After decades with the Surete du Quebec, most of them in homicide, those words still sent a frisson through him. 'Where?' he was already reaching for the pad and pen, which stood next to every phone in their flat.
'A village in the Eastern Townships. Three Pines. I can be by to pick you up within a quarter hour.'
'Did you murder this person?' Reine-Marie asked her husband when Armand told her he wouldn't be at the two-hour service on hard benches in a strange church.
'If I did, I'll find out. Want to come?'
'What would you do if I ever said yes?'
'I'd be delighted,' he said truthfully. After thirty-two years of marriage he still couldn't get enough of Reine- Marie. He knew if she ever accompanied him on a murder investigation she would do the appropriate thing. She always seemed to know the right thing to do. Never any drama, never confusion. He trusted her.
And once again she did the right thing, by declining his invitation.
'I'll just tell them you're drunk, again,' she said when he asked whether her family would be disappointed he wasn't there.
'Didn't you tell them I was in a treatment center last time I missed a family gathering?'
'Well, I guess it didn't work.'
'Very sad for you.'
'I'm a martyr to my husband,' said Reine-Marie, getting into the driver's seat. 'Be safe, dear heart,' she said.
'I will,
'Three Pines ... Three Pines,' he repeated, as he tried to find it. 'Could it be called something else?' he asked himself, unable for the first time with this detailed map to find a village.
Agent Yvette Nichol raced around her home, looking for her wallet.
'Oh, come on, Dad, you must have seen it,' she pleaded, watching the wall clock and its pitiless movement.
Her father felt frozen in place. He had seen her wallet. He'd taken it earlier in the day and slipped twenty dollars in. It was a little game they played. He gave her extra money and she pretended not to notice, though every now and then he'd come home from the night shift at the brewery and there'd be an eclair in the fridge with his name on it, in her clear, almost childlike, hand.
He'd taken her wallet a few minutes ago to slip the money in, but when the call had come through for his daughter to report for a homicide case he'd done something he never dreamed he'd do. He hid it, along with her Surete warrant card. A small document she'd worked years to earn. He watched her now, throwing cushions from the sofa on to the floor. She'll tear the place apart looking for it, he realised.
'Help me, Dad, I've got to find it.' She turned to him, her eyes huge and desperate. Why's he just standing in the room not doing anything? she wondered. This was her big chance, the moment they'd talked about for years. How many times had they shared this dream of her one day making it on to the Surete? It had finally happened, and now, thanks to a lot of hard work and, frankly, her own natural talents as an investigator, she was actually being handed the chance to work on homicide with Gamache. Her Dad knew all about him. Had followed his career in the papers.
'Your Uncle Saul, now he had a chance to be on the police force, but he washed out,' her father had told her, shaking his head. 'Shame on him. And you know what happens to losers?'
'They lose their lives.' Yvette knew the right answer to that. She'd been told the family story since she'd had ears to hear.
'Uncle Saul, your grandparents. All. Now you're the bright one in the family, Yvette. We're counting on you.'
And she'd exceeded every expectation, by qualifying for the Surete. In one generation her family had gone from victims of the authorities in Czechoslovakia, to the ones who made the rules. They'd moved from one end of the gun to the other.
She liked it there.
But now the only thing standing between the fulfillment of all their dreams and failure, like stupid Uncle Saul, was her missing wallet and her warrant card. The clock was ticking. She'd told the Chief Inspector she'd be at his place in fifteen minutes. That was five minutes ago. She had ten minutes to get across town, and to pick up coffee on the way.
'Help me,' she pleaded, dumping the contents of her purse on to the living-room floor.
'Here it is.' Her sister Angelina came out of the kitchen holding the wallet and the warrant card. Nichol practically fell on Angelina and, kissing her, she rushed to put her coat on.
Ari Nikulas was watching his beloved youngest child, trying to memorise every inch of her precious face and trying not to give in to the wretched fear nesting in his stomach. What had he done, planting this ridiculous idea into her head? He'd lost no family in Czechoslovakia. Had made it up to fit in, to sound heroic. To be a big man in their new country. But his daughter had believed it, had believed there had once been a stupid Uncle Saul and a