Woman Chased by Crows (51 page)

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Authors: Marc Strange

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“We don't pull this off we're in
so
much trouble,” Stacy said.


We're
in trouble?” It appeared that Adele had regained her appetite: her mouth was full of macaroon. “Ha! Check it out. There's a gaggle of party hacks in the corner working on damage control already.” Three men were huddled at the rear of the reception hall. “I think the big boys are wondering if they bet on the wrong horse.”

“Kinda late in the game to find a replacement.”

“Maybe, but better than having your man busted on the floor of the House of Commons. The woman with the phone growing out of her ear is probably calling party
HQ
. His ass'll be off the ticket in a fartbeat.”

“Wish we had more to hit him with.”

Adele helped herself to a few more cookies. “That guy Cam's looking shaky. I asked him if he was aiding and abetting and he nearly pissed himself.” Cam was standing apart from the meeting in the corner, wiping his nose and squeezing the crease between his eyebrows. Adele had another bite of macaroon. “Why don't you take a run at him? You might handle him better than I would. I think he scares easy.”

“I'll be gentle.”

“Not
too
gentle.”

“Hi there. It's Cam, is that right?”

“Yes.”

“I'm Detective Crean, Dockerty
PD
. And you are Mr. O'Grady's right-hand man, is that right?”

“I'm his special assistant. For the duration of the campaign.”

“You don't get to go to Ottawa?”

“What? Oh, no, this isn't full-time with me. I sell real estate.”

“So this is a sideline?”

“Well, it's a bit more than that.”

“Have you known Mr. O'Grady long?”

“No, not long.”

“Like back when he was on the police force?”

“Oh, no.”

“How about when he ran for city council? Did you work on that campaign?”

“No. This campaign is actually the first time I've been involved . . . with him . . . in his political career.”

“And how involved are you? Special assistant sounds like an important job. You, what, look after all the details, right?”

“Yes. Details. I'm the detail person.”

“So you pretty much know everything about his day-to-day activities. For the duration of the campaign, I mean. What? Five weeks? Something like that? Where he goes, what he does. You have his entire schedule, don't you?”

“Yes. I'm supposed to.”

“Supposed to.”

“Well, I can't account for every . . . it's not like I'm
with
him every minute . . . of every day . . . for the entire campaign.”

“Of course not. The man needs some privacy, after all.”

“Yes.”

“But he would have to be on call, wouldn't he? You have to be able to get hold of him. If something should come up.”

“Yes.”

“What sort of things might come up, do you think?”

“Oh, I don't know, changes in schedule perhaps, reporters wanting a comment about something . . . things like that.”

“And he's always available?”

“Well . . . yes. Usually.”

“Usually. Is he ever
un
available?”

“Well, once or twice there's been miscommunication.”

“I see.”

“Nothing that had a serious impact. He missed a meeting once. His cellphone was off and I couldn't reach him.”

“You remember when that was?”

“I'd have to check.”

“But you could pin it down? If you had to?”

“Excuse me.” He sneezed violently. “I'm sorry. My sinuses. I think it's the air in here.”

“That can be very annoying.”

“It gives me awful headaches. Right between my eyes.”

“Ouch. And stress can bring on a headache as well.”

“I'm pretty sure it's allergies.”

“So there's nothing else eating at you? Things going the way they should? All smooth sailing on the campaign trail?”

“It's been pretty smooth, yes.”

“That's good. Not many more days until the election, is it?”

“Not many.”

“This would be a bad time for something unforeseen to come along and mess up all your good detail work, wouldn't it?”

“Like what?”

“You would know better than I would, Cam. Thing is, I'd hate to see a nice guy like you, with a what, wife and kids?”

Cam shook his head. “I'm not married.”

“Really? Even so, you want a regular life, don't you? You wouldn't want to get caught up in something that could wreck all your chances. Know what I mean? If the man you're working for turned out to have secrets, things he was keeping from you, or even worse, things he was asking
you
to keep secret, well, that could make you an accessory to something bad, you know? And maybe you wouldn't even know what it was you were covering up, but when it started to come out, it might not be clear to people that you were entirely innocent. Know what I mean? People might think, hey, he must have known things weren't right, otherwise why would he be covering things up. You see where I'm going with this?”

“Yes.”

“So let's do this very quietly, confidentially, while there's still time to get your side of the story.”

“What is it you want to know?”

“Well, for starters, I'll want you to pin down those times when you couldn't reach him, when he wasn't available say, or when his reasons for not being available didn't quite add up. Because you being a detail guy, you probably keep a close watch on things, don't you?”

“Yes I do.”

“So. For a start, I'm going to need a list of those dates and times. That would be helpful. Now, think carefully, Cam. Is there something else you want to tell me?”

“I don't, I mean I don't know if it's important.”

“You'll have to let me decide that.”

“I guess I do. Well . . . there is a package.”

The candidate's wife in heels was the same height as Adele in cop shoes. The two women were nose to nose. Neither was blinking nor backing down, but where Keasha O'Grady had fire in her eyes, Adele was unruffled.

“I want to know what's going on here.”

“It's Keasha, isn't it? I'm Detective Moen. You probably don't remember but we met years ago.”

“I know who you are. You were Paul Delisle's partner after my husband retired.”

“That's right.”

“This is about Paul? Have you caught the person responsible?”

“We did.”

“Then do you mind if I ask what it is you're doing here?”

“Just asking your husband a few things.”

“And it couldn't wait?”

“That's a beautiful ring, Mrs. O'Grady. Gift from your husband, wasn't it?”

“A great many years ago.”

“He tell you where he got it?”

“He won it, in a poker game.”

“Must have been a pretty high stakes game. It's worth a lot of money.”

“This is about a ring?”

“We tried to arrange a less intrusive interview but . . .”

“It's a campaign. Our schedule is unforgiving.”

“I'm investigating multiple homicides. And
I'm
unforgiving.”

“Multiple . . . ? What on earth is going on?”

“I think there are some serious questions that need to be answered. By your husband. When he can make himself available.”

But the candidate's wife was no longer listening, she was looking across the room at the empty speaker's platform. The audience was murmuring in confusion. Dylan O'Grady was gone.

Damn! Well what did you think was going to happen, you big stork? Keep poking him like that he was bound to do
something
. Confess? Grab a hostage? Pull out an
AK
-47 and blast his way to freedom?
Something
. So he picked the simplest one, he ran. Great. Now all we have to do is find him.

“Anybody see which way he went?”

The general consensus among the pointing fingers suggested that Dylan O'Grady had taken off through the side door to his right, although there was a contradictory view that he'd left by the front door, and a few people thought he'd gone up the stairs. Obviously not everyone in the room had been paying attention. Adele ran for the first choice.

The hall led in two directions. Stacy and Cam Gidrick were coming from one of them.

“Did you see him?”

“See who?”

“Dilly. He booked, Stace. Just took off. Where were you?”

“Went to the parking lot, to check out Cam's car.”

“Okay, so he didn't go that way.”

“Car wasn't there.”

Captain Rosebart was not happy to be called away from his favourite television show at 9:23 p.m. on a Thursday night. He refused to tell Adele what show it was, but she suspected there were Kardashians involved.

“Oh Lordy Jesus, Moen, what did you do now?”

“I talked to him. I told him we wanted to bring him in for questioning.”

“So why didn't you bring him in?”

“He was making a speech. We're waiting for him to finish. Hell, there was a room full of heavy political types. We were trying to keep it quiet.”

“Yeah, that worked out great.”

“What would you have done?”

“Well, for starters, I probably wouldn't have started hassling him in public.”

“We didn't have a lot of choice, Captain. Our dancer lady was on his case all day long. She wanted to rattle him.”

“Well you all did a great job. He got rattled. We've got newspapers and
TV
reporters up the wazoo, the goddamn political party's accusing us of screwing with their election . . .”

“Tell them, better it happened now than
after
.”

“I don't need you to tell me how to handle those assholes.”

“Of course, sir. What
do
you want me to do?”

“For starters I want a
huge
fricking report laying out exactly how you got to the point where you spooked this guy so bad he ran off in the middle of his campaign.”

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