FOREVER DEAD
FOREVER DEAD
A Cordi O’Callaghan Mystery
Suzanne F. Kingsmill
A Castle Street Mystery
Copyright © Suzanne F. Kingsmill, 2007
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise (except for brief passages for purposes of review) without the prior permission of Dundurn Press. Permission to photocopy should be requested from Access Copyright.
Editor: Barry Jowett
Copy-editor: Andrea Waters
Design: Jennifer Scott
Printer: Webcom
National Library of Canada Cataloguing in Publication
Kingsmill, Suzanne
Forever dead : a Cordi O’Callaghan mystery / Suzanne F. Kingsmill.
ISBN 978-1-55002-705-1
I. Title.
PS8621.I57F67 2007 C813’.6 C2007-900087-8
1 2 3 4 5 11 10 09 08 07
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J. Kirk Howard, President
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For:
John, Tim, and Jesse
&
Bill, Allison, and Dorion
Prologue
Jake Diamond eyed the angle of the sun and knew he’d never get out of the bush by nightfall. That he would never get out at all didn’t cross his mind as he gripped the axe in his left hand and sliced the finely sharpened edge viciously downward, slashing a long, narrow strip of bark from the cedar. There were a hundred more such blazes snaking their way back behind him through the endless stand of trees.
Diamond surveyed the slashes with a mixture of satisfaction and frustration. He hadn’t expected it to take so long, but then he hadn’t counted on unwanted company either. Another dozen or so to go. He continued on through the heavy undergrowth toward the next tree. His deeply tanned arms glistened with sweat in the sticky summer sun, and his thick curly black hair lay matted at the line where it met his broad forehead. He had the chiselled features of a statue not yet finished, the lines sharp and blocked out, the nose straight, the chin square, the eyebrows with a startled look, as if slashed on at the last moment by the sculptor. It was a face that would have aged well, given the chance.
“Come on, Paulie!” he called, searching the woods for his cat, knowing she was there, never far away — not since the day he’d been bullied by his four-year-old nephew into caring for the little three-legged cripple, and she had latched onto him.
She darted out of the tangled woods to his left and rubbed her long, lean, velvet black body against his leg, purring loudly as she looked up at Diamond with her startling yellow eyes framed by the black obelisk of her face.
“Easy now, Paulie. Easy, you’ll rub all your fur away!” he laughed as he shifted the axe to his right hand and reached down to scratch the cat’s ears. “Just a few more and we’re done.”
The little cat raced off ahead of him as Diamond moved quickly, taking a compass reading after each blaze. He broke out of the woods onto the smooth, pale granite that formed the top of a cliff overlooking a lake. The shimmering blue of the water stretched beyond his sight to the north, and he could just make out the tell-tale white froth of the rapids to the south, their dull roar sounding like wind racing through the trees. Across the lake, beyond the first undulating mountain of evergreens, he could see a pale wisp of smoke coming from the new logging camp carved into this wilderness. For one nasty moment he thought he heard the distant buzz of a chainsaw, and the anger surged in him — sweetened only by the revenge that now lay within his grasp. But the buzz was only a dragonfly caught in a spider’s web, wildly flapping its wings.
The clifftop where Diamond found himself was cleft in two from some great wrenching upheaval of the earth’s inner guts; a thin jagged tear ripped down the cliff face almost to the water’s edge, along an area of weaker rust red rock. He carefully scanned the lake, looking for any sign of movement. Finding none, he turned back to face the woods, and, with one foot on either side of the narrow crevice, he took a quick compass bearing from the last blazed tree. Just a precaution in case something happened to him — he’d never forget how to get there. After all he’d been through, how the hell could he?
“Let’s go, Paulie, or we’ll never beat the sun back to camp. One more night, girl, just one more night.”
By the time they reached the campsite the sun was sinking into the water, its red eye bleeding into the clouds above, leaving behind a tangled whirl of angry purple and crimson swirls. Several large cedars stood shadowing his campsite, but all other brush and trees had long since been cut down or burned by other campers. Diamond threw his ratty green canvas backpack to the ground, sat down, and dug out his cup from one of the many pockets on his pack. He filled it from the water bag he had left hanging in the shade of one of the trees. The water was tepid and bitter from the chemical taste of the iodine tablets he’d used to purify it. He checked the impulse to spit it out and instead let it sluice down his parched throat and made a mental note to switch brands of tablet. This stuff was about the worst he’d ever tasted. Paulie jumped onto his lap trying to whisker away the water.
“All right, all right. There’s a whole lake down there for you. Why do you want this horrible stuff, eh?”
But he let her lap briefly at his cup as he looked out at the setting sun. Normally he loved the solitude and beauty of the north woods, but tonight, for some reason, the quiet was almost oppressive — noisy in its silence. Jake suddenly found himself straining to listen to it, to catch it off guard and hear it by its very absence, but he was puzzled to find that tonight instead of comforting him, it felt oddly menacing.
Paulie stopped drinking and with a sudden movement turned to look behind her, her body tense, ears quivering. Diamond followed her stare, wondering what it was that she was hearing, when he became aware of the trees moving in the newborn wind.
“Is that what’s bothering you, girl?”
It was shuffling to life in the trees overhead, easing through their branches like a gentle, foreboding hiss. It felt obsequious, fawning, as it caressed Diamond’s body, whistling a strange keening that made Diamond shiver. He was momentarily unnerved by the flood of feelings it released: a fathomless, inexplicable sadness and an unexpected, gnawing fear of something