by Stan Jones
FROZEN
SUN
Copyright 2008 by Stanley E. Jones
All rights reserved.
Published in paperback by
Bowhead Press, LLC
Box 240212
Anchorage AK 99524
eBook published by
Soho Press, Inc.
853 Broadway
New York, NY 10003
www.sohopress.com
Jones, Stan, 1947-
Frozen sun : a Nathan Active Mystery / Stan Jones.
p. cm.
ISBN: 978-0-9799803-7-4
eBook ISBN: 978-1-56947-839-4
1. Police—Alaska—Fiction. 2. Inupiat—Fiction
3. Alaska—Fiction. I. Title.
Library of Congress Control Number 2007941568
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
ALSO BY THE AUTHOR
White Sky, Black Ice
Shaman Pass
FROZEN
SUN
a Nathan Active mystery
Stan Jones
This book is dedicated to my parents,
Rufus and Etta Jones
CONTENTS
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
A NOTE ON LANGUAGE
PART I: CHUKCHI
CHAPTER ONE
CHAPTER TWO
CHAPTER THREE
CHAPTER FOUR
CHAPTER FIVE
PART II: ANCHORAGE
CHAPTER SIX
CHAPTER SEVEN
CHAPTER EIGHT
CHAPTER NINE
CHAPTER TEN
PART III: DUTCH HARBOR
CHAPTER ELEVEN
CHAPTER TWELVE
CHAPTER THIRTEEN
CHAPTER FOURTEEN
CHAPTER FIFTEEN
CHAPTER SIXTEEN
CHAPTER SEVENTEEN
PART IV: CHUKCHI
CHAPTER EIGHTEEN
CHAPTER NINETEEN
CHAPTER TWENTY
CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE
CHAPTER TWENTY-TWO
CHAPTER TWENTY-THREE
CHAPTER TWENTY-FOUR
CHAPTER TWENTY-FIVE
CHAPTER TWENTY-SIX
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
Many people helped bring this story to life, and I thank them all. In particular I salute the assistance of Helen Jung and Jim Paulin, two reporters who told me things about Dutch Harbor I wouldn’t otherwise have known, and that of Ron Emmons of the Anchorage Police Department, who told me what happens when an unidentified body turns up in Alaska’s largest city. Also, my gratitude to Monette Draper for counsel on the insanity defense, and to Philip M. Hawley and D.P. Lyle for advice on liver disease.
Finally, I owe a huge debt to Kent Sturgis and Kay Haneline, two fine editors who looked over the manuscript in its final stages and made many improvements.
A NOTE ON LANGUAGE
“Eskimo” is the best-known term for the Native Americans described in this book, but in their own language they call themselves Inupiat, meaning the People. “Eskimo,” a term brought into Alaska by white men, is what certain Indian tribes in eastern Canada called their neighbors to the north; it probably meant “eaters of raw flesh.”
Nonetheless “Eskimo” and “Inupiat” are used more or less interchangeably in Northwest Alaska today, at least when English is spoken, and that is the usage followed in this book.
The Inupiat call their language Inupiaq. A few words in it— those commonly mixed with English in Northwest Alaska—appear in the book. They are listed below, along with pronunciations and meanings. As the spellings vary among Inupiaq-English dictionaries, I have used spellings that seemed to me most likely to induce the proper pronunciation by non-Inupiaq readers.
A Northwest Alaska Glossary
aaka (AH-kuh): mother
aana (AH-nuh): grandmother; old lady
Arii! (ah-DEE): I hurt!
Inupiaq (IN-you-pack): the Eskimo language of northern Alaska; an individual Eskimo of northern Alaska
Inupiat (IN-you-pat): more than one Inupiaq; the Eskimo people of northern Alaska
kunnichuk (KUH-knee-chuck): storm shed
atikluk (ah-TEEK-look): A light summer woman’s parka, usually in a flowered pattern. It has no opening in front, but is pulled on and off over the head.
muktuk (MUCK-tuck): whale skin with a thin layer of fat adhering; a great delicacy in Inupiat country
naluaqmiiyaaq (nuh-LOCK-me-ock): almost white; a half-breed
naluaqmiu (nuh-LOCK-me): a white person
naluaqmiut (nuh-LOCK-me): more than one white person; white people
nanuq (NA-NOOK): polar bear
One day, as our ship rounded the top of the great circle, I noticed a string of strange bare mountains rising out of the sea along the northern horizon. They resembled heaps of smoking slag; the sun, striking their sides, gave them a greenish cast like verdigris on copper. I asked a fellow passenger what they were. “Illusions,” I thought he said, but now I realize he said they were the Aleutians.
—Corey Ford, Where the Sea Breaks Its Back
PART I
CHUKCHI
CHAPTER ONE
“Beautiful, wasn’t she?”
Nathan Active studied the mural-sized photograph on the wall outside the principal’s office at Chukchi High School. A girl, half Eskimo and half white, stood on a bluff overlooking the lagoon behind Chukchi on a summer day. She held a bouquet of roses and wore an evening gown, a tiara, and a sash that said “Miss North World.” A small brass plate underneath read “Grace Sikingik Palmer.”
“She was beautiful from the day she was born.” Jason Palmer was in his early fifties, Active guessed. Tall, swept-back silver hair, jeans, hands pushed into the hip pockets. A good-looking face, with a slightly fox-like cast to the eyes and the bridge of the nose. “That’s why I named her Grace. But I doubt she looks like that now.”
Active pulled a notebook from his pocket. “How long since you’ve heard from her?”
“It’ll be ten years this Christmas,” Palmer said. “She started at the university in Anchorage the fall after this picture was made, came home for Christmas, and we never saw her again.”
“She didn’t call? Or write? How about her mother? Did anybody else in the family hear from her?”
“No, but my son Roy crossed her trail when he was in Anchorage for a basketball tournament three years ago this past winter. She was hanging around that bar down there. The Junction.”
Active grimaced. “Whew.”
“You know the Junction.”
“Everybody in Anchorage knows the Junction, sir. It’s a behavior sink.”
“A what?”
“Behavior sink. It means … ah, never mind. It’s social worker talk for hell on earth.” He turned back to the picture. “Did Roy just hear about this or did he actually see it with his own eyes?”
Palmer nodded. “He saw her, all right. She - - She - -”
His voice broke and he turned away. He pulled a handkerchief from a hip pocket and blew his nose. He walked across the hall to a fountain, bent and drank, then crossed back again.
“She was coming out of the Junction and she was drunh-hunh-hunk - - “ Palmer pulled out the handkerchief and turned away once more, his shoulders shaking.
The misery here was too deep to touch with words. Active waited silently, studying the girl in the black-and-white mural.
The principal of Chukchi High School was right. His daughter was, or had been, a looker. A fine straight nose, high cheekbones, dark almond eyes with a slight tilt and an odd silver gleam at the corners, full lips. Long dark hair and clear dark skin aglow in the summer sun of the photograph. She had inherited some of her father’s looks, especially around the eyes.
Finally the sobs stopped, and Palmer
blew his nose again. His face took on an expression of stony resolve and he spoke in a monotone, like the robot voice on an answering machine.
“Roy saw her coming out of the Junction drunk. She was with two men, Roy thought they were soldiers from their haircuts. They were holding her up between them. A black one and a white one.”
Palmer paused, pressed his lips together and swallowed twice, blinking rapidly. Active wanted to say something, but sensed that a word would bring on another collapse. He nodded encouragingly.
“Roy - - did I tell you Roy is my son?”
Active nodded again.
“Roy tried to get her to come with him. He said, ‘Come home, Sikingik.’ You know what that means, Nathan?”
“ ‘Sun,’ I think?”
“That’s right, ‘Sun.’ She was grace and sunlight. Like a gift from God.” Palmer paused and pressed his lips together again for a moment. “Anyway, Roy says ‘Come home, Sikingik.’ And Grace just says … it’s hard for me to use words like this, I’m an educator. And she’s my daughter. You understand?”
Active nodded.
“She says, ‘Fuck you, Roy.’ And the white soldier says, ‘What did you call her, there, Nanook?’ “
“ ‘Sikingik,’ Roy says. ‘That’s her Eskimo name.’ “
“ ‘She told us her name was Amazing Grace,’ the black one says. ‘And now she’s gonna amaze us.’ After that, they put her in a cab and drove off. Roy saw some Eskimos hanging around the bar, so he talked to them a little. They said she was just living on, what do they call it? Four Street?”
Active nodded. “Technically, it’s the bars along Fourth Avenue. But really it just means you’re homeless in Anchorage.”
Now Palmer nodded. “Well, they said she was living on Four Street and … doing whatever she had to for drinks.”
Just then a buzzer sounded in the quiet, empty hall. Classroom doors banged open all around and a flood of students surged out, mostly Inupiat but with an occasional white or Korean face mixed in. They stared curiously at their principal standing in the hallway with a Trooper. Palmer took the opportunity to use his handkerchief again, and Active resumed his study of the picture of Grace Palmer.
There was a kind of angry remoteness about the eyes and the lips. Enough steel there, he would have thought, to save her from whatever it was about Four Street that sucked down so many village girls.
He shook his head and wondered how she would look today. Like Palmer had said, probably not much like the picture taken on the bluff ten years ago. He imagined the flawless skin coarsened by drink and weather. Perhaps it would be pebbled with the acne that seemed to come with life in the bars and shelters and Visqueen camps where the street people of Anchorage made their homes. He pictured a couple of teeth missing and a brush-stroke of dried blood below one nostril.
As suddenly as it had come, the tide of students ebbed and the hallway was quiet again. Active turned back to the principal. “Why did you wait so long?”
“It’s hard to admit your child has rejected you.” Palmer looked at the mural. “You keep hoping she’ll turn up, call, something. If you talk to the authorities, it seems like you’re giving up, making it official that she’s gone.”
Palmer cleared his throat and put the handkerchief back into his pocket. “I did try once before, though. My wife asked me to go look after Roy saw her at the Junction. You know the Bible, Nathan?”
Active shook his head. “Not much.”
“Me either. But my wife does. ‘My daughter, shall I not seek rest for thee, that it may be well with thee?’ That’s what Ida said. She told me it came from the Book of Ruth.” He paused, a distant look in his eyes. “But in the end I couldn’t go. I couldn’t face … I couldn’t face it.”
“And now? Have you heard something?”
“No, it’s my wife again. She’s got liver cancer from what they call Silent Hepatitis. She had to have a lot of blood when Roy was born and I guess she got it from the transfusion. “ He turned from the mural and faced Active. “Anyway, she wants to say goodbye to her daughter. I don’t see much hope of finding Grace after all this time, but you know how a woman is, a mother. She wanted me to ask you to go look.”
Active frowned. “Your wife knows me? I don’t think we’ve ever met.”
“All the Eskimos know you, Nathan. The Chukchi boy that got adopted out as a baby and came back as a Trooper? You bet. Ida said, ‘You ask that Eskimo Trooper, he’ll do it.’ “
Active spoke as gently as he knew how. “I’m sorry to have to ask this in your time of trouble, but are you sure she’s still alive? Ten years is a long time, especially on Four Street, and nobody’s seen her in three years.”
Palmer flinched and gazed at the mural. “I tried to talk to Ida about that but … well, she’s a mother.”
“I can file a missing person report with the city police in Anchorage.” Active wondered if Palmer knew how little effort the report would generate. Homeless Natives drifted on and off the city’s streets like the shadows of passing clouds. They went back to their villages for a while, they got temporary jobs out of town, they moved in with boyfriends or girlfriends. Generally, the overworked city cops took an interest only when one of them turned up beaten to death in an alley, drowned in Ship Creek, or frozen solid under a bridge. “Maybe the cops down there can visit some of the shelters, hit some of the bars, that kind of thing.”
“How hard will they work it? Ida needs some kind of hope to cling to.” Palmer looked more in control of himself now. Perhaps it was because they were easing away from the womanish stuff of emotion, getting back into the man’s world of practical action, talking about what to do.
Active sighed. “They won’t work it very hard, I’m afraid. Unless they have reason to think something’s happened to her.”
“Unless something’s happened to her! My Lord, she was sleeping with soldiers and - - “ Palmer stopped and shook his head. “But you can’t go, Nathan? Ida made me promise to ask.”
“Tell your wife I’m sorry, but the Troopers won’t pay for travel on a missing person report like this.”
Palmer turned back to the mural and studied it silently. Then he sighed. “I told her it would probably be that way. At least we tried.”
“Does Ida have any other family with her?”
“Cowboy Decker is bringing her sister Aggie down from Isignaq in a few days. That’ll help some, I guess.”
“I can’t go, but I’ll see what I can do. I have a buddy on the city force down there.” Active motioned at the mural behind him. “Do you have a normal-size picture of her? I’ll send it down with the report.”
Palmer reached into his windbreaker and pulled out a tattered photo-finisher’s envelope with a blue rubber band around it.
“Ida found this around the house somewhere.” Palmer handed him the envelope. “I don’t know what’s in there, I just couldn’t look. I probably should have this mural taken off our wall here, but …”
Active looked at it once more. “But you can’t quite give up on her.”
Palmer shook his head.
“I understand.”
CHAPTER TWO
Martha Active Johnson was considering Leonora Oneok’s request for muskrat leave when Nathan stuck his head into her office.
“I can come back,” he said.
“No, no, Sweetie.” Martha shook her head. “You just wait outside a minute. Leonora and I are almost done. Ah, Leonora?”
Leonora twisted in her chair to see who Martha was talking to, then quickly turned back and nodded yes, they were almost done.
Leonora’s lips were pressed primly together and her eyes, uncharacteristically, were on her hands. Was she blushing? Martha studied the girl, her newest teacher aide. Leonora, like most women in Chukchi with twenty-twenty vision, must have noticed how Nathan looked in his Alaska State Trooper uniform.
As always when Martha saw her son unexpectedly like this, her heart was stirred, too, but of course in a different way. It
was not just that he was so young and handsome with his buzz-cut black hair and clear brown skin. It was the wary, deep-set eyes and the boyish, vulnerable lips. They told someone who knew Nathan as well as she did that deep inside he was still the child who did not fully believe he was loved, or would ever be.
She shook off the regrets and turned her attention back to Leonora Oneok. Leonora was from Ebrulik, a village on the Isignaq River eighty miles inland. The surrounding tundra was dotted with lakes, all teeming with muskrat. Now that spring was coming over the Arctic, the Oneok family was heading out to trap muskrat, and Leonora wanted two weeks’ leave to go along.
Martha approved of girls staying in touch with their families, and of Eskimo girls keeping up the old hunting and gathering traditions. It seemed like girls who did this actually coped better with the white man’s world than girls who turned their backs on the old ways and tried to be completely modern. The Chukchi Region School District saw things the same way, maintaining an official policy of honoring leave requests like Leonora’s.
But Martha, as head of the teacher-aide program at Chukchi High, had to survive the remaining month until the end of school. With daylight already perpetual as the Arctic sun climbed toward its summer zenith, with the rivers inland breaking up and the sea ice in front of town starting to rot, keeping a high school full of restless adolescents in their seats would take everything the aides and teachers could do, and then some. She decided to throw a scare into Leonora.
“I need you here,” she told the girl. “You know how these kids are. And you’re a new employee, so you haven’t built up much leave time yet.”
Leonora wrinkled her nose in the Inupiat squint of negation and dismay. “Arii! I promised my mom. She worry about me, over here in big city like Chukchi.”