“You going to open it?” Jesse asked.
Louis pushed open the thin door. The wind whipped in from behind him and he could hear a flutter of papers inside. The shanty was dim and Louis reached for the flashlight on his belt, shining it around the inside.
It was small, about ten feet by ten feet, made of cracked wood. Directly in the center, next to a hole in the ice, sat an old wing-backed chair. Next to it was a TV tray table holding a Coleman lantern. A generator-fueled space heater occupied one corner, a warped Styrofoam cooler another. The ice floor was covered with green Astroturf, littered with cigarette butts, beef jerky wrappers and Pabst cans.
Louis went in, swinging the flashlight up over the walls. They were festooned with fishing gear. There was also a Black and Decker chain saw, an Indian blanket and a sheepskin bota.
“Louis, look.”
Louis turned the light on Jesse, who was kneeling by the fishing hole. On one jagged edge there were dark stains.
Louis knelt, shining the light on the hole. It was blood. He trained the light back up on the chair. There was a small stain on the seat, as black as the water in the ice hole.
“This is where he was shot,” Louis said.
“Here? But he was found up near the shore,” Jesse said.
Louis stood up and pointed the flashlight at the chair and then down at the hole. “See the blood pattern? He was shot sitting in that chair. Then my guess is he was put down that hole.”
Jesse stared at the ice hole. “Goddamn,” he said. “Someone shot him and stuffed him down this fucking hole. Just stuffed him down there. Jesus H. Christ.” He turned abruptly and stood at the door, facing outward.
“Jess? What’s that?”
Jesse turned in the direction of Louis’s flashlight beam. It had picked up an iron bar lying by the chair.
“It’s a spud bar. You use it to chisel a hole in the ice.”
Louis knelt to examine the bar. Fred Lovejoy had weighed well over two hundred pounds. Chances were the killer hadn’t had the patience to use this to hack out a hole big enough for a body. Louis focused the light up on the chain saw hanging on the wall. “And that?”
Jesse glanced at the saw. “Lazy guys use a saw. It’s cleaner.”
“And faster,” Louis said dryly.
Jesse was staring down into the hole. “I don’t get it. Why in hell would someone bother to do this? I mean, why not just leave the body here?”
“Maybe to buy time,” Louis said. “By spending ten extra minutes cutting the hole, he bought himself enough time for evidence to decay, witnesses to begin to forget. The trail goes cold and the case gets harder to solve.”
Louis walked to the door and faced the bloody chair, forming and imaginary shotgun in his arms.
“Think he knew his killer?” Jesse asked.
Louis lowered his arms. “Hard to say. I think the killer walked right up on him just like with Pryce.” Louis shook his head. “But Lovejoy was a trained cop. How could somebody get the drop on him so easily?” He paused. “Maybe he did know him.”
Jesse picked up a beer can by the small opening. “Or maybe Fred was too drunk to react. Fred did like to drink. And people around here don’t expect trouble. Not even us.”
“Well, Pryce did,” Louis said. “He had his gun drawn.”
They were silent for several moments. Then Louis began a slow sweep of the floor with his flashlight.
“What you looking for? A shell?” Jesse asked.
“No, a card.”
Jesse stared at him for a moment then reluctantly began to do the same. For several minutes there was no sound except for their breathing.
“Damn, it has to be here,” Louis said.
“Maybe it’s up in the house,” Jesse said.
Louis shook his head. “He left the other one right by Pryce’s body.”
“Maybe it fell in the hole.”
“That would be just our luck.” Louis spotted a magazine near the far wall and bent down to look at it more closely. It was the Sunday magazine of the New York Times, dated November 24. It was open to the crossword, which was nearly finished.
“He was doing a crossword puzzle when he was shot,” Louis said.
Jesse looked over at him. “Fred was a crossword freak. He was always working on those damn things.”
Louis knelt and used the end of his flashlight to flip the magazine aside. “Bingo,” he said.
The card was lying face down. Louis guessed it had been swept against the wall with the magazine when he opened the door. Fishing a pen from his jacket, he used it to turn the card over.
“Ten of hearts,” Louis said. He rose, his gaze traveling around the shanty. “There’s got to be a connection,” he said.
“Connection?” Jesse asked.
“Pryce was an active cop, but Lovejoy was retired. What’s the connection?”
“They’re both cops,” Jesse said.
“It’s got to be more than that,” Louis said. “We’ve got to search that cabin, top to bottom.”
He turned. Jesse was shaking his head.
“It’s there, Jess. All we have to do is — ”
“I’m not going back in there,” Jesse interrupted, turning away. He took a deep breath. “I’m not going back in there.”
The sound of a siren drew Louis’s attention before he could reply.
“Chief’s here,” Jesse said quickly, leaving the shanty.
Louis emerged just as the Bronco pulled up in front of the cabin. Gibralter got out and started toward the front door.
“Chief! Out here!” Jesse called.
Gibralter stopped and turned, peering toward them. He started down the snowy bank and across the ice.
“How long was Fred retired?” Louis asked as they waited.
“About two years,” Jesse said. “Fred trained me. I liked the guy. Everybody did. Even the Chief.”
“The chief?”
Jesse nodded slowly. “They were friends, sort of. After Fred retired, they went fishing together sometimes.”
They fell silent.
“Jess, about the cabin,” Louis began.
“Drop it,” Jesse said sharply, and walked off toward Gibralter.
Louis frowned as he watched him go. What was going on here? What had caused Jesse’s reaction in the cabin? And why was he refusing to go back in? Then it came to him. Jesse hadn’t been sick from the smell. He was scared. Two of his colleagues had been gunned down. And for all any of them knew, whoever had done it wasn’t finished.
Gibralter and Jesse came back to Louis. “What’s going on?” Gibralter said, his eyes scanning the shanty.
“This is where Lovejoy was shot,” Louis said.
Gibralter’s eyes registered surprise. “Here? How do you know?”
But he didn’t wait for an answer. He stepped around Louis and looked inside the open door of the shanty. “Kincaid, hand me your flashlight,” he said.
Gibralter stepped inside, directing the flashlight over the chair and the jagged hole with its bloody edge. Then he slowly backed out of the shanty and turned to face Jesse and Louis.
“Fred was a good man. I could count on him,” Gibralter said tightly. He looked away abruptly, his eyes going back to the cabin, then up at the pines rimming the lake.
Louis watched him carefully, looking for a reaction, not just of a chief for a downed comrade but for a man mourning a dead friend. But Gibralter’s face remained composed and Louis didn’t know whether to feel pity or admiration.
“I want this entire area secured and searched thoroughly,” Gibralter said. “From the cabin to those trees.”
Louis scanned the shoreline. The area had to be at least a mile square. He caught Jesse’s eye and knew he was thinking the same thing. Gibralter was grasping at straws.
“Harrison, has Cedar Springs been notified?” Gibralter said.
“Yes, sir.”
Gibralter knelt and brushed a layer of powdery snow away from the ice. Visible on the surface were a few dark spots Louis thought at first might be blood. Gibralter stood, took a deep breath and blew it out in a white vapor. He looked at the sky.