"What?" he squeaks, indignation surging. "My problem is anxiety and depression."
"Fluvoxamine is an SSRI. A selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor. Used to treat pedophiles by inhibiting sexual desire and fantasy."
He loses it then. Rants and rages at me. It's true that the drug is most commonly used for depression. But according to what Dalton found, my reason for the prescription is the right one.
Pierre Lang has a long history of minor convictions, pleading guilty to misdemeanours and getting wrist slaps. Then he kidnapped and raped a girl on the cusp of adolescence. While awaiting trial, he disappeared, apparently having bought his way into Rockton.
"I could be wrong," I muse. "I'll check with the doctor. I was pretty sure, though--"
"You are wrong. And I'm going to report you for ... for slander."
"Slander only counts in a public statement. In private, I can say what I like. Being a detective, it's my job to speculate. Speaking purely as speculation, I can understand why they might allow a pedophile in, if he paid well enough. Like I said, there's no temptation here. Well, not unless there's a girl who looks young for her age, and that pedophile is desperate..."
"I'd like you to leave now," Lang says.
"I'm sure you would," says a voice behind me. Dalton walks in and plunks himself down on the sofa as Lang squawks.
"Door was unlocked," Dalton says.
"Does it matter?"
"Guess not. I have the key."
"That isn't what I meant." Lang settles for glaring and pulls himself in, like a bird hunkering down, wings wrapped around itself. He tries to shoot a glare at Dalton, but his gaze doesn't rise above the sheriff's collar.
"So..." Dalton sprawls on the sofa, legs out, arms stretched across the back. Establishing territory, taking as much as he can while Lang draws himself ever tighter. "You were saying, Detective Butler?"
I glance over. Dalton meets my gaze, expressionless, but I still catch the message. He overheard my accusation. He's not stopping me, but he's here to make sure I don't give away anything more.
I ask Lang about Abbygail. When's the last time he saw her? And the first time? And he balks at that one--how would he remember? But he does. I can see that in his eyes. I keep circling, prodding, poking. After about twenty minutes, I close the interview and we leave.
"How much did you hear?" I ask when we're away from the house.
"Starting at the part about the meds."
"I overstepped there, didn't I?"
"Yep."
As we walk, three people wave at Dalton. Two more call greetings. They don't seem to even notice that he doesn't wave or call back.
"I'm not sure how to put aside what I read," I say. "Am I supposed to?"
Dalton scratches his chin. He walks another three steps. Then he says, "Depends on you, I guess. How you deal with it. How you compartmentalize."
A woman greets him, and this time he replies, and that makes me look up and see one of the local chefs. In his book, she's suspected of escaping charges related to befriending girls for a forced-prostitution ring.
I understand what he's saying. That if I read his journal, I have to compartmentalize. Look at this woman who cooks my meals and forget what she's been accused of, unless, like Lang, it plays into an investigation.
"Lang did notice Abbygail," Dalton says as we continue walking. "There was a..." He tilts his head, searching for a word. "Frustration there. Not really an interest. A frustration."
"Because she was the closest thing here to what he likes. Yet she was an adult woman, which he does not seem to like."
He nods. "I saw it. Monitored it. Warned Abbygail as best I could. Maybe not enough..." He drifts off for a moment, then comes back with, "She seemed to understand."
"She would have," I say. "Being from the streets, she'd have been able to sniff a predator and steer clear."
"He's still a suspect," Dalton says. "I've been watching him since she disappeared."
"Nothing?"
"Yeah."
He slows, and when I look up, we're behind the station, at the shed where they store the ATVs.
"Border run?" I say, trying not to betray a spark of excitement. My day could really use this.
"Nah, taking you out visiting. Time to talk to a guy in a cave."
TWENTY-SEVEN
I figure the "guy in a cave" thing is a local joke, like saying you need to speak to a man about a dog. Dalton certainly doesn't elaborate. We go into the drive shed, and I get a much more in-depth ATV lesson than I did when I arrived.
Dalton may grumble that he doesn't like explaining things, but he's a natural teacher. He's patient and ... I won't say "enthusiastic," which implies a level of emotion I don't think our sheriff is capable of, but it's like when we discussed the hostiles in the forest, and I mentioned primates and there was a spark of genuine interest there. A hound catching a scent. Except, for Dalton, that intriguing scent isn't prey--it's knowledge.
When he finishes the safety lesson, he starts to explain how the throttle works, and then checks himself, as if realizing this is more than I need to drive it. But it's not more than I want, and when I ask questions, he pairs the driving lesson with one on basic mechanics, so I can understand how an ATV operates.
Dalton's not the only hound who likes to pursue a trail of knowledge. When we're riding and he slows to give me directions or point out an obstacle, I always have a question--what's that animal that scurried across the path? or what are those trees with the berries? At first he suspects I'm sucking up, and his eyes narrow as he carefully responds. But I genuinely want to know, and he must see that in my face, because soon he's giving the answers freely.
When we stop and get off the ATV, I don't ask why. I get the feeling that's not the kind of question Dalton likes to answer. Instead, as we walk into a clearing off the path, I notice what looks like a campfire ring.
I point to it. "One of yours? Someone from the town, I mean?"
He hunkers down beside the ring. "We have our bonfires in the town square. If we light one out here, it's usually on hunting trips, when you're a lot farther from town than this. We'll also build them at the logging area or the fishing ponds, when it gets cold. This is from settlers."
"People who live outside the town but aren't actually hostile."
"Not actively hostile. If you stumble on them and point your gun, yeah, expect trouble. What you have here looks like a hunting party. Maybe trapping. You can tell it's settlers because they use stones for the firepit. The fire's also a little too large. Hostiles are more careful. They're also a little less..." He purses his lips, considering his word choice. "Structured."
"They aren't going to fuss with hauling in firepit stones and a log to sit on."
"Yeah."
"And you can tell it's a hunting or trapping party because...?"
He points. "Decaying offal pile over there. Scavengers dragged away the better parts. There's a broken arrow here, which suggests hunting, but trapping is still a possibility."
Even when he points, I can't see what he's indicating until I go over and have to crouch to make out the signs he picked up in a casual sweep.
"If you're out on patrol, you need to write anything like this in the logs," he says. "Your notes will tell me how fast I need to get out here to assess."
"Is there a guide for what things mean?"
He gives me a look like I'm asking for an app for my phone. Then he taps the side of his head.
"It's all up there," I say. "It would be more helpful if you wrote it down."
"Tried. No one read it. Either they don't give a shit or they don't have an eye for reading signs." He pushes aside a branch. "Mostly the latter. Like Will. Fucking worst tracker ever. Once reported grizzly tracks that turned out to be boot prints. His boot prints."
I laugh.
"People learn in different ways," Dalton continues as he walks back to the path. "Will's a smart guy. College educated. Pre-med before he joined the army. But reading
doesn't do it for him. Hearing it, doing it, that's how he learns. So not much point in me writing shit down."
We continue right past the ATVs. Soon I see why, as the path becomes so narrow that we can't even walk side by side. When I notice a sandy patch alongside the trail, I crouch for a better look.
"Speaking of prints," I say. "What are these?"
He barely gives them a glance. "Cat."
"Bobcat? They seem small."
He snorts. "No bobcats here. Lynx mostly. And one cougar."
"One?"
"We're a little out of their range, which runs in a swath from Whitehorse to Dawson City. There is one, though. Her prints are nearly as big as a grizzly's. You can't miss them. And stay out of her way, same as you would a grizzly. She's no friendly kitty. Killed a guy on a hunting trip couple years back."
"I didn't see that in the files."
"No investigation needed. She jumped from a tree. Landed on his back. Snapped his neck and dragged him off to her kittens." He rubs his chin. "Who may also have hung around, now that they're full-grown."
I peer up into the treetops.
"Too dense for her here," he says. "And she's not likely to strike when you have company. Predators are smart. They don't bite off more than they can chew ... or haul away."
"Lovely..."
"The guy who got killed had wandered off from the party. We only knew what happened because he screamed and someone spotted the cat dragging his body away. I suspect she only went after him because of the kittens. Spring's when you need to be particularly careful."
"I won't need to worry about it, since my six months are up by then."
He grunts in acknowledgement. And yes, that stings, because I want him to be impressed enough already to change his mind, even if I haven't made up my own.
"Lynx, then?" I say, pointing at the tracks again.
"Too small. Lynx aren't big cats, but like cougars, they have oversized paws. Adaptation to walking on snow. Those prints are Felis catus. Domestic cat."
"Isn't that Felis domestica, sheriff?"
"Nope. That would be a common but incorrect taxonomic name, detective. It can also be Felis silvestris catus, which combines woodland and domestic cat. And in this case, that might be more accurate."
"So they're former house cats?"
He motions for me to resume walking as he says, "Escaped from town when they allowed them."
"You have feral cats in the forest?"
"And dogs. Rabbits, chickens, few hogs. All descended from escapees. Dogs were for security. Cats for mousing. The others for food. Back when there were fifty, sixty people in Rockton, raising livestock made sense. Now? Too much land needed to raise more than a few dozen chickens for eggs and goats for milk."
"Why did they get rid of the cats and dogs?"
"No idea. They weren't documenting things back then. I do, for the day-to-day stuff--what kind of problem we faced and how we resolved it. For the dogs and cats, I've heard rabies outbreak. They put them down and didn't want to risk bringing in more. I also heard it was something as stupid as allergies--one of Val's predecessors was allergic so he made a no-animal law and no one's changed it."
"Have you considered changing it?"
He looks surprised by the question. "Course. You can't just say that we should keep doing a thing just because it's always been done. Cats eat their fill of mice, so upkeep is minimal. Dogs can eat the parts of game we throw out. Fresh water is plentiful. I've been considering it. Getting new animals--not taming the ones out here. You don't do that shit. Once they're wild, they stay wild."
"Are the feral dogs dangerous?"
"Fuck, yeah. More than wolves. They're bigger and meaner. Lot less scared of humans, too. It's just wrong to go from being wild to tame or vice versa. If you see a dog, I'm not saying to shoot it on sight. But if it makes any aggressive moves? Yeah, you have to put it down."
We step out of the woods into an open area near mountain foothills. I admire the scenery for a moment before coming back with, "But the cats are fine?"
"Unless they're rabid. Or just crazy. It happens. Fucking with nature is a problem, like I said. Worst, though, are the hogs. More dangerous than the black bears."
"Tell me the wild chickens aren't dangerous."
"Unless they fly out in front of your horse, which they do sometimes. Unseated a guy years back. Broke his neck. The rabbits, though? The rabbits haven't killed anyone." He pauses. "So far."
TWENTY-EIGHT
As we continue along the foothills, I drink in the scenery. Most of the trees are evergreens, but there are enough deciduous changing colour to remind me of home. It's a perfect autumn day, crisp and clear.
"Given the many, many dangers of the forest, I'm presuming you guys don't do a lot of activities out here."
He shrugs. "Nah, we do. Some of us, anyway."
"Any rock climbing?" I say, gesturing at the craggy face of the mountain.
He nods. "Anders is into it. We go out sometimes with a few of the others. Caving, too. Former resident was into that. Mapped out caves. Taught me. We go sometimes--Anders, me, few others. Only those who can handle themselves out here."
"So that's a no, then?"
He frowns back at me.
"You're subtly telling me not to ask to join you."
He snorts. "If you think I'm capable of being subtle, you aren't very perceptive, detective." He peers over. "You want to come out with us?"
"I might." I shrug.
I'm trying for nonchalance. I don't want to sound like I'm brown-nosing. Nor do I want to jump in like an eager kid. But his thoughtful look vanishes, he turns away and grunts something I don't catch, and I've made a misstep.
Before I can try again, he points and says, "Gonna have to do a bit of rock climbing now. We need to get there."
I follow his finger to see what looks like a crack high in the rock face.
"What's up there?" I ask.
"Cave. Like I said."
"I expected something bigger."
"If the opening was bigger, there'd be something bigger in it. Like a bear. And it is bigger on the inside."
"Like the TARDIS?" As I say it, I mentally kick myself--pop culture references make him uncomfortable--but he makes a noise suspiciously like a chuckle and says, "Yeah, except no time travelling."
He catches my expression, shakes his head, and says, "Ever heard of those amazing devices calls DVDs?"
"Sure, but what do you play them on up here?"
"Tree stumps. If you carve them out just right and get ground squirrels to run around them really fast, you can project moving pictures on a wall."
"Yeah, yeah."
"We have a DVD player," he says as he starts up the slope. "We hook it up to a screen and generator for movie nights. As sheriff, I have a laptop and access to the generator for charging. I also have an income that I can spend down south on shit like DVDs. You want to watch something? Ask me. My collection is limited, though. Right now I've got Doctor Who, The Walking Dead, and Game of Thrones."
By now I know enough not to even wonder if he's joking.
"Also have Deadwood," he says. "Makes more sense to me than most of your so-called dramas, which is why I stick more to the fantasy stuff."
My foot slides on a particularly steep part. Dalton only glances back to make sure I don't tumble to my doom.
"I might borrow The Walking Dead," I say. "I haven't seen that."
"Good show. Also reminds you that no matter what kind of shit we have in these woods, at least it's not zombies."
"Yet. And you do have cannibals."
He sighs. "I never said we definitely have them. I said the evidence suggests it's possible. Even if we do, they're not charging out of the woods like a zombie horde."
"Yet."
We reach the cave. The opening is a gash in the rock, maybe three feet wide by eighteen inches high. When I catch the smell of a wood fire, I go still and scan the area. Dalton hunkers down to the opening and yells, "Bre
nt! You home?"
"Depends on who's asking," a voice replies.
"Your ex-wife sent me. Something about you owing her money."
"You're gonna have to be more specific than that."
"I'm coming in, and I'm bringing company." Dalton hands me his backpack. "Pass this through to me." Before I can reply, he's on his stomach and crawling through the space. Then his hands appear. I give him the bag. After another thirty seconds, grey eyes peer out.
"You need an invitation, detective? Sure as hell hope you don't need instructions, because you should have been watching."
I get down on my stomach. The gap turns out to be wider than I think. I slide through easily ... and nearly fall onto my head.
Dalton catches me and helps me get upright, and I see we're in an open area that's more like I expect from a cave. Dalton walks, hunched over, to a slope heading down into darkness.
"You gonna turn on the porch light?" Dalton yells.
The hiss of a lantern. Then a wavering light that does little to illuminate what I'm presumably about to climb into.
Dalton grabs a rope on the side and lowers himself down the slope. This time, I pay careful attention. Then I follow. At the bottom, the light is disappearing as a man carries it along a passage. Even I need to crouch to get through this one. Then the man pushes at what looks like a door. It swings open. Flickering light and the smell of woodsmoke pours out and I see a fire, the smoke rising into a hole in the top of what I'm guessing is called a cavern. It looks like one of those bomb shelters from the Fifties, though. There's a bed, a table and chairs, and shelves--lots of shelves, with goods from books to canned food. Dried meat hangs from the ceiling along with dried roots and other flora that I presume is edible.
There's a man, too. And he also fits the scene perfectly, looking like a guy who retreated to his bomb shelter fifty years ago and just popped his head out now. He's about seventy, with grey hair in a ponytail, pale, wrinkled skin, and eyes that peer against the light. Right now, they're peering at me.
"Now that's a deputy," he says. "Much prettier than your last one."
"Ms. Butler is a detective."
"Really?" Brent's wire-brush brows shoot up. "Women do that nowadays?"
"Women do everything nowadays," I say.
He grins. "Except piss standing up."
"Oh, we can do that, too. It's just messy."