Читать книгу Memories are Murder - Lou Allin - Страница 6

ONE

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Over, under, under, under, over.” Miriam MacDonald ran an inquiring finger down a newspaper page.

“Are you doing mental knitting or Sudoku?” asked Belle Palmer, as she entered the office and hung her navy trench coat in the closet after shaking off the moisture. Blessed rain—no need to shovel it.

A frizzy eyebrow rose, matching the Brillo-pad hair on her associate’s greying head. Miriam engaged the wooden foot roller under her desk and gave a satisfied sigh as her baba’s bunion legacy eased. “Remember those stats that called Sudbury the most dangerous place in Canada? How we live three years less than in cities like Vancouver where eighty is the norm? I’m clocking everyone in today’s obits. So far we’re only one down. Old Finns and Italians are tough birds.”

“What was that marketing ploy you emailed the mayor during his last brainstorming drive to attract business? ‘Move to Sudbury and get to heaven faster?’ ” Belle gave a quick genuflect, and they both laughed in the face of death.

As they settled in at their desks, Miriam’s phone rang. She shoved aside a box of Timbits to pick it up, angling it between her ear and shoulder. “Palmer Realty. How may I help you?” A pause. “Yes, this is . . .”

Abruptly she stood, then braced herself against the desk, left hand on her ample chest as her cheeks went bone white. “In the hospital? How badly hurt? Don’t tell me that Jack might . . .” Her rapid breathing punctuated the stuttered sentences.

Belle put down a pile of messages and came to her side. “Jack’s injured? What happened?”

Miriam waved her off and listened, jotting notes on a pad, nodding and shaking her head. At last she hung up, by now only a slight hand tremor revealing her anxiety. Colour returned to her pleasant, round face, but a crease formed on her forehead, joined by another. Belle’s elder by ten years, Miriam was like a no-nonsense sister who reminds you that your boyfriend eats with his mouth open even though he owns a BMW and has shares in Microsoft. “An accident in the shaft. He was pinned by machinery.” Jack was a heavy-equipment operator at Kidd Creek Mines in Timmins, about two hundred kilometres north. The job was lucrative but dangerous. If not for helping to pay for their daughter Rosanne’s teaching degree, he could have taken early retirement.

Belle put her hand to her mouth, had felt her heart dance in arrhythmia. “How serious is it?” Jack was a strong and vital man, nearer her age than Miriam’s, quick with a joke and a bottle but quicker to help a friend. Thoughts of paralysis or brain damage trickled icicles down her spine.

“Just a fractured hip. He got off lucky. But he’ll be out of commission for a few weeks once he leaves the hospital. Tabernac.”

“That’s a relief.” In a nickel-mining community like Sudbury, Ontario, everyone knew someone who had been injured on the job, the fortunate ones with only a truncated thumb or aching back.

Spitting out more Frenglish curses, Miriam considered the inbox on her desk, the growing list of calls. Her small fist clenched in decision. “I have to go and help him, Belle. He doesn’t have anyone else.” As the penetrating grey eyes narrowed, quicksilver glittered in the iris. “He’d better not be collecting girlfriends, or the hospital will be his last home when I finish with him.”

“I’ll bet.” Jack flirted with everything lacking an Adam’s apple but meant no harm—Belle hoped. She still recalled an impulsive kiss aborted by a rifle shot.

Now that the crisis had eased, panic about the realities of Miriam’s absence took over. Summer was nearly underway, the Victoria Day lilacs ushering in the blackflies along with her clients. Palmer Realty specialized in cottage properties, and no one wanted to buy a camp in the winter, which took up half of Northern Ontario’s year. “What about a retirement home, where he can get meals and some attention short of actual nursing? Timmins is practically a ghost town. Health care is keeping the place afloat.” At Miriam’s shocked expression, she threw up her hands in surrender. “Sorry. Bad idea. He’d go bananas.”

Miriam and Jack had been divorced for years but recently had been enjoying a renewed romance heated up by long distance. Nagging in the back of Belle’s mind was the possibility that Miriam might move away to join him, an alarming prospect in a two-person business. Jack’s connections might even land his ex-bookkeeper wife a job at Kidd Creek at top salary, not the “unshelled peanuts” Belle paid.

With the deliberation of a numbers person, Miriam riffled through an address book. Whereas Belle often jumped to hyperactive conclusions, nothing fazed Miriam. Her voice assumed a preternatural calm as the grindings of logic began moving her sharp cerebral cogs. “I wouldn’t leave you stranded. You know that. I have a few people in mind.”

“Jessie’s still in Israel.” Her venerable friend and the retired secretary of Uncle Harold, who had founded the business, spent many months a year teaching on a kibbutz. Figs and dates falling into her mouth, tropical plants and hot, dry sun.

While Miriam ummed and ahhed to herself, Belle concluded with a panicky shudder that running the office on her own was out of the question. An answering machine gave a fly-by-night impression, and she’d have to close when she took listings, held open houses, and did the myriad chores Miriam shuffled with the deftness of a keno dealer. The smallest realty office in a town with an historic boom-and-bust mentality, her business skated on the edge of the edge. A couple of bad months in prime time could ruin her, and the downhill side of her forties was no time to train for a new career. She’d rather wrestle bears than go back to teaching Grade Ten English.

Why was she sitting helplessly, waiting for rescue? Hadn’t Canada’s pioneer author Susanna Moodie advised souls lost in the wilderness to be “up and doing”? Belle grabbed the phone book to search for a temporary help pool. In a minute, she had located three agencies and started pounding numbers. Magna Personnel Resources had a listing no longer in service, Yours Temporarily had been hit with a bout of the flu and three unplanned pregnancies, and Bullworkers provided manual labour but nothing secretarial.

Hands on her hips, Miriam marched over with an annoyed look as Belle shrugged her shoulders. The older woman snapped the Yellow Pages shut. “Stop that. I told you I wouldn’t leave you in the lurch. Those people aren’t trained in real estate. Probably a bunch of yahoos. I’m sure I have just the person. Her number’s busy, usually is, but I’ll call you tonight. I know she’s in town, because I saw her at Value Village last week.”

Belle gave a sigh of relief. Value Village, too. Sounded like a sensible person. The used clothing store was no stranger to this loonie stretcher, who had grabbed a pair of Buffalo jeans for five dollars. Balancing optimism with fears, she nodded and tried to assume a grateful expression. Miriam was under serious pressure, and she deserved empathy and encouragement. In her youth, Belle had prized brilliance above all qualities in a friend, silver-tongued devils who cared nothing for feelings; now kindness was nudging into first place. “Jack will be okay. He’s tough. And I don’t want you taking the bus up Highway 144. Use the company car.” She spread her hand in a magnanimous gesture. Miriam leased a pink Jetta, and with her book-cooking accounting skills, had also wrangled a tricky tax-deduction deal for Belle’s Sienna van, complete with business logo, all-wheel-drive and automatic sliding doors.

Leaving at five, Belle climbed into the van and slid a Statler Brothers CD into the slot. Listening to “The Class of ’57” always made her feel younger. She cast an eye at the mock Victorian home that housed the business on a shady cul-de-sac downtown. Massive cottonwoods were forming fluffy seed pods and mustering their leaves. Starting down the Kingsway, she ran into the only serious traffic in the Nickel Capital. Ninety thousand people lived in the core, though the City of Greater Sudbury served as healthcare and taxation centre, as well as shopping hub for another seventy-five thousand in outlying small towns.

As she took Falconbridge Road north, she passed through Garson, the bedroom community with the nursing home where her father lived. Tuesday, Tuesday, their lunch day, was coming up. She was getting used to his double language and often used it herself, either an ominous or comical sign.

Monitoring the landscape in this seasonal transition period, she blinked at the latest offering. At first a distant mist, the leaves were shy debutantes wearing spring-green dresses on the poplar and birch. The maple and oak foliage would be slower to unfurl but hung on stubbornly into the late fall. Approaching the airport, she gave a bemused glance at the venerable orange steam shovel that marked the entrance to a busy gravel pit. It was set up on crushed white stone and lit up at night like a proud icon of industry.

While operations had closed in Cobalt, Kirkland Lake and other more remote outposts, the gigantic Sudbury deposits, courtesy of a meteor two billion years ago, were revealing deep pockets. The lode of high-grade nickel, gold, silver and platinum ran thirty miles into the earth’s core. The International Nickel Company (INCO) and little brother Falconbridge once had twenty thousand workers. Now the number had fallen below five thousand, but the tons of mined ore rose steadily thanks to modern machinery. Owned by Swiss and Brazilian consortiums, they were a combination powerhouse on the international scene, with the base metal at a twenty-year high.

Belle collected her mail at the kiosk and turned down Edgewater Road, passing Philosopher’s Pond, a kettle lake left by glaciers, then reached the road to the former Blue Lake mine, now Nickel Rim South. Though the mine had closed in the Fifties, scientific advances were permitting deeper excavation. Nearly four hundred million dollars had been spent on the venture, including a massive complex rising from the crumbled foundations of the old site. But industry came with a price. The project was squeezing both people and wildlife. No longer could she ramble its wide, dozed roads to avoid bears and blackflies in the first weeks of summer. A massive parking lot had been backfilled onto a swamp, and above, a gleaming headframe bestrode the hill like a colossus, fed by an army of marching hydro lines.

As she drove along the ten-kilometre road skirting the western edge of Lake Wapiti, the rare conjoining of another meteor crater, she became aware of a shape behind her and tensed as a cheeky horn tooted. When she’d built years ago, only a dozen full-timers lived here. Now they numbered forty-five, buying cottage properties, tearing them down, and constructing monster houses even on toenail properties, windows a stone’s throw from the road. She kept her speed at forty, fast enough for the blind turns and hills. Her rearview mirror framed a red Jeep Liberty. On they drove, the Jeep sniffing Belle’s bumper. Though thoroughly annoyed, she searched her mind for a safe pull-off. Why enrage a neighbourhood jerk?

Time didn’t permit her courtesy. On a wicked stretch over a high culvert with a creek tumbling freshets far below, the Jeep thundered past on the narrow, hard-surfaced road, its gravel and tar crumbling at the edges.

Belle read the license as the Jeep kicked up a load of dust: HOTTIE. Not likely a last name.

Another mile ahead, she saw the Jeep parked in a steep drive. She chuckled to imagine how that incline would strike fear under the demands of ice and snow. The house had changed hands three times in the last decade.

Finally, she pulled into her long driveway, passing her routed sign, “The Parliament of Owls”, displaying the white, beaked Corny and brown, frowning Horny. Slamming the door, she could hear deep-chested barking, the world’s cheapest burglar alarm. Freya, a senior German shepherd, bounded out, ran circles, and left for her ablutions. Ten hours was no problem for her elimination needs; she seemed to sleep the day away in yogic bliss.

Inside the two-and-a-half storey cedar house, Belle shook out chow, plus a spoon of fibre for the dog, refreshed the water bowl, and headed up to the master suite for a bath. Minutes later, towel-drying her short, red hair, now peppered with grey, she put on comfortable yoga pants and a T-shirt. The wood stove was on simmer, but it warmed the house like a bakery.

Dinner was a quick linguine puttanesca with black and green olives, a fresh tomato, and tangy Sicilian olive oil, mounded with grated pecorino. Settled in the TV room in a pasha chair with massive ottoman, Belle tuned her television to her only satellite subscription channel, Turner Classic Movies.

Doris Day and Rock Hudson were starring in Pillow Talk. Remembering his death from HIV/AIDS, she watched the film with an ironic new subtext and an academy-award performance. So many of the screen’s leading men had secret lives. Some, like Charles Laughton, arranged publicity marriages. Raymond Burr made massive donations to children’s charities.

As the film ended, the gibbous moon began its silvery rise across the back of her yard. No word from Miriam. Should she succumb to nerves and call, or trust her cohort?

Half an hour later, she was immersed in the wilderness of Rocky Mountain National Park in Nevada Barr’s Hard Truth. If she were to imagine herself an author, Barr, with her brilliant sense of place, would be her model. Then the phone rang.

“Still up? I knew you’d be fretting. Now you can relax, and I can leave to help Jack. Here’s the answer to our problems.” An old friend of Miriam’s had agreed to sign on for three weeks or longer if necessary.

“And guess what? She’ll do it for two-thirds of my salary. Am I a ruthless negotiator? Must have learned it from the master.” Miriam knew that her boss loved spinning pennies into loonies and toonies like Rumpelstiltskin at his wooden wheel.

Despite the windfall, Belle had sudden reservations. She stubbed out her cigarette in the little catcher’s mitt ashtray that remained from the old cottage. “Why so cheap? Does she know the real estate business?”

Miriam harrumphed in an affronted response. “Of course. A few years ago, she was a secretary at Crown Realty. We took computer courses together at Nickel City College.”

Crown had gone belly up. Easy conclusions as to the woman’s availability. Why wasn’t she still working locally? “What about updating the website? We need to get those new listings fired up.”

Miriam made a scoffing sound with her lips. “No worries. She’s a master at Flash, she assured me.”

Belle let a beat or two pass. “What’s she been doing lately?”

“Just . . . got back in town from living down south in Milton. That’s why she’s happy to come on board. Yoyo has family here and needs breathing space to find a full-time permanent job again.”

Belle finished the last dregs in the scotch glass. “I’m not sure I heard you right. Did you say Yoyo?”

“Short for Yolanda. Yoyo Hourtovenko. You’ll love her. A laugh a minute.”

“Lots of laughs? That hardly sounds like a—”

“Did I mention that she owns a German shepherd?”

Minutes later, turning out the light with a sigh of relief, Belle drifted into a baby-sweet sleep, prepared to adore Yoyo on sight.

Memories are Murder

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