Isabelle lives on Ile-des-Sceurs, a small chunk of land in the St. Lawrence owned for generations by the gray nuns, but recently colonized by an order of Yuppies. A "mixed use" community the island's condos, town houses, private homes, and high-rise apartments are tastefully integrated with tennis clubs, strip malls, bicycle paths, and carefully tended green spaces. The is]and is connected to the south shore via the Champlain Bridge, and to Montreal by two small bridges.
Isabelle's condo is on the top floor of a two-building complex at the far northern tip. Following the failure of her third marriage, she signed divorce papers, sold her home and all its contents, and sallied forth to the clean-slate Ile-des-Scturs. The only belongings she brought along were her treasured CDs and photo albums.
Wanting something in keeping with her new "what the hell" mind-set, Isabelle had chosen a safari theme. Her decorator had blended natural fabrics that looked like they'd been approved by the World Wildlife Fund with simulated leopard and tiger skin. The walls were hung with animal prints, and a collection of African carvings dotted a glass-topped coffee table, the legs of which resembled elephant feet. The king-sized bed in the master suite was swathed in a canopy of mosquito netting.
Kit was enthralled, or at least appeared to be. As Isabelle gave us a tour he asked question after question about the origin of each of her possessions. I wasn't sure of the depth of his interest, but was pleased at his social acumen.
It was not the decor but the view that captivated me. One guest was still expected, so after Kit and I had been issued drinks and had met the other attendees, I stepped onto the balcony to take it in.
A light rain was falling, and across the river the skyline twinkled in every color imaginable. The mountain loomed over the buildings of Centre-ville, massive and black. I could see the lights of the cross high up on its flank.
From inside I heard the doorbell sound, then Isabelle called my name. I took one last look and went inside.
The final diner had just arrived and was handing his trench coat to Isabelle. When I saw his face my law dropped in surprise.
Chapter 14
Vous?
It was not one of my more adroit openers. I shot Isabelle a "just wait till later" look, which she ignored.
"Oui You are surprised, Tempe?" She beamed. "I said you two had met in an informal way. Now I will officially introduce you."
The journalist extended his hand. This time it held no mike, and his look was friendly, not the stunned surprise I remembered from our encounter outside the Vipers' clubhouse.
"Tempe, this is Lyle Crease. I'm sure you've seen him on television.
I could place the face now. He was an investigative reporter with Cfl
"And, Lyle, I know I don't have to tell you Dr. Brennan's name. We call her Tempe. That's with the long 'e' at the end. People do have trouble with that."
When I allowed Crease to take my hand, he leaned close and kissed me first on the right cheek, then on the left, in traditional Quebec fashion. I stepped back and mumbled something I hoped he'd interpret as cool but polite.
Isabelle introduced Crease to the others, and he shook hands with the men and kissed the ladies. Then she raised her champagne glass in Kit's direction.
"I think in honor of this handsome young Texan, tonight we should all practice our English."
Glasses shot up as everyone cheerfully agreed. Kit looked enormously relieved.
"May I help you with dinner?" Tasked in frosty English, eager to get Jsabe]le alone to share some thoughts with her.
"No, no. Everything is ready. Please, everyone, come to the table. There are little cards beside each plate."
Shit.
Isabelle retreated to the kitchen while the rest of us gathered around to ascertain the seating arrangement. As I'd suspected, I was next to Crease. Kit was on my right.
There were seven in all. An elderly actor sat on Kit's other side. I'd met him on a previous occasion, but couldn't remember his name and hadn't caught it when introduced. I was unfamiliar with the other two guests. It turned out they were a couple, the wife an antiques dealer, the husband a film producer.
We made small talk as Jsabelie shuttled plates from the kitchen. The actor had just finished a run as Polonius in a French production of HamLet at the Theatre du Rideau Vert. Crease recounted his most recent assignment. The story concerned a sixteen-year-old hacker who had broken into an U.S. Army network, then phoned the RCMP wanting to be caught.
"The kid wanted recognition," said the actor.
"He could have tried out for football," my nephew offered.
Not bad, Kit.
"And what have you two been up to?" Isabelle asked the couple as she circled the table pouring wine.
When she came to Kit she paused and looked at me. I nodded. What the hell. He was legal in Quebec and I was driving. Kit accepted with enthusiasm.
The producer's name was Claude-Henri Brault. He'd just returned from a three-month shoot in Ireland. His wife, Marie-Claire, ran a shop in Old Montreal and had spent the time buying antiques in Provence. She rambled on about the kingdom of Aries, the Angevin dynasty, and at least a dozen Louis, describing how each had changed the face of the furniture industry Between bites of veal I stole peeks at Lyle Crease. His hair and teeth were flawless, his creases as sharp as I remembered. The only imperfection I spotted was a sprinkling of dandruff across his collar.
And Lyle was a good listener. He kept his eyes on Marie-Claire, nodding intermittently, as though the aesthetics of fabric and cabinet design Were the only thing that presently mattered.
When Marie-Claire paused for breath Isabelle stepped in, redirecting the conversation like an air-traffic controller with several flights on her screen. Though I had to admire her skill, I didn't appreciate the direction she chose.
"Tempe has been working on these dreadful gang murders. Can you tell us something about them?"
"The bikers?" asked Claude-Henri.
"Yes." I wanted to glare at Isabelle, but decided it would be rude. I also wanted to strangle her, which would be still ruder.
"Were you involved in the discovery I read about in today's paper?"
"Yes. But as Isabelle knows"-I smiled icicles in her direction- "I can't-"
"What are you doing with bikers, Aunt Tempe?"
Kit's interest had wandered during the furniture design lesson, but he perked up at the new topic.
"You know that I work for the provincial medico-legal lab."
He nodded.
"Last week the director asked me to look at some murder cases. I mentioned nothing about my role with Operation Carcajou.
"How many?"
"Quite a few."
"More than the Bee Gees?" he persisted.
"Five."
"Five people iced in one week?" Kit's eyes were huge. Everyone else at the table had gone quiet.
"Two of them were killed in 1987. We recovered their bodies this week."
"That's what I read about," said Claude-Henri, pointing a fork in my direction. "C'est ça. That was you in the photograph."
"Who were the others?" Kit pressed on.
Now I wanted to strangle my nephew
"Two were bomb victims. One was a little girl accidentally killed during a drive-by shooting."
"Mon Dieu," said Marie-Claire, abandoning the commitment to English.
I reached for my Perrier, desperately wishing I'd paid attention to her so I could dodge with a question about Renaissance ye nec rs.
'Are you counting the young woman whose bones were found in St-Basile-ie-Grand?"
I turned at Crease's question. Though his voice sounded casual, his eyes had a glint I hadn't noticed before. If he had hopes of a story he wouldn't get it from me.