The Long Way Home(60)
She felt her skin crawl and tingle as the blood crept away from the surface. Away from the painting and the photograph. To hide in her core.
“Here,” she said, pointing to the painting. “This is where it happened.”
“What happened?” asked Reine-Marie.
“Where Peter started to change. I was wondering why he didn’t save any of his other works. He probably did some in Paris, he probably did some in Florence and Venice. But he didn’t save them, didn’t give them to Bean to keep safe. Why not?”
“I was wondering the same thing,” said Armand. “Why didn’t he?”
“Because they weren’t worth saving?” Jean-Guy suggested, and was rewarded with a beam from Clara.
“Exactly. Exactly. But he saved these. He must’ve heard about this garden in his travels and decided to go there—”
“But why?” asked Beauvoir.
“I don’t know. Maybe because it’s so strange. Venice and Florence and Paris are beautiful, but conventional. Every artist goes there for inspiration. Peter wanted something different.”
“Well, he found it,” said Jean-Guy, looking at the paintings.
They were still merde. It was as though Peter had fallen into a pile of shit. Then painted it.
“I don’t know what happened,” said Clara. “But something in that garden changed Peter. Or began the change.”
“Like a ship,” said Gamache. “Changing course. It might take a while to get to port, but at least it was going in the right direction.”
Peter was no longer lost. He’d finally found his North Star, thought Gamache.
If so, why had he then flown to Toronto? Was it to deliver the paintings to Bean? But they could have been mailed, like the others.
Was it to visit his old professor? Was he looking for approval, for a mentor? Or maybe it was simpler, more human. More Peter.
Maybe he was running away again, frightened by what he’d seen in the garden. Unwilling to go further down that path. Maybe he went to Toronto to hide.
And once again the Samarra story came to mind. There was no hiding. Not from fate. Peter’s destiny would find him.
Toronto, then, was another step closer to his destination.
As though they’d all had the same thought at the same time, they turned as one to look at the far wall. And the canvases tacked up there. Peter’s latest works. Perhaps his last works. Certainly his last signposts.
* * *
“Gimme a bacon butty,” said Constable Stuart. He said it as a Wild West sheriff might’ve ordered a shot of whiskey.
He took off his jacket and smoothed his wet hair.
“What happened to you, boy?” the waiter at the breakfast bar asked, as he wiped crumbs off the melamine surface.
“What do you know about that garden down the road?”
The circular motion of the damp rag slowed. To a stop. The elderly man considered the constable.
“It’s just a garden. Like any other.”
Stuart got up off the round stool. “I’ll let you think about that answer. When I get back I’d like a better one. And that butty. And a black coffee.”
In the men’s room Stuart used the toilet, then washed his hands and scrubbed his face, trying to get off the dirt and grass ground into his skin. Some of the dirt turned out to be bruises and he stopped scrubbing.
He gripped the porcelain sink and leaned toward the mirror, staring into his wide eyes. He knew that lawyers were taught never to ask a question unless they were prepared for the answer. They did not like surprises.
But cops were the opposite. They were almost always surprised. And rarely in a good way.
Robert Stuart wondered if he was prepared for the answer that awaited him.
* * *
Clara sat at the laptop Jean-Guy had brought over when they’d arrived.
Coffee had been made and poured, and now she brought the computer out of sleep mode.
There on the screen was a home page.
“What is it?” Clara asked. “It can’t be just a normal garden. Not with a name like that.”
“We didn’t have a chance to read much about it,” said Reine-Marie, bringing a chair over to sit beside Clara. “We wanted to get here as quickly as possible. All we know is that it’s not far from Dumfries.”
The men also brought over chairs and sipped coffee and read about a garden of cosmic speculation.
* * *
Constable Stuart swung his leg over the stool. A bacon butty and black coffee awaited him, but there was no sign of the elderly waiter. Or anyone else. But he did hear voices from behind the swinging door.
He took a huge bite of the grilled sandwich. It was warm and the smoked bacon crackled and tasted of his settled childhood. Reluctantly he put the butty down and looked around to see if anyone was watching. But he was alone in the diner. He walked swiftly and softly over to the door.