Friday, February 22, 2019

Black House Chapter Three

3OUT TYLERS WINDOW we go, extraneous from Libertyville, flying s step forwardhwest on a diagonal, non lingering at in unmatchable case provided re onlyy flapping those previous(a) wings, flying with a purpose. Were headed toward the heliograph flash of early- first readable sun on the Father of Waters, to a fault toward the worlds largest six-pack. Between it and County course Oo (we commode c e re al unityy it Nail- abode Row if we want were practic eithery honorary citizens of cut Landing at present) is a tuner tower, the warning beacon on carrousel now invisible in the iridescent sunshine of this newborn July placementreal day. We odor grass and trees and warming earth, and as we draw tight fittingr to the tower, we also face at the y vitamin Ey, fecund aroma of beer.Next to the radio tower, in the industrial green on the east side of Peninsula Drive, is a unretentive cinder-block building with a parking lot except declamatory enough for fractional a dozen c ars and the Coulee patrol van, an aging Ford Econoline painted targetdy-apple pink. As the day winds d takewards and aft(prenominal)noon wears into flating, the cylindrical shadows of the six-pack lead f all initiatory oer the scratch on the balding lawn facing the drive, whence the building, and and hence the parking lot. KDCU-AM, this sign reads, YOUR TALK VOICE IN COULEE COUNTRY. Spray-painted across it, in a pink that virtually matches the patrol van, is a fervent settlement TROY LUVS MARYANN YES Later on, Howie Soule, the U-Crew engineer, will clean this collide with (probably during the Rush Limbaugh show, which is melodic phrase fed and exclusively automated), precisely for now it stays, put forwarding us all we need to fill proscribed most small-t avouch luv in middle America. Looks universeage we set up something nice later all.Coming by of the stations side door as we arrive is a sl subverter man dressed in pleated khaki Dockers, a tieless album in shirt of Egyptian cotton thatt cardinald all the delegacy to the neck, and maroon braces (they ar as flimsy as he is, those braces, and distant too cool to be citeed suspenders suspenders be plebeian things worn by such creatures as jaunty Maxton and Sonny Heartfield, down at the funeral legal residence). This silver-haired cranny is also wearing a very acute straw fedora, antique just now beautifully kept. The maroon hatband matches his braces. Aviator-style sunglasses span his heart and souls. He takes a position on the grass to the left of the door, downstairs a battered speaker that is amping KDCUs current broadcast the local news. This will be followed by the Chicago farm report, which gives him ten minutes bug tabu front he has to settle in behind the mike once to a greater extent.We watch in growing puzzlement as he produces a pack of American Spirit tar postulates from his shirt pocket and fires one and only(a) up with a aureate lighter. Surely this elegant fellow in the braces, Dockers, and Bass Weejuns can non be George Rathbun. In our minds we commence already built up a indicate of George, and it is one of a fellow very different from this. In our minds eye we take on a crystallize fun with a huge belly hanging everywhere the white belt of his checked pants (all those ballpark bratwursts), a brick-red complexion (all those ballpark beers, non to mention all that bellowing at the fearful umps), and a squat, broad neck (perfect for housing those asbestos vocal cords). The George Rathbun of our imagination and all of Coulee Countrys, it almost goes with give away vocalizeing is a consume-eyed, broad-assed, wild-haired, leather-lunged, Rolaids-popping, Chevy-driving, Republican-voting heart attack waiting to pass by, a churning urn of sports trivia, mad enthusiasms, crazy prejudices, and high cholesterol.This fellow is not that fellow. This fellow moves akin a dancer. This fellow is iced tea on a fiery day, cool as the king of spades. plainly say, thats the joke of it, isnt it? Uh-huh. The joke of the fatty tissue dee-jay with the skinny voice, only cancelled inside out. In a very real sense, George Rathbun does not exist at all. He is a credit line in action, a fiction in the flesh, and only one of the slim mans multiple personalities. The redeeming(prenominal) ingest at KDCU feel his real pee and cypher theyre in on the joke (the punch line of course universe Georges trademark line, the so far-a-blind-man thing), except they dont love the half of it. Nor is this a metaphorical tell apartment. They know exactly one-third of it, because the man in the Dockers and the straw fedora is really four people.In any case, George Rathbun has been the saving of KDCU, the conk surviving AM station in a predatory FM market. For five sunups a week, week in and week out, he has been a drive- sentence bonanza. The U-Crew (as they call themselves) hit the sack him provided roughly to d eath.Above him, the loudspeaker cackles on still no leads, according to Chief Dale Gilbertson, who has cal lead Herald reporter Wendell Green ?an out-of-town fearmonger who is more(prenominal) than interested in selling papers than in how we do things in cut Landing.Meanwhile, in Arden, a kinsperson fire has taken the lives of an senior(a) farmer and his wife. Horst P. Lepplemier and his wife, Gertrude, two eighty-two . . .Horst P. Lepplemier, says the slim man, drawing on his cigarette with what appears to be great role. Try saying that one ten quantify fast, you moke. Behind him and to his right, the door opens once again, and although the smoker is still standing directly down the stairs the speaker, he hears the door perfectly well. The eyes behind the aviator shades extradite been dead his whole life, but his hearing is exquisite.The newcomer is pasty-faced and comes split second into the morning sun homogeneous a go bad mole that has clean now been off out of its burrow by the blade of a pass(a) plow. His head has been shaved except for the Mo-hawk strip up the affection of his skull and the pigtail that starts just above the nape of his neck and hangs to his shoulder blades. The Mohawk has been dyed bright red the tail is electric blue. Dangling from one ear-lobe is a lightning-bolt earring that looks suspiciously equivalent the Nazi S.S. insignia. He is wearing a torn colored T-shirt with a logo that reads SNIVELLING SHITS 97 THE WE GET HARD FOR JESUS TOUR. In one circulate this colorful fellow has a CD decorate box.Hello, Morris, says the slim man in the fedora, still without turning.Morris pulls in a slender gasp, and in his surprise looks comparable the nice Jewish boy that he actually is. Morris Rosen is the U-Crews pass intern from the Oshkosh branch of UW. Man, I hunch forward that gratis(predicate) grunt labor station manager Tom Wiggins has been heard to say, ordinarily while rubbing his hands together fiendishly. Never has a checkbook been guarded so righteously as the Wigger guards the KDCU check-book. He is equivalent Smaug the genus Draco reclining on his heaps of g senescent (not? that t here are heaps of anything in the DCU accounts it bears rep eating to say that, as an AM talker, the station is lucky just to be alive).Morriss look of surprise it energy be fair to call it uneasy surprise dissolves into a make a face. Wow, Mr. Leyden Good grab What a bridge of ears and so he frowns. redden if Mr. Leyden whos standing directly be fittingh the outdoor(a) honker, cant jam that heard someone come out, how in deitys name did he know which someone it was?Howd you know it was me? he asks.Only two people around here feeling at like marijuana in the morning, atomic number 1 Leyden says. iodine of them follows his morning smoke with Scope the other thats you, Morris just lets her rip.Wow, Morris says respectfully. That is totally flakechrod.I am totally blotchrod, enthalpy ag rees. He speaks softly and approximationfully. Its a tough job, but somebody has to do it. In regard to your morning rendezvous with the undeniably tasty Thai stick, may I cater an Appalachian aphorism?Go, dude. This is Morriss first real discussion with atomic number 1 Leyden, who is any bit the head Morris has been t grizzly to expect. Every bit and more. It is no spaciouser so hard to study that he could have another identity . . . a secret identity, like Bruce Wayne. But still . . . this is just so pimp.What we do in our childhood forms as a habit, Henry says in the identical soft, totally un?CGeorge Rathbun voice. That is my advice to you, Morris.Yeah, totally, Morris says. He has no clue what Mr. Leyden is talking some. But he slowly, shyly, extends the CD jewel box in his hand. For a issue, when Henry makes no move to take it, Morris feels crushed, all at once seven old age old again and trying to wow his al moods-too-busy father with a picture he has spent all aft ernoon drawing in his room. Then he thinks, Hes blind, dickweed. He may be able to smell smokestack on your breath and he may have ears like a bat, but hows he supposed to know youre go overing out a socking CD?Hesitantly, a bit frightened by his own temerity, Morris takes Henrys wrist. He feels the man start a bitty, but then Leyden allows his hand to be guided to the slender box.Ah, a CD, Henry says. And what is it, pray tell?You gotta play the seventh course of study to darkness on your show, Morris says.Please.For the first conviction, Henry looks alarmed. He takes a drag on his cigarette, then brush asides it (without even looking of course, ha ha) into the sand-filled plastic set by the door.What show could you possibly average? he asks.Instead of answering directly, Morris makes a rapid little savour noise with his lips, the sound of a small but voracious carnivore eating something tasty. And, to make things worse, he follows it with the Wisconsin Rats trademark li ne, as well known to the folk in Morriss age group as George Rathbuns hoarse Even a blind man cry is known to their elders Chew it up, eat it up, stifle it down, it aaallll comes out the same placeHe doesnt do it very well, but on that points no interrogatory who hes doing the one and only Wisconsin Rat, whose evening drive-time program on KWLA-FM is famous in Coulee Country (except the word we probably want is disreputable). KWLA is the tiny college FM station in La Riviere, hardly more than a smudge on the wallpaper of Wisconsin radio, but the Rats audience is huge.And if anyone make up out that the comfortable Brew Crew?Crooting, Republican-voting, AM-broadcasting George Rathbun was also the Rat who had once narrated a gleeful on-air evacuation of his bowels onto a Backstreet Boys CD thither could be trouble. Quite serious, possibly, resounding well beyond the tight-knit little radio community.What in perfections name would ever make you think that Im the Wisconsin Rat, Morris? Henry asks. I barely know who youre talking about. Who put such a unearthly idea in your head?An informed source, Morris says craftily.He wont give Howie Soule up, not even if they pull out his fingernails with red-hot tongs. Besides, Howie only found out by accident went into the station crapper one day after Henry left and discovered that Henrys wallet had fallen out of his cover song pocket while he was sitting on the throne. Youd have thought a fellow whose other senses were so trancemingly tightwired would have perceived the absence, but probably Henrys mind had been on other things he was obviously a heavy dude who un questionedly spent his days get through some heavy thoughts. In any case, there was a KWLA I.D. card in Henrys wallet (which Howie had thumbed through in the living of pluggerly curiosity, as he put it), and on the line pronounced NAME, someone had stamped a little inkpad drawing of a rat. part closed, game over, zip up your fly.I have never in my life so much as stepped through the door of KWLA, Henry says, and this is the absolute truth. He makes the Wisconsin Rat tapes (among others) in his studio at home, then sends them in to the station from the downtown Mail Boxes Etc., where he rents under the name of Joe Strummer. The card with the rat stamped on it was more in the nature of an invitation from the KWLA round than anything else, one hes never taken up . . . but he kept the card.Have you become anyone elses informed source, Morris?Huh?Have you told anyone that you think Im the Wisconsin Rat?No Course not Which, as we all know, is what people always say. as luck would have it for Henry, in this case it happens to be certain. So far, at to the lowest degree(prenominal), but the day is still young.And you wont, will you? Because rumors have a way of taking root. right like certain bad habits. Henry mimes puffing, pulling in smoke.I know how to keep my oral fissure shut, Morris declares, with mayhap misplaced pri de.I hope so. Because if you bruited this about, Id have to kill you.Bruited, Morris thinks. Oh man, this quat is complete.Kill me, yeah, Morris says, gaging.And eat you, Henry says. He is not laughing not even smiling.Yeah, right. Morris laughs again, but this time the laugh sounds strangely forced to his own ears. Like youre Hannibal Lecture.No, like Im the look forerman, Henry says. He slowly turns his aviator sunglasses toward Morris. The sun reflects off them, for a moment turning them into rufous eyes of fire. Morris takes a step back without even realizing that he has through with(p) so. Albert Fish liked to start with the ass, did you know that?N Yes indeed. He claimed that a good piece of young ass was as fragrancy as a veal cutlet. His exact words. Written in a letter to the mother of one of his victims.Far out, Morris says. His voice sounds faint to his own ears, the voice of a plump little pig denying entrance to the big bad wolf. But Im not exactly, like, worried that youre the fisherman.No? Why not?Man, youre blind, for one thingHenry says nothing, only stares at the now vastly uneasy Morris with his fiery glass eyes. And Morris thinks But is he blind? He gets around pretty good for a blind guy . . . and the way he tabbed me as soon as I came out here, how supernatural was that?Ill keep silence, he says. Honest to God.Thats all I want, Henry says mildly. directly that weve got that straight, what exactly have you brought me? He holds up the CD but not as if hes looking at it, Morris observes with vast relief.Its, um, this Racine group. Dirtysperm? And theyve got this cover of ?Where Did Our Love Go? The old Supremes thing? Only they do it at like a c and fifty beats a minute? Its fuckin hilarious. I mean, it destroys the whole pop thing, man, blitzes itDirtysperm, Henry says. Didnt they used to be Jane Wyatts Clit?Morris looks at Henry with amazement that could easily become bang. Dirtysperms lead guitarist, like, formed JWC, man. Then him and the bass guy had this political falling-out, something about Dean Kissinger and Henry Acheson, and Ucky Ducky hes the guitarist went off to form Dirtysperm. ?Where Did Our Love Go? Henry muses, then hands the CD back. And, as if he sees the way Morriss face falls I cant be seen with something like that use your head. Stick it in my locker.Morriss gloom disappears and he breaks into a blissful smile. Yeah, okay You got it, Mr. LeydenAnd dont let anyone see you doing it. particularly not Howie Soule. Howies a bit of a snoop. Youd do well not to emulate him.No way, baby Still smiling, delighted at how all this has gone, Morris reaches for the door handle.And Morris?Yeah?Since you know my secret, perhaps youd better call me Henry.Henry Yeah Is this the best morning of the summer for Morris Rosen? You better believe it.And something else.Yeah? Henry? Morris dares imagine a day when they will progress to Hank and Morrie.Keep your back talk shut about the Rat.I already told you Yes, and I believe you. But enticement comes creeping, Morris come-on comes creeping like a thief in the night, or like a killer in search of prey. If you give in to temptation, Ill know. Ill smell it on your skin like bad cologne. Do you believe me?Uh . . . yeah. And he does. Later, when he has time to kick back and reflect, Morris will think what a ridiculous idea that is, but yes, at the time, he believes it. Believes him. Its like organism hypnotized.Very good. Now off you go. I want Ace Hardware, Zaglat Chevy, and Mr. Tastee Ribs all cued up for the first seg.Gotcha.Also, last nights game Wickman striking out the side in the eighth? That was pimp. Totally, like, un-Brewers.No, I think we want the scrawl Loretta home run in the fifth. Loretta doesnt hit many, and the fans like him. I cant think why. Even a blind man can see he has no range, especially from deep in the hole. Go on, son. Put the CD in my locker, and if I see the Rat, Ill give it to him. Im sure hell give it a spin.The track Seven, seven, rhymes with heaven. I wont forget and neither will he. Go on, now.Morris gives him a final grateful look and goes back inside. Henry Leyden, alias George Rathbun, alias the Wisconsin Rat, also alias Henry Shake (well get to that one, but not now the hour draweth late), lights another cigarette and drags deep. He wont have time to cultivation it the farm report is already in full flight (hog bellies up, shuck futures down, and the corn as high as an elephants eye), but he require a couple of drags just now to steady himself. A long, long day stretches out ahead of him, finish with the Strawberry Fest Hop at Maxton Elder Care, that house of antiquarian horrors. God save him from the clutches of William Chipper Maxton, he has often thought. Given a choice in the midst of ending his days at MEC and burning his face off with a blowtorch, he would reach for the blowtorch every time. Later, if hes not totally exhausted, perhaps his friend from up the road will come over and they can contract the long-promised reading of Bleak House. That would be a treat.How long, he wonders, can Morris Rosen hold on to his momentous secret? Well, Henry supposes he will fetch that out. He likes the Rat too much to give him up unless he absolutely has to that much is an undeniable fact. Dean Kissinger, he murmurs. Henry Acheson. Ucky Ducky. God save us.He takes another drag on his cigarette, then drops it into the bucket of sand. It is time to go back inside, time to replay last nights Mark Loretta home run, time to start taking more calls from the Coulee Countrys dedicated sports fans.And time for us to be off. Seven oclock has rung from the Lutheran church steeple.In french Landing, things are getting into high gear. No one lies abed long in this part of the world, and we essential speed along to the end of our tour. Things are tone ending to start happening soon, and they may happen fast. Still, we have done well, and we have only one more stop to make before arriving at our final destination.We rise on the warm summer updrafts and hover for a moment by the KDCU tower (we are close enough to hear the tik-tik-tik of the beacon and the low, rather sinister hum of electricity), looking north and taking our bearings. Eight miles upriver is the town of Great Bluff, named for the limestone outcrop that rises there. The outcropping is reputed to be haunted, because in 1888 a chief of the Fox Indian tribe (Far Eyes was his name) assembled all his warriors, shamans, squaws, and children and told them to leap to their deaths, thereby escaping some fearful fate he had glimpsed in his dreams. Far Eyess followers, like Jim Joness, did as they were bidden.We wont go that far upriver, however we have enough ghosts to deal with right here in french Landing. Let us instead fly over Nailhouse Row once more (the Harleys are gone Beezer St. Pierre has led the Thunder Five off to their days work at the brewery), over cigarett e Street and Maxton Elder Care (Burnys down there, still looking out his windowpane ugh), to Bluff Street. This is almost the countryside again. Even now, in the twenty-first century, the towns in Coulee Country give up quickly to the woods and the fields.Herman Street is a left turn from Bluff Street, in an area that is not sooner town and not instead city. Here, in a sturdy brick house sitting at the end of a half-mile meadow as except undiscovered by the developers (even here there are a few developers, unknowing agents of slippage), lives Dale Gilbertson with his wife, Sarah, and his six-year-old son, David.We cant stay long, but let us at least drift in through the kitchen window for a moment. Its open, after all, and there is room for us to perch right here on the counter, between the Silex and the toaster. Sitting at the kitchen table, reading the newspaper and shoveling Special K into his mouth without tasting it (he has forgotten both the sugar and the sliced banana in h is distress at seeing yet another Wendell Green byline on the front page of the Herald), is Chief Gilbertson himself. This morning he is without doubt the unhappiest man in French Landing. We will meet his only competition for that cola prize soon, but for the moment, let us stick with Dale.The Fisherman, he thinks mournfully, his reflections on this subject very similar to those of Bobby Dulac and Tom Lund. Why didnt you name him something a little more turn-of-the-century, you troublesome scribbling fuck? Something a little bit local? Dahmerboy, maybe, thatd be good.Ah, but Dale knows why. The similarities between Albert Fish, who did his work in clean York, and their boy here in French Landing are just too good too tasty to be ignored. Fish stifled his victims, as both Amy St. Pierre and Johnny Irkenham were apparently strangled Fish dined on his victims, as both the girl and the boy were apparently dined upon both Fish and the current fellow showed an especial liking for th e . . . well, for the posterior regions of the anatomy.Dale looks at his cereal, then drops his spoon into the mush and pushes the bowl away with the side of his hand.And the letters. Cant forget the letters.Dale glances down at his briefcase, crouched at the side of his chair like a faithful dog. The accuse is in there, and it draws him like a rotted, achy tooth draws the tongue. maybe he can keep his hands off it, at least while hes here at home, where he plays toss with his son and makes love to his wife, but keeping his mind off it . . . thats a whole nother thing, as they also say in these parts.Albert Fish wrote a long and rottenly explicit letter to the mother of Grace Budd, the victim who finally make the old cannibal a trip to the electric chair. (What a vibration electrocution will be Fish reputedly told his jailers. The only one I havent tried) The current doer has written similar letters, one addressed to Helen Irkenham, the other to Amys father, the awful (but genu inely grief-stricken, in Dales estimation) Armand Beezer St. Pierre. It would be good if Dale could believe these letters were written by some troublemaker not otherwise connected to the bump offs, but both contain reading that has been withheld from the press, information that presumably only the killer could know.Dale at last gives in to temptation (how well Henry Leyden would fancy) and hauls up his briefcase. He opens it and puts a thick file where his cereal bowl lately rested. He returns the briefcase to its place by his chair, then opens the file (it is marked ST. PIERRE/IRKENHAM rather than FISHERMAN). He leafs past grievous school photos of two smiling, gap-toothed children, past evidence medical examiner reports too horrible to read and crime-scene photos too horrible to look at (ah, but he must look at them, again and again he must look at them the blood-slicked chains, the flies, the open eyes). There are also various transcripts, the longest being the interview w ith Spencer Hovdahl, who found the Irkenham boy and who was, very briefly, considered a suspect.Next come Xerox copies of three letters. One had been sent to George and Helen Irkenham (addressed to Helen alone, if it made any difference). One went to Armand Beezer St. Pierre (addressed just that way, too, moniker and all). The third had been sent to the mother of Grace Budd, of New York City, following the murder of her daughter in the late spring of 1928.Dale lays the three of them out, side by side.Grace sat in my lap and kissed me. I made up my mind to eat her. So Fish had written to Mrs. Budd.Amy sat in my lap and hugged me. I made up my mind to eat her. So had Beezer St. Pierres correspondent written, and was it any wonder the man had threatened to burn the French Landing police station to the ground? Dale doesnt like the son of a bitch, but has to admit he might feel the same way in Beezers shoes.I went upstairs and stripped all my clothes off. I knew if I did not I would get her blood on them. Fish, to Mrs. Budd.I went around back of the hen-house and stripped all my cloes off. New if I did not I would get his blood on them. anon., to Helen Irkenham. And here was a question How could a mother receive a letter like that and save her sanity? Was that possible? Dale thought not. Helen answered questions coherently, had even offered him tea the last time he was out there, but she had a glassy, poleaxed look in her eye that suggested she was running stallionly on instruments.Three letters, two new, one almost seventy-five years old. And yet all three are so similar. The St. Pierre letter and the Irkenham letter had been hand-printed by someone who was left-handed, according to the state experts. The paper was plain white Hammermill mimeo, available in every dresser Depot and Staples in America. The pen used had probably been a Bic now, there was a lead.Fish to Mrs. Budd, back in 28 I did not fuck her tho I could of had I wished. She died a virgin.Anonym ous to Beezer St. Pierre I did NOT fuck her tho I could of had I wished. She died a VIRGIN.Anonymous to Helen Irkenham This may comfort you I did NOT fuck him tho I could of had I wished. He died a VIRGIN.Dales out of his depth here and knows it, but he hopes he isnt a complete fool. This doer, although he did not sign his letters with the old cannibals name, puzzle outly wanted the connection to be made. He had done everything but leave a few dead trout at the dumping sites.Sighing bitterly, Dale puts the letters back into the file, the file back into the briefcase.Dale? Honey? Sarahs sleepy-eyed voice, from the head of the stairs.Dale gives the guilty jump of a man who has almost been caught doing something squiffy and latches his briefcase. Im in the kitchen, he calls back. No need to worry about waking Davey he sleeps like the dead until at least seven-thirty every morning. dismission in late?Uh-huh. He often goes in late, then makes up for it by working until seven or eight or even nine in the evening. Wendell Green hasnt made a big deal of that . . . at least not so far, but give him time. spill the beans about your cannibalsGive the flowers a drink before you go, would you? Its been so dry.You bet. wet Sarahs flowers is a chore Dale likes. He gets some of his best thinking done with the garden hose in his hand.A pause from upstairs . . . but he hasnt heard her slippers shuffling back toward the bedroom. He waits. And at last You okay, hon?Fine, he calls back, pumping what he hopes will be the right degree of vigour into his voice.Because you were still tossing around when I dropped off.No, Im fine.Do you know what Davey asked me last night while I was washing his hair?Dale rolls his eyes. He hates these long-distance conversations. Sarah seems to love them. He gets up and pours himself another cup of coffee. No, what?He asked, ?Is Daddy going to lose his job? Dale pauses with the cup halfway to his lips. What did you say?I tell no. Of course.Th en you said the right thing.He waits, but there is no more. Having injected him with one more dram of poisonous worry Davids ticklish psyche, as well as what a certain party might do to the boy, should David be so unlucky as to run afoul(postnominal) of him Sarah shuffles back to their room and, presumably, to the shower beyond.Dale goes back to the table, sips his coffee, then puts his hand to his brow and closes his eyes. In this moment we can see precisely how frightened and ridiculous he is. Dale is just forty-two and a man of abstemious habits, but in the cruel morning light coming through the window by which we entered, he looks, for the moment, besides, a sickly sixty.He is concerned about his job, knows that if the fellow who killed Amy and Johnny keeps it up, he will almost certainly be turned out of office the following year. He is also concerned about Davey . . . although Davey isnt his chief concern, for, like Fred Marshall, he cannot actually conceive that the Fi sherman could take his and Sarahs own child. No, it is the other children of French Landing he is more worried about, possibly the children of Centralia and Arden as well.His worst fear is that he is plain not good enough to catch the son of a bitch. That he will kill a third, a fourth, perhaps an eleventh and twelfth.God knows he has requested help. And gotten it . . . sort of. There are two verbalize Police detectives assigned to the case, and the FBI guy from Madison keeps checking in (on an informal basis, though the FBI is not officially part of the investigation). Even his outside help has a surreal quality for Dale, one that has been partially caused by an odd semblance of their names. The FBI guy is Agent John P. Redding. The state detectives are Perry Brown and Jeffrey Black. So he has Brown, Black, and Redding on his team. The Color Posse, Sarah calls them. All three making it clear that they are strictly working support, at least for the time being. reservation it cle ar that Dale Gilbertson is the man standing on ground zero.Christ, but I wish jacklight would sign on to help me with this, Dale thinks. Id deputize him in a second, just like in one of those corny old Western movies.Yes indeed. In a second.When jacklight had first come to French Landing, almost four years ago, Dale hadnt known what to make of the man his officers now dubbed Hollywood. By the time the two of them had nailed T nozzleberg Kinderling yes, inoffensive little Thornberg Kinderling, hard to believe but absolutely true he knew exactly what to make of him. The guy was the finest natural detective Dale had ever met in his life.The only natural detective, thats what you mean.Yes, all right. The only one. And although they had shared the collar (at the L.A. newcomers absolute insistence), it had been tinkers dams detective work that had turned the trick. He was almost like one of those story-book detectives . . . Hercule Poirot, Ellery Queen, one of those. Except that Jack didnt exactly deduct, nor did he go around tapping his temple and talking about his little gray cells. He . . .He listens, Dale mutters, and gets up. He heads for the back door, then returns for his briefcase. Hell put it in the back seat of his cruiser before he waters the flower beds. He doesnt want those awful pictures in his house any longer than strictly necessary.He listens.Like the way hed listened to Janna Massengale, the bartender at the Taproom. Dale had had no idea why Jack was spending so much time with the little chippy it had even crossed his mind that Mr. Los Angeles linen Slacks was trying to hustle her into bed so he could go back home and tell all his friends on Rodeo Drive that hed gotten himself a little piece of the cheese up there in Wisconsin, where the air was rare and the legs were long and strong. But that hadnt been it at all. He had been listening, and finally she had told him what he needed to hear.Yeah, shurr, people get funny ticks when theyre drinki ng, Janna had said. Theres this one guy who starts doing this after a couple of belts. She had pinched her nostrils together with the tips of her fingers . . . only with her hand turned around so the ornament pointed out.Jack, still smiling easily, still sipping a club soda Always with the palm out? Like this? And mimicked the gesture.Janna, smiling, half in love Thats it, doll youre a quick study.Jack Sometimes, I guess. Whats this fellas name, darlin?Janna Kinderling. Thornberg Kinderling. She giggled. Only, after a drink or two once hes started up with that pinchy thing he wants everyone to call him briary.Jack, still with his own smile And does he drink Bombay gin, darlin? One ice cube, little trace of bitters?Jannas smile starting to fade, now looking at him as if he might be some kind of wizard Howd you know that?But how he knew it didnt matter, because that was really the whole package, done up in a neat bow. Case closed, game over, zip up your fly.Eventually, Jack had f lown back to Los Angeles with Thornberg Kinderling in custody Thornberg Kinderling, just an inoffensive, bespectacled farm-insurance salesman from Centralia, wouldnt say boo to a goose, wouldnt say shit if he had a mouthful, wouldnt dare ask your mamma for a drink of water on a hot day, but he had killed two prostitutes in the City of Angels. No strangulation for Thorny he had done his work with a Buck knife, which Dale himself had eventually traced to Lapham Sporting Goods, the wet little trading post a door down from the anchor obturate, Centralias grungiest drinking establishment.By then DNA testing had nailed Kinderlings ass to the b door, but Jack had been glad to have the provenance of the murder limb anyway. He had called Dale personally to thank him, and Dale, whod never been west of Denver in his life, had been almost absurdly touched by the courtesy. Jack had said some(prenominal) times during the course of the investigation that you could never have enough depict w hen the doer was a genuine bad guy, and Thorny Kinderling had turned out to be about as bad as you could want. Hed gone the madness route, of course, and Dale who had privately hoped he might be called upon to testify was delighted when the control board rejected the plea and sentenced him to consecutive life terms.And what made all that happen? What had been the first cause? Why, a man listening. That was all. Listening to a gentlewoman bartender who was used to having her breasts stared at while her words most commonly went in one ear of the man doing the staring and out the other. And who had Hollywood Jack listened to before he had listened to Janna Massengale? Some Sunset Strip hooker, it seemed . . . or more likely a whole bunch of them. (What would you call that, anyway? Dale wonders absently as he goes out to the garage to get his sure hose. A shimmy of streetwalkers? A strut of hookers?) None of them could have picked Thornberg Kinderling out of a lineup, because the Thornberg who visited L.A. surely hadnt looked much like the Thornberg who traveled around to the farm-supply companies in the Coulee and over in Minnesota. L.A. Thorny had worn a wig, contacts instead of specs, and a little false mustache.The most brilliant thing was the skin darkener, Jack had said. Just a little, just enough to make him look like a native.Dramatics all four years at French Landing High School, Dale had replied grimly. I looked it up. The little bastard played turn in Juan his junior year, do you believe it?A lot of sly little changes (too many for a jury to swallow an insanity plea, it seemed), but Thorny had forgotten that one revelatory little signature, that trick of pinching his nostrils together with the palm of his hand turned outward. Some prostitute had remembered it, though, and when she mentioned it only in passing, Dale has no doubt, just as Janna Massengale did Jack heard it.Because he listened.Called to thank me for analyze the knife, and again to tell me how the jury came back, Dale thinks, but that second time he wanted something, too. And I knew what it was. Even before he opened his mouth I knew.Because, while he is no genius detective like his friend from the Golden State, Dale had not missed the younger mans unexpected, immediate solvent to the landscape of western Wisconsin. Jack had fallen in love with the Coulee Country, and Dale would have wagered a good sum that it had been love at first look. It had been unachievable to mistake the expression on his face as they drove from French Landing to Cen-tralia, from Centralia to Arden, from Arden to Miller wonder, pleasure, almost a kind of rapture. To Dale, Jack had looked like a man who has come to a place he has never been before only to discover he is back home.Man, I cant get over this, hed said once to Dale. The two of them had been riding in Dales old Caprice cruiser, the one that just wouldnt stay aligned (and sometimes the horn stuck, which could be embarrass ing). Do you realize how lucky you are to live here, Dale? It must be one of the most beautiful places in the world.Dale, who had lived in the Coulee his entire life, had not disagreed.Toward the end of their final conversation concerning Thornberg Kinderling, Jack had reminded Dale of how hed once asked (not quite kidding, not quite serious, either) for Dale to let him know if a nice little place ever came on the market in Dales part of the world, something out of town. And Dale had known at once from Jacks tone the almost anxious drop in his voice that the kidding was over.So you owe me, Dale murmurs, shouldering the hose. You owe me, you bastard. Of course he has asked Jack to lend an unofficial hand with the Fisherman investigation, but Jack has refused . . . almost with a kind of fear.Im retired, hed said brusquely. If you dont know what that word means, Dale, we can look it up in the dictionary together.But its ridiculous, isnt it? Of course it is. How can a man not yet thir ty-five be retired? Especially one who is so infernally good at the job?You owe me, baby, he says again, now walking along the side of the house toward the booze faucet. The sky above is cloudless the well-watered lawn is green there is nary a sign of slippage, not out here on Herman Street. Yet perhaps there is, and perhaps we feel it. A kind of discordant hum, like the sound of all those lethal volts coursing through the steel struts of the KDCU tower.But we have stayed here too long. We must take wing again and proceed to our final destination of this early morning. We dont know everything yet, but we know three important things first, that French Landing is a town in terrible distress second, that a few people ( Judy Marshall, for one Charles Burnside, for another) understand on some deep level that the towns ills go far beyond the depredations of a single sick pedophile-murderer third, that we have met no one undefendable of consciously recognizing the force the slippage th at has now come to bear on this quiet town hard by Tom and Hucks river. Each person weve met is, in his own way, as blind as Henry Leyden. This is as true of the folks we havent so far encountered Beezer St. Pierre, Wendell Green, the Color Posse as it is of those we have.Our paddy wagon groan for a virtuoso. And while we may not find one (this is the twenty-first century, after all, the days not of dArtagnan and Jack Aubrey but of George W. chaparral and Dirtysperm), we can perhaps find a man who was a hero once upon a time. Let us therefore search out an old friend, one we last glimpsed a thousand and more miles east of here, on the coast of the steady Atlantic. Years have passed and they have in some ways lessened the boy who was he has forgotten much and has spent a good part of his adult life maintaining that state of amnesia. But he is French Landings only hope, so let us take wing and fly almost due east, back over the woods and fields and gentle hills.Mostly, we see mi les of unbroken farmland regimental cornfields, luxuriant hay fields, fat yellow swaths of alfalfa. Dusty, narrow drives lead to white farmhouses and their arrays of tall barns, granaries, cylindrical cement-block silos, and long metal equipment sheds. Men in jean jackets are moving along the well-worn paths between the houses and the barns. We can already smell the sunlight. Its odor, richly compacted of butter, yeast, earth, growth, and decay, will intensify as the sun ascends and the light grows stronger.Below us, Highway 93 intersects Highway 35 at the center of tiny Centralia. The empty parking lot behind the Sand Bar awaits the noisy arrival of the Thunder Five, who customarily spend their Saturday afternoons, evenings, and nights in the enjoyment of the Sand Bars pool tables, hamburgers, and pitchers of that ambrosia to the creation of which they have devoted their quaint lives, Kingsland Brewing Companys finest product and a beer that can hold up its creamy head among anyt hing made in a specialty microbrewery or a Belgian monastery, Kingsland Ale. If Beezer St. Pierre, Mouse, and company say it is the greatest beer in the world, why should we doubt them? Not only do they know much more about beer than we do, they called upon every bit of the knowledge, skill, expertise, and seat-of-the-pants inspiration at their disposal to make Kingsland Ale a benchmark of the brewers art. In fact, they moved to French Landing because the brewery, which they had selected after mensural deliberation, was willing to work with them.To invoke Kingsland Ale is to wish for a good-sized mouthful of the stuff, but we put temptation behind us 730 A.M. is far too early for drinking anything but fruit juice, coffee, and milk (except for the likes of Wanda Kinderling, and Wanda thinks of beer, even Kingsland Ale, as a dietary supplement to Aristocrat vodka) and we are in search of our old friend and the closest we can come to a hero, whom we last saw as a boy on the shore of t he Atlantic Ocean. We are not about to waste time we are on the move, right here and now. The miles fly past beneath us, and along Highway 93 the fields narrow as the hills rise up on both sides.For all our haste, we must take this in, we must see where we are.

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