Wilkie was battling to restrain himself. “Mr. Zoller, how long does it take to drive to the ferry?”
“Ten minutes.”
“Okay. And it leaves in twenty-five minutes. When is the next ferry?”
“That would be the nine-forty-five tonight, but it’s usually late.”
“Understand this, Zoller, my wife and I have a dinner engagement tonight. Be it on your head.”
“Yes, sir, I’ll get right to the substance.” Zoller began a rambling irrelevancy about how tourism was the mainstay of the island economy, and how the island’s many cultural offerings should be on better display–”
“Get to the point!”
Before Zoller could do so, Stoney charged into the room. “Sorry, Your Honour, my car broke down.”
Wilkie glanced anxiously at the clock, scrambled through his papers. “Stonewell. Unsightly premises. Do you want an adjournment?”
Stoney must have sensed profit in saying no. “Those cars are my babies. Most of them were there before there was even a bylaw. I’m ready for trial.”
“Not guilty,” Wilkie said.
“What?”
“Not guilty! I find you not guilty! And you, Zoller, sum up in no more than six words, because we have to get to the damn ferry!”
“That’s what I’m leading up to, the ferry. The majority vote last night was for the idea of a statue at the ferry dock, maybe on the hill overlooking Ferryboat Bay, at least fifteen feet tall, like the ones in the front of the defendant’s house with wings on them, and in time for tourist season this spring. And we could hang a sign on it to inform visitors of the island’s many arts and crafts–”
Arthur had sensed McCoy simmering behind him, and now he erupted. “I ain’t going to see my work compromised by a barnacle like Kurt Zoller! I don’t do billboards! Nobody tells me what to create!” He aimed a stubby, muscular finger at Zoller. “Oi’ll go to the clink first before I kowtow to you, you snout, you stool–”
The red-faced judge seemed ready to slap McCoy in irons–eighteen months for a missed ferry–so Arthur cupped his hand over McCoy’s mouth and announced his terms. “Full artistic freedom, he’s not to be policed in any way, or bothered when at work. Substantial compliance within six months. On that basis, my client informs me he will be pleased to place a sculpture at the ferry landing.”
Wilkie was already sweeping papers into a briefcase. “So ordered! The accused is discharged! This court is adjourned!” He led the flight to the parking lot.
Arthur spent a few moments cooling McCoy down, talking sense to him: this could be to his advantage, could turn around a bad year. There would be publicity, it wouldn’t hurt his fame or his pocketbook to be the creator of an island attraction, well photographed, sold as postcards. Moreover, Hamish needn’t put in a wink of effort. Arthur would be proud to donate his fee, the twelve-foot-high Icarus, to a pedestal on Ferryboat Knoll.
McCoy reproved him for his offer. “You said you loiked it, b’y, and you’ll keep it. The image is too tormented, it’ll scare the tourists. Oi’ll give them joy.” As he wandered off with some friends, he was more relaxed; common sense had trumped anger.
As the editor of the Bleat rose from the media bench, it tilted, and one of the reporters slid off, landing rudely on her bottom. Nelson waddled up to Arthur with pen and pad. “A lot of my readers are going to think he got off light. What do you say to that, Mr. Beauchamp?”
“I say to that, Nelson, that it would be most pleasant to drop a couple of fishing lines on a sunny, placid, winter’s day.” Contemplation of that prospect was put on hold as he stepped outside. Lying in wait, with tiresome predictability, was Cud Brown.
“Go check on Pomeroy, see for yourself. Come back and tell me if he don’t belong in the cackle factory.”
Progress to the docks was slow, Cud was walking backward, arms extended to prevent Arthur from darting past. Nick was watching from the Blunderer while playing with the ship-to-shore electronics.
“Maybe I have not been plain, Cud. I am not a conveyer of information about your trial, nor am I entitled ethically to advise you. Brian Pomeroy is a skilled counsel who, incidentally, a few years ago won a celebrated case involving wrongful identification.”
Cud’s voice lowered. “There’s something about him that scares me. Something about his eyes…”
CAROLLING CAROLINE
Those wacky eyes, glinting like flints from the cheap meth they buff the coke with. Yes, stardust was what Brian was now abusing, blow was what he’d been tucking up his nose during the half-dozen shopping days before Christmas. It’s got more oomph than Xanax, it brings security, a blast of self-esteem. He wasn’t interested in going back to his couch doctor for more Xanax, he didn’t even want to see Dr. Epstein, with her hints about “caring facilities.” Institutions. Creepily smiling keepers, muscular warders.
Harry the Need makes home deliveries, just like the folks at Lucky Penny Pizza. Hell of a guy when you get to know him. He used to trade stocks, ran with a fast crowd, got hooked on meth, graduated to horse, sells to support his habit. He’s against legalization; it would collapse the market.
Cud must have been seriously distressed on realizing he’d been bad-mouthing the winner of a famous case of failed identification. Maybe the lumpen poet now remembered seeing Brian’s televised scrum, his sardonic bon mots after eyewitnesses failed to ID the assassin of the visiting Bhashyistan president. As a bonus, Brian was credited with causing Bhashyistan to break diplomatic relations with Canada.
Brian was grateful that Arthur took the trouble to wise Cuddles up. Brian wants this case. He wants to run an insanity defence. One in which the lawyer is insane.
No other counsel had the jam to take on the intemperate poet. Beauchamp had obviously fished widely in the lawyer pool before settling on a bottom feeder. Two of Brian’s partners had been approached, they admitted it, Macarthur and Brovak. Brian taunted them–they were cowards, afraid to ruffle the bench by pleading the cause of a loudmouth who may have murdered a judge, maybe two or three. They claimed money was a factor: Cud had none. Brian wasn’t proud, he would accept legal aid rates.
Morning coffee in hand, still in his underwear, he looked out the dusty window to see if any of his followers were out there. Last night it was a thin guy in a London Fog, watching him through the window of the Glad Times Noodle House.
Nine o’clock, and his room was already stuffy, sweaty, smoky. The Ritz’s heat got trapped on this top floor, but you couldn’t open a window without hearing Bing Crosby. Sleigh bells ring, are you listening? It was that abysmal time of year when the gluey, the garish, the mawkish rule. What happened to the beauty of it, the spiritual, the birth of hope? You rarely heard the great old carols any more.
That’s actually what Brian had been doing Tuesday night, lustily carolling Caroline, “Good King Wenceslas,” “Adeste Fideles.” Standing below her window, reminding her through song of the coming celebration of the great Christian miracle–what could be wrong with that, he asked the judge, a young woman, unimpressed. She sought the view of Caroline in the gallery. “Just tell him to stay away from me. Especially when drunk.”
Brian felt more rested today; he’d got four hours’ sleep last night, the most in weeks, and four hours more than the night before, on a musty mattress in a barred room of the Redcoat Inn in North Vancouver. The disturbance charge has been bumped four weeks. Access rights are cancelled in the interim. Now he must confront Christmas on his own, without his three Costa Rican adoptees, Gabriela, Amelia, and Francisco, who always helped him survive the annual banality. He must show grit, suck it up.
He bent to the mirror, checked his eyes for wackiness. He did two more lines.
While his computer warmed up, he studied the wall prints. The unhorsed cowboy among the stampeding longhorns. A rider slouched over his galloping steed, two arrows sticking from his back. Four cowpokes sitting around a fire at night–a placid scene until one noticed the eyes glinting in the blackness. Rave
nous wolves, maybe, scalp-hunting Apaches. The artist had captured the essential futility of trying to stay alive.
A pop-up screen, Widgeon’s admonition-of-the-day. Dialogue must sound natural to the ear, yet unembellished by the chaff of common parlance–the hideous “uh” and “um” and “er”–or by the repetitious four-letter obscenities of the ill-bred.
Despite all his complaining and wanking, Inspector Grodgins doesn’t say shit, piss, or fuck. In fact, none of Widgeon’s characters commit such acts–especially Inspector Grodgins. His ungainly sidekick, Constable Marchmont, seems entirely asexual. So might be the author, whose manuals offer no aid for the sex scenes, let alone tips on how to write with a hard-on. Without Widgeon’s guidance, Brian must walk alone into the valley of concupiscence.
Cudworth Brown, slouched in a chair, chewing on a toothpick, and staring with woeful eyes, conjured in Lance Valentine the image of a ruminating ox. What Cud was staring at was Rosy’s bottom in a tight dress as she bent toward her printer.
“Let me get this straight. That centrefold, your secretary, is the wife of one of the crime-stoppers who busted me.”
A tug at her blouse, a hand to her piled hair–she had a sixth sense, Rosy, knew when she was under scrutiny. Using this power, she often intercepted Lance’s admiring looks, which she returned with knowing, teasing smiles. It had been a grave mistake to hire her. Too distracting. Too married. To a cop.
“That’s right, old boy. Case officer, I would suspect.”
“You bet he is. Detective Sergeant Henry ‘Call-Me-Hank’ Chekoff. I had a hangover like a spike through my head, and he cathauled me for two hours. Told him a thousand times I want to see my lawyer. Chekoff has a huge fucking interest in sticking it to me for the max.”
“I shouldn’t doubt that at all.” Lance bent to the rose and sniffed it to mask the man’s nervous sweat.
Cudworth bounded to his feet. “I’ll take my chances with Pomeroy, you tin-star shamus.” He stamped to the outer office, grabbed his poncho from the coat rack, slammed the door on his way out.
Rosy came in with the pages she’d transcribed, a divorcee rich already, seeking more in settlement. “What got him stoked?”
“He thinks you’re a spy. You’d never disclose anything to do with my clients, would you, my love?”
“Of course not, Lance.”
“Even to your husband.”
“Especially him.”
“He needn’t know I’m working for Mr. Brown.”
“You were working for Mr. Brown.”
“He’ll be back.”
“You’re awfully sure of yourself, aren’t you, boss?”
Her hand lightly touched his shoulder as she leaned over him. L’Eau d’Hiver, complicated by breath mint. A braless breast brushed his shoulder while she guided his hand down the page. “This word, just before ‘dirty whoring old goat.’”
“Scrofulous.” He picked up yet another scent from her, an essence of something glandular. This dangerous woman was not just flirting with him. She was daring him.
“Here, line fifteen, she’s describing how she caught her husband with the maid.” Rosy’s nipple scuffed his shoulder, hard as a pebble. The smell of her. She quoted the divorcee: “‘I opened the door and they were on the floor.’ It rhymes! Then…I’m not sure, I think I heard, ‘with his hand between her thighs.’”
“His head between her thighs.”
The beast below had begun stirring. He quickly swivelled to the window, and stood, trying to concentrate on Cud Brown jaywalking to the honky-tonk bar. Girls! Girls! Girls!
When he turned back, she was bent over the desk, displaying, offering her behind, heart-shaped in a tight skirt. He couldn’t take much more. He reached behind the forensics texts and fumbled for his sixteen-year-old Laphroaig. Women didn’t usually unsettle him this way. Maybe it was the L’Eau d’Hiver–how did she know he fancied that scent, with its subtle sillage? He poured an ounce and downed it.
Rosy turned, caught him staring. “Thanks, I’ll have one.” She hoisted herself onto his desk, her skirt riding up. “At first, with your little earring and your morning rose and all, I thought you were gay. But you’re not, are you?”
He couldn’t hide the proof of that as he passed her a drink. His breathing had become irregular. Lance couldn’t bear not being in control. He was not in control now, the woman was exploiting his one great weakness–it was as if she’d known about it, the flaw that persuaded the Yard to quietly let him go.
She ignored the drink he sought to hand her, and without warning she grabbed his belt and pulled him on top of her, open wet mouth finding his, fingers sliding toward his groin.
In less than a minute her panties were dangling from her ankles, and Lance was between them. At the transcendent moment of merging, it came to him that he hadn’t locked the outer office door. This ugly realization was confirmed when Hank Chekoff walked into the inner office, red-faced and spitting bile as he yanked out his police issue Smith 9 mm.
“It’s her fault!” the coward screamed, and the burlesque queen died in a hail of bullets.
It had to be done. The author had lusted for Rosy but never loved her, and she must be buried in the graveyard of the stereotypical. The subtle essence of L’Eau d’Hiver was wasted on this femme pornographique, save it for a sidekick with cool, with class.
Widgeon, Chapter Nineteen, “The Credible Sidekick.” Ever since the pioneering Dr. Watson, the role of best supporting actor–the foil, the mirror against whom your hero humbly shines–has been crucial to the success of mystery series. If I may be allowed to drop the name of my own Constable Ed Marchmont, it was no easy task to create a totally humourless character and make him interesting!
Brian remembered to back up, then put his weary old Mac to sleep. He must gird himself for the office, for Cudworth Brown and his ill-meant apologies for his ill-mannered accusations. He cut up some coke for the road, poured it into a little envelope torn from a Craven A packet.
He didn’t feel especially bonkers now that he was off Xanax, which had done little, merely stabilized him. Cocaine seemed a more natural remedy, curative; he felt healthier after a snort or two, sharper, confident. And it helped cut down the drinking.
He shrugged into his coat and descended into the bowels of downtown, a gloomy day, a cold drizzle. An ATM on Georgia Street coughed up three hundred dollars. He was going through his account fast, that was the drawback of his mood enhancer of choice.
He had to buy presents for the kids, find a way to smuggle them in. The shops were busy, depressing. Dumbly smiling elves in tinselled windows, syrup from speakers, tunes for illiterate ears, Christmas lights everywhere, sputtering, blinking, inducing a new phobia, fear of epileptic seizure.
He tarried a while outside the Bay, listening to a pretty violin-playing busker play a stripped-down version of the Four Seasons. He gave her twenty dollars for trying out for Rosy. Then down to the pimped-up waterfront, right on Cordova, then a ramble up Water Street, and you’re at Maple Tree Square, and that’s when you realize you’re being followed again. It was the same thin guy in the overcoat, or his brother. Dark complexion, Brian hadn’t noticed that last time. Who does he represent?
He hurried into an ugly so-called heritage building, avoided the elevator, took two flights of stairs, checking behind him at every landing. Yes, he’d shaken off the thin man. He entered through the portals of Pomeroy, Macarthur, Brovak, and Sage, whose freckled receptionist greeted him with a frozen cheery smile. “Good afternoon, Mr. Pomeroy.” Loud, so everyone could be warned.
Cuddles wasn’t here yet, just a couple of white-collar criminals in the waiting room. Brian had time to powder his nose. But stepping out of a doorway in a confrontational way–arms outstretched to hinder progress–was Maximilian Macarthur III, his dear friend, his woe-sharing buddy and partner of two decades.
“We need to talk.”
“I agree, Max. I’ve got a client coming by, let’s set a time.” Brian couldn’t
get by, Max blocked all the holes. He was a little guy, bald and wiry, a runner, over-healthy. He pulled Brian into his office, closed the door.
“The divorce is over, Bry. It’s time to get normal.”
Brian stared grumpily out the window. Max had a pigeonless view, a choice view, over Burrard Inlet, a tableau of sea and mountains.
“Christ, you were coming around. Why did you relapse? For the last three months you’ve been like some ghoul who wanders in occasionally to spread gloom. Was it because your secretary quit? Roseanne got married. That happens. She’s pregnant. That happens too.”
Brian listened sullenly. Max doesn’t understand. No one understands. They can’t reach me, they can’t get to where I am.
“We’ve got you another one. She’s in your office now, restoring order from chaos. April Fan Wu, two weeks out of Hong Kong, she worked in a major law office there. Knows the lost art of shorthand.”
“Appreciate it. I think my client’s here.” Brian edged to the door.
Max had to reach to put an arm around his shoulders. “We’ll look after that disturbance charge, Bry, don’t worry about it. But I want to know what’s going on with you. Everyone’s concerned…”
“Did they ask you to check me out?”
“Who?”
“Everyone. You used the word everyone. Who is that, I want to know. Who is everyone?”
“Your partners, Bry–Augie and the Animal and me. Wentworth too. The conspiracy doesn’t go any higher. Where the hell have you been staying; why won’t you tell us?” The tone was of a social worker admonishing an adolescent runaway.
“I’m in a cabin in the woods, Max. I’m centring. I’m a Buddhist now, I’m studying the ways of the ascended masters. Listen, Max, I love you for caring, but if I act a little crazy, I’m just putting you on. It’s my sense of humour, Max, noir is in fashion. How’s Ruth? How’s little Jackie?”
Kill All the Judges Page 5