Stabenow, Dana - Shugak 02 - A Fatal Thaw

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by A Fatal Thaw(lit)


  Her braid loosened, and her hair fell free and hid the white bandage on

  her temple, and she began to toss her head and throw her long black hair

  back and forth. She lunged at a group of dancers, calling to them, and

  they lunged and called back. The boy with the eagle feather and the

  Nikes caught up with her, and for a while they danced together, Kate

  slowing down so that he could keep up. She turned and danced away; he

  followed. Another fell into line, a third, and soon all the dancers were

  stamping their feet and shaking their hands in a line that snaked around

  the floor and doubled back on itself half a dozen times. Kate led the

  way, up the floor and down, in and out of the corners, around the tables

  and back again.

  On the floor, Kate's pulse seemed to beat in time with the beat of the

  drums, her breath to come and go with them, her steps dictated by them.

  The drums guided her through the dance with a firm hand, taking over her

  body and leaving her mind free to grieve.

  Abel. She had not thought of him, or had tried not to, in months. Abel,

  her uncle-by-choice, her uncle-by-honor, who had died if not by her

  hand, then as a result of actions she had put in motion. He had guided

  her steps throughout her childhood as the drums guided her steps now,

  had taught her everything she knew of woodcraft, of hunting and fishing.

  His missing presence was a constant ache at the back of her mind.

  Suddenly she saw him, standing at the edge of the crowd, his grizzled

  old face grinning at her, his faded blue eyes twinkling, as if to say,

  "Well, girl? Ready to do a little poaching with the old man?" He turned

  as if to go, and she faltered slightly, and then the beat of the drums

  caught her up and swept her away.

  She saw Pat and Becky Jorgensen, hand in hand, smiling warmly at her,

  their fingers smeared with ink and marked with paper cuts from sorting

  their neighbors' mail. The thin, intense figure of Steven Syms stared

  over at her with a fanatical expression. He'd been a born-again Baptist

  type, Kate remembered, who never went anywhere without a Bible and who

  had staged a one-man protest demonstration, with sign, in front of the

  Roadhouse when a movement to reform Alaska's twenty-year-old legal

  abortion law was quashed in the state legislature. Next to him, Lisa

  Getty, blond and blue-eyed, slender and seductive, smiled the smile that

  enticed and mocked at the same time. Max Chaney, appropriately enough,

  stood on her other side, looking

  around with a puzzled expression, so new to the company that he did not

  yet understand his presence in it. Other figures appeared dimly, figures

  she knew must be the Longstaffs and the Weisses, coming to bid her

  farewell.

  She strained to see her mother, her father, but it had been too long

  since their deaths, and nothing was left of their spirits on earth

  except what she carried within her.

  The drums began to slow and ease in volume, and Kate's movements slowed

  and eased with them. The song ended on a long fade, Kate's dance with a

  last, graceful

  flight of eagle feather through the air. The music stopped as she came

  to a halt before Chief William. She reached for his gnarled, twisted old

  hand and, bending forward from the waist, held it for a moment to her

  forehead. She returned the finger mask to the Koniag dancer and held

  both hands out, palms up and eagle feather lying across them, to the

  boy. She said something to him, and he blushed and ducked his head.

  Bernie was awed, by the dance, by the spirit it invoked, even in him, a

  practicing cynic, the only philosophy a working bartender could hold to

  and survive. "That was the most beautiful thing I've ever seen in my

  life," he told Kate when she returned to his side.

  Her face was flushed and she was out of breath. She laughed at him, and

  then he saw her smile fade and a guarded wariness replace the joy in her

  eyes. He turned and saw the square, stately figure of Ekaterina Moonin

  Shugak approaching, and in that moment he remembered something else

  about Kate Shugak. She didn't get along with her grandmother.

  "Finaa," Kate said, inclining her head stiffly. Her temple gave a

  vicious throb.

  "Katya," her grandmother said. She gave a regal, dismissing nod in

  Bernie's general direction. Bernie, amused, had watched the stout old

  woman make her progress through the crowd, smiling at someone, stopping

  to shake hands with someone else, holding up a baby and exclaiming over

  its beauty, in a manner that reminded him irresistibly of Elizabeth II

  of England outside Buckingham Palace. He managed now to remove himself

  from her presence without quite bowing and backing away.

  "Bernie, wait," Kate said, "I need to talk to you. It's why I came. Can

  we go-"

  He raised a dismissive hand. "Later."

  "Not later, now. Bernie, it's important. I have to talk

  "Whatever it is'll keep. I've got a team to psych

  up." "I am glad to see you here, dancing with your people," the old

  woman said to Kate.

  Kate watched Bernie's back moving rapidly in the opposite direction and

  swore under her breath. She almost went after him but couldn't quite

  bring herself to turn her back on her grandmother and walk away, and

  cursed again. "I enjoyed it, emaa," she said out loud. Determined to

  give the devil her due, she added, "This potlatch was a good idea."

  "It was the right thing to do," her namesake said simply.

  "Yes," Kate agreed. "And a good thing, for all of us. Friends," she

  added, emphasizing the word, "as well as family."

  There fell an awkward silence. At least for Kate it was awkward. The

  last time Ekaterina Moonin Shugak might have felt awkward was during the

  birth of her thirteenth child, some thirty years previous. Kate doubted

  it. Ekaterina Moonin Shugak ruled her family, the Niniltna Tribal

  Association, the Park, the Alaska Federation of Natives and much of the

  Alaska state legislature with the same firm, unshakable, unfumbling hand

  with which she would have ruled Kate, had Kate let her, and she was

  never, ever awkward.

  Kate cleared her throat. "Well, I came to see someone, emaa. I'd better

  get to it."

  The old woman delayed her, touching a forefinger to the bandage at her

  granddaughter's temple. "You've been hurt."

  Kate shrugged away. "It is nothing."

  Ekaterina's hand dropped back to her side. "Have you heard from Axenia?"

  Kate went on alert. "Yes." "How is she?"

  "She's fine, emaa. Jack found her an apartment and a roommate. She's

  enjoying her job. And she's enrolled

  in an accounting class at the University of Alaska. She sounded very

  happy the last time I talked to her."

  Kate couldn't help the defensive sound her words took on at the last.

  The old woman did not reply, but her silence was immensely eloquent, at

  least to Kate. "Well, if that's all, I'd better get going."

  "Katya." "What!" Her grandmother looked mildly surprised at her tone,

  and Kate was immediately ashamed of herself and as immediately

  determined not to show it. "I only wa
nted to say, Katya, that you may

  have been right about Axenia."

  Kate's jaw dropped slightly, and the old woman pressed her advantage.

  "She was unhappy here. If she is happy in the city, perhaps it was good

  for her to move there. If she had stayed home, who knows? Your mother

  ..." Ekaterina didn't finish her sentence.

  Kate regarded her with a slowly lightening expression, and unfortunately

  Ekaterina chose that moment to add, "Besides, the tribe does not need

  weaklings. There are few enough of us left. Those that remain must be

  strong."

  Kate stiffened. "Axenia demonstrated her strength when she had the

  courage to recognize she didn't want to live here. She demonstrated her

  determination when she fought your disapproval to move to Anchorage, and

  she demonstrated her courage when she moved away from everything and

  everyone she knew, to a place with no friends or family."

  "She abandoned her culture," Ekaterina snapped back, and those watching

  from a discreet distance were struck by the similarity of their faces,

  one old, one young, both stubborn.

  "Maybe not," Kate said, bristling. "Maybe she took her culture with her,

  to pass it on to those who weren't

  "No real Aleut-"

  "Define Aleut for me, emaa," Kate said in a voice that was almost a

  shout. "Are we talking about the Kanuyaq River Aleuts, most of whom are

  descended from Ninety-Niners as much as they are Alaskan Indians? Are we

  talking about the Kodiak Island Aleuts, who are descended from Russian

  promishlyniki as much as they are the Alutiiq? Or are we talking about

  our own family, which in only the last four generations includes a

  Russian cossack, a Jewish cobbler, a Norwegian fisherman, a Rhode Island

  whaler and a Cherokee chief? Axenia is as much one of us as you or I,

  emaa. Just because she chooses not to live in the Park doesn't make her

  any less an Aleut. Or any more a weakling."

  She spun around on one heel and marched off, shoving her way through the

  crowd, now engaged in wrapping up the remaining food, breaking down the

  tables and clearing the floor for basketball action. She was angry and

  wasn't paying attention to where she was going.

  "Whoa!" a male voice said when she ran full tilt into someone. Two hands

  caught at her arms to steady her.

  She looked up, shoving the hair out of her eyes. "Oh. Hi, George. Sorry,

  I wasn't watching where I was going."

  "No problem." He released her. "You get your Koreans off okay?"

  "Yeah, Lottie took them up." He grinned. "She didn't look any too happy

  about it, but I made her an offer she couldn't refuse."

  Kate halted and stared at him. "Today?" He nodded. "Just a couple hours

  ago." "You stop to get permits?"

  He looked surprised. "Of course. Dan issued them himself. We stopped on

  the Step long enough to check in with Park Service and then I kicked

  them out at the base camp."

  "How's the weather?" she asked automatically, not really listening to

  his reply.

  He shrugged. "Looking good for now, but who knows? We're talking Big

  Bump here. That mother changes moods the way Princess Di does clothes."

  Someone called his name and he turned to answer. "Damn," Kate whispered.

  Then all her suspicions were true, and there was nothing she could do

  now to stop it all coming out. Someone bumped into her, jostling her out

  of her preoccupation. "Damn," she said, more loudly, "damn, damn, damn,

  " and shoved her way through the crowd toward the stairwell.

  There was a long hall at the bottom of the stairs. She walked all the

  way down to the end, stopped in front of the door of the boys' locker

  room and banged on it with a clenched fist, venting her anger on the

  blank and innocent steel. The door opened and Stevie Kvasnikof's

  suspicious face appeared. "No girls allowed," he growled and would have

  slammed the door shut if she hadn't smacked her open palm against it and

  stiffened her arm.

  "I want to talk to Eknaty."

  "Eknaty who?" he said, thrusting his jaw forward. "There's no Eknaty in

  here."

  "Eknaty Kvasnikof your brother, you idiot," she told him. "I know he's

  in there, he's the shining hope of Niniltna's second Class C state

  championship. Tell him I want to talk to him."

  He glowered at her for a moment and then turned to yell. "Coach! Hey,

  Coach! Kate Shugak's out here!" There was a chorus of young and rude

  male noises.

  Bernie shoved past Stevie and closed the door behind him. He stood in

  front of her with his hands on his hips. Any lingering, mellowing

  effects of the dancing upstairs had dissolved in the cold, bracing

  anticipation of competitive testosterone. "What do you want?" he

  demanded. "We got a game to play. If you want to talk to me, see me after."

  "I don't want to talk to you, I want to talk to Eknaty," Kate said,

  patiently for her.

  "Same thing. You want to talk to Eknaty, you see me after." He half

  turned and paused. "Why do you want to see him, anyway?"

  "Max Chaney's been shot." He froze. "What?"

  "Max Chaney has been shot. He's dead." He paled. "Like Lisa?"

  She raised her eyebrows. "You know about Lisa?" His eyes fell. "Enid

  told me." He looked up. "Was he? Was Max Chaney shot like Lisa?"

  "It looks like it."

  "Jesus." Bernie's eyes closed and he shook his head. "I know," she said.

  "We can't go around anymore with our heads in the sand, hoping something

  will happen to make this all go away. The killer has killed twice now,

  has even had a try at me." She touched the bandage at her temple. His

  eyes widened. "You said Eknaty was pretty upset at Lisa's death. If he

  was odd jobbing it for Lottie, he may have been there the morning Lisa

  got shot. He may have seen something. If I can find the rifle that shot

  her ..." Her voice trailed away.

  Their eyes met in perfect, if almost shamed, understanding. "All right,"

  he said finally. "You can see him. After the game," he said, raising his

  hand to stop her when she reached for the door. "And for ten minutes

  only. I'm not having you play mind-fuck games with my star guard in the

  middle of the goddam state championship. And Kate," he said, raising one

  finger and poking it toward her with vicious emphasis, "if that kid's

  free-throw percentage falls after tonight, I'll be on you like stink on

  shit."

  When Kate reentered the gym, the tables and food and signs had

  disappeared, the floor had been swept clean, and the dancers had

  abandoned the floor for the bleachers,

  and were packed in together as tight as a salmon stream in July. The

  potlatch had left everyone feeling good, and the prospect of three solid

  days of basketball put the cap on everyone's enjoyment.

  Of the half dozen teams from around the state, first up in the

  tournament's rotation were the Kanuyaq Kings against the Seldovia Sea

  Otters. Cheerleaders in letter sweaters and short skirts stamped and

  clapped and yelled and worked the crowd into a feeding frenzy. The Kings

  took to the floor in blue and gold, the Otters in red and white. The

  Kings' center was ha
lf a foot taller but the Otters' center wanted it

  more and Seldovia got the tip-off.

  "Two points, big team, two points," the Otters' cheerleaders chanted.

  "Defense, defense!" the home crowd yelled. The Otters tried too hard and

  the guards took the ball down the court without waiting for the rest of

  their team to take position. The lay-up rolled around the rim and out of

  the basket and was recovered by a King forward who broke and ran with

  it. His slam went dunk and the crowd went wild. Galvanized, the Otters

  brought the ball back in and down the court, set up a tight man-to-man

  offense, worked the ball ,around the key until their center was clear

  and fed it to him the way momma feeds strained pears to baby, no

 

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