His lips brushing the granite, he sobbed out a laugh. What a fucking completely unhelpful memory.
Lazeroff called from the riverbank, a hundred miles away.
Another voice, higher pitched, cut through the roar and hiss ahead of him, once, and then again. Paul shouted back, a wordless yell, and slowly, as though he were trying to pull himself out of a dark, sucking vacuum, inched onto the top of the boulder. His cheek against the cold rock, he blindly stretched a leg out over the torrent in the narrow channel between stones. Nothing but moist air, too wet, water cascading over his boot. The inside of his thigh strained and stretched as he lifted his leg higher. Finally the side of his foot hit a ledge and held.
He raised himself upâthe trees and river lurched back into focus, the nauseating expanse of the sky threatened to topple himâand pivoted his other foot until he faced the other boulder in a split-legged crouch, suspended over the river. He transferred his weight to the leading leg and pushed off with the other. Both knees smacked against rock as he landed face and chest first. He gripped the side of the boulder with his thighs, blood in his mouth. Water surged against his boots as he scooted along the boulder's ridge, dizzy and trembling.
On the downstream side of the rock, a tiny eddy curled away from the rage of the main current and calmed, until each pebble beneath the surface was clear and vivid. His eyes clung to that one strangely tranquil spot as he forced himself onward. A shallow, limpid, yet mysterious placeâit hid its essence in plain sight.
He reached the edge and blindly swung his arm where he'd seen Jory slip between the rocks. His hand grabbed at air. He raised himself up and peered over. Only endless water funnelling darkly through the breach. Nothing in the rapids downstream, nothing in the logs and sticks piled against the upstream side. It had all been a trick, a joke played out of boredom and anger, revenge for every time he'd listened under the stairsâthere was no way Jory had really been here.
8
The two of them returned to the Immitoin the next morning. Gina was staying with Sonya. Jory's father was somewhere along the river with the Search and Rescue team, while his mother waited in Bishop, where police and volunteers coordinated the search effort from the old fire hall. A helicopter thudded overhead as he and Lazeroff drove.
“You sleep any?” Lazeroff asked. Travel mugs rattled in the plastic holders, the fire hall coffee half finished and forgotten.
Paul took a while answering. “No.” Their faces mirrored each other, sallow and bruised. A chill had dogged him all night. Everything outside the vehicle floated, a cold, sickly sort of beauty. They drove a police
SUV
âthis time, the logging trucks pulled over for them. Cars and trucks were parked along the side of the road, volunteers combing the river. Someone radioed: “Cliff, we're here. You want us to wait?”
Lazeroff slowly picked up the receiver. “Go ahead and start. We're right behind you.”
At the top of Hardy's driveway were two police cars, a Search and Rescue truck, and a gathering of men. The odds of finding Jory there were good, but with the river so high and wild right now, not a sure thing. The body could still be tumbling in the Flumes, or caught on a sweeper near Basket Creek. Maybe he'd drifted past already.
A muffled crack came from outside. Three volunteers hid behind one of the cars. A cop ran up the driveway, head low. Lazeroff jerked the vehicle halfway into the ditch and jumped out. Paul followed, staggering as the road's soft shoulder crumbled under his feet. The copâit was the young guy from last autumn, Davisâhad his gun drawn.
“He's shooting at us,” he said, astonished.
“Sure it wasn't for himself?” Lazeroff asked.
“The ricochet whistled past me.”
“He's frightened.”
“Barry's behind the woodshed.”
“Tell him not to fire.” They ducked and loped to where the volunteers were huddled.
“He was yelling before he shot,” one of the men said eagerly. “Couldn't make it out.”
Another added, “Kai. That's what he said.”
“What the hell does that mean,” Lazeroff muttered.
“Yelled it a bunch of times. Sounded like a crow.”
“I'm going down there.” Lazeroff stood. His hands were empty, his gun holstered. Paul sat on the ground, his head near the wheel well, breathing in the smell of dried mud and warm rubber. “Hardy,” he heard Lazeroff call. The men were silent, straining to listen. He rubbed his eyes. Thrushes called their single, reedy note back and forth and wrens grated and buzzed in the underbrush. Someone next to him lit a cigarette, the sharp flick of the lighter close to Paul's ear. Wisps of acrid smoke, a raven calling from across the river.
“We're good,” Davis was saying. Paul struggled to his feet, leaning against the car door. He heard boots scuffling on gravel, a struggle. Lazeroff and the third cop had Hardy in cuffs and were dragging him by his arms while he pulled and strained toward his house. He threw his head back and howled, snuffled for breath, and howled again. The old man was shockingly thin and dirty, his eyes lost within dark sockets, a filthy beard. He saw Paul and suddenly pulled toward him. The cops yanked him back, and he howled one final time as they shoved him in the back of Davis's cruiser.
Lazeroff was covered in sweat as he turned to the crowd of volunteers. “Okay. Sounds like the body was here. Early this morning.” Lazeroff hesitated. “Hardy pushed it back into the current.”
A collective gaspâthe sound grated on Paul's nerves. He felt suddenly and irrationally protective of Hardy. “Why the hell would he do that?” a volunteer asked indignantly.
Lazeroff rubbed his forehead angrily. “How would I know? Might as well radio up to the Flumes, tell them to call it off. Everyone get down to Spry Creek or Bishop.”
Davis and the third cop went to drive Hardy into town. “Get him fed,” Lazeroff told them. He walked with Paul down the driveway. “The place looks like hell inside,” he said quietly. “Not a crumb to eat.”
They checked his truck and found the battery dead and a flat tire that had been chewed by rodents or porcupines, probably during that last cold snap before spring.
“He's never had trouble getting through the winter before,” Lazeroff said.
No more food packages from the Wentzes. Elsie probably believed her bread and soups and roasted chickens were still being delivered. She would have said something to Gina otherwise. Maybe Hardy had lost his mind just enough that he didn't phone anyone for help, was rotting away in dementia. Paul remembered the old man's fear that morning, Billy's face when they passed each other on the road. Maybe they'd punished Hardy for speaking to Paul. Because Paul wouldn't stay out of people's lives, as Billy had warned him to do.
“He thought we were coming to arrest him. Kaiâhe was shouting that at me too.” Lazeroff stopped at the front door and rubbed at his eyes. “Makes no sense.”
Through the window, Paul could see old newspapers strewn on the kitchen table, a torn-open bag of millet or birdseed on the counter. Paul's stomach lurched, and he wrapped his arms tightly across his chest, shivering. It was like the sun couldn't reach him. “Kai's a name. I know who that is.”
Lazeroff studied him for a moment, then shook his head. “Later,” he said. “Tell me later. You look done for the day.”
Two days later, they gave up on the river and lowered the reservoir. The simple act of opening the McCulloch Dam's floodgates was a massive exercise in engineering, hydrology, communication, and cooperation. It required the coordinated efforts of governments, scientists, and hydroelectric corporations from the Immitoin, Kettle, Columbia, and Kootenay Rivers, all the way down to Roosevelt Lake and the Grand Coulee Dam in the States. The Waneta, Hugh Keenleyside, Revelstoke, and Mica Dams closed most of their gates and let their reservoirs fill, as did the Duncan, Brilliant, and both Bonnington Falls Dams on the Kootenay River. Below these dams, biologists and their technicians salvaged rainbow trout eggs from redds suddenly left high and dry. They filled plastic laundry baskets with gravel and buried the eggs inside, then lowered the surrogate nests into deeper waters. All of this done to maintain the balance of the Columbia River system and its floodplains, while the Immitoin poured itself through the McCulloch Dam.
The drawdown lasted two days. Finally, a search team found Jory among the old wharf pilings near Bishop. Paul and Lazeroff were flying over the reservoir at the time, covering the opposite side. Lazeroff made the pilot take them over Lambertâa gift to Paul, who wouldn't have thought to ask, his mind in a bleak, swirling fog. The pilot tilted the helicopter to give him the best possible view as they hovered over a handful of summer cottages built on high ground. Below the high water mark, preserved in a skeletal state and exposed now by the drawdown, lay the crumbled foundations of houses, the traces of concrete walls where the packing sheds had stood, rusted scraps of tin roofing, the black stubs of old fence posts and cut trees. Near the cottages, scattered and abandoned among stands of fir and pine, stood the collapsed remnants of split-rail fencing, overgrown garden plots, and hay sheds, and scattered rows of what were unmistakably fruit trees, ancient and mossy and being swallowed by the natural forest.
Paul, because of the effort being made on his behalf, tried desperately to take in the sight of the drowned village, as if he could grasp all that the remains of Lambert signified in a brief glance. Finally, Lazeroff tapped the pilot on the shoulder and they banked north. A moment later someone radioed to say Jory's body had been recovered. The static in the headphones was badâfor a moment, he thought they'd said “restored.”
There was a multitude of polite requests and suggestions as to where Jory's ashes should be scattered. His parents, both stunned and touched by Shellycoat's apparent affection for their son, acquiesced to the snowboarders, the kayakers, and the co-owners of Jory's shop. His father went to his potter's wheel and kiln, fired a series of small clay urns, and divided the ashes. The managers of the ski hill reserved an urn for a memorial at the lodge, while his friends planned trips to his favourite backcountry runs, the ridges and peaks where he'd gained his small piece of fame. The remaining urns were for Jory's family and Sonya.
Paul and Gina had been taking care of her, as had Jory's parents, bringing food and staying with her in the apartment. She was flying out east to stay with her own parents for a while. The morning before she left, Paul went upstairs and found her sitting on the couch, a map of the Immitoin Valley spread on the coffee table. “When will you be back?” Paul asked.
“A month or so.” She didn't look up from the map, and her dull hair hung in front of her eyes. “I got accepted,” she mumbled. “University of Toronto.”
“Well. Congrats.” He hadn't known she'd applied for university. Had she told Jory?
“But I'll be here for most of the summer,” she added.
“I'm glad.”
She rubbed at her face with her sleeve. “We were going to break up.”
“I know.” A clay urn, he suddenly noticed, was in her lap, and despite all the help friends and family had given her, the apartment was a mess of dirty dishes and towels heaped on counters. “Can I help with anything? Can you make rent?”
She didn't need money, but there was a place she wanted to go in July when she came back. She pointed to the map. You followed the Immitoin way past Basket Creek and the Flumes to where the logging road ended. A trail led to alpine meadows and a series of small lakes. “He took me hiking thereâit was like our first date.” She asked if Paul and Gina would take her there to scatter her portion of the ashes.
She was bent into herself, crying now. He awkwardly stretched his arm over the coffee table and squeezed her shoulder, thinking the right thing would be to go sit next to her, offer comfort, but his memories of the winter held him back. It was strange to think, but he'd needed to need her. Despite it being pointless and disturbing and just plain misguided, desire had been a way of riding out his past until it smoothed into the present. They'd come together, he and Jory and Sonya, at a temporary but necessary place where Paul could live his wrong-headedness for a while and enjoy these unlikely friendships before they drifted apart. In two or three years, he and Sonya would hardly know each other, and that was the way of things.