Department of Agriculture right after the Alaska Purchase. ("Seven cents
an acre! Did we take the Russians to the cleaners or what?" Peter Heiman
was reported to quote his grandfather as saying in a profile in 1986,
front page, Metro section, News. Paula noted that Peter's grandfather
had died in 1943, and Peter hadn't been born until 1947.) The first
Peter Heiman had been a farmer, sent to Alaska to oversee operations at
five experimental farms (Homer, Anchorage, Fairbanks, Rampart, and
Sitka) to see what would grow in Alaska and what would not. He had some
success with crab apples, and even more with a gold miner's sister who
shot the Lake Bennett rapids in 1898 along with the rest of the
stampeders. At least she said she was his sister, and her alleged
brother backed her up, but with a lot of those old gals you never knew.
Once she was married, Elizabeth Heiman settled into a life of quiet and
what looked to Paula like stiflingly dull respectability.
Peter Heiman's father, the second of that name in Alaska and Elizabeth
and Peter's only child, had been, in turn, a gold miner, a big-game
guide, a Bush pilot, a Bristol Bay fisherman back when the Bristol Bay
fleet fished under sail, had maintained radios for the U.S. Navy on the
Aleutian Chain, and when the Japanese invaded, joined the Alaska Scouts,
also known as Castner's Cutthroats, although as the second Peter Heiman
was fond of saying after the war was over, Lieutenant Castner had
disliked the name. They took the islands of Attu and Kiska back from the
Japanese, during which action the second Peter Heiman was wounded
33
and for which he was later awarded a Purple Heart by no less than Major
General Simon Bolivar Buckner, Jr., Alaska Defense Commander, Himself.
There was a grainy black and white photograph (Alaska Magazine, "Forty
Years After," May/June 1984) with the second Peter Heiman looking gaunt
and tired, standing in a line of other soldiers, and trying his best to
throw out a negligible chest for General Buckner to pin his decoration
on. He had the same narrow face, the same lantern jaw, and the same
thick thatch of coarse dark hair as his father did in the sepia
photograph of his parent's wedding (Alaska Life Magazine, "Centennial
Tales," September 1967).
After the war, the second Peter Heiman left Fairbanks for the Park and
homesteaded eighty acres of land, established a profitable truck farm,
and started a hauling business on the Kanuyaq River Highway, moving
freight between the port of Valdez and the interior market town of
Ahtna. Eventually he expanded operations to include Fairbanks and Anchorage.
It was to Ahtna he brought his bride in 1946, an Isabella Chapman,
daughter of a Fairbanks merchant. They had two sons, a third Peter in
1947 and then Charles in 1949.
Peter was the first of the Peter Heimans to go to college, the
University of Alaska. He was a National Merit Scholar (UAF student
newspaper Polar Star, February 1969), and then he left school to join
the U.S. Army and do one tour in Vietnam. He was back in Alaska by
Christmas 1972, back in school in 1974, and had his bachelor's degree in
May 1975 (list of UAF graduates in May twentieth issue of the Fairbanks
Daily News-Miner).
Charles followed his brother to Vietnam and didn't come back. Obituary,
November 24, 1971, Ahtna Tribune, Anchorage Times, Fairbanks Daily
News-Miner. Two generations of war heroes and one war tragedy, Paula
thought. Bad luck on the parents, and on Peter the Third, too, if he and
Charles had been close.
34
It seemed they had been. The third Peter Heiman went into business with
his father's backing, formed a trucking company, and made out like a
bandit during the last half of the "70s and the first half of the "80s,
back when oil was king. Every other load into Prudhoe Bay was a Heiman
Trucking Kenilworth tractor-trailer ("Teamsters in Alaska," CBS 60
Minutes, 1976). The third Peter had expanded into services, a sort of
Kelly Girls for contract employees like plumbers, welders, carpenters,
and electricians, so that he was sitting pretty when the bust came in
the mid-'80s and the oil companies started looking around for contract
employees who worked by the hour and didn't come with all those
expensive benefits attached, like health and retirement and investment
plans.
In the fullness of time Peter Heiman married, a roustabout he met
overnighting at Galbraith Lake on a trip to Prudhoe. She was a big
woman, big-haired and big-hipped and big-busted, and she lasted nearly
two years (notice of divorce of Peter A. and Shirley F. Heiman, Ahtna
Tribune, Anchorage Times, Anchorage Daily News, Fairbanks Daily
News-Miner, October 1977). The third Peter married again, a flight
attendant with Wien Air Alaska he met on a trip to Anchorage to pick up
a new rig. Another blonde, shorter, skinnier, and more fertile, Cindy F.
Heiman divorced her husband when she caught him in bed with a third
blonde in 1980, and when she left she took his son, the fourth Peter,
and a good half of the business with her. (A delicious series of
articles reporting the very juicy trial in the Anchorage Daily News,
March and April 1981. The Times seemed to have stayed away from the
story.) The third Peter then married the third blonde, a Bush pilot
called Walkaway Jane after the second time she wrecked a plane and
walked away from it, who promptly died in her next crash two months
after the wedding.
The third Peter didn't marry again. He tended to his business, buried
his father next to his brother when the
35
second Peter died in 1994 (obituary, December 1994, Ahtna Tribune,
Cordova Times, Valdez Star, Valdez Vanguard, Seward Phoenix-Log,
Anchorage Daily News, the Times was out of business by then, Eagle River
Star, Frontiersman, Fairbanks Daily News-Miner, Juneau Empire), buried
his mother next to his father when she died in 1995 (obituary, Ahtna
Tribune, Anchorage Daily News, June 1995), and took over as the heir and
sole proprietor of Heiman Transportation and Service Corporation, Inc.
By then he was already a state senator, and from all indications (AP
photos of the third Peter dining with the governor in Juneau, conferring
with the senior U.S. senator in Washington, D.C., shooting grouse with
Alaska's U.S. congressman in Oregon and, of much more interest to Paula
Pawlowski, seen in the company of every mover and shaker of any
importance in Alaskan politics for the previous ten years, some of whom
were still out of jail) a successful one.
She took many notes, followed by a lunch break.
When she got back to the library, the greasy burger and fries from the
Sourdough Cafe sitting uneasily between her chronic heartburn and her
incipient ulcer, she went back through a lot of the same spools looking
for the name Gordaoff. She was in Fairbanks in the first place because
both the Heiman and the Gordaoff families had a lot of history there.
Plus, she wasn't paying for it. She wasted a moment speculating as to
/>
where all the Gordaoff campaign funds were coming from, decided she
didn't care so long as her checks cleared the bank, and got back to work.
The Gordaoff family was no less distinguished than the Heiman family,
and with a lineage that went a lot farther back. Anne Gordaoff's
grandmother was a feisty little (four feet five, "The Little Lovelies
Who Would Be Miss Fairbanks," Fairbanks Daily News-Miner, 1910)
Athabascan woman, who married an Irish con artist with fingers in every
pie south of Livengood, and who when those pies
36
began to burn started drinking and beating his wife. She made Alaskan
history by being the first Native woman ever (and the only one for a
long time afterward) to sue her husband for divorce, get it, get the
kids (there were four, two adopted), and get all the property that
hadn't been gambled away. There were a lot of photographs of her, a tiny
woman with dark skin and straight black hair piled high on her head. By
all accounts Lily Gordaoff MacGregor oversaw her husband's business
interests with so attentive an eye and so firm a hand that she became
something of a local real estate magnate.
Paula did some more digging and her eyebrows rose a little. Lily
Gordaoff MacGregor had been a landlady of some consequence, owning an
office building on Cushman, two boarding houses, one in Livengood, one
on Wicker- sham, and-this time Paula's eyebrows rose very high indeed.
She grinned down at the Fairbanks tax rolls for 1915. Lily Gordaoff
MacGregor had been the owner of record of two houses on Fourth Avenue
between Bamett and Cushman Streets in Fairbanks, Alaska, also known as
the Fairbanks Line. Men had been lining up at the Fairbanks Line from
1906, when the Fairbanks city fathers created it at the behest of
Archdeacon Stuck. The Fairbanks Line was, in fact, the longest-running
and certainly one of the most profitable red light districts in Alaska
and possibly the entire American West until its closure in 1955.
Paula toyed with the idea of selling this information to Peter Heiman,
and then decided against it. When you offer yourself to the highest
bidder, you ought to stay bought. She looked down at the tax rolls and
grinned again. Any professional worthy of the name would say the same.
In 1919 the influenza epidemic had carried off two of Lily's children,
which two were not called by name in that issue of the Fairbanks Daily
News-Miner. All the June 12th article said, and on the front page, too,
was that Lily Gordaoff MacGregor was moving her family to Cordova,
37
where she had relatives, and that she would be sorely missed by all who
remained behind.
Quite a tribute for a white-run newspaper of the time to pay to a Native
woman. Paula was impressed. She ran the spool backwards, and her
attention was caught by a headline datelined Niniltna, a village in the
Park that comprised the greater part of Anne Gordaoff's chosen district.
She had to rewind to find it again. Someone had been killed, murdered, a
woman, in the spring of 1915.
It had nothing to do with Anne Gordaoff, of course, but the
circumstances listed in the paper were such that Paula might be able to
work them into her novel. The third chapter could use a little spicing
up, and what better for spice than a discretionary helping of blood and
guts? After all, everyone loves a murder.
She glanced at her watch. Three-forty-five. Her time was bought and paid
for until five. She wondered what Anne Gordaoff's stand was on
subsidizing the arts.
She decided Anne was for it.
38
RAMPART JANUARY 14, 1899
The man died at five minutes past two o'clock in the morning. The boy
was born at three.
They had moved to Rampart from Dawson the previous spring along with
fifteen hundred other stampeders. At first it was the same there as it
had been in Dawson, a lot of people who would speak to Sam Halvorsen but
none who would deign to notice the Dawson Darling, no matter how
respectably married she could now claim to be. Sam Halvorsen was the
scion of a wealthy and respected Minneapolis family who had made money
in lumber, and Rampart, for all its small size and remote location, was
like many of the gold towns of the north filled with people of similar
backgrounds, people who, if they didn't know Sam's family, had at least
heard of it, and displayed their disapproval of his marrying so far out
of his class by soundly snubbing his wife.
"What do we care?" he said, tumbling her into the bed of the tiny
bedroom at the back of the tiny cabin on the bank of the Yukon River.
"I've got you, what the hell do I want with a bunch of snobs hanging
around getting in the way?"
But she thought he did want them, and it worried at her.
She was, in fact, his lawful wife. They had married in March, three
months to the day from when he had snatched her from the Double Eagle
stage in Dawson.
He had enough of his father in him that the cabin, built of logs and
insulated with sod, was solid and as air-tight
39
as anything in the Arctic was at fifty-two below. The post took up most
of the space, with a tiny bedroom in one corner, just wide enough for
the bed, which was a big one to accommodate the length of Sam's legs.
"And yours," he had said before investigating their cumulative length in
painstaking detail.
Ah, she loved him, how she loved him. She now thought she had loved him
from the first moment she had seen him, standing so tall and so angry
next to the door he had just come through, fresh from the claim on
Orogrande Creek he had sold the month before, looking for nothing more
than a cold beer and an honest game of poker.
Instead he found her, prancing around nearly naked in front of a lot of
drooling idiots with more gold than sense, for sale to the highest
bidder. "I knew you were my wife," he told her later, "and I sure as
hell didn't know what my wife was doing up on that stage."
It was a week before they got out of bed, a month before they'd left his
cabin, two months before they realized that her auction had made even
wide-open Dawson City too hot to hold them. They hadn't been able to
find a minister to marry them, and had had to fall back on an itinerant
preacher headed for Nome, riding a bicycle down the frozen Yukon River.
They followed him as far as Rampart, where Sam built their post and she
filled it with goods to sell. He put in a few tables next to the
Franklin stove they brought in from Outside, where Sam ran a few card
games, losing more than he won, but "hell," he'd said when she
remonstrated, "I already won the big pot," and kissed her.
That fall, the ax had slipped when Sam was chopping their winter's
supply of wood. He'd cut his leg, not badly, and the wound had seemed to
heal. It had opened again in November, though, and become infected,
until great dark streaks ran up his leg. She had sent for a doctor from
Dawson, another from Fairbanks, depleting funds already low from lack of
sal
es due to the stampede for the new gold
40
fields at Nome. No one had been able to help him.
"Take care of that boy, Darling, " he said at the last, his voice
slurring. "Take him to my folks in Minneapolis. They'll look out for you
both."
But she knew, as she sat next to what was now his funeral byre, that the
Halvorsens in Minneapolis would have nothing to do with her or her son.
The Darling's Rampart neighbors had been faithful correspondents.
She had fifty dollars in scrip, a few silver coins, and two small pokes
of dust received in payment from a couple of miners laying in supplies
for the winter, and who had pretty much cleaned out hers. She had her
clothes. And she had a new-born baby rooting at her breast for milk that
wasn't there.
There was a knock at the door. It was Sam's best friend, Arthur Hudson.
"I came as soon as I heard," he said, stepping inside and closing the door.
Arthur had traveled the Chilkoot Trail with Sam in 1897. He'd staked the
claim next to Sam's at Orogrande Creek, although he hadn't done as well
as Sam. He'd been present at the Double Eagle Saloon on Christmas Eve
Stabenow, Dana - Shugak 11 - The Singing Of The Dead Page 5