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what he thought he was doing here, pulling some part from a Spenser for Hire episode. Maybe Hattie wasn’t so far off the mark when she accused him of “reckless meandering in retirement”. She said the point was to slip out of his uniform and into a whole new life, a new world—but he was stuck, a man without hobbies, a man without a plan, without a family. He saw the coffee mug again, “World’s Best Teacher’.” The world needed all the Tim Fieldings it could get, the ones who, despite all evidence to the contrary, still believed the promise of the advertisement. McKelvey knew it was the string that held their friendship together—the chasm that fell between his own bleak view of humanity and the school teacher’s unflagging investment in the future generations. He saw something there within the younger man that he either wanted or knew he ought to want. Right now, the half pill was performing at half duty, confronting the impending depression with a small smile. Perhaps it was a smirk.

      McKelvey gave the address, and Hassan said, “Thank you sir, for calling back.”

      “My truck died a couple of weeks ago,” McKelvey explained. “I’m having trouble finding a replacement. Who knows, maybe I’ll become a regular until something turns up.”

      “Try Auto Trader online,” Hassan suggested, like they were old friends now.

      “Online, sure,” McKelvey said. “I don’t have a computer at home.”

      “They have it for free, sir, the internet. At the public library. That is where my children use it for their schooling. We can’t afford a computer of our own. Not yet.”

      “I guess I’ll need to apply for a library card first,” McKelvey said.

      The guy on the AM sports station was going on about the Blue Jays, how Clemens took the loss last night in a tough game against the Yankees. The bastards, McKelvey thought. He hated the New York Yankees not for winning all the time, but for winning the way they did. They were just a hateful team, overpaid braggarts and loudmouths—so perfect in their prancing starched pinstripes. Tonight Pete Walker would hit the mound for the Jays, and McKelvey had his money on the home team. Walker was the sort of guy who could keep his cool and get himself out of a tight spot. It was a characteristic that would have made the man a good cop.

      Hassan pulled up to the curb outside the low-rise apartment. It was a working class neighbourhood, the fringe of so-called Little Poland. As the metropolis grew, these self-proclaimed neighbourhoods seemed to blossom from beneath the sidewalks as though the roots had been there all along, defining themselves by block and intersection. Little Italy, Greektown, Chinatown, Portugal Village, Koreatown, the Gay Village, there was something for everyone, for that was the essence of Toronto, the heart pumping blood through this massive body: a hundred different languages, a million different stories, the past preserved and the future a shared dream. This new city, it belonged to everybody, the last best frontier.

      “Here,” McKelvey said, getting out and handing the driver a twenty. “Wait here for me for ten minutes, will you?”

      Hassan took the bill, folded it once and set it on the clipboard at his side. “I am at your service, sir.”

      McKelvey made his way up the walkway to the four steps that led to a set of double glass doors. Suddenly he was filled with a sense of foreboding, the cop’s instinct that gave his stomach a quick flip. He thought he was probably going to walk in on the woman and another boyfriend, or maybe her and a whole crew of reprobates holed up in the love shack with the phone turned off and poor Tim Fielding sitting across town going crazy. The whole thing was a misunderstanding. Inside the foyer was a wall of mailboxes to the right, flyers and coupons for pizza and carpet cleaning scattered on the floor. To the left was a listing of tenants set in a glass case next to a keypad and speaker intercom. He ran his finger down the list until he came to D. Kruzik. He pressed the buzzer and waited. Nothing. He pressed it again, this time for a full minute. Nothing. He pulled at the main door, found it sloppily unlocked, and slipped inside.

      The apartment was on the top floor of the eight-storey building. He rode one of two elevators, noting the drastic difference in design and upkeep compared to Fielding’s newer building. This elevator was small and the carpet was stained and marked here and there with black cigarette burns. It smelled like the inside of a cab mixed with something else he couldn’t quite put his finger on. As the doors opened, it came to him: boiled cabbage.

      He found the unit—801—at the end of the hallway on the left. A narrow rectangular window on either end of the hall let in the only daylight, and it was a good thing, because the whole place had the feeling of 1960s Eastern European Cold War modesty. He knocked and waited. He put his ear to the door and listened. Nothing. A door opened up the hall, and a woman in her mid fifties, dressed in a dark coat with a kerchief tied over her hair, glanced at him quickly. He fished his own house keys from his pants pocket and pretended to look for the right one. When the woman was inside the elevator, he knocked again, put his ear to the door, closed his eyes. Nothing. And then something. What, a sound of movement? The subtle resonation of human presence on the other side? He reached out and turned the doorknob. It was unlocked. He took a step back and gave it a moment. He stepped in and listened again. Nothing. He turned the doorknob quietly in his left hand.

      “Hello,” he called.

      He was startled to find the apartment empty save for a few papers scattered across the top of the kitchen counter, old direct mail flyers. Tiny and spare, a one-bedroom for eight-fifty a month. But it was empty. He left the door ajar as he stepped quietly into the hallway that opened on the right to a small kitchen and continued straight ahead into a living room. He surveyed the emptiness, and spotted a single magnet stuck to the fridge, an item of information stored for later testimony perhaps.

      “Hello?” he said. “Donia? I’m a friend of Tim’s…”

      He listened. Nothing. And then it was there again, the sense of human energy. It wasn’t a sound, not quite, it was some frequency coming through on the channel of the sixth sense. He had entered enough rooms and vacant buildings in his day to trust in the feeling, to believe in its root. In an earlier life he would have reached now, hand hovering above the holstered sidearm at his side. But he was unarmed now, standing there alone in a stranger’s apartment. What a fool’s errand. What the fuck had he been thinking…

      He was turning back to the door when the rush came upon him, the kinetic surge of a body in motion. From a bathroom down the hall, four fast strides—McKelvey turned, pivoting at the knees just in time to catch something thick and hard across the side of his skull, heavy metal: explosions of pinwheels scorched across the blackness.

      McKelvey twisted, falling sideways, reaching out, hands curled into fists, and he saw his mistake—goddamned rookie patrolman’s mistake of turning his back before every single room, every single closet had been checked and cleared—and the son of a bitch was right there, combat jacket and jeans, hair shaved close to the bone—and McKelvey caught a sledgehammer of a blow square in the centre of his face, an atomic detonation.

      He was splayed on the floor, a beetle turned the wrong way.

      The door slammed shut.

      He squinted through the tongue-thick ether. Numbness spread across his face, a dull pulse knocking from behind his eyes. Then his hearing went garbled as though he were under water. He could taste blood down the back of his throat, iron and copper, and he knew, even before he sat up, that his nose was broken, his fucking nose was broken.

      The taxi driver was pulled up to the curb listening to callers on talk radio share their opposing views on the so-called “War on Terror” when he noticed the big man in the green army jacket come bursting through the main doors. He ran across the street— mere feet in front of Hassan’s car—and jumped in a silver Honda Accord (probably a ’94 or ’95, Hassan thought). The car peeled from the curb, gone. Hassan strained to make out the plate. APVB and three digits, maybe a nine in there. These were the details he provided to McKelvey once his passenger had also come stumbling from the building, a clutch of bloodied paper towel held to his face, a darkness crawling

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