The main road on the reserve ran within a kilometre of the shoreline of Queesik Bay. The closer the road came to the lake, the more likely someone would be parked there in order to access the water to fish or swim. This was what he’d have to do – locate a lookout on the Eagle in a bend in the road close enough to the water to disguise why he was there. He’d brought a pair of high-powered binoculars, and when he was installed on the shoulder beside a marshy tract of land, he lowered the two rear passenger seats and lay between them on his stomach. With the glasses steadied against the rear window, he was able to see the comings and goings through the front door of the Eagle, although the activity inside was hidden.

Janice had made him a special lunch for his “first stakeout,” a cloth lunchbox that zipped shut and contained a rare roast beef sandwich on a baguette, two large red apples, a Thermos of coffee, a big bottle of water, and some whole grain crackers with a hunk of cheddar in cling wrap. He was to text her every hour, or whenever something exciting happened. He stared hard through the binoculars and watched a number of people enter and exit Eagle Smoke and Souvenir. He texted Janice: Stakeout under way. An hour later, he texted, Numerous cigarette and souvenir purchases have been duly noted. At one o’clock in the afternoon, he forgot to text, and she wrote to him asking what was happening. He wrote back, Bored silly.

He’d worked out categories and taxonomies by the middle of the afternoon. General categories were On foot and By vehicle, and By vehicle was subdivided into Car and Taxi. There were categories for Alone and Not alone. Some people came out with bags, some not. There was no way of knowing if the bagless people had made purchases or not, but a person buying only a pack of cigarettes wouldn’t have a bag.

No one who went in alone came out with anyone. No one who went in with someone left without that person. People who came in taxis left in taxis. Sometimes a person who came on foot left in a taxi. That was the only variation. By three in the afternoon, he was out of food and water and more or less out of patience. He called Hazel. She answered curtly and wouldn’t talk to him for more than a few seconds. He hung up and stared out the rear window. Real romantic, a stakeout. He made a checkmark under On foot as a man entered the shop from the road.

Hazel dropped her mother off at home. Emily said, “Off to visit the undertaker now?” as she closed the door to the house, but she’d ignored the sniping. The whole time she’d been in Pass’s office, the facts of the case were piling up in the hopper of her mind. There was a point when likenesses and dissonances began to coalesce in a case. She didn’t have all the hints, all the resonations in place, but there was too much lining up. Not enough for an image to form, but enough to sense one.

Now she was thinking again that it had to do with money. A precise amount. The girl had taken precisely what she’d been owed. But then she’d also torn the office apart looking for something else. The money had been right there in the front hall, in a drawer. Unless that was where she’d looked last. She didn’t seem to lack confidence, this girl. Stunning the wife, conking her in the head and ransacking the place wasn’t exactly subtle. And why had she left Cathy alive? Had this girl intended to kill Henry?

Finally, could there be a connection to the casino? What if Henry had gone back to a forgotten vice and somehow gotten entangled with this girl? When she got back to the station house, she had Cartwright track down a wallet-sized picture of Henry Wiest. She tucked it into her breast pocket, along with a photocopy of the police sketch of the thoughtful-looking young woman.

] 13 [

Afternoon

Hazel Micallef parked her unmarked as close as she could get to the casino’s doors so the walk from the car to the entrance would be as short as possible. She went in unmolested and her luck held out. One of the three guards was the man who’d admitted her with Constable Bellecourt two nights ago. “Back for more?” he asked.

“Got a quick meeting with Lee.”

“Awesome. I’ll let him know you’re coming.”

“Oh, don’t bother. I have to use the, uh, first and I’ll just go to the office. I know where it is.”

“Is this police business?” he asked.

She wasn’t sure how to answer that. Maybe it was better that she was just here as a civilian, albeit a civilian in uniform. “No,” she said.

“Well then, without Constable Bellecourt accompanying you, you’ll need a member’s card. It’s a technicality, sorry. You can get one over there at Member Services. Line up on the right.”

“Member card, huh?”

“Sorry,” he repeated. “Policy.”

She stared at him, to no effect, and she went and stood in the line between two other prospective new “members,” fuming, and then slid her driver’s licence across the desk to a woman with a blank look on her face. She gazed at the card and typed Hazel’s particulars in. She pointed over her own shoulder mysteriously, and when Hazel looked at where she was pointing, a flash went off. “Come back in ten minutes,” she said.

“Ten minutes? What about my licence?”

“We just do a quick check. Then you get it back. A lot of fake IDs come through here, unfortunately.”

To her left, at a porthole in a wall covered in Plexiglas, a man came up and gave his name, and another woman gave him his new membership card and his licence back through a little opening. At least they were thorough, Hazel thought.

For ten minutes, she stood in the vestibule and watched people come and go from the interior of the casino. On one of the walls there were pictures of people holding big cardboard cheques. These people were jackpot winners. She understood that some people had a system for winning jackpots, but they required patience and a big bankroll. Not all of the winners looked happy. Imagine the problem you had if forty thousand dollars wasn’t enough to solve it.

After ten minutes, she got in line on the left to pick up her card. A woman in front of her in line collected her driver’s licence and her new membership to the casino, an exciting-looking black card with a display of fireworks on the front. Hazel gave her name and got the two cards in return. She pocketed her licence.

The guard showed her how to run the card through the reader. “What, really, is the point of this?” Hazel asked.

“Self-exclusion.”

“Self-exclusion?”

“Problem-gamblers exclude themselves from the casino. If they try to run their card through, they get caught and we toss ’em.”

“Really.”

“Good luck, ma’am,” the guard said.

“Yeah. Thanks.”

He opened the door for her and she plunged into the air-conditioned scintillance and stood before a bank of slot machines. She headed into them, like a deer into cover, and walked with her head down as she tried to figure out the best path to get to the poker room. She’d decided to head there first, as it was out of the way of the main floor, and from what little she knew about poker, people who played it liked to talk. Maybe she’d hear something. Show around a picture or two and listen. Poker was popular. It was on every other channel, guys with stubble squinting. Maybe someone had seen Henry Wiest in here. Tying him to the casino – without a member’s card – would be a very useful bit of information.

The laneway between the machines led directly to the back of the casino. The word POKER was painted over an archway. She walked casually to a cut-out in the wall beside the entry. There was a man in a good suit typing on a keyboard. He saw her approach.

“Officer?”

It wouldn’t do to correct him, so she let it stand. “Sorry to bother you … Calvin … I’m just down from Fort Leonard and I’m looking for this man.” She slid the picture across the top of the cut-out. “Unfortunately, this is in regard of a next of kin. I was told I could find him here most afternoons.”


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