the doorway of the gift boutique, her ill-fitting blue pant suit dirty at the cuffs from mud, her hair cut in a pageboy, out of fashion since the 1600s, and wearing lipstick that looked as though someone had taken a potato peeler to her lips.
‘Agent Nichol.’ Beauvoir nodded. That sullen, sulky face turned his stomach. He knew, just knew, Gamache had made a horrible mistake inviting her on the team. He was damned if he knew why the chief had done it.
But he could guess. It was Gamache’s personal mission to help every failing, falling, flawed creature. And not just help, like with a nice letter of recommendation, but actually put them on his team. He’d pick them up and put them on homicide, the most prestigious unit in the Sûreté, working for the most famous detective in Quebec.
Beauvoir himself had been the first.
He’d been so disliked at his detachment in Trois-Rivières, he’d been permanently assigned to the evidence cage. Literally a cage. The only reason he hadn’t quit was because he knew his very presence pissed off the bosses. He was full of rage. A cage was probably where he belonged.
Then the Chief Inspector had found him, taken him onto homicide and a few years later promoted him to inspector and his second in command. But Jean Guy Beauvoir never totally left the cage. Instead it had moved inside and in it he kept the worst of his rage, where it couldn’t cause damage. And beside that cage sat another, quieter cage. In it, curled up in a corner, was something that frightened him far more than his fury. Beauvoir lived in terror that one day the creature in there would escape.
In that cage he kept his love. And if it ever got out it would go straight to Armand Gamache.
Jean Guy Beauvoir looked over at Agent Nichol and wondered what she kept in her cage. Whatever it was, he hoped it was well locked. The stuff she allowed out was malevolent enough.
They descended to the lowest level of the hospital, into a room that held nothing natural. Not light, not air, which smelled of chemicals, not the furniture, which was aluminum. And not death.
A middle-aged technician matter-of-factly slid Madeleine Favreau from a drawer. He casually unzipped the bag then reeled back.
‘Oh, shit,’ he shrieked. ‘What happened to her?’
Even though they were prepared it still took a moment for the hardened homicide investigators to climb back into their bodies. Gamache was the first to recover, and speak.
‘What does it look like to you?’
The technician inched forward, craning his head to the limits of his neck, then peeked inside the bag again.
‘Fuck me,’ he exhaled. ‘I don’t know, but I sure don’t want to go that way.’ He turned to Gamache. ‘Murder?’
‘Scared to death,’ said Nichol, entranced. She couldn’t stop staring at that face.
Madeleine Favreau was stuck in a scream. Her eyes bulging, her lips stretched across her teeth, her mouth wide and silent. It was hideous.
What could cause that?
Gamache stared back. Then he took a deep breath.
‘When will Dr Harris be in?’ he asked. The technician consulted the work schedule.
‘Ten,’ he said, gruffly, trying to make up for his little shriek earlier.
‘Merci,’ Gamache said and walked out, the other two in his wake along with the stench of formaldehyde.
Myrna, Lacoste and Clara made straight for the stairs. Clara’s short legs strained to keep up with Myrna who was hauling herself up two at a time. Clara tried to stay hidden behind Myrna hoping the fiends would find her friend first. Unless they were coming up behind. Clara looked behind and rammed into Myrna, who’d stopped dead in the corridor.
‘Had my father seen that,’ she said to Clara, ‘he’d insist we get married.’
‘Nice that there are still some old-fashioned men.’
Myrna had stopped because Agent Lacoste, in the lead, had stopped. Suddenly. Halfway down the corridor.
Clara looked around her protective Myrna and saw Lacoste standing very alert.
Oh, God, she thought. What now?
Slowly Lacoste edged forward. Myrna and Clara edged with her. Then Clara could see it. Yellow strips of tape, scattered on the floor. Yellow strips of tape dangling from the frame of the door.
The police tape had been violated, not simply removed, or even cut. It had been shredded. Something had wanted very badly to get in.
Or to get out.
Through the open doorway Clara could see the dim room. Lying in the center of their chairs, on the salt circle, was a tiny bird, a robin.
Dead.
EIGHTEEN
Agent Robert Lemieux shoved more