Killing a Cold One

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Killing a Cold One Page 19

by Joseph Heywood

“All around the area?”

  “Pretty much. There’s so much geographic and geologic eye candy up there, I like to move around.”

  “See many wolves or moose?”

  “Some moose, more wolves, but not that many of either.”

  “Ever come across a wolf-killed moose?”

  She chuckled. “Not in the U.P. Alaska, sure, Canada, sure, Isle Royale, you bet—but here in the U.P.? Nopers.”

  “If you get up there later this week, keep an eye out.”

  “Are you telling me you found a wolf-killed moose?”

  “Two, we think. We’re looking into it.”

  “Holy shit,” she said. “Does Pilkington know?”

  “Sort of. Why?”

  “He did his master’s thesis on canid predation,” she said.

  No wonder the biologist seemed so excited. “Thanks, D.”

  “See ya ’round the mountain, Service.”

  •••

  Pilkington and his Oregon visitor pulled up to the cabin at seven that morning. Nancy Krelle stood six foot tall, wore loop earrings, had massive hands and feet, endlessly long legs, and a tiny waist. Her complexion was smooth and youthful with a tan that looked permanent, which suggested she spent more time outdoors than inside. Her voice was low and deep, and she seemed to have the thousand-yard stare typical of combat veterans.

  Krelle and Pilkington came inside, and Service gave them coffee. Noonan and Treebone were introduced and immediately went elsewhere. Allerdyce was already gone, off to who knew where. The old poacher wasn’t one for keeping people informed. Introductions had been perfunctory. Krelle had intense blue-gray eyes and a quirky speech pattern that immediately irritated Service.

  She said, “Thank you for seeing me, will it be, possible to see, the site where you recovered the tooth?” Before Service could answer the woman added, “Forsooth to reach the truth we need to get out to sleuth the tooth.” Then she said “Whoops,” and blushed bright red.

  What the hell was that? “Right now the weather’s cooperating,” he said.

  Krelle said, “ ’Ting. Got tuck in my ruck and plenty of pluck to do this, hoping for luck, you got a truck?”

  Service looked at Pilkington, who acted like everything was perfectly normal. “I have a truck. How long you want to be out there?”

  “There. Couple days, I’d say, which for us will or will not pay, we can hike around for a couple days, look for predator and preys, hope our sky stays dry and gray, and I hope we can soon get under way.”

  “Not a problem,” Service said, thinking, What the hell is the deal with her?

  “Not…blem,” the woman said.

  “You think the tooth is legitimate?” he asked.

  “ ’Sibly, but this is not yes-no at this point. It remains to appoint un petite point before the evidence we can anoint or disappoint.”

  “Before we jump off, can you tell me more about the dire wolf?” he asked.

  “Wolf. No, we’ll talk up there in thinner air.”

  Service saw Pilkington shrug. “We’ll leave soon,” Service told them.

  Krelle said. “Soon’s a boon, I know I sound like a fucking buffoon with all these rhymes my speech’s bestrewn. Shit.”

  Service pulled Pilkington outside. “What the hell is that shit all about? She keeps repeating words and saying all those stupid-ass rhymes.”

  “Mostly she repeats last syllables of the previous speaker’s last word,” the biologist said. “Logoclonia with intermittent obsessive-compulsive rhyming disorder. She’s not sick, although some of her symptoms mimic dementia. The speech crap aside, the woman is a polymath, like da Vinci. Krelle is preeminent in her field; she knows her stuff. Think about what she had to go through to get where she is,” Pilkington said. “Patience, Grady.”

  “We have to wait for Allerdyce,” Service told Pilkington, “but we should be shoving off soon.”

  Krelle said, “ ’Oon, I won’t swoon if we depart soon, before it’s up the rising moon, and you should dearly listen to my tune. All my thoughts are hard at first, like Viking runes, but in time your ear will get attuned.”

  Service found himself staring openmouthed at the woman, afraid to say anything that would launch her into another cuckoo spiel.

  “The operative word here,” Krelle said with an upbeat voice, “is that all this is intermittent; it comes and goes. Once we’re in the field, a lot of this nonsense ends. Don’t know why. It just does,” she concluded, took a deep breath, and started up again. “I sometimes curse this damn fixation, which yields so little approbation, yet I know in my private ruminations, I hope this will prove a consolation, when we reach our final destination, there’ll be a whole lot fewer such inclinations.” She paused again, and added, “Please don’t feel you have to speak. My disorder can make folks weak, to think they’re with such a creepy freak.”

  Service continued to stare in silence as she droned on, looking more and more frustrated with each word.

  “Hence,” she said, “I suggest we dispense in the interests of mutual defense, of all words lacking immediate consequence.” And finally, “To get me moving, no need to say a bloody thing, just show me the way and I shall spring, like your duly appointed underling.”

  Service couldn’t help himself, said. “No shit.”

  “Shit,” she said. “Let me not submit to your words to wit, for neither of us will benefit.”

  When Allerdyce rambled into camp, Service had him get his gear out of his pickup and load it into his Tahoe. They departed in silence, lest the weird river of rhyming words begin anew.

  33

  Wednesday, November 26

  KETCHKAN LAKE, BARAGA COUNTY

  Double D’s source notwithstanding, the weekend storm clogged the mountains, making it difficult to get where they wanted to be. Service was still brooding about Lupo but decided he was wrong. The man didn’t know anything, so why waste time and money chasing him to Bumfuck, Canada. To hell with him.

  Limpy rode with Service, and Krelle rode with Cale Pilkington in his truck. The four of them hiked in heavy silence in light falling snow, their boots and walking sticks leaving grooves to mark their passing. Service took Allerdyce’s pack for him and sent the old poacher ahead into the valley to find and mark the remains, while he led Pilkington and Krelle on to the north to set up their camp, Pilkington huffing the whole time and sweating profusely, but keeping up and not complaining. Krelle looked as fresh and untrammeled as she had that morning; it was clear she was a field veteran, and in good shape.

  Service carried the seventeen-pound six-person REI-brand tent in a special case, belted to the outside of his operations ruck. At the campsite he quickly unpacked the tent and sent Pilkington to fetch firewood. Krelle assembled the tent-frame poles and helped him fit the poles into the geodesic shelter, steadying it with steel spikes. Tent up, fly in place, and snugged to the tent to shed snow, they put their inflatable ground pads and packs inside and hung a few items from hang-loops built into the tent’s fabric seams. Krelle went to help Pilkington gather and stack more firewood and cover it with a small tarp.

  Allerdyce trudged up from the valley when Service was alone and muttered, “Lotta snow; bloody t’ings’re down deep.”

  Krelle came back before Service could respond, and, fearful of launching her into more of her annoying rhyme-drivel, he tried to keep the subject specific rather than conjectural. “The tooth we sent—real or not?” he asked her.

  “Real? Define real. Yes, I guess, but I must admit there is some stress, that when I let it, makes me into a terrible mess. Not to hedge, but by that I mean something about the tooth puts me on edge.”

  “I found it in the dead moose. I sent the photos,” Service said. “That’s all I know.”

  “No DNA yet,” she said, “but I suspect it will come back as gray wolf. Mostly.”

&n
bsp; “Mostly?”

  Krelle sighed deeply. “Size says dire, shape says gray, but the gray and dire are genetic canyons apart—that is, not part of the same line of genetic descent. The dire wolf line died out and went nowhere. All wolves today come from a previous wolf line or predecessor genetic stock. Dires were only in the Americas, and grays were concurrent, crossbreeds possible, but not probable.”

  “Dires only in the Americas?” Service asked.

  “Its genetic common ancestor crossed over the Bering bridges and migrated south into more temperate zones, and then mutated into the dire wolf. It would seem that whatever the antecedent species was, it did not migrate south in Asia, and thus they died out. The dire is strictly a temperate zone creature.”

  “Crossbreeding with grays?” Service asked.

  Pilkington answered, “Not that we know of. We have coy dogs and wolf dogs, and coy wolves, but dogs, coyotes, and wolves are more or less in the same genetic silo. Dire wolves aren’t.”

  “But we can’t rule it out,” Krelle said. “While not probable, many things are theoretically possible in genetics. The problem is that we have never had a valid dire wolf DNA sample, not one, though we’ve found thousands of skeletons and remains. We’ve got the advantage of accelerator mass spectrometry now—AMS—which allows us to carbon-date very small samples.”

  “Are we wasting our time out here?” Service ventured.

  Krelle said, “Don’t assume that. Show me the sites, and let’s think and talk about tit and tat, and this and that.”

  “A solo dire wolf couldn’t survive alone,” said Pilkington.

  “That’s certainly one hypothesis,” Krelle said. “If this is a genuine modern relation of a dire. But it also could be in the genotype of Alaskan gray wolves, which died out about ten thousand years back, plus or minus, about the same time dires disappeared, and frankly, the interbreeding of disappearing Alaskans with modern new wolf breeds makes some sense genetically.”

  “Were there dire wolves in Canada?” Service asked.

  “Never been found there, or, for that matter, here in Michigan or the upper Midwest. The consensus is that they were warmer-climate animals. Specimens closest to here have come from Missouri, Indiana, and Ohio. Some from Kentucky, too, and east and west along that line, all the way from the Atlantic to the Pacific Oceans.”

  “In other words, chances are this is not some descendant of the dire wolf,” Service said.

  “Certainly not based on established evidence and accepted theory, but I prefer to let new evidence take us where it will. I also prefer not to be in a hurry to discount new information solely because it lies outside accepted norms. If not a dire, it could just as well be something equally new and heretofore unsuspected. You guys know you probably have two species of wolf in the state?”

  Service said, “Just Canis lupus.”

  Pilkington coughed and said, “Actually, there’s a fair possibility that we have Canis lupus and Canis lycaon, the so-called Eastern Canadian wolf.”

  “They’re here,” Krelle said. “Pro-wolf groups are already trying to factor this into their campaign to keep gray wolves from being delisted under the Endangered Species Act. The recognition of a new species could muck things up for those who have to manage wolf populations. It sure wouldn’t help.”

  “And if there’s a third, heretofore unknown, species to go with those two?”

  “A potential regulatory miasma,” Krelle said. “But look at this another way: If there’s two here, why not three?”

  The men stared at her until Allerdyce broke the silence. “Youses want go look at bones while light’s still good?”

  Walking into the valley, Krelle stayed on Service’s shoulder and whispered, “When you talk, I sometimes hear what I take to be an implied sneer, as if you think I’m wiggy or insincere.”

  The rhyming had returned. “No, ma’am,” he said, and pointed at a boulder. “Take a seat.”

  She opened a thermos of coffee and listened as he gave an account of the recent killings and the state of the human remains. The color drained from her face with each new fact.

  “Do you have photographs?” she asked.

  “In my pack,” he said. He took it off and handed an envelope to her.

  She went through the photographs slowly, several times. “Wolves or even near-wolves don’t do this,” she pronounced. “The artuation in the moose photos is suggestively canid, but in the environment, one predator may start, and follow-on predation waves tend to scatter remains about. As for those poor people, I have never seen anything like that, never imagined anything like that, and I never want to see anything like it again. Why the heck are you involved in this?”

  Grady Service told her about the dogman and the governor’s order. Krelle closed her eyes and held her hands over her knees. “That’s insane, panic, cheap political stunt, or all of the above.”

  Service agreed and kept quiet.

  Krelle said, “I want to see where the remains were, even if they’re gone now, and then I’d like to sweep north and look around some more.”

  Allerdyce showed them where the bones were, and then led them north into corrugated and eccentric country between High Lake and the headwaters of the West Branch of the Sturgeon River. Pilkington had not come along. He begged off, went back to camp, got his gear, and headed out. Krelle would ride out with Service and Allerdyce tomorrow.

  They were in an open boulder area, fresh snow falling, when Service’s eye caught movement ahead. He had just decided it was time to go back to camp and eat, and something had moved. A wraith, something low, dark, and heavy. Krelle was to his immediate right, Allerdyce ahead of both of them, the stiffening wind into all of their faces.

  “Limpy,” Service said softly.

  The old man looked back. Service held forefingers to the sides of his head like ears or horns, held a hand behind him, parallel to the ground, a wolf tail out, unlike a coyote tail down. Then he put forked fingers to his eyes.

  Allerdyce raised his eyebrows, questioning without language if he should move forward, but Service held out his hand, palm out, and lowered it slowly. Allerdyce, understanding the command, sank slowly out of sight. Service touched Krelle’s arm and they joined Allerdyce on the ground. Krelle lay close to him in silence and eventually said tentatively and almost inaudibly, “Pair of boulders, eleven o’clock, twenty-five yards.”

  Service turned to look her in the eye.

  “I saw it, too,” she whispered.

  “Saw what?”

  “Ochre-gray, brindle maybe, tail out—a wolf without doubt, but a wide, wide body.”

  “Species?”

  “The legs were short, the stature squat, trunk bigger even than the largest grays we know of.”

  “Dire?” Service ventured.

  “Off-the-wall hypothesis,” she said. “We know climate change is pushing some species north and killing others who can’t adapt. The rate for this is alarming, and not theoretical. We have records. Perhaps there was a remnant zootrope in isolation south of here, and it’s migrating north, looking for new territory. Certainly population shifts are being driven by climatic change, and there are more places to hide, more forest now by far than in 1900. Wild habitat is available, especially for migrators who can carefully pick their way.”

  Allerdyce suddenly ghosted into their peripheral vision, close to them, whispered hoarsely, “Wolfie,” and pointed.

  Service said, “See if you can cut the track. We all saw it.”

  “We’re not hallucinating,” Krelle told the old poacher, who grinned happily and crawled away.

  •••

  Just before dark the old man came back and led them forward, where he lit the snow with a small green penlight. “Fresh,” Allerdyce said. “Real.”

  Service heard the air go out of Krelle when she looked down. “Good God almighty,
” she said.

  Not a single set of tracks, but three different sizes, one the size of the tracks Service and Denninger had found.

  Allerdyce chuckled, said, “Dis is fun, sonny.”

  Service couldn’t tell if the old man was amused or shaken. He knew that he himself was taken aback, and so, too, was Krelle. He could hear her hyperventilating.

  “We play hide-seek wit’ dese guys, or head ta camp?” Allerdyce asked.

  Service measured the largest track at seven inches long by four inches wide, and took photos, but gave no thought to plaster casts. That gear was back in the truck. They had a lot to think about, and he was not the least bit sure where to start. Or how.

  A dogman is one thing, but what appears to be breeding wolves of a size never before imagined is another. This is an entirely different deal, with so many ramifications I can’t even begin to sort them out.

  Service herded his small tribe south toward their camp and tried not to look over his shoulder.

  34

  Thursday, November 27

  KETCHKAN LAKE

  They talked little during the night, lost in their own thoughts. Sometime during the hike back to camp Allerdyce killed four pats. Walking in the woods with that old man is like touring Wal-Mart with a kleptomaniac, Service thought. And the old man, presumably, is on his best behavior. Jesus.

  Service also knew he was beyond making an issue of minor transgressions. Hell, I gave a felon a firearm! The old man was quicksand pulling him deeper, yet it was also inescapable that Allerdyce never seemed to rattle, rarely showed any negative emotions, and, in the woods, had few equals.

  They were drinking fresh coffee at first light when Service’s cell phone vibrated in his pocket. It was Tuesday calling. Shit, today’s Thanksgiving! He hadn’t even thought about it.

  “I’m sorry,” he answered.

  She cut him off. “Don’t even. I’m here, and I’ve got everything handled. Pilkington called here this morning, checking on you, and I got worried. I guessed you’d be out of there by now.”

 

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