house one day, several times, and the only time I met him is [when] he came up on the porch one day. I had the door open and I was mopping the floor. He came up and knocked on the door and asked if Hank was there and I told him 'No,' Hank was not there. Hank was at work. And he turned around and walked off, and I told him, I said if you leave your name, I'll tell Hank you stopped by. And he said just tell him Big Mac stopped by." Most other times, however, Mac just drove up, stuck his head out of the car, and asked if Hank was there. 38
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Hank described his conversations with Mac as "talking shit." Mac spoke of the tire-tool beatings he inflicted on others and leaving them for dead. And, of course, he also spoke of getting guns and taking and using up women, including very specific references to a good-looking girl in a convenience store in Waco, where Mac used to work. They drank a lot of beer, and when not riding around the Belton and Temple area, they usually stopped in smelly beer joints like Poor Boys, The He Ain't Here, and Dundee's Club. Sometimes they went to Waco, to the Cut, to score dope from the whores.
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Psychologist Matt Ferrara, in an interview with Hank, later suggested that Mac was really planting a seedhe wanted to see how Hank would react to such bizarre conversations and even more bizarre behavior. Hank's other sister, Bess, saw clearly that Big Mac had an overpowering effect on Hank. In reality, Mac was preparing his next accomplice. He was setting up Hank Worley to be a 1990s version of Roy Dale Green, and Hank was not smart enough to see it until it had become a fait accompli . 39
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On November 24, 1991, during one of their trips to Waco, Mac's car broke down near a convenience store south of Waco. It was not the convenience store where the good looking girl Mac wanted to "take" worked, though. Stranded, Mac and Hank called Billy and Janice to come by and pick them up. Janice noticed that Mac was no longer driving a pickup. Mac had returned the pickup to his father and was now driving another vehicle, a cream-colored, 1985 Ford Thunderbird. The next day, Janice secured a new water pump for Billy to fix the car. The incident was significant only because there was no doubt that on November 25, 1991, the day Janice bought the water pump, Kenneth was in possession of a light-colored 1985 Thunderbird. 40
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