24
For they proceed from evil to
evil, and they know not me, saith the Lord.
JEREMIAH 9:3
ON THE DRIVE TO FAIRBANKS, KANE TRIED TO FORGET the events of the previous two days.
There was a lot to forget. He’d had time before
the troopers showed up to fast-forward through Big John’s tape
collection, finding the original tapes of Simms and Slade and
selecting another that featured Richardson, the mine manager. He’d
watched Slade’s all the way through at regular speed, then one part
of it several times. Then he’d sat, staring into nothing for
several minutes.
“God damn it,” he’d said at last. “God damn it,
God damn it, God damn it.”
He’d stowed the tapes he was keeping in the
inside pockets of his parka and returned the rest to the shelves.
He couldn’t do anything about the tapes that were left. There were
too many to hide. Besides, when the troopers questioned Little
John, he’d tell them about the tapes. It would look pretty
suspicious if they’d all just vanished.
So lots of tapes remained of Faith at work. Kane
knew someone would copy a tape or two, and they’d make the rounds
at cop stag parties and poker games for years to come. The cop
world would know Faith as an eager whore, and nothing more.
He knew, too, that word of what Faith had been
doing would leak out, which meant he was obligated to tell her
father before he heard it on the small-town telegraph. That had
been an encounter Kane never wanted to repeat. The blood had
drained out of Thomas Wright’s face, leaving him pale as the sheets
of paper on his desk, his eyes closed, rocking back and forth,
saying, “I don’t believe it,” over and over again. Kane had finally
gone in search of help, and when he’d brought the two middle-aged
ladies who had been at his table at dinner back to Wright’s office,
one of them had shot him a baffled look and spat, “What have you
done?” He’d made a run for it, and that was the last he’d seen of
Wright.
Word of Thomas Wright’s pain got out, of course.
Many Rejoice residents refused to speak to him after that. When he
tried to ask Moses Wright some questions, the old man held up a
cross and yelled at him to leave, like he was driving out a demon.
Kane’s appeal for information at that evening’s gathering was
greeted by mutters or stony silence. The few who did talk had no
idea what might have caused Faith to think she’d been ruined.
Everything else was a collection of negatives.
The troopers’ search of Big John’s cabin had found no clue to
Faith’s whereabouts. They’d held on to Little John for a while,
under the theory that his father couldn’t have pulled the robbery
solo. But without any evidence tying him to the crime, all he had
to do was keep quiet, and he did, about Faith as well as the
robbery. So they’d let him go. They might charge him with running a
house of prostitution, not much of a charge all things considered.
The trooper investigators were pissed off about the outcome.
“If you assholes had brought us in on this when
you should have, the old man would still be alive, and we’d have
been able to make a case,” Sam had shouted at Kane and Slade.
“Wanted that reward too bad, huh, Kane?” Harry
had sneered, and Kane was too depressed to snarl at him.
Even Slade was mad at Kane. The trooper wanted
the original videotape of himself and the two women, but Kane
wouldn’t give it up. When Slade demanded to know why, Kane lied and
said that he still wasn’t sure what Slade’s role had been in all
this, and he wasn’t about to hand over his leverage until he was.
After he’d said that, he’d thought he was going to have to fight
the big trooper.
After two days of nothing but hostility, Kane was
anxious to get some space between himself and the residents of
Rejoice and Devil’s Toe, so anxious that he pulled out at four
a.m., even though the errand that took him north and west was a
long shot. He hoped, too, that the drive would help erase the
images from the videotape that kept running through his mind like
they were on a loop.
He played nothing but the blues on the four-hour
drive through the darkness, the music matching his mood and the
cold, pitiless land he drove through. The highway took him past
Eielson Air Force Base, through North Pole, then into downtown
Fairbanks, a small cluster of buildings on both banks of the Chena
River.
Kane stopped there, at the post office, where he
put all of the videotapes but one in a box and mailed them to
himself in Anchorage. Then he walked a few blocks to a mean-looking
bar on Second Avenue. Good thing the bars open early here, he
thought, and ordered a shot and a beer.
He sat looking at them for a while, debating the
wisdom of drinking them. There was no wisdom in doing that, he
knew, but it wasn’t wisdom he was after. So he downed the shot and
chased it with beer.
His impulse was to stay and drink until he
couldn’t remember Faith or Laurie, until he couldn’t remember
Charlie Simms or Lester Logan or Big John lying dead, until he
couldn’t remember his time in prison and the lack of grace in the
world, until he couldn’t remember anything, especially Ruth Hunt.
All that made several more drinks irresistible, but later, he
decided. He had work to do. Work was all he had now, so it had
better be enough. He forced himself back out into his truck and
drove up toward the university with the alcohol rolling around in
his empty stomach like liquid fire.
The university sat on a hill above the Chena,
west of town. Following the directions he’d gotten off Slade’s
computer, Kane took the road that ran across the base of the hill,
then past a golf course. About two miles past the campus, he took a
left onto a road through the trees, then another left. He rolled up
a short hill to a big house that sat in a clearing overlooking a
creek valley. His knock was answered by a young man with a cereal
bowl in his hand. He wore a pair of blue-and-white-striped boxer
shorts and nothing else.
“Yeah?” the young man said.
“I’m looking for Feather Boyette,” Kane
said.
“Got no Feather Boyette,” the young man said.
“Got a Feather Collins. She owns the place.”
“I’d like to talk to her, then,” Kane said.
“Step in, mister,” the young man said, “it’s
goddamn cold with the door open.”
Kane stepped in. He found himself in a big, open
room with a kitchen along the back and a set of stairs leading up
to a railing-lined walkway that gave access to several doors.
“Hey, Feather,” the young man called as he walked
back toward the kitchen, “old dude wants to see you.”
The door farthest along the walkway opened, and a
woman in a bright red Chinese dressing gown with wide sleeves
stepped out. Her hair was jet black and her face smooth, but she
moved older than she looked.
“Can I help you?” she asked.
Another young man, this one blond and naked,
stepped out onto the walkway behind her and ran his hands into her
robe through the sleeves.
“We aren’t finished yet,” he said, his hands
moving beneath the fabric.
The woman writhed against him, then pulled
away.
“Not now, baby,” she said. “We have
company.”
“I’m looking for a woman named Feather who used
to live in Rejoice,” Kane said.
“What do you want with her?” the woman asked. The
young man made another grab but she slapped his hands away. “I said
not now,” she said. The young man grunted and retreated through the
door, closing it behind him. “The young are so single-minded,” she
said.
“I just need some information,” Kane said.
“History, really.”
“You could have picked a better time to talk
about the old days,” the woman said, “but what’s done is done. Help
yourself to a cup of coffee in the kitchen and I’ll be down
soon.”
The dark-haired young man was sitting at the
kitchen island spooning cereal into his mouth.
“Nice place you’ve got here,” Kane said, pouring
coffee into a mug.
The young man nodded and swallowed.
“It’s Feather’s really,” he said. “We just room
here. We’re college students.”
Kane took a drink of coffee. It was very
good.
“The rent high?” he asked.
The young man laughed.
“Rent,” he said. “Right. There’s three of us live
here. We each pay the rent once a week. Franklin’s paying his right
now.” He put his cereal bowl into the sink. “Guys been lining up to
rent rooms here for years,” he said, making little quotation marks
around “rent rooms” with his fingers. “Well, gotta go.
Classes.”
Left alone, Kane picked up his coffee and made a
tour of the downstairs. The living room featured
comfortable-looking couches. The dining room table was solid cherry
and could seat a dozen. Original artwork dotted the walls, and
every window had a view.
The dark-haired young man came down the stairs
dressed, took a coat out of the closet next to the front door, and
left. He was followed not long after by another young man. Kane was
just starting his third cup of coffee when the blond one came
flying down the stairs, dressing as he went.
“Damn, late again,” he said, grinning, as he ran
past.
By the time the woman came down the stairs, Kane
had about memorized the ground floor of the house. It was all very
tastefully and expensively done, right down to the leather-bound
books that filled the walls of what appeared to be a den.
“I’m sorry for the wait,” the woman said,
extending a hand.
Kane took it. The bones were delicate and the
back of the hand was lined with veins. Feather Collins looked every
bit her sixty-some years around the edges, where spas and cosmetic
surgery couldn’t hide the effects of aging. But otherwise she
looked damn good.
“You’re staring, Mr. . . .” she said.
“Kane,” Kane said. “Nik Kane. I’m sorry. It’s
just that I expected someone older.”
The woman smiled.
“Oh, I’m old enough,” she said, “but I’ll take
that as a compliment. Would you care to sit down?”
They sat across from one another in the living
room. The woman tucked her legs up underneath her.
“A lifetime of yoga has its rewards,” she said.
“Now, what can I do for you?”
“It’s about a young woman named Faith Wright,” he
said. “She’s missing.”
“Faith Wright,” the woman said. “Thomas Wright’s
daughter?”
“Yes,” Kane said.
“I’m afraid I can’t help you,” she said. “Faith
was quite young when I left Rejoice, and I haven’t seen her
since.”
Kane nodded.
“I didn’t expect you could tell me much about the
girl,” he said. “But I was hoping you could fill me in on some
history of Rejoice, about the Wrights and Faith’s grand-mother, who
also disappeared. Margaret Anderson?”
“Peggy Anderson. We all called her Peggy, all of
us except Moses,” the woman said. “That takes me back. Do you think
the two disappearances are related?”
“I don’t really know,” Kane said, giving the
woman what he hoped was a charming smile. “The truth is, I’ve run
out of real leads to follow, and I’m here grasping at
straws.”
“Couldn’t anyone in Rejoice tell you about
her?”
“Not really. Most of the original group that
settled Rejoice has died off or moved away. Except for Moses
Wright, you may be the last of the people who founded Rejoice who
is still in Alaska, not counting a few people who were children
then.”
“Like my ex-husband, you mean? How is
Gregory?”
“He’s doing well, the last time I saw him. As is
your son.”
Something in the tone of Kane’s voice made the
woman straighten in her seat.
“Do you think it odd, Mr. Kane, that I have
severed contact with my son?” she asked.
“A little,” Kane said, “but it’s really none of
my business.”
The woman sat staring at Kane for a long
time.
“If you’re going to hear the whole story of my
goddamn life,” she said, “you’ll need something stronger than just
coffee.”
She got up, took Kane’s mug, and walked to the
kitchen. She dumped the contents into the sink, got another mug,
poured coffee into the mugs, then added something from a bottle.
She got a can of whipped cream out of the refrigerator and sprayed
some into each mug. She walked back into the living room, set
Kane’s in front of him, and took her seat.
“Now, then, we can begin,” she said, cradling her
mug. She took a sip, licked the whipped cream off her upper lip,
and started talking.
“I was coming on fifteen when Mikey Hogan took me
out behind the bottling plant in south Boston to show me something.
He was about ten years older, and my mother, God rest her soul,
didn’t want me having anything to do with him. Mikey and his half
brother, Francis, who was a few years younger than him, were
nothing but trouble, she said.”
The woman raised her cup in a mock salute.
“You got that right, mom.
“But I liked it from the first, so I hung around
with Mikey when I could sneak away. He was a guy around the
neighborhood, running errands for bookies and such, and devilish
handsome. We were hot and heavy for a few years. Then I graduated
high school and went off to college, and he lost interest. We still
knew each other and spent time together during the summers, but we
quit having what the parish priest called carnal knowledge of each
other.
“I didn’t mind, though. There were plenty of guys
at college. I graduated and moved back to the old neighborhood and
got a job. Then the sixties hit and Mikey had plenty of dope. He
still liked young girls and would bring them around to my place.
Young boys, too, which is why I let him in. Before I knew it, there
was a bunch of us crashing there. Then Mikey started talking about
going far away, to Alaska. To get back to the earth, like people
were talking then. We pooled our money and bought a bus, and
Francis, who was always good with engines, got the thing running.
We painted it all up and stocked it and everything, and it just sat
there in the lot behind my apartment until one day Mikey said,
‘We’re going.’ And we went.”
She stopped talking for a while, then
continued.
“You know, I look at these young people now and
think, what were we doing then? Mikey and I were old enough to know
better, but we didn’t give a damn. The rest of them, the oldest was
maybe seventeen. Where were their parents?
“The whole thing was weird. Like Francis not
coming along. There’d been some sort of robbery out at the airport
there, and Francis had been grabbed up by the cops, Mikey
said.
“None of us paid much attention then. Like I
said, Mikey had plenty of dope and always seemed to have money when
we needed it, and we floated across America making love, not
war.
“When we got to San Francisco, some people left
and some people joined up. By the time we headed north, we were a
convoy, the bus and several cars. Mikey started calling himself
Moses, because he was leading us to the promised land, and sleeping
with the sweetest young thing on the bus, pretty Peggy
Anderson.”
The woman was quiet again for a while.
“He liked them young, but who doesn’t? Anyway,
that first winter was rough, living in the bus in the cold.
Fortunately, we had more girls than boys, so we attracted a couple
of young locals who knew what they were doing. We made it through
the winter and everything looked good. That summer we got a few
cabins built and some gardens planted and caught some fish and used
Mikey’s money for the rest. Only everybody called him Moses by
then, Moses Wright, and when I kidded him about it in private he
gave me such a look that I called him Moses from then on,
too.
“About the only attention we attracted, besides
the local boys, was from the trooper who was stationed out there—a
big, young, good-looking guy. He was always dropping in. At first I
thought he was suspicious, but he didn’t do anything and we
gradually came to accept him. We kept the dope out of sight, but
otherwise he was just another visitor.
“Then, that fall, Peggy was pregnant. I was
surprised. When I was seeing him, Mikey was never careful about
birth control and neither was I, but nothing happened. I’d gotten
pregnant once, in college, so I figured maybe it was Mikey who was
shooting blanks. But then Peggy got knocked up, so I guessed it had
all just been luck.
“The baby, Thomas, was born in June. We had a big
celebration, I remember, with a bonfire and fireworks, and Mikey
looked proud enough to bust. But he and Peggy started having
trouble not long after. We were still living close together then,
and I could hear them yelling at each other at night. That winter
Peggy disappeared, and not long after Mikey began toting a Bible
around. I thought he was just goofing, but he was deadly serious.
About the Bible, about being Moses, about the whole religion thing.
He even quit chasing the young girls for a while, although
everybody was paired up by then, so he didn’t have much
choice.”
The woman drained her cup and got to her
feet.
“You want more?” she asked.
Kane shook his head. The first one hadn’t been a
good idea all by itself.
“I’m having more,” she said, “and if you want to
hear what I’ve got to say, so are you.”
Kane handed her his mug. He didn’t want to hear
more, not really. He felt worse now than he had when he’d knocked
on the door, and the Irish coffee wasn’t helping. But he took the
fresh mug from her and drank as she resumed talking.
“The trooper looked hard for Peggy,” the woman
said. “He questioned us all, especially Mikey, but didn’t get
anywhere. The next summer, another young girl moved in, and Mikey
took up with her, and then another after that, but they didn’t
stick. Maybe he just wanted help with the baby. Anyway, a few years
went by. Mikey was really Moses by now, and most everybody else in
Rejoice was getting religious, too.
“Then, one day right around summer solstice,
Francis showed up. Everything was cool for a week or so, then he
and Mikey had a big row and Francis left Rejoice. He didn’t go far,
though. Some of the less religious element of Rejoice had moved
over into the woods around Devil’s Toe because they didn’t like all
the new rules Mikey was making. Francis moved over there, too, and
somehow got the money to buy the roadhouse there.”
“He was calling himself John Wesley Harding by
then?” Kane asked.
“Yes,” the woman said with a smile, “he was.
Mikey warned me against having anything to do with him. Not that he
needed to. I never liked Francis that much. He was mean and not
very smart.”
“Why were you sticking around?” Kane asked,
interested despite himself. “You were educated, and used to a
better life. Why didn’t you leave?”
“Inertia, at first,” the woman said, “and a
steady supply of young drifters. And then I noticed little Gregory
Pinchon. He couldn’t have been more than eight then, but God, he
was a beautiful child. I waited, and when he was sixteen and legal,
I took him into my bed. It was quite a scandal. I was in my
mid-forties and all the tongues were wagging. But I made sure he
got me pregnant right away, and then nobody could stop us getting
married. It was about the time Matthew was born that the community
decided we needed some rules about young people and sex and came up
with all that ‘walking out’ garbage.”
“What happened?” Kane asked. “Why did you
leave?”
The woman took their mugs into the kitchen, then
brought them back. When Kane tasted his, it was straight
whiskey.
“Young men are great for some things,” she said,
slurring some of her words, “but Gregory didn’t wear well on me. He
was beautiful, but repressed sexually, probably by all that
religious nonsense. And outside of bed we didn’t have anything to
build a marriage on. Besides that, I was a rotten mother.”
Kane could hear a slur in his own voice when he
spoke.
“Was that all?” he asked. “The whole reason you
left?”
“No,” she said. “There was Mikey, too. He was
stirring people up against me. By then, I didn’t know if that was
because he believed I was too sinful or because I was about the
only person left in Rejoice who knew him from the old days.
“So I took the hint and left. Came here. Divorced
Gregory. Met a man, a nice fellow, man named Collins, who had a lot
of money. All that time I’d spent studying the Kama Sutra came in
handy then. He married me. Five years ago, he dropped dead. I’ve
been taking in boarders ever since.”
Very carefully, Kane set his mug down.
“That’s quite a story,” he said. “Did you ever
have any idea what happened to Margaret Anderson Wright?”
“Nope,” the woman said. She shook her head from
side to side for what seemed to Kane like a long while. “I thought
it was strange she’d run off and leave her baby, but none of us was
too stable. I think the trooper thought something bad had happened,
but like I said, nothing ever came of it.”
They sat looking at one another for a
moment.
“That’s some scar you’ve got,” the woman said.
“What happened?”
“I had a difference of opinion with a sharp
object,” Kane said. Or that’s what he tried to say. It came out
sounding like something in Russian.
“You must be a rough customer,” the woman said,
giving a theatrical shiver.
Kane got carefully to his feet and started to put
on his coat. He got his arm into the wrong hole and had to start
over. When he looked, the woman was smiling at his antics.
“You don’t have to leave,” she said. “You could
lie down with me awhile. I’ve got a big, soft bed upstairs.”
“I appreciate the offer,” he said, “but I’m
pretty sure that I’d just embarrass myself, particularly compared
to your boarders.”
He held out his hand and shook hers, then made
his way to the door as carefully as if he were walking on a
tightrope high above the ground.
“I hope you don’t mind if I don’t get up to show
you out,” the woman called after him, “but my feet seem to be
numb.”
Kane managed to get the door open. He stepped
through and pulled it shut behind him. Then he stood for the
longest time, leaning against the door and breathing in the cold,
fresh air.