He was watching Sammie when he said this, presumably hoping for a reaction. She stuck to taking notes.
Disappointed, he continued, “After that, it spreads out. You have a food and beverage manager, a personnel manager, marketing manager… brass hats like that, and each of them has a bunch of people under them that swells or fades depending on the season.”
“Anyone run the CEO?” I asked.
“Oh, yeah. There’s a board of directors. They’re basically invisible except when they use their gold passes to cut to the head of a lift line. I don’t know when they meet or what they do, but none of us ever heard about them. It was all the CEO or CFO on down, and for the operational types mostly Linda and the individual department managers.”
“What’s McNally like?” Sammie asked, not looking up from her notes.
“He cruises around like the captain of the Love Boat, trying to make everybody feel good—just the opposite of Gorenstein. No one who works there has much time for him, since he didn’t really know anything except how to dress good and play politics, but I guess they needed all of that they could stand.”
“Why?”
“I worked other mountains when I was younger, mostly as a garage mechanic. That’s actually how I started at Tucker, before the security job opened up. The pressure’s about the same everywhere, but some are run well, with the employees taken care of and the equipment kept up, and others are pretty fly-by-night. Like Tucker. So McNally had to sound and look happier than maybe he was. He’s a good enough shit. I mean, I liked the guy, ’cause I knew he was in a jam. He never showed it, though. Always acted glad to see you—and remembered names, too.”
“I heard they were getting ready to spend a fortune,” I said. “Really fix it up.”
Newell looked unimpressed. “Yeah, well, whatever. It would take a fortune just to bring the dump up to code, if you ask me… Not that you are.”
“What about the resort generally? The nightclub and condos, the owners versus the day skiers, the full-timers and the seasonal workers. What’s it like as a society?”
He paused thoughtfully before answering, “It’s a company town—lives and dies with the resort. That makes it like a soap opera, with everybody angling for position and every clubby little group pissing on the other. And there’s a real pecking order. The lifties—that’s the lift operators—they’re probably at the bottom of the heap. Some of them, especially the loaders who just make sure people get seated without killing themselves, they’re barely conscious half the time. Long hair, tattoos, body piercing, into drugs. Not all of ’em, of course, but a bunch.
“At the other extreme, not counting the management types, the ski patrol, and the instructors, you got the snowmakers. They have as many misfits, but they’re big on the job, you know? They get off on making snow, like it was an art form. And they see themselves as Navy SEALs or something—the elite. They tear around on snowmobiles like Harley riders, strut their stuff, pretty much keep to themselves as a group. If ever some employees get into a bar fight or have a run-in with the police, they’re probably snowmakers.”
He’d loosened up during all this, his face relaxing and his hands becoming more expressive. There was something about being part of this culture that clearly captured his imagination. Cops tend to find comfort in a regulated world with rules and parameters and clearly defined social structures, but they’re also tribal by nature. It sounded like Tucker Peak and its brethren offered a perfect mixture of both.
“From what I’ve heard,” he continued, “the mountain’s more like a traveling circus as far as personalities go. People are real loyal to it, even with the shitty pay. They come back year after year—guys like home builders and roofers and others who can’t do their regular work in the winter. And some of the instructors and snowmakers are like gypsies—when we got our summer up here, it’s winter in Australia or New Zealand or South America, south of the equator, so they go and work for resorts down there, skiing year ’round.”
He paused, staring at the tabletop. “’Course, that’s all changing, too. Money’s tight, management’s looking for cheap labor. A lot of the older hands have moved on to better mountains. I got sick of all the deadheads they were hiring, who basically sign up to ski for free and fuck up the equipment. Real foolish, if you ask me. That’s why I quit.” He looked suddenly belligerent. “Not ’cause of that prick Manning.”
“Were you aware of much criminal activity going on?” I asked, blandly ignoring the reference.
He smiled broadly for the first time. “I don’t guess I’m the best one to answer that. Everyone knew I was a cop, or that I wanted to be one in the early days. So they didn’t brag much around me. But look at what you got—bunch of bums, basically, wandering from place to place, leading a hard life with weird hours. You’re going to get some criminals mixed in, and some dopers, guaranteed. Hell, I used to get high just walking through the locker room at shift change, the air was so full of dope.”
“But nothing like a ring.”
He laughed. “Too organized—those people’re way too flaky for that. Anything’s possible, I guess, but I don’t see it. A few tickets would be ripped off, or a till would go light at the end of the day, but I don’t see a gang operating there. I said it was like a separate world, but a small one, too: Everybody knows what everybody else is doing.”
He paused and scratched his cheek. “’Course, on the burglaries, if there were only two guys, maybe—one inside, one out—I could see that.”
“Any candidate you can think of that still works there?” I asked him.
He shrugged. “I’d look at the newcomers, the ones without the loyalty. Tucker Peak may be on the skids, but there’s still a shitload of money on that mountain. Given the caliber of some of those employees, I’d say that’s a hot combination.”
Chapter 7
TWO WEEKS LATER, NEAR MIDNIGHT, I STEPPED OUTSIDE THE ONE BAR that catered almost exclusively to Tucker Peak employees. It was on the highway feeding the access road, two miles from Lifton, located in a no-man’s-land among a small cluster of commercial buildings that survived like mollusks on the hull of a ship: a general store, a gas station, a ski equipment and rental place, a motel, and a couple of nondescript storage buildings. The bar was named the Butte, either out of some Far West nostalgia or by someone who couldn’t spell. I’d been coming here almost nightly since being hired as a carpenter the week before, eavesdropping, striking up friendships, and sporting the new hair color and beard I’d been growing since my meeting with Allard.
I breathed in the hard freezing night air to cleanse my lungs of the smoke and stench I’d just left, the blackness around me as silent as a tomb in comparison with the din of the bar.
I began walking toward the gas station a hundred yards down the road. There wasn’t much light, just the sign ahead of me and the muted neon of the Butte. Both stores were closed and dark, and the motel didn’t brag much. I almost needed a flashlight to see.
About halfway to the station, I paused by one of the storage buildings, looked around carefully, slipped into the shadow, and then walked quietly down the rutted alleyway to the back. I heard a metallic click ahead of me and the sound of a van door sliding open.
A soft voice called out, “Joe?”
“Yeah.” A pinpoint of light appeared in the utter gloom, guiding me to a parked van. “Nice bush you got going,” Lester Spinney said, moving out of the way and letting me inside. The warmth that greeted me was welcome, even after so short a walk. “You look like a young Ernest Hemingway.”
Lester slid the door shut and hit a switch on the wall. The interior was suddenly washed with the glow from a battery-powered safelight, much like a darkroom’s, barely bright enough to reveal Willy and Sammie also sitting there, waiting.
The van’s windows were opaque, and a curtain separated the back from the driver’s compartment.
I found a seat and removed my coat. “You been here long?”
“Half the goddamn
night,” Willy complained.
“Twenty minutes,” Lester said.
This was the first meeting we’d had as a group since Sammie and I had gone undercover. As far as I knew, nothing had occurred as a result of our digging, but I’d wanted to compare notes anyhow. Sammie and I had taken advantage of Tucker Peak’s tenement-style employee housing to immerse ourselves in the local culture and put our time to the best use, but the tradeoff had been a news blackout from the outside.
“What’ve we got on the Jorja Duval killing?” was the first thing I wanted to know.
Willy shook his head disgustedly. “Zip.”
Lester was more generous. “The autopsy didn’t give us much more than what we saw, including the bruising on her arms and shoulders that suggests she was manhandled just prior to death. The crime lab guys went through all the trace evidence they collected and figure it came from about two dozen different people, which, given that place, probably amounts to two weeks’ worth of renters.”
“I think she talked,” Willy interjected. “That’s why she wasn’t beat up worse and why she was killed.”
“Could be,” I agreed, struck by the irony of options.
“Marty’s still making like Casper, of course,” Lester resumed, “probably lurking around till the dust settles. His car and apartment have been minor gold mines, though. Klesczewski and his bunch are having a field day. Turns out Tucker Peak wasn’t an exclusive target. Marty’s been ripping off cars and homes all over Bratt for over a year. Weird part is, he kept most of the stuff, which makes you wonder why he bothered stealing it in the first place. Ron’s backtracking from the loot to whatever owners he can find, but it’s still not leading him anywhere.”
“What about the burglaries here?” Sammie asked. She was wearing faded jeans and an old pair of boots, but with her red ski instructor’s parka and freshly dyed blonde hair, she was looking quite exotic. She knew it, too. She’d taken the name Greta Novak for her cover—a double Hollywood homage. I’d settled for the far more mundane Max Lambert, which I’d made up out of thin air.
Spinney pursed his lips. “We got the Manning stuff, of course. And we found a storage unit Marty rents. That’s where he kept most of it, and where Ron’s having his second Christmas for the year, but there were only a few pieces from Tucker Peak. No explanation for the discrepancy. Maybe Marty’s inside man kept most of what they stole. I reinterviewed Don Matthews, and he confirmed that Marty usually took his time before fencing his goods, so that might fit. In any case, Willy and I’re thinking our best bet is going to be sticking to Tucker Peak and working things from this end with you guys. Ron’ll feed us anything useful if and when he finds it.”
“Which is doubtful,” Willy added. He and Ron hadn’t gotten along when they’d both been detectives, being so different in nature as to be classified separate species. His comment just now was as clear an indicator as any of Willy’s turmoiled outlook on life; with no one else I knew could a person as decent, hard-working, and self-effacing as Ron Klesczewski evoke and maintain such rancor.
Spinney paid no attention. “What we’re doing now is taking all the burglaries we think Marty pulled on the mountain and breaking each one into its component parts: timing, location, day of the week, season, weather, target, MO, items stolen, follow-up police data, and victim background. We’re also checking into who was insured and who wasn’t, and for how much, and the patterns of custodial visits, mail deliveries, service calls, and the rest.”
“How many houses are we talking about?”
“Eight,” Willy answered. He looked at Sammie. “What’ve you been up to besides catching rays?”
Having been hired after me just a few days ago, Sammie was already sporting a noticeable tan. I realized that her striking appearance was getting under Willy’s skin—never a hard reach at the best of times.
“Mostly just figuring out who’s who and what’s what.” She returned Willy’s stare. “Joining the ski instructors turned out to be a lucky choice. They have a fuller run of the place than almost anyone, including going to the nightclub. Everybody’s happy to see them coming except the ski patrollers and the snowmaking and maintenance bunch. The first because of some weird rivalry thing, and the second because they treat everybody like shit. So, once I get past being the new guy, I should have a pretty good vantage point.”
“Carpenters have the same leeway,” I added. “We don’t do the social circuit, but we’re almost invisible so long as we’re carrying tools. We’re also loaned out to the condo management division to do repairs outside the lodge and summit buildings, so I might be able to gain access there if we need it.”
“Any ideas yet on who we can trust and who we can’t?” Lester asked.
“I bet Linda Bettina’ll pan out in the long run,” Sammie suggested. “Everyone thinks pretty highly of her.”
“Oh, hell, Sam,” Willy growled. “They just want to get into her pants. It’s a Wonder Woman fetish.”
Sammie shook her head and said, mostly to herself, “You’re such an asshole.”
“She’s been a big help to me, checking employee records,” Spinney volunteered, which earned him a silent, dark look from Willy.
“How’s that going, by the way?” I asked. “I’ve been loitering around that phone during shift break, but so far it’s been a dead end. Either Marty and his contact are spooked and laying low, or they’ve got another way of keeping in touch.”
Lester didn’t look happy. “I hate to admit it, but the best thing might be if they hit another condo while we’re here. There’re up to twelve hundred employees on this mountain during the peak season, Joe, running the gamut from dropout lawyers to trailer trash that had criminal records in the womb. They come from just down the road and from overseas, and some of them lie about their names. Bettina hasn’t held anything back, but their records’re almost useless. She says that for the money they pay the lower ranks especially, they don’t make much effort checking under the hood.” He smiled and added ruefully, “I mean, you two got jobs there, right? How careful can they be?”
“Doesn’t that bite them in the butt sometimes?” Sammie asked.
“More now than in the old days,” Spinney admitted. “But they’re between a rock and a hard place. Recently, they’ve been putting up with whatever screwy behavior they’re handed just to keep the place going. And they don’t make a big deal about it when they do get bit, since it might give the resort a bad name. Pretty ironic that you get a bunch of pampered rich folks being catered to by potential crooks, all because you’re paying so poorly you don’t want to ask questions you don’t want answered.”
“Sounds like poetic justice to me,” Willy said.
I returned to the original inquiry. “It still doesn’t hurt to assume for now that Marty’s contact is someone local, or at least someone he knows from the past. Did you compare all the names we’ve collected from Marty’s background to the employee records here?”
Lester nodded. “Yup. And got nothin’ yet. Still, Marty Gagnon’s no Einstein, and I’ll bet money his contact’s not, either. They probably started ripping off condos ’cause it seemed like a good idea at the time. We just need to connect the right two dots and hope one or the other sticks his head out of the bushes.”
Spinney paused, as if reflecting on his own words, and then asked, “What about the protesters? They something to factor in?”
“I don’t think so,” I answered him. “At least not yet. So far, all they’ve done is sit in the road, surround the ticket booth, and hang a banner from the ski lift towline in the middle of the night, which I thought was pretty creative.”
“No one’s been busted yet?” Spinney asked.
“One or two who went too far, but the resort’s still playing nice. From what we heard, McNally, the CEO, is trying to work out a compromise. That’s good for us, though. Snuffy’s deputies are out in force every day, straining at the leash—you and Willy asking questions and checking backgrounds are fitting right in.
”
“I don’t see why McNally’s dicking around with those people,” Willy said. “They’re a pain in the ass.”
“He probably thinks they’d be a bigger pain if he let Snuffy have his way,” I suggested. “It would just make for bigger headlines.”
There was a slight lull in the conversation, which I ended by grabbing my coat and awkwardly putting it back on in the van’s tight confines. “Okay, I guess that’s it. Lester, how soon before you think you’ll have some names Sammie and I can zero in on?”
“Maybe a couple of days.”
“Then we’ll do this again in forty-eight hours, unless something breaks before then.” I looked over at Sammie. “You drive down here?”
She nodded.
“I'll walk you to your car.”
My tone of voice made it clear that this wasn't merely a suggestion—and that nobody else was invited.
Outside, back in the cold and the darkness, we both watched the departing van lumber up the gloomy alley toward the road. Its brake lights flared briefly at the road’s edge, and then it vanished with a sudden burst of acceleration, leaving behind a plume of exhaust that lingered like a ghost in the soft glow from the gas station sign down the street.
“You fitting in all right?” I asked Sammie in the sudden silence.
“Yeah. It was easier than I thought. I figured they’d all be Olympic dropouts: super hotshots that would pick me out in a New York minute. Turns out they’re too busy trying to get laid to care if I know a ski from a pole. A third of them are amazingly shitty instructors—hate the people they’re supposed to be teaching. So I’m looking pretty good, and the instructing’s kind of fun.” She smiled at me suddenly. “If the money were better, I’d think about doing it full time.”
“Right. I believe that. You pick up anything interesting yet?”
“Not really. I meant what I said in the van. There is one guy, though—Richie Lane—a real predator. Put the moves on me right off, took the hint, and moved on, like a shark checking out bait. I watched him with a class yesterday. He had his hands all over the women but talked up the guys, too. Has a fancy watch, expensive clothes, drives a ’Vette, although an old one. Could be he’s just a gigolo—he basically lives in the nightclub—but he might be up to something more. Wouldn’t be the first time a thief got inside information through a little pillow talk.”
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