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Five

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Thank God it was Tuesday. With a day like the one I had just had, it wasn’t that I was looking forward to three more, only that there were just three days before the weekend. I had a feeling I wasn’t going to get a whole lot of relaxation time.

I couldn’t bring myself to face Carl again that afternoon. As soon as the bell rang at the end of the day, I made my best effort to get out of the school fast. That itself is no small feat. When I was young and in school, when the bell rang at the end of the day, those of us cool enough to have jobs at gas stations or Beaver Lumber could afford our own cars to take us home or to the homes of the many friends that could be acquired through the joy of car ownership. It didn’t matter if the car was a beat up, 1966 Ford Fairlane; wheels were wheels. Those without cars started walking, at least as far as the nearest bus stop.

Not so today. Not even a Chrysler dealership can produce the volume of mini-vans that appear in front of a school in the immediate aftermath of last period dismissal. Oh, sure, there are a few station wagons, SUVs and sedans, and even the occasional compact, but hell hath no highway like the mini-van strewn driveway of the public school at eight thirty a.m. and three p.m., Monday to Friday.

By three forty-five, I was home. There were a few lifestyle changes I was not willing to make with my change of profession. One of those was my home. In my first three years as a lawyer, I had socked away most of my salary and lived comfortably off the avails of my in-laws’ wealth. My ex-wife Sandi and I had a large, comfortable-bordering-on-luxurious condominium apartment in Vancouver’s Kitsilano neighbourhood. Though now divorced and employed in the public service, I couldn’t bring myself to leave the proximity to the beach. Of course, on my income, I’d had to drop from a three bedroom to a small, ‘one plus den,’ but I could see ocean from the living room and could have my foot in the water in less than a block. Also, Starbucks was about eight hundred feet from the lobby.

The rest of my conversation with Tricia Bellamy had left my head swimming. Tricia had detailed for me her relationship with Carl as it had transpired over the past year. Shortly after the start of second semester, according to Trish, she and Carl had begun to spend time together after school when she was experiencing academic difficulty with Biology Eleven’s categorization of basically everything organic into fila, strata and other arcane scientific terms. It was during this time that she alleged a romantic relationship had begun.

The night before a mid-term exam, Tricia and a small group of students had stayed late after school to go over material they knew would cause them difficulty on the exam. As time ticked by in the impromptu tutorials, the number of students decreased gradually until Trish found herself alone with Carl. At his suggestion, they ordered a pizza and continued to discuss the practical portion of the laboratory exam for the next day.

Tricia said she had always thought Carl was attractive; she also felt that Carl had always treated her differently, that he had some special interest in her. When they had finished their pizza and had exhausted every possible area of study for the test, Carl had finally suggested it was time to call it quits. It was after seven. When Trish realized how long they had spent together, and how much of his own time Carl had spent helping her, she says she was overwhelmed by a sense of being really important to Carl.

“We stopped by the door to the lab,” she had told me, “and I turned to say thank you. Just to really say, you know, thank you for taking all of this time to help me. He was so close and so kind, and I had always liked him, and the next thing I knew I was kissing him. It was just that simple and that fast.”

There had been no secret courting, no sending of notes, no surreptitious meetings, no long history of flirting. According to Tricia Bellamy, it just happened. And more importantly, it hadn’t stopped. Both Tricia and Carl had been shocked at first. Neither had been planning or expecting it to happen. But once it had, she said it was like a floodgate of feelings had opened, and it seemed that things had become very intense very quickly.

The relationship hadn’t become sexual right away. That was why Tricia had never felt she was being exploited or that the relationship was in any way wrong. She was seventeen years old and involved in a relationship with a teacher fifteen years her senior, but she also knew that he loved her. In fact, it had been nearly two months before she and Carl had “made love,” as she had put it. They had been together ever since, until last week, when Carl had told Trish he could no longer see her and felt it was best if they kept their distance from one another outside of the classroom.

Of course, none of this jibed with the version of events Carl had given me earlier in the day. In fact, in his story, there were no events to corroborate: Tricia was his student, plain and simple. Her threat to report him to the principal was so far out of left field that Carl was literally in a state of shock. Furthermore, he had convinced me, and I believed him, or at least I had until I had met up with Tricia.

First impressions are often impetuous, but Tricia too had seemed truly genuine, a love-struck girl whose heart had just been broken by what she had thought was a long-term, loving relationship. She admitted she had threatened Carl in anger and that her preference was to continue their relationship. In fact, she was desperately seeking to reconcile with him. I had certainly met my share of sociopathic defendants who could concoct stories with imaginative detail, but it was difficult to believe that this girl could be dreaming up this entire history of her romance with Carl.

Which left me at this point, drinking red wine, staring out my living room window watching the sun disappear before even the five o’clock news could begin, wondering whose story had the most credibility and what the hell I could do about it.

After an hour of thinking and two glasses of wine, I was no closer to determining whose version of events I believed. I was also feeling a bit light-headed; at nearly six feet tall, I may look big, but without food, two glasses of wine most definitely can make me woozy. I decided to clarify my thoughts by heading up to Chianti, my favourite little Italian eatery, a few blocks away on Fourth Avenue.

Another advantage to living in the Kitsilano neighbourhood was its proximity to no small number of great restaurants. Fourth Avenue alone housed Italian, Indian, Vietnamese and Mexican restaurants, along with specialty stores that sold food from small countries I wasn’t sure I had heard of.

If I actually felt like cooking, which I admit was rare, I could also walk easily to Granville Island Public Market, an island oasis of fresh produce, meat, bakeries and coffee. The island is also a cultural mecca in the urban centre of Vancouver, with four live theatres, renowned quaint bookstores, galleries and craft stores, all placed under the steel girders of the Granville Street Bridge.

“Good evening, Professor.” Teri, my favourite server, greeted me as I walked down the sloped entrance to the restaurant. “Will you be joining us this evening, or are you taking our wares home with you?”

“And miss your company?” I replied. “Home equals work. Here equals pasta. Here wins.” Teri led me to a table near the window, which wasn’t my first choice, but considering the lineup that nearly always greets one at this restaurant, I couldn’t complain. “Don’t need the menu,” I told her as I sat down. “I’ll just have the special and a glass of Cab.”

“To go with the...” she sniffed the air around me, “Merlot you downed before arrival? Tsk. Mixing Merlot and Cabernet. Shame.” She walked away to place my order, leaving me wondering how she could always detect even the faintest hint of whatever I’d been eating or drinking throughout the day. While I waited, I planned my strategy for dealing with Carl and Tricia the next morning. A side of me wanted desperately to believe Tricia. As the younger party and, by general definition, the more vulnerable of the two, I felt I had a duty to ensure she was looked after. On the other hand, I had agreed to represent Carl, and I couldn’t in good faith fail to do so. I knew I would have to reveal the details of my conversation with Tricia to him and get his response, which I imagined would be fierce denial.

Within a few minutes, my salad, wine and queen of sarcasm had arrived. “You look deep in thought, Win,” she began. “Tough day saving the minds of our city’s youth?”

“Oh yeah,” I told her.

“What happened? Someone not do their homework, or was it an adolescent crisis like ‘Oh my Gawd, graduation’s only eight months away, and I don’t have a dress yet’?”

“More along the lines of the latter, but on a somewhat grander scale.”

“Yeah?”

“Yeah. Unfortunately, it’s an actual legal matter, so I can’t go into it.”

“You just can’t give up, can you?”

“I know. I kind of just opened my mouth and said ‘yes’ before I realized what was happening.”

She smiled knowingly at me. “Look. Cheer up. You’ve never had a problem doing the right thing before. I can list all kinds of right things you’ve done: defending the defenceless, entering the teaching profession, dumping the Dragon Lady...”

“She dumped me,” I corrected.

“Details. Eat your dinner. Finish your wine. Go for your walk and listen to your heart. You’ll figure out what to do.” Teri walked away to serve the less glum pasta diners.

But she was right. I’d already decided that tomorrow I’d tell Carl I would defend him as best as I could. But if Tricia’s story was true, I wouldn’t try to get him off, only see he received due process.

That much I felt I could offer in clear conscience.

Winston Patrick Mystery 2-Book Bundle

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