“Oh, believe me. We will.”
Chris stared at his beer bottle again as if it were calling to him. He tilted it to his lips and finished it and wiped his mouth. Then he waved at the waitress to order another. “Do you know anything more about what happened to Haley Adams?” he asked.
“That’s why I wanted to talk to you. The more we learn about Haley, the more questions we have.”
“There are rumors flying around the set, you know,” Chris said.
“Like what?”
“People are saying she’s dead. Is that true?”
“I hope not,” Stride replied.
“Do you have any reason to think she might be?”
“For now, we just want to find her.”
“You guys seem awfully interested in an intern who simply stopped showing up for work,” Chris pointed out. “That makes me think there’s something more going on here.”
“Nothing that I can talk about,” Stride said.
Chris pursed his lips and nodded. “Okay. I get it. What do you want to know?”
“Who hired Haley to work on the crew? How did she get the job?”
“The production manager hires local film students as interns. It’s pretty common. They’re usually cheap and enthusiastic. Haley was the best of the bunch. Mature. Reliable. It was strange, though. For a UMD student, she didn’t know much about Duluth.”
“What do you mean?” Stride asked.
“Being from Duluth myself, I made it a point to be friendly with the local kids. I talked to them when I could. Last week I was talking to Haley, and I made some offhanded joke about lefse. She didn’t know what it was. I laughed. I said, ‘How can you grow up in Minnesota and not know what lefse is?’”
“What did she say?”
“She said she’s from Florida, not Minnesota. She came to Duluth to go to college. Apparently, one of her high school teachers grew up here and was telling her what a great area it is.”
Stride frowned. “Okay. Maybe.”
“Yeah, maybe. The thing is, the next day I took some of the crew across the bridge to get burgers at the Anchor Bar. Haley went along and made a comment about never having been there. I mean, really? A UMD senior who has never been to the Anchor Bar? Hell, I was thrown out of there twice before the end of my freshman fall semester.”
“So you think she’s not who she said she was?”
“It raises some red flags,” Chris said. “It makes me wonder whether she was telling us the truth about her background.”
Stride eased back in the chair and drank his coffee, which was getting cold. “Odd question, but can you think of any reason Haley would have been spying on Dean Casperson?”
Chris stared at him. “Was she?”
Stride waited a moment and then said, “It looks that way.”
“What kind of spying do you mean?”
“Focusing a high-powered telescope on his bedroom window,” Stride said.
Chris’s brown eyes widened. “Wow. That’s disappointing. I thought better of the girl than that. But yeah, that kind of stuff happens all the time. It’s a real problem during location shooting, when celebrities don’t have the same privacy protections they do at the studio.”
“What would someone be looking for?” Stride asked.
“Anything. Sometimes it’s paparazzi trying to get candid photos they can sell. There’s big money in that. Sometimes it’s tabloid reporters looking for gossip and dirt. They’ll spy, bribe, hunt through garbage, whatever it takes. You already mentioned something about the National Gazette today, didn’t you? Believe me, this kind of crap is their specialty.”
Stride thought about the possible motives. Photos. Gossip. Dirt. Scandal. That would explain Haley Adams peering through the bedroom window at Dean Casperson. It didn’t explain why she was missing. It also didn’t explain John Doe and the recently fired Glock.
“Have there been any leaks about the film or the cast?” he asked.
“There are always leaks.”
“Anything serious or embarrassing?”
Chris shook his head. “Nothing out of the ordinary. The weather has put us behind schedule and hurt our budget, but that’s par for the course. I don’t get too worried if something like that shows up in Variety.”
“What about other problems? Things that you wouldn’t want to see in a tabloid headline.”
Chris hesitated. “I’m sure I don’t know half the crap that goes on when the cameras are off. And I don’t ask.”
“That seems like a cautious response, Chris.”
“Well, filming a movie is like a nonstop high school dance. There are rumors, fights, hookups, romances, parties, breakups. Most of the time, you simply try to drag the project across the finish line before complete chaos ensues. By that standard, things have gone pretty smoothly so far.”
Stride heard something in Chris’s voice that hadn’t been there before. It was an airy lightness that sounded forced and insincere. He wasn’t talking like a Minnesotan anymore. He was keeping secrets.
“There’s something you’re not telling me,” Stride said.
Chris took a long time to answer. “Okay, you’re right, but it has nothing to do with Haley.”
“Tell me anyway.”
Chris sighed. His mouth squeezed into an unhappy frown. He played with the beer bottle between his fingers. “One of the other interns quit the crew after two days. There was an incident.”
“What kind of incident?” Stride asked.
“She went out drinking with a cast member. Things got out of hand. At first she claimed she was sexually assaulted. Then she changed her story and said it was simply a misunderstanding.”
“Rape’s not a misunderstanding.”
“I’m only telling you what she said. She didn’t want to pursue it and didn’t want the police involved. She quit. That was the end of that.”
“What was her name?” Stride asked.
“I’d rather not say. She won’t talk to you anyway.”
“Why not? Was she paid off? Is that why she changed her story?”
“I can’t say anything more,” Chris said. “Our lawyers would freak. I’m sorry, Lieutenant.”
Stride shook his head in disgust. He hated seeing people played like pawns. “Which cast member? Who assaulted her?”
“There was no assault,” Chris insisted. “Please don’t characterize it like that.”
“Who?”
Chris looked over his shoulder as if to make sure they weren’t being watched. Spies were everywhere. His voice sank to a whisper.
“Jungle Jack,” he said.
7
Stride was restless. He didn’t go home.
Instead, he drove north out of the city on Jean Duluth Road until the buildings, traffic, and people disappeared around him. It didn’t take long to leave civilization behind in Duluth. There was nothing but small towns and dense forest all the way to the Canadian border. Sometimes he felt as if the city were the last pioneer outpost, holding back the encroaching wilderness. It was grayer up there. More primitive. And more ominous.
His headlights guided him. He had to be cautious about deer at night, as John Doe had learned too late. This far north, he had to think about wolves, too. Stride stayed on the road until it ended, and then he turned onto Highway 44 and continued into the middle of nowhere. There was nothing on either side of him but evergreens crowding the pavement. He passed no homes and no crossroads. A few snow flurries kept him company by skittering across his windshield.
He knew where he was going, but he didn’t really know why. He hadn’t been to this place in years. He hadn’t even thought about going back until Chris had mentioned it. This was the part of the Northland where Art Leipold had owned hunting ground. This was where three women had died.