Heat Lightning

Heat Lightning by John Sandford

Book: Heat Lightning by John Sandford Read Free Book Online
Authors: John Sandford
during the war. He was mentioned in several articles about Vietnamese tourism, and did some work with a consortium of U.S. and Australian hoteliers who wanted to build a new Asian Gold Coast south of Hanoi.
    He wrote the study on the use of Agent Orange in Vietnam, and published it in 1990. The study was attacked online by another academic, from the conservative Heritage Foundation, who dismissed it as an overreaction to Sinclair’s wife’s death from cancer in 1988.
    In 2004, Sinclair had been ordered to leave Vietnam for supporting a dissident Vietnamese academic. After that, nothing but a lot of references to academic papers and disputes.
    Interesting guy; and his name, together with the Agent Orange paper, rang a bell in Virgil’s memory. He took a look at the paper that Grogan had given him, skipping through it. Kudzu , he thought after a while. This was the kudzu paper .
    In an effort to recover from the effects of the defoliant, the Vietnamese had decided to try kudzu, as a fast-growing, hardy perennial. The plant was hardy, all right: in ten years, with no natural enemies, it was burying the country. The Viets had been fighting the kudzu ever since, and were losing. Shouldn’t fuck with Mother Nature; or if you did, Virgil mused, you should do it in somebody else’s country.
    The paper had been assigned reading in his ecological sciences senior seminar. He remembered the arguments about it—the first time he realized that even scientists would throw science overboard when it conflicted with their politics.
    Huh.
    He looked online for a local phone number or address, checked with directory assistance, and finally called, “Carol?”
    She stuck her head in. “Yeah?”
    “I need to find a guy—moved here last year, I can’t find anything on him.”
    “Gimme his stuff. I’ll get it to Sandy, she’ll find him.” Sandy was a part-time staff researcher, part of Davenport’s team.
     
 
SINCLAIR HAD LED a prominent but fairly opaque life. Virgil read a number of profiles and found out only that he’d been sandy-haired and slender in the eighties; and one article mentioned that he was a poker player. That was it, on the personal level. Everything else was politics and left-wing infighting.
    With Bunton, the opposite was true. Nothing on the Internet, not even his name. But in the state records . . .
    Virgil first checked the criminal records, since Bunton was a biker and a tough guy. Got immediate hits: two thirty-day jail terms in Beltrami County in the late seventies, on assault and public drunkenness charges. Forty-five days in the Hennepin County Jail for drunk and disorderly and resisting arrest without violence, which is what cops charged you with when you’d done something to piss them off.
    He’d been served a writ by an ex-wife to keep him away from her, and had protested that the wife was stealing and signing his veteran’s disability checks. That meant that he’d suffered some kind of job-related injury in the military. Given his age, Virgil thought, it was possible that he’d been wounded in Vietnam. Northern Plains Indians were known for their willingness to volunteer for the toughest infantry jobs.
    Bunton had been implicated, but not charged, in a fencing sting involving stolen car parts; had been arrested twice for simple assault; and had spent two weeks in the Ramsey County Jail on outstanding, unpaid traffic tickets. That had been four years earlier, and he’d stayed clear of the law since.
    Getting old, Virgil thought. Probably still full of the piss, but not the vinegar.
    Altogether, he knew exactly what Bunton would be like, but nothing about what he did for a living. It was possible, Virgil thought, that he didn’t do anything.
     
 
CAROL STUCK HER head in. “Sandy got the Sinclair guy. Phone number and address.”
    “Excellent. Now I’ve got another guy I need to look for . . .”
    He gave her the information on Bunton.
     
 
ON THE PHONE, Sinclair had a straight, clear

Similar Books

Silver Lies

Ann Parker

In Between Days

Andrew Porter

Ice

Elissa Lewallen

Soul of the Assassin

Jim DeFelice, Larry Bond

Frame-Up

Gian Bordin

Tamed by a Laird

Amanda Scott

Desire's Sirocco

Charlotte Boyett-Compo

The Pegnitz Junction

Mavis Gallant

The Secret of Sentinel Rock

Judith Silverthorne