Chapter 19 Jennie
The world came back online in layers, first the groan of the air conditioner, then the drone of insects, and finally, the hard staccato of truck engines firing in tandem.
I blinked into the thin light, not quite registering where I was for a moment.
Nothing says “good morning” like waking up in someone else’s home.
I didn’t remember falling asleep. The last thing I remembered was sitting cross-legged on the bed, rerunning every minute of the Maddox dinner.
I listened again. The trucks weren’t idling. They were leaving, distance chewing up the diesel until the only thing left was the echo of tires on gravel and the faint rattle of loose tailgates.
I rolled to the window, careful to keep the blinds angled just enough for a clear view but not so much as to silhouette myself.
The driveway was empty. Every vehicle gone.
Even the barn looked still, no morning traffic, no hands shuffling hay bales or unloading feed.
No sign of Levi’s after-market Jeep, which usually squatted at the edge of the lot.
This had never happened before. Not since I’d been here.
There was always a Coleman in the house or very close.
Even on the rare occasion Harlan had to haul himself into the city for a banking meeting or a shot of vitamin B, Wyatt or Levi or at least Cordelia held down the fort, shuffling paperwork in the office and micromanaging the hands.
Not today. Tonight, the property felt like a prop on a stage, silent like the eye of a tornado.
I wasn’t about to waste this opportunity. I’d spent years in the field, and there’s a rhythm to these moments. If my window opens, I jump. I pulled on a tee and a clean pair of jeans.
I started with the camera detector, which had been extremely handy in my PI work. I set it to scan, then circled the room. No red blinks. No hidden eyes. It wasn’t the first time I’d checked my room and wouldn’t be the last.
I took the hall at a steady pace, watching the camera detector.
The office was at the far end of the hall, next to Cordelia’s “craft room,” which was really a junk catch for broken sewing machines and decades of cross-stitch patterns.
I put my ear to the door. Nothing. I opened it as slowly as I possibly could.
I’d been in here before, but never alone.
The room was a hybrid of old money and new paranoia, a wall of legal books, most of them never cracked, a battered desk that might’ve been cherry under the lacquered stains and pen scratches, and an overstuffed filing cabinet.
There was a credenza with a box of rolled blueprints, and a corkboard crowded with reminders, some in Harlan’s sharp block capitals, some in Cordelia’s looping, near-Gothic hand.
The desktop computer, an old Dell with a noisy cooling fan and a monitor bigger than some TVs, was powered off.
The keyboard was sticky, keys worn blank on the most-used letters.
I booted it anyway and waited through what felt like a full geological era while it loaded.
When it finally came up, the desktop was almost insultingly bare.
Three icons, a generic mountain wallpaper, and a documents folder I opened to find nothing but equipment manuals.
I plugged in my thumb drive out of habit and left the software to run, but I already knew what it was going to find. Nothing.
I started pulling drawers, flipping through the contents as fast as I could process.
The top drawer was pens, a business card for a local notary, and a roll of antacids so ancient the label had bleached white.
The right-hand drawer was old invoices, last year's tax prep forms, and an envelope addressed to a PO box in Austin with no return address.
Inside was a single sheet of paper with a string of numbers, four columns, two dozen rows.
Not dollar amounts, not dates, just a steady march of integers and decimal points.
I snapped a photo, put everything back as close as I could, and moved to the files.
The main drawer was all manila folders, most unmarked, some with labels like “O&G, OFFICIAL,” “WATER RIGHTS, SUIT,” or, my favorite, “GRIST.” I flipped through, taking snapshots of anything that looked even a degree off the straight and narrow.
The ledgers were handwritten, without even a pretense of Excel.
The handwriting didn’t match anyone in the house, and the entries were years old, some as far back as the late eighties.
I scanned a few columns, tonnage, vendor, destination, cost. But the vendors were all wrong.
Not the local feed and seed, not the brands the ranch used.
Some names were clearly fake, “River Hawk,” “Mistral Holdings,” “DHM LLC”, while others could have been real, but weren’t in any supplier list I’d ever seen.
The numbers, too, were weird. No cattle operation on this side of Texas ran this kind of volume, not even at the height of the boom.
Either the Colemans were running the world’s worst loss-leader, or these records were for something else.
I snapped as many pages as I could. After three minutes, I had a phone full of forty-three images and a sick twist in my gut that said I’d just seen something I wasn’t supposed to.
That was when I noticed the safe. Not under the desk, not in the obvious spot, but mounted in the wall behind a blown-up map of the county, an antique survey map, one I could get for ten bucks at an office supply store and make look valuable with the right frame.
I lifted it gently, found a flush-set Sentry keypad, and took a good look at the worn keys. 2, 3, 5, and 6 had the most wear.
Four digits, possibly six. I took a photo of the keypad and the immediate area, then replaced the frame, careful to set the hanging wire on the same nail groove.
I pulled the drive, shut down the PC, and took one last look around for anything I might have missed.
There was a stack of legal pads under a pile of promotional mousepads in the credenza.
I flipped through them, more out of habit than hope.
In the middle of the top pad was a half-page of calculations, ratios, yield percentages, and a couple of formulas.
I could read the gist. Someone was running logistics, but not for cattle. Not even close.
That was when I heard the truck.
Not the full Coleman fleet, but one engine, close enough that the crunch of tires on the gravel drive made it to the office. I killed the flashlight, slid out of the office, and took the back hall to my bedroom on my tiptoes.
The front door opened. The slow drag of boots on tile, deliberate, unhurried, someone who wasn’t worried about being caught or catching anyone else.
I pressed myself to the wall beside the bedroom door, just out of line of sight from the hall. My phone vibrated in my hand, a notification from the image-capture app on the drone. I muted it with my thumb and slid the device into my pocket.
The steps paused near the office. There was a rattle, the door handle turning, and then the creak of the hinges. I held my breath and counted to ten. The footsteps stopped. For a second, nothing, just the rush of my pulse.
Then the steps resumed. Down the hall, past my door, and out the back toward the porch.
I waited. Five minutes, then ten. Only when I heard the distant start of the truck, then the receding echo of the engine, did I risk moving.
I peeked out my bedroom window. The truck was gone. I sat on the edge of the bed, my hands braced on my knees, and let the adrenaline drain. My brain wanted to race, to rerun every second, but I forced myself into the here and now and thumbed through the photos on my phone.
The ledgers made even less sense on second look.
The tonnage numbers, the shipment frequencies, nobody moved this kind of product, not even the corporate farms up by Amarillo.
The names were wrong. Some were repeated at random intervals, others appeared once and vanished.
The “vendor” column read as code, a fake layer to keep out the idiots and the feds, or maybe a failsafe for the day the whole thing went sideways.
I plugged the thumb drive into my laptop and ran a malware scan while the files loaded.
The clone image confirmed what the desktop had already told me.
There was no browsing history, no email, only three PDFs that were nothing but equipment manuals.
Either the Colemans were running a clean box, or they'd swapped in a dummy for anyone snooping. All the file creation dates were the same day, three years ago. The computer was a prop. If it wasn’t a shell, they weren't much for technology, apparently.
I opened the gallery on my phone and scrolled through the forty-three images, zooming on each, looking for patterns.
One ledger entry in particular caught my eye.
Three shipments in a single week, all to “DHM LLC,” tonnage that matched exactly across the row.
Each “shipment” was marked with a three-digit code, the prefix always “MC,” and the notation “special.” No weights, just a string of numbers, and the date.
Then the next page, “MC” again, but this time a new vendor, “Seven Rivers,” and a notation that said, “Hold for approval, Hargrove.” The name was underlined, twice.
I cross-referenced the dates. The “special” shipments lined up with the bank transfer dates I’d found in the other folders. The cash moved out, the goods moved in, and the only thing tying it together was the handwriting.
I zoomed in on the script. It was neat, blocky, and didn't match Harlan's or Wyatt's or Levi's, and it wasn't even close to Cordelia's. Whoever had kept these records hadn't been a Coleman, not a current one at least, and they'd been doing it for a very long time.
Whatever the Colemans were running, it wasn’t for themselves. And it had been running a long time, longer than Harlan had run this ranch, maybe even before he’d set foot in Texas.
I stared at the wall, where the safe would be if I had x-ray vision. I pictured the map, the keypad, the worn keys. It was all connected. If I could get the safe open, I'd have the answer.
I sat back, mind spinning. It wasn’t about cattle. It was never about cattle. I wasn’t even sure it was about guns. There weren’t enough guns out there to match these kinds of numbers.
It was about what moved with the cattle, what moved under the radar, disguised as part of the operation but really something else, something that could be measured in tonnage but never showed up on the public records.
I ran through what I had. MC shipments with no clear cargo, vendor names that were either shells or codes, dates that ran biweekly but had been ramping up recently, and a notation in the ledger that said 'Hold for approval, Hargrove,' whoever that was.
I scrolled through the photos, looking for the oldest records I'd captured. There it was, a certificate of origin from a meat-packing plant in Nebraska, dated 1998, signed by a name I didn't recognize, the notary stamp whited out and rewritten by hand. The MC number matched. This went way back.
I checked the window again. Still quiet, but the sky was brightening, the day getting ready to split open.
I set an alarm for six, then lay back, one arm over my eyes. I didn’t dare sleep, not with the safe still locked and the Colemans due back any minute. But I felt something I hadn’t in weeks. Hunger. I’d found the thread. Now I had to pull.