«Ashes of Trevor» *(TEASER)

The first dozen pages of, Ashes of Trevor, a novel-length detective mystery infused with the stories and spirit of Toronto at the peak of the City’s confidence and prosperity, right on the cusp of the Great Recession. The novel will be up for sale on Amazon when editing is completed in the summer. Featured cover art by Brisbane-based graphic designer Steven Warenycia.

Ashes of Trevor

by M.G. Warenycia

I.

The impasto swirl of lavender and ultramarine which compassed the span of human sight told of life and energy; the same vernal vitality that plumped the maples like sprung umbrellas and painted fuchsia clouds over the blackened skeletons of the crabapple and cherry trees. The surf lapped with uncharacteristic timidity against the stone piles which held back the waters more sea than lake. Soccer moms jogged alongside playful retrievers, truants took a respite from their studies; the boardwalk which ran the length of this and adjoining beaches, while hardly crowded, had an extra complement of visitors eager to enjoy the first spell of really pleasant weather since Boreas plunged the great metropolis into shivering demi-twilight some six months prior. In the distance, a silvery glitter poked above an umbrous willow.

“Another one going up!” an aged voice of inconclusive accent muttered beneath brows more gloomy than the southerly stormclouds. “How can anybody live like that? You know, fifteen or twenty years ago, they said we’re all gonna have to start living like the Japanese? ‘Rabbit hutch’ apartments, people getting squeezed into subway trains like meat into a sausage casing. I said, nah, that’s stupid. And, if you visited Japan, you’d know that’s mostly just Tokyo, anyway. Even the Japanese were realizing it was a mistake, too. And what’s their excuse?” he pointed to the tower, which loomed too close for comfort. “There’s no reason I can see for it.” He swept his arm across the horizon to suggest the foolishness of people choosing to dwell in tiny rented boxes in the sky when there were vast swatch of undeveloped land all around the City.

“Gosh, I dunno; guess they want ta be like folks in New York ‘er Tokyo, like you say,” replied his companion, a tall, younger man whose scalp and brawny forearms were both covered with coarse ginger hair. “’Course, I’m from Up North myself, eh, so I could never get used to it.” Then, almost apologetically, he added: “Then again, maybe, people are working so much these days, you don’t have ta worry about cutting yer lawn, or shovelling snow.”

The older man’s grumbling was the equal of any Craftsman yard-clearing device. “Still, it goes to the root of civil society. Believe me. The architects and developers can say whatever they want. Vertical communities, ach! We humans don’t operate in vertical spaces; we operate horizontally. You need mixed-used neighbourhoods, mixed-class too, if you can. People encounter each other naturally in day-to-day life, interact. The public spaces are always visible, owned by the residents –“

“’Defensible spaces,’ right, we learn that in Situational Crime Prevention.”

“Right! Crime, too. When you know your neighbours, can see…take your tower block apartments, and compare them with a farming village in Guya-uhh, a fishing village on Sint Maarten or a feudal settlement in northern India. But, hey, gives you guys more work, doesn’t it?”

“Heheh, yeah, guess you could say that!”

“Yeah, which people like me pay for…”

“Don’t universities get most of their funding from the government, though? Which would mean that yer salary is…”

“Vertical communities!” The old professor waved his hand, simultaneously dismissing the off-duty policeman’s argument and drawing his attention to a tree, an especially large specimen that stood out among the beachside grove. “I’m not saying they don’t exist in Nature. Ehh, right in front of you. If you think about it, a lot of different cultures have got architectural ideas from Nature. Domes, beehives. The whole idea of cement, debatably. Wattle-and-daub walls – just need to have watched some species of birds building their nests. But that – that?!?!” he jabbed his chin at the distant tower. “Where’s the analogy to, say, a mature healthy tree, in these condo towers? It’s mere space. And hideous!”

The policeman nodded, holding his tongue regarding how the professor had purchased a charming Victorian house a few blocks from where they stood, while enjoying a globe-trotting, socially rich life that would now appear obscenely irresponsibly to any high school guidance counsellor, let alone to a struggling young couple. Times were different now, the officer reflected; what’s more, most people didn’t seem to have the slightest awareness that a change was on the horizon; a change of such overwhelming magnitude that the very complexion and direction of people’s lives would be altered by the millions without them noticing.

“It’s the subtle things, see. Those are the differences that really count. Yeah,” the professor tapped the tree’s bloated trunk with a stick. “You realize, even if we don’t chop down a single tree, the urban forest – the vegetation of the City, taken as a whole – it’ll be unrecognizable in a dozen years. I mean, to someone who knows one tree from the next. Most people won’t have a clue. Wonder if it’ll play with people’s psychology, the change in the ‘average green’ of the landscape or the ratio of sunny to shady spots – depends on what they replace them with, of course.”

“Wha…what d’ya mean?”

“I’m talking about this.

“Gosh, geez…”

“Bah, it won’t hurt you.”

“Sure, but ya don’t have ta shove it in my face. It’s a…?” The policeman bent to inspect an object on the end of the stick the professor was holding. It was tiny and caught the sunlight like a forbidden gem.

“That,” the professor cocked his head towards the tree; “Is a glorious specimen of Fraxinus americana, common name: white ash. That is a Agrilus planipennis, the emerald ash borer.”

“The beetle?” the constable asked redundantly.

“The beetle!” The professor flung the stick among some hummocks of bunch grass. “Eugh! About nine percent of all the trees in this City, one for every three residents, is an ash tree. Because of that iridescent insect, they’ll all be dead. I told them at the Ward Committee meeting. They said they have no records of emerald ash borers here; have to send out researchers, form a subcommittee. You watch, though – in two, three years, heck, maybe next summer, if the winter is mild. Then, they’ll be sending out tree removal teams. They’ll have to cut them down. Every single one. There’s no resistant strains, no effective treatment.”

“Hmph. S’pose they’re worried about liability, if one of ‘em fell on somebody’s house. Lots’a real high-end properties around here. Heheh, I tell ya, Doc, hangin’ out with you is like going ta university fer free.”

“Better. Anyway, you were going to tell me about some cases you’re working on? When are they gonna give you that promotion?…”

II.

“Good morning to you, too, Peter. I’m Rita Ramachandran, reporting live from the Scott Mission at 502 Spadina Avenue, which is one of the last reported locations where anyone saw or heard from Dylan Coleman. Staff and guests here both recall Dylan staying at the Mission intermittently during the past four to six weeks and he may have been here as recently as last Thursday night. However, none of his personal effects remain for police to examine for clues and a police spokesperson says it is too early to comment on any leads.”

The photogenic, blazer-clad Tamil maiden held the microphone awkwardly far from herself, hoping that viewers would not notice her efforts to restrain her breathing. Mercifully, the camera shifted focus to a grizzled man wrapped in a couple soiled windbreakers. “I know when I saws the posters. I says a myself, Christ, eh, just saw him like, oh, a couple days ago, eh. ‘Cept everybody here called him Justin, if they knew him. I mean, I didn’t really know him, ya know. He was a quiet kid, kept to himself. Come ‘n go when he needed. Ya don’t really ask questions, ya know.”

The camera switched to a hopeful-looking young shelter worker, labelled “Rev. Peter Houseman: “We provide a refuge, mainly. We’ll help facilitate access to counselling and treatment, but we don’t enforce it. Persons come here of their own free will. If you’re asking whether Dylan seemed troubled, yes, he did, but people do not come through our doors because they are healthy and their lives are well in order…No, no, he never talked to me about feeling threatened or scared, personally. I would have contacted police, but there was nothing like that.”

“Well, Peter, there you have it,” Rita gasped. “There’s just so much about Dylan’s life in Toronto that’s a blank page at the moment, it’s difficult to draw any conclusions.”

“Thank you, Rita,” Anchorman Peter Marlborough’s sober accents acknowledged. “Perhaps we can learn more about who Dylan Coleman is by talking to those who knew him best.” The anchor flinched, wanting to curse himself for the Freudian slip, but he carried on seamlessly. “We have on the Colemans on the line live from North Bay. Let’s go there now.”

The screen focused on a grainer feed, evidently starting somewhere in the middle of an interview being conducted by an on-site reported. The camera focused on the obvious parental couple. The text on the screen read “Rob Browning – Sue Coleman (Parents).” The man, who had a stern military bearing, sign of his employment at the local RCAF base, spoke first. “I don’t agree with the direction the police there are taking, sorry. I’m not an expert in psychology or anything like that, but Dylan would not simply ‘go missing.’ We know our son and, frankly, the cops in Toronto, he’s just a number in a case file to them. I don’t know how you can think somebody would want to disappear by choice, for no reason at all. He was a good kid, hard worker, never got into any trouble, besides the usual stuff, growing up. Half the question they’re asking us, I don’t know what it’s for, except so somebody can make overtime.”

“I just…” Dylan’s mother’s voice broke with sobs; “I just want my baby back in one piece. That’s it; that’s all.” Her mouth moved as if she wished to say more, but no intelligible words emerged.

The newsfeed returned to Miss Ramachandran. “There you have it, Peter. The parents are not happy with the way police are handling this investigation.”

“It certainly seems like that, Rita. We should give credit though, to the Toronto Police Service for taking prompt action on even imperfect reports coming out about a potential criminal event that would have been neglected or ignored only a decade or two ago. At least that was the statement of AEqualis Toronto on this story. Now we bring you live to 52 Division headquarters, where police are giving an official statement on this case…”

From the appearance of the Superintendent standing behind the podium, one could be forgiven for thinking it was high summer and the AC had broken down. “…It is my regret to say so, but unfortunately, if that is what the family are telling you, I must say there is nothing we have found to support it…No, I am saying we do not believe this was a voluntary disappearance and we do believe foul play is involved…Obviously, we cannot release all the evidence publicly at this time; goodness, we’re right in the middle of…Yes, evidence…Both statements of witnesses – probably witnesses – and the circumstances, all indicate…” A reporter asked a question, inaudible on TV, which the Superintendent must have found impudent in the extreme. “The community? The Community! Consulting? With whom?…We keep residents informed, yes, but at this stage…Impact? Public perception? I don’t know, ugh! We don’t even have a suspect yet, so I can hardly comment on what the impact of the investigation will be on the Community…Yes, relations with the police have been strained in the past, but the policy of conciliation and cooperation of the last fifteen or so…” His voice grew weak and dull as he repeated a script learned by rote…

III.

“Disgusting! It’s disgusting he thinks we’re disgusting! Look at the way he curls his lips, fat sausage lips. You wonder what shady business he gets up to in his spare time.” The bar patron was fuming over his Lakan Extra Premium Lambanog. He was balding, bespectacled; a dense beard, cropped tight, ran around the circumference of his face. Muscles bulged under his sleeves and a paunch swelled over his belt buckle, but his cheeks were sunken and papery.

The bartender and the other patrons eyed him with an uneasy mixture of deference and disapproval. They were mostly well-to-do and pale. The lips comment, ehhh…and ‘shady’? Why, in the context…There was much shuffling of glutes atop barstools, absentminded tapping of coaster rims on wood, and ploughing of cold condensation with fingertips.

“You shouldn’t…people might take it the wrong…” a drinker half-heartedly mumbled without finishing the thought.

“It’s good they’re representing more diverse communities now,” offered another, to which the ranter snapped:

“Do you feel represented by any of those guys up there, huh? Do you know what it feels like to see those badges and jackboots crashing in on you when you’re in the steam room, vulnerable…argh! Yeah, yeah, bet you know what a nightstick on your ass at three a.m. feels like. And did anyone stick up for you?” Him…and him, and her – all of them, they represent Mr. and Mrs. White Picket Fence, the burbs, respectability. They wish you didn’t exist. But, hey, who cares about history, right?”

The other patrons hung their heads, humbled, but the bartender, a man as venerable in the Community as the bearded haranguer, took umbrage. “Nobody’s saying don’t care about history, Matt. Come on, look at me: I was writing articles for Q-Dition, back when it was printed once a month on a mimeograph in a schoolteacher’s garage. Didn’t pay so good as this gig, either, and that’s saying a lot. I got harassed, got put in lock-up a couple times, had to deal with all that shit. Point is, though, it’s history. I’m happy – we all should be happy – that those days are gone and people like this guy –“ he jabbed his chin towards a younger patron, a university student – “Don’t have to go through what we did. I mean, if they did, then what did we fight so hard for all those years?”

The ranter finished his drink hastily and stomped out. The others did not share their neighbour’s blind hatred of the police. They were concerned by the news playing on the ceiling-mounted television, though they’d been but dimly conscious of the goal. When he went home and slept that night, the bartender would dream a long and vivid dream. He was in a park, thickly wooded but well maintained. He was not sure how he got there, but it was the sort of place he enjoyed jogging or cycling in, so he set out to explore it. Rain was on the way. He had no umbrella. There were houses, subdivisions; he could see their roofs and chimneys protruding among the treeline. But it would take him quite a while to reach them. There was probably a mall, with a food court, too. His stomach felt hollow. With the rain coming down now, he could foretell that his pants would become soaked through and his loafers would become slop buckets, so he sought shelter in a grove of trees, whose massive crowns of saw-toothed, generically-shaped leaves were conveniently broad and spreading, forming perfect vegetable umbrellas. The leaves caught almost all of the droplets. Unable to wander around and explore, and with no companions nearby, he grew instantly bored and focused, as a bored man often does, on the minute details of his surroundings, so as to provide coal for the boilers of his mind. The grass was evenly trimmed. One would naturally expect a great deal of leaves, twigs and other arboreal detritus upon the grass, given the setting, but the lawn was picked clean as a wheatfield in a time of famine. Everyone else must have see the stormclouds approaching, or else he would have encountered people shuffling hastily towards the hidden parking lots, hoodies drawn up over their heads or newspapers shielding their eyes and hairdos. A hundred and fifty years and more the trees must have grown there; a place preserved and protected, and not a belated attempt to rectify the sins of Man by declaring a park after strip mining or clearcutting. Birds there were; he could hear them. Robins, awaiting a meal of post-shower worms; starlings. As the sky grew darker and the rain fell heavier, the amount of water getting to him through the leaves did not appreciably increase, but the birdsong changed. The cheery songbirds of the day were replaced by the hooting, barking and whooping of the birds of the night, who, as if in deference to human prejudices, wear a sinister aspect. As he listened, the queer whistling and whooping grew louder and louder, till he was not sure whether it was birds he was listening to, after all. The appearance of a pair of luminous red eyes a couple feet from ground level, unsettled him. A coyote? Luminous they were, literally, for, like a highway patrolman’s MagLight in the eyes of a pulled-over inebriate, their glow washed out the form surrounding them, although it was clear that it blinked and ducked behind the trunks of trees and the rims of boulders. Soon after, other pairs of eyes, likewise glowing and red, emerged from the nocturnal blackness, only to disappear and reappear in a more disconcerting spot. He felt a strong sensation of familiarity, alongside that of fear, though where that familiarity came from in time and place, or whether it was a delusion, he could not be sure. He felt scared enough that he wasn’t embarrassed to cry out, though he stopped after the first sputtered moan, aware that the folks in those distant houses would not hear him, especially in this rain. His tense gaze shifted increasingly quickly left to right and back again, playing a game of whack-a-mole with the blinking and shifting lights. The trunk of the ancient tree gave him reassurance; four feet at least, across the middle. That he could not see behind him gave him comfort that no threat was present in that direction…until he felt the undulation; the rattling and pulsing transmitted into his spine through the wrinkled bark.

His reason slipped and he let out a loud, futile wail, cut off by the sound of the tenants on the floor below shutting their windows, filling him with shame and confusion.

IV.

“Oh my friggin…!” The barista had already been tired, white rings of sweat salt and antiperspirant staining the underarm of her black uniform t-shirt. She was wearing it for the second overtime shift in a row because she’d been too worn-out to do laundry when the machines in her building were free. Her fingers were the colour of a hided watermelon from the bleach, Ajax and other cleaning chemicals she could not pronounce. Judith, the floor manager, could see that and obviously knew the hours everyone was schedules. Yet, Judith assigned her to clean the men’s room, first thing after she had come back from break. The Z-Teca burrito was lying hot in its foil wrapping upon the counter. She’d carefully suited up with gloves, apron…she needed a hazmat suit. The urinal cakes were fresh, the porcelain therein clean-scoured, but the stall…what must have been the entire roll of toilet paper…how could anyone…The edges of the outer sheets fluttered like feathers in the current from the vent and the open door. The bulk of the sheets were held firm to the floor by liquid mass, and by the adhesive action of the said liquids towards the tile as they slowly gummed. Spray or splatter covered the inside of the urinal door, flapping loosely on its hinges. Handprints, full handprints of blood, still bright crimson, marked the white walls and, by the sinks, a certain quantity of it had been used to trace crude symbols – they were definitely symbols, or intended to be such – probably with a finger, though Amy couldn’t be sure.

Dazed, Amy retraced her steps, watching lest she accidentally come into contact with some hitherto unnoticed residues. A parka-clad student shoved past her in obvious urgency. “N-nooo!” She seized his sleeve.

“Hey, what the f*ck are you doing?” he shook her off. He should have listened. He and his coffee companion fled from the café seconds later.

“That’s the fastest clean on record,” Judith snarled from behind the cash. “Ummm, you can’t just leave the mop and bucket, unless you’re expecting the customers to clean it for you. Actually, that does sound like you.”

“N-no, Judith…I’m not…I can’t…”

“If you’re such a spoiled princess, you shouldn’t have got a job in food service. Leave the money for people actually willing to work for it.”

“Judith…I…I think we should call the police? Maybe? Like, if there’s that much…something must have happened. I mean, right?”

“Police? What happened? Nobody made a report.”

Armando, who was restocking the pastry case, looked up sheepishly. “Umm, ackshually, there was dis homeless guy that ran out like ten minutes ago. You were in the back. He had like, six or seven coats on him.” Armando spun a finger around his ear. He had not glimpsed the inside of the restroom, but he could put two and two together.

The two or three customers ordering drinks and food who stood nearest to the counter could overhear the employees’ conversation. Worried looks passed between them as they contemplated how close to completion a frappe could be before they cancelled their order. Those farther from the counter stiffened with alertness, perceiving a sudden change in the mood but unsure of the cause and too timid to ask.

No one noticed yet another deranged, disoriented homeless man shambling along Dundas Street. That was, of course, until he stood for a time which even to the casual passer-by and the more so to the staff and patrons inside, staring gape-mouthed and trance-eyed at the window, or the sign, or the people inside of the Tuen Mun BBQ restaurant. Eventually, the creeped-out head chef set down his cleaver and shoved his nose against the window, giving everyone else the unconscious signal they needed to justify abandoning whatever they were doing to gawk. The few who possessed cell phones with cameras drew them out to snap grainy pictures for posting to internet forums. The panicked manager called the police.

V.

Questioning of the lunatic was abruptly suspended when the officers became aware that he was seriously injured, as evidenced by the bloodstains on his lower pant legs and the fresh defensive wounds visible when he finally removed his hands from the Michelin Man ensemble of coats and scarves enfolding him. There was no way to tell what happened to him, gibbering as he was, plus certain aspects of his appearance led the officers to believe he might infect them with something, or some animal living on him, should they attempt to wrestle a pair of cuffs on him. They let the paramedics take him away. They’d barely finished calming down the restaurateur and feeding him the perfunctory advice on accommodating the presence of disturbing vagrants when eh bulleting came to go back and do a proper questioning of witnesses. Other officers would see the ME. Dylan Coleman had been located…and it looked like a homicide.

“You ever have a problem with homeless people around here before?” Constable Lambrakis waited patiently for the obviously never-fully-assimilated owner of the restaurant to process the question.

The small man, dapperly dressed in an out-of-date black suit, grabbed hunches of his long hair. “No, no. Yes, sometimes, go in garbage, looking food we throw away. In back. But never make trouble.”

“Yah-huh,” Lambrakis scribbled in his notebook. “Was this one of the men you saw poking through your trash before?”

“No. Nevah see him before. Neh-vah.”

“You sure? They all kind of look alike, sometimes.”

“Nevah, sorry.”

The customers had proven hopeless. At most, they tried to exaggerate details plainly within the officers’ memory, to make the incident seem more graphic than it was. None of them knew it was a homicide investigation – what could they have ‘seen,’ then? Lambrakis wondered…

Spring is a slow time for murder in Toronto and thus a good time for detectives to take a holiday. Detective Constable Doulas McMurtry, with his experience operating in the area, was assigned to the case as soon as he began his shift. By that hour, in the late afternoon, there was no sign at the Tuen Mun that anything out of the ordinary had occurred, a light rain having washed away any stray droplets of blood. Constable Jennifer Koo, McMurtry’s partner, looked inquiringly at him as they stood below the neon sign depicting a sampan, red on yellow, alongside the like-coloured block script and bold calligraphic characters. Her eyes asked permission to go tear into the restaurant staff. There were a number of businesses in the Division where she was forbidden, if not when in uniform.

“Lambrakis doesn’t think anybody here has any connection to the victim,” the Canuck mused, recalling the briefing he got from the initial investigating officers. “Says everyone they talked to came across honest, and none of them were much help. I tend to agree with him. I mean, sounds like this Coleman kid was really off his rocker.”

“Why?” Koo asked in a thoughtful whisper.

“I figger from how he was yammering like a maniac, when he talked, if he was saying words at all. That and his appearance. Y’know, hasn’t shaved in five days, wrapped up in enough coats ‘n jackets to roast a normal –“

“Argh! You’re like a brick, sometimes! I meant, why do you think he ended up like that?”

“Well, ya know, a lot of these guys – not the Indians, though – a lot of them were hard working guys once, feedin’ their families, payin’ their taxes. But then they got hurt, ‘n workman’s comp’s not enough. Wife leaves ‘em, he gets on the bottle. Or the mine, or the factory – all the good union jobs, eh – they all close down. Yer seeing more ‘n more of it now, with all this offshoring stuff going on. Comes into Toronto ‘cause he gets a little work fer a while, or thought he could, or fer some kind of treatment, maybe. The homeless shelters are full-up, and you’ve got a ten, twelve year wait fer assisted housing, but ya need it next month, eh. Then, you find yourself fighting fer a warm spot on a sewer grate. Not like there’s anywhere else, is there?”

Jenny’s contrarian instinct revolted, yet her brain struggled to come up with anything. “Wait, though…”

“Huh?”

“That doesn’t sound like this guy, though. He was just a kid, not some Baby Boomer factory worker.”

“No, guess it doesn’t. Huh. Bad home?”

Jenny hurried him along on their work, sparing him from getting deflated by further argument. “CAMH is right down the street,” she suggested, but that line of inquiry was ended at the front desk, as no Dylan Coleman appeared on the institution’s records and none of the sane individuals on duty recognized his photo, except from the news.

The City was beginning to twinkle in the first shades of twilight when Constables McMurtry and Koo strolled back south on Spadina to 52 Division headquarters. A spark of inspiration, or rather accumulated years of open-eyed experience hit McMurtry. “Should have checked in here before anything!” He smirked, forcing Jenny to follow as he ducked into the tile-fronted LCBO on the corner of Baldwin and Spadina. In a country with much unacknowledged Puritan blood coursing through its veins, ‘The Liquor Store’ carries unsavoury connotations by name alone. However, as LCBO locations go, the Baldwin-Spadina outlet has a uniquely notorious reputation almost on a level with the McDonald’s at Dufferin and King. Despite apparently deliberate attempts to compensate with frequent renovations and a conspicuously bright exterior colour scheme, all the porous surfaces of the building are stained and reeking as soon as they are pressure-washed, and cigarette butts and other, more disquieting refuse collect with the dust and road salt in the seams of the concrete and asphalt. It even has its own temporary tenants; an Air BnB open to the sky. While history has generally proven the Prohibitionists wrong, if one ever wished for a place in Toronto to showcase the scourge of Daemon Rum, there could be few equal and none better. Here, the dregs of the downtown lumpenproletariat flock to purchase Oblivion with the residue of welfare cheques, the pay of brutalizing labour jobs (‘an honest day’s toil’) and the coinage deposited into coffee cups by pedestrians rich in misguided guilt. One might ask if the provincial government feels at least a little bit embarrassed having their name stamped above such a morally questionable trade, but it is too lucrative to privatize.

As on every Friday during Rush Hour, the place was packed, the regulars outnumbered by university students stocking up for the weekend’s recreation. Behind the counters were an acne-faced lad barely old enough to drink himself, a Madrasi housewife with perpetually startled eyes, and a rock-jawed matron who spoke with the Ulster-tinged accents of the orchard country beyond the metropolitan borders.

“Do you know this guy?” McMurtry showed the photograph to the cashiers.

“Yes, I see, news, ka-henh,” Lilawattie muttered, nodding her head as fast as the syllables left her mouth.

“No, no, I mean did you ever see him in here? Buy stuff, steal stuff?”

“No, no, I-I don’t know here,” the cashier tried to serve the next customer, terrified of appearing unproductive to her bosses. The customer shifted awkwardly on his feet – he could see the cops were doing something and, what the…he was supposed to shove a uniformed policeman out of the way, or rush around him or something?

Jenny peered over the cashier to examine the array of personas non grata, of which there were many tiny security camera portraits stuck on a bulletin board.

“Let me see what’cher lookin’ at,” the other cashier rasped, forgetting her work entirely. “It’s the kid on the news, isn’t it?”

“Yes,” Jenny confirmed; “But we don’t want to put it out there too obvious, because people bog us down with fake tips, if they think we’re investigating.”

“You found him?”

“Uhhh…I’m not at liberty to…”

“Well, I’ll see it on the news anyhow, tonight, won’t I, eh? I do know him, if ya want ta hear it. Seen him a few times, yeah. Polite little feller, quiet. Wouldn’t say I know him personal, but you know. Right, Lil? He’s been in here, right? The kid in the picture they got there.”

Lilawattie moaned and hummed in incomprehensible anguish, shaking her head.

“Did you check his ID?”

“…” The apple farmer’s daughter shrunk. She remembered hearing something about that kid’s age on the news, which meant…

“What did he buy, usually?” McMurtry asked. There was no way of tracking who sold what to customers with apparently valid ID, who paid cash on unknown occasions, months ago. The woman was shaking in her boots over nothing.

“Hmm…Lili, do you remember?” the Canadian tried subtly (she thought) to shift responsibility, as if Liliwattie must have for some reason been Dylan’s ‘regular’ cashier.

“Eee-ugh…” Much hissing and muttering.

“Hmm, well, I didn’t serve him too often, but, I seem ta remember…coolers? Rosé? Sweet wines, pink wine, that sort of thing.” She forgot herself watching the handsome cop scribbling on his notepad. “Oh, and there’s this, this special wine, from Hungaria? Sweet wine, too, I think. He asked fer it by name once. I remember, because it’s one of those things that never moves off the shelves. He had ta write it down fer me. Unusual tastes, huh?”

“Uh-huh. Do you, uh, if you remember from any ID, maybe, know where he might have lived? Maybe he had a shelter card in his wallet? They’re light blue pieces of paper with the City logo on ‘em.”

“Shelter?”

“You know, fer homeless people.”

“I never figured he was homeless, I guess. I dunno.”

“You never figured? His appearance didn’t, uh, give you any hints?”

“Well, I mean, I didn’t think he was a student, because, y’know, not ta judge, but the way he talked. Like he hadn’t got a lot of education. But he was always clean shaven, and…” she leaned to whisper to the detective: “He didn’t smell, y’know?”

“He didn’t smell?!?” The detective practically bellowed in surprise.

The cashier looked with nervous terror at the bearded, drowsy forms wrapped in stained overcoats standing further back in the line and imagine the righteous indignation they were surely feeling. She whispered even more quietly, “You know, the smell those people have? You can tell; musty, yick!”

“He didn’t smell?” McMurtry tapped his chin meditatively, then threw his colleague a meaningful glance. “It’s just a hunch, but tell me if ya think this makes any sense. So, this is things I heard, growing up, or from older guys on the force…”

VI.

The electric beat was pulsing as hard as the veins in Cyrus Gilani’s temples; the fog of cologne and vodka and sweat seemed to conduct electricity as well as vibrations like Tesla’s ether. The resurgence of a late winter flu had made Cyrus sluggish and cranky since he woke up at 2:45 pm, and he was not pleased to have to step out in the bracing night air, but the constant vibrations of his phone were driving him mad.

He didn’t recognize the number. It was in his contacts as Maitland Grange, but the yammering voice on the other end of the line did not sound like a ‘Maitland.’ “Ah-halloh, halloh, stop talking so f*cking fast. What is it? Who are you?”

The caller sounded half asleep and wholly drunk. He identified himself as Jurgis Mindaugas and claimed to have been hired by Cyrus’ father two years earlier to superintend one of his properties. This Mr. Mindaugas described it as a medium-sized apartment building; a block of dark bricks that preserved archaic features, like iron fire escapes and windows with real sills. “Right, right, I remember my dad showing it to me once,” Cyrus assured him, though he had no memory of the place. However, the address and age of it rang enough of a bell for him to infer that it must have been one of the properties he’d inherited from his father.

According to Mindaugas, while his tenants were normally discrete (which was how he preferred it), over the past two days, first the theatre manager by the fourth floor elevator, then the Mexican ‘students’ in the rearmost unit on the third floor had been complaining about a smell, though they could not agree on what it was nor on the source. It was possibly on the third and maybe on the fourth – sickly sweet, or rotten, a blocked drain or a rat in the walls. The superintendent himself could swear he scented something as the elevator doors were opening on both those floors, but, then, the elevator shaft runs the length of the building and the scent, which he struggled to describe, was absent from the halls.

“Whah..shit, okay, do you have any idea what it is? Why are you calling me now?”

The superintendent’s voice fell soft and deferential. The Mexicans claimed to have heard a banging or a loud popping. Mindaugas offered that it might be the retired chemistry professor also on the fourth floor, conducting experiments which the superintendent had observed on a past visit to his unit. Why didn’t he just knock on the door and find out?

As the liquored Lithuanian layered on the excuses, Cyrus began to see that he was afraid of his tenants and had no real understanding of the knowledge one reasonably expects a building superintendent to have. He was probably given the job as make-work by Cyrus’ late father, as a favour in recompense for some now-forgotten assistance rendered to the elder Gilani during his first years in Canada, before he became an obscenely wealthy businessman. Mindaugas didn’t live at the building. The place was not very particular, but the residents…how to say? Mr. Gilani, senior, had explained it to him when he was installed on the job. The residents were very particular about each other, and, while all colours, ages and occupations were tolerated, a man like Mr. Mindaugas would make the residents ill at ease if he was always there, listening and poking around.

“I see…Okay, and, I guess, you can’t go doing unit inspections, if the tenants aren’t there when you are?”

Oh, absolutely not, the super insisted. Even if there was a dripping dark leak coming out of a unit’s pipes, you didn’t just knock and ask to come in and have a peek. He’d made that mistake before. “I never know who is the real tenant unless I check the book!”

“Argh! Okay, okay. What do you want me to do about it?”

“Well, I, ah, I ask you, because you, you are the owner. I don’t know, I listen, whatever you say.”

Cyrus hung up and got a mate to drive him back to his apartment, where he would repose for the next couple days. Business! Sickness was a refuge; maybe people would stop bothering him for a while. Did it matter, this maintenance issue in one of his many, many buildings? Urgh! But the tenants there did pay some fat rents, and the margins were fantastical, given the abysmal standard of maintenance and the generally sturdy nature of old buildings like that. Maybe someone’s door needed to be unlocked? Ahhh, but that would be someone with a hidden nanny-cam, who would sue him before the Landlord and Tenant Board. TREB would take his license with another of these cases. So, he would need a warrant, but a warrant meant involving the police, which he was loath to do. But how ‘involved’ could they bem heh? A piece of paper, get it stamped…Then again, the inescapable inference asserted itself: folk who insist on such secrecy and discretion would undoubtedly have things – or people – in their dwellings that would be of more than passing interest to the police; that would be ‘in plain sight’ and then excuse further investigation, which would bring news cameras at some point…He wondered how soon he could get a contractor to cart away the illuminated “Gilani Developments Ltd” sign from the building’s lawn…

VII.

Toronto is not like New York, for it definitely sleeps, although its hours of slumber vary with the day and seasons. This Friday night felt so long that Kwok Chung Yee found himself imagining that it was summer, a delusion temporarily dispelled every time he went out for a smoke break, which was even more often than usual tonight. No respectable foodie blog would declare it, but customers eager for a plate of char siu fan and the crispiest, most luminously red siu mei goose were drawn in like moths to his heat lamp display and the neon glow of the Tuen Mun BBQ sign. The very tackiness of it and its seemingly retro (though actually quite accidental) linkages to certain zeitgeistal images of ‘Chinatown’ in Western popular culture acted upon the unconscious minds of passers-by (other than students at the nearby campuses and personal friends from the suburbs, no one ever actually sought out the Yuen Mun BBQ). The atmosphere and deliciously grisly display window did its part on the more conscious whims of any who had read too many vintage National Geographic articles about Hong Kong or watched too many subtitled Cantonese movies on the OMNI network or pirated VCD. Business was good, and he could not toss out a packed house; not till twenty or thirty minutes after posted closing, at least. A full clean was not done; the staff were shoed out, and Kwok Chung Yee finally got to clear his head – though first he had the head waiter move Chung Yee’s minivan to the curb out front. He didn’t mention that it was because he did not want to be starting it – or running to it – in the shadowed demi-courtyard out back.

Chung Yee merged with the still-abundant current of walkers on Spadina – it was a clubbing night. The bright lights and coarse commercial vitality were like a blanket to a fearful child. He was afraid of the dark, and he knew it. A dragon fruit that strayed from one of the polychrome produce pyramids struck the top of his shoe right when the thought resurfaced. A sign? His sister believed in such things and that’s why she hadn’t gone into business with him all those years ago. Or, rather, she had, but backed out. He began weighing up the relative luck in life of him versus Chun Fa, and, owing to his mood, found his own side of the scale tipping aloft. It was true that Chun Fa and her friend Hsiao Foong’s florist shop earned much, much less than the Tuen Mun BBQ, but her husband was a lawyer and they had not suffered the obvious and dramatic events of great misfortune that had befallen Chung Yee and his ex-wife. There was the divorce, first of all. He hadn’t intended for ‘Apple’ to be anything more than the immediately forgotten massage parlour entertainment she was. He had forgotten her, literally. Alas, the piquant pixie worked nearby…There were massage parlours everywhere, and he had a car, yet he’d been so lazy! Being conveniently close, Apple and her colleagues fuelled their nocturnal industry near their work, and, on a white and wicked January night, the radiant glow and lung-warming fumes roiling out of a busy char siu joint are salvation itself. It was a busy place, Apple and her pals observed; so many customers, buying so much food, and at prices that were not excessively economical. Neither meat nor sauce betrayed the faintest trace of corner-cutting in their succulent savour. At first, the restaurant owner did not recognize Apple in her parka, but Apple recognized a potential goldmine – the creed of her class being to try every shot, no matter how shameless or hopeless – and Mrs. Kwok, who was eating there, after shopping on the town, recognized adultery.

Apple paid for her meal, while Chung Yee paid for Apple with approximately half his earthly property. He sought sympathy from his sister. He had forgotten that she had ever told him so. Oh yes, she had, she insisted, back when he bought the restaurant, or, rather, the equipment needed to set up a restaurant, along with the business license. She’d never had any objection to the premises itself, which, though not ideal from a feng shui perspective (it was laid out, after all, by a penny-pinching Edwardian Scotsman), was not objectionable either.

The ranges, ventilators, one of the freezers, the original supply of silverware and pots, even the signs and trading name, he’d all purchased from another restaurateur, a Viet who, it was said, had lived in Tuen Mun as a refugee a couple years before coming to Canada in ’83. Why they were abandoning ship was not something he recalled, though he never heard from them after the purchase and had long since lost their names and contact info. All the equipment was in top condition – the original owners seemed strangely reticent about the work of cooking and serving food to people, though there were enough of them in that family to make a slender custom light work indeed. He’d tried to guess their real angle, but they didn’t seem to have the charisma and robust constitutions for underworld work. Their social skills, even among locals of the neighbourhood, were dreadful. Then again, they dressed unassumingly and economical little Nissans, so maybe there was no other angle to the situation. The curious thing was that they were selling a restaurant, effectively, and a decent one by neighbourhood standards…yet they were not selling the premises. It seemed pointless to move everything a block and half away, but they did the work, so Chun Yee couldn’t complain. He would have preferred the location he got, anyway, even if he’d bad to source everything full price.

The first restaurant to bear the name of Tuen Mun BBQ was in one of those stand-alone structures that still bear a commercial aspect, but are a block or two back from the rowhouse shops on the main Dundas-Spadina strip. Twenty or thirty years ago, there were more businesses on these linden-shrouded side streets, but commerce has become concentrated and the few establishments that remain watch lazily through dust-browned windows and faded signs as their partners leave and the family houses and Chinese hometown associations are transformed into overpriced sharehouses for students and hipsters.

Chung Yee had naturally passed by the ex-Tuen Mun since then. He saw that it had been converted into a restaurant supply distributor, thou he could not see past the rude stacks of pots, rice sacks and cooking oil drums to divine what manner of people operated it. When the wholesaler was moving in, he saw a car replacing the Viets’ and asked one of the white workmen, who worked with the renovation company laying down cobbles and replacing shrubs in front, but they claimed to know nothing. Nor, in all his many years running the Tuen Mun, did je see any person entering or exiting the distributor’s. It might simply be timing, of course, as it wasn’t a retail location. Regardless, the way it squatted there, taking up valuable real estate, arrogant and threatening to amateurs who dared meddle with it; it reminded him of a great tree, its wood grown dry and corrupt with the years, yet whose dark presence discourages even sensible men from lingering near and whose spidering roots reach points unfathomed, denying its neighbours any chance that a lucky breeze should rid them of its curse.

He slowed his steps when he reached the deserted side street, though he did not stop nor turn his body to face the building squarely. The place was still apparently used as a wholesale restaurant supply store, still apparently devoid of any activity, the general air of neglect intensified ever so slightly since the last occasion he saw it. He hurried on, circling round to reach back to his car, not wanting to return by the route he’d come.

On the highway home, he rehearsed asking his sister’s opinion, but, upon reaching the quiet house in the somnolent subdivision, his courage drained. Watching a movie with his second wife, who would understand nothing of his early days as an entrepreneur, could not satisfy his urge to vent his worries and grope for answers, but, with extra lights left on in the halls and dining room, it was enough to get through the night.

VIII.

The cold wet air passing through the perversely open window made Jenny’s feet curl, her body yearning for the shelter of heavy blankets which were, alas, once again for her alone. Meh, more time to devote to work. If she wasn’t serious about being a police officer, what was she doing it for, glorified cosplay? She would never admit it, but she was glad to be on a major case, gruesome as the raw material was. It’s not so easy to tell yourself that your focus is rightly on yourself, when your daily task is pushing paper or flipping burgers. The Inspector had given her a business card for an animal rescue before he went on vacation. As a result, she’d not communicated with him since, although she knew this case was right up his alley. A bluff got her what she was looking for, but the spoils rotted of their own richness.

The story she told Codrington was that a publican, a Queertown stalwart, had made some remark about a similar case, or series of cases, occurring in the late 80s – or maybe it was the early 90s? Codrington had enough experience to know what Jenny was suggesting: that the same person responsible for Dylan Coleman’s demise had been acting during that earlier period, perhaps not coincidentally the era in which the murder rate peaked just as the City was shaking off its gritty, grimy previous incarnation. This felt like a good idea – that is, that they could at least look like they were doing something to satisfy ‘the Community.’ The Colemans did not appear to have the money to feed a drawn-out lawsuit or any but the trashiest private investigators; they would reign themselves in when an easy windfall was no longer likely, thus extinguishing the sole reason for caring about their son leaving only righteous resentment for the shame he’d brought them. But those who lived under the rainbow banner, oh! They were a different story…

Codrington had inquired of his mentor, the long-retired ex-Chief Inspector Malone. With a string of expletives and tasteless jokes that hinted at why the force back then was not able to crack the cases, Malone recalled that indeed there had occurred cases, in the time period indicated, which more or less fit the fact patter of the Coleman case, at least as regards the identity of the victims. These words Codrington relayed, having located the files, to Jenny.

The darkness was seeping in, intruding into the space guarded by he table lamp. It was better the files stayed at the office, yes, or else even a quick dash into bed after flicking off the light might not have been enough to save her. Sleep came slowly, and she did not like the simple realism of fatigue’s mirages: the bulges in the drywall that emerge and recede; the solitary knocks on the door which one thought one heard. The eyes cannot be trusted and the mind suspects itself. She really wished she had taken up the offer of a cat…

The Beam

The Beam

by M.G. Warenycia

            The urban legend has lost much of its mythic aura. What, with everyone having a camera in their pocket and Google, GPS and other investigative tools, if we are confronted with something that sounds like it might be BS; another ‘cool story, bro,’ we can verify it in a matter of minutes from almost anywhere. Everything that happens is known or at least rapidly knowable. Yet this is a false impression embraced because it is comforting to think that there is nothing more unknown in the world—as a wise man once said, “The oldest and strongest emotion of mankind is fear, and the oldest and strongest kind of fear is fear of the unknown.” The reason urban legends, cold cases and other unsolved mysteries have such a powerful hold on our imagination is because their settings and characters belong to the familiar world of modernity and well-ordered crowds of educated, technologically adept people who, by their sheer numbers and activity, are supposed to ward off the Unknown. These legends belong to our world, yet seem to drag into it, like a thing unclean, relics of earlier ages and far-off lands which we’ve smugly assured ourselves were are permanently sealed off from.

            As a Torontonian born and raised, I am biased, but I think there are good reasons why someone (certainly, a fellow Torontonian) would find the period in the life of the 416 and its environs which has just barely become history to be the most fascinating of all. Perhaps one is a university student—that almost always induces an attachment to the city—or one has moved into particular area and wants to learn more about it. You will quickly discover that there is a tremendous wealth of stories, rich in colour and intrigue, which never entered a textbook or Wikipedia page. So many stories, despite the invention of the internet, retain a character of tribal legends shared among select groups, or local lore known only to the denizens of specific neighbourhoods and the urban studies “anthropologists” at U of T or Ryerson who decided to spend their OSAP and tenures studying them. And among these stories, the most interesting of all are those that emerged during the period immediately preceding the modern internet of social media and smartphones. If one had to put a date to it, let’s say before the Great Recession hit in ’08-’09 and going back through the Chretien and Mulroney years to late in the reign of Trudeau the First.

            The City was recognizably the same entity; a sophisticated multicultural metropolis long since having shaken off the era of the Orange Order, dingy factories and Sunday laws, when today’s most chic districts were stained by flophouses, poverty and sin percolating beneath the shade of ancient elms.

            The rhythms of life were similar; the cars were mostly models we might spot on roads today, and folks had televisions and CD players. Kids played video games, rode bikes and skateboards, and hung out at the mall. We were past the days of village, church and superstition. Everything of these times should be knowable, at least everything important, but try and you’ll see: events as big as elections and major crimes are sometimes nearly non-existent in the digital record, unless you’re lucky enough to find a mimeographed dissertation that a diligent scholar bothered to scan and upload as a PDF. We ‘know,’ as a City and as neighbourhoods, that certain things must have happened, but casual internet research would make these events less certain than UFOs and Bigfoot. It’s plenty to stimulate any latent fear of the unknown.

            I set the stage this way because the strangeness of the account that follows comes as much from its status as a mystery from the age of computers, video games and (primitive) cell phones as from the actual events described. In so far as the events themselves were told and ‘known’ to educated, secular Torontonians to have occurred, the following is a true story. There was never any dispute as to that, although there was some discussion as to the real motives and legal identities of the parties involved. Recalling things at this date, it never ceases to amaze how our cold, hard world of facts and tech can be subverted into folklore, no different form the supposedly vampiric count of a Carpathian castle or an alleged case of bone-pointing curses in the Australian Outback.

            I first heard the story when I was in high school, although I heard it on subsequent occasions from other tellers, and individuals who were classmates or friends had heard it themselves, at different times and from different sources, one of whom was a rabidly atheistic science teacher and one of whom was the assistant proprietress of the Agincourt Garden Bakery, a Hong Kong-style bakery and dessert store on Glen Watford Drive, near Sheppard Avenue East.

            My high school, then called ASE 2 (for Alternative Scarborough Education 2), was a small ‘alternative’ school—a model of arts-focused, individualized education for students whose enthusiasm and academic abilities demanded a bit more than the typical, factory-model public high school provided. It occupied the top level of Henry Kelsey Elementary School on Chartland Boulevard, which snakes its way off Brimley Road in Agincourt, a neighbourhood in the north-western corner of Scarborough, Toronto. Agincourt, which is often understood to include the adjacent neighbourhood of Milliken to the east, was a tidy, quiet suburb of leafy crescents and cul de sacs woven around strip malls and shopping centres, both typically displaying the brown brick and dark brown or dark green fluted metal cladding style which was in vogue in the ‘80s, when much of them were built…later to be apparently replaced by covering the brick with bright aluminum panelling, pale stucco and blue-green glass. It is a neighbourhood for families—no hulking apartment blocks or condo towers—dwelling in quaint but solidly middle-class houses. Accordingly, the neighbourhood is as full of schools as malls: a stone’s throw from ASE 2 and Henry Kelsey, there is Albert Campbell Collegiate, Francis Liberman Catholic High School, North Agincourt Junior Public School and several others within a ten minute walk, although there are no colleges or universities. High taxes and absurd government policies have result in a growing migration northward beyond Steeles into Markham and Richmond Hill, but Agincourt still bears the stamp of the era in which our story takes place, when it earned the nickname “Asiancourt,” due to its ethnic makeup. An ordinary Canuck couldn’t tell, but the new inhabitants flowing in between the late ‘70s and the ‘00s were almost exclusively Hong Kong Cantonese and Taiwanese, whose culture and languages are quite distinct from the mainland, whose hostile rule these groups came to Canada to flee, especially after 1989…which, not entirely coincidentally, is around the time our story takes place.

            The parties involved were mainly students at the high school, though it’s not 100% certain that this means ASE 2, since the teaching staff had all done stints at other schools in the district. Mrs. Tse, who ran the bakery mentioned earlier saw the young lads occasionally, but the details as she remembered them were edited by the news and filled in by her only daughter, Faye, who helped out at the bakery after school and was a schoolmate of at least two of the boys. At the far corner of the brick-and-brown strip mall at 4386 Sheppard which, as of this writing, is still known as the Mandarin Shopping Centre, there was a store called The Beam. In those days, there was no Best Buy or Future Shop. Video games, the systems to play them on and associated paraphernalia were available at other places, but the best sources were specialty stores, such as The Beam, because these things were still seen as niche items and, given that the workforce largely consisted of Baby Boomers with a fair continent from the so-called Silent Generation, on top of which there was no internet for customers to learn about these products which cost, relative to wages, substantially more than they do today, there were major incentives for the discerning electronics buyer to seek out a retailer whose expertise was unquestioned. Repairs, as opposed to “toss it and buy a new one,” were also a thing back then. Strange times, indeed. Faye’s cousin, Rupert, worked at The Beam. Based on what became known later, matters were already far along when Faye’s cousin came rapping at the bakery window.

            “We’re closed,” Faye instinctively shouted, her attention concentrated on the tray of dough blobs, set to become tomorrow’s red bean buns, which she was loading onto the racks between its mates to rest and rise. It was only when she returned to the front of the shop to do a cursory check of the tables that she realized something was wrong. Rupert was standing there, as he must have been for minutes, his head hunched between his shoulders and his body pressed against the door as if for cover.

            “Faye…” he hissed her name as if he didn’t want anyone else to hear. “Open up. Come on, please, dammit!”

            This was grossly out of character for her archetypally geeky and polite cousin to swear, and in the presence of a girl! “Geez, Rupert, you look like a ghost. What’s going on? It’s not even 7:00 yet…” she checked her watch as she unlocked the door. Rupert and his boss typically closed up shop an hour or two after the bakery, partly to catch the after-supper traffic, partly because The Beam had the advantage of hired staff, whereas the Agincourt Garden Bakery relied on cheap but limited family labour.

            Rupert should have appreciated the gesture of pulling out a chair at a freshly-wiped table and the offer of a bun and coffee in the just-washed cup, but he didn’t sit down, instead moving with uncharacteristic deliberation towards the kitchen in the back. Faye trailed him. As he disappeared into the kitchen, she stopped to glance out the windows which, including the glass front door, ran the breadth of the shop from a few inches above the pavement to almost the ceiling. There was nothing but the dwindling residue of rush hour rolling by in the purple twilight.

            Rupert was already standing by the navy blue Tercel hatchback that her parents bought her, ostensibly as a reward for getting her license. Taking the hint, she drove, but when she was about to turn onto her parents’ street, Rupert, who’d said nothing up to this point (which wasn’t very long because the Tse household was only one major intersection away) grabbed her coat sleeve. “No!”

           “No what?!?” Thankfully the street was too slow for Rupert to have potentially caused an accident, but it was unsettling for him to freak out on her while she was driving, nonetheless.

            “You don’t want them to know where you live or to connect you to me—I mean, if they haven’t already.”

            “Who is ‘they?’” Admittedly, the idea of random strangers, whoever they were, finding out where her family lived was disturbing, seeing how these strangers had put such a scare into her cousin.

            “J-just find some place, any place that’s not near here. Not my house either. Somewhere we can talk. I’ll explained. Just keep driving!”

            Taking Rupert’s advice but also knowing what was best for him, Faye got on Sheppard and drove to a busy Tim Horton’s. They drank their Double-Doubles in the car. Warmed and fortified, Rupert explained what was troubling him. There were three youths—though maybe there had been a fourth one time—boys from local high schools, although he didn’t have any names to share. They had occasionally stopped in at The Beam to purchase NES games and equipment. The store sold all kinds of gaming-related merchandise, including board games with Nintendo or Sega tie-ins, figurines, branded memorabilia and so on, and all these boys were fans, not simply buyers of convenience or necessity. Rupert didn’t know them personally and, being mere high school students they didn’t have a ton of cash to fling around, but it was clear from the way they talked and from how much they spent in light of their likely incomes, that games were their main or only hobby. Faye didn’t wish to be cruel, but she might have added that this would be obvious to anyone who knew the nerdy quarter—based on Rupert’s descriptions and first names or nicknames or remembered, she figured she knew who two of them were…maybe.

            Rupert thought literally nothing of it for months. It wasn’t like nerdy teenagers being into gaming and electronics was rare. During this time, they group, or fragments of it, would come into the shop maybe once every two or three weeks. However, it was only the previous Monday, when two of the lads popped in, that these loyal customers had any extended interaction with him.

            “Where are the books?” the evident leader, a husky, buzz-cut ginger asked.

           “And the die?” his companion, a soft, sleepy-eyed brunette with longish hair parted in the middle, added.

            “Huh? What books?” Rupert was confused. They were happy-friendly, like basically all young customers besides those who are so broke they must wait in nervous silence for products to go on sale, or those who already had actual jobs in addition to their school responsibilities. “Sorry, who died?”

            Rupert had barely noticed the customers because there was a heap of other tasks, like checking off the inventory book, unpacking shipping boxes and so on, so that he could never afford to just stand there smiling at the counter as a couple of kids looked over the merchandise, the bulk of which they couldn’t afford. He snapped on guard like a soldier when one of them—the ginger—barked out the question again. “Do you have our books? We ordered them three weeks ago. You gave your word.”

            As Rupert described it, there was something off about this dingy, red-haired geek with a voice like a pissed-off pitbull. The eyes glaring across the counter had a cold intensity about them that a child in a cozy bourgeois suburb should never have. “I’m sorry?” he stammered as he tried to recall the backstory to the encounter, if indeed there was one.

            The ginger kid told him about a bunch of game manuals, guides for players that were bundled with games or sold aftermarket, before such things became digital. They were sometimes as thick as novels and contained illustrations by members of the studio or fans, if they were third-party works. They were especially keen on a Dungeon Master’s manual, so described—a compendium of lore and strategies for the Dungeons & Dragons series of games, which were extremely popular at the time, both for Nintendo and board game formats. Like with Mario, the Legend of Zelda, Sonic the Hedgehog and other well-known titles, the shop stocked a lot of memorabilia and merchandise based around the universes of the games. Rupert wasn’t a hundred percent sure, but the kids reminded him of two of a trio who had come in…it was sometime in slushy late winter. They’d bought a couple gaming magazines and a replica of a sword based on one from a game, possibly something to do with Dungeons & Dragons, thought it could have also been Castlevania or Conan the Barbarian. He remembered the transaction because of the unexpected reaction when Rupert offered to throw in, for a discount, a Nintendo Power guide for what he’d mistakenly thought was the relevant game. The kid snapped; said something like a true Dungeon Master does not cheat, accusing Rupert of not understanding the spirit of a true Dungeon Master, something like that. What really stood out to Rupert was that the kid said “does not” and “cannot,” sharply enunciated. A small detail but it stuck with him as something abnormal; not “doesn’t” or “can’t,” but “does not” and “cannot.”

            After critiquing the guide that Rupert had innocently offered them at half off, the kid demanded a different manual, one published by the official company which owned the intellectual property rights to D & D, not Nintendo or some amateur gaming journalists. Through all this conversation, the kids were glowering at him viciously. He’d nodded and answered in response to the question as to when they’d be getting in new stock, “Three weeks.” To be honest, he’d just wanted them out of the store. Trouble was, Rupert only took inventory and wrote down what got sold; the boss did the actual ordering and purchasing. Because of exams or a date or whatever reason, Ruper forgot and the books in question were never ordered.

            That evening, the kids had come back and Rupert, who was only a high school kid himself, was scared. There was nobody else in the shop and tonight, of all nights, the ordinarily diligent boss would not be locking up: Rupert would be all alone. “It was as if they knew,” he said. They left, but Rupert couldn’t relax and forget about it. He planned to call in and take a week’s holiday that he would normally have reserved for the summer.

            The next couple days were uneventful. Faye tried to remind herself to keep on the watch for anything suspicious, but nothing occurred to disturb her mundane routine, nor did she see a group of teenage boys fitting the description provided by her cousin. It was Friday when Rupert came knocking, all cringing and scared. There was only thing she could remotely consider out of the ordinary and she wasn’t sure if it was only because she was primed to look for strangeness that she took note of it at all. It happened when she was taking a walk on East Highland Creek Trail, a paved bike-slash-pedestrian path (which most people wouldn’t assume even has a name) that winds its way behind Chartland, diagonally between the bus stop at Brimley and Sheppard and at Midland and Huntingwood, continuing up in the northwest across the intersection to Finch. The path runs alongside a watercourse into which numerous culverts drain excess rainwater from the house-lined streets surrounding the trail and its park. There isn’t really any creek to speak of, just reed beds where, in summer, red wing blackbirds swoop and caw, though in the rainy season of April through to June, there can be water deep enough for ducks to swim in and nest. Faye loved the spot: the rows of houses which backed onto it and the dense stands of willows and poplars along the ‘creek’ and at either end of the trail insulated it from the noise of the traffic zooming past on the nearby thoroughfares. It was also the quickest way to get from her school to Chartwell mall or home, all of which sat on the circumference of the park.

            The crabapples, planted, presumably, to provide a climate-appropriate facsimile of Sakura cherry blossoms, had bloomed early that year owing to the wet, mild weather. Only someone like a computer programmer who actually enjoyed their job could resist the rustic charm of the flowering crabapples—Faye was not such a perverse creature. Stepping cautiously to avoid slipping on the slick, steep grass, she ogled a specimen of Malus baccata that had appeared particularly resplendent approaching it from up the path. Curiously, the blossoms were almost absent from one half of the tree, nearest the creek. Absent-mindedly, Faye searched for the inevitable tent caterpillar nest—for there is no unsprayed crabapple tree in Scarborough which is without a tent caterpillar nest, or two or three. She found it, but there were no caterpillars. She knew that the City never sprayed the trees in the park, out of regard for the health of the children on the playground of North Agincourt Junior Public, only thirty to a hundred feet away, depending on the tree. Closer inspection revealed that someone had burnt the branch in an act of sadistic and petty vandalism. The tree, because live, moist foliage doesn’t burn easily, was intact, but the damage would have required more than a candle or a Bic lighter. Glancing down at the watercourse, she saw that it was stagnant, but a mass of floating blossoms had collected at the mouth of the culvert that opened out somewhere on the other side of Brimley. One sees weird and meaningless stuff all the time; the products of boredom or the weather, which we tend to overthink. Nonetheless, the scene never quite left her mind…

            Interestingly enough, a surviving dissertation written for the U of T in 1998 by a PhD student who grew up in Agincourt indicates that, for all the neighbourhood’s pleasant appearance, the Metro Toronto Police undertook several investigations in the area at the time. Most involved organized crime and counterfeiting, but sometimes the locals were the victims. A few years earlier, there was a string of racialized vandalism and what might be described as low-key hate crimes, including a letter-writing campaign which resulted in hundreds of residents receiving flyers and typed letters warning them of the threat posed by the Asiatic newcomers. For instance, the materials claimed, some of the unassuming entrepreneurs and office workers next door were members of the “Triads” or “White Lotus” secret societies involved in smuggling opium and exotic animals, and many of them were Reds trying to subvert Canada and install a communist regime (insane, to anyone who knew anything about Hong Kong and Taiwan). Alas, for Margaret Hunter, Dorothy Henderson and Phyllis Cresswell—if those were their real names, which they—found themselves on the wrong side of history, their self-righteous Anglo-Saxonist screeds soon forgotten. Recently, however, some householders had been receiving unposted letters similar in format and style, this time informing them of the dangers of Satanism and witchcraft being practiced in their midst. Their kids, these parents were told, were being seduced by the gateway drugs of video and board  games—Dungeons & Dragons being specifically mentioned as a powerful influence—to join clubs in which participants would perform black magic and sorcery. The author stressed that this was not merely an issue of children becoming somewhat overzealous in play and make-believe; the ‘game’ aspect was only there to fool them; to make them comfortable so they could be lured in. No, these were genuine occult rituals based on authentic Wiccan spells such as witches were formerly and rightly burned for. And it was happen to their children! The teachers, especially at that ‘Alternative’ school, were turning a blind eye or were tacitly encouraging the kiddies to become good little witches and warlocks: the art teacher was not named, but the letters were sufficiently specific in their allusions to make it a defamation case and thus a Criminal Code offense.

            Because of the references to gaming and the complaint of Rupert Tse, which was reported, the police assumed that the letters were yet another attempt to get the dwindling number of white residents riled up against the by-then-well-established migrants. The opium dens and communist invasion never materialized, so new sources of potential corruption of the youth needed to be unearthed. A Constable Bartle or Barlow—sources differ—was dispatched to carry out surveillance and threaten the offender who would attempt to shatter multicultural paradise. Principals and teachers at two schools and local busy body came forward with witness testimony about occult cliques or covens among the schoolchildren, though repeated questioning whittled the supposed eyewitness reports down to idle rumours told by cat ladies with crystals over tacky mugs of herbal tea when there was nothing better to do. One teacher’s black cat had gone missing shortly before the spring solstice and, given that, during the 1980s, animal shelters introduced policies restricting the adoption of black cats at certain periods during the year because of supposed cases of animal sacrifice, the disappearance was taken more seriously than would normally be the case.

            The hypothesis of foul play was seemingly corroborated when this Constable Barlow attended at a pet store near the railway bridge across Brimley north of Sheppard, on the north side of the parking lot from where the Oriental Centre stands today. Barlow had simply wanted to advise small business owners to be vigilant. The owner of the pet shop, which specialized in aquaria and reptiles, was a stalwart of the business community and had been among those bearing the brunt of anti-immigrant sentiments early in its history. Unexpectedly, this entrepreneur took issue with the police’s theory, pointedly comparing the sample of the offensive letters which Constable Barlow brought with him against an original which the businessman kept on his wall beside where their ought to have been a cash register. The original, dated 1983, was perfection in spelling and grammar, and, although Phyllis Cresswell probably didn’t exist, the true author was without a doubt an educated WASP woman proficient with an IBM Selectric. The recent letter was not paragraphed correctly and contained numerous spelling mistakes. Additionally, it was not signed with a suitably stereotypical old Upper Canadian name. “Believe me,” the pet shop owner shook his head, “I’d complain if there was something to complain about. We’ve worked too damn hard to build what we have here for someone to tell us we don’t belong. But, I don’t think this is the same person, sorry. I can’t even understand what they are saying. What the hell kind of magical mumbo-jumbo is this?!?”

            “Well, uh, you might still say they seem like they are acting on the same motives. Right? Disturbing the peace or…uhh…” The Constable was dismayed at being forced to think up his own theories of the crime.

            “Why call you guys though? For a few stupid letters? I don’t even know who this is for.”

            “Yeah, but when kids are involved, it’s a bit different, I guess. People get protective, and if someone’s corrupting their young minds, well, we can’t just sit by and do nothing…can we?”

            “Do something about what? This sounds like opium dens and mamasans all over again.” The shopkeeper stared the cop down in such a way as to let him feel he was treading on racist-ish ground.

            “For the love of…don’t shoot the messenger! Come on, I’m just relaying to you what’s going on here, as an affair of public concern, you might say. And, hey, the teachers at the school there say that a lot of the kids are into this ghouls and goblins shtick. Guess being a wizard or warrior beats being a dweeb and a reject, even if it’s all in yer head.”

            “So? The police don’t have anything better to do? You never found those counterfeiters you were talking about on the news?”

            Barlow explained what had happened at The Beam. “When it’s threats, gossip…lotta gangs these days, I’m told, younger ‘n younger…it could escalate. Then you’ll be on our asses fer not caring about yer persecuted community!”

            “Wait, you say some kids who are into devil worship went and threatened Lo Tse’s son?” Wheels were turning inside the proprietor’s head.

            “Yep, that’s right. I’d take it with a pinch of salt, but…” The Constable described the youths based on Rupert Tse’s report.

            “I know those kids! Or, alright, okay, I’ve seen them. They came in here to buy some milk snakes. But they didn’t buy a terrarium. Some people have an aquarium already, and they think they can just fill it with dirt and rocks and that’s good enough. I try to tell them different, but if people want to be idiots…Then they came in again and I asked them—I was only joking, by the way—if they knew how to take care of them, because there was no way anyone could keep so many like they bought in one tank. They got all excited, like maybe I was accusing them of mistreating the snakes and causing them to die…which I suppose I was. I think they were afraid they’d get into trouble. They never came back.”

            “Did you report this to the Human Society?”

            “Why? It’s not like I’m a detective. Besides, that species; they aren’t worth anything except when you sell them retail. You can catch them for free Up North. Just look under rocks or in woodpiles around cornfields or at the edge of the forest.”

            Now, this sounded like there really were some kids up to no good and, although there wasn’t an obvious crime, when people’s children are involved, the Law becomes a bit more aggressive. Unfortunately, while school officials were content to shoot the breeze, when pressed for solid information that could lead to any of their own students getting hauled in for police interrogation, they were useless. The cops figured they might have been trying to shield from scrutiny the students who were into weirdness, since they were often the products of broken or abusive homes…It happened all too frequently and still happens, that the kid who tortures animals and starts fires for fun becomes sacred and inviolable and their parents and educators go to extreme lengths to prevent anyone making interventions: see the case of Austin Harrouff.

            Faye was surprised to learn from her dad that cousin Rupert was staying with relatives back in Hong Kong for a holiday. She’d tried hard to convince herself that there was nothing ominous or symbolic in any of the ‘signs’ that kept stubbornly popping into her life. So, he was taking things seriously. Everything at school was normal, though whenever she thought of Rupert’s run-in at The Beam and was on alert for the angry outcasts she figured were the kids who harassed her cousin she never saw anything of them. Bolstering herself against embarrassment, she hung around in the hall, waiting for Grade 11 Chemistry to let out. She knew that Silas McLean was big into D & D because of the printed t-shirts he wore and his habit of affecting Olde English speech when chatting in the student lounge. Alas, when the class streamed into the hallway, Faye saw only Silas’ equally pimply but less portly sister, whom she didn’t know personally. As she contemplated asking Miss McLean whether they might have an opening for a new player at her brother’s next Dungeon meet or whatever they called their gatherings, she could have sworn the geek-girl cut her some stink-eye. She walked away too fast, her head held too straight for a student heading to the lockers after a boring class.

            Irrepressible superstition tainted what consolation Faye was able to obtain. For instance, there was the cat that started to visit her. Faye’s mom didn’t allow pets other than fish and turtles, but Faye herself adored all small, cuddly animals, especially cats. That Saturday, it had first wandered into the backyard when she was digging in the garden, purring like a lawnmower as it sauntered through a gap where the green-vinyl-coated chain link was supposed to meet the wooden fence post. Astonished and delighted, Fate immediately knelt to greet the kitty, which didn’t run away, allowing her to scratch and pet it and tell it what a good boy it was. The only disappointment was the obvious fact that the rotund, well-groomed feline was surely somebody’s pet. With no small degree of anxiety, the girl went into the house and hurried back with a saucer on which she’d arranged morsels of leftover fried grouper. The cat duly gorged itself, accompanying her while she finished her chores before taking its leave with a confident grace that declared, “I shall return.” The cat did return on subsequent days, whether there was a snack or not. His chubby cheeks and googly eyes contrasted cutely with what Faye interpreted as his stoic, philosophical demeanour. If only her mom or dad could fortuitously meet the fellow, they would change their minds. Two or three times she saw him standing watchfully in the park above the watercourse, on which occasions he appeared to recognize her, though he never left his perch to greet her. At least he wasn’t running around in traffic…The fact that Sooty (so she named him) was a black cat with a white patch on his chest and yellow eyes like an owls on the one hand added to the cool factor of his maybe become her pet, but, on the other hand, it called up ominous associations with recent circumstances.

            Sooty was a gentleman and came to pay a formal call upon the Tse family early the next morning, before everyone went to work and school. As befitted a true gentleman, he brought a gift. Being a cat, the gift was the carcass of a small animal. It showed the depth of his devotion that it was no common cat-gift. Only great presence of mind and a tomboyish constitution stifled Faye’s scream: flopped on the paving stones at the threshold were the mangled remains of a snake. Faye inspected the carcass, hiding it from onlookers with her back and shoulders. The serpent was no larger than a biggish specimen of the common garter snakes which she’d come across hiking in the nearby Rouge National Park, but its head was more pointed and its scales were variegated like an ear of Indian corn. It had been slain by Sooty—and he was no tidy assassin. How to dispose of the carcass? If she just chucked it in the garden, her mom would freak out when she happened on it, which she would when doing planting and weeding later in the day. If she attempted to dispose of it in the garbage, it would be reeking by garbage day on Thursday, and if she tried to get rid of it in the park, right then and there, her absence from the family’s morning routine would be noticed, plus there would be a ton of people around. Kids in the fenced field of North Agincourt JPS adjoining the park, old people out for a stroll or tai chi, parents walking their children: someone would see her scrambling along the opposite slope with a dead snake in her hand and they’d see her toss it. People would imagine what they wished about her bizarre behaviour ad she’d never live it down.

            Knowing it was stupid as she was doing it, Faye took two garbage bags from the kitchen along with an empty cereal box—she didn’t want the thing’s texture to be perceptible. So gross! Picking it up with a plastic-wrapped hand like it was a freshly-extruded dog turd, she double-bagged it and plopped it into the cereal box which itself went inside a kitchen bag and into her backpack. There was no break long enough at school, at a suitable time, to allow her to do what needed doing. Despite her profound revulsion, it came along in her backpack to work as well, staying in the Tercel. Only when the bakery closed up and she’d parked the car but not entered her house, could she make the couple-minute trek to the watercourse. It was almost nighttime, light-wise, accelerated by the clouds which spat chill droplets enough to justify an umbrella without mandating a raincoat. Predictably, there was no one else on the path. She made her way down the bank beside a clump of osiers, so as to be invisible from the road and some angles, if not the second-storey windows of the houses. The environmentalist in her flinched at the thought of pitching so much non-biodegradable plastic into Nature, but if she took it out of the bag and didn’t also discard the bag, then the bags full of its residue would be coming home with her and, heaving tumbled them inside out, she’d have no clue which surfaces would be carrying its filth. Out the whole package went, straight into the water. It was disappointingly buoyant and visible among the reeds.

            Intending to walk home by a circuitous route different from how she’d arrived, Faye was startled to observe that the park was not so desolate as she’d imagined. A figure darted across from the bushes on the creekward side into the spruces walling off a cul de sac, or so she believed. She hadn’t seen clearly and the lay of the terrain meant the figure was not silhouetted against the sky. It was a furtive shadow that moved, or seemed to move, about fifty feet in front of her, nothing more, possibly less. This killed any desire she had to walk up to the Huntingwood exit and she instead turned around and headed towards Sheppard, where there were more streetlights and people and cars. Walking the tree-shaded, thinly-travelled sidewalks for long stretches behind the back fences of houses that may well be empty that time of night—not even thinkable.

            She would head to Chartwell Mall, grab something to drink in the food court—some of her friends worked in the mall—and use a payphone to give her dad or brother a call to come pick her up. At the intersection, she waited, waited for the signal to cross. The light changed, but some idiot decided it was his time to gun it and turn the corner, sending her tottering back with a rush of engine-warmed air. Other drivers who felt that their bosses kept them at the office too long seized the opportunity and followed, nose-to-tail.

            “Wah!?!” A heavy hand clapped her shoulder.

            “Easy there,” a low, gravelly voice intoned. “You’re not under arrest. Technically. I just wanna know what was in the bag.”

            Faye was in shock, but the sight of the cop’s badge and gun calmed her. The rumour mill had sown the seeds of many terrors in her mind, all of which were ready to take control of a woman walking home after dark, but none of them was effective against a trained police officer with a .38 special. She led the policeman to the watercourse while he radioed dispatch for backup.

            The commotion and sweeping blue and red lights drew many pairs of eyes to rear windows; many a nose butted up against a mosquito screen. No doubt the folk all had their theories, but they could hardly tell who was who in the chaotic mess of lights and darkness, nor did the plastic bad the detectives retrieved from the reed bed hint at a leg, arm or torso, much less a complete human body. A baby, perhaps? The Constable who had detained—not arrested—Faye was a man of the old school, unashamed of his already less-than-fashionable prejudices. He full knew that the anxious girl from a decent middle-class “Oriental” household was not the cause of either a hate-mail campaign or of socially isolated schoolboys engaging in cult activity. He understood what a police investigation on her record would do when she applied to a prestigious university and was familiar enough with the diverse communities his force served and protected to realize that the consequences the poor girl would face from her family (regardless of whether she was found guilty of anything) would make the provincial women’s correctional centre look like even more of a vacation resort than it already did. When Constable Barlow perfunctorily admonished her for being out alone in the park when there were bad characters on the prowl, what with the incidents with the letters and at the electronics store, Faye explained that the complainant in that case was her cousin, giving Barlow much to ponder. He changed track when he brought her home and discussed matters in the presence of her parents, as was policy. By this point, the police knew that the bag she’d tossed had contained a dead snake, and the story was too silly yet complicated to have been made up on the spot. The Constable had lived in Toronto all his life, including earlier eras when the wilderness intruded far more into the City than it does today, and he had never once seen or heard of snakes of this type living there. “I believe you that it was left by yer cat as a gift. And, seeing as that pet store over on Brimley sells this kind of snake—milk snakes, they call ‘em—I’m pretty sure that’s where it must have come from. Begs the question, though: where did yer cat find it?”

            Ignoring her mother’s protestations about her keeping a pet, Faye answered, “I dunno, he always comes in through the backyard, through a hole in the fence. The house backs onto the park, where you saw me. I’ve seen him prowling around there before, like he’s hunting. I guess he caught it there?”

            Barlow tapped his pen against his notebook. “That would be the place you’d expect snakes to live around here, isn’t it? I mean, there’s no arms or real forests or anything. What d’ya figure, somebody bought ‘em fer pets and they escaped?”

            Faye eyed him coldly, as if she was being bullshitted. “I think it has something to do with those kids who were bothering Rupert.”

            “Okay, but we’re still at square one on that topic. Don’t think it’s gonna go anywhere, not without names. Don’t tell me you don’t know if anybody’s been threatening anybody else, or’s gone missing or there’s anything suspicious at school? You see these people every day…unless you skip all your classes?” Mrs. Tse’s English comprehension was weak, but she perked at the cop’s last sentence.

            “I don’t know…it’s just…” Given that her high school had less than two hundred students, it sounded downright callous of her, but it was the truth. Despite the best teachers that the Scarborough District School Board could provide, and despite all the exhortations not to bully or exclude, high school is as tribal as the Bronze Age. One never has to fall through the cracks if one was never above the floor in the first place. It was possible that Faye was repressing memories of an occasion where she’d reused a prom dance or rebuffed what she and her razor-tongued sestren blew up into an unwanted sexual advance, but, if she was, her face was as blank as a wall of granite. “Like, I don’t know what everybody’s into in their private lives. You know, like, we do things as a family that some people might say are backwards or whatever, like feng shui or burning incense. Some people are just private and so you won’t know if you don’t ask.”

            Barlow grunted and wriggled in his chair. “’Scuse me, let me put it more straightforward. Are there any students, in your school—and this’d be dudes, probably—any kids who are so batshit—pardon my French—so crazy into this Dungeons & Dragons role-playing fantasy stuff that they might think they really are elves or wizards or something and might be real pissed if yer cousin forgot to order their wizard spell books for them, and might, say, buy snakes or other animals from the pet shop to do ritual sacrifices with them in what’s the closest thing you’ve got to a forest grove around here?”

            “What? The park, beside the creek. Right where we were.” There wasn’t really much else she could say. “Sooty—that’s his name—probably got the snake there, but I don’t know anything about cults. Sorry. I’d want to stay away from anything like that.”

            “Guess it’s a matter fer animal control now, then?” The Constable snapped shut his notebook and left.

            Even though it genuinely was ‘the way things are’ back then, Faye was uneasy. A bunch of schools are several thousand stories, each one with a different protagonist. The titles and the G-rated ones are easy to know and are written in report cards, piano recitals, sports team rosters and feel-good articles in the municipal newspaper (then, the Scarborough Mirror). She couldn’t help thinking about those other stories which played out in the same scenery as those where her and her friends were the lead characters. Some of them were centred in houses she saw as she went to and from school, but she’d never realize it except by intuition. In these stories, there were no excessively elaborate lunches prepared by mom. There was frozen pizza, store brand cereal and TV dinners. There were no smiling little girls with Hello Kitty backpacks, no spotless white carpets or lucky goldfish, or gardens, nor, later on, risqué (but not actually risky) group shopathons downtown; no nights at the arcade or tentative forays into avant garde bars and nightclubs (the ones where friends had fun, danced to Euro beats and go drunk, not the ones with private rooms and underage employees).

            These other stories existed in a parallel world where her kind were the resented ‘bad guys,’ interacted with only out of necessity in school or to make purchases at electronics stores. She did not want to know the content of these stories, but she reckoned they included lots of poking at stuff found on railway tracks or in junkyards, stupid dares, and gratuitous violence towards small animals. Sooty would be let into her room tonight; her mom’s objections would be stubbornly overpowered when they came. The climate of fear would make Mr. and Mrs. Tse more indulgent, as when Faye got the Tercel as a gift, long after her birthday but close to a series of newspaper articles about the Scarborough Rapist stalking women as they walked home from bus stops. She consoled herself that the world her stories lived in was bright, prosperous and building new malls and restaurants, while the characters of those other stories were fast leaving, retreating to the clapboard bungalows and ashen THS apartment blocks where they belonged. Soon they would be gone and all would be peaceful and clean…

            Animal control officers did come in and apparently discovered a nest of the invasive snakes. As it hadn’t been that long since they were released and there weren’t a great deal of rodents or other prey in the area, there wasn’t that many of them and the ecologists could be reasonably sure that, if they hadn’t got them all, those remaining would not be able to sustain a population beyond the winter. A complication developed in the course of the cull, however. The animal control workers well understood that the stretch where the creek entered the grassy slope and ran underneath the whole breadth of the Brimley-Sheppard intersection before disgorging into a perpendicular watercourse would be a natural hiding spot for snakes, being dark and insulated within the earth. They wanted to flush the culvert, but it was backed up somewhere between the two entrances. The reason why brought the police again.

            It was the body of a teenage boy, Caucasian, who had been in good health before he ended up there. Some say the name was withheld to spare the family the publicity. Others aren’t aware of any cover up but simply don’t remember. He would not be the first or the last youth whose body was found in a culvert in the spring in Toronto, as radio PSAs regularly warned of the dangers associated with such locations. Kids were more adventurous before the iPhone. Usually, though, the cause of death was drowning, not stabbing. This lad had been stabbed to death. That in of itself, of course, was not enough to justify the story being preserved and retold to us by our teachers and by us to our peers. Tragically, there’s no shortage of teens who get stabbed, typically over drugs, romance or jealousy, or in the course of family violence.

            The thing is, when these kids get stabbed, usually it’s with a knife, or a broken bottle, or occasionally an ice pick or screwdriver. The body in this case had been stabbed with a dagger. Once. Through the heart, as precisely as if the killer had been studying a biology textbook for reference as they did it. That’s right, by the way: a dagger. As in, the implement with a fixed, double-edged blade that one is more likely to come across in a museum than at Home Depot. The coroner, understandably, did not have much experience with murder by dagger, but, based on photographs, he was of the opinion that it was more likely a medieval-style dirk or bollocks dagger than a stiletto. The police did their due diligence, but could only conclude that the murder weapon must have been purchased at great expense from an antique dealer, or else it could have been constructed for free by a machinist in a metal shop. The body was further remarkable in the way it was clothed. The jeans, sweatshirt and sneakers were generic, but, on top of those layers, it was wrapped in a ‘cloak’ that had been fashioned from a plaid woollen blanket and secured with a broach, identified as an item made for medieval and renaissance re-enacting. With no other leads in the immediate area, the police went to Rupert Tse. There was no evidence he was involved in the death and he was never considered a suspect. Oddly enough, he recognized the body as one of the teens who had come into The Beam in search of gaming manuals. Whether he mentioned this fact or not to the police, he could not help being reminded of how the teens had purchased that Dungeons & Dragons-themed replica sword. Like many items of memorabilia manufactured for the hardcore gamer fanbase, it was no mere toy. It was no product of a blacksmith’s forge, either, but the sword’s hilt of cast bronze, leather and fake gems…if you removed it and attached it to an actual steel blade, perhaps ground out in one of the innumerable small workshops or home handyman’s sheds scattered throughout the GTA…It was noteworthy that the kids never returned to The Beam. They might have moved away. A typical Baby Boomer argument would be that they grew out of video games, but the amount of thirty and forty-something gamers today belies such facile assumptions.

            One theory, which was the one our science teacher told, was that the murdered kid had been killed as part of a ritual sacrifice somehow connected with Dungeons & Dragons. We mostly laughed at this idea, but, then, we were the first internet generation and, besides, Canadian society as a whole had become a lot cleaner, safer and more regulated by the time we were in high school. For all the reasons to be nostalgic about the Good Old Days, crime is not one of them. Anyone who has taken a couple Criminology courses at university or who simply likes watching true crime documentaries and podcasts on YouTube will soon by struck by the ridiculous amount of serial killers, cults and families with dungeons in their basements and bodies in their crawlspaces that existed between the late 1960s and the middle of the 1990s. Whether it was socioeconomic factors, technology, or, heck, something in the ether, who’s to say? As for us, we couldn’t see how any connection could exist between a board or video game mass manufactured in a corporate factory and sold in Wal-Mart (or, back then, K-Mart, Zellers or Eaton’s) and gods or spirits, if such things existed. But, then, look at all the crazy tales there are about Ouija boards—none of which came from a witch’s lair or were cursed by a mad monk in a Himalayan monastery. The interpretation of a ritual murder designed to give a teenage Dungeon Master ‘powers’ by sacrificing one of his friends to an entity dreamt up by Gary Gygax isn’t so far-fetched, given what we know people have done in distressingly modern times. It might have been exaggerated by Fate Tse and her friends in retelling to new students and thence onward, from cohort to cohort, through the classroom grapevine that winds between schools and school boards. Then again, her people don’t tend to joke about such things. Engineering or Comp Sci degrees notwithstanding, you can bet money that the denizens of ‘Asiancourt’ will keep their distance from any walls when walking at night during the seventh month of the Lunar Calendar and may demonstrate a queer reluctance to step on cockroaches or to turn round when you call their name in the dark…

            Things began to change as the Great Recession deepened in the 2010s and the municipal government’s policy of relying on real estate as a substitute for an economy drove up housing prices and property taxes. Lockdown lunacy has made the situation worse. As of this writing, the bakery has changed ownership several times, and, though it still hangs on, the Tses and countless other families like them joined the great northward march across the 416-905 border at Steeles, founding new colonies in Markham and Richmond Hill, while the old neighbourhood is being rapidly displaced by folk speaking an alien tongue and harbouring alien values. This strange fragment of local legend belongs to that earlier zeitgeist, but, through pen and word of mouth, it will live on, as is the stubborn habit of legends and their peoples.