So it was with Lynda and Bob. After they learned that their son had never made it to Scotland, they called his friend George Pesut in Nuremberg and established the following: On August 7, Duncan had borrowed George’s car for a short trip, and was supposed to have been back in Nuremberg on August 11 at the latest to catch his flight to Glasgow. He was last seen on August 8 as he departed his friend Roger Kortko’s house in Fuessen, Germany and headed south towards Austria and Italy. Since then, none of his other contacts in Europe had heard from him. He had literally vanished without a trace.
With each passing day, the likelihood seemed to increase that something terrible had indeed happened to him, just as Lynda had dreamed. She often stared at the phone, willing it to ring with him on the line, and its silence was maddening. How could a young man and the car he was driving disappear in such a highly developed region?
A car crash was the first kind of disaster that came to mind, but a wreck would be reported. During the 1980s, adult tourists in Italy were occasionally kidnapped by mafia bands, but no one had called to demand a ransom. Lynda feared he had picked up a dangerous hitchhiker, though only someone armed with a gun would have dared try to abduct Duncan—a 6’1” professional hockey player whose fighting spirit had earned him the nickname “MacFearsome.”
The Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP), which posted officers at Canadian embassies in Europe, said that young men often disappear for adventure or romance, and usually turn up sooner or later. Lynda knew this wasn’t the case with her son, who’d always been free to do whatever he wanted, and would certainly let his parents know he was okay. Moreover, there was simply no way he would shirk his obligations and run off in someone else’s car.
Even if he had decided to disappear, he couldn’t live without money, and he hadn’t cashed a traveler’s check since August 7. Tracing them had been possible because he’d given Lynda power of attorney for handling his affairs in Canada while he worked in Scotland. She recalled their brief exchange about it the night before he left. He was sitting at the kitchen table, eating a midnight snack of cereal and reading the hockey news when she gave him the document to sign.
“Looks like I’m signing my life away,” he said as he glanced at it, and then back at his newspaper. “Can you hand me a pen?”
“You can read it first,” she said.
“Nah, if I can’t trust my mother, who can I?”
The sentiment was mutual. She was confident she knew him and that he was responsible. Still, his disappearance made her wonder if there was something going on in his life that she didn’t know about—something that got him into trouble after he was last seen in Germany.
Until the spring of 1989, Duncan MacPherson hadn’t had time to get into trouble because he’d devoted most of his waking hours to hockey. In the early eighties, while playing for the Saskatoon Blades, he showed great talent as a defenseman. Especially impressive were his devastating open-ice hits, and in 1984 he was a first round draft pick of the New York Islanders.
In spite of his early promise, five years after his triumph he learned that NHL glory was not to be his. In the spring of 1989, the Islanders didn’t renew his contract, which also ended his position on the Springfield Indians, the Islanders’ minor league team with whom he’d played in preparation for the national league. He handled the disappointment with rare grace for a twenty-three year old. Injuries were partly to blame, but he knew that his busted up body wasn’t the only reason. NHL players became steadily faster in the 1980s, leaving him behind the curve. In a television interview at the time he made no excuses.
“Down in the minors you play the best you can, and if you’re not meant to be a superstar, well, there’s nothing you can do about it,” he said with soft-spoken stoicism.
Lynda worried about him, but soon saw that he wasn’t taking it too hard. Part of him was relieved to be out from under the thumb of coaches, with their silly insistence that he give “one hundred and ten percent” to the sport. He also looked forward to hiking the Appalachian Trail—something he’d wanted to do for years. Like his father Bob, he loved the outdoors and often read books about adventure in the wilderness. For the long trip from Saskatoon to Germany, he took a copy of Touching the Void—a harrowing account of a British mountaineer named Joe Simpson who managed to survive plunging off a mountain and into a glacier crevasse.
Duncan felt a spiritual kinship with Simpson and his legendary pluck. Among his home town fans, he had achieved immortality one night at the Arena when the Regina Pats—a loathed rival of the Saskatoon Blades—showed up with a daunting new “enforcer.” An enforcer (also known as a “goon”) is a player more adept at fighting than passing and scoring, whose unofficial role is to intimidate the opposition. The Pats new enforcer was huge, and his team clearly relished the prospect of cowing the Blades on their home ice. Just before the match, the goon gave an interview to a Saskatoon paper in which he threw down the gauntlet: “I don’t really care about the score; I’m just looking forward to sorting out MacPherson.”
“What do you think, Dunc?” his teammates nervously asked in the locker room before the match.
“I’ll take care of him,” he replied, and sure enough, as soon as the puck dropped, he drifted over to the enforcer and attacked him. When Lynda saw him square off and remove his gloves, she covered her eyes, certain he was going to get killed by the much bigger boy, but to the incredulity and delight of his fans, he won the fight. Though she didn’t like violence, she was charmed by his indomitable spirit in the rink and the way it contrasted with his gentle, easy-going style outside of it.
After Duncan’s Appalachian Trail adventure, he returned to Saskatoon and promptly came down with a case of Lyme disease. At the end of what would prove a long convalescence, he found himself uncertain of what to do next. Some of his friends encouraged him to go for a position in Europe. One evening, while Lynda cooked dinner, he told her he’d been approached by a man who claimed to be a recruiter for the CIA and who asked him if he’d be interested in working for the agency. The Cold War was still on in the summer of 1989, and hockey players in Europe could cross the Iron Curtain with ease. Duncan said he thought it sounded like an intriguing job, but was reluctant to take it because it could require changing his identity and separating from his family.
Shortly thereafter he received another unusual proposal, this one from a Vancouver businessman with a mysterious past. Ron Dixon was his name, though it was rumored to be an alias, and he’d just bought a hockey team called the Tigers in the town of Dundee, Scotland. On the phone he offered Duncan the job of head coach with a generous salary. Given Duncan’s young age and the fact he’d never even met Dixon, he was surprised by the offer, and told his mother he thought it was maybe too good to be true. Dixon talked fast about his big plans, but was evasive about specifics.
“I’m afraid the guy’s a bit of a bull-shitter,” Duncan said.
In spite of his misgivings, he accepted the job, which was to start in mid-August. With an open schedule during the first half of the month, he decided to visit some old hockey friends who’d landed positions in Europe. At some point on his driving tour he’d phoned his boss, but it wasn’t clear from where and on what day he’d made the call. Dixon remembered having received it around 4:00 P.M. in Vancouver.