I kissed her forehead. “Yes, I’ll be there.”

I stood outside Taylor’s room for a few seconds, listening, making certain that her reassurance wasn’t just bravado, but all was silent. I walked down to the kitchen and poured myself a glass of milk. Our brown bags of spice cookies were on the counter. I picked mine up and carried it with me to the porch. I was sorely in need of something to take the sting out. Willie, ever faithful, lumbered after me. I’d just settled into the rocking chair and taken my first bite of cookie when my cellphone bleated from somewhere in the house. I almost let it ring, then I thought of Taylor sleeping, and I leaped up to answer and stop the noise.

My caller announced her name straightaway. “This is Maggie Niewinski,” she said. I didn’t make the connection immediately. Luckily, Ms. Niewinski helped me out. “I’m Clare Mackey’s friend in Prince Albert.”

“Right,” I said. “I’m sorry. It’s been a long day.”

“That it has,” she said. “Nonetheless, I thought I should call and give you an update.”

“Has Clare been in touch with you?”

“No,” she said. “That’s the update. I’ve called everyone I could think of. All the women in the Moot Team have. Clare hasn’t been in touch with anyone we know.”

Despite the warmth of the evening, I felt a chill. “I guess there’s still the possibility that she just decided to cut her ties here.”

“Why would she do that?” Maggie asked.

“I don’t know,” I said. “I guess I’m just hanging on to the hope that there’s a logical explanation.”

“There isn’t,” Maggie said sharply. Clearly she respected unvarnished truth. “Clare wasn’t an easy person to get close to. She was friendly with people, but she didn’t seem to have a need for friendship. That’s probably why it was so easy for her to simply vanish without anyone asking a lot of questions. But you asked questions. What’s your connection with Clare?”

“It’s tangential,” I said. “Clare was the running buddy of a woman who’d once been my teaching assistant. Her name is Anne Millar. Anyway, when Clare stopped showing up for their morning run in November, Anne went to the police and she went to Falconer Shreve. Everybody gave her the brush-off. Anne and I spotted one another at Chris Altieri’s funeral, and she unloaded. I just agreed to do what I could to help.”

Maggie’s tone was withering. “So a stranger and a casual acquaintance took the time to do what none of us who were with Clare every day for three years at law school bothered to do.”

“You had busy lives,” I said.

“Nobody should be that busy. But we’ll make up for it. You say the police gave Anne Millar the brush-off. Do you happen to know who she talked to?”

I hesitated, but I knew it was pointless to delay the inevitable. “Anne spoke to Inspector Alex Kequahtooway.”

“Kequahtooway,” Maggie repeated. “Okay, I’ve got it. He’s obviously the place to start. We’ll have to find out who’s issuing the inspector’s orders or who is paying him off.” For the first time, Maggie Niewinski faltered. “November to July. Eight months. It may already be too late.”

“You don’t think Clare’s alive?” I said.

“I hope she is,” Maggie said. “But I’ll tell you one thing. If anything’s happened to her, Inspector Alex Kequahtooway is dead meat.”

My mind was racing when I clicked off my cell. There was no way I could dismiss Maggie Niewinski. A telephone call was not an infallible indicator of character, but Maggie had not struck me as a fanciful woman, nor did she strike me as a woman who made idle threats. Obeying the adage that one picture is worth a thousand words, I walked back to my bedroom and picked up the yearbook from Clare Mackey’s graduating year at the University of Saskatchewan law school and returned to the comforts of the rocker on the porch and my bag of spice cookies.

I turned to the photo of the Moot Team. Maggie was at the centre of the picture, a fine-boned blonde with an air of fragility that, given her determination to leave no stone unturned in her search for Clare, was deceptive. I leafed through the book, looking for Maggie in other pictures. She was there many times, and always with the other members of the Moot Team. Clearly, they were women of parts: members of the staff of the Law Review; revellers toasting their tablemates at the Malpractice Mixer; exultant hockey players wearing skates and oversized sweaters with the U. of S. logo. According to the text on the page, their graduating year had been a good one for the women’s hockey team. They had triumphed at the championships in Montreal. There was a picture of the team, beaming, arms draped around one another’s shoulders. Beneath the photo the caption read, “Raising hell and kicking butt.”

Seemingly, they were about to continue the tradition. I put on my glasses and brought the photo of the hockey team closer to my face. Together, the women had the relaxed stance and easy body language of team players. They did not look like people who would relish destroying another human being, but that was exactly what they were about to do, and in my heart I knew that if I’d been in their position, I would have been leading the pack.

The scent of nicotiana wafted through the screened windows. Unbidden, memories of other nicotiana-scented nights washed over me. Alex wasn’t a faceless enemy to me. He was a man whose hands had caressed me and whose body I had loved. Our relationship had never been an easy one. There had been unasked questions and stupid arguments. We had quarrelled over small things because we both knew the big issue between us was beyond solution. But as problem-ridden as our personal relationship had been, I had never doubted that Alex was a good cop and an incorruptible one. Now it seemed that that assessment was being called into question.

The memory that drove me to pick up the phone and dial Alex’s number was not one I cherished. It was of a time when the door to Alex’s private world had opened and my cowardice had slammed it shut – perhaps forever. We had eaten dinner at my house and decided that, rather than driving, we would walk downtown to police headquarters. The night was unseasonably warm, and I hadn’t worn a jacket. When we started home, I’d been chilly, and Alex had put his arm around my shoulders. As we’d crossed the intersection near my house, a man in a pickup truck yelled an ugly racial slur, not at Alex but at me. His words had branded us both. “When you’re through fucking the chief,” the man had said, “why don’t you try it with a white guy?”

In the months afterwards, I replayed the scene a hundred times in my mind. Always in my revision, I behaved heroically. I raised my head and walked across the street with the man I loved. The truth was I had not been brave. Obeying an impulse as atavistic as it was unforgivable, I had shaken off Alex’s arm and run to the safety of the sidewalk. The men in the half-ton had applauded the fact that I had allied myself with them. My apology to Alex had been heartfelt, and he had been understanding, but there was no denying the truth: that split second at the Albert Street Bridge had opened a chasm between us that we had never again been able to close.

I had failed him, and we both knew it. Tonight I had a chance to make amends. I picked up my cell and tried his number. Remembering what we had once been to one another, I wanted to warn him, but at another level I knew that I needed an explanation myself. The Alex I knew had been principled, a man of integrity who believed that every human being had an obligation to do what he could to make a difference. He had been one of the best things in my life. I needed to know that I hadn’t been wrong to love him. I needed to know that, no matter what had happened on that icy November day, Alex was worth loving.

As the phone rang, images of the apartment I knew so well flashed through my mind. It was in a small old building downtown, not posh, but comfortable, with high ceilings and a bedroom with a small balcony where, after love-making, we would take our chairs and sit and look out across the street at the blank face of the church. The memories absorbed me. I didn’t notice how many times the phone rang. When, finally, the phone was picked up, the voice on the other end was not Alex’s. It was a woman’s voice. “Hello,” she said. “Hello,” and then in a voice in which anger and fear were mixed, “Hello. Who’s there? Hello.”

I hung up. Those few words weren’t enough to reveal whether the woman in Alex’s apartment was Lily Falconer, but one thing was certain: the man I’d loved for three years had found someone else to come home to.

CHAPTER

9

Вы читаете The Last Good Day
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