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Monday Mourning
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A4
A5
A6
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Chapter 31
C
LAUDEL HAD A WARRANT BY NINE. RYAN WAS AT MY PLACE AT quarter past.
When I got into his Jeep, Ryan handed me coffee. Caffeine was not what I needed. I was wired enough to recaulk the Pentagon.
Thanking him, I pulled off my mittens, wrapped my fingers around the Styrofoam, and worked on slowing my heartbeat even as I sipped.
Five minutes out, Ryan cracked his window and lit up a Player’s. Normally he would have asked if I minded. Today, he didn’t. I assumed he was feeling as jittery as I was.
The streets were clogged with the remnants of Monday morning rush hour. A decade and twenty minutes later we entered the Point.
Turning onto de Sébastopol, I could see two cruisers and an unmarked Impala positioned at intervals along the block. Exhaust floated from all three tailpipes.
Ryan slid behind the nearest cruiser. Killing the engine, he turned to me.
“If Menard so much as frowns in your direction, you’re out of there. Do you understand?”
“We’re going to search the place, not assault it.”
“Things could turn ugly.”
“There are seven cops here, Ryan. If Menard’s uncooperative, cuff him.”
“Any threatening move, you hit the deck.”
I saluted smartly.
Ryan’s voice hardened. “I’m serious, damn it. If I say split, you’re gone.”
I rolled my eyes.
“That’s it.” Ryan’s hand moved to restart the engine.
“All right,” I said, pulling on my mittens. “I’ll obey orders. Sir.”
“No nonsense. This is dangerous work.”
Ryan and I got out and quietly closed our doors.
Overnight the weather had changed. The air felt moist and icy, and heavy gray clouds hung low in the sky.
Seeing us, the stable dog started in. Otherwise, there wasn’t a sign of life on de Sébastopol. No kids sticking pucks. No housewives hauling groceries. No pensioners gossiping on balconies or stoops.
Typical Montreal winter day. Stay indoors, stay in the metro, stay underground. Hunker in and remain sane until spring. The barking sounded all the louder in the overall stillness.
Ryan and I angled across the street. As we approached the Impala, the dynamic duo got out.
Claudel was wearing a tan cashmere overcoat. Charbonneau was in a big shaggy jacket, the composition of which I couldn’t have guessed.
We exchanged nods.
“What’s the plan?” Ryan asked in English.
Claudel spread his feet. Charbonneau leaned his fanny on the Impala.
“One unit will stay here.” Claudel jerked a thumb toward the cruiser at the far end of the block. “I’ll send the other around to de la Congrégation.”
Charbonneau unzipped his parka, shoved his hands in his pockets, jiggled his change.
“Michel’s going to take the back door.”
A walkie-talkie screeched from Charbonneau’s hip. Reaching back, he fiddled with a button.
Claudel’s eyes flicked to me, back to Ryan.
“Brennan knows what to do,” Ryan said.
Claudel’s lips thinned, but he said nothing.
“We’ll show Menard the judge’s Christmas greeting, order him to sit, then toss the place.”
Charbonneau rested a hand on his gun butt. “Wouldn’t ruin my holiday if this pogue decided to pull a Schwarzenegger.”
“All set?” Claudel slipped a two-way from his waistband, rebuttoned his coat.
Nods around.
“Allons-y,” Claudel said.
“Let’s go,” his partner echoed.
Pushing off the Impala, Charbonneau strode toward the far end of de Sébastopol. He spoke to the driver, then the cruiser disappeared around the corner. Charbonneau reversed direction and cut diagonally across the vacant lot.
Thirty seconds later, Charbonneau’s voice came across Claudel’s walkie-talkie. He was at Menard’s back door.
Claudel waved a “come on” to the other team of uniforms.
As we picked our way up the icy walk, Claudel in the lead, Ryan and I following, the second cruiser slid to the curb behind us.
Stumbling along, I felt the same formless dread I’d felt on Friday. Heightened. My heart was now thumping like a conga drum.
At the turn, Claudel stopped and spoke into his walkie-talkie.
I stared at Menard’s house, wondering what it had been like when the real Menard’s grandparents, the Corneaus, owned it. The place was so dark, so menacing. It was hard to imagine chicken being fried, baseball being watched, or kittens chasing balls in its gloomy interior.
Claudel’s radio sputtered. Charbonneau was in position.
We stepped onto the stoop. Ryan twisted the brass knob. The bell shrilled as it had on Friday.
A full minute passed with no response.
Ryan twisted again.
I thought I heard movement inside. Ryan tensed, and one hand drifted toward his Glock.
Claudel unbuttoned his coat.
Still no one appeared.
Ryan twisted the bell a third time.
Absolute stillness.
Ryan pounded on the door.
“Open up! Police!”
Ryan was raising his fist for another go when a muffled shot spit through the silence. Blue-white light popped around the curtain edges in the window to my right.
Claudel and Ryan dropped to identical crouches, weapons drawn. Grabbing my wrist, Ryan pulled me to the ground.
Claudel screamed into his walkie-talkie.
“Michel! Es-tu là? Répet. Es-tu là?”
In a heartbeat Charbonneau’s voice crackled back, “I’m here. Was that gunfire?”
“Inside the house.”
“Who’s shooting?”
“Can’t tell. Any movement back there?”
“Nothing.”
“Hold position. We’re going in.”
“Move!” Ryan gestured me back.
I scrambled to the spot he indicated.
Claudel and Ryan rocketed to their feet and began battering the door, first with their shoulders, then with their boots. It held firm.
In the distance the stable dog flew into a frenzy.
The men kicked harder.
Splinters flew. Slivers of yellowed varnish skittered in the air. The weathered boards held.
More kicking. More cursing. Claudel’s face went raspberry. Ryan’s hairline grew damp.
Eventually I saw movement where the faceplate of the lock screwed into the wood.
Waving Claudel back, Ryan braced, flexed one leg, and thrust it forward in a karate kick. His boot slammed home, the latch bolt gave, and the door flew inward.
“Stay here,” Ryan panted in my direction.
Breathing hard, guns crooked two-handed to their noses, Claudel and Ryan entered the house, one moving left, the other right.
I slipped inside and pressed my back against the wall to the right of the door.
The foyer was dim and still and smelled faintly of gunpowder.
Claudel and Ryan crept down the hall, weapons arcing, eyes and bodies moving in sync.
Empty.
They moved into the parlor.
I moved to the far side of the foyer.
In seconds my eyes adjusted.
My hand flew to my mouth.
“Este!” Claudel lowered his weapon.
Wordlessly, Ryan dropped his elbow and angled his Glock toward the ceiling.
Menard was seated where he’d been on Friday, his body slumped left, his head twisted strangely against the sofa back. His left hand dangled over the armrest. His right lay palm up in his lap, the fingers loosely curled around a nine-millimeter Smith & Wesson.
Charbonneau’s voice sputtered on the two-way. Claudel answered.
Ryan and I moved closer to Menard.
Claudel and Charbonneau exchanged excited words. I heard “suicide,” “SIJ,” “coroner.” The rest of their conversation didn’t register. I was mesmerized by the Menard-thing on the sofa.
Menard had a dime-sized hole in his right temple. A stream of blood trickled from its puckered white border.
The exit wound was at Menard’s left temple. Most of that side of his head was gone, spattered on the brass lamp, the dangling crystals, and the floral wallpaper of the hideous room. Mingled with Menard’s cranial wreckage was a macabre gumbo of blood and brain matter.
I felt a tremor under my tongue.
Ryan dragged the Windsor chair as far as from the body as possible, led me to it, and pressed gently on my shoulders. I sat and lowered my head.
I heard the uniformed cops storm in.
I heard Ryan’s voice, shouted orders.
I heard Charbonneau. The word “ambulance.” The name Pomerleau.
I heard doors kicked open as Ryan and the others moved through the house.
To escape the present, I tried to focus on all I would have to do in the future. Reassess the MP lists. Resubmit skeletal descriptors with open age estimates. Obtain DNA samples from Angie Robinson’s family.
It was no good. I couldn’t think. My attention kept drifting back across the room. My eyes roved the hands, the splayed legs, the gun.
The face.
Menard’s freckles stood out like dark little kidneys against the pallid skin. Though his eyes were open, the expression was blank. No pain. No surprise. No fear. Just the empty stare of death.
My own mind was a combat zone. Relief that Menard would hurt no one else. Anger that he’d escaped so easily. Pity for a life so grotesquely twisted. Anxiety for Anique Pomerleau.
Concern that we still did not have the answers.
This wasn’t Menard. Who was this guy? Where was Menard?
Fingers caressed my hair.
I looked up.
“You OK?”
I nodded, touched by the tenderness in Ryan’s expression. “Have you found Pomerleau?”
“House is empty.” Ryan’s voice was heavy as a coffin lid. “There are things here you might want to see.”
I followed him through a hallway, into a back room, and down a narrow stairway to a poorly lit cellar. The walls were brick and windowless, the floor cement. The air was damp and smelled of mold, dust, and dry rot.
Around me I could see the usual assortment of basement junk. A metal washtub. Garden implements. Stacks of cardboard boxes. An old sewing machine.
I heard voices, then a muffled expletive ahead and to my right.
Passing through an open door, Ryan led me into a second room. Though similar in construction to the outer basement, this one was smaller and brightly lit. Its walls and ceiling were covered with polyurethane panels.
Claudel and Charbonneau were standing by a counter that might once have served as a workbench. Both wore latex surgical gloves.
Hearing us enter, Charbonneau turned. His face looked like something in the claret family.
Ryan left to do another sweep of the basement.
“The little troll had himself a really special place down here.” Charbonneau swept a hand around the room. “Soundproofing and all.”
My eyes followed the arc of Charbonneau’s motion.
In one corner two sets of handcuffs dangled from a pair of rings imbedded in the ceiling. A crude table hugged the adjacent wall. I crossed to it, a cold numbness in my gut.
The table was sturdily built, of plywood and two-by-fours. Eye-hooks had been screwed into each corner, then a leather cuff attached to each hook. Four chains lay coiled beside the cuffs.
“This table isn’t old,” I said.
“Table?” Charbonneau’s voice trembled with anger. “It’s a goddamn rack!”
I walked to the workbench. Claudel looked at me, then shifted left, his face a shrink-wrapped mask of control.
The numbness made the rounds of my innards.
A bullwhip. A cat-o’-nine-tails. A riding crop. A hide-covered paddle. A noose with an enormous knot at midloop.
“All the tricks needed to show your slave who’s boss.” A vein throbbed in Charbonneau’s temple. I saw fury in his eyes.
“Calm-toi, Michel.” Claudel’s voice was a flat line.
“And this asshole was real creative.”
Charbonneau jabbed at a horse bit, a curling iron, a crudely made gag with a ball in the center.
“Check out his reading material.”
Charbonneau’s rage made him hyperactive. He snatched up a magazine, tossed it down. “Porn. Bondage. S and M.” He grabbed a videotape. The Story of O.
As the video hit the workbench, Ryan charged in, his jaw muscles tightened all the way to his sternum.
“I’ve found something.”
We moved as one, out the door, through the outer basement, around an ancient furnace, and into a chamber much like the one we’d just left.
Floor-to-ceiling shelves wrapped three sides of this room. A single bare bulb hung from its ceiling.
Ryan strode to the far wall. We followed. Behind the shelving I could see polyurethane similar to that lining the other room. The edge of one panel had been pried free.
“This wall isn’t brick. It’s plywood.”
Ryan ran his fingertips vertically along the newly exposed plywood, just beyond the shelving.
“There’s a discontinuity.”
Claudel removed one glove, mimicked Ryan’s move, then nodded.
Ryan pointed to the door through which we’d entered.
“Check out the lights.”
We all turned. One switch plate looked shiny and new, the other dingy and cracked.
“The older one works the overhead.”
He left the rest unsaid.
Claudel yanked off his remaining glove. Wordlessly, he and Ryan began ripping polyurethane.
Charbonneau hurried to the outer basement. I heard clattering and scraping, then he was back with a rusted crowbar.
Within minutes Ryan and Claudel had bared a six-inch swath. In it I could see a crack and two hinges. Through the crack, not a sliver of light.
Gauging door width, they attacked the other side of the shelving where two polyurethane panels met. Their efforts revealed another hairline fissure between sheets of plywood.
“Let me at it.” Charbonneau moved forward.
Ryan and Claudel stepped aside.
Charbonneau inserted the tip of the crowbar into the gap and levered.
A section of wall and shelving jigged forward.
Charbonneau slid the tip of the crowbar farther and heaved.
Plywood, batting, and shelving popped free.
Charbonneau grabbed a shelf and yanked. The false wall swung wide, revealing an opening approximately five by two feet.
The overhead bulb illuminated the first eighteen inches of the cavity behind the wall. Beyond that, the chamber was pitch-black.
Dashing to the door, I flicked the shiny switch, and spun.
My teeth clamped my lower lip as my throat clenched.
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Monday Mourning
Kathy Reichs
Monday Mourning - Kathy Reichs
https://isach.info/story.php?story=monday_mourning__kathy_reichs