The Further Investigations of Joanne Kilbourn (33 page)

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Authors: Gail Bowen

Tags: #Fiction, #General, #Mystery & Detective, #Detective and mystery stories, #Mystery Fiction, #Kilbourn; Joanne (Fictitious Character), #Women detectives, #Women Sleuths

BOOK: The Further Investigations of Joanne Kilbourn
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“I don’t know. I haven’t been to the campus yet, but one of our technicians, Gerry McIntyre, was out there for his morning run, and he saw squad cars over by the Education building. When he went over to ask what was going on, the cops told him the place had been vandalized.”

“Jill, I hate to shoot down a story idea, but a certain amount of vandalism is one of the rites of spring at any university. It’s ugly, but it doesn’t usually amount to much beyond kids getting drunk and deciding to leave their mark on the world. Last year some Engineering students decided they weren’t getting the respect they deserved, so they spray-painted ‘Engineers Rule’ on every blank wall they could find.”

“This wasn’t quite that sophomoric. Gerry says it looks like a hate crime.”

“A hate crime?” I repeated. “Who was the target?”

“Homosexuals,” Jill said. “Apparently, the graffiti the vandals left behind is homophobic, and, Jo, the reason I think this particular vandalism may be worth talking about is that it’s not unique. I’ve been watching the wire services, and gay-bashing seems to be enjoying a certain cross-country vogue again. Anyway, what do you think about the change of topic?

“My stomach is already churning at the thought of the phone-ins.”

“We’ll screen the callers so we know everything about them but their blood type, and I’ll keep my finger on the cutoff button …”

I laughed. “Okay. You’re on.”

“You’re going to have to do some digging. There’ve been several rulings on sexual orientation lately, and you should have that stuff at your fingertips. Are you sure I’m not crowding you?”

“I’m sure. I try to keep up on the major rulings that come out of the Charter, and I have a file folder stuffed with articles on gay and lesbian rights.”

Jill laughed. “Still clipping newspapers. Jo, you’re a dinosaur.”

“Maybe,” I said. “But I like the way newspapers feel in my hands. Anyway, don’t worry about giving me enough lead time. All I’ve got on today is taking Taylor to her class – oh,
and feeding Julie’s fish. She’s going to her sister’s in Port Hope till this blows over.”

“When the going gets tough, the tough get going,” Jill said mildly.

I laughed. “You know Julie. She’s never liked a mess.”

“I guess she’s not alone in that,” Jill said. “See you tonight.”

She sounded more like her usual self than she had in months, and I felt the relief wash over me. “Jill, I’m so glad you called. And Springtime for Homophobes is a great topic.”

“Thanks,” she said, “but actually, it was Tom’s idea.”

After I hung up, I pulled out the telephone book, checked the university’s listings, and dialled the number opposite the office of Physical Plant. I got a recorded message telling me when the regular office hours were and giving me a number to call if I deemed my concerns to be of an emergency nature. They weren’t, but I
was
curious. I looked at my watch. If I hurried, I could drive up to the campus and be back before the demands of Saturday morning made themselves felt.

When I started for the bathroom, I caught a glimpse of myself in the mirror over my dresser and cringed. I’d slept in the clothes I’d greeted Julie in the night before. I was getting worse than Angus. I grabbed clean underwear and a fresh sweatshirt and jeans, then I went into the bathroom and splashed water on my face. As I began brushing my teeth, my mind drifted. The night before I had told Alex that Tom Kelsoe’s new celebrity was only part of the reason for my jealousy. Most of the reason, although I hated to admit it, was Jill.

We had always been close. The day after she graduated from J school, she’d started working for my husband, Ian. He was the youngest attorney general in the history of our province, but he’d been in politics long enough to be both bemused and touched by Jill’s fervent idealism. After he died, Jill kept working for the government, but she said the
spark was gone. She moved to Ottawa, did a graduate degree in journalism, and started working for Nationtv. When she came back to Saskatchewan, one of the first things she did was hire me for the political panel. I’d never thought of doing television, but Jill had faith and patience; she shepherded me through the gaffes and panics of the early days, and it had worked out. Personally and professionally, Jill and I were a nice mix. Her relationship with Tom Kelsoe had changed all that, but as I rinsed my toothbrush I decided that, even if it meant holding my nose and learning to love Tom Kelsoe, I was going to change it back.

“Jo, look. I’ve started the drawings for my mural.”

Taylor was standing in the bathroom door with her sketchpad under her arm.

I put my toothbrush back in the cup. “Okay,” I said, “show me.”

She pushed past me, flipped down the toilet seat and settled herself on top of it. After she had balanced her sketchpad on her knees, she began explaining. “Alex said nobody ever gets close enough to Nanabush to take his picture, but this is how I think he looks.”

As Taylor’s index finger danced across her sketchpad, pointing out details, lingering over problems, I was struck again by the gulf between the little girl perched on the toilet seat, legs dangling, and the gifted artist who had made the pictures of Nanabush on the pages in front of me. At the age of six, Taylor’s talent was already undeniable. It was a question of nature not nurture. Taylor’s mother had been a brilliant artist, and Taylor had inherited the gift.

When we’d looked at the last sketch, Taylor hopped off the toilet. “I’m hungry,” she said.

“I wouldn’t be surprised,” I said. “You’ve already done a lot of work today. Why don’t I get you some juice and cereal.
I have to go up to the university for a few minutes, but as soon as I get home, I’ll make pancakes.”

When I put the dogs on their leashes and led them to the garage, they looked dubious, and when I opened the back gate of the Volvo our aging golden retriever, Rose, sat down defiantly. “Come on, Rosie,” I said. “Get in. We’ll have our run out at the bird sanctuary. The paper says the bluebirds are back. It’ll be an adventure.” She cocked her head and looked at me sceptically. I moved behind her and pushed her until she finally lumbered into the car. Sadie, our collie, who was beautiful but easily led, bounded in after her.

By the time I pulled into the parking space at the university, the dogs had perked up, and they jumped out, eager to follow me, as I headed for the Education building. The red-white-and-blue police cars were still there, as was the vandals’ handiwork. The long glassed-in walkway that linked College West and the Lab building was dripping with all the ugly anti-gay invective the wielder of the spray-paint canister could think of. I was cheered to see that the vandal had crossed out the extra
s
that had initially been in “cock-sucker.” Maybe literacy was on the rise after all.

The dogs and I walked towards the Education building. A young police officer with a blond braid was standing by a squad car making notes.

“What’s up?” I asked.

Her look was noncommittal. “Everything’s under control,” she said coolly. “Why don’t you and your dogs finish your walk?”

“I’m not rubbernecking,” I said. “I teach here.”

“I hope for your sake that your office isn’t in this building.”

“Can I go in?”

“Not with your dogs.”

I walked them back and put them in the car. First seduced and now abandoned, they began to bark, furious at the betrayal.

When I came back, the blond-braided police officer had been replaced by a young constable who looked as if he could bench-press two hundred kilograms without breaking a sweat. I flashed my faculty I
D
at him and said, “I teach here.”

He waved me through. “Go ahead,” he said. His voice was surprisingly high and sweet as a choirboy’s. “Stay away from the areas marked by crime-scene tape, and if an officer asks you to leave, please obey.”

I went into the building, turned left, and walked towards the cafeteria. It looked as it always did after hours: the accordion security gates were pulled across, the tables were wiped clean, and the chairs were stacked in piles against the far wall. Someone had suspended cutouts of Easter rabbits and of chicks in bonnets from the ceiling above the empty food-display cases, and by the cash register there was a sign announcing that Cadbury Easter Creme Eggs were back. Everything seemed reassuringly ordinary, but when I continued along the hall and pushed through the double doors that led to the audio-visual department of the School of Journalism, I stepped into chaos.

I was ankle-deep in paper: computer printouts, dumped files, books with pages torn and spines splayed. The walls around me were spray-painted with the same snappy patter I’d seen on the walkway between College West and the Lab building. It was slow going, but finally I made it past the photography department and turned down the hall that led to the Journalism offices.

As I walked towards Ed Mariani’s office, I was reassured to see that whoever had done the trashing was an equal-opportunity vandal. The offices of straight and gay alike were destroyed. Through open doors, I could see books and
pictures heaped on desks, plants overturned, keyboards ripped from their terminals. On Ed’s door was a sign: “Of all life’s passions, the strongest is the need to edit another’s prose.” Beside it somebody had spray-painted the words “Fairy-Loving-Bum-Fucker.” I closed my eyes, but I could still see the words, and I knew Ed’s sign was right: at that moment, I hungered for a paint canister of my own and a chance to do a little judicious editing.

Sick with disgust, I turned and doubled back towards the front door of the building. I wanted to be outside where my dogs were waiting; the air was sweet and the bluebirds had come home.

When I pulled up in front of our house, Taylor was sitting on the top step of the porch, with Benny on her knee. She was still wearing her nightie, but she’d added her windbreaker and her runners. “Winter’s over,” she said happily.

“It certainly feels like it,” I said. “Now let’s go inside and get something to eat. I’m starving.” I made coffee and pancake batter. Taylor, who had already eaten a bowl of cereal and a banana poured batter in the shape of her initials onto the griddle; when she’d polished off her initials, she made Benny’s initials. I was watching her devour these and waiting for my own pancakes when Alex came.

“I haven’t even had a shower yet,” I groaned.

“You look good to me,” he said. “After yesterday, you deserve to laze around.”

“I wish,” I said. “I feel like I’ve already put in a full day.”

I took the pancakes off the griddle. “Do you want these?”

“You take them, but if there’s plenty …”

I handed him the bowl and the ladle. “Taylor makes hers in the shape of her initials.”

He smiled. “She’s such a weird little kid.” He went over to the griddle and poured. “Okay. Fill me in on your day.”

I watched his face as I told him about the vandalism at the university. He listened, as he always did to whatever the kids and I told him, seriously and without interruption or comment.

“I guess it could have been worse,” I said. “At least whoever did it vented their spleen in words. Nobody was hurt.”

“Sticks and stones may break my bones but names will never hurt me,” he said, and there was an edge of bitterness in his voice that surprised me. “Did Mrs. Gallagher get in touch with you last night?” he asked.

“She made a house call. She brought her keys over because she’s going to her sister’s in Port Hope.”

“She told me she might do that.”

“So she did talk to you.”

“Of course. She’s a good citizen. She wouldn’t leave town without telling us where she’d be. Anyway, I was glad she called. I had some questions; she answered them.”

“What kind of questions.”

“Just tidying-up-loose-ends questions. I wanted her to go over again what she knew about where her husband was in the twenty-four hours before he died. She didn’t have much to add except …”

“Except what?”

“Except I still don’t think she’s told us everything. For one thing, I have a feeling that yesterday wasn’t the first time she’d been in that rooming house on Scarth Street. When I took her there, she started down the hall on the main floor as if she knew where she was going.”

“But Reed’s body wasn’t on the main floor.”

“No. It was upstairs, on the top floor. Actually, we have a witness who thinks he saw Gallagher going up the fire escape at the back at around quarter to nine.”

“I don’t understand how you can let Julie go when you think she might be holding something back.”

“Jo, when someone dies suddenly, everybody who knew them holds things back. There are a hundred reasons why the living don’t choose to disclose everything they know about the dead, but as long as those reasons don’t have a direct bearing on our case, we don’t push it.”

“So Julie doesn’t have to stay in Regina.”

“There’s no legal reason why she should. Her husband’s dead, and human decency might suggest that she hang around till he’s in the ground, but there’s nothing to indicate that Gallagher’s death was anything other than accidental. They’re doing an autopsy this afternoon, but with the hood and the garter belt and all the other paraphernalia, I think we know what they’ll find.”

“Which is?”

“Which is that Reed Gallagher died of a fatal combination of bad judgement and bad luck.”

“It still doesn’t make sense to me.”

“Jo, a lot of sexual practices don’t have much to do with common sense, but that doesn’t mean they don’t happen. Sherman Zimbardo had coffee with a couple of doctors from the E.R. at the General last night; he says some of the stories those women had about what they’ve removed from there would curl your hair.” Alex deftly slid his pancakes onto his plate and smiled at me. “And it’s all in the name of love.”

I passed him the butter. “ ‘ “Thank goodness we’re all different,” said Alice.’ ”

Alex looked quizzical. “Who’s Alice?”

“Someone who stepped through the looking-glass,” I said.

Alex picked up the maple syrup. “I know the feeling,” he said. “Now, what’s on your agenda today?”

“Nothing but good works,” I said. “I’m going to take Taylor to her art class and get ready for tonight’s program. How about you?”

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