Inspector Green Mysteries 9-Book Bundle (125 page)

Once Green was satisfied Kyle’s lungs were clear, he rolled him onto his back and began
CPR
. Mechanically, methodically, he counted, dredging his memory for skills he’d never had to use beyond the classroom.

Sandy and Sullivan surfaced yet again, splashing and gasping. Sandy screamed to Tom for the rope.

“Forget it,” Tom shouted from the car. “She’s been down too long.”

“Throw the fucking rope!” Sandy yelled.

Tom came back with a blanket and bent to cover Kyle before retrieving the rope and reluctantly helping the two others tow Edna’s inert weight to shore. Once they’d tugged her half out of the water and splayed her body on the muddy ground, Sullivan sprinted up to the cruiser to radio for help. Green heard him asking for two ambulances and as many paramedics as they could muster.

After what seemed an eternity, he felt Kyle’s chest heave beneath his hands as the boy spasmed in a cough. Green stopped
CPR
and rolled him on his side, watching through a film of grateful tears as Kyle coughed and retched weakly back to life.

Sandy was bent over his mother, frantically trying to do
CPR
. Green gestured to Tom. “Take care of Kyle for me while I help Sandy.”

“Forget it!” Tom snapped as he cradled Kyle against him gingerly. “Let the bitch die!”

Sandy whirled on him, tears mingling with the water dripping down his face. “I’m not going to let her fucking die! She’s going to pay!”

It was four in the morning before all the crises had been contained, the charges sorted out, and the proper paperwork completed. Green had refrained from demanding to know why the
OPP
had taken so long to arrive, and they in kind had not mentioned his multiple violations of procedure that had placed himself, a fellow officer and four civilians in serious jeopardy. The police cruiser was still lodged against the tree at the bottom of the hill, an expense and complication that would thrill Barbara Devine when she assumed her post Monday morning.

Still, from the brass’s perspective, even though the methods weren’t pretty, the end result would sound good on the morning news. No one had died, and the bad people had been arrested. Edna and Kyle McMartin had been taken to Belleville General Hospital, where Edna had regained consciousness and was already screaming police incompetence, suggesting that prolonged oxygen deprivation had not altered her brain one bit. The cold water was the saving grace, the doctors intoned, but Green suspected it was her stubborn refusal to admit defeat. She would need every ounce of that in the months ahead, if he had any say in the matter.

After a thorough check-up, a hot meal and a good night’s sleep, Kyle was set to be discharged from hospital in the morning into the care of his grateful but very shaken father. Sandy had been checked over at the medical centre in Madoc and given a clean bill of health, and after some consideration, Green and Sullivan had declined to press charges. Under the circumstances, Sandy had paid dearly enough.

“I didn’t even know that she knew I was gay,” he said as he and the two detectives waited at the Madoc
OPP
station for Jeb McMartin to arrive. Sandy paced the reception area, exhausted but too wound up to sit. “She must have found our notes.”

“Or Derek’s father told her,” Green replied. “He wanted you two stopped as well.”

“Derek was my first lover. Knowing Mom, she’d think it was all his fault. Her baby, corrupted by a depraved pervert.” He gave a bitter laugh. “Poor mother. Two flawed failures for sons, like some kind of divine punishment. Over the years, she’s kept pushing women on me. What did she think? That I could just switch it off if a good enough woman came along?”

“Probably.”

“And Lawrence!” Sandy exclaimed, his emotions flooding out. “Poor innocent Lawrence comes home looking for a little home comfort—after all those years in the asylum for a crime she committed!—and what does he get? His worst nightmare! The witch from hell! You know, she actually showed the church that afternoon, because I was off duck hunting when the client came along. That’s probably when she spotted him.” He clenched his fists, paced faster. “I knew she was a hard woman, but I never believed her heartlessness ran so deep. I hope you can nail her!”

Green assured him they’d do their best, but privately, once Sandy had left, Sullivan shook his head doubtfully. The two of them slumped wearily over cups of coffee.

“We don’t have much to nail her on,” Sullivan said. “Even on the attempted murder of Kyle, it’s going to be hard to get past reasonable doubt. She can just say some strange car chased her into the lake. You forgot to turn the goddamn siren on, you know. As for either of the Pettigrew murders, all we have are the confused reports of a couple of boys and one bloody fingerprint that we can’t really link to Derek’s death. Unless forensics gets really lucky with the axe and we can get some usable blood from it to match to the blood on the fingerprint.”

Axe! Green sat up as a memory leaped into his mind. All pain evaporated. Pulling out his cell phone, he dialled home. The phone rang and rang before Sharon’s groggy voice came through. Belatedly he glanced at his watch. Four a.m.

“Sorry, honey,” he said. He’d already given her a full report earlier in the night, and he suspected she might have only just managed to fall asleep. “Nothing’s wrong,” he added hastily. “I’m fine, but I have a question to ask Hannah.”

To her credit, Sharon didn’t protest or demand answers, but simply went to wake his daughter up. There was a long delay, during which Sullivan watched him curiously, before the phone picked up again.

“What?” came his daughter’s surly voice.

“Hi, honey, I thought you might like to know Kyle is safe.”

“I heard. Lucky for you.”

He felt a flare of anger. No “how are you, Dad? I heard you were in an accident.” How long was she going to make him pay? He glanced at Sullivan, whose children had been all over him when he called, clamouring to know about the chase. But now Sullivan was eyeing him, and his mystified look brought Green back to the issue at hand.

“I have a question about what Kyle told you in the barn.”

“I already told you everything.”

“But you said it was all jumbled up and hard to connect. Did he say anything about the bad person who was chasing the man who died? Did that person have anything in their hand?”

“What the hell?”

“Think, honey.”

“No. He was talking about bells. He said something was too dangerous and he said bad boy and get in trouble and no wood, and fall—”

“No what?” Green scrambled to make the connections to what the boy might have seen.

“No wood. He said that several times.”

Bingo, Green thought, his spirits soaring. In the mind of a >child, what use was an axe with no wood? “Thanks a million, honey! I love you! Go back to bed.”

He waited until seven o’clock before calling Cunningham, for he wanted the man wide awake. “I’ve got a challenge you’re going to love, Cunny. I want you to make up a life size dummy of Lawrence Pettigrew—same height, same weight distribution—and I want you to take it to the church tower. There’s a rusty old axe in the sanctuary I want you to test for prints. Then I want you to take this dummy up to the top and experiment with pushing it over the edge. Backward, forward, sit it on top, make it jump.”

Cunningham was laughing. “You want a ring-side seat for this?”

“Absolutely. I want to see what makes it land on its stomach with its head towards the tower. I’m betting it’s when the dummy’s back is to the wall and someone else pushes its chest back and flips it over the wall.”

When he’d hung up, Green turned to Sullivan triumphantly. “That’s how we’re going to nail her, Brian!”

“She’s not strong enough to push him over.”

“She didn’t have to. She had the axe, and when she came at him, he backed up so far over the wall that he flipped over. Some kid in the square heard him screaming ‘get away, get away’. He was terrified. To him, remembering the last time he’d seen her with an axe, she must have seemed like the devil incarnate.”

Green could tell from Sullivan’s expression that he didn’t share Green’s optimism, but it didn’t matter. The evidence might be circumstantial, just one small piece in the theory they would lay in front of the jury, but it gave him something to work on. Some hope of exacting a small measure of justice for all the victims in this case.

Of all those victims, Green was most worried about Tom, whom they had to leave in the custody of the
OPP
after his clearance by the Medical Centre. Peters would be accompanying him back to Ottawa to face multiple charges, once proper transportation could be arranged. As the final act of his command, Jules seemed hellbent on making sure someone shouldered the blame for the crisis, and right now his sights were set on Tom. Whose shoulders were pretty frail already.

While Sullivan arranged the loan of an
OPP
vehicle to get himself and Green back to Ottawa, Green wandered back to the lock-up to give Tom a final word of encouragement. He had to wait five minutes in the interview room before the door opened and Tom shuffled in, his hands cuffed and a grey blanket draped around his shoulders. His eyes were bruised and puffy as if he’d been physically battered, and he barely acknowledged Green as he sank into a chair.

Green instructed the
OPP
officer to remove the cuffs and wait outside. Once they were alone, Green pulled out a pack of cigarettes from his pocket and laid one on the table.

“Thought you could use one of these.”

Tom shrugged. “No smoking allowed.”

“Take it.”

Tom massaged his wrist, then picked up the cigarette and stuck it in his mouth. It trembled as Green extended a light.

“Thanks.”

Green watched the ravaged man, who barely had the energy for his nicotine fix. Green didn’t know what to say or even why he had come. Just that someone had to come.

“I’m going to do everything I can, Tom.”

Tom squinted through smoke. “To nail her?”

“That too. But I meant to help you.”

Tom stared at the table a long time, not smoking, not moving. “How was I supposed to know?” he said finally. “I came home, found Lawrence in the shed holding Derek in his arms. Blood all over him, this great fucking axe at his side. I tried to get him away, but he kept saying he had to save Derek from the devil.” He tried to raise his cigarette to his lips, but it dropped from his fingers. Green rescued it and held it while Tom fought a silent war with his pain. “I damn near killed him on the spot, but Mom and Dad came along. He wouldn’t stop screaming. We locked him up, and he screamed the whole night. Mom and Dad fucking tied him up to drive him to Brockville, left Benji and me to clean up the mess.”

Tom began to tremble all over, his eyes glassy with tears. He blew out a shaky breath and sucked in another. “Oo-h boy. Ain’t never thought about this without a few stiff ones along for the ride. Benji and me were supposed to burn Derek up with the place, but we couldn’t stand the idea. I mean, him curling up like a steak on a barbeque. We laid him out nice in the ground underneath before we burned the shed down.”

Green struggled to find something rational to say. “Why didn’t someone in the family call the police?”

“Dad said that wouldn’t bring Derek back, only blow the whole thing up in the papers and all. Said Lawrence was sick and belonged in a hospital. I guess I should’ve fought the old man on that one, but he kept saying it must’ve been some kinda God’s will. Derek’s punishment. I never knew what the hell that meant, till now.”

Green felt the horror like a physical blow to the stomach, and he fought to draw breath. “Jesus,” was all he managed.

“Yeah. Jesus. He figured we’d get rid of it all. All the sins, all the ugly little secrets.” Tom took the forgotten cigarette from Green’s fingers and sucked the smoke deep into his lungs. “Benji never did get away from the nightmares. Till he took the only way out he could think of. And Lawrence... Fuck, look what we did to that poor kid. He could’ve had some kind of life, with the drugs there are now and us sticking by him.”

Green regained his professional footing with an effort. “He didn’t have a bad life in St. Lawrence, Tom. He did have a family of sorts.”

Tom didn’t seem to hear. He twirled the cigarette in his hand. “I was so mean to him when he was a kid. He was a nice little kid, kinda cute, you know? But he should’ve been protected, like Kyle. But you can’t go back, eh? Even the old cottage ain’t the same no more.” He shrugged as if disappointment was second nature to him. “Me and Robbie figured we’d bury him out in the village in that little graveyard by the church. Can’t think of much else I can do to make it up to him.”

It was a nice idea, Green told him, to give him something to hold on to in the days ahead. After the
OPP
officer led Tom back to his cell, Green sat alone in the interview room for almost five minutes, gathering the courage to get up.

On the long drive back into the city, the two detectives picked over the case in a desultory fashion, trying to gain their own sense of equilibrium with the events of the past few days. But their hearts weren’t in it, their bodies ached and their minds were too foggy for creative thought. Finally Green tilted his seat back and shut his eyes, profoundly weary. Even with two strong painkillers, every muscle in his body ached, and his bandaged hands throbbed.

“Jesus, what a night,” he murmured. “I’m getting too soft for this kind of thing.”

Sullivan glanced at him. “You violated just about every rule in the book, you know. Luckily, they’ll never know the half of them.”

Green opened his eyes. Smiled. There was a ring of the old warmth in Sullivan’s tone, from the days when they were partners. “And luckily, you were right there to fix them, eh?”

Sullivan nodded. Flicked his signal casually and pulled out to pass a tractor. “I might have to stay in
CID
just to keep you from getting killed.”

Green didn’t reply. Didn’t dare jinx it. He let the painkillers wash over him, and the next thing he knew, Sullivan had pulled into the driveway of his Highland Park home. Sharon folded him into her arms, led him straight upstairs and settled him in bed with a hot cup of tea.

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