This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are either the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, business establishments, events or locales is entirely coincidental.
Eye of The Wolf
A Berkley Book / published by arrangement with the author
All rights reserved.
Copyright © 2005 by Margaret Coel
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ISBN: 978-1-1012-0534-1
A BERKLEY BOOK®
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BERKLEY and the “B” design are trademarks belonging to Penguin Putnam Inc.
Electronic edition: August, 2005
Berkley Prime Crime Mysteries by Margaret Coel
THE EAGLE CATCHER
THE GHOST WALKER
THE DREAM STALKER
THE STORY TELLER
THE LOST BIRD
THE SPIRIT WOMAN
THE THUNDER KEEPER
THE SHADOW DANCER
KILLING RAVEN
WIFE OF MOON
EYE OF THE WOLF
Contents
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
AUTHOR’S NOTE
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
My deepest thanks to the people on the Wind River Reservation who took the time to talk with me about many aspects of this novel: Merle Haas, Director, Sky People Higher Education; Douglas Noseep, Chief, Wind River Law Enforcement; Richard Ortiz; and Harold Smith. A special thank you to Brian Smith for guiding me to the remote and beautiful area of the Bates Battlefield.
My thanks also to Detective Sergeant Roger Rizor, Fremont County Sheriff’s Department, Wyoming; to Robert Pickering, Ph.D., forensic anthropologist, Deputy Director, Buffalo Bill Historical Center, Cody, Wyoming; and to Gail Rogers, LPN, Boulder, Colorado.
And thanks to Carl Schneider, Boulder, for his always astute advice; to Fred Walker, for educating me about guns, also of Boulder; to Stephan and Julie Edwards in Riverton for showing me around the beautiful campus of Central Wyoming College; and to Anthony Short, S.J., former pastor at St. Stephen’s Mission on the Wind River Reservation, for suggestions that keep me on track.
And to my friends who read parts or all of the manuscript and made many suggestions which, in almost every case, I took: Virginia Sutter of the Arapaho tribe; Karen Gilleland, Beverly Carrigan, and Sheila Carrigan, Boulder. And to Philip F. Myers, Silver Lake, Ohio, for his perceptive comments.
And to my husband, George, the clearest-eyed critic of all.
This is for Violet Katherine Henderson.
Welcome to our world; we have been waiting for you.
AUTHOR’S NOTE
The Bates Battlefield is located in Hot Springs County, Wyoming, three miles from the border of Fremont County. For the purposes of this story, I have placed the site of the battlefield in Fremont County.
The Indian thought of the wolf as “an animal who moved like liquid across the plains, silent, without effort, but with purpose. He was alert to the smallest changes in his world. He could see very far—‘two looks away.’ ”
—OF WOLVES AND MENBY BARRY LOPEZ
“We reached the old wolf in time to watch a fierce green fire dying in her eyes. I realized then, and have known ever since, that there was something new to me in those eyes—something known only to her and to the mountain.”
—A SAND COUNTY ALMANACBY ALDO LEOPOLD
The place where crying begins,
The thi’aya,
The thi’aya.
When I see the thi’aya,
I begin to lament.
—ARAPAHO SONG
1
THE CALL HAD come at precisely two minutes after nine this morning, everything about it marked with urgency, even the way the black plastic phone seemed to shudder with each ring. Father John Aloysius O’Malley, the Jesuit pastor of St. Francis Mission on the Wind River Reservation, could still feel the knot of dread that had tightened in his chest as his hand shot across the desk for the receiver. There were so many emergency calls—Father, there’s been an accident! Father, could you get over to the hospital? Father, we need help—that he’d developed a sixth sense, like an invisible antenna capable of detecting the type of call even before he’d picked up the phone.
“Father John,” he’d said, the usual greeting, but he’d hurried it, he remembered, anxious to hear what had happened.
And on the other end, the calm, deliberate voice of Nathan Owens, the Episcopal priest at St. Aiden’s Mission in Ethete. “I think I’ve got something for you, John,” he’d said. “Could you come over as soon as possible?”
Now Father John squinted into the sun exploding off the snow and aimed the front wheels of the ancient Toyota pickup into the tracks that marked the Blue Sky Highway. It had snowed during the night, a late gasp of winter that intruded into spring after a week of clear skies and sunshine and wild grasses sprouting green in the fields. Now the gray sagebrush poked out of the snow that blanketed the ground as far as he could see. The feeling of snow still hung in the air. Intermittent bursts of warmth from the vents punctuated the music of Il Trovatore blasting from the tape player on the seat beside him and barely cut through the cold that crept past the windows and into the cab. It was the first Monday in April, the Moon of Ice Breaking in the River in the way that the Arapahos marked the passing time.
Small houses began flashing past—gray one-story here, tan bi-level over there. He was on the outskirts of Ethete, the humped foothills of the Wind River Mountains, lined with snow, in the distance to the west. He knew the roads that crisscrossed the reservation by heart. He’d spent the last nine years at St. Francis Mission, almost the entire decade of his forties and three years longer than the Jesuits usually left a man on assignment. Not a day went by that he didn’t listen for the phone call that would send him on to some other place. The call would have its own peculiar sound, he thought. He would sense it.
He didn’t want the call to come. He was at home here, a fact that still took him by surprise when he thought about it. He, the tall, redheaded priest from Boston, descended from a long line of redheaded Irishmen, at home in the vast openness of the Wyoming plains with brown-skinned Arapahos, the blood of warriors coursing through their veins. He’d never imagined himself a mission priest. He’d been on an academic track, teaching American history at a Jesuit prep school with a doctorate and a univ
ersity position ahead. Instead there had been the year spent at Grace House becoming a recovering alcoholic, followed by the search for a job with a Jesuit superior willing to take a gamble, or maybe just desperate for help. Finally, the call had come: a position available on an Indian reservation. Did he want the job? He’d flown into the Riverton airport, still wobbly on his feet with his newfound sobriety.
The center of Ethete was ahead—a stoplight swinging over the junction of two roads with a gas station and convenience store on the southwest corner. Father John began easing on the brake, then took a right into the grounds of St. Aiden’s, and wound around the narrow, circular road past a series of small buildings, past the hundred-year-old log-cabin church rooted in the earth and the snow. He parked in front of the cream-colored residence and turned off the tape player, the melody still running through his head as he hurried up the sidewalk.
They were similar, the two missions, he thought, knocking on the front door and glancing around. One Episcopalian, the other Catholic, separated by thirty miles, both with a circle of dormitories, schools, and cookhouses that had metamorphosed into offices, museums, and meeting halls. St. Aiden’s had come first, but Father John Roberts, the Episcopal priest who founded the mission, had welcomed the Jesuits in 1884 when they built St. Francis close to Arapaho settlements in the eastern part of the reservation. “Now the Indians are surrounded by Christianity,” he’d said.
The door squealed open, and a small woman peered upward, sending him a look of expectation. She was that indeterminate age—somewhere between fifty and seventy—and everything about her looked soft, from the gray color of her hair to the milky blue eyes and the tiny lines cushioned in the folds of her face.
“Come in, Father,” she said, backing into a small entry and pulling the door with her. “Nathan’s waiting in the study.” She tossed her head toward the closed door on the left, then started down a narrow hallway toward the kitchen in back.
“How do you like your coffee?” she called over one shoulder. He could see the edge of the dark cabinets beyond her, the small table still littered with what looked like the plates and mugs from breakfast. The sharp aromas of bacon and fresh coffee mingled in the air. Somewhere in the house, a washing machine was rumbling.
“A little milk. Thanks.” He rolled his jacket into a bulky ball and set it on the chair in the corner, then balanced his cowboy hat on top. Before he could rap on the door, it swung inward. Filling up the opening was the large figure of Nathan Owens, dressed in blue jeans and a denim shirt that strained across his barrel chest. The man’s round, puffy face was marked by a prominent nose and flushed cheeks beneath the thin strands of fading brown hair combed back from his forehead. He was in his seventies, he’d once confided to Father John, beyond the age of retirement, a fact that he hoped would continue to escape the Episcopal powers-that-be. He liked working on the reservation, even though he hadn’t wanted the assignment here twenty years ago—another fact that he’d confided. A Philadelphia WASP on an Indian reservation? The Lord works in strange ways.
“He brought me from Boston,” Father John had said, and they’d both laughed.
Now Father Nathan motioned him into a cramped study, not unlike his own. Papers spilled over the surface of the desk and onto the chair pulled close to one side. “Have a seat,” the other priest said, scooping another pile of papers from the upholstered chair against a bookcase crammed with books stacked on one another.
Father John dropped onto the chair as the Episcopal priest swung his girth around the desk and settled into a swivel chair. “I appreciate your coming, John,” he said, shoveling his fingers through his thin hair before patting it back into place.
“What’s going on?”
Father Nathan raised a fleshy hand, fingers outstretched. His wife was coming through the door, holding out two coffee mugs like offerings.
“Don’t worry about me,” she said, handing one mug to Father John. She smiled at him. “The priest’s wife sees nothing and tells nothing.” She pushed aside a stack of papers and set the other mug on the desk.
“Thank you, dear.” Nathan waited until the woman had retraced her steps and closed the door behind her. “I don’t want Hilda worrying about this,” he said. “It’ll only upset her. She knows there’s something I wanted to talk over with you. That’s all.”
Father John sipped at his coffee. It was fresh and hot. He could feel the burning strand of liquid dropping into his chest.
“I’m going to cut to the chase, John,” Father Nathan was saying. “A very disturbing call came in late Saturday night. The minute I answered the phone, a voice on the other end—if you can call it a voice—said, ‘Listen carefully and pay attention.’ I tell you, a chill ran through me. I hit the record button on instinct.” The man paused, his gaze fastened on the phone next to his untouched mug of coffee.
“You’d better hear this,” he said, jamming a fleshy finger on one of the buttons.
There was a half-second of whirring, followed by a clicking noise, then . . .
“This is for the Indian priest.”
The voice of a machine, Father John thought, a monotone, high-pitched and rapid. And inhuman. The voice of a robot or an alien in a B movie. Father John shifted forward, set his mug on the desk, and dipped his head toward the phone, not taking his eyes from the tiny microphone spilling out the words:
Once they fell in heat.
Revenge is sweet
And cold.
Bodies in the snow.
Frozen enemy of old
Dead in the gorge
Attacks no more.
The whirring continued for a moment followed by silence. The walls seemed to close in; the cold of the dead gripped the room.
“Well, what do you make of it?” Nathan sat back in his chair, one hand resting against the base of the phone.
Father John looked away. The tinny, mechanical voice, the clipped words were still in his head. Bodies in the snow. Dead in the gorge. A distorted, soulless voice. The voice of evil.
“It’s very disturbing.” He brought his gaze back to the man watching him from the other side of the desk.
“I would say frightening. The caller went to a lot of trouble to disguise the voice. Could be either a man or a woman.” Then Father Nathan heaved himself to his feet, walked across the study, and stared out the window that framed a slice of the mission grounds. “I can tell you, I haven’t gotten much sleep since that call came. Keep thinking that out there in the snow, some poor soul . . .” He turned back to Father John. “No,” he corrected himself. “The caller said ‘bodies.’ ”
Father Nathan lumbered back and sank into the chair, like a bear moving into his cave. He set his elbows on the desk and made a fist that he knocked against the palm of his other hand. “I must’ve played that tape a couple dozen times yesterday. I’m out of my depth, John. If the message is supposed to be a code that the caller thought I’d understand, well . . .” He threw up both hands in a gesture of surrender. “I don’t get it. Enemy of old? Dead bodies in a gorge? Sometime around 2:00 a.m. this morning, I reached two conclusions. Either the call is a sick joke that somebody wanted to play on the mission priest, or I wasn’t the priest who was supposed to get the message. The caller could have dialed the wrong mission. Makes sense, doesn’t it? You’re the one people hereabouts call the Indian priest. You’re the one who used to be a history professor.”
“I taught American history in a prep school,” Father John said, shaking his head. He was always mistaken for the history professor he might have been.
“A historian nonetheless.” The other priest waved away the clarification and shot a glance toward the window. “The caller wants the bodies found and figured you’d make sense of the message. I believe it was intended for you.”
Now Father John got to his feet and walked to the window. It looked peaceful outside, the snow covering the ground and tracing the roofs of the old buildings, white flakes drifting like ash off the branches of the
cottonwoods. Nathan’s first conclusion could be right, he was thinking. The message was nothing more than a sick joke. He might even believe it, if it weren’t for the voice, the soulless voice. This is for the Indian priest.
He turned back.
The other priest was slumped in his chair, staring at some point across the room, and for an instant, Father John had the sense that he was in the presence of an old man, weighted down by the long years and, now, consumed with an indefinable dread.
“Someone could have been killed,” Father John said. His voice was soft, the voice of the confessional, of a counselor. “Perhaps, as you say, more than one person.”
Father Nathan was quiet a moment. Then he said, “I was about to call the Wind River Police, but what will I tell them? A crank call about bodies in the snow? They’d fill out a report and file it with a hundred other vague reports. Nothing about the message makes sense. Bodies? Where are they? Enemies and attacks? What are we talking about?”
Father John let a beat pass while he chased the shadow of an idea forming at the edge of his mind. “Possibly about an Indian battle,” he said. “The bodies could be on one of the old battlefields.”
“How many battlefields are there?” The other priest seemed to be warming to the idea.
Father John walked over and dropped back into his chair. “Hundreds,” he said. “The war on the plains lasted almost forty years.” He ran his tongue over his lips. His mouth felt as dry as sand. Hundreds of battle sites. It would be like uncovering a pebble in the snow. But there were clues. The caller had imbedded clues in the message.
He let another moment pass before he said, “I’d like to take the message to the elders.”
The other priest was nodding. “Yes, yes,” he said, thumbing through a folder. He pulled out a sheet and handed it across the desk to Father John. The telephone message was scrawled in black ink across the page. “I wrote down the words,” Nathan said. “I also copied the tape.” He rummaged through the center drawer. “You still keep that player in the pickup for your operas?”
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