Deadfall (5 page)

Read Deadfall Online

Authors: Sue Henry

Jessie stared at her, mouth open, and began to shake her head before Linda had even finished her statement.

“I couldn’t—not just take off. There’re the dogs to take care of. Besides, can’t they catch this person just as well if I’m here as they could if I were gone? Alex? Ben? No. I won’t go. This is where I live—my home. I didn’t do anything, so why should I leave? Where would I go anyway?”

“How about a trip to Idaho?” Alex suggested. “I’d been thinking we should go maybe next spring. Why don’t you go now? My folks would love to have you.”

“Ale-e-x! Not a chance. Out…of…the…question!”

“Go ahead, Jess. Tell us how you
really
feel about it.” Alex grinned at the Caswells.

Jessie was forced to laugh at herself, but it didn’t discourage her from presenting one more rationale.

“If I left, the harassment would probably stop. Then how would you find out who it is? You’ve both all but admitted that you don’t have enough evidence to identify anyone, really. You need more. How are you going to get it if I’m not here as the target?”

Alex was anything but happy at her choice of the word
target
to describe herself, though he knew it was accurate and, unfortunately, appropriate—also that she could be right.

T
he next day, Sunday, passed quietly, with no further suggestion of trouble, though Jessie and Alex were both watchful and uneasy. Individually and together, they had been up and down several times during Saturday night to check the dog lot from the window. Alex had disabled the motion detector so the floodlights remained on all night. Because light did not reach to the back of the yard, Jessie had moved as many dogs as possible closer to the cabin, within the bright circle.

“How could anyone have come into the lot without the dogs barking?” Jessie asked from her end of the sofa, looking up from an attempt to concentrate on the funnies in the Sunday paper. Without discussing it, they were attempting to fill the long morning, as usual, with breakfast, coffee, and newsprint.

“Wondered about that myself,” Alex said, swinging his stockinged feet off the other end and opening the door to the pot-bellied stove to add another chunk of firewood. “I hate to
suggest it, but there are a few people they wouldn’t bark at. Could it have been someone you, or we—and they—know?”

“You know, someone might get past a person, but I don’t think they could fool a dog that didn’t know them,” she agreed. “I can’t think of anyone specific—anyone I’d want to accuse. There are a few people—mostly guys—who would rather women didn’t run the Iditarod, but why pick on me? Besides, that kind of thing’s sort of old news to come up this suddenly and viciously, isn’t it? I’ve been thinking, and it seems to me there could be two other possibilities for how the traps were set—either it was done when neither of us was here or when the pups would naturally be making a racket about something else, using that as a cover.”

“Okay, but we were here the whole evening before Nicky stepped in that first trap.”

“Was there anytime during that evening when they barked or made a fuss? I’m so used to the sounds of the dogs that I might not have noticed something that might have caught your attention.”

“It seems like there was something—just before we went to bed Friday night. Didn’t someone stop by…or was it the night before that Fortis stopped in?”

“Night before.” She shook her head, trying to recall. “But there
were
some lights that shone on the house from the road. A turnaround in the driveway. We thought someone was coming, but they just pulled in, backed out, and left. Remember?”

“You’re right. And the dogs barked—they did.”

“Yeah, and for longer than they normally would for that kind of thing. Remember? I was just about to go out and put a stop to it when they finally settled down and shut up.”

“I’ll bet anything that’s when those traps were brought in. It would only take a few minutes to park on the shoulder of the road—or pull off where that trail of yours goes into the trees beyond the yard—slip into the back of the lot, and set them in two boxes. Has to be.”

It gave them a possible answer for
when
, but told them
nothing more about
who
. The rest of the day seemed endlessly full of frustration and raw nerves.

They went out together and spent only the time necessary to feed and water the dogs. Jensen not only took the shotgun, but wore his off-duty Colt .45 semiautomatic, as well. There was nothing untoward, no hint of disturbance or further harassment.

“But it’s not over, is it?” Jessie said quietly.

“No. If that first note came as long ago as August, there have been long spaces between incidents, so one day is nothing. The difference is that now we’re aware of it. This person knows it and is just letting us stew and the tension build for something else, I think. These things usually escalate. Jess, are you sure about Idaho? This could—probably
will—
get worse.”

She stood up from pouring water into a metal dish for a dog named Shorty, and gave him a long searching look. “Yes. Quite sure…for now. It would feel like quitting—like letting this S.O.B. win—and you know how I feel about quitting.”

He looked down and scuffed the heel of one boot in a clump of dry brown grass.

“This is different from finishing a murderous race, you know. You don’t have to prove anything here.”

“I know. And I don’t intend to be stupid about it. I promise that if I reach a point where I feel that I should or need to get out, I’ll say so. Honest.”

“All right. But you aren’t used to having to gauge this kind of thing. So if I reach a place where I think you definitely should go—and I warn you, I’m close—I’ll do the same. Fair?”

“More than fair. I’d trust your judgment.”

“One other thing…for me.”

“Yeah?”

“I don’t want you to be alone out here. Will you agree to have someone here with you when I have to be somewhere else—at work?”

“Yes. I’ve been considering that, and I think it’d be a good
idea. Not just as discouragement, but as a witness, too. Linda said if I wanted someone, she’d come.”

“I meant…”

“No. No cops. That would make me crazy.” Her eyes narrowed slightly. “Linda will be fine. She’s smart, and quick, and can handle the shotgun as well as I can.”

“Yeah, I know. Cas wouldn’t have one in the house unless she learned to use it. All right. I’ll have someone patrol out here during the day, and call you often to check. Keep the cell phone in your pocket, okay? And stay out of the lot as much as possible.”

They spent another semi-wakeful night. Once, in the dark, Alex woke to find Jessie sleeping with her head on his arm, her back close against his side, as if seeking reassurance. He did not mention it when they got up, but, trying not to make her aware, he watched her carefully as she went through her usual morning routine. It was almost, but not quite, ordinary. Most people would have been fooled, but he noticed when she fumbled the toothpaste, informed her that she had put her sweatshirt on backward, and ate slightly scorched toast without comment.

Jessie said little, but was relieved, if not glad, to have him leave for the troopers’ office in Palmer as soon as Linda Caswell pulled up at the cabin in her Blazer. Though she could tell he was trying hard to be unobtrusive, his constant, unspoken attention made her feel he could see the pressure she was feeling, even added to it. It made her feel clumsy, forced concentration on what were normally unconscious actions, and created awkwardness in their execution—water was spilled, silverware wound up on the floor, she bruised her shoulder on the bedroom doorframe. She found herself doing—and redoing—chores to keep her hands busy, so he wouldn’t worry about her tendency to sit still, lost in thought.

She knew she needed to think, was convinced that whoever was doing these horrid things had to be someone with whom she’d had some kind of contact. There was certainly a chance
it was just some unbalanced fan she wouldn’t recognize face-to-face, but that chance, she thought, was small. It was much more likely that this fixation on her was the result of some encounter, however slight. To sort through her connections with other people, she needed time to sort through her experiences mushing and running public sled dog races. Before that, she would not have elicited this kind of focus, for who had known her then? If it didn’t have something to do with the Iditarod, why would this person include that particular race in his or her threats?

But there were so many people over the last few years of racing and so much recognition of the state’s premiere sport. How could she hope to pick out one among hundreds?

She waved good-bye to Alex and—glancing uneasily around at the trees and brush that could provide cover for many kinds of menace—forced a smile as she held the door open to welcome Linda into the snug log cabin. This evil had taken nothing of material value—except for injuring Nicky’s leg which eliminated her use as a sled dog—but, she realized, it was rapidly stealing intangibles from her that she found more valuable than any thing she owned. It was a theft of trust, confidence, assurance—things she had always taken for granted—certainty, safety. What next? What else would be demanded of her?

She closed and carefully secured the deadlock on the door she usually left unbolted, and went to pour Linda a cup of coffee.

 

“‘H
appy birthday, Jessie. Did you find the presents I left your dogs? I hope you appreciate my thoughtfulness. We will run this race together, but this time I get to win.’ And you say this came inside the package, after you found these traps?”

“Right. We found the dog caught in the first one and Jessie found the second the next morning. Almost got caught in it
herself. Shook her. Seriously. And both tags said the same thing:
Happy Birthday Jessie
.”

“And the two other notes came in the mail in the last month.”

“Yes. She didn’t think enough about them to mention them. Stuffed them away in a file until last night.”

Jensen and John Timmons, the burly assistant coroner, sat at a table in a central room of the Anchorage crime lab, examining the notes Jensen had brought in for testing. The traps—their tags removed for testing—lay on the opposite end of the table, one still stained with Nicky’s blood. Timmons had rubbed at his fuzzy hair until it stood out from his head like a Brillo pad, and now he frowned down at the note in his hand.

“Well, we already know there’s nothing here in terms of prints,” he reiterated, “and it was sealed with water, not saliva, which says the perp may be significantly aware of DNA identification. As you said, there’s a multitude of printers the notes could have been run out on. You’re going to need someone who’s more experienced than I am in the psychology of this kind of thing—Dave’ll be back after lunch—but I’d say there are a couple of things at work here that might give you a start on the bastard.”

He rolled away from the table in his specially built wheelchair toward a file across the room.

Paraplegic as the result of a skiing accident, John Timmons still managed to move faster than most people could on legs. His chair was equipped with a lift to raise him into a standing position. This, along with a set of braces he used while doing autopsies, or anything else that required him to be upright. The lift was unnecessary now, as he opened a lower drawer and took out a folder, which he brought back to the table. Though he was the assistant coroner, his interests reached beyond his job. The whole process of technical criminal investigation fascinated him, as it did Alex. Opening the folder, he laid out a list of soil types and where in the state they could be found.

“The traps aren’t new—the first one even has some rust on it—but they’re both dirty as hell, especially around the hinges. Tests may help us get some idea of where they’ve been used besides the kennel. Not much of a chance for anything vital, but who knows?

“The other thing you can do is start on the obvious Iditarod connection. The race people, or other mushers, might also have heard from this nut. You’ll want to have them check their files for similar threats.”

As Jensen nodded thoughtfully, a door banged open and someone came quickly through from the front office.

“Hey, there you are. They said you needed some help on some kind of harassment thing. Just finished the paperwork for the Coats trial. I’m all yours.”

Jensen looked up to find Trooper Phil Becker striding toward him across the lab, an enthusiastic grin on his face.

The mood at the table improved with his arrival, for both the older men liked the young trooper, who wasn’t long away from his rookie years on the force. He still reminded Alex of one of Jessie’s half-grown pups, though he was convinced that Becker would exhibit this attitude when the hair that was always falling in his eyes had turned white. In his early thirties, Becker had close to six years with the post and almost three with the homicide group, under Jensen’s direction. His interest in the detail involved in crime detection had initially brought him to Alex’s attention, after which he had gone out of his way to work with Phil when the opportunity presented itself. The young officer had rapidly developed into a proficient team member.

Still, there were times when he had to tell Becker to put a cork in it, for the young trooper was inclined to think with his mouth. His main talent was his people skills: easy laughter, honest interest, and warmth. It was hard not to like Phil Becker. People instinctively trusted him, often enough to say more than they intended. Under his bright, greedy-for-facts exterior lay an increasingly efficient detection unit, capable of
handling problem attitudes more easily than most, and defusing threatening situations with easygoing humor. Gulping information as fast as he could take it in, he could still be counted on not to let a crumb of it get away, and often made interesting connections between the bits and pieces he gleaned.

“Pull up a chair,” Timmons invited. “We’ll fill you in on this batch of
love notes
Jessie Arnold’s been finding in her mailbox.”

“Jessie? Damn, Alex. I thought you had her surrounded with our invisible shield that no one can get through.”

“Not quite, I’m afraid,” Jensen said grimly, handing the notes across to Becker. “Someone seems to think she’s fair game for some rather nasty threats.”

“Jeez, I’m sorry. She’s a nice lady—doesn’t need this kind of stuff.”

“Well, who does?”

Quiet long enough to examine the notes and hear about the traps, Becker looked up frowning.

“Someone connected to the Iditarod in some way?” he asked.

“Maybe. Could be just an observer, for or against it.”

“Lot of anger. No misspellings or glaring grammatical errors. Must have at least an average education. ‘…this time I get to win.’ Could this mean there was a time when he, or she, didn’t get to win?”

“Now, there’s an interesting angle,” Timmons commented. “Could it be a musher who came in behind her in some race?”

Jensen and Becker gave each other a haven’t-we-been-here-before grin, remembering a case they had worked together.

“That idea will have to be considered, I suppose,” Alex agreed. “But I think it’s unlikely. However, Cranshaw’s attitude was, too.”

He referred, indirectly, to the Iditarod race where he had met Jessie, during the investigation of three murders that occurred early in its more than thousand-mile length. One of
the suspects had been Bomber Cranshaw, a male musher who disapproved of women sled dog racers.

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