He talked loud. He pissed off Mr. Holly. He said it's _our_ case. _We're_ sealing her up. _We'll_ bring in Homicide.
Mr. Holly fumed. Mr. Holly fugued out. He kicked a sawhorse. He yelped. He fucked his foot up.
A prowl car pulled up. A cop got out. He gestured wild. He talked wild. Pete heard "car at the dump." Pete heard "Tedrow."
Mr. Holly yelled. The sergeant yelled. A cop raised a bullhorn. Lock her up-let's roll code 3-the Tonopah Dump.
The fuzz dispersed.
They grabbed their cars. They peeled up "J." They fishtailed in mud. They plowed through gravel yards.
One cop stayed behind. Said cop locked the shack.
He stood by the front door. He stood in the monsoon. He smoked cigarettes. The rain doused them. He got two puffs per. He gave up. He ran to his car. He rolled the windows up.
Pete ran. The rain covered him. He kicked up mud. He ran back to the alley. He circled the shack.
No cars. No back-door guard-good. Said door was locked. The windows were tinfoil-patched.
Pete reached up. Pete tore at a foil patch. Pete de-patched a window.
He climbed up. He vaulted in. He saw chalk lines and bloodstains. He saw a burned-up TV-set.
Floor debris-chalk-circled: Bindle scraps/tube glass/fried nigger hair.
Pete tossed the shack. Pete worked _rapidamente_. He grid-scoped. He saw one dresser/one toilet/no shelves.
Two mattresses. Bare walls and floors. No stash-holes inset. A window air-cooler-Frost King brand-matted screens and rusty ducts.
No cord. No plug. No intake valve. Call it dope camouflage.
Pete popped the top. Pete reached in. Pete praised Allah Himself.
White horse-all plastic-wrapped-three bonaroo bricks.
32
(Las Vegas, 1/17/64)
Five cops grilled him.
Wayne sat. They stood. They filled the sweat room.
Buddy Fritsch and Bob Gilstrap. A Sheriff's man. A Fed named Dwight Holly. A Dallas cop named Arthur V. Brown.
The heat went off. Their breath steamed. It fogged the mirror-wall. He sat. They stood. His lawyer stood under a speaker. His lawyer stood outside.
They popped him at home-2:00 a.m.-he was still there with Lynette. Fritsch called Wayne Senior. Wayne Senior came to the jail.
Wayne blew him off. Wayne blew off his lawyer. Dwight Holly knew Wayne Senior. Dwight Holly stressed the friendship thus:
You're not your dad. You killed three men. You fucked my investigation up.
They'd braced him twice. He told the truth. He wised up and called Pete.
Pete knew the scoop. Pete knew a lawyer. His name: Ward Littell.
Wayne met with Littell. Littell quizzed him: Did they tape you? Did they transcribe?
Wayne said no. Littell advised him. Littell said he'd watch the next go. Littell said he'd veto tape and transcription.
The veto worked. The room was cherry-no tape rig/no steno.
Wayne coughed. His breath fogged out.
Fritsch said, "You got a cold? You were sure out in the rain that night."
Holly said, "He was out killing three unarmed men."
Fritsch said, "Come on. He admitted it."
The Sheriff's man coughed. "_I've_ got a fucking cold. He wasn't the only one out in the rain."
Gilstrap smiled. "We've cleared up one part of your story. We know you didn't kill Lynette."
Wayne coughed. "Tell me how you know."
"Son, you don't want to know."
Holly said, "Tell him. I want to see how he reacts."
Fritsch said, "The coroner found abrasions and semen. The guy was a secretor. AB-negative blood, which is real rare. We checked Durfee's jail records. That's his blood type."
Holly smiled. "Look, he didn't even blink."
Brown said, "He's a cold one."
The Sheriff's man said, "He wasn't even crying when we found him. He was just staring at the body."
Gilstrap said, "Come on. He was in shock."
Fritsch said, "We're satisfied that Durfee killed her."
The Sheriff's man lit a cigar. "And we're satisfied that Curtis and Otis clued you in to his plan."
Holly straddled a chair. "Someone hipped you to Leroy Williams and the Swasey brothers."
Wayne coughed. "I told you. I have an informant."
"Whose name you refuse to reveal."
"Yes."
"And your intent was to find and apprehend Wendell Durfee."
"Yes."
Brown said, "You wanted to apprehend him, to make up for not doing it in Big D."
"Yes."
"Then, son, here's what bothers me. How did Durfee know that you were the officer sent down to Dallas to extradite him?"
Wayne coughed. "I told you before. I rousted him a few times when I worked Patrol. He knew my face and my name, and he saw me when we exchanged shots in Dallas."
Fritsch said, "I'll buy that."
Gilstrap said, "I will, too."
Brown said, "I won't. I think something happened between you and Durfee. Maybe in Dallas, maybe up here before they sent you down. I don't see him coming all the way up here, presumably to kill you and get his incidental jollies on your wife, unless he had a personal motive."
Tex was good. Tex was better than the Sheriff's man. Pete chased the dice men. The cops chased him. They popped Pete. They filed paper. The Sheriff's man knew shit-all about it.
Brown said, "Your business up here is your business. I wouldn't care about any of this, except for the proximity of a missing Dallas officer named Maynard D. Moore, who you reportedly did not get along with."
Wayne shrugged. "Moore was dirty. If you knew him, you know that's true. I didn't like him, but I only had to work with him for a few days."
"You said 'knew.' You think he's dead, then?"
"That's right. Durfee or one of his asshole Klan buddies killed him."
Gilstrap said, "We've got two APBs out on Durfee. He won't get far."
Brown hovered. "You're saying Officer Moore was in the Ku Klux Klan?"
"That's right."
"I don't like the sound of that accusation. You're defaming the memory of a brother officer."
The Sheriff's man laughed. "This is hilarious. He kills three Negroes and gets on his high horse about the KKK."
Brown coughed. "DPD has been anti-Klan from the get-go."
"Bullshit. You all get your sheets cleaned at the same laundry."
"Boy, you are wearing me thin."
"Don't call me 'boy,' you redneck faggot."
Brown kicked a chair. Fritsch picked it up.
Gilstrap said, "Come on. This line of talk is getting us nowhere."
Holly rocked his chair. "Leroy Williams and the Swasey brothers were moving heroin."
Wayne said, "I know that."
"How?"
"I saw Curtis robbing bindles."
"I've had them under spot surveillance. They were pushing in Henderson and Boulder City, and they were making plans to push in West Vegas."
Wayne coughed. "They wouldn't have lasted two days. The Outfit would have clipped them."
Fritsch rolled his eyes. "He goes from the Klan to the Mob."
Gilstrap rolled his eyes. "You've got the Mob in Vegas like you've got the Klan in Dallas."
Wayne rolled _his_ eyes. "Hey, Buddy, who bought you your speedboat? Hey, Bob, who got you that second mortgage?"
Fritsch kicked the wall. Gilstrap kicked a chair. Brown picked it up.
Holly said, "You're not making any friends here."
Wayne said, "I'm not trying to."
Fritsch said, "You've got the sympathy vote."
Gilstrap said, "You've got the chain of events."
The Sheriff's man coughed. "You're trying to apprehend a fugitive copkiller. You learn that your wife may be jeopardized, so you rush home and find her dead. Your actions from that point on are entirely understandable."
Brown hitched up his pants. "It's your prior relationship with Durfee that I don't understand."
Holly said, "I concur."
Fritsch said, "Look at it our way. We're trying to give the DA a package. We don't want to see an LVPD man go down for three murders."