Jenny and Anne said their good-byes, and they all returned to the waiting area, where Cork explained things to Bullhead and the others. To Hank Wellington, he said, “Henry’s determined to stay here as long as Stephen wants him. What are you going to do?”
Wellington eyed the Ojibwe men, who’d cleared a plant off a table in preparation for dealing a hand of pinochle. “If these guys’ll let me, I’ll do my best to take their pennies.”
“Sit down, rich man,” Bullhead said. “You may know high finance, but when it comes to pennies, Indians always have the inside track.”
It was nearing four o’clock in the afternoon when Cork and his daughters climbed into the Land Rover and pulled away from the hospital. The sun hung low in the west. Rising below it was a bank of dark clouds. He turned on the radio, and just before they headed north out of Duluth, they heard the weather report: More snow was moving in, with significant totals possible before morning.
It had been a long day. They were quiet, drained. There’d been no sleep for any of them the night before, and Cork figured that for him, at least, there’d be no sleep in the night ahead. It seemed to him that he was trudging up an incline, with a great distance still to go before he reached the top.
And what was at the top? Walter Frogg. Frogg in handcuffs or Frogg dead.
“You’re not going home to rest, are you, Dad?” Jenny said.
She knew him too well.
“Miles to go before I sleep,” he replied, one of his favorite retorts.
“Frogg?” Anne asked.
Cork didn’t reply. He simply looked toward the west and thought that if he had any luck at all, a hard snow would add only a small measure of difficulty to what he was planning for that night.
CHAPTER 42
Skye had Waaboo bathed and in his pajamas when the O’Connors walked in the door.
“Mommy,” he cried and ran to Jenny’s waiting arms.
She lifted him and nuzzled his neck and said, “Did you and Skye have fun today?”
“We pwayed,” he said.
“You prayed?”
“No, pwayed. We pwayed wif Bart.”
Skye held up the stuffed orangutan. “All day.”
“Make him talk, Aunt Skye,” Waaboo said.
And she did. A wonderful monkey voice that had Waaboo laughing with delight.
Jenny thanked Skye, and Deputy Reese Weber, who was still on duty, and took her son upstairs to put him to bed.
“Any trouble?” Cork asked Weber.
“Except for Bart there, who’s a little bit of a rogue, everything’s been real quiet.”
“I made sandwiches for the gentlemen in the truck out front,” Skye said. “I used all your bologna. I hope that was okay.”
“If I’d had prime rib, I would have insisted they eat it,” Cork said. “I’ll go out in a minute and thank them myself. Isn’t it about time for a shift change, Reese?”
“Marsha called a few minutes ago. Ken Mercer is on his way to relieve me.”
“You go on back to the department. We’ll be fine until Ken gets here. Thanks, Reese. Thanks a million.”
“No trouble. Skye, you were a pleasure.” The deputy gave her a broad smile as he prepared and then departed.
“I can throw together some chili for dinner,” Anne said. “Any takers?”
“I could eat,” Cork replied. “But first I’m going out to see the Studemeyer brothers.”
As he descended the front porch steps, Cork could hear John Mellencamp blasting on the radio in the cab of the pickup. The windows were a little fogged, but when he looked inside he could see that both men were sleeping. He tapped on the glass, and they woke up. Wes lowered his window. The smell of beer and cigarettes rolled out from inside. Not much heat came with it, and both men sat bundled in their heavy parkas.
“You guys are off duty,” Cork said. “Go on home, get warm, and get some sleep. And next Saturday you’re coming to dinner here. I’ll grill you a couple of the juiciest steaks you ever ate.”
“How’s the boy?”
“He’ll be fine,” Cork said.
“Glad to hear that. Any more word on the bastard who shot him?”
“I’m just about to check in with the sheriff on that.”
“You need anything,” Randy said from the other side, but through a yawn, “you let us know.”
“I’m much obliged,” Cork said.
The Studemeyer brothers took off. Cork stood in the cold and felt the first flakes of the predicted snow light on his face. He looked up into the darkness of the night and the clouds, then stared down Gooseberry Lane, which was illuminated by streetlights, then at his house, which at the moment, held everything that was precious to him.
He would not let the threat go on any longer. He spoke to the darkness.
“Tonight,” he said, as if striking some kind of bargain. “Tonight, whatever it takes.”
He listened, but heard in reply only the sweep of the wind that was blowing in the next storm. Even so, he believed that something had changed. He sensed a deepening of the dark that had nothing to do with the night or the storm, a hardening that had nothing to do with the freezing cold.
He’d no sooner returned to the house than Dross called him on his cell phone.
“Azevedo’s back from Babbitt,” she told him.
“Anything?”
“Nothing helpful.”
“Is George still with you at the department?”
“Yes.”
“I’ll be right there.”
Anne and Skye were working together in the kitchen. The place already smelled of frying hamburger and onions and garlic and cumin.
“Ken Mercer should be here any minute,” he told them. “I’m heading over to the sheriff’s department.”
“How long will you be gone?” Anne asked.
“I don’t know.”
“What about dinner?”
“Save me some chili. I’ll eat when I get back.”
He turned away, ignoring the look she gave him, trying not to see in it the plea to be reasonable. He had not forgotten Meloux’s advice about letting go of anger for the sake of clarity in the hunt. Anger wasn’t what drove him now. It was something he didn’t know a name for, a force that overrode hunger and the need for sleep and any feeling of emotion. He was the blade of the guillotine. He was the lead in the executioner’s bullet.
Azevedo was with Dross in her office. Cork joined them and Azevedo gave his report. He’d talked with Joe Kovac, chief of police in Babbitt. Frogg’s cousin, Eustis Hancock, was a troublemaker, always on Kovac’s radar. Hancock had done hard time, and a lawman’s badge didn’t mean much to him. The chief had insisted on going along on the interview. Azevedo admitted that he was grateful for the backup.
Cork cut to the chase. “You got no cooperation from Hancock?”
“He stonewalled us.”
“Any sign of Frogg’s presence?”
“Nothing on the outside of the property. Hancock never let us in the door. We’ll need a warrant for that, and we’ve got no evidence at the moment that would get us one.”
“How tough were you in your questioning?”
“I didn’t hit him with a rubber hose, if that’s what you’re getting at.”
“Did you get any sense if he was lying?”
“I think lying is so second nature to that guy he wouldn’t recognize the truth if it put a finger up his nose. So no, I didn’t get a sense that he was trying to hide anything with particular regard to his cousin.”
Dross said, “Okay, where does that leave us?”
Azevedo replied, “Kovac will keep an eye out for Frogg’s pickup, have his guys cruise by Hancock’s place regularly to see if they spot anything. Beyond that, not much we can do at the moment.”
The deputy looked tired. Dross looked tired. It had been a long day for both of them. Hell, several long days since Evelyn Carter first went missing. Cork understood they were doing their best. It just wasn’t good enough.
He said, “Can you give me directions to Hancock’s place?”