Black Fly Season (23 page)

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Authors: Giles Blunt

BOOK: Black Fly Season
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People claim to do the long drive back to Algonquin Bay in under three and a half hours, but they’re lying. To get from downtown Toronto to Algonquin Bay takes four hours minimum. By the time Cardinal was heading north up Trout

 

Lake Road toward home, he was thinking about the steak he was going to grill for himself on the back porch. He would allow himself exactly one beer with it; he didn’t like to have more than that when Catherine was away; it tended to depress him.

When he and Delorme had finished at ballistics, he had badly wanted to drop over to Catherine’s hotel; the Chelsea was not far from the forensic centre. But he had been faced with a conundrum. If Catherine were at her best, of course, it would be no problem for him to show up. But she was treading rocky terrain, just now, feeling his protectiveness as persecution, and his showing up unannounced might be exactly the wrong move. In the end, he had decided against it, but now he wondered where she was and what she was doing. In her hotel room, he hoped, watching TV. Or online with her laptop, trolling eBay for bargain lenses. He would call her the minute he got home.

His cell phone rang, and it was Larry Burke; he was on guard duty at the hospital. His voice was tight, full of nerves.

‘I think you’d better get up here,’ he said. ‘Seems our redhead friend has disappeared.’

CHAPTER 28

Larry Burke was waiting at the front door of the hospital looking glum when Cardinal arrived.

‘How did this happen, Burke? For God’s sake, this girl is in danger.’

‘I know that. But nobody told me she was a flight risk. I was supposed to be careful about who I let in, not worried about her getting out. It’s not like she’s being held here on a charge or anything.’

‘Tell me what happened.’

‘Nothing happened. She’s had the run of the ward since she got here. Everybody loves her. She comes and goes as she pleases. The first couple of times I was a little nervous, but she always told me where she was going and she always came right back.’

‘Where did she say she was going this time?’ She said she was going to visit one of the other

girls on the ward. She’s done that before. Girl

named Cindy in 348.’ ‘And you didn’t go with her?’

‘She didn’t want me to. Bad enough she has to in here when she’s not really sick, I figured

 

give her some privacy. Like I say, nobody said she was a flight risk. There was no reason to worry about her taking off.’

‘If she has taken off. How do we know she hasn’t been kidnapped by whoever tried to kill her?’

‘Nobody saw zip. If she was taken against her will there would have been a commotion.’

‘Did she have any visitors?’

‘Nope. Not one.’

‘Let me borrow your radio.’

Burke unsnapped his radio and handed it over. Cardinal buzzed the station and told the dispatcher to put out an all-points on Terri Tait. He gave a description and switched off.

‘Did you ask everyone on duty? You’re sure no one saw her leave?’

‘I asked everyone. Nobody saw her.’

‘At least she’ll be easy to spot with that flaming red hair. Did you talk to the girl in 348?’

‘Yeah. Name’s Cindy Peele. Didn’t get much.’

‘I’ll talk to her again. Why don’t you book off now?’

‘You blame me she’s gone AWOL?’

‘I blame myself. I should have warned everyone to stay close.’

Cardinal went up to Terri’s room. The bed was rumpled but didn’t look slept in. He opened the closet. Her few clothes were missing.

Cardinal went down the hall to 348. A girl wearing headphones sat listlessly propped against her pillows, watching TV. Her hair, dirty blonde,

 

needed washing, and there was a small white cuff of bandage on her left wrist. She didn’t look away from the TV when Cardinal entered; he walked in front of the screen and pointed to her headphones.

‘What!’ She snapped at him as if he had been plaguing her for weeks.

‘Would you take the headphones off, please, Cindy?’

She pulled the headphones down so that they hung round her neck. Her face was an exaggerated sketch of annoyance.

Cardinal introduced himself.

‘This is so bogus. Why can’t people just leave me alone?’

‘This isn’t about you. I just have a few questions concerning the young woman down the hall.’

‘Like I’m her twin sister or something.’

‘She visited you a few times, didn’t she?’

‘So what? Are you going to arrest me?’

Anger radiated from the girl in hot waves. Cardinal was reminded of Kelly’s teenage years. Catherine had been in hospital for most of them, and he had had to suffer his daughter’s virtuoso command of the negative emotions on his own.

‘Why did she visit you?’

‘Hello-o. She was probably like totally bored. Who wouldn’t be?’

‘What did you talk about with her?’

‘Nothing. Life. She was trying to cheer me up. As if.’

So much rage in one so small. Cardinal estimated

 

Cindy’s height at about five-four. Slight build. Very similar to Terri Tait, maybe a little bigger.

‘Did she tell you anything about herself? Where she was from? Where she was going?’

‘She said she was from like BC or Vancouver. Whatever. She was studying acting. Totally wants to be famous, like who doesn’t. Mostly she asked questions.’

‘What sort of questions?’

‘She’s like, “Where do you live? How many brothers and sisters do you have? What do your parents do?” And I am so not into it. She’s like, “Do you have a boyfriend?” And I’m like, “As if.”’

‘Did she tell you why she’s here in Algonquin Bay?’

‘No.’

‘Did she tell you what happened to her?’

‘No.’

‘You didn’t ask about the bandage on her head?’

‘Bandage?’

Of course not, Cardinal thought. You didn’t even see it. No one else exists in your world.

‘She did ask to use my cell phone. And I let her. Said she didn’t have one, and the hospital phone wasn’t working.’

‘When was that?’

‘Last night. Around seven.’

‘Do you know who she called?’

‘No way. Some Vancouver number. She asked first if that would be okay. I didn’t care.’

 

‘Was it a man or woman, do you know?’

‘I’m not a snoop. Soon as she started dialling, I put the headphones on.’

‘Did she say anything about planning to leave here? Where she might go?’

‘Nope. Why are you so like after her? What is she, like a total criminal mastermind or something?’

‘We’re not after her. We’re trying to protect her.’

‘I hate being protected,’ the girl said, as if people were constantly forcing their protective services on her.

‘When did you see her last?’

‘Couple of hours ago.’

‘What was she wearing?’

‘Hospital nightgown thing.’

She could have hidden her other clothes underneath that, then gone and changed somewhere else.

‘What happened?’

‘What do you mean “what happened”? She came in, made a little chit-chat. And left. I didn’t know she was going anywhere. Why would I care?’

‘We need to know who she called. May I look at your cell phone?’

‘It’s right there. Knock yourself out.’

Cardinal picked up the cell phone from her night table. It was seashell pink with a sticker that said Do Not Enter. He pressed the memory button and a list of numbers appeared on the tiny screen. There was only one with the Vancouver area code.

‘Is this the one she dialled?’

 

Big shrug. Bored eyes. ‘Search me. I fell asleep.’

Cardinal made a note of the number.

‘You fell asleep while she was here?’

‘There’s not like a whole lot else to do in this place.’

‘Have you checked your things? Are you missing anything?’

‘No, I’m not missing anything.’

Cardinal opened the closet. There was a denim jacket, bell bottoms, cargo pants, and a couple of Tshirts on the shelf.

‘My hoodie,’ she said. ‘Bitch took my hoodie.’

‘Hoodie?’

‘Long-sleeve T-shirt with a hood. Royal blue. That total bitch. That thing was expensive. I’m gonna kill her.’

‘You may have to get in line.’

‘That total LOSER.’ The pale hands slammed down on the bed.

‘Listen, Cindy,’ Cardinal said, ‘I’m sorry about your clothes, and I want to thank you for your help. I hope you feel better soon.’

‘As if.’

The girl clamped the headphones over her ears, banishing him.

Out in the corridor, Cardinal pulled out his own cell phone and dialled the Vancouver number. A snippy, synthetic voice informed him that service at the number had been suspended.

‘Excuse me,’ he said to the nurse on duty. ‘How many women’s washrooms are there on this floor?’

 

‘The patients’ rooms all have their own washrooms,’ she said. She looked scarcely older than Cindy, minus the incandescence of rage. ‘Or did you mean public washrooms?’

‘Public, yes.’

‘There’s two. One right there -‘ She pointed to a door across the corridor. ‘And another one by the elevator.’

Cardinal showed her his ID. ‘I’m looking for your patient Terri Tait. I need to check both those washrooms. Will you come with me?’

The nurse went to the closest washroom and knocked loudly on the door. She pushed open the door. ‘There’s no one in here.’

Cardinal went with her into the white glare of tile and porcelain.

‘What are you looking for?’

‘I’m not sure.’ There were only two stalls. He checked each of them. ‘Will you show me the other one, please?’

He followed her down the hall to the elevator area. Once again she knocked loudly on the door before pushing it open.

Cardinal opened the first stall. Nothing. Then the second. There was a patient’s nightgown and robe hanging from the hook.

The nurse bent down and picked up a narrow strip of paper, a patient’s ID band. ‘I guess they never changed her tag,’ she said.

Cardinal took it from her. It still read Jane Doe.

 

Back in the car, Cardinal called Delorme at home. There was a clatter on the other end of the line and then Delorme’s sleep-husky voice saying hello.

‘I woke you. I’m sorry.’

‘You don’t sound sorry.’

‘I’m not. Terri Tait has disappeared from hospital.’

Delorme’s voice cleared. ‘Abducted, you think?’

‘Looks like she just borrowed some clothes and snuck out. Of course, it’s possible someone picked her up in the parking lot. Did we ever hear anything back from the Vancouver police?’

‘Nothing. But I got a social insurance number. I’m waiting for employment records.’

‘So we still don’t know if she has relatives in this area.’

“Fraid not.’

‘I’m thinking it’s possible she’s spent time here before. That she has some place to go. People who will take her in. If we do the footwork, we’ll find the place, find the people.’

‘What do we do in the meantime?’

‘I’ve got a phone number to follow up on. Someone she called from the hospital.’

‘Local?’

‘Vancouver area code, but it could be a cell phone. I’ve already put out an all-points. That red hair of hers, somebody’s bound to spot her sooner or later. In the meantime, I’m going to bed.’

‘Where are you now?’

‘Trout Lake Road. Coming back from the hospital.’

 

‘Do you ever wish you did something else entirely? Something unrelated to police work.’

‘I fantasize about running a carpentry business. But then if I did woodworking full time I’d probably get sick of that, too.’

The, sometimes I wish I’d just gone into business. I wasn’t too far from an MBA when I got sidetracked.’

Cardinal realized when he hung up that that was the most personal conversation they’d had in six months.

CHAPTER 29

The blinds were all shut; the house was the dim lightless grey of limbo. Terri was sitting on her jacket, but even folded up it couldn’t soften the hardness of the hardwood floor. You run, run, run, but you’re coming undone. The refrain reverberated in her head as if it had become the soundtrack for her life.

She stared at the red-brick fireplace and its sooty interior. Whoever had last lived in this house had certainly cleaned the place up before shutting the door for the last time. She wondered who they were, and if they had been happy. There was nothing special about the house itself. There were a hundred just like it in the neighbourhood, but Terri had been happy here.

How odd that she should be so unhappy now, because as a child she had been completely sunny. She had got along fine with her parents, got along fine with Kevin, her kid brother. But then disaster had struck, and Terri and Kevin had had to go out to Vancouver and live with an aunt and uncle whom she didn’t much like. She remembered the stink of her uncle’s pipe,

 

and how her aunt had always thought everything was just ‘precious’ or ‘darling’, words that set Terri’s teeth on edge. That was her mother’s sister, but she couldn’t have been more different. They hadn’t been bad people, but they couldn’t replace her parents and that made Terri resent them.

This house had been the last place she had been truly happy - carefree, the way a kid should be. She remembered how the fireplace had glowed on cold winter nights. There used to be a glass screen in front of it, and she and Kevin used to fight for the patch of carpet just in front of it, lying on their bellies to watch television. The TV had been in the corner, except at Christmas when they moved it to make room for the long-needled tree they always got.

Terri got up and walked again through the dining area. Her parents’ dining set, Swedish modern, had been too big, and if you sat at the end of the table opposite her father you were actually sitting in the living room. In the kitchen, a peculiar memory assailed her: she had been drying the dishes and fainted clean away while drying the carving knife. It had stuck in the floor where it had fallen and was still there when she woke up moments later with her parents’ worried faces looming over her. A touch of anaemia, the doctor told them.

Her bedroom was much bigger than she remembered. Of course, back then, it had been

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