The Lighthouse Road(71)
"He'll be here presently, no doubt," Hosea said, and as though his voice had summoning power, in walked Selmer Gunnarson, flushed and breathing heavily.
Before he could apologize for being tardy Mayfair said, " Thank you for joining us, Mister Gunnarson. You remember Thea Eide."
Selmer took a seat beside Thea and said hello.
Mayfair removed his spectacles and set them gently on the blotter before him. He joined his hands and cocked his head. "Miss Eide, you testified in March regarding incidents at the Burnt Wood Lumber Camp involving the watch salesman Joshua Smith." He paused, nodded to Selmer, who quickly translated, speaking softly into Thea's ear.
Judge Mayfair continued, "Mister Smith fled Gunflint for Duluth, where, on March the sixth, he set fire to the Rathbone sisters' lodge rooms. The consequences of that blaze resulted in the Parsons Block burning to the ground." Selmer translated as the judge spoke. "The Meining Hardware Company lost its entire inventory as well as its storefront; Crowley Electric likewise lost everything; the lodge rooms of the Knights of Pythias were destroyed. In all, some forty-five thousand dollars in damages."
The magistrate shook his solemn head. "The watch salesman Joshua Smith managed to flee Duluth for Port Arthur, Ontario, where he took employment in a hotel livery. Ten days ago he was found unlawfully entering a dry goods store. When the authorities searched his boardinghouse room, they found several hundred dollars in currency and several hundred more in stolen goods. It seems Smith is in the habit of taking that which don't belong to him."
Now Mayfair stopped talking to read a document on his desk. Thea, more confused than ever, looked between Selmer and Hosea, neither of whom replied to her questioning look.
Curtis Mayfair set the document back on the blotter. "Miss Eide, Joshua Smith is being extradited. The North-West Mounted Police are in the process of delivering Smith to federal authorities in Duluth, where he'll be tried for arson and grand larceny, among other things. But before they deliver him, they thought enough to stop and collect the hundred-dollar reward we've offered for his capture.
"I figured, as long as we have to pay the reward, we may as well get our money's worth and charge him for his crimes up at the Burnt Wood Camp." He paused a moment to let Selmer catch up, then put his spectacles back on and looked firmly at Thea. "Miss Eide, I hope I can rely on your testimony this afternoon in our case against the watch salesman Joshua Smith."
The magistrate studied Thea for a long moment. When she did not respond— how could she? What was being asked of her?— Mayfair simply turned to the constable, nodded, and sat back in his chair.
Thea kept her eyes on the door as though the building would crumble if the weight of her stare weren't on it. When Joshua Smith came through— his head hanging low, his eyes covered with greasy and unkempt hair, his shoulders slouched, his hands in the pockets of his worn dungarees, his dirty boots unlaced and shuffling across the floor as though weighted with stones— Thea saw a different man than the one who'd violated her. Smith was gaunt and twitchy. The constable pushed him into a chair opposite Thea, where he collapsed with his chin on his chest.
Her impulse was to fly, to raise her shawl like wings and catch a breeze to carry her home. He hadn't even noticed her sitting there. Seemed not even to know where he was.
"Your honor," the constable began, he was standing behind Smith, his big hands on the fugitive's jutting shoulders, "this is our man." He hit Smith on the ear. "Identify yourself, you goddamned vulture."
Smith had looked up with the slap, his sight landing on Thea. Immediately he sat upright, he pushed his hair from his eyes. He looked from Thea to the magistrate and back to Thea. The constable hit him again.
"I said identify yourself."
"I'm Joshua Smith," he stammered.
Mayfair spoke. "Mister Smith, do you know why you're sitting in my chambers?"
"Sir?" Smith said.
"From the look on your face, you've got some idea."
Smith finally turned his attention away from Thea. He looked at Mayfair. "Sir?" he repeated.
"Enough already with the pleasantries. I asked if you know why you're here."
"I reckon it's got something to do with the cook here."
" 'The cook here'? Are you crazy, boy? You're in the custody of an international police regiment. You're being extradited. Do you know what that means? You're being taken to Duluth, where you'll stand trial for crimes that are going to land your skinny ass in the penitentiary for twenty years. The 'cook here' is the very least of your problems."