Jenny, Cork’s fourteen-year-old daughter, came into the room from the hallway. She gave her father only a glance before she curled up on the sofa with a book in her lap. He could tell by the way she looked at him that she was reflecting some of her mother’s mood. The whole house seemed suffused with the quiet cold of Jo’s anger.
“Hi, kiddo. Where’s your mother?”
“In her office, working. She’s waiting to talk with you.”
He looked at the book in her lap. “What’s that?”
“Mrs. Cavanaugh asked me to do a reading for the Christmas program next week.”
“What reading?”
“Whatever I want. A poem, I think. I’m going to read something by Sylvia Plath.”
“Didn’t she kill herself?”
“She was a very intelligent woman.”
“What poem?”
“I haven’t decided yet.”
Cork sat down beside his daughter. She edged away. “Have you discussed this with Mrs. Cavanaugh?”
“She said the choice was mine.”
“Sylvia Plath. That doesn’t sound very Christmasy. Maybe we should talk about it,” Cork suggested.
“The choice is mine,” his daughter said emphatically.
Jenny was becoming more like Jo all the time. Even at fourteen her face already had the same tooserious shadowing. She was small, precocious, and full of radical energy. Her eyes were like her mother’s, too. A cold blue-white. But there were many things Jenny had done to make sure she was not like her mother. Jo had marvelous taste in her dress, yet Jenny chose to wear clothing bought at secondhand stores-old dresses and combat boots and ratty sweaters. With the help of a friend, she’d pierced each of her ears in two places, and she kept discussing the possibility of putting at least one hole in her nose. She streaked her hair with purple and sometimes wore it in short spikes that looked as if she’d grabbed hold of a live power line. She had given up smiling in favor of an attitude of disgust or sometimes simply ennui that was exaggerated by the sleepy look from her full-lidded eyes, part of the genetic Ojibwe legacy of her father.
“Guess I’d better see what your mother wants, huh?”
“Guess you’d better,” Jenny agreed.
“Wish me luck,” he said.
“Luck,” she offered him dourly.
He found Jo at her desk in her office bent over papers. The room was walled with law books and smelled of leather bindings. Jo looked up as he came in. Her eyes seemed big and startled, but as soon as she took off her thick glasses, they resumed their usual deceptively languid calm.
“We were worried about Anne.”
“My fault,” Cork said. “She was helping me with some things.”
“What things?”
“Am I under oath, counselor?”
“I’m just wondering if this was a mutual plan or one of Annie’s spur-of-the-moment inspirations.”
“Why don’t you ask Annie? She’ll tell you the truth.”
“I’m asking you. Because if it was something you knew about, I wish you’d have checked with me first.”
“There’s no court order dictating I have to do that.”
“Maybe there should be.”
She pushed away from the desk, stood, and turned her back to Cork. She stared out the window at the backyard, where the snow flew around the trunk of the maple tree and piled up against the lilac hedge. Her hands were clasped tightly behind her.
“I think it’s time we began discussing a divorce.”
“Annie was just telling me how she prays for us to get back together.”
“Cork, we have to help them see things as they are.”
“If I always knew how things are, I suppose I’d do that.”
She turned back. “You know, it’s funny. Last year I could have sworn a divorce was exactly what you wanted.”
“I never said that.”
“No,” she agreed. “But you also didn’t object when I asked you to leave the house.” She faced the window again, studying the storm outside.
“It was what you wanted, wasn’t it?” When she didn’t reply, he walked slowly to her desk, then carefully came around and stood beside her. “Maybe it’s time you and I stopped thinking so much about what we want and thought a little more about the kids.”
She swung around angrily and threw her glasses on the desk. “You think I don’t worry about them? I work long hours to make sure the bills are paid and Annie gets her braces and Jenny might not have to work her way through college. I don’t get any help from you on that.”
“I wasn’t talking about finances,” he countered coldly. He walked away and stood staring at the rows of legal books, tomes that attempted to spell out justice, something he no longer believed in. He fought against the hopeless, cornered feeling they gave him.
“Look, we can’t go on the way we’ve been going,” Jo said. “It’s not good for anybody, especially the children.”
“And a divorce would be better?”
“Cleaner.”
“Like antiseptic.”
“It’s what’s best for everybody. I think deep down you know that, Cork.”
They were both quiet. The wind rattled the window, and from beyond the door came the sound of the television in the living room.
Cork put his hands deep in his pockets and balled them uselessly into fists. “Fine.”
“When?” Jo pressed him.
“Whenever you want.”
She put her glasses back on and looked down at the papers on her desk. “After Christmas will be fine. You’ll want to get yourself an attorney. I can give you some recommendations if you’d like.”
“Don’t do me any favors,” he replied.
There was a knock at the door. Rose peaked in. “Dinner’s ready,” she said, looking them both over tentatively.
“I’ve been invited,” Cork told Jo.
“All right,” Jo agreed, not happily.
Near the end of dinner, the telephone rang. Rose answered it. She held the phone against her ample bosom and said, “It’s for you, Cork. It’s Darla LeBeau.”
“Darla?” Cork got up from the table and took the phone. “Hi, Darla. What’s up?” He listened and his face grew serious. “I’m sure it’s nothing. He’s a responsible boy.” He listened again. “Look, how about if I come over? No, it’s no trouble.”
“What’s no trouble?” Rose asked as soon as he hung up.
“Paul LeBeau went off this afternoon to deliver his newspapers and hasn’t come back. He’s been gone almost five hours.”
“You don’t think he’s still out there in the snow somewhere?” Rose asked.
“I don’t think so,” Cork said. “Even if he was struggling, he could easily knock on a door. Anybody in Aurora would let him in. Darla’s afraid Joe John’s come back and taken him.”
Rose shook her head. “I don’t think Joe John would do something like that. Do you, Cork?”
“It’s a possibility.”
“He’d kidnap his own son?” Rose looked astonished.
“Jesus, Aunt Rose, it happens all the time,” Jenny said.
“Don’t swear,” Anne told her sister.
“Jesus Christ.” Jenny smiled cruelly.
“Jenny!” Rose said.
“Jenny’s right,” Cork broke in. “Most common form of kidnapping. The truth is, if a kid’s going to be taken, I’d rather he was grabbed by someone who’s doing it out of love.”
“That’s not love, Cork,” Jo said.
“It might be to Joe John.” Cork started for the kitchen.
“You don’t mind going?” Rose asked.
“No,” he said over his shoulder. And it was absolutely true. It had been a long time since anyone needed him this way, and if felt pretty damn good.
5
Darla opened the door even before Cork had a chance to knock. Her eyes were puffy and red from crying, and tears had left a trail through her face powder down both cheeks.
“It’s Jo
e John, Cork,” she said. “I know it’s Joe John.”
Darla worked at the casino in public relations and was still dressed for the office in a dark blue blazer and skirt, a cream-colored blouse. There was gold around her neck and on her wrists.
Cork stepped in out of the cold and wiped melting snowflakes from his face. “What makes you think so, Darla?”
“Because it’s just like him to drop off the face of the earth for two months, then pull this kind of stunt. It’s just the kind of thing he’d do on a drunk.” She took his coat and brushed the snow onto a mat in the hallway, then hung the coat in the closet there. Cork slipped off his boots and left them on the mat.
He’d known Darla LeBeau since high school, when she was a cheerleader with long blonde hair, nice legs, and a lot for a boy to notice under her sweater. In her sophomore year, she began going steady with Joe John LeBeau. Joe John was a fullblooded Anishinaabe bussed in from the Iron Lake Reservation ten miles outside Aurora. Dating someone from the reservation would have caused Darla a lot of trouble, but Joe John was different. Joe John was a celebrity, a basketball player of amazing ability. The St. Paul Pioneer Press had dubbed him the next Jim Thorpe, and he’d been heavily recruited by colleges all over the Midwest. He accepted a basketball scholarship to Indiana, but just before he was to begin his second year, as he was crossing a street in Bloomington, an old woman who failed to stop her big Cadillac at a red light ran him down. His right leg was shattered from his ankle bone to his hip, and although it was reconstructed, he always walked with a limp after that. With no hope of playing basketball again, he came home to Aurora. Shortly after that, he and Darla were married.
“You probably should have called the sheriff, Darla.”
“I didn’t want to get Joe John in trouble. I just want Paul home safely.”
“Have you tried calling Paul’s friends?”
“I’ve called everywhere I can think. His friends, my folks, the neighbors. I even called Pizza Hut because sometimes he’ll play video games there after he’s finished his routes.”
“Nobody saw him?”
“Nobody. I’ve got coffee. Want some?”
“Thanks.”
He followed Darla to the kitchen.
“You’re sure he went to deliver his papers?” Cork asked.
“He left a note on the refrigerator telling me where he was going. He’s so good that way.”
Cork sat on a stool in her spotless kitchen. He’d sat here with Joe John many times after he brought him home from a drunk. Joe John wasn’t a mean drunk. Mostly he was nostalgic. Very often Cork would find him on the basketball court in Knudsen Park shooting hoops. Even drunk, he had a nice touch. Or sometimes Joe John would disappear for a while, usually no more than a week or two, and he would come back sobered up and contrite and full of assurances that he was through with the bottle forever.
A lot of the whites in Aurora were quite happy to see Joe John fail. Indians, they said with great satisfaction. Drunks. It didn’t matter that Joe John had given Aurora some shining moments, that the signs posted at the town limits proclaiming “Home of the Warriors, State Basketball Champions” were entirely due to Joe John’s talent, and that Joe John had suffered a significant disappointment through no fault of his own. That he was Indian explained it all.
Joe John had tried many times to beat the booze. It was his sister, Wanda Manydeeds, who finally helped him. Like Henry Meloux, she was one of the Midewiwin, a member of the Grand Medicine Society. She convinced Joe John to let Henry Meloux treat him in the old way. She could have treated Joe John herself, but the Midewiwin never ministered to their own relations. The treatment was something neither Meloux nor she nor Joe John would talk about, but it seemed to work. For over a year, Joe John had been sober. He had begun a business of his own, a janitorial service, contracting to clean offices in Aurora. It was a good business. Things seemed to be going well.
Then, two months ago, Joe John up and vanished, leaving his truck smashed into a tree on County Road C and the cab reeking of whiskey. He’d simply walked away from the accident and never come back.
“Have you heard from Joe John lately?” Cork asked.
“Not a word.” Her hand trembled as she poured out his coffee. “I was always afraid something like this would happen. Joe John hated it here, Cork. When he was drunk, he used to talk about how he’d take Paul away someday, somewhere where nobody knew who he was and wouldn’t make fun of Paul for being the son of a drunk Indian.” She looked at her trembling hand and put the pot down.
“You told me on the phone he’s been gone about five hours. How do you know?”
“In his note he said it was two o’clock when he left. I don’t know why he thought he had to deliver on a day like today. Nobody would care if the paper wasn’t delivered today. People would understand.” Her shoulders sagged wearily. “I make good money at the casino. He doesn’t have to deliver papers at all. I think he just wants to show people he’s not like his father.”
“How have things been between you and Paul lately?”
“What do you mean?”
“Any tension, arguments?”
“You mean, did Paul run away?” she said. “He wouldn’t do that.”
“I don’t think he would either,” Cork reassured her. “It’s just one of the possibilities we have to consider.” He sipped his coffee. “Has he talked about his father lately? Maybe said something about wanting to find him? I’m only asking because I know how it feels to lose your father at that age. I know I would have done anything to bring him back.”
“No, nothing. He’s been quieter lately, but I just figure it’s his age.”
“Have you called Wanda? If Joe John’s back, she’d know.”
“I tried. The lines must be down.”
Cork thought for a moment. The refrigerator clicked on and the bottles rattled inside it. The wind howled past the kitchen window in the breakfast nook.
“Okay, we know he left the house. Do we know if he actually started his route? Or finished?”
“No.”
“Do you know what route he follows, who his customers are?”
“No,” Darla said, shaking her head with exasperation. “No.”
Cork reached out and touched her hand across the counter. “That’s all right, Darla. There’s no reason you should. Does Paul keep any kind of record of his customers?”
A sudden, hopeful look lit her face. “He has a receipt book he uses when he collects for the papers every month.”
“Good. Let’s have a look.”
“I’ll get it,” she said.
Cork didn’t see any reason yet to be worried about Paul’s safety. Aurora was a small place and children didn’t just disappear. Probably Joe John was responsible, too ashamed to face Darla but anxious to see his son, particularly as it was the Christmas season. Cork also knew from experience that more often than not when teenagers vanished, they left of their own accord.
Darla LeBeau returned with a dark blue receipt book and handed it to Cork. Paul kept good records, and from the order of the addresses, which began on Center Street and followed one another geographically out to the last address on North Point Road, Cork figured Paul probably collected from his customers in the same order he delivered their papers.
“What are you going to do?” Darla asked.
“I’ll start by calling a few of his customers, find out if the papers were delivered, and maybe when. That will give us a little more to go on than we have now. And you never know. Someone might have seen something.”
He began with the last address in the receipt book. Judge Robert Parrant. The line was fuzzy and Cork didn’t even get a ring at the other end. He moved back through the receipt book, making half a dozen more calls. North of the tracks, nothing connected. South, everyone who answered had received a paper, although no one had actually seen anything of Paul.
“Seems to be a problem with the lines to the north,” Cork told Darla. “I wish I’d been ab
le to get through to the judge. That would tell me if Paul had actually finished his route.”
Darla brightened a moment. “Sometimes Paul stops there a while. The judge seems to like him. Tells him stories and things. Paul hates it, but I’ve told him to be polite.”
“I suppose it’s possible Paul’s stranded there and because of the problem with the telephone lines, he has no way of letting you know. Maybe I ought to head over to the judge’s house. At least I’d be able to tell if Paul finished delivering his papers.”
“I want to go with you,” Darla said.
Cork shook his head. “You need to stay here by the phone just in case Paul calls. I’m sure he’s fine, Darla. He’s a good, responsible kid who knows how to take care of himself, okay?”
“What if he’s not there?”
“Then he’s somewhere else and he’s okay and we’ll find him,” Cork assured her. At the front door, Cork said, “Call someone. It isn’t good for you to be here alone. Call someone you can talk to. Okay?”
“Okay,” she said. She put her hand on Cork’s arm. “Find him, Cork. Please.”
The judge’s estate wasn’t easy to reach. The plows hadn’t touched any of the outlying roads yet, and Cork went slowly, with the front bumper of the Bronco nosing through drifts. The estate occupied the whole tip of the finger of land called North Point. The house itself was a huge stone affair, more than a century old, surrounded by gardens in summer and a sea of snow in winter. In its way it was like the man who owned it. Isolated.
The judge had once been a powerful figure in the politics of Minnesota. The scion of a family grown rich from clear-cutting the great white pines of the North Woods, he viewed himself as a rugged individualist and stubbornly clung to the view, as had those Parrants before him, that a man became what he made of himself. Only the hand of God-not an interfering government-should direct men’s destinies. In the Iron Range, an area noted for its independent, unpredictable, and generally cantankerous population, his message was well received.
His personal influence had reached its zenith more than two decades earlier when he made a nearly successful bid for the governor’s mansion. Five days before the election, with the judge carrying a slight edge in the polls, the St. Paul Pioneer Press published photographs of him leaving a motel room in the company of the wife of the chair of the party’s central committee. Minnesota may have been liberal in its politics, but it was pretty Lutheran in its morality. The judge lost by a landslide.
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