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Death Roe
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DEATH ROE
ALSO BY JOSEPH HEYWOOD
Fiction:
Taxi Dancer (1985)
The Berkut (1987)
The Domino Conspiracy (1992)
The Snowfly (2000)
Woods Cop Mysteries:
Ice Hunter (2001)
Blue Wolf in Green Fire (2002)
Chasing a Blond Moon (2003)
Running Dark (2005)
Strike Dog (2007)
Shadow of the Wolf Tree (2010)
Force of Blood (2011)
Non-Fiction:
Covered Waters: Tempests of a Nomadic Trouter (2003)
A WOODS COP MYSTERY
DEATH ROE
JOSEPH HEYWOOD
Copyright © 2009 by Joseph Heywood
First Lyons paperback edition, 2011
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying and recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, except as may be expressly permitted in writing from the publisher. Requests for permission should be addressed to Globe Pequot Press, Attn: Rights and Permissions Department, P.O. Box 480, Guilford, CT 06437.
Lyons Press is an imprint of Globe Pequot Press.
Text design by Sheryl Kober
Layout by Melissa Evarts
ISBN 978-0-7627-7177-6
Printed in the United States of America
The Library of Congress has previously catalogued an earlier (hardcover) edition as follows:
Heywood, Joseph.
Death roe : a woods cop mystery / Joseph Heywood.
p. cm.
ISBN 978-1-59921-428-3
1. Service, Grady (Fictitious character)—Fiction. 2. Game wardens—Fiction. 3. Upper Peninsula (Mich.)—Fiction. I. Title.
PS3558.E92D43 2008
813'.54—dc22
2008024499
E-ISBN: 978-0-7627-9463-8
To past and present detectives of the
Michigan Department of Natural Resources
Wildlife Resource Protection Unit and its predecessors,
who operate without fanfare or recognition,
and seek to bring light to darkness.
PART I
THE UPPER PECULIAR
Singularity is almost invariably a clue. The more featureless and commonplace a crime is, the more difficult it is to bring it home.
—Sherlock Holmes, “The Boscombe Valley Mystery”
1
Monday, October 4, 2004
CARP RIVER, MACKINAC COUNTY, MICHIGAN
Grady Service had found a vantage point under the canopy of a cluster of white cedars, and sat on a low bluff watching the dark riffle through his thermal imager. Four individuals on the far bank were using long spinning rods, methodically arcing long casts across the gravel: They would cast, reef and reel, reef and reel, the classic Yooper salmon-snagger’s twitch. Testosteronal splashes told him they were using not lures but spiders, large treble hooks with one-ounce chunks of lead soldered to them, a jury-rigged grapple used to foul-hook the Chinook salmon trying to spawn on the gravel beds below.
It was cool, first light, clouds rolling over, a hint of rain in the air, and he had watched at least six fish snagged, hauled to shore, and stashed. As it began to grow lighter, the snaggers gave indications of calling it quits before anyone could see them at work. They had come in at 4 a.m., two hours ago, and had worked quietly and efficiently the whole while.
While they collected their gear, Service moved west, hopped and slid down a century-old log slide, and made his way across flat boulders to the far side of the river. He cut east, climbed up into the woods, and searched until he found the carcasses of kings, gutted, eggs stripped out, meat tossed aside. Odd, he thought. They took only the eggs. Most snaggers took the whole fish.
The snaggers were walking ahead of him, hiking east in silence toward the campground. The group’s aural discipline and demeanor suggested they were professional violets, not amateurs. Violet was Service’s term for violators of fish and game laws.
The campground was nearly empty. In years past during this season it was usually overflowing, but two-dollar-a-gallon gas and a stone-dead economy were keeping downstate fishermen closer to home this fall, and mostly he was encountering homegrown outlaws. The four people went to a pale blue recreational vehicle and carried their gear inside. They had worked and departed in silence, good discipline, all signs of a veteran crew.
Service gave them a few minutes to settle in, approached the living-quarters door, and knocked. It opened immediately and a light came on. The man before him had matted gray hair, more salt than pepper. He had bright blue eyes, an almost cherubic face, wisps of whiskers on a receding chin.
“What?” the man asked, squinting like he had just been awakened.
“Sir, would you please bring out the fishing gear and the salmon roe you just took inside?”
The man studied him, started blinking wildly, and broke into a huge grin. “Hooy na ny!” he said. “No fucking way! I can’t believe this!” he said. “It’s you!”
“Sir, please step outside.”
“Okay, okay,” the man said, stepping down to the ground. He looked to be early forties, gaunt, leather-skinned, spry. “You don’t remember Benny?”
The man was stalling. “Get the others out here with their gear—all of it. Right now! I’m not going to repeat myself.”
The man yelled something in Russian and there was muffled scrambling inside. Three teenage girls emerged, carrying rods. Service looked at the man. Russian? He probed his memory. He had once threatened to ticket a sixteen-year-old Ukrainian immigrant. Had to be more than twenty years ago. The boy had been serving as the lookout for a shining crew, his job to blink a red light if he saw a game warden coming. He had failed. Service had wrenched the light away from the startled boy and put him on the ground in almost the same motion. The crew had hired the kid in Macomb County, offered him fifty dollars in cash, some cheap booze, and cigarettes for the weekend. The kid had been petrified and Service had let him off with a warning if he would agree to testify against the others, which he had. But the others had pleaded guilty and paid their tickets without protest. The kid had been spared court and a ticket.
“Baranov,” Service said.
“You got good memory,” the man said happily.
“They called you Blinky.”
“Da, I work light for slovachy—bastards!”
Service studied the girls, who sat down at a picnic table. All under eighteen, he guessed, but these days it wasn’t easy to judge.
Some professional crew, he thought. “Where are the eggs?”
“What eggs?” one of the girls challenged with a shrill bark and started talking to the others.
“Konchaj bazar,” Service said menacingly in Russian. “Stop talking.” He had studied the language in college, retained smatterings, enough to operate rudimentarily.
The man turned to the girls and nodded at the RV. One of them went inside and came out with a sagging clear plastic bag, which she handed to Baranov, who held it out to the conservation officer.
Service set the bag by his boot. “A lot of charges here, Blinky. You’ve got possession of illegal equipment, taking fish by illegal means, improper disposal of litter. The fine on the fish alone is ten bucks an inch or ten bucks a pound, whichever I decide. I cut you a break that first time, and hoped you saw the light, but apparently you didn’t figure it out.”
“Many people do this thing,” the Ukrainian whined. “Many,” he added.
“And many get caught. It’s against the law,” Service answered
. There was a silver spider attached to each line. “You got more spiders?”
“Inside,” the man said.
“Get all of them—and your mold, too.”
He had not seen silver spiders in almost ten years. The new generation of snaggers poured tubular molds that vaguely resembled lures and hung oversized hooks a couple of inches behind them. Some tried to skirt the law by using legal one-ounce rigs, but it was the way they used them that gave them away. They could always claim they were fishing legitimately, but a game warden only had to watch the retrieve to know what they were up to. Legal-weight torpedoes were a halfhearted subterfuge; spiders were blatant, in your face.
The same two girls went back inside and came out with a plastic tackle box and a cardboard box. “Open them,” Service said.
The tackle box held a dozen shiny spiders; the cardboard box contained a mold and coils of pencil lead to be melted down.
“What’s the deal with the eggs, Blinky?”
“We Ukrainians believe the eggs cleanse our blood. Was, for long time, you know, food of serfs and peasants before food of czars and fucking Kremlin bosses.”
Service had the group follow him back to the fish carcasses. The girls scooped the gutted fish into the clear plastic bags and they all trooped back to the campground, where Service measured each of the six fish and took down names. The girls were Alexandra, Alla, and Anina. They gave their ages: twelve, fourteen, and sixteen. The eldest had challenged him. The others were quiet, calm, showed no nervousness. They were either used to this, or not aware of the trouble they were facing.
Service looked at them. “No school today, girls? It’s Monday.”
“Leaks in school roof,” Baranov said disgustedly. “Will open again Wednesday. The schools have no money. The people have no money. How much this will cost?” he asked.
“Six fish at thirty-four inches each, give or take, round it off to two hundred inches, times ten bucks, let’s say two grand in restitution—just for the fish. Additional fines and costs I can’t cite because each county has its own scale, but we’re talking illegal gear, illegal taking, and illegal disposal. I could write you for over-limit, but that’s moot because everything you’re doing is illegal. It won’t be cheap, Benny. I’m also taking the spiders, the mold, and your rods.”
“You leave us nothing to fish with,” the man protested.
“You weren’t fishing, you were snagging,” Service barked back.
“Okay, is mistake. Give us break, yes? Life is not so easy.”
Something in the man’s voice intrigued Grady Service. He was right about life being tough. Michigan’s economy was in the crapper, its unemployment among the highest in the country. “Why would I give you a break?” he asked.
The man shrugged.
“You had one chance from me already,” Service said.
“Yes, of course,” the man said disconsolately. “Benny does not forget.”
“Your English has improved,” Service said.
“My girls,” the man said. “I am citizen now. My girls, they insist I must speak good American.”
Grady Service had lost his son and girlfriend last spring and the wounds were still raw. Baranov’s girls were underfed, dressed shabbily, dull-eyed, and looked hungry. The thought of his soon-to-be-born grandchild living this way made his stomach turn.
“Things tough, Blinky?”
“Michigan,” was all the man mumbled, and Service understood. He had recently seen college students in Houghton wearing T-shirts that said michigan is dying.
“You got a job?”
“No more. Fifteen years I was in GM plant, Novi, UAW, union card, everything. Then job was gone, pfft. Union, bah! Three years now, I have no work.”
“You’re a citizen?”
“Yes, of course. But with ticket, maybe now they change minds, deport me to Ukraine, give my darling girls to foster homes. They are all born here, all real Americans—same as you.”
“Any arrests or tickets since I gave you your warning?”
“No, honest to God. Benny Baranov is honorable man.”
“Honorable, but snagging. There’s a major disconnect.”
“For food, sir,” the man said in a pleading tone. “For my family. You must understand.”
Sir? “Bullshit. You threw the meat away.” Violets who knew they were in trouble always adopted an obsequious, oddly formal tone.
“You would eat such rotting shit?” the man countered.
“No way,” Service said. “The fish are full of contaminants, the eggs too.”
The man shrugged and looked downcast, but mumbled, “But legal to eat, yes?”
Service asked for the man’s driver’s license, and sat down at the picnic table.
“You moved out of Detroit?” Service said, holding up the license.
“Capitalism: No work, no money; no money, no rent, no food. In Soviet Union they pretended to pay workers and workers pretended to work. In United States there is no faking. No job, you starve democratically.”
The license listed an address in Onaway, which had a long reputation for hard-core DNR violators. “More work up this way?” The northern part of Michigan was even more depressed than southern regions of the state.
“More natural food north,” the man mumbled. “In the taiga.”
“You poaching your food?” Service asked.
“Sometimes,” the man admitted. “Girls must eat.”
There was resignation in the man’s eyes as Service wrote the ticket, tore off Baranov’s copy, and held it out. “You can call the court to find out the amount of the fine, and what to do. You have to pay it within ten days, but you can do it by mail. If you don’t pay, a warrant will be issued for your arrest, and when we find you, we will take you to jail.”
The man took the ticket, folded it without looking at it, rammed it into his trouser pocket.
Service’s gut was churning. Was the guy hurting or was this a line of bullshit? He made his decision quickly. “Okay,” Service said. “Keep the rods, but fish legally with them. I catch you again, there will be no mercy.”
“Spasibo,” the man said, raised his arms, herded the girls inside, and closed the door. Service heard sobbing through the thin walls, cut spiders off the lines of the rods, took out one of his business cards, left it under a reel, collected the spare spiders, mold, fish, and eggs, and headed for his truck, which was more than a mile away, on the other side of the river. Poor bastard, he told himself as he hiked. But he had not made the choice for the man and there had to be consequences, or what was the point of the job?
The salmon would die after spawning, but someone had to ensure they would have the chance to reproduce. Your job, your responsibility, he lectured himself. Nature had a way of balancing things; only man could permanently skew the balance, which made him wonder what man’s purpose was in the big picture. Having had the thought, he said “Bah!” out loud and kept hiking.
How did an out-of-work autoworker afford an RV that had to have set him back at least a hundred grand off a lot?
This past summer he had learned that his late son’s girlfriend Karylanne Pengelly was pregnant and due in late December. She was a junior at Michigan Tech in Houghton. He thought about the baby, and the prospects of being a grandfather, and told himself, no way was his grandchild going to end up like Baranov’s daughters.
Almost four years earlier he had met DNR fire officer Maridly Nantz and they had fallen in love. She was a wild spirit, who also had wanted to become a conservation officer. Less than two years ago they learned that he had a son by his previous marriage. Now Nantz and his son Walter were dead, murdered. And she had left him an unimaginable fortune he didn’t want, without consulting him. Whatever else lay ahead, he was resolved to take care of his grandchild with what she had left behind.
He had a lot of regrets in his life, but this grandchild was not going to be one of them.
2
Monday, October 4, 2004
ST. IGNACE, MACKINAC COUNTY
Sergeant Milo Miars was in civvies. He was short and fit and had intense eyes, like steely-gray BBs, and sported a clean shave and a fresh whitewall haircut. They met outside Lehto’s pasty shop on US 2. The sergeant had called while Service was driving away from the Carp River, asking for an immediate meeting with a demanding tone of voice. Until this fall, Grady Service had reported directly to Captain Ware Grant, the senior officer in the Upper and Northern Lower Peninsulas. Though he had been a detective in Wildlife Resource Protection—the DNR’s special investigations unit—for a couple of years, he had not had to deal with the organization other than to forward case reports. This was about to change.
“You did a helluva job last summer,” Miars said.
Service had helped solve a case in which a pair of killers had been ambushing and murdering game wardens all around the country. Ironically it had been Limpy Allerdyce who had stepped in and eliminated one of the killers. Though it could never be proven in a court, Service knew the truth, and it perplexed him. Did he owe the old poacher now? Allerdyce, a felon, was one of the most notorious and successful poachers in the U.P., and possibly the state. Service had already sent him to Jackson Prison once. He decided the best thing to do was ignore that it had happened. “It was an experience I could have done without,” Service told his new supervisor.
“You working any cases now?”
“The usual stuff. I’m pretty clear.”
“Good. We’re going to send you down to Vanderbilt, undercover. We’ve got a dirty elk guide down there, but we can’t seem to get anything on him.”
Service shrugged. He had never handled an elk case before and found the proposition mildly interesting. He wasn’t sure how he felt about performing undercover, but having worked with federal undercover agents, he had some definite feelings about protocol and procedure. “If I work UC, I’ll be the one to serve the warrant when the time comes.”