Death Trap Read online




  SUE HENRY

  DEATH TRAP

  AN ALASKA MYSTERY

  This one’s long overdue for

  The Friday Night Adoption Society

  Alice

  Gretchen

  Becky

  Phoebe

  Don

  Melissa

  Vern

  Findlay

  Meg

  Robert

  and

  all the rest

  CONTENTS

  Map

  CHAPTER 1

  “I wasn’t here then,” he reminded her. “So now that…

  CHAPTER 2

  “How did you get separated from Tank in the first…

  CHAPTER 3

  “That was the day you ran into me, right?” Ten-year-old…

  CHAPTER 4

  When the van pulled up at the mall, Frank Monroe…

  CHAPTER 5

  “I was still sitting on that bench,” Frank Monroe continued…

  CHAPTER 6

  Becker frowned in thought. “But you didn’t go home, did…

  CHAPTER 7

  “You ’bout scared the pee out of me!” Danny said…

  CHAPTER 8

  “Right,” Jessie agreed. “It turned into a total nightmare.” She…

  CHAPTER 9

  “Little did you know.” Timmons made his first comment of…

  CHAPTER 10

  “It must have been scary to be chased again. Did…

  CHAPTER 11

  Jessie’s morning had been full of questions to be answered…

  CHAPTER 12

  “It was so good to have someone there,” Jessie went…

  CHAPTER 13

  “It was a good thing you came to the phone,”…

  CHAPTER 14

  “That was the morning my bicycle was gone,” Danny said…

  CHAPTER 15

  Danny’s ride home with his parents had gone about as…

  CHAPTER 16

  Nancy Lake was a small community and recreation area approximately…

  CHAPTER 17

  For a long minute Alex Jensen stared down at Lynn…

  CHAPTER 18

  “I had been at Jessie’s long enough to finish eating…

  CHAPTER 19

  “Why was it too late?” John Timmons asked. “I never…

  CHAPTER 20

  In a wilderness cabin, far from anything familiar, Jessie Arnold…

  CHAPTER 21

  “What did Lynn say when he called?” she asked Jensen…

  CHAPTER 22

  The radio in Becker’s pickup crackled to life as he…

  CHAPTER 23

  Jensen said nothing until they had returned to the trucks…

  CHAPTER 24

  We drove back to town, where I picked up Jessie’s…

  CHAPTER 25

  The fair was still crowded with people that evening when…

  CHAPTER 26

  Jensen stared blankly at the wooden door of the cabin…

  CHAPTER 27

  Paged from the fairground, where he had been meeting with…

  CHAPTER 28

  “I hate hospitals,” Jessie informed the living room group in…

  CHAPTER 29

  “Lomax had purposely stayed away from the staff meeting, knowing…

  Acknowledgments

  About the Author

  Praise

  Other Books by Sue Henry

  Copyright

  About the Publisher

  Map

  CHAPTER 1

  “I wasn’t here then,” he reminded her. “So now that it’s all over, will you please explain to me just what you were doing by yourself in that dog yard at Nancy Lake.”

  Jessie Arnold frowned at the trooper’s question, narrowed her gray eyes, and a curl of honey-blond hair fell over her forehead as she shook her head, remembering. As all eyes turned toward her, she shifted a bit self-consciously in her place on the big sofa that had been a housewarming gift for her new cabin. She glanced around the group of people that had gathered for dinner and now sat companionably in her living room, drinking coffee or beer and discussing the circumstances in which they had all, in one way or another, found themselves involved in the preceding few days.

  Two were finishing a second slice of pie, and one had lit an aromatic pipe, adding a faint fruity scent to the pleasant smell of the fire in the potbellied iron stove. The fire crackled suddenly in the ensuing silence, which was broken again as Alaska State Trooper Phil Becker set his bottle of Killian’s on its stone hearth with a clink. Crossing his arms on the back of the straight chair he straddled, he rested his chin on them and looked across at Jessie, waiting to see what she would say and attempting, though not very hard, to hide the I-told-you-so grin that twitched his lips.

  “Better answer the question,” he suggested finally.

  “Oh, cut it out, Phil,” she told him, attempting to look severe and failing. “We all know you think I shouldn’t have gone off on my own, and you’re probably right. But I was worried and angry, and it seemed a perfectly reasonable thing to do at the time. How was I to know…” She let the sentence trail off thoughtfully.

  He shrugged, waiting for her to finish her defensive justification, but quit trying to control the grin and allowed it to spread across his face.

  “I was looking for Tank,” she began, turning to her questioner and ignoring Phil’s expression.

  At the sound of his name, Jessie’s lead dog, Tank, sat up from where he was curled next to young Danny Tabor on the braided rug at her feet, all his attention focused on her face. She leaned forward and took the dog’s face between both her hands and smiled as she spoke to him.

  “Yes, I was looking for you. And found you, thank God, though it got us both into a lot of trouble.”

  He leaned blissfully into her caresses and gave her arm a lick, returning the affection.

  “Lie down, good boy,” she told him, and waited to continue her explanation till he had done so and laid his muzzle on Danny’s knee.

  “First, Maxie McNabb stopped by on her way to Colorado and—”

  “Who’s Maxie McNabb?” Danny asked.

  Jessie sighed. Explaining everything that had happened was obviously not going to be easy.

  “Maxie is a friend of mine who lives in Homer, but she travels to warmer places in her motor home during the winter. I met her when I drove a Winnebago up the Alaska Highway last May for Vic Prentice, the contractor who built this new cabin for me. She was coming back to Homer for the summer, and we ran into each other in a Canadian campground. We kept in touch, then in August she stopped here for a visit she had promised me on her way back to the Lower Forty-eight. It was a short visit, but our conversation gave me the idea of searching local dog yards, so that’s where I went.

  “I had gone to the fair, you see…” she continued, remembering what had transpired on her visit to one particular and unpleasant dog yard, and the situation in which she had found herself as a result.

  The grin faded from Phil Becker’s face. He listened intently, along with the circle of old and new friends who made up Jessie’s audience, for there were details of what had happened that he had not yet heard and a few questions of his own to be answered.

  Except for her voice and some gentle Celtic harp music from her sound system in the background, it was quiet in the room as the story began to unfold. Remembering how events had occurred, Jessie began to take herself back to that particular day and where she had found herself—and Tank.

  CHAPTER 2

  “How did you get separated from Tank in the first place? He usually goes everywhere you do.”

  “Yes, he does,” Jessie agreed. “But we were at the fair for the second day, and I wanted to take a look
at the animals in the barn. I knew they wouldn’t want a dog in there, so I left him with Joanne at the Iditarod booth for an hour. When I came back he was gone, and she was frantic. Then we searched everywhere, but—”

  “You haven’t said how you wound up at the fair in the first place,” Becker interrupted. “Why don’t you go back to when it all first began—when Joanne asked you to help.”

  Jessie nodded, visualizing the morning of the phone call. “Okay. I had just come back from a walk when she called. I couldn’t work with my mutts—doctor’s orders—and I’d been thinking I’d go crazy if I didn’t find something to keep me busy.”

  She grew quiet for a minute, allowing events to order themselves in her mind. It had started so innocently—with a reasonable response to the plea of a good friend for assistance and the anticipation of a few days of enjoyable interaction with old and new sled dog racing fans.

  “I took my morning coffee outside,” she told the assembled group. “It was the first time I’d been able to smell fall in the air—a hint of cool air and dry leaves. You know. I stood there looking out at the yard where my dogs usually are, feeling frustrated. Then…”

  With care not to slosh the hot coffee she carried in a blue pottery mug, Jessie stepped onto the porch of her new log cabin, closed the door behind her, and stood assessing the clearing that held her home and dog yard just off Knik Road a few miles west of Wasilla, Alaska. The last Saturday in August had dawned bright and clear at just before seven that morning, with a coolness in the air and the scent of drying grasses, reminding her that the ground in the nearby birch grove would soon be littered with leaves of gold. The drop in temperature raised a little steam from the coffee, which tickled her nose as she sipped it, cupping both hands around the mug, appreciating its warmth.

  Except for the twitter of a small bird or two, it was quiet, an unusual state, as she was ordinarily greeted by barks and yelps from the occupants of her kennel, and one that left her with a restless sense of disquiet as she looked out at the almost empty yard. It seemed inexplicable that only a few of the more than forty dogs she owned were currently occupying their boxes; that the whole yard was not full of active, enthusiastic canines ready to continue fall training as soon as snow fell and grew deep enough to support a sled. But the majority of them had been taken to spend the winter with Lynn Ehlers, a friend who would add them to his own teams for training runs and races. It left Jessie with little to do at a time of year that was usually filled with preparation that raised her spirits in anticipation of the racing season.

  Irritated with the situation and her enforced idleness, she swung too quickly toward the rocking chair where she intended to sit and felt a twinge of pain in the knee she had injured two months earlier in a fall down the steep side of a mountain. The tendon she had torn enough to require surgery was healing well, and she was no longer wearing a brace, but the doctor had cautioned against sled dog racing.

  “If you’re wise,” he had solemnly advised her, with a penetrating look over the rims of his glasses, “you’ll give it a rest this year, Jessie. If you don’t compromise now, you’ll be able to race next year without it bothering you unduly. I can’t promise that if you don’t. So no training runs or heavy kennel work, okay? And don’t overdo the therapy.”

  She reluctantly agreed and had conscientiously kept to her prescribed regimen of physical exercise. But she had not realized how much her frustration level would rise when the leaves began to gild the birches of her woods. When the wind had delivered the first chill hint of fall and the nights grew longer and darker, and especially when the sky was swept with northern lights, she had found herself pacing the confines of her cabin, yearning to be out and about, preparing for a winter filled with swift teams of dogs and runs through the hushed and frozen wilds of her adopted state. Though she knew the situation was temporary, it was still an agonizing one that was difficult to accept and overcome.

  Good thing I live alone, she thought, bending to rub at the knee with her knuckles. No one else could put up with me right now.

  Hearing her slight intake of breath at the complaint in her knee, Tank, who had followed her out the door, pricked his ears attentively.

  “Hey, boy.”

  Crossing the porch, she eased into the chair and, as he came to sit beside her, reached to massage his neck and shoulders. He laid his head on her good knee and leaned into the attention of her affectionate fingers.

  “I should have sent you off with Lynn and the rest of my guys. You’re getting as out of shape and lazy as I am.”

  But she knew they were a pair. He might need more activity than he would get this winter, but neither of them would benefit from a separation, so she had elected to keep him at home. The bond between them was strong and had been established through much more than the thousands of miles of running they had done together over the years.

  “Well,” she told him, more brightly than she felt, “we can at least take a walk, can’t we?”

  At the word, he wheeled and headed for the steps that led down to the yard. Looking back over his shoulder, he gave her such an eager doggy grin that she had to chuckle as she stood up and opened the cabin door to grab a sweater and shrug it on.

  As they went down the front steps together, the few dogs left in the yard raised their heads or sat up where they had been resting in or near their boxes. Lack of activity had dulled their usual optimistic expectation of exercise, and they exhibited a decided lack of enthusiasm, though they had been interested enough in the food and water she had provided for them earlier.

  They don’t expect me to take them out, Jessie realized sadly, or they’d be tugging at their tethers and yelping for attention.

  Only one of the older dogs, who like Jessie was nursing an almost healed injury, responded to the appearance of woman and lead dog by pacing toward them and attentively watching Jessie’s face with longing in his eyes.

  “Good old Pete.”

  She walked across to lean down, rub his ears, and unfasten his tether. “You want to come with us? Why not?”

  She stood for a moment looking toward Knik Road, which ran past the end of her long driveway, then frowned and headed for the woods behind her cabin instead. On a day as full of approaching fall as this, with the bite of cooler temperatures in the air to inspire them, other mushers would be out with their teams on training runs. Until there was snow and it grew deep enough to fill the woodland trails, they would drive their dogs ahead of four-wheel ATVs on trails that paralleled Knik Road, and she had no desire to meet them and to see the sympathy in their eyes and voices at finding her afoot, still limping slightly.

  Circling the cabin, she led Pete and Tank to a narrow cut in the trees that would lead eventually to a whole network of training trails that ran for miles in all directions, maintained by the sled dog racers who had created them and used them every winter. Without snow to cover the tangles of ground-cover, stumps of small trees and bushes had been hacked off and removed, along with the summer’s growth of weeds. It was a path too rough for training but suitable for walking if she watched her footing and took care not to stumble. She could stroll at a comfortable pace, accommodate the limitations of her injury, and enjoy her two mutts’ delight in freedom from leash or harness.

  The woods were fairly quiet, some of the small birds that filled them with a cheerful summer cacophony already fleeing south before the frost arrived with chill winds to snatch leaves from the trees to litter the ground. A few leaves already crunched beneath her feet, and their earthy, slightly acrid smell rose in a pungent reminder of damp and decay to blend with a pale scent of wood smoke on the breeze from some neighbor’s breakfast fire.

  As Jessie paused to examine the rose hips plumping on a bush beside the trail, a squirrel chattered noisily down from the bare limb of a nearby birch at the three trespassers in its territory. Tank and Pete both hesitated and raised their heads at the sound but, wise to the improbability of catching such a scold, immediately moved on and igno
red the challenge. Pinching off one of the rose hips, Jessie rolled it between her fingers and considered gathering a pocketful to dry and save for tea rich with vitamin C. The idea was tempting, but knowing she didn’t really care all that much for the brew, she decided to leave them alone. Some moose would relish these later in the year. The extreme plumpness of the bright red berrylike fruit reminded her that they were supposed to be an indication of a heavy winter.

  From somewhere close a raven called from high above her head but, though she carefully inspected the treetops, remained a disembodied sound. Three times it broke the stillness of the woods with its ragged croak before taking flight, a soaring black silhouette against the thin cloud cover of the sky. Hearing the raven reminded Jessie that, according to legend, this trickster of the northern world had once had a lovely singing voice and pure white feathers but had lost them both in flames cast by an angry magician from whom it had craftily stolen the sun, moon, and stars. The heat had charred it black and left it with only the scorched croak; one of the many raven tales that always made her smile.

  For over an hour, the three enjoyed the freedom of the woods. Slowly the overcast cleared and sunshine brightened and warmed the morning with long shafts of light that splashed down through the canopy of the branches. Jessie’s mood lifted, and she found herself humming in wordless appreciation of the world around her. It was good sometimes to wander slowly along and notice the many small things that would soon be buried in snow. On a sled, behind a dog team, they all vanished in a blur of speed. Fall was her favorite season, and it was pleasant to have time to enjoy it, even if that gratification was the result of losing her usual training runs.