18
For nothing is secret, that
shall not be made manifest; neither any
thing hid, that shall not be known and come abroad.
thing hid, that shall not be known and come abroad.
LUKE 8:17
MISS EVELYN WISP, THE PRINCIPAL OF DEVIL’S TOE REGIONAL High School, did not look happy. She gave Kane and Slade the sort of look Kane’s fifth-grade teacher used to give him after some particularly boneheaded escapade. In fact, Miss Wisp—she insisted on the “Miss”—looked a lot like that teacher, whose name Kane could not for the life of him bring to mind. All the boys had simply called her Sister Mary Pointer, because a long, heavy wooden pointer had been her preferred tool for correcting misbehavior.
Of course, Kane thought, that nun would be five
hundred years old by now. And he doubted she would have broken her
vow of celibacy, even if she’d been able to find a man desperate
enough to help her do it. Could be a grandniece, though, Kane
thought. It was all he could do not to ask her, but he and Slade
were having enough trouble with Miss Wisp without adding fuel to
the fire.
The plain fact was that Miss Wisp did not want
them searching Faith Wright’s locker.
“Why, the hubbub will distract the students for a
week at least, and us with the exit exam coming up,” she
said.
“We could come back after school,” Slade
said.
“Yes, I suppose you could,” Miss Wisp said, as if
he’d just said the most obvious thing in the world. “But the
students would find out anyway. And so would the school board. I
wouldn’t want to have to explain this to the school board.”
Kane leaned forward in his chair.
“I’ll be happy to explain this to the school
board,” he said, fighting to keep his tone reasonable. “A girl is
missing, and we have her father’s written permission to search her
locker for clues to her whereabouts. Any more delay only adds to
her jeopardy. How do you think the school board will like it if it
turns out that she could have been helped, but the delay in
searching her locker prevented that?”
“You don’t know that Faith is in any trouble,”
Miss Wisp snapped.
“And you don’t know that she’s not,” Kane said
reasonably.
The principal sat glaring at Kane, her jaw
working as she sorted through her options. She’s certainly got that
look down, Kane thought. They must be related.
“I’m afraid I’ll have to call the school
district’s attorney and confer,” Miss Wisp said. “I’m not even
certain we know the locker’s combination.”
“That’s enough,” Slade said. “I want Faith
Wright’s locker number and I want it now. If anything other than
that number comes out of your mouth, I’m locking you up for
obstructing an official investigation, and you can talk to the
school district’s attorney through the bars.”
What’s gotten into him? Kane thought. Aloud, he
said, “I don’t think there will be any need for that, Jeremy. I’m
certain that Miss Wisp only wants what’s best for her
students.”
He poured a little more verbal oil on Miss Wisp’s
wounded feelings, and after looking in a file, she gave them the
locker number.
“But I was serious about the combination,” she
said. “I’ll have to see if anyone knows it.”
Kane knew she was bluffing and decided to call
her on it.
“That won’t be necessary,” he said. Leaving Slade
in the office, he walked out through the accumulating
students.
It felt good to do something, to move forward, to
let the role of the detective settle over him and armor him against
his fears and doubts. This was a job he knew how to do, and he
could feel his confidence, confidence that he could and would do
this job, growing within him.
He went to his truck, took the bolt cutters he’d
bought in Anchorage out of the back, and walked into the
school.
Devil’s Toe Regional High School was a rectangle
of one-story boxes with peaked roofs around a central court-yard.
The front box was divided by a two-story entrance module with a
cathedral ceiling that housed the library, administrative offices,
faculty lounge, and cafeteria. In the middle of the rear box was a
two-story block that Kane assumed was the gymnasium. The school
housed about 250 students, Miss Wisp had told them, eighteen
teachers, and an administrative staff of six. They really needed
more teachers and staff, she said, but the legislature was being
tight-fisted.
The first bell rang as Kane reentered the
building. Some of the students began drifting toward classrooms.
Others gave Kane and his bolt cutters the fish eye. They’re
probably worried that it’s their lockers I’m after, he thought. He
walked back into the principal’s office, where Slade and Miss Wisp
sat regarding each other like boxers waiting for the bell.
“These will get us into the locker,” Kane said to
Slade, holding out the bolt cutters.
“But the lock?” Miss Wisp said. “Who will pay for
the lock?”
Kane extracted a twenty-dollar bill from his
wallet and laid it on her desk.
“This should cover the cost of the lock,” he
said.
Miss Wisp looked at him with pursed lips.
Sister Mary Perpetua, Kane thought. That was her
name. At least, her nun name.
“We don’t have any way to take in cash from
strangers,” Miss Wisp said. “Besides, I’ve just remembered. We have
a list of locker combinations somewhere.”
“Too late,” Kane said. He wondered if he was
being high-handed because she looked so much like the nun. To
Slade, he said, “Let’s go.”
“I’m going with you,” Miss Wisp said.
“Fine,” Slade said, “just don’t get in our
way.”
Miss Wisp led them down one hallway, then halfway
down the next. Students were still putting things into lockers and
taking things out. Miss Wisp stopped in front of a closed
locker.
“This is it,” she said, “number
one-seventeen.”
“What’s going on?” asked a young man dressed, as
were half the students in the school, in dirty jeans and a flannel
shirt. He had a knit cap with a Carhartt label on his head.
“Nothing that need concern you, John,” Miss Wisp
said. “Go to your classroom.”
“It does concern me, Miss Wisp,” the young man
said. “Faith is a friend of mine.”
“You Johnny Starship?” Kane said. The boy looked
surprised and nodded warily. “Maybe you’d better stick around.
We’ve got some questions for you.”
“Mister—what did you say your name was?—you can’t
just question underage students,” Miss Wisp said. “It’s against the
law.”
Slade gave the principal a disgusted look and
opened his mouth to speak. Kane cut him off.
“I’m sure this young man wants to help us find
his friend,” he said, smiling. “And I’m sure that the school board
would want you to let him help us. But if you’d rather wait until
he can get a lawyer here from from Fairbanks or Anchorage, I’m
certain the girl’s father and everyone else will understand that
you are just looking out for the boy. They might question why you
put his rights before her safety, but you can explain that, can’t
you?”
Miss Wisp’s glare would have melted concrete, but
he had her and they both knew it.
“Go ahead,” she said in a voice that dripped
icicles.
“Give me the bolt cutters,” Slade said.
Kane handed him the tool.
“You stay right where you are, pal,” Slade said
to Johnny Starship.
The locker was secured by a cheap combination
lock run through holes in its handle. Slade gripped the locking bar
with the jaws of the bolt cutter and strained. The lock
broke.
“Good bolt cutters,” he said, handing them back
to Kane. Then he swiveled the locking bar to one side, pulled it
through the holes, and snapped open the locker.
The second bell rang.
“Students should go to their classrooms,” Miss
Wisp said, but none of the students who had formed a semicircle
around the locker budged. Kane saw a couple of teachers in the
crowd as well.
“Move along,” he said, raising his voice. “This
has nothing to do with you.”
The teachers started herding the students
away.
“Have a look,” Slade said to Kane.
The locker was as neat as everything else that
belonged to Faith Wright. The walls were undecorated gray metal. No
clothing hung in it. Textbooks stood in a line on the top shelf. On
the floor sat a pale-blue plastic step stool supporting a dark-blue
plastic crate. The crate contained binders of various colors,
arranged spine up. A pair of sensible-looking shoes sat beneath the
stool, to be exchanged for boots, Kane figured, and worn inside the
building.
“Clean enough to do brain surgery in here,” Kane
said. “You take the books, and I’ll take the binders.”
He picked up the crate and turned to Johnny
Starship.
“Go ahead to your first class,” he said. “It’ll
take us a while to go through these. Come and see us when it’s
over. We’ll be . . .” He looked at Miss Wisp. “Where will we
be?”
Miss Wisp pursed her lips so hard that they
disappeared. She said nothing.
“Surely you have an empty room we can borrow for
a couple of hours,” Kane said, keeping his tone light and
reasonable. Miss Wisp looked like a cartoon figure of anger. All
that was missing was steam coming out of her ears.
“Miss Wisp,” Slade said, his tone neither light
nor reasonable.
“I suppose you can use the counselor’s office,”
she snapped. “The counselor only visits once a week. This
way.”
“Come and see us in the counselor’s office,” Kane
told Johnny Starship, then followed Miss Wisp’s rigid figure down
the hallway.
Miss Wisp opened a room with a key, turned on the
lights, and walked in. The room was small and windowless, as homey
as Faith Wright’s locker. Kane and Slade put their loads on the
metal desk.
“Thank you, Miss Wisp,” Kane said. “We’ll find
you if we need anything else.”
Kane’s words set the principal vibrating with
indignation.
“This is my school,” she said. “Faith is one of
my students. I have an obligation to be here while you search her
belongings.”
“You have an obligation to cooperate with the
police,” Slade said, none too kindly, “and an obligation not to
obstruct an investigation. Good-bye.”
Miss Wisp looked from one man to the other, spun
on her heel, and marched out of the room.
“There goes someone to make telephone calls to
get us in trouble,” Kane said with a smile.
Slade laughed.
“Let her,” he said. “It won’t be the first time
I’ve gotten into trouble with a principal.”
The men pulled chairs up on the opposite sides of
the desk. Slade slid the first book off his pile and began leafing
through it. Kane did the same with the first binder. It was red,
and its spine was labeled “Civics.” It contained nothing but notes
and other papers relating to the class. The notes were in a clear
handwriting, feminine but unadorned by the curlicues Kane
associated with teenage girls. Each of the test papers in the
binder bore an “A” written in blue ink, and several pages appeared
to be notes for what seemed to be an ambitious term paper on the
separation of church and state.
The next binder, a green one labeled
“Trigonometry,” was just as well organized, clear, and
comprehensive. Kane, who didn’t remember a single bit of his high
school math, couldn’t make heads or tails of it. The blue one
labeled “Spanish IV” was just as bad. The marks in both were all
A’s.
“This is one formidable young lady,” he
said.
Slade set the last of the textbooks on the
pile.
“There’s nothing in these,” he said. “There’s
writing in some of them, but it’s all different and none of it
looks like the handwriting in the notebooks. Probably used
books.”
Kane took binders labeled “English” and
“Chemistry” off the pile and slid them over to the trooper.
“Check these out,” he said, then opened one
labeled “PE.” There wasn’t much in that but some handouts on
exercises and a couple of physical evaluations that said Faith
Wright was in good shape indeed. Kane turned to the last binder,
“Extra C.” He leafed through fliers for dances and student-body
elections and copies of the school newspaper.
“The only thing I see in here,” Slade said,
sliding the English binder onto the pile, “is notes on a lot of
feminist literature: Simone de Beauvoir, Nancy Hardesty, Catherine
MacKinnon. Plus a bunch of stuff about feminism and sexuality.
That’s a little unusual for a Christian girl, isn’t it?”
“Maybe,” Kane said, “but a young woman who wants
to go to the Ivy League probably needs to know that stuff. How do
you know those are feminist writers?”
Slade laughed.
“I took a course on feminism in college,” he
said.
“Know thine enemy?” Kane asked.
“I suppose,” Slade said, “but I don’t remember a
thing about that class. Except that it put me next to a lot of
women anxious to demonstrate their sexual independence.”
Kane turned a page announcing tryouts for the
school’s production of The Taming of the
Shrew and stopped.
“I’ve got something,” he said, sliding the binder
over to Slade. “Tell me what you make of this.”
What Kane had found were a pair of statements
from an Anchorage bank addressed to Dorothy Allison at a Devil’s
Toe post office box that showed weekly deposits of a thousand
dollars or more.
“Looks to me like Dorothy was making pretty good
money doing something,” Slade said.
The two men sat looking at each other.
“Suppose it’s an alias?” Kane said.
“Could be,” Slade said. “Why else would she have
these statements?”
They were silent again for a few minutes.
“So if it is an alias,” Kane said, “how could
Faith Wright have been earning one thousand dollars a week?”
Slade looked uncomfortable and said
nothing.
“Hard to think of many legal ways,” Kane said.
“But the illegal ways are completely out of character, at least the
way I read her character. Maybe Johnny Starship can shed some light
on this.” He paused. “I think the conversation might go better if I
talked with him myself.”
Slade looked at Kane for a moment, then
nodded.
“Okay,” he said, “I’m sure the investigators
could use my help questioning the workers up at the mine.”
“You might stop at the post office first,” Kane
said, “and see who rented that post office box.”
Slade didn’t look happy about the suggestion. But
he nodded, got to his feet, put on his coat, and left.
Kane finished leafing though the binder while he
waited, finding nothing else the least out of the ordinary. When he
finished, he leaned back in his chair and stared at the ceiling,
trying to blank his mind and let this new piece of information
settle into the mosaic he was composing of Faith Wright. The
ringing of the school bell didn’t stop his reflection, but a knock
at the door did.
“Come in,” he called, and Johnny Starship stepped
into the room.
“Please sit down,” Kane said, motioning to the
chair Slade had vacated. “Thanks for coming.”
The young man sat on the edge of the chair,
looking like he might take off at any moment.
“I’m not sure my dad would want me to talk to
you,” he said.
“Okay,” Kane said, “but all I’m trying to do is
find out what happened to Faith Wright. I’m told you are friends.
Don’t you want to help find her?”
“Maybe she doesn’t want to be found.”
“Do you know that? Do you know that she left of
her own free will?”
The young man shook his head.
“I don’t. The last time I saw her she said she’d
see me later, just like always.”
“When was that?” Kane asked.
The young man looked over Kane’s shoulder at the
wall.
“I guess it was Friday before last, here at
school,” he said.
That’s his first lie, Kane thought.
“Were you good friends?” he asked.
The young man shrugged.
“We talked about stuff. She was nice to me. Lots
of kids won’t have anything to do with me because of my
family.”
“What kind of stuff did you talk about?”
“Oh, life and stuff. About the problems of life
and what to do about them.”
“Did you hang out together after school?” Kane
asked. “Are you into the same extracurricular activities?”
Johnny Starship’s eyes flitted to the wall
again.
“I don’t do many extracurricular activities.
Nobody wants me in their clubs and stuff. And I don’t know what
Faith does after school.”
“So you wouldn’t know how she was making money?
Lots of money?” Kane asked.
The boy stood up.
“I’ve gotta go,” he said. “I don’t want to be
late for class.”
“Johnny,” Kane said, “whatever you know, whatever
Faith was doing, she needs your help now. The way you can help her
is to talk to me.”
“No,” the young man said. “No. I can’t. I
won’t.”
He turned and hurried out through the door.
Kane sighed, shook his head, and got to his feet.
He carried the books and binders out to his truck. Both bells rang
as he was doing so. He went into the administrative offices, walked
past a student at the counter, and opened the door to Miss Wisp’s
office. The principal stopped talking to a pleasant-looking woman
in her forties to glare at him.
“A closed door is usually a sign that someone
doesn’t want to be disturbed,” she snapped.
“No kidding?” Kane said. “I’m just here to report
that we’re done for now. Thank you for your help.”
He nodded to the other woman and smiled.
“I’m Nik Kane,” he said. “Faith Wright’s father
has hired me to find her. And who might you be?”
“I might be anyone,” the woman said, “but who I
am is Audrey Lee. I’m Faith Wright’s faculty adviser. I’m helping
her with her college applications. The girl has a lot of potential.
Do you think you will find her?”
“You might be able to help me do that,” Kane
said. “Do you know which after-school activities Faith is involved
in this year?”
“Mrs. Lee,” Miss Wisp said, “you know we aren’t
supposed to talk about the students.”
The other woman ignored her.
“Faith wasn’t involved in any extracurriculars
this semester,” she said. “She told me she had an after-school
job.”
Kane asked a couple of more questions without
getting anything, thanked the woman, nodded to Miss Wisp, and
walked out to his pickup. Faith Wright is proving to be a very
interesting young woman, he thought. But not in a good way.