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TWO

McKelvey sparked his first cigarette of the day on the sidewalk in front of his building. A morning of blue skies, a hint in the air of the autumn to come. This city was at its best, he had always believed, in those in-between seasons of spring and fall. The winter was as grey and as dirty as the slush kicked up from buses and cars, and the dead of summer brought with it a muggy, suffocating heat that made the city stink of garbage and the lake. The owner of a flower shop across the street was busy hosing off the sidewalk, and McKelvey wondered briefly if the Dart & Feather pub located next door had anything to do with it. He smiled as he conjured an image of staggering young men sloping sideways down the other side of last call, holding one another for support as that ninth pint of ale began to percolate with the deep-fried fish and chips.

He tugged on the smoke then suddenly held the mustard gas in his lungs as a lithe jogger rolled around the corner, catching him by surprise, a woman dressed in expensive exercise shorts and tank top that left no part of her a mystery. She had a life-affirming spring to her stride that made her golden ponytail bounce. You weren’t allowed to smoke anywhere any more, McKelvey thought, because people believed that by taking a few extra measures they could stretch their life to infinity. What is this prize we seek, he wondered. To outlive all contemporaries, to while away those last long empty days withered in a nursing home with a shawl wrapped around bony shoulders, some jaded and underpaid support worker celebrating like it was your birthday every time you took a shit—‘Good for you, Mister McKelvey, that’s a good boy now!’ When the moment came, that very instant that he was no longer of any use to himself or others, he’d much prefer to cross the yellow warning line and stumble onto the electrified tracks of the subway. There was no question. Find the ice floe and hop on board.

He exhaled the captive smoke once the perky jogger had taken her perfect rear end to the next block. A twinge of guilt reminded him there was a full gym in the basement of his condo, a dark corner he had yet to grace. It was one of the perks of paying exorbitant condo fees. There were stretches of weeks, though, wherein he returned to the regimen of pushups and sit-ups, enjoying the surge of energy and strength that came back to his body like a remembered sense, touch or smell. All in all, and considering the places he’d been and the things he’d twisted and torn in his career as a division street cop, he figured he wasn’t in bad shape. At least not for his age, and that was the slide ruler against which he found himself increasingly judged. Retired, pensioned off, not yet sixty but more salt than pepper in those curls. He was suddenly eligible for a broad new variety of discounts as though he were a member in a secret club—young pimple-faced clerks smacking bubble gum, asking him, ‘You want the seniors’ discount?’ Of course he did.

He had every intention of taking the subway north on the Yonge line, get off at the urban hip crossroads of Eglinton Avenue and Yonge Street, and catch a streetcar or cab the rest of the way east to Fielding’s new place. He missed his little truck, hadn’t felt his freedom restricted in such a manner since he first arrived in the city as a young man with a duffel bag and the forty bucks his father had given him in lieu of advice. In those days he’d hoofed it everywhere he went, and in that way he got to know every side street and corner of the growing metropolis. The geographical knowledge had come in handy once he found himself behind the wheel of a patrol car seeking out the opportunity to make a good collar, to sweep the streets.

Public transit made the most economical and environmental sense, to be sure, but the last time he’d taken the subway, he’d come close to assaulting a teenager. This eyeliner-wearing ignoramus sat there with a pound of steel pierced into his head, listening to headphones that may as well have been loudspeakers, this drone of cyclical drums and repetitive bass lines bleeding out like a screwdriver in your ear. McKelvey gritted his teeth, felt his blood pressure thrum, a spider’s web of heat across the back of his neck that was a sort of advance warning system. But he rode out that wave of electricity, urging his thick knuckles to reach out and provide a lesson in civil decorum.

The so-called “Megacity” was stumbling in its infancy. A little over three years earlier, the provincial government had amalgamated the six municipalities that comprised Metropolitan Toronto—the original city, East York, North York, York, Etobicoke, Scarborough, everything and everybody—into a monolithic City of Toronto. It was a trend that was popping up all over the country, from Halifax to Ottawa, this notion that somehow things would be easier, more efficient, with one level of municipal government. In McKelvey’s mind the whole thing was a big goddamned boondoggle, a colossal waste of taxpayers’ dollars, and rather than more efficient, everything seemed more obscure, doubled and tripled up. People asking if garbage day would stay the same. Would the fees for public swimming increase? And anyway, the people weren’t in favour of it, hadn’t been from the get-go. A municipal referendum found the vast majority of citizens overwhelmingly opposed to the concept of amalgamation, worried their borough would lose its uniqueness, get swallowed up by the Megacity—the precise reason why they lived “here” and not “there”. Which is of course what had happened, near as McKelvey could gather. It didn’t help matters that the Megacity’s first mayor was a clown who sold bargain sofas and washing machines through these horrible television ads in which he gave you the thumbs up and a conspiratorial wink like he was your long-lost buddy from grade school.

Now McKelvey hailed a cab easing its way along Front Street. The driver seemed glad for the fare, yanking his wheel to the curb. He was a young man, perhaps thirty-five, and like the vast majority of cab drivers in this and every other North American city, he was dark-skinned and from some faraway place. He spoke with a thick accent, Middle Eastern. McKelvey was never quite able to read, let alone pronounce the names of the drivers posted on their taxi license in that plastic card tacked to the back seat.

“Please,” the driver said. “Where to?”

“DVP to Eglinton East,” McKelvey said as he slid in the back. There was a lingering scent of alcohol and sweat back there, the residue of late night fares.

Tim Fielding had moved to a building overlooking the Wilmot Creek Park. The young man was on his third residence in the two years McKelvey had known him. These geographical adjustments seemed to cure a man of memory and melancholy, at least for a time. And that was worth something. McKelvey saw no shame in a man taking comfort where comfort could be found; he was in no position to judge. He had himself had contemplated many times making an exit from this city with its memories of his wife and son, of the bad ending for all of them. It was a thought, at least for him, that had never moved beyond conception. He loved and hated this place, worshipped and despised it. It was what it was; it was his city.

“Just starting or have you been on all night?” McKelvey said to pass the time.

“Since midnight,” the driver said. He eyed McKelvey in the back, and McKelvey thought of those towers coming down like soft ash to the ground, how it had changed everything, and what it must have meant for a man with dark skin and a name like— he squinted at the taxi license photo folded over the back seat—a name like Hassan. McKelvey wasn’t naturally sympathetic to the plight of immigrants, for he believed every man had to make his own way, but this new world had opened his eyes to the obstacles faced by a very specific group. The media called it “racial profiling”, but the police, well, they just called it the law of averages.

“How’s business?” McKelvey said.

The driver looked in the mirror. His eyes were bloodshot, weary. “Bad, very bad. Airport travel is down forty per cent. Tourists are not coming, you see. Affects us very bad. This is my cousin’s car. I rent from him. I pay the gas and his fee and have barely enough left to pay for my apartment. In my country I am an engineer, but not here. Here I drive a taxi, deliver pizzas.”

McKelvey shook his head and looked out the window. He let the conversation die. There was nothing he could do to change anything. Things were what they were. Traffic was lighter than usual on the Friday morning of the long weekend. People calling in sick or booking an extra day of vacation to stretch that last bit of summer. McKelvey knew the highways would build through the afternoon as families scattered northward up the 400 to cottage country, west on the Queen Elizabeth Way to Niagara Falls, or east on the 401 to places like Ottawa and Montreal. You wouldn’t want to be on the Gardiner Expressway or the Don Valley Parkway at four o’clock this afternoon. The sign said the Greater Toronto Area was home to five million souls, but it felt like double that when the commuters flowed into the downtown each weekday morning from the sprawling suburbs.

As the cab passed beneath the Bloor Street Viaduct, McKelvey was reminded of the great leaps taken from that high arch. Over the years, this connecting span had served as the exit point for many an overwhelmed soul. He had responded to a jumper call there in his patrol days, this thirty-year-old salesman who had argued with his unfaithful girlfriend and decided to teach her a lesson by taking a nosedive from the rail. McKelvey saw in his mind’s eye the man’s limbs twisted at awkward angles, the internal structure completely re-organized, dark blood sprayed like graffiti across the rocks onto which he had landed. You noticed the smallest details, and they got burned into your memory. How the man’s blue necktie was folded back across his shoulder, eyes grey and dead and milky, flies already buzzing at the nostrils. McKelvey wondered now how this had affected the unfaithful girlfriend, what sort of weight she had carried through the days of her life, where she was now, and what she was doing—and how often she stopped to think of that day the way McKelvey did.

The deep and rugged ravine of the Don River had until 1919 served as a natural obstacle to movement and growth. Construction of the Prince Edward Viaduct—or the Bloor Street Viaduct as it came to be known—linked two major thoroughfares: Bloor Street on the west side of the ravine, Danforth Avenue on the east. The span had played a crucial role in Toronto’s history as a young city in terms of bringing together boroughs previously divided. McKelvey wondered now if the designer, Edmund Burke, would accept as part of that progress the fact his viaduct had eventually become North America’s second most-used suicide bridge after the Golden Gate in San Francisco. It was, McKelvey figured, the give and take of modern life.

The driver exited the DVP onto Eglinton Avenue East and slowed as he searched for the address McKelvey had provided.

“Right up there,” McKelvey said, and the cab pulled up to the front of a fourteen-storey building. The fare was twenty three dollars and change. McKelvey gave the driver a twenty and a ten and told him to keep the change.

“Thank you sir,” the driver said. Then, as McKelvey walked toward the entranceway, he called out. “Please, if you need a driver, sir, give me a call. I give you my card…”

The man had scrawled his name and cellphone number across a taxi receipt in the shape of a business card. The entrepreneurial spirit impressed McKelvey, and he stuck the card in his shirt pocket, giving the top of the car a tap before he walked away.

The elevator in Fielding’s building was mirrored floor to ceiling. If the designer had been after some element of class or chic, he’d missed the mark. The effect was disorienting, slightly creepy. The glass was smudged with hand prints and the smeared smacked lips of toddlers. McKelvey punched the button for the ninth floor then stood back and checked his reflection in the yellowish light. He was dressed in jeans with a white dress shirt and navy sports jacket, still unable to leave the house without looking something like a plainclothes cop. Which is what he was, in his heart of hearts, and what he always would be. It was his skin, it was his DNA—the Alpha and the Omega of Charlie McKelvey. Which was somewhat ironic, considering he had stumbled by chance into the job as a fresh-faced kid off the bus from the cloistered northern mining town of Ste. Bernadette. It was a steady paycheck at first, and he’d never expected it to become a lifetime, to define everything about who he was and what he believed. One day you simply wake up and The Police is your marrow.

He buttoned and unbuttoned the jacket, turned to the side, sucked in his modest paunch. Those draft beers at Garrity’s, the always-at-hand bar peanuts. He thought he didn’t look as bad as he felt. He was holding his weight steady at one ninety, better than the two fifteen he’d carried around his last few years on the Hold-up Squad, eating fast food and guzzling too much coffee. The soft lighting in the elevator was flattering too, and his curly hair seemed to have more pepper than salt. But as the floor chimed and the doors whooshed open, he saw that it was all an illusion: every mile was etched there, and he had been both city and highway driven.


Tim Fielding was the sort of man who could not easily conceal the internal workings of his life, something McKelvey had learned from their time together in the men’s grief group up at St. Michael’s Hospital. The young widower wore his guts on his sleeve, the type of man who would never hold up under police questioning. That morning, when he opened the door, McKelvey thought Fielding looked as though he hadn’t slept in a week. His usually clear eyes were red and glassy, and his face had taken on a new paunchiness.

“Thanks for coming, Charlie,” he said. “You must think I’m crazy.”

“To be honest,” McKelvey said, “you’re the most rational person I know.”

Fielding went to the kitchen and poured two coffees from a drip machine. He handed a mug to McKelvey, and McKelvey read the swirling blue letters that proclaimed “World’s Best Teacher’.”

“You take sugar and cream, right?” the younger man said.

“Just cream,” McKelvey said. “I’m supposed to go for skim, but what the hell. It’s a holiday almost.”

Fielding stood with the fridge door open, staring. After a moment he turned and held his palm up.

“Sorry,” he said. “No cream. And the milk’s expired.”

McKelvey nodded, accustomed to his own lack of fresh groceries. He sat in the living room on the sofa and set his coffee on the table. It was one thing for his own fridge to carry little more than a block of crunchy orange cheese, but Fielding was better organized and took better care of himself than that. These were the variety of observations that allowed a cop to form his appraisal of a situation. Everything meant something. It was the part of his job had that always driven his wife crazy. On the way home from a house party, Caroline might say, “Charlie, for god’s sake, those are our friends. Do you always have to watch people like that, like you’re on duty?” And for the most part he was unaware he was even doing it. The insinuation seemed to be that he wanted to find the dark spot in every soul.

“Donia,” Fielding said, coming around the kitchen island to join McKelvey, “she’s a student in my night school course I was telling you about. She’s Bosnian, a survivor from the war. Her family was destroyed. She came over less than a year ago to work in a factory as a seamstress, working these industrial sewing machines. She wanted to get ahead, but her English isn’t strong enough. She’s from a small village. Her people were simple people, farmers and tradesmen. She always said that: simple people, but good.”

McKelvey took another mouthful of the black coffee. It was caustic, like Liquid-Plumr running down the back of his throat. His doctor had warned against this sort of carelessness, for the peptic ulcer which had hemorrhaged and escalated his retirement meant a lifetime of vigilance against those four horsemen of the apocalypse: booze, cigarettes, stress and coffee. He had grown sick of the bitter and bland low-fat yogurt, of a life lived on the narrow margin of the health food aisle. A man could only eat so much plain rice and couscous before he snapped, walked into a steakhouse off the street and bought a twenty-two ounce prime rib with all the trimmings.

“You met her through the night school,” he said, getting his facts down.

“I just…we hit it off. It sounds stupid, Charlie, I know. She’s a beautiful woman, and there was something there. She’s wounded, I suppose, and I’m obviously not a poster boy for the well-adjusted. We just seemed to fit.” Fielding threaded the fingers of his hands as he might do in demonstrating a point to his students. “We went for coffee and then it was lunch and then it was dinner. And then, you know…”

“You slept with her,” McKelvey said. Going easy here, for if he had been making inquiries on the job, he would have used guttural language in an attempt to draw some emotion, indignation— yeah, that’s what you did with her, isn’t it, you dirty dog?

Fielding nodded and said, “I hope you know me well enough to know there was nothing untoward about the situation.”

Untoward, McKelvey thought. Was that a fancier way of describing the act of a teacher putting his prick in one of his students?

McKelvey said, “Go on.”

“We’re adults here, Charlie,” Fielding continued. “She’s not one of my Grade Six students with braces and a training bra.”

McKelvey pushed the mug away a little so he wouldn’t keep reaching for it out of habit. He regarded his friend, saw the truth written across the man’s face, and in fact had never suspected otherwise. Tim Fielding was one of those people walking the streets, bless his heart, who happened to lack the gene necessary for telling bold-faced lies.

McKelvey said, “So what happened?”

“She stopped answering her phone two days ago. She missed class on Wednesday night, and she hasn’t missed a class in six weeks. Something’s not right, Charlie. I’m no cop, but it just doesn’t feel right.”

“You have a key to her place.”

“No, but she has a key to mine. We didn’t spend the night together more than a few times, but when we did, she always stayed over here. She said her place was too small.”

“Where does she live?”

“She was in a unit off Blevins Place in Regent Park when she first came over last year. She said she had heard enough gunfire during the war, so she found a little apartment she could afford at Roncesvalles and Dundas, near the tracks over there.”

Fielding gave the address, and McKelvey pictured its approximate location. On the edge or even within the boundary of the so-called “Little Poland” neighbourhood. But first she had lived in Regent Park, having come to this country to escape war and instead having found the darkest the city could offer in terms of social housing gangs, handguns going off like firecrackers in Regent Park, pop, pop, pop—where the tough boys of 51 Division did all they could to prevent young black men from killing other young black men while witnesses stood by with their mouths sewn shut for fear of reprisal.

“Have you been to her place?” McKelvey said. “I mean her new place?”

“Just inside the lobby. I picked her up one time, about two weeks ago.”

McKelvey nodded, already working through the language he would use to somehow tune his friend into the workings of the big bad world out there without destroying this new ray of light that had entered his life. As far as he knew, Fielding had been on something like four dates since his wife’s death at the hands of a repeat drunk driver more than four years ago. The wrong woman, or the right woman, would see him as an easy mark.

“So she’s gone for a few days,” McKelvey said. “Maybe she’s visiting a friend, a relative. You’ve been seeing each other what?”

Fielding shrugged and said, “Four weeks, I guess.”

“A month. Jesus, Tim. Maybe she’s screwed off for a few days and doesn’t feel like she owes you an explanation. Has that entered your mind?”

Fielding removed his glasses and rubbed his eyes with the pads of his palms. He put the glasses back on. He sat back, exhaled a long sigh. “Something’s not right, Charlie. I know it in my gut. It’s not like her to just take off without a word. I mean, she missed a mid-term on Wednesday night. She could fail the course, and she’s put a lot into it. She’s trying to make a better life for herself. But there’s been something there that I could never quite put my finger on. Like she was waiting for something to happen.”

McKelvey saw that his soft approach had missed the mark. “How well do you really know this woman, Tim? That’s all I’m saying. We can be friends with people or work with someone for fifteen, twenty years, then one day they do something that seems completely out of character. But is it really out of character? Or are we just shocked because we thought we knew every aspect, every angle to that person?”

Fielding sat there looking into his coffee and didn’t say anything.

“She could be in a hotel room in Montreal right now with her husband,” McKelvey said, and stopped his foul imagination from going further. “Or maybe she’s with her other boyfriend playing the slots down in Vegas for a long weekend getaway. Or anything else you can think of. You said yourself that you never stayed over at her place.”

“She’s not married, and she doesn’t have another boyfriend. I believe that much about her. Her husband was executed by rogue Serbs in the war. Listen, I know you’re cynical, I know you think like a cop. That’s why I called you, Charlie, because I’m not stupid enough to assume I can place a missing person’s report on a thirty-two-year-old woman I met four weeks ago. They’ll laugh in my face. I thought if I told you about us, about her just disappearing, you of all people would believe me.”

McKelvey sat there and ran his hand across his face, the extra day of stubble coming in rough as iron shavings. The things a man would do, would say, while in the throes of love or lust never ceased to amaze him. It was in this regard that all men were indeed created equally—pauper or prince, it hardly mattered: we all fall the same. He remembered this particular collar from his first year on the Hold-up Squad. Guy’s married and has four kids, starts screwing around with a girl at the office. The girl has expensive tastes, she likes the thrill of opening gifts, that ooh-aah moment. She wants to eat out at all the hot places, dance at all the cool clubs. The guy’s kids need braces and hockey equipment. His credit card gets maxed, he takes out too many loans that he can’t pay. When McKelvey finally had the poor bastard sitting there in the corner of the interview room—showing him a black and white single frame printout from the security video capturing him standing in front of the bank teller—McKelvey asked him what could possibly make a guy with no criminal record walk into a bank with a pellet gun on a Tuesday afternoon in May. The guy got this look on his face—a mixture of sadness and stoicism—and he said, “I had no choice, man. I couldn’t afford to keep her, and I couldn’t stand to lose her. Either way I was screwed. You know what I mean?”

Now McKelvey exhaled a long breath across the room, across the morning that had begun with such promise. The end of summer, the beginning of autumn. He had some grocery shopping to do before the girls came to visit him on Saturday. He had a good coffee to buy and get into his system—something that wouldn’t act as an instant laxative—and later still he had a stool at Garrity’s on which to sit and circle classified ads for used vehicles he would not purchase. Ragged and ridiculous, perhaps, but he had a life to live. But yes, at the end of it all there was no denying that he did in fact have the time to go through some motions here, to give Tim Fielding a sense that at least something was being done.

“Listen,” McKelvey said, “I don’t know what you’re expecting from me. I’ll go on over there and check out her place. Maybe ask a few of her neighbours or the super, or something like that. That’s all I can do here, Tim. I’m not on the job any more. I’m not a private detective.”

“I’d appreciate it,” Fielding said, relief written on his face.

“If and when it comes to that, I can put you in touch with someone on the force who won’t laugh in your face,” McKelvey said, getting up and moving for the door. “But that’s about all I can do here.”

“I’ll get my keys,” Tim said.

McKelvey got to the door then turned. He said, “Thing is, I should head over there myself, take a look around. I think it’s better that way.”

Fielding stopped and took it in. He nodded as though he understood this was a requirement of police business, how things worked. McKelvey didn’t want to explain the fact that Fielding would be the first obvious suspect if anything untoward had happened to the woman, god forbid. Begin at the nucleus, work your way out. McKelvey saw the school teacher leaving his fingerprints all over the apartment…

“I can at least give you a lift over there.”

McKelvey smiled, pulling the card from his shirt pocket. “I’ve got a driver.”

He used Fielding’s cordless phone to call Hassan. He asked the driver to meet him in front of the building. Then, against his better judgment, he shook his friend’s hand and promised to report back within the hour. In the elevator he shook his head at himself, at this whole thing, and dug his fingers into his pants pocket, where he found a half tab of the painkillers—he had broken a few of them in half, and he carried them around from time to time like loose change. In case the pain got too bad, or whatever. Maybe it was boredom, or maybe it was simply because they were there, and he could. Too much to think about, and anyway, he didn’t need to make any justifications here. He was far beyond the days of reporting to any sort of supervisor, real or imagined. He pressed the button for the ground floor, snapped his head back and swallowed the tab dry.

Slow Recoil

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