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Authors: Giles Blunt

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BOOK: Forty Words for Sorrow
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53

B
EYOND THE RAILROAD TRACKS,
the old house leaned against the storm. A piece of the eavestrough hung slackly from the porch, weighed down by melting icicles. At one corner of the roof a piece of tarpaper flapped like a shot bird. Horns from traffic on the overpass honked in the distance.

McLeod remembered the place from his days in uniform. “Had to boom their door in practically every Saturday. Old Stanley Markham—Cardinal, you remember Stanley—old Stanley used to go on a toot and come home and tear the place to bits. Strong son of a bitch, too. Broke my arm in two places. That little manoeuvre cost him three years. Few years back his liver finally killed him, and boy, do I ever not miss him. Goddam house always stank of cat piss.”

Cardinal asked, “Who lives there now?” They were watching the house through flapping wipers as if it might at any moment hoist up its foundations like a tattered skirt and haul off into the freezing rain.

“Who lives there now? Sweet Celeste lives there now, Stanley’s loyal widow and one of nature’s true troglodytes. Three hundred pounds, voice that can peel paint, and tough as her bastard of a husband, too. If her IQ was any lower, you’d have to water the bitch.”

“Fraser drives a Ford Windstar,” Delorme said quietly. “I don’t see it in the driveway.”

“Fraser also has a hostage. I’m not going to wait around to find out if he’s home or not.”

“Hold on, now. How about a little backup before we waltz in there?” McLeod said. “We ain’t exactly a SWAT team, here.” He didn’t say so, but the implication was, We’re lumbered with a woman and a scene guy—we’re asking for it.

A brown UPS truck was lumbering to a stop behind them. Ancient brakes howled in protest.

“Give me a minute,” Cardinal said. Splinters of rain stung his face as he got out of the car. He showed the driver his badge and climbed in on the passenger side. The driver was an Indian named Clyde. Under the peaked brown cap his wide cheekbones made him look like a Mongolian soldier.

“Clyde, I need your help with a police matter. I need to borrow your uniform.”

Clyde kept his gaze out the window, as if he spoke to the rain, the heaps of dissolving snow. “You going undercover?”

“Just for about ten minutes. It’ll save us pulling out weapons. Don’t want gunfire on a residential street in the middle of the day.”

“How about a trade? You get my uniform, I get your badge.” Still speaking to the rain.

“It doesn’t work that way, Clyde.”

He turned and grinned, displaying the most perfect teeth Cardinal had ever seen. “You can borrow my uniform any time you want. Hate wearing the thing anyways.”

Cardinal took off his coat and struggled to put on Clyde’s brown jacket. It was tight across the shoulders, but it would pass.

“What kind of gun is that?”

“Beretta.”

“Use it much?”

“Never. Brand new issue. How do I look?”

“Like a cop in a UPS outfit. Take a couple of parcels—there, it might get you in the door.”

“Good thinking, Clyde. You should be a cop.”

“I can’t stand cops,” Clyde said, speaking once more to the weather. “You about ready? I got deadline issues.”

“I need the truck too, Clyde. Can you wait somewhere else? Two guys in a UPS truck looks funny. You guys don’t drive around in pairs.”

“That’s true.” He grabbed a pack of cigarettes from the dashboard. “I’ll be in Toby’s. Store on the corner.” The Indian swung down out of the truck. “Second gear’s a bastard. Just rev like hell and shove her straight into third. Sure you don’t want me to drive?”

“Thanks. I’ll manage.” Cardinal nearly stalled the truck right on the railroad tracks—oh, smart move, he thought, get creamed by a freight train before backup even gets here—then he revved it like Clyde said and threw it into third. The truck juddered, then caught, and he drove through a swamp of slush to the unmarked. Delorme rolled down the window.

“I’m going to go straight up to the front door like this,” Cardinal told them. “Give me exactly three minutes after she opens the door. Soon as I’m in, McLeod deals with her and you follow me. We straight?”

“You’re in. McLeod takes her. I follow you.”

“Collingwood heads straight for the basement.”

McLeod leaned forward from the back seat. “Watch out for Celeste. She’s got kind of a negative take on law enforcement.”

Cardinal steered the truck up to the front of the house. He selected a medium-sized parcel that would cover the Beretta in his hand. He was wishing he had his thirty-eight. I should have spent time on the range, he scolded himself, I’m not used to this weapon. It felt long and unwieldy in his hand.

Celeste Markham opened the door, and Cardinal nearly gagged at the corrosive odour of cat piss. The woman’s eyes, two black buttons nearly lost in the dough of her face, emitted twin beams of boredom and hostility. A filthy flower-print robe hung half open over massive collapsing breasts. On her upper lip, a moustache of fine blonde hair glistened. “Wrong house,” she said sullenly. “I didn’t order nothing.”

“Mrs. Markham, I’m a police officer and I have business with Eric Fraser.” Stairs to the right, living room to the left. The basement door must be under the stairs.

“He ain’t home. You ain’t coming in here.” She started to close the door. Cardinal blocked it with his foot. When Delorme and McLeod were on the porch stairs, he pushed his way past the woman, his elbow disappearing into the humid depths of her belly.

He heard her cursing McLeod as he took the stairs two at a time. He flew past a bedroom where a television was blaring with a game show. Cardinal glimpsed what looked like a dozen cats sprawled around a two-litre bottle of Dr Pepper and an immense bowl of Chee-tos. There was a blackened bathroom and at the end of the hall a closed, new-looking door. “Police!”

The door was locked. Cardinal kicked at it, and Celeste Markham screamed from downstairs, “You better not break nothing!”

The door was cheap, hollow-core, and it splintered easily. Cardinal reached through and unlocked it from the inside, and stepped inside with the Beretta in his hand, Delorme behind him.

After the stench and filth of the rest of the house, the room was shockingly clean. Instead of cat piss, it smelt faintly of soap. The bed covers were drawn tight, with hospital corners. The window, although ancient, offered a pristine view of the overpass; someone had cleaned it carefully, and Cardinal did not suspect Celeste Markham. Cars rippled in the old glass. Something Cardinal had often noted in people who’d done time, even juveniles: they kept their rooms neat as Marines.

The closet contained four shirts, all pressed, all on hangers. Two pairs of pants, also ironed, also on hangers. One pair of boots with Cuban heels, well-worn, spit-shined.

The desktop was empty. The small drawer contained a ballpoint pen and a yellow notepad with no writing on it. Underneath the desk they found a box of maybe thirty books, neatly stacked.

“So empty,” Delorme said, voicing Cardinal’s thought. “It’s like no one lives here at all.”

Collingwood filled up the doorway behind them. “Nothing in the basement. Big Mama says he just uses this room, doesn’t have the run of the house.”

“Where’s he eat, even?” Cardinal asked of the room at large. “It’s like the guy’s not human.”

“Something under here.” Delorme’s voice was muffled; she was down on her knees, checking under the bed. She dragged out a guitar case. Careful not to smudge fingerprints, she pressed open the latches. It was an Ovation guitar, in good condition.

“Keith London plays guitar. I’m pretty sure Miss Steen said an Ovation. We’ll seal this room and let Arsenault at it later.”

The search proceeded in silence for the next few minutes. The guitar was solid, it might link Fraser conclusively to Keith London, but it didn’t lead anywhere
now
. Cardinal was getting increasingly frustrated with the neatness of the place. He pulled a file box out of the closet: nothing but neatly filed receipts. He twisted the lid from an old candy tin: nothing but paper clips and rubber bands. Then he opened a shoebox. It was bound with a piece of blue velvet ribbon as if it might contain precious mementoes. Cardinal was expecting photographs, perhaps a diary. But what he found there was worse than coming upon Todd Curry’s body.

“Place is like a hospital,” Delorme was saying. “I should get this guy to clean my place.”

“Oh, no. I don’t think you want to do that.” Cardinal found it an effort to speak. He was staring at three items laid out neatly in the shoebox, three items that made him feel suddenly very weak. Delorme peered into the box, and her sharp intake of breath was an echo of his own feelings.

The shoebox contained three locks of hair, each a different shade and texture, each neatly taped at one end. One lock of hair was straight and black as sable; that would be Katie Pine’s. Another—almost certainly Todd Curry’s—was dark brown and curly, finer. The blond would be Billy LaBelle’s. There was none for Woody—that killing had been unplanned, almost incidental—nor was there any for Keith London, whose hair was long, straight, light brown.

Downstairs, Celeste Markham and McLeod were hurling threats at each other. If he didn’t get out of her way, she had every intent of breaking his other arm. McLeod suggested she might want to repeat that to a judge.

“Collingwood,” Cardinal said at last, “tell McLeod to keep it down so we can think. Have them argue in the car.”

Cardinal opened dresser drawers one after another: socks stacked like missiles, T-shirts folded into crisp squares, sweaters that looked as if they’d never been worn. Just their luck the guy had to be a neat freak. Even the wastebasket was empty. Cardinal picked up the yellow legal pad again and riffled the pages. Nothing fell out. He held up the top page like a screen against the window. Faint impressions took on shape—a list of some sort.

“What do you suppose ‘P.H.’ stands for?” he asked in the blessed quiet that filled the place now. Somewhere a cat was meowing.

“P.H. Maybe some victim we don’t know about?”

“No, it says Trout Lake P.H. We know this guy likes to move around: the mine shaft, the empty house. And we know he’s familiar with the Trout Lake area because Woody was found near the marina. And look what he’s planning to take with him: duct tape, pliers …”

“I think the next one is ‘crowbar.’ What else does it say?” Delorme was practically climbing over his shoulder. He felt her moist breath on his neck. “Then it’s ‘battery’ lower down.”

“What’s P.H. on Trout Lake, though? What’s on Trout Lake that begins with P.H.?”

“Public housing! There’s that housing development past St. Alexander’s. That’s it, John. Another empty house—a house that isn’t finished!”

“Except that’s not public housing out there. Port Huron? No, there’s no Port Huron around there either.”

“P.H. on Trout Lake …” Delorme touched his sleeve. “We can check the city directory, find who’s got those initials on the roads out there.”

“That’ll take too long. It’s got to be something simple. I keep thinking ‘public beach,’ but that’s P.B. What else is out there? There’s the reservoir and the marina and what else?”

“Well, there’s the reservoir itself. I mean, that’s pretty big. Pretty isolated.”

In following days there would be a lot of discussion around the department about who said it first. Some said Delorme, some Cardinal. Collingwood changed his mind about it several times and he was
there
. But Cardinal would always remember Delorme’s wide brown eyes looking at him, how beautiful they were with the beauty of sure knowledge. In the end it didn’t matter who first uttered the word “pumphouse.” Cardinal, to his later shame, immediately dismissed the idea. “Can’t be the pumphouse. It’s not on Trout Lake.”

“No,” Delorme said. “But it used to be.”

54

C
ARDINAL HAD TWO CALLS TO MAKE
before they could move. He called headquarters and had a patrol unit dispatched to cruise by the old pumphouse. Normally, his next call would have been to Dyson, but with Dyson out of the picture, he called the chief at home.

“We know where he’s planning to kill the London kid. He could be there already.”

“He has the boy with him?”

“We think so. We believe he’s still alive. I need eight men, shotguns and body armour.”

“You want OPP on this?”

“Chief, there isn’t time.”

“Go, then. Take what you need.”

Delorme came back from the unmarked, beads of rain glistening in her hair. “Flower says the patrol unit went by the pumphouse. Fraser’s Windstar is parked outside.”

“They got close enough to see. Let’s hope they didn’t get close enough to tip him off.”

“Flower says no. They’re sticking nearby in case he comes out of there, though.”

“We’ve got him, Lise. We’ve got the bastard cold.”

In the car, Delorme said, “I ordered up the truck—hope that’s okay.”

“It’s okay. It’s good. But next time, ask.”

“You were on the phone.”

“You should have asked. I might have wanted cars only. I might have wanted OPP. You ready for this?”

“I’m ready.”

With sirens it took less than seven minutes to reach their agreed assembly point, the marina at Trout Lake. Other cars arrived moments later. There was McLeod, Collingwood, Burke and Szelagy, other uniforms. The rain had stopped, but the heavy clouds were a deep grey, almost purple at the edges. It was three o’clock; the gloom made it look like seven.

“All right, Trout Lake Road and Mathiesson provide the only access to Pump House Drive. You and you,” Cardinal pointed to two of the uniformed men, “I want those points blocked. He isn’t getting out of there. And no one’s going in.”

“What about the lake?”

“No one’s going on the lake, not on that ice. Burke and Szelagy, you stay at the top of the drive to keep away neighbourhood onlookers, and pen the guy in if he busts out of the pumphouse. McLeod, Collingwood and Delorme will come with me. Everyone clear?”

Everyone was clear.

“Eric Fraser is armed. Eric Fraser is dangerous. And Eric Fraser deserves to be dead.”

“You’re not kidding,” someone—probably Szelagy—muttered.

“But Eric Fraser also has a hostage—an eighteen-year-old boy—and we don’t want to get that boy killed. If anyone’s life comes under immediate threat, you take Fraser down—but only then. Are we clear?”

They were clear.

“All right then.” Cardinal opened the car door. “Let’s get it done.”

Cardinal raised the unit already staked out at the top of Pump House Drive. Nothing was happening. No movement of any kind.

Gripping the wheel, he realized he was shaking. It felt like fear, but it was pure adrenalin. He breathed deeply to steady himself. He didn’t want to be shaking when he pulled out the Beretta, wishing yet again that he’d put in those hours on the range.

The two lead cars plowed through the slush at the turnoff and jounced along the road toward the pumphouse. As planned, Larry Burke and Ken Szelagy stayed to guard the entrance.

Burke and Szelagy had been the first cops to see Katie Pine’s body in the shaft head on Windigo Island and, ever since, Burke had found it frustrating to watch Delorme and Cardinal from a distance and not be part of the action. He wanted to be a detective himself someday.

A car slowed, and a man in his fifties—an executive, Burke guessed—leaned out the window. “What’s going on? What’s with all the cops out here?”

Larry Burke waved him on. “Keep moving, sir. We need this area clear.”

“But what’s going on?”

“Just keep moving, please, sir.” He gave the man a first-class, Aylmer-regulation dose of cold-cop authority, and it worked, as it usually did. The man drove on.

Cardinal had asked for him and Szelagy to be in on this final stage of the case, and Burke appreciated it. Pine–Curry was the case of the century as far as Algonquin Bay was concerned. Cardinal had the pick of the force, but he asked for Burke and Szelagy, and Larry Burke cheered himself with this thought.

Another car rolled up. A woman driver, not attractive, Burke decided.

“You’ll have to move along, ma’am.”

The woman didn’t even glance at him, kept her eyes fixed on that downhill grade toward the pumphouse. “What’s going on? What’re all these cars doing here?”

“Police business, ma’am. Just move along, please.”

To Burke’s considerable irritation, the woman did not drive away. She just pulled to the side of the road and continued staring down the hill as if Christ himself were about to rise from the icy depths of Trout Lake. Burke sauntered over, rapped on her window and pointed a gloved finger up the road. According to the Aylmer training manual, a silent gesture, if authoritative enough, will be just as effective as your voice. It wasn’t.

“Move it out,” Burke said, louder this time. “We need this road clear.”

Although the rain had long stopped, the woman’s wipers were still flapping, or rather one of them was still flapping; there was no wiper on the passenger side. She had some kind of scaly thing happening with her face. Hell of a bandage over one ear, too. Intolerable, the way she stared beyond Burke and down the hill, totally ignoring him. No way Burke was going to let her get away with that. Burke was not about to screw up now, no matter how tiny his role in this production might be. “Hey, lady!” Yelling now. “Are you deaf?”

He slammed the flat of his hand on the car roof. The woman jerked her head up, and he caught a glimpse of terrified eyes. Then she shoved it in gear, and the car lurched away. “Jesus,” he said to Szelagy, “I hope they’ve got the highway blocked off by now. Did you see that?”

“Some people,” Szelagy said, “got a big nose for other people’s business, you know? Have to stick it into everything.”

Burke watched the car rattle up the road, belching clouds of black exhaust. Trout Lake and its surrounding suburbs were an affluent area, very upscale. You’d think the dumb bitch could afford a better vehicle than a half-wrecked Pinto.

BOOK: Forty Words for Sorrow
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