The boys got drunk in the woods with four cans of Pit Bull that Jeremy stole from the back of his aunt Lena’s fridge at the bait shop near the public access to North Lake. Jacob watched him over the pile of old stones they called grandfathers and sipped on his beer, the bubbly bitterness filling his head with cotton batting. Jeremy was lanky and tall, and though it was a brisk day he wore only a jean jacket over his bare chest, which was tattooed with crossed tomahawks. Jeremy had told them about how his uncle Goose sometimes drifted back into town, and when he did, he always had a case of Pit Bull in the back of the fridge so he could deal with Lena’s nagging. But nobody had seen Goose in over two months, and some people were saying that he had gotten himself arrested in Duluth. Jeremy figured that by the time he came back he might have forgotten how many beers he had in there, so he said they should stop by and nab some of them. He distracted Lena by introducing her to Jacob while Hayhoe and Cheese Whiz raided the fridge and stuck the beers in Cheese Whiz’s school backpack. They all looked at the minnows and suckers for a minute, and argued over the best places to catch sturgeon, then piled back out into the car.
Now they sat in the remnants of a sweat lodge Goose had held with his cousin Cocoa Butter when he was on vacation from his job at the DNR. People called him Cocoa Butter because he was always putting sunscreen on. The two men had said they wanted to initiate the younger guys, so they made Jeremy and Hayhoe and Cheese Whiz dig up and carry grandfathers all day. The boys had to ask each rock if it wanted to come, “and some of those fuckers were heavy,” said Hayhoe. The birch branches from their deer-hide wigwam stood around them like an empty rib cage as they sipped on their twenty-four-ounce gold cans.
“It was a big deal and the grandmas were all smiley about it for like a week,” Hayhoe said. They laughed and pried at the pile of grandfathers with sticks. He threw one of the rocks at Cheese Whiz, who was reading an ACT practice book.
“Hey, Harvard, don’t worry about it so much.”
Cheese Whiz toed the rock back into the pile. “Chill out, dude. If I don’t get into Harvard my uncle said he’s gonna disown me.” Jacob could see that he was writing a lot of math symbols in the margins.
“His uncle’s a big lawyer in Minneapolis, represents the band,” explained Hayhoe. “Lotta pressure for such a little brain.”
“So what’s it like living in the city?” Jeremy asked, turning to Jacob.
“I don’t know. It can be pretty tough, but in different ways.”
“Gangbangers and bullshit,” said Jeremy.
Jacob shrugged, and Hayhoe spoke up again. “I lived there for a while with my dad. It can be tough. That Little Earth.”
“I didn’t go around there too much,” Jacob said.
The sky glowed big and deep azure as the sun began to set, and they made a fire and threw on some sweet grass, which Hayhoe told Jacob was holy. Then they set up the empty beer cans on a log and Hayhoe showed them how to shoot them with his gun. He had stolen it from a hobo he’d found sleeping in the train yard down by the feedlot in Saint Paul.
“You got to lock your elbow,” Hayhoe said to Jacob, adjusting his arm. The gun was heavy. “It’s all about force and acceleration, right Cheesy? Otherwise the shot’ll go wild. Give it a try.”
Jacob squeezed and the gun recoiled like a throw baler. The can fell to the ground and Hayhoe clapped Jacob on the back, his beer-drenched breath washing over him. “You’re a good shot! Kid’s good!”
They went through half a box of his cousin TV Boy’s ammo, setting the cans up and slowly peppering them with holes. The Indians up here all had nicknames like that, Jacob had learned. TV Boy, Cocoa Butter, Cheese Whiz. Almost no one was referred to by their real name, except when their grandmothers were mad or if somebody wanted to make some kind of point, and it was hard to keep them all straight. They stopped at Jeremy’s grandmother’s house, where they all ate fry bread and listened to her old stories about all the sex people used to have. The powdered sugar made Jacob’s dirty fingers sticky and brown. They raided her garden shed for the gas cans Jeremy said she kept there, then drove in to North Lake.
* * *
JACOB SAT IN the back seat, his head buzzing from the sugar and the beer. They all laughed most of the way, the headlights coming at them like reverse beacons, and Jacob suddenly realized they were under the yellow glow of the big metal canopy at the Food ’n’ Fuel. They piled out of the car, and the cool air washed him into a clearer attention.
“Is your grandma a sex fiend?” he asked Jeremy.
“She’s always talkin’ like that,” he shrugged.
“I think she’d hump a tree if it wasn’t stuck in the ground,” said Hayhoe. He took the two rusty gas cans out of the trunk. They pulled off the cork-gasketed lids and started pumping vaporous green gas into them. “Man, those cans are old school,” noted Cheese Whiz as they watched the vapors pour out of their wide mouths and run down over the concrete.
“Poboy alert,” said Jeremy. They all turned and watched Grossman’s car fly by on the highway.
“He can stop us all he wants,” shrugged Hayhoe. “We ain’t got nothing, just gettin’ ready to cut some grass for our grandmothers, be upstanding citizens.”
“Make your grandmother’s place look citified,” said Cheese Whiz.
“You boys need to make certain the yards on the reservation look as clean and upstanding as our yards do here in town,” said Jeremy in his best uptight white-alderman voice. They all laughed, and then Hayhoe clicked the pump off.
Hayhoe ditched the car in a wooded path off a damp gravel road. They took turns carrying the heavy gas cans through the cut wheat field that lay between the woods and the back of the bank. They set them on the lawn between the building and the back drive, stretched their tired arms, and Hayhoe unscrewed the top of the first can.
“This is for your dad, man,” he said, looking at Jacob. “You’re both part of us now. We stick together, Indi’n to Indi’n.” He hoisted the can and poured the green liquid over the log siding, darkening it in the moonlight. Jacob could smell the thick stench of it. Jeremy and Cheese Whiz took turns pouring from the other can as Hayhoe handed his can to Jacob. “Okay, little bro, your turn. Don’t get it on your shoes or they’ll know who did it.”
Jacob’s hand closed around the old wooden handle. He lifted it and felt the gas sloshing back and forth inside. He splashed some out onto the log walls just as Cheese Whiz struck a light.
The flame leaped toward Jacob in a sudden giant woof of yellow heat. “Holy shit!” yelled Jeremy.
Hayhoe yanked Jacob back by the collar. They stumbled backward and fell to the pavement, the gas can draining on its side beside them.
“Fuckin’ assholes, you almost burnt us!” said Hayhoe.
“The gas can!” said Jacob.
The fire quickly took hold. Hayhoe scrambled for the can and ran it into the field. The boys followed, then turned and looked at the blaze in frightened wonder.
“Jesus,” said Cheese Whiz.
“We gotta go!” said Jeremy. He began screwing on a gas cap. Hayhoe found the other cap on the edge of the grass, and they hoisted and lugged the cans back through the field, running and looking behind them as the fire continued to grow.
“Jesus, it’s going fast, huh?” observed Hayhoe.
A powerful fear rose in Jacob as he ran through the sharp bristle. He thought of Grossman, who had roughed him up when he had arrested him before, and he thought of how mad his dad would be if he got caught again, especially over the bank. JW’s old bank. “I can’t be caught doing this,” he said.
“Don’t worry,” said Hayhoe as he and Jeremy carried the cans back through the field. “We stick together.”
Just then, Cheese Whiz yelled, “Cops!”
They saw a sheriff’s cruiser racing along the highway toward the bank, its blue and red cherries turning. It pounded up over the curb cut and shot into the bank parking lot, its searchlight cutting out the night.
“Go with him, go!” Hayhoe said to Jacob. “We’ll meet you at the car!” He nodded toward Cheese Whiz and Jacob split off with him, the sharp wheat stubble stabbing at his ankles as they angled away into the night.
* * *
GROSSMAN MADE OUT the silhouettes of two people running with gas cans as he finished calling in the fire. He blurped his siren and flipped on his PA. “You there!” he yelled into the mike. “Stop. Put your hands up! Now!” But the figures just kept running deeper into the cut wheat, so he floored it and drove the cruiser out after them. It thumped and yawed and fishtailed in the soft earth, and he heard a rooster tail of mud spraying his wheel wells, then a sick wet thump as the car bottomed out and got stuck in a tractor rut. He shifted into reverse, but the cruiser didn’t move.
“Shit!”
He aimed the searchlight at the fleeing forms and got out to give chase, unholstering his service pistol. He had called in the fire as soon as he saw it, and by now he could hear the North Lake Fire Department sirens in the distance.
“You’re not gonna get away,” he yelled at their backs. “You’re only making it worse.”
Then one of the two figures stopped while the other kept running. Good, he thought. He could get this one to ID the other.
“Smart move,” he yelled, and then there was the flash and bark of a gunshot.
He wasn’t knocked out, but it felt as if he had been, even though he was fully aware of the passage of time—every split second of it. Lying on his back in the wheat stubble, Grossman focused on the burning pain in his shoulder. He reached up to touch it, and his world went white with fear when his hand came away hot and sticky with blood. He rolled over in the stubble.
“Oh my god, oh my god,” he muttered, and then he threw up into the moist black dirt.
For a few minutes that felt like a lifetime, Grossman lay there on his back, his shoulder throbbing. He imagined other shots whizzing overhead, between him and the flickering sky. There were northern lights. He could hear nothing, but he was certain that if he lifted his head it would be shot off. His heart pounding, he gingerly felt the shoulder with his right hand. The bullet had cut the skin and muscle above his left collar bone, but it was just a flesh wound. He could hear the fire engine arriving, the voices of the firefighters as they hooked up and began battling the fire. And then he heard Dan Barden’s voice, calling out to him from near his car. He wanted to answer, but his voice was lost in his chest. Finally, after some effort, he rolled onto his knees, got slowly to his feet, and tottered back over the rutted field.
“My god, Bob, you’re hit!” said Barden when he saw him approaching. Beyond him a fire engine stood in the lot. The firefighters trained a hose on the blaze, sending out a cloud of steam that rose white and billowy through the truck’s lights and into the night.
“I’m not feeling so well,” Grossman replied, and lay back on the hood of his cruiser.
The fire was doused quickly. The damage to the thick logs was minimal, Grossman heard the captain say, as a paramedic daubed his wound with white gauze. “Thanks to your quick action, Bob,” he added with a respectful nod.
Against Grossman’s better judgment, he let Barden drive him to the North Lake hospital, where he spent three hours getting stitches and a bandage, and then down to County, where he filed a report and called his boss, Big Bill Donovan, at home.
His wife Margie came to pick him up, her face white with fear. She drove him home while Barden went up with a tow truck to retrieve his cruiser.
The days that followed held small rooms and coffee. County deputies and agents from the FBI and the BIA questioned him ad nauseam. Officers canvassed the reservation, the school, the gas stations, and the trading post. They hung out at the Pit Stop, at the Tamarack Restaurant and the Many Lakes Casino, asking questions about who had started the fire, and who had shot Deputy Grossman. It was a full-court press, but the Native Americans weren’t talking. Nobody knew anything. Or at least they said they didn’t. But Grossman knew they hung together.
Despite searching extensively, the police didn’t find the bullet that had hit him. Big Bill actually asked Dan Barden to check Grossman’s service pistol to make certain he hadn’t inflicted the wound himself, a line of inquiry Grossman found both insulting and laughable.
Big Bill offered him paid leave per union rules, but Grossman insisted on going back on duty the next day, as if nothing had happened. “You fall off a horse, you get back on,” he said. It was important to make a statement to the Native kids that they couldn’t intimidate him, and it was good PR for his image with the public. Still, for safety’s sake, Big Bill reassigned him to the south territory until the investigation was finished.
As he drove up and down the highways around Virginia and Hibbing, Grossman couldn’t stop thinking about the shooting. He began to wonder if the bullet hadn’t borne some kind of old evil Indian magic curse, infecting him in a spiritual sense. It was irrational, he knew, but over the coming days this conviction took hold.