Hidden Prey
report.
4
J ERRY R EASONS WATCHED Lucas slide four feet down a pile of broken concrete-block chips to the lake. Reasons was a cop and a muscleman, with a broken nose and a crooked smile and a chipped tooth. He wore a black golf shirt that showed off his ball-bat forearms and Mack-truck chest; his jeans looked like they were painted on his perfect, sculpted butt. He had a Glock on a belt clip under his right hand, and a badge in a belt clip over his left pocket. He said, “I hate the fuckin’ Russians.”
“Yeah?” Lucas stood with one foot on a chunk of eroded concrete, the other on the lake bank, stooped and stuck his hand in the water. The day was unexpectedly warm and windless, but Superior was as cold as ever, the color of rolled steel. He’d been on the lake a few times, but had never been easy with it. Fall overboard in Superior, you had fifteen minutes to get out before the cold killed you. He looked back up at Reasons. “Hate ’em, huh?”
They were at the end of a boat slip, one that must have been a halfmile long and a couple of hundred feet across. The TDX grain elevator stood along one side of the slip, a series of off-white ten-story-high cylinders full of wheat, soybeans, and various kinds of agricultural pellets.
“Yeah. You ask them a question about one of their buddies bein’ killed, and you can see them thinking it over, what to say. They’re figuring out whether or not to lie. You see it all the time,” he said. “You pick up a drunk Russian on the street, you ask, ‘You been drinking?’ and the guy thinks it over. He smells like a fuckin’ distillery, he’s got puke running down his shirt, he’s got a bottle in his hand, he can’t stand up, and he’s thinking it over. What happens if I say yes? Fuckin’ Russians.”
“So you don’t like Russians,” Lucas said. He shook the water off his hand, patted his hand against his pants leg, and climbed back up the bank. They started back through the weeds toward the dirt track that led to the elevator. The ground was rough, hard to walk on. They’d followed what Reasons said was a chase path that had been crushed through the weeds, though there was no longer much evidence of the chase, if there had been one. Reasons thought that the victim had run from the gun, had taken a fall or two—the gunman may have fallen as well—and then, perhaps disoriented, he’d turned back toward the elevator. The gunman had caught him on the pad, and had killed him. Lucas thought that was possible, if a little strange. “You ever known one personally? A Russian?”
Reasons kept a toothpick in the corner of his mouth. Using his tongue, he switched the toothpick from the left side to the right side, cleared his throat, and said, “I married one.”
Lucas grinned at him. “That’s good.”
“I don’t know what I was thinking,” he said. He scratched his neck. “Living with the bitch is like having a rock in your shoe. A big rock. Though I gotta say, she still turns my crank.”
“You got nothing from the Russians on the ship?”
Reasons shook his head. “Nothin’. They didn’t know a thing. They weren’t sure the moon was gonna come up. Or go down, if it did come up.”
Lucas nodded. “Listen: in the file, you had a note that said, ‘Kid?’ And then there was something about the coat and the temperature. What was that all about?”
Reasons turned and looked up at the elevator. “This guy Kellogg was what they call a grain trimmer. When it’s time to load up a boat, he goes on board to supervise.” He pointed at a long metal pipe, a foot or two in diameter, that dangled from the side of the building. “The grain comes down through that big pipe, outa the elevator and into the ship’s hold. He’d just gotten done and walked over to the rail for a cigarette. He was standing right there.” Now he pointed to a spot in the empty air at the end of the slip. The Russian ship had been sent on its way a week earlier. “That’s when he saw the guy walking away from the body. He yelled at him and the guy runs. The guy was small, almost like a kid. He’s not sure about that, because the perspective from up there is goofy—way high, looking down, in the dark. But he thought the guy was small.”
“How about the coat?”
“He said the guy was wearing a long coat. I checked with the weather service, they said the temperature down at lakeside that night was sixty-one degrees. It’d been a hot day. I wondered about
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