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The Ojibwas called it Crust-on-the-Snow Moon, the full moon of the coldest month in a climate which suffered no fools. Technology had tried to even the odds, but people in Northern Ontario knew the illusory line between safety and danger. Snug behind triple-glazed windows, Belle Palmer scanned the lake to watch the bloodless sky ghost surrender to the sun. At -28° Celsius, this February morning was dead quiet. No loons ululating, no rain pelting from the eaves, no crickets chirping on the hearth or anywhere else.

The harsh growl of a snow machine near the deck caught her in a customary T-shirt, spoiled by the woodstove which warmed the house like a bakery. She yanked on sweat pants, opened the door, and was shoved aside as her German shepherd charged at a tall figure in a snowmobile suit. Then the man removed his helmet and the dog, transformed from attack to welcome mode, waggled up for a pet. “Hey, Freya, didn’t you recognize me?” he asked.

“Jim Burian, you cowboy,” said Belle. “Only the young and strong and crazy would be out in this. I haven’t seen you since Thanksgiving dinner at your mom’s.”

“I guessed that you were up. The smoke looked like a fresh morning fire. Shouldn’t have gone out at this temperature, but I counted on stopping here on the way to the lodge.” He cocked a thumb at a boy throwing snowballs for Freya in the driveway. “The kid’s turning blue, too, though he won’t admit it.” He dropped his heavy boots at the door and called, “Come in here, Ted, before your nose falls off.”

“Coffee’s on. And I’ve got cocoa, too.” Though Belle disliked unannounced visitors, Jim she could talk with eight days out of seven. Ethical, hard-working, completely without pretensions, the Burians were golden currency in the region. Years ago she had discovered his family’s lodge at Mamaguchi Lake with its friendly charm. He’d been having trouble with grade ten English when they first met, so with her literature background she’d tutored him as a favour; then they had become good friends. Twenty-three now, having spent a few years as a Katimivik volunteer in the Hudson Bay area, he was a crack wilderness instructor who paddled the local canoe routes like the familiar streets of a neighbourhood. His course at Shield University was demanding most of his time, so they hadn’t talked much since the summer.

“Jeez, what a sauna! Strip tease,” he said, peeling off the suit, two sweaters and a pair of wool pants, leaving him in the same outfit as Belle, her mirror image, give or take twenty years. His face, chafed by the cold, had filled out from a gangly adolescence and recalled a young Tony Perkins. He brushed a hand through his thick, curly brown hair and got comfortable on the sofa. Just one flaw marred his even features, the traces of a harelip operation, camouflaged by sprouts of a new mustache. At age three he had been sent to Toronto for reconstructive surgery, and a more recent operation had repaired facial nerve damage. His crooked smile didn’t match his innocent presentation.

Ted, a younger version of Jim, happily retreated with Belle to her computer room, carrying a plate with toast and peanut butter, a mug of cocoa and a hint book to the game “Grim Fandango”. When she returned, Jim was sipping his coffee with obvious relief and rubbing his stockinged feet back to life. “Selling any properties lately? Or is the market quiet?” he asked.

Belle pursed her lips in mock despair. “With Madame Quebec’s constant threat to leave the marriage bed, nervous interest rates and depressed nickel prices, not much is moving.” The International Nickel Company, aka Mother Inco, had been until recently the town’s major employer.

As Jim leafed through Canadian Geographic, jade-green eyes reflecting the sun pouring in through the walls of six-foot windows, Belle engineered a giant omelet filled with chopped artichoke hearts and mozzarella. With a quiver of guilt and some minor salivation, she ripped open a package of hollandaise sauce mix. “Been saving this for someone special. You’re not a high-cholesterol time bomb yet, are you, laddie?” He shook his head. “Good, because after this concoction, your arteries will need an ice auger!”

Minutes later, they forked into the fluffy pillows of egg, oozing with mellow cheese and golden sauce, exchanging appreciative smiles instead of words. Finally, Jim slowed up enough to mention that his family had opened the lodge only a few weeks ago. “Too cold in January to bother. Seven weeks of -35° each night and -25° by day. This winter no one’s going to get his money’s worth from that megabuck snowmobile trail pass. Why don’t you come on up and see us?”

“I’d like to check out your new hunt camp, too, just value my toes and fingers too much. Where is the place?”

“About ten miles north of our lodge, Larder Lake area.” He rummaged through his suit and unfolded a topographic map. “Right here. Has a great stream, even runs all winter so I don’t have to melt the snow. I’ve been recording virgin pines in the area, hoping to get evidence to prevent that new park from being built.”

“Yes, I was sick to hear about such a stupid proposal. Tell me what you learned. Put me on the inside track.”

He gave her an unusually dark and serious look which surprised her. “It’s an ecological disaster in the making. You know that country, Belle. Those dirt roads the tourists will use cross some pretty sensitive areas. It’s on the edge of the only big tree country within fifty miles. We’re having a rally at Shield, March 15. I hope you can come.”

“I’ll spread the word to my neighbours. None of us wants any more activity on Lake Wapiti. We like living twenty miles from the nearest convenience store. It concentrates the mind.” Belle spooned up the last drop of hollandaise. “Well, on to happier topics. How’s Melanie?” She wiggled her finger under her nose. “And very fetching, by the way, but is it Gable or Hitler?”

A blush crossed his face as he gave a cover-up cough and shifted his feet. “Couldn’t be better. Melanie’s in the nursing program, so we see each other for lunch or coffee. Study at night together, too. I took her on some of the old canoe routes in the early fall. Remember the Elk Lake loop?”

“When it rained for five straight days, and I nearly got hypothermia? I’ll say. We should have stayed in camp, except that we were tired of salty rice and noodle dinners and the same Agatha Christie novel. I’d read a page, rip it off, and toss it in the fire to lighten my load,” she said, laughing.

Jim pushed back his empty plate, wiped clean with toast. “Boy, can she carry a pack! Forty pounds is no problem.” He rotated his coffee cup in reflection. “Taught that city girl everything she knows about the woods. Call me Caliban, the monster of the forest. ‘I’ll show thee the best springs; I’ll pluck thee berries; I’ll fish for thee and get thee wood enough.’ ”

Belle realized how much Jim had matured in the last few years. His parents had confided that as a boy he had been so insecure, especially with strangers, that he had refused to meet anyone’s gaze. “I see you remember the Shakespeare we read for your grade twelve finals. I thought that you hated it.”

He nodded at the reference.

“Besides,” she went on, “Caliban was my favourite. He had substance, and he smelled out hypocrisy. Miranda was so boring with all that ‘Brave new world’ stuff.” The back of her hand swept over her forehead in a stage gesture.

Jim’s smile widened as the sun brightened the room. “I’m happy with Melanie. We’re so easy together, so easy that it’s a miracle.”

Belle knew him well enough not to pry further about his plans; he guarded his privacy like a Cayman Islands bank account number.

He downed the last gulp of coffee. “Got to go now, but how about a tour? I haven’t seen your house since it was framed.”

“The computer room,” she said, leading him down the hall, following the salsa beat as Manny Calavera, travel agent for the dead, voyaged to the Underworld to save his client. Needing no help, Ted was operating the controls like a pro, flipping through Manny’s inventory, manipulating his scythe.

“If you’re short on ideas for my Christmas present,” Ted said to his brother, “this would be great.”

Belle cleared her throat. “I, uh, got the system more for the information connections. Our business webpage, too. I belong to several forums, tropical fish, mystery, classic films. But don’t ask about alt.sex. It might as well be old.sox at my age.”

“I’d kill for an Internet account at school. Our research facilities are pretty feeble,” Jim replied.

Belle escorted him to the TV room where she trained her Chaparral system on Ted Turner’s sanity-saving TNT classic film network. “How long have you had your satellite dish?” he asked. “It’s quite the piece of art on the dock.”

“Ha! Art would be cheaper. The cement base was poured in September, but I finally saved enough this month to add the electronics. Too bad aerial reception is so poor out here. Cable’s a century away. Maybe man wasn’t meant to live in the boonies.”

On a sturdy stand by the window, her fish family splashed in their fifty-gallon aquarium, bumping the glass in hungry frustration. She turned off the pump, sprinkled on some dried shrimp and dropped in a few food tablets. “It’s always Tanganyika or the Amazon rainforest for these lucky brats,” Belle said. Mac, the African knifefish, paraded his spots, eight on one side and thirteen on the other. Li’l Pleco, the plecostemus, leisurely rolled onto his back to suck food from the surface like a boat turned turtle, confident that a stray pellet would drift into his sucker maw in payment for rasping the algae from the tank. In contrast, Hannibal the needlefish lurked at the top in imaginary weeds. Prisoner of his genes, he ate only live prey and had been spoiled by the summer’s excellent minnows, now reduced to an occasional goldfish. “He was a #2 pencil, now he’s a pregnant Orson Welles,” Belle said.

After the tour, Jim reassembled his clothes with a sigh. “Hate to go back into that cold, but I think I’m stoked enough to ward off frostbite for the half hour to the lodge. Thanks for the meal. Drop by if you can. I’ll be out at the hunt camp during break week to work on my paper.” He started to fasten his helmet, then paused. “Say, I wanted to ask. Have you seen any small planes around the lake, seen lights in the night?”

Belle cocked her head, trying to recall. “Maybe once. I thought it was a fluke because I know they’re not allowed to land after dark without instrumentation. What’s up?”

“Nothing good.” He rubbed Freya’s ears, and the dog gave an imitation of a purr. “I spend a lot of time in the bush, especially at odd hours coming back from the hunt camp. I’ve heard small prop jobs at night and seen signs of ski landings on Obabika, Stillwell, places no one should be.”

“See any people?”

“Are you kidding? They’re in and out in minutes. And why go there anyway? Those lakes are way off the main trails, too shallow for fish. It’s a transfer, Belle, and I’m talking about drugs. What else?”

She nodded. “Used to be that was just an American problem. Then a big city problem. Everything’s twenty years late up here. We’ve been lucky.”

Jim’s hands trembled as he pulled on his mitts, and his voice grew cold. “They’re going after kids now. Ted’s in grade nine, for God’s sake, and several of his classmates have used that junk. If anyone ever tried to turn him on, I’d take care of them.” He punched his fist into his leather gauntlet. “I love that little guy.”

Ted had to be pulled from his game, but he thanked Belle before he left, which earned him an approving wink from his big brother.

As the machine faded into the distance, Belle found herself worrying about this new side of Jim, a personal rage against drugs. If she read him correctly, serious anger was not an emotion he’d had to deal with much in the past. Well, he was a grown man now, not a high school student. Shrugging off her concern, she beamed into the weather channel. It always cheered her to see that compared to the Arctic, her world was relatively tropical. It was -45° in Rankin Inlet up in Hudson Bay, -40° in Resolute, and a whopping -48° in Iglulik. For a sweet minute she felt toasty . . . until she noticed a monster blizzard sweeping down from Superior. Another day of grace before the plowing would resume.

The phone rang, and a grizzly voice asked, “How about a run to Mamaguchi Sunday? It’s me, Rocket Man.” Her neighbour, Ed DesRosiers, had just sold his plumbing business and retired. She envied Ed his racy new Phazer snowmobile with its killer headlamp housing sitting up like a beacon. It was as unlikely a machine for a fat old coot with a dickey hip as it was for a sort-of-middle-aged woman hourly expecting arthritis.

“Why not? There’s a storm on the way, but it should clear by then.”

“Come out to the ice hut around ten. Only ling biting, but it helps to pass the time. Hélène’s going to early-bird bingo, but she’s making a batch of tourtières.

Belle’s neighbours were few, especially after the cottages closed up for the winter. Those hardy souls who wintered over were well-bonded, tolerating each other’s idiosyncrasies in exchange for the loan of a handy tool, an egg or cup of milk, some gas, a newspaper or videotape, and most importantly, a watchful eye for strangers. In this primitive cooperative, one person was good with electricity, another with pumps, another with snow machines; one had a plow, one had a backhoe and one handed around fresh vegetables or fish.

Hanging up, she heard a deep rumble from the main road, probably the wood she had ordered. Usually ten or twelve cords handled the vicious winters, but the record cold had melted her pile to a few odd ends of junk cedar harvested from her acre lot, stuff that went up like cotton and lasted about as long. Several calls had finally located a supply of “dry” maple. Green wood, seasoned less than eight to nine months, gave no heat and was difficult to light. Of course, she had propane back-up, but she wasn’t about to shell out five hundred dollars a month to Cambrian Fuels if she could avoid it.

Down the driveway, scraped to satin by Ed and his plow, bumped an ancient dump truck. A young lad, cigarette in mouth, jumped out before he realized that Freya was slavering after him. He leaped for the cab. “Whoa! Call your dog, lady.” Belle reserved this ploy for new tradesmen. Ninety pounds of hairy muscle rampaging like a rabid wolf discouraged unwelcome callers. Ever the tease, Freya could be depended upon to veer off at the last minute, but the uninitiated rarely stood still long enough to discover this for themselves.

“Sorry. I’ll get her.” She led the barking dog inside, tapping her gently on the head and scolding her for effect.

A tutored glance showed that the wood was seasoned maple, a good sixteen inches, not short-cut like the townies with pretty stoves wanted. “Over here, please.” Belle pointed at a cleared space near some pallets. “Watch the telephone and hydro lines.” When the pneumatic lift pumped up, the driver opened the tailgate, the wood crashed down and the door clanged shut.

The boy walked over, presenting a paper. “Five cords of dry maple. Sixty a cord comes to three hundred and tax of forty-five.”

Belle caught his eye and arched her brow. “Cash?” Two-thirds of Canadians admitted to avoiding the onerous provincial and federal sales taxes. The underground economy was alive and well even if the primary one was still ailing.

“Sure. Three hundred even,” he said without flinching and accepted the three crisp brown bills she withdrew from her parka. He surveyed the mammoth deck to the endless lake beyond. “What a great spot. Wish I could live here. Do a bit of fishing.” He paused and seemed to be counting the windows. “Big family?”

Belle was ready. “Oh, several of us. And a hungry dog,” she added. Taking the hint, he inhaled a last meditative drag, and soon the guttural chug of the motor faded into the distance. Isolated places were free Wal-Marts for thieves. It helped to have a vehicle visible at all times, even a junker, so she let Ed leave his plow truck by the propane tank to free up his small parking area.

Later that evening, just before she packed Spenser away (poor man was on a heavy case in tropical San Diego; did people get paid for working there?), Belle thought she heard a plane. She stepped out onto the mini-deck off her second floor master suite and tried to home in on the sound. The temperature was back to -30°, and the trees were snapping like rifle shots. Though the moon illuminated the white surfaces and the house lights radiated across the lower deck, a steady snow was beginning to obscure visibility. She turned her head slowly, shutting her eyes to concentrate. Too low and too noisy for a regular airport flight. It came closer, so much so that she ducked involuntarily. A small cream Cessna ski-plane landed and taxied to her dock, where the dish sat collecting snow. Was the guy crazy? Belle threw on a heavy coat, boots and hat and followed her snowmobile path to the lake.

“Good thing I saw your dish,” a man said, getting out of the plane and letting the motor idle. “Where’s Dan? Place sure don’t look like a lodge.”

Belle propped her hands on her hips and yelled over the engine noise. “What are you talking about?”

The man squinted at the house while the snow danced circles around his waist. “Say, isn’t this . . .” He wheeled as he bit off the words and climbed back into the cockpit, throttling up and off in a swirl. She watched him fly down the lake until he disappeared in the shrouded darkness. Too small for instrumentation gear, yet he hadn’t seemed low on fuel or in trouble. She made a note to call Steve Davis, a detective on the Sudbury Force. Besides, Steve owed her a dinner.

Belle Palmer Mysteries 5-Book Bundle

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