“Ah, come on. Just a peek? Something I can fantasize about when I get back to raisin country.”

Hively was starting to look flustered. “What time is it?” he said and checked his watch. “Fuck shit fuck.”

“You got an appointment, Mason?” Ort said.

“A deadline. You two humpy lads had better go away now. Little Mason cannot play, so come again another day.”

“Too bad our timing is wrong,” I said. “I’m a big Stieg Larsson fan, and I understand you are too, Mason.”

“Truer words were never spoken, but I have moved on and on and on, and so, my brethren, should you.”

“I was just hoping for a quick glance at where The Boy with the Dragon Tattoo would have been filmed. Ort told me about that movie that unfortunately never got made.”

The smaller of the two Mexicans I’d seen out by the big metal building came into the kitchen now. He was carrying a tray and what looked like a plate with some half-eaten food on it. He set the tray on the counter and the plate and some utensils in the sink.

Hively nodded at the Mexican and said, “Thank you, Blanco. Did you enjoy your supper?”

The Mexican looked puzzled at first, before the message sank in. He said, “Yeah. That spaghetti tasted very good.”

I tried again to get permission for a quick look at the dungeon, but now Hively began to get really agitated, his hands shaky and his eyes moving like a tilt-a-whirl. So I backed off. Ort and I walked out to his pick-up truck and drove back toward Mount Shasta.

CHAPTER TWENTY-SEVEN

A late-model black van came bumping up the driveway as we exited the Skutnik lodge property. I couldn’t see who was in it, but there appeared to be two people in the front seat in addition to the driver, who looked like a compatriot of Pablo and Blanco. Were there others in the back of the van? Were they Mexican illegals who did the gardening around the lodge, or who eviscerated visitors who got too nosey for Mason Hively’s taste? Or was this crude racial profiling on my part?

I asked Ort why there were so many Mexicans—if that’s what they were—working for Skutnik.

“Hal’s cheap as shit,” Ort said. “Martine and Danielle do the hiring at MS and they pay okay, so we can get locals and legals. But at the lodge they get these illegals and also roughnecks who been in jail and shit. Also, Mason likes them to tie him up sometimes. I’ve heard that some of them’ll do it, but they think they should get paid extra for helping Mason get his jollies. Anyway, who are they gonna complain to?”

“No, there’s no Saul Alinsky in Mount Shasta.”

“No. Who?”

“He organized poor people in Chicago in the forties and fifties.”

“Like a union? The dude wouldn’t be welcome around Mount Shasta. He’d get hurt.”

“I noticed that Pablo and Blanco carried side arms. Is this for protection or other uses?”

As he pulled back onto highway eighty-nine, Ort said, “I reckon both. Of course, a lot of the more dangerous Mexicans—the ones in the gangs—they like to stick people with knives. I guess it’s just a habit they have. Save on ammo or somethin’.”

“Might Hal or Rover or Mason hire people like that?”

“Not to keep around the house, I wouldn’t say. Some of them are mules. They carry weed shipments east. But those criminal types of individuals mostly work for the cartels. I saw some guys up at the lodge a couple of weeks ago I didn’t like the looks of. But they ain’t been back, as far as I know.”

“Could Hal have his own weed growing and wholesaling operation? I thought that was Martine and Danielle’s department.”

“If Hal sold weed, he’d fuck it up like he does everything else. The guy is freakin’ incompetent, plus of course being kind of a whack job. Anyway, Hal doesn’t know for shit. It’s Rover and Mason who use some of the cartel mules for certain jobs, I think. I don’t know exactly what. I’d hate to think. But Rover and Mason don’t grow, I wouldn’t guess. Those two wouldn’t know how to plant a petunia. They are strictly movie stars and porn and shit like that.”

By the time Ort dropped me off back at the motel, it was after five o’clock. Paul Delaney wasn’t in his room, so I walked down to The Bar, thinking he might be there. He wasn’t at his customary corner table in his cozy hang-out with the harmonic convergence going on outside and the Patsy Cline records playing inside, and the waitress said she hadn’t seen Delaney.

I went back to the motel and made arrangements for Ricky Esteban’s flight to Redding the next day and his rental car, then texted Ricky with the details.

I banged on the door of Delaney’s room again. Still no answer. His rented Nissan was parked outside the room, so he hadn’t driven anywhere. I called Ort and said I couldn’t find Delaney and I was worried. Ort said he’d stop by the motel later and maybe we could both look around.

I phoned Marsden Davis and got him just heading home from the precinct.

“Any news of the Kim and Miller homicides? I looked at the Globe online, but the paper’s not reporting anything new.”

“It’ll be in tomorrow’s paper, but I’ll give you a preview. It looks like Miller was killed in a van he was forced into behind Kim’s building. Forensics found footprints in the blood in Kim’s apartment, and the same blood—Bryan Kim’s—was found on Miller’s shoes and on the back stairs and on the pavement in the alley. We’re thinking that Miller was actually present when Kim was stabbed. He figured rightly that as a witness he was gonna get it next, and he ran out and down the back stairs, and the killer or killers chased him and grabbed him and tossed him in what we think was their van and stabbed him in there until he bled out and then dumped him on the Cape, poor guy. A lot of this is theorizing, but it’s where we think this is headed.”

“What van? This is news about a van.”

“A neighbor saw three Hispanic males park a van in the alley behind Kim’s building. This citizen thought the two were cleaning or construction people, but later he wondered about that and he talked to an officer. This guy said he looked out later when a patrol car was checking the alley, and the van was gone. So now we’re getting somewhere, a little bit.”

“How little a bit?”

“The dude who saw the van didn’t remember any useful detail. We’ve got a woman in forensics who helps people recollect stuff like that, and she’s workin’ on this guy’s brain. But all we know for sure is, the van was dark colored and probably on the late-model side. There’s a security camera at the end of the alley for the condo units down there. I’ve got people looking at the tapes.”

“No tag ID?”

“Would I forget to mention that? We’re hoping the tapes will get us a read.”

I said, “There might be a connection to drug dealers here in Mount Shasta. I saw a black van with three Hispanics in it this afternoon.”

“No shit,” Davis said. “You saw three brown men in a black van, and you didn’t make a citizen’s arrest?”

“These guys are almost certainly up to their eyebrows in Siskiyou County pot growing and wholesaling. If these three are who I think they are, they have connections to one of the big cartels, but I’m not sure about that. They’re probably mules who were doing an eastern run, and while they were in Boston they did a side job, killing Bryan Kim. Somebody at Hey Look Media had monitored Miller’s phone conversation with Kim. Kim had found out from a guy named Paul Delaney, an old friend of Eddie Wenske, that Wenske had discovered drug-dealing connections with Hey Look Media and Wenske was in Siskiyou County investigating this and living undercover among the mules when he disappeared.”

Davis said, “That’s pretty convoluted, but I guess plausible.”

“So Kim was killed for the same reason Wenske had to be silenced—to protect the drug operation that was basically keeping the ineptly run Hey Look Media empire afloat. And Boo Miller was both the mechanism by which HLM found out that Wenske was onto them, and then he was in the wrong place at the wrong time—the right place for HLM—when he showed up at Kim’s Boston apartment to pool their information and then to brief me that night at dinner.”