Stabenow, Dana - Shugak 11 - The Singing Of The Dead
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While Johnny was checking out Ethan's old room, still filled with
Ethan's old model planes, Ethan walked Kate back to her truck. "I've
already got him enrolled in school in Niniltna. He knows how to run a
four-wheeler, and he knows how long it'll take him to get there. He's
got the schedule, and his books."
"Yeah, but will he go?"
"He says yes."
"That's not necessarily the whole-hearted endorsement I was looking for,
Kate."
"He says yes," she repeated. "He's young, but he keeps his word when he
gives it. He'll go." At least for the next two years, she thought, and
shrugged it off. Time enough to think about that when it happened.
Ethan touched her arm and in an instant it was like she was back on the
top of Widow's Peak on a hot, sunny
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afternoon, with the sky clear all the way to Middleton Island. She moved
to one side, out of reach. "What?"
"Why are you leaving him? He hasn't been here that long. Why are you
just taking off on him?" He paused. "He's Jack's boy, isn't he?"
"Yes." She looked over his shoulder and concentrated on a stellar blue
jay showing off his shiny blue feathers against the dark green branch of
a white spruce. She nodded at the house. "He's with his mom now, or he's
supposed to be. He ran away."
"Ah, shit."
"Not for the first time. His mother told him if he ran off again, he
could stay lost. He hitchhiked here from Arizona, Ethan."
"He's what, fourteen?" When she nodded, he said, "Ballsy little bastard,
isn't he?"
Kate ignored the admiration in Ethan's comment. It was strictly a guy
thing. "What Johnny doesn't realize is, Jane hates my guts. She showed
up last night at Bobby's. Now that she knows he's with me, she won't
stop looking."
"Happy Mother's Day."
"Yeah."
"She going to show up out here?"
"Not here, not yet. My place, maybe."
"So you want him here when she does."
She nodded. "The reason I'm leaving myself is, I've got a job. Sooner or
later, I'm going to have to hire a lawyer. That takes money."
Ethan scratched his chin. "He's pissed at you, isn't he."
It wasn't a question, but she answered it anyway. "Yeah." It was a
relief to share it with someone else, even Ethan. "Yes, he is."
"Mad because his dad went with you and got killed." Again, it wasn't a
question.
"Yes."
"All your fault."
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She nodded.
"Like my dad," he said, surprising her. "That was all your fault, too."
She gaped at him. Never once had any of the Int-Hout boys pointed the
finger at her for Abel's death. Not once had any of them so much as
whispered the possibility that she might be to blame for his suicide,
that if she had let sleeping park rangers and Anchorage investigators
lie, Abel might be alive today. Abel, and now Jack. Her fault, she
thought bleakly. Her most grievous fault.
"No, it wasn't," Ethan said, surprising her. "Dad was Dad, an
unreconstructed Alaska old fart who never got past 1925 in his thinking.
Miller, maybe, was an accident. Dahl was deliberate. He wasn't going to
live with that any longer than he had to whether you caught him out or not."
She felt a slackening of tension in her gut she hadn't known was there.
His next words made her tighten up again.
"Last year, you got in the middle of a bunch of crazies. You're lucky to
be alive yourself." He turned to go, and over his shoulder he said, "And
I was damn sorry to hear about Jack Morgan, Kate. Everybody says he was
a hell of a good man. I liked him, what I saw of him, when we met at
Bernie's that time."
She watched him walk down the trail and she thought, Sure you did.
About as much as she had liked Margaret.
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Kate hadn't been in Ahtna since the April before last, when the engine
fell off a 747 and crashed through the roof of her cabin, along with
fifty thousand dollars in compensation that had to be deposited to her
account at the Last Frontier Bank. The teller had goggled at the stack
of cash, and the manager had to be called over to okay the transaction.
He did, after telling Kate three times that all deposits of more than
five thousand dollars had to be reported to the IRS. Kate was sure that
the moment she left the building they'd been running the numbers on the
bills.
After repairs to the homestead and the truck, a new snow machine, tires
all around for the four-wheeler, a truck load of new tools, a year's
supply of canned goods, and a steady line of mostly deserving Park rats
with their hands out, there was less than two thousand left, but when
she'd gone to Anchorage that April she'd had money to burn. She'd taken
Jack to dinner every night. She'd insisted on buying him a cut-and-style
at Jeri's, where he'd once forced her into the chair. When he said,
barely a jest, "Just so long as you don't make me wear lingerie," she'd
taken him to Nordstrom and had him parade back and forth in a series of
sports jackets and yuppy chinos. She would have taken him over to the
shoe section if he hadn't rebelled. "Paybacks are hell," she'd said.
"I got paid back that night," he'd growled.
The 172 hit an air pocket, and she was jolted out of her
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reverie. The pilot, a tall, thin man in oil-stained coveralls with a
lantern jaw in perpetual need of a shave touched the yoke
absentmindedly, not looking up from the book he was reading. Kate had
already checked out the title. Round the Bend by Nevil Shute. One of
George Perry's favorite authors, along with Earnest K. Gann. Both men
wrote about flying like they'd held a plane up in the air a time or two,
something George, full-time Bush pilot, part-time A&P mechanic, and sole
proprietor of an air taxi, appreciated in full.
The plane steadied into level flight once more. They were fifteen
minutes out of Niniltna, another fifteen minutes to go. It was a clear
day, the sun high in the sky, and the Quilak Mountains loomed at their
back like a bridge between earth and heaven, with the right of way
reserved only for a worthy few. Beneath them the Kanuyaq River doubled
and tripled back on itself as the foothills flattened reluctantly into a
broad plateau. Here and there a roof showed beneath the branches of
trees that had been encouraged to grow closely to the eaves, the better
to protect the owner's privacy. A skiff was pulled up on a sandbar, the
aluminum hull dull in the waning light. A black bear and three cubs took
fright at the sound of their engine, and Kate's last sight of them had
the sow frantically pushing one cub up the lone spruce tree in the
middle of a meadow.
She had bought Jack two of the jackets she had forced him to model,
because the one he usually wore for court was a disgrace, one of the
pockets hanging by one corner and soft-boiled egg stains down the front,
and because she rarely had the opportunity to buy him gifts. She had
followed him into the dressing room to make sure he didn't leave them
behind. There
had been a close encounter in that dressing room that
should have got them arrested, and would have if that clerk waiting on
them hadn't...
Ahtna was a small town of two thousand, built where the northern reaches
of the Kanuyaq River met the Kanuyaq
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River Highway, which connected the Glenn Highway with Valdez. It was one
of the first communities of any size in Alaska, after Fairbanks and
Nome, started by one of the smarter stampeders who had seen early on
that while the miners themselves made little or no money, the businesses
who sold miners their supplies made out like bandits. "Mining the
miners," they called it. Some of the miner miners were bandits, come to
that, Kate thought, reminded of certain members of her own family tree,
one of whom had been hung for a horse thief back in 1899. Not that Emaa
had ever admitted to it, but Kate had done some research for a paper on
local history for a school project, and the story of the hanging had
been on the front page of what was then the weekly Ahtna Tribune. It had
been one of the more well-attended public events in Ahtna's early days,
according to the reporter, who quoted the newly sworn territorial
sheriff in every paragraph.
Now, with her experience as a law enforcement professional, she thought
of the article with a more informed perspective. New lawman on the job
out to make a name for himself, establish his authority, send out a
warning to the other nogoodniks in his jurisdiction not to shit in his
nest. Poor Zebulon Shugak didn't stand a chance. But he had certainly
given rise to a great deal of merriment among the student population of
Kate's generation of Niniltna High, which had added not inconsiderably
to her own status as well.
And then there had been the bonus of embarrassing her grandmother.
Johnny Morgan, she thought, was an amateur compared to Kate Shugak in
her prime.
Evidently the sheriff's plan had worked; Ahtna had grown to become a
thriving little hub town, and had been the first to embrace flight by
building an airstrip out of gravel mined from an oxbow a mile up the
river and hauling in tanks to be filled with fuel which was sold at
rates just this side of extortion. Ahtna was the Park's banking
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hub, its marketing hub, its educational hub, with one of the University
of Alaska's few remaining regional branches, and its bureaucratic hub,
with federal offices for the departments of the Forest Service, Housing
& Urban Development, the Air National Guard, and everything in between,
including, naturally, the National Parks Service. Raven, the Native
regional corporation, was doing a brisk business in erecting HUD-backed
subdivisions and renting the results to federal employees, many of whom
were by now Raven shareholders. One pocket picks the other, Kate thought
as they banked over one such subdivision and came in for a landing with
George Perry all over it, light as a feather, straight as an arrow; you
didn't know you were on the ground until you'd stepped out of the plane.
Bush born and bred, Kate appreciated a good pilot above all else.
"Somebody meeting you?" George shouted over the roar of the engine. Mutt
gave George a swipe with her tongue before jumping out to stand next to
Kate, and laughed up at him with her guilty tongue hanging out when he
swore and wiped his face on his sleeve.
"I'm fine," Kate shouted back.
"Okay," he shouted in reply, although he didn't look convinced that it
was. Everyone was treating her like she was breakable these days. Kate
shut the door with more force than necessary. George locked down the
handle, and the Cessna taxied down to the end of the runway and took off
again.
She hitched a ride with someone she didn't know, a man at least ten
years her junior, his profession made known by the buoys and silver
seine in the bed of the truck. He offered to buy her a drink and tell
her his troubles. Kate was so pleased at this complete ignorance of her
identity and recent history that she let him down a lot easier than she
might have, and they parted friends in front of the hotel. Mutt even
wagged her tail. She never kissed on the first date.
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Kate paused for a moment, watching the gray, silty current of the river
flow powerfully between high, crumbling banks. A spruce tree had given
up the fight to maintain the vertical and was laying on its side, roots
exposed, its top just above water. Two skiffs passed in midstream going
in opposite directions, the upstream one empty, the downstream one piled
high with boxes and cans and crates and cartons, the gunnel almost
awash. A flock of Canada geese made a low pass in a ragged vee, honking
the call that sounded so joyous in spring and so melancholy in fall.
Mutt stood next to her, the picture of patience. Cars and tracks
arrived, doors slammed, gravel crunched underfoot. Some people nodded,
others said hello with great care, as if they were afraid she might
bite. Whispered comments floated back to her. "-lucky to be alive-" "Did
you know Jack Morgan? A great guy-" "-World War III, Denali style-"
"-she seems all right, you have to wonder if it was as bad as they say-"
Near them a car door opened. "Miss Shugak?"
Mutt's ears pricked up, and she took a pace forward. The man backed into
the doorframe with a thump and said, the words tumbling out, "Mr. Herman
would like to speak to you for a few moments, if you don't mind." He
looked from Mutt to the handle of the rear door, torn between his duty
and his wish to live. Stretching his arm as far as he could, he managed
to snag the handle and maneuver the door open, all the while keeping one
foot in the well of the driver's seat.
Kate was always appreciative of a job done against the odds, and she
took pity on him. "It's all right. She doesn't bite unless I tell her
to." And then because she couldn't resist it, "Or unless she's hungry."
The manner of his reentry into the car was less than graceful.
Peter Heiman was laughing when she bent down to look in at him. When he
could he said, "Hey, Kate."
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"Hey, Pete," she said.
"Get your ass on in here and set a spell. You, too, Mutt."
With a graceful leap Mutt was sitting down in his open briefcase, papers
flying everywhere. Kate climbed in and closed the door.
"Damn, I love this dog," Peter Heiman said, scratching behind Mutt's
ears. Kate couldn't tell for sure, but she thought the backs of the
driver's ears looked a little red. "How you been, Kate?"
"Okay, I guess," she said, and at his look added, "Better now."
"Good. I was sorry to hear about Jack Morgan. I know you two were close
for a long time. How come you never married, anyway?"
She looked away. "I guess we just weren't the marrying kind."
"I hear his kid is staying with you."
"Yes." He raised an eyebrow, and she said, "He's fourteen. That's all
you need to know."
He laughed again. She'd always liked that about him, his laughter. He
laughed a lot, over cribbage games at Ab
el's homestead, over the bar at
Bernie's, at high-school versus town-team basketball games in Niniltna.
He was as crafty an opportunist as ever did business in the Park, but he
had a strong sense of the ridiculous and an even stronger sense of
reality, and she respected him as much as she respected anyone in public
office.
"So what's up, Pete?" she said. "You looked like you were waiting for me."
His hand still on Mutt's head. "I was." Their eyes met. "Brad? Take a