Whisper to the Blood (33 page)

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Authors: Dana Stabenow

Tags: #General, #Mystery fiction, #Suspense, #Fiction, #American Mystery & Suspense Fiction, #Detective, #Mystery, #Mystery & Detective, #Fiction - Mystery, #Crime & mystery, #Crime & Thriller, #Mystery & Detective - Women Sleuths, #Women Sleuths, #Alaska, #Murder - Investigation, #Shugak; Kate (Fictitious character), #Women private investigators - Alaska

BOOK: Whisper to the Blood
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"We think they did," she said. "Let's find them first."

He raised an eyebrow. "You got any thoughts on that score?"

"Where to find them, you mean?" Her turn to frown. "According
to Vidar, they haven't been back home in maybe as long as two weeks. Out that
long, they'll need shelter, and food." She got up and walked to the map of
the Park on the wall, and ran her finger down the line that represented the
Kanuyaq River. "I'm guessing, if they're still alive, that they've
squirreled themselves away in the hills somewhere."

"That narrows it down."

"Yeah, actually it does." Her finger left the river and traced the
line of foothills between it and the Quilak Mountains. "There are a lot of
old mines back there, a lot of old gold dredges, too."

"Yeah," he said, "probably fifty, a hundred? You able to
narrow it down any more?"

"Dan could help us do that." She looked around in time to see the
expression on his face. "He's got the most up-to-date records and maps
about mines and equipment in the Park. He's always on the lookout for
squatters. He'll know if there is anything out there in good enough shape to be
used for more than an overnight shelter."

He didn't say anything, and she said persuasively, "Come on, Jim. I
don't know what's going on with the two of you, but you have to talk to him
sometime."

He scowled. She waited. Mutt groomed.

"When he found Deem's body?" Jim said.

"Yeah?" Kate said.

"He tampered with the crime scene." She waited.

He sighed. "Deem had the deed to the Smiths' forty acres in his pocket.
He and Smith were co-owners. It retains subsurface rights."

"Oh," Kate said. "Like if they found gold on the creek."

"Dan's pretty sure it was all about the gold. He thinks Louis
bankrolled Smith, and it was why he was going to marry Abigail and why Smith
was going to let him. I think it's why Louis was headed up to the Step that
day, to establish their mining rights."

"Why did Dan take the deed?"

"Ah, jesus, who knows. He was half in the bag for one thing. Moron.
Nobody knows better than him, unless maybe it's you, that you don't remove
evidence from a crime scene."

"You didn't charge him."

"No," he said glumly, "I didn't charge him. I should have,
but I didn't."

Considering what he himself had done or not done in the matter of the murder
of Louis Deem and the Koslowski murders, he was as at fault as Dan was of
withholding evidence. Maybe, he thought now, that might be why he'd stayed mad
at Dan for so long. It was hard to forgive someone for behavior of which you
yourself were guilty. You knew only too well how much in the wrong you were.

She was silent for a moment, and then she repeated herself. "You have
to talk to him sometime, Jim. If nothing else, you have to work with him."

"Fine," he said without enthusiasm. "You go on home. I'll
detour up to the Step."

"No need," she said. "I passed him on the way here. Looked
like he was headed for Bernie's."

He brightened a little.

They got up. Kate paused in the doorway. "Howie still in the
back?"

"Yup."

"Good."

"Well, he won't leave until I catch whoever shot Mac, and when he heard
about Talia I thought he was going to wet his pants. As long as I don't need
the room and he buys his own food, I'm okay with it." He hesitated.
"I did talk to Judge Singh, and she says that lacking anything more than a
tire print we don't have a case against him for Louis."

"Did you tell her about the aunties?"

"Yes," he said, a little apprehensively. When she didn't go off on
him he relaxed again. "She says she's disinclined to issue a warrant for a
dog on the say-so of Howie Katelnikof."

"The aunties still not talking?"

"Haven't seen them today, I've been otherwise engaged. And Howie of course
is now reneging his-quote-nonconfession confession-end quote-right, left, and
center. He says he must have been drunk, and I hadn't Mirandized him, and I was
threatening him anyway and he got scared and confused and he would have said
anything to get me to leave him alone, and—"

"I get the picture. Still, good that he's here where we can keep an eye
on him."

She preceded him out the door and she didn't see the curious look he gave
her.

 

 

 

 

TWENTY-ONE

 

N
o belly dancers or church socials
this evening, just the regular crowd, a group of old farts playing pinochle at
the round table beneath the blare of the basketball game on the television
hanging over their heads, and a mosh of couples on the handkerchief-sized dance
floor barely moving to the competing blare of Linda Ronstadt's "Blue
Bayou." About half the tables were filled, the amount of empties per
tabletop indicating the seriousness of the drinkers seated there, although
nobody seemed especially drunk. No one seemed especially happy, either, except
of course for the four Grosdidier brothers, although when Kate took a closer
look she could see that Matt seemed a little strained.

"Damn," Jim said, looking at the Grosdidiers, "I hadn't
realized the extent of the damage. I wonder what the other guys look
like."

Nick and Eve Waterbury sat at one table. Eve had one timidly restraining
hand on Nick's arm and radiated anxiety. She was saying something in a low
voice. Nick had his face turned away. At first glance he looked sullen, at
second angry, at third despairing. Kate made a mental note of distance and
elevation. Nick wasn't much of a drinker but he had a temper, and it looked
like Eve was testing it.

Jim gave her a gentle nudge with his elbow. The four aunties were sitting in
the corner at their regular table. There was no greeting called to Kate and
Jim, just four heads studiously bent over the current quilt, a bright,
geometric splash of primary colors.

Bernie was behind the bar, a tall, thin presence with a calm face and what
hair he had left bound back into a ponytail that reached to his belt.

Strike that, Kate thought, looking at Bernie, not thin, gaunt. Bernie looked
as if he hadn't had a good meal since his wife died. His cheeks were hollowed
out, his eyes sunken, the tendons of his hands stood out like whipcord. The
past year had aged him ten. "Hey, Kate," he said. "Mutt."

Instead of rearing up to place both front feet on the bar as was her
invariable habit, Mutt trotted around it to butt Bernie's hand with her head.
She looked up at him with what could only be described as a kind, loving gaze,
if anything coming out of predatory yellow eyes could be called kind. For a
moment Bernie seemed to stop breathing. Then he cuffed Mutt gently, pulled down
a package of beef jerky, and said, albeit a little shakily, "Get out from
behind the bar before I make you buy a round for the house."

Her tail swept a graceful arc. She nudged him again and then trotted back
around the bar to Kate.

"Jim," Bernie said, looking over Kate's shoulder.

"Bernie," Jim said, looking at the bottles lined up in back of the
bar.

"What'll you have?"

"Coffee," Kate said, taking a stool, "and heavy on the
cream."

"Same," Jim said, sitting next to her.

On Jim's other side was Dan O'Brien, his back to them as he continued his
ongoing attempts to romance Bernie's newest barmaid, one Laura Delgado, a
Latina import from California who had followed a Bristol Bay fisherman north a
year before. He had not proved to be as attractive in his natural habitat as he
had been on a free-spending spree through the clubs of her native Los Angeles,
and she had left him to start hitchhiking home the previous fall. In Ahtna
she'd stopped to replenish the treasury by waiting tables at the Lodge, where
she'd met and fallen madly in love with Martin Shugak.

That she'd fallen in love with Martin Shugak was a nine-day wonder in the
Park, but, Kate thought, perhaps not so difficult, because no matter what
Auntie Edna said the only person who could fall in love with Martin would be
someone who didn't live in the Park and therefore did not know him well. At any
rate little Laura Delgado had followed Martin home to Niniltna, and at the end
of the road Bernie gave her a job. She was short and plump with polished golden
brown cheeks, a perpetually wide smile, a perfect set of large white teeth, and
a flirtatious look in her bright brown eyes that was going to get her into
trouble before breakup. It didn't hurt that she sounded like Jennifer Lopez,
and had considerably more cleavage.

"Bernie," Kate said in a quiet voice, "how often has Nick
Waterbury been in here lately?"

Bernie followed her gaze and said with a noticeable lack of interest,
"He's in here four nights out of five anymore."

"Eve always with him?"

"Sometimes yes, sometimes no."

"He drinking a lot?"

Bernie shook his head. "Not a lot. Steady, though."

"Yet another charge to put on Louis Deem's tab," Kate said.

Little Mary Waterbury, daughter and only child of Nick and Eve, had been
Louis's third wife and last victim. She half rose to her feet. "Maybe I
should—"

"No." Bernie held up a cautionary hand. "Leave them
alone." His mouth twisted. "It's all we can do for them now, but we
can do that much."

She looked at Jim. "Bernie's right," he said. "You can't fix
this. If it's gonna get fixed, Nick and Eve have to do it."

What he didn't say but what they both knew was that most marriages did not
survive the death of a child.

"Hey, Laura," Bernie said. "Thirsty people waiting."

She giggled, a dimple flashing in her left cheek, and with a toss of long
black hair she grabbed up her tray, winked at Dan, and sashayed off, giving him
a roguish look over her shoulder as she went. The impact was kind of lessened
when she collided with a chair but Dan sighed anyway, a lovelorn, wistful
sound. Usually it was breakup before Park rats started falling in love with
anything that didn't move out of the way first.

"Hey, Dan," Jim said.

Dan's back stiffened. He turned, very slowly, his eyes wary, a thickset
redhead with fair skin that flushed easily. He wore bibs over a plaid shirt and
high, thick-soled leather boots. "Hey, Jim. Kate. Didn't see you come
in."

"Yeah, we noticed," Jim said. "Looking for you,
actually."

"Really." Dan took a long deliberate pull at his beer and sat
contemplating the bottle for a moment. "What can I do for you?"

"You heard about the snow machine attacks on the river?"

The tension in Dan's shoulders eased slightly but his eyes were still wary.
"It's all anybody's been talking about, and my ears work fine."

"Yeah, figures. I was thinking I'd talk to the Johansen boys about
them."

Dan raised his eyebrows. "Couldn't hurt. What's that got to do with
me?"

"They appear to have changed location. Haven't been home in a couple of
weeks, according to their dad." "And?"

"And I don't think they'd leave the Park. So if they're still in the
Park, and they've changed addresses, I got to thinking about where they'd go.
And while I was thinking I remembered all those abandoned mines along the foothills
south of the Step. Lot of old timber they could use to build a shelter inside
one of them, put in a wood-stove, pack in some grub, melt snow for water, you'd
make it through as long as you wanted to. I was thinking, too, that you'd have
the best knowledge of those mines, and maybe even a map."

Dan shook his head. "No."

"You don't?"

"No, I do, but we've been closing those old mines, caving in the
entrances. They're an invitation to squatters, and they're dangerous to hikers
and backpackers. Every time I hear about a new one I close it up."

Jim shrugged. "Could be one of them was dug out."

"It'd be a major excavation, requiring at minimum one of Mac Devlin's
Cats," Dan said dryly. "You can bring a lot of rock down with a stick
of dynamite."

"That you can," Jim said with respect. "Any other ideas you
might have as to where the Johansens might be holing up?"

Dan scratched his head. "Hell, Jim, place is twenty million
acres."

"I know," Jim said with equal gloom.

They shook their heads, and Kate could see that all would eventually be
right in the world of their friendship.

She, on the other hand, was growing more and more worried about the
whereabouts of the Johansen brothers. They weren't home. According to Dan there
was no place for them to go to ground among the old mines. Kenny Hazen would
have called Jim if they'd shown up in Ahtna. Where the hell were they?

It was no joke to be out in the Park without shelter at this time of year.
Where could they go, especially if they were hurt? There'd have to be trees for
fuel, they had to stay warm, and-

She sat up, staring straight ahead. "Hey," she said.

Before she could say any more, the door to the Roadhouse slammed open.
Everyone looked around and two men stood in the doorway, one with blood frozen
on his face, the other supporting him. "Somebody else got jumped on the
river!"

"Fuck," Matt Grosdidier was heard to say clearly.

There was a general movement toward the two men. Jim nodded at the
Grosdidiers and made a hole through the crowd, Kate bringing up the rear. The
bleeding man started to slip and Luke Grosdidier slid a chair under his butt
before he fell all the way to the floor. The Grosdidiers did triage surrounded
by a supervisory buzz of commentary, Peter fetching a first-aid kit the size of
a hospital crash cart.

Jim let them get on with it for fifteen minutes before he said, "How
bad?"

"Not too," Mark said, his usually cheerful face serious as he
concentrated on the task at hand. "He's got a goose egg on the back of his
head and it bled a little, but he says he woke up on his own. We'll keep him
awake, in case of concussion, and he should probably go into Ahtna for an
x-ray, but I think he'll be okay."

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