Authors: M. J. McGrath
She left the door and went back inside to fetch her purse. There was a fixing on the door to which she would be able to attach a padlock. The store would surely sell those. As a precaution, she sifted through her pile of papers, selected those few she needed for her ongoing investigations and stuck them in her daypack, then headed into the settlement.
The tide was out now, leaving behind it a dirty hem of rotting bergy bits and gravel-crusted ice, and for the first time in weeks the air was cooler outdoors than inside. She checked about as she walked, wondering whether she wouldn't be safer in Ottawa. She had folk looking out for her down there. Here she was vulnerable. Palliser had already said he wasn't prepared to offer her police protection. The only other person she could ask was Charlie Salliaq, and he was in no shape to help. She made a mental note to ask at the Northern Store about getting a plane out. Get back to Ottawa, file the cease and desist papers against the Defence Department from there.
The store had not long been open. The owner and his wife were still sorting out keys and dusting down the cashier's desk. She caught the man's attention and asked for a combi lock.
He stood up and rubbed his head. âDon't get any call for locks. I'd have to order one up on the supply plane.' He began fishing around for the mail order catalogue. Oolik, that was his name. She remembered now. Bit of an asshole.
âWhen are you expecting the next supply plane?'
Oolik turned his head back to glance at the âGreat Canadian views' calendar on the wall.
âShould be tomorrow afternoon, weather permitting.' He pushed the catalogue at her. âToo late to order you a padlock for then. It'd probably take a couple weeks.'
âWhat's the likelihood of being able to get a seat on tomorrow's plane?'
The man began scratching at his head again. He was in no hurry. âWhere you need to get to exactly?'
âIqaluit, Ottawa, it doesn't really matter.'
Oolik sighed. âI guess I could call North Star Air, see if they could take you. Depends on their cargo commitments. But they usually don't fly unless they're full both ways.'
âI'm happy to pay a premium.'
She saw Oolik frown disapprovingly and kicked herself. Offering an Inuk a backhander was like showing up on a first date with bad breath.
Predictably, Oolik returned a few minutes later shaking his head. âI could book you on next Monday's plane.'
There was nothing like being told you couldn't leave to make it seem all the more imperative that you did.
âAny other way of getting off the island?'
âYou had a boat, Resolute Bay's about three hundred and fifty kilometres that way,' Oolik said. He tipped his head to the southwest. âBut you'd need to know all the currents and get lucky with the ice.'
Somewhere inside her chest a dark bud of panic began to swell. She thought about Charlie and the Ellesmere Police and, most of all, about Camp Nanook, and suddenly felt very alone.
âI need a weapon.' She heard the words before she realized they were hers.
Oolik was staring at her, part baffled, part bored. âWe don't keep any guns in stock. You have to order them up.' He reached around to a shelf behind him and heaved a huge and tattered catalogue onto the cashier's desk.
âA knife then?'
Oolik tutted. âWe've got a moratorium on those. Out of respect for the family.'
âPepper spray?'
Oolik threw back his head and laughed.
âBear spray then.'
The laugh became a hoot. âHa, lady, I like your sense of humour. Polar bears are mean. They freshen their
breath
with bear spray.'
As she left, a damp grey fog of resignation began to pick at her bones. She wanted desperately not to go back to the hotel but her legs seemed to carry her there as if she had no choice in the matter. A part of her still needed to believe that the Department of Defence lawyers would return her calls and the matter of Glacier Ridge would be handled in a civilized manner through the courts, but the larger part of her knew this for what it was. A wishful fantasy. Whatever she had touched on had gone too far for the polite processes of the courts. She had crossed over some boundary into the terrain not of the law but of
realpolitik
and in that territory anything was possible.
The hotel foyer was surprisingly cool now. She stopped a moment to listen for the sounds of intruders and hearing nothing went up the stairs and turned into the corridor. As she approached her room she saw that the door was slightly ajar and through the gap there was some movement. She moved forward, propelled by some sense of destiny, then caught herself, too late to leave but not too late to overstep the bedroom door and tiptoe to the bathroom. She slid her backpack behind the door and walked back to meet her fate.
The door to her room swung open and two men in military police uniforms stepped out and came towards her.
âSonia Gutierrez?' The older of the two, a man of Hispanic origin like herself, reached out and took her arm. She felt herself tense, the rush of adrenalin a welcome relief from the numb, animal resignation of before. A cuff closed around her wrist.
The policeman said he was arresting her for trespass on military property, but that hardly mattered. She felt a hand on the small of her back, pushing her forward.
Rashid Alfasi's boss at the meteorological office in Ottawa hadn't heard from him in a couple of days. The stats from the various outlying met stations were collated once a week on Mondays and the staff were only contacted if there was something unexpected in the figures.
âIs he in trouble?' the man asked.
Derek switched the phone to speaker to allow Edie to listen in. She'd watched him become increasingly preoccupied over the last twelve hours. He hadn't said as much, but Edie was sure he was regretting focusing all his energies on the two
unataqti
in the early stages of the case. It made the work of broadening the investigation more difficult, not least because they were now having to do it without alerting Klinsman. But, in the absence of firm proof against any of the other suspects, the link between Alfasi and Martha Salliaq was too important to ignore.
âYou ever have any problems with Rashid? Skipping off, going AWOL, that kind of thing?'
âNo, sir. The kid's reliable.'
âDid he volunteer for the Ellesmere posting?' Southerners who chose to spend time in the High Arctic were usually trying to escape something or other.
âWell, yes,' said the man in a wary tone. âRashid could be a bit of a loner.'
âIsn't it right that the met service seconds some of its workers to the military?'
There was a pause. âThat is correct, yes.'
âIs Rashid Alfasi one of those?'
The man cleared his throat. âI can't answer that question, sir. You'd have to go through the proper channels.'
âI see,' Derek said. âWell, call us if he gets in touch. We're concerned for his safety.' Derek left the detachment number. âI'd rather this was between us for now. I don't want to concern the family.'
âOf course, the family.'
Derek ended the call and sat staring at the phone, wondering if the whole goddamned island hadn't been converted into a single vast military installation, with the locals, people like him and Edie, serving unwittingly as guinea pigs in some giant defence experiment. Sure it was paranoid, it was probably all-out insane, but that didn't mean it wasn't true.
He picked up the handset and listened to the dial tone. Then he opened his desk drawer and pulled out the multitool he kept there and began unscrewing the phone. Halfway through he stopped himself. The regime of no sleep, too much caffeine and irregular meals was getting to him. He was having irrational thoughts. His outlook on the world was becoming paranoid.
He turned to Edie. âI need a break.'
Then he went outside and did what he always did when he needed to reassure himself that he wasn't going crazy.
He fed his lemmings.
â¢Â   â¢Â   â¢
Edie watched him drift out of the office and down towards the lemming shed. Derek's lemming thing was one of the few things about him she didn't understand. Years ago, when she was still a kid, after her father had left but before they'd closed the school and left the children to get a tundra education, a well-meaning
qalunaat
teacher introduced a dozen lemmings into the classroom in a tank. A boy called Isaac volunteered to take the lemmings home during the summer recess and his mother cooked them into a stew. That pretty much reflected the general Inuit view of lemmings.
What Edie did understand, though, was that Derek had to be
feeling pretty bad. It was a feeling she shared. Back in the spring she'd got lost in the forest in Alaska. The trees seemed to muddle her senses and she'd been overwhelmed by the disconcerting sense of being blocked on every side and unable to move forward. That same feeling had returned.
She heard the back door swing open and the sound of Derek's footsteps through the kitchen. At the comms room he stopped and she heard the sound of his voice requesting radio contact. A while later he came back into the office, his breath smelling heavily of tobacco.
âI just spoke with Larsen on the
Piquot.
He's gonna search the ship. Alfasi's not likely to have gone out on the land with no vehicle.'
He reached for his jacket on the hook by the door. âI'm gonna check around. It's possible he's hiding in plain sight.' The settlement was thickly strewn with old fishing sheds, abandoned stores, dog kennels and outbuildings and the overturned mounds of broken and unused boats.
âWant me to come?'
Derek shook his head. âI'm familiar with the terrain. If you'd like to be helpful, you could go find out what Klinsman's said to the Salliaqs and, while you're at it, ask them if they know anything about Alfasi. But go lightly. We don't want Klinsman to know that we're investigating the kid as a suspect. Especially not if he's working for them.'
â¢Â   â¢Â   â¢
She left a few minutes behind him. Rain spilled from a raw dough sky. The supply plane buzzed overhead and gradually disappeared south into low-lying cloud. Moments later, disturbed by noise, the jaeger that had made its nest around the back of the detachment flew up and over the wire towards the sea. Momentarily curious, Edie skirted the detachment building and stood on an old packing crate to get a look at the nest. There were only two chicks now, their flight feathers beginning to come through. Most likely the weaker of the two would become food for the stronger and only one would survive to adulthood.
Leaving the birds, Edie wandered up to the track and turned northeast towards the cliffs until she reached the Salliaqs' house. Charlie
and Markoosie were sitting on the couch staring at an ice-hockey game on TV. Lizzie was sitting in a chair by the window, sewing beads onto a sealskin parka.
âThat's beautiful,' Edie said.
âIt's for Martha. My mother is doing most of the work, but she's sleeping right now.'
Charlie looked up from the game. âI suppose you'd better come sit at the table. Lizzie'll fetch us tea.'
Charlie pushed up to standing, shuffled over to the table and lowered himself very carefully into a hard-backed chair. Markoosie returned to the ice-hockey game.
The deterioration in the old man's health was shocking. A week or so ago, just after the discovery of Martha's body, he'd seemed tired and physically weak but now he was barely able to haul himself about. His eyes were cloudy and there were livid red patches on his face and hands.
âWe thought you might be Sonia. She usually comes by about this time,' he said.
Edie told him she thought the lawyer had business in Iqaluit. âShe was probably on the supply plane that just went over.'
Charlie took this in without comment. âWe got a call from that colonel fella about them
unataqti
. Seems your Lemming Police friend just handed over the case like it was an old sack.'
âIt wasn't like that,
avasirngulik
.'
Just then Lizzie appeared with a plate of muktuq with the tea and sat down at the table beside her father. She eyed Edie warily.
The old man picked up a piece of muktuq and began rubbing it between his fingers to warm the fat. âOh, we'll play along, but underneath me and my family won't have nothing to do with that colonel fella. You understand? Maybe Sonia can figure something out but I'm not holding my breath. Them two
unataqti
won't ever come to justice now.'
Charlie raised the piece of muktuq to his nose, decided it smelled good, popped it into his mouth and began chewing.
âYou know Rashid Alfasi,
avasirngulik
?' Edie began. âWorks at the met station, been helping Susie Silliq out at the Shack some weekends?'
Charlie's eyes narrowed. âThat Arab kid?'
âCanadian. His parents are from Morocco.'
âWhat about him?'
âHe's gone missing.'
Charlie shrugged, helped himself to a piece of muktuq and pushed the plate towards her as though nothing had been said. The kid wasn't his concern.
To be polite, Edie took a piece of muktuq and put it on the table beside her.
âWhy are you asking us about him?' Lizzie said.
Her father stopped chewing, spat out his muktuq and rested it next to his mug. He sighed and folded his arms across his chest. He really did look very frail.
âDon't take it personal, Edie Kiglatuk, but I think it best if you just left. You're no good to us. Not you nor that Lemming Police.'
â¢Â   â¢Â   â¢
On the way back she ran into Derek. He was with his old dog, Pie Crust. The animal lived with Stevie most of the time now, but Derek used him every so often when he went hunting or out on patrol.
âI've just come from Alfasi's house. No one's been back there.' He patted the dog. âYou get anything from Charlie?'
âHe's got it into his head that we just let the military march in and take over. Feels betrayed.'
Derek raised an eyebrow.
â¢Â   â¢Â   â¢
The next couple of hours they focused on the hunt for Alfasi, poking into sheds and dog kennels, breaking open the locks of outbuildings, tearing up their hands lifting the shells of old boats, but at the end of it they came up empty. Not long after they returned to the detachment there was a knock and Klinsman appeared, a tall fellow in shades and an immaculately pressed military policeman's uniform beside him. Edie could tell that Derek was as surprised as she was by the visit.
âDo you have a minute?'
âFor you, always, colonel,' Derek said drily.
Klinsman took a breath in and stepped inside. He didn't appreciate the police sergeant's tone. âThis is a courtesy call, sergeant, and I needn't have made it, but I figure we're all professionals here.'
âI know you are, colonel, but to be honest I don't like the look of your sidekick,' Derek said. âSomething of the rookie about him. New to the Arctic, is he? Just shipped in?'
There was a small pause during which the MP stared impassively ahead and Klinsman rearranged his features.
âWhen we took over the case I requested military police backup, sergeant. But, really, I'm not here to go over old ground. Just the opposite. I'm on my way to inform the Salliaqs of a development in the investigation.' He was looking at Derek directly now. âFor logistical reasons we weren't able to move over the weekend but you should know that this morning we formally charged Privates Jacob Namagoose and Skeeter Saxby with the murder of Martha Salliaq.'
Derek sat back and frowned. âOn what evidence?'
Ignoring the question, Klinsman went on, âI am glad for the sake of the family and for the success of the ongoing SOVPAT exercises that we are going to be able to draw a line under the case and I want you to know how much we have appreciated the cooperation of the Ellesmere Island Police.' Klinsman was going through the motions. He was that most dangerous kind of man, Edie thought, someone for whom any real engagement with human beings had been replaced by strict adherence to form. Men like that were capable of anything.
âSpare us your gratitude,' Derek said.
Klinsman eye-flicked to the MP. For an instant Edie thought she saw him blush.
âWell,' he went on, as though everything had been nicely sorted, ânow we can all go back to our lives.'