Vermilion Drift (30 page)

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Authors: William Kent Krueger

Tags: #Suspense, #Fiction, #General, #Mystery & Detective

BOOK: Vermilion Drift
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He drove to his house on Gooseberry Lane, had some lunch, and afterward took Trixie for a midday walk. While he walked, he thought.

If not Ophelia, if not Hattie, if not Huff, then who?

He didn’t get much further before a black Tahoe pulled to the curb beside him, with a familiar Shinnob at the wheel. Tom Blessing leaned across the seat and hollered out the passenger window, “Hey, Cork! Somebody on the rez you need to talk to.”

“Mind if I bring my dog?”

“No problem. Hop in.”

Cork opened the passenger door, and Trixie, who hadn’t learned and probably never would learn to distrust strangers, eagerly leaped in ahead of him.

“I tried your home phone and Sam’s Place,” Blessing said, pulling away from the curb. “Didn’t have your cell number, so I finally decided to come into town and see if I could track you down.”

“What’s up?” Cork asked.

“You’ll see when we get to Allouette.”

Blessing headed out of Aurora, around the southern end of Iron Lake, and back up the eastern shoreline. He drove with the windows down, something Trixie thought was heaven. She sat on Cork’s lap with her head outside, blinking against the wind.

“Heard that with all the crap that’s happened in the Vermilion One Mine the government’s going to look elsewhere to store all their nuclear junk,” Blessing said. “True?”

“As far as I know, all they’ve done is pull the survey team back. They haven’t crossed the mine off their list yet.”

“But they’re thinking about it?”

“That’s my hope. A lot of bad publicity so far, and the worst is yet to come. But it’s the government, and you know how deep bureaucratic stupidity can run.”

“What do you mean the worst is yet to come? What’s worse than a bunch of bodies stuffed in a mine tunnel?”

What happened to those bodies before they got there
was what Cork thought but didn’t say.

Instead he replied, “I’m just thinking there’s no chance they can spin any of this in a good way, Tom.”

“Are you kidding? They sold an entire nation of Christian folk on the idea of killing most of us Indians. If there’s a way to make radioactive drinking water sound like Kool-Aid, the federal government’ll find it.”

A few miles outside Allouette, Blessing got on his cell phone. “We’ll be there in ten minutes,” he said. “You still got him? Good.” He snapped the phone shut and slipped it back into his shirt pocket.

They entered Allouette, pulled onto Manomin Street, and swung into the parking lot of the community center.

“How long will this take, Tom? I’m wondering if I should leave Trixie in the truck.”

“Bring her in. Elgin’ll watch her.”

Inside the center, they walked down a long hallway, past the open doors to the gym, where Ani Sorenson was running some girls from the rez basketball team, the Iron Lake Loons, through drills. They passed the door to the administrative wing, where all the tribal offices were situated, and they took a right toward the room where Blessing did his work.

Tom Blessing had been a hard case. He’d been a leader in a gang of Ojibwe youths who’d called themselves the Red Boyz. As a result of a remarkable and deadly firefight on the rez, he’d experienced a radical
transformation. Now he was deeply involved in the Wellbriety Movement, helping troubled Ojibwe kids find their way on a healing path using the teachings of elders and based on ancient wisdom and natural principles.

On his door hung a poster of a white buffalo. Inside his office, the walls were plastered with photographs of Blessing and some of the other former Red Boyz, along with a lot of kids doing a lot of things—learning to make birch bark canoes, harvesting wild rice, boiling down maple sap into syrup, playing softball, serving fry bread at a powwow, preparing for a sweat.

Elgin Manypenny, who’d also been one of the Red Boyz, sat on Blessing’s desk. In a chair shoved against one of the walls slumped a teenage kid. Cork knew him. Jesse St. Onge. His uncle Leroy stood next to him.


Boozhoo
, Elgin, Leroy,” Cork said and shook each man’s hand in turn. “
Boozhoo
, Jesse.”

“Anin,”
the kid replied respectfully.

“Shake the man’s hand,” St. Onge said.

The kid reached up and did as he was told.

“Sit down, Cork,” Blessing said. “Elgin, mind taking Trixie for a walk?”

“Happy to.” Manypenny slid from the desk. “Come on, girl. Let’s go play.”

Trixie didn’t hesitate a second.

Blessing sat in his desk chair and nodded to Leroy St. Onge, who held out a folded piece of paper toward Cork.

“Found that in my nephew’s coat pocket this morning,” he said.

Cork unfolded the paper. Printed inside in the bloody From Hell font were the words
We Die. U Die
.

“Jesse got one of these threats?” Cork asked.

“Not exactly,” Leroy St. Onge said. “Go on, Jesse. Tell him.”

The kid focused on his hands, which were folded in his lap. He didn’t say anything at first.

“Jesse,” his uncle said.

The kid gathered himself and mumbled, “Okay, I did the throw up in the Vermilion One Mine.”

“The throw up?” Cork asked.

Blessing explained. “When a piece of graffiti art is done fast, it’s called a ‘throw up.’”

“It was you? How did you get into the mine?”

“Through the entrance on the rez that the cops got all taped up now.”

“How’d you know about that entrance, Jesse?”

The kid got quiet again.

“Go on,” his uncle said sternly.

“Isaiah Broom.”

“Did he go into the mine with you?”

“No, just showed me the way. He wouldn’t, you know, go in himself.”

“Why not?”

Jesse shrugged.

Everyone waited.

Finally Jesse said, “I got the feeling he was scared.”

“But you weren’t?”

“No.” The kid straightened up in a display of bravado.

“You went in alone?”

“Yeah. I took a flashlight and my paint cans and this printout Isaiah gave me of what he wanted me to do.”

“Did you notice anything strange in the mine?”

“Yeah, the smell. Like something dead. I understand now, but I just thought, you know, that maybe an animal got stuck in there and died. I didn’t think… you know.”

“Sure, Jesse,” Cork said. “Tell me about being in the mine.”

“Well, I went in like Isaiah showed me, and it was real dark and spooky. I had a flashlight but it wasn’t much and going into all that dark was like pushing through mud. I went all the way to the end of the tunnel. There was a wall and I couldn’t go any farther. I went back and told Isaiah, and we left and went to his place, and he got some stuff, power tools, you know, and we came back. This time he came in with me.”

“He went all the way in?”

“Yeah, but he was all jumpy, like the place was full of ghosts or something. We got to the wall, and Isaiah cut through it, and we
crawled in and kept going to where the elevator shaft was. I was going to do my piece there, but Isaiah said we should go down farther so they wouldn’t know how we got in. So we climbed down this ladder that was, you know, next to the elevator. Isaiah showed me where he wanted me to work. Me, I wanted to do something I’d be proud to tag, but he wanted it done just like he’d printed out and he wanted it done fast.”

“It was Isaiah’s design?”

“I guess. I’m all like, hey, man, it’s not aesthetic. But it was what he wanted, so I just did the throw up, and we left.”

“Why?”

The kid stared at Cork. “What do you mean?”

“Why did you agree to do what Broom asked?”

“You mean his design?”

“No, the whole thing in general. It was pretty risky.”

“I don’t want all that radioactive stuff here,” Jesse said, as if it should have been perfectly obvious to anyone. “It was a way of fighting back. The warrior’s way,” he added proudly. “Isaiah, he’s been sort of leading the protest, and when I told him I wanted to help, he said The People could use my talent. See, on the rez I’ve got kind of a rep for my work. Isaiah said he had an important job for me.”

“‘We Die. U Die.’ What did that mean?”

“Just, you know, that if the junk they put in there leaks, we’re all dead. Even the assholes who are responsible.”

“Who would those assholes be?”

“I don’t know. The guys who make the decisions, I guess.”

“Names?”

“I don’t know.”

“Max Cavanaugh? Lou Haddad? Eugenia Kufus?”

“I don’t know who those guys are.”

“Some of the people making the decisions. They all got notes saying ‘We Die. U Die.’ Do you know anything about that, Jesse?”

“No, nothing. I just did the throw up in the mine.”

“We Die. U Die. Who came up with that?”

“Me, sort of. When I was on the protest line in front of Vermilion One, I said we should have a sign that read something like ‘This won’t
kill just us. It will kill everybody.’ Isaiah liked it, but he shortened it for the throw up.”

Leroy St. Onge asked, “What kind of trouble is he in, Cork?”

“Trespass with criminal intent, maybe. Vandalism.” He leveled a long look at Jesse. “His heart was in the right place, and I think even the people who own the mine aren’t excited about the prospect of dumping nuclear waste there, so I’m guessing that, when the whole story’s known, no charges will be brought. That’s certainly the recommendation I’ll make to the mine people and the sheriff.”

St. Onge said, “I think I need to have a talk with Isaiah Broom.”

“Get in line, Leroy,” Cork said.

“Can we go now?” Jesse asked.

“As far as I’m concerned,” Cork told him. “Look, I’ll do what I can to make things easy for you, Jesse, but the sheriff’s people will want to talk to you.”

He made a sour face. “Ah, man.”

“I’ll be there with you,” his uncle said and put his hand on the boy’s shoulder.

“Mind giving us a few minutes alone, Cork?” Blessing asked.

“No. I need to go outside and make a call on my cell phone anyway. Meet you at your truck?”

“Fine.”

Cork left the way he’d come. Outside, he could hear Trixie barking in the park next to the marina a block away, and he saw Manypenny throwing a Frisbee, which Trixie was having a great time chasing down. He plucked his cell phone from its belt holster, pulled up the number from which Rainy Bisonette had called two nights earlier, and punched redial. While he waited, he watched Trixie having the best time she’d had since Stephen left for West Texas. He made a mental note:
Play more with the dog
.

Rainy answered, her voice distant and impersonal. “Yes, Cork?”

“Boozhoo,”
he said, trying to be cordial.

“What do you want?”

All business, this woman.
All right then
, he thought, and got down to it.

“What time did Isaiah Broom leave Crow Point yesterday?”

“Early. Shortly after sunup.”

“Any idea where he was headed?”

“He didn’t say.”

“Is Henry there?”

“No. He’s out gathering.”

Herbs, Cork figured.

“How did Broom seem when he left?”

“Hungover. Worried.”

“Did Henry talk to him?”

“Not really. Broom hurried off like a man on a mission. Uncle Henry couldn’t persuade him to stay.”

“Thanks, Rainy.”

“For what?”

He meant to say for the information she’d just given him. But what came out was “For taking care of Henry. I love that old man.”

Her end of the line was quiet. “So do I,” she finally said, speaking more gently than she ever had to Cork.

When he hung up, he headed immediately back into the community center. He ran into Blessing outside the open gym doors and spoke over the squeak of rubber soles on urethane.

“I need a favor, Tom.”

“Ask.”

“I need to borrow your truck for a little while.”

Blessing reached into the pocket of his pants, pulled out his keys, and handed them over.

“Is it okay if Elgin plays a little longer with Trixie?” Cork asked.

“How long will you be?”

“Not long if I can find the man I’m looking for.”

“Broom?” Blessing guessed.

“Broom,” Cork said.

THIRTY-EIGHT

I
saiah Broom lived in a cabin of his own design and making. It stood at the end of a short stretch of dirt track in a small clearing a couple of miles east of Allouette. Where the track split from the asphalt of the main road, Broom had pounded a post and hung a sign from it:
Chainsaw Art
.

As Cork drove into the clearing, he spotted Broom in front of the cabin, shirtless, a big Stihl chain saw in his hands, working on a section of maple log that stood six feet high. The noise of the saw drowned out the sound of Blessing’s truck, and Broom didn’t notice Cork’s approach until the vehicle pulled to a stop in a shroud of red dust.

Broom shut off the chain saw and watched Cork come. He didn’t put the Stihl down. In the heat of the summer afternoon, his powerful torso dripped with sweat.

“Isaiah.”

“What do you want, O’Connor?”

“How’s the head?” Cork asked.

“Huh?”

“Heard from Rainy that you were a little hungover the other day. I know how that feels. You okay now?”

“My head’s fine,” Broom said.

“Aren’t you going to ask about mine?”

“Why should I?”

“Somebody whacked me good yesterday. Right here.” Cork pointed toward the back of his head. “Still a little tender, but I’m okay. Thanks for your concern.”

Broom finally lowered the chain saw to the ground, where it sat amid chips and sawdust. “What’s your game, O’Connor?”

“Looks like it’s going to be twenty questions. What did you do with the things you raked up at your uncle’s cabin?”

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

“I was out at Indigo Broom’s yesterday morning. Just wanted to see the place for myself. Or what remained of it, which wasn’t much. I stumbled onto a couple of items that made me believe some of the things I’ve been thinking lately about your uncle are true. Then I get hit on the head, and when I come to these things are gone, along with anything else that might incriminate your uncle.”

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