She Felt No Pain. Lou Allin
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“Sometimes the most evident answer is the real one. Don’t look for no zebra in a herd of horses.” He picked up the plastic bag. “Hardly anything left. His last fix. Poor sod went out with a bang...or a whimper. Dropped dead on the spot. Just enough time for an uh-oh. Give the immediate area a sweep in case he’s tossed sharps into the bushes. Kids come here, I imagine. Ride their bikes up the creek trail.”
“Yes, and now there are caches in the area.” She explained the concept.
He was looking inside the pencil case. “Extra syringe. Cotton pads.” He opened a tiny bottle and sniffed. “Bleach. Primitive sterilization but better than nothing.”
“That pencil case looks ancient.” When someone’s possessions were boiled down to whatever they could carry, the items provided an often poignant flash of humanity. Had he been holding fast to this item from childhood? Bought it at a second-hand store? Innocence mixed with the most sordid of experience. “Any ID?”
“Getting to that, missy. Hold your horses. Don’t act like you have something better to do here in Lotusland North.” He slipped a thin leather wallet from a pocket and opened it, pooching out his large lower lip. “Driver’s license. Ontario. How about that?” He cocked his head. “Looks like our man is Joel Hall. Whoa. Here’s a CT credit card in the name of Phillip Blunt. Twenty bucks. A lottery ticket for last week. Super Seven. Not enough numbers circled to win.”
“Wouldn’t that make a great story? Guy’s found dead with a million-dollar ticket?”
Snorting, he fingered his way under an interior flap. “My oh my. A hundred dollar bill? And another?” He flicked one with his nail. “Brand new, too. If he was selling, it wouldn’t be for this much at one crack. Maybe it came from Phil’s wallet.”
“I doubt he was a dealer. Usually they have a place to sleep, not to mention wheels.”
“Unless the dealer turned doper. Shot up the profits.” He held up a picture. “Who’s this angel? Too young to be his mother. An old girlfriend? Or a wife?”
“Or a sister. Let me see.” She held the small black-and-white photograph by its edges. High-school graduation package size. Judging from the hair style, it was definitely Seventies. She’d seen her mother’s yearbook from university. Bouncy hair, fluffed up, “teased” had been Bonnie’s word. Pouffy angora sweater. Ring on a chain. The woman was attractive, and her smile was full of youthful hope. Something was vaguely familiar about her. On the back was written in teenage script with a little heart over the i: Love and kisses always, Judy. “If only there were a last name on this. Judy’s probably married now, too. And anyone can get a driver’s license. It’s out of date, too. With no picture like the new ones in this province.”
“Another lost soul, I’d say. Doesn’t look like he’s had much of a life. Just an accident waiting to happen. But someone meant something to him once. Maybe she’s still thinking about him. And that cash has me scratching my head.” As Holly got up, he took her seat with a groan. “Knee’s screaming blue murder. I oughta get a replacement, ’cept I’d have to wait six months.”
“I’ll check the backpack.”
He put a warning hand on her arm. “Go slow. You don’t know what might be in there.”
She carefully looked through the pouches and zipped pockets: Soap, a ratty towel, a disposable razor, and a couple of t-shirts that had seen better days. Nothing was outstanding. Two pop tarts were crumbling in their packets. The flotsam and jetsam of the bottom rung of society. “Nothing to speak of. Not even a secret hiding place.”
She gave the area a once-over. Needles were everywhere these days, even collection boxes in the ferry bathrooms, and the exchanges for addicts were attacked as “enabling” despite the fact that they minimized the HIV infection rate. Recently the fixed exchange location in downtown Victoria had drawn so much criticism that in its place, a mobile van cruised the streets. With the apparent inconvenience of finding the vehicle, many were reusing dirty needles. “Harm reduction” was a tough sell for activists battling more conservative citizens. Fortunately, in Canada health care was regarded as a right, not a privilege. Since its inception, no prime minister had dared prod the sacred cow.
To be as thorough as possible, she established a fifty-foot perimeter. The scraggly undergrowth defied combing. Sword ferns dueled with deer fern and bracken. Pick-up sticks of skinny alders blocked her progress, and the prickly weave of tiny ground blackberries threaded together the tapestry. Nothing more turned up except a beer can with fresh butts. Prints probably, DNA possibly. For good measure, she paper-bagged everything, peering at the water bottle, which seemed to have three good latents. In the distance, the wail of the ambulance could be heard. They’d probably been jammed by a fender-bender. Travel in the summer on the two-lane to Victoria was getting slower every year now that the housing developments in Sooke had ballooned the population. Hadn’t anyone thought about infrastructure when that Sun River development of five hundred people had begun? And west of Fossil Bay, the Jordan River plan, involving hundreds of hectares of former clear-cuts, now stalled in the zoning, foresaw another nine thousand people. The traffic ramifications reminded her of sand dripping in an hourglass.
“Here are the ETs,” Boone called, making final observations in a notebook. At least his purpled face had returned to a normal colour. This kind of exercise was taxing for the old man, but she liked working with him, trusted his wisdom.
They made their way back to the parking lot after the body had been removed. Boone drove off in his Jeep, the tailpipe dangling with baling wire. Surprisingly, the Jones family was still there. She walked over to thank them again. In the back seat, the kids were watching a video.
“Everyone’s getting hungry, and we’re due in Port Renfrew, where we’ve reserved a campsite,” Chrissy said. “I don’t think they got that close a look at the poor man. Frank saw him in time. Let’s hope it’s not quite real, only a bad memory. I told them that he had a heart attack. It seemed easiest.”
Nothing wrong with a white lie now and then. “One last question. Did you find that cache?” Holly took off her cap to wipe her brow.
“Are you kidding? We got out as fast as we could.”
For safety, Holly waved them back across traffic onto the busy road. Geocaching sounded like fun for kids. A real game in the real world...except that in this case a corpse had joined the party. As a first step, she’d run his name through CPIC. In all likelihood he had a record, perhaps even outstanding warrants. She respected the humanity, the mother who had borne him. But he had committed himself to a maverick lifestyle and removed himself from a world of cares.
Under the bridge, Bill’s old lawn chair still stood, nearby a coffee pot and enamel cup beside a careful fire pit with a metal screen on top. She tested the ashes and found them cold. His meager belongings, consisting of a wheeled dolly with a shock-corded milk crate, sat beside his backpack. This way, hitchhikers could carry more, and the dolly could go into a trunk or truck bed. Odd that he’d left it so trustingly, but probably it held nothing of value. She’d lived light too, possessing no furniture that couldn’t be left behind in the places she’d rented. But didn’t everyone want a room of his own? Her mother would have expected her to reach out a hand, not be judgmental about those who lived on the street...or in the forest.
Chipper capped a bottle of spring water and wiped his mouth with a snow-white handkerchief. Other than her father in courtly mode, he was the only man she’d ever seen use one. “Everything go okay?” he asked.
Holly