Al Noggins frowned over the letter from the Small Business Department. “You sure this is genuine?”
Even the local preacher was a non-believer — why did no one have faith in Stoney?
“This Charley fellow was a lawyer, you say.”
“Or a cop.” Stoney produced the bug, stuck its suction cup on Reverend Al’s desk.
“Let’s play it.” Forbish was all antsy. They were in Al’s cottage, the parlour, where they’d caught him searching a joke book to spice up his Sunday sermon.
“I want it on record that we’re off the record,” Stoney said.
“For now, okay.” Forbish reached over and clicked it on. There was nothing for a few minutes, just background noises, a door closing.
Then: What do I call you, Robert, Bob?
Call me grateful, Charley.
Stoney listened to the opening skirmishing, in which Charley, instead of focusing on the award, waylaid him with questions about Garibaldi. Then a gap when the houseboy came in to restock the fridge. “This is where we tilted a couple back,” Stoney explained. “Now I got to warn you, there’s stuff here about Arthur, who, by the way, I’m kind of worried he’s on the run.”
Reverend Al looked shocked. “Nonsense, I’m sure he’s out campaigning with Margaret. She’s on Vancouver Island. I’ll give her a call.” He was campaign manager for her on Garibaldi, he’d pestered Stoney into staking a bunch of lawn signs.
Forbish impatiently pushed play. Here was where Arthur’s name was used in vain: A bon vivant with an eye for the chicks, they say … Boy, I’ll bet you must know some stories about the old shyster.
And that was about it. Charley blew the scene, then there were just the sounds of Stoney and Dog getting back in party mode.
Forbish looked resentful, like he’d been conned. “Well, that was a total letdown. Everybody knows Mr. Beauchamp has been acting up. Savannah Buckett, you told me yourself. I can’t print this, I run a family newspaper.”
“Can I hear the beginning again, please.” Reverend Al had the expression you get when something in the back of the fridge has gone bad.
Forbish rewound until they got to: I’m a no-bullshit country boy just like you. Charley gives you no blarney, that’s my motto.
“Stop right there,” Al said. “Who’s this Charley?”
“I got his note right here.”
Reverend Al’s mouth fell open as he looked at the brunch invitation, the note that had improved the attitude of Fortesque at the front desk. “Charley Thiessen?”
“Yeah, I guess that’s his last name. Thiessen.”
Reverend Al began rummaging through some clippings on his desk. Forbish, suddenly overexcited, tried to rise too, but his wooden armchair came with him. They were both talking at once. “Charley Thiessen? Whoa, hang on here. Thiessen? The minister of justice?”
Al came up with a photo — the same dweeb, red paint smeared all over his white shirt.
“Hey, yeah, that’s him.” Stoney never read the papers, so this was totally mystifying.
Forbish freed himself from the chair. “Hold the presses. This is gonna go national.” He made a grab for the recorder, but Stoney whisked it away.
Reverend Al picked up the phone.
As her limousine sped from the airport, Clara Gracey lit her first cigarette of the morning, drew on it greedily. Beside her, Percival Galbraith-Smythe gave her a tsk-tsk, lowered the window a few inches. Snow blew in. “Went well?”
“Well enough,” she said. They’d had to bus in an extra thousand supporters to help fill an arena in Gerard Lafayette’s riding. She’d denounced him as a coward who’d fled his party and his responsibilities after bungling Eager Beaver. But unfortunately, his defection wasn’t playing as poorly as she’d hoped among the tough-minded burghers of Montreal Nord, and expectations of unseating him were dimming.
“Your reference to him as a procurer of prostitutes is today’s top sound bite.”
She regretted that; she hadn’t been able to restrain herself. Rally in Vancouver coming up, but if this storm didn’t relent, her plane could be grounded. But she’d had to make this Ottawa pit stop to give audience — a confrontation, really — to emissaries of Anglo-Atlantic Energy. “Who are they sending?”
“Their board chairman from London, their CEO from New York, and their head of legal from Dallas. All by private jets. They don’t want press, so we’re smuggling them into the Langevin Block by a back door.”
“We should put them behind bars for aiding and abetting the enemy. Hang them up by their heels and waterboard them.” There were no boundaries to Clara’s wrath. Greedy cowards. Sneaking behind Canada’s back.
“We’re not certain what they want. To grovel, perhaps, at the feet of our radiant chain-smoking ultimate leader. Or perhaps they will come bearing gifts of frankincense and myrrh and cheques made out to a campaign fund that’s running on fumes.” He batted away her own fumes, opened the window wider. “I’ve arranged an impromptu later with the Wolverine team. Mr. Crumwell has not been invited.”
“Thank you. They’re still set to go in three days?”
“Weather permitting. Forecast shows clearing skies over the Bhashyistan desert.”
Unlike here. She couldn’t find an ashtray, reached across him, flicked the butt from the window. “Warn the press we’re flying out before this blast closes the runways. Mid-afternoon.” Air Cleavage, they’d dubbed the party’s chartered 737. She ought to have dressed less boldly but hated looking matronly, Thatcherish.
“What about this rumour Alta bribed Lafayette?” Clara had seen it on a popular blog, hints he’d been rewarded to smooth Alta’s way into Bhashyistan.
“Oh, it’s just a little thing we’re spreading. Might even be true.”
“I’m going to ask you to pull it, Percival. It’s below the belt, even for that demagogue. He’s become a minor player.”
“Not. He’s found scores of candidates. They’re eroding our vote in some touch-and-go rural areas.”
“History won’t remember him. He’ll be buried in the footnotes. I’d like to have a chat with the RCMP commissioner.”
“Goodness, I hope not about our rumour …”
“No, something else.” She wanted Commissioner Lessard’s take on what Crumwell was up to — the business about the tar sands stank. “Do we have a complete slate of candidates?”
“All holes are filled, if you’ll pardon the expression. Three losers in Quebec were nominated just before deadline, and one in Cow Islands.” As Percival preferred to call Cowichan and the Islands.
“And who’s our loser there?” She’d done a flip-flop, decided against running a star candidate against Margaret Blake. They could run Mother Teresa and still lose. Option B was infinitely better: free Blake from any worry about retaining her seat, get her out of her riding, barnstorming the country — the Greens were feeding off the opposition parties eight to one as against the Conservatives.
“Our contest in Cow Islands was between a bigoted evangelist and an alcoholic ex-professional wrestler. The wrestler won. Known to his fans as the Viking. We’ll be lucky to keep our deposit.”
Clara lit another cigarette, and Percival cracked open the window again. The Airport Parkway had become Bronson Avenue, and now they were looping onto Colonel By Drive, by Dow’s Lake, the Rideau Canal. And, blurred by the whirling snow, the skaters’ changing shack from which a roadside bomb had plunged Canada into a ludicrous war. Six weeks earlier, this had been the scene of charred bodies and twisted metal. She shivered.
By nine a.m., she was in a boardroom in the Langevin Block, the PMO’s operations centre, across the street from the Hill. The three men from Anglo-Atlantic were on one side of the table, facing Clara and her crew: E.K. Boyes, plus the foreign affairs minister and her deputy.
“How long has this been going on?”
“Exactly what, Madam Prime Minister?” The CEO, Reaves, Anglo’s designated hitter, oozing with false sincerity, refusing to wilt under her slit-eyed glare.