by Chuck Logan
After a few shovelfuls Yeager was panting and sweating profusely. He staggered and leaned on his shovel. “Don’t know what’s wrong.”
Holly took his shovel, drove it into the dirt. “Delayed stress,” he said quietly. “You ever kill a man before?”
Yeager shook his head, mopped sweat from his face.
“Kind of weight you pick up and never put down. Takes some getting used to. Hello…” His shovel twanged on hollow metal.
They looked at each other. “That ain’t right,” Yeager said. “It’s a fucking counterweight, it’s solid iron.”
They went back to work and got it exposed. The weight was squared off on top and a slightly wider trapezoid on the bottom. Three large bolt holes were drilled into it, and an oblong opening through the side and out the top, like a handhold.
“What kind of weight?” Holly asked.
“Counterweight for a Deere loader. A 644C. Common enough machine around here,” Yeager said.
Broker curled his hand around the opening in the top and yanked. It heaved slightly. “Jesus, what’s it weigh?”
“Yeager squinted. “Something’s wrong. You shouldn’t be able to move that thing. Sucker should weigh over four hundred pounds.”
“Why bury it? It’s not like they wear out, like tires,” Holly said. Real curious now, his shaggy white eyebrows drew closer together, his forehead wrinkled. Broker cleared away more dirt, tossed the shovel aside. With Holly, he squatted, grabbed handholds, and together they upended the weight.
“No shit, lookit that,” Holly said.
The three of them explored the cast-iron slab with their fingers. More than a third of its volume had been cleanly machined to create a cylindrical cavity, open on one end.
“A hollow counterweight?” Broker said as he and Holly turned to Yeager.
“See here,” Yeager said. He pointed to one end of the cavity, where the edge of the weight had been thinned down to less than a quarter-inch. It had cracked and shattered. “If it was bolted on the machine, with another weight in back of it, you could never see it was drilled out. But they screwed up milling out that thin edge to the hole and it cracked. Woulda gave it away, so he tossed it.”
“Dale Shuster is sounding more and more like a tricky guy,” Broker said. “What do you suppose he had in mind to put inside this thing?”
Yeager squatted, ran his thick fingers over the steel. “I seen a lot of smuggling tricks-false bottoms in gas tanks, compartments in trucks. But this is way too much work to get on and off a machine unless it was for something real special.” He looked at Holly. “Would what you’re looking for fit in here?”
Holly shook his head, tapped his teeth together. “Not sure.”
“Still, it’d be one hell of a chore to get the weight on and off. You’d need a hoist, air wrenches for the bolts. And only one fella around here has the gear to do millwork like this,” Yeager said. He looked at Broker, then at Holly. “Eddie Solce. He’s done a lot of repair work for the Shusters, going way back.”
On the ride out, Yeager explained how Eddie Solce lived south of town. He’d failed farming and had sold off half his land and had the rest in the Crop Rotation Program. He’s always been the local guy to repair farm equipment in his metal shop. “And he’s only got one hand. Lost his left hand in a corn picker, ’bout twenty years ago. Got him one of those old-fashioned Trautman farm hooks-just this clamp, but he can practically pick his nose with it.”
Yeager wheeled into a long driveway leading up to a white foursquare farmhouse in need of a paint job. Pointing toward a green F-150, he said, “He’s home, there’s his truck. Another thing, Solce always liked Ace. He was a little disappointed Ace didn’t marry his oldest daughter, Sally. They dated pretty heavy during high school.”
At the front door, Eddie Solce came out to meet them in blue jeans and a Chambray work shirt. Lean and rawboned, he’d shriveled into one mean nest of wrinkles after sixty and now it was impossible to tell his age. But he still looked strong, especially his right hand-as if the loss of his left hand had pumped twice the strength into the right. Broker thought he looked garrulous and he was.
“I already heard. Goddamn shame. Ace got himself shot by that goddamn Joe Reed. And some woman, too. Ace always did follow his pecker into trouble. Damn Joe anyway. Dale should’a never taken that buck on.” Eddie paused, squinted, nodded toward Broker and Holly. “Who the hell are these two? Ain’t from around here, that’s for sure.”
Yeager took Eddie by the shoulder, walked him off a few paces. “You don’t want to know who these boys are, believe me.”
Eddie flexed his jaw and sucked in his cheek on one side as he snatched a look over Yeager’s shoulder. “That one dusty white-haired fucker-he looks like he came outta a goddamn movie.”
“Eddie.” Yeager said it like an admonition, like a command to come back to his senses and get serious.
“Yeah, Jimmy,” he said, more collected.
“C’mon, let’s take a walk.”
“Am I in trouble?” Sober now, his voice slower. “Where we going?”
“Your shop. Something I wanted to talk to you about. We found it over at Shuster’s shed. But the thing is, it’s too big to carry around.”
Solce set his jaw in resignation when Yeager said that. Like he knew where this was heading. They started toward the barn and the pole barn alongside. Broker and Holly fell in behind, listening to the conversation.
They went into the shop, which was an orderly rectangular work space with a long metal fabrication bench in the middle. A stick welder, along with tanks of acetylene and oxygen, sat off to the side. Racks of mixed plain and diamond-plate chromed steel sheets lined the wall. Yeager walked up to a machine at the end of the shop. It stood six feet tall, had a complicated drill head and a video console on an arm off to the side.
“Bridgeport mill,” Broker said.
“Yep,” Holly said, “That’d be the thing.”
They settled back and watched.
Yeager put his hand on the mill and looked at Solce. “Well, Eddie?
“I got nothing to do with what happened at that bar. I been here all morning, ask Margo and the grandkids,” Eddie said. He began to scratch at the steel hook with his right hand.
“But you did some unusual work for Dale this summer, didn’t you?” Yeager said.
Eddie ground his teeth, tapped them together a few times. “A job’s a job.”
“But this job was pretty strange, you gotta admit…”
Eddie swallowed and said very respectfully, “Am I in trouble, Jimmy?” He scratched at his hook faster, like it really itched.
“I’m thinking no, but if you don’t tell me straight about drilling a channel in a five-hundred-pound Deere counterweight I’ll sure as hell figure out a way to put you ass deep in something,” Yeager said.
Eddie sagged and sat on his metal bench. “Wasn’t just one. Was five of the fuckers.”
Broker and Holly came forward, their eyes getting wide. “How the hell did you get five of those things in here?” Broker said.
Eddie shrugged. “Joe Reed brought ’em over on a lowboy. Had a hoist and jacks. He was good at stuff like that. We brought them in one by one on a forklift.”
“When was this?” Yeager said.
“Beginning of June. Took me two weeks to do the four on the loader. Then one of them cracked and I had to do another one.”
“Jesus Christ, Eddie,” Yeager said. “Did it occur to you to wonder what the hell Dale wanted with bored-out weights on a 644C?”
“Well, it was different. And Dale, he just said, like-‘I know this looks weird but it’s a joke I’m playing on Irv Fuller.’ See, he was getting set to sell the loader to Irv, in Minnesota.”
Broker and Holly were squinting slightly, leaning forward, listening carefully. They shot quick looks at Yeager.
“One hell of a lot of work for a practical joke,” Yeager said.
“I know, Jimmy. But those two families have a history
of shorting each other way back. And there’s the stuff from high school. Remember? Irv was behind that stunt they pulled on Dale.”
Yeager narrowed his eyes, folded his arms across his chest, and said quietly, “Along with Ginny Weller.”
“They ever find her in Grand Forks?” Eddie asked.
“No,” Yeager said. He glanced at Broker and Holly.
Broker took Holly aside and explained about the burned yearbook, Nina’s license. Then he stepped forward, raised his hand to calm Eddie, who instinctively edged back. “Give us a diagram of the job, how you milled out those weights.”
Eddie’s eyes flitted to Yeager, who nodded his assent. Eddie got up from the bench, went to a counter next to the mill, and took out a pad of paper and a pen. He held the pad in place with his hook and sketched an angled channel running through two weights from the side view. He looked up. “Big enough to stick your arm in, except it don’t go through and through. The channel on the rearmost weight was open on one end and to within an eighth of an inch on the other end. That’s why one cracked, ’cause it was such a close tolerance. But the other weight, the channel was only halfway through, so when you put the weights back on the machine you can’t tell they been milled.”
“The same on both sides?” Broker asked.
“Yeah, but they wanted them angled kinda. So they run continuous together.” Eddie raised his hands and pulled them in tight to his chest in an inverted V. “Like the two channels come to a point.” He licked his lips, swallowed. “Kinda,” he said, his nerves kicking out an extra word.
Yeager clapped Eddie on the shoulder. “Take it easy, Eddie, You did good. I’ll be in touch.”
They left Eddie Solce sitting on his bench staring at the concrete floor of his workshop. On the swift walk back to Yeager’s cruiser, Holly said, “Angled channels converging, steel plug in the back, paper thin in front. What’s that sound like to you?”
“Like a funnel for a shaped explosive charge,” Broker said.
“Well, technically, more like a directional charge. Man, we gotta find that machine,” Holly said.
“I’m working on it,” Yeager said, flipping open his cell.
Chapter Thirty-nine
As Yeager drove back to town, Broker worked at shoring up his compartments. He lit another of Nina’s cigarettes. He tore open the pack and counted; nine remaining.
He stared straight ahead, fixed on the dead-straight two-lane narrowing down to a vanishing point. He avoided the image that waited one mental partition away-of Nina lying dead in a North Dakota ditch.
He refocused on the present. At least he had blundered into a good fit with these guys. Especially Holly, who had migrated past tough, scary, and super-elite, achieving now the cool intensity of a ghost. He was utterly without affect, like he was already spending his weekends on the other side.
Yeager was smart enough to know he was running with the big time. But he was proud and grounded and suspicious enough not to take it all too seriously until he had proof.
And they had none of the macho posturing that afflicted some cops, feds, and soldiers. Usually the ones with the peacock-strut were the guys who’d only shot their weapons at stationery targets under the watchful eyes of a range officer.
As the grain elevators and water towers of Langdon came into sight, Yeager finally reached his wife.
“Pam, find me a phone number on Irv Fuller in the Cities. Somebody’s gotta be in touch with him. And it’s urgent.” He ended the call, put down the phone, and turned to Broker in the passenger seat.
“Irv Fuller’s dad had a construction business in town. Irv’s dad and Ace’s dad always got in these pissing contests back and forth over equipment. But the thing that got me thinking is-Irv and Dale were in the same class in school. Along with Ginny Weller and Gordy Riker. And those three really stuck it to Dale senior year.
“Then Irv and Ginny got married when Irv took over his dad’s business. Ginny wanted to leave town, Irv wanted to stay. Ginny left him and took up with an attorney in Grand Forks.
“After Ginny left him, Irv migrated to the Cities about seven years ago and remarried a gal whose dad had a construction outfit. Irv’s dad and father-in-law threw in together and word is, now he’s got this big operation.”
Yeager turned to Holly, “Except Ginny went missing and Dale Shuster blacked out her eyes in his yearbook.”
“That yearbook. Somebody should take a look at Fuller’s picture,” Broker said.
“You got it,” Yeager said. “And I want to go back to the shed and look at that loader. It’s the same model as the one Dale sold to Irv. Maybe we look at it we can get more of a picture on those channels.” Then he picked up his mike and called dispatch. “Anyone get a line on Gordy Riker?”
“Nobody seen him since yesterday morning. He bought some doughnuts at Linder’s bakery.”
Yeager looked at Broker. “You ain’t missing after just twenty-four hours. He could be down at Devil’s Lake fishing.”
“Still,” Broker said.
“Yeah,” Yeager said. He keyed the mike again. “Kruse, you monitor?”
“I’m here, Jimmy.”
“Could you check that yearbook they found. Look for Irv Fuller in the senior pictures. Tell me if there’s anything weird about the picture.”
“Ten-four.”
Three minutes later they were pulling in at Shuster’s shed when Kruse called back: “No Fuller. In fact no names starting with F.”
“Burned?” Broker asked.
“Missing. Just ragged paper curled against the binding. Page has been ripped out.”
“Thanks,” Yeager said and hung up the mike. Broker, Yeager, and Holly exchanged apprehensive looks and got out of the car. Across the highway Lyle waved. Yeager called to him. “Where’s the crime lab?”
“On the way. Probably another half-hour.”
While the two cops traded information, Broker felt the first delayed panic attack flap through his chest. He looked up into the blazing sun, shivered, lit another of Nina’s cigarettes.
Eight.
They tried the front office door, found it locked and walked around back. The rear entrance was a tall, wooden, barn-type sliding door. Only rusty wheels on a rail resisted them. They pushed the door open and went inside.
The John Deere 644C front-loader sat in veils of heat and shadow like a giant yellow steel-and-rubber Sphinx. It stood ten feet tall to the roof of the cab and weighed fifteen tons. The bucket rested on the ground at the end of the lowered hydraulic boom and cylinder. Motionless, it mocked them like a deceptive, sleeping beast of burden with long yellow steel muscles and fat, four-foot-high Michelin tires.
A spray of white dots speckled the cab, the motor assembly, the huge wheels, and the bucket. Pinpoints coming in through birdshot punctures in the tin roof.
Broker imagined Ace or even Dale: country kids with their dad’s shotgun, knocking down pigeons.
The left rear counterweight was missing from the chassis.
Holly leaned forward and rested his right palm against the hot metal where the missing weight should be. He closed his eyes-Spock in a Vulcan mind-meld. Abruptly he turned, walked from the pole barn, and went around to the right, into the weeds, generally in the direction of the buried counterweight.
Broker and Yeager walked around the machine, trying to puzzle out Dale Shuster’s strange millwork. Then they wandered up toward the office area, which had been stripped clean. No phone. No computer. Just the chair, a desk, and the small refrigerator, unplugged, empty, with the door open. Yeager’s eyes traveled around the empty structure, then his cell rang. He answered. It was his wife. He hunched the phone to the crook of his neck, took a notepad and a pen from his chest pocket, and jotted something down. Thanked her and hung up.
“We got Irv Fuller. He lives in Lake Elmo, Minnesota,” Yeager said. “Just a sec, I gotta take a leak.” He went into the bathroom as Holly came back in the shed. Yeager flushed the toilet. Came out. He called to Holly. “W
e got a location on Irv Fuller.”
Holly nodded, walked faster.
But something had Broker thinking. “I only met Dale once,” he said. “Yesterday morning. With Kit.”
“Yeah,” Yeager said, momentarily distracted, yawning in the heat.
“Kit said he was weird. She used the bathroom and she said it was creepy because when she went in there she found blue poop in the toilet…”
“What?” Holly came alert, pale eyes zeroing in as he moved closer. “She said what?”
“Something about blue poop. I thought she meant that some toilet-bowl cleaner-”
“No.” Holly bit off the syllable. “I spent five days with Kit.” He waved his hands for quiet as he came closer, then he jabbed his finger. “She never made anything up. She was not suggestible at all. Not easily influenced. She was always very precise. If she said blue poop, she saw blue poop.”
“Holly, man; slow down,” Broker said.
“Slow down, my ass. Blue poop does not normally occur in nature. Blue poop is one of the side effects of ingesting ferric hexacyanoferrate II, a mineral compound commonly known as the paint pigment Prussian blue. It was invented in Berlin around 1704.” He took a step forward and tapped Broker on the chest. “Guys. Prussian blue has other uses. It’s an antidote to radiation poisoning. It absorbs thallium and cesium 137 in the intestines. Then the radioactive isotopes are excreted.”
Broker and Yeager stared at him.
Holly went on, “Blue shit in Dale Shuster’s toilet means he could have been working around something radioactive and taking precautions.”
“Jesus. And he’s drilling big hidey holes in construction machinery,” Broker said.
“I think we gotta locate that machine fast,” Holly said.
Yeager referred to his notepad and punched numbers in his cell. They huddled around him. His lips jerked in a disappointed expression. “Got an answering machine.”
“Wait. Don’t leave a message. End the call. If Dale’s got Nina…” Broker said. “What if he’s in contact with Dale? It would telegraph we’re onto him.” He asked Yeager, “Would people in town call Irv about the shooting and Dale disappearing?”