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brief, each of us relaxed, slowed our engines to a crawl and continued a more leisurely patrol. Unfortunately, the reprieve was soon over.

      “Hey, guys! Look! Isn’t that a police car?” shouted John-Joe, pointing to the distant dock of the Fishing Camp, where red and blue lights flickered like electrical sparks from the end of Forgotten Bay.

      “Whadda we do now?” someone else yelled.

      “Nothing!” shouted back Eric. “We have every right to be on this lake. So get out your rods and fish!”

      I pulled up the rod from the bottom of the boat that was filled with several inches of water. Even though my feet were soaked, the bottom of my jeans dripped, and my heart still pounded from my near miss, I found it exhilarating. Eric was right. I hadn’t had this much fun in years. I pulled out the container of worms. Unfortunately, fishing had never been one of my loves. Particularly the part where you pulled this writhing glob of goo out of the container and held it while attempting to pierce and then thread it onto the hook two or three times until the bait was securely attached.

      But, in the interests of stopping CanacGold, I persevered, jammed the yucky thing onto my hook and cast the line over the side of the boat. Then, deciding to take advantage of the interlude, I grabbed the bucket and started bailing. A glance at the others revealed they were doing likewise.

      When the policeman finally reached us, he was met by a sedate group of fisherman slowly trolling the water, intent on catching the big one. Eric had even managed to catch a large silvery bass.

      The officer, his back towards us, sat squeezed into the narrow bow seat of a large green motor boat. His brown uniform was liberally sprinkled with dark wet blotches. At the helm sat Charlie Cardinal, encased in a dripping yellow Camp rain slicker, an Ottawa Senators cap clamped down over his brow and a smug grin on his round, glistening face.

      And in the middle of the boat, his designer suede jacket splattered, his knuckles white against the dark green boat gunnels, glowered Gareth, who just happened to be afraid of water. Served him right, I laughed to myself.

      “Bonjour, messieurs-dames!” shouted the policeman, who turned out to be Sgt. LaFramboise, his nose as arrogantly pointed as the day I’d met him in Eric’s office. Today it appeared he’d forgotten his English.

      And a good day to you too, I thought. I felt something tug at my line. I jerked it up, but it fell slack.

       “Une journée formidable pour la pêche, n’est-ce pas?”

      Yes, this clear sun-filled windy morning was perfect for fishing. Couldn’t he see the big one Eric was holding up?

       “Vos permis, s’il vous plaît.”

      Uh-oh. I never thought I’d need a fishing licence. I didn’t have one, and it was a three hundred dollar fine.

      Charlie, his bulging stomach propped against the side of the boat, steered the officer from one boat to the next, as each of the “fishermen” showed him their permit. Balancing a clipboard on his knees, Gareth took down the names.

       “Et vous, madame. Est-ce que je peux voir votre permis, s’il vous plaît?”

      He’d finally reached me. I feigned ignorance. “What is he saying, Eric?” I mumbled, stalling for time.

      “Sorry, I can’t hear you, Meg. Speak louder,” Eric replied, as his dimples created tiny puckers on either cheek. Gareth gave him a scathing look.

      I tried again “What does he—”

      At that moment, the loud roar of plane engines burst over the trees. From the shore of Whispers Island, a fleet of Zodiacs sped towards us.

      “Ah excusez-moi, messieurs-dames. Il faut que nous reculions pour permettre aux avions d’atterrir.” Sgt. LaFramboise motioned us to move towards shore, away from where the planes would be landing. Charlie sat in the stern, beaming, while Gareth lips creased into a smug smile. In his hand, he held what looked to be a radio transmitter.

      The Zodiacs arrived. Cutting their engines to a crawl, they drifted to either side of Charlie’s green boat. Then the boats, like a set of grasping pincers, advanced toward us and slowly began to push us to the shore. We were caught like a school of helpless fish.

      I glanced at Eric, who shook his head. “We don’t have a choice, guys. We’d better move out of the way,” he said reluctantly.

      “Too bad, guys,” Gareth shouted. “Better luck next time.”

      I ignored him and so did Eric. But Charlie responded with a loud guffaw.

      Gradually, we were herded closer to shore, while overhead the two planes slowly circled.

      We had almost reached the shore when Gareth lifted the radio and spoke several sharp words into it, after which one of the planes started its descent. Suddenly, John-Joe burst from the pack and roared back into the middle of the lake. Close on his stern, another boat followed, its powerful Mercedes engine throwing a stream of water into the air. The Zodiacs leapt after them. In their wake lumbered Charlie and the police officer, with Gareth clinging to the sides of the boat. The plane arched upwards and back into the air.

      “I order you to halt!” shouted Sgt. LaFramboise through a megaphone. Now the English came out.

      Shouting “Stay out of this, Meg!”, Eric turned his boat and raced after the others, his black mane flying like a flag of defiance.

      The lake became a swirling churning mass of boats and spray. It was like a pack of sharks fighting over prey. Above the roar, I heard intermittent shouts of “Halte-là!”, “Attention!”, “Arrêtez, arrêtez!”

      Without warning, a loud thud rent the air. In the middle of the chaos, a green hull reared skyward, hung there for one long heart stopping moment, then crashed back to the lake, its contents tumbling into the cold, frothy water. All movement stopped.

      A single silver hull sped to the spot where the officer, Charlie and Gareth had fallen in. Next, Eric was hauling the three bedraggled shapes, one after the other, over the side of his boat.

      By the time I reached Eric’s boat, Charlie and the policeman had managed to shake off much of the excess water. With his brown uniform looking as if it had been through a wringer washer, Sgt. LaFramboise gesticulated and shouted at Eric. Charlie, looking massive in a clinging purple T-shirt, continued shaking his yellow jacket over the side. Gareth, in ruined suede, just sat there glaring, as water dribbled down his face. He made no attempt to wring himself dry.

      The drowned rat look suits you, I thought to myself.

      Charlie’s boat was floating hull up a short distance away. Next to it drifted John-Joe’s aluminum boat with the bow staved in. He sat in the stern bailing, while a couple of the others tried to right Charlie’s boat. But they soon gave up and tied a thick yellow towrope through the bow ring.

      And all the while, the fleet of Zodiacs slowly circled us. They made no move to help out. Now that they had us trapped, they wanted to ensure none of us broke loose. But they needn’t have worried. With John-Joe out of action and Eric trying to placate LaFramboise, none of us had the heart to resume the action.

      With tails between our legs, we returned in single file, at funereal speed, to the now crowded dock of the Fishing Camp.

      My heart thudded as the planes landed. One after the other, they skidded across the puckered surface of the lake as the Zodiacs turned back to meet them.

      What would we do now?

      TWENTY-SIX

      With a warning that it would be jail if we tried to prevent the planes from landing again, Sgt. LaFramboise told all of us to leave the Fishing Camp and go home, except for John-Joe. Insisting that John-Joe had rammed Charlie’s boat intentionally, LaFramboise threatened to charge him with assaulting a policeman. When Eric tried to intervene, the SQ officer threatened to charge him too. Some of the surrounding angry crowd

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