Order of Good Cheer (17 page)

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Authors: Bill Gaston

Tags: #FIC019000, #Historical

BOOK: Order of Good Cheer
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Li would likely not have heard in any case because she was talking with Art Tanner, an ex-businessman who now worked in government, keeping alive the province's tradition of selling all its best trees to other countries.

Tanner was talking loudly to her, as one does with foreigners.

“So let me get this straight. Li? Yes, Li. Now, Roger over there — Mr. Sorenson over there says — You say you're ‘a student'?”

“Yes, we here studying nature of sistah city.” Li's foreignness had her bring a hand to her mouth and shield it when she grew unsure. “And shipping, to China. Ah, relationship of —”

“You're a student. A university student.”

“Ah, yes. University in Shanghai. Study of relationship, for instance, hypothetical, of drought in Alberta, plus market price grain, equal amount of tons shipping to China. Many factor. Very very many factor.”

“You don't work for a corporation then?”

“Ah, no no.”

“You don't work for your government either?”

“Yes. Our government, Chinese government, give us grant, to study these, ah, relationship.” She pronounced “Chinese government” as one fast word. “You know, Prince Rupert is seven hundred eighty kilometres close, more close, to ports in China than —”

“We're aware of that. So you're here to — While you're here, is there any way you can, let's say, influence —”

Art Tanner had turned two shades darker during this exchange. Andy could see that all he really wanted to ask was, Is there any point in any of us talking to you?

“Let me try this. Will your ‘study,' possibly bring, an increase, of business, of ‘shipping,' to Prince Rupert?”

“Ah-yes. If our work is, you say, ‘publish,' and Chinese government see, then, yes, more shipping very possible. Very good.”

Meanwhile, May E was trying puns on Pauline, and Andy decided she was mostly frivolous. Li was mostly shallow, and Art Tanner mostly selfish. Andy wondered what
he
mostly was. He knew he was gazing at the wall of beige drapes and that he couldn't pull his gaze away, staring so thoroughly into the wavy scalloping that he could feel his brain move with it. He was wet with perspiration. Maybe it was these new clothes.

Art Tanner regarded Li as if gauging whether she might still be in any way worth his while. Apparently she was. His face collapsed
then rebuilt itself to smile in an altogether different way, a less businesslike way, and he asked if he could fill her half-full glass.

SOMEWHERE IN THE
thick of the evening the banquet developed a ragged and angry feel. It had lost dignity, if it ever had any, so as to be almost fitting when someone threw up in the hall bathroom. There was little laughter now and people started trickling out. Andy couldn't say if it was the fault of Leonard's yelling at Worthington, or if the Wheat Women's impotence had blunted the horny commercial spirit. Or it might just have been the food. Andy had already decided it was the food. It wasn't horrible but it was supposed to have been good. Food could make you groan and laugh. Staring at the half-full trays of chicken à la king and dry meatballs, Andy thought of yesterday's reading, of Champlain, of changing a colony's mood with brilliantly strange food, with celebration for its own sake. And he might have cured scurvy! The livers of seal and porpoise had vitamin C in them, but only if freshly killed, and they also ate the green stomach contents of moose. In a fantastic accident, Champlain had unwittingly also cured their plague.

Leonard had started yelling when Andy was in the kitchen phoning his mother. She'd called the party with a message for Andy, simply that “they found her.” Andy wanted to make sure that they found her healthy, and to see about his mother too. He was calling just as Leonard came into the kitchen, seething, followed by Ken Worthington, the manager from the Hickory Pit. Andy had noticed Worthington flitting in and out of the party, checking on the food table and beer supply, and not only whispering admonishments to the guy carving the baron of beef but straightening his chef's hat. Apparently Worthington was the
caterer. In fact Andy thought he recognized the rib sauce smothering tonight's “Barbecue Winglettes.”

His mother answered and, yes, Marie Schultz was alive and well. Behind him, Andy heard Leonard saying something about the toughest roast beef he'd ever had. Then something about his niece and nephew. Andy suspected that Leonard mostly used “niece” and “nephew” and “brother” in their idealized sense.

“But no,” Andy's mom said softly, “she's not well and she's not the same.” Laura's mother had walked all the way out to Oliver Lake Park, where the police found her sitting at a picnic table, under that new shelter the Rotary Club had built. They didn't know how long she'd been sitting there by herself in the dark, frightened, and she didn't know either.

“You sound
really
tired, Mom. You should try to get a good sleep.” Behind him, Ken Worthington and Leonard were debating the ethics of minimum wage.

“We're in a dither here. Poor Marie was just happy to be home, and we've upset her.”

Andy asked her what she meant.

“We're angry, dear. And we've told her that we don't know what to do with her.” She allowed herself a long pause and then spoke slowly but with the weight of a milestone in her voice. “We've told her, that we don't know, what we're going to do.”

Andy said nothing could be decided tonight and at least they'd found her and they all needed sleep. His mother pointed out that tomorrow was another day. They said goodnight.

“Andy.” Leonard was not looking his way but he was being hailed. “We need your opinion on salmon. Come settle something.”

“I'm no foodie.” But Andy went to stand by the two men, both of whom were portly, and black-mustachioed, but while one was unidentifiable in an off-the-rack grey suit, the other wore
jeans, a Tibetan felt vest, and what he called his “headdress,” a single eagle feather attached to his ponytail, that bounced against his back when he got this animated.

“Tell me,” Leonard said to Andy while he looked Worthington in the eye. “Would you say the Chinese are famous for fresh fish?”

“Um. I guess.” They were a people largely lacking refrigeration, but sure. They kept carp in pools. Actually they dried most of their fish. And there'd been a nasty taint to some squid he'd had at the Jade last month. Likely Leonard was thinking of Japan. “Sure,” he added.

“So if you want to impress Chinese dignitaries with fish, would you say that freshness is something you shoot for?”

Worthington snorted at the “dignitaries,” but chose anyway to address Leonard's logic, namely his failure to mention the closure and ban on fresh seafood until the mystery of the fishkill had been solved.

“Whoa.” Leonard pointed both hands, like six-shooters, at Worthington. “Closure was lifted two days ago. You had time to —”

“One day. The boats haven't even gone —”

“The salmon are
in the rivers
. You want fresh salmon, you talk to someone like me. You going to make this thing work, you need fresh. It's your
job
to get it.”

“Don't tell me my job.”

“That
frozen
sockeye was cooked
dry
, and putting a
sauce
on it, that slippery fuckin' hollandaise —”

“Béchamel sauce. Gimme a break.”

“— only makes dry fish feel
dryer
and doesn't fool
any
body, and those fuckin' frozen prawns were
farmed ones from China
.”

“And was a nice touch. You know, ‘China.' Trade. As in, we're already doing it. ‘Trade.' As in, yes, we catch prawns here too, but look what we eat: yours.”


Frozen, farmed, Chinese
. You know why they're the cheapest ones in the store? You know there's health warnings on that shit? They use shit water, and to keep the shit alive they pump in crap galore, unbelievable, they inject the fuckin'
hormones
with antibiotics to keep the fuckin' crap out of the — You know what
night soil
is?”

“All imports are —”

“They use
human shit
to fertilize
every
thing. The fish farmers and all their fat drunken uncles stumble out at night and reef down their fuckin' black pyjamas to take a dump in the family prawn tank.”

Ken Worthington lifted a single hand by way of goodbye, or maybe “I've had it,” and turned to leave. Andy felt bad for him. He was in the wrong business, because he had less a feel for food than for money, and here he was moonlighting to make ends meet, cutting a few corners. Palming his way out the saloon-style door, Worthington looked mostly tired.

Leonard seemed tired too as he grabbed a beer for both of them from the fridge. Side by side they leaned back against the kitchen counter.

“What's with Drew?” Leonard asked, mostly to the floor. “He looks messed tonight.”

Andy said he didn't know. He could say he was ignoring his head-Betty, but didn't want to explain a word game. He asked Leonard why the tilt with Ken Worthington, and Leonard said he'd arranged the jobs for Grace and Neil — his niece and nephew — and this catering business could really work out, it could get bigger and make jobs for more kids. Leonard tried to get Andy to agree that the food was abysmal.

“It's not memorable, no.”

“It's fuckin' sad. There's no excuse. You try that barbeque sauce?”

“It's sad.”

“And Grace needs something good in her life right now.”

Andy pictured the dead-eyed girl out there, clumsily tilting wine into businessmen's glasses. “She from the north?”

Leonard nodded. He had relatives in the villages to the north and south, both accessible only by boat. The village to the north was worse in terms of what Leonard generally called “family values.”

“Know what they're doing there now? They get cranked on meth and — You know extreme fighting? Those shows on cable?”

Andy asked if he meant that caged fighting with no gloves, where you could knee and elbow and they got all bloody, squeezed up against the chicken wire. It was sometimes on at the Legion if there was no hockey.

“They get high and they extreme fight. With their
friends
, man. They do a fuckin' fight club.” He implored Andy with the saddest small eyes, and Andy could see the niece in that face. “They try and beat up their brother. Their best friend. They do meth and try to kill each other.
Brothers
.”

“Jesus.”

“It's gotten fuckin' primitive, man. It's that satellite tv. Bad news.”

“Where's Grace stay?”

“With her aunt.” Leonard began violently shaking his head at the next thought. “You know, her brother, sixteen, seventeen, he's cooking meth in his bedroom, almost killed them all, and his father doesn't give a shit? Does
nothing
?”

“Did it catch fire?”

“I don't know, it was fumes or something. The thing is they don't care. Father's a selfish asshole. Mother doesn't metabolize.”

This was Leonard's term for a drunk. He liked seeing alcoholism as purely physiological, to remove all judgement.

“Speaking of which”— he brought his empty beer to his face and peered in —“to beer or not to beer, that be the question.”

“Charter tomorrow?”

“Bears.”

Taking tourists on the long run up-inlet he didn't have to leave as early as with a fishing charter, but still early. He didn't care much for grizzly watching. It demanded noiselessness once within two hundred yards. The Khutzeymateen sanctuary had the world's densest grizzly population and you could generally count on some to be feeding on the shore grass, but you had to be delicate. Leonard had to cut the engine and drift in with not even a
clink
from binoculars set down. Andy had come along a few times to help, basically to make coffee and hand out sandwiches. He didn't love grizzlies himself. They hated humans and were kind of insane, as animals go. Through a complex lineage tree they were related to a large, evil pig. He suspected Leonard needed his help less than his company, so he'd feel less lonely when the tourists complained among themselves that this “close encounter” with the bears just didn't seem that close, nothing like what you could see at home on high-def. Leonard once told Andy that most people with the money to afford his charter were automatically a bit afraid of him not only because he was Indian, but because by rights he owned everything they could see and deep down they knew it. He'd also told Andy, somewhat dramatically, that when passing Metlakatla he wouldn't announce that the abandoned village was once the site of the largest church north of San Francisco and west of Chicago, because he didn't want to reveal where his people had first been enslaved.

“Texans,” Leonard added, about tomorrow. For some reason Leonard liked Texans.

Andy remembered Leonard's words to Worthington, “You talk to someone like me,” and had an idea.

“Len, could you get some wild food, no matter what time of year?”

“Sure. Maybe. Like what?”

“I'd pay for it and everything. I'm thinking mussels, the big —”

“West coast of Haida Gwaii. Where it's crazy stormy they grow the size of dance slippers. Read that in a book, ‘mussels the size of dance slippers.' ”

“Great.”

“But they'd have to be flown in. Which shouldn't be a problem. I've got a buddy supplies a resort out that way. How many pounds you want?”

“I'm just thinking. How soon would you have to know in advance?”

“I dunno, a week?”

“How about a moose?”

“You want a moose?”

“‘Some' moose.”

“Well, it's out of season, you know.”

“That's why”—Andy smiled —“I'm talking to someone like you.”

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