Dana Stabenow - A Taint in the Blood

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"Kate Shugak is the answer if you are looking for something unique in the crowded field of crime fiction." – Michael Connelly
***
Thirty-one years ago in Anchorage, Alaska, Victoria Pilz Bannister Muravieff was convicted of murdering her seventeen-year-old son William. The jury returned a quick verdict of guilty, believing the prosecutor's claims that she had set fire to her own home with both her sons inside; William died and the other, Oliver, narrowly escaped. Victoria was sentenced to life in prison without parole, and though she pled not guilty at the trial, she never again denied her guilt.
Now her daughter, Charlotte Muravieff, has hired Kate Shugak to clear her mother's name. Her daughter has always believed in her innocence, and now that Victoria has been diagnosed with terminal cancer, Charlotte wants her free. Kate is the only p.i. Charlotte can find who's willing to take such a long-shot case. Kate, on the other hand, is only willing because she's suddenly a single parent to a teenager, a teenager she hopes will decide to go to college. Besides, it can't be bad to do a favor for the Bannister family, one of the wealthiest and most prominent families in Alaska's short history.
As Kate begins an investigation, Victoria protests, refusing to cooperate. But soon it seems she isn't the only one who wants to leave the past in the past. In this spell-binding novel, Kate's confrontation with thirty years of secrets and regret-and murder-in one of Alaska's most powerful families shows award-winning crime writer Dana Stabenow at the top of her game.

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But she was equally incapable of just walking away. “Hey,” she said.

Neither boy stirred.

She raised her voice. “ Hey .”

The boy on the bench moved, groaned, and opened his eyes. It took him a minute to focus. When he did, he sat up abruptly, accidentally kicking his companion, who banged his head against the bottom of the bench when he sat up.

“Ouch!” He rubbed his head.

His brother-the resemblance was obvious around the eyes and the way the hair grew stiffly from the hairline-risked taking his eyes off Kate for a moment. “You okay, Kevin?”

Kevin rubbed his head. “Yeah. I’m all right. Who’s she, Jordan?”

“Nobody.” Jordan got up and headed for his bike. “Come on, Kevin. Let’s go.”

“Where you going?” Kate said.

“None of your business,” he said shortly.

“You’re right,” she said, which at least surprised him enough to halt forward motion. “But I could give you some breakfast, if you’re interested.”

He looked at her, frowning. Kevin rolled out from beneath the bench and brushed ineffectively at the leaves adhering to his clothes. “I’m hungry, Jordan,” he said plaintively.

“We don’t know her, Kevin,” Jordan said. “She could be some kind of weirdo.”

“Right again,” Kate said, noticing that Jordan wasn’t automatically making for home. “How about this? You follow me to my house. You stay outside, and I’ll bring the food out.”

“You’ll call the cops is what you’ll do.”

She met his eyes squarely. “Not unless and until you give me permission to,” she said.

With the timing and tact of a seasoned diplomat, Mutt trotted over and shoved her nose under Jordan’s hand. Her tail whapped vigorously against Kevin’s knee.

Even Jordan smiled.

Jim was still at the town house when Kate and entourage arrived. He stood glaring at her from the front door. She almost lost the boys when they saw his uniform shirt. “He’s a trooper from the Bush, he doesn’t know from Anchorage,” she said quickly.

They didn’t run, but they looked ready to.

“Who’re they?” Jim said as she leapt the steps to the minuscule front porch.

“Friends,” Kate said, “hungry friends.” She turned. “ Come in or park it on the lawn, your choice.”

In the end, the four of them sat down to breakfast together- eggs scrambled with cheese, onions, garlic, and green chilies, served on tortillas with salsa and sour cream. The boys had cocoa and she and Jim had coffee.

I’m going to have to buy more eggs, she thought as she watched the boys, their heads bent over their plates. Hungry as they were, they ate neatly. Someone had been teaching them manners. That wasn’t always a good thing, in her experience.

She looked at Jim. She saw him look at the boys. He opened his mouth, and she caught his eyes and shook her head once from side to side.

He closed his mouth again.

She wondered why he was still here. She wondered if he was ready to cave. Probably not, she thought. Probably just pissed off to wake up alone for a second time. Probably thought waking up alone the morning after was the sole province of women.

She got up to get the coffeepot, and paused next to Jim to refill his mug. She took her time over it, leaning in, ensuring as much body contact as possible.

He wrapped his hand around one of her thighs, and for a split second she didn’t know if that hand was going to slide up or shove away. It shoved, and she went with it, moving around the table to refill her own mug and replace the coffeepot. Neither of the boys, faces still in their plates, noticed anything. She slid into her seat, her eyes mocking. Jim looked very tense around the jaw-line. She smiled at him. His hand tightened around his mug. She hoped he wouldn’t throw it at her, as she didn’t know what the boys were running from and she didn’t want them to run from her house, too.

They cleaned their plates and then cleared the table. “I guess we better go,” Jordan said.

Kevin looked forlorn, but he nodded obediently.

Jim looked at Kate.

She pushed back from the table and draped a knee over one arm of the chair. “Where you going to go?” she said to the older boy.

“Home,” he said.

Kevin raised his head to give his brother a quick, alarmed glance.

Kate nodded. “Think things will have calmed down since you left?”

“They always do,” he said, his eyes bleak.

Drinkers, she thought. They’ll have sobered up by now. And it’s chronic enough for the boys to know the routine. “You live off the trail?”

The boys exchanged a glance. “Sort of.”

Not even close to it, she thought. “I’d like to give you a ride home.”

“No,” Jordan said immediately.

Jim opened his mouth. Kate closed it with another look. “Guys, you did good. When things got bad, you left, you found a place to sleep, and you found a nonweirdo to feed you breakfast. You did good, but you were lucky, too. I’d just as soon you don’t have to be lucky again.”

“We do okay,” Jordan said.

Kevin said nothing, pale of face, standing very close to his brother.

“I bet you do,” Kate said. “But you don’t have to do it alone.”

Kevin plucked at his brother’s sleeve. “Jordan-”

Jordan looked down at the pleading face of his little brother and all the fight went out of him.

Their home was a trailer in Spenard, a good three miles from the coastal trail. Their mother came to the door after Kate pounded on it for a while. The smell of spilled booze and stale cigarettes was strong enough to rock Kate back a step.

The woman, short-waisted and thick through the middle, looked to be at least part Aleut, something Kate had suspected from the first time she had seen the boys.

She blinked at her sons. “Kevin? Jordan? What are you doing up already?” She saw Kate. “And who is this woman?”

When Kate got back to the town house, Jim was still there. “You’re still here,” she said, brushing by him in the doorway.

“We’ve got to talk,” he said, following her into the kitchen.

“Really?” She poured the last of the coffee. “I wouldn’t wish the home those boys are living in on a dog.”

Mutt looked reproachful, or as reproachful as she could pressed up next to Jim, tail wagging with delight.

“Call DFYS.”

Kate pressed her lips together. “They aren’t starving, and nobody’s hit them. Yet. I had a conversation with their mother. Might have scared her some. I’ll keep tabs.”

Diverted momentarily from his mission, Jim said, “You can’t save everyone, Kate.”

“What was it you wanted to talk to me about?” she said.

“You know damn well what about,” he said. He kept himself well to the other side of the room, out of her reach.

She cleared her face of all traces of a grin before turning. “I must be a little slow this morning,” she said, leaning against the counter, hands cradling her mug. She smiled at him through the steam rising up off the surface of the coffee. “Explain it to me.”

He stared at her in fulminating silence for a charged moment, then finally blurted, “Those damn boys, for one thing! Are you out of your mind, bringing them home like that? You should have called DFYS the instant you walked in the door!”

“No, I shouldn’t,” she said equably. “Is that all?”

It was like throwing gas on an open fire, she noticed and waited hopefully, thinking she might be tossed over his shoulder and hauled back upstairs. To her disappointment, Jim managed to reign in his temper. That couldn’t be good for his blood pressure. She drained the mug and put it in the sink. “Well, I’ve got work to do, and I’m sure you do, too, back in the Park. I won’t keep you.”

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