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Authors: Garry Ryan

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A Hummingbird Dance (20 page)

BOOK: A Hummingbird Dance
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The other marionette wore jeans, black shoes, and a white shirt with targets painted in red on the front and back. He stood alone at the front of the stage.

“Alex!” the female marionette gestured with her hands. The puppeteer suspended the marionette from a metal hook. Her head hung in grief.

The puppeteer lifted a white pickup truck. It had “Republic of Alberta” painted in black across its side. Inside were four heads with cowboy hats. As the truck swung down, one of its doors opened. The marionette with the target painted on his shirt was sent flying off the stage. When the truck reached the top of its arc, the puppeteer grabbed it and set it down behind the stage.

The puppeteer opened a door in one of the wooden chests and out walked a duplicate of Alex's marionette with the targets on its back and chest. “And that was that. One deaf and gay First Nations man killed on the side of the highway. Aidan never forgave herself.” Alex looked up at the puppeteer and then at Aidan the marionette.

Lane felt his attention shift from puppeteer to the marionettes. At that moment, the marionettes became real to him. He listened to them, watched them the way he would listen to any other living, breathing person.

Aidan's head lifted. “I should have done something.” The marionette's head dropped.

Alex turned to her. “There was nothing you could have done. After that, I was a star. The Premier even had a name for me.”

The Premier stepped out of the closet. His oversized face was mostly jowls and nose.

Alex said, “Hey, Mr. Premier.”

The Premier wore a headdress and pinstriped suit. “Where's the parade? I need to get out in front of it!”

The audience began to laugh. One man said, “You're not leading the pride parade!”

The Premier turned to walk back into the closet.

“Wait! I've got a question.” Alex moved closer to the Premier.

The Premier turned to face Alex. “I don't have to talk to you. You're a ghost.”

“Spirit.”

“There's a difference?” the Premier asked.

“Big difference. I always wanted to ask you why you called me the ‘victim of the week'?”

The Premier said, “It was a slow news week. The media needed an issue, and you got your fifteen minutes of fame. I had to put a spin on the story. Nothing personal.”

“You're wrong. Murder is very, very personal.” Alex moved closer.

“Is that a pie in your hand?” the Premier asked as he backed away.

The Premier's headdress was lifted off. He turned so the audience could read the licence plate on the back of his suit jacket.

“What's it say?” The Premier looked back over his shoulder.

Alex moved the side of the stage.

“What's it say?” the Premier asked.

The license plate had an “I”, a heart, a number two, a shovel, a silhouette of the province, and a bull.

Someone in the audience said, “I love to shovel Alberta bullshit!”

“That's right!” someone else said. There was laughter and an enthusiastic round of applause.

The Premier went back into his closet.

Alex faced the audience. “There were witnesses, but there was no proof. The hit and run happened too fast. I was buried near a tree on my grandmother's acreage. It was against the law, but my grandmother has a way of doing what she wants. She plants honeysuckle over my grave every summer and the hummingbirds come.”

Aidan the marionette lifted her head. She moved forward and stood beside Alex. “The case is still open. We plant a tree every year to celebrate Alex's life. And every once in a while he can dance.”

Aidan stepped back. A door opened in the side of the closed case. It was Alex dressed in white, red, and green. There were moccasins on his feet and feathers at his back. His eyes were circled with red.

Alex looked up at Aidan the puppeteer. “So this is your big secret. This is your gift!” Alex the dancer stood at centre stage. Alex the target stepped into the background. The puppeteer hung him from a hook.

A drumbeat began in the corner. Lane looked across the room as the chanting began. Four men sat around the drum and beat as one heart. He looked back to the stage.

A white ceramic flower stood at the centre of the stage. It was almost as tall as Alex's marionette.

Alex said, “I can't hear the drum, but I can feel it!” He pointed at his heart and bent at the waist to begin his dance. “Even death cannot stop me from dancing!” He circled the flower and backed away, spun, then returned to the flower. After he stuck his nose close to the flower, he appeared to hover, moving his arms so fast they became a blur of green. Then he repeated the motions, dancing around the flower. With each pass, his speed increased until the separate colours blurred into a rainbow.

Applause erupted from the audience.

The stage disappeared in front of Lane as the audience stood to clap and cheer.

Someone nearby shouted at the puppeteer, “Who makes your outfits?”

The chanting and the drum carried on.

Someone said, “Drag king!”

Another person picked it up. “Drag king!”

The crowd began to chant to the beat of the drums. “
DRAG KING! DRAG KING
!”

The puppeteer stood above the crowd. Her eyes focused on someone to Lane's right. Lane looked and saw Harper who nodded his head at her and smiled.

The puppeteer bowed to the audience and as she did, she lifted Alex. Suspended in midair, he bent low at the waist; then his right arm swept forward in a midair bow. There was a roar from the crowd. The puppeteer waited for the applause to slow before looking at Alex's marionette. “I've been so angry with you. If you could dance like that, why couldn't you dance out of the way of the truck?”

After the show, Glenn drove everyone but Lane and Harper home. They waited for the puppeteer, who appeared in a nondescript red ball cap, blue jeans, and white shirt.

“Aidan, do you want some help to load up?” Harper smiled.

Aidan looked at him. “You the one who got shot?” “That was him.” Harper pointed at Lane. “I just got shot at.”

Lane waited.

“I could use some help. But you two aren't here just to help me get packed up.” Aidan lifted her hat and wiped sweat away from her forehead with her sleeve.

“There are still two men missing.” Lane lifted the end of one case.

Aidan looked at each of them in turn. “I'll pull the truck around. We'll load up, then we'll talk.”

“What about supper? You must be hungry.” Harper picked up the other end of the case.

“Supper would be nice. Thanks.” Aidan went to get the truck.

While they waited in line to pick up Aidan's dinner, Lane said, “Eva told us Aidan was at the rodeo. We just assumed she meant the Stampede.”

By the time she returned, Lane and Harper had all the cases waiting outside the entrance to the Wagon Wheel Hall. Everything was loaded up five minutes later.

Lane handed her the plate he'd set on the hood of the pickup. “Here's supper.”

Aidan looked at him for a moment before accepting the food. She sat on the open tailgate. Aidan used
a plastic fork to scoop up beans, spear salad, and pick up slices of bison. She mopped up the remaining sauce with a bun.

Harper leaned against the fender and Lane sat on the tailgate.

Aidan let out a long sigh. “I've been too nervous to eat.”

Lane watched her walk over and put the plate in a garbage can.

Harper said, “The show was magnificent.”

“I wasn't sure how people would react.” Aidan smiled and looked away.

“Did you get your answer?” Lane asked.

She sat on the tailgate. “Yes.”

“Was it worth it?” Harper leaned his elbows on the sides of the pickup's box.

“You bet.” Aidan pulled her knees up and rested her chin on them.

She's exhausted
, Lane thought. “We have some questions.”

Aidan cocked her head sideways to look at him. She leaned her cheek on her knees. “Of course.”

“How long have you been here?” Harper asked.

“Since you last saw me. And I can't prove I was always here. I was rehearsing and kept to myself.” Aidan looked to the hills in the west where the sun hung low and painted the landscape in colours so rich it seemed possible to lick them of the hills like they were popsicles.

“You said there were witnesses. When I read the file, it said you were the only witness to what happened to Alex.” Lane studied Aidan's eyes.

Her skin flushed red. “Look! How come when a First Nations deaf and gay kid gets killed, the case doesn't get solved? When two white guys die, then everyone wants answers?” Aidan looked at each of them in turn.

“Actually, it looks like four people besides Alex have died. We still have two of the five unaccounted for,” Lane said.

“You have to do what you have to do. I told the
RCMP
everything I knew. It all happened so fast I couldn't be sure, but I knew who it was. I just couldn't prove it was Blake Rogers. He lied through his teeth, and the other three kept their mouths shut. Now it looks like they're all dead. What's the point in probing any deeper?”

Lane decided it was time to stop beating around the bush. “There's still a murderer out there. Is it you?”

Aidan shook her head. She looked directly at Lane. “I didn't, couldn't kill anyone. After I saw what Alex's murder did to Eva, I don't think I could ever kill anyone.”

To Lane, it almost sounded like a regretful apology.

“Do you know where we can find Norm?” Lane waited for a change in her eyes.

“Nope.” Aidan pushed herself off the tailgate.
She's lying
, Lane thought.

“I'm going home to sleep, unless of course, you've got other questions.”

“Where can we get in touch with you?” Harper asked.

“I live at Eva's.” Aidan waited for Lane to get off the tailgate. She closed it, got in the cab and drove away.

Lane walked in the back door just after sundown. Twilight promised another half hour of summer light.

“The kids took the dog for a walk.” Arthur sat at the kitchen table. His ears and neck were sunburned.

“The fight's over?” Lane went to the fridge for a glass of water.

“For now.”

Lane looked over the water glass at Arthur.

Arthur's eyes held tired determination. “We need to talk.”

Lane sat down.

“Erinn got the kids talking on the way home. They're afraid.”

“Of what?” Lane asked.

Arthur gave him an
Are you completely blind?
expression. “You've been shot at twice, wounded once. Do I have to draw you pictures? They're worried about you. They've already lost their families, such as they were, and they're beginning to think this might be their family, although they didn't put it exactly like that. And there's more.”

Lane took a deep breath, let it out slow.
This just gets more and more complicated
, he thought.

“Christine went to your brother first when she left Paradise. She stayed there for a day but couldn't stay any longer.” Arthur turned on the kitchen light.

“Oh.”
Being Christine's second choice hurts more than I thought it would
.

“It was obvious your niece wanted Christine there but her parents did not. We were her last stop before …”

“Before what?” Lane asked.

“She didn't get specific, but she was headed out of
town. Who knows if we would have heard from her again?” Arthur rubbed the stubble on his chin. “The question is not how did we end up with two kids. It's how are we going to survive raising them?”

“And how do we all manage to stay together?”

“According to Erinn all we have to do is accept them.” Arthur shook his head.

Lane laughed out loud. “There's irony for you!”

Arthur's shoulders sagged. “And they're not the only ones who are afraid of what's going to happen to you.”

ch
a
pter 17

SUNDAY, JULY 14

“Did you like the show?” Eva asked. They sat in her kitchen eating saskatoon muffins and drinking coffee.

Aidan sat across from Lane. There were dark circles under her eyes.

“I couldn't take my eyes off the puppets,” Lane said.

Aidan frowned.

“What?” Lane asked.

“They're marionettes.” Eva looked at Lane with a face free of judgement.

“Sorry. They seemed to come alive. One moment they were marionettes and the next they were real,” Lane said.

“I'm sorry, I mean thank you. I hoped that would happen.” Aidan's face went red.

“Was it like a documentary?” Lane buttered a muffin but kept his eyes on Aidan.

“Everything you saw, except of course for most of Alex's lines, happened.” Aidan looked directly back at Lane.

“Alex loved to dance. We travelled around the country to powwows every summer,” Eva said. “No one could dance like he could.”

“Did you see the truck that hit him?” Lane looked at Eva.

“No.” Eva shook her head.

“There was more than one witness, though.” Lane made sure to fill his tone with confident certainty.

Eva looked at Aidan. Eva said, “He found out yesterday.”

“You were there?” Lane asked.

“Of course. Saw you,” Eva said.

“I didn't see you,” Lane said.

“You were too busy watching the show. I left with the drummers.” Eva looked at Aidan. “Was there someone else who saw what happened to Alex?”

Aidan looked at Eva. “Yes.”

“Who?” Eva touched Aidan's hand.

Aidan stood up. She looked at Eva before turning and leaving the kitchen.

Eva looked at Lane and Harper in turn. Her face was a mask.

“We need to know,” Harper said.

BOOK: A Hummingbird Dance
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