Read Incidents in the Life of Markus Paul Online

Authors: David Adams Richards

Incidents in the Life of Markus Paul (38 page)

Markus once again borrowed money—that was his problem—and bought a snowmobile, though he couldn’t afford it. Sometimes he hunted coyotes up on the barrens as they came out just at dark. He could bring one down at 250 yards with a .22-250 that he had also borrowed the money to buy.

He went to a Skidoo party and began to date a French girl from Neguac. They would go for pizza and have a beer or two. Twice in bed he wanted to tell her what had happened so long ago. He had a duty to, he knew—and he would—soon. He would. He inquired about exhuming Hector’s body and was told it was best to wait until the spring.

He went to Bill Monk’s late one morning as Bill sat there entertaining one of his friends.

“Yes—what do you want?”

“Nothing much,” Markus said, and he walked over to the sink and poured himself a nice cold glass of water, turning around to face Bill as he drank.

He listened to Bob Dylan a lot that winter.

He listened to Hank Williams.

He saw Roger’s old girlfriend, May, at the Kmart one evening. She worked there now, and was a rotund, greying woman. He wanted to tell her about Roger’s complete and heroic innocence but did not. There would be no point.

One cold day in February 2007 he went to the co-op and bought and wrapped a pry bar, and sent it to Topper Monk.

The phone would ring and he would not answer it.

Heidi Doran sent him a Valentine’s Day card.

Once he saw Sam Dulse in town and didn’t even say hello.

Sometimes in the dark he would listen and listen to nothing at all.

He decided he would get a court order to have Hector Penniac’s body exhumed as soon as the weather got warm. He was told April 26 would be the best day. So he decided that was the day the case would be reopened and he would hand the evidence over.

He inquired by email about the
Lutheran
and a week later word came back, not from the Netherlands but from the captain, who had been forwarded the message in Brisbane, Australia, where he had retired. From him, who seemed a nice enough gentleman, Markus discovered the
Lutheran
had been dry-docked, not scuttled, and at last report was blocked and rudderless in a yard in Rotterdam.

If the pry bar had been hidden well enough, it just might still be there.

He decided he would go to the Netherlands in the spring, before the body was exhumed. He told his commanding officer this one day, out of the blue.

He thought how truth had now snapped those chains that had once seemed impossible to break.

He visited his father’s grave for the first time.

Then one morning, in a freezing March snowstorm, Markus woke up to a call from the office. “Get over here. Someone’s in the cell,” the boyish constable said.

Markus got up and dressed. He knew from experience that it was probably an Indian in the cell. And it was his duty to go. Well, it was his duty to go anyway, First Nations or not. He put the pistol toward the back of his right hip, by habit.

He arrived at ten and went in through the side door. There was loud talk when he entered and then a kind of mirthful silence. Back behind the front office a corridor led to metal stairs where footfalls sounded heavy, and beyond a heavy grey metal door were the six
cells, which were more often than not occupied by drunks and smalltime thieves.

He walked right past her. He thought the constable had pointed to the fifth cell. She was in the fourth. She was handcuffed to the bed but was lying on the cement floor, almost naked. Her long, greying hair fell down her back. They had taken her false teeth out, and her bra was lying in the far corner.

He stared at her a brief moment. She was still beautiful.

“Why is she only in panties?”

“Didn’t want her to injure herself,” the young constable said, chewing gum.

“You had to take her bra?”

“Didn’t want her to injure—”

“Where did you arrest her?”

“Neguac—in a fight at the bar. It’s always something with her. This time she said it was her brother’s birthday. Who knows? She was pumped full of ecstasy.”

She was shivering and had pissed the floor.

“Do you know her father is a member of the Assembly of First Nations and a recent recipient of the Order of Canada—Isaac Snow—and one of the great men on this river?”

“Well,” the young constable said, snapping gum and frowning, “just goes to show. Do you want to go in?”

“Sky,” Markus whispered, not staring at her nakedness. “Sky.”

Sky turned, made a lunge at the air, her brilliant eyes flashing.

“Fuck you,” she said.

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

Thanks to Philip Lee; my first reader, Liz Lemon-Mitchell; my agent, Anne McDermid; my editors Maya Mavjee and Lynn Henry; my wife, Peg; and my children, John and Anton.

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