The Third Riel Conspiracy (21 page)

Read The Third Riel Conspiracy Online

Authors: Stephen Legault

Tags: #FICTION / Mystery & Detective / General, #FICTION / Mystery & Detective / Historical

“Durrant, what is it?”

“Revenge is a curious motivation.”

“Did you find the man?”

“No. He spooked. Remember I told you I arrested his little brother right before this business with Riel?”

“Yes, of course.”

“Word got down here pretty quick. Must have come across the wire. Modern technology.” Durrant shook his head. “A lawman can't keep ahead of the renegades. Anyway, I feel as if I'm chasing a ghost.”

“Durrant, we're here to look into the business at Sun River, aren't we?”

“Yes, of course. That's my duty—”

“But you thought maybe you might find what you were really looking for here in Fort Benton?”

“Yes.”

“And it's revenge you're seeking?”

“Not much of a lawman, I suppose.”

“You're a
man
first, Durrant.”

“I am a lawman above all else, Charlene. I've seen what revenge does to a man. It will get him hanged from the neck. Revenge is the most basic of motivations for murder.” He slipped off his boots and undressed in the dark.

“You're not going to kill anybody,” said Charlene.

“I don't know that.”

“I know you. When the time comes, when you find the men who shot you, you'll remember that you are a North West Mounted Policeman.”

SUN RIVER WAS
a long day's ride from Fort Benton. The earth began to rise and fall as they travelled west toward the mountains. They rode the track up out of the Missouri River and at Great Falls started along the trail into the Sun River country.

“So this is where Louis Riel was hiding all those years?”

“Not so much hiding as just living. He was a
US
citizen, taught school, was married and had children.”

“Remind me, what exactly are you looking for?”

To the west, the Rocky Mountains drove up like torn steel, their spiny backs rising and falling in a blue line that stretched unbroken as far as either of them could see. “I don't know,” Durrant admitted. “Riel told me there were secrets buried down here. I don't know if he was being literal or just aggrandizing once again. I guess we'll just have to do what any lawman would: ask a lot of questions.”

“I thought that lawmen in this territory rode in guns blazing.”

“You've been reading penny paperbacks again.”

“Life of a stableboy.”

As the sun was sinking behind the western wall of serrated rock, the town of Sun River came into view. “Not much to show for itself,” said Charlene.

“I see a church steeple, and that's a good sign. We'll start there and ask about our northern prophet.” They rode the flat expanse of country that bordered the broad Sun River, its banks filled to near overflowing with spring's meltwater. “It's good country. I can see why Riel made this home.” They reached the church and gratefully dismounted. Looping their reins over the hitching post, they stood and regarded the tiny village and the vast country around them. Durrant watched cattle on the ridge above the river they had just traversed disperse as an oncoming rider appeared. He watched the horseman drop into the willows along the river. A voice interrupted him.

“Evening.”

Durrant turned to see a man in black robes on the steps of the church. “Good evening,” said Durrant.

“Help you?”

“I hope so. We're looking for a place to bed down for the night. My name is Durrant Wallace. I'm with the North West Mounted Police. This is my . . . friend, Charlene Mason.”

“A little out of your jurisdiction,” said the priest.

Durrant noted that the man was a Jesuit. “Yes, Father, I am. I'm here to ask about Louis Riel.”

“Ah . . .” said the priest. “I've heard about the business up in the Saskatchewan Territory. I told Riel he should just stay put, let the Indians sort out their own problems, but he said he had a calling.”

“You were here when the men came to find him?”

“Yes, of course.”

“Were there many who saw what went on?”

“Not so many. There are only about thirty souls who live in town. We serve the farms and ranches for fifty miles.” The priest opened the door of the church, and he, Durrant, and Charlene stepped inside. The room was dark and warm. A woodstove rumbled in the corner. The priest walked to the front of the church.

“Father, did Riel attend your church?”

“Yes, he did.”

“Was he a regular?”

“He was here every Sunday.”

“And what did he do in Sun River?”

The priest had taken up a post at the front of the church before the altar. Durrant sat down in the front pew. Charlie sat down beside him.

“He taught school. He was a very well-educated man. He was very good with both the students and the parents.”

“Did people know about his . . . past?”

“We did. Some of it. I imagine there are things in Riel's past that nobody knows for certain, but we knew enough.”

“You knew that in 1874 Riel incited a revolution at Fort Garry, in what is now Manitoba, and a man, a Protestant named Thomas Scott, was murdered?”

“We knew this.”

“You're a Jesuit.”

“It's not about who follows which church, Mr. Wallace. It's about faith in Jesus Christ.”

“Well, that may be so, Father, but for Mr. Scott it had everything to do with being a Protestant. There were many reasons why, in 1874, the Métis rose up, just as there are many reasons for the current resistance, now coming to an end in the North West Territories of the Dominion. One of them was the age-old quarrel between the interpretations of God's word that has formed the rift between Catholics and Protestants.”

“Am I to take it you are not a God-fearing man?”

“I have seen too much of this world to fear anything but the frailty of the human spirit.”

The church was quiet. Durrant could feel Charlene's eyes on him. The priest shifted. Durrant broke the silence. “I'm sorry, Father. We're here on urgent business. Riel's second rebellion is over. Many have been killed. I am investigating the death of one man who was murdered in our own compound. This man was despised by many, and it seems they were all converging on him to cause him harm. I am charged with bringing his killer to justice.”

“What does that have to do with us?” The priest gestured as if his congregation was before him.

“I have it on good authority that the murdered man was in Sun River this past July. He came here under the pretext of being friend to Riel and the Métis. He travelled as part of the small company of men with Gabriel Dumont to try and entice Riel to return to Canada. His intent was not to help aid Riel's return, but to prevent it. He failed, and I don't know why. We hoped that by coming here we might learn what it was that happened, and how this may have led to his eventual murder.”

“I remember the party of travellers, and I remember Dumont.” The priest closed his eyes. “There were four men that came into town who approached Riel. Two men tended to the horses and camped up on the ridge.”

“Two men?”

“Yes, there were two.” The priest's eyes were still pressed shut.

“Did these men not come into town?”

“I don't believe so. As I recall, Dumont was very careful about this. He spent several days here to convince Riel that the time was right for his return.”

“Father, I wonder if I might ask a favour of you. I wonder if you might recommend a place we can board ourselves tonight.”

“Sun River doesn't have a hotel.”

“Might we call on the grace of your church for shelter?”

“I suppose. Are you man and wife?”

“No, but I am this young woman's guardian,” said Durrant. “I am charged with her safety.” The priest nodded his agreement. Durrant continued, “In the morning, would you kindly take us to where these men were camped?”

TWENTY-FIVE

UNEARTHED REVELATIONS

JUNE 11, 1885. SUN RIVER, MONTANA.

Durrant lay awake, listening to the wind beat against the wooden walls of the church. Charlene was stretched out on the floor next to the stove, wrapped in a blanket. Several times he stoked the fire and Charlene opened her glacial-blue eyes and regarded him. In the early hours the wind died and Durrant began to drift toward sleep, but something jarred him awake. The fire in the stove was nearly out and the room was cool. Everything was dead still. Durrant shrugged off his blanket and struggled with his prosthetic. He stood up and looked to see that Charlene remained asleep. As carefully as his game leg would allow, he moved away from the stove and toward the centre aisle of the church. Using the silver-handled cane for support, he slowly went down the aisle.

He heard a clicking and the sound of wood creaking. Someone was opening the main door to the church. Durrant raised the Enfield. He realized he was holding his breath, and let it out. He took two more steps, stopped, and listened. The sound came again, louder this time and immediately in front of him. He moved to the left side of the double door and extended the Enfield before him. The door opened an inch and Durrant thumbed back the hammer on his pistol.

The moment was frozen. He aimed at what he imagined would be an intruder's head, his heart thumping in his chest, his hand sweating.

The door closed with a thud. The noise caused Durrant to step back, and he bumped the pew behind him; it made a scraping sound on the wooden floor.

“Durrant?” called Charlene.

“Quiet!” he whispered. He watched her rise silently and pick up the Remington shotgun from the floor next to her. He held up his right hand, the cane dangling awkwardly from his deformed fingers, and motioned for her to remain still, but she did not. She came up behind him, the shotgun pointed at the floor.

He turned to look at her and realized that she was not afraid. “There's someone outside the door.” He advanced on the entrance and with his cane flipped the fastener and threw open the door. A gust of air entered the church and extinguished their only light. Pistol held at the ready, Durrant stepped out onto the top step, Charlene behind him. He scanned the area. The half moon resting on the western horizon provided enough light to see the country around them. Durrant heard horses running. He raised the pistol and saw, on the road a hundred yards away, two riders galloping away toward Fort Benton. He aimed the Enfield but knew at that distance, and with the riders' speed, he had no hope of finding a mark. And what if he did? Though it appeared the riders had come from behind the church, there was no way to tell. He lowered his pistol and looked at Charlene.

“Two men, both with broad-brimmed hats, dark horses,” she said.

“Maybe they came to say confession.”

“I'm all ears.”

They stepped back into the church and together pushed a pew in front of the door. “That ought to do it. The father will be flummoxed to get inside come the morning, mind you.”

“If he brings a coffee pot we might allow him in.”

Durrant went back to their sleeping area, got a piece of cordwood, and opened the stove. Charlene rearranged their blankets, and Durrant imagined that she did it in a way that brought them closer together. He was about to put the wood in the stove when he was stopped in his tracks.

There would be no sleep that night: on top of the stove was a square of newspaper torn from the masthead of the
Calgary Daily Herald
. It was dated the day that Durrant and Charlene had left the city on their ride south. On it was a note scrawled in ink.

When you go to the ridge in the morning, bring the gravedigger.

THEY SEARCHED THE
church and found the back door; Durrant cursed out loud at his own foolishness. “So while we were watching the front, someone snuck in and left this right under our noses.”

Charlene was composed. She found an oil lamp and lit it. They sat by the stove with their backs to the wall. Durrant held his gun. “If they wanted to hurt us, why not just do it here?”

Durrant looked around. “It's a church.”

“I think there have been more than a few murders in a church, have there not?”

Durrant looked at the note. “Let's go and find out.”

THE PRIEST WAS
shocked. “Who in the community knew we were here?” asked Durrant.

“I don't know. Maybe a few—”

“Who did you tell?”

“I told no one.”

Durrant was silent a moment. Then he said, “There was a rider on the road—behind us, maybe a mile or two back.” Charlene looked at him. “I think he might have followed us from Fort Benton. Maybe from before that. The
Calgary Daily Herald
suggests maybe
long
before that.”

“What do you want to do, Sergeant?” the priest asked.

“Take us to the ridge where Reuben Wake was camped.”

IT WAS A
fine morning. It warmed quickly as the sun rose. Durrant and Charlene ate a meal the priest provided and then saddled their horses and rode north, out of town. When they were alone, Charlene asked, “Are you certain of this?”

“Yes,” Durrant said quickly. “But if you wish to stay behind—”

“I just wonder if you trust this man.”

“The priest? Of course not.”

“What of the two riders on the road?”

“This priest may have been one of them.” Durrant was watching the horizon. When they began up the hill, he mused, “I wonder who else was camped here with Reuben Wake.”

The priest caught up to them, and Durrant and Charlene fell silent. They rode up the breaks above the Sun River. They were a few miles from town when the priest turned his mount. It was an open space with just a few cottonwood trees providing cover. “This is the place where Reuben Wake was camped, Sergeant.”

Durrant rode a little and worked his way around the cottonwoods. There was a black spot on the ground indicating a fire pit, with dense clumps of vetch growing through bits of charred wood.

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