As he performed his morning routines, he was plagued by a sense that his marriage had begun to show gaps, ever widening, a gulf between two islands. His slowly sinking beneath the sea, hers high above the tide line, full of bustle and battle. The thought of losing her had been causing palpitations, panic attacks.
Friday, November 26. Why did the day feel so oppressive? He had to shake this mood. A sprightly pre-breakfast walk along the canal ought to help, though it looked bone-chilling cold out there. Global warming had yet to target the nation’s capital.
A morning spat from next door, quickly drowned by a baroque concerto. The neighbours had arisen.
The phone rang as he pulled on his pants, and he nearly stumbled in them as he raced to arrest a second ring. “Good morning.”
“Good … well, it’s actually not a good morning, Arthur.” Savannah Buckett, in Blunder Bay. It was five-thirty out there.
“What happened?” Was this, finally, the prayed-for crisis that would wing him to the western shores?
“I didn’t want to bother you last night, but they’re not letting him out.”
“Who?”
“Zack. They’ve got Zack. The cops. They say he’s going to have to do the rest of his term, five months.”
He’d been at the rally in Vancouver, outside the bank tower housing Alta International’s B.C. office. Arthur was shocked to learn he was accused of violating parole by joining a public demonstration. “Do I understand a term of parole prohibits Zack from attending public protests?”
“Yeah, both of us. That’s why I didn’t go.”
“Read me the language.”
“We are barred from organizing, participating in, or attending any public demonstration relating to political or environmental issues. Zack says that’s against the Charter of Rights.”
“Fundamentally so. There was no court order enjoining this protest?”
“No. The police didn’t intervene at all except to keep order and grab Zack.”
“Savannah, you are to call Tragger, Inglis in Vancouver and ask for my secretary, Gertrude Isbister, and give her what she needs for an affidavit for a judicial review. Regrettably it can’t be heard until after the weekend, but I’ll be there.”
“You’re a lovely man, Arthur.”
He felt a tingle of relief, anticipation. Perversely, Zack’s arrest offered an antidote to his felt uselessness.
Still no stirring from the bedroom. He left a note: “Gone for a nippy walk.”
And nippy it was. But the sun was out, and a fast walk warms, and there was comfort in knowing he’d be in Vancouver by the weekend enjoying the dying autumn’s softness. Back in the saddle. Doing what he did best.
He walked south on Bronson Avenue, a busy artery feeding the Airport Parkway. His usual route would take him to Dow’s Lake, the pathway along it, past the skaters’ changing huts — unused as yet, but as this freeze continued the lake and canal would soon be thronged with hardy commuters skating to work, an Ottawa rite of winter.
Approaching from the north came a vehicle with its flashers on — an RCMP cruiser, moving with a funereal lack of speed. Behind it came a troop of Mounties on motorcycles, followed by a second cruiser and, some distance away, a stretch limousine, which seemed deliberately to have slowed the procession’s pace. From its open windows, swarthy men were waving to pedestrians. “Maple leaf forever!” one shouted. “On marge of Lake Labarge!” called another. They were passing a bottle.
Clearly, this was the infamous band of Bhashies, who had profoundly failed to charm staid Ottawa. Heading for their Ilyushin and a polar flight home. An RCMP van was impatiently pressing them from the rear. A police helicopter roared overhead. The Crown must have called out the reserves to get rid of its guests.
As he reached the bridge between the canal and Dow’s Lake, Arthur momentarily lost sight of the procession in the backed-up traffic. But as he gained the apex of the bridge, he recoiled with a gasp on seeing a brilliant flash below, accompanied by a whump so loud it seemed to reverberate drumlike within his chest cavity. Pedestrians froze, cars braked. A puff of grey smoke, swallowed by darker clouds, billowed skyward. The lick of flames reflected red from the frozen surface of the lake.
People were pouring out of cars and stalled buses. Arthur, craning over the bridge railing, could see the twisted remnants of the stretch Lincoln on Colonel By Drive, by the lakeside. A skaters’ change hut was aflame, as was an adjoining Beavertail hut.
As Arthur picked up his pace, others overtook him, running, and by the time he found his way down to the disaster scene, police and emergency vehicles were arriving, brakes screeching, uniformed men and women bounding from them.
Soon, extinguishers were dousing flames around the sprawled, blackened bodies in the limousine. Collateral damage had been done to the RCMP cruiser behind it, whose two dazed occupants were sitting on the sidewalk, receiving first aid.
Arthur felt faint, grasped a lamppost, took several deep breaths. He’d seen dead bodies before — his career had hardened him, but not enough; never had he witnessed such carnage. A missile or a roadside bomb. A direct hit. Clean, expert, unerring, ghastly.
Police were throwing up a cordon, ordering the crowds back with the frantic bawling of the severely rattled. A woman next to Arthur was vomiting. He felt his stomach roiling too.
An improvised explosive device, that was the verdict of the experts who testified before the news cameras. A remote-controlled IED, the odious weapon of choice for the fanatics of the modern age of terrorism, tested and refined in the battlefields of Iraq and Afghanistan. Likely triggered by a cellphone, the experts said. Ten dead, the entire Bhashyistan delegation plus the chauffeur and their ambassador, who’d been seeing them off to the airport.
Here was a day-old clip of that ambassador, his face lit by a smile as he cut a ribbon outside a brick duplex being renovated for an embassy. Here were clips of the Bhashie delegation being welcomed, feted, inspecting the honour guard. The sole Canadian victim, the chauffeur, was a retired naval warrant officer, whose children were shown grieving.
Arthur was still shaking. Margaret was still in her robe. They’d been staring raptly at the screen for the last hour, as the networks scrambled to interview witnesses, mobilize pundits, piece together the story, fill in with backgrounders. The IED had apparently been hidden high up in the changing hut. Some pedestrians were rushed to emergency with shrapnel cuts, none severe. For some reason, Ottawa International had been shut down, planes were being diverted. The city had come to a halt, the parliamentary sitting cancelled.
No arrests. No indication any were imminent. Three Bhashies remained in town: their embassy staff, quartered in a small hotel on Sparks Street, hiding there, unavailable to the press.
Still no response from cabinet, just footage of them heading to a briefing room, fleeing pursuing cameras, getting jammed up at the doorway in their haste. There’d been no reaction from Bhashyistan either, calls from newsrooms not answered, the country’s entire phone system down. The silence seemed ominous. Arthur couldn’t imagine what Mad Igor was thinking right now. Fifteen years ago, his father murdered on Canadian soil. Now his top ministers. One would not have to be wildly delusional to see Canada as complicit.
Arthur got up to the intercom to buzz in Pierette Litvak, Margaret’s assistant, who announced from the lobby: “Sorry I took so long, I had to change, I actually peed my pants.” This was information Arthur didn’t care to know. A minute later she came sweeping in, throwing her ski jacket on a chair, giving him a peck, then rushing to Margaret and hugging her. “Wow, you all right?”