‘I mean me and the girl.’
Namagoose folded his enormous arms. ‘You can’t just pin this on me because I’m Cree. It’s discrimination, I have rights, man, I have rights.’
Derek took a breath and leaning forward said in a calm voice, ‘No one’s taking anyone’s rights away. We’ll follow up your story with Private Saxby. If it doesn’t check out, then it doesn’t matter who your people are or whether or not I like them or they like me, you’re in deep shit, brother.’
Namagoose looked up from under his eyelids, a thunderous expression on his face. ‘I ain’t your brother,’ he said.
• • •
On the return trip Edie and Derek stopped off at Lake Turngaluk. Joseph Oolik reported that he’d gone home around ten o’clock yesterday evening and only got back an hour or so ago. He’d filled the tank several times and, as Derek had asked, driven the truck over to the coastal track and discharged its contents out into the Sound. One time a pod of orca had come in close to shore, no doubt smelling the blood, but he’d squared what he was doing with his conscience and said a prayer like they’d suggested. Now there was virtually nothing left except mud.
‘I’m fixing to finish up sometime today,’ Joseph Oolik said. He wiped his hands together as if he was trying to rid them of something. ‘This place gets to a fellow. Aside from, well, you know, the thing that happened.’ He seemed profoundly uncomfortable. ‘If I didn’t have so much respect for the Salliaqs as a family I’d have left long before now,’ Oolik said. He stretched his neck to take in the inuksuit all around. ‘You see that, every last one of ’em pointing away.’
Derek smiled. ‘That’s nothing but how folk built them, Joseph.’
Oolik tutted and shook his head. ‘Well, that’s as you say, sergeant, that’s as you say.’
• • •
They left him to finish up and on their way into the settlement took a detour by the run-down clapboard outhouse currently serving as the Shoreline Bar. The building was closed and there was no one about.
‘No point wasting time waiting,’ Derek said. ‘We’ll go back later.’
Next stop the nursing station. The place was always busy around resupply as patients showed up early in the hope of being first in line for a script for some of the new medicine that would be coming in with the ship. Luc was in his office looking tired, his hair rumpled into strange crests where he’d been pulling at it. He’d finished taking the preliminary samples from Martha Salliaq’s body late last night. They were now labelled up in the freezer, waiting for the arrival of the forensics team. He had yet to take the elimination samples from the family but was intending to do that too once his morning clinic was finished.
‘You seen any of them since last night?’ Derek asked.
‘I went by Markoosie’s house late to ask if anyone needed something to help them sleep but they said they were OK,’ Luc said.
‘How they seem to be holding up? Anyone behaving oddly, maybe, a little out of character?’
‘I’m not sure they’ve really taken it in yet. One thing. Confidentially, I think Charlie Salliaq’s sick. You see how pale he’s looking? I noticed his gums are swollen and he looks exhausted. He’s been having nosebleeds for some time and I did suggest he come see me about it a couple weeks back but he gave me a spiel about qalunaat medicine. One more way white men control Inuit, blah blah blah. It was quite something.’
‘Charlie’s an equal opportunity bigot, I wouldn’t take it personally,’ Derek said drily. ‘But thanks for letting us know.’
Luc responded with a nervous smile.
At that moment the front door swung open and Chip Muloon strode through the waiting room. He nodded a greeting.
‘What’s he doing in here?’ Derek said.
Luc followed Derek’s gaze. ‘He’s interested in the annual ship’s medical records for the research he’s working on. I keep the files in a cupboard, historical stuff . . .’ Luc faltered, suddenly remembering Edie’s connection to Chip, and added, ‘But I guess you’ll already know that, Edie.’
‘We don’t talk about each other’s work,’ Edie said. She wanted Derek to know she had boundaries.
Luc checked his watch and threw his hands in the air. ‘I’m sorry, guys, but I really have to start clinic.’
As they were going out the door he called them back.
‘Oh, I almost forgot. It’s just been crazy this morning. Those two fellas from the Defence Department?’
Derek and Edie exchanged alarmed looks. Luc picked up on them.
‘The ones who came over to look at Martha?’
Derek’s eyes widened. ‘Military?’
‘Uh, I think they said Defence Department. No uniforms. Any case, they told me you and Colonel Klinsman had both authorized it.’
Derek moved back inside the door. ‘What did they want?’
‘To see the body. Take a few photos.’
‘That all they took?’
‘I didn’t see them take anything else, and I was with them the whole time.’ Luc swung his head. ‘Sorry, folks, I should have checked.’
Derek gave him a reassuring smile. ‘Don’t worry about it. I’m sure it was just routine.’
Edie waited until they were outside. ‘What was that about?’
Derek pursed his lips in the way he always did when he was thinking something through. ‘Maybe they’re looking for an excuse to cancel the clean-up, like Gutierrez said. Or maybe it’s just that the body was found on ex-Defence Department land. I’ll bring it up next time I speak to Klinsman.’
• • •
They separated, Derek returning to the detachment while Edie went back to the Shoreline Bar. The front door was un-padlocked now and the owner, Tom Silliq, was making his way around a ragged assortment of cracked plastic tables and chairs with a greasy mop. The Shoreline didn’t have a licence like the Anchor, so it was officially illegal. She remembered reading a piece in the Arctic Circular a while back which talked about the Kuujuaq Council of Elders voting in personal limits on alcohol orders. The limits were wildly over-generous and those who didn’t drink often sold their allowances to those who did, so she supposed it hadn’t been hard for Tom to get the place stocked and running. Locals avoided it, saying there were too many unataqti and Tom’s prices were too high, none of which bothered Tom any.
When he saw her Tom stopped what he was doing and leaned on his mop. There was a roll-up in his mouth. When he removed it, Edie could see one side of his lip was broken and cankerous.
‘You’re the teacher.’ He poked at her with the stub. His fingernails were yellowed and heavily ridged. ‘Out of Autisaq, Maggie Kiglatuk’s people.’
‘That’s right.’
‘Why you working for the Lemming Police?’
Derek had told her he and Silliq had had words a couple of times over graffiti and loose dogs, then once more recently over his bartending activities; and Derek had heard the rumours that Silliq was effectively pimping local girls to the soldiers at Camp Nanook, though no one had yet produced any evidence of this.
‘Fella ain’t one of us. His people don’t come from around here.’
‘Nor do our people, you remember your history,’ Edie said. ‘In any case, I’ve come about Martha Salliaq.’
The bar owner wiped his nose on the back of his hand. ‘Take a seat,’ he said. ‘You want a beer?’
‘Yup, but I’m not gonna have one,’ she said. ‘Gone that way too many times in the past.’
Silliq let out a knowing chuckle. ‘I had a loonie for every time someone said that to me. Doesn’t stop ’em though.’
‘It stopped me. I was a lousy drunk,’ Edie said, humouring Silliq now. ‘You wouldn’t have liked me.’
‘Don’t know if I like you now, working for that Lemming Police.’
‘How’s about I’m working for Martha Salliaq. For the family.’
Tom raised an eyebrow and considered this. ‘I guess that makes it different,’ he said.
‘You remember Martha com
ing in here on Friday, Tom?’
‘Sure I do.’ He had a disconcerting habit of picking at his ulcerated lip as he spoke. It made him hard to understand and harder still to look at. ‘I went outside to fetch some more beer from the store, she was sitting on the little wall I got out there. Face was all puffy like she’d been crying. But I told her to come in, sat her down, gave her a soda. It was early, hardly anyone in the bar.’
‘Know what she was upset about?’
He sucked his teeth. ‘Oh you know how girls are. I didn’t ask her about it.’
‘Did she go home?’
‘I guess so, eventually.’
Edie frowned and Tom Silliq went on.
‘A while after I left her, some fellas come in, unataqti, I’m setting them up a few beers and the next thing she’s joined them. They were talking and laughing. It was getting busy and she seemed OK, so I forgot about her.’ When his eyes blinked, his nostrils flared.
Edie pulled out the mugshot of Namagoose that Klinsman had given them.
‘Fella she was with look anything like this?’
‘Oh yeah.’ He stabbed at the image with a yellow fingernail. ‘The tall one.’ He turned and began rearranging the coasters on the bar. With his back to her, said, ‘The other one was smaller, hair the colour of piss, skin like piss, looked like one big piss you ask me.’
‘They all leave together?’ Edie had returned from Camp Nanook convinced that Namagoose had lied about Saxby’s involvement. Here was a chance to catch him in the lie.
Silliq closed his eyes, reluctant to say more. ‘Look,’ he grumbled, ‘I can’t afford to have the unataqti decide not to drink here any more. Any case, I told you everything I know. I got busy. I didn’t see the girl leave.’ He pushed himself up from his chair and reached for the mop. ‘Busy now, come to that.’
Seeing she wasn’t going to get anything more out of him right then, Edie made her way back to the detachment, making a mental note to go back later, stand old Silliq a drink or two.
Derek was already by the door, pulling on his outerwear. He reached for his hat and pointing to her boots he said, ‘No need to take those off. We’re going back to Camp Nanook. Klinsman’s got Saxby. They’ve searched his locker. Man’s knife is missing.’
11
Sonia Gutierrez had been sitting in the communal area of the hotel, leafing through copies of the documents in the decontamination agreement between the settlement of Kuujuaq and the Defence Department until they’d given her a headache. Remembering the Tylenol in the hotel kitchen, she now made herself some coffee, got the pills and went up to her room.
She tried to work out why it was that the agreement seemed to mean so much to her. A young woman – her client’s beloved daughter – had been horribly killed. You’d think that might be her primary concern, but something in her just wouldn’t let the clean-up go. All her life she’d been fighting power, first in Guatemala, then in Ottawa and now here in the High Arctic, and she was intimately acquainted with the way power covered up after itself, the tiny gaps and small inconsistencies it left behind. The timing of the girl’s death, just before the start of the clean-up, and Klinsman’s eagerness to cooperate with the police investigation had set alarm bells ringing in her mind. The anomaly in the environmental impact report increased their pitch. There was nothing she could put her finger on right now, but long years of experience had taught her to trust her instincts. And her instincts told her that something wasn’t right.
What she really needed was someone to talk all this through with, a fellow lawyer or maybe just a good and trusted pal, but after the embezzlement scandal, lawyers she had once counted as her friends no longer wanted anything to do with her in case her near-disgrace rubbed off on them. There were one or two people in Ottawa who remained on her side but she couldn’t in all honesty call them confidants. The obvious candidate was her sister in Guatemala but she’d tried calling her a couple of times and not got through.
And there was Chris Tetlow. Calling Chris would mean swallowing a little pride, but the way she was feeling now she figured it was probably worth it. Picking up her phone card, she went downstairs and tapped in the various codes until she reached Tetlow’s cell. The journalist picked up. From the slur in his speech and the time it took him to register her name, she guessed he was in a bar and that he’d been there some time.
‘Hey, Son, wassup?’ There had been a moment, a few years back, when Tetlow had been one of her loudest cheerleaders. He was a freelancer then, one of the few in the north, with a particular interest in native affairs. They’d scratched each other’s backs and more. Tetlow hadn’t behaved well, dumping her by text, and she’d subsequently discovered he’d been seeing someone else almost the whole time they’d been together. For a while relations between them had soured but, mostly through her efforts, they’d now managed to build a cordial if slightly awkward professional relationship. These days Tetlow worked for the Arctic Circular based out of Yellowknife and Iqaluit. Since so much of Gutierrez’s work involved native land claims it was useful to her to have Tetlow onside.
‘You hear about the murder of that girl in Kuujuaq, near the SOVPAT camp earlier in the week? Martha Salliaq?’
She could almost hear the cogs in his mind turning over. ‘Rings a bell.’ He sounded remote, as if he was too drunk to take this in or maybe just didn’t care, but she felt so in need of an ally right now that it almost didn’t matter.
‘You up there now, Son, or what?’ He’d gone somewhere quieter so that she no longer had to strain to hear him.
‘Yeah. I’ve been negotiating a clean-up of the old DEW station at Glacier Ridge. You remember?’ They’d talked about it a few times over the years. ‘Thing is, Chris, I can’t put my finger on it but I think there’s something going on. Apart from the murder, I mean, but maybe connected to it.’
‘Go on.’ Tetlow’s journalistic instincts had kicked in and he sounded almost sober now.
Sonia outlined the events of the past few days, including the anomaly she’d found in the documents.
‘Isn’t Derek Palliser in charge up there? The lemming fella? There’s more to that man than meets the eye. He comes over as some small town loser, obsessed with rodents, then last year he pulls off this amazing investigation into a big-time Russian oil developer. Made international waves.’
Sonia hadn’t been up on Ellesmere last year but she remembered reading about the case in the papers.
‘Well, I’m beginning to think he’s either amazingly naive or he’s working with the Defence Department.’
There was noise in the background at Tetlow’s end.
‘Maybe he just wants to get the investigation out of the way as quickly as possible so they can get on with the clean-up? You think of that?’ Tetlow’s voice flared in and out, as though he was focused on something else in the room.
‘No, Chris, that never occurred to me . . . Of course I thought of that.’ She paused. Dios mío.
There was a pause.
‘I met that girl’s mother one time by the way,’ Tetlow said suddenly. ‘Alice. A story I was working on a while ago about a bunch of babies that died at birth in the seventies and eighties.’ He hesitated. ‘Uh, I guess that would have been before your time. Any case, it didn’t stand up.’ She heard a woman’s voice, then Chris say, ‘Two minutes,’ and he was back on the line again.
‘But listen, you got anything more concrete?’
‘I told you all I got.’
He sounded disappointed.
‘Maybe you should come up here, help me get some more.’
The woman’s voice again, louder this time.
‘Uh, look, Son, I gotta go. Call me if you get any closer to something . . .’
‘Concrete?’ she offered, but he’d already put down the phone.
• • •
Back in her bedroom she flicked through the documents once more. It made sense to go back to the beginning and take a look at the site plans. There were two sets, as it tu
rned out, the ones she’d worked from and a much earlier version from before she’d taken on the case. The early drawings dated from 1960, not long after the site had been built. She’d never had cause to look at this set before, partly because the clean-up negotiations had always worked from drawings dating from 1974, and partly because the earlier documents were hidden away in an obscure addendum which had been drawn up before she’d taken on the case. These days the site no longer much resembled either set of plans. The Defence Department had torn down some of the structures after they’d abandoned the place in the mid-1990s. A few of the remaining buildings had got frost damage and crumbled and a few more had succumbed to the 180-kilometre-per-hour winds that regularly swept down from the Arctic Ocean.
Nonetheless, the plans showed that during the fourteen years between 1960 and 1974 there had been considerable additions to the permanent structures on the site. In itself this was no big deal. Many of the radar stations on the Distant Early Warning line had been remodelled over their thirty-five-year lives, as monitoring technology became more sophisticated and strategic needs changed. What seemed peculiar about Glacier Ridge was the extent and type of enlargement. The 1960 plans showed the classic radar main station format, buildings arranged in an H and built into the prevailing northwesterlies. By 1974 the site had more than doubled in size. The basic H shape remained, but the area had been filled in by a more random-looking cluster of buildings, none of which were facing northwest. This kind of expansion could only have resulted from a change in function. In which case, what had the station become – and why, in the decade she’d been involved in negotiations, had no one ever mentioned the change?
Sonia stared into the middle distance for a moment, trying to recalibrate her thoughts. Her head told her she was on to something.
But what?
12
For the third time in thirty-six hours Derek and Edie found themselves at the sentry gate at Camp Nanook. This time Klinsman kept them waiting for a few minutes, and apologized with his usual formality, but he seemed if anything more distracted and for the first time, Edie thought, wary.
The Bone Seeker: An Edie Kiglatuk Mystery (Edie Kiglatuk Mysteries) Page 11