The William Kent Krueger Collection 2

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The William Kent Krueger Collection 2 Page 12

by William Kent Krueger


  * * *

  Meloux put another bowl and spoon on the table and dished up stew. The men ate without speaking, Meloux filling the quiet of the one room with the sound of his slurping as he sucked from his spoon. He’d tossed Walleye a big ham bone, and the dog gnawed contentedly in the corner. When they’d eaten, Cork took a pack of Lucky Strikes he’d bought at the Food ’N Fuel on his way out of Aurora and held the cigarettes out to Meloux. The old Mide accepted the offering. Without a word, he stood up, and Cork and Solemn followed. Meloux walked outside, led them down a path toward the lake, between two rock outcroppings to a place where sooted stones ringed a circle of ash. The lake spread before them, water the color of apricots, reflecting a sky full of the afterglow of sunset. Meloux sat on a maple stump, the other two on the ground. Walleye, who’d trotted along, circled tightly a couple of times and, with a tired groan, eased himself onto the dirt near his master. From the pack Cork had given him, Meloux took one cigarette. Carefully, he tore open the paper and let the tobacco fall loose into his palm. He pinched the tobacco and sprinkled a bit to the west, to the north, to the east, and to the south. He took another pinch and offered it to the sky, and then a final sprinkling offered to the earth. When this was done, he took another cigarette for himself, then passed the pack to the others. Meloux wedged a wrinkled hand into the pocket of his bib overalls and drew out a small box of wooden matches. One after another, the men lit up and smoked for a while, letting the silence that had begun with the meal linger. In the apricot light, Cork studied Solemn’s face.

  There was something very different about the young man. Since Sam’s passing, the muscles around Solemn’s eyes were always tense, wary, waiting, expecting the approach of something bad. That tension was gone now. Cork had the feeling he was finally seeing Solemn’s eyes clearly. And they were beautiful eyes, dark brown and sparkling.

  Meloux sat with the lake at his back. He blew smoke into evening air that smelled of pines and also, in that particular place, of the char and ash of many fires.

  Without looking directly at Solemn, Meloux said, “I think you are right. I think it is time.”

  Solemn seemed to divine Cork’s confusion. “We’re talking about what I ran from,” he said. “It’s time to go back and face it.”

  “I was beginning to think you were dead,” Cork said.

  Solemn laughed. “In a way, I was. After you left me alone at Sam’s Place that day, I got to thinking about my chances with the law. I knew what people thought of me. I didn’t see any way I was going to get a break. Man, I could feel those iron bars closing in. I got scared and ran. I followed the lake north, thinking I’d make it to Canada, figure what to do from there. But I didn’t get to Canada. I ran into Henry instead.”

  The old Mide shook his head. “You ran into Walleye.”

  Solemn pointed toward the trees northwest along the lake. “Out there in the woods beside Half Mile Spring. Walleye wouldn’t let me pass. A few minutes later, Henry showed up.”

  Meloux said, “I thought Walleye must have scared up a rabbit. Turned out to be a scared rabbit in a young man’s skin.”

  He grinned, and Solemn laughed.

  “I gave him shelter,” Meloux said. “And food. I heard his story. I let him stay, and I burned cedar, and considered what should be done. The nephew of Sam Winter Moon, that is something to think about. If he were a man truly, I would have told him to turn and face his problems. But I could see he wasn’t. And then I understood.” The old man took a draw on his cigarette, and let the smoke out slowly. “Giigwishimowin.”

  Cork knew the word, knew of the rite. In the days before white people disrupted the Anishinaabe way, giigwishimowin was the experience that marked a male’s passage into manhood. When the time was right, usually sometime in his teens, a young man was sent out into the forest alone to fast and to seek a vision that would guide him for the rest of his life. Not until Kitchimanidoo, the Great Spirit, had granted him that vision showing him the path he was to follow and that would lead him in harmony with creation, did he return to his village. He left as a boy and came back as a man, in his own eyes and in the eyes of his people.

  “I explained it to him, because it was a thing he had never heard of,” Meloux said.

  “A modern Shinnob.” Solemn smiled at his ignorance. “Mumbo jumbo, I thought. But I figured whatever it took to keep my ass out of jail. Henry led me into the woods. We walked for a couple of hours. I didn’t have a clue where we were going, where we were. Finally Henry stopped and said, ‘Here.’ That’s all. A man of few words.”

  “You don’t have to speak much if you speak well,” Meloux replied.

  “We were in this big hollow with a stream running through,” Solemn went on. “I asked Henry what I was supposed to eat. He said, ‘Nothing.’ I asked him what exactly I was supposed to do. He said ‘Nothing.’ I asked him when he would come back. He said, ‘When it’s time.’ And then he left.

  “At first, I was just bored, you know. Time dragged by. Night came. I went to sleep. Maybe I dreamed, I don’t remember. The next day I got hungry. I thought about looking around for something to eat, but Henry told me to eat nothing, so that’s what I did. When I got thirsty, I drank from the stream. I sat, thought, slept, thought some more. Day after day. Man, my stomach growled like a bear. The nights got pretty cold. The only visitors I had were blackflies and wood ticks. A lot of times, I was close to just packing it in. But what then? There wasn’t anyplace for me to go. I lost track of the days. My thinking began to get confused. Henry tells me I was out there for sixteen days when it finally happened, when I finally had my vision.

  “I was sitting up against a big rock beside the stream when He walked out of the forest. He came to where I was and smiled. He sat down and we talked.”

  Solemn’s eyes were alive with the color of the sky and the lake, the color of a fire that burned beyond the horizon but still lit everything.

  “Who was it?” Cork finally asked.

  “You’re going to love this,” Solemn said. “It was Jesus.”

  * * *

  Cork looked at Meloux, who seemed unperturbed at this startling declaration.

  “Jesus?” Cork said.

  “The Son of God,” Solemn said.

  “He appeared to you?”

  “We had a good, long talk.”

  Cork peered hard at Solemn’s face. He saw no indication that it was a joke, a hoax, a diversion. In fact, what he saw in those dark eyes was utter calm.

  Cork said, “What was he wearing?”

  “Jeans. An old flannel shirt. Minnetonka moccasins, I think.”

  “He was dressed like a Minnesota tourist?”

  “Maybe in Mexico He wears a sombrero,” Solemn said.

  Cork felt fire on his fingers, and he realized he’d forgotten about his cigarette. The ember had burned all the way down to the point where it was singeing his skin. He dropped the cigarette and jerked his hand to his mouth to suck away the pain.

  “Did he give you a message to deliver?”

  “We just talked.”

  Cork blew on his fingers. “About what?”

  “He told me He understood what it was like to be accused of a crime you didn’t commit. He told me it was okay to be afraid, but that all things occurred for a purpose, and to believe that all of this was happening for a reason.”

  “Did he tell you the reason?”

  “Just to believe.”

  “What happened then?”

  “He told me he knew I was tired and that I should lie down and sleep. So I did. When I woke up, he was gone.”

  “When you woke up,” Cork said.

  “You think it was just a dream,” Solemn said.

  Cork looked toward Henry Meloux. “What do you think?”

  Meloux finished his own cigarette, ground the ember against the side of the maple stump, and threw the butt into the ashes inside the stone ring.

  “The concern on a vision quest is this: Has the vision guided the life?
Solemn Winter Moon went into those woods lost. When he came out, he had found himself. Look at him, Corcoran. You can see the change for yourself.”

  “Henry, do you really think Jesus visited Solemn?”

  The old Mide gave it some consideration. “In a thing like this,” he finally said, “what one man thinks, or even what many men think, isn’t important. A life has been changed. A good man walks with us today. This is always a reason to be glad.”

  Cork looked back at Solemn. “Just like that, it happened?”

  “Just like that,” Solemn replied. He licked his fingers, pinched the ember of his cigarette to extinguish the glow, and tossed the butt into the ashes with Meloux’s. “I figure your coming here is a sign that it’s time to go back.”

  Solemn stood up, then Henry and Cork. Walleye, when he saw the others rise, yawned and stretched, and slowly got to his feet.

  “Migwech,” Solemn said to Henry. Thank you.

  Henry, a man of few words, closed his eyes, and nodded once.

  15

  CORK AND SOLEMN walked back toward the Bronco as night swept the light from the sky. Cork was careful because the way was growing dark. They came to Wine Creek. As they prepared to cross, Solemn spoke at his back.

  “You don’t believe me.”

  “I believe you believe what you saw,” Cork said.

  “But it wasn’t real, right? Just a dream. Or maybe a hallucination brought on by the fast.”

  Cork turned back. “What did he look like? What was the color of his hair?”

  “Black.”

  “Long or short?”

  “Long.”

  “Eyes?”

  “Dark brown, kind of like walnuts, but so soft you could lie down in them.”

  “You’ve just described a Shinnob. Isn’t it possible that you did hallucinate? Or you know the Shinnob sense of humor. Maybe somebody played a joke on you that, in your weakened condition, you bought hook, line, and sinker.”

  “What I saw was real. It’s important that you believe it.”

  “What’s important is what the sheriff’s people are going to believe. Put yourself in their place. A guy with your background bolts in the middle of a murder investigation, and next thing they know, you claim to have talked with Jesus Christ. They’re going to think one of two things. Either you’re trying something you hope will give you a shot at an insanity plea. Or you really are crazy.”

  “Because people don’t talk to Jesus?” Solemn said.

  “Because Jesus doesn’t just step out of the woods wearing Minnetonka moccasins.”

  “I’m here to tell you that sometimes He does.”

  Solemn leaned very close to Cork so that his face was less than a foot away. For an uncomfortably long time, he looked into Cork’s face, something the Ojibwe did not normally do. To look into the eyes of another was a piercing of sorts. And Cork felt pierced.

  “What did you see,” Solemn finally said.

  “I don’t know what you’re talking about.”

  “It’s in your eyes. You saw something, too, but don’t understand it. What?”

  Was Solemn referring to the gray visage that had guided Cork to safety during the whiteout on Fisheye Lake? How could he know?

  “You’re wrong.” Cork turned away, studied the creek in the dark, looking for the stones over the water.

  “You told me before that if I turned myself in, you’d stand by me,” Solemn said. “Will you?”

  “Yes.”

  “Even though you don’t believe me.”

  “I believe you didn’t kill Charlotte.”

  “I appreciate that.” Then Solemn said something strange. “What’s ahead won’t be easy.”

  “That’s exactly what I’ve been trying to tell you,” Cork said. “You’re in deep shit.”

  “I mean for you. I’ve talked with Jesus. I have that to give me strength and comfort. But I know that you doubt God.”

  “For me, God doesn’t matter. What matters is that I gave you my word.”

  His foot found the first stone, and he crossed Wine Creek.

  * * *

  From the pay phone in the waiting area of the sheriff’s department, Cork called Jo at home. He called Dot Winter Moon but got her answering machine and left her a message. Finally, he called Sam’s Place to apologize to his daughters for having deserted. When they heard his reason, they didn’t give him a hard time, and they agreed to close.

  Randy Gooding came out of the secured area and seated himself on the hard plastic bench where Cork sat waiting for Jo.

  “Winter Moon’s taking all this pretty calmly.”

  “He’s had time to think things over.”

  Gooding scratched the back of his head. “How’d you find him?”

  “Doesn’t matter.”

  “You convince him to come in?”

  “That was his idea.”

  Gooding nodded. “Sheriff’s on his way. We had some trouble tracking him down. He was at a swank dinner thing out at the Four Seasons. He’ll probably show up in a tux.”

  “Nobody in Aurora wears a tux except to their wedding.”

  Gooding smiled slightly. “Having Winter Moon in custody is such an occasion for Arne, I wouldn’t be surprised if he took the time to stop by home and put one on. He’s been taking a lot of grief for letting Winter Moon get away. But if he closes this case, he’s got his future wrapped up like a big, fat cigar.”

  Cork leaned forward and clasped his hands. “Solemn didn’t do it.”

  “Sure a lot of evidence that says otherwise.”

  The front door opened and Jo walked in. She’d come in a hurry. She had on jeans and a gray sweatshirt. Her reading glasses were still propped on top of her head. She held Stevie by the hand. In the years when he’d have been old enough to remember, Stevie had never been in the sheriff’s office. His eyes were like two big, shiny chunks of coal as he took the place in.

  “I didn’t have anybody to leave him with,” Jo said in response to Cork’s look of surprise. “The girls are at Sam’s Place, and Rose is at the rectory.”

  “No problem,” Cork said. “Come on over and sit with me, Stevie.”

  The moment Jo appeared, Randy Gooding had politely stood up. Stevie settled himself in the spot vacated by Gooding.

  “Where’s Solemn?” Jo asked.

  Gooding said, “We’ve got him in a holding cell at the moment. The sheriff hasn’t arrived yet.”

  “Did anybody talk to him?”

  “I read him his Miranda rights, but he’d already been strongly cautioned against making any statements without an attorney present.” Gooding cast a glance at Cork. “He was pleasant but he didn’t say anything.”

  “I’d like to see him.”

  “I’d rather you waited until the sheriff—”

  Arne Soderberg swept through the front door. It wasn’t a tux he was wearing, but it was a dark blue suit that probably cost enough money for Cork to have damn near retired on it. The sheriff’s eyes quickly took in everyone in the waiting area, but he spoke only to Gooding.

  “He’s in lockup?”

  “Yes.”

  “Question him yet?”

  “He asked to have an attorney present.”

  Soderberg looked at Jo. “Lost cause, counselor. County attorney says we’ve already got enough to nail him.”

  “That’s what county attorneys are supposed to say,” Jo replied.

  Soderberg finally deigned to speak to Cork. “You bring him in?”

  “Solemn came in on his own. I just provided the transportation.”

  “Fine.” Soderberg smiled and clapped Gooding on the shoulder. “Great day, Randy. Great day. Shall we go have a talk with Winter Moon?”

  Soderberg and Gooding started toward the security door. Jo looked at Cork.

  “I’ll stay here and keep Stevie company,” he told her. “You see to Solemn.”

  Jo spoke quietly, but with great firmness. “I’m not taking his case, Cork. I’ll just see him
through things until he can secure representation, that’s all.”

  “He wants you to represent him.”

  “That’s tough. He’s getting somebody else.”

  “Try telling him that.”

  Jo gave him a cold eye, but he knew it wasn’t even half the chilly look Solemn would get when he made his request.

  “Where do they keep the bad guys?” Stevie asked once everyone had gone.

  “Just because someone’s under arrest that doesn’t make him a bad guy. The police sometimes make mistakes, too.”

  It was nearing his bedtime, and Stevie settled against his father and yawned. “Can I see the jail?”

  “Not tonight.”

  “Were you ever in jail?”

  “Lots of times. But fortunately, I always had the key.” He tickled his son’s cheek.

  Stevie laughed and pushed at his father’s hand. “Will Mom be long?”

  “I don’t know. Maybe.”

  Stevie slid down, laid his body out along the bench and put his head on his father’s lap. Cork stroked his son’s hair. It was oily, in need of a shampoo. By the time they all got home that night, it would be too late for washing. Tomorrow would have to do.

  “Solemn is a funny name,” Stevie said. He stared at the bright light in the ceiling, his dark eyes reflecting the glare. He seemed mesmerized. Or more likely, just tired.

  “I suppose,” Cork said.

  Stevie’s eyes continued to glaze over. In a few minutes, his eyelids began to droop under the weight of his weariness. He finally let them close.

  It was almost an hour before Jo came out again. She walked slowly toward the bench where Cork sat cradling Stevie’s head in his lap. Her normally sharp blue eyes seemed dulled, a little bewildered.

  “Are you okay?” Cork asked.

  “I’m not sure,” she said.

  “What happened?”

  She spoke as if she couldn’t quite believe what she was saying. “I agreed to take his case.”

  * * *

  A wind came up and blew all night long. Jo lay in bed next to Cork, listening to the trees groan and shiver, to the wind as it rushed through the leaves with a sound like floodwaters. The curtains did a frantic dance. Finally she got up and closed the bedroom windows. When she came back to bed, she said, “By morning all the lilac blossoms will be gone.”

 

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