by P J Parrish
Louis smiled wanly. So Pryce had been trying to make it to the big time, too. He thumbed through the other letters, his smile fading. There were at least a dozen letters of inquiry and almost as many rejections, the oldest dating back to February 1982. Pryce had joined the Loon Lake force in 1981. If this file was any indication he sure grew bored here quickly.
But that made no sense. Stephanie Pryce said they were happy in Loon Lake. Maybe Pryce didn’t tell her he was looking for another job. Who knew what went on between husbands and wives?
Louis set the resume file aside and continued on through the rest. Forty-five minutes later, in the second drawer, he came across a well-worn yellow legal pad that he also hadn’t noticed last night. The top binding was filled with doodles like the ones on the desk blotter. He went quickly through the pages: more doodles amid Pryce’s small, hard-to-read handwriting. A few numbers but nothing that registered.
Slowing down now, he flipped to the last page of the pad, looking for anything relevant to Pryce’s last days. He kept going, reading each page, until he got to the top again. It was dated from last summer. It contained brief notes about the burglary of a tourist cabin Jesse had mentioned.
Louis tossed the pad on the floor in disgust. Shit. Nothing…absolutely nothing.
He stared at the open drawer of the cabinet, and he kicked it closed. His eyes fell on the legal pad, lying face-down on the floor. Doodles, more damn doodles. The whole back of the pad was one giant paisley doodle that fanned out in elaborate concentric circles. In the center was one number — 61829.
Louis wheeled the stool to the room entrance. “Hey, Dale, come here a sec.”
Dale looked up from his computer and came over.
Louis held out the pad. “Look at this number. Any thoughts?”
“Too short for a social or phone,” Dale offered.
Louis stared at the number. It was probably nothing but then again maybe Pryce had drawn this elaborate design around it on purpose, like Jesse giving emphasis to his signature with a double underline.
But cops didn’t routinely record notes on bulky legal pads; they wrote important stuff in their pocket notebooks. Pryce’s was still missing. He had asked Gibralter about it but the chief said he had never seen it.
Louis gathered up the legal pad, the resume file and a few papers he had set aside to be copied. The rest, he was sure now, was useless and he could send it back to Stephanie Pryce. Standing up to stretch, he switched off the light and closed the gate behind him.
“You lock it?” Dale called out.
Louis snapped the padlock closed. “Done.”
Going to the desk, he put the materials in his drawer and glanced at the clock. It was past seven. His research time was almost up for this morning. He knew he could work late tonight, but he wasn’t sure he wanted to. He wanted to be home in case Zoe jogged by.
He went to the locker room to change into uniform. Normally, he preferred dressing at home but with the weather as cold as it was and his car on the fritz he couldn’t risk appearing at briefing less than crisp and spit-shined. Yesterday, Gibralter had blasted one guy for having mud on his shoes. Ten inches of snow and Gibralter was worried about mud.
There was a clean uniform hanging in the locker, one of the three he’d received his first day. He wondered when he’d get more. Surely, they would give him more than three. Shit, he probably had to buy them.
“Good morning,” Jesse said from behind him.
“Morning, Jess.”
“You’re here early.”
“I wanted one more crack at the file cabinet.”
“Find anything new?”
“Resumes and letters. Pryce was looking for another job.”
Jesse didn’t look up. “Not surprised. Sometimes I think he felt we weren’t good enough for him.”
Louis let the comment go. “I was also going over the case file. There’s a statement I’d like to follow up on, a Moe Cohick, lived behind Pryce. He saw a man running.”
“He saw a shadow, that’s all,” Jesse said. “Couldn’t give us any description.”
“Well, sometimes people remember things later. I’d still like to talk to him. Can you go after shift?”
“Yeah. Remind me to call Julie though. Tonight is taco night and she gets pissed if I’m late.”
Jesse pulled off his white T-shirt and opened his locker. “Motherfucker. He didn’t bring them.”
“Bring what?”
“Pop’s Cleaners. They were supposed to drop off my uniforms.” Jesse looked at his watch. “Chief is going to rip me apart if I’m not in a clean uniform.”
Louis turned to say something but his eyes were drawn to Jesse’s bare, brawny back. Across the shoulders and down the spine were faded little scars, like small whip or knife marks.
The door suddenly opened and an old bald man with a fuzzy goatee rushed in, a dozen or so plastic-wrapped uniforms over his shoulder.
“I’m sorry, Jesse. Snowed in this morning.”
Jesse took five of the hangers from him. “Damn it, Pop, you know it’s tough to work the streets bare-ass naked.”
“Cold, too.”
Jesse pulled out his wallet. “How much?”
“Forty.”
“You greedy old bastard.” Jesse slapped the money in the old man’s palm.
“You keep talking to me like this and one day I’m going to keep the shit you leave in your pockets.”
Jesse sighed. “How much this time?”
Pop held out a handful of wrinkled bills. “What? You think I count it?”
“I know you fucking count it.”
“Five ones and twelve cents.”
Jesse took it from him, paused then stuffed the bills in the old man’s shirt pocket. “Can’t believe I keep tipping you.”
“Can’t believe I keep thanking you.” Pop grinned. He folded the remaining uniforms over his arm and nodded toward Louis.
“New customer?”
“Louis, this is Pop,” Jesse said. “He picks up and delivers. Usually, he’s on time.”
Louis shook his hand. “How do I get in on the pickup?”
“Just leave ‘em on that table in your bag every Monday. I come back on Wednesday.”
“Sure thing. Thanks.”
Pop leaned over to Jesse. “Same size as Pryce, isn’t he?”
“Man,” Louis moaned.
“Reminds me,” Pop said. “I still got three of his. I’ll bring ‘em to you. And they’ll be on the house.”
Jesse passed the park and turned left on Fourth Street. It was only five, but in response to the winter dusk, the streetlights were already on. Louis craned to look up at the modern poles. They cast the street in harsh, Martian-landscape light. Forget the quaint old lamps that lined Main Street. Even in a burg like Loon Lake property owners wanted the brightest, newest lights to protect their homes.
Jesse swung the cruiser into Moe Cohick’s drive. Like Pryce’s house, it was the last one on the block. To the south was a sturdy twelve-foot wooden fence, which marked the boundary of a small lumberyard beyond. To the north were more homes, each yard partitioned by chain-link fences.
Moe came out on his porch. He was a round little man, with red cheeks and wispy white hairs sprouting from a bald head. He was wearing a brightly striped turtleneck sweater that made him look like a Russian stacking doll. He was eating a bearclaw.
“Evening, Officers. What brings you about?”
Jesse didn’t offer his name and Louis assumed he and Moe knew each other. Louis introduced himself. “We wanted to ask you about the man you saw running the night Officer Pryce was killed,” he said.
“Sure, but I don’t know what else I can tell you.” Moe popped the last of the bearclaw into his mouth.
“Can you show us where you saw him?”
Moe nodded and led them around his garage to the backyard. A long-snouted dog leapt at them from the neighbors’ yard, barking furiously. Moe stopped in the center of his backyard. He point
ed to the back of the Pryce house then moved his finger along the chain-link fence north, toward the end of the block.
“He was going that way.”
Louis opened his notebook, where he had jotted what little description Moe gave the first time. “You said he was big?”
“Well, now, I think I said bigger than me.”
Moe was so short Louis could see a birthmark on his scalp. “Can you be more specific, Mr. Cohick?”
“How tall are you?” Moe asked.
“Six-foot.”
“Not as big as you. But he could’ve been bent over, like hunkering down.”
Jesse let out an annoyed sigh. The dog behind them was still barking. Moe picked up a snowball and threw it at the dog. “Shut up, you mangy mutt!”
The snowball splattered against the fence, seeming to make the dog angrier. It was growing hoarse.
“Where were you standing?” Louis asked.
“At my kitchen window.”
“You’re up at three-fifteen in the morning?” Louis asked.
“I own the bakery on Main. I have to be in by four.” Moe patted his belly. “I make the best stuff in the county. Always fresh.”
“We ain’t here to talk about your damn donuts, Cohick,” Jesse said. Louis glanced at Jesse. He guessed Jesse had gotten an earful from Julie about being late.
Another bark drifted to Louis. This one was high-pitched, almost shrill. Louis peered over Cohick’s head to the house catty-corner. An agitated terrier was straining against its chain, yapping back at the long-snouted dog behind them.
“Mr. Cohick, what direction did the man come from?” Louis asked.
“Well, now, I believe he came around that way and headed that way. Toward Pine, where the park starts.”
Louis trudged through the snow to the back fence. He squinted in the fading light at the tall wooden fence of the lumberyard; there was no way a man could scale that. He looked the other way, down the long expanse of chain-link fence that separated all the yards. He could see the pines of the park at the end of the block and in between he counted six backyards that the killer could have cut through on his escape. He was assuming the killer had stayed in the back, under the cover of darkness, making his way across the yards to Pine Street. It was only a guess, but it made sense. A shotgun made a big noise; the neighbor had called it in almost immediately. The killer needed to stay hidden as long as possible. He couldn’t take a chance of being spotted in the glare of those streetlights out front.
Louis went back to Moe and Jesse.
“Jess, did you talk to everyone on this block?”
“Everyone. Moe’s the only one who saw anything, such as it is.”
“Hey, at least I saw something,” Moe protested.
“Thanks, Mr. Cohick, sorry to bother you,” Louis said.
“No problem.”
They started back toward the house. The long-snouted dog behind the fence came alive again as they neared, provoking the terrier into action as well.
Jesus, how did these people sleep? Louis stopped and turned. “Mr. Cohick, were the dogs barking that night?”
Cohick rubbed his bald head. “Well, now, come to think of it, they were.”
“Damn it, I asked you if you heard anything, Cohick, and you said no,” Jesse said.
“You asked me if I heard anything unusual,” Cohick said. “Dogs barking their asses off at three in the morning ain’t unusual around here!”
“Watch your mouth, doughboy,” Jesse snapped.
Louis stepped up. “Mr. Cohick, how many dogs are there on this block?”
“Let’s see…” He began to count on his hands.
Jesse cut in. “I can tell you how many. The Smiths, the Jessups, and what’s his name…Haskins. They all got dogs. We’re out here all the time giving them leash-law citations.”
“Pryce didn’t have a dog?” Louis asked.
“No.”
“Show me where these people live.”
Jesse pointed out the houses. It was every other one and no two butted up against each other. To avoid the dogs, the killer would have been forced to hop the fences diagonally. That’s only if he knew the dogs were there. Which meant he probably knew the neighborhood or had scoped it out to plan his escape route.
Louis started back into the yard. The dogs kept up their cacophony.
“Louis!” Jesse called out.
“Come with me,” Louis said.
“Christ, now what?” Jesse muttered, trudging after Louis.
Louis hopped the fence into Pryce’s yard and headed toward the park. The long-snouted dog charged the fence as Louis approached.
“Louis! Where the hell are you going?” Jesse yelled over the noise.
“Retracing his steps.”
They wove their way across the yards, avoiding the ones that Jesse said had dogs. At each fence, Louis would stop and brush off the snow on top.
“What are you looking for?” Jesse said, puffing to keep up.
“I don’t know.”
It was dark by the time they reached the last yard that bordered Pine Street. Louis’s boots were sodden and his hands were cold as he hoisted himself over the final section of chain-link. Across Pine Street, the park loomed dark and quiet.
Jesse was shaking with effort as he climbed over to join Louis on the side walk. His face was red and sweaty. “Now, what the fuck did we do that for?” he demanded, wiping his brow.
Louis ignored him. He was walking slowly along the fence, gently brushing away the snow. Halfway down the length of the last yard he stopped. He quickly pulled off his glove.
“Jess, come look.”
Jesse hurried over. Louis moved so the streetlight fell full on the fence. There, caught on an A-shaped spike, was a small piece of dark fabric.
“Fuck,” Jesse whispered, staring at it.
Louis searched his jacket pocket and came up with a paperclip. He used it to pluck the fabric from the fence.
“Jess, go get the car,” he said.
Jesse ran off. Louis waited, shivering in the cold, holding the tiny swatch. He turned and looked at the park behind him.
The entrance was marked by a small sign. The two-lane road going in plunged deep into thick, snow-covered pines. Not a bad place to conceal your vehicle while you committed a murder. Louis scanned the area, wondering where the killer had gone once he left the park. A left turn would have taken him right back to Main Street, exiting close to the station. Not likely. A right turn led him through a residential area and toward the freeway. More logical, but still slow going on unplowed side streets.
The cruiser pulled up and Jesse jumped out with a flashlight and evidence bag. They bagged the swatch, and Jesse stared at it in the gleam of the flashlight.
“Green,” he said. “Like an Army jacket.”
They quickly took some Polaroids and labeled the spot. Jesse was silent as they got in the car.
“I guess I blew it with Cohick,” he said finally.
“Witnesses don’t always know what they see or hear is important, Jess.”
“Well, it’s not like I couldn’t see or hear the damn dogs, is it?”
“You missed it. It happens.”
Jesse said nothing, just slammed the cruiser into gear.
“Jess, pull in the park. I want to check something.”
Only one lane of the road had been plowed and there were no lights. The darkness engulfed them and Jesse flicked on the brights to illuminate the tunnel of dense pines. The road led to a parking lot, which was heaped with untouched snow banks, then continued into the trees.
“People use the park much in the winter?” Louis asked?
Jesse shook his head. “Nothing much in here but the baseball diamond. Kids use the hill by the school for sledding.”
“I bet this is where he left his car,” Louis said.
“And I bet he left that way,” Jesse added, pointing to the road.
“There’s another entrance?”
Jesse nod
ded. “It exits on Evergreen, which turns into Highway 44, which is always plowed and usually empty.”
Louis looked at him. “What does that tell you?”
Jesse frowned then blinked. “Shit, it means he knew. He knew there was another exit.”
“He probably knew about the dogs, too.”
Jesse sat back in the seat, lost in thought. It started to snow lightly and he turned on the wipers. “Whoever killed Pryce knew the town,” he said quietly.
“Probably,” Louis acknowledged.
The radio gave out a burst of static. Louis turned it down. Edna’s voice came on. “Loon-13 and 11. What’s your twenty?”
Jesse answered her. “City Park.”
“Be advised Loon-1 requests you respond to 181 Lakeside Drive, code three.”
Jesse looked at his watched and sighed. “So much for tacos.” He clicked the radio on. “Central, what’s the nature of the call?”
“Unknown, Loon-13. The caller was a teenager. He said…” Edna hesitated. “All he said was there was something gross in the lake.”
CHAPTER 8
The body was face down, frozen under the ice near the shoreline. It lay in a classic dead man’s float position, the upper back and the outstretched arms visible near the surface and the lower torso and legs blurring down into the icy depths.
Even through the milky ice, the green parka and red wool cap were plainly visible. So were the hands, frozen close to the surface, with the tip of the left pinky finger poking out through the ice.
Louis stared at the body. Ollie came up behind him, carrying a 35-mm camera. Without a word, he circled the body and began snapping pictures. Louis recalled the initials “O.W.” on the Pryce crime-scene photos. Apparently, O.W. was Ollie, sergeant, mystic and department photographer.
Louis surveyed the shoreline. There were only a few cabins and most were dark and shuttered on this stretch of the lake. He zipped up his jacket and nestled down into the fur collar. It was getting ball-freezing cold.