Read Inspector Green Mysteries 9-Book Bundle Online
Authors: Barbara Fradkin
Sullivan eyed Green warily. “And while you have poor Gibbs running around after old war records, what else do you have up your sleeve?”
Green smiled. “You and I are going to Renfrew.”
“Now? Are you crazy? The Crowns are waiting.”
“After the Crowns. It’s the next logical step in the investigation.”
Sullivan picked up his sandwich wrapper, crunched it into a ball and lobbed it over the desk, hitting the basket dead centre. “Forget it, Mike. I’ve got some statements to review, then I’m going home. Home. Where all good family men should be around supper time.”
“How about tomorrow?”
Sullivan removed his feet from the desk and stood up to leave. “Tomorrow’s Saturday. My day off, remember? A day when all good family men…you know the drill.”
Green followed him out, trying to quell his frustration. Sullivan was right; the meeting with the Crown attorneys would take all afternoon, and it was too late to set up a trip to Renfrew that day anyway. As for tomorrow, Sullivan was also right. Green couldn’t run his life as if he were the only one in it. Walker’s case would still be around Monday.
But Fate would not let the case slip from his mind for that long. No sooner had he returned to his office later that afternoon when his phone buzzed. Mr. Donald Reid was downstairs in the foyer, requesting to see him, the desk sergeant said.
Surprise, surprise.
Green ushered Don Reid into an empty interview room and took out his notebook expectantly. Don had clearly not relaxed one iota since Green’s visit out to the house. He drummed his fingers on his thigh and shifted from one side of his chair to the other as he looked for a place to begin.
“You have some information for me?” Green prompted.
“Yeah. Look, I’m not trying to badmouth Eugene, but if you’re thinking he may have been murdered—well, there’s a lot Ruth will never tell you. She’s so protective, and she can never see the other side of him.”
“What do you mean?”
“Well, he’s a complex guy, and there are things that went on that Ruth didn’t know anything about. I think he could have known people and done things that he kept secret.”
“Like what?” Green demanded, getting tired of the vagueness.
“Like talking with someone in his car the day he died. Ruth thinks he doesn’t know anybody foreign, but the truth is— before they moved to the country, every Saturday he’d go drinking at this bar in Renfrew. He had a whole life there that he never told Ruth about, and he must have met guys there. Twenty years ago, just as an example, he got in a fight. The police were involved. You guys probably have it on your computer, if you want to check.”
Green’s ears perked up, but he kept his expression deadpan. Contrary to common belief, the police didn’t have Joe Public’s every little transgression on their national database, and each jurisdiction guarded its own cases jealously. “Why don’t you tell me about it? Save me the trouble of tracking it down.”
Don waved his hand as if to distance himself. “Eugene beat somebody up. Bar fight. I don’t know that much about it. Eugene never talked about it, and he never said why it happened.”
“Did he get in a lot of bar fights?”
“No, that’s the thing. When he drank he usually got morose and surly. He’d say bitter, vicious things, but I never knew him to use his fists.” Don’s words began to flow faster, as if his pent-up thoughts had just been released. “It was a surprise to me when Ruth called and said he’d been arrested for beating up a man in a bar.”
“So tell me what you did learn.”
“Well, in those days he was a weekend drunk. The hardware store would close at six o’clock on Saturday, and Eugene would head for Paddy’s Bar and Grill on Raglan Street for a couple to unwind. That couple would stretch to seven or eight, and he’d usually roll into the house at two in the morning when the bar closed. He’d spend Sunday nursing a hangover with more booze and Monday sleeping it off.”
“Did he hang out with a particular group at Paddy’s place?”
Don shrugged. “Eugene wasn’t a party animal, but Renfrew’s a small town, and it was probably the same crowd of serious drinkers who closed the place each Saturday. They drank, watched the hockey game, argued about sports.” He made no attempt to keep the contempt out of his voice. “The night of the fight, one of the local farmers brought along his cousin from out of town—Hamilton, I think—who was visiting the family. This cousin and Eugene exchanged words —no one knows what it was about—and suddenly Eugene jumped him. He threw him against the bar and started beating the shit out of him. The others broke it up as fast as they could, but it put the guy in the hospital. Eugene was charged, but I don’t know what happened to the case. He probably got off.” Don shook his head, and his lips curled in a curious sneer.
“You didn’t like your father-in-law, did you?”
Don shifted in his chair edgily. “Does that make me a suspect?”
“No more than anyone else at this point,” Green said amiably.
“Eugene was a cold, self-absorbed bastard. My wife suffered a lot because of him, and I get sick of the whole family making excuses for him.”
“What was he like as a father?”
“Unpredictable. That was the worst of it, really. If he had always acted like a cold, disinterested bastard, his kids might have been able to write him off and get on with their lives. But he’d dole out these tiny morsels of love at unexpected times, and it kept them coming back for more.”
“That’s a classic abuser’s technique. Keep ’em guessing, keep ’em hoping, but afraid. It’s a powerful way to control people.”
Don nodded his head slowly up and down, and his edginess dissipated. “Yeah, that was Eugene. And it left its mark on Margie. She’s so goddamn unsure of herself. The least hint of trouble, she crumbles. I don’t have the patience for all this love and understanding shit, Inspector. I mean—not that I don’t believe in love, but I figure you’ve got to take what life gives you and get on with it. None of this I-can’t-be-a-decent-human-being-because-of-what-I-went-through-in-the-war crap. I mean, if we had that attitude, we’d let all the crooks out on the streets and you’d be out of a job, right?” He grinned, but when Green did not join him, he sat forward as if preparing to leave.
“Did Howard have the same insecurities as his sister?”
Don sat back in the seat again. “Howard was trying to write him off and get on with his life. But Eugene still played him like a trout on the line. Even three hundred kilometres away, the hook is well set. The poor kid is going to kill himself trying to be everything his father was not.”
After Reid left, Green ran Eugene Walker’s name through the police computer, hoping at least to find out the outcome of the assault charge. But as he feared, there was nothing. The Canadian Police Information Centre coughed up no record of the case at all, merely one conviction of impaired driving five years earlier, which had resulted in suspension of his licence. Whatever had transpired between Walker and the visitor from Hamilton, only the Renfrew police files would tell. If they even still existed.
It was Friday night, and November darkness had long since set in. Green locked up and hastened out to begin the homeward trek before he was hopelessly late for Shabbat dinner. The trek to Barrhaven took an incredibly long time, he’d discovered in the two months they’d lived there. He called the suburb the End of the Earth and had only moved there as a concession to Sharon, who wanted clean air, safe streets and a house that wasn’t falling apart. They’d acquired that, plus a fifty-minute commute across the cornfields of the Greenbelt, then along the congested Queensway that traversed the city.
He hated it. Hated sitting in his car crawling from red light to red light. Hated living in a plastic cookie-cutter house on a postage-stamp sized lot with a few twigs for trees and endless acres of baby carriages as far as the eye could see. He was an inner city boy raised in the crumbling brick tenements of Lowertown. The rooftops had been his playground and the narrow alleys perfect for a pick-up game of hockey. Pick-up hockey was against the law on the back crescents of Barrhaven.
His suburban neighbours were all ten years younger than him, fresh-faced high techies or junior company managers with their foot on the bottom rung of the ladder and their eyes on the top. Unlike him, they didn’t have ex-wives and hefty support payments for a teenager who’d been forced into every West Coast therapy her desperate mother could find. All for being the same type of ornery, restless teenager he’d been, Green suspected. No doubt his ex-wife was trying to eradicate even the remotest gene that tied the girl to him.
That night it was brittly cold and the road was a icy sheet as he nudged his car into the traffic jam on the Queensway. Red tail lights danced in the swirls of exhaust that stretched ahead forever. With a sigh he slipped in a Tragically Hip CD and let his mind roam. Usually the Hip put his mind in a mellow, meandering mood. But not tonight. Tonight his mind was like a hound on the scent.
It headed straight back to the case. What had really happened in that bar twenty years earlier? What foreigner had Walker talked to on the afternoon of his death? And were the two events linked? So many questions, and no one interested in the answers but Green.
Saturday was his day off as well as Sullivan’s. Tony’s first birthday was coming up later in the week, and Green had been planning to spend the weekend getting ready for the big celebration, to which Sharon seemed to be inviting half the neighbourhood. The house sported a few pieces of furniture from their old one-bedroom apartment, but it was entirely without decor. Sharon had a long list of chores for him to perform, which included painting and picture hanging to be completed in time for the birthday party. He knew she was right, and he owed her that much, despite his aversion to the Dreaded Vinyl Cube. But given his facility and enthusiasm for household chores, he suspected Tony would be married and moved out before he made it to the bottom of the list.
Given a choice between painting walls or chasing murder, if it were up to Green, there would be no contest. Renfrew beckoned. And the lure of a puzzle waiting to be solved.
Four
February 10th, 1940
In my mind the bayonet pricks me still.
I’ve cleared rubble from the square for three days,
barehanded and hatless in the bloodied snow.
German orders pummelled my ears, their bayonets spurred me on.
As I lie against the soft swell of her belly,
her fingers probe, her tongue clucks.
She will not lose me to German sport, she says.
Already fear and death have taken half of us.
Henryk arrives with bread stolen right off a Nazi truck.
He roams everywhere, hears everything.
As she feeds me, he smiles
And tells of a farm in the rolling hills far from town.
The farmer reads the pain in my eyes, takes my hand gently.
By planting time, he says, you’ll be strong again.
At eight o’clock
Saturday morning, Green and Sullivan were headed west along Highway 17 towards Renfrew. The sun lay pale and cold on the horizon behind them, and the rolling fields and scrub on either side were blanketed with snow.
“I don’t believe I’m doing this,” Sullivan muttered as he accelerated around a slow-moving pick-up. “What the hell am I doing here with you, Green?”
“The valley’s your turf, and I need your experience. You think they’re going to talk to a city boy like me?”
“And what the hell are you doing here? You should be home with your wife and son.”
“I promised Sharon and him this evening and the whole day tomorrow. I even promised to paint the living room.” Green had practically had to sell his soul, but he didn’t admit that to Sullivan. Sullivan loved his home, and to him, fun was a weekend spent finishing the basement or restaining the deck. Fifteen years of listening to Sullivan’s do-it-yourself tales had almost put Green off home ownership for good.
Sullivan turned off the main highway and wove expertly down the narrow country road toward Renfrew. After a few minutes of silence, he shrugged. “Well, she’d better not be holding her breath.”
Green had no time to think up a comeback before they pulled onto the main street crammed with little shops, and he had to turn his attention to finding the OPP station. The Ontario Provincial Police were housed in the Town Hall, a self-consciously impressive brick building set back behind the town’s war memorial. Inside the grand exterior, the reception area of the OPP was little more than a closet. On the other side of a glass window, a huge uniformed officer was wedged into one of the chairs behind a desk, sipping coffee. He glanced through the glass as the two detectives came in, then leaped to his feet, eyes lighting up.
“Jesus, Mary and Joseph! Brian Sullivan!”
“Kennelly!” Sullivan had time to reply before the door flung back, and he was clasped into a thumping embrace. When the two separated, Kennelly looked him up and down. They were the same height, broad shouldered and powerfully built, although Kennelly’s midriff sagged even lower than Sullivan’s. He grinned with delight.
“What’re you doing back here? Thought you hated these parts.”
“Back for my adrenaline fix,” Sullivan laughed. “I’m with Ottawa CID. This is Mike Green.”
Sullivan slipped the introductions by casually, without reference to Green’s rank, which would have torpedoed any chance for collegial solidarity. As Green had hoped, Kennelly engulfed his hand in a friendly iron grip, tossed in a greeting, then swung back to Sullivan with a laugh. “Will you look at you! I couldn’t believe it when I heard you were a cop! I thought you were going off to the big city to make a million.”