That was the dead Augustin Renaud. Final y respected.
The paper, Gamache was relieved to see, had been careful to simply report on where the body was found. While they mentioned it was a respected Anglophone institution they left it at that. There was no suggestion of Anglo involvement, of conspiracy, of political or linguistic motivation behind the crime.
But Gamache suspected the tabloids would be less reticent.
“That’s that library, isn’t it? The place you’ve been working?” Émile broke open a croissant and the flakes tumbled to the table. Émile had had dinner with friends the night before so he and Gamache hadn’t seen each other since the murder.
“The Lit and His, yes,” said Gamache.
Émile looked at him with mock seriousness. “You can tel me Armand. You didn’t—”
“Kil him? I could never kil a stranger. Now, a friend
. . .”
Émile Comeau laughed then grew quiet. “Poor man.”
“Poor man. I was there you know. Inspector Langlois was good enough to let me sit in on the initial questioning.”
As they ate Gamache told Émile about his day, his mentor peppering him with succinct questions.
Final y Émile Comeau leaned back in his chair, his breakfast finished but another appetite piqued. “So what do you think, Armand? Are the English hiding something? Why ask for your help if they aren’t afraid?”
“You’re quite right, they are afraid, but not of the truth. I think they’re afraid of how this looks.”
“With good reason,” said Émile. “What was Renaud doing there?”
That was the big question, Gamache thought.
Almost as big as who kil ed the man. Why was he at the Literary and Historical Society?
“Émile?” Gamache leaned forward, cupping his large hands round his mug. “You’re a member of the Champlain Society. You know a lot more about this than I do. Could Renaud have had something? Could Champlain possibly be buried there?”
“Come for lunch at the St-Laurent Bar.” Émile stood. “I’l have some people there who can better answer that.”
Gamache left Henri at home, something he rarely did
but the place he was going didn’t welcome dogs, though privately he thought they should. Dogs, cats, hamsters, horses, chipmunks. Birds.
And yet there were only people at St. Andrew’s Presbyterian Church for Sunday service, and quite a few. The benches were fil ing quickly. He recognized some as reporters, the rest were probably more interested in gossip than God. Most of the day’s congregants, he suspected, had never been inside this church, perhaps never even realized it was there.
It had been discovered, along with the body.
English Quebec was on parade.
Al the pews were built in a semi-circle facing the pulpit and Gamache found a seat on a curving bench near the side of the church. He sat quietly for a few minutes, marveling at his surroundings.
The church seemed fil ed with light. It streamed through the bright and cheerful stained glass windows. The thick wal s were plastered and painted a cream color, but it was the ceiling he couldn’t help staring at. It was painted a fresh robin’s egg blue and rose above the sweeping, graceful semi-circular balcony.
Something else struck the Chief Inspector. There wasn’t a crucifix in sight.
“Lovely, isn’t it?”
Gamache turned and noticed Elizabeth MacWhirter had slipped in beside him.
“It is,” he whispered. “Has the church been here long?”
“Two hundred and fifty years. We just celebrated the anniversary. Of course, Holy Trinity Anglican is the big church. Most of the English community goes there, but we struggle along.”
“Is it affiliated with the Literary and Historical Society? It seems to be on the same grounds.”
“Only informal y. The minister sits on the board, but that’s just coincidence. The Anglican archbishop used to be on the board but he moved a few years ago so we decided to ask the Presbyterian to join us.”
“Do you always get this sort of turnout?” Gamache nodded to the people now needing to stand at the back.
Elizabeth shook her head and smiled. “Normal y we could stretch out and sleep in the pews, and don’t think a few of us haven’t done it.”
“It’l be a good col ection today.”
“Better be. The church needs a new roof. But I suspect this lot is only here to gawk. Did you see the
article in Le Journalist this morning?”
The local rag, Gamache knew. He shook his head.
“Only Le Soleil. Why? What did it say?”
“It didn’t actual y say anything, but it did suggest that the English had murdered Renaud to keep our dark secret.”
“And that would be?”
“That Champlain is buried under the Lit and His, of course.”
“And is he?”
It was his impression Elizabeth MacWhirter had been startled by his question. But the organ had begun and the congregation rose and she was spared the need to answer. He knew what she would say.
Of course he isn’t.
He sang “Lord of Al Hopefulness” from the hymnal and watched the congregants. Most seemed lost, not even trying to sing, some moved their mouths but he’d be surprised if any sound came out. And about a dozen, he guessed, raised their voices in song.
A young man climbed into the pulpit and the service began.
Gamache turned his attention to the minister.
Thomas Hancock. He looked about twenty. His hair was dark blond, his face handsome though not classical y so, more the handsome that went with robust health. Vitality. It was impossible, Gamache had noticed, to be both vital and unattractive. He looked a bit, Gamache thought, like Matt Damon.
Intel igent and charming.
They prayed for Augustin Renaud.
Then Thomas Hancock did something Gamache would
never
have
thought
possible.
While
acknowledging that Renaud had been murdered only yards away he didn’t dwel on it, or on the curiosity of God’s Wil .
Instead the Reverend Mr. Hancock, in his long blue cassock and his baby face, spoke of passion and purpose. Of Renaud’s obvious delight in life. He connected it to God. As a great gift of God.
The rest of the sermon was about joy.
It was an extremely risky strategy, Gamache knew.
The pews were fil ed with Francophones curious about this subculture unearthed in the very center of their city. English. Most Québécois probably never even knew they were there, never mind so firmly ensconced.
They were an oddity, and most of the people in the
church had come to stare, and come to judge.
Including a number of reporters, notebooks out, ready and eager to report on the official reaction of the English community. By concentrating on joy instead of tragedy, the church, the Anglos, might be perceived as uncaring, as trivializing the tragedy of a life stolen.
A man murdered a stone’s throw away.
And yet, instead of playing to the crowd, instead of offering a muted apology, of finding appropriately contrite biblical passages, this minister spoke of joy.
Armand Gamache didn’t know how it would sound when written up in tomorrow’s Le Journalist, but he couldn’t help but admire the man for not pandering.
Indeed, for offering another, a more positive, perspective. Gamache thought if his church spoke more about joy and less about sin and guilt, he might be tempted to return himself.
The service ended with a hymn and the col ection fol owed by a silent prayer, in which Agent Morin told Gamache about his late grandmother, who smoked incessantly without ever removing the cigarette from her mouth.