Stabenow, Dana - Shugak 11 - The Singing Of The Dead

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by The Singing Of The Dead(lit)


  The corresponding bloodstain on the white linoleum-tile floor had dried

  a hard brown. She'd been shot once, had

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  fallen to the couch, then to the floor. They'd found no evidence that

  she'd hit the table.

  Bookcases, homemade but sturdily built and nicely finished with a

  natural stain and a light coating of varnish, filled every available

  inch of the wall space above the couch backs, between the windows, and

  below the ceiling. The books were alphabetized by author, all history,

  all about eras of Alaskan history, World War II, gold rush days, the

  Civil War. Some Kate recognized from her own library: The Thousand Mile

  War by Brian Garfield, The Flying North by Jean Potter, Pierre Berton's

  The Klondike Rush, his mother's I Married the Klondike, and Murray

  Morgan's Confederate Raider. Little yellow sticky notes festooned the

  pages, where passages had been marked in light pencil.

  She saw an oversized book bound in leather with fading letters on the

  spine, which proved to be a copy of the duke of Abruzzi's account of his

  expedition to climb Mount St. Elias in 1897, a book Kate had given up on

  acquiring when Rachel at Twice Told Tales in Anchorage had told her it

  was priced on the Internet at seven hundred and fifty dollars. There

  were photographs, and she sat down on the unstained couch and leafed

  through them, pausing to read a paragraph here and there.

  She replaced the book on the shelf with due reverence, and wondered what

  other treasures Paula had hidden away in her little tin hot dog. There

  was no filing cabinet, no notes. Everything Paula had been working on

  must have been either in the notebooks or on the laptop.

  The kitchen cupboards were neatly organized, the dishes inelamine, the

  pots and pans Paul Revere, the glassware Wal-Mart, the flatware Costco.

  In the little refrigerator filed beneath the counter there was an aging

  block of cheddar cheese, a half-empty carton of eggs, and a bunch of

  green onions that looked like they were melting. The remainder of a loaf

  of Wonder Bread on the counter was dried hard. There was a box of Walker

  shortbread rounds in the

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  cupboard, the only evidence of sin. The sink, the tiny gas stove and

  oven, everything was spotlessly clean. The countertops looked new, some

  kind of fake wood. The cupboard below was stocked with dish soap,

  clothes soap, bleach, paper towels, and plastic trash bags, all in giant

  economy-size boxes. Paula hated to shop, and bought large when she did

  so she wouldn't have to do so again any time soon. Kate's heart warmed

  to her, and hardened toward her killer.

  Down the tiny hallway the bathroom was stocked with Ivory soap in

  hand-bar and bath-bar sizes, half-gallon jugs of generic shampoo and

  conditioner with pump handles, another half gallon of generic hand

  lotion on the sink. The single bed (more room for bookshelves) had two

  changes of sheets, one on and one in the clothes hamper, a quilt for

  summer and a down comforter for winter. Paula hadn't liked to shop, and

  she wasn't a prisoner of her possessions, and for no reason this

  realization made Kate's anger at Paula's killer run higher. Paula

  Pawlowski had refined living down to its essentials, so that she could

  concentrate on what mattered.

  What mattered was books, if the bulk of the contents of the trailer was

  any indication. Shelves, built-in and freestanding, took up every

  available inch of floor space, were wedged between bed and wall, were

  mounted over all the windows. Every one of them was lined with books. It

  took Kate a while to see that they were in alphabetical order, clockwise

  from the door, starting with the five-shelf bookshelf nailed to the

  divider between the kitchen/living room and the bedroom, and ending with

  the two shelves mounted on brackets over the toilet in the bathroom. She

  saw Jane Austen, L. Frank Baum, Lois McMasters Bujold, Bernard Cornwell

  by the door; Loren Estelman, Steven Gould, Robert Heinlein, Georgette

  Heyer (and now she was seriously angry), John D. MacDonald, L. M.

  Montgomery, Ellis Peters, J. K. Rowling, Sharon Shinn, Nevil Shute down

  one side of the little hallway, around and over the bed; Laura

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  Ingalls Wilder and Don Winslow over the toilet.

  There weren't that many people in the world who read for fun, who would

  rather read than watch television, who were physically incapable of

  walking past a bookstore. Kate had come to it late, a gift from a gifted

  English teacher at the University of Alaska in Fairbanks, which meant

  that she had a keen sense of time wasted, a reverence for the art, and

  deep respect for those who practiced it. She looked at all of Paula

  Pawlowski's books and realized that Paula had been a lifelong friend of

  hers before they'd ever met. She found herself growing very calm.

  I will find out who did this to you, she said silently to the spine of

  The Death and Life of Bobby Z. I will find out, and I will make them pay.

  A knock at the door startled her. She went back into the hallway, and

  could make out a shape through the translucent glass pane in the door.

  "Who's there?" she called.

  "It's me, Paula, open the damn door." Another knock, impatient this

  time. "Look, I know you're mad at me, but-"

  Kate opened the door and found a man staring up at her in surprise. "Who

  the hell are you?"

  "My name is Kate," she said. "What's yours?"

  "Gordy Boothe, I-wait a minute. What are you doing in Paula's trailer?

  Where's Paula?" He craned his head to look around her. "Paula?"

  She stepped outside and closed the door behind her. "How well did you

  know Paula Pawlowski, Mr. Boothe?"

  "What?" Now he was staring down at her in bafflement and growing anger.

  "Look, what the hell is this? Where's Paula? Paula!" He banged on the

  door with his fist. "Paula, open this door!"

  "Mr. Boothe. Mr. Boothe!" She put a hand on his arm. She won't hear you.

  She's not here."

  "What do you mean, she's not here? She just got home last night; I drove

  her home from the Lodge."

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  "Really," Kate said. "What time was that?"

  "I don't know, eleven, eleven-thirty."

  "Did you stay with her?"

  "No." He hadn't been happy about it, either, and he still wasn't. "She

  wouldn't let me. She said she'd had this great idea, and she wanted to

  work on it before she lost it." He'd been watching Kate's expression. He

  was a pleasant-faced man in his mid-fifties, about five-ten, with a bald

  spot that made him look like he was tonsured and a body that looked like

  it had once played team sports in a desperate battle to stave off a

  middle-aged spread. "Look, Miss-what did you say your name was?-what's

  going on here? Who are you?"

  "Were you and Paula close, Mr. Boothe?" Kate looked behind him and saw

  the picnic table with two benches on either side of it. She moved toward

  it, and he followed her.

  "We had a relationship, sort of," he said. "We were good friends."

  "Which was it, were you friends or lovers?"

  He was starting to ge
t angry. "Look, I don't know what business that is

  of yours. Look here, what's-" His face paled, and the stuffing went out

  of him so suddenly that he collapsed on the nearest picnic bench. "Did

  you say "was'?"

  "I'm sorry to tell you this, Mr. Boothe. Your friend met with an

  accident last night."

  He uttered a low groan. "A bear? Was it a bear?"

  "Why do you say that?"

  "Because we heard one crashing through the bushes when I dropped her off

  last night. Is she okay? Where is she? Is she at the hospital?" He rose

  to his feet.

  Kate pulled him back down. "Mr. Boothe, I'm sorry to have to tell you

  this, but I'm afraid Paula is dead."

  He stared at her, his face very white. And then he burst into tears.

  He was a history teacher at Ahtna High School and the coach for both the

  girls' and boys' volleyball teams. He'd

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  met Paula three years before, when she came to him for help with some

  historical research for her novel, and they'd had an on-again, off-again

  relationship since. He was supposed to have met her at the airport when

  she flew in from Fairbanks the day before, with dinner at the Lodge to

  follow, and the rest of the night at his house, but their plans had gone

  awry when he'd been late getting back from a school trip to Kuik, and

  she had come up with her brilliant idea. "If I'd insisted she come home

  with me, she'd still be alive," he said, blowing his nose. Fresh tears

  started down his face. "I should have made her come with me. Damn it!"

  He thumped the picnic table in sudden rage. "Damn it, damn it, damn it!"

  Paula hadn't had any enemies, he said. She had lived out here because

  the rent was a third of what it was in town. Her parents were dead, and

  she'd been an only child. Where had she come from originally? He thought

  Chicago. Or maybe it was Cincinnati, he wasn't sure. She'd moved up with

  her mother twelve years before, and supported herself by writing grant

  applications for nonprofit corporations and hiring herself out to do

  research.

  "Mr. Boothe, did she say or do anything last night in any way out of the

  ordinary?"

  He shook his head. "No. Nothing."

  "What was this new idea she had that she wanted to work on?"

  He blew his nose again. "She'd found a story about a murder back in,

  god, I don't know, 1919 or something. One of the girls in one of the

  hook shops in Niniltna, back when it was party town for the Kanuyaq

  Copper Mine. She was all excited about how she could work it into her

  novel. She couldn't wait to get started." He sat, knees splayed, hands

  dangling between them, chin sunk on his chest.

  "Anything else?"

  He stared at the ground, oblivious to the afternoon growing cooler

  around them, looking unutterably weary. "She

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  was so nice. And so smart. And she read." He looked up. "Books," he said.

  "I know."

  "She liked to jitterbug. Did you know that?"

  "No. I didn't know that."

  "She was good at it, too. Danced me right off the floor more than once.

  When I had to chaperon a school dance, Paula would come and we would

  dance, and the kids would stand around in a circle and clap and yell and

  whistle." He smiled at the memory. It didn't last. "There'll never be

  anyone else for me. Paula was it. At my age, you just don't meet a lot

  of women you like." He raised his head, blinking away tears, and saw her

  watching him. "You're still young. You think you've got all the time in

  the world. Well, you don't." He got up and walked a few steps toward the

  battered Toyota Land Cruiser parked next to Tony's Escort. He stopped

  halfway there and wheeled around. "You're sure?" he said. "You're sure

  she's dead?"

  "I'm sorry, Mr. Boothe."

  His shoulders sagged. "Where is she?"

  "An autopsy is required in every incidence of violent death in the state

  of Alaska."

  "Can I have her back, afterward? I'd like to see her buried, if I may."

  "I'll tell Chief Hazen."

  "Thank you. Thank you for everything. You've been very kind." When the

  Toyota had backed halfway down the driveway, he stopped and rolled down

  the window. "She said she'd married well!"

  "Who had?"

  "The hooker! Paula said she'd married well! That's all I remember, though!"

  "Thanks!"

  He waved and rolled the window back up.

  Kate sat where she was for a good ten minutes after the sound of the

  engine had faded away. Gordy Boothe must

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  have walked into the restaurant the night before five minutes after Kate

  had walked out. Like him, she wished he'd talked Paula into staying with

  him, or that he had stayed at the trailer with her.

  It was early afternoon, about four o'clock. She ought to go back into

  town and catch a ride of some kind to Niniltna. Mutt wasn't back from

  lunch yet. She thought of the grizzly Gordy Boothe had heard in the

  bushes the night before, and hoped Mutt didn't bring it back with her.

  She could have called Mutt, but she didn't. She wasn't ready to go back

  to town yet, to be around people yet. She went back into the trailer and

  into the bedroom and took a second look at Helm. Kid puts on a weird

  helmet, acquires another personality; father beats him with a stick

  until he learns how to get out of its way: he goes to war at the head of

  an army and kicks serious enemy ass. She was immersed from the first

  page, and didn't hear the quiet purr of an approaching engine. She

  didn't even hear the door open. The Airstream, sitting on a solid

  foundation of cement blocks, didn't shift. The hydraulic hinge slammed

  the door closed though, and Kate looked up from where she was sitting on

  the floor, back to the bookshelf, startled but not quick enough. The

  tiny hallway was so short that the bedroom could be reached in one long

  step. There was a creak of wood over her head, and Kate looked up to see

  the five- shelf bookshelf and all its books come crashing down on her.

  Kenny Hazen dropped Jim Chopin at the Ahtna airport, and Jim would have

  been in Tok by now if he hadn't discovered a minute trace of oil on the

  hose leading from the engine to the oil pan. So he had to track down a

  new hose, and that took time, but it wasn't like he was in a hurry.

  There wasn't a lot going on back at the ranch. Well, except for Steve

  Glatter trying to kill his wife, Barbara, and Terry Moon when he caught

  them parked on a very short dead

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  end road a mile away from the turnoff of the Glatter homestead, clearly

  visible from the highway. If somebody had to do the nasty, why couldn't

  they practice a little discretion?

  It would make his life a lot easier. As it was, Terry was in the

  hospital, Barbara had retained an attorney, and Steve was in jail on the

  charge of assault in the third degree with the handle off a meat

  grinder. Terry wasn't all that beat up, and the Glatters had three minor

  children. Assault in the third was only a Class-A felony. Jim would have

  downgraded it to assault in the fourth or even reckless endangerment if

  he'd tho
ught he could have gotten away with it, but the magistrate on

  duty that day had been partying late the night before at the Do Drop

  and, as a consequence, had been in a severe mood the following morning.

  It was six o'clock by the time he finished the job. It wasn't one a

  licensed A&P mechanic would have to sign off on, so all he had to do was

  wash his hands and he was halfway home.

  Still. It wouldn't hurt to drive out to Paula Pawlowski's trailer, which

 

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