The other was a list of residence check requests, filed with the department by the owners before they left, and giving information like the dates they'd be gone, who was going to check on their property for them, and asking us to have a car drive by every night. We were beginning to regard the second list as an indicator of the next burglaries. It was also very painful for Lamar, our sheriff. Many of the people who were on the list were his supporters. He'd gotten their support, at least in part, by having the residence check program in the first place. Simply being able to be the first to tell them they'd been burglarized, however, wasn't his idea of a positive result coming from the RC program. As a direct consequence of Lamar's pain, it was becoming a particularly painful experience for the officers on the night shift, who were supposed to do the actual checking.

"Uh, well, do you have anything about that Bohr, Bohr, Borglan place, out on W4G, down by the Church crossroads?" asked Fred.

"Cletus Borglan's, you mean?" A perfect target. Borglan and his family wintered in Florida, usually leaving right after Christmas. And about a half mile from where Mike had come upon Fred about an hour ago. I began to feel a glimmer of hope.

"Yeah, that's it." Goober began to rock back and forth, just a little twitchy movement, but noticeable.

"No." Not unless somebody had forgotten to tell me, I thought.

"Oh, boy. Oh, boy." He sat holding on to the front edge of the seat with both hands, looking down. "I wish you had, Mr. Houseman. Oh, boy." He sounded like he was going to cry. He began to rock a bit harder.

I figured that he was about to snitch somebody off, and that he was hoping that we had a report of the burglary already, so that he wouldn't be telling me something that only he and the burglar would know. A hazardous practice, without a doubt.

"If you're worried about us 'finding it,' Fred, we can always come up with something that'll keep you out of that part." I tried to be helpful.



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