I grabbed the snail mail from my newsroom box and found a manila envelope with no return address. Inside, an unlabeled CD, wiped clean. Sometimes sourcing pays off, I thought as I kissed it.
I handed the disc to Xiong, who inserted it in his computer, then gave me a thumbs-up when rows of data appeared on the screen. I only had a quick glance, but it sure looked like the gun-permit data.
“How did you come to acquire this?” Xiong asked.
I gave him my Don’t Ask look.
Whenever I’d received such a fortuitous package, I never tried to identify my source. Their anonymity kept both of us safer. Once, three years after a particular story ran, I crossed paths with a political aide who let me know she had been my Good Samaritan but that it was a one-shot deal and to never call her again.
Xiong and I huddled over his screen.
Too much information can be overwhelming. Having fifty thousand names is about as helpful as having no names. I gave Xiong my makeshift list of one hundred people who hated Sam Pierce.
“This will take time.” He waved me away and hunkered down over his keyboard and monitor, formatting data and programming a search to see if any of the names overlapped. Should any of the Sam haters also show up armed, that could elevate them on the suspects list.
“Thanks.” I kept my voice low to avoid distracting him.
He didn’t even look up as I walked off.
“Good-bye!” Noreen was slamming down her phone when I entered her office. I hoped the call wasn’t about me, or it would be like walking into a trap.
It was about Clay.
“It’s the chief again,” Noreen said. “Acting like he and I are all pals and wanting to know where Clay’s getting his information. I told him it’s none of his business.”
As she finished ranting, I thought to myself, Nice try, Chief. You may fool my boss, but you don’t fool me. I know who Clay’s secret source is.
Noreen settled down, so I updated her on the bat situation. Good news, no rabies. Bad news, internal hemorrhaging.
She seemed disappointed about the rabies test results, confused about barotrauma. “So the turbines are smacking the bats out of the sky?”
“No. They kill the bats without even touching them,” I said. “Their lungs explode when they fly too close to the blades because the air pressure drops suddenly.” She did seem to grasp the analogy about divers getting the bends.
“This hasn’t been reported, Noreen, and could be a big story. Especially with the turbines exploding, too.”
Noreen drummed her fingers on her desk. I couldn’t tell if she was nervous or impatient. I tried to quickly tie elements together like the bombs and bats. Then I divulged that I’d consulted Toby about the story, because I wanted her to hear that from me, on the job. Not from him, over supper.
The mention of Toby seemed to concern her. “How did he react?”
And then I realized what the problem had been all along. Once dead bats showed up, she was worried her animal rights activist husband might somehow be involved in this whole mess. And her fear wasn’t all that outlandish. Their marriage was impulsive, two dog lovers tired of living with only their canine companions.
Neither of us knew Toby all that well before their wedding.
“Toby says this is the first he’s heard,” I said.
My answer soothed her, because usually if I think someone’s guilty of something, I come right out and say it—though not on the air. As we discussed the story further, it was clear the bats’ obscure cause of death intrigued her. I also pointed out that most national best-seller lists were dominated by vampire books.
“Even if viewers don’t like bats,” she conceded, “they do like mystery.”
Then Noreen observed that Halloween was close and interest in bats might peak. So she gave me the go-ahead to start putting a story together and promised to talk to the promotion department.
I smiled.
((PROMO SOT))
WHY ARE THE BODIES OF
DEAD BATS BEING FOUND
NEAR WIND TURBINES? TUNE
IN TO CHANNEL 3 FOR THE
ANSWER.
I smiled because promotion meant priority. And also because the station had devised a secret way to get more prime-time promotion slots for local news stories. When a thirty-second promo for a network show was airing during a commercial break, Channel 3 would run one of its own spots over it. Sometimes it rolled a couple seconds late and looked sloppy, but it still meant more viewer eyes on our product.
Of course, if the network ever found out … somebody more important than me would have to be fired.
Toby had someone he wanted me to meet. A human, not an animal.
I’d been to Tamarack Nature Center in White Bear Lake earlier that year, on a murder investigation, but this was a much tamer visit.
When Malik and I arrived, Toby introduced me to Serena Connoy, the local leader for Bat Protectors of America, a group concerned about the shrinking population of bat colonies.
“Our followers are few in number but devoted in cause.” She explained they tracked hibernating and migratory bats.
A long black braid hung down her back. I imagined that style kept bats from getting tangled in her hair.
“Here’s an interesting experiment.” She showed us a large flight cage, tucked between some bushes, with several little brown bats inside. As infants, their nest had been destroyed during a remodeling project, and the group was trying to raise and rehabilitate them for release back in the wild.
Toby praised their mission. “Bats deserve freedom.”
“Bats deserve life,” Serena replied.
Malik shot some video of the tiny creatures, huddled together on the side of the cage. A fluorescent lantern hung in the middle to attract flying insects for them to eat at night.
Another bat volunteer stepped up and shook my hand. “Just call me Batman.” He was long and lanky, with an angular face. I couldn’t help but think the Batman logo on his black-and-yellow Bat Protectors T-shirt was a bit cliché as well as a copyright infringement.
“Bats are nature’s superheroes,” he said in defense of his attire. Then he cited several examples of their valor, including how the flying mammals can consume nearly a thousand mosquitoes an hour.
Our conversation took an interesting twist when Serena divulged that their group was the one collecting bat bodies under the Wide Open Spaces wind turbines as part of a scientific study. Other bat zealots made similar pilgrimages in California, Pennsylvania, and Maryland.
They’d observed the same thing I had: dead bats without visible signs of injury.
Most of them were hoary bats, red bats, or silver-haired bats—which all migrate through the Midwest in the fall. I asked if we could clip a wireless microphone on her for an interview and she agreed.
“Because so little is known about the species’ population size,” she said, “these wind deaths could have far-reaching consequences.”
After the barotrauma threat became known, national leaders of Bat Protectors had asked wind farms from coast to coast to stop the spinning, but the owners were insisting on more research.
That upset the Batman volunteer. “They say a few dead bats is not too great a price for going green.”
I thought it unlikely they phrased their response so bluntly, but Toby was outraged. “This is about prejudice against bats.”
Serena stayed calm, explaining that bats seldom collide with turbines because they use a sonar navigation system called echo-location. “While they can sense the actual turbine, the atmospheric pressure drop around the blades is an invisible hazard.” She also stressed that both sides—wind farms and researchers—were working to negotiate some sort of compromise. “Perhaps using sound to deter the bats, or halting the turbines at certain times of night.”
“What do you think of the bombings?” I had to ask.
“Our organization is peaceful and opposes breaking any laws, including the destruction of property. We believe education is a more productive route.”
I was pleased to have corroboration that the bat casualties were not an isolated circumstance.
CHANNEL 3 WASN’T ALONE
IN GATHERING BAT BODIES
… AN ENVIRONMENTAL
GROUP HAS FOUND A
PATTERN IN THE DEATHS AT
WIND FARMS HERE AND IN
OTHER STATES.
I had what TV news calls an “enterprise” story—one not easily duplicated by the competition. I figured I could have it on Noreen’s desk tomorrow afternoon.
By day’s end, work was work.
Besides the wind farm story, I was still trying to secretly investigate the gossip murder.
To stay alert, I scanned the walls of my office, noticing the surveillance photo of the woman and child, along with my flower note. “Thanks Alot, Riley, Give Everyone The Disturbing Information Regarding That Bad Ass Gossip.”
I decided to compare the handwriting on my missive to the one on the condolence flowers.
From my computer, I pulled up the Sam Pierce funeral video, freezing the shot of the wildflower sympathy card. The message seemed strained: “Be Assured Sam Took A Righteous Direction.” But the penmanship matched. I printed a copy, pinning it next to its bulletin board mate.
More promising, Xiong sent an email containing four names that overlapped both lists: possible armed suspects in the killing of Sam Pierce. I grabbed my archive file and pulled those particular gossip columns. Certainly there was no guarantee that the person who murdered Sam would have gone through the trouble of getting a gun-carry permit. But because these four had weapons and motives, it was a place to start.
Buzz Stolee—a pro basketball player who had walked, nude below the waist, behind a sports reporter going live from the locker room. The athlete claimed he didn’t realize his image was being broadcast to more than a hundred thousand viewers. Instead of teasing him for being a dumb jock, Sam criticized the size of his … you know.
Ashley Lind—a former reporter for a competing station whom Sam literally ran off the air. He hated her hair. He hated her clothes. And he kept asking when the baby was due when she wasn’t pregnant. Her contract wasn’t renewed.
Ryan Meister—a local politician who lost reelection after Sam kept writing that he threw like a girl when he threw out a feeble first pitch for a Twins game.
And Tad Fallon—his society wife, Phedra, committed suicide by taking pills after Sam suggested she had an alcohol problem. She didn’t. But she had a depression problem. Her husband had a gun. And the paperwork suggested he got it barely a week before Sam was gunned down.
I made a wall chart with all four names, putting Tad’s first. But I reminded myself not to develop tunnel vision, like the cops sometimes did with suspects. I left space in between each name to add clues, should they develop. Then I leaned back to admire the short list.
I was reluctant to bring any of the names to the attention of the police, because in a recent missing person case I had suggested two suspects. They both ended up being in the clear; I ended up looking like an idiot.
And almost getting killed by the real murderer.
Matters were further complicated in the gossip case because the cops undoubtedly had their own short list of suspects. I just hoped it wasn’t so short that my name was the only one on it.
Because Noreen had ordered me to stay away from Sam’s homicide, any investigating I did had to be inconspicuous. I couldn’t just call up the people on my list, identify myself as a Channel 3 reporter, and blurt out questions. Because if any of them called the station to complain, I was doomed.
Ashley Lind was the easiest of the four to find. I’d phoned a rival at Channel 7, where she used to work, and casually inquired if they ever heard from her.
“Good timing,” I was told. “Or did you already hear?”
“Hear what?” I answered, hoping they weren’t on the verge of breaking a story about her being arrested for murdering anybody. Not only would they have the news first, they’d have the best suspect file tape.
The only clue I got was a vague comment that a picture was on the way.
Seconds later, I clicked on an email attachment and instead of a mug shot, I saw a photo of a beaming Ashley in a hospital bed holding a bundled baby. She apparently really had been pregnant this time.
The birth announcement gave me a pang as I read the details about baby Neal’s length and weight. Hugh had so wanted to be a father. But I’d wanted to wait. I wondered what our kids would have looked like.
I felt a different pang when I reached the date and time of Neal’s birth and realized Ashley Lind had a seven-pound, ten-ounce unalterable alibi for Sam’s homicide.
I crossed her name off the list. Then I reached in a card file I kept in my desk and mailed her some baby congratulations, telling her how lucky she was to be out of this sinking news business.
Most days, Channel 3’s sports department holds little allure for me.
It’s unusual for a market the size of Minneapolis–St. Paul to be home to so many major professional sports franchises. Twins baseball. Vikings football. Wild hockey. Timberwolves basketball. There’s continuous debate on whether we can support them all; one team or another is always threatening to leave unless it gets a new stadium. The North Stars followed through and became the Dallas Stars. Now the Vikings are making similar noises.
What the players do on the field or ice or court doesn’t particularly interest me; out of uniform is when they generally create news. Breaking laws versus breaking records. And over the years, various athletes have hit the front pages with driving transgressions, drug offenses, and sex crimes. But so far, not homicide.
I wandered back to the sports corner of the building to try to ferret out leads where Buzz Stolee might be found off the court. I didn’t use his name specifically, because I didn’t want any of the Channel 3 jocks giving him a heads-up. I merely asked if there was a downtown bar where the NBA guys hung out.
“Why do you want to know, Riley?” countered one of the sports producers.
“Yeah, you a groupie wannabe?” said another, leering.
I should have guessed this would be a waste of time. The sports staff liked to shield athletes from the news department. For Buzz, I imagined they’d be even more protective. He was a frequent guest on their Sports Night show. I’d run into him in the green room a couple of times, but he’d never given me a second look.
“I’d like to pick their brains on a possible story,” I said.
“Any story you want to talk to them about can’t be a story they want to show up in.”
“And they’re not used to women being interested in their brains.”
I ignored him and the implication. He responded by throwing a basketball at me, then seemed surprised when I caught it.
To further the decoy ruse, I mentioned wanting to chat up football players as well. “I just want to run some info by them about the pro sports world and gauge their reaction.”
“You’re such a hot investigator, Riley, you don’t need our help.”
“Well, I guess that’s good,” I replied. “’Cause I’m sure not getting it.” I threw the ball back at him and turned away.
Normally the sports staff wouldn’t be so snarly to my face, but they probably sensed I was not riding as high as usual. And sports journalists resent how when last-minute news breaks, their section of the newscast is often compressed to make room for political intrigue like a governor’s Argentine mistress, or even just a fire as long as there’s good video of actual flames and not just smoke.
The conversation was a lot shorter, and a lot more cooperative, when I called a political source and asked where former legislator Ryan Meister was working these days.
“Iraq,” she answered.
“What?” I responded.
“Former National Guard sergeant, called up for service again. But now that the U.S. is talking of pulling out, look for him home next year and running for election again the first chance he gets.”
“This time as a war hero?” I pictured him walking in a Fourth of July parade dressed in uniform, a combat ribbon on his chest.
“Better than throwing like a girl,” she laughed.
A star-spangled alibi.
I crossed Ryan Meister off the list. And decided I needed to go bar hopping.