15 THE HIDDEN FACE
One day that September, the undercover operative who was
pretending  to  be  an  insurance   salesman    stopped at  a   filling station
in  Fairfax and struck  up  a   conversation    with    a   woman   working
there.  When    the operative   told    her that    he  was looking to  buy a
house   in  the vicinity,   she mentioned   that    William Hale    “controlled
everything” in  these   parts.  She said    that    she’d   purchased   her own
home    from    Hale,   which   was on  the edge    of  his pasture.    One night,
she recalled,   thousands   of  acres   of  Hale’s  land    had been    set on
fire.   Nothing was left    behind  but ashes.  Most    people  didn’t  know
who  had     started     the     blaze,  but     she     did:    Hale’s  workers,    on  his
orders, had torched the land    for the insurance   money—$30,000   in
all.
White   tried   to  learn   more    about   another suspicious  matter: How
had Hale    become  the beneficiary of  Henry   Roan’s  $25,000 life-
insurance   policy? After   Roan    turned  up  with    a   bullet  in  the back    of
his  head,   in  1923,   Hale    had     the     most    obvious     motive.     Yet     the
sheriff had never   investigated    Hale,   nor had other   local   lawmen—
an  oversight   that    no  longer  seemed  incidental.
White   tracked down    the insurance   salesman    who had originally
sold    Roan    the policy  in  1921.   Hale    had always  insisted    that    Roan,
one of  his closest friends,    had made    him the beneficiary because
he  had lent    Roan    a   lot of  money   over    the years.  But the salesman
told    a   different   story.
As  the salesman    recalled    it, Hale    had independently   pushed  for
the policy, saying, “Hells  bells,  that’s  just    like    spearing    fish    in  a
