"All right. We just went past there. We'll hit it on the way back."
"Good."
"Anybody gonna give us shit?" Lucas asked.
"No, no, it's not that tough. It's just a little… sleazy."
"With some guys who like to fight."
"Occasionally."
6
OWATONNA IS A SMALL CITY known to a few architecture buffs for a Louis Sullivan jewel-box bank. They got lost for a while, running down edge-of-town streets, and finally found Charlie Pope's trailer in a weedy mobile-home park down a dead-end road.
Pope's trailer was a mess. An aging Airstream travel-trailer, once silver, it had been hit by something-a falling tree?-that had put a dent across the top; the whole thing sat maybe five degrees off level, the tires shot, steel wheels visible through the rotting rubber. Weeds grew window-high around it, and a box elder tree flaked bark, leaves, and red bugs onto it.
As they pulled into the trailer park's visitor parking lot, a blade-thin black cat ran out from one of the other homes, paused, one foot in the air, to look at them, and then disappeared into the brush behind Pope's place. Some of the mobile homes in the park were well kept, with neatly cut yards; most were not. Either way, Pope's place was the neighborhood slum.
MARK FOX WAS SITTING on the hood of his jeep, which was tucked in an overgrown parking slot next to Pope's trailer. Fox was a tall, thin, cowboy-looking guy with a weathered face, black roper boots, a black T-shirt, and a denim jacket and jeans. He was smoking a cigarette when they pulled up. He crushed it into a rust spot on the hood of the Jeep as they got out of the Porsche.
"Must've been more money coming out of the legislature than I thought, cops riding around in a Porsche," he said as they shook hands.
Lucas shrugged: "Guy's gotta have a four-wheel drive to get around in, this part of the country."
Sloan rolled his eyes and said, "We know the guy for three seconds and the bullshit starts… This is Pope's place?"
Fox looked at the trailer and said, "Yup. Such as it is. Come on in."
"I sorta know why he ran for it," Sloan said. "If I lived here, I'd run for it, too."
"Ah, it's different inside," Fox said. "It's worse."
HE TOOK THEM INSIDE. A sour odor of human dirt hung about the place, with a underlying tone of sewage: there might be a cracked sewer pipe somewhere, or something wrong with the septic system. Sloan said, wrinkling his nose, "Smells like an armpit with an onion in it." Fox: "Or an asshole."
"Hold that thought," Lucas said.
The three of them were too much for the tiny kitchen, and Fox continued six feet down the trailer into a nominal living room. The kitchen was made of dented metal cupboards, a stove the size of a breadboard, and a yellowed microwave. Fox said, "When he cut the bracelet off, he left it here on the floor. No sign of him. I put out a bulletin but never heard back from anybody."
"Nobody's seen him here in the park?"
"I checked, nobody's seen him-and if he'd been here, they would have. He was a hard guy to miss."
"And the park's about the size of my dick," Sloan said.
"Everybody assumes he took off," Fox said. "But, as far as anybody knows, he doesn't have a car."
"No car," Lucas said. He glanced at Sloan, who shook his head. If he didn't have a car, how was he moving around?
"Not as far as I know," Fox said. "He rides the buses. Charlie hasn't made enough since he got back to buy much. Last time we talked, he said he was spending everything he made on clothes and food. That looked about right to me."
"How much does a beat-up car cost?"
"You might get something for a grand, but he didn't have it."
"Relatives?"
"His mother's still alive, but she's poor as a church mouse herself," Fox said.
"He just walked off the job."
"Yeah. That's the story. I went down to see his boss-he worked with a garbage hauler-and he said Pope finished up one day, said, 'See ya,' and never came back."
"They owe him money?" Lucas asked.
"Three days," Fox said, nodding.
"Huh." They took their time poking around the trailer. Some clothes must be missing, they agreed, because there was almost nothing left. They did find an open three-pack of black Jockey shorts under the pull-out bed, with one pair left inside, along with a dozen DVDs. Lucas flipped through them: "Strokemaster Finals, Fantasic Facials, Best of Anal adventures 24…"
"There'a violation for you," Fox said.
"Strokemaster could be golf instruction," Sloan said.
LUCAS TAPPED A CHEAP color TV and an even cheaper DVD player that sat on a cardboard box across from the bed. "He didn't take his movies, his new shorts, or his TV. Maybe he was thinking of going out for a run, but coming back."
"Maybe he fucked something up and figured he couldn't come back," Sloan said.
"What'd he fuck up?" Lucas asked. "He was absolutely clean on the Larson killing, if he did it."
"Maybe something we don't know," Sloan said. He looked at Fox: "Was he smart? Good-looking? Controlled-crazy?"
Fox snorted. "Charlie? Charlie was a pervert. He looked like a pervert. If you saw him walking down the street, you'd say, 'There goes a pervert.' Didn't you get that file from St. John's? There're pictures…"
"We just got it; haven't had time to think about it," Lucas said. "How about smart? Is he smart?"
"He got arrested a block from the Target Center trying to anally rape a screaming woman, two feet from the sidewalk that ten thousand basketball fans were about to walk down. He just grabbed her and started whaling away. Charlie is a dumb motherfucker. He just blew off the best job he ever had."
"As a garbageman," Lucas said.
"An apprentice garbageman."
Lucas and Sloan looked at each other for a moment, then Sloan wagged his head and said, "That ain't the picture Elle was painting."
THEY EXPLAINED ELLE to Fox and the image she'd constructed of the killer. "That's not Charlie. If she's right, we're looking for the wrong guy." Fox said.
"Maybe something snapped when he was in St. John's," Sloan sggested.
"I didn't know him before he was in St.John's," Fox said. "I know him now. He's stupid and ugly now."
MOST OF THE TIME, thoroughly shaking down a house or an apartment would take hours. With Charlie Pope's trailer, they were done in half an hour -not only was there not much to look at, there was hardly any paper. They could find no checkbook, no credit cards, no computer, not even a notepad. The state paper he had, involving his imprisonment and parole, was in a state file folder under a six-year-old phone book.
"Nothing here but a bad smell," Sloan said.
WHEN THEY LEFT, Fox locked the door, and Lucas shook his head: "I had my hopes, but I don't think so. I can't get around the car thing."
"You can steal cars," Fox said.
"But would you steal a car to transport a bloody body, and then keep it?" Lucas asked. "I haven't heard about anybody finding a stolen car full of blood. I suppose he could have abandoned it, but it's been weeks since Larson was killed. Somebody should have seen it by now, if it was stolen."
"Could be parked out at the airport for a month," Fox suggested.
"Not with the new security," Lucas said, shaking his head. "Their surveillance system takes your tag number when your car comes in, runs it right there. And if you're out there for more than a week, they'll take a look at your car."