GOT SOMEONE BOOKING FLIGHTS.” OLLIE TURNED TO ME. “Can you be at the airport by eleven?”
“Me?” I didn’t bother to hide my surprise.
“Ruben whored in Edmonton, too. You think her mothering instincts were better out west?”
“The local ME must have experts he calls on.”
“That office is having some issues.”
“The SQ won’t pick up her expenses,” Ryan said.
“The RCMP will. I’ll run her through as a temporary CM. Civilian member.”
“I know what the term means.” Ryan gave Ollie a smile that carried zero warmth.
“So.” Ollie’s eyes held mine levelly. “Are you in?”
My mind played a flash reel of squirming eyes, tiny mummified hands, wadded tissue. I checked my watch, then nodded.
“If you can’t get away, Detective, I understand.” Ollie spoke without turning to Ryan.
“I’ll see you at the airport,” Ryan said.
Upstairs, there were no new anthropology cases. After clearing my sudden change of plans with LaManche, I headed out.
I’d just entered my condo when my iPhone sounded. The noon flight was full, so we were booked on the one o’clock. I used theextra hour to shower, print my boarding pass, and place a courtesy call to the ME in Edmonton. He thanked me and said his facility would be at my disposal, should I need it.
At twelve-twenty, I met Ryan and Ollie at the gate at Pierre Elliott Trudeau. Air Canada flight 413 was posted as delayed. Our new departure time was one-fifteen. I took little comfort in that estimate. The attendant said it was a mechanical issue. Right.
We finally took off at three-forty-five. Which meant we missed our connection in Toronto. Luckily, the next flight to Edmonton left at five. Following a sprint through the airport, we made it. The joys of modern aviation.
Ryan has many fine qualities—intelligence, wit, kindness, generosity. As a traveling companion, he’s a pain in the ass.
Ollie’s presence did nothing to improve Ryan’s disposition. Or maybe it was me. Or the croque-monsieur he ate in the coffee shop. The atmosphere in our little band was as friendly as that at a drug raid.
Ollie offered transport upon landing, but Ryan insisted on renting a car. Though Ollie suggested I accompany him, I felt it more diplomatic to remain with Ryan.
With no reservation, the rental process took over an hour. I didn’t ask why.
Edmonton is Canada’s answer to Omaha. Solid, unassuming, and surrounded by a whole lot of nothing. It’s a place that makes you think of sensible shoes.
We saw a lot of the city en route to RCMP K Division headquarters. At first I offered directions based on GPS maps I pulled up on my phone. Ryan neither acknowledged nor followed my suggestions. Eventually, I gave up and focused on the world sliding past my window. The view involved a whole lot of brick.
It was nine-forty when we finally turned onto 109th Street. My stomach was whining that I should have had a sandwich with Ryan. I ignored it.
After presenting ID and explaining our destination to a commissionaire who maintained an attitude of near-terminal severity, Detective Sunshine and I were issued clip-on badges stamped with very large T’s. Feeling decidedly temporary and untrusted, we followed a corporal onto an elevator and ascendedin silence. At an office marked Project KARE , our escort indicated that we might proceed on our own.
Ryan opened and held the door for me. I pointedly waited for him to go first.
The setup looked a lot like Ryan’s home base at Wilfrid-Derome. Not that the RCMP would call it a squad room. Here it was an office. No matter. Like the crimes that necessitate their existence, such spaces share a depressing uniformity no matter the locale. Same in-boxes, foul coffee, and memorabilia.
At ten P.M . the place was deserted.
Ollie’s desk was off to one side. He was at it, shoulder-cradling a phone. On hearing the door, he looked up and gestured us to him.
As we approached, Ollie foot-dragged a chair into position beside one