Sullivan thought the eyes were likely the true measure of the man, whereas the smile and the hair were the work of Liberal Party spin doctors who thought he looked too scary in his warrior guise.
As he passed through the struggling farmsteads of the Ottawa Valley, Sullivan had to block out his own aversion to the place. The sparse, rocky landscape fostered a fierce combination of pride, independence and bitterness among those who hung on there. “This Land is Our Land; Back off, Government” warned the huge signs staked in fields along the roadsides. He should have felt pride and sympathy for the families who clung to their land in defiance of bureaucratic red tape and urban ignorance. But for Sullivan, who had grown up in one of them, it evoked memories of isolation and helplessness, drunken violence and wanton neglect. Of starving and hiding and never knowing when he was safe. He’d been eighteen and on the first bus out of town after high school before he ever felt safe.
The red Liberal signs signalled the invasion of another culture, not based on the land or the seasons, but on the military, whose loyalty depended on who had the power, the purse strings, and the vision to see the world their way. John Blakeley was one of their own.
Sullivan felt his adrenaline pump as they drew closer to their destination. Six months, he thought. Six months since he’d felt the excitement of a case, of following up leads and tracking down a bad guy. Of doing something more worthwhile than drawing up staffing plans. What the hell had he been thinking when he’d taken the transfer to Strategic Planning?
He’d been thinking about the next rung on the ladder, the next notch in his belt, the prestige and pay of a staff sergeant’s rank. He’d been thinking about the exhaustion and humiliation of his twenty unappreciated years fighting society’s bottom feeders in Major Crimes. He’d been burned out, pure and simple. He’d lost sight of the camaraderie and the sense of triumph when they closed a case. He’d forgotten the novel and unexpected twists of each new day. But damn it, it felt good to be back. This was why he’d become a cop, and this is where he’d always belonged.
When they turned off the Trans-Canada Highway and headed towards the centre of Petawawa, he instructed Leblanc to pull up his email on the laptop and check for Gibbs’s reports on Blakeley and Atkinson. He’d felt bad leaving Gibbs behind at the station, poring over his computer yet again, while others went on the adventure. Perhaps the trip would have been good for him.
His guilt disappeared when he saw Gibbs’s reports, which were much shorter than usual. The poor kid was in shock, and in no shape for field work. Sullivan pulled into a gas station out of sight of the Blakeley Campaign headquarters, sent Leblanc out to do the fill-up and swivelled the laptop towards him. The reports were full of typos and oversights the meticulous detective rarely made, and Sullivan felt a twinge of sympathy that the young detective couldn’t be home giving himself some TLC .
John Blakeley was a local boy born and bred in Renfrew in 1953, the son of an Anglican minister. He had attended Kingston’s Royal Military College and graduated as a civil engineer in 1975. Last summer, after thirty years in the army, he’d retired as a full colonel, having spent the last two years on the staff of the army’s top general at National Defence Headquarters in Ottawa. His military record looked impressive to Sullivan’s untrained eye. Before this last stint, he’d spent two years at UN headquarters in New York, working with the UN High Commission on Refugees as an expert on the delivery of humanitarian aid. Prior to that he’d served as a military observer and as a staff advisor to peacekeeping operations in six different countries.
The perfect poster boy for the new military, thought Sullivan. He combined a soldier’s discipline with an intelligence and sensitivity that allowed him to navigate the diplomatic minefield of international affairs. He’d been married twice and now lived with his second wife in a home just outside Petawawa on the Ottawa River. Gibbs had provided the address, but Sullivan figured that in the middle of a work day he’d have more luck finding the man at his campaign headquarters. Besides, he wanted a crack at Roger Atkinson as well. Perhaps even more, for as Green had pointed out, Atkinson may have been the one Patricia Ross was after.
Gibbs had had less luck tracing Atkinson’s background, probably because the man was not nearly such a public figure. Reporters were all over Blakeley, but no one seemed interested in the man planning the battle strategy behind the scenes. Roger Atkinson had been born in Sheet Harbour, Nova Scotia in 1970 and had a short stint in personnel with Halifax City Hall before picking up stakes and moving to Pembroke, Petawawa’s neighbouring town, in 1996. Although details were sketchy, he’d worked first in personnel and later in public relations for various transport or supply firms in Eastern Ontario. His involvement with politics seemed to start when he did some lobbying of a prominent Ottawa MP , which led to working in the man’s constituency office and later on his campaign. As far as Sullivan could see, Atkinson was a nobody from nowhere who had parlayed a small pencil-pushing job into a major source of influence, with the potential to make or break party fortunes.
The two detectives found the campaign office without difficulty. It was a nondescript storefront that took up almost half of a small strip mall on Petawawa’s main road, but Blakeley’s workers had livened it up by emblazoning his name across the entire outside facade in massive red letters. Nice touch, Atkinson, Sullivan thought as he pushed open the glass door. Inside was a large rectangular room filled with volunteers who were hunched over lists at makeshift desks, working the phones. Lawn signs, posters, leaflets, T -shirts and party hats were stacked high on shelves around the room, all with the now familiar red and white colour scheme. Sullivan scanned the room for the man in the poster. No such luck, but a couple of private offices at the rear caught his eye, so he headed that way.
A woman leaped up to block his path. She barely reached his chest, but she faced him down like a pitbull. Her blue eyes challenged his. “Are you a new volunteer?”
Sullivan suppressed a smile. With his linebacker bulk and his frank stare, people rarely mistook him for anything but a cop, but perhaps in this crowd he looked like an off-duty sergeant major. He debated showing his badge but wanted to save the surprise for one of the men he was after. Instead he nodded towards the back.
“No, I’m here to see Mr. Atkinson.”
“Oh.” She shot a glance at a partially open door. “He’s extremely busy. Perhaps I can help you? I’m the office manager, Leanne Neuss. And you gentlemen are...?”
He reached for his badge irritably. “Sergeant Brian Sullivan, Detective Leblanc of the Ottawa Police. This won’t take long.”
Startled, the woman stepped back, and Sullivan seized the occasion to plough past her. With a perfunctory knock, he strode inside the office, waited for Leblanc to follow suit, and shut the door behind them.
The man at the desk was on the phone. He swivelled around and stared at Sullivan through bewildered eyes. Obviously not too many got past Madame Neuss unannounced. Sullivan had the impression of blond good looks that had seen too much booze and fast times. His sandy hair was thinning, his cheeks were florid, and his hazel eyes shot through with red. A second chin had begun to form beneath his jaw, and it wobbled as he gathered his features into a frown.
“Can I help you?”
Sullivan sat down and introduced himself, while Leblanc took up a position in front of the door. The man’s frown transformed to alarm. He looked at the phone, which was still in his hand. “I’ll call you back,” he said and hung up. Plastering a smile across his face, he rose and extended his hand.
“Roger Atkinson. How can I help you?” The man’s handshake was slick and practised, but Sullivan felt a pent-up power behind the grip. On closer inspection he could see the muscles rippling beneath the man’s crisp white shirt. For a pencil pusher, this guy was in damn good shape.
On