Praise for the Dave Cubiak Door County Mystery series:
DEATH STALKS DOOR COUNTY
“Can a big-city cop solve a series of murders whose only witnesses may be the hemlocks? An atmospheric debut.”
Kirkus Reviews
“A satisfyingly complex plot . . . showcasing one of the main characters, Wisconsin’s beautiful Door County. A great match for Nevada Barr fans.”
Library Journal
“Murder seems unseemly in Door County, a peninsula covered in forests, lined by beaches, and filled with summer cabins and tourist resorts. That’s the hook for murder-thriller Death Stalks Door County, the first in a series involving ranger Dave Cubiak, a former Chicago homicide detective.”
Milwaukee Shepherd Express
DEATH AT GILLS ROCK
“The latest Dave Cubiak Door County Mystery sees Cubiak investigating the mysterious carbon monoxide deaths of three prominent World War II vets who are about to be honored for their service”
Chicago Tribune
“Three World War II heroes about to be honored by the Coast Guard are all found dead, apparent victims of carbon monoxide poisoning while playing cards at a cabin. . . . The second installment of this first-rate series provides plenty of challenges for both the detective and the reader.”
Kirkus Reviews
“Skalka captures the gloomy small-town atmosphere vividly, and her intricate plot and well-developed characters will appeal to fans of William Kent Krueger.”
Booklist
DEATH IN COLD WATER
A DAVE CUBIAK DOOR COUNTY MYSTERY
PATRICIA SKALKA
THE UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN PRESS
The University of Wisconsin Press
1930 Monroe Street, 3rd Floor
Madison, Wisconsin 53711-2059
uwpress.wisc.edu
3 Henrietta Street, Covent Garden
London WCE8LU, United Kingdom
eurospanbookstore.com
Copyright © 2016 by Patricia Skalka
All rights reserved. Except in the case of brief quotations embedded in critical articles and reviews, no part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, transmitted in any format or by any means—digital, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise—or conveyed via the Internet or a website without written permission of the University of Wisconsin Press. Rights inquiries should be directed to [email protected].
Printed in the United States of America
This book may be available in a digital edition.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Names: Skalka, Patricia, author. | Skalka, Patricia. Dave Cubiak Door County mystery. Title: Death in cold water / Patricia Skalka.
Description: Madison, Wisconsin: The University of Wisconsin Press, [2016] | Series: A Dave Cubiak Door County mystery
Identifiers: LCCN 2016012946 | ISBN 9780299309206 (cloth: alk. paper) Subjects: LCSH: Door County (Wis.)—Fiction.
Classification: LCC PS3619.K34 D39 2016 | DDC 813/.6—dc23
LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2016012946
Map by Julia Padvoiskis
Door County is real. While I used the peninsula as the framework for the book, I also altered some details and added others to fit the story. The spirit of this majestic place remains unchanged.
Contents
Dedication
A Second Skin
Driving North
Missing
The Incident Room
An Invasion of Privacy
On the Beach
Word Gets Out
Two Ladies
Trouble at the Estate
The Nature of Evil
Black Dots
A Visit to the Yellow House
Men from Boys
Lunch at Pechta’s
Under the Clock Tower
Cold Water
A Difficult Task
Inside Hangar Three
The Rescue
Praying for Angels
The Special Room
On the Parlando
Acknowledgements
To
Eddie
I will cause the arrogance of the proud to cease, and will lay low the haughtiness of the terrible.
Isaiah 13:11
DEATH IN COLD WATER
A SECOND SKIN
Dave Cubiak cast his line into the gray water and waited. Perched on the rock ledge along the Green Bay shore, he’d waited all afternoon: For the sun to break through the clouds. For a fish to take his hook. For the autumn leaves to be done with their annual display of color. For the tourists to pack their bags and depart. For Cate to come home.
Watching the sun fall toward the horizon, Cubiak checked the time. It was late and he’d missed pretty much all of Sunday’s big football game: the Bears versus the Packers or, because this was Wisconsin, the Packers versus the Bears. He’d done so deliberately, even though skipping the match was an unforgivable sin in his adopted Door County. He’d have to pick up the highlights later. A few of the important details would provide fodder for a week’s worth of small talk around the department and elsewhere on the peninsula.
The day was cooler than predicted, and Cubiak wished he’d worn gloves and an extra layer. He tugged his collar up to his chin and reeled in his line. For the third time in thirty minutes, the bait was gone. Maybe he should try a lure, he thought, and reached for his dented red tackle box. As Cubiak rummaged through the jumble of jigs and plugs, he heard a rustling in the bushes and looked up to see a white bundle sail over his head toward the bay.
The sack hit the water about fifteen feet from shore.
“What the hell?” he said.
He figured it was a plastic bag filled with trash and wondered if he could snag it with his line.
Then something inside the bag wiggled, and there was a sound. A cry like that of a baby.
Cubiak struggled free of this boots and jacket and jumped in.
The momentum pulled him under, and the sheer cold of the water left him unable to move. After a panicky moment, he began to flail about. Pumping his arms and kicking his legs, he fought his way up and surfaced ten feet from the bag. It was sinking fast. Never much of a swimmer, Cubiak stroked desperately toward it. When he was within an arm’s length, the bag went under, trailing the rope that knotted it closed. Cubiak lunged for the cord and snared the end between his numbing fingers.
Not trusting his grip to hold, he snaked the rope around his wrist, drew the bag to his shoulder, and clumsily paddled toward shore, veering past the sheer ledge toward a patch of rocky beach. As he struggled to catch his breath, he clutched the water-soaked bag to his chest and stumbled over the wet, slippery pebbles. When he reached solid ground, he dropped to his knees and lowered the sack to the grass. It was an old pillowcase. Cubiak loosened the rope and began unknotting the top. The cries had ceased. Was he too late?
Cubiak peered inside and then fell back on his heels. He’d braved the icy water to save a litter of newborn kittens. The sheriff would have laughed if his teeth hadn’t started chattering. Who else would go out for fish and come back with kittens?
He took a second look and realized that something was not right. The kittens were ensnared by a thin cord that bound their paws and twisted around their necks and bodies. The more they tried to squirm free, the more they became entangled. At first Cubiak didn’t understand; then he realized that something had gone wrong when the kittens were born and that the rope was part of the afterbirth. There were four, maybe five kittens. He couldn’t tell. They meowed pitifully and crawled around each other, blind and terrified and probably colder than he was.
Cubiak got the scissors from the firs
t aid kit in the jeep and started cutting through the dried tissue. The kittens squirmed as he pulled the sinew from their scrawny, hairless bodies, but one by one he freed them. When he finished, he swaddled them in a wool blanket and laid the bundle on the passenger seat. With the heat on high, he headed home.
The shortest route took him past groves of yellow and scarlet maples but he didn’t notice the trees or their flaming colors. He was too cold and too mad about the kittens. He knew all too well that he could have drowned trying to save them, and he had the uneasy feeling that maybe he didn’t really care all that much if he had. Not that day.
Still, it was a cruel thing to do to such helpless creatures. And Cubiak had no tolerance for wanton cruelty. Which is why when he saw a familiar blue pickup outside the Tipsy Too, he swerved into the parking lot and pulled up alongside the truck. Just as he expected, the dented hood was warm. Cubiak left the jeep running with the heat on for the kittens and went inside. The tavern, a favorite with locals, was dimly lit and loud. Smoking had been banned for years but the faint stink of cigarettes still seeped from the woodwork and all those places that never saw a mop or cleaning rag.
Cubiak didn’t care that he appeared ridiculous to the crowd in the bar. Ignoring the sniggers and sideways glances from the clientele, he searched through the cluster of regulars until he found the owner of the truck. Leeland Ross, thirty-four, was a serial loser who smelled as nasty as he looked with his grimy clothes and tangle of dirty hair hanging over the collar of his frayed barn coat. Cradling a beer in thick, pawlike hands, he hunkered at the bar and stared up at one of the half-dozen TVs broadcasting the last few minutes of the game. The sheriff slapped the wet pillowcase in front of the burly, bearded man.
“This yours?” he said.
Leeland drained his beer. “Ain’t never seen it in my life,” he said, his eyes riveted to the screen.
The sheriff had had more run-ins with Leeland than he cared to remember. The most recent was some six months earlier when he’d responded to a neighbor’s complaint about possible animal abuse on the farm where Leeland lived with his father, Jon, another ornery sort. Then, as now, Cubiak had no proof.
“I found it full of kittens floating in the bay. Looks like your handiwork,” he said.
Leeland swiped at the pool of water dripping from Cubiak’s sleeve. “I eat what I kill, Sheriff.”
Cubiak grabbed the sack. He was tempted to wring it out over Leeland’s worn cowboy boots. There were times he wanted to provoke a man like Leeland. But he’d heard there’d been a death in the family recently and figured this was neither the time nor the place. “Sorry about your uncle,” he said.
Leeland grunted and the sheriff spun away.
The rest of the way home, Cubiak talked to the kittens: Assuring them that most people were decent, not sons of bitches like Leeland. Telling them how lucky they were that he’d been fishing the bay that afternoon. Wondering aloud why he’d been fishing at all. It wasn’t something he did regularly or often. It was the game. He’d gone to avoid watching the game being played at Soldier Field with the familiar glimpses of the Chicago skyline, reminders of the city where he’d once been a cop and had once had a wife and daughter. He had come to Door County to escape the past and had slowly adjusted his attitudes and lifestyle to the slower, more gentle pace of the peninsula. His new life fit like a second skin that was in need of tailoring. Yes, he told the kittens, he was growing into it, as they would into their own little kitten bodies, but sometimes—sometimes—the old skin prickled beneath and it was on those days that he needed to get away and try to lose himself.
Cubiak had hoped to find that Cate had made it back from her most recent assignment. Maybe she’d even had time to heat up one of the leftovers in the freezer and there’d be a warm supper on the table. But the house was dark and empty. And Cate’s mail—addressed to C. L. Wagner—lay unopened on the table. After a hot shower he downed the last two shots of vodka—the most he’d allowed himself in more than a year—and then he tended to the kittens.
The poor little things looked half starved. Cubiak poured warm milk into a baby bottle—the same one he’d used to feed the runt from Butch’s first litter—and let each of them take a turn. The dog bounced around nervously. Though unsettled by the kittens, she seemed to instinctively understand that they were to come to no harm. When he’d finished with the feeding, Cubiak put the kittens in a towel-lined box by the stove and left Butch to stand guard over them.
“Don’t worry. They’ll be gone soon,” Cubiak assured the dog while he heated a can of chili.
Hours later, the sheriff pried his eyes open to the neon glare of a digital clock. It was 11:17 p.m. and he was in bed, though he couldn’t remember how he got there. Out of habit, he reached to the other side of the mattress. Empty.
“Quiet,” he said to Butch, whose barking had wakened him.
The usually obedient dog ignored the command. Still cold and bleary with sleep, Cubiak realized that Butch was trying to get his attention. Had something happened to the kittens? Was Cate in trouble?
Over the dog’s yapping, Cubiak heard the pounding at the back door.
“Coming,” he said loudly as he swung his feet to the floor and dragged the blanket around his shoulders. Butch followed him down the short hall and into the kitchen. At the stove she took up her post by the kittens, leaving Cubiak to approach the rear porch alone.
“Where the hell is he? Knock louder.” A man was shouting. The voice was deep, slurred, and unfamiliar.
“Pipe down.” It was sheriff ’s deputy Mike Rowe, answering back.
The yard was dark. Clouds scuttled across the moon and blanketed most of the stars. The bits of light that got through glanced off the water and cast shadows along a narrow strip of Lake Michigan’s rocky shore. Cubiak stepped into the dark porch.
“Chief ! You there?”
Cubiak opened the door.
“Sorry to disturb you, Sheriff,” Rowe said, but before he could go on the stranger shoved past him. The man was tall and broad chested, and even in the faint moon glow Cubiak caught the arrogant thrust of his chin and the expensive cut of his clothes.
“Sorry, my ass,” the interloper said on breath that stank of beer and onions. Then, raising his voice again, he added, “Do you know who I am?”
Cubiak refused to be baited. “It’s nearly midnight,” he said as he stepped back and allowed the two into the kitchen. “What’s going on?” The sheriff directed the question to his deputy.
Butch growled.
“Quiet,” Cubiak said and the dog dropped to the floor. The sheriff turned to the stranger. “Sit down,” he said. The man hesitated, and then he grabbed a chair from the table and sat.
In the uneasy calm, Rowe explained that he was driving home from a party when he saw the stranger fly by on Highway 57 near Sturgeon Bay. “I clocked him pushing ninety and pulled him over. When he refused to provide his license and then couldn’t walk a straight line, I put him in my car and headed toward the jail. He said his lawyer would take care of the problem and kept insisting on seeing you. Claims his father’s disappeared and that there’d be hell to pay if you didn’t get on it right away.”
“Why didn’t you call me?”
“I did, but there was no answer at either number.”
“Right,” Cubiak said, picturing his cell phone on the jeep’s dash. “Sorry. Left the cell in the garage.” He lifted the receiver from the wall phone. No dial tone. “Damn squirrels must have chewed through the line again.”
He turned to the stranger, who’d gotten up and walked over to the box of kittens. “Who’s your father?”
The man looked up, his face a combination of disdain and surprise. “My father is Gerald Sneider.”
“Holy shit,” Rowe said.
Cubiak drew a blank and nodded to his deputy to go on. “Gerald Sneider is a local legend. He made a fortune in lumber in the UP and retired to an estate up near Ellison Bay. For years he was known as Mr. Packer.
This guy hasn’t missed a game in decades. Every season he buys as many tickets as he can get his hands on and gives them away to kids and local residents who can’t afford the price of admission. Any time the team needs money for improvements, he’s good for it. Rumor has it that in the lean years, he even provided the bonuses to coaches and players to keep up team morale.” Rowe looked at the man he’d stopped for drunk driving.
“You must be his son, Andy.”
“Andrew.”
Cubiak pointed to the empty chair. “Well, Andrew, why don’t you sit down again and tell us what happened.”
It started in Chicago. Third quarter they were sitting in the family skybox at Soldier Field when his father got a phone call. “The score is tied. It’s fourth down. The Packers are on the ten-yard line, and all of a sudden my dad stands up and announces that he has to leave. This is like against his religion. He never leaves any event until the end. He’s never left a game until the last player has walked off the field.”
“Did you say anything to him?”
“No. I thought it was pretty odd but I didn’t say a word. I’d learned a long time ago not to question or cross my father.” Later, when he, Andrew, was driving back, he called his father’s cell but there was no answer. “I must have tried ten times.”
“Maybe his phone died,” Cubiak said.
“No chance of that. My father prides himself on being the kind of person who never runs out of gas, never forgets to pay a bill, and never lets his phone battery lose more than fifty percent of its juice.”
Also, Andrew went on, he knew his dad had plans to stop at a friend’s house just north of Milwaukee, but when he checked with the friend he hadn’t seen him either. “Everything seemed wrong, so naturally I was in a hurry to get back to the house. Then this guy”—he jerked a thumb at Rowe—“stopped me.”
“As he should, considering how fast you were driving and the fact you’re in no condition to drive at all.” Cubiak scrubbed the top of Butch’s head. “The game ended seven hours ago. Allow five hours for the drive up with traffic, where were you the other two?”
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