from Sam's feelings and Victor's innocence, if there
was anything I could do to avoid losing that money, I
was going to.
"And the only way for me not to lose it," I said, "is
for Victor to get back to his project. Otherwise the
whole idea goes off the rails and my investment goes
with it, because without a surgeon a trauma center is
pretty pointless, wouldn't you say?"
Wade took another meditative sip of his ale. "You
can't just find another surgeon, maybe advertise in the
city papers? Hire on someone else to fill in for Victor?"
It was a good thought, but not practical. "Downeast
Maine is too remote. Victor wants to be up here;
the rest follows from that. To anyone else this area
would look like a career dead end, but he's willing to
let it develop."
With Victor heading it, a local trauma center could
attract whatever it needed, given time and patience:
more money, a rising reputation, other staff.
But without him, its chances were zippo.
"Uh-huh," Wade said quietly when I'd finished,
which for him was unusual; ordinarily, his energy
could charge a truck battery.
"Sam all right?"
I peered at him. "Hanging in there. What about
you?'
"Oh, fine." He frowned at the ale bottle. "I guess.
But this just makes me realize again that I shouldn't
have left Victor in the bar last night. I knew Reuben
was after him but I walked away. So in a way this is--"
All my fault, he was about to say, and I just stared
at him. Self-flagellation was not exactly his usual habit.
"Wade, there was nothing you could have--"
He got up, his face severe. "Done? Yes, there was.
A long time ago. But I didn't do it."
He rubbed a big hand over his wiry hair. "I could
have, but I didn't. Just like last night. And now ...
look, one thing I know from working on the water is,
no one's going to do it for you. If you want something
a certain way, you've got to make it that way. And
when push came to shove last night, I did nothing."
Looking around the kitchen, he shook his head angrily.
"Ah, hell. Got a nice old Remington shotgun in
the truck, a guy wants me to work on for him. But in
the mood I'm in, if I put a hand to it I'll just screw it
up. I'll see you later."
With a grimace of self-disgust he pulled his jacket
back on and went out, not even stopping to pat Monday,
who watched him go with a look of hurt puzzlement
in her eyes.
I felt the same. Like many Maine men, Wade
guards a core of privacy; he tells his secrets in his own
time, when he is ready. And mostly, that worked fine
for both of us.
But at the moment I wasn't in favor of secrets.
Not at all.
My lovely old white clapboard Federal was
charming and historical, but its state of repair
lent new meaning to the term fixer
upper. Calling it drafty, for instance, would
have been putting it mildly. The way the wind blew
through that old place in winter, I might as well have
told the oil man to pump heating oil into the street, and
burned it there without bothering to run it through the
furnace.
And winter, despite the brilliant autumn afternoon,
was not far off. So, after Wade had gone, I
trudged upstairs to start the weatherstripping project.
With me I brought the clawhammer and the pry bar
from my cellar workbench, a tack hammer and nails,
the enormous heavy roll of copper weatherstripping I'd
lugged uphill from Wadsworth's Hardware, and a tape
measure.
Hauling them all into the big, bright front room
overlooking the street, I began removing sashes from
the room's four tall double-hung windows, prying the
exterior stops off the frames and lifting the heavy
sashes--they are the things that actually have the glass
panes in them--out of their channels.
The trick is to avoid cracking the wooden pieces
while prying them up, because you will need to use
them again when you put the sashes back in; that, or
pay a lot to have all new ones custom-made for you. So
I proceeded carefully with a type of pry bar called a
cat's-paw, its blade wide and thin so as to slide deeply
in and distribute the prying pressure.
And it worked beautifully. Easing off the wooden
strips, I lined the old square-cut nails up on the windowsill
as I removed them. Nowadays, nails are
manufactured from miles-long lengths of wire, thousands per
minute, but these had been made one at a time by hand
and I wanted to save them, though I wouldn't be reusing
them. They belonged to the house.
From the window I could see all the way down Key
Street to the harbor. Cars had already begun flooding
into town, a whole week before the official beginning
of the Salmon Festival, which Ellie said was going to go
on come hell or high water and never mind the little
matter of a couple of murders.
In the park behind the old red-brick Peavey Library,
men were busy setting up the striped awnings
under which we would eat the salmon supper: steamed
new potatoes and boiled corn and blueberry pie, and of
course the grilled salmon. A group of town women
were slapping a fresh coat of white paint onto the
bandshell, where there would be live music. Ellie was
among them, her coppery hair shining in the sun, and
all over town I could see bright posters, placards, and
banners announcing the upcoming festivities.
A nail pierced the tip of my thumb. Staring at the
droplet of blood, I heard Ellie's words suddenly in my
mind:
Why did Reuben have to come back wow/?
The idea niggled at me as I brushed out the channels
where the window sashes had been: dust and old
paint chips, bits of the past undisturbed for years,
much like the recollections of people returning to East
port for the festival. Many had grown up here, and
now they were coming back to dust off old friendships,
regale themselves with old memories, and generally indulge
in a little harmless nostalgia for the good old
days.
Maybe Reuben had come back for the festival,
also. From what I'd heard of him, he hadn't had many
friends. But I gathered he'd had victims. So maybe that
was why he'd come back now: to prey upon them
again.
Thinking this, I unrolled some copper weather
stripping and clipped a length of it. One thing an old
house teaches you right away is the value of a good
tool; instead of tin snips, I had a cuts-all gadget that
was sharp enough to amputate fingers. Using it and the
tack hammer, I fastened the copper strip to the top of
one of the upper sashes and trimmed it neatly to fit.
Killing Reuben was one thing; having victims led
logically to having enemies. But displaying his body,
hanging it up like some bloody flag: that was something
else. There was also the question of the other
victim, the one with Victor's dratted tie in his throat.
How had he hooked into all this bad business--if he
had? And then there was a final problem, one my mind
kept skittering away from.
I clipped another piece of weatherstripping, nailed
it into the groove of the window channel. As I did so, a
breeze moved stealthily, lifting the hairs on my neck.
But it was only a cold draft coming in through the open
window.
Replacing the sash in the channel, I checked its fit
to make sure it was tight but also free to slide easily up
and down. Then I got out the real prize from my window-restoration
toolkit: the gimlet. This is a device like
a small, needle-sharp-tipped wood screw, but in place
of the screwhead it has a wire-loop handle.
Because the thing is this: once the exterior stop was
lined up against the sash, there wasn't room to use a
power drill. But hammering a nail in was almost certain
to split the old wood, and the old nail holes were
too chewed up to use a second time.
So, placing the window in its channel and snugging
the exterior stop up in front of it, I pressed the sharp
tip of the gimlet into the wooden strip, grasped the
gimlet handle between my thumb and forefinger, and
gave it a twist.
Presto: a new hole, called a pilot hole, just smaller
than the nail I intended to drive, so the nail would hold
snug. And the hole was already made for it so the old
wood could not become damaged. Pleased, I surveyed
the bright window again, the wavery old glass turning
the view to an impressionistic smear.
Without warning, the remembered sight of Reuben
rose in it like a nightmare, his flaxen hair bloodstained,
his eyes gazing from behind a red shroud. His hands
had been scrabbling in his last moments, but in death
they dangled, his unkempt nails maroon crescents.
In other words, they hadn't been tied. Yet he had
been alive when somebody hung him on the cemetery
gate. Alive and kicking ...
I blinked the memory away, gazing determinedly at
the boats in the harbor, the white clapboard houses
etched sharp as ink sketches in the sunshine. But I
couldn't so easily get rid of the questions lining up one
after another, like the old nails on the windowsill.
Reuben was a fighter. Even Teddy Armstrong, who
tossed guys out of La Sardina with monotonous regularity,
had hesitated to eject Eastport's bad boy. And
though he was a very small man, Reuben still must
have weighed 130 pounds or so.
Which would have made getting him up on that
gate alive an interesting project. Almost, perhaps, as
interesting as finding out who'd done it and why.
But first, I had a decision to make.
Well, two decisions, actually.
I
Wade Sorenson is not a protective man in the
usual sense. His idea of looking out for a
woman, for instance, is to take her to the
firing range and teach her to put six shots
into a two-inch target circle at fifty yards. As he'd done
with me, and when he was finished I could handle a
wide variety of weapons.
And then I'd killed a man with one of them. That
the fellow had been trying to kill Sam at the time was