I run all of that through my mind. “Do you think she’s dead?”
“Two months is a long time to be missing, Kate.” He grimaces. “We need the names of the men she was involved with.”
“All we can do at this point is talk to the people she knew,” I tell him. “Especially her friends.”
As we pull away, I try to put my finger on something else that’s bothering me about our meeting with the Fishers, but I can’t pinpoint it. I glance out the window and see Eli Fisher standing at the rear of the wagon, watching us, his mouth a thin, flat line.
“You know, Chief, that was pretty smooth, asking for one of those bread boxes.”
I glance over at Tomasetti and see one side of his mouth twitch, and I know he’s messing with me. “How much do I owe you?” I ask.
“I thought maybe you could buy dinner.”
I glance at the clock on the dash. It’s almost 6:00 P.M. I wish I could reach out and stop time. “Is later okay?”
“What do you have in mind?”
“I thought we’d drive up to Monongahela Falls and talk to the parents of the missing boy.”
He gives me a look of feigned disappointment. “You’re not trying to weasel out of dinner, are you?”
“Wouldn’t dream of it.”
CHAPTER 8
Irene and Perry Mast live on a mile-wide swath of farmland cut into national forest fifty miles north of Buck Creek. According to Goddard, the farm is over two hundred years old. During the Civil War, the house was part of the Underground Railroad, a stopping point for African slaves escaping to Canada. Now the Masts run a large hog operation and farm corn and soybeans.
Dusk has fallen by the time Tomasetti and I turn into the narrow gravel lane. It’s bordered on both sides by vast fields of corn as high as a man’s head. I catch the telltale whiff of hog manure as we speed toward the house. Most Amish farms are neat and well managed, the kinds of idyllic places photographers like to capture for postcards or coffee-table books. That’s not the case with the Mast farm.
The lane curves right and a sprawling brick house with peeling white paint and a rusty tin roof looms into view. Ahead, a massive barn with red paint weathered to brown greets us like a grizzled old friend. Looking through the fence rails, I see a dozen or so Hampshire hogs rooting around in mud so deep, their bellies scrape the surface.
The farm has a depressed, overused look to it, as if the people who own it no longer have the will to maintain it. I wonder if the loss of their son nine years earlier has anything to do with it.
Tomasetti steers the Tahoe around deep ruts and parks adjacent to the fence. “Damn place stinks,” he says as he slides out.
“Pigs,” I tell him as I start toward the house. “Poorly managed manure pit.”
“Great.” We share a look, and I know he’s thinking about the case we worked last winter, when three family members perished in the cesspit on their farm.
“There’s a light in the metal building over there.”
His voice jerks me back to the present, and I follow his finger as he points. Set back a short distance from the barn, a large windowless steel building looks out of place among the older wood structures. The sliding door stands open about three feet and dim yellow light slants through the opening.
A narrow dirt path cut into knee-high grass takes us toward the shed. We’re fifteen feet from the door when I notice several objects the size of soccer balls in the grass. At first, I think they’re decorative rocks. I’m nearly upon them before I realize they’re severed hog heads.
Tomasetti actually takes a step back, sends me a “What the fuck?” look.
“They’re probably slaughtering hogs,” I explain.
“Well, if the smell of shit isn’t bad enough, let’s just throw in a couple of severed heads.”
“You want to wait out here?”
He stares down at the heads in disgust. “This is going to ruin the whole baby back rib thing for me.”
Grinning, I go through the door. “Man up, Tomasetti.”
I grew up on a farm where the slaughter of livestock was a routine part of life. I bore witness to the process a dozen times before I was old enough to realize how much I hated it. Sense memories, I think, and I’m surprised at how vividly those days come rushing back.