Forty Words for Sorrow. Giles Blunt
Чтение книги онлайн.
Читать онлайн книгу Forty Words for Sorrow - Giles Blunt страница 8
Arsenault peered into the ice block. ‘A maple leaf, looks like. A piece of one, anyway.’
The forests of the near north are mostly pine, poplar and birch. ‘Anybody do any sailing round here?’ Cardinal enquired.
Arsenault said, ‘Me and the wife were out here for a picnic last August or so. We can do a quick survey to make sure, but if I remember right, this whole little island was Jack pine and spruce. Lots of birch.’
‘That’s what I think too,’ Cardinal said. ‘Which would tend to confirm that the murder happened somewhere else.’
Delorme called Forensic on the cellphone to let them know they could expect the body in approximately four hours. Then they moved the remains, ice and all, down the snowy slope of the beach and into the waiting truck.
Remains, Cardinal thought. The word was not adequate.
Sergeant Lise Delorme had been clearing the decks of Special Investigations for some time, a couple of months to be exact. There were no major cases pending, but she had thousands of little details to clear up. Final notes to make. Dispositions to update. Files to archive. She wanted everything to be shipshape for her replacement, who was due to arrive at the end of the month. But the entire morning had gone by and all she’d managed to do was clear sensitive material off her hard drive.
Delorme couldn’t wait to get going on the Pine case, even if she was in the completely weird position of having to investigate her partner. So far, it looked like Cardinal was going to keep her at arm’s length, and she couldn’t really blame him for that. She wouldn’t have trusted anyone right out of Special either.
A phone call in the middle of the night – that’s how it had started. She had thought at first it was Paul, a former boyfriend who got drunk every six months and called her at two in the morning, weepy and sentimental. It was Dyson. ‘Conference at the chief’s house in half an hour. His house, not his office. Get dressed and wait. Horseman’ll pick you up. Don’t want certain parties seeing your car outside his place.’
‘What’s going on?’ Her words were slurry with sleep.
‘You’ll know soon enough. I’ve got a ticket waiting for you.’
‘Tell me it’s for Florida. Someplace warm.’
‘It’s your ticket out of Special.’
Delorme got dressed in three minutes flat, then sat on the edge of the sofa, nerves singing. She’d spent six years working Special, and in all that time she had never once had a midnight summons, nor ever seen the inside of the chief’s house. Ticket out of Special?
‘No point asking me anything,’ the young Mountie told her before she’d even opened her mouth. ‘I’m just the delivery girl.’ A nice touch, Delorme thought, to send a woman.
Delorme had grown up revering the Mounties. The scarlet uniform, those horses – well, they went straight to a little girl’s heart. She had a vivid memory of the first time she saw them perform the Musical Ride in Ottawa, the sheer beauty of such equestrian precision. And then in high school, the glorious history, the great trek west. The North West Mounted Police, as they were then known, had ridden thousands of miles to ward off the kind of violence that was plaguing the westward expansion of the United States. They had negotiated treaties with the aboriginals, sent American raiders hightailing it back to Montana or whatever barbaric pit they had crawled out of, and established the rule of law before settlers had even had a chance to think about breaking it. The RCMP had become an icon of upstanding law enforcement around the world, a travel agent’s dream.
Delorme had bought the image wholesale; that’s what images are for, after all. When, sometime in her late teens, she had seen a photograph of a woman in that red serge uniform, Delorme had seriously considered sending away for an application.
But reality kept breaking through the image, and reality was not nearly as pretty. One officer sells secrets to Moscow, another is arrested for smuggling drugs, still another for tossing his wife off the balcony of a high-rise. And then there was the whole Security Service fiasco. The RCMP Security Service, before it had been dismantled in disgrace, had made the CIA look like geniuses.
She glanced at the fresh-faced creature in the car beside her, wearing a shapeless down coat, blond hair pulled back in a neat French braid. She had stopped for the traffic light at Edgewater and Trout Lake Road, and the street lights silvered the down on her cheek. Even in that pale wash, Delorme could see herself ten years ago. This girl too had bought the straight-arrow image and was determined to make it stick. Well, good for her, Delorme figured. Cowboys armed with brutality and incompetence may have betrayed those true-North ideals, but that didn’t make a young recruit dumb for clinging to them.
They pulled up in front of an impressive A-frame on Edgewater. It looked like something out of the Swiss Alps.
‘Don’t ring the buzzer, just walk right in. Doesn’t want to wake the kids.’
Delorme showed her ID to a Mountie at the side door. ‘Downstairs,’ he said.
Delorme walked through the basement, amid smells of Tide and Downy, then past a huge furnace into a large room of red brick and dark pine that had the leathery, smoky look of a men’s club. Fake Tudor beams criss-crossed stucco walls that were hung with hunting prints and marine art. A feeble flame flickered in the fireplace. Above this, a moose head contemplated the head of R.J. Kendall, chief of the Algonquin Bay police department.
Kendall had an open, congenial manner, perhaps partly to compensate for his small stature (Delorme was a head taller than the chief), and a big laugh that he used all the time, often accented with a backslap. He laughed too much, in Delorme’s opinion; it made him seem nervous, which perhaps he was, but she had also seen that genial manner vanish in an instant. When angered, which was thankfully not often, R.J. Kendall was a shouter and a curser. The whole department had heard him tear up one side of Adonis Dyson and down the other for undermanning the winter fur carnival, with the result that it became a noisy, rowdy affair that made the front page of the Lode for all the wrong reasons.
And yet Dyson still spoke highly of Kendall, as did most people who carried shrapnel wounds from one of his explosions. Once his anger was over, it was really over, and he usually made a gesture or two to soothe ruffled feathers. In Dyson’s case he’d gone out of his way – on TV – to give Dyson credit for downturns in robberies and assaults. It was far more than his predecessor would have done.
Dyson himself was in one of the red leather armchairs talking to someone Delorme couldn’t see. He waved a languid hand in her direction, as if midnight meetings were routine with him.
The chief jumped up to shake Delorme’s hand. He must have been in his late fifties, but he affected a boyish air, the way some powerful men do. ‘Sergeant Delorme. Thanks for getting here so fast. And on such short notice. Can I get you a drink? Off-hours, I think we can afford to relax a little.’
‘No, thank you, sir. This time of night, it would just knock me out.’
‘We’ll get right down to it, then. Someone I want you to meet. Corporal Malcolm Musgrave, RCMP.’
Watching Corporal Malcolm Musgrave emerge from the red leather chair was