
"Like now."
"Like now, with ethanol and four-dollar corn. Anyway, if you could grow oil…I guess he figured they couldn't lose. But it was all bullshit. It was a scam right from the start, cooked up by a bunch of commodities people in Chicago and some outlanders like Bill Judd. When it all went bust, Bill Judd didn't care. He was a sociopath if you've ever seen one. But people who were tied into him, like my dad, did care…"
She sighed and shook her head. "Lot of people thought my dad was right there in with Judd. But Dad lost half his land. He was farming more than two thousand acres back then. He sold off the land at way-depressed prices, right into a big farm depression in the middle eighties, paid off all his debts, and then he got this.45 that he had, and killed himself. Out in the backyard, one Saturday afternoon. I can still remember people screaming, and I can remember Mom sitting in the front room looking like she'd died. That's what I remember most: not Dad, but Mom's eyes."
"Jimmy was pretty hurt, I guess? Boys and fathers?"
"He was." Her eyes came up to meet his. "You don't think Jim had anything to do with Judd's murder?"
He shook his head: "Of course not…Were the Gleasons tied in with Judd?"
"They were friendly," Joan said. "There was a tight little group of richer folks, like in most small towns. Doctors, lawyers, bankers, real estate dealers. People say that Judd helped some of them with investments…but the Gleasons didn't have anything to do with the Jerusalem artichoke scam. Everyone would have known-it all came out in the lawsuits…"
He leaned toward her again, pitching his voice down: "I'll tell you what, Joanie. Jim and I and Larry Jensen, we all think that the Gleason murders and the Judd murder are tied together. Three murders in three weeks, all by somebody who knew what he was doing; where to go and when to go. Even did it under the same conditions, in the rain, in the dark. And that's after you haven't had any murders in twenty-two years."
