Authors: C. J. Box
“Ever find any bodies?” Brueggemann asked.
“Nope.”
THEY ALMOST
missed it. Joe was taking a slow rocky turn to the left through the trees when his headlights swept quickly across a dark box twenty yards into the timber.
“Any time now,” Brueggemann said, his eyes glued to the GPS.
“You’re a little late,” Joe said, reversing until the beams lit up the old structure.
The heavily falling snow didn’t obscure the fact that the line shack was a wreck. It was tiny—barely ten by ten feet—and made of ancient logs stained black with melting snow. The roof sagged, and there was no glass in the two rough-cut windows on either side of the gaping door. A dented black metal stovepipe jutted out of the roof at a haphazard angle.
“What a dump,” Brueggemann said.
“Yup,” Joe said, swinging out of the cab. He dug his green Game and Fish parka out from behind the bench seat. It had been back there, unused, for the last five months, and he shook the dust off. His
twelve-gauge Remington WingMaster shotgun was behind the seat as well, but he decided to leave it. He reached inside the cab for the long black Maglite flashlight, which was jammed between the seats. He clicked it on and shined it toward the line shack. He choked the beam down so it peered into the open windows, but all he could see were interior log walls.
“I’ve got the camera,” Brueggemann said, tossing the evidence bag into the cab of the truck.
Joe took a step toward the line shack, then stopped. He turned and got his shotgun.
“You think you’re going to need that?” Brueggemann asked.
“Probably not.”
The snow crunched under their boots as they approached the line shack. Joe held the flashlight with his left hand and carried the shotgun in his right.
“Why a shotgun?” Brueggemann asked. “What’s wrong with your service pistol?”
“Nothing,” Joe said, “except I can’t hit a damned thing with it.”
Brueggemann chuckled. He said, “I knew that. I just wanted to hear you say it.”
“You’re starting to get on my nerves,” Joe said. “Now, get behind me.”
THE HEAVY SNOW
hushed the rumbling of the running motor of Joe’s pickup as he neared the front of the line shack. He swept the beam left to right and back again, covering the front of the structure as well as the roof and several feet to each side. Because of the snowfall, any boot prints that might have been there were hidden.
“Anybody home?” Joe asked, feeling more than a little silly.
He heard Brueggemann’s breath behind him, and was grateful he didn’t giggle.
As he got close to the line shack, still sweeping the light across the windows, he saw something that surprised him: a glimpse of brightly colored cloth on the cluttered dirt floor inside.
“There might be something,” he said over his shoulder.
“Really?”
Brueggemann asked, surprised.
Rather than enter the sagging open door, Joe moved to the left to the broken-out window.
Joe took a deep breath of cold air and inhaled several large snowflakes that melted in the back of his sinus cavities. Then he stepped forward and thrust the Maglite through the window frame toward the floor, slowly moving it up and down the length of the body wrapped in a blanket. The beam swept across the partially exposed skull, the matted hair, the gaping eye sockets where the flesh had been eaten away by rodents and insects.
“Want to look?” Joe asked Brueggemann.
“Is it her?”
“Not exactly,” Joe said, stepping aside and handing his trainee the flashlight.
ON THE WAY OUT
of the forest toward the highway, Luke Brueggemann said, “Jesus, who would do something like that? Wrap a dead deer in a blanket and leave it in a line shack? What in the hell could they have been thinking?”
Joe shrugged.
“That’s just sick, man,” the trainee said.
“It happens,” Joe said. “My guess is some hunter shot an extra deer than he had permits for, and decided to dump it. Why he’d wrap it
in a fake Navajo blanket—I don’t know. I hate it when hunters waste a life and all that meat. It makes me furious. Luckily, it doesn’t happen very often.”
“I wish we could have found the bullet,” Brueggemann said. He’d watched Joe perform the necropsy with equal measures of curiosity and disgust. But because of the deteriorated condition of the carcass, the fatal wound couldn’t be determined. “I’d like to figure out who did that and ticket their ass.”
“We’ll never know unless someone fesses up,” Joe said. “Sometimes it takes years to solve a crime like that. But we’ve got the photos, and we’ll write up an incident report for the file. One of these days we may solve it. Someone talking in a bar, or telling the right person about it—that’s when we can cite them. And you’d be surprised how many of these miscreants show up and confess. Crimes against nature eat on some of these guys the way nothing else does.”
“It’s a puzzle,” Brueggemann said, withdrawing his cell phone and glancing at the screen.
“What’s even more of a puzzle,” Joe said, “is how those hunters saw a deer carcass in a blanket and thought it was Alice Thunder. There seems to be something strange in the air right now. The missing people and that triple homicide have everyone looking over their shoulders and seeing things that aren’t there, I think.”
When his trainee didn’t respond because he was concentrating on his phone, Joe said, “We’re still a few miles away from getting a signal.”
“I can wait.”
“You’ll have to.”
THE SNOW
had accumulated so quickly they couldn’t see their entry tracks in the rough two-track on the way out. The big rocks in the road made them pitch back and forth inside the cab like rag dolls.
“I’ll be glad to get back on asphalt,” Brueggemann said.
“Uh-oh,” Joe said, as his headlights lit up a dead tree that had fallen across the road in front of them, blocking their progress. Luckily, the tree didn’t look too large to push aside.
“When did
that
happen?” Brueggemann asked.
Joe said, “Heavy snow brings down those old dead trees. Try and push it out of the way. If that won’t work, I’ll get the saw out of the back.”
The trainee hesitated for a moment, as if preparing to argue, but apparently thought better of it. “It’ll just take a minute,” he said, pulling on leather gloves.
While Brueggemann walked toward the fallen tree, his back bathed in white headlights, Joe withdrew his own cell phone to check messages. No bars. He glanced to the bench seat and realized Brueggemann had absently left his there. Joe wondered if Brueggemann’s smart phone picked up a signal yet, and picked it up to check.
There was no signal yet, but the darkened screen hinted at the text thread underneath. Joe glanced up to make sure Brueggemann’s back was still to him—it was, as his trainee lifted the tree and walked it stiffly to the side—before tapping a key to light up the screen. Although Joe had no business looking at the extended text thread, he was curious. But the phone was locked and a password was required for access. He lowered the phone back to the seat, ashamed of his attempted spying.
Out on the road, Brueggemann stepped aside and brushed snow from his sleeves and signaled for Joe to drive forward. When he drew up alongside, Joe stopped for his trainee to crawl in. He noted that the first thing Brueggemann did when he swung inside was to immediately retrieve his cell phone from the seat and drop it in his breast pocket.
“Thank you,” Joe said.
“The pleasure is mine,” Brueggemann said sarcastically. “It’s snowing like a motherfu—” He caught himself before the curse came out. “Like crazy,” he said instead.
“It is,” Joe said. “But we’re not that far from the highway now, and we should be fine.”
“Late, though,” his trainee said, looking at his wristwatch. He seemed to be in a hurry to get back to his motel. Probably to talk to his girl. Joe wondered what her name was.
AFTER BEING TUMBLED
about the cab on the two-track, it felt like heaven to drive onto the snow-covered highway again, Joe thought. He turned right and began to climb toward the summit.
After shifting out of four-wheel-drive low, he snatched the mic from its cradle. They were now back in radio range. Since they were participating in the task force, the under-dash radio unit was still tuned to the mutual aid channel that included all the law enforcement agencies.
“This is GF-48,” Joe said. “We investigated the lead and it’s negative. We’re heading back to the barn now.”
“Roger that, GF-48,” the dispatcher said. The signal—and her voice—crackled with static. “I’ll inform the county sheriff’s department.”
“It was a dead mule deer wrapped in a blanket,” Joe said, and glanced to Brueggemann, who smiled.
“Roger that. A dead deer.”
“GF-48 out,” Joe said. As he leaned forward to cradle the mic, the dispatcher came back. “Joe, have you been in touch with your wife yet?”
Concerned, Joe said, “Negative. We just regained radio contact.”
“Better call her,” the dispatcher said.
“Right away.”
To Brueggemann, Joe asked, “Do we have cell service yet?”
The trainee looked at his phone and shook his head and said, “Must be the snow.”
THERE WAS
an untracked foot of it on the summit of the mountain, and Joe used the reflections of the delineator posts to make sure he kept the pickup on the road. As they finally began to descend, he felt the vibration of an incoming message on his cell phone in his pocket. At the same time, Brueggemann’s cell phone chirped with received text messages.
As both men reached for their phones, the radio chatter increased in volume and was filled with distant voices.
Brueggemann reached forward to turn down the volume when Joe recognized the fast-clipped exchange of officers somewhere involved in a tense situation.
“Hold it,” Joe said to Brueggemann. “Something’s going on, and I want to hear what it is.”
They listened as Joe drove. One of the speakers identified himself as a Teton County sheriff’s deputy. The other was a Wyoming highway trooper. The third was the local dispatcher in Jackson Hole. Snatches of the conversation popped and crackled through the speakers of Joe’s pickup radio.
… One dead at the scene of the rollover …
… transporting a second victim now to Saint John’s …
… the vehicle is a Chevy Tahoe, Colorado plates, VIN number …
“Where’s Saint John’s?” Brueggemann asked Joe.
“Jackson,” Joe answered quickly, imploring his trainee to be quiet.
… need to alert the emergency room doctors that the victim is in bad shape … claims he was tortured and it sure as hell looks like it …
“Tortured!” Brueggemann yelped.
“Please,” Joe said, “I can’t hear.”
… The dead one at the scene appears to be male, late twenties to early thirties, no identification … massive head wound …
… The staff at Saint John’s has been informed….
… snowing like hell here … not sure if there are other victims around … can see tire tracks but no other vehicles …
… cannot send additional units because our personnel is currently across the border in Idaho …
… Idaho! We need them here….
… Teton Pass is closed because of the storm….
… We need an evidence tech on the scene ASAP. The snow is covering the tracks and we’re gonna lose the chance of figuring out what happened….
… Requesting once again any possible backup or assistance on the scene …
“Jesus,” Brueggemann said. “What do you think happened?”
Joe shook his head as if he didn’t have any idea, and raised his phone to listen to Marybeth’s message that had been left two hours before.
When he heard it, he felt his insides go ice cold. Despite the road conditions, he punched the accelerator.
“Jesus!” Brueggemann said. “What are you doing?”
“I’ve got to get home,” Joe said through clenched teeth.
NINE MILES WEST
of Dubois, after summiting and descending the Absaroka Mountains, Nate slowed his Jeep and turned right on an untracked dirt road that led to a wide ribbon of ink that serpentined through the snow. The inside of the cab smelled of burned dust from the heating vents, hot tears from Haley, and the musky congealing blood that covered his flesh and clothing. The grille of his Jeep was packed with wind-driven snow from the drive over, and melting rivulets coursed down his headlights.
He wheeled parallel to the bank of the Wind River and parked behind a thick stand of willows, concealing the location of the Jeep from anyone behind them on the highway. He cut the headlights before opening his door and swinging his legs out.
“Do you want me to keep the motor running and the heat on?” he asked Haley.
He couldn’t see her face well in the soft glow from the dome light. It had been nearly two hours since she’d spoken to or even looked at him. She’d spent the whole of the trip over Togwotee Pass staring out the front windows in unsettled silence, her head tilted slightly forward, her hair hanging down over her face. Her cheeks were wet with
tears, but she’d rarely sobbed, as if she’d been too proud to make a sound and reveal herself. Instead, she gripped the safety bar across the dashboard as if holding on for dear life.
He’d spent the whole of the trip deconstructing what he’d done to Trucker Cap, and analyzing the information he’d tortured out of him.
“Haley …”
She mumbled something that was snatched away by the muscular flow of the river behind him.
“What?”
“I said I don’t give a fuck what you do, you fucking monster!”
she shrieked, her mouth twisted into rage, her eyes wide and rimmed with red.
Nate leaned back on his heels and waited a full minute before walking to the back of the Jeep for his duffel bag. He left the engine running and said, “I told you not to watch.”
FALLING SNOWFLAKES
disappeared on contact with the icy surface of the river, leaving tiny one-ring disturbances. Curls of steam rose from the flow into the even colder air and vanished like ghosts. As Nate shed his shoulder holster and hung it over a willow branch, he heard a beaver slap its tail on the surface upriver and the
gloop
sound of the creature diving deep. What little filtered moonlight there was marked the sides of the current with accents of light blue.