17
It is an honor for a man to
cease from strife: but every fool will be meddling.
PROVERBS 20:3
MASS ENDED, AND KANE WALKED OUT INTO THE CLEAR chill of winter. He took out his cell phone, saw he had a message, and called for it. Larry Littlefield’s voice told him that there was nothing about anyone named Feather Boyette in any of the criminal databases.
“But one of my computer monkeys found a Feather
Collins in the archives of the Fairbanks paper,” Littlefield’s
voice said, “giving money to some charity or cutting a ribbon or
something. Maybe she’s your girl. How many women named Feather can
there be? Either way, remember that I drink the single malt. Here’s
the Collins woman’s address.”
Littlefield rattled off an address and the
message ended. Well, Kane thought, as he wrote the address in his
notebook, that’s a long shot.
He walked back to his truck, drove to the grocery
store, and emerged with some bags of groceries and a case of beer.
He stopped at Café del Mundo for a couple of pounds of ground
coffee. He made another stop at Lowe’s and bought a set of
heavy-duty bolt cutters. He sat in the parking lot, breathing
deeply and telling himself: No more excuses and no more
hesitations. It’s time to go to work. He started the truck and
drove back toward Rejoice.
He stopped at Summit Lake to drink coffee from a
thermos. The view was as spectacular as that in any national park
in the Lower 48, and there had been a time when he could have sat
there and looked at it for an hour. Instead, he found himself
thinking about what the priest had said: “There is nothing covered,
that shall not be revealed; and hid, that shall not be known.” He
had to keep moving forward now. To lose his momentum was to lose
control of his new life. He gulped his coffee, tossed the dregs out
the window, and drove off.
Slade opened the door of the Devil’s Toe trooper
office. Kane handed him the case of beer, then went back for the
bags of groceries. When he returned, Slade led him to the back and
up a flight of stairs to the living quarters. They walked into a
living room, furnished with a couch and a couple of easy chairs. A
pocket kitchen was separated from the living room by a breakfast
bar, and a hallway led to what Kane assumed were the bedrooms. Two
investigators were sitting in the living room amidst paperwork and
the remains of a meal. Kane knew them both.
“Hello, Harry,” he said, “Sam.”
“Killer Kane,” the one he’d called Harry said.
“Shouldn’t you still be in prison?”
“Nice to see you, too,” Kane said.
“Knock if off, Harry,” Sam said. “He doesn’t mean
it, Nik. We’re both just unhappy to be told we have to let a
civilian poke around in the case. Nothing personal. Any civilian
would be the same. You’d have felt that way, too, back in the
day.”
Kane turned on his heel and walked out, down the
stairs and out the front door. He retrieved his duffel bag and
sleeping bag from the truck, carried them back up the stairs, and
dumped them on the floor.
“Don’t anybody get in a hurry to help,” he said.
“I wouldn’t want you to hurt anything.”
He pointed to the case of beer on the
countertop.
“It’s an assortment of local beers,” he said.
“They should be cold. Help yourselves.”
The investigators looked at one another.
“You going to tell us what you’re doing, messing
around in our investigation?” Harry asked.
Kane got himself a glass of water and took a seat
in one of the chairs at the counter, spinning around to face the
room. His smile wasn’t friendly.
“I’m not just some civilian, Sam,” Kane said,
ignoring the other trooper investigator. “And I’m not really here
to investigate the mine robbery. The people over in Rejoice have
asked me to find one of theirs who’s gone missing. Chief Jeffords
asked me to help, too, and as I guess you found out before you left
Anchorage, I have somebody high up in your chain of command I can
call. Plus, I’m consulting with Charlie Simms on mine security. Is
that enough for you yet?”
Harry started to reply, but Sam held up a
hand.
“We just don’t want you tracking up our
investigation,” he said.
“Fine by me,” Kane said. “I’ll need to borrow
Jeremy here in the morning for a little while to help me with my
investigation, and I certainly don’t want to get in your way. Just
for curiosity’s sake, though, what is your next step?”
The two men looked at each other again. It was
all Kane could do to not burst out laughing. He dug into the case
and pulled out some beer bottles.
“Like that, is it?” he said, handing one to each
of the troopers. “Well, let’s drink to the fact that most criminals
are stupid, and whoever took the payroll will probably fuck up and
catch themselves.”
The investigators looked at Kane, and suddenly
all three of them were laughing.
“You might be a clown, but you got that right,”
Harry said. “Cheers.”
They drank, Kane sipping his water, and told
stupid criminal stories for a while.
“You remember that bank robber,” Sam said, “the
one who wrote the holdup note on the back of one of his own deposit
slips? Had his name and address right on it?”
“Yeah,” Kane said, “and how about that guy who
killed his wife and tried to burn her up in the fireplace and when
he was caught in the act claimed she’d died and fell into the fire
on her own and he was just feeding her in because it wouldn’t be
dignified to let her be seen in a coffin all burned like
that?”
After they’d laughed and drunk some of the
tension away, Kane unpacked his groceries and made himself a
sandwich. The others kept drinking, Harry polishing off two bottles
to everyone else’s one.
“I tried to talk to Charlie Simms when I was in
Anchorage,” Kane said, around a mouthful of turkey, ham, and
Havarti, “but he’d had emergency brain surgery and was in no shape
to be talking. According to his wife, it’s touch-and-go if he ever
talks again.”
“It figures,” Sam said. “There’s not enough
evidence in this case to stick in your eye.”
“Got any results back from the lab tests on
Charlie’s clothes yet?” Kane asked.
“Are you kidding?” Harry said. “With the budget
the crime lab’s got, the techs are working nine to five, Monday to
Friday, and that’s it. We won’t get any results for a couple of
days at the earliest. Medical examiner’s office is the same way, so
we won’t get anything from the body ’til then, either. Doesn’t make
any difference to any of them that both victims used to be
cops.”
That set off a round of bitching about the hard
life of the law enforcement officer, followed by fresh beers for
everyone but Kane.
“Nothing from searching their rooms?” he
asked.
“You know the answer to that,” Harry said in a
sour tone. “You been all through their stuff. All we found is that
Simms lived like a monk and Logan lived like a slob. You didn’t
happen to remove anything we might be interested in, did
you?”
“Like what?” Kane said. “The minutes of their
last robbery-planning meeting?”
Harry tried to struggle out of his chair. It
occurred to Kane that everyone in the room except him had had too
much to drink.
“You always were a superior son of a bitch,”
Harry said, “but I guess you got what was coming to you.”
“Harry,” Sam said.
“Don’t Harry me,” Harry said. He looked at Kane.
“You know what it was like to wear a uniform after you shot that
kid? Do you? All the jokes about drunk cops and the sass from
teenagers? ‘What you gonna do, off-i-cer, shoot me?’ We got new
shooting protocols and mandatory alcohol counseling and stricter
firearms-discharge reviews. And all because you couldn’t hold your
liquor, you no-good son bitch. I should kick your ass for
that.”
Harry was swaying a little now. Kane slid off his
stool, walked around the breakfast bar, put his hand on Harry’s
shoulder and eased him back down in his chair.
“Nobody’s fighting tonight, Harry,” he said.
“It’s time for sleep.”
He turned to Slade.
“I suppose you’ve only got enough beds for the
three of you,” he said.
“There’s the couch,” Slade said.
“Just give me the keys to the holding cell,” Kane
said. “I’ll sleep down there. It won’t be the first night I’ve
spent in a cell. Will it, Harry?”
The trooper investigator waved his hand sloppily
but said nothing.
“Guy’s a drunk himself,” Kane said quietly.
“Probably scared to death he’ll do something that’ll cost him his
pension. Or worse.”
Slade handed him some keys. Kane picked up his
duffel and sleeping bag and walked downstairs. He opened the cell
door, spread his sleeping bag on the bunk, and went to brush his
teeth in the bathroom off the office. He set his travel alarm for
seven a.m. and lay down. He tried to think about Faith Wright and
what he needed to know, what he knew, and what he suspected about
the mine robbery. But he couldn’t. Instead, he thought about what
Harry had said. It might not have been a crime to shoot that kid,
but it had been a sin. And he’d done his penance, hadn’t he? His
penance, and then some. He followed these thoughts into the
darkness. When the alarm dragged him into wakefulness, it seemed
like he’d been asleep only a matter of moments.