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Bad Little Falls mbm-3

Page 15

by Paul Doiron


  “That’s horrible.”

  “I had to get a room at the Blueberry Bunch Motel until I can clean everything.” I took a breath. “Look, I owe you an apology.”

  She crossed her arms and glanced toward the frosted window.

  “As a warden, I’m not allowed to share information about ongoing police investigations. In the eyes of the attorney general, we’re both material witnesses to a homicide. Technically, we shouldn’t even be talking.”

  She started to stand up, but I put my hand on her arm and eased her back down.

  “I should never have agreed to take you to the hospital.”

  “Why did you do it, then?”

  “Because I wanted to get to know you. I still do.”

  “Why? So you can get me to say something that will incriminate Prester? Thanks but no thanks.”

  “That’s not it. You’re right that I am attracted to you. Who wouldn’t be? But there’s more to it than that.”

  She sensed a truckload of bullshit headed her way. “Like what?”

  “My mom was a single mom. She and my dad split up when I was nine. My father was a son of a bitch-worse than Randall. For a few years, it was just the two of us, bouncing around from apartment to apartment in Portland. My mom never worked at McDonald’s, but she waited tables at a pub.”

  “What are you saying-that I remind you of your mother?” A look of disgust appeared on her face.

  “Not at all!” I said. “I just remember how difficult those years were for both of us. It must be that way for you and Lucas.”

  She grew quiet and seemed to settle into the booth, as if the urge to flee had passed.

  “In my truck last night, you told me how you were trying to change your life. If I were in your shoes, I’d feel pretty desperate, too.”

  “You wouldn’t have become an alcoholic and a drug addict.”

  I pictured that tantalizing can of Foster’s in my refrigerator. “I don’t blame you for not believing me, but I hope you will accept my apology. I wish you and your family the best, Jamie. I really and truly do.”

  Her posture had softened while I’d been speaking; her shoulders no longer seemed so tense and she was holding my gaze. Finally she said, “Aren’t you going to get in trouble for coming in here? The whole town knows I’m bad news.”

  “Let me worry about that,” I said. “I’d like to drop off Lucas’s notebook tonight.”

  “I’m going to try to see Prester later, if they’ll let me. Then I have a meeting at seven. My sponsor is already pissed that I missed two days in a row. Come by after eight-thirty. I should be home by then.”

  “Is there any chance Lucas might have taken a pair of binoculars from my truck?”

  She gave a sigh that made me think it wasn’t the first time Lucas had stolen something. “There’s a one hundred percent chance he did. I’ll find them when I get home tonight.”

  “I’d appreciate it.”

  “He has this idea of becoming a ranger someday. That’s probably why he took them. If you want, you can have dinner with us. I’m sure Lucas would like that. He’s sort of infatuated by you.”

  “Thanks for the invitation, but it’s probably best if I just drop off the notebook.”

  “There will be extra food, if you change your mind. I’m making American chop suey. Please take a shower before you come over, though. You really do stink.”

  I smiled and reached for my wallet. “How much do I owe you for breakfast?”

  “It’s on the house,” she said, rising to her feet.

  “Are you allowed to do that?”

  She gave me the kilowatt version of her usual megawatt smile. “Didn’t you see my picture by the door? I’m the Employee of the Month. I can do anything I want in this place.”

  From McDonald’s, I drove downtown to the Wash-O-Mat, where I spent the next two hours watching my clothes do somersaults in the dryer.

  There was a college student behind the counter when I entered, jawing into a cell phone about her “lame” professor. I got coins from the machine and various boxes and packets of detergents and softeners, anything with a perfume to mask the stench of my clothes.

  I brought my laptop from the patrol truck. After everything I’d learned over the past forty-eight hours, I had plenty of people whose names I wanted to feed into the secure databases that law-enforcement officers can access in the state of Maine.

  I typed the name Randall Cates and the date of birth from his car registration into the search fields and brought up his fish and wildlife and motor vehicle records. There was a conviction for night hunting, and another for operating a snowmobile under the influence, citations for speeding and driving unregistered vehicles. Fewer than I’d expected, frankly. Up until someone killed him, he’d been very careful to maintain a Teflon coating around himself.

  Not so Prester. The string of Title 12 and driving convictions was as long as Corbett had claimed: practically the entire Maine Criminal Code from A to Z. No violent offenses, however.

  Barney Beal had incurred speeding tickets on the road, on the trail, and on the water. I couldn’t access his criminal records, but the kid was definitely a speed demon, if nothing else.

  Who else? I’d need a date of birth or license number to check Kendrick’s records in the database.

  I did locate the article about him in the New York Times Magazine, and as Doc Larrabee had suggested, the tone was as breathless as a teenage girl posting on her Facebook page about her favorite pop singer:

  MAN, OUT OF TIME By Ariel Evans

  Kevin Kendrick is a teacher, an environmental activist, and, he’ll tell you, the best woodsman left in America. He believes that the nation’s survival depends on relearning forgotten skills, from building a fire with nothing but sticks of wood to making a boat out of sealskins. It might sound far-fetched, but spend a week with him in the wilderness of eastern Maine, which he calls home, and you just might decide he’s right.

  The article was long but well-written and interesting. It repeated the stories Larrabee had mentioned of Kendrick’s amazing adventures living among the headhunters and paddling across the Labrador Sea.

  It also laid out his philosophy in depth, of which I’d sensed only the vaguest outline the other evening. It was, verbatim, the credo of Earth First! “The Earth is currently experiencing the fastest mass extinction event in its history and the perpetrators of this holocaust are none other than ourselves, the human race. Much as addicts have no hope of a cure until they admit to themselves that they have a problem, so must we admit to one in our relationship with the Earth.”

  Kendrick, the article said, had collected an almost cultlike following among young people who came to the University of Machias to study with him or attend his Primitive Ways survival school. I wondered if Trinity Raye had been one of these youthful devotees, but when I searched her name, all I found were some brief news stories in the Bangor Daily News and the Ellsworth American and an obituary that claimed she had “died unexpectedly” in her dorm room.

  I bought a Snickers bar from the vending machine to gnaw on while I folded my clothes. My diet, never great to begin with except when I’d been living with Sarah, had deteriorated in recent weeks. Thinking about her made me melancholy. I wondered what man she’d woken up with this morning while I was stuck in a suffocating Laundromat washing the skunk smell out of my T-shirts.

  On my way out the door, I stopped at the counter and was startled to find the teen blabbermouth gone and Ben Sprague, of all people, standing in her place. He wore a starched white shirt, which showed the undershirt beneath it, blue Dickies held up by red suspenders, and an expression of inexplicable hostility.

  “What are you doing here?” he asked.

  I tried to project good fellowship. “Laundry. I was in town and had an emergency load to do. Is this your Laundromat?”

  “We own one in Machias and another in Calais.”

  “I didn’t know.”

  “Why would you?”


  I continued the charm offensive. “That was quite a night we had, wasn’t it?”

  “Yes.”

  “How’s Doris doing?”

  “The same. We heard the other one survived.”

  “He’s still in the medical-surgery ward at the Down East Community Hospital, but the doctors expect him to pull through.”

  Sprague blinked at me a few more times. “What can I do for you?”

  “I have a lot of laundry to do, and I was wondering about wash, dry, and fold service.”

  “We don’t offer that.”

  Glancing at the wall behind him, I noticed a sign advertising the prices for laundering shirts, dry cleaning, stain removal, and basic tailoring repairs. “The sign says you do.”

  “We’re not currently offering that service. We can’t afford the staff.”

  There were also framed photographs on the wall: pictures of Rotary Club members selling Christmas trees, a studio portrait of Doris and Ben. Several of the pictures included a young man with a beaklike nose wearing a UMaine sweatshirt.

  “Is that Joey?” I asked.

  Sprague blinked rapidly, started to turn his head, then stopped. “Yes, that’s my son.”

  “He goes to UMaine?”

  “No, he’s down in Boston now. Is there anything else I can do for you? Because I’m fairly busy here.”

  The two of us were the only ones in the Laundromat.

  I was pushing my duffel bag into the backseat of my patrol truck when I spotted a familiar figure heading in the direction of the Wash-O-Mat. He was wearing a wool sports jacket instead of a buckskin parka, and he was carrying a battered leather briefcase instead of a shovel. But the dashing bearded man was unmistakably someone I knew.

  “Hey, Kendrick!”

  The dog racer stopped in mid-stride and peered down the street, shading his eyes with his hand. It seemed strange to see him suddenly, having just read at length about his adventures; it was as if I had conjured him up somehow. In his tweedy professorial garb, he looked like a person wearing a costume. He didn’t seem to belong in the outfit he had on; he reminded me of one of those old paintings of a Carib Indian, who,

  having been snatched from the New World, was being presented in pantaloons and a doublet at the court of Queen Elizabeth I.

  I slammed the truck door and slid the keys into my still-damp pants pocket. I needed to find a bathroom where I could change into my newly dried clothes. The cold, wet fabric made me shiver now that I was out in the polar air again.

  “Laundry day?” Kendrick asked as he came toward me.

  “I didn’t realize the Spragues own this place.”

  “Ben and Doris have another one in Calais,” he said.

  “That’s what he was just telling me.” I lowered my voice, although there was no one around to hear. “Do you know what the story is with their son? I keep hearing he had an accident, but no one will tell me what happened.”

  Kendrick straightened up and gave me a piercing look. “Have you considered the possibility that the family is embarrassed that their son tried to kill himself?”

  His intention had been to shock me into silence, and he achieved the effect he was after. “That’s tragic,” I said at last.

  “And none of our business, wouldn’t you agree?”

  I nodded, feeling genuinely ashamed at my own curiosity. “You haven’t spoken with Doc lately, have you?”

  “No. Why?”

  “I haven’t heard from him since that night at the Spragues’. I wondered how he was doing.”

  “He falls into funks these days. Helen’s death hit him hard.”

  “I expected he’d call me or something,” I said. “By the time I got back to the Sprague house, you two had taken off.”

  He waited, unsure if this was supposed to be a question. “Doc caught a ride out with the ambulance. I had my dogs. There wasn’t any reason to stay.”

  “Rivard was expecting you to direct help to our location.”

  “There was no point. Ben told me you found the other man-Cates-buried inside a snowbank.”

  “That’s right.”

  “I also heard Sewall is under guard at the hospital. From that, I can infer that the police are regarding the death as suspicious.”

  “Now you’re the one asking inappropriate questions.”

  “I’ll take that as confirmation,” he said in the lofty tone that entered his voice every so often. “Has Sewall been talking to the police?”

  “You seem to be pretty good at reading me,” I said. “I’ll let you figure it out.”

  I could see his quick mind working in the little movements of his eyes. His nostrils flared suddenly. “Did you get sprayed by a skunk?”

  There was no point in denying anything; Kendrick was too smart for me to fool. “You remember the prankster I told you about?”

  “George Magoon.”

  “He let a skunk loose in my trailer.”

  Kendrick laughed so hard, he began to cough. “No wonder you’re spending your day off at the Laundromat.”

  I nodded, my lips pressed together in imitation of a smile.

  “You have to admit that was an inspired practical joke,” he said.

  “No, I don’t.”

  “Well, I think it’s pretty hilarious.” Without looking at his watch, he said, “I need to get to class. I’ll be curious to hear how the Prester Sewall case develops. Those two bastards deserved their miserable fates. If it had been up to me, I would have let them freeze to death out there.”

  And with that, he walked away. No handshake, no good-bye. I watched him climb into a burgundy 4 X 4 pickup with a kennel setup in the bed, a stack of cages for his malamutes. He started the engine but didn’t pull into traffic immediately. I had the strong sensation he was studying me in his side mirror. For a man with a class to teach, he was in no particular hurry to get to campus.

  After a minute of this ridiculousness-Kendrick watching me watching him-I returned to my vehicle. Next stop: the hardware store. I wondered how much it would cost to rent a carpet steamer. More money than I had in my checking account probably, but what choice did I have, short of moving out and forfeiting my security deposit?

  I needed to call Rivard, too. It was obvious my sergeant was avoiding me, since he hadn’t contacted me yet on the Brogan matter.

  When I glanced up the street again, I noticed that Kendrick had disappeared while I wasn’t paying attention.

  21

  I had the day off, which meant I could apply myself to the task of cleaning my trailer. How do you remove skunk spray from window curtains? I doubted that the guys at the local hardware store had encountered that particular problem before, but as a matter of fact, they had.

  The kindly white-haired man behind the counter recommended I try a special “Skunk-Off” spray, a compound I never knew existed. I rented a carpet cleaner with an upholstery attachment and bought a gallon of the cleaning solution. My shopping list included bleach, agricultural lime, contractor-grade trash bags, and twelve rolls of paper towels. By the time I left Machias, I’d pretty well disposed of all my disposable income for the month.

  Seven hours later, after I was done with my labors for the day, I wasn’t sure my trailer smelled a whole lot better. By then, my nose was useless; I could no longer discriminate between the actual skunk odor and my suspicion of its lingering presence. I’d worked up a sweat scrubbing the floors and walls, washing countless loads of laundry, and stuffing irrecoverable bedclothes into trash bags. I took a shower and changed into a T-shirt and jeans. Before I left, I decided to prop the windows open to air the place out overnight, which meant packing all my firearms and other valuables into the patrol truck. Fortunately, I owned almost nothing of value.

  I found Lucas Sewall’s notebook lying open on the kitchen table. Like everything else, the paper had absorbed a musky aroma. I flipped through the lined pages, but the boy’s cramped handwriting discouraged me from actually reading any of the dated diary entries. I gla
nced at my watch. Jamie should be home from her AA meeting, I realized.

  The thought of seeing her made me feel like a love-struck teenager. I laughed out loud in embarrassment.

  There was an enormous pickup truck-an emerald-green Toyota Tundra-parked beside Jamie’s van in the the Sewalls’ driveway. I nosed my truck in behind its bumper and prayed that I wouldn’t get clipped by a passing car. I tucked Lucas’s notebook under my arm and started up the shoveled walk.

  As I reached out to press the buzzer, the door sprang open. I found myself looking down at a remarkably small man. His features were fine-boned, and his eyes were overly large and heavily lashed. He had sandy blond hair parted in a heavy bang on one side. He stood no more than five feet two. He wore black snowmobile pants and boots and a T-shirt bearing the dragon logo of a karate school. My first thought was that he must be a boy, because he reminded me of those baby-faced kids in junior high school all the girls had crushes on. It took me a moment to realize that I was staring down at a man older than I was.

  “What do you want?” His voice was adenoidal, as if he had ceased the aging process when he turned fourteen.

  “Is Jamie here?”

  “Who are you?”

  Another realization came winging into my head. This man was Lucas’s father. The resemblance was uncanny.

  “Mike Bowditch. Maine Warden Service.”

  One small hand tightened into a fist. “Why do you want to see Jamie?”

  “Mitch, who’s at the door?” It was Jamie’s smoke-strained voice.

  “Some game warden.”

  Looking over the man’s blond head, I saw her emerge from the kitchen. She had changed out of her zebra uniform and was wearing an apron over a chambray shirt and faded jeans. The overhead light brought out the golden strands in her hair. “Mike?”

  “Hey, Jamie,” I said.

  The boyish man flashed his eyes back and forth from her to me. “You know this guy?”

  “He’s a friend.” She took a step to place her body between us. “Please come in, Mike.”

 

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