The Murder Stone

 

‘Why would a child have so many clocks?’ asked Beauvoir, surveying Mariana and Bean Morrow’s room. There were clocks on every surface.

 

‘How do you know they’re Bean’s?’ asked Gamache.

 

‘Because the kid’s screwed up. Wouldn’t you be if your name was Bean and nobody knew if you were a boy or girl?’

 

They stared at him. He hadn’t told them this yet.

 

‘What do you mean?’ asked Lacoste.

 

‘Mariana Morrow’s kept Bean’s sex a secret.’

 

‘Even from her mother?’

 

‘Especially from her mother. From everyone. How fucked up is that?’

 

Gamache picked up a Mickey Mouse clock and nodded. What parents did to their kids, he thought, looking at the room and listening to the ticking, ticking, ticking. He examined Mickey then picked up a few other clocks.

 

Why had Bean set them all for seven in the morning?

 

 

 

 

 

EIGHTEEN

 

 

Peter Morrow stood alone just outside the yellow ribbon. The ground held a Julia-sized indent.

 

In life she’d torn the family apart and now she was doing it in death. Selfish, greedy and yes, cruel. He’d meant every word.

 

His mother had cried for her. Had only good things to say about Julia. She’d become perfect Julia, beautiful Julia, kind and loving Julia. Well, who’d stayed and looked after Mother? Who visited her and had her for dinners? Who phoned her and sent cards and gifts?

 

He stared at the hole and tried to feel something. Tried to remember Julia as a girl. His older sister. Born between the boys, like being born between the wars. Trodden upon and mauled as the boys tried to get at each other. They’d squashed and trampled her in the middle. Flat.

 

And now Dad had done it too.

 

There’d been four of them all their lives. Thomas, Julia, Peter, Mariana. Four wheels, four walls, four seasons, four elements, four corners of the earth.

 

But now they were three. Strange as their world had been, it at least made sense, to them. What happens when one corner is removed?

 

All hell breaks loose. And the first trumpet was heard tonight. His mother’s cry.

 

‘Peter?’

 

He stood still, not daring to turn round, to show his face to anybody.

 

‘Is it all right that I’m here?’ he asked.

 

‘As long as you go no closer, but you know that,’ said Gamache.

 

The two men stared at the scene, though both were actually staring at the pedestal of hard marble. Gamache had come into the garden for some fresh air, to walk off his dinner and try to put order into the pile of evidence they were collecting. But mostly he’d wanted to come here again, to look at the white block. The thing he’d first mistaken for a grave marker. And now it was.

 

But what troubled him was why the block wasn’t marred. It showed absolutely no sign of the statue’s ever being on it, and certainly no signs of it scraping off. Not a scratch, not a blemish. It was perfect. And it was impossible.

 

‘My mother used to read us stories when we were children,’ Peter said. ‘My father would play the piano and we’d all cram onto the sofa and Mother would read. Our favourite was always from a book on myths. I still remember most of them. Zeus, Ulysses. Thomas loved that one. Always wanted it read. Over and over we heard about the lotus-eaters and the sirens.’

 

‘And Scylla and Charybdis,’ said Gamache. ‘I loved it too. That terrible choice Ulysses faced, to aim his ship for the whirlpool or for the six-headed monster.’

 

‘He chose the monster and it killed six of his men. They died and he sailed on,’ said Peter.

 

‘What would you have done?’ asked Gamache. He knew the myth well. Ulysses returning from the Trojan War, his long perilous journey. Trying to get home. Coming upon that terrible strait. On one side a whirlpool that sucked every ship and soul into it. And on the other side Scylla. A six-headed monster. On one side certain death for everyone on the ship, and on the other certain death for six of his men.

 

Which path to take?

 

Peter felt the tears then. For little Julia, crushed by her brothers, crushed by her mother, crushed by her husband. And finally, just as she’d returned home, crushed by the one man she trusted. Her Ulysses. Her father.

 

But mostly he was weeping for himself. He’d lost a sister today, but worse, far worse, he felt he’d just lost his mother. A mother who’d decided the dead sister was perfect, and he was a monster.

 

‘Let’s walk,’ said Gamache, and the two men turned their backs on the dented earth and the harsh white cube beside it. Gamache clasped his hands behind his back and they fell into step, walking silently across the lawn and towards the lake. The sun was just setting, filling the evening sky with spectacular lurid colour. Purples and pinks and golds, it seemed to change every moment.

 

The men stopped and stared.

 

‘That was a lovely image of your family gathered around your mother as she read.’

 

‘You’re mistaken,’ said Peter. ‘We weren’t gathered around her. We were on the sofa, all four of us. She was across the room in her wing chair.’

 

Suddenly the image that had been so natural, heartwarming even, that had finally allowed him to see the Morrows as a family, disappeared. Like the sunset, it shifted into something else. Something darker.

 

Four small children by themselves staring across the straits to their mother, upright and proper and reading about terrible choices. And death.

 

‘You said Ulysses was Thomas’s favourite. What was yours?’

 

Peter had been thinking of the square of white marble looming over the place where Julia died. Four corners, four walls.

 

‘Pandora’s box,’ he said.

 

Gamache turned away from the sunset and looked at Peter. ‘Is something bothering you?’

 

‘You mean beyond the murder of my sister?’

 

‘I do mean that. You can tell me.’

 

‘Oh really? Well someone told my mother what I said to you this afternoon. Yes, look surprised, but can you imagine how I felt? You demand I tell you the truth, I tell it, and get practically kicked out of the family for it. I bet it’s always been easy for you. So sure of yourself. Always fitting in. Well try being an artist in a family of intellectuals. Try being tone deaf in a family of musicians. Try being taunted all the way to class, not by other kids, but by your own brother, yelling “Spot, Spot”.’

 

Peter felt the last restraints tear apart. He wanted to warn Gamache, to tell him to run, to flee from him, to hide in the forest until this riot had passed. Until the writhing, stinking, armed escapees had burned and violated everything in sight and moved on to another target. But it was too late, and he knew the man in front of him would never run.

 

Morrows ran and hid in smiling cynicism and dark sarcasm.

 

This man stood his ground.

 

‘And your father?’ Gamache asked, as though Peter hadn’t sprayed his face with spittle. ‘What did he say to you?’

 

‘My father? But you already know what he said. Never use the first stall in a public washroom. Who fucking says that to a ten year old? You know the other lesson we were taught? Beware the third generation.’

 

‘What does that mean?’

 

‘The first generation makes the money, the second appreciates it, having witnessed the sacrifice, and the third squanders it. We’re the third generation. The four of us. Our father hated us, thought we’d steal his money, ruin the family. He was so afraid of spoiling us he never gave us anything, except stupid advice. Words. That was all.’

 

Was that the burden Gamache had seen etched in that stone face? Not sacrifice, but fear? Was Charles Morrow afraid his own children would betray him? Had he created the very thing he was so afraid of? Unhappy, unloving, ungrateful children? Children capable of stealing from their father, and killing each other?

 

‘Who do you think killed your sister?’

 

It took Peter a minute to be able to speak again, to change direction.

 

‘I think it was Bert Finney.’

 

‘Why would he kill Julia?’ It was almost dark now.

 

‘For money, always for money. I’m sure my mother’s the beneficiary of her insurance. He married my mother for money and now he’ll get more than he dreamed.’

 

They continued their walk down to the dock and the two Adirondack chairs reclining on the grey, weathered wood. Peter was drained. Their feet echoed on the slats and water gently lapped against the wharf.

 

As they approached one of the chairs moved. The men stopped.

 

The wooden chair grew before their eyes, outlined against the last of the light.

 

‘Monsieur Gamache?’ the chair said.

 

‘Oui.‘ Gamache took a step forward though Peter reached out to grab him back.

 

‘Armand Gamache? That is your name, didn’t you say?’

 

‘Oui.‘

 

‘I knew your father,’ said Bert Finney. ‘His name was Honore. Honore Gamache.’