Hunter that it all came out.”
Their conversation was seared into his brain.
“What did you say?” Madame Coldbrook had asked.
“The Deer Hunter,” Beauvoir repeated. “The movie.”
He prayed she wouldn’t ask him why, because he had absolutely no idea.
“Then you know the scene, with the revolver. What they make Robert De Niro do.”
“Yes,” Beauvoir had lied.
There was a long pause.
“When did you know?” he asked.
“Not at first. Not from your email or even the beginning of our conversation. And I still don’t know, for sure.”
“But you suspect. Enough to send us that hint. You wanted me to ask, and I’m asking.”
“Let me ask you a question, Inspector. Was there a special case made for the revolver?”
Now it was Beauvoir’s turn to be silent, for a moment.
“Yes,” he finally said.
“Then it’s almost certainly true.” He heard the long sigh all the way from England. “We get a lot of calls from police forces saying our handguns had been used in a crime. Most are street violence, gangs. Revolvers aren’t common these days, but neither are they uncommon. It was only when you said that it was uncharacteristic for the victim to have a revolver and he was killed by a single shot to the temple—”
“You knew then,” said Beauvoir.
“I wondered. I thought it was something you should consider.”
“Then why didn’t you tell me during our call?” he asked. “Why that vague hint?”
“It’s against company policy to admit our revolvers are used for something that cruel. I could be fired. But I needed you to know. I realize it wasn’t the most obvious of hints, but it was the best I could do. I was hoping you’d know that scene from the film.”
“I didn’t, but a colleague saw it last night and put it together. Why did you ask about the special case for the revolver?”
“From what I gather, a ritual is often created. A special case is made. It becomes a sort of ceremony.”
He could hear the disgust in her voice.
“I could be wrong,” she said.
“But you don’t think you are, do you?”
Beauvoir was still lost, but one answer had appeared on the very edges of his mind. An outlier. A terrible monster of an idea. Lurking, pacing, just beyond his reason.
And with the next thing Madame Coldbrook said, it raced across the border, clawing its way to the very front of his mind.
“Only a revolver can be used. The barrel has to spin for the game to work. Was he killed playing it, do you think?”
The game.
The blood raced from Beauvoir’s extremities so quickly he almost dropped the phone.
The game.
They now knew why Leduc had a revolver.
In the single light of the kitchen, Jean-Guy looked at his father-in-law.
Gamache was staring at the floor and shaking his head slightly.
“You can’t have known, patron. It must’ve been going on for years.”
Jean-Guy immediately regretted that last statement, as Gamache winced.
Then he looked up and met Jean-Guy’s gaze.
“Can you imagine?” he said quietly. “Their terror? And no one did anything to stop it. I did nothing to stop it.”
“You didn’t know.”
“I could have fired him. I should’ve fired him. I kept him on to keep an eye on him while I gathered more information on his corruption. I was looking in that direction and completely missed the worst thing Leduc was doing.”
“No one saw it.”
“Oh, someone saw it,” said Gamache, his rage bursting out.
He managed to rein it in, but it roiled just below his skin. Turning it red.
“You’re right,” said Jean-Guy. “Someone knew what was happening. They put a gun to Leduc’s head and pulled the trigger.”
He saw a look on the older man’s face. A primitive, primal, savage moment. Of satisfaction. And then it was gone.
“Was that the motive?”
“Oui,” said Gamache. “I think so.”
Madame Coldbrook had asked if Leduc had died playing the game. He hadn’t. Never did. But still, it killed him. He’d been murdered. Executed. Not in the game, but because of it.
“Whoever killed him tried to implicate you,” Beauvoir said. “By placing your fingerprints on the revolver. Making it look like you’d murdered Leduc. It was Charpentier, wasn’t it?”
Gamache looked at the kitchen clock. Three thirty in the morning.
“We need to get some sleep,” he said. “We have a big day ahead of us.”
But sleep eluded Jean-Guy. He lay staring at the ceiling. Gamache had asked if he could imagine. He lay there and tried to imagine what it was like for those cadets, who were not just cadets. They were someone’s sons and daughters. Someone’s children.
And he imagined his own