Page 43 of Deep Freeze


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“That would have been a shame, the mourning and all,” Virgil said.


So what’s up?” Thomas asked.

Johnson introduced Virgil, who first explained the blue squid, then the murder problem, and Thomas said, “Well, it won’t be one of the big places out here. Has to be one of the small ones.”

“Why’s that?” Virgil asked.

Thomas pointed at the floor. “Because the big places have wood floors. You’d have to drill a hole through the floor. Or you’d have to move your whole outfit, and you can see if that’s been done, and nobody out here has moved since before Christmas. Lot of the smaller places don’t have full floors.”

“That helps,” Virgil said. “If you know all the people out here... where’s the first place you’d look?”

“I’m not sure you’d look in an ice house at all,” Thomas said. “Even if the guy is a rat, why wouldn’t he haul the body out to his house, pick up the auger, and go on up the river where nobody can see him, drill some holes, and drop her in there? It was snowing hard Thursday night—I wasn’t out here, I was in town, but I was out with my snow blower for a while... real pretty night. Anyway, in that storm he could have driven out on the river, a pickup or a sled—either one—and drilled a few holes lickety-split, dropped her in, been back to shore, nobody the wiser.”

“Well, fuck me,” Johnson said. To Virgil: “It was all so clear in my mind.”

“That’s gotta be an unexpected change,” Thomas said.

“You still might be right,” Virgil said to Johnson. He turned to Thomas. “You see any tracks going up- or downriver?”

“Yeah. About a million of them. Everybody’s been out riding.”

Johnson: “That’s true. Shit.”

“Still worth a look around,” Virgil said. He said to Thomas, “There’s a translucent plastic tent out there, a big one...”

“Duane Hawkins’s place. Supposed to get thermal gain—lets the sunlight in, got a dark fabric floor to soak up the radiation, mirror on the inside so it doesn’t radiate back out... free heat.”

“Does it work?” Johnson asked.

“I guess. He’s got a kerosene heater in there, too, thermal gain cuts the kerosene use by about half, he says. ’Course, doesn’t work worth a damn at night. But he’s not out much at night, and during the day the plastic lets in all the light you need, so it’s not a bad setup... Haven’t seen it in a real high wind yet.”

He looked back at Virgil. “Why? Can’t think Duane’s involved with Gina Hemming in any way?”

“Don’t particularly think he was,” Virgil said. “A plastic fishing tent... something I’ve never seen before.”

They chatted a few more minutes, but Thomas didn’t have much more information. And clearly wasn’t a suspect: Gina Hemming would have kicked his ass in a struggle.

Back outside, Virgil zipped up his suit and said to Johnson, “I want to take a look at that tent. Talk to the owner.”

“Oh-oh. What’d I miss?”

“The person going in there kept looking at me... there’s a kind of thing that happens when people look at cops and keep looking back,” Virgil said. “Attracts the eye. A cop’s eye, anyhow.”

“How’d he know you’re a cop?”

“Could be a she—couldn’t tell from the parka—and I got the squid on my face. And the hair, when I took off the helmet.”

“You think...?”

“Dunno. Let’s go ask. Do you know this Duane Hawkins?”

“Yeah, I see him around from time to time. Works out at the Kubota dealer, mechanic or something,” Johnson said.

They tramped across the ice to the tent, probably fifty yards, but when they got there, there was no one inside.

“Shoot,” Virgil said.