Page 20 of Eyes of Prey


  Across the lake, the yellow rectangle burned in the cabin window. A woman in a pink robe, her hair in curlers, sat under the light reading an old issue of Country Living. She was facing an old-fashioned picture window, positioned to look over the lake, when Druze and Bekker got back to the car.

  “Richard,” she called to her husband, and stood and looked out the window. “There are those headlights again . . . . I’m going to call Ann. I really don’t think they were planning to come up tonight.”

  CHAPTER

  17

  Lucas punched the Porsche down the country highway, hissing along the wet blacktop, past woodlots of unleafed trees and the sodden, dark fall-tilled fields. The day was overcast, the clouds the color of slag iron. A deer, hit by a car, probably the night before, lay folded like an awkward, bone-filled backpack in a roadside ditch. A few hundred yards farther along, a dead badger had been flung like a rag over the yellow line.

  He’d been to two hundred murder scenes, all of them dismal. Were murders ever done in cheerful surroundings, just by accident? He’d once gone to a murder scene at an amusement park. The park hadn’t yet opened for the season, and although it made a specialty of fun, the silent Ferris wheels, the immobile roller coasters, the awkward Tilt-A-Whirls, the Empty House of Mirrors were as sinister as any rotting British country house on a moor . . . .

  He crested a low hill, saw the cop cars parked along the road, with an ambulance facing into a side road. A fat deputy sheriff, one thumb hooked under a gunbelt, gestured for him to keep moving. Lucas swung onto the shoulder, killed the engine and climbed out.

  “Hey, you.” The fat deputy was bearing down on him. “You think I was doin’ aerobics?”

  Lucas took his ID out of his coat pocket and said, “Minneapolis police. Is this . . . ?”

  “Yeah, down there,” the deputy said, gesturing at the side road, backing off a step. He tried a few new expressions on his face and finally settled for suspicion. “They told me to keep people moving.”

  “Good idea,” Lucas said mildly. “If the word gets out, you’re gonna get about a million TV cameras before too long . . . . How come everybody’s parked out here?”

  Lucas’ collegial attitude loosened the deputy up. “The guy who answered the call thought there might be tracks down there in the mud,” the fat man said. “He thought we ought to get some lab people out here.”

  “Good call,” Lucas said, nodding.

  “I don’t think we’ll see any television,” the fat man said. Lucas couldn’t tell if that made him happy or unhappy. “Old D.T. put a lid on everything. D.T.’s the guy running the show down there.”

  “Hope we can keep it on,” Lucas said, heading toward the side road. “But if they do turn up, don’t take any shit from them at all.”

  “Right on.” The deputy grabbed his gunbelt in both hands and gave it a hitch.

  The side track was two hundred yards long. At the end of it, Lucas found a nervous gray-haired woman and a pipe-smoking man sitting on the narrow porch of a cabin, both in cable-knit sweaters and slickers. Beyond the cabin, in a tangle of brush and brambles, Swanson was standing in a pod of people, some in uniform, others in civilian clothes.

  Lucas walked past the cabin and gingerly into the scrub, staying away from a long strip of yellow police tape that outlined the original track into the raspberry bushes. Halfway back, a uniformed deputy, working on his hands and knees, was pouring casting compound into a footprint. He looked up briefly as Lucas went by, then turned back to his work. He’d already poured some casts farther along the trail.

  “Davenport,” Swanson said, when Lucas pushed through to the end of the track. Two funeral home attendants in cheap dark suits were waiting to one side, a carry litter with pristine sheets for the uncaring body set carefully by their feet. Two more men, deputies, were working in a muddy foxhole, excavating the body with plastic hand trowels, like archaeologists on a dig. The body was half uncovered, but the face was still down. Swanson stepped away from the group, his face gloomy.

  “It’s for sure? George?” Lucas asked.

  “Yeah. When they went into the hole, they got his foot, and the deputy stopped the digging and called for help. When they started again, they got to his hip, took his billfold out of his pocket. The same guy who found him recognized the name and called for help again. The clothes are right. It’s him.”

  Lucas stepped off to the side to get a better look at the hole. A foot stuck up awkwardly, like a grotesque tree shoot struggling for the sun. A sheriff’s deputy in a ball cap and a raincoat came over and said, “You’re Davenport?”

  “Yeah.”

  “D.T. Helstrom,” the deputy said, sticking out a bony hand. He was a thin man, with a dark, weathered face. Smile lines creased his cheeks at the corners of his mouth. “I’ve seen you on TV . . . .”

  They shook hands and Lucas said, “You were the first guy out here?”

  “Yes. The couple back there on the porch . . . ?”

  “I saw them,” Lucas said. He moved away from the hole with Swanson and Helstrom as they talked.

  “They saw some lights over here last night. We have a lot of break-ins in these lake cabins, so I came by and checked it out. There was nothing at the cabin, but I could see somebody had been through the bushes. I went along . . . and there was the grave.”

  “They didn’t try to hide it?” Lucas asked.

  Helstrom looked back along the track and cracked a thin grin. “Yeah, I guess, in a city way. Kicked some shit over the grave. Didn’t try too hard, though. They must have figured that with the rain, hell, in a couple of weeks there’d be nothing to find. And they were right. In a week, you couldn’t find that hole with three Geiger counters and a Republican water-witcher.”

  “We’re both saying ‘they,’ ” Lucas said. “Any sign of how many?”

  “Probably two,” Helstrom said. “They left tracks, but it was raining off and on all night, so the prints are pretty washed out. We’ve got one guy in gym shoes, for sure, ’cause we can still see the treads. Then there are prints that don’t seem to have treads on them, on top of the treaded prints—but we can’t be sure, because the rain might have taken them out . . . .”

  “Car?” Swanson asked.

  “You can see where the tires were. But I followed it all the way out to the road, and the tread marks were gone.”

  “But you think there were two,” Lucas said.

  “Probably two,” Helstrom said. “I looked at every track there is, marking the ones to cast; I couldn’t swear to it in court, but I’d be willing to bet on it in Vegas.”

  “You sound like you’ve done this shit before,” Lucas said.

  “I had twenty years in Milwaukee,” Helstrom said, shaking his head. “Big-city police work can kiss my ass, but I’ve done it before. We’re taking the body over to Minneapolis, by the way. We’ve got a contract with the medical examiner, if you need the gory details.”

  Swanson was looking back toward the hole. From where they were standing, all they could see was the foot sticking up and the two men working in the hole, getting ready to move the body. “Maybe we got us a break,” he said to Lucas.

  “Maybe. I’m not sure how it’ll help.”

  “It’s something,” Swanson said.

  “You know what I thought, when I first dug him up?” Helstrom asked. “I thought, Ah! The game’s afoot.”

  Lucas and Swanson stared at him for a moment, then simultaneously looked back to the hole, where the foot stuck up. “Jesus,” Lucas groaned, and the three of them started laughing.

  At that instant, one of the deputies, pulling hard, got the body halfway out of its grave. The head swung around to stare at them all with empty holes where the eyes should have been.

  “Aw, fuck me,” the deputy cried, and let the body slump back. The head didn’t turn, but continued looking up, toward the miserable gray Wisconsin sky and the black scarecrow twigs of the unclothed trees.

  He thought about it on the
way back, weighing the pros and cons, and finally pulled into a convenience store in Hudson and called TV3.

  “Carly? Lucas Davenport . . .”

  “What’s happening?”

  “You had a short piece last night about a guy disappearing, a law professor?”

  “Yeah. Found his car at the airport. There’s a rumor flying around that he was Stephanie Bekker’s lover . . .”

  “That’s right—that’s the theory.”

  “Can I go with . . . ?”

  “ . . . and they’re taking him out of a grave in Wisconsin right this minute . . . .”

  “What?”

  He gave her directions to the gravesite, waited while she talked to the news director about cranking up a mobile unit, then gave her a few more details.

  “What’s this gonna cost me?” she asked in a low voice.

  “Just keep in mind that it’ll cost,” Lucas said. “I don’t know what, yet.”

  Sloan was working at his desk behind the public counter in Violent Crimes when Lucas stopped by.

  “You’ve been over in Wisconsin?” Sloan asked.

  “Yeah. They did a number on the guy’s eyes, just like with the women. Did you talk to George’s wife yesterday?”

  “Yeah. She said it’s hard to believe that he was fuckin’ Stephanie Bekker. She said he wasn’t much interested in sex, spent all his time working.”

  “Huh,” Lucas said. “He could be the type who gets hit hard, if the right woman came around.”

  “That’s what I thought, but she sounded pretty positive.”

  “Are you going to talk to her again, today?”

  “For a few minutes, anyway,” Sloan said, nodding. “Checking in, see if she forgot to tell me anything. We got along pretty well. That Wisconsin sheriff called her with the news, she’s got some neighbors over there with her. Her brother’s going out to identify the body.”

  “Mind if I tag along when you go?”

  “Sure, if you want,” Sloan said. He looked at Lucas curiously. “What’ve you got?”

  “I want to look at his books . . . .”

  “Well, shit, I’m not doing much,” Sloan said. “Let’s take the Porsche.”

  Philip George had lived in St. Paul, in a two-block neighborhood of radically modern homes nestled in a district of upper-middle-class older houses, steel and glass played against brick and stucco, with plague-stricken elms all around. Three neighborhood women were with his wife when Sloan and Lucas arrived. Sloan asked if he could speak to her alone, and Lucas asked if he could look at George’s books.

  “Yes, of course, they’re right down there, in the study,” she said, gesturing at a hallway. “Is there anything . . . ?”

  “Just wondering about something,” Lucas said vaguely.

  While Sloan talked to George’s wife, the neighbor ladies moved into the living room and Lucas walked through the study, a converted bedroom, looking at books. George had not been an adventuresome reader. He owned a hundred volumes on various aspects of the law, a few histories that appeared to be left over from college, a dozen popular novels that went back almost as many years, and a collection of Time-Life books on home repair. No art books. Lucas didn’t know much about art, but he knew that most of the work on the walls was of the professional-decorator variety. Nothing remotely like Odilon Redon.

  On the way back to the living room, Lucas scanned the framed photographs hung in the connecting hall. George at bar association meetings, accepting a gavel. George looking uneasy in new hunting clothes, a shotgun in one hand, a dead Canada goose in the other. In two photos, one black-and-white, the other color, he was singing in different bars, arms outstretched, beery faces laughing in the background. Overhead in one, a banner said “St. Pat’s Day Bad Irish Tenor Contest” in the other, a cardboard sign said “Bad Tenors.”

  Annette George, tired, slack-faced, was sitting at the kitchen table talking to Sloan when Lucas returned from the tour. She looked up, red-eyed, and said, “Anything?”

  “Afraid not,” Lucas said, shaking his head. “Was your husband interested in art at all? Painting?”

  “Well, I mean . . . no. Not really. He thought maybe he’d like to try painting sometime, but he never had the time. And I guess it would have been out of character.”

  “Any interest in a guy named Odilon Redon?”

  “Who? No, I never heard of him. Wait, the sculptor, you mean? He did that Thinker thing?”

  “No, he was a painter, I don’t think he did sculptures,” Lucas said, now confused himself.

  She shook her head. “No . . .”

  “There’re a couple of photographs in the hall, your husband singing in bad-Irish-tenor contests . . . .”

  “Yes, he sang every year,” she said.

  “Was he good? I mean, was he a natural tenor, or what?” Lucas asked.

  “Yes, he was pretty good. We both sang in college. I guess if he had an art form, that was it.”

  “When he sang in college, what part did he sing?” Lucas asked.

  “First tenor. I was an alto and we sang in a mixed choir, we’d stand next to each other . . . . Why?”

  “Nothing. I’m just trying to picture him,” Lucas said. “Trying to figure out what happened.”

  “Oh, gosh, the things I could tell you,” she said, staring vacantly at the floor. “I can’t believe that he and Stephanie . . .”

  “If it helps any, I don’t believe it, either,” Lucas said. “I’d appreciate it if you’d keep that under your hat for the moment.”

  “You don’t believe?” she asked.

  “No, I don’t . . .”

  Later, when Sloan and Lucas were leaving, she asked, “What am I going to do? I’m fifty . . . .”

  One of the neighbor ladies, looking at Lucas as if the question were his fault, said, “Come on, Annette, it’s all right.”

  Sloan looked back from the sidewalk: she was still standing there, looking through the glass of the storm door. “What does that mean, about the art? And the Irish-tenor contest?” he asked, turning to Lucas. “And do you really think there’s somebody else . . . ?”

  “Have you ever heard an Irish-tenor contest?” Lucas asked.

  “No . . .”

  “I did once, at the St. Pat’s Day parade. The guys are tenors,” Lucas said. “That’s a fairly high voice—and especially a first tenor. You must’ve heard guys singing ‘My Wild Irish Rose’? Like that. Our guy on the nine-one-one tape, I don’t see how he could sing in a tenor contest. Not unless he had a terrible cold or something.”

  “Didn’t sound like he did,” Sloan said, eyes narrowing.

  “No. He sounded like a baritone, or even a bass.”

  “And George wasn’t interested in art, or what’s-his-name . . .”

  “Redon,” Lucas said absently. “And this artist I talked to, he said you’d probably have to know a little about art to pull that picture out of your head. It’s not one you see every day. As far as I could tell, the Georges don’t have an art book in the house.”

  Sloan looked back at the house. Annette George was gone. “Well, if George wasn’t the guy, then the real lover’s in the clear. Everybody in the world’s assuming that he was the guy.”

  “Now think about this,” Lucas said, moving slowly down toward the car. “If this guy’s a serial killer, why’d he go to the trouble of burying George? He didn’t care about burying the other two. And dragging a body around the countryside, that’s a hell of a risk. What’s he hiding about George?”

  “And why didn’t they bury him the same night he disappeared, instead of waiting? That’s even more of a risk,” Sloan added.

  “It’s fucked up. I’m beginning to wonder if we really know what’s going on,” Lucas said. They’d reached the car and he leaned on a fender. “We keep looking at Bekker, because we feel like he’s the guy. But it doesn’t make sense from his point of view.”

  “Tell me,” Sloan prompted.

  “If Bekker’s behind it, why was Armist
ead murdered? He claims he didn’t know her, and we’ve got no indication that he did. Her friends certainly didn’t know Bekker, because they’d remember his face. And if the killer hit George just for the thrill of it, why leave the others but bury George?”

  Sloan nodded and sighed. “Like you said, it’s fucked up.”

  “Interesting,” Lucas said.

  “Gimme the keys,” Sloan said. “I wanna drive this piece of shit.”

  On the way back to City Hall, Lucas told Sloan about the gravesite, and about the deputy’s line: “The game’s afoot.”

  “Cracked us up, Swanson and me,” Lucas said.

  “That ain’t bad,” Sloan admitted. He had a weakness for wordplay. “The game’s afoot.”

  They were headed west on I-94, and Lucas, in the passenger seat, was looking blankly at a billboard advertisement for South Dakota tourism. Afoot? “Jesus,” he said. “When they dusted for prints at Bekker’s place, did they do the floor outside her bathroom? The bathroom that opens off her bedroom?”

  “Fuck if I know,” said Sloan. “Why?”

  “Footprints,” Lucas said. “The lover, whoever he is, might have wiped all the handles and stuff, but I bet the sonofabitch didn’t wipe the floor. And if he didn’t, we might still be able to get prints. I mean, since the game is a foot . . .”

  Cassie came over and cooked Italian, humming in the kitchen, brewing tomato sauce, dancing around and sucking on the wooden spoon as she worked in the spices. She was wearing a fuzzy sweater that clung to her, and Lucas moved around behind her, handling her, stroking her stomach.

  “Christ, the muscles are unbelievable,” he said.

  “I pray to Jane Fonda every morning . . . .”

  “Mama’s Got a Squeeze Box” came up on the radio and she tried to give him a quick dance lesson. He failed.

  “You got the same problem as all large white men: you’re afraid to shake your ass,” she complained. “You can’t dance if you don’t move your ass.”

  “I feel ridiculous when I try to move my ass,” Lucas said. He gave it a tentative shake.