I wanted to get justice for Steven Gallagher.

So I told the agents that I had learned about the Brayton situation while investigating the Brennan murder, but making it sound as if it were peripheral to that. And for a long time I had believed it was, while I was intent on lying to Chris Gallagher, rather than finding the truth.

When the agents left, I went in to see Barone, and told him that, for the time being at least, we had a head start on the renewed investigation into Brennan.

“Now these are the kinds of conversations I like,” he said.

“I thought you would.”

“So where do we start?”

“In Brayton,” I said. “That’s where it begins and ends.”

“So what is your ass doing here?”

I finally had time to approach the investigation my way.

Without the horrible clock ticking on Bryan’s life, I was able to analyze the Brayton system more logically and dispassionately. I did what I always did on a case. I wrote down what I knew, what I didn’t know, and why.

And then I went for a drive.

The only people who could be said to have come out of the carnage as winners were Edward Holland and Alex Hutchinson. Holland had constantly tried to protect his citizens, and it was manifested in his constant pleas for outside assistance, and most profoundly in his ordering his police chief to do whatever was necessary to remove them from a dangerous situation.

He risked unpopularity by doing so, but when he was proven right he became a political hero. He was already being talked about as the leading candidate for the open US Senate seat, and he was milking the publicity every chance he got.

Alex Hutchinson was in a similar situation, and her story was even more appealing. She was a mother protecting her children, protecting the children of an entire town, and she stood up to incredibly powerful forces arrayed against her.

Not only that, but she succeeded where Holland and the police had failed; she got the people to move off the land before the explosion. I certainly couldn’t have managed it, and neither could the local police.

With Holland moving on to a Senate bid, there was talk of drafting Alex for Mayor. Since there hadn’t been a contested mayoral election in Brayton in twenty years, it was hers for the taking. She had also been doing some interviews, but not as much as Holland.

So Alex was my first stop when I got to Brayton. She was at her normal spot behind the cash register at her diner, but that was the only thing that was the same as my last visit. It was so crowded that I had to park down the block, and there was a line stretching out the door of people waiting for a table. Even if Alex did not become the Mayor, she was already parlaying fame into financial success.

I worked my way through the line and went up to the register. She brightened when she saw me, and said, “What brings you back here?”

“My job,” I said. “Got a minute?”

She looked around at the madhouse that was the diner, and I thought she was going to ask me to wait. But she called over one of the waitresses and asked her to watch the register.

Alex smiled. “Our regular table seems to be taken. Want to take a walk?”

“Sure.”

We went out the back and walked towards a small park, with a children’s playground, a couple of tennis courts, and not much else. But it was a nice day, and I liked being around Alex. I figured things could work out between us, if she weren’t married, with two kids, and living in Brayton. Oh, well.

“You’re pretty famous,” I said.

“As are you.”

“So are you going to be Mayor, or continue fighting Hanson over the land, or both?”

She seemed surprised. “You didn’t hear?”

“Hear what?”

“They’re saying that most of the explosives were planted underground, down some of the holes that had already been drilled. It caused like a small earthquake.”

“So?”

“So I’m not an expert, but it changed the whole picture. It might have made it too expensive to get to the natural gas in the shale. Either way, it will set them back at least a couple of years before they know for sure.”

I hadn’t heard that, and I said so. “So you’ve won, with some help.”

She nodded. “Not the way I wanted to win, but I’ll take it. That poor guy that was killed that night was right.”

She was talking about Chris Gallagher. “What do you mean?”

“He told me that nobody was going to drill on that land, and that we should leave when the police told us to. You think he could have planted the explosives?”

“No, Alex, I don’t. I knew him pretty well.”

“Oh,” she said. “I’m sorry.”

We walked some more, and I said, “Alex, I want to ask you a question. But first let’s reduce it to simple terms. Your side wanted the drilling stopped, and the other side wanted to drill. OK?”

“OK.”

“So it would make sense that someone on your side would have planted the explosives, to stop the drilling.”

She shook her head. “Nobody on-”

I interrupted. “Don’t get defensive; I’m not making accusations, I’m just thinking logically. Your side benefited from the explosion; there’s really no doubt about that.”

“OK…,” she said, warily.

“So why would they have been set to go off when there were all those people on the land? It could have been a catastrophe for your side, and the other side certainly gained nothing from people dying.”

She thought about it for a while. “On the news they said it was set with timers. So maybe when it was set, they didn’t know the people would be there. Maybe they didn’t want the people there when it went off.”

I didn’t say anything, because she had just made me see something I hadn’t seen before.

“Does that make sense?” she asked.

“Probably more than you realize. One more question … why did you listen to me and ask the people to leave? The Mayor had just said the same thing, yet you didn’t listen to him.”

“I trust you.”

The next stop on my Brayton reunion tour was Edward Holland.

I called him in his office, but he had left early, having done a round of TV interviews that apparently left him too tired to do any Mayor stuff.

I said that I was there on important police business, and they contacted him and I was told I could come to his home.

He lived on a large estate on the outskirts of town. It wasn’t ostentatious, but was very comfortable, and certainly nicer than any other homes I had seen in the area.

He greeted me himself, and invited me into the den. If there were any feminine touches in the house, I hadn’t seen them, and I asked if he was married.

He shook his head. “Who has the time?” he asked, smiling. Then, “So what is this official police business you’re here about?”

“The Daniel Brennan murder.”

He smiled. “Haven’t we had this meeting already?”

I nodded. “Right. But that’s before I knew you were responsible for it.”

He almost did a double take. Here we were, talking like buddies, and all of a sudden I was accusing him of murder. “What the hell are you talking about?”

“Here’s how I see it. You arranged the sale of town land to Carlton and Tarrant Industries, the secret foreign company that you set up and own, using the tricks you learned in your law practice. Then you paid off Michael Oliver to report that there was a fortune to be made from the shale under the ground, when in reality that wasn’t the case.”

Holland was smiling, not afraid at all, but nor was he showing any of the outrage an innocent man would be showing.

I continued. “You handled the legal case yourself, going to Federal Court, even though that wasn’t the smart way to do it. But you needed Carlton to win, so you paid Brennan off when it seemed he might be on the court. I don’t know how you got to him, but you did. And then he probably changed his mind, so you had him killed.