pushed himself off the porch and approached McComb, his hands pushed flatly into his back pockets. âI want a property receipt for the shit you took out of my house,â he said.
âItâs on your table,â McComb said.
âI didnât sign it.â
âYou donât need to, asshole.â
âI think I do,â Johnny said, his face averted.
McComb stepped closer to him, covering Johnny with his shadow. The men were now so close together they looked almost romantically intimate. âYou donât deserve to live in this country,â McComb said.
âCould be. You gonna write out another receipt?â Johnny scratched an insect bite on his forearm.
Maybe his boot brushed against McCombâs shoe, or his coned hat touched McCombâs face. Or maybe McComb, staring at Amber over Johnnyâs shoulder, simply could not deal any longer with his own rage and sense of sexual rejection. He swung his fist
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