Authors: William Kent Krueger
Bridger shoved the cord into the back pocket of his Wranglers and watched the woman and the boy step back onto the deck of the sloop. “You know, Chief, the rich are different from you and me. I think it was Scott Fitzgerald said that. He sure knew whereof he spoke. You ever seen her up real close? I always wondered if those hooters were real. But I guess they must be. If she’d laid out the money to pump them hooters up, she’d’ve laid out the dough to cut back some on that honker of hers. Two amazing hooters and one hell of a honker. What a combination, huh?” He smiled at LePere and a lot of silver flashed among his teeth. “Got any cold beer?”
LePere was watching the woman and the boy again. With Bridger there and making such a commotion, he kept the field glasses at his side. He needn’t have. Neither the woman nor the boy looked his way. “You know I don’t keep alcohol here. It’s too early to be drinking anyway.”
“Fuck you, Mom. How about a Coke?”
“In the fridge.”
Bridger turned and headed toward the cabin whistling “Witchy Woman.”
LePere sat back down on the canvas chair and brought the field glasses to his eyes again. The woman had a rope in her hand now and was showing the boy how to tie knots. When LePere was a boy, his father had taught him the same knots, probably.
Bridger strode back onto the dock, guzzling a can of Coke. In his other hand, he held a paperback book.
“Superior Blue,”
he said, holding the book up so that the shiny cover caught fire in the morning sunlight. He nodded toward the woman in the dinghy. “This is the book she wrote. You read it?”
“Yeah. What of it?”
“You’d better be careful, Chief. People are going to think you’re stalking her.”
LePere didn’t answer. Bridger rolled the can of cold Coke across his forehead, which was already beginning to glisten with sweat from the heat.
“Life’s full of irony, don’t you think, Chief? I mean, here she is, only a few hundred yards away, and she doesn’t even know who you are. Hell, she doesn’t even know you exist. Doesn’t even suspect that you hate her guts.”
“I don’t hate her,” LePere said.
“No?” Bridger shook his head. “You are one strange motherfucker, Chief.” He glanced across the water. “Show’s over.”
The boy let go the mooring lines. The little engine began to sputter and the woman steered the boat toward the opening of the cove. Once they were on the main body of the lake, LePere knew she would cut the engine and lift the sail. And if there were wind, they would fly. But even the rich couldn’t command the wind.
Bridger turned and started off the dock. “Well. You ready for another day at the salt mines?”
Bridger drove, one arm resting in the open window of an old green Econoline van. They were headed
toward Aurora, driving along the state highway that edged the southern shoreline of Iron Lake. The trees there were mostly evergreen, and the air carried the sweet bite of pine pitch.
“Hear what happened at Lindstrom’s mill?” Bridger called over the wind.
“No.”
“Somebody blew the fuck out of it.”
“Protest?”
“Got me, Chief. All I know is it woke me up before I was ready to be woke up. I was dreaming about this little bar I used to go to in San Diego—”
“Anybody hurt?”
“Who am I? Walter fucking Cronkite?”
LePere settled back and let the air and the shadows of the trees and the smell of the pine wash over him. Lindstrom. More trouble for an already troubled man. LePere felt no pity.
“So… Chief—you give any more thought to what we talked about yesterday?”
“What
you
talked about.”
“Whatever. You think about it?” Bridger watched the road.
“No.”
“Easy money, Chief.”
“It’s crazy.”
“Every great plan has some element of craziness to it. That’s what makes it great.”
“You must’ve been reading that biography of Patton again.”
“Great man,” Bridger said. “Look, I can tell you’ve been thinking about it.” He leaned near to LePere and
whispered like the voice of the devil. “A cool million.”
“Only a million? Why not two?”
Bridger straightened up and pounded the steering wheel, grinning. “Hells bells, why not? The risk is the same.”
They passed a sign on the road that said
CHIPPEWA GRAND CASINO 3/4 MILE TO A JACKPOT OF GOOD TIMES AND GOOD FOOD
.
“You see, that’s the point,” LePere said. “You’re thinking the way white people think. More, always more. Never happy with what they have.”
“Tell me you’ll be happy just cleaning toilets the rest of your life.”
LePere stared out the window as they turned onto a beautifully paved road that led through a stand of young white pines to the casino. “It’s too risky,” he finally said. “People could get hurt, Wes. We could go to prison. Besides, we’re on the verge of something big already.”
“What we’re on the verge of is destitution. My luck ain’t held at the tables lately. If we have another hefty diving expense, I can’t cover it.”
“We stay with diving the wreck. We’re so damn close to the answers. I know it. And that’ll pay off big, sooner or later.”
“You got more patience than brains, Chief. But that’s okay.” Bridger reached out and punched his shoulder gently. “You got time to think about it. The postman always rings twice.” He pulled his van into the casino lot and parked it. They stood beside the van a moment before separating.
“We’re still on for the dive tomorrow,” LePere said.
Bridger smoothed his mustache and considered. “You’d go alone if I said no, wouldn’t you?”
“Yeah. I’d go alone.”
“Jesus. And you call me crazy. What time?”
“I’ll pick you up at five
A.M
. We can be out on Superior by seven.”
Bridger winced. “Make it seven. We’ll be on the lake by nine.” He saw the unyielding look on LePere’s face. “For Christ’s sake, Chief, that wreck’s been there for a dozen years. It ain’t going anywhere.”
“Six,” LePere countered.
Bridger threw his hands up in surrender. “All right. Six it is.”
They headed in opposite directions, Bridger to the gaming floor, where he’d spend most of his day at a blackjack table, and LePere to a door marked
EMPLOYEES ONLY
. After he’d signed in at the security desk, he went to the locker room and changed into his dark blue jumpsuit. The other custodial staff were already heading out. He joined them, joking with them as they split off toward their own areas. He pulled his cart from a closet on the east end of the casino and headed to his first stop, the men’s room on the first floor east wing. He put out the
CLOSED FOR CLEANING
sign and stepped inside.
A large bald man in shorts and a loud Hawaiian shirt stood at the third urinal, his stance wavering. When LePere stepped in, the man looked up from his business. His hand traveled along with his bloodshot eyes, and a stream of urine splashed over the wall. He watched the yellow flow make its way down the wall and puddle on the floor, then he grinned stupidly at LePere and zipped up. He started toward the door,
reaching into his pocket as he came. When he was abreast of LePere, he said, “Sorry ‘bout that, Geronimo.” He pulled a red five-dollar casino chip from his pocket, tossed it onto LePere’s cart, and stumbled out the door.
W
HEN
C
ORK FINALLY ARRIVED
at Sam’s Place, his daughters already had things well under control.
Sam’s Place was an old Quonset hut set on the shore of Iron Lake, just outside the town limits of Aurora. Long ago, the structure—a leftover from the Second World War—had been purchased by Sam Winter Moon. Sam had turned the hut into a clean little joint where, during spring, summer, and fall, he’d served burgers and shakes and cones through a small window. His customers had been mostly boaters who motored up to the dock Sam built. When Sam Winter Moon was killed at Burke’s Landing, the old Quonset hut had passed, via Sam’s will, into Cork’s possession. And when, immediately after that, Cork’s life fell apart, Sam’s Place had become his refuge and his vocation. He’d learned how to flip a pretty mean burger.
North of Sam’s Place, behind a chain-link fence, was the long brick rectangle where Bearpaw beer had been brewed since 1938. South, stood a copse of birch and aspen that hid the ruins of an old foundry. In its day, the foundry had cast the metal for a good number
of the double-bladed ax heads used to clear the magnificent white pines that had been the glory of the great North Woods.
Except for the haze from the burn of the forest fires up north and the black smudge from the fire at Lindstrom’s mill, the day was beautiful. A perfect day for sailing, and already a lot of boats were on the lake.
Sam’s Place was divided into two parts. In the rear half was a kitchen, a small bathroom, and a living area furnished simply with a table and two chairs handmade from birch, a desk with a shelf for books, a couple of lamps, and a bunk. Sam Winter Moon had lived there first, then Cork in the worst part of his life. The front of the Quonset hut contained the freezer, grill, deep fry, ice milk machine, and stacked cartons of food and paper goods. As Cork entered, he saw that it contained all of his children as well.
“Daddy!” Stevie cried. “I’m helping.”
“I can see that, buddy. Good for you.” He smiled at his daughters. “Thanks, guys.”
Jenny said, “No problem, Dad.” She was busy with the ice milk machine.
“We’re going to need ones,” Annie told him, looking up from the register.
His daughters were growing in a way that made him proud. Jenny had recently abandoned purple hair and a fierce desire to pierce her nose. Over the last year, she had worked her way through every volume of
The Diary of Anaïs Nin
. Her sixteenth birthday was less than a month away; she intended, once she’d finished high school, to move to Paris, live on the Left Bank, and write great works of literature.
Annie, eighteen months younger, redheaded, and
freckled, was the star pitcher on her softball team. For as long as she’d had the ability to conceive a future for herself, she’d wanted to be a nun.
“What was all the excitement this morning?” Jenny asked.
“Some trouble at the Lindstrom mill.”
“What kind of trouble?” Stevie asked. He’d opened a small package of Fritos and was munching.
“Well.” Cork hesitated, but he knew they’d all hear soon enough. “There was an explosion and a fire. Someone was killed.”
“Who?” Annie asked.
“We don’t know.”
“We? You mean
they
, don’t know. Sheriff Schanno and his men.” Jenny looked at him in the same way her mother did whenever she caught Cork in a slip of the tongue.
“Right,” Cork said. “That’s what I meant.”
Stevie appeared troubled, his small face intense and focused as his mind worked. “He got blowed up?”
“They’re not sure, buddy. He might have died in the fire.”
“He got burned up?”
Cork felt his stomach turn as he watched his son work on that one in his small head. “Tell you what,” he threw in quickly. “Let’s you and me go to the bank and get some small bills so we can do business today.”
Stevie brightened. “Will I get a Tootsie Pop?”
“If they don’t give you one, we’ll change banks. How’s that?” He hefted his son onto his shoulders. “Hold down the fort, you two.”
“We’re on it, Dad,” Annie said.
• • •
When Cork returned almost half an hour later, a beaten-up Econoline van stood parked in the graveled lot of Sam’s Place. The van was a dull green and wore a thick coating of dust. Painted on the side, barely visible now beneath the grit, was a huge white pine. Scripted in red letters under the pine were the words
SAVE THEM AND WE SAVE OURSELVES
. The van carried California plates.
A young man lounged against the counter at the serving window. He appeared to be in his early twenties; he had curly blond hair, wire-rimmed glasses, a light green T-shirt with the sleeves rolled high up on his biceps, cutoff jeans, and hiking boots. He laughed as he spoke with Jenny. Near the picnic table on the grass that edged the shoreline of Iron Lake, a woman about Cork’s age leaned on a carved wooden cane and stared across the glimmering blue water. When she turned and walked to the picnic table, her gait was slow and appeared to cause her a good deal of pain. She relied heavily on the cane.
The young man slid money to Jenny and received in return a white sack and two shakes. Cork, as he headed toward the door, heard the final exchange between the two of them, French words he didn’t understand. The young man took the sack and shakes and joined the woman at the picnic table. They talked quietly, then opened the sack and began to eat.
“Dad,” Jenny called to Cork as he came in. “That guy. He studied in Paris, at the Sorbonne.”
“He
says
he studied at the Sorbonne,” Annie pointed out. “Sister Amelia warned me that men will say whatever they think you want to hear.”
Jenny fisted her hands on her hips. “Yeah? And
what would that dried-up old cow know about men? The nearest she ever came to being with a guy was that Halloween Stuart Rubin got drunk and put on a Richard Nixon mask and trick-or-treated at her door stark naked. You know what she said to him?”
“Everybody knows what she’s
supposed
to have said.”
“What?” Stevie asked.
Jenny smiled down at her brother. “‘Thank you, Lord.’ “
Stevie’s right cheek bulged around his Tootsie Pop. “Huh?”
“Never mind,” Cork said to him. “Why don’t you help your sisters get some more cups out and ready to go. I’ll be in the back with the books,” he told the girls.
Cork sat at the desk in the back part of Sam’s Place and pulled out the ledgers he used to track the finances of his business. So far, in terms of profits, the summer had been stellar. The heat drove people early to the lake, and when they got hot on the water, they often headed toward the little stretch of shoreline at Sam’s Place where the big red pine shaded the picnic table. Cork paid his daughters a good wage, and not just because he loved having them around. They were excellent help. Annie possessed such a sense of responsibility that God, on the seventh day, could easily have turned his new creation over to her and napped without a worry. Jenny had a mystique and a skill with people that kept them talking with her through the serving window long after they’d been given their order. Studying the numbers in his ledgers and listening to the laughter of his children in the other room, Cork was fairly certain that—even full of smoke and fire—this summer would be the best since he’d taken over Sam’s Place.