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And There He Kept Her: A Novel
And There He Kept Her: A Novel
And There He Kept Her: A Novel
Ebook441 pages7 hours

And There He Kept Her: A Novel

Rating: 4 out of 5 stars

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"A dark and complex mystery that will consume you."—Julie Clark, New York Times bestselling author of The Last Flight

They thought he was a helpless old man. They were wrong.

When two teenagers break into a house on a remote lake in search of prescription drugs, what starts as a simple burglary turns into a nightmare for all involved. Emmett Burr has secrets he's been keeping in his basement for more than two decades, and he'll do anything to keep his past from being revealed. As he gets the upper hand on his tormentors, the lines blur between victim, abuser, and protector.

Personal tragedy has sent former police officer Ben Packard back to the small Minnesota town of Sandy Lake in search of a fresh start. Now a sheriff's deputy, Packard is leading the investigation into the missing teens, motivated by a family connection. As clues dry up and time runs out to save them, Packard is forced to reveal his own secrets and dig deep to uncover the dark past of the place he now calls home.

Unrelentingly suspenseful and written with a piercing gaze into the dark depths of the human soul, And There He Kept Her is a thrilling page-turner that introduces readers to a complicated new hero and forces us to consider the true nature of evil.

Follow Acting Deputy Sheriff Ben Packard back into Minnesota's North Country August 15th with Where the Dead Sleep.

LanguageEnglish
PublisherSourcebooks
Release dateJun 14, 2022
ISBN9781728247908
And There He Kept Her: A Novel
Author

Joshua Moehling

JOSHUA MOEHLING grew up as an Army brat and moved all over the US and Germany. After attending college in South Dakota and Mankato, MN he moved to Minneapolis and began a career in the medical device industry. AND THERE HE KEPT HER is his first novel.

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  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I really liked this debut novel by Moehling. I particularly liked the main character, Ben Packard, who is the acting sheriff of the small town of Sandy Lake. You learned a lot about and including the fact that he's gay (which apparently netted some 1 star reviews from unsuspecting homophobes). I particularly enjoyed all the other characters that you can easily see coming back in a sequel, which I would love to see.The plot centers around teenagers who go missing. We see this story from all sides so there are no big gotcha moments but quite a few a-ha moments of how pieces start to fall into place. I love that the bad guy is multi-faceted and while unquestionably a bad guy you see him questioning some of his life-choices. You see the victim using her wits to stay alive. And Ben Packard being emotionally and physically pulled in all directions just trying to do his best. And Gary, he is a peripheral character, but provides some great comic relief (he's also gay so be forewarned).This book isn't really a thriller/mystery in the typical sense of the genre since you know the who and what but and you're learning the how and why of it all which depends on the diverse cast of characters that Moehling has put together.Many thanks to NetGalley and Poisoned Pen Press for providing me with an advanced copy of this book in exchange for my honest review.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    And There He Kept Her by Joshua MoehlingSmall town murder mystery that presents a new main character and town that both have plenty of potential to provide much fodder for future stories. This debut author is one I would gladly read again.What I liked: * Knowing what happened to Jenny and Jesse from the first chapter* The writing, plot, pacing, and overall story* The small town setting * Deputy Ben Packard, acting sheriff and investigator: from a bigger city, chose to move to and work in Sandy Lake County after losing someone important, has secrets, a bit of a loner, works hard, interesting, would like to know more about him* Jenny: Kidnapped sixteen-year-old, Ben’s niece, person being looked for throughout the story* Susan: Jenny’s mother, Ben’s cousin, chef-cook, restaurant owner, a bit different – on the spectrum perhaps, might be a recurring character* The diversity of the staff that Ben works with – some will no doubt show up in future books if this becomes a series – really liked Kelly(dispatcher) and Jill Thielen but others will play their parts as the team becomes more known over time* Gary: dog rescue owner with an intriguing past – would love to know more about him* Some of the quirky characters* Learning about Nick’s brother who went missing decades before – will Nick find out what happened to him if the series progresses? * That it was so easy to dislike the bad guys though they were rather stereotypical in some ways. * The police procedural aspects of the story* That Jenny’s storyline was tied up in a neat bow at the end with no dangling strings * Knowing that there is plenty of ground laid for another book if the author and publisher decide to provide one. What I didn’t like: * The people I was meant not to like and the crimes they committed* Some of the parents parenting* Having to wait for book two…if this IS a seriesDid I enjoy this book? YesWould I read more by this author? YesThank you to NetGalley and Sourcebooks-Poisoned Pen Press for the ARC – This is my honest review.4-5 Stars
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    And There He Kept Her is Joshua Moehling's debut novel.Moehling kicks off his tale with a 'grab you by the throat' opening prologue. Two small town Minnesota teens break into the house of a old man. We're not quite sure what they're after, but things definitely don't go as planned....We then meet new on the job, Acting Sherriff, Ben Packard. He's got ties to the town and his own secrets that he keeps close to his chest. I quite liked Ben as a lead character. He's smart and more than capable. Moehling has given him an interesting personal life as well. The supporting cast gives us a very competent woman deputy and another deputy not so on the ball. The residents of Sandy Cove are eclectic. And truthfully, it's not a town I would want to live in. Moehling has penned a dark, gritty tale. From the publisher: "They thought he was a helpless old man. They were wrong." There's lots of ways for the book to unfold from that initial premise. As readers, we know what's happened in the basement, even as Ben tries to piece things together. Having the advantage of the two narratives definitely ramps up the tension. (Gentle readers - this one may not be the book for you.) There's a satisfying ending to And There He Kept Her. But, there's also a door left open for an unanswered question from the past. So, it sounds like there will be another book with Ben Packard - one I would happily pick up.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    law-enforcement, forced-imprisonment, suspense, grieving, triggers, Minnesota, thriller, secrets, procedural, small-town, murder, violence, victimization, family-dynamics*****Finding the missing teenagers (the girl has insulin dependent diabetes and is without her materials) is the driving force for Deputy/Acting Sheriff Ben Packard who left Minneapolis PD after a devastating personal loss and moved North to the small town where he had family connections.Emmett is disgusting and has a history of female abuse in a hidden room in his house.And it only gets worse from there. The writing is good, but the graphic aspects were too triggering for me. I read it, but it wasn't easy because I know that this is more than fiction. The story is grim but compelled me onward to the end.I requested and received a free e-book copy from Poisoned Pen Press via NetGalley. Thank you.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Ben Packard moves to a small town where he used to summer as a child to become the acting Sheriff and get away from the city where he was a cop. In this town two kids break into a house to commit a robbery and soon go missing. Ben’s niece is one of those kids and he promises his cousin that he will find her. She is kidnapped and held in the basement of Emmet Burrs. This is a dark story, a thriller but not a mystery. Great character development, especially with Ben. You get to know and feel the characters. The writing is very descriptive and makes the story flow. Since the reader knows at the onset what happened, it is more me wondering who was going to live and who was going to die. Really intense!
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Review of Advance Reader’s Edition eBookWhen Detective Ben Packard suffered a tragic personal loss and left the Minneapolis Police Department after serving there for some twelve years, he headed to Sandy Lake. As a child, he and his family had spent time in this small town and, although it continued to hold the secret as to what happened to his brother, Nick, more than twenty years ago, it also held some warm memories of time spent here with family. And his cousin, Susan, and her family lived there, too.With Sheriff Stan Shaw currently undergoing treatment for colon cancer, Packard has assumed his duties as acting sheriff. And now, with Jesse Crawford and Jenny Wheeler missing, the whole department now hunts for the two teens. Ben will need to unravel the secrets of Sandy Lake if he is to have any hope of bringing Jenny home to her family.=========Dark, grim, and compelling, this captivating narrative pulls readers in from the outset and keeps the pages turning at a brisk rate. Well-defined, nuanced characters populate the story; most are relatable and likable. [But a couple of characters are so detestable they redefine evil and are unlikely to elicit even a drop of sympathy from the reader.] The story is character-driven; surprising revelations keep the characters authentic as relationships are revealed and secrets exposed.The evolving tale is complex and intriguing and, at the same time, sinister and disturbing. Nightmarish events keep the tension high while a strong sense of place anchors the narrative. The small town atmosphere permeates the telling of the tale. In a twist from the usual mystery, readers know from the beginning exactly what’s happened and who did what, meaning there is no big mystery to unravel, no stunning reveal, no twisting plot to parse out answers or red herrings. Instead, the unfolding story is, for the most part, a police procedural that follows the investigation into the disappearance of the two teens. The only disappointment here is that, with so much made of the missing brother, Nick, throughout the story, readers are sure to be disappointed that the question of his fate remains unanswered. Recommended.I received a free copy of this eBook from Poisoned Pen Press and NetGalley#AndThereHeKeptHer #NetGalley
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    4. 5* So good! This story drew me in immediately and held my attention. Even though it was an intense thriller, with police procedural vibes, there were times the author was able to sprinkle in some bits of humor. Gary, the former truck driver, was such a likeable character, and the author knew how to paint his personality so perfectly that I could imagine being in the story in person. He did a great job with that. Also, Mrs. MacDonald. What a hoot! This lady genuinely made me laugh out loud several times. She was so witty and full of life.Joshua Moehling wrote a very good debut novel. I look forward to his next one and I'm hoping it will follow up on with our main character, Ben, in this small, charming town. We need more experiences with Gary and Mrs. MacDonald. What happened to Ben's brother? That is where I hope the next book will pick up and explore. It seems there may be more than one Emmett Burr harboring secrets among the residents.Thanks to NetGalley and the publisher for my advanced reader copy in exchange for my honest review.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Ben Packard leaves the Minneapolis MN PD to become an investigator in Sandy Lake MN. hoping for a less major crimes to solve in a small town. All this changes when a teenage boy & girl go missing. But one resident harbors dark secrets. Early on we learn what happen to the teenagers and who was involved. The boy is the son of Packard's cousin. And There He Kept He is a dark tale and apage turner.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Two teenagers attempt to break into a senior citizen’s house to steal prescription medication only to be interrupted by the homeowner, Emmett Burr, who is armed and ready to take on the trespassers.

    When two teenagers go missing in Sandy Lake, Minnesota, Sheriff's Deputy Ben Packard (acting Sheriff on account of the previous Sheriff’s terminal illness), leads the investigation into their disappearance. The case is also personal on account of one of the teenagers being the daughter of his cousin. As the story progresses, we find out more about Ben's personal life and his family's connection to Sandy Lake including a personal loss from his childhood and the mystery surrounding the same. Secrets from Emmett's past are also gradually revealed. We also get to meet some of the residents of this small town as the police leave no stone unturned in tracing the whereabouts of the two missing teens.

    Dark and disturbing, And There He Kept Her by Joshua Moehling is a well-written debut that I am guessing will be the first in a series. The story is told in the third-person narrative style and switches between Ben’s and Emmett's PoVs. The author successfully weaves in some light-hearted moments in the narrative with the small-town dynamics and an interesting cast of characters among whom are two neighbors who require police intervention to resolve their feuds! The author does touch upon some important themes- substance abuse among schoolchildren, seniors’ safety, kidnapping and sexual abuse and some of the scenes are more than a bit disturbing. Having said that, I do not consider this book to be a “thriller” in the true sense of the term. Yes, crimes are committed – as sick and disgusting as one may imagine, but the reader knows mostly everything from the get-go - where the missing teenagers are, what happened to them and who is responsible! So all we have to do is follow the police as they uncover the “mystery”- no twists, no shocking reveals and therefore nothing much that makes this book stand out. The police procedural angle was well executed and the Deputy Sheriff’s trials and tribulations in navigating through his not-so-competent department, the gossip mill and speculation about his personal life while dealing with his own personal tragedies made for an interesting story.

    While I enjoyed the read and truly liked the main character, I can’t say that this had me on the edge of my seat or rapidly turning pages to find out what happens at the end . Thus for me, though this is a well-written book I cannot give it more than an average rating.

    Many thanks to NetGalley and Poisoned Pen Press for the DRC of this novel. All opinions expressed here are my own.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    When I saw the cover of this book, I KNEW it was a must read for me! I didn’t even glance at the synopsis and wow I did not see what this book was going to be about at all!!

    First: You know exactly who “he is” and “where he kept her”
    Second: We know who she was, and who she is now!

    I enjoyed the new hot queer police chief on the scene and it being a small town and all, the author does a terrific job at making the townies comical.

    Creepy, dark and twisted and I am hopeful there will be a part 2, because I need more please!!

    Thank you for the gifted copy.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Ben Packard, police detective, takes a job in Sandy Lake, MN where he spent his childhood summers and where his brother disappeared and was never found. In this book, he investigates two missing teenagers. The story is told from his perspective and also that of bad guy Emmett Burr. I found that I Iiked the way the author depicted all of the characters in this small town, and as the story progresses, the tension and suspense builds. This is the first in a Ben Packard series, and I'll definitely read the next one.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Great mystery thriller. Didn't want to put it down!

Book preview

And There He Kept Her - Joshua Moehling

The front cover for “And There He Kept Her” by Joshua Moehling. The cover shows a house in the forest by a lake with a foggy night sky.

Praise for And There He Kept Her

"Fans of Sue Grafton are going to love And There He Kept Her. Joshua Moehling has crafted a dark and complex mystery that will consume you, starring a protagonist who is equal parts quirky Milhone and steady Gamache. In the wake of a tragic loss, sheriff’s deputy Ben Packard has returned to Sandy Lake, hoping to start over with a blank slate. What he finds is a town populated with eccentric characters and its own dark secrets, proving that small town life can still add up to big trouble."

—Julie Clark, New York Times bestselling author of The Last Flight

Joshua Moehling is a fresh, powerful new voice in crime fiction. His debut novel is a twisted ride with a detective you won’t soon forget. This book isn’t just unputdownable—it’s the definition of the word.

—Samantha Downing, international bestselling author of My Lovely Wife and For Your Own Good

"There’s a terrific new voice in crime fiction, and it belongs to Joshua Moehling. And There He Kept Her is a taut, beautifully written thriller reminiscent of Karin Slaughter. A novel with heart, its protagonist, Deputy Sheriff Ben Packard, is the kind of hero we need today, a man wrestling with his sexual identity as he searches for missing teens in a small Minnesota town guarding secrets of its own."

—Jonathan Santlofer, author of The Last Mona Lisa

"When Deputy Sheriff Ben Packard investigates the disappearance of two teenagers in Sandy Lake, Minnesota, he exposes the seamy underbelly of a small American town. And There He Kept Her is a sharp, intense thriller combining a dark plot with a relentless pace. An absorbing, impressive debut."

—A. J. Banner, #1 Amazon, USA Today, and Publishers Weekly bestselling author

"And There He Kept Her plays out like something on TV, resembling Yellowstone in its small-town setting and larger-than-life drama set against captivatingly detailed scenery… And There He Kept Her is a great opportunity to get into a new detective series at the ground level. Especially if you like the idea of the hardboiled detective novel but prefer your stories set in modern times with light touches of current social issues. Moehling’s is a strong debut."

—Associated Press

The title page for “And There He Kept Her” by Joshua Moehling, published by Poisoned Pen Press.

For Chris

Copyright © 2022, 2023 by Joshua Moehling

Cover and internal design © 2022 by Sourcebooks

Cover design by Stephanie Gafron/Sourcebooks

Cover photo by Ildiko Neer/Arcangel Images

Internal design by Holli Roach/Sourcebooks

Sourcebooks, Poisoned Pen Press, and the colophon are registered trademarks of Sourcebooks.

All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means including information storage and retrieval systems—except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles or reviews—without permission in writing from its publisher, Sourcebooks.

The characters and events portrayed in this book are fictitious or are used fictitiously. Any similarity to real persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental and not intended by the author.

All brand names and product names used in this book are trademarks, registered trademarks, or trade names of their respective holders. Sourcebooks is not associated with any product or vendor in this book.

Published by Poisoned Pen Press, an imprint of Sourcebooks

P.O. Box 4410, Naperville, Illinois 60567-4410

(630) 961-3900

sourcebooks.com

The Library of Congress has cataloged the hardcover edition as follows:

Names: Moehling, Joshua, author.

Title: And there he kept her / Joshua Moehling.

Description: Naperville, Illinois : Poisoned Pen Press, 2022.

Identifiers: LCCN 2021023658 (print) | LCCN 2021023659 (ebook) | (hardcover) | (epub)

Subjects: GSAFD: Mystery fiction. | LCGFT: Detective and mystery fiction. | Novels.

Classification: LCC PS3613.O3344 A85 2022 (print) | LCC PS3613.O3344 (ebook) | DDC 813/.6--dc23

LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2021023658

LC ebook record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2021023659

Contents

Chapter One

Chapter Two

Chapter Three

Chapter Four

Chapter Five

Chapter Six

Chapter Seven

Chapter Eight

Chapter Nine

Chapter Ten

Chapter Eleven

Chapter Twelve

Chapter Thirteen

Chapter Fourteen

Chapter Fifteen

Chapter Sixteen

Chapter Seventeen

Chapter Eighteen

Chapter Nineteen

Chapter Twenty

Chapter Twenty-One

Chapter Twenty-Two

Chapter Twenty-Three

Chapter Twenty-Four

Chapter Twenty-Five

Chapter Twenty-Six

Chapter Twenty-Seven

Chapter Twenty-Eight

Chapter Twenty-Nine

Chapter Thirty

Chapter Thirty-One

Chapter Thirty-Two

Excerpt from Where the Dead Sleep

Reading Group Guide

A Conversation with the Author

Acknowledgments

About the Author

Chapter One

4:30 a.m.

Rain lashed the boy as he ran from his car back to the old man’s house. It was cold enough that he could see his breath. Water dripped from the ends of his shaggy hair, ran down his scalp and under his shirt. At least the clouds had hidden the moon. The news had called it a supermoon. All night it had followed everywhere he went, an ivory face watching him, reading his mind.

The road was gravel and getting muddier by the minute. Jesse tried running along the edge, but the ground was soft and soon his feet were as wet as his hooded sweatshirt.

On his left, houses faced the lake. He ran by a mailbox that said MILLER in faded letters and then by another mailbox that said MADIS N, this one pitched forward with its door hanging open like it was about to be sick. He stopped in front of the small gray house set back from the road and realized he was looking right through a hole where the door should have been and out the other side at the water beyond. He looked back at the MILLER house and noticed it was missing most of its roof and all of its windows.

Jesse ran on, already wet to the skin. He turned off the road and followed two muddy ruts past a stand-alone garage. The house ahead of him was a dark-brown rectangle without a straight line or a sharp corner. A wooden staircase went up the front to a sliding glass door and small windows with the blinds drawn.

Jesse stopped to catch his breath. In the dark, the house looked like it had climbed out of the mud or was sinking back into it. No part of him wanted to be here, to have to pay back his debt like this.

In and out. Get it over with, he muttered.

He bypassed the staircase, pulling up his hood as he skidded down a muddy set of uneven steps alongside the house.

The lower level of the house was cement block. A narrow yard widened in the direction of rusty metal chairs overturned around a fire pit before gradually descending to the lake. The house had another deck on the back. Underneath were the remnants of a depleted woodpile and a battered storm door with access to the basement.

Jesse pulled open the storm door and set the clip that propped it open. The back door had individual glass panes set in a crosshatch pattern. Jesse hit the window closest to the dead bolt with his elbow. The sound of breaking glass made his breath catch in his throat. He counted to ten, waiting for lights to come on. Nothing happened. He reached inside, undid the bolt and the twist lock on the doorknob. Thunder rolled overhead as he pushed the door open and stepped over the broken glass.

It was pitch-dark inside. A clock radio on a shelf flashed red numbers 12:00…12:00…12:00. It smelled like cigarettes and garbage and wet, rotten things. Jesse took a penlight from his back pocket and used it to sweep over a workbench on his left littered with scattered tools and boxes of nails and spools of wire and plastic grocery bags. A telephone with a tortured, twisted cord hung on the wall. On his right an old refrigerator droned. He pulled open the door hard enough to make the beer cans inside dance on their wire racks. The light reached all but the basement’s darkest corners. He left the door open.

Shelves made from concrete blocks and long sagging planks split the room in half lengthwise. In front of the shelves he saw a rocking chair with cracked leather on the seat and on the back. A sawed-off section of tree trunk was being used as a side table. He saw an enormous ceramic ashtray filled with cigarette butts and a garbage can overflowing with beer cans and crushed cigarette packs and boxes from microwave meals. On the floor behind the chair, a damp cardboard box had split its seams and let slide an avalanche of magazines. Nearly nude women stared up from the covers. Jesse picked up one closest to his foot—a moldy Penthouse from August 1981. More than twenty years before he was born.

He circled behind the shelves, past a wall-mounted sink and an open toilet in one corner. The other corner of the basement was built out into a small room with a metal door. It could have been for storage, but his gut told him it was something else. Jesse shivered at the threshold, his skin clammy and prickling with a million hairs. He made a sideways fist around the door’s sliding bolt and pulled it backward, stepping out of the way as the heavy door swung open on silent hinges.

He thumbed the penlight again. He wasn’t sure but he thought the walls were painted…pink. The color had peeled away in places, leaving discolored spots that looked like scabs. He saw a thin mattress covered in dark stains on a metal frame. A heavy chain hung limply through a steel ring bolted on the wall at the head of the bed.

Nothing about the scene in front of him made sense. He wasn’t sure what he was looking at, but he knew the last thing he’d ever want was to be left alone in this room, in the dark, with the door shut. He blindly reached for the inside door handle to pull it shut again and found there wasn’t one. He shined the penlight on it just to make sure.

This was a prison cell of some kind. A cage. How else to explain a door with no handle, no way to get out from the inside?

He shined the weak penlight across the blistered pink walls again. He felt like he was staring into the mouth of something that wanted to swallow him. When he killed the light, the darkness inside seemed to go down and down to a place that had never known the sun.

Behind him, the furnace made a loud ticking sound, then whoomped to life. Jesse turned away and shook off the bad thoughts. He stuck the light in his pocket and headed for the stairs that went up to the main floor. At the bottom, he stared at the closed door above him. He’d been told the old man would be drunk, at least. Passed out, if Jesse was lucky.

He labored up the first three steps, pausing on each one to talk himself out of turning around and making a run for it.

He turned one last time toward the dark room in the corner and thought about the stained mattress and the door with no handle.

Someone stepped on the broken glass by the basement door.

Jesse crouched and froze like a rabbit with no cover. The refrigerator door was still open, spilling light into the room. Behind it he saw a dark silhouette through the window in the basement door. The shape paused with one foot on the broken glass, then took another step into the room.

Jenny.

What the fuck are you doing here? Jesse hissed. He took out the penlight and flashed it at her so she could see where he was standing against the wall on the stairs.

I got worried, she whispered.

Jenny was much less wet than Jesse was, thanks to the oversize letter jacket with sleeves that went down past her fingertips and made her look like she had no shoulders. In the dark he couldn’t see her freckles, or her green eyes, or the eye tooth with the twist to it, the imperfection that made every one of her smiles perfect.

Where’s the car?

I moved it a little closer. I have the keys.

She came over and stood by his side at the bottom of the stairs. They both looked up at the door overhead. We shouldn’t be here, she said.

I don’t have any choice. He’s threatening my family.

We can figure out something else.

No, we can’t. He doesn’t want money. It’s this or something bad happens to my sister.

Jesse, come on. He’s messing with you. If you go back and say—

The floor creaked over their heads.

They stared at each other, wide-eyed, frozen. One second passed. Another. There was only the sound of the furnace blower and the drum of the rain, coming down hard again at the open basement door.

Jenny put a hand on Jesse’s arm and eased him a step backward.

The door at the top of the stairs crashed inward with enough force that it hit the wall and tried to bang shut again. The double-barreled shotgun leveled down at them kept it from closing all the way.

Jenny screamed and ducked behind Jesse. Jesse raised his hands in a pleading gesture. He waved the penlight at the fat, naked man standing above them with the shotgun and an oxygen mask over his mouth.

Hold on, hold on! We made a mistake. We were just leaving, Jesse pleaded. He felt Jenny’s body small and hard against his back, her hand tight around his arm.

The shotgun boomed like the end of the world. The light went out and fell from Jesse’s hand. Jenny screamed again when Jesse crumpled without a sound, all his weight falling back against her. They went backward down the steps, Jesse on top of her. Jenny hit her head on the concrete with the bright crack of a glass jar breaking.

The fat, naked man stepped down through the cloud of burning gunpowder and fired the second barrel.

Chapter Two

7:00 a.m.

The call about the bear came over the radio as Ben Packard was on his way to see the sheriff. He listened as dispatch directed it to another deputy on duty. Caller says she and her husband were walking their dog when a large black bear came out of the trees and charged their animal. Her husband grabbed the bear around the neck to make it let go of the dog. The husband has a bite or a scratch on his belly. He’s bleeding but not seriously wounded.

Packard picked up the mic. This is 217.

Dispatch came back. Go ahead, 217.

I’m 10–8. I can take the bear.

You’re not on the schedule, 217.

Yeah, yeah. I’m suited up and nearby. Let me take it.

Copy, 217.

The bear was gone by the time Packard arrived at the address. The house was a boxy, manufactured home on a grassy lot with a ring of ornamental grass surrounding a flagpole. Packard stood with an elderly man and his wife in a kitchen that smelled like lemon dish soap and coffee, waiting for the ambulance to arrive. The old man had taken his shirt off and was holding a wet paper towel to his wound.

The wife looked in the fridge and asked Packard, Can I make you a breakfast sandwich? Eggs and bacon on a biscuit. I could wrap it up and you could take it with.

Packard said, No thank you. That’s very kind of you to offer.

You can make me a breakfast sandwich, the old man said.

Hush. You’ll get your sandwich after the ambulance looks at you.

They better not think they’re taking me to the hospital. The old man pulled the pink paper towel away from his sunken chest to look, then put it back. There’s nothing wrong with me. They’ll do a bunch of tests and send in three doctors to ask me questions so each one can bill me. That’s how they fund Obamacare. Charging guys like me three times.

Packard hmmed, trying to sound sympathetic. How’s your dog?

The wife turned from the fridge, put the tips of her fingers over her mouth, and shook her head. The old man stared out the window over the sink and kept blinking.

I’m sorry, Packard said. I know how hard it is to lose your dog.

After that, the wife continued her verbal inventory of the fridge. He politely declined a slice of pie, a piece of fruit, and a cup of coffee to go—she had real cream if that’s how he took it.

When the EMTs arrived, Packard excused himself and left to find the bear. He drove slowly with the window down, watching the trees and the ditches for the animal. There had been a full moon the night before, followed by a fair amount of rain. The bear’s tracks were easy to follow in the soft ground on either side of the road.

A half mile later—thin, shrubby trees on one side, small homes spread far apart on the other—he came upon two men standing at the end of a driveway. One had a bloody rag wrapped around a hand he was holding against his chest. A blue pickup was backed into the driveway next to a chop saw and a pair of sawhorses set up outside a partially sided garage.

Is that from the bear or the saw? Packard asked as he rolled to a stop.

Bear, the bleeding guy said. We were just getting started. I was up on the ladder when the bear come across the road. I yelled but Jim was running the saw and had his ear protection on. I came down and tried to chase the bear away. Got too close and got raked across the back of my hand.

Where did the bear go?

It’s in the garage, said Jim.

Packard could see a boat on a trailer, a four-wheeler, and a riding mower packed into the two-car garage. What’s in there that a bear would want?

Fifty-pound bags of dog food and birdseed.

Packard parked the county SUV. There was no chance of making it to the sheriff’s house by 7:00 a.m. He texted the sheriff’s wife to let her know he was running late, then asked dispatch to have the ambulance at the old man’s house sent to his current location when they were done. He had the number for the county conservation officer in his phone. He called her to confirm what he should do about the bear.

Any idea if it’s a male or female? Theresa Whitaker asked.

Haven’t got that close yet, Packard said, keeping an eye on the garage, watching for any sign of movement.

Cubs?

Not that I’ve seen.

You have to put it down, Theresa told him. It’s attacked two people. I’ll call the university and have someone come pick up the carcass. They’ll test it and see if they can find a reason for the aggressiveness.

Packard gave her the address and then got out of the vehicle, taking the twelve-gauge shotgun from the rack behind his seat. He asked the men if there was anyone else on the property. Both shook their heads. Packard told them to stay where they were. Where’s the dog food?

Back right, behind the boat, Jim said.

Is there a garage door opener in that truck?

Yeah.

Let’s get it.

The guy with the bloody hand followed Packard to the truck in the driveway and unclipped the opener from the visor. Packard asked him to shut the garage door once he was inside.

Try not to shoot my boat, the guy said.

Packard approached the open garage with the shotgun raised. He stepped inside, nodded back at the man behind him, and waited as the door lowered. In twelve years as a police officer in Minneapolis, he’d fired his service weapon once. In the last eighteen months with the sheriff’s department in Sandy Lake, he’d already shot two deer and a moose, all mortally wounded after being struck by cars. A bear was another first.

The weak light on the overhead garage door unit stayed lit. Packard hugged the wall to his left, skirting the four-wheeler and the riding mower, since he didn’t know exactly where the bear was. The trailered fishing boat was a red Lund with a 60-horse Johnson tilted over the stern.

He could hear the sounds of plastic being dragged and the crunch of dry dog food. Near the back wall, he got his first glimpse of the bear—its snout buried in a torn bag—pinned in the far corner by the boat’s motor. Packard pegged its weight somewhere north of three hundred pounds. Its fur was deeply black and glossy. It smelled musky.

As soon as the bear realized he was there, it rose up on its hind legs, taller than Packard, who was six four. Packard kept the gun up but paused to marvel at the size of the animal. It moved its pale snout this way and that, sniffing the air. Nothing in its shiny black eyes gave any hint of what it was thinking. In such an enclosed space, they could have been in an interrogation room back at the station. Packard had a ridiculous urge to try to negotiate a deal with the bear. Let it off with a warning if it promised not to attack little dogs or cranky old men again.

The bear dropped its front paws on the motor’s lower unit, hard enough to bounce the front end of the trailer, then rose up tall again.

Packard took two quick steps forward and pulled the trigger.

The twelve gauge thundered. The bear curled like a question mark, then collapsed, boneless, to the floor. Packard waited for a few seconds, then hit a button on the back wall to raise the garage door. Daylight raced across the floor like a sunrise at high speed. He squatted next to the dead bear, his ears ringing. The animal already looked diminished in death. Packard put his hand on top of its head. I’m sorry, he said.


• • •

Packard was hours late by the time he turned into the sheriff’s driveway. A decorative split-rail fence ran a short way on either side, then ended abruptly, keeping nothing in or out. The house was a brick rambler with green shutters that backed up against acres of thick woods five miles outside of town.

Marilyn Shaw answered the door. Early sixties. Hair dyed red with gray roots. Wearing blue slacks and a cardigan sweater over a green shirt. She had a dish towel over one shoulder that she used to finish drying her hands before she took Packard’s between hers and stood on her toes to kiss his cheek. You get taller and more handsome every time I see you.

Packard towered over her. He had dark hair that had started to recede at the temples in his twenties, then decided to hold its ground, leaving him with a slightly irregular hairline in the front. He kept it short, just this side of a military cut. He wore a trimmed beard almost year-round now that beards on men were the style again. Eyes blue or gray, depending on the light. Women were drawn to the size and shape of him. Men were intimidated by it. He was an imposing figure in uniform, even the brown one worn by the sheriff’s department.

Packard followed Marilyn inside. How’s he feeling? he asked, keeping his voice low.

Marilyn shrugged a bit and waved her flat hand side to side. Packard nodded and followed her to the kitchen.

Can I get you a cup of coffee?

If it’s not any trouble, Packard said. Waiting with the old man and his wife at the scene of the bear attack had taught him it was easier to accept the first offer than decline ten more.

No trouble at all. Go on in. He’s watching TV.

The family room was on the back of the house. The Shaws’ decor was classic country. Varnished beadboard. A wallpaper border of chickens and checkerboard hearts that circled the ceiling. The family room was heavily carpeted, with bookshelves and an overstuffed sectional and framed wildlife prints. Scented candles in glass jars perfumed the air. Packard had to duck to avoid hitting a low bulkhead. Stan was lying back in a recliner, television remote on his belly, looking drowsy. He slowly turned his head. When he saw Packard, his face lit up. He struggled for a moment to right himself in the recliner. Hey, you giant sonofabitch.

Hey, yourself.

The sheriff had been a walking bull of a man. Only five foot nine but broad shouldered and wide through the chest, shaped like a potato on toothpick legs. Before the chemo, he had thick dark hair, gray just over the ears, that he kept swept back with pomade in a tamed pompadour. He was a foul-mouthed bullshit artist with men, a gentleman to the ladies, and a hard-ass on criminals. He and Marilyn taught Sunday school and marriage preparation classes at the Catholic church. The people of Sandy Lake loved him. He could have run for sheriff and won, uncontested or not, until the sun burned out.

Stan sat up in the recliner, a blanket over his legs. He looked more diminished every time Packard came by. A February snowman in March. His hair had come back thin and white. His scalp had spots and odd scaly patches crusted with blood.

Packard took a seat on the end of the sectional. A bass fishing show was on the flat-screen TV in front of them.

You just missed that guy in the orange hat pull up a seven-pounder, Stan said.

Where they at?

Uh… Hell, I don’t know. I thought it was Minnesota. Could be anywhere.

They watched TV for a couple of minutes; then Stan pointed the remote at the TV, turned down the volume, and asked what was new.

Packard told him about the budget review with the city council. They were underspent in overtime and fuel costs. Warmer temps forced the ice fishing festival to be canceled, which helped keep overtime down. We’ve been so fiscally responsible I thought it was a good time to pitch the idea of hiring two new deputies. I assume they’ll approve only one. You all right with that?

Stan shrugged. You’re the one who has to be all right with it, he said.

Packard had been hired by Stan Shaw eighteen months earlier as an investigator for the Sandy Lake County Sheriff’s Department, but for the last four months he’d been serving as acting sheriff, covering as many of Stan’s duties as possible while the sheriff went through a second round of treatment for colon cancer.

Shaw’s decision to appoint Packard came as a surprise to the county board of directors. Off the record, Shaw had told them his deputy with the most seniority was six months from retirement and didn’t want the job. The one with the second most seniority wasn’t fit to plan the holiday party let alone run the whole department. Shaw liked Packard for the job because he worked hard and came with no baggage. The sheriff, or the acting sheriff, had to be unpopular at times. Packard had no alliances, no grudges, no debts. He hardly knew anyone. Shaw told the board its options were Packard or no acting sheriff at all.

The other investigator in the department, and Packard’s closest ally at work, was Detective Jill Thielen. She was one who told Packard about the other deputies, all of them male, claiming it wasn’t fair the single guy who worked all the time got the acting sheriff job. They couldn’t be expected to put in the same hours he did.

Congratulations, Thielen told them. Now you know how every working mother feels.

That shut ’em up.

Marilyn came in with his coffee. Stan said, Sweetheart, I just thought of another positive thing about colon cancer. This guy has to review the budget with the board. Not me.

Packard smiled, then tried to swallow it when Marilyn tsked and shook her head. We heard you respond to the bear call this morning on the scanner, she said, changing the subject.

Yeah, damn. I forgot to ask about the bear, Stan said.

Packard told them about the old man with the dog and the other guy with the bloody hand. I cornered the bear in the guy’s garage and shot it, he said, sipping his coffee.

What did you use? Stan asked.

Twelve gauge.

Stan nodded his approval.

What I want to know is why you’re in uniform and responding to calls on your day off. I heard that on the radio, too, Marilyn said.

I was coming here so I thought I’d be ready just in case.

Benjamin, someone else could have responded to the bear. You need to take time off. You can’t work seven days a week.

Oh, but he could. Not all of the work was as exciting as coming face-to-face with a seven-foot black bear, but it was still work. It gave him a sense of purpose. The things he did in his time off—working out and remodeling the house he’d bought—were solitary activities. Too much time alone gave him too much time to ponder whether moving to Sandy Lake after Marcus was killed had been the right decision or not.

You’ll never meet someone if you don’t take off the uniform and get to know people socially, Marilyn said.

By meet someone she didn’t mean friends—not that he had a lot of those either. She meant romantically. Packard shifted nervously in his seat. Stan did the same, but probably because of the cancer.

"Marilyn, don’t pester the man. He’s doing his job and my job. That’s

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