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The Yard Dog: A Mystery
The Yard Dog: A Mystery
The Yard Dog: A Mystery
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The Yard Dog: A Mystery

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The Yard Dog takes place near the close of World War II, when a large number of Nazi POWs were incarcerated in camps scattered across the prairies of the United States.

At Waynoka Divisional Point, near POW Camp Alva, the disillusioned Hook Runyon is assigned by the railroad to run off hobos and arrest pickpockets. Left behind in the war because of the loss of his arm in a car accident, Hook lives in a caboose, collects rare books, and drinks busthead liquor. When a coal picker by the name of Spark Dugan is found run over by a reefer car, Hook and his sidekick, Runt, the local moonshiner, suspect foul play and are drawn into a scheme far greater than either could have imagined. This conspiracy reaches the highest echelons of the camp and beyond and will push Hook and Runt to their physical and mental limits.

Hook is a complex character, equal parts rough and vulnerable, an unlikely and unwilling hero. He is more than matched by Dr. Reina Kaplan, a Jewish big-city transplant to Camp Alva who is battling her own demons and has been put in charge of educating the Nazi inmates in the basics of democracy before their eventual return to Germany.

Vivid descriptions of period detail, stark landscapes, and unique characters make this first book in the Hook Runyon series a fascinating mystery full of tension and deep insight.

LanguageEnglish
Release dateAug 12, 2009
ISBN9781429929165
The Yard Dog: A Mystery
Author

Sheldon Russell

DR. SHELDON RUSSELL, Professor Emeritus, University of Louisville, and University of Central Oklahoma, is the author The Yard Dog, The Insane Train, and four previously published historical novels. He lives in Guthrie, Oklahoma.

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    The Yard Dog - Sheldon Russell

    PROLOGUE

    NO ONE KNEW the Waynoka rail yards better than Spark Dugan. No one knew better where doors were unlocked, where a man could sleep on a bitter night, or where the squabs were nested for gathering and eating during sparse times. No one knew better the scheduled runs, the refuse piles, or the machine shop with its gears and belts and wheels. The yards had been Spark’s for as long as he could remember, since after the Depression, since after the land had fallen silent beneath the Oklahoma dust.

    When Spark’s family left for California, he stayed behind. Too slow in the head to find work on his own, he lived in the shack under the bridge. After several weeks, he received a card in the mail with a picture of a cactus on it, big as a man with arms outstretched. He couldn’t read the words, but he knew they were from them. After that, he never heard again.

    The first time the river flooded his shack, he went to the yards looking for shelter. Lights winked behind clouds of steam, and cars rumbled out of the darkness. Tracks struck off to worlds far away. Steam engines thundered and hissed through the yards, and the earth trembled beneath him. The smells of oil and creosote were thick as syrup in the night, and he knew that this was where he belonged.

    He learned to gauge train speeds with accuracy, to leap from car to car, to roll under moving stock and come out on the other side. Once, he caught his overall’s strap over the door lock of a cattle car and was dragged to the end of the yards. Holes were worn in both his boots, and his big toe turned black as an eggplant.

    Soon he discovered bits of coal scattered along the tracks and a ready market for them as well. Picking coal wasn’t much of a living for most, but for Spark, a man whose thinking lurched and hitched like the freight cars about him, it was enough. A good day brought cash for shine, Bull Durham for smoking, bologna for frying. Sometimes the coal cars would slow enough that he could tail up, fill his bucket, and drop off before the speeds wound up again. On a lucky day, the cars would stop long enough for him to pitch coal over the side for gathering up later. On those days, the chunks of coal were big as melons, the kind Hook Runyon, the railroad bull, liked best for his stove.

    He’d known Hook Runyon a long time, maybe forever. He couldn’t be clear on that. The coal he gave Hook was not for bribing purposes, though some might think it. He brought coal to Hook’s caboose because Hook was his friend, because Hook would slap him on the back and laugh, a laugh all full of power like a steam engine pulling grade.

    Hook never cussed him, or cuffed him to a car ladder, or cracked his head with a stick. But even if he had, Spark would have brought him coal anyway. He didn’t have many friends like Hook, in fact none that he could remember. Hook could drink Runt Wallace’s shine straight up, didn’t talk ’til it mattered, didn’t whine or ask for more than he was worth.

    As Spark saw it, he and Hook had much in common. Like him, Hook was a collector, even though Hook collected books, which seemed a useless thing. Spark himself liked rail spikes, high-carbon ones with HC stamped on the heads. Last count, he’d collected nearly three sacks full and had them stashed down by the river. Come time, he’d sell them at the salvage yard and have himself a shine-on weekend.

    Since the war, the yards had picked up business, making night picking more dangerous with so many men about. The trains ran with hardly a breather in between. There was more opportunity for trading here and there, though so many strangers made him uneasy.

    Tonight the yards hummed, and his bucket brimmed with coal. He squatted in the darkness to take measure of the yard and the movement of the cars. A switch engine eased a line of reefers in for icing. He could smell the heat and steam of the engine, feel its throb and pulse in his bones. When the brake was set, the cars rumbled away like rolling thunder. The engine bell pealed again and again. He loved the sound. It filled him and spilled over into his soul.

    He turned down the tracks to Hook’s caboose as he had a thousand times before. But for Spark on this night, the bell fell silent and would be heard by him no more.

    1

    HOOK RUNYON ROLLED over in his bunk as engine 3768 pulled out of the yards, a mile-long trail of reefer cars at her back. The cadence of her 4-8-4s and eighty-inch drivers was distinct as she labored against the enormity of her load. Dawn’s light cast through the gray window of his caboose, which sat on the siding. Pulling the covers over his head, he squeezed his eyes shut against the throb. It was Sunday, thank God, and there were twenty-four hours left to nurse the ravages of Runt Wallace’s popskull whiskey.

    When he awoke the second time, the sun bore through his lids, and he groaned. Prying open an eye, he took in his graceless surroundings: the coal stove; the stacks of books, like the ruins of a bombed-out city; the boxes of photographs with their edges curled with moisture. In the far corner, an empty quart bottle lay on its side as dead and useless as a corpse.

    Sitting on the edge of the bunk, he waited for the whirl in his head to subside before slipping on the prosthesis. They’d taken his right arm below the elbow, leaving him movement, but even after all this time, the stump seemed foreign, as if it belonged to someone else. The hook lay cold against his leg as he worked on his britches. Afterward, he tied his shoes, a task that had taken him weeks to master, and then he lit a cigarette against the dreariness of the morning.

    When he checked the coal box under the entrance step, he found it empty. Spark Dugan filled his box without fail. Hook wondered if something might be wrong. Even in the coldest mornings, it was topped with coal and slid under the steps to keep it dry. Spark Dugan gathered his bounty along the tracks, where it fell from the cars as they rattled their way to the power plant in the southern part of the state. His best pickings were at the switches or where the engines stopped and started.

    The divisional supervisor had accused Spark Dugan of stealing and asked Hook, as the local Santa Fe bull, to arrest him for trespassing, but he hadn’t the heart. Spark Dugan was just slow in the head, that’s all, a lonely man who lived in a tar-paper shack under the trestle. He was without friend or kin and talked to no one, not a hello or good morning as he shuffled along the tracks, his cuffs frayed from the bedding rock. What coal he didn’t use himself, he sold around town, most often to the blacksmith shop on Main or to the widow women who traded baked bread and custards for a share.

    Little was said between him and Spark, but over time they had become friends. Spark reached out with what he valued, with what he could, and that was coal. Even though slow-witted, Spark had his ways and did not depart from them without cause. Maybe he would swing by and check on him today, make sure he wasn’t laid up sick somewhere.

    Dumping what coal was left into the stove, Hook dribbled in kerosene from the lantern and lit it, waiting for the flames to struggle to life. The mornings were still cold, and the water bucket was glazed with ice. Breaking it with the dipper, he filled the pot and set it on the stove. Lighting another cigarette, he sat on the edge of the bunk, pulling the blanket over his shoulders. Living in a caboose was like living in a rowboat. When a train went by, which was every fifteen minutes, she pitched and rolled and threatened to swamp.

    But from here he had a good view of the roundhouse and the yards, and the price was right. The caboose had been part of the deal when he was transferred out of Flagstaff. He was neither trained for nor inclined to law enforcement, but like most things in his life, fate had dealt her hand. He had discovered a propensity for the work, an ability to step outside himself and to see through others’ eyes, to think through others’ thoughts. He’d been around enough to know that the skill was instinctive, an intuition tucked away in some primitive lobe of his brain.

    The aroma of coffee perking brought him about, and he snuffed out the cigarette. Drawing cold water, he filled the basin and whipped up a lather in the shaving mug. He examined his beard in the cloudy mirror. The gray was showing more each day. At forty, he was still lean and strong, not from exercise, but from a constitution that defied the harsh realities of his life. He was tall, six foot two, as his father had been, but his black eyes and straight black hair had been inherited from his mother’s side of the family. Indian blood, though not uncommon in Oklahoma, was not a point often touted when he was a child.

    He poured himself a cup and sipped at the coffee as he stood at the window, wiping the steam away with his sleeve, looking down at the yards. Engine 4801 rolled onto the turntable to await maintenance at one of the stalls, and a cloud boiled from the steam jenny down at the machine shop. Morning shift was changing, and men, black with grease, lunch boxes in tow, struck out for their frost-covered pickups. Since the war had started, they’d worked twelve-hour shifts, seven days a week, and the wear was taking its toll. Twice now he’d broken up fistfights down at the ice plant.

    If not for the arm, he might have been a soldier himself by now, fighting the Germans, or an archaeologist like he’d always planned, or a teacher at the university. Janet had been driving, the streets black with ice, and even now he remembered the sounds of breaking glass, the cries for help, the smell of his own flesh rendering in the fire. The amputation of his arm had been as certain and swift as Janet’s departure. Soon after, she’d married the lieutenant in charge of food service down at the army air-force base.

    Hook wasn’t one for crying about what couldn’t be changed, but a big chunk of his spirit went the way of the arm. And then when Janet left, he’d spun downward in despair, a man lost in a dark sea with no shore in sight. At some point, despair turned to bitterness. He buried his feelings deep, so deep that even he could not find them. But with time, he’d struggled back to make a life. Even still, in the silent hours of night, the old memories sometimes rose up out of the darkness.

    Hopping a freighter, he spent a year on the rails. During that year, he’d learned how to survive, how to fight for a scrap of food, how to roll a man off the rods in the dark of night. During that time, he’d developed a taste for whiskey, changed his name from Walter to Hook, and nursed the smoldering rage within him.

    Pulling up a chair, he read over yesterday’s paper in search of an auction. Books were his passion and his salvation. Without them he would have perished from boredom long ago in this godforsaken place. But the auctions offered little in the way of interesting material, mostly farm estates, tools and kitchen utensils, the occasional collection of Reader’s Digest or National Geographic, the rare book, the odd reader. It was the uncommon farmer who left a library behind when he went to his Maker.

    Searching through his stack of books, he landed on Conrad’s Heart of Darkness, a library copy he’d scavenged at a school fund-raiser. This was a day for such diversions, a day for placating guilt and easing the thump in his head.

    The whistle from the six o’clock northbound wailed in the distance. It would be filled with green troops from the Texas training camps, boys on their way to the front. The caboose rocked under the rush of wind when the train roared by, the guards in the doorways in their brown uniforms, their rifles slung from their shoulders.

    The knock at the door was loud and urgent, and Hook jumped, the hair crawling on the back of his neck. When he opened it, Jake Campbell stood on the porch, his hands over his ears against the morning cold.

    What is it? Hook asked.

    I think you better come, he said.

    I’m not on duty. You boys got any fighting to do on Sunday, just have at it.

    Looking down the tracks, Jake blew into his hands.

    You better come, Hook, he said. There’s a body under a reefer car over to the ice deck. They think it’s Spark Dugan.

    2

    AFTER SENDING JAKE for the sheriff, Hook donned his coat and slipped the camera over his shoulder. As he made his way to the ice plant, his empty stomach protested under the assault of black coffee and nicotine. Kicking a rock down the track, he cursed under his breath. Dragging bodies from under trains was not how he’d figured on spending his Sunday.

    A death was bound to stir up trouble, and Eddie Preston, the divisional supervisor out of Chicago, was less than enamored with him as it was. Being a Baldwin-Felts detective, Preston considered Hook unqualified for the job and had done everything he could to prevent his being hired in the first place.

    A line of reefers stretched from the ice deck to the supply sheds. Reefers were the railroad’s pride and joy, a fleet of freight cars laden with perishable fruits and vegetables. The Green Fruit Express, GFX, as it was called, coursed from California to New York in frantic runs through the desert, the difference between riches and ruin a matter of the three-hundred-pound blocks of ice that cooled their cargoes. As a major divisional point, the Waynoka, Oklahoma, yards touted the largest ice plant in the United States and labored twenty-four hours a day to keep the cars iced.

    Men gathered around the reefer, their breath rising in the morning chill. The switch engine puffed and sighed, and steam shot from her sides. Ten or so German POWs watched from atop the ice deck. A prisoner-of-war facility had been built in Alva, twenty miles north. Prisoners were assigned to the ice plant as part of their labor program. They worked no more than eight-hour shifts, as dictated by the Geneva Convention, dragging the blocks of ice into the bunkers situated atop the reefer cars. A camp guard watched on, his weapon at the ready.

    Ross Ague, the night foreman at the ice plant, pushed back his hat and wallowed a cigar stump into the corner of his mouth as Hook approached.

    It’s a goddamn mess, Runyon, he said, and there’s cars waiting to ice. That produce goes to mush, someone’s ass is going on the line, and it ain’t going to be mine.

    Leaning down, Hook looked under the car, his stomach lurching. An arm was severed and tossed against the rail, its fingers curled. Caught by the undercarriage, the torso had dragged backward down line, the skin and muscle scoured away by bedrock. There was no mistaking the frayed cuffs or the wear of Spark Dugan’s heels, and there was flesh on the two right forward wheels. In spite of the gruesome condition of the corpse, there was no spray of blood on the undercarriage.

    When Hook bent under for a closer look, he could see Spark Dugan’s face, like he’d dropped off to sleep. The smell of carnage rose in the cold, and Hook leaned against the reefer to catch his breath.

    What happened? he asked.

    Goddamn if I know, Ague said, spitting between his feet. We was finishing up the shift when Jake spotted him. Figure he was sleeping under the car. Taking out a match, he snapped it against the button on his fly and lit his cigar. Had you boys run ole Spark Dugan off like you was supposed to, we wouldn’t be sweeping him up this morning.

    Stepping back, Hook clicked off a picture and rolled up the next frame.

    Spark didn’t have anyone that I know of, he said.

    No, Ague said. He’s lived in that shack under the trestle for as long as I can remember, if you call it living.

    It was damn cold last night for sleeping under a reefer car.

    Maybe he was drunk, Ague said. Everyone knows Spark Dugan liked his hooch. Maybe he was jerking off for all I know. He wasn’t none too bright, you know.

    Dropping down on one knee, Hook focused in on the twisted form and took another shot.

    What’s in the reefer?

    Reefers are sealed at the point of origin, Ague said. You know that. Keeps yard dogs from poking around and spoiling the goods.

    I could check with the divisional office, Hook said, lighting a cigarette. " ’Course it might take awhile. You know how efficient those bastards are."

    Ague rolled his eyes and pulled a wad of papers from his pocket. Cabbage, out of Oceanside, California, he said. Why? Is being run over by cabbages better than being run over by oranges?

    Who was working graveyard? Hook asked, ignoring him.

    Me, and them union busters up there on the deck, and that guard, if you call sitting on your ass working. There was the switch engineer and Jake. That’s about it. We had a grapefruit run out of Texas and didn’t look up until sunrise.

    Would those POWs have seen something?

    Can’t see squat from the deck, Runyon, not at night. Jake was checking angle cocks when he spotted ole Spark Dugan, or what’s left of him. No one even knew he was there until then.

    You don’t mind if I ask them a few questions?

    Tossing away the cold cigar, Ague said, You can take them to Sunday school for all I care, but it ain’t up to me. You want to talk to them Germans, you’ll have to clear it with the commander at Camp Alva. I ain’t got no say one way or the other. Besides, he said, they don’t talk nothing but Kraut.

    Hook framed the prisoners in his camera and snapped off a shot. He walked around to the tracks that ran parallel to the reefers. Spark’s coal bucket lay spilled down the center of the tracks.

    You boys didn’t move Spark’s bucket, did you?

    We ain’t touched nothing, Ague said. Given how sensitive you yard dogs are.

    Where’s this car headed? he asked, slipping the camera strap over his shoulder.

    Shrugging, Ague checked his schedule again.

    Destination for RD 32 is the Camp Alva spur. Kraut for them fuckin’ Nazis, I reckon.

    From across the way, the sheriff’s car pulled into the parking lot, its red light spinning. Sheriff Donley and Jake picked their way over the switches toward them. Donley was renowned in the county for his ability to break a man’s jaw with a single punch. But he was equally renowned for his inability to fill out traffic-violation reports without the help of the court clerk. When he abandoned giving tickets altogether, driving in town soon degenerated into a contest of wills.

    Squatting, Sheriff Donley shined his flashlight under the reefer and silently studied the ball of gore that was once Spark Dugan. Retrieving a handkerchief from his back pocket, he dabbed at the perspiration on his forehead.

    Jesus, he said.

    Look, Sheriff, Ague said. We got a line of reefers waiting to be iced by the morning shift. Can’t we move this along?

    Clicking off his flashlight, Sheriff Donley worked it into his back pocket and looked down the line of cars.

    Knew ole Spark Dugan was going to get it someday, he said.

    Steam shot from the switch engine, drifting off in the chill.

    You figure it to be an accident then? Hook asked.

    I been called out a dozen times on Spark Dugan, getting drunk, sleeping it off here and there, wherever he took a notion. Once he drank a quart of shine and passed out on Bell Watson’s porch. She shit a brick when she went out for the mail.

    There wasn’t much blood, Sheriff, not for the mess he’s in, and he’s lying on his back. He had to be facing that car when it ran over him, and what’s his bucket doing over there on those other tracks?

    He was probably froze up, Hook. Maybe he tripped over the rail. It was cold last night, and I don’t think Spark Dugan heard none too good. I never could get him to answer up one way or the other.

    This took place on railroad property, Sheriff. It will have to be cleared with the divisional office.

    There’s forty cars waiting for ice, Ague said. Maybe we could talk over old times some other day.

    Taking a pack of Beech-Nut chewing tobacco out of his pocket, Sheriff Donley loaded his jaw and turned up the collar of his coat.

    I got a prisoner pickup at eight o’clock for Judge Mason, Hook. Maybe you could finish up here for me?

    What about the body?

    Taking another look under the reefer, Donley spit a brown glob onto the track.

    The county fund ought bury him, if you’ll get hold of Bud Hanson, the digger.

    I guess I could do that.

    Tossing his flashlight onto the seat of the car, the sheriff got in and rolled down the window.

    Some things are worth stirring up trouble for, he said, starting up the car. Spark Dugan ain’t one of them. Backing around, he stopped, looking out from under his hat. You know how the goddang government is about reports, Hook.

    Consider it done, Sheriff.

    Thanks, he said, hanging his enormous arm out the window as he pulled off down the road.

    Ague tore off the wrapper of a fresh cigar, wetting one end of it and then the other, rolling it into the corner of his mouth.

    There’s a extra arm under that reefer, Runyon, he said, if you’re in need of one.

    Reaching over, Hook snapped Ague’s cigar between the tongs of the prosthesis, bending it up at a right angle.

    No. Thanks, he said. This one works just fine.

    As he turned away he could hear Ague cussing above the din of the switch engine.

    The sun fell warm across Hook’s shoulders as he walked the line of reefers to the operator’s office. Water dribbled from the bunker drains, and the smell of creosote and coal hung in the air. The earth trembled beneath his feet as engines and cars rumbled through the maze of switches. It was going to be a fine spring day, for everyone except Spark Dugan.

    At the depot, the operator handed Hook the phone and turned back to his telegraph. When Eddie Preston came online, Hook cleared his throat.

    Hello.

    Eddie, this is Hook Runyon.

    Runyon, you know what day it is?

    Sorry I disturbed your Sabbath, Eddie, but we had a reefer car turn a local citizen into roadkill last night.

    Oh, Christ. Was the signal out?

    It happened in the switchyards down at the ice plant. They found him this morning.

    What happened?

    Backed over. Dragged a hundred feet or so by the looks of it.

    "This could

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