Never Sleep With a Suspect on Gabriola Island (19 page)

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Authors: Sandy Frances Duncan,George Szanto

Tags: #Fiction, #General, #Mystery & Detective, #Action & Adventure

BOOK: Never Sleep With a Suspect on Gabriola Island
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On the dock, waiting to meet the plane, half a dozen people. Including Tam Gill! Come to meet her? He couldn't know she'd be on this flight! He waited back from the others, not watching the passengers.

She handed her customs card and Canadian passport to a woman wearing a peaked hat that said Immigration-Customs/Douane, separate functions except at small ports of entry. No, nothing to declare. Nothing but a sudden pounding heart. The woman kept the card, handed back the passport. Bureaucracy done with.

Tam was staring at her. Their eyes met. From him a moment of recognition, then uncertainty. Then a huge smile, a wave, and he elbowed his way toward her. “Hi!”

“Hello. What are you doing here?”

“Come to meet you, of course.”

“How'd you figure me on this flight?”

“Just lucky.” He grinned. “No, I'm lying. I'm picking up a shipment for the Gallery. Need a ride? I've got the van.”

“I only have to go a couple of blocks. It's just as fast to walk.” Drat.

“Two blocks are two blocks.”

That smile again. She smiled back.

“Let me grab my shipment. Aside from everything else, I'm the Gallery customs broker. Give me a minute.”

Her eyes followed him to the cargo pod. A dock crewman unloaded suitcases, small wooden boxes, half a dozen cardboard packages, and three high, wide, thin crates.

Well, darn it. His appearance had thrown her into a fuss.

Tam collected the crates. The dock man handed Tam a sheet of paper. He located a dolly, loaded it, wheeled the packages to the van and piled them in back.

Most irritating was, now she'd have to change. She couldn't meet Tam later in clothes he'd already seen her in today. Professionalism demanded an image that controlled, and that included tactical clothing. Likely, and she let an ironic smile grow in her mind, likely he'd already undressed her. Peeled off her jacket, let her pants fall to the floor. The sex dance.

“You coming?” He opened the passenger door.

She walked over, not managing the brisk step she wanted. He reached his hand over for her elbow but she used the door's armrest to pull herself in. He closed the door.

Only a pair of jeans and another blouse. Dang!

“Where you headed?” He smiled at her through the open passenger window.

“Cameron Island. The whole two blocks south.”

“No problem. I just have to stop up there.” He pointed. Above the back of the dock, a government placard said,
Customs/Douane
. “Won't be a minute.” He headed off.

Two minutes. Three. She could have been at Noel's apartment already. Customs. Voluntary honesty here, pick stuff up, go by, report. What was he importing? She leaned around, supported herself on the driver's seat. Still warm— Well of course it was warm, the whole van was warm, it was a warm day. Five minutes. The three crates lay stacked flat. She eased herself between the seats. Snooping headed the description list of any job she'd ever be interested in. On the top crate, a bill of lading enclosed in plastic. From Sultan Suppliers, North Bend, Oregon—

“Frames.” Tam's head stuck in through the door window.

She nodded. “Ah.” Getting caught snooping was not in the job description. She sidled forward between the seats. “All done?”

“Yep.” He climbed in and did up his seatbelt. “It's quick. They know me.” He started the engine. “Three modern antiqued picture frames, value twelve hundred dollars each. Sultan does good work. You need a frame, I can get you a good price. Anything else you'd like to know?”

Kyra produced a mock-feeble smile as she fumbled with the seatbelt. “Sorry. Just curious.”

“Must be your profession.” He laughed a little, and drove onto Front Street.

She mentioned the new airline route, so much easier. For him too? Before had he used the regular Nanaimo airport? He dropped her on the circular drive in front of Noel's condo building. She realized she was looking forward to their drink. But hmm, Tam hadn't asked which Cameron Island building to drive to.

She thanked him, headed for the outer lobby, and pushed the electronic buttons. No response. But her key from Noel opened the door. She walked up two flights and let herself into his apartment. Was that deadbolt always so loose? A note from Noel: I'm on Gabriola. Dempster's binocs turned up in the Bourassa shed. New stuff on that Vegas casino. Lyle's coming for dinner. You are VERY welcome!

Lyle. Interesting. And the binoculars. Intriguing.

She looked in Noel's study closet on the off-chance she'd left some garment. No, but some other clothes hung there. She flicked through the hangers and paused at a steel-blue shirt. She stroked the sleeve, fine lawn, almost like silk. Yep, it would fit her. Noel wouldn't mind.

From Noel's balcony she watched tourists on the embankment. Couples, all ages. For a moment she yearned to walk along that promenade hand in hand with a man who loved her—

She wrote on the bottom of Noel's note: I should be back before seven. Yes, I'd love dinner, thanks. And I promise to leave you right after. She took a long bath and got dressed. She watched the Gabriola ferry arrive, and depart. She grabbed her jacket. Time to go.

TWELVE

ROSE HAD BEEN thinking about Rab. Rab was Peter, originally Pyotr, Rabinovich, a Russian Jew who'd taken a circuitous path from the old USSR to the USA, stopping in Czechoslovakia as it was then, some years in Panama, then Switzerland and Israel. His most striking feature was an elegant skull, baldness having hit him in his twenties. His face was lean, like the rest of him, with a dominant nose, prominent cheekbones and lips full enough to belie the leanness. His eyes were a pale grey-blue. A scar courtesy of the KGB decorated his left cheek. Why had the KGB arrested him, when had he gotten free? Rab was ever vague on details. His young wife and their little girl had been killed when a suicide bomber had blown up the bus they were on. He had taken merciless private revenge against the faction that had claimed responsibility.

Rose, some years back, was surprised to discover she found bald heads attractive. Artemus had a head of lush silver-grey hair which he'd undoubtedly keep to the grave. His head was attractive too.

They'd all met six years ago, soon after Rab opened The Hermitage, his Las Vegas luxury hotel and casino. He'd insisted on decorating his palace with good European art, his way of reclaiming Jewish-owned art stolen by the Nazis during the Second World War. A consultant had mentioned, among other dealers, Artemus Marchand. Gabriola? A small island? Does it have roads? He was intrigued. Their business association had worked well. Rab and Rose became friends, each someone the other could confide in.

She locked the greenhouse, wheeled in through her bedroom door to the kitchen, wine rack, opener, glass. She took a sip. Oh what the hell. She dialed Rab's private number.

“Hello?”

“Hello, Rab.”

“Ah! My favorite
collaborateur!
What wonderful thing have you done now, Rosie-Rosita?” He spoke with perfect English grammar set in what Rose recognized as residual Leningrad nasality layered with light west-Asian gutturals and curlicued Levantine cadences.

“Rab, you're a caress to a woman's ego.”

“Tell me more.”

“Well, in fact, I have done something wonderful. A new flower. A black
Chrysanthemum morifolium,
the first of its kind.”

“Amazing!”

“I'm going to show it next weekend.”

“Rosie-Rosita, congratulations. Dumas only created a black flower on paper.”

“I accept all laudatory comments.” He was good for her. And, she believed, they were good for each other. An affair of the mind, he described their relationship, far more important than affairs of the flesh. Of which he had many, some sweet young plumlet ever on his arm. “But Rab, I'm worried. About our—arrangement.”

“Should we speak on the phone?”

“I don't have much to say. Only that— I don't know if we should continue.”

“You speak of recent global politics?”

“I worry about borders.”

“Yes, we should talk. Oh my dear, I've neglected you. My life has been even more horribly full than normal. And yours as well, I imagine.”

“Not really, not on our island.” Should she explain? Why not. “Our biggest event's been the death—the murder—of our gardener.”

A moment of silence before Rab said, “But that's awful!”

“Yes. I found his body.”

“How dreadful, Rosie. How horrible for you. Have the police discovered who did it?”

“No, but they've been around. Artemus was upset. He hired investigators.”

“Hmm.”

“I agree.”

Their Hmm, and, I agree, caught a full summary of Artemus' not-thought-through decision and the problems it might bring. “Anyway, they didn't find anything.”

“Still, that was a damn stupid thing for him to do.”

“Just foolish, I'd say.”

“Did he hire a large agency?”

Strange question. “I don't think so. A man and a woman.”

“Their names?”

Why does he want to know that? She told him. “They sent a report absolving the Gallery.” She wished she hadn't mentioned the detectives. “So I didn't think to bother you.”

“Nothing you do could be a bother to me, my darling.”

She laughed. She'd bet Tam learned flirtation from someone like Rab. Or did the ability just arrive on a male chromosome? “You're sweet.” They would talk soon about the arrangement. They said goodbye. She finished her wine. The time had come to discuss this with Artemus.

• • •

Kyra, jacket in hand, walked up Bastion Street across the bridge over the old Island Highway. Down to the right used to be the whorehouse district. Up the hill along Fitzwilliam to the old city quarter, slowly becoming a boutique and restaurant area, especially along Wesley Street. The houses up here dated from the late 1800s, homes for Hudson's Bay Company overseers and foremen, for managers of Nanaimo's coal industry. The name Nanaimo, she also knew from Noel, comes from
Snuneymuxw
—she said it aloud. Except for the starting
S
and the strange
X
just before the end, it did sound like a mispronunciation of Nanaimo. Rather, the other way around, Nanaimo a corruption of—

Oh, quit maundering! Just do your job. Another interview, another judgment of partial truths told, concealed stories, stances, innuendos. Schools-of paintings and Eaglenest. You're good at interviews, remember? Selby Street. One block. Three-storey modern Tudor condos. The door to the Mews, the name. The number. She pressed.

A voice from a tinny speaker said, “I'll buzz. Come up.”

A low whine. She entered and climbed stairs, found the apartment, raised her knuckles, brought them down as the door opened. She caught her balance and her brain said, déjà vu: Tam's karate move on Dempster, going with the other's action.

Tam grinned. “Hi.”

“Hello.” She smiled and held out her hand. He took it and they shook, his pressure firm but not dominating. As hard as hers.

“Come in.” Golf shirt, khaki shorts. Bare feet.

“Thank you.” She strode to the middle of the room, jacket in hand.

“My home away from home. Well, my studio apartment away from home.”

“Nice.” Small kitchen against the side wall—sink beside stove, fridge beneath, microwave above. A wooden table and two chairs by the sliding glass wall, overlooking downtown and the harbor. A couch. Couple of doors, one closed, the half-open one to a bathroom.

“Every now and then I need to get away from Gabriola.”

“Oh? Is that important for you?”

He looked at her sharply. “If you want to live more lives than you get over there, yes.”

More lives, that's what she too wanted. “It's very attractive.”

“I like it. But I like my place on Gabriola too.”

Was he yanking her back and forth? “That's also pretty.”

“You know why I like it?”

Was she supposed to guess? She was the interviewer here. “Why?”

“See, I start off in some huge place, Bucharest, London, even Toronto, and I take a fast plane to a smaller place, Vancouver. From there it's a small plane to a smaller place on a big island, Nanaimo. Then a little ferry to a small island, and a slow van on curving roads to a house, Eaglenest. Then a path through woods to a tiny cabin. That's my kind of island peace.”

It appealed. “Active downsizing.”

He laughed lightly. “But I need Nanaimo, too. And Vancouver. And London.”

She nodded.

“Now. We can go out for a drink.” An inferior option, his tone declared. “Or I have almost everything you might want,” he gestured, “right here. We can sit on the balcony. I think it's still warm enough.”

“Yes.” He was smooth.

He walked past her to the sliding glass door, half-open, and gestured for her to go out, assuming his preferred option had been accepted. “What may I give you?”

“A glass of white wine?” As she passed him her sleeve brushed his arm. The fine lawn of her shirt pressed on her skin. Part of her said, Be careful, Rachel, and another part insisted, If it takes flirtation to get him chatty, two have to play the game. She sat on one of the rattan deck chairs, a table between them, and set the jacket on the arm. Had he edged his shoulder forward as she passed? She faced out toward the harbor but paid more attention to the beat of her pulse. Did it show at her temples? She touched her hair, slid her fingers down the side of her brow. No.

He brought glasses, cut crystal, and a bottle of cold wine, a Caterina Sauvignon Blanc 2006 from Washington State. He displayed it like a good sommelier. She nodded, he uncorked.

An expensive wine. The very wine she'd bought Sam, a case, for their second anniversary—an earlier vintage, of course. A wine Sam loved.

Tam set both glasses on the table, filled them to half, handed her one, raised his, found her glance, no words. The glasses clinked lightly. Excellent crystal. Nineteenth-century Bohemian? She sipped. Lovely. Tam was saying, “ . . . can't keep much wine around. Your choice was limited.”

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