Book
Review: THE SHAPE SHIFTER, by Tony Hillerman (2006) Crime
Fiction
Hillerman's
novels feature the Navajo Tribal Police (A real police force, HQ in
Shiprock, New Mexico) and Lieutenant Joe Leaphorn and his sidekick
Sgt. Jim Chee. As this story opens, Leaphorn is newly retired, has
just come up to headquarters to pick up his mail.
There
is a letter from Mel Bork, a guy he knew when they were both rookie
cops years ago, investigating suspected arson in a tourist shop where
some very rare Indian artifacts had been burned up. Mel encloses a
magazine photo “Hey, Joe, ain't this that rug you kept telling me
about, one of a kind, and destroyed in the fire, and we agreed that
maybe the fire really was a crime, not just a careless drunk and some
talk about witchcraft? If you're interested, give me a call.”
Bored
with retirement, Joe thought why not? He phoned the number in the
letter. Mrs. Bork answered, and when she learned Leaphorn was an old
police friend, she said he was just who she needed to talk to. Mel
had gone two days ago to see a man who owned an old valuable Indian
rug, and he hadn't returned. The local sheriff's office yesterday had
said not to worry yet, but then she had received a threatening phone
message. She played it back to Leaphorn. A man's deep voice: “Mr.
Bork, you need to get back to minding your own business. Keep poking
at old bones and they'll jump out and bite you.” A chuckle. “You'll
be just a set of new bones.”
“Mrs.
Bork, keep that tape in a safe place. Call Sgt. Garcia at the
sheriff's office down there and have him listen to the tape. Did Mel
mention any one he was going to see?”
“I
think maybe a Mr. Tarkington; he has an art gallery here in
Flagstaff.”
When
Tarkington finds out the Navajo police are investigating 'The
mystical rug' said to be destroyed by fire years ago, he tells
Leaphorn, “I think we need to talk about this, but not over the
phone. Where are you?”
“In
Window Rock.”
“How
about coming to the gallery tomorrow?” Flagstaff
is 200 miles from Window Rock, but that's not far in the southwest.
Leaphorn went.
The
picture of a very expensive home with a very rare artifact hanging on
the wall is a house not far from Flagstaff, Tarkington says. Owned
by a man named Jason Delos. The man came up from California for his
wife's health. Nobody has ever seen her. He has an Asian man as a
sort of butler and cook. Gossip has him to be ex-CIA from the Vietnam
war, whether retired or fired depends on who you listen to. The rug
hanging on the wall? Impossible to duplicate it – too many
variables – dyes, weaving styles, age. Some say it depicts the
Navajos in exile 150 years ago, a tale of sorrows, hatreds, curses,
evil spirits of the worst kind, 'shape shifters' who could change
from human form to animal in an instant – not at all what Navajos
usually commemorate. Some say it was destroyed in that fire that
Leaphorn investigated years ago.
Leaphorn
meets Sgt. Garcia in a coffee shop near the sheriff's office in
Flagstaff. “I've worked with Bork a few times. Private
investigator; seems like a nice guy. This tape his wife had me listen
to has me worried. What's he into? You talk to this man Delos yet?
"Tell
him you're investigating a crime? What crime? We don''t have one yet,
do we?”
“I'll
see him tomorrow. Just wondering about that one-of-a-kind rug that
was said to be burned up all those years ago.” They decide to go up
to the old crime scene, and they find one of the original robber gang
digging there, Tomas Delonie, just out of his 25-year prison
sentence. He admits he is looking for any part of Shewnack's loot
that might be buried there.
Leaphorn
remembers now how he had stopped at old Grandma Peshlakai's, who had
just been robbed of two bucketsful of pinyon sap. He had explained to
her that he had to leave on a call to Totter's Trading Post where a
fire had just killed an important murder suspect.
“He's
dead?” she had asked. Leaphorn agreed.“He
can't run then. This man I want you to catch is running away with my
buckets of pinyon sap.” She still scowls at him every time they
meet, even though he had recovered her empty buckets from the site of
the fire.
“You
find anything yet?” Garcia now asks Delonie.
“Not
yet.”
“You
think you will?”
“I
wanted to just see that the bastard is really dead. Get closure. The
Navajos, like Mr. Leaphorn here, have that curing ceremony to help
them forgive and forget. My tribe has never had such a ceremony. But
maybe just seeing where the bastard burned up will work for me. ”
Back
in Flagstaff next morning, Leaphorn places a call to Mr. Delos. A
polite voice asks him to wait a moment. “Mr. Leaphorn, Mr. Delos
say he can see you. He ask you to be here at eleven.”
A
small man waits for him. In his early forties, he had a smooth,
flawless complexion. A Hopi or Zuni, he thought at first, then
changed it to probably Vietnamese or Lao. “I am Tommy Vang,” he
said, smiling. “He say bring you to the office.”
Mr.
Delos was cordial but non-committal. Leaphorn came away with little
more than he knew before, except for a neatly packaged lunch Tommy
Vang had packed for his trip home.
Back
home, the ten o'clock news caught his attention, about a fatal car
accident. State police would not identify the driver until
next-of-kin had been notified; bystanders said it was a prominent
Flagstaff businessman . . . .
I
don't want to spoil the end of this story for you readers. Author
Hillerman is justly famous as an interpreter of Navajo culture and
those of other minority groups. His many awards include former
president of the Mystery Writers of America, and the Navajo Tribe's
Special Friend Award. This is one of the last books he wrote before
his death in 2008 at age 83.
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