Название: Black Fly Season
Автор: Giles Blunt
Издательство: HarperCollins
Жанр: Приключения: прочее
isbn: 9780007372836
isbn:
‘Lay off, Lorraine.’
‘You know what I’m thinking?’ Delorme said to Milcher. ‘I’m thinking that your stereo never did get stolen. I think you just said that so it would look like you didn’t have a clue who took your gun. Because if it was just the gun that was taken, that would indicate the thief knew exactly what he was looking for, and knew exactly where it was. In other words, the thief would have to be someone you knew.’
‘Hey, look. You don’t know what those guys’ll do to me if they think I ratted on them.’
‘Someone shot this young woman in the head, Mr Milcher. We’re going to need a name.’
Algonquin Bay, although modestly populated, was not so long ago the second-biggest city in Canada (measured by area). In the late sixties, three former municipalities of no size whatsoever had come together in a Small Bang of amalgamation to create a city that measured some 130 square miles. Only Calgary was bigger.
Since then, many other cities and townships have succumbed to amalgamation fever, and Algonquin Bay can no longer claim to be bigger than Toronto, Ottawa, or Montreal. Even so, it’s possible to motor for half an hour in certain directions from the centre of town and still find yourself within city limits.
Walter ‘Wombat’ Guthrie lived in the basement flat of a former farmhouse just within the city’s southern border, in other words, several miles from downtown.
‘A biker named Wombat,’ Delorme said in the car. ‘They probably imagine it’s some ferocious predator. Razor-sharp teeth. But I’ve seen wombats at the Toronto Zoo. They’re these cute fuzzy little things. You want to pick them up and take them home.’
‘Walter Guthrie is not little and he’s not cute. He’s got a sheet as long as your arm including assault, armed robbery, and grievous bodily harm. He’s been a member of the Viking Riders practically since kindergarten and if they had such a thing as a pre-natal chapter, he’d have been a founding member of that, too.’
‘How come I haven’t run into him?’
‘Because you worked white-collar crime for six years and Walter Wombat Guthrie can’t even spell white collar.’ Cardinal made a right on to Kennington Road. ‘The only reason we haven’t run up against Wombat and his brethren lately is simple: they moved the clubhouse beyond city limits. Good news for us; headache for the OPP.’
‘I thought all these guys were in their sixties by now – you know, grey ponytails flying in the breeze.’
‘Not all of them. Some of them. But that doesn’t mean they can’t still cause trouble. The only reason Algonquin Bay has a heroin problem is courtesy of the Viking Riders. They basically dumped the stuff – sold it at a loss and as soon as people couldn’t live without it, they jacked up the price.’
‘It’s an effective business model,’ Delorme said. ‘AOL works the same way.’
‘Effective is right. We now have thirty or forty full-time heroin addicts. Maybe more.’
Cardinal drove past a mouldering Sunoco station and turned into the driveway just beyond. He parked beside a wooden house that had once been white. Plastic sheeting flapped at the windows, and an eaves-trough hung from the roof like a disabled limb.
Delorme let out a low whistle.
‘Yeah,’ Cardinal said. ‘Where are the arsonists when you need them?’
‘No bike in the drive, I notice.’
‘Keep that up, Sergeant Delorme, and you’ll make lieutenant in no time.’
They went to a side door, a doorbell labelled Guthrie. Cardinal ignored it and pounded on the door with his fist. They waited a couple of moments, swatting away black flies, then went round to the front door.
‘Landlady,’ was Cardinal’s one-word explanation. This time he used the bell.
It was answered by a bony woman in a bathrobe, black hair streaked with grey and still wet from the shower. Other than that, she was all nose and cigarette.
‘We’re looking for your tenant,’ Cardinal said. ‘Walter Guthrie.’
‘Join the line,’ the woman said. ‘I ain’t seen him in two weeks and he owes me rent.’
‘You have any idea where he is?’
She shrugged and cocked her alarming nose toward the highway. ‘Same place he always is. The clubhouse. Lots of times he don’t come home for a week, but two weeks is a little unusual.’
‘Do us a favour,’ Cardinal said, handing her a business card. ‘Give us a call the minute you see him.’
‘Oh, sure,’ the woman said. ‘And you can take me directly to the morgue after.’
Cardinal started to say something, but the woman closed the door.
‘That was great,’ Delorme said as they headed back to the car. ‘You have such a way with women.’
With certain colourful exceptions, motorcycle gangs in northern Ontario have learned that it doesn’t pay to draw a lot of attention. That’s why the Viking Riders several years ago relocated their clubhouse from Trout Lake Road to a remote site off Highway 11 near Powassan. Nothing about the foursquare, red-brick structure indicates its function as headquarters for travelling pandemonium. In fact, the casual passer-by might judge by the faded sign on the third floor and the persistent odour of burlap that it was still home to the Bronco Bag Factory, which hasn’t been in business since 1987. The building had never had a lot of windows, and most of those that remain have been bricked up to little more than slits, as if the current Dark Age tenants fully intend to fire arrows at any enemy foolish enough to lay siege to the former factory.
When Cardinal banged on the steel door he held his shield up to an armoured security camera. So did Delorme.
The door opened, and the man who answered didn’t look anything like a biker: thirty-five, five-ten, maybe one-seventy. Short hair neatly parted and a pair of round-rimmed designer glasses gave him a collegiate air. This was Steve Lasalle, president of the local chapter of the Viking Riders; he was about twenty years younger than his colleagues, but Cardinal had done business with him before.
‘What can I do for you?’ Lasalle said. ‘I’d invite you in, but the place is a mess.’
‘We’re looking for Walter Guthrie,’ Delorme said. ‘Is he inside?’
‘Sorry. Not here.’
‘He’s not at home, either. His landlady hasn’t seen him for two weeks.’
‘Surprise, surprise. Neither have I.’
‘When СКАЧАТЬ