Death Du Jour_ A Novel Part 49
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"Of course. We really need to be on our way. Her husband will be crazy wondering where she is." I gestured at Anna, who was nodding like a box turtle.
The guard s.h.i.+fted watery eyes from Anna to me, then tipped his head toward the stairs.
"Let's go, then."
We wasted no time.
Outside, rain was still falling. The drops were thicker now, like the Slushes my sister and I had bought from summer vendors. Her face rose from a niche in my mind. Where are you, Harry?
At Birks Hall Anna gave me a funny look.
"Odocoileus virginia.n.u.s?"
"It popped into my head."
"There is no white-tailed deer in the museum."
Did the corners of her mouth pucker, or was it merely the cold? I shrugged.
Reluctantly, Anna gave me her home number and address. We parted, and I a.s.sured her that Ryan would call soon. As I hurried down University something made me turn back. Anna stood in the archway of the Gothic old building, motionless, like her Cenozoic comrades.
When I got home I dialed Ryan's pager. Minutes later the phone rang. I told him that Anna had surfaced and outlined our conversation. He promised to inform the coroner so a search could begin for Amalie Provencher's medical and dental records. He rang off quickly, intending to contact Anna before she left Jeannotte's office. He would phone later to fill me in on what he'd learned during the day.
I ate a supper of salad nicoise and croissants, took a long bath, and slipped into an old sweat suit. I still felt chilled, and decided to light a fire. I'd used the last of my starter logs so I wadded newspaper into b.a.l.l.s and overlaid them with kindling. Ice was ticking against the windows as I lit the pile and watched it catch.
Eight-forty. I got the Belanger journals and turned on "Seinfeld," hoping the rhythm of the dialogue and laughter would have a soothing effect. Left on their own I knew my thoughts would run like cats in the night, rooting and snarling, and raising my anxiety to a level where sleep would be impossible.
No go. Jerry and Kramer did their best, but I couldn't concentrate.
My eyes drifted to the fire. The flames had dwindled to a few spa.r.s.e tongues curving around the bottom log. I went to the hearth, separated a section of paper, tore and balled up several pages, and stuffed them into the embers.
I was poking the logs when recall kicked in.
Newspapers!
I'd forgotten about the microfilm!
I went to the bedroom, pulled out the pages I'd copied at McGill, and took them back to the sofa. It took only a moment to locate the article in La Presse La Presse.
The story was as brief as I remembered it. April 20, 1845. Eugenie Nicolet was sailing for France. She would sing in Paris and Brussels, summer in the south of France, and return to Montreal in July. The members of her entourage were listed, as were her upcoming concert dates. There was also a brief summary of her career, and comments as to how she would be missed.
My coins had taken me through April 26. I skimmed everything I'd printed, but Eugenie's name did not reappear. Then I went back through, strip-searching every story and announcement.
The article appeared on April 22.
Someone else would appear in Paris. This gentleman's talent lay not in music, but in oratory. He was on a speaking tour, denouncing the selling of human beings and encouraging commerce with West Africa. Born in the Gold Coast, he'd been educated in Germany and held a professors.h.i.+p in philosophy at the University of Halle. He'd just completed a series of lectures at the McGill School of Divinity.
I backpedaled through history. Eighteen forty-five. Slavery was in full swing in the United States, but had been banned in France and England. Canada was still a British colony. Church and missionary groups were begging Africans to stop exporting their brothers and sisters, and encouraging Europeans to engage in legal commerce with West Africa as an alternative. What did they call it? The "legitimate trade."
I read the pa.s.senger's name with growing excitement.
And the name of the vessel.
Eugenie Nicolet and Abo Gaba.s.sa had made the crossing on the same s.h.i.+p.
I got up to poke the fire.
Was that it? Had I stumbled on the secret hidden for a century and a half? Eugenie Nicolet and Abo Gaba.s.sa? An affair?
I slipped on shoes, went to the French doors, flipped the handle, and pushed. The door was frozen shut. I leaned hard with my hip and the seal cracked.
My woodpile was frozen, and it took me some time to hack a log free with a garden trowel. When I finally got back inside I was s.h.i.+vering and covered with tiny pellets. A sound stopped me dead as I crossed to the hearth.
My doorbell doesn't ring, it twitters. It did so now, then stopped abruptly, as if someone had given up.
I dropped the log, raced to the security box, and hit the video b.u.t.ton. On the screen I saw a familiar figure disappearing through the front door.
I grabbed my keys, ran to the lobby, and opened the door to the vestibule. The outer door was settling into place. I depressed the tongue and pulled it wide.
Daisy Jeannotte lay sprawled across my steps.
31.
BEFORE I COULD REACH HER, SHE MOVED. SLOWLY, SHE DREW IN her hands, rolled, and pushed to a sitting position, her back to me. her hands, rolled, and pushed to a sitting position, her back to me.
"Are you hurt?" My throat was so dry my words came out high and stretched.
She flinched at the sound of my voice, then turned.
"The ice is treacherous. I slipped, but I'm quite fine."
I reached out and she allowed me to help her up. She was trembling, and didn't look fine at all.
"Please, come inside and I'll make some tea."
"No. I can't stay. There's someone waiting for me. I shouldn't be out on such a dreadful night but I had to speak to you."
"Please come in where it's warmer."
"No. Thank you." Her tone was as cold as the air.
She retied her scarf, then looked directly into my eyes. Behind her, bullets of ice sliced through a cone of streetlight. The tree limbs looked s.h.i.+ny black through the sodium vapor.
"Dr. Brennan, you must leave my students alone. I've tried to be helpful to you, but I do believe you are abusing my kindness. You cannot pursue these young people in this manner. And to give my number to the police for the purpose of hara.s.sing my a.s.sistant is simply unthinkable."
A gloved hand wiped her eye, leaving a dark smear trailing across her cheek.
Anger flared like a kitchen match. My arms were wrapped around my midriff, and through the flannel I felt my nails dig into my flesh.
"What the h.e.l.l are you talking about? I'm not pursuing pursuing Anna." I spat the word back at her. "This isn't some G.o.ddam research project! People are dead! Ten for certain, G.o.d knows how many others." Anna." I spat the word back at her. "This isn't some G.o.ddam research project! People are dead! Ten for certain, G.o.d knows how many others."
Pellets bounced off my forehead and arms. I didn't feel them. Her words enraged me, and I vented all the anguish and frustration that had built in me over the past few weeks.
"Jennifer Cannon and Amalie Provencher were McGill students. They were murdered, Dr. Jeannotte. But not just murdered. No. That wasn't enough for these people. These maniacs threw them to animals, then watched their flesh torn and their skulls pierced right into their brains."
I ranted on, no longer in control of my voice. I noticed a pa.s.sing couple quicken their pace, despite the gla.s.sy sidewalk.
"A family was slashed and mutilated and an old woman shot in the head not two hundred kilometers from here. Babies! They slaughtered two little babies! An eighteen-year-old girl was torn apart, stuffed in a trunk, and dumped right in this city. They're dead, Dr. Jeannotte, murdered by a group of loonies who think they're the posse for all morality."
I felt flushed, despite the freezing cold.
"Well, let me tell you something." I jabbed a trembling finger. "I'm going to find these self-righteous, malevolent b.a.s.t.a.r.ds and put them out of business, no matter how many altar boys, or guidance counselors, or Bible-toting swamis I have to hara.s.s! And that includes your students! And that may include you!"
Jeannotte's face looked ghostly in the darkness, the smeared mascara transforming it into a macabre mask. A lump had formed above her left eye, throwing it into shadow and causing the right to look strangely light.
I dropped my finger and rewrapped the arm around my body. I had said too much. My outburst spent, the cold was causing me to s.h.i.+ver.
The street was deserted and utterly silent. I could hear the rasping of my breath.
I don't know what I expected to hear, but it was not the question that came from her lips. "Why do you use such imagery?"
"What?" Was she questioning my prose? Was she questioning my prose?
"Bibles and swamis and altar boys. Why do you make these references?"
"Because I believe these murders were committed by religious fanatics."
Jeannotte held herself completely still. When she spoke her voice was icier than the night, and her words chilled me more than the weather.
"You are out of your depth, Dr. Brennan. I'm warning you to leave this alone." The colorless eyes bore into mine. "If you persist, I will be forced to take action."
A car crept down the alley opposite my building and stopped. As it turned onto the street, the headlights made a wide arc, sweeping the block and momentarily illuminating Jeannotte's face.
I tensed, and my nails dug deeper into my sides.
Oh, G.o.d.
It was not an illusion created by shadow. Jeannotte's right eye was eerily pale. Stripped of makeup, the brow and lashes flared white in the pa.s.sing beams.
She may have seen something in my face, for she pulled her scarf forward, turned, and picked her way down the steps. She did not look back.
When I got inside, the message light was flas.h.i.+ng. Ryan. I phoned him back with shaky hands.
"Jeannotte's involved," I said, wasting no time. "She was just here telling me to back off. Seems your call to Anna really irked her. Listen, when we went back to Saint Helena, do you remember the man with the white streak?"
"Yeah. Skinny guy, scarecrow-thin, tall. He came in to talk to Owens." Ryan sounded exhausted.
"Jeannotte has the same pattern of depigmentation, same eye. It's not obvious because she hides it with makeup."
"Same hair streak?"
"I couldn't tell, but she probably uses dye. Look, these two must be related. The trait's just too unusual to be a coincidence."
"Siblings?"
"I didn't pay much attention at the time, but I think the guy on Saint Helena was too young to be her father and too old to be her son."
"If she's from the Tennessee mountains there are limited genetic possibilities."
"Funny." I was not in the mood for redneck jokes.
"Could be whole clans that share the gene."
"This is serious, Ryan."
"You know, different stripes in different hollers." He imitated Jeff Foxworthy. "If your stripe is the same as your sister's, then you may be-"
Stripes. Something about stripes pulled at me.
"What did you say?"
"Hollers, it's what you folk-"
"Will you stop it! I just thought of something else. Do you remember what Heidi Schneider's father said about their visitor?"
The line was quiet.
"He said the guy looked like a skunk. A G.o.ddam skunk."
"s.h.i.+t. So maybe Daddy wasn't being poetic."
In the background a phone rang and rang. No one answered it.
"You think Owens sent Streak to Texas?" Ryan asked.
Death Du Jour_ A Novel Part 49
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Death Du Jour_ A Novel Part 49 summary
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