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Until the Night

Page 19

by Giles Blunt


  But not lucky enough, my frien’. Because me, I am not finish. I don’t know about you, but I’m ’aving a lot of fun. And I can give you twenty-five different reason you’ll never catch me, even if you live to be ninety-five. So I’m going to ’ave more fun—a lot more fun, maybe sooner dan you tink.

  The atmosphere in the room had changed. Everyone had shifted position, sitting forward now.

  “Obviously a major development,” Loach said. “Let’s listen to it one more time.”

  He fiddled with his trackpad and started the playback again. When they had listened all the way through, he shut his laptop.

  “Like I say—major.”

  “It certainly is,” Cardinal said, “assuming it’s real.”

  “Are you saying it isn’t?”

  “I’m just saying we have to be sure.”

  “He comes up with the numbers 25 and 45 by accident? Where’s he get those, if it’s not real?”

  “Well, one of them refers to your age, right?”

  “I’m forty-six, not forty-five, or ninety-five, thank you. And how’s he get the 25? I don’t think that’s coincidence, and we haven’t mentioned either of those numbers to the media.”

  “You’re forgetting your Montrose case in Toronto. You were in the news a lot with that. I’m willing to bet more than one of those stories mentioned your age.”

  “Well, that’s true,” Loach conceded. “I was forgetting about that.”

  “Let’s cut to the chase,” Chouinard snapped. “Do we think it’s real or not?”

  “We can’t know for sure,” Cardinal said.

  “Exactly,” Loach said. “Which is why I’ve already sent it to the RCMP profilers. In the meantime, we’re gonna throw everything we have at this. The caller’s French Canadian, obviously, with a strong accent—and we’re gonna go right back to the next of kin and places of employment and get the names of any contacts with FC accents.”

  “People can fake accents,” Delorme pointed out, “and that one’s pretty extreme.”

  “Which doesn’t mean it’s fake,” Loach said. “Maybe you don’t hear it the way we do.”

  “French Canadians have a genetic defect? We not only talk funny, we’re born deaf too?”

  “I’m not even going to answer that,” Loach said. “This is a hot lead and we’re going to hit it with everything we’ve got.”

  Cardinal appealed directly to Chouinard. “D.S., we’re better off focusing on something more solid. The sedatives, for example—they had to come from somewhere. We’ve got to run down drugstore thefts, veterinarians, hospital inventories. And the clothes, too. Older guy buying outdoor gear for a woman—someone might remember.”

  “Excuse me,” Loach said. “We have a man’s voice. We can run that voice right by the people closest to the victims. Someone’s gonna recognize it.”

  “It’s too much of a leap,” Cardinal said. “Except for the two numbers, which could be coincidence, he doesn’t say anything that isn’t common knowledge. Also—let me finish—also, it doesn’t jibe with previous behaviour. We know the killer followed or observed these two women very closely, without being observed himself. The crimes themselves were well planned and well executed.”

  “Not true. We have a recognizable vehicle. People have seen him. We’re pretty sure he has a fake hand, for Chrissake.”

  “Point is, this is a quiet, concentrated, methodical person. Now all of a sudden he picks up the phone and calls us? Why?”

  “To taunt us, obviously. Same as with the numbers themselves.”

  “Do they really qualify as taunts?” Cardinal said. “They’re not in-your-face like the phone call.”

  “Think what you want. I’m running Lacroix, and the people on my team are going to get names—and recordings—of any French-Canadian males known to the victims. Work, relatives, professionals, I don’t care. And we’re gonna get voice prints.” He put the cap back on his flash drive and stood up. “Arsenault, see what you can do to this recording to bring up that music in the background. Those violins or whatever—I’d like to know exactly what that is.”

  “Beethoven.”

  Everyone turned to look at Collingwood. He blushed and spoke into his chest. “Quartet in C minor, opus 18.”

  Loach pointed at him. “He always talk this much?”

  “Bob was raised by a family of raccoons,” Arsenault said. “We’re happy when he talks at all.”

  Cardinal went to his cubicle, sat down, and stayed there exactly fifteen seconds before he got up again and went to Chouinard’s office.

  “Don’t even bother,” Chouinard said.

  “D.S., we’re going off on tangents. We can’t have the case split up like this. Put me in charge of the whole thing.”

  “No. You look after Flint, Loach is looking after Lacroix.”

  “It’s the same killer. It should be one case, one lead.”

  “Normally I would say you’re right, but this department is a little too complacent for my taste. I think a little competition could do us a world of good.”

  “I just don’t want anyone else to get killed.”

  “No one wants anyone else to get killed. Close the door on your way out.”

  From the Blue Notebook

  Wyndham emerged from the lab and lugged his computer battery to a sled that was already heaped with equipment. Gordon had evolved a kind of mobile observation post that he painstakingly assembled and disassembled every other day in his obsessive pursuit of perfection. He was a compact, pocket-sized man, but his shadow as he crossed the ice must have been thirty metres long. The shadow of his heavily laden sled was not much shorter.

  For some time now we had been bearing south along the western shore of Axel Heiberg Island, our ice island having been nudged by other floes into the Sverdrup Channel. It was a beautiful day and nearly everyone was working outdoors to make the most of it. We had abandoned our heavier parkas for down jackets or fleeces, although the slush necessitated knee waders. I checked my AARI buoys, which gave continuous readouts of drift direction and speed, details of water currents, temperature and so on. My fans and scoops and sensors were at the end of a narrow drive shaft beneath ice that was over seventy metres thick.

  Wyndham had passed our radio mast and had nearly reached his first observation post, trudging in the peculiar head-jutting way of anyone who is man-hauling anything heavy. The sun was low, and half obscured by a lenticular cloud that swept upward like a solid brushstroke from the horizon. The light was the colour of a blood orange.

  We were spread out across our table of frozen sea like markers on a board game. Most of the buoys were fixed into the ice directly north of the lab, and normally that’s where I would have been at that time of day. But I was getting an anomalous readout from a buoy half a kilometre to the west, so that’s where I went. I was cranking my sensors toward the surface while watching Wyndham.

  Rebecca was farther from the central building, between me and the landing strip. She genuflected and aimed her camera into the cloud, into the sun. Probably shooting infrared. Her passion for documenting the invisible.

  Hunter was riding his tractor, doggedly ploughing the landing strip down to something approaching solid ice. The Twin Otter was scheduled to pick up Deville and drop off some supplies in three days. The temperature was expected to drop before then. Even so, landing a Twin Otter on that surface was going to be dangerous, and I was thankful once again that I had quit the flying business for the relatively tranquil requirements of research.

  Vanderbyl was making adjustments and checking readings from his hydrophones and other sensors. Ray Deville had been hanging around him all morning. He had been informed of his impending evacuation and for the past few days had been making frantic efforts to convince Kurt of his competence to carry on, but he was not in sight at the moment.

  There was the crack of a gunshot and I looked over toward the lab building. Someone practising on the target range. I was still working at raising the sensors with
a hand crank, the motorized one having seized up yet again. A few more metres to go. Wyndham had his laptop out and was wiring it up to an array that measured changes in albedo—the reflectivity of the Arctic surface.

  That, then, was our dispersal: Vanderbyl to the east of the landing strip, Rebecca and I to the west, Wyndham (and Hunter, still on his tractor) in a line straight north from the lab and the radio mast. Dahlberg, Washburn and Bélanger were inside. All of this I remember as vividly as if each of us were a pin stuck on a map.

  More shots from the firing range. They sounded a little strange, but in that unpredictable acoustic environment I wasn’t concerned. Arm aching, I finally managed to crank my sensors out of the drill hole. The problem was immediately obvious: an Arctic jellyfish had got itself wrapped around the fan. I pried the mess off with one of my trowels and it hit the slush with a smack.

  The dogs had started barking and I looked around to see if there was a bear. I knew that Wyndham was armed that day, and also that Hunter—ex-military Hunter—was always armed. Rebecca was working reasonably close by and I could see the flare gun strapped to her waist. In most cases a warning flare is enough to make a bear think twice.

  The dogs’ barking transmuted itself into the yips and whines of canine paranoia. I pulled out my binoculars and focused first on Wyndham, who seemed intent on his observations. Hunter was ploughing at the near end of the runway.

  Beyond the strip, Vanderbyl was hoisting a small pack onto his back. He usually headed inside about this time to spend an hour or two in the lab before lunch.

  I took my radio out of an inner pocket. What’s going on with the dogs? I said. Have we got a bear somewhere?

  It was Wyndham who came back: All quiet over here.

  A rumble of thunder cut him off. You get used to the sound of cracks shooting through contracting ice. Sometimes they make a deep squeal that ends with a gasp, a kind of breathy pop. I’ve heard fracturing ice wail as if a gate of Hell had suddenly blown open, and other times it sounds like nothing more than the slam of a washing machine lid. I had never heard one that sounded like thunder. The dogs began howling in earnest.

  I turned toward Rebecca. I think I was hoping she would be perceiving some storm system visible only to her infrared. But she was not looking through her camera. She was standing in an attitude of anxious expectation.

  I turned back with the binoculars. Wyndham had stopped work. He had his back to me in a posture of alertness, listening. Vanderbyl had passed him, heading toward camp, but stopped and turned around when Wyndham yelled something.

  There was a tremendous crack and we all—everyone I could see—fell to our knees. Hunter was still on his tractor, still ploughing. It’s possible he didn’t feel that first tremor.

  At first no more than a fissure, the crack that appeared was the otherworldly blue of the polar lead. From my vantage point, the lead seemed to run about three hundred metres, forming an amethyst wound that stretched from the edge of the camp to the foot of the radio tower. Hunter had seen it too and switched off his tractor, creating an envelope of silence.

  Leads opening up like this were not uncommon. To reduce the risk of such a fracture forcing us to up stakes and move, we had erected Arcosaur in the middle of the widest ridge, in the middle of our island of ice. What no one had expected was that a lead might open up at right angles to the island furrows.

  We got to our feet and looked around, one to the other. Ray Deville had emerged from somewhere, having changed from his parka to a lighter jacket. He was on his knees, as stunned as the rest of us. My radio crackled and I had to retrieve it from the slush where it had fallen.

  Wyndham’s voice, with a tremor in it: I’ve got a huge lead just opened up less than ten feet away.

  Get away from it, Vanderbyl told him. It’s probably over, but let’s be on the safe side.

  I can’t move. My sledge is caught on something.

  Uncouple your tether, man. Don’t hang around.

  I’m trying to. My bloody fingers won’t work.

  Even over the radio you could hear the laugh in Wyndham’s voice—nervous, of course, but also self-deprecating. That was utterly in character, and it was one of the many reasons he hadn’t an enemy in the world.

  I don’t think Wyndham, I don’t think any of us, had yet registered true panic. We were not yet cognizant of the magnitude of the disaster. Vanderbyl, a tall, no-nonsense sort of man, easily six-three, moved toward Wyndham in long, efficient strides despite the slush.

  Wings shearing off a jetliner. That was the sound that at that moment ripped through the atmosphere. Off to my right, our main building imploded, the roof crashing in toward the middle as the two sides were pulled away from each other. The crack in the ice widened with horrific speed, shooting like a pale blue bolt across the surface.

  Vanderbyl was on the far edge of the split. With me, across from him: Wyndham, Rebecca and Ray Deville—and somehow Dahlberg. Dahlberg had no reason to be outside, but I had no time to wonder about that. Wyndham’s sledge had disappeared. Wyndham himself was down, having been dragged a short distance until he caught on one of the buoys, and now he clung to it. I found myself running toward him. Rebecca looked unhurt. She was getting up, but Deville remained on his knees where he had fallen. His face bore the vacant, bewildered look of a man who has been pulled unhurt from a death-dealing car crash.

  As I ran, I registered in my peripheral vision that Hunter had started up his tractor again, raised his plough, and was turning the ungainly machine toward Wyndham. And it was only as I ran that I understood exactly the peril Wyndham was in. The Nansen sled, with its freight of equipment, had tumbled into the lead with Wyndham still harnessed to it. The only thing keeping him from following it into the abyss was the buoy fastened into the ice and to which he desperately clung. I patted my pockets for my folding knife as I ran.

  It looked as if Hunter would reach him first. Vanderbyl had come to a stop on the far side, halted by the blue gap that was now some twenty metres across. Hunter’s tractor was slamming toward them.

  It takes considerably more time to read about what happened next than the events themselves took to occur. We are talking a matter of seconds, somewhere between three and five.

  There was a tremendous boom and those of us on foot were hurled to the ice. The impact sent the snot flying from my nostrils, and all the bony places of my body lit up with pain. As I pulled myself up, I saw that the crack had turned serpentine, opening a whiplash curve just in front of Hunter. He had no time to react. The tractor’s port tread went over first, causing the whole machine to pivot and tip sideways, pitching him into the crevasse. What is most vivid now in my mind is not the image of his death—the sprawling, ungainly ugliness of it—but rather his absolute silence, the absence of any cry, the slightest protest at his severance from the living. The tractor tilted with agonizing slowness, halting for a moment on the precipice with the poise of a ballerina, before somersaulting with a roar over the edge.

  I was getting to my feet, trying to regain my breath, and saw Vanderbyl doing the same. He would not be able to help—the gap had become a canyon. Behind him, the radio mast listed at a forty-five-degree angle. Somehow I managed to stagger the last dozen or so metres to Wyndham.

  He was on his side, curled around the buoy. From his position he couldn’t have seen what had happened to Hunter. He even tried to make a joke.

  No rush, Kit, he said to me. Take your time.

  I was on my knees. I had my knife out but was having trouble opening it. Some people, I said to him, will do anything for attention.

  A squeal of metal and I looked up. I have absolutely no doubt that if we had had just another few seconds, I could have saved Wyndham. The radio mast lurched and fell another ten degrees, paused for a half-second, and crashed full length to the ice. The top third of the array snapped off and vanished.

  I cannot say with certainty—no one could know for sure—but it seems likely that the top of the radio mast, in its pl
unge into the abyss, smashed into Wyndham’s dangling sledge and tore him away from the buoy. Before I could so much as drop my knife to grab for him, he had slithered across the last few feet and over the edge.

  Again, that terrible silence.

  I crawled to the precipice, lay down and peered over the edge. In that blue and shimmering canyon, there was no sign of life. Sea water swirled and foamed as it flooded into the crevasse some hundred feet below.

  Vanderbyl was stabbing at his radio, barking Mayday, Mayday. Get some rope, he yelled to me. We’ve got to get them out of there.

  There was no rope to get. The fracture, serpentine to the north, had forked to the south. The lab hut hung in jagged pieces from either edge of the initial split. The rest of the buildings—the power shack, the vehicle shed, the sleeping quarters—were mostly intact on a shard of shelf ice that had become its own separate floe. I remember wondering what had happened to Murray Washburn, our facilities manager, and Paul, our cook. They rarely had occasion to visit the lab, and it seemed unlikely that they would have been in it the moment it was destroyed.

  Ice island T-6 was now at least three ice islands, rapidly drifting away from each other. Kurt Vanderbyl was a hundred and fifty metres distant, adrift on his own shard, his dark silhouette rippling against the sun. Rebecca ran to the edge of what now amounted to our universe, calling her husband’s name. The useless shortwave dangled from his left hand. He slowly raised his right in farewell.

  14

  AT LUNCHTIME, CARDINAL WENT OVER to D’Anunzio’s and ordered a sandwich and a coffee. The place was a fruit store in addition to being a coffee shop, and while he was waiting he bought a half-dozen oranges and set them on the counter. Tony D’Anunzio was as chatty as usual, but Cardinal just grunted in reply. His ham and cheese sandwich came and he ate it in silence. He had looked for Delorme to see if she wanted to join him, but she had already headed out somewhere else. In thinking about her now, his mind went into split-screen mode. On one side, the image of her as she looked that night of the party—an image that reawakened the desire to kiss her. On the other, the image of her sitting on his couch with a bowl of popcorn on her lap as they watched a movie together. He missed the easiness of their friendship—missed it so much that he could not have said at that moment which side of the split screen he wanted to become the whole story.

 

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