“That is correct.”
“He’s also going to interface with you, Mr. Larssen, in making sure the publicity and security environment of Deeper is appropriately maintained. Of course, any announcement of the new location of the field has been put off until this situation settles down, but just among us I can say it will be Deeper. Any questions?”
Silence.
“Sheriff Hazen, any news on the investigation at your end?”
This was what Hazen had been waiting for. “Yes,” he said mildly. “As a matter of fact, there is.”
They all leaned toward him. Hazen settled back in his chair, letting the moment build. Finally, he spoke.
“It appears that Chauncy went down near the creek and collected some last-minute corn samples, which he tagged and labeled. They say he was waiting for the corn to get ripe or something.”
All three of them nodded.
“The other news is the killer isn’t local. Local to Medicine Creek, that is.” Hazen said this as casually as possible.
This perked everybody up.
“It also appears that these killings aren’t the work of some psychopathic serial killer, either. That’s what they weremeant to look like. The scalping, the bare feet, the hint of a connection to the old Ghost Massacre and the curse of the Forty-Fives—all that’s just window dressing. No: these killings are the work of someone with a motive as old as the hills—money.”
Now hereally had their attention.
“How so?” Fisk asked.
“The killer struck first three days before Dr. Chauncy’s scheduled arrival. Then he struck again the dayafter Chauncy arrived. Coincidence?”
He let the word hang in the air a moment.
“What do you mean?” Larssen was getting worried.
“The first two killings didn’t have the desired effect. And that is why Chauncy had to be killed.”
“I’m not following you,” Larssen said. “What desired effect are you talking about?”
“To persuade Chauncy that Medicine Creek wasn’t the right place for the experimental field.”
He had dropped his bombshell. There was a stunned silence.
He continued. “The first two killings were an attempt to convince KSU to forgo Medicine Creek and site the field in Deeper. But it didn’t work. So the killer had no choice but to kill Chauncy himself. Right on the eve of his big announcement.”
“Now wait—” began Sheriff Larssen.
“Let him finish,” said Fisk, placing his tweedy elbows on his tweedy knees.
“These so-called serial killings were nothing more than a way to make Medicine Creek look unsuitable for a sensitive project like this—a way to make sure the experimental field went to Deeper. The mutilations and Indian crap were all designed to stir up Medicine Creek, get everyone talking about the curse, make us all look like a bunch of superstitious yahoos.” Hazen turned to Hank. “If I were you, Hank, I’d start asking myself: who had the most to lose with the field going to Medicine Creek?”
“Now hold on here,” the Deeper sheriff said, rising in his chair. “You’re not suggesting that the killer is from Deeper, I hope.”
“That’s exactly what I’m suggesting.”
“You haven’t a shred of proof! What you’ve got is nothing more than a theory. Atheory! Where’s the evidence?”
Hazen waited. Better to let Hank blow off a little steam.
“This is ridiculous! I can’t imagine anyone here brutally murdering three people over a damn cornfield.”
“It’s a lot more than a ‘damn cornfield,’ ” said Hazen coolly, “as I’m sure Professor Fisk can tell you.”
Fisk nodded.
“This project is important. There’s big money in it, for the town and for KSU. Buswell Agricon is one of the biggest agricultural companies in the world. There are patents, royalties, laboratories, grants, you name it, up for grabs here. So Hank, I’ll ask you the question again:who in Deeper had the most to lose? ”
“I’m not going to open an investigation on the basis of a crackpot theory.”
Hazen smiled. “You don’t have to, Hank. I’m in charge of the case.I’ll open the investigation. All I ask is your cooperation.”
Larssen turned to Fisk and Raskovich. “Here in Deeper, we don’t habitually send law enforcement off on wild-goose chases.”
Fisk returned his gaze. “Frankly, what Sheriff Hazen is saying makes sense to me.” He turned to Raskovich. “What do you think, Chester?”
When Raskovich spoke, the sound came from deep within his barrel chest. “I’d say it’s definitely worth looking into.”
Larssen looked from one to the other. “We’ll look into it, of course, but I sincerely doubt the killer is going to turn up here. This is premature—”
Hazen broke in smoothly. “Dr. Fisk, with all due respect, I think you should keep your options open as to where the field should be sited. If the killer’s been trying to influence your decision . . .” He paused significantly.
“I certainly see your point, Sheriff.”
“But the decision’s already been made,” Larssen said.
“Nothing is engraved in stone,” said Fisk. “If the killer’s from Deeper—and I have to say the theory stacks up nicely—then, frankly, this is thelast place we’d want to site the field.”
Larssen shut up. He was smart enough to know when to do that, at least. He gazed at Hazen, his face dark. Hazen felt sorry for him. He wasn’t a bad guy, really, even if he was a little short on both brainsand imagination.
Hazen rose. “I have to get back to Medicine Creek—we’ve still got a body to find—but I’m coming back first thing tomorrow to start my investigation. Hank, I hope we can work together in a friendly way.”
“Sure we can, Dent.” Hank had to choke out the words.
Hazen turned to the KSU men. “Nice to meet you. I’ll keep you posted.”
“We appreciate that, Sheriff.”
Hazen plucked a pack of cigarettes from his pocket and fixed an eye on Raskovich. “When you get to Medicine Creek, come by my office. We’ll see about getting you temporary peace officer status. It’s the modern-day equivalent of being deputized. We’re going to need your help, Mr. Raskovich.”
The campus security chief nodded as if this were the most normal thing in the world, his face a mask of stolidity, but Hazen knew he had just scored big with Chief Campus Doorshaker Chester Raskovich.
Thirty-Eight
The discipline of Chongg Ran, invented by the Confucian sage Ton Wei in the T’ang dynasty, was later transported from China to Bhutan, where it was further refined over a period of half a millennium at the Tenzin Torgangka monastery, one of the most isolated in the world. It is a form of concentration that marries utter emptiness with hyperawareness, the fusion of rigorous intellectual study with pure sensation.
The first challenge of Chongg Ran is to visualize white and blacksimultaneously —not as gray. Only one percent of adherents are able to move beyond this point. Far more difficult mental exercises await. Some involve simultaneous, self-contradictory imaginary games of Go, or more recent studious pastimes such as chess or bridge. In others, one must learn to fuse knowledge with nescience, sound with silence, self with annihilation, life with death, the universe with the quark.
Chongg Ran is an exercise in antitheses. It is not an end in itself, but a means to an end. It brings with it the gift of inexplicable mental powers. It is the ultimate enhancement of the human mind.
Pendergast lay on the ground, maintaining acute awareness of his surroundings: the smell of dry weeds, the feeling of sticky heat, the stubble and pebbles pressing into his back. He isolated every individual sound, every chirp, rustle, flutter, whisper, down to the faint breathing of his assistant sitting some yards away. With his eyes closed, he proceeded to visualize the surrounding scene exactly as if he were seeing it with his own eyes, spread out below him:sight without seeing. Piece by piece he assembled it: the trees, the three mounds, the play of shade and light, the cornfields stretching out below, the towering thunderheads above, the air, the sky, the living earth.