Bury Your Dead

émile looked like a kid loosed in the toy factory. Gamache left his mentor sitting at the dining table, reaching for a pile of papers.

 

Within minutes the Chief Inspector was at the old library, standing in the deserted hallway.

 

“May I tuna you?” Winnie asked from the top of the oak staircase.

 

“I was wondering if I could speak to you and whoever else is here.” He spoke English in hopes the librarian would switch to her mother tongue.

 

“Meet we maybe in bookstore reunion?”

 

She hadn’t taken the hint.

 

“Good idea,” said Gamache.

 

“Bunny day,” agreed Winnie and disappeared.

 

Gamache found Mr. Blake in the library and within minutes Winnie, Elizabeth and Porter had joined them.

 

“I have just a couple of questions,” said the Chief. “We’ve found evidence that Augustin Renaud came here a week before he died.”

 

He watched them as he spoke. To a person they looked surprised, interested, a little disconcerted, but none of them looked guilty. And yet one of them had almost certainly lied to him. One of them had almost certainly seen, perhaps even met, Renaud here. Let him in.

 

But why? Why had Renaud wanted to come here? Why had he brought four others?

 

“What was he doing here?” Gamache asked and watched as they first stared at him, then at each other.

 

“Augustin Renaud came to the library?” asked Mr. Blake. “But I didn’t see him.”

 

“Neither did I,” said Winnie, surprised into English.

 

Elizabeth and Porter each shook their heads.

 

“He might have come after the library closed,” said Gamache. “At six o’clock.”

 

“Then he wouldn’t have gotten in,” said Porter. “The place would’ve been locked. You know that.”

 

“I know you all have keys. I know it would be easy for one of you to let him in.”

 

“But why would we?” asked Mr. Blake.

 

“Do the names Chin, JD, Patrick and O’Mara mean anything to you?”

 

Again they thought and again they shook their heads. Like the Hydra. One body, many heads. But of a mind.

 

“Members, perhaps?” he pressed.

 

“I don’t know about JD, but the others aren’t members,” said Winnie. “We have so few I know their names by heart.”

 

It struck Gamache for the first time what an interesting English expression that was. To commit something to memory was to know it by heart. Memories were kept in the heart, not the head. At least, that’s where the English kept their memories.

 

“May I have a list of your members?” he asked. Winnie bristled and Porter jumped in.

 

“That’s confidential.”

 

“A library membership list? Secret?”

 

“Not secret, Chief Inspector. Confidential.”

 

“I still need to see it.”

 

Porter opened his mouth but Elizabeth jumped in. “We’ll get it for you. Winnie?”

 

And Winnie, without hesitation, did what Elizabeth asked.

 

As he left, membership list folded in his breast pocket, Gamache paused on the top step to put his heavy gloves on. From there he looked across to St. Andrew’s Presbyterian Church and the rectory facing the old library.

 

Who would have the easiest time letting someone into the Lit and His, unseen? And, if lights were turned on after closing time, who was most likely to see it?

 

The minister, Tom Hancock.

 

After first going to the stone home Gamache found the minister at his office in the church, a cluttered and comfortable back room.

 

“I’m sorry to disturb you, but I need to know if you saw Augustin Renaud at the Lit and His a week before he died.”

 

If Tom Hancock was the one who’d let them in he would almost certainly deny it. Gamache wasn’t expecting the truth, only hoping to surprise a fleeting look of guilt.

 

But he saw none.

 

“Renaud was there a week before he died? I didn’t know that. How’d you find out?”

 

Alone among them Hancock hadn’t tried to argue. He was simply, like the Chief, baffled.

 

“His diary. He was to meet four others there, after hours we think.”

 

Gamache gave him the names but the minister shook his head. “Sorry, they mean nothing, but I can ask around if you like.” He paused and examined Gamache closely. “Is there anything else I can help you with?”

 

Help. I need help. Gamache shook his head, thanked him, and left.

 

When he got back to 9? Ste-Ursule, émile was still reading.

 

“Any luck?” He looked up.

 

Gamache shook his head and took off his coat, brushing snow from it. “You?”

 

“I was just wondering about these. Did you notice them?”

 

Gamache walked over to the table and looked down. émile was pointing to the diary page, the one that mentioned the meeting at the Lit and His with the four men. At the bottom of the page, in very small but legible writing, were two numbers.

 

9-8499 and 9-8572.

 

“A bank account? A license plate maybe? They’re not reference numbers,” said Gamache. “At least, not Dewey Decimal numbers. I noticed them too, but he has so many numbers scribbled everywhere. The diary’s littered with them.”

 

They didn’t seem to be phone numbers, certainly not for Québec. Map coordinates? Not like any he’d ever seen.

 

Gamache glanced at his watch. “I think it’s time to visit Monsieur Patrick. Will you join me?”

 

émile snapped the diary shut and stood, stretching. “It’s amazing, all this paper and yet nothing new. All the research had been done by other people before him. You’d think in all those years Augustin Renaud might have found something new.”

 

“Maybe he did. People aren’t usually murdered because nothing’s happened. Something happened in his life.”

 

Gamache locked up and they made their way along the narrow streets with Henri.

 

“All this was forest in Champlain’s time?” said Gamache, as they walked along Ste-Ursule. émile nodded.

 

“The main settlement stopped at about rue des Jardins but it wasn’t all that long after Champlain’s death that the colony expanded. The Ursulines built the convent and more settlers came once they realized it wasn’t going away.”