“The LeGrands have all the relevant files?”
“Only as they relate to their daughter.”
“I take it you haven’t kept from them, as you did from us, the fact that Brian met with Florenza, presumably to get her side of the story.”
“They know that.”
“And they have Cudworth Brown’s entire statement. Such as it is.”
“Yes.” She was probably desperate to grab the next flight home.
“Well, it seems they haven’t got good value for their money, Ms. Wu.”
“It was not for want of trying, Mr. Beauchamp.”
“Florenza’s parents still have no idea what she might say at the trial-is that what it comes down to?”
“She has refused to communicate with them.”
“Do you have any idea?”
“I have no more idea than you.”
He turned to Wentworth. “What about your last interview with Cud?”
Wentworth patted his briefcase. “I haven’t had a chance to dictate it.”
“Minimal damage. Please read Wentworth’s notes, Ms. Wu, clarify anything you need to, and initial each page. Then you may leave, but I can’t say this won’t come back to haunt you.” The process took several more minutes, and by now it was a quarter to ten. Nine-thirty on the dot, the chief had said.
Sure enough, Kroop was doing a slow burn when court finally convened at ten-fifteen. He flexed his fingers and scowled, took a bead on Arthur, a schoolmaster ready to administer five on each hand. “I take it you have something to say?”
“Regrettably, a matter of great urgency came up about which I intend to alert Crown counsel. In the meantime, milord, full speed ahead.”
Kroop was not expecting such a confident little speech and didn’t have a good counter. “It had better be good, Mr. Beauchamp.” Abigail and her crew were whispering, exchanging shrugs. The jury also seemed confused, and you could tell the press was thirsting for more. Cud was gaping, silently mouthing “matter of great urgency,” it looked like. All the way from the third row, Wentworth could feel his vibrations, dying to be in the loop.
Professor Chandra returned to the stand. Wentworth had almost forgotten about her. So had Arthur, who murmured, “I’m a blank.” He looked over Wentworth’s shoulder as he flipped through his notes.
“Ah, yes.” Arthur straightened, turned to the witness. “Yesterday, madam, you described seeing my client in conversation with the host.”
“As I walked to my car.”
“In low tones, you said, while enjoying a cigar. This was hardly an excited or passionate conversation?”
“No.”
“They could have been talking about the price of tea in China.”
“I suppose.”
“It would be quite uncivil, wouldn’t it, for the host not to pass time with his remaining guest and wish him a good night?”
“I wasn’t suggesting there was anything sinister about it.”
“Of course not. Now let’s go back to your dinner conversations with Judge Whynet-Moir.”
“I trust we’ll not get into a lot of hearsay here,” Kroop said.
Arthur studied the wall clock. “Shall I proceed?”
“Yes, move it along.”
“Thank you. What did you and the judge talk about?”
“Well, politics.”
“Help us out. Politics in what sense?”
“The shakeup in the federal cabinet.” Chandra reflected. “He asked my opinion of the new justice minister. His predecessor, Jack Boynton, had died recently; we talked about that.” A sharp look at Arthur, a sly smile. “Had we known your wife would be running to replace him, we might have talked about that too.”
A whispered buzz from the back. Arthur smiled broadly. “Indeed she is, and putting on a vigorous campaign, I think you’ll agree.”
“Tuesday will tell the tale.”
“A day that will not come too soon for me.”
That brought chuckles, but not from Kroop, who looked impatient.
“I take it you knew Jack Boynton, Ms. Chandra?”
“I’d met him several times, interviewed him.”
“And did Whynet-Moir know him?”
“Mr. Justice Whynet-Moir,” said Kroop.
“Did Mr. Justice Whynet-Moir mention that he had an old association with the minister?”
“There we are, hearsay.”
“Milord, if you intend to make your plane to Ottawa, fewer interruptions will help speed you on your way. This is not hearsay, it is part of the res gestae, as are all the deceased’s conversations that night.”
The chief could barely still his fury. “What do you say about this?” he asked Abigail.
“I tend to agree with my learned friend.”
The judge went redder still, embarrassed now, you could hear the clacking of his false teeth. “Continue.” He barely got the word out.
Arthur went on amiably. “Thank you. Did the deceased indicate he knew Jack Boynton?”
“As I recall, Justice Whynet-Moir worked for a while in the nineties as Jack’s parliamentary aide, before he entered cabinet.”
“Ah, close friends.”
“Presumably.”
“And did he have anything further to say about the late minister?”
“Oh, a story or two about his addiction to junk food. Couldn’t pass by a hot dog stand without stopping. He said, ‘Good old Jack,’ laughed, and then said he’d rather discuss my book.”
“Changed the subject, did he?”
“I suppose, yes.”
The press table was busy. It wasn’t that Chandra looked smug or anything, but Wentworth had the sense she was sneakily pleased, she’ll be in the news, it won’t hurt book sales.
“So how long did Whynet-Moir work in Boynton’s parliamentary office?”
“Barely a year and a half, then he returned to his Vancouver practice. I believe he had enough of Ottawa.”
“I don’t blame him.”
The boss was playing to the crowd, getting his laughs. Cud was finally looking more relaxed, here was the grizzled gunfighter in action, taking on the Cattleman’s Association.
“Counsel, I beg your indulgence-where is this going?”
“I’m as eager to find out as you, milord. No more questions.”
Wentworth turned to see a tall, lanky, and dour gentleman, dressed like a banker, approach the counsel bench with a burglar’s soft walk: Silent Shawn Hamilton, here on a watching brief for Flo LeGrand. Or maybe for her parents. Wentworth found it hard to believe such an experienced lawyer would have hired April Wu as a spy; he’d be in serious breach of ethics.
“Call Lynn Tinkerson.”
She walked in, an older woman, smallish and trim in a pant suit, no decorations, little makeup. An important novelist, Cud had called her. Wentworth had looked her up: her novels were mostly about heroines in emotional crises. “A keen observer of human foibles,” said one critic on the Web. “Strips bare all pretension, leaving her characters naked and shivering in the cold glare of authorial appraisal.” Prompting recall of an embarrassing checkup Wentworth had for a groin itch several years ago.
Tinkerson had a direct manner on the stand. “I went up to Mr. Brown, introduced myself, and we had a brief chat. He asked me which of my books I’d recommend that he read. I suggested he’d find The Fishmonger’s Daughter the most accessible. I congratulated him on his shortlisting for the Governor General’s, and he said it gave him the courage to go on. He said it was a hard life being a professional poet, and that he had to play all the angles.”
“Any further discussion?”
“I asked him where he was staying, and he said, ‘I’m bunking right here; they made me an offer I couldn’t refuse.’”
Wentworth was relieved that finally came out, the jury may have thought Cud stayed on as an unwelcome guest. The keen observer of human foibles wasn’t much help with the all the petting and footsying under the table, though she noticed Cud and Flo were relating “in a very cordial manner.”
Whynet-Moir was engaging and affable, and complimentary about her writing. “He’d bought several of my books and said he was ‘delightedly speeding through them.’”