across it by stepping from stone to stone.
The wisp of a girl in the seat beside him strained against the shoulder strap and pressed her nose against the window. âI bet there are lots of fishes in there.â
The driver did not respond, and this irked the child.
Sarah Frank looked to the Ute policeman for confirmation.
âAre
there lots of fishes in the river?â
He nodded.
âWhat kind?â she pressed.
âMostly rainbow trout,â Moon said, and jerked the steering wheel to miss a shallow pothole in the gravel road.
âRainbow,â she sighed. âI bet theyâre really pretty.â Mr. Zig-Zag purred: Sarah rubbed the black catâs neck. âAre there any catfish in the river?â
âNope. Piedraâs way too cold for âem.â
She shivered. âArenât there no other fish to keep the rainbow trout company?â
He thought about this. âWell⦠I sâpose there might be some rattlesnake trout about.â
âThat sounds scary.â
âOh, theyâre not dangerous. Just another kinda fish.â He waited for the inevitable question.
âCharlie, why are they called
rattlesnake
trouts?â
âFor one thing, they got a long, skinny neck.â
There was an expression of wonder in her brown eyes, which seemed far too large for her face. âA fish with a neck.
Really?â
âSure. That old rattlesnake trout can pop his head out real fast and strike!â He flicked his hand to demonstrate. âLast April, Gorman Sweetwater said he saw one snap a woolly worm off a willow branch that was a good two feet above the water.â
She shuddered.
He was on a roll. âItâs an evolutionary advantage. Gives âem an edge over the common water-feeders.â
âBut with such a long neck wouldnât it be awfully hard to swim?â
âSure. It could get wrapped around a reed or even tied in aknot. So when theyâre not using that long neck, they keep it all coiled up on their shoulders. Thatâs why theyâre called a rattlesnake trout. Although down in New Mexico they call âem spring-necked trouts.â
She made a face. âI think they sound
icky.â
âI donât much like their looks myself. But some fishermen prefer âem to rainbows or cutthroats. Last week Gorman Sweetwater caught a small one. Said he stretched the neck out and it wasnât moreân ten inches long. He let it snap back and only counted three coils. But I guess old Gorman mustâve took a shine to it anyway. He took it home and put it in a big bowl with his Chinese goldfish.â
âWould you take me to see it?â
âIâd sure like to, but itâs too late.â
âWhy?â
âGame warden found out about it. Made Gorman throw the thing back in the Piedra.â
âWhy?â
âAgainst the law to keep a rattlesnake trout with less than five coils.â
Sheâs a good kid, but kind of gullible.
âOh.â
Charlieâs nice, but he makes up such silly stories.
Sarah Frank clutched the black cat against her chest and squinted through the sandblasted windshield at a dusty road that led into the canyon country. âAre we almost there?â
Moon, who had answered this question a dozen times since heâd picked her up at the Colorado Springs airport, nodded. âAlmost.â
The child looked up at the big policeman. âAre you sure Aunt Daisyâ²11 be glad to see me and Mr. Zig-Zag?â
Sarah was no blood relation to Daisy Perika, but all the kids called her âAunt Daisy.â âSheâll be happy to see you. But,â he added cautiously, âshe donât much care for cats.â
âI know. When I was here before, Aunt Daisy never called Mr. Zig-Zag by his real name. She called him Dishrag and Hair Bag and stuff. And sometimes she kicked at him.â
âKicked him?â Sounded just like the grumpy old