It was unclear who was runner-up, but Arthur had reason to suspect it was Anglo-Atlantic. An umbrella corporation, sheltering several midsize hopefuls from the U.K., Texas, and Alaska, with backing from unnamed Saudi sources. Big names on its board, a former U.S. vice-president, a British chancellor of the exchequer who’d left office under a cloud.
The clue had come by happenstance, from Irwin Godswill, overheard in this very club two weeks earlier telling his broker to pull out of Alta and into Anglo-Atlantic. Sly Irwin, whose insider knowledge and uncanny instincts for the market were legendary. Arthur looked about, saw no sign of the old crapshooter.
As he signed his chit for the maitre d’ he asked, “Mr. Godswill — seen him about lately?”
“I believe he’s in his Palm Springs residence this week, sir.”
“Ah, well, next time.”
An hour later he was in Gastown, outside the War Room, where a sign read, “Support Canada’s war effort.” He paused to watch a kick-boxer being helped off the mat, his nose bleeding, as the winner leaned nonchalantly on the ropes. Arthur shuddered, took the elevator up to Macarthur, Brovak, Sage and Chance, where the receptionist told him Augustina was finishing with a client.
“And is Wentworth lurking about?”
“I’ll ring his office.”
“No!” More softly: “Please don’t disturb him.”
“But he asked me to let him know when you showed up.”
“Let’s keep that a secret between you and me for now.”
Just the day before, the author of A Thirst for Justice had slipped through caller ID by using a payphone, demanding more details for Part Two: “The Wet Years.” An hour taken up with a struggle to bring back misty memories best left buried.
Augustina came out after a few minutes, leading a grieving young woman to the door. Arthur couldn’t imagine having the emotional strength for the family law she practised; cold-hearted murderers tended not to tug at the heartstrings.
She embraced him, led him to her office, produced a ziplock bag enclosing a thin, unopened envelope.
“I intercepted it before front desk could forward it to his mail drop. Haven’t touched it.”
The addressee’s name was in pen, capital letters written in a hand unused to English, an awkward slant, misspellings: “BRIN POMOROY, LAYER.” The address was barely sufficient: no postal code but the right street number. No return address. An Albanian stamp.
Arthur unsealed the plastic, lifted the envelope free by the corner, examining it but finding no smudges that might yield prints. “Any luck locating Brian?”
“The woman who runs the trading post in Fort Malchance — that’s his mail drop — says he took off on a snowmobile over the Mackenzie Mountains to a ramshackle tourist lodge that’s closed all winter, i.e., nine months of the year, and he must have hid out there for a few weeks. Searchers went out in a ski plane, but no Pomeroy. He’d been there, though. A forgotten shaving kit. A few.30–30 cartridges on the porch. He’d been subsisting on ptarmigans and snowshoe rabbits.”
“He has a rifle.”
“So has everyone else up there. But I know, that’s not good.”
Suicide was a real concern. Five hours of sunlight, if that, at this cruel time of year in the Subarctic. One didn’t need a gun to die there.
“He’d left some scribbled notes that made no sense — something about a lost gold mine. That rang a bell. He recently beat some charges against a couple of hardrock miners over a stolen claim. I couldn’t find the file — he may have taken it with him. According to our ledger, those guys never paid a retainer. What does that suggest to you?”
“That he’s not as mad as we think.” A gold mine could be a lucrative fee.
Arthur held the envelope up to the light, but he lacked Abraham Makepeace’s gift of X-ray vision. He could make out a few lines written on a torn scrap of lined paper.
He slit the envelope with a letter opener, pulled the note out. Fractured English. The name “Brin Pomoroy” again appeared, and the line below read: “Abzal Erzhan, he say pliss help.” Arthur swallowed hard. A name: “Hanife Bejko.” An address in a town called Gjirokaster. “No telfon here. Pliss you cum here.”
Augustina went to her computer, searched for Gjirokaster, which a website proclaimed to be a UNESCO World Heritage Site, a historic Ottoman town built on five steep hills in southern Albania, not far from the Greek border. Birthplace of Enver Hoxha, Albania’s long-time Stalinist dictator who’d learned from the same manual as Boris Ivanovich.
She went off to make several copies of the letter and to store the original in the office safe. Arthur sank into an armchair, tingling with the impact of this confirmation of an uncertain theory, and with relief that Erzhan was still alive, though God knew in what health. Especially if he’d been subjected to that monstrous euphemism for torture, enhanced interrogation techniques.
Hanife Bejko — someone who’d shared a prison cell with him? Scared, presumably, and ultra-cautious. Albania had been newly born as a democracy after decades of Communist rule. Friendly to the West, but still unsteady on its feet.
In his turmoil, Arthur hadn’t thought to close the door, and there was Wentworth Chance in the corridor, frowning at him. “I hope you can set the day aside, I have a million things to ask you.”
“I meant to pop in, Wentworth. Today will be rather busy. I have a flight to Garibaldi at noon.”
“I’ll go with you. There are lots of people I have to talk to for ‘The Garibaldi Years’ section. There’s so much going on in your life right now, I don’t know how to end the book.”
“Maybe if I got driven over by a cement truck, that would solve the problem.” Wentworth looked shocked. “Sorry, that was dungeon humour. I do have private business on the island, Wentworth. Let’s set a date and meet elsewhere.”
“I have a first-draft deadline in three weeks. I’m also kind of limited on the early years. Your press coverage was skimpier back then, a lot of transcripts are missing. Grant me an hour now, a simple, measly hour, please.”
Arthur must pay for the hurt he caused. He followed Wentworth to his office, a poorly soundproofed space looking over a fire escape. Through the floorboards could be heard thumps and yells and curses.
He looked balefully at the overflowing boxes of transcripts, letters, clippings, photos. Arthur’s many triumphs were stored here, some bitter losses, but there was nothing to reveal the insecurity, the constant sense of impending failure that horse-whipped him to excel. Nothing to tell of the price the law demanded, or why he’d struggled in vain to escape into retirement. Unable to win a divorce from the law, that soul-destroying bitch, he was now representing the most wanted man in Canada, in Bhashyistan, and maybe the world.
Syd-Air ran an erratic and perilous service from Vancouver’s Coal Harbour to the Gulf Islands with its one ill-maintained seaplane, but despite Syd’s unwitting propensity for scooping up crab traps with his floats, his trips took only twenty minutes. Arthur always felt guilty about these eco-unfriendly flights, but he was in no mood to spend half a day on the ferry.
As the aircraft dipped below a sodden mass of cloud toward Blunder Bay, he saw that his dock was in total disarray. Planks missing, bumper floats missing, tools all over, beer cans, the Blunderer at anchor nearby, too close for comfort. As Syd made a flypast, Stoney and Dog scrambled to shore as if fearing an aerial attack.
Arthur took what comfort he could from the fact that they were already working and it was only half past twelve. He might have waded to shore, but he was in a suit, carrying his briefcase with a copy of the letter from Hanife Bejko. “Hopeless Bay, then,” he told Syd. He could get a ride from the General Store. As they gained altitude, he saw Zack setting fence posts — and being aided, inevitably somehow, inescapably — by Ray DiPalma.