“Neither have you. Which means there’s no one either of us really likes.”
“Hmm.”
“We’ve got people who’ve committed murder, but this guy kept Nicole alive. And the folks we’ve got mostly killed one person for a reason. Whoever did this enjoyed it. No other purpose. If we have anyone here fitting that description, I don’t know it.”
“Except, one could argue, the pedophiles.”
“Of which we have three, and two don’t fit the description. One’s a woman. And Lang’s too skinny.”
“Then that’s the only way to narrow the field. Focus on those who could have done it. Right time period. Right gender. Right skin color. Right basic physical size.”
“Forty possibilities.”
“You’re fast.”
He looks over. “You gonna pretend you didn’t already work it out?”
“No, I was just giving you props.”
His brows knit.
“Props. Proper respect. Yes, I have been working it through. My calculations, though, give me forty-seven.”
Now his brows shoot up. “You fail math, Butler?”
“Remember that for skin tone she was looking at him in dim light and in contrast to her. All she can say is that his skin is lighter. That doesn’t make him Caucasian.”
“Fuck.”
“Yep.”
After a moment, he says, “What’s your take on Nicole? She seems to be coping well.”
“Maybe too well. It might be shock. Which worries me.”
“Agreed. We’ve got Isabel keeping an eye on her, but Isabel did therapy for people having normal problems. Not that.”
“So you’d like a second opinion?” Isabel’s voice precedes her as she walks around the building.
“Yeah, under the circumstances, I’d like a second opinion.”
“Then get one. You’ve got a better source than me here. Someone who can assess both Nicole’s physical and mental health. You just need to kick his ass hard enough.”
“I wish I could,” Dalton grumbles. “If I threaten to put him on shoveling duty for a week, he’ll just take off his damn butcher’s apron, pull on his parka, and ask me to point him in the right direction. Only person who can get him to do it?” He looks at me.
I sigh. “I’ll go talk to Mathias.”
FIFTEEN
I push open the door to the butcher’s shop. From the back room comes the ominous sound of a saw skritch-scraping through bone. The smell of blood hangs so heavy I can taste it.
Most residents will stop right here and call a tentative “hello?” If they don’t get an answer, they’ll leave.
I walk around the counter and poke my head into the back room. “Mathias? Avez-vous une minute?”
The saw stops, and his voice drifts out, “Pour vous, oui.”
Most Canadians my age have taken French. Years of it, the end result of which is that we can travel to Paris and ask for directions en français and even understand the response if it isn’t too long. Asking for those directions in Montreal is trickier, because what we’ve learned isn’t Quebecois.
I spent a few years working in Ottawa, which vastly improved both my French and my dialect, and I shamelessly “practice” it on Mathias, knowing that while his English is perfect, he enjoys the chance to communicate in his native language. We do have two other Francophones in Rockton, but Mathias doesn’t like them. And if Mathias doesn’t like you? Don’t talk to him. Just don’t.
He comes out of the back room, wiping his bloodied hands on his even bloodier apron. At fifty-three, he’s one of the oldest residents in Rockton. If there’s a stereotype of a butcher, he doesn’t fit it. He looks like a young Ian McKellen, a little less dapper and a little more … I won’t say dangerous, but there’s a glint in his eyes like he’s sizing up everyone around him and finding them terribly amusing.
He scrubs up at the sink and takes off his apron. I think the only people he bothers removing it for are me, Dalton, and Isabel, and it’s not so much respect as the realization his bloody-butcher routine isn’t nearly as much fun with people who aren’t fazed by it.
When his hands are dry, he disappears into the back and returns with a plate. On it are three slices of sausage. Without a word, he lays it in front of me. I try each slice, then point at the first piece and ask, in French, “What wood did you use to smoke that one?”
“Birch.”
“It’s better than the aspen.” I point to the second piece. “I like the heat in that one, though. Did I taste anise?”
“Correct. Eric brought me new spices.”
“Nice. My favorite, though, is…” I pick up the rest of the third and eat it. “You had me at cardamom.” I say the spice name in English, which makes him chuckle and say, “Cardamome.”
“Close enough.”
I get a waggled finger for that, and he disappears, and returns with a package of the cardamom sausage for me.
“You recognize the spice,” he says. “But the meat?”
I chew slower. “Is that … pork? Wait, is this…”
“Your wild boar.”
There aren’t actually wild boar in the Yukon. Many years ago, though, the town experimented with pigs, importing a Hungarian breed that crossed European boar with domestic pigs and created a winter-hardy pig with a wool-like coat. Great idea. Until they escaped. They’ve been living and breeding in this part of the woods for generations. A deep-woods hiker once got a picture of one. It was dismissed as a Photoshopped fake. Clearly there are no wooly-coated wild pigs in the Yukon. For imaginary beasts, though, they’re delicious.