Virgil went to the door and let them in, and Shrake wrinkled his nose, and asked, “You got something in the oven?”
“Guy was dead here for a couple of weeks,” Virgil said. “Anyway, we need to interview a bunch of people. We’re looking for a good marksman who knew Glen Andorra. Andorra was the dead guy here—”
Jenkins interrupted. “We got a briefing from Jon before we came down. He told us you’d screwed up the investigation, as usual, and were looking for a couple of pros to figure it out for you. We know about Andorra and Osborne and the two wounded victims, and that you can’t figure out why nobody could hear the gunshots—”
“Figured that one out,” Virgil said.
He brought them up to date, including the fact that they were back to square one. “We’ve got some legwork to do. I’d be willing to bet that the shooter was a regular out here and knew Andorra well enough to be invited to his house and allowed to walk around, out of sight, while Andorra sat in his easy chair. The range has something like a hundred and eighty members. I don’t think weneed to interview all of them; I think we can talk to a couple of dozen, at random, and get some pointers to the real possibilities.”
He divided up the list of range members, taking eight pages himself and giving eight more each to Shrake and Jenkins, and added, “We’ll want to spot these addresses on our mapping software so we can work through clusters of people instead of running all over the place.”
“Good,” Jenkins said. “Let me get my iPad. Does this place have WiFi?”
It did.
—
Shrake found Marlin Brown crawling around his freshly tilled garden plot, following a yellow string across the ground, his nose about two inches from the dirt. He was a compact man, wearing compact coveralls with plastic knee protectors. Shrake watched him, puzzled, then called, “Mr. Brown?”
Brown looked up. He had dirt on his nose. “Hi.”
“I’m with the state Bureau of Criminal Apprehension. I’d like to speak to you for a moment.”
Brown stepped carefully out of the garden plot, and Shrake asked, “What the heck are you doing?”
Brown said, “Planting radishes.” He held out a cupped palm.
“Really.” Shrake peered into Brown’s hand, which contained perhaps a hundred reddish gray spheres smaller than BBs.
“Cherry Belle Organics,” Brown said. “I’m a little late getting them in, but it’s been cool.”
“Those’ll turn into radishes?”
“Not a gardener, huh?”
“I once grew a marigold,” Shrake said. “It died and made me sad.”
“That’s life on the farm,” Brown said. “Anyway, what can I do for you?”
Brown went to Andorra’s range to shoot his shotgun and didn’t know much about the rifle guys. He did have some names of people whom he’d seen shooting rifles, and Shrake made notes on his list. “This is shotgun country down here,” Brown said. “Not much call for high-powered rifles.”
—
Dick Howell was a rural route mail carrier. When Jenkins pulled into his driveway, he found Howell’s girlfriend unloading groceries from her car. Jenkins was aware that country women, when alone, were nervous about large men in suits showing up unexpectedly, so when he climbed out of his car, he stood next to the car door, and called, “I’m an agent with the state Bureau of Criminal Apprehension. Is Mr. Howell here?”
“He’s out carrying his route,” she called back. Jenkins had seen her relax, so he took his ID out of his coat pocket and walked up to her, showed her the ID, and asked, “Do you know where he might be?”
“I can call him and ask,” she said.
She did, and Jenkins caught Howell as he waited in a turnout by a bridge over a wide creek; he was sitting on the railing, looking down at the water.
Jenkins introduced himself, and asked, “Any fish in there?”
“Nothing you’d want to eat, I don’t believe,” Howell said. He was chewing tobacco, and he hocked a wad into the creek.
Jenkins thought, Not now anyway, but didn’t say it. Instead, he said, “I’m looking for information about target shooters over at Glen Andorra’s range.”
“I heard about Glen,” Howell said. “Sounded bad.”