Authors: William Kent Krueger
“I talked to Lily, but she wouldn’t say anything to me,” Kretsch said.
“And nobody had her examined to confirm that she’d been abused?”
“We knew,” Hornett said. “We didn’t need to have her examined.”
“What I’m saying here, Gabriel,” Cork said evenly, “is that if you could substantiate a claim of sexual abuse of a minor or a vulnerable adult, a warrant could have been sworn out for the two men. The law could have stopped them.”
“The law would have had to catch them first,” Hornett replied. “Not an easy thing.”
“All right,” Cork said, “let’s move on. When Lily Smalldog disappeared, did you know that she was pregnant?”
“We didn’t suspect it at all. She said nothing to us, and she wore such loose-fitting clothing all the time. Only after we heard about the boxes of formula that Chickaway had carted off across the lake did we put two and two together.”
“When she disappeared, you notified Tom immediately?”
“Of course.”
“What did you think had happened to her?”
“She didn’t leave the island on her own, we knew that much. We’ve got only two launches here, so they’re easy to monitor. We figured one of the Indians had come and taken her. Then, when we found her sweater, we thought she’d gone into the lake, same as her mother. Both women suffered from periods of darkness you can’t imagine.”
“Depression?”
“I’m no doctor, so I couldn’t really diagnose it.”
“Were they being treated?”
“We treated them with prayer, Cork. It’s our way.”
“I understand Lily and her mother had their own cabin.”
“Yes.”
“Could we see it?”
“Now?”
“As good a time as any,” Cork said.
Hornett stood up and led them to the door. “You stay here, Josh. And mind Mary,” he said with a note of chastisement.
His younger brother glared at him but said nothing and obeyed.
The cabin was several hundred yards east of the peninsula where the other buildings of the camp stood. They reached it by walking a narrow path, almost overgrown now, that ran among the birches along the shoreline. It was a small, isolated little structure built of logs, without electricity and with an outhouse off
to one side. The great restless blue of the big water was visible through a wide break in the trees at its back. In the wind off the lake, the sound of the birch leaves rustling was like fast-running water. Cork thought it was a lovely spot.
“It’s pretty rustic, but Vivian and Lily seemed to be just fine with what they had,” Hornett said as they approached the place. “We were planning at some point to run electricity out here and put in indoor plumbing, but all our efforts for quite a while have been focused on our larger projects.”
The door was padlocked, but Hornett brought out a set of keys, undid the lock, and shoved the door open. He stepped inside, and the others followed.
The windows were closed and clouded with dust. Judging from the stuffiness of the room, they hadn’t been opened in a great while. There was a table, and there were two chairs and two small bunks. There was a cast-iron stove for heating. That was all. Nothing personal remained in the cabin, nothing that would have spoken to the nature of the two women, mother and daughter, who’d lived there.
“What happened to Lily’s belongings?” Cork asked.
“We’ve got them boxed and stored up at the camp, should anyone ever want to claim them. There’s nothing much, though. Clothing, a few pictures. Vivian and Lily lived a pretty simple existence. Took their food with the rest of us, washed their clothes in our laundry, bathed in our showers. They didn’t need much here.”
Cork recalled the cabin on the isolated island where Jenny had found the body of Lily Smalldog. It was a simple affair, too. Lily had been used to isolation, to making do by herself. As far as Cork could see, she hadn’t had much in her life, but what little she did have was apparently enough.
“Dad,” Stephen said.
He’d wandered away from the men and stood looking at the wall of the cabin above one of the bunks. Cork joined him and saw what he’d found.
“What is it?” Hornett asked.
“A word carved into the wood,” Cork said.
Hornett came and looked, too. “I can’t make it out. Looks like gibberish. But Lily wasn’t good with reading or spelling.”
“It’s an Ojibwe word,” Stephen said.
“Gizaagin.”
“What does it mean?”
“I love you.”
Stephen stepped closer and looked down, then slid the bunk out a foot and pulled a folded paper from where it had been caught between the bunk frame and the wall. He unfolded it, studied it, then handed it to his father.
It was a drawing, simple pen and ink but really quite lovely, of a deer and fawn in a meadow. It was signed “Sonny.”
Cork handed it to Tom Kretsch. Bascombe and Hornett looked at it over his shoulder.
Hornett said, “One of those little gifts I was telling you about. It didn’t take much to get that poor girl to spread her legs.”
Not much,
Cork thought.
Just love.
H
e stared up at Jenny with an intensity that would have been unnerving in someone grown, but he was only a baby and understood nothing except the nearness of her face, the scent of her body, the beat of her heart, the comfort of her presence, the electricity of her love. What had his mother been to him but these same things? Did he understand that, although Jenny offered him all of this, she was not his mother?
His left hand, so tiny, reached for her mouth, took her lower lip between his fingers, squeezed. He was strong, and it must have hurt her, but she made no move to stop him.
“Do you know what love is?” Rose asked.
They sat together in the dining room of Bascombe’s lodge. Lynn Belgea had come with Babs Larson and had offered to take someone back to the houseboat to get suitcases so that everyone would have clean clothing. Mal and Aaron and Anne had gone with them, and Rose and Jenny were left alone. The lodge smelled of the baking meat loaf, of herbs and hot meat juices.
Jenny carefully removed the baby’s fingers from her lip. “I used to think I did.”
“I believe it’s a life tied to another life in a way that feels inseparable. We care about a lot of people, but we choose to love a very few.”
“Choose?” Jenny looked down at the baby. “I didn’t choose this.”
“Ask your sister, and she might tell you that God chose for you. Are you unhappy with the choice?”
“Aunt Rose, do you believe, really believe, that I could love this baby? I’ve only known him for a little more than a day.”
“I believe what I see. And, Jenny, all I see in your face when you look at him is love.”
“Aaron thinks I’m crazy.”
“I think he’s just afraid.”
“Of what?”
“Of what’s in your face when you look at this child. Because it’s not what’s in your face when you look at him.”
“What I feel for Aaron is different.”
“I don’t think he understands that.”
“Come on, Aunt Rose. He’s a grown man. This is a baby.”
“A baby you’ve fallen in love with in just one day. How long did it take you to fall in love with Aaron?” When Jenny didn’t answer, Rose asked, “Are you in love with him?”
“I thought so. I don’t know now.”
Rose smiled gently. “And you wonder why he’s afraid?”
She ran her hand down her niece’s hair, smoothing wild strands in the way Jenny’s mother might have had she been alive and a part of this conversation.
“Are you afraid?” Rose asked.
“Of what?”
“Losing him.” She nodded at the little face staring up at Jenny. “He has family somewhere who have a legal right to him.”
“I know.”
The words sounded like acceptance, but what Rose heard in her niece’s voice was something more like a faint trumpet of defiance.
The baby was asleep again when they heard the cut of an engine over the sound of the wind outside. Rose went to the window and saw Babs Larson’s boat drawing up to Bascombe’s dock. Everyone piled out and walked to the lodge. They were talking in loud voices as they approached.
Rose stepped to the door and put a finger to her lips. “The baby’s asleep,” she told them.
“We’ll just stay out here then,” Larson said. “Everyone give a hand, and we’ll get these things to the cabins.”
The others headed away carrying duffel bags, but Lynn Belgea came in. Her dog was with her. He went to the basket and sniffed at the baby.
“Careful, Teddy,” Belgea said.
The dog backed away and lay down in an alert pose.
“He looks like a watchdog,” Rose said.
“He’s a good boy.” Belgea petted him fondly. “I just stepped in to check on the baby. How’s he doing?”
“He’s fine,” Jenny answered. “I wish I knew his name, though. It’s getting awkward always calling him ‘the baby’ or just ‘him.’ ”
“Maybe he doesn’t have a name yet,” Belgea said. “Did I tell you how Ted got his name?”
Jenny and Rose both shook their heads.
“I’d been alone for quite a while, and everyone on the Angle knew I was thinking of getting a dog. It was a pretty popular topic of conversation. Everyone began referring to the pet I’d get as The Eventual Dog. TED. I got so used to thinking of him that way that, when I finally brought him home, that was his name.”
Jenny said, “Wouldn’t work for this little guy. Two days ago, I had no idea I’d have a baby on my hands.”
Belgea looked at her and at the child, and she smiled gently and said, “Could have fooled me. If there’s anything you need for him or for yourself, you be sure to let me know.”
“I will.”
Outside the others returned. Belgea said good-bye, and the good women of the Angle went back to Larson’s boat and headed away.
“Clean duds,” Anne said, as she came into the lodge. She held up a folded stack of clothing for Jenny.
Jenny still wore the things she’d had on when the storm threw her onto the island. The idea of cleaning herself up was wonderful. She said, “Would someone watch him while I shower and change?”
Rose and Anne replied almost in unison, “We’d be happy to.”
“You’ll let me know if he cries or if he needs me.”
“Go,” Rose said. “He’ll be fine with us.”
Jenny took her clothing and started to leave but at the door turned back and glanced at the basket with concern.
“Go!” Anne ordered.
Jenny left.
Mal, when he’d come in, had sat at the table, and now he gingerly rubbed his damaged ankle. “If she has trouble leaving him for a few minutes, it’s going to be hell on her when she has to give him up for good.”
They all looked at the baby, and then at the empty doorway through which Jenny had disappeared, and no one had a thing to say.
When Cork and the others returned, the sun was behind the trees on Oak Island, and Bascombe’s lodge lay deep in the shadows of evening. As they approached the lodge, Cork’s mouth began to water at the aromas drifting outside. When they stepped in, he saw that the table was set, and he could hear the clatter of activity in the kitchen.
“We’re back,” he called.
Anne came out and said, “Wash up. I’ll call the others.”
Over the best meat loaf Cork swore he’d ever tasted, he recounted the events on Stump Island.
“What did you think of them?” Rose asked.
“They were friendly enough,” Cork replied.
“But?”
“I got a hinky feel from the place.”
Bascombe shrugged and said, “Religious folks always give me the willies. I figure they’re okay, just a little lopsided in their view of human nature.”
Cork looked at his brother-in-law. “Mal, you ever hear of a group called the Church of the Seven Trumpets?”
“Can’t say I have.” Mal worked his tongue over something stuck in a back tooth. “But if it’s a biblical reference, it probably refers to the seven trumpets in the Book of Revelation.”
“Mr. Hornett told us to read Revelation,” Stephen said. “What did he mean?”
Mal said, “Basically, Revelation states that at the end of the world angels will blow seven trumpets. The first six will bring devastation and death to the earth with a lot of fire and bloodletting and plagues and things falling from the heavens and eventual darkness. The seventh will signal the second coming of Christ, and the defeat of Satan’s armies and the Antichrist, and the final judgment.”
“They’re certainly firm believers in the Apocalypse,” Kretsch said. “Rumor is that they’re stockpiling supplies on the island in preparation.”
“Hornett called their camp the Citadel,” Cork said. “Which sounds sort of like siege mentality, but I didn’t see any evidence of huge stockpiles.”
“Stump Island’s a big place,” Kretsch said. “You could hide an army there.”
Bascombe said, “I don’t see what that has to do with the Smalldog girl.”
Cork shook his head. “I don’t know either. Except that everything Hornett said rang wrong. I don’t like to go on hunches, but I’ve got a hunch they weren’t being exactly forthcoming with us.”
“That may have nothing at all to do with Smalldog or Jenny’s baby,” Bascombe pointed out.
Jenny’s baby. Cork realized it was the first time anybody had used that term, had spoken it, anyway. It didn’t please him. The
child wasn’t Jenny’s responsibility, wasn’t the responsibility of any of them. Though it wasn’t the baby’s fault, he was dangerous. Death shadowed him, and that shadow had fallen across Cork’s family. Cork was determined, as soon as was humanly possible, to get the baby into the hands of the proper authorities. But he tabled that issue for the moment and returned to the matter at hand.
He said, “If you’re looking at one thing that’s amiss and you stumble onto another, in my experience, it pays to look for connections.”
Kretsch said, “I agree. But how do we take a closer look?”
“Do you have access to the Internet here, Seth?”
“Yep,” Bascombe said, “but it won’t do you any good. My computer crashed a while back, and I haven’t had any reason to get it fixed. I kind of like not being connected with all the craziness of the world outside the Angle.”
Cork swung his gaze to the window. Beyond, the lake was growing pale in the dying light. A few stars were already twinkling in the eastern sky. He thought for a moment about asking Bascombe to take him to the mainland, where he might find what he wanted. But the wind was still blowing strong, and waves galloped across the water like wild horses. And he was dead tired. They were all tired, he could see.