"That boy's a long way from his Hollywood poontang, ain't he?" the deputy said behind me.
"How about putting the cork in the humor for a while?" I said.
"What?"
'The man grew up down South. You're patronizing him."
"I'm wha-"
I walked ahead of him and caught up with Sykes just as he stepped out of the willows into a shallow, water-filled depression between the woods and a sandbar. The water was stagnant and hot and smelled of dead garfish.
"There," he said. "Right under the roots of that dead tree. I told y'all."
A barkless, sun-bleached cypress tree lay crossways in a sandbar, the water-smooth trunk eaten by worms, and gathered inside the root system, as though held by a gnarled hand, was a skeleton crimped in an embryonic position, wrapped in a web of dried algae and river trash.
The exposed bone was polished and weathered almost black, but sections of the skin had dried to the color and texture of desiccated leather. Just as Sykes had said, a thick chain encased with rust was wrapped around the arms and rib cage. The end links were fastened with a padlock as wide as my hand.
I tore a willow branch off a tree, shucked off the leaves with my Puma knife, and knelt down in front of the skeleton.
"How do you reckon it got up under those roots?" Sykes said.
"A bad hurricane came through here in '57," I said. "Trees like this were torn out of the ground like carrots. My bet is this man's body got caught under some floating trees and was covered up later in this sandbar."
Sykes knelt beside me.
"I don't understand," he said. "How do you know it happened in '57? Hurricanes tear up this part of the country all the time, don't they?"
"Good question, podna," I said, and I used the willow branch to peel away the dried web of algae from around one shinbone, then the other.
"That left one's clipped in half," Sykes said.
"Yep. That's where he was shot when he tried to run away from two white men."
"You clairvoyant or something?" Sykes said.
"No, I saw it happen. About a mile from here."
"You saw it happen?" Sykes said.
"Yep."
"What's going on here?" the deputy said behind us. "You saying some white people lynched somebody or something?"
"Yeah, that's exactly what I'm saying. When we get back we'll need to talk to your sheriff and get your medical examiner out here."
"I don't know about y'all over in Iberia Parish, but nobody around here's going to be real interested in nigger trouble that's thirty-five years old," the deputy said.
I worked the willow branch around the base of the bones and peeled back a skein of algae over the legs, the pelvic bones, and the crown of the skull, which still had a section of grizzled black hair attached to the pate. I poked at the corrugated, blackened work boots and the strips of rag that hung off the pelvis.
I put down the branch and chewed on the corner of my thumbnail.
"What are you looking for, Mr. Robicheaux?" Sykes said.
"It's not what's there, it's what isn't," I said. "He wasn't wearing a belt on his trousers, and his boots have no laces."
"Sonofabitch probably did his shopping at the Goodwill. Big fucking deal," the deputy said, slapped a mosquito on his neck, and looked at the red and black paste on his palm.
Later that afternoon I went back to work on the case of the murdered girl, whose full name was Cherry LeBlanc. No one knew the whereabouts of her father, who had disappeared from Mamou after he was accused of molesting a black child in his neighborhood, but I interviewed her grandparents again, the owner of the bar in St. Martinville where she had last worked, the girls she had been with in the clapboard jukejoint the night she died, and a police captain in Lafayette who had recommended probation for her after she had been busted on the prostitution charge. I learned little about her except that she seemed to have been an uneducated, unskilled, hapless, and fatally beautiful girl who thought she could be a viable player in a crap game where the dice for her kind were always shaved.
I learned that about her and the fact that she had loved zydeco music and had gone to the jukejoint to hear Sam "Hogman" Patin play his harmonica and bottleneck blues twelve-string guitar.
My desk was covered with scribbled notes from my note pad, morgue and crime-scene photos, interview cassettes, and Xeroxes from the LeBlanc family's welfare case history when the sheriff walked into my office. The sky outside was lavender and pink now, and the fronds on the palm trees out by the sidewalk were limp in the heat and silhouetted darkly against the late sun.
"The sheriff over in St. Mary Parish just called," he said.
"Yes?"
"He said thanks a lot. They really appreciate the extra work." He sat on the corner of my desk.
"Tell him to find another line of work."
"He said you're welcome to come over on your days off and run the investigation."
"What's he doing with it?"
"Their coroner's got the bones now. But I'll tell you the truth, Dave, I don't think it's going anywhere."
I leaned back in my swivel chair and drummed my fingers on my desk. My eyes burned and my back hurt.
"It seems to me you've been vindicated," the sheriff said. "Let it go for now."
"We'll see."
"Look, I know you've got a big workload piled on you right now, but I've got a problem I need you to look into when you have a chance. Like maybe first thing tomorrow morning."
I looked back at him without speaking.
"Baby Feet Balboni," he said.
"What about him?"
"He's in New Iberia. At the Holiday Inn, with about six of his fellow greaseballs and their whores. The manager called me from a phone booth down the street he was so afraid one of them would hear him."
"I don't know what I can do about it," I said.
"We need to know what he's doing in town."
"He grew up here."
"Look, Dave, they can't even handle this guy in New Orleans. He cannibalized half the Giacano and Cardo families to get where he is. He's not coming back here. That's not going to happen."
I rubbed my face. My whiskers felt stiff against my palm.
"You want me to send somebody else?" the sheriff asked.
"No, that's all right."
"Y'all were friends in high school for a while, weren't you?"
"We played ball together, that's all."
I gazed out the window at the lengthening shadows. He studied my face.
"What's the matter, Dave?"
"It's nothing."
"You bothered because we want to bounce a baseball buddy out of town?"
"No, not really."
"Did you ever hear that story about what he did to Didi Giacano's cousin? Supposedly he hung him from his colon by a meat hook."
"I've heard that same story about a half-dozen wiseguys in Orleans and Jefferson parishes. It's an old N.O.P.D. heirloom."
"Probably just bad press, huh?"
"I always tried to think of Julie as nine-tenths thespian," I said.
"Yeah, and gorilla shit tastes like chocolate ice cream. Dave, you're a laugh a minute."