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He was beginning to recognize many of the faces. Regulars. He said hello to those he knew but avoided talk by making straight for the crowded free-weights area, where everyone grunted and sweated. Where there was no time or space for idle chatterers.

He worked out for an hour.

Emma Shaughnessy did not appear.

He walked home in the rain.

THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 16

On Thursday morning, Matty Kayle decided to boil herself an egg for breakfast.

She hadn’t had one all week, not since last Thursday, when she’d read of the murdered woman in the paper and Albert had been sarcastic with her as usual. And she had wondered what life would be like without him.

A skunk had been poking about in the backyard during the night. She quite liked the smell, in small amounts, for it evoked pleasant memories of her childhood in this place. There were many skunks about then. Raccoons too. And coyotes hunting for voles and squirrels.

It would be so nice if she had a small dog.

Albert was having his usual bowl of cereal more or less silently behind his Globe and Mail. Perhaps he would like an egg too.

She hadn’t cooked breakfast for him for- well, she couldn’t remember the last time he’d had anything other than cereal.

“Would you like a dog?”

She hadn’t meant to say dog. She had meant to say boiled egg, not dog.

He lowered his paper and looked at her as though she was mad. “What did you say?”

Matty blushed. “I meant to say boiled egg. Would you like a boiled egg?”

“You know I don’t eat boiled eggs. Nor boiled dogs either.” He shook his paper and glared at her.

She carried her egg and toast to the table and sat down. She couldn’t see Albert because of the paper. Afghanistan on the front page. It was in the papers all the time. Iraq too. She could never remember the difference between the two countries. Mrs. Prendergast, who now lived in a low-rise on Chilco but used to live next door in the high-rise building, and with whom she sometimes chatted if they ran into each other shopping at the SuperValu, said that one country was as bad as the other. She had no sympathy for either of them, she said. They were all a bunch of terrorists. Matty was sure Mrs. Prendergast must be right, for she had spent two years at university.

“What’s the latest news from Ghanistan?” she said brightly to the newspaper wall in front of her.

Albert lowered the paper and stared at her.

She smiled wanly at her husband’s face, already sorry that she’d opened her mouth. Knowing she’d said something wrong. But the drive for some human contact, no matter how minimal, was so often her undoing.

His pink wet lips pursed disapprovingly. “Ghanistan? Do you mean Afghanistan?”

“What did I say?”

“Ghanistan. You said Ghanistan.”

“Same thing.”

Albert’s upper lip curled in contempt before his face disappeared behind the paper.

A wave of dizziness came over her. She wanted to kill him. Her heart missed a beat. The spoon fell from her fingers and clattered to the floor.

The dizziness passed, and suddenly it all seemed so simple. She would kill him.

That was it.

She would kill Albert.

Later, at ten, she slipped into her warm blue wool sweater and navy coat and set off briskly for the library with her Harlequins in her shopping bag. The rain was holding off, but not for long, she thought. She eyed the heavy black clouds massing over the mountains. Unless she was prepared to work in the rain, she would have to put the dahlias off for another day.

She returned her Harlequins to the library and, after much searching, checked out only one book: The Oxford Book of Poisons.

SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 19

Roy Wakabayashi was due to pick up his wife Corinne from the West End Fitness Center at 10:15 PM and already it was 10:05. He would have to hurry.

Before the West End killer, Corinne had always walked to and from the gym alone. But not now. As far as his wife’s safety was concerned, Roy took no chances. A Vancouver police officer with five years’ service, he was more aware than most of the crime and violence in the city. He had to deal with it every day. Since the West End murder, Roy had been driving Corinne to the gym and picking her up when she was through.

He made it on time. When he saw her hurrying toward the car, it always made him feel glad to see her, even after a short absence. She was slight and dark, with a heart-shaped face and shining eyes. She was so beautiful. She always had a smile for him that made his heart beat faster. She slid into the car, and they kissed affectionately before heading home.

Home was a one-bedroom apartment on Broughton, in the West End. Married for three years, they were saving for a down payment on their own home. He drove into the underground garage and parked. He held his wife’s hand in the elevator up to the tenth floor. At the door of their apartment, he kissed her and nuzzled her neck and stroked her damp back.

“I want you,” he said.

“I know.”

He led her into the bedroom.

Afterward he made tea while she showered- she didn’t like showering at the center. Then he got ready for work. He was on the night shift, which meant leaving at 11:00 PM. Tonight he would be going to work with a smile on his face.

Corinne saw him off at the door. Dressed in pj’s, smelling of soap, her eyes shining at him. God! He wanted to make love to her again. Instead he kissed her twice and waved to her from the elevator.

She closed and locked the door.

At 11:20, just as she was about to go to bed, her apartment buzzer rang.

“Pizza delivery.”

“I didn’t order pizza.” She hung up the phone.

A few minutes later there was a knock on her door. She stood on her toes and put an eye up against the peephole. A man with a pizza box stood outside in the hallway. He wore a white coat that read Luigi’s Pizza.

“Go away,” Corinne called through her closed door. “I told you. I didn’t order a pizza.”

“You number ten-oh-four?” He was reading from a slip of paper. He had an accent, Italian, it sounded like.

“Yes. But I didn’t order.”

“Medium bacon and pepperoni. Number fourteen?”

“You made a mistake. It’s not for me.”

“Eight-oh-eight Broughton, apartment ten-oh-four?”

“Go away.”

He sounded worried. “Please, you sign paper for me that I come to right place, same address on bill? Otherwise boss, he make me pay for pizza myself.”

She hesitated. He looked harmless enough. She felt sorry for him. All she needed to do was sign his bill.

She unlocked and opened the door.

CHAPTER SIX

MONDAY, NOVEMBER 20

Casey spent the morning at City Hall going over city business reports, including brief summaries on what had come to be known as the hens-in-the-backyard issue. Tame stuff compared to murder. He often wished he had the police beat. But Wexler had been doing that job since before Homer wrote the Iliad.

He phoned the office and left a message for Wexler and Ozeroff to meet him at Hegel’s for lunch if they could make it.

It was raining hard.

On the way he picked up a copy of the Province. Banner headlines screamed:

Headless Corpse Number Two!

He sat in the bus and read the lead story.

The body of a young Japanese-Canadian female was found in her Broughton Street apartment at 7:20 am by her husband when he returned home from working the night shift. Police believe that the woman let the killer into her apartment, that it may have been someone she knew. Names are being withheld for the time being. It is the second brutal murder in the West End in two weeks. Police are advising women to use extra caution. They should not under any circumstances open their doors to strangers.