2
Thus sayeth the Lord: Execute
ye judgment and righteousness, and
deliver the spoiled out of the hand of the oppressor.
deliver the spoiled out of the hand of the oppressor.
JEREMIAH 22:3
“SO WHAT COULD I DO?” KANE SAID, SITTING UP STRAIGHT in the hard wooden chair that faced Tom Jeffords’s desk. Jeffords didn’t want anyone but himself to be comfortable in his office. “I told him I’d try to find the girl.”
Jeffords sat behind the cherry wood desk in a
padded leather chair that, with the addition of just a few jewels,
would have been a throne. He was flanked by the red, white, and
blue of the U.S. flag, the blue and gold of the Alaska flag, and
the white-field-with-blue-anchor of Anchorage’s city flag.
The wall between the flags was covered with
certificates and plaques, each and every one of them awarded to
Thomas Jeffords. Stretching out from the flags to the far walls
were clusters of photographs of Jeffords with various dignitaries:
Pope John Paul II, Ronald Reagan, Bill Clinton, two George Bushes,
John Denver, B. B. King, Martha Stewart, Ted Nugent (the Motor City
Madman), several prosperous-looking Asians. If you were wealthy or
famous and visited Anchorage, it was hard to avoid having your
picture taken with Tom Jeffords.
Jeffords drummed on his blotter with a letter
opener.
“I’m glad to hear that,” he said. “They need the
help, and you need a new start.”
It must be nice to sit on a throne and issue
decrees, Kane thought.
“Look,” he said, “I just spent four hours
bouncing around the sky in a bush plane with a kid barely old
enough to drive, and another with a bunch of Bible thumpers, all as
a favor to you. So if you’re looking for me to start gushing
gratitude, don’t.”
“Angels,” Jeffords said, trying to balance the
letter opener on its point.
“What?” Kane asked.
“Angels,” Jeffords said. He moved his hands
slowly away from the opener. It started to fall. He grabbed it
again. “Their neighbors call them Angels. It’s not meant as a
compliment.”
“Why do you know so much about Rejoice?” Kane
asked.
Jeffords was silent. He moved his hands again.
The opener tilted to the side. He let it fall.
“Let’s just say I have an investment in the
area,” he said.
Kane could believe that. Jeffords’s title was
chief of police, but he really ran Anchorage. Doing so had made him
a rich man. Not from bribes and corruption. Jeffords was too smart
for that. But for more than a dozen years he’d been on the inside
of every good business deal in the city and many outside it. He
could have any sort of investment in the area around Rejoice.
Kane didn’t bother to ask what the investment
was. He knew from experience that Jeffords would tell him what he
wanted him to know and nothing more.
“What are they doing out there, anyway? The
Angels?” Kane said.
Jeffords spun the letter opener and watched it
wheel around until it stopped, business end pointed at Kane.
“I’m sure they could give you a better account
than I,” Jeffords said.
He gave the letter opener another spin.
“Seems like a hard place for a religious
community,” Kane said. “There’s got to be more welcoming
locations.”
Once again the opener pointed at Kane.
“What’s the point of having faith,” Jeffords
said, his words tinged with what might have been sarcasm, “if you
don’t test it?”
He spun the letter opener once more and both men
watched it revolve until it stopped, pointing at Kane.
“Are you a religious man now, Nik?” Jeffords
asked. “Do you believe in God?”
“What difference does that make?” Kane said,
hearing the irritation in his voice. “Jesus, Tom, you’ve known me
for more than thirty years. What are you asking me a question like
that for?”
“Rejoice’s preacher is said to be an eloquent and
convincing man,” the chief said. “It wouldn’t pay to be too
credulous. On the other hand, the Angels have created a religious
culture out there. It would help to be able to speak their
language.”
“I’ll get by,” Kane said, wondering what Jeffords
really meant by the question. Was the chief developing religious
scruples as he aged? Or was he afraid that during his years in
prison Kane, like so many other cons, had found Jesus?
He looked across the desk at the big,
silver-haired man in the tailored police uniform and
shrugged.
“This is probably a snipe hunt, anyway,” he said.
“By now the girl could be in Vancouver or Seattle or anywhere. Even
here.”
“I’m having my people keep an eye out for her,”
Jeffords said. “I’ve made inquiries of my friends in the state and
the Lower 48. Even our Canadian cousins. Nothing so far.”
“What is this girl to you?” Kane asked.
Jeffords’s answer was a thin smile.
“She’s a missing teenage girl from a respectable
family,” he said. “What else does she have to be?”
Classic Jeffords, Kane thought. An answer that
doesn’t answer anything.
“What are your plans?” the chief asked.
“I came back to collect a few things,” Kane said.
“I’ll load up and drive out there tomorrow sometime.”
“Good,” Jeffords said. “Is there anything else I
can do for you?”
“You can give me my job back,” Kane said.
“You know perfectly well that can’t happen,”
Jeffords said, holding up a hand to keep Kane from replying. “I
know, I know. You’ve been cleared of the charges against you. But
you still violated department policies. I’m taking a big political
risk helping you out at all.” Then his voice softened. “You’re a
good investigator, Nik, maybe the best I’ve ever worked with, but
you’ll never work here again.”
“So the fact I was falsely convicted doesn’t make
any difference?” Kane asked. “Is that fair?”
Jeffords shook his head.
“Don’t be childish, Nik,” he said. “As my father
used to tell me, fair is a place where men in overalls throw cow
chips for distance.”
“Your father was quite a card, wasn’t he?” Kane
said. “What if I sue?”
“Jesus, Nik,” Jeffords said, his voice tired,
“give it up. Start over. You made a mistake. You paid for it. Move
on.”
Kane bit down on an obscenity and swallowed it.
He didn’t really want to fight with Jeffords. Even if the chief had
left him dangling in the breeze back then, he owed him a lot.
Jeffords had quietly made sure he’d gotten a good defense lawyer.
He’d quietly helped out Laurie, Kane’s wife—soon-to-be ex-wife
now—while Kane was in prison. He was quietly trying to help him
now.
He owed Jeffords for all that, even though he
knew the chief had done it for his own reasons. For much of Kane’s
time with the police department, Jeffords had been his boss. But he
didn’t consider the chief a friend. Tom Jeffords was all about Tom
Jeffords.
“What are you doing in your dress blues, anyway?”
Kane asked to fill the silence.
The chief looked at Kane, then at the big gold
mariner’s clock on his desk.
“You remember how this job is,” he said. “It’s
always twenty-four/seven. My budget is up before the Assembly
tonight, then I’ve got to make an appearance at a fund-raising
dinner with Gwendolyn.”
“Political?” Kane asked.
“Not this time,” Jeffords said. “Charity.”
That was all the small talk Kane had in him, so
he just sat there, waiting to hear what else was on Jeffords’s
agenda.
“Have you put in your papers for your pension?”
the chief asked.
“No,” Kane said.
“Why not?” Jeffords said. “You’ve got, what,
twenty-five years in on the force?”
As if he hasn’t been looking at my file, Kane
thought.
“That’s right,” he said.
“Twenty-five years,” Jeffords said, “and the
expunging of your criminal record restored your pension rights.
You’re fifty-five. You’re entitled to the money now. Why not claim
it?”
Because if I draw my pension I can’t come back on
the force, Kane thought. But he didn’t say it. Jeffords knew why he
was stalling, and part of the reason he wanted Kane to make the
application was to foreclose the question of re-hiring him once and
for all.
“I just haven’t had the time,” Kane said.
The chief pushed a button on his desk. In a
moment his longtime secretary, a canny, competent woman named Emily
Lee, walked into the room. Her hair was gray now, and lines had
appeared at the corners of her eyes and mouth, but she retained
much of the beauty that had had cop after cop pawing the floor.
When they were all younger, Kane had been sure that Jeffords had
been fooling around with her. Then the chief had divorced his first
wife to marry money, and their relationship now seemed strictly
professional.
Emily Lee nodded to Kane.
“Hello, Emily,” Kane said. “Is he still working
you too hard?”
Emily Lee offered Kane a smile, and his heart
jumped.
“Yes, he is,” she said. “He’s such a stern
taskmaster.”
She turned to the chief and briefed him on his
schedule for the following day. When she was done, the chief said,
“Nik here needs help with his pension paperwork, Emily. Why don’t
you get his information from personnel and fill it out for him?
Then all he’ll have to do is sign it.”
The woman smiled, nodded, and left the room. The
chief rose and got into a long overcoat. Kane stuffed his feet into
the cold-weather boots, picked up his parka, and followed Jeffords
out.
“What do you know about the rough element out
there in Devil’s Toe?” Kane asked as they walked down a long
hallway.
“Every place has one,” Jeffords said.
I wonder if they still call those Jeffordisms,
Kane thought, those answers that don’t answer anything.
Getting out of the building wasn’t easy. Jeffords
was stopped in the hall by three people who needed to consult, so
Kane got to listen to conversations about materials procurement,
delays in the delivery of new patrol cars, and the lack of minority
applicants. He knew two of the people who stopped the chief, but
they both ignored him. A lot of the department didn’t know just
what to think about Kane, and having him walking the halls was
probably an embarrassment for them.
“Maybe you should keep me around as an object
lesson,” he said to Jeffords when the last of the conversations
ended. “You know, ‘There but for the grace of God . . .’ ”
“Nik . . .” Jeffords said.
“You know,” Kane said, interrupting the chief,
“if you’d stood behind me when all that happened, I might not have
been sent to prison.”
“I’ve explained that to you,” Jeffords said.
“There were political considerations.”
“Yeah,” Kane said, “there are always political
considerations.”
“And you were drunk,” Jeffords said.
Kane could hear the edge in the chief’s voice, so
he didn’t respond. Besides, Jeffords was right. He’d been
drunk.
“Do you need more money?” Jeffords said. Kane
took the question to be an olive branch, and he was careful to
reply calmly.
“No, thanks,” he said. “I still have plenty from
what you loaned me.”
The two men continued in silence. Jeffords also
stuck his nose into the watch commander’s office and the
dispatchers’ bullpen. The watch commander was a guy named Rudy
Jones, who got to his feet when he saw Kane and gave him a big
hello and a handshake. Apparently there was a part of the force
that saw him as a hero, Kane thought, or at least a guy who’d
gotten more than was coming to him.
The watch commander didn’t have much for the
chief; Kane knew from experience that what Jones really wanted was
for Jeffords to go home and leave him in charge. Two of the
dispatchers were frosted at being forced to come in on mandatory
overtime and let the chief know it. He laughed about it on the way
through the lobby.
“The department would stop running without those
women,” he said, “and they’re the first to tell you so.”
The air outside was warmer and moister than it
had been in Rejoice, but that wasn’t saying much.
“Feels like snow,” Kane said as he and Jeffords
descended the steps of police headquarters. The building was well
lit, the big towers of lights fighting the winter darkness to a
standstill. The headquarters was new, built five years earlier with
bond money approved by voters grateful to live in such a safe,
smooth-running city.
The new building had everything. It was built on
rollers and reinforced to withstand even the biggest earthquake. A
civilian couldn’t park a car within blast range or get past the
armed, bulletproof glass-encased receptionist in the lobby with
anything short of an RPG. One wing of the building housed an array
of up-to-the-minute communications equipment. Temblor, terrorist
attack, or Third World War, Jeffords was ready.
His driver had the chief’s bulletproof car
waiting in front of the building. Kane nodded to him and followed
Jeffords into the backseat of the black Lincoln Town Car. A
red-faced man in the blue-on-blue uniform of the Alaska State
Troopers was waiting for them, sitting in the jump seat.
“This is Major Denton,” Jeffords said to Kane as
the car pulled away. “He’s here unofficially to tell you a few
things about the area into which you are venturing. Stanley, this
is Nik Kane.”
Kane didn’t recognize Denton, and if the trooper
knew who Kane was, he did a good job of hiding it. Kane wasn’t
really surprised to see him. The two departments cooperated pretty
well, in part because Jeffords had gotten his start wearing a
Smokey Bear hat.
“Whenever you’re ready, Major,” he said to the
trooper.
“There are two communities in the area in
question,” Denton said. “I’m told you have visited Rejoice. Just
across the river, on the highway, is the town of Devil’s Toe.
“It’s not much more than a wide spot in the road.
Devil’s Toe started out as a mining town, and when the mining
played out, it shrank to little more than a roadhouse and grocery
store catering to the Natives scattered around the area.
“It’s still that today, although there’s a
component of the population composed primarily of riffraff who came
up to get federal homesteads back in the sixties and seventies.
Some of them proved up. Some didn’t. The ones who stayed are
dominated by a fellow who calls himself John Wesley Harding.”
“John Wesley Hardin?” Kane said. “The Texas
outlaw?”
“Harding, with a g,” the
trooper said. “This guy isn’t from Texas, he’s from back east
somewhere. Real name’s Francis Hogan.”
“Probably got the name off the Dylan album,”
Jeffords said. “It’s spelled with a g
there.”
Kane and the trooper looked at him.
“What?” Jeffords said. “I can’t like Bob
Dylan?”
The two men shrugged, and the trooper
continued.
“Nobody around there seems to know him as Francis
Hogan,” Denton said. “Everybody calls him Big John. He has a son,
Little John, who is in his thirties, and another son, a teenager,
whose name is, believe it or not, John Starship. His mother was a
teenage runaway who called herself Brenda Starship.”
“Big John was, what, in his fifties when the last
boy was born?” Kane said. “He liked them young then?”
“Still does, as far as we know,” Denton
said.
Kane could feel himself relaxing. A police
briefing was a familiar situation, and getting one reminded him of
better times.
“The mother still around?” he asked.
“Long gone,” Denton said. “She moved to
Anchorage, did some hooking, then married a GI and left the
state.”
Kane looked out the window. The car was traveling
through a part of town so generic everyone just called it midtown.
What had once been perfectly good muskeg had been scalped, filled,
and leveled, much of it while Kane had been in prison. In place of
the trees and willow bushes, malls and big-box stores had erupted.
In the block they were passing Kane counted seven fast-food
outlets. Of course, it was a long block. The roadsides were
decorated with a thin film of snow colored brown by the sand put on
the roads to improve traction. The short trees planted here and
there in the name of landscaping were leafless sticks. Hell must be
a place much like this, Kane thought.
“What else?” he asked.
“There are also some solid citizens in the area:
business owners, teachers, other state employees, even a few
legitimate homesteaders,” Denton said. “But Devil’s Toe has more
than its share of less-than-solid citizens.”
“Got it,” Kane said. “Lots of bad guys. Probably
bad girls, too. Go on, please.”
“For years, no one paid much attention to the
area,” the trooper said. “The Native people kept to themselves. The
residents of Rejoice were quiet and hardworking, and the citizens
of Devil’s Toe were no better or worse than in a lot of road
towns.”
“What changed that?” Kane asked.
“Two years ago, the Pitchfork mine opened,”
Denton said. “And some of the entrepreneurs of Devil’s Toe began to
offer, shall we call it, entertainment for the mine workers.”
“I don’t suppose we’re talking about movies?”
Kane said. “Community theater?”
“Women,” the trooper said. “Gambling.
Drugs.”
The car pulled up in front of Kane’s apartment
house.
“Why haven’t you people closed the bad places
down?” Kane asked.
Denton and Jeffords looked at one another.
“Don’t be soft, Nik,” Jeffords said. “You know
that wherever you have a bunch of men working you’re going to have
vice. Nobody wants these guys driving back and forth to Anchorage
or Fairbanks for their booze and nooky. Too dangerous.”
“Too likely they won’t come back, you mean,” Kane
said. “So letting the vice go on is just a service for the company.
Keeping the workforce happy and productive.” The silence in the car
was broken only by the rumbling of the engine and the whine of the
heater fan.
“Just what are you doing about the bad people in
Devil’s Toe?” Kane asked.
“Not much we can do unless we catch them
red-handed,” Denton said. “The protections of the legal system
extend to criminals even out in the tules.”
“But you have your best men on it?” Kane
asked.
“We have one trooper for several hundred square
miles,” Denton said. “Budget constraints. Our man out there is
named Jeremy Slade. He’s just out of training.”
“That’s the best you could do?” Kane said. “A kid
just out the of the academy?”
“These things are arranged by seniority,” the
trooper said. “None of the senior officers wants to live in Devil’s
Toe.”
“Or to try to enhance his career by looking the
other way, I’ll bet,” Kane said.
“Nik,” Jeffords said, a warning tone in his
voice.
Kane sighed.
“The people out in Rejoice say your man hasn’t
been much help with Faith Wright’s disappearance,” he said.
“His report says he’s checked around without
finding anything,” Denton said. “His opinion is that the girl, who
is nearly eighteen anyway, just ran off.”
Well, Kane thought, if he’d done a better job,
they wouldn’t need me.
“Okay, you’ve got a situation out there that
could explode at any time,” he said. “So what do you want me to do
about it?”
“What makes you think we want you to do anything
about it?” Jeffords asked.
Kane looked at him.
“The mine is a centerpiece of the governor’s
economic development policy,” Denton said. “He wouldn’t like to see
anything embarrassing happen there.”
“Neither would the mine owners, who have their
own concerns,” Jeffords said. “They have a substantial investment
in equipment. They have a significant amount of gold being stored
and shipped. Every two weeks, they have a large sum of money on
hand for payroll.”
“Cash?” Kane asked.
“Checks would hardly have much value out there,”
Jeffords said. “The company offers the workers the option of direct
deposit, but surprisingly few of them use it.”
Kane’s lips twisted in a sardonic smile.
“Wouldn’t want the money where the IRS or
child-support enforcement could find it,” he said.
No one said anything for a moment.
“So that’s it?” Kane said at last.
“That’s it,” the trooper said. “What everyone
would like is for peace to descend on Devil’s Toe, and particularly
the Pitchfork mine. We don’t mind them feeding booze to the
workers, or even running a cathouse, but we want to be certain
nothing worse is in the works.”
He reached into his shirt pocket, produced a
business card, and handed it to Kane.
“My private number is written on the back,” he
said, “in case you run into anything you need help with.”
Kane put the card in his pocket and got out of
the car.
“Oh, Nik,” Jeffords called after him, “when you
get out there, be sure to see the head of mine security first
thing. You know him. Charlie Simms.”
Kane closed the door and watched the car drive
off.
Yeah, I know Charlie Simms, Kane thought. He’s
the guy who helped put me in prison.