Man in the water, p.1

Man in the Water, page 1

 

Man in the Water
Select Voice:
Brian (uk)
Emma (uk)  
Amy (uk)
Eric (us)
Ivy (us)
Joey (us)
Salli (us)  
Justin (us)
Jennifer (us)  
Kimberly (us)  
Kendra (us)
Russell (au)
Nicole (au)



Larger Font   Reset Font Size   Smaller Font  


Man in the Water


  Begin Reading

  Table of Contents

  About the Author

  Copyright Page

  Thank you for buying this

  St. Martin’s Publishing Group ebook.

  To receive special offers, bonus content,

  and info on new releases and other great reads,

  sign up for our newsletters.

  Or visit us online at

  us.macmillan.com/newslettersignup

  For email updates on the author, click here.

  The author and publisher have provided this e-book to you for your personal use only. You may not make this e-book publicly available in any way. Copyright infringement is against the law. If you believe the copy of this e-book you are reading infringes on the author’s copyright, please notify the publisher at: us.macmillanusa.com/piracy.

  FOR RENÉE

  ALWAYS AND FOREVER

  ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

  Allow me to acknowledge my debt to Grace Gay, Kayla Janas, Keith Kahla, James McDonald, Susannah Noel, Alison J. Picard, Emily Polachek, Sabrina Soares Roberts, and Renée Valois for their assistance in writing this book.

  ONE

  Nina Truhler screamed when she found the man in the water. Later, she would tell me that she hadn’t been afraid, merely startled. I didn’t believe her, though, because I heard the scream.

  What happened, a mutual friend had invited us to go boating on the St. Croix, the river that formed much of the border between Minnesota and Wisconsin. Dave Deese was pretty excited about it. The weather had improved dramatically by mid-March. Unseasonably bright, warm sunshine had melted the snow and most of the ice and Deese was anxious to get his boat out of dry dock, a forty-two-foot Sea Ray Sundancer that he and his wife often slept on just because. I mean the man had all but given up playing golf so he could spend more time on the river, how nuts was that? He had his “big splash” a few days earlier. Apparently, that’s the term luxury boat owners use when they launch their boats; guys with fishing and pontoon boats probably not so much.

  Nina and I were excited, too, about the prospect of taking a river cruise and for the same reason—spring. So we accepted the invitation and drove a half hour from Minneapolis to the marina located a few miles north of Stillwater. Only by then the temperature had plummeted to a few degrees below freezing and the sky had turned a dark shade of gray. I half expected to see icebergs floating on the St. Croix and the fact that I didn’t, well, that didn’t prove they weren’t lurking beneath the surface.

  The lot was nearly empty; only four vehicles were parked there when we arrived including a black SUV with the name E. J. WOODS TREE CARE SERVICES printed in white letters on all of its doors. We bundled ourselves in heavy coats, boots, and hats, and walked onto the mazelike steel-and-wooden pier that jutted from the shoreline into the river. The marina boasted over two hundred and fifty U-shaped slips but finding Deese wasn’t difficult. I counted less than two dozen boats secured to the cleats and plugged in to the electrical outlets. That, plus the sparsely filled parking lot, told me those of us who thought spring had come early to Minnesota were in a true minority.

  Before we could reach Deese, though, we were intercepted by a woman; her words came in puffs of condensation.

  “Help me,” she said. “Please.”

  I had no idea how old she was. Her eyes were clear and blue; yet her face suggested that she had discovered the fountain of youth in an artful amalgamation of cosmetics and neurotoxins. Her skirt was short, her jacket lightweight, and her head uncovered; shoulder-length blond hair was whipped about in the wind and she used both of her hands to keep it out of her face. The wooden planks beneath her feet were as steady as a concrete sidewalk, yet she bobbed back and forth as if they were being buffeted by heavy waves.

  “Please help me,” she repeated.

  “Help you what?” I asked.

  “My husband…”

  She wrapped her arms around herself as if she suddenly realized that it was cold outside.

  “My husband…”

  “Yes?”

  She shook her head.

  Nina stretched out a hand and rested it on the woman’s shoulder.

  “Tell us about your husband,” she said.

  “I can’t find him. I’ve looked and looked and I can’t find him.”

  “You can’t find him?” I asked.

  “He was here.”

  “Here at the marina?”

  “But now he’s gone.”

  “Gone where?”

  Stop it, my inner voice told me. You sound like an idiot.

  “I don’t know,” the woman said. “Can you help me?”

  “Of course we can,” Nina said.

  Her gaze turned from the woman and settled on me.

  So, when you say we …

  I spun in a slow circle, my eyes first scanning the boats moored in their three-sided slips. Next I examined the parking lot. The marina was located on the eastern side of the St. Croix Scenic Byway along with a couple other marinas, a business that rented paddleboats, and the St. Croix Scenic Overlook. On the western side, there was a restaurant, a coffeehouse, a massage parlor, and plenty of houses. Yet, as a man once said, nothing was stirring, not even a mouse. Finally, I turned toward the large red, white, and blue building with the name HEGGSTAD MARINA painted in large white letters above the front door and huge windows. There was a parklike area reserved for picnics and barbecues located between the building and the river, along with a dockside gas pump, only I could see no one moving.

  “Did your husband go inside?” I asked.

  The woman shook her head.

  “Did you look?”

  She shook it some more.

  “I’ll be right back.”

  I walked across the wooden planks and climbed the concrete steps leading to the building. A sign on the front door told me that cable TV and internet access were available to slip renters as well as free shower rooms and a coin-operated laundry. Bright lights inside Heggstad Marina made the place seem like an automobile showroom, only for boats. There was also a large area devoted to the sale of all the things you might find on a boat, from life jackets to bumpers and fenders to ropes and harnesses to bags of Fritos and precut fruit, plus a section where a fellow might buy dry clothes, deck shoes, and rain gear. I started walking through the building, my head on a swivel, searching the empty spaces between the boats.

  A man called to me.

  “May I help you?”

  He had a name tag above his left pocket that read BRAD HEGGSTAD.

  “Hey,” I said. “I met a woman outside who’s looking for her husband. I thought he might have wandered in here.”

  “I haven’t seen anyone.”

  “Restrooms?”

  “Good idea.”

  He gestured at a corridor between the showroom and the boat supplies. I found the men’s room. It was large with several shower stalls and empty. I tried the women’s restroom on the off chance. It was vacant as well.

  Heggstad was waiting for me when I returned.

  “Nothing, huh?” he asked.

  “No.”

  “When did he get here?”

  “I don’t know.”

  “What’s his name? Does he have a boat?”

  “I don’t know.”

  “Could he be visiting one of my early rentals?”

  “His wife didn’t say.”

  I expected him to be annoyed by my answers. God knows I was. Yet there was genuine concern in his voice when he said, “Maybe he’s not here at all. Maybe he wandered across the street to get a cup of coffee.”

  “I’ll look,” I said.

  I went to the door, opened it, and stepped outside. The cold wind slapped me in the face, yet the scream hit me harder.

  Nina’s scream.

  I didn’t see her as much as her long blue winter coat. The coat was at the far end of the marina where two boats were parked. It was standing at the very edge of the dock and looking down. A sleeve came up to cover Nina’s mouth and the coat backed away from the edge. Another sleeve seemed to search behind her for a bench. Finding none, the coat sat down in the middle of the dock.

  By then I was running. I sprinted down the stone steps to the pier and past the woman who was standing exactly where we had left her, staring at nothing in particular. The dock was wide and stable and I had no trouble jogging the length that stretched along the shoreline and then over one of the arms that jutted out into the water. My heavy Columbia hiking boots pounded on the wooden planks and seemed to echo across the water beneath them. I was chanting Nina’s name by the time I reached her.

  “Nina, Nina.”

  “I’m okay, I’m okay,” she chanted back.

  I knelt next to her; my arm circled her shoulder.

  “I’m okay. The woman, she told me—after you left she told me that she thought she saw her husband on the dock next to these boats.” Nina shrugged a shoulder toward the cabin cruisers moored behind her on opposite sides of the dock from each other, one very near where we were sitting and one closer to the shore. “No one is on the boats, but McKenzie”—she raised a hand and pointed—“I went to the edge of the dock and looked down. I don’t know why.”

  I followed Nina’s pointing finger to the edge. There was a wooden ladder attached to the dock. I looked down, went to my knees, and looked some more. I wasn’t sure what I was looking at; the water was clear, only the overcast sky wasn’t giving me much help. As my eyes adjusted, I realized I was staring at the top of a man’s head about a foot and a half beneath the water. He was fully clothed for winter, his gloved hands were tightly gripping each side of the ladder, and he was looking straight ahead as if there was something under the dock that demanded his complete and undivided attention. I removed my own glove and immediately felt the cold. I was about to dip my hand into the icy water, yet thought better of it.

  What are you going to do, check for a pulse?

  I spun on my knees toward Nina.

  “I’m sorry,” I said.

  Her expression suggested that she had no idea what I was talking about. Probably because I had never told her that the thing I hated most when I was a cop was delivering bad news.

  “I’m sorry, there was an accident … I’m sorry, there was a shooting … I’m sorry, we conducted a welfare check…”

  Now I was going to have to deliver some more bad news, even though I hadn’t been a cop for a long time, and I was not looking forward to it. I stood and gazed across the marina.

  The woman was still standing where we had left her, her weight shifting from one foot to the other. What I found remarkable, though, was that despite enlisting our aid to find her husband, Nina’s scream, and my mad sprint to Nina’s side, the woman wasn’t looking anywhere near us but instead gazing across the river toward Wisconsin.

  Don’t you think that’s a little off?

  If I was still a cop, I would have questions to ask her, I told myself.

  I looked down at Nina.

  “He’s dead, isn’t he?” she said. “I mean, of course he is, but how? Did he drown?”

  “I don’t know.”

  Aren’t you getting tired of saying that?

  “Geez, McKenzie, I knew these things always happened to you but I didn’t know when we got married that they would happen to me, too.”

  “I’m sorry.”

  * * *

  The operator said, “911, what’s your emergency?”

  I told her where we were; I told her about finding the man in the water. I told her to contact the Stillwater Police Department, water rescue, and the medical examiner, in that order. She didn’t seem interested in my advice and instead asked for my name. I gave it to her and she told me to remain where I was.

  “Help is on the way,” she told me.

  She also told me to remain on the line until help arrived. I apologized, said I had things to do, and hung up.

  By then Nina and I had reached the woman. She waited for us to speak.

  “I’m sorry,” I said.

  She waited some more.

  “I’m sorry, but we found a man in the water.”

  “He must have fallen in the river by accident and drowned,” the woman said.

  Nina opened her arms and stepped toward the woman. The woman stepped backward, avoiding the hug.

  “I was afraid that might have happened when I couldn’t find him.” She sounded like she was explaining why she had missed a sale at Cub Foods. “E. J. wanted to look at the boats and at the river. He liked boats and the river. I was waiting in the car for him.”

  The woman gestured at the SUV in the parking lot with the words E. J. WOODS TREE CARE SERVICES painted on the door.

  “I waited in the car because it was cold,” the woman added. “When he didn’t return—I waited at least a half hour.” She glanced at her watch as if to confirm the time. “When he didn’t return, I went looking for him. I didn’t find him. I feared the worst. I met you two. You were very kind. I’m grateful for what you’ve done.”

  Geez, lady, my inner voice said. Your husband just drowned in the St. Croix River. When are we going to see some tears?

  “Did you call 911?” the woman asked.

  “Yes.”

  “I’m grateful for that as well. It saves me the trouble. I guess there’s nothing to do now except wait.”

  We didn’t wait long. The woman spun toward the parking lot at the same moment that another black SUV pulled into the lot, this one with the name STILLWATER POLICE printed in white on the side. When she saw the vehicle, the woman moved away from us and sat down on the dock. She brought her knees up, holding her skirt around her thighs, and leaned forward, resting her face against her knees. After a moment, she uncurled enough to glance behind her. She watched a female police officer slide out of the SUV. The officer was dressed in full battle regalia, her long hair piled on top of her head. As the officer approached, the woman resumed her near-fetal position and began rocking side to side.

  Okay, now this is really off.

  The officer landed on the dock and started moving toward us. She stopped when she reached the woman, who was now humming unintelligible sounds filled with grief and sorrow.

  The officer knelt and rested her hand on the woman’s back.

  “Ma’am,” she said.

  “My husband, my husband … He’s gone. It’s the marina’s fault.”

  “Ma’am, what’s your name?”

  “Bizzy.”

  “Ma’am?”

  “It’s the marina’s fault.”

  The officer looked up at me. The name tag above her left pocket read STOLL.

  “Are you McKenzie?” she asked.

  I nodded in reply.

  “You found the body?”

  I gestured at Nina.

  “Both of us. This woman”—I pointed at her—“apparently, she’s the vic’s wife.”

  I purposely used the word “vic.” It’s a cop word, slang for victim. I wanted the officer to know that we were both on the same side.

  “Show me.”

  Officer Stoll rose and I led her across the dock to the far end of the pier. She asked me how I had come to the marina.

  “It’s still off-season,” she said.

  I explained.

  “Did you see anything?” she asked.

  “Only the body,” I replied.

  I led Officer Stoll to the edge of the dock. She looked down, went to her knees as I had done, and looked some more.

  “Wow,” she said.

  Wow, indeed.

  “McKenzie, were you on the job?”

  “Almost twelve years in St. Paul.”

  “Have you seen anything like this?”

  “I didn’t catch many drownings.”

  “I have. A couple, anyway. This is … the way he’s hanging on to the ladder like that. Wow.”

  Stoll did something then that convinced me she was a good cop. She crawled away from the edge and, while still on her knees, began running her bare hands back and forth over the wooden planks. She did this until she covered at least a couple of square yards.

  “I don’t feel any moisture,” she said. “I don’t feel any ice.”

  “He could have tripped over his own feet,” I said. “I’ve done that.”

  She hummed a reply and we made our way back to where Nina and the woman were standing.

  By then more officers had arrived, all men. Unlike the female cop, they had come with sirens blaring. The sirens drew a crowd. Brad Heggstad climbed down the hill from the marina building to the pier. I didn’t know if he was interviewing the cops or they were interviewing him. My pal Dave Deese and his wife, Barbara, sat on the deck of their Sundancer and watched from a distance. Neighbors lined the fence above the marina and looked down on us.

  Nearly all the cops went one by one to the edge of the dock to see the man in the water for themselves. It was like he had become a tourist attraction. Meanwhile, Nina and I were separated and interviewed. The wife of the man in the water was interviewed as well. By then she had dried her tears and was telling the cops almost exactly what she had told us. From what little I overheard, I discovered that her name was Elizabeth Woods and her husband was Earl Woods. She told the cops that she felt indebted to Nina and me. I couldn’t imagine why.

  Not long after, deputies belonging to the Washington County Sheriff’s Office arrived. I failed to recognize them at first; their uniforms closely resembled the Minnesota Highway Patrol’s. I didn’t know which incidents fell within the Stillwater PD’s jurisdiction and which belonged to the county, but the deputies immediately took charge of the crime scene, if you want to call it that. One by one, like the police officers, they also went to the edge of the dock and looked down. Afterward, they interviewed Elizabeth Woods, Brad Heggstad, and Nina and me all over again. One deputy made his way up the dock to where Deese’s boat was moored and chatted with him and his wife. Afterward, he visited one by one the other boats in the marina; they all seemed to be empty.

 

Add Fast Bookmark
Load Fast Bookmark
Turn Navi On
Turn Navi On
Turn Navi On
Scroll Up
Turn Navi On
Scroll
Turn Navi On
183