Winter Moon
Jack and Paul were alone for a few minutes in the study, each of them with a glass of port, looking at the many framed photographs of prize-winning horses that nearly covered one of the knottypine walls, the attorney suddenly changed the subject from equestrian bloodlines and quarter-horse champions to Quatermass Ranch.
"I'm sure you folks are going to be happy there, Jack."
"I think so too."
"It's a great place for a boy like Toby to grow up."
"A dog, a pony-it's like a dream come true for him."
"Beautiful land."
"So peaceful compared to L.A. Hell, there's no comparison." Paul opened his mouth to say something, hesitated, and looked instead at the horse photo with which he'd inoken off his colorful account of Ponderosa Pines' racng triumphs. When the attorney did speak, Jack had the feeling that what he said was not what he had been out to say before the hesitation. "And though we aren't spitting-distance neighbors, Jack, I hope we'll be close in other ways, get to know each other well."
"I'd like that." The attorney hesitated again, sipping from his glass of port to cover his indecision.
After tasting his own port, Jack said, "Something wrong, Paul?"
"No, not wrong
just
What makes you say that?"
"I was a cop for a long time. I have a sort of sixth sense about people holding back something."
"Guess you do. You'll probably be a good businessman when you decide what it is you want to get into."
"So what's up?" Sighing, Paul sat on a corner of his large desk.
"Didn't even know if I should mention this, cause I don't want you to be concerned about it, don't think there's really any reason to be."
"Yes?"
"It was a heart attack killed Ed Fernandez, like I told you. Massive heart attack took him down as sudden and complete as a bullet in the head. Coroner couldn't find anything else, only the heart."
"Coroner? Are you saying an autopsy was performed?"
"Yeah, sure was," Paul said, and sipped his port. Jack was certain that in Montana, as in California, autopsies were not performed every.time someone died especially not when the decedent was a man of Eduardo Fernandez's age and all but certain to have expired of natural causes.
The old man would have been cut open only under special circumstances, primarily if visible trauma indicated the possibility of death at the hands of another. "But you said the coroner couldn't find anything but a damaged heart, no wounds."
Staring at the glimmering surface of the port in his glass, the attorney said, "Ed's body was found across the tbreshold between his kitchen and the back porch, lying on his right side, blocking the door open. He was clutching a shotgun with both hands."
"Ah. Could be suspicious enough circumstances to justify an autopsy.
Or it could be he was just going out to do some hunting."
"Wasn't hunting season."
"You telling me a little poaching is unheard of in these parts, especially when a man's hunting out of season on his own land?"
The attorney shook his head. "Not at all. But Ed wasn't a hunter.
Never had been."
"You sure?"
"Yeah. Stan Quartermass was the hunter, and Ed just -inherited the guns. And another odd thing-wasn't just a full magazine in that shotgun. He'd also pumped an extra round into the breach. No hunter with half a brain would traipse around with a shell ready to go. He trips nd falls, he might blow off his own head."
"Doesn't make sense to carry it in the house that way, either."
"Unless," Paul said, "there was some immediate threat."
"You mean, like an intruder or prowler."
"Maybe. Though that's rarer than steak tartare in these parts."
"Any signs of burglary, house ransacked?"
"No. Nothing at all like that."
"Who found the body?"
"Travis Potter, veterinarian from Eagle's Roost.
Which brings up another oddity. June tenth, more than three weeks before he died, Ed took some dead raccoons to Travis, asked him to examine them." The attorney told Jack as much about the raccoons as Eduardo had told Potter, then explained Potter's findings.
"Brain swelling?" Jack asked uneasily. "But no sign of infection, no.disease," Paul reassured him. "Travis asked Ed to keep a lookout for other animals acting peculiar. Then
when they
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