How long had it been? Half an hour? An hour? He didnt know.
The rivers force was draining his strength but he refused to let go.
Wheres the chopper? Theyve got to see us. Come on!
Shouting was futile. The current pummeled him, the pain was electrifying. His body went numb. He was slipping from consciousness.
He thought of Nora, his wife. Her eyes. Her smile. It gave him strength.
The river was relentless but he refused to let go. His hands were bleeding but he refused to let go, reaching deep for everything drilled into him at the training academy in Regina.
Never give up, never quit, never surrender. He held on until the air began hammering above them.
A helicopter.
Everything blurred in the prop wash: A rescue tech descended, tethered to a hoist and basket. Graham helped position the girl into it, then watched her rise into the chopper. Then the tech returned for Graham, strapped him into a harness and raised him from the water. Mountains spun as they ascended over the river to a meadow where they put down. The techs pulled off his wet clothes, wrapped him in blankets and they lifted off.
As rescuers worked on the girl, the helicopter charged above a rolling forest valley that cut through the mountains. In minutes they came to a clearing near a trailside hostel where several emergency vehicles waited, including a second helicopter-the red STARS air ambulance out of Calgary. Its rear clamshell doors were open. Its rotors were turning.
Shes not responding, Graham heard the techs shout to the medical crew.
Wearing their flight suits and helmets, the emer gency doctor, paramedic and nurse worked quickly, ad ministering CPR, an IV, slipping an oxygen mask over her face, transferring her to a gurney. They packaged her into the medical chopper which thundered off to a trauma hospital in Calgary.
Graham stayed behind on the ground. He was barefoot and enshrouded in blankets as paramedics from
Banff treated him for mild hypothermia and cuts to his hands and legs. Other officials watched and waited. Lets get you to the hospital in Banff for a better look, a paramedic said.
Graham shook his head, watching the red helicopter disappear in the east.
Im fine. I want to stay with the search. A park warden trotted to his pickup, dug out a set of government-issue orange coveralls-the kind firefight ers wore for forest fires-woolen socks and boots, and tossed them to Graham.
Theyre dry and should fit, the warden said, nod ding to a change room. When youre ready, Ill drive you to the search center. He shook Grahams hand.
Bruce Dawson.
A few minutes later, with Graham in the passenger seat, Dawson ground through all gears as his truck rumbled along the dirt road that cut southwest through pine forests. On the way, he radioed a request to the searchers to retrieve the Mounties bag from his camp site, along with his badge, boots and things hed left by the river, and bring them to the center.
Whats the status? Graham asked. Those kids didnt come up here alone.
Right, we figured on adults, too. Weve expanded the perimeter downstream. Dawson kept his eyes on the road, letting several moments pass before he said,
I was listening on the radio after they spotted you in the river with the girl. Thats a helluva thing you did. Graham looked to the mountains without respond ing.
It was a bumpy thirty-minute ride over backcountry terrain to the wardens station for the Faust region. It sat on a plateau near a ridgeline trail. In its previous life the station had been a cookhouse built from hand-hewn spruce logs by a coal mining company in 1909. Now it was doubling as the incident command center. Its walls were covered with maps. The main meeting room was jammed with people and a massive table was loaded with computers, GPS tracking gear and more maps. Sat phones and landlines rang, amid ongoing conversations as radios crackled nonstop over the hum of search helicopters.
The station was also equipped with basic plumbing.
Graham took a hot shower, changed into his clothes from his retrieved bag. As he joined the others, his chief concern was the girl.
Whats her status?
No word yet. Dawson offered him a mug of coffee and a ham sandwich. Graham accepted the coffee, declined the sandwich. We know they landed at
Alberta Childrens moments ago. While were waiting for news, Ill update you on the search.
Referring to the map spread out on the big table,
Dawson touched the tip of a sharpened pencil to a point along the river.
This is where the boy was found. Mounties from
Banff and Canmore are at the scene, and the medical examiners just arrived.
Dawson touched the tip of a sharpened pencil to a point along the river.
This is where the boy was found. Mounties from
Banff and Canmore are at the scene, and the medical examiners just arrived.
Do we have an idea who the boy is? Or who he belongs to? Any missing children reports?
Dawson shook his head. Not yet. Too many pos sibilities. His pencil followed the river. Youve got scores of campsites, day-trippers. Were going through the registrations and weve got teams going to each site to account for each visitor. People are mobile. Theyre on trails, or in Banff doing the tourist thing, or in
Calgary, or wherever. Its going to take time. Graham understood.
Weve gridded the area. Weve got people on the ground, on the water, in the air, were searching every-
Is there a Corporal Graham here? Across the room, a young woman held up a black telephone receiver. Thats me, Graham said.
Call for you!
Taking it, Graham cupped a hand over one ear. Dan, we heard what you did. You okay? It was his boss, Inspector Mike Stotter, who headed
Major Crimes out of the RCMPs South District in
Calgary.
Im fine.
You went above and beyond the call.
No, I didnt.
Dan, listen, Im sorry, but they just pronounced her at the hospital.
What?
They just called us. She didnt make it. Im sorry. Her trembling body. Her eyes. Her last words, spoken into his ear.
Graham rubbed his hand over his face.
Give me this case, Mike.
Its too soon for you.
I was coming back from leave this week. Ive got some cold cases ready for you. Look, this ones likely going to be a wilderness accident, nothing suspicious. We dont need to be there. Forniers rookies in Banff can have it.
I need this case, Mike.
You need it?
Did the chopper crew or the hospital indicate if she said anything? If she tried to speak before she died? Hang on. Shane was talking to them.
Graham looked at the mountains, feeling something churning in his gut until Stotter came back on the line. Nothing, Dan, why?
She spoke to me, Mike.
Whatd she say?
It wasnt clear. But Ive got a feeling that this wasnt an accident. We need to be on this. I want this case,
Mike.
A long moment passed.
Okay. Ill tell Fornier. Youre the lead. For now. If its criminal, it stays with us in Major Crimes. If its not, you kick it back to Forniers people. Look, Prells in
Canmore on another matter, Im sending him to you now, to give you a hand.
Prell? Whos Prell?
Constable Owen Prell. Just joined us in Major
Crimes from Medicine Hat.
Fine, thanks, Mike.
You sure youre good to take this on. Youve got two fatals so far and the rivers likely to give you more. Im good.
Better get yourself to the scene where they found the boy.
5
Fausts Fork, near Banff, Alberta, Canada
The boys face was flawless.
Almost sublime in death.
His eyes were closed. Not a mark on his skin. He had the aura of a sleeping cherub as a breeze lifted strands of his hair, like a mother tenderly coaxing him to wake and play.
His resemblance to the girl was clear. He was older, likely her big brother. His jeans were faded, his blue sweatshirt bore a Canadian Rockies insignia, his sneak ers were a popular brand and in good shape. He looked about eight or nine and so small inside the open body bag.
Who is he? What were his favorite things? His dreams? His last thoughts? Graham wondered, kneel ing over him on the riverbank with Liz DeYoung, the medical investigator from the Calgary Medical Exam iners Office.
What do you think? Graham raised his voice over the rivers rush. Accident, or suspicious?
Way too soon to tell. DeYoung was wearing blue latex gloves and, using the utmost care, she grasped the boys small shoulders and turned him. The back of his skull had been smashed in like an eggshell, exposing cranial matter. It appears the major trauma is here.
From the rocks?
Probably. Well know more after we autopsy him, and the girl, back in Calgary. At this stage, Mother Natures your suspect.
Graham glimpsed DeYoungs wristwatch and updated his case log using the pen, notebook and clipboard hed borrowed from the Banff members helping at the scene.
No life jackets, Graham said.
Excuse me?
The girl didnt have one. He doesnt have one. Did anyone see life jackets?
No. But if youve got a reason to be suspicious, would you share it?
Its just a feeling.
A feeling?
Forget it. Im still thawing out. Did you find any ID? Items in his pockets? Clothing tags?
No. Except for a little flashlight and a granola bar, nothing. Look, you guys do your thing. Get us some names and a next of kin, so we can request dental records to confirm. You know the drill.
He knew the drill.
So were good to move him? DeYoung had a lot of work ahead of her.
Graham didnt answer. He was staring at the boy, prompting her to look at him with a measure of concern.
Are you okay?
DeYoung knew something of Grahams personal situation and took quick stock of him, blinking at a memory.
Dan, you know the only time I ever met Nora was last Christmas. We all sat together at the attorney generals banquet. We hit it off. Remember?
He remembered.
Im so sorry. I missed her service. I was at a con ference in Australia.
Its okay.
How are you doing? Really?
His gaze shifted from the boys corpse to the river, as if the answer to everything was out there.
He stood. You can move him now.
DeYoung closed the bag. Her crew loaded it onto a stretcher, strapped it in three areas, then carried it care fully up the embankment to their van. Graham watched the van inch along the trail, suspension creaking as it tottered to the back road. Then it was gone.
For a moment, he stood alone in the middle of the scene.
It had been cordoned on three sides with yellow tape. He was wearing latex gloves and shoe covers. Nearby, members of the RCMP Forensic Identification Section out of Calgary, in radiant white coveralls, looked surreal against the dark rocks and jade river, working quietly taking pictures, measuring, collecting samples of poten tial evidence.