She grabbed a paper towel and scrubbed away at a bit of eye makeup.
"That's got it," Dixon said. "Hey, love the outfit."
"Really?"
His eyes swept over it--and, sure enough, she felt a bit of that ele
ctric sizzle again. Not as high-voltage as with Richard, but still ...
"I never do drugs," Frankie Greek said.
Dixon looked at him curiously.
"Some musicians do. I mean, you hear about it. But I never have. Some of my songs are about drugs. But that's, like, just something to write songs about. I stay away from them."
"Well, good for you."
Rune gave him an exasperated look then said to the marshal, "Anything more on the case?"
"Naw." Then he seemed to think he shouldn't be talking quite so blue-collar and added, "No. No evidence in the Edelman death." He shrugged. "No prints at the scene. No witnesses. You haven't seen anything odd lately? Been followed?"
"No."
Dixon nodded. Looked at some videos. Picked one up. Put it down.
"So," he said.
Two "so's" from two different men in one night. Rune wondered what this one meant.
"Could I talk to you?" he asked, motioning her to the front of the store.
"Sure."
They stood by the window, next to a distracting cardboard cutout of Michael J. Fox.
"Just thought you'd like to know. I checked out that case you told me about. The Union Bank heist?"
"You did?"
He shook his head. "I didn't find anything. Technically, it's still open but nobody's been on the case since the fifties. They only keep murder cases open indefinitely. I tried to find the file but it looks like it was pitched out ten, twenty years ago."
"I thought maybe you were investigating it."
"The robbery? Me?" Dixon laughed again. He had a nice smile. Richard, she was thinking, had that mysteriousness about him. Something going on under the surface--you couldn't quite believe his smile. Dixon's seemed totally genuine.
He took off his baseball cap, rubbed his hair in a boyish way, put the hat back on.
She said, "I mean, it was kind of a coincidence you were asking about Mr. Kelly and everything."
"Bank robbery'd be the FBI, not the Marshals. I'm involved only 'cause the killer used the kind of bullets a lot of hit men use. We check stuff like that out."
"Teflon," Rune said.
"Oh, you know about that?"
"The police told me. But if you don't care about the robbery then why'd you look up the case?"
He shrugged, looked away. "I dunno. Seemed important to you."