knows it's not much but it's his place so he'll stay. We won't call because what we have in common is the knowledge of terrible things, and why would we remind ourselves of that?

I'm pulling down the wallpaper in the honeymoon suite. Not the vines and blossoms glued to the wall decades ago but the bold headlines and columns of dried newsprint. Tearing through the same brittle photos of Ashley Flynn and Krystal McConnell that have been displayed across the country and will be recognized by hundreds of thousands for a couple of months until the next local atrocity comes along and new carelessly smiling faces are produced to replace them. At first I take each sheet and fold it back into its original quarters, but this allows too much time for every page to rest in my hands with their faces looking back at me. So I begin to rip them down instead, clawing blindly at the walls, crunching up whatever catches in my hands and tossing it all into a pile on the bed. When I'm done I watch the resulting cone of newsprint tremble and pitch as each of the pages struggles to open up once more. Continues this show of life until, after a time, it comes to rest as a sleeping body on the white bedclothes.

The Lady is all that's left. A face that enlarges without anything on the wall around it, filling the space as though a full-scale portrait. I pull the tape carefully away from her, hold the surprising weight of the paper in my hand before slipping it inside my shirt pocket. Feel its warm and shifting burden against my chest as I grab my bags and pull the door closed.

Time for me to pay up,'' I say, keeping my eyes away from the concierge's baldness by laying a credit card on the desk and continuing to dig around in my wallet.

''Headin' out, are ya?'' Taps the ancient computer to life and sets to grinding out a copy of my bill on a printer that produces a sound equivalent to the operation of a sawmill. ''Thought you might be makin' this place your permanent residence.''

''We can't always get what we wish for.''

''No, sir, that is the truth.''

He plunks the sales slip before my lowered eyes along with a ballpoint pen gnarled by teeth marks. But as I slip the credit card into the breast pocket of my jacket I feel something there, hard and slim as a postcard. Pull it out and hold a crumpled five-by-seven below my eyes. Krystal and Ashley posing in their white lace dresses with blue ribbons tied at their waists. The one I stole from Ashley's bedroom.

I try to pull away from it but the picture holds me a moment more. Its surface gloss the silver membrane over still water. And beneath this, buried in the shallows, the reflection of those passed into the unrecoverable. Girls standing close, holding each other's hands and staring out with the faces of imagined burden and loss. Faces set by history, both the one they were acting out in the names of others and now, in death, their own. A history claiming them even as they lived. As the camera shutter clicked open to the light and their image burned itself onto the film, even in this most present of moments they were already falling away into the past.

''Would you do me a favor?'' I ask.

''Ask away.''

''Would you mail this to Brian Flynn for me? I think I have his street address somewhere here--''

''Not to worry,'' he waves his hand. ''I know where he lives.''

I hand the picture over to him and he finds a large enough envelope, drops it in, and seals it without looking.

''Suppose I should ask if you found everything here at the Empire to your liking?'' he asks after I sign the credit slip.

Then I do what I meant not to do and look at the concierge's face. A near toothless man of indeterminable age who's spent too much time out of the sun. Then I do what I promised I would never do. I look at the top of his head. A good long look at the bulging crisscross of veins patterned over his scalp, rushing blood around the circumference of his skull. But it's nothing more than a flaw of the body, something that proves he's alive.

''The room was very comfortable, thank you,'' I answer, pushing the front door open with my knee and stepping out blind into the light.

The drive back to the city is long and cold. This is mostly because the car still lacks a front windshield and the temperature, as is appropriate for the season, flirts around the freezing point. There's nothing for it but to pull up the collar on my overcoat, hunker down as low in the seat as possible and crank the heat so that, every once in a while, I feel a lick of warmth carrying the smell of burning rubber. Aside from two trucks that pass with a honk, their drivers laughing down at me to show teeth the color of diner coffee, I'm surprised that nobody seems to notice the extreme conditions under which I roll southward. Not that I'd be likely to notice anyway, eyes fixed dead ahead, my body a hunched question mark, unable to move but capable of driving straight down a four-lane highway just as well as the other unmoving shadows behind other wheels. Down past the factories, shipping warehouses, and salvage yards, through the asphalt channels bordered by walls built to protect backyards from the noise their inhabitants moved out to the suburbs to avoid. Along the curving river valley, weaving down to where the highway meets Lake Ontario and dissolves.

I'm not thinking about tiptoeing around Graham and Bert as I clear out my desk, about facing the question as to whether the insurance on the Lincoln covers driverinflicted demolition. My mind is free of thoughts on the collapsed arc of my career, how long my savings will cover the mortgage payments or what, if anything, I may be alternatively qualified to do. But what does occur to me, in a blink of memory that comes as I pull off the Don Valley Parkway onto Richmond Street and face the glare of sun off the downtown office towers, is the fact that Tripp's bloody shirt still sits in the trunk of my rental car.

Down Richmond, past the under-clothed tourists and teenaged runaways of Yonge Street, across Bay with its corners clotted by the ministerial faces of professional money handlers, and onto Spadina, where I make a right and head north. Making turns that take the car deeper into the cramped residential neighborhoods off College Street, one block featuring overrenovated gingerbread numbers and the next a series of brick and wrought-iron squares. Circle back, go straight, become lost. Just driving. Not knowing where I'm going until I get there. And when I do, it's to pull over next to a parkette jammed between two redeveloped row houses, a chunk of clear space equipped with a slide and a swing and a sandbox now brimming with fallen snow like an unmarked grave.

Climb around to the back of the car and pop open the trunk. The shirt's still there, tied inside its white plastic bag. Pick it up with both hands and walk over to the garbage can next to the park's gate. On the other side, a bunch of kids playing tag. Boys and girls sent outside to burn off some after-school steam before dinner. Old enough to play together without supervision but young enough that they still love simple games like this, ones without teams or points or rules.

Take the bag and bury it deep below the sweet garbage of chicken bones, ketchupy fast food bags, an empty bottle of vodka, and today's issue of the Star with the front page headline ''Lost Girls' Teacher Goes Missing.'' Then I lift myself straight and in the failing light of early winter dusk watch the neighborhood kids play. Listen to the triumphant ''You're it!'' followed by squeals of fresh pursuit and escape. Children oblivious to the fact they are being watched by a stranger on the other side of the playground fence, tagging each other and turning hunted to hunter in regular turns, kicking up the snow as they run so that a shimmering cloud of frozen crystals follows each of the paths they take.

acknowledgments

For providing the time and space to write, I am indebted to the Yukon Arts Council, Belinda Smith, Max Fraser, and most particularly Pierre Berton for my residency at Berton House, Dawson City. For my year as writer- in-residence, my thanks to Champlain College at Trent University, its students, and its Masters during my stay, Martin Boyne and Stephen Brown.

The Ontario Arts Council, the Toronto Arts Council, and the Canada Council for the Arts are enthusiastically thanked for grants provided during the writing of this book.

Portions of the novel have been previously published in different form in Carousel and The New Quarterly. I am grateful to the editors there, namely Mary Merikle, Peter Hinchcliffe, and Kim Jernigan at The New Quarterly and Daniel Evans at Carousel for their supportive comments.

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