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"You cannot overestimate how much you underestimate me, Monsieur Claudel."
He straightened, dropped his chin, and took a deep breath. When he spoke again his voice was calm.
"Any further exchange is pointless."
I agreed.
He walked toward the door, his back stiff as a dressage rider's. Before leaving, he turned, raised his chin, and spoke down his nose.
"There is one other thing that I should tell you, Ms. Brennan."
I waited.
"George Dorsey was charged with first-degree murder this morning."
Though his words were ice, I could feel the heat all the way across the room. Then he was gone.
I took a long breath that caught several times on the way up. Then I uncurled my fingers, sat, and stared at children playing in the school yard twelve floors down.
I was angry for Dorsey. I was frustrated by Claudel's pigheaded refusal to listen. I was mortified that the man had taken steps to annul my appointment to Carcajou.
I was furious with Claudel, but I was equally angry with myself. I detest losing my temper, but seemed unable to control it in arguments with Claudel. But it was more than that.
While I hated to admit it, Claudel still intimidated me. And I still sought his approval. Though I thought I'd gained ground in the past, the man obviously continued to regard me with disdain. And it mattered. And that irked me. Also, I knew it had been wrong not to at least notify him of the Dorsey interview. Investigative teams demand that all information be contributed to the common pool, and rightly so. Because I knew Claudel would not include me in the loop, I had elected not to inform him. Only, he was one of the chief investigators on the Cherokee case. By my actions, I had handed him a weapon to use against me.
"The h.e.l.l with him."
I turned my gaze from the kick ball below and surveyed the contents of my office. Articles to be filed. Forms to be signed for destruction of remains. Phone messages. A briefcase filled with biker info.
My scanning stopped at a pile of photocopies stacked on a corner cabinet. Perfect. I'd been putting it off for months. I decided to distance myself from the current quagmire of bones and bikers and surly detectives by updating my database on old cases.
And that's what I did until it was time to go.
On the way home I swung by the Metro store on Papineau and picked up the ingredients for puttanesca sauce. I wondered if Kit would like anchovies, bought them anyway. I'd proceed as I had when serving Katy a foreign dish. I wouldn't tell him.
The evening's cuisine was a moot point. When I arrived at the apartment no one greeted me but Birdie. The boots and clothing had been cleared, and a floral arrangement the size of Rhode Island filled the dining room table. A note had been placed on the refrigerator door.
My nephew was so, so sorry. He'd made plans that couldn't be changed. Sad face. He promised me the entire day on Sat.u.r.day. Smiley face.
I slammed the bags on the kitchen counter, stomped to the bedroom, and kicked off my pumps.
h.e.l.l. What kind of life is this? Another Friday with the cat and the tube.
Maybe Claudel would like dinner. That would make my day.
I pulled off my work clothes, threw them on the chair, and slipped into jeans and a sweats.h.i.+rt.
It's your own fault, Brennan. You're not exactly Miss Congeniality.
I dug around on my closet floor, located my Top-Siders, and broke a nail yanking them on.
I couldn't remember when I'd felt so down. And so very alone.
The idea popped up without warning.
Call Ryan.
No.
I went to the kitchen and began emptying groceries, Ryan's face filling my mind.
Call.
That's past.
I remembered a spot just below his left collarbone, a hollowed-out muscle that cradled my cheek perfectly. Such a safe spot. So quiet. So protected.
Call him.
I did that.
Talk to him.
I don't want to listen to lame excuses. Or lies.
Maybe he's innocent.
Jean Bertrand said the evidence is overwhelming.
My resolve crumbled with the canned tomatoes, but I finished emptying the bags, balled and stuffed them under the sink, and filled Birdie's dish. Then I went to the living room phone.
When I saw the light my stomach did a mini-flip.
I pushed the b.u.t.ton.
Isabelle.
The landing was like that of a gymnast after a bad vault.
The machine told me I had two entries that had not been erased.
I pushed again, hoping Kit had played them and forgotten.
The first was Harry, looking for her son.
The second message was also for Kit. As I listened, the small hairs rose at the back of my neck, and my breath froze in my throat.
24.
AFTER UNSUCCESSFULLY ATTEMPTING TO DECODE THE GARBLED message for Kit from a person named Preacher about a meet, I concluded that this probably involved Harleys, and not those owned by a suburban motorcycle club. I thought of waiting up, decided against it. message for Kit from a person named Preacher about a meet, I concluded that this probably involved Harleys, and not those owned by a suburban motorcycle club. I thought of waiting up, decided against it.
Impulsively, I dialed Ryan's number. The answering machine replied. My despondency complete, I went to bed.
I slept fitfully, my thoughts like colored chips in a kaleidoscope, congealing to form clear images, then drifting apart into meaningless patterns. Most of the tableaux involved my nephew.
Kit, driving his pickup through a tunnel of trees. Kit, arms overflowing with flowers. Kit on a Harley, Savannah Osprey riding the back, bookend bikers to either side.
At one point I heard the beep of the security system. Later, vomiting, then the sound of a toilet.
In between cameos of my nephew, my unconscious presented theme song suggestions. Lord of the Dance Lord of the Dance kept repeating. The music was like fleas in the carpet: Once in, it was impossible to dislodge. kept repeating. The music was like fleas in the carpet: Once in, it was impossible to dislodge.
Dance, dance, wherever you may be . . . . . .
I awoke to pale gray lighting the edges of the window shade. Slamming a pillow across my head, I threw an arm over it and pulled my knees to my chest.
I am the lord of the dance, said he . . . . . .
At eight I gave up. Why be annoyed? I reasoned. It isn't rising early that's a pain. It's having having to rise early. I didn't to rise early. I didn't have have to get up, I was choosing to do so. to get up, I was choosing to do so.
I threw back the covers and slipped on the same outfit I'd featured for my Friday evening with Bird. A Brennanism: When in doubt as to where the day will take you, underdress.
While the Krups pot brewed my 100 percent Kona I peeked out the French doors. Rain fell steadily, turning trunks and branches s.h.i.+ny, jiggling leaves and shrubs, and puddling in low spots on the courtyard brick. Only the crocus sprouts looked happy.
Who was I kidding? This was a morning to sleep.
Well, you're not. So do something else.
I threw on a jacket and sprinted to the corner for a Gazette Gazette. When I got back, Birdie was curled on a dining room chair, ready for our Sat.u.r.day ritual.
I poured myself some Quaker Harvest Crunch, added milk, and set the bowl next to the paper. Then I got coffee and settled in for a long read. Birdie watched, secure in the knowledge that all cereal leavings would be his.
A United Nations human rights panel had blasted Canada for its treatment of aboriginals.
Dance, dance . . . . . .
The Equality Party was celebrating its tenth birthday.
What's to celebrate? I wondered. They hadn't won a single National a.s.sembly seat in the last election. Equality had been born of a language crisis, but the issue had been relatively quiet over the past decade, and the party was hanging on by suction cups. They needed another linguistic flare-up.
The Lachine Ca.n.a.l would be undergoing a multimillion-dollar face lift. That was good news.
As I refilled my cup and gave Bird his milk, I pictured the place where Kit and I had skated last Sunday. The bike path ran along the ca.n.a.l, a nine-mile waterway filled with toxins and industrial sludge. But it had not always been a sewer.
Built in 1821 to bypa.s.s the Lachine rapids and allow s.h.i.+ps direct pa.s.sage from Europe to the Great Lakes, the ca.n.a.l was once an integral part of the city's economy. That changed when the St. Lawrence Seaway opened in 1959. The ca.n.a.l's mouth and several basins were filled with earth displaced by construction of the metro system, and it was eventually closed to navigation. The surrounding neighborhoods were neglected and, save for the creation of the bicycle path, the ca.n.a.l was ignored, tainted by a century of industrial dumping.
Now plans were afoot to revitalize the city's southwest side. Like Mont-Royal Park, designed by Frederick Law Olmsted one hundred and twenty-five years ago, the ca.n.a.l was to be the centerpiece for a renaissance of the entire sector.
Maybe it's time to buy a new condo.
I resettled at the table and opened to another section.
The RCMP had to squeeze more than twenty-one million dollars from its budget to cover salary raises. The federal government would cough up only a portion.
I thought of the blue-collar workers picketing on Guy.
Bonne chance.
The Expos lost to the Mets, 10-3.
Ouch. Maybe Piazza was was worth the ninety-one million the Big Apple had forked out. worth the ninety-one million the Big Apple had forked out.
Dorsey's rearraignment on new charges was on page five, next to a story about Internet crime. The only thing I learned was that he'd been arraigned late Friday afternoon, then transferred from Op South to the provincial prison at Riviere-des-Prairies.
At ten I phoned the hospital. Madame LaManche reported that her husband was stable, but still uncommunicative. Thanking me politely, she refused my offer of help. She sounded exhausted, and I hoped her daughters were there for support.
I sorted clothes and ran a load of whites. Then I changed to basketball shorts and a T and laced up my cross-trainers. I walked to McKay and Ste-Catherine, and took an elevator to the top-floor gym.
I ran the treadmill for twenty minutes, finished with another ten on the StairMaster. Then I lifted weights for half an hour and left. My usual routine. In. Exercise. Out. That's why I liked Stones Gym. No high-tech glitz. No personal trainers. A minimum of spandex.
When I emerged, the rain had stopped and the cloud cover was losing its hold. An especially promising patch of blue had appeared over the mountain.
I arrived home to the same quiet I'd left. Birdie was sleeping off the cereal milk, my nephew was sleeping off something I didn't want to contemplate.
Dance, dance . . . . . .
I checked the answering machine, but the message light was dark. No response from Ryan. As with all recent calls to his number, his machine was not calling back.
O.K., Ryan. Message received loud and clear.
I showered and changed, then arranged myself at the dining room table. I sorted everything Kate had loaned me. Photos to the left, doc.u.ments to the right. Again I began with the photos.
I glanced briefly at Martin "Deluxe" Deluccio and Eli "Robin" Hood, then at a dozen members of the same species, bearded, mustached, goateed, and stubbled. I moved on to the next envelope.
Color prints fell to the table. In most the focus was blurry, the subjects badly framed, as though each was shot quickly and covertly. I sifted through them.
The settings were predictable. Parking lots. Motel pools. Barbecue joints. Yet the amateur quality made these scenes somehow more compelling, gave them a vitality lacking in the police surveillance photos.
Going from picture to picture, I noted accidental events captured by tourists, salesmen, pa.s.sing motorists. Each told the story of a chance encounter, a random intersection of the ordinary and the dark. Kodak moments of fascination and fear. Heart racing, palms sweaty, reaching for the camera before the wife and kids returned from the toilet.
I picked one up and studied it closely. An Esso station. Six men on chopped-down Harleys, twenty yards from the lens yet a universe away. I could feel the shooter's awe, his seduction-repulsion by the aura of the motorcycle outlaw.
For the next hour I worked my way through the stack of envelopes. From Sturgis, South Dakota, to Daytona Beach, Florida, whether shot by police or Joe Citizen, the events and partic.i.p.ants were tediously similar. Runs. Campgrounds. Swap meets. Bars. By one o'clock I'd seen enough.