"Come on, Kit. I'll tell you what I've been up to."
We strolled up broad stone steps, wending between bicycles lying on their sides, and settled on one of the wooden benches flanking the entrance to the chalet. Above us pigeons cooed softly in the heavy wooden beams.
"Where should I start?"
"At the beginning."
"O.K., wise one.
What was the beginning?
"Quebec Province has the dubious distinction of hosting the only active biker war in the world right now.
"That Hells Angels thing you talked about at Isabelle's dinner."
"Exactly. These gangs are fighting over control of the drug trade."
"What drugs?"
"Mostly cocaine, some pot and hash."
A busload of Japanese tourists appeared from the parking lot, worked its way toward the railing, then began photographing itself in varying combinations.
"I became involved about two weeks ago. Two members of the Heathens, that's a puppet club to the Rock Machine, were blown up while trying to bomb a Vipers clubhouse on the southwest side of the city."
"Who were the bombed-out bombers?"
"Twin brothers, Le Clic and Le Clac Vaillancourt."
"The Vipers are with the Hells Angels?"
"Yes. The sniper who took them out was arrested-"
"A Viper snipes I Jike that."
"The sniper investigation led to the recovery of two of the bodies we discussed at dinner"
"The guys buried near the Vipers' clubhouse?"
"Yes."
"Where is this clubhouse?"
"St-Basile-le-Grand." An odd look crossed his face, but he said nothing.
"The two skeletons were later identified as members of an OMC called the Tarantulas, defunct now, but active in the seventies and eighties."
"What about the girl's bones you found out there?"
"She has since been identified as Savannah Claire Osprey, from Shallotte, North Carolina. That's why I went to Raleigh. Savannah was sixteen when she disappeared in 1984."
"Who killed her?"
"I wish I knew."
"How did she end up here?"
"Same answer. Let me backtrack a minute. Before the discoveries at St-Basile-le-Grand, there was another murder The sergeant at arms for the Vipers, a gentleman named Richard 'Spider' Marcotte, was shot in a drive-by outside his home. It may have been a Heathens hit in retaliation for Clic and Clac."
"That saved the taxpayers some money.
"Yes, but remember there was a toll exacted on the public. A child got caught in the cross fire."
"That's right. She was nine years old." His eyes were focused on my face. "She died, didn't she?"
I nodded.
"Emily Anne Toussaint was killed the day you and Howard dropped off Bird."
"Holy crap."
"Since that time I have been pursuing forensic evidence pertaining to these biker crimes. So you can understand my lack of enthusiasm for your newly acquired friends."
"And tattoo. You've seen some rough shit."
"There s more.
I glanced at his face. Though shadowed by the eaves, his eyes were bright as a songbird's.
"This past week another biker was killed. Yves 'Cherokee' Desjardins."
"Which side?"
"He was a Predator That's the Angels."
"So the Heathens were still evening the score for the twins?"
"Maybe. The problem is Cherokee was an older guy who hadn't been active for a while. Also, it seems he was running his own coke concession.
"So he might have been snuffed by his own side?"
"It's possible. We don't have all the evidence. We just don't know. Right now our investigation has slowed."
I told him about LaManche.
"Holy shit. Maybe they got to him, too.
"Who?"
"The Angels. Maybe he was going to find something in that body they didn't want found."
"I don't think so, Kit."
"Maybe they slipped him something. You know, one of those poisons that leave no trace.
"He was in the awtopsy room. That's a secure area.
"There could be a mole at your lab. They do that, you know Position their people on the inside."
"Whoa." I laughed. "Let's not get carried away."
He turned and looked past the Japanese tourists to the misty peaks in the far distance. Someone opened a door behind us and pigeons startled from the steps.
'Jesus, Aunt Tempe, I feel like a real lowlife. Your boss is sick, and you're trying to juggle a zillion separate murders all at once. And what do I do? I show up, dump a dead fish on your counter, then run around town having fun."
The Japanese were moving our way.
"And I was too distracted to follow what you were doing. Anyway, ready to hike?"
"I live to ramble."
We circled the chalet and set off on one of the many dirt trails that honeycomb the mountain. We walked in silence for awhile, watching squirrels scuttle among last year's leaves, excited by the arrival of spring. The trees overhead were loud with chirps and trills and warbles and shrieks. At one point we stopped to listen to an old man perform a recorder adaptation of "Ode to Joy." Wearing a long overcoat and ear-flapped beret, he played with all the concentration of a symphonic virtuoso.
As we strolled west, the dome of l'Oratoire St-Joseph appeared on the horizon. I told Kit the story of Frère André's heart. Stolen from its altar crypt, the organ became the focus of a massive manhunt. Eventually it showed up at our lab, and was now ensconced in safer quarters deep within the church.
To the south rose the pale yellow tower of l'Ecole Polytechnique at l'Université de Montréal, site of the 1990 slaughter of thirteen women. The day was too lovely to share that story.
We were heading downhill when Kit broached an equally unpleasant topic.
"So who's this guy Ryan?"
"Just a friend," I hedged.
"Harry talked about him. He's a detective, right?"
"Yes. With the provincial police."
I'd introduced my sister to Ryan during her stay in Montreal. Sparks had flown, but I'd left town almost immediately and didn't learn if there was liftoff. I'd avoided Ryan for a long time after that, but I'd never asked.
"So what's the deal?"
"He's gotten into some trouble."
"What kind of trouble?"
A calèche passed on the road above, moving in the direction from which we'd come. I heard the driver cluck, then the slap of reins on the horse's neck.
"He may have gotten involved in drugs."
"Using?"
"Selling." Though I was trying hard, my voice sounded wavery.
"Oh."
The clop of hooves receded, grew quiet. "You care about this guy, don't you?" "Yes."
"More than Uncle Pete?" "That's not a fair question, Kit." "Sorry."
"Whatever happened to that fish?" I said, changing the subject.
"It's in the freezes"
"Here's a plan. We zap Mn Trout, then peruse les motards while he finishes defrosting. Tonight we throw him on the grill, then slide over to Hurley's for a few beers."
"It's a salmon. Otherwise the plan is sound."
We descended the rest of the way, cut through the Montreal General, and continued downhill on Côte-des-Neiges. At the bottom I turned and looked back up at the peak.
"Did you ever notice the cross at night?"
"Sure. It's pretty."
"From down here, yes. From nearby it's just a pile of steel mesh and bare bulbs. I think Andrew Ryan's like that. Nice at a distance, but up close he's a tangled mess."
Chapter 26
The Beraqan are a horticultural people living in longhouse villages on the island of Borneo. When I taught introductory anthropology, I used them as an illustration of the absurdity of Western funerary practices.
According to Berawan beliefs, the souls of the dead are released to the afterlife only when the flesh has decomposed. Until that point, the deceased hover in limbo, no longer part of the living, but unable to join the dead. And there's a hitch. Their bodies can be reanimated by malevolent spirits roaming the world in search of housing. Once revived, these living-dead cannot be killed. Needless to say, the villagers are not wild about having them around.