Depth of Winter
By Craig Johnson
The Longmire Series
The Cold Dish
Death Without Company
Kindness Goes Unpunished
Another Man’s Moccasins
The Dark Horse
Junkyard Dogs
Hell Is Empty
As the Crow Flies
A Serpent’s Tooth
Any Other Name
Dry Bones
An Obvious Fact
The Western Star
Also by Craig Johnson
Spirit of Steamboat (a novella)
Wait for Signs (short stories)
The Highwayman (a novella)
Stand-alone E-stories
(Also available in Wait for Signs)
Christmas in Absaroka County (four stories)
Divorce Horse
Messenger
VIKING
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penguin.com
Copyright © 2018 by Craig Johnson
Penguin supports copyright. Copyright fuels creativity, encourages diverse voices, promotes free speech, and creates a vibrant culture. Thank you for buying an authorized edition of this book and for complying with copyright laws by not reproducing, scanning, or distributing any part of it in any form without permission. You are supporting writers and allowing Penguin to continue to publish books for every reader.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Names: Johnson, Craig, 1961– author.
Title: Depth of winter / Craig Johnson.
Description: New York, New York : Viking, [2018] | Series: A Longmire mystery
Identifiers: LCCN 2018023887 (print) | LCCN 2018025790 (ebook) | ISBN 9780525522485 (ebook) | ISBN 9780525522478 (hardcover)
Subjects: LCSH: Longmire, Walt (Fictitious character)—Fiction. | BISAC: FICTION / Mystery & Detective / General. | FICTION / Westerns. | FICTION / Suspense. | GSAFD: Mystery fiction. | Suspense fiction.
Classification: LCC PS3610.O325 (ebook) | LCC PS3610.O325 D46 2018 (print) | DDC 813/.6—dc23
LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2018023887
Netflix is a registered trademark of Netflix, Inc. All rights reserved.
The series Longmire™ is copyrighted by Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc.
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, businesses, companies, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.
Version_1
For Anna, Greg, and the rest of their lives together.
CONTENTS
By Craig Johnson
Title Page
Copyright
Dedication
Acknowledgments
Epigraph
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Epilogue
A Conversation with Craig Johnson
About the Author
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
Come in from the blistering light of Calle Juárez and set yourself down on a stool, gentle reader. Lean your elbows on the room-length bar and glance up at the hand-carved bar-back that was shipped from France back in the mid-thirties. Allow yourself to relax into the calm, peaceful ambiance of the green-tinted lamps and the soft glow of old-world mahogany that belies the bellicose streets of downtown Juárez, Mexico, just outside.
Opened two years into the American Prohibition, The World Famous Club Kentucky found a ready customer base from across the border and before long celebrities of all stripes were taking up residence at the bar where you now sit. Don’t pay any mind to that giant, stuffed hawk above the bar-back, or the trough that runs the length of the bar, harkening back to when patrons used to stand and rather than lose their place, simply relieve themselves in situ, as it were.
Allow me to call Lorenzo “Lencho” Hernandez over to mix you a drink in the home of the original margarita, and don’t worry about the price, they’re only two dollars apiece, so you can have as many as you’d like.
Behind us there’s a very large man in a cowboy hat sitting at a table with a legless hunchback in dark glasses and a porkpie hat, and they seem to be having a very intense conversation, but we’ll get to that later. Right now I want to say thanks to you and a few other people the way I always do before we get this story rolling.
If I had my way we’d be circling the place with my usual compadres, Gail “Highball” Hochman and Marianne “Mai Tai” Merola. We’d lift a glass to my raft of Penguins, Kathryn “Cosmopolitan” Court, Sarah “Sidecar” Stein, and Victoria “Screwdriver” Savanh. Brian “Old Fashioned” Tart and Ben “Bellini” Petrone will get us one for the road while Jessica “Gin Fizz” Fitzpatrick and Mary “Whiskey Sour” Stone drop pesos in the old Wurlitzer jukebox as the Coasters play “Down in Mexico.” I also need to thank Michael “Michelob Ultra” Crutchley and Ry “Rye Whiskey” Brooks for some of the funniest lines in the book.
And lest I forget, though, the one that always quenches my thirst will always be Judy “Champagne Cocktail” Johnson, the top shelf of my life.
In the depth of winter I finally learned that there was in me an invincible summer.
—Albert Camus
Poor Mexico, so far from God and so near the United States.
—Porfirio Díaz
1
I turned my water glass in the slick circle of condensation on the smooth, red lacquer of the table between us and studied the man across from me. I was afraid that if I didn’t pay attention, he might disappear. The Seer was like that; it was as if he simply drifted away, giving him access to places without appearing to be there, making other people’s secrets his own.
“You should take in some of the culture while you are here south of the border—go to the bullfights.” Adjusting his straw porkpie hat to a jauntier angle, the hunchback smiled. “You might enjoy it.”
I said nothing.
He looked in my general direction, the smile slowly fading. “My friend, Miguel Guerra, says you are highly motivated, but that if I can talk you out of this, I should.”
I still said nothing.
He stared at me. “Do you speak Spanish?”
I wiped the sweat from under my eyes with a thumb and forefinger—I had a hard time convincing myself it was coming up on November. “Very little.”
He had taken his cheap sunglasses off and placed them next to his drink. His eyes were opaque, and they wandered past me, toward the knobby hills to the south that rose from the desert like a bony hand, the fingers spreading to make peaks and battlements, as if the mountains were at war with the flat land. “That’s not good, because where you are going there will be places where no one speaks English.”
The Seer sipped his soft drink and then batted the white cane between the knees of his threadbare pants at the exact place where his legs ended.
“Your English is very good.”
He shrugged. “I have lived my whole life here in Juárez and back before the new drugs, we were just a suburb of El Paso.” He glanced down at his truncated legs. “Not the old drugs that did this. My mother traveled to Germany in the sixties and was given the drug that took my legs and my sight and in the process gave me this humped back.” He vaguely waved at it sitting there like one of the battlements behind him. “Did you know that hunchbacks are seen as lucky in my country—that we bring good fortune?”
“I hope that’s the case.”
“Personally, it has never brought me any providence.” He paused for a moment and then turned toward the Club Kentucky, seeing it the way it was in his mind’s eye. “Juárez used to be Las Vegas before there was a Las Vegas—twenty-four-hour bars, casinos, cabarets, brothels.” The Seer sipped his soda. “It is said that this club invented the margarita.” He nodded. “Marilyn Monroe sat on that very stool where you sit now.”
“How do you know Marilyn Monroe?”
He smiled broadly for the first time, and I was surprised at the blinding perfection of his teeth. “My mother was here.”
“In this bar?”
“Sí, January twenty-first, 1961. Monroe filed for divorce from Arthur Miller here in Juárez. She was with two men, her lawyers, Aurellano González Vargas and Arturo Sosa Aguilar. They filed a suit of incompatibility of character.” He leaned in confidentially. “A marvelous playwright, but she told my mother he was hung like a cocktail sausage.”
“Huh.”
“She also saw your John Wayne drink himself senseless and walk out onto the sidewalk where he fell face-first like a tree.” Sensing my disinterest, the Seer leaned back against the wall. “Most tourists love stories about Hollywood celebrities.”
“I’m not here as a tourist.”
He waved his cane toward me and changed the subject. “Can you ride a burro?”
“I can ride a horse.”
“That does not mean you can ride a burro; there are places where you cannot go by horse or car.”
“Fine, I’ll walk.”
“It is not enough.” He studied the problem for a while and then shook his head. “Where you are going you will need a reason to be there, or they will kill you just to hear the sound of their weapons.”
“I guess trying to blend in isn’t much of a possibility?”
He smiled and slowly began shaking his head. “Let’s see, shall we?” His face became somber, and his mouth hung open as if he were tasting the air between us like a snake. “From the timbre of your voice and lung capacity I would say you are at least two hundred pounds, and from the way the floorboard creaked when you walked in I would say two-fifty.”
“I am.”
“From the angle of your voice, I would say you are six-foot-four or five.”
“Five.”
“Facial structure also affects the voice—you are of Northern European descent so I am guessing blondish, but considering your age possibly gray, and with blue eyes—but not pure blue, more likely blue with either green or gray.”
“Gray, no blue.”
“Ah, eyes are difficult. . . . But you will have to forgive me in that I have never actually seen blue or gray or any other colors for that matter.” He glanced toward the bar where he knew without seeing that the entire staff of four aged bartenders were watching and listening to us. “And from the deference of the staff, I am guessing your persona is formidable.”
I sighed. “Lately.”
“You are armed?”
“Yep.”
“With what?”
“Colt 1911.”
He shook his head at the antiquity of my sidearm. “Why the .45?”
“Because they don’t make a .46.”
He smirked and allowed his sightless eyes to rest on the surface of the small table between us. “I regret having to ask . . . but can you shoot?”
“Yep.”
“How well?”
“Well enough for whatever needs to be done.”
He paused for a moment and then nodded. “Maybe we use this.” He tipped his head to one side. “There have always been men who come here from your country mostly for money and women, but other things, too. I propose a safari, but not for animals.”
“For what then?”
“There were men like yourself who came to Old Mexico in search of antiquities. Even now. There was a good friend of my cousin’s, a Mr. Guzmán, who was here searching for a particular Russian Model P made by your Colt company.”
“José Guzmán.” I smiled. “Although I think his friends call him Buck.”
“I believe that is his name, sí. He was a lawman like you—you know him?”
“A legend.”
“My cousin was with him when he bought the single-action pistol from a fat policeman who was directing traffic in the middle of the street in Nogales.” He sipped his Guayaba Jarritos. “What kind of lawman are you?”
“Absaroka County Sheriff, Wyoming.”
“We don’t see many sheriffs.” He warmed to his purveyor of antique armaments idea and nodded more vigorously. “This will provide us with an excuse for being in areas where we might not normally be, and it gives us a bargaining reputation without the hazards of drug money.” He finished his soda. “I will begin spreading the word that there is a gringo in town looking for vintage armaments and that we will be traveling around the area south of here.”
“We?”
He lowered his eyes. “Yours is a good cause, and I would like to help you.”
I shook my head but then spoke, realizing he couldn’t see my response. “I can’t let you do that. I appreciate your help, but if you go with me you’re likely to be killed.”
“I am half dead now, so what does it matter?” He folded up his cane and reached out his arms like my granddaughter Lola did when she wanted to get out of her high chair. “We will need a driver.”
I finished my water and pushed the old wheelchair, which was painted a vibrant turquoise and orange, toward the door, the cane across his knees. “You’re not going, and I don’t need a car—I have a truck parked on the other side.”
His turn to shake his head at me. “A new truck?”
“I don’t know, a rental. It’s blue, I think.”
He took charge and wheeled past me down the bar toward the front entrance. “Too new for our purposes, and the US plates are too conspicuous; we will need something that blends in, along with a driver who knows the roads.”
Hastily, I tossed a few pesos onto the table before following after him. “I thought cars couldn’t go on the roads where we are going.”
He called back over his shoulder. “Eventually, but first we will need a driver and a vehicle that will not arouse suspicion.”
One of the old bartenders opened the glass door for him and then assisted me in getting him over the rubber threshold with a demeanor that read happy-to-be-rid-of-the-both-of-you. Blinking from the bright sun and pulling at my sweat-soaked shirt collar, I joined the Seer on the streets. “Does it ever cool off in this damn place?”
“It snowed here thirty-seven years ago.” He replaced his inside sunglasses for the oversized ones that he used outside. “In the winter at night it gets colder.” He grinned. “Sometimes.”
We had reached the curb when a large, honest-to-God pink, 1959 Cadillac convertible pulled into view and slid up in front of us like a pulsating puddle of Pepto-Bismol, oozing to a stop. A young man with long hair and amazingly thick glasses got out and came around, opened the door, and saluted me. “Hola, Capitán.”
The Seer gestured toward the young man. “My nephew, Alonzo—our driver.”
I gave him my hand. “Walt Longmire.”
“Good to meet you.” He lifted his uncle from the wheelchair, carefully placed him in the passe
nger seat, and then put the conveyance into the cavernous rear.
I leaned forward, but the Seer stopped me with his cane. “We have not discussed the fee for our services.”
“I figured we’d get to that.”
He gestured toward his nephew and stuck a hand out. “One hundred US dollars apiece per day, plus expenses.”
“Driving this, gas alone should be another thousand.” I shook his hand and noticed how strong his grip was, then reached out and tapped the Longhorn steer horns mounted on the hood. “So is this the inconspicuous vehicle we’ll be taking south?”
Alonzo gunned the motor. “This sonless, goat-fornicating, godforsaken, flat-beer-tasting beast will carry us as far as the equator if need be.” He grinned, and you could tell that he and the Seer were from the same genetic corral. “We will see you tonight at Our Lady of Guadalupe Cathedral.” He threw an arm over the side of the Caddy and pointed down the street. “I will meet you inside a little before nine p.m.” He turned his head. “Any questions?”
“Yep.” Running my eyes over the glossy flanks of the hot pink Caddy and the outrageous tailfins, the largest ever produced, I stuffed my hands in my jeans and glanced at him. “How much Mary Kay did you have to sell to get this thing?”
* * *
—
On the long trip back to the Avenue Benito Juárez bridge, I thought about what I was doing. I was a stranger in a strange land, and my backup was a legless, blind humpback and his Coke-bottle-lensed, Caddy-driving nephew, neither man instilling a great deal of confidence.
The sidewalk became more crowded as I approached the Border Patrol building on the right, and I was reminded of the cattle chutes we used in Wyoming as I took the general entrance back into my country instead of the one to the left for Americans with documents.
I had to remember to get a passport.
Standing in the long line, I looked around me and figured that the Seer had been right about my blending in—I was going to have to lose about eight inches, forty pounds, and investigate a pigment transplant.