13
And they robbed all that came
along that way by them. . . .
JUDGES 9:25
THE TROOPER USHERED KANE OUT THE DOOR AND locked it behind them. He unplugged his cruiser, climbed in, locked the shotgun in its rack, started the SUV, and backed it fast onto the highway, straightened, and roared off, lights flashing and siren wailing.
That seems a little excessive on an empty
highway, Kane thought as he tried to keep the trooper’s lights in
sight. But he could remember what it was like to be young and
behind the wheel of a police car, adrenaline racing through his
veins. Slade seemed to have that going on in spades. Kane looked at
the speedometer. He was doing seventy, but the cruiser was pulling
away.
Kane was just able to make out the trooper’s
brake lights, but lost them as the cruiser made a high-speed turn
onto the mine road. He backed off the accelerator and followed at a
more sedate pace. By the time he reached the crime scene, in a
curve about halfway to the mine, the cruiser was slewed across the
road, lights still flashing. The trooper was standing next to it,
arguing with a couple of men.
Kane pulled to a stop well short of the
cruiser.
“I said go back to the mine,” the trooper was
shouting as Kane opened his door. “You’ve already compromised the
crime scene, so don’t make matters any worse.”
Kane walked in the cruiser’s tire tracks to where
the trooper stood. A couple of yards beyond it, one of the mine’s
Explorers was nosed into the alders at the side of the road. Both
front doors were open. Lester Logan was sprawled facedown in a
blood-soaked patch of snow near the rear of the Explorer, a shotgun
next to his outflung hand.
“You’re standing on mine property,” one of the
men said, in a tone that said he was trying to be reasonable. They
were both older than the trooper and didn’t seem at all impressed
by him. “Besides, that’s one of ours laying there.”
“I don’t care if it’s your brother,” Slade said.
“I want you to walk, carefully and in your own footprints, back to
your rig and go back to the mine. If you don’t, I’m going to put
cuffs on you and send you into Anchorage.”
The two men looked at each other.
“Do what he says, Tony,” Kane said. “He’s law and
you’re not, now.”
“Hello, Nik,” said the man who had spoken. “I
guess you’re right, but it’s hard to remember sometime, isn’t it?
Especially when you know a kid with a badge is only going to fuck
things up.”
“Now, listen . . .” the trooper began, but the
two men turned and walked single file toward another Explorer
parked some distance up the road. The man Kane had called Tony
moved with a noticeable limp.
“Was there anybody else with this car?” Kane
called.
“Charlie Simms,” Tony threw back over his
shoulder. “He took a hell of a whack, and they’ve got him in the
infirmary.”
The two men reached the other Explorer, got in,
and backed up the road and out of sight.
“What are you doing here?” the trooper
snapped.
“I’m here to help you,” Kane said, “and if you’ve
got any sense at all, you’ll let me.”
“Just stay out of my way,” the trooper said,
opening the door to his car. A blast of warm air from the cruiser’s
heater washed over Kane.
“How do you know those guys?” the trooper asked,
taking a small camera from the passenger seat. “They more washed-up
ex-cops like you?” He closed the door and started taking
pictures.
“I don’t know the one guy,” Kane said, “but the
other one, Tony Figone, used to be on the Anchorage force with me.
He was a good cop, until he tore up a knee and medicaled. If you
keep at it long enough and you’re smart enough, you might hope to
be as good a cop.”
The trooper grunted and kept shooting.
“Not much of a camera for crime-scene photos,”
Kane said.
“Digital, gramps,” the trooper said, then moved
off to shoot from another angle. Kane followed along, as much to
keep moving in the cold as anything else. The trooper made a
complete circuit, snapping away.
“I can just load these onto my computer and send
them to crime-scene interpretation in Anchorage. For all the good
that’ll do. Those clowns tracked all over, and the road’s packed
too hard and been traveled too much for tire tracks to tell us
anything. If there’d been some fresh snow, we might be able to see
something.”
The trooper moved closer to the body, watching
where he put his feet. The exit wounds in Lester’s back were the
size of softballs. Slade moved gingerly around the body, taking
close-ups. When he was finished, Kane knelt next to the body and
put his palm on the back of Lester’s neck. It was already cold to
the touch.
“Going to be tough getting a time of death,” he
said.
“More like impossible,” the trooper said. “I
called for a doctor on the way here, but the closest one’s in
Rejoice and doesn’t have any medical examiner experience. So it’s a
good thing we’ve got an eyeball witness.”
“Can I roll him over?” Kane said.
“Don’t see why not,” the trooper said.
Kane did. Rolling Lester over wasn’t easy; the
body was stiff with cold. But when Kane finally had Lester lying on
his back, he and the trooper could see the dead man’s chest
clearly.
“You ever handled a murder before?” Kane
asked.
“No,” the trooper said, “but I know the
procedures.”
Kane could hear the defensiveness in his
voice.
“Okay,” he said, leaning over to look closely at
Lester’s chest.
“Two shots, large caliber. Tap, tap.” He rolled
the body over. “No obvious powder marks around the wounds, so the
shooting wasn’t point blank, but the entry wounds are close
together, which argues for either close range or a very skilled
shooter. There’s no telling where the bullets went after they
passed though Lester. I suppose if we were to examine every tree
within range we might find something.”
The trooper snorted. Kane rolled the body over
once more and looked into Lester’s face. His lips were pulled back
in a sick caricature of a smile and his eyes stared unseeing at the
sky.
Maybe he’s looking at God right now, Kane
thought. If so, I’ll bet he wishes he’d led a better life.
“You should get on the horn and call for a
helicopter,” he said aloud. “Get the body to a competent ME and
criminologists as soon as possible.”
“Right,” Slade said sarcastically. “We’ve got the
budget to be flying dead people around.”
For an instant, rage reddened the edges of Kane’s
vision. He fought it back, stood up, and looked at the
trooper.
“Listen, kid, and listen good,” he said. The
trooper took a step back. He could hear the anger in Kane’s voice,
too.
“I don’t give a shit if you’re happy in your job.
I could care less if you like me, or wish I was a thousand miles
away. But here are the facts. I know a lot more about this sort of
thing than you do. More than that, I make one phone call, and
you’ve got the brass crawling up your ass asking why you didn’t
take the advice of a veteran police officer. Probably be the end of
your short, unhappy career in law enforcement. So get on your
telephone and order that chopper. I’m going up to the mine, and
I’ll send those guys you ran off back down to guard the scene. When
they get here, you can come on up and ask Charlie Simms some
questions, if he’s in any shape to answer.”
The trooper opened his mouth to say something.
Kane cut him off.
“And if you give me the slightest reason, and I
mean the slightest reason, you’re going to be sitting in a little
office in Anchorage answering questions from internal affairs, or
whatever it is your team calls the shoo flies, about why you blew
off the Faith Wright investigation.”
Kane and Slade looked at each other for a long
moment, until the trooper dropped his eyes. The two men walked back
to the cruiser and got in. Kane sat in the passenger’s seat,
soaking up heat and listening to the trooper’s cell phone call
requesting a helicopter. He was surprised at the way he’d attacked
the kid, but something about being involved in an investigation,
two investigations now, the return of the old rhythms and
procedures, made him feel more confident.
“They’re laughing at me,” the trooper said,
putting his hand over the mouthpiece.
“Give me the phone,” Kane said, digging out his
wallet and removing the card the trooper brass hat had given him.
He broke the connection and punched in the number on the back of
the card.
“This is Nik Kane,” he said. “We met a couple
days ago. I’m out in Devil’s Toe now. Somebody hit the mine payroll
and killed one of the guards. Maybe you knew him? Lester Logan?
Used to be APD? Anyway, the body needs to get back to Anchorage
right away for processing, and whoever is answering the phone at
trooper headquarters in Anchorage”—he put his hand over the phone
and said, “You did call Anchorage, right?” and the trooper
nodded—“yeah, in Anchorage, is being a dickhead about sending a
chopper.” He listened for a minute. “Of course this is going to
cause some shit,” he said. “We shouldn’t be wasting time talking
about the obvious.” He listened some more. “Okay,” he said, and
hung up.
“There’ll be a chopper in the air within five
minutes,” he said.
“Who was that?” the trooper asked.
Kane ignored the question.
“I just thought of something else that needs
attention,” he said, getting out of the cruiser. The trooper did
the same. Kane walked around to where he could see the crime
scene.
“From the grooves in that berm beside the road,
it looks like somebody pulled up alongside and forced them off,” he
said. “So the perps must have had four-wheel drive.”
“Fat lot of good that does,” the trooper replied.
“There’s hardly anybody out here who doesn’t.”
“Yeah,” Kane said, “but maybe this one left some
paint behind. Let’s look.”
The two men walked over and examined the left
side of the Explorer.
“Nothing,” the trooper said.
The two men stood there for a moment.
“I’m headed up to the mine,” Kane said. “Come on
up when you’re relieved.”
He walked back toward his truck.
“Hey,” the trooper called, “you’re the one who
should be staying here.”
Kane ignored him, got into his pickup, drove off
the road, around the cruiser and the crime scene, then back onto
the road and up to the mine. He found the front gate open and
nobody in the box. He drove to the trailer where Simms had his
office and walked in. He walked past the secretary, who called,
“Wait a minute.” He ignored her, opened the door to the conference
room, and walked in. For the first time since he’d gotten out of
prison, he was feeling like he was in his element, in
control.
Richardson, the mine manager, was sitting at the
table with a couple of other suits and the two men the trooper had
run off.
“Take your pal here, Tony, and go back down and
secure the crime scene,” Kane said. “Then send the trooper on up
here.”
“You taking over, then, Nik?” Tony asked
him.
“Just temporarily,” he said, “until somebody with
more experience shows up.”
Tony and his companion got to their feet.
“Wait a minute,” Richardson said, “where do you
two think you’re going? I’m in charge here.”
A slow smile spread across Tony’s face.
“That’s the way you want it, fine,” he said, “but
if you want the payroll back, your best bet is to let all of us do
what we know how to do.”
The mine manager looked from Tony to Kane to the
other suits. Finally he looked at Kane again.
“You sure you know what you’re doing?” he
asked.
Kane waved a hand at Tony and his
companion.
“Take off,” he said, “and don’t let anybody touch
anything.”
“Aw, jeez, Nik,” Tony said, “who do you think
you’re talking to?”
The two men left the room. Kane took a
chair.
“Do these two know about the payroll-shipment
arrangements,” he said, nodding at the other suits, “or should we
be talking alone?”
“They know,” Richardson said.
“Great,” Kane said. “How many others?”
“Just us,” the mine manager said, “and, of
course, Simms. It’s only the people who need to know. Reynolds here
is the chief accountant, and Lewes is the head of employee
relations.”
“Uh huh,” Kane said. “I don’t suppose that their
secretaries might have found out, or anybody else who works in the
office?”
“We keep the information to ourselves,” the one
called Reynolds said. He didn’t sound very convincing.
“Never mind,” Kane said. “Tell me about the
arrangements for this shipment.”
The mine manager hesitated, looking at the other
two suits.
“Look,” Kane said, “you want your best chance at
recovering the payroll, talk. Otherwise, don’t.”
Richardson sighed and started talking.
“We used to deliver the payroll the same way
every time. Armored car from a bank in Fairbanks. But a few months
ago, Charlie suggested we start changing up. He was getting nervous
about being so predictable. ‘It’s a four-hour trip, and there’s
lots of places to waylay that armored car,’ he said.
“It made sense to change up the arrangements, so
we did. We still use the armored car from time to time, but we’ve
flown the money in in a small plane, and had it driven down in an
unmarked car. The four of us pick a method the day before the
shipment, and that’s how it’s delivered.”
“How was it delivered this time?” Kane
asked.
“Airplane,” Richardson said. “Simms and Logan met
it at the landing strip.”
“Wait a minute,” Kane said, “I drove by the
landing strip coming from Rejoice. I didn’t see anybody
waiting.”
“That’s a different strip,” Reynolds said. “The
Devil’s Toe strip is up the highway a ways.”
“How much money did they get?” Kane asked.
Reynolds looked at a printout that lay in front
of him.
“One hundred thirty-seven thousand, three hundred
thirty-four dollars and seventeen cents,” he said.
“Not much for an operation this size,” Kane
said.
“Some of the men have their salaries deposited
directly into the bank,” Reynolds said.
“And we’re down to a skeleton crew right now,”
the mine manager said. “Gold prices are kind of soft.”
“Still,” Kane said, “if whoever did this had
waited until summer, they could have gotten—what?—twice that? With
enough overtime, three times?”
“True,” Richardson said, “but a hundred
thirty-seven thousand dollars is nothing to sneeze at.”
Kane was silent for a moment.
“Any idea who might have done this?” he
asked.
The three men looked at one another and all shook
their heads.
“I know Simms was worried that somebody inside
the mine would be involved,” the mine manager said.
“So he must have thought it would be one of you
three,” Kane said, “since you keep the payroll information so
secret.”
The three men looked at one another again.
“Look,” Richardson said, “the truth is, I don’t
know who might have known about the shipment. This office isn’t all
that big, and the walls aren’t all that thick.”
Kane got to his feet.
“So you’ve got—what?—seventy, eighty people
working here now, and any of them might be involved?” he said. “And
some of them have got families who might have heard, and others get
drunk at the roadhouse and might tell anybody? What were you people
thinking?”
No one said anything.
“Okay,” Kane said, looking at the mine manager,
“why don’t you show me where Charlie Simms is?”
Richardson went into his office and came out
wearing a coat. Kane followed him out the door and across to a
prefab wooden building.
“Look, it won’t do any good to stress the
negative,” Richardson said as they walked. “It’ll only make
trouble. For your friend Simms, as well as everyone else.”
Kane followed the mine manager into the building,
down a short hall, and into what could only be a clinic. Charlie
Simms lay on an examining table under a light blanket, an IV
dripping something into his arm, and wires running from his body to
a couple of machines. A small black man with a trim goatee sat on a
chair next to him, making notes on a clipboard.
“This is Divinity Aaron, our medic,” the mine
manager said to Kane.
“Mr. Aaron,” Kane said, “how’s the
patient?”
“He took a heck of a blow,” the medic said.
“Seems a little concussed but otherwise okay. His pulse is strong,
and so’s his blood pressure. I’ve got fluid running to keep him
hydrated.”
Simms’s eyes fluttered open.
“Who’s there?” he whispered.
“It’s me,” Kane said, “Nik Kane. How you doing,
Charlie?”
“Head hurts like hell,” Simms whispered.
“Can you tell me what happened?” Kane
asked.
Simms closed his eyes. The silence stretched out
so long that Kane thought he’d gone to sleep. Then Simms cleared
his throat.
“Can I have a drink of water?” he asked.
The medic picked up a plastic cup with a straw in
it and held it to Simms’s lips. Simms lifted his head a little,
groaned, and drank. His head fell back on the pillow.
“I can’t remember,” Simms said, his voice a
little stronger. “I remember meeting the airplane at the Devil’s
Toe airstrip, getting the money, driving back. But after turning
onto the mine road . . . nothing. God, my head hurts.”
“Might be better if you let him rest for a
while,” the medic said.
“Okay,” Kane said. “There’s a doctor coming over
from Rejoice. I’ll send him by here to check Charlie out. There’s a
trooper helicopter headed this way, too, so if he needs to go to
town to get checked out, we can send him on that.”
“Don’t want to go to town,” Simms said. “Want to
catch whoever did this to me.”
“I’m sure you do, Charlie,” Kane said. “I’m sure
you do.” To the medic, he said, “You take a gun off him?”
The medic pulled open a drawer and handed Kane an
automatic. It was a Glock 17. Not Kane’s favorite weapon, but
dependable and relatively cheap. Kane popped out the clip, then
worked the slide. A round arced out onto the floor. The clip was
full, and the gun didn’t smell of gunpowder.
“Hasn’t been fired,” Kane said, reloading it and
replacing it in the drawer. “Lester’s shotgun hadn’t been, either.
So none of our bad guys is leaking blood.”
He looked around the room, saw Simms’s clothes
hanging on a chair, and scooped them up.
“I’ll bring you some more clothes, Charlie,” he
said, “but these are going to the crime lab.”
Simms didn’t reply. Kane walked out of the
clinic, followed by the mine manager.
“Why are you taking his clothes?” Richardson
asked. “You don’t think he’s involved, do you?”
“Standard procedure,” Kane said. “The lab might
be able to lift something that tells us about the perps.”
The trooper pulled up as they reached the mine
manager’s office. Kane stuffed Simms’s clothes into a big evidence
bag. His coat was too big to fit, so the mine manager went off to
find a garbage bag.
“You can try Simms if you want to,” Kane said to
Slade, “but he’s pretty loopy and says he doesn’t remember anything
about the crime.”
“I suppose he’ll keep,” the trooper said. “I
wonder if they’ve got any coffee in there.”
“I’m sure they do,” Kane said, and led the way
into the office trailer.
From there they went to search Charlie Simms’s
quarters, in a nest of prefabs as far from the mill house as they
could be and still be inside the fence. Even at that distance, Kane
could feel a light shaking in the floor. The quarters were about
the size of a decent hotel suite: bedroom, bathroom, living room,
and kitchen.
The search didn’t take long. There were a few
clothes in the closet and dresser, shampoo, shaving gear,
cholesterol medicine, and Viagra in the bathroom.
“Viagra?” Slade said. “What’s he want with Viagra
out here?”
“Good question,” Kane said, “although just
because he has it with him doesn’t mean he’s using it.”
There was beer in the refrigerator, canned food
in the cupboards and dirty dishes in the sink, a paperback western
on a table next to one of the armchairs, a row of videotapes
beneath the big TV. About what Kane expected to find in a
construction camp room.
By five p.m., they were back in the trooper’s
office. They’d examined the Explorer thoroughly, searched Logan’s
locker and Simms’s office, and come up with zip. They sent Lester
Logan’s body and Simms’s clothes back to Anchorage on the
helicopter. The pilot said that a couple of trooper investigators
were on their way out from Anchorage by car.
The doctor from Rejoice had said he couldn’t tell
how serious Charlie Simms’s injuries were, and he’d be happier if
Simms went to town for evaluation and observation. So Kane had
packed him a bag, and they’d loaded Simms on the chopper, too,
along with the medic.
“Just make sure he gets to the hospital okay,”
the mine manager told the medic. “We’ll charter you back here in
the morning.”
The medic had grinned at the prospect of a night
in town.
After the now fully loaded helicopter left, Kane
and Slade made one more eyeball scan of the area before the light
left completely, found nothing new, and reopened the road. In
between all that, they’d done a lot of waiting, eaten a lunch the
mine’s kitchen had knocked together for them, and drunk a lot of
the mine’s coffee.
“Any ideas about this?” Slade asked. He had his
hat off, his collar open, and his stocking feet up on his desk. His
hair was a mess, and he looked about twelve.
“Lots,” Kane said, “but nothing that bears
sharing right now. I guess what we do for the time being is wait
and hope Simms’s memory comes back. And you can keep an eye out for
anybody spending more money than he ought to have. Or taking any
spur-of-the-moment vacations.”
The trooper nodded.
“You think we’ll catch whoever did it?” he
asked.
“Oh, I’m sure of it,” Kane said.
Slade dropped his feet onto the floor and leaned
forward.
“What do you know that I don’t?” he asked, so
earnestly that it made Kane laugh.
“There aren’t enough hours in the day for me to
answer that question,” Kane said. “But as far as this holdup goes,
just keep your shirt on. Part of being a good detective is knowing
when to press and when to wait.”
The trooper settled back in his chair.
“I’m sorry I was so snotty this morning,” he
said. “It’s just that life here is a lot more complicated than it
might look, and I’m not sure I’m cut out to handle it, even without
robberies and murders.”
“That’s not what we were having difficulties
about,” Kane said. “Remember? We were arguing about Faith
Wright.”
The trooper tensed at the mention of her name.
Kane stood up.
“I’m leaving now,” he said. “Monday, if you’re
still not too busy with the robbery, I’m going to want you to
accompany me to the high school so I can search the girl’s
locker.”
Slade started to say something, but Kane held up
his hand.
“Between now and then,” he said, “I want you to
think about how you’re going to handle this. If you’re wrapped
around the axle in some way that involves doing your job right,
decide how you’re going to deal with that. Just don’t think that
one of your options is to stonewall me or lean on me or somehow get
me to go away. Because that’s not going to happen.”
The trooper looked at Kane steadily for more than
a minute.
“What makes you think I’ve got a problem doing my
job?” he asked in a voice that sounded as young as he looked.
Kane laughed.
“I’ve made a few mistakes, too,” he said.
He put on his coat.
“Some of them,” he said, turning to go, “the
not-so-serious ones, happened early in my career, and older and
wiser heads helped me out. I’m offering you the same kind of help I
got. You’d be smart to take it.”