Wright said, “Letty, John. This is a terrible thing. Boxie had kids, and now they’ve lost both their parents; this is . . . this is a fucking catastrophe. Now, Dick and I are talking about your idea. Looking at the sales end of things. I don’t know why I didn’t think of it myself. Getting old, I guess.”
“How are your knees?” Kaiser asked.
“I’m told they’ll work fine, but I’ll have the scars from hell. Anyway, the best way to figure out this oil sales idea of yours is for me to start calling people I know,” Wright said. He stopped to cough, cleared his throat. “Every time I go to a hospital, I get sick. Anyway, I’ll get Jessie—you met her, my secretary—to put together a list of phone numbers. I’ll be calling them all morning, if I don’t cough up a lung, first.”
“If we’re right, and it’s a wildcatter, how does the oil get to him?” Letty asked.
“Truck. That’s the only way I can see it happening. Once it’s at a known company, they’re probably shipping it out by a commercial trucking company or pipeline. I can’t see them trucking it out of there themselves, a tanker truck only carries about a hundred and ninety barrels. They’d need a lot of trucks, too many for a small operator. They’re probably using several of the commercial trucking companies, so none of them notice the sudden production increase. I’ll hit them all. We use them ourselves, so they’ll talk to me.”
“How about refiners?” Letty asked. “They’d have to have computerized accounts . . .”
“Yeah, I’ll do them, next,” Wright said. “The doctors here are gonna have me walking around later today, so . . . I don’t know how far I’ll get. Give me your phone numbers—I’ll call you direct when I have something.”
“We have to talk to the cops,” Letty said. “We made statements yesterday, after we found the bodies. We’ll have to go in and read them and sign them. We won’t talk to the cops about this sales thing until we hear back from you. If we told the cops, they’d start calling everybody and people would start freezing up.”
“Guess you’re right about that,” Wright said. “We can hold that between us for now.”
* * *
Outside, Kaiser glanced up at the clear blue sky and said, “Too nice a day to talk to the cops.”
“We’ve got other possibilities,” Letty said. “Rand Low had some buddies out here before he went to prison. His FBI file has a list—a couple of them testified against him at his trial.”
“Right here in Midland?”
“No, let me look.” She took her laptop from her briefcase, called up the file that Greet, the DHS briefer, had given them. “One is a guy named Brody Rivers, also known as Stony Rivers, last known address was in Lubbock, which I don’t think is too far from here. Another is named Victor Crain, don’t know much about him, except he may have been in a militia with Low.”
“One thing I learned when I was down here in the Army—nothing in Texas is close to anything else,” Kaiser said. “Lubbock is a couple of hours from here. El Paso is quite a bit farther, bet it’s four or five hours.”
“It’s early,” Letty said. “Why don’t we hit up Tanner at the police station, if he’s there, sign our statements and take off? We’ll be back before Wright will have anything on the sales.”
* * *
That’s what they did. The Midland police station was a tan cube with a high set of stairs out front and a couple of long-haired kids sitting on them, like they were waiting for either a ride or their dealer. Inside, they were told that Tanner was at the Blackburn house and would have to be present when they signed. Letty told the uniformed sergeant they spoke to that they were going to Lubbock, and asked her to tell Tanner that they’d be back in the afternoon.