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In Cold Blood
football field, if ever you seen him play with his children, you wouldn’t
doubt me. Lord, I wish the Lord could tell me, because I don’t know what happened.»
His wife said, «I do,» resumed her darning, and was forced by tears to stop. «That friend of his.
That’s what happened.»
The visitor, K.B.I. Agent Harold Nye, busied himself scribbling in a shorthand notebook — a
notebook already well filled with the results of a long day spent probing the accusations of Floyd
Wells. Thus far the facts ascertained corroborated Wells’ story most persuasively. On November
20 the suspect Richard Eugene Hickock had gone on a Kansas City shopping spree during which
he had passed not fewer than «seven pieces of hot paper.» Nye had called on all the reported
victims — salesmen of cameras and of radio and television equipment, the proprietor of a jewelry
shop, a clerk in a clothing store — and when in each instance the witness was shown photographs
of Hickock and Perry Edward Smith, he had identified the former as the author of the spurious
checks, the latter as his «silent» accomplice. (One deceived salesman said, «He [Hickock] did the
work. A very smooth talker, very convincing. The other one — I thought he might be a foreigner, a
Mexican maybe — he never opened his mouth.»)
Nye had next driven to the suburban village of Olathe, where he interviewed Hickock’s last
employer, the owner of the Bob Sands Body Shop. «Yes, he worked here,» said Mr. Sands. «From
August until — Well, I never saw him after the nineteenth of November, or maybe it was the
twentieth. He left without giving me any notice whatever. Just took off — I don’t know where to, and
neither does his dad. Surprised? Well, yes. Yes, I was. We were on a fairly friendly basis. Dick
kind of has a way with him, you know. He can be very likable. Once in a while he used to come to
our house. Fact is, a week before he left, we had some people over, a little party, and Dick
brought this friend he had visiting him, a boy from Nevada — Perry Smith was his name. He could
play the guitar real nice. He played the guitar and sang some songs, and him and Dick
entertained everybody with a weight-lifting act. Perry Smith, he’s a little fellow, not much over five
feet high, but he could just about pick up a horse. No, they didn’t seem nervous, neither one. I’d
say they were enjoying themselves. The exact date? Sure I remember. It was the thirteenth.
Friday, the thirteenth of November.»
From there, Nye steered his car northward along raw country roads. As he neared the Hickock
farm, he stopped at several neighboring homesteads, ostensibly to ask directions, actually to
make inquiries concerning the suspect. One farmer’s wife said, «Dick Hickock! Don’t talk to me
about Dick Hickock! If ever I met the devil! Steal? Steal the weights off a dead man’s eyes! His
mother, though, Eunice, she’s a fine woman. Heart big as a barn. His daddy, too. Both of them
plain, honest people. Dick would’ve gone to jail more times than you can count, except nobody
around here ever wanted to prosecute. Out of respect for his folks.» Dusk had fallen when Nye knocked at the door of Walter Hickock’s weather-grayed four-room
farmhouse. It was as though some such visit had been expected. Mr. Hickock invited the
detective into the kitchen, and Mrs. Hickock offered him coffee. Perhaps if they had known the
true meaning of the caller’s presence, the reception tendered him would have been less gracious,
more guarded. But they did not know, and during the hours the three sat conversing, the name
Clutter was never mentioned, or the word murder. The parents accepted what Nye implied — that
parole violation and financial fraud were all that motivated his pursuit of their son.
«Dick brought him [Perry] home one evening, and told us he was a friend just off a bus from Las
Vegas, and he wanted to know couldn’t he sleep here, stay here awhile,» Mrs. Hickock said. «No,
sir, I wouldn’t have him in the house. One look and I saw what he was. With his perfume. And his
oily hair. It was clear as day where Dick had met him. According to the conditions of his parole,
he wasn’t supposed to associate with anybody he’d met up there [Lansing]. I warned Dick, but he
wouldn’t listen. He found a room for his friend at the Hotel Olathe, in Olathe, and after that Dick
was with him every spare minute. Once they went off on a weekend trip. Mr. Nye, certain as I’m
sitting here, Perry Smith was the one put him up to writing them checks.»
Nye shut his notebook and put his pen in his pocket, and both his hands as well, for his hands
were shaking from excitement. «Now, on this weekend trip. Where did they go?»
«Fort Scott,» Mr. Hickock said, naming a Kansas town with a military history. «The way I
understood it, Perry Smith has a sister lives in Fort Scott. She was supposed to be holding a
piece of money belonged to him. Fifteen hundred dollars was the sum mentioned. That was the
main reason he’d come to Kansas, to collect this money his sister was holding. So Dick drove him
down there to get it. It was only a overnight trip. He was back home a little before noon Sunday.
Time for Sunday dinner.»
«I see,» said Nye. «An overnight trip. Which means they left here sometime Saturday. That would
be Saturday, November fourteenth?»
The old man agreed.
«And returned Sunday, November fifteenth?»
«Sunday noon.»
Nye pondered the mathematics involved, and was encouraged by the conclusion he came to: that
within a time span of twenty or twenty-four hours, the suspects could have made a round-trip
journey of rather more than eight hundred miles, and, in the process, murder four people.
«Now, Mr. Hickock,» Nye said. «On Sunday, when your son came home, was he alone? Or was
Perry Smith with him?»
«No, he was alone. He said he’d left Perry off at the Hotel Olathe.»
Nye, whose normal voice is cuttingly nasal and naturally intimidating, was attempting a subdued
timbre, a disarming, throw-away style. «And do you remember — did anything in his manner strike
you as unusual? Different?»
«Who?»
«Your son.»
«When?»
«When he returned from Fort Scott.»
Mr. Hickock ruminated. Then he said, «He seemed the same as ever. Soon as he came in, we sat
down to dinner. He was mighty hungry. Started piling his plate before I’d finished the blessing. I
remarked on it, said, ‘Dick, you’re shoveling it in as fast as you can work your elbow. Don’t you
mean to leave nothing for the rest of us?’ Course, he’s always been a big eater. Pickles. He can
eat a whole tub of pickles.»
«And after dinner what did he do?»
«Fell asleep,» said Mr. Hickock, and appeared to be moderately taken aback by his own reply.
«Fell fast asleep. And I guess you could say that was unusual. We’d gathered round to watch a
basketball game. On the TV. Me and Dick and our other boy, David. Pretty soon Dick was snoring
like a buzz saw, and I said to his brother, ‘Lord, I never thought I’d live to see the day Dick would
go to sleep at a basketball game.’ Did, though. Slept straight through it. Only woke up long
enough to eat some cold supper, and right after went off to bed.»
Mrs. Hickock rethreaded her darning needle; her husband rocked his rocker and sucked on an
unlit pipe. The detective’s trained eyes roamed the scrubbed and humble room. In a corner, a gun
stood propped against the wall; he had noticed it before. Rising, reaching for it, he said, «You do much hunting, Mr. Hickock?»
«That’s his gun. Dick’s. Him and David go out once in a while. After rabbits, mostly.»
It was a .12-gauge Savage shotgun, Model 300; a delicately etched scene of pheasants in flight
ornamented the handle. «How long has Dick had it?»
The question aroused Mrs. Hickock. «That gun cost me over a hundred dollars. Dick bought it on
credit, and now the store won’t have it back, even though it’s not hardly a month old and only
been used the one time — the start of November, when him and David went to Grinnell on a
pheasant shoot. He used ours names to buy it — his daddy let him — so here we are, liable for the
payments, and when you think of Walter, sick as he is, and all the things we need, all we do
without . . .» She held her breath, as though trying to halt an attack of hiccups. «Are you sure you
won’t have a cup of coffee, Mr. Nye? It’s no trouble.»
The detective leaned the gun against the wall, relinquishing it, although he felt certain it was the
weapon that had killed the Clutter family. «Thank you, but it’s late, and I have to drive to Topeka,»
he said, and then, consulting his notebook, «Now, I’ll just run through this, see if I have it straight.
Perry Smith arrived in Kansas Thursday, the twelfth of November. Your son claimed this person
came here to collect a sum of money from a sister residing in Fort Scott. That Saturday the two
drove to Fort Scott, where they remained overnight — I assume in the home of the sister?»
Mr. Hickock said, «No. They never could find her. Seems like she’d moved.»
Nye smiled. «Nevertheless, they stayed away overnight. And during the week that followed — that
is, from the fifteenth to the twenty-first — Dick continued to see his friend Perry Smith, but
otherwise, or as far as you know, he maintained a normal routine, lived at home and reported to
work every day. On the twenty-first he disappeared, and so did Perry Smith. And since then
you’ve not heard from him? He hasn’t written you?»
«He’s afraid to,» said Mrs. Hickock. «Ashamed and afraid.»
«Ashamed?»
«Of what he’s done. Of how he’s hurt us
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football field, if ever you seen him play with his children, you wouldn'tdoubt me. Lord, I wish the Lord could tell me, because I don't know what happened."His wife said,