“Three?”
“Take it or leave it.”
The thief looked up at the big orange tractor and said, “I'm gonna be out fifty bucks for gas.”
“Hey, Roy?”
“Yeah?”
“Tell somebody who gives a shit.”
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LUCAS STOPPED BACK at headquarters, left a note for a guy in Property Crimes, asking him to check on stolen Kubota 2900 tractors. He looked at his watch every thirty seconds for ten minutes, then headed for a restaurant called The Bell Jar. No sign of Catrin. He was a few minutes early, but he started to worry. Maybe she'd bailed. . . .
The maître d' put him in a corner, where he could see the room. A waitress came by and dropped off the drinks menu; a couple of minutes later she came back and he ordered a martini. “Will you be dining by yourself today?” she asked.
“No, I . . .” And Catrin came in the door. “I'm meeting that lady right there.”
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CATRIN, HE THOUGHT, had dressed as carefully as he had, in a light gray-wool skirt, a black cashmere sweater, and low heels. She was wearing small diamond earrings. She looked, he thought, absolutely wonderful. She read his face and might have colored, just a bit, as he stood up to meet her.
“Lucas.”
“How are you?” He was fumbling already. “I mean, with your friend . . .”
“Funeral's on Tuesday,” she said. “It's over. With what she'd been through, it was time. I don't feel the least bit bad about it.”
“Okay. . . .”
She smiled and said, “Did you order?”
“A martini.”
“A martini? What happened to the Grain Belt?”
“Only on special occasions,” he said. He looked around the restaurant. “If you ordered bratwurst in this place, the chef'd probably faint.”
“So I'll have a martini,” she said. “An old-time drink with an old-time friend.”
And she was fumbling, he thought.
“Last time I saw youânot yesterday, but back whenâyou were really upset.”
“I remember,” she said. “You were such a punk. You were unbelievable. You were also pretty sure you were God's gift to women, if I remember correctly.”
“C'mon. I wasn't God's gift to anyone.”
“Easy to say now.”
“You weren't exactly a ride in the park yourself.”
“Are we gonna fight?” But she said it smiling, almost delightedâlike something was still the same.
“The last time I saw you,” he said, dropping his voice, “you were absolutely buck naked. The last thing I saw was you standing there with your fists on your hips, looking for your underpants.”
“That was something you weren't supposed to bring up,” she said, and now she
was
pink. “Though I do remember that we spent quite a bit of time running around naked.”
“Yeah. Jesus. Are we old now?”
“No, but we were definitely young then.” A waiter came, gave them menus and left water, and promised to come back. Catrin opened the menu and looked over it to say, “You really made me angry, back then. I almost couldn't stand it. I never told Jack about you, and he was a hockey fan, and he used to take me to hockey games the next year, before he graduated. He was one of
your
fans. I remember how pissed off I'd get when you'd be skating around. Cruising around, backward or something, all arrogant macho tough asshole, smiling at the girls . . .”
“Jesus.” He was impressed.
“Still pisses me off, thinking about it.” Her eyes dropped to the menu.
THAT WAS THE end of the sex talk. After they ordered, the conversation drifted to their current lives.
“When you said your husband took you to hockey games before he graduated . . . When did he graduate?”
“The next year. We got married June of my sophomore year, and he did his internship with a military hospital in Koreaâhe was a captain. Then, when we came back, he joined his father's practice in Lake City . . . and that's where we've been.”
“What about you? You didn't finish school?”
“No . . . you know. I got pregnant while we were in the army. I mean, I took classes over the years, but I never got back to school full-time. I thought about going this fall, to Macalester, but I just . . . I don't know. I didn't go. Now I'm supposed to go this winter, and I still don't know. . . . I'm kind of fucked up.” She heard herself say it, and stopped. “The last time I said thatâused those words, âfucked up'âwas when we were dating.”
“Yeah, well, the good stuff always comes back,” Lucas said wryly.
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WHEN THEY WERE eating, she said, “Things have really been good. I loved Jack right away, I wouldn't give up any of that for anything. But this is like feminist hell: I keep coming back to
How about me? When do they make my movie?
I always thought I was gonna be the movie star, and the rest of you were gonna be the extras. Instead, I wind up as the one in the background who's changing diapers and doing the books and working for free for United Way.
“I thought you and I were alike, because you always did what you were going to do; you were always the star in your movie. I thought I was like that: I was always going to do what
I
wanted to do, and then the kids came, and I
had
to take care of them. I didn't have any choice, because they were
mine,
and nobody else was going to do it, and it just made sense.”
“Now they're moving out,” Lucas said. “So do what you want to do.”
“But what am I going to do? I have a feeling that if you want to be a movie star, in any movie, you've got to start young and work hard, and the best way to do that is be hungry all the time. But Jack started investing while we were still in the Army, and he always made good money, and you know how much we're worth now? Something like ten million dollars. That's a ridiculous amount. . . . Jack wants to buy a house in Florida, and he's talking about an apartment in Londonâwe both like London, and you can get there in seven hours on Northwest. . . . So what's the point in trying to be a movie star now? To do what?”
“Not to make money, maybe. You were a painter, and you want to do photography. So do photography. Or paint.”
“Ahhh . . .” she said. “That all seems too sterile now. Everything is too comfortable.”
“So go back to college in criminal justice,” Lucas said. “You can be a cop. I can fix it so Minneapolis'll hire you, and you can go around and do murders.”
“Really?”
“What do you want to do, Catrin?” Lucas asked.
“Not be a cop,” she said.
“So what?”
“I don't know. I'm just so comfortable, everything is so perfect, that I want to scream.”
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HE WALKED HER back to the car. She stood on her tiptoes and kissed him on the cheek, and swiveled into the front seat of the Lincoln. “By the way, the chances of us running into each other up here are just about nil, but if we doâwe do get up here every couple of weeksâI didn't tell Jack about meeting you for lunch. There just would have been too many questions. So if we see you . . .”
“Yeah. Don't worry.”
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HE WAS WHISTLING on the way back to the office, caught himself, and caught himself again. Man, she was married. And it didn't sound like a bad marriage, either. But there was something between the two of them, between himself and a woman he hardly knew anymore, and it had a lot to do with sex. The thought might have brought him down, but it didn't. When he got back to his office, he found another Post-it note on the door:
Find me. Marcy.
Sherrill was at her desk in Homicide. She didn't ask about the lunch. She said, “No Trick.”
“What?”
“The motel manager said he checked out this morning. He's driving a ten-year-old lime-green Caddy with a trunk full of golf clubs and one suitcase. We got a license number.”
“A real license number?”
“Yeah. Illinois tag. I ran it, and it comes up under a different name, a guy named Robert Petty, but it's a ten-year-old lime-green Caddy. I called Petty, and he said he sold it two weeks ago, and the guy was supposed to change plates. I guess Trick never got around to it.”
“Goddamnit,” Lucas said. “You put the tag out?”
“Yeah. Pretty much all over the five-state. And I called Del, and he's looking around. The hotel manager said Trick didn't seem to be in a hurryâhe checked out about ten minutes before the checkout deadline, and they talked about the Vikings for a while. So . . .”
“He may still be around.”
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SLOAN CAME IN, asked, “Have you seen it?”
He held up a copy of
The Star,
with Alie'e on the front. She was standing in a dark, cavernous space, with fire or sparks flying behind her; she was wearing what looked like men's underpants and a short, torn T-shirt that left her midriff bare. In yellow, inch-high block letters, a headline read, “ALIE'E: THE LAST SHOOT.”
“Holy shit,” Sherrill breathed. She took it from Sloan, and flipped it open to the portfolio in the middle of the issue. Alie'e in a dress the color of froth on the Caribbean Sea, walking down what looked like a line of fire. Another shot of her in the shorts-and-T-shirt ensemble, but this time with one exposed and apparently rouged nipple, and behind her, a giant man in a welder's helmet.
And on the page opposite, a close-up facial shot of a woman Lucas wouldn't have recognized, except for the film he'd seen on television the night before, and the scars. “Is that . . .” Sloan asked.
“Jael Corbeau,” Lucas said.
“Looks different,” Sloan said.
“Lots better,” Lucas said.
She'd been caught full-face, at night. Although the photo had the flash ambience of a news shot, it was obviously done in a studio: Everything was perfect, poised, balanced, designed. Corbeau was looking back over a bare shoulder; a single strand of dark pearls looped around her neck and dropped out of the bottom of the photo. Her hair was cropped and she was not quite snarling at the camera; her lipstick looked dark, maybe purple.
“Hot,” Sherrill said. “If I was inclined to do a little muff diving, I'd take either one of them.”
“What kind of talk is that?” Sloan asked.
“The kind that turns me on,” Lucas said, bumping Sherrill in the arm with his elbow.
“You're not the only one,” Sherrill said. She tapped the lap of the giant welder in the photo of Alie'e, the photo with the rouged nipple.
Lucas looked closer. “Is that . . .”
“Unless it's a bigger-than-usual jackknife,” Sherrill said. “Like, way bigger than usual.”
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NOTHING WAS HAPPENING. Cops came back shaking their heads, looking for something else to do. Every person that they could find who'd been at the party had been interviewed. Nobody used any dope, nobody knew where it was coming from. Nobody had seen Alie'e after midnight, only a few people could remember Lansing at all.
After an end-of-the-day meeting in Rose Marie Roux's office, Lucas headed home. He changed into a sweatshirt and shorts, ran for forty-five minutes through the quiet Highland Park area of St. Paul. Feeling virtuous. And back home, he picked up the phone to find a message from dispatch: Call Carl Knox.
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“CARL,” HE SAID. “Lucas Davenport.”
“I got two names for you. And I've squeezed as hard as I'm going toâI'm already nervous enough.”
“What're the names?”
“Curtis Logan, spelled just like it sounds. He says he's an artist and he used to work in one of the art museums. He started by selling coke and ecstasy and speed to a few of the patrons, and his name got around. In certain groups.”
“Okay. Curtis Logan.” Lucas noted it on a legal pad.
“And James Bee. That's B-E-E, like in bumble.”
“What's he do?”
“Certified financial adviser. Hooks up with rich people through a company called RIO Accounting. Same thing as Logan, mostly handles fashion drugs. Ecstasy, speed.”
“What are we talking about in sales? Every once in a while? Or big time?”
“I don't know exactlyâI wasn't doing an investigation, I was looking for a connection. But I got the feeling they're semi-big-time. And very careful.”
“I owe you,” Lucas said.
“Yeah. You do. And for Christ's sakes, don't do anything that'll make them think of me, when you ask about them.”
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NEITHER OF THE two names was on the party list; that would have been too much to expect, anyway. But if they could get the two of them, they might be able to develop a daisy chain of peddlers-to-the-rich, and a name might still be found. . . .
Del was still working. Lucas dialed his cellular number and pulled him out of a bar. “Got two names for you, but you've gotta go gentle.”
“Like walking on cotton.”
Lucas gave him the namesâDel hadn't heard of either of themâand said, “Call me if you get anything.”
“Probably won't nothing happen until tomorrow,” Del said. “I'll get on some banks, start doing some financials.”
“We can't really afford a long-term look,” Lucas said.
“I'll do it fast as I can, but I can't just go knock on their doors.”
“Hear any more about Trick?”
“No, but people are talking about a big game. Maybe tomorrow night, or the next night. I haven't tracked it down yet, but that'd be a possibility.”
“Call me when you get it.”
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THAT NIGHT HE worked on his game, but there were no calls. A call came in the morning, though.