New Canadian Noir: The Exile Book of Anthology Series, Number Ten

New Canadian Noir: The Exile Book of Anthology Series, Number Ten

New Canadian Noir: The Exile Book of Anthology Series, Number Ten

New Canadian Noir: The Exile Book of Anthology Series, Number Ten

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Overview

Old vines and older grudges tangle in the Okanagan Valley. An elderly widow, eking out a living collecting detritus, seeks to avenge the murder of her friend. A love-weary security guard clashes with bounty hunters. An ursine meth-cooker faces even stranger creatures on the frozen tundra of Nunavut. As the dead walk and the living despair, a private detective unravels a bizarre mystery. In The Exile Book of New Canadian Noir, the whole spectrum of the noir esthetic is explored: from its hardboiled home in crime fiction to its grim forays into horror, fantasy, and surrealism; from the dystopian shadows it casts in science fiction to the mixture of desire and corruption it brings to erotica; from the blood-spattered romance of the frontier to the stark nihilism of literary realism.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781550964615
Publisher: Exile Editions
Publication date: 03/01/2015
Series: Exile Book of
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 304
File size: 1 MB

About the Author

Claude Lalumière is the editor of 12 anthologies and the author of The Door to Lost Pages, Nocturnes and Other Nocturnes, and Objects of Worship. He lives in Montreal. David Nickle is an award-winning author and journalist. His most recent book is the story collection Knife Fight and Other Struggles. He lives in Toronto.

Read an Excerpt

The Exile Book of New Canadian Noir


By Claude Lalumiere, Nickle Lalumiere

Exile Editions

Copyright © 2015 Exile Editions Ltd
All rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-1-55096-463-9



CHAPTER 1

SUN MOON STARS RAIN

Silvia Moreno-Garcia


James.

Beautiful, beautiful James. Not the same boy I'd first met all those years ago. A few strands of grey in his blond hair, a few too many sleepless nights leaving a mark on his face, but still a strikingly handsome man beneath the ratty jacket and grime.

Folks call him JD or Jimmy, but he's still James to me.

"What do you want? It's late," I say.

"Xochi, can I come in?" he asks.

"Didn't you hear me? It's late. I've got work tomorrow."

"Xochi, please. Come on. Let me in for a few minutes."

"Can't do."

"Xochi, I really need your help."

I first met James when we were both nineteen at a party in Chinatown which he'd crashed. I was in love with him within an hour. It made me physically sick, his absence creating a gnawing void in my stomach, his presence sending me into bouts of hyperactivity. Agonies of longing and tremulous desires that subsided once it became evident James would prefer to shack up with a post-apocalyptic mutant squid-ape rather than me if the occasion presented itself.

As a result, fifteen years later, I was over my childish infatuation but never quite immune to the charm of James. He'd imprinted on me, I suppose.

I let him in and James begins looking for a place to sit down. For a studio apartment in Vancouver my place is actually quite large. They've subdivided apartments so much that people can literally be living in a closet, but this is an older building and there's more footage than you'd expect. I even have a little den attached to the side, which I don't like very much because the previous tenant painted suns and stars and a great moon over the ceiling, all in these girly purples and pinks and golds, but I've always been too lazy to paint over it. The super won't do it. So there it stays.

Ten years from now I suppose it'll be swallowed by the sea, what with the global warming and all. But that doesn't concern me. There's always the Yukon, which is looking quite pleasant, as the world gets hotter with all the El Niños pounding at the coasts.

At some point in the distant past James and I had talked about trying to see how things were in the far north, final frontier and all, à la White Fang. But he'd gone and become a junkie and an alcoholic – which, I guess, at least is true to the spirit of Jack London – and I'd never really done any of the things we'd yakked about. Then again, I guess most things don't work out the way we plan them. Not for people like us, anyway.

"What is it – women, drugs, or money?" I ask as I walk to the kitchen and pour myself some gin. I don't offer James a glass. It's the expensive variety and I'm not into sharing my spoils. He drinks too much already, anyway.

James moves the boxes with books I have on the couch, takes off his jacket, and sits down. I can see the jacket has holes all over the place. Much good it must do him on a rainy day, which is every day in this part of the country.

"You really read all of these?" he asks.

"Don't say some stupid shit you know the answer to just to deflect my question," I tell him, 'cause yeah, I read, and not the e-reader thingy. Books are supposed to be artifacts, not just text on a screen, ya know."

He doesn't reply.

"So it's all three," I say. "Look, I'm not lending you money."

"I didn't talk about lending me anything," he says.

"Well, there's only one damn reason why you'd crawl over here."

"Xochi, I need a gun."

"I want a pony. Preferably in a curry sauce."

"I need it."

"Yeah, like I can get one."

"You're a security guard."

"Working in Canada, man. They barely allow us to carry a fucking flashlight and just to have handcuffs I had to pass an AST course. And I had to buy my own handcuffs, damn assholes wouldn't provide them. Did you have an aneurysm and forget about that?"

Truth is, I do have a gun. More than one gun: there's the one I keep behind the picture of the Virgin of Guadalupe (she looks like a nice lady) and another one on the shelf, in a hollowed-out book (arts and crafts count for something). But I don't trust James with that shit. First thing he'd do with a weapon is sell it or accidentally blow off a foot. Moron.

"I really do need it. Look, it is women and it is money. But not the way you think."

"Fuck if it isn't. You've got no money to pay for some new prostitute that's caught your fancy and —"

"It's Christine."

Christine Chao? That was a surprise. Christine was ancient history. James had had a dozen relationships and more than a dozen years to mope after her. "What about her?"

"She contacted me two weeks ago. Said she needed to talk. So I said yes. Turns out she's dating this guy, some important bastard who ain't so nice. Lots of dough. She wants to leave him but she can't. He won't let her. So she's trying to figure some way out of town. Wants to try her luck overseas, cut all ties. She wants to start again, new name. She's wondering if I can help her."

"Forging papers?"

"No, catching salmon. Of course forging papers," James mutters.

"So you do it."

"No. I try to do it. Before I can finish the job and give her the passport there's something on the net that Christine Chao's gone missing and next thing I know two big fuckers are looking for me at The Yellow Door."

"Can you be more specific?"

"Can I be more specific? Two dudes with knives, how about that. Look, my roommate's not answering the phone, and Christine's vanished. I need to lay low for a couple days, get that gun, and get my ass over to Mexico."

Good old Mexico. Down to Cancun, no doubt, like every other loser with a lack of imagination who'd run afoul of someone on the West Coast and thought the streets in the south were paved with tanned babes and cash.

I finish my drink and set the glass down on the kitchen table. "You can't stay here," I say, grabbing his jacket and throwing it at him. "I have no guns and it's past my bedtime. Get your ass out."

"Look, Christine gave me this. As a down payment, you know," he says, pulling out a gold necklace and showing it to me. "You can have it."

"No, she didn't give it to you as payment. You would have hawked it if she had. Did she steal it? Are people looking for this piece of shit?"

"I don't know. All I know is I've been having some rotten luck and I'm ready to pay whatever it takes to get rid of it, okay?"

That's the thing about me, you know. I can always get rid of James's problems. I remember when he dated Christine and the looks she gave me, like she was wondering why some hot smooth-talker like James would be hanging out with a bitch as ugly as me, with the fucked-up teeth and the fucked-up skin. And it was, it has always been, because I could save him from himself. Maybe there was a time I liked being his own personal superhero, but that shit got old real fast.

"Hey, look, all I'm saying is let me hang out for a bit, let me figure this. "

"You've gone from wanting a damn gun to a hotel room. Nice bargain you strike."

"Alright, just ... just a roof for the night. I'll sleep on the floor, not even the couch. What's that gonna cost you? We've known each other for what, fifteen years?"

"Fifteen long fucking years, James," I mutter.

"Well, yeah. You can't throw fifteen years down the drain. All the stuff I did for you ..."

That amounts to barely nothing, of course.

"... come on, Xochi."

"I'll say the same thing I said the last three times you got yourself into something stupid: fuck off."

A knock on the door makes us both turn our heads. Before I can say anything there comes a loud voice I recognize.

"Xo Doza, it's Wick."

I motion to James to head into the den, and he does. I don't grab my gun. It would look too suspicious. But I have my knife tucked safely at the wrist.

I open the door, and there's Wick with two dudes I haven't met before. But if they're with Wick then they're also bounty hunters sniffing some trail. Bail bondsmen and bounty hunters are illegal here, but Wick and her friends don't exactly do stuff by the book.

"What's up, Wick?" I ask.

"I got a line out for your buddy JD is what's up."

"He's been playing cards again? Don't bother. He always manages to get the cash."

"You think they'd get me to collect some measly tab? Who the hell do you think I am?"

"Well, I have no fucking idea what you're doing lately, and I don't care. Fuck off. I've got a gig in a couple of hours and I need my beauty sleep."

Wick takes out her phone and shows it to me. Big round number, she shows me. Lotta zeroes. I tilt my head and frown.

"That much?"

"That much, baby."

"Who's looking for him?"

"Doesn't matter. Have you seen him?"

"He owes me money."

"That's not an answer."

"No, Wick. Haven't seen him. Now let me get my power nap," I say and move to close the door.

Wick steps forward. She's tall; she's a damn six-foot-two of Amazonian muscle and I'm much shorter, much lighter. I'm knives and punches and I work the occasional special event. Lately I've been doing night work at an abandoned factory. Lots of foot patrols and chasing bums away. Bums. Not the same line of work as Wick.

"Look, Xo Doza, girl, I like you. You're smart. You're quiet. You're a nice person. But this is a lot of money. Tell you what. I give you a 10 percenter if you let me walk quietly into your apartment. If you don't let me, I walk in, break your skull, and smash your boy's face into a pulp anyway. So you get a smashed skull and no money. I'll give you three minutes to gather your thoughts."

My first thought is: no way. This is James we are talking about.

My second thought is: exactly.

If our positions were reversed I know James would gracefully bow out of the way and let three fuckers beat me up, no problem, ma'am.

My third is whatever shit James has gotten himself into is too thick for me to wade into. It's probably time for the Yukon, anyway.

James was bound to have a bad ending. I just expected him to go in a slightly different fashion, killed by too much booze and drugs, not Christine Chao.

I have a knife but it's three of them. James is no good for fighting, couldn't fight his way out of a paper bag. That's me and three, then.

Sure, once upon a time I was crazy-crazy for James but that was when I was nineteen and James was this pristine daydream.

If I could grab my gun and put a couple of good ones in Wick, maybe. But what about the other two?

James.

Beautiful, beautiful James.

I stand by the doorway thinking very, very hard and to tell you the truth, I don't know, man.

What's that gonna cost you?

I don't know anymore. I just don't know.

CHAPTER 2

MOOT

Corey Redekop


"You're moot."

She was worth a stare, and knew it. Late twenties. A face of superbly crafted beauty. Five feet nine inches of unblemished curvature sheathed within a dress formulated to be gawked at.

Not what I was used to seeing at nine in the morning. Or any time. My clientele tended toward the shabby.

She'd walked in as I was polishing my eye. Dumb luck I hadn't bothered to turn the lights on. The dim from the morning sun barely cut the smog, let alone the window that hadn't known clean since the Allies won. I popped it in before she could notice.

"Miss Carmen Lopez. Miss Lopez, if you'd be so kind, Mr. Pasko." Her lips smiled. The rest of her didn't bother. No one ever truly smiled in my office.

"I might be so kind." I propped my feet up, showing off socks that had been new when Roosevelt took office. The first time. "I aim to please, Miss Lopez. Says so on my business card. But if you're here for personality, I have a different office for that. And I'm disinclined to put on airs without a look at your bankbook." I leaned back, slid a cigarette into my mouth, and flicked a matchstick with my thumbnail. If I'd been wearing my fedora I'd have tilted it over my eyes.

Ever since Bogart's Maltese shtick, people expected a show for their buck, and I was happy to play the part if it meant a client. But where I once followed up dry witticisms with professionalism, I now intentionally prodded. Helped maintain a distance. If you were at my door, you'd likely as not be put off by a little brusqueness anyway.

Her fingers whitened around her handbag. She wasn't used to lip. "Mr. Pasko —"

"Dudley, please." I took a long drag, imagining the rush that once upon a time calmed my nerves.

"— I am looking for someone, and you come ... recommended."

"By whom?"

"Does that matter?"

"I suppose not." I puffed out a few half-hearted rings. "But I offer a discount for referrals."

"Money is no object, Mr. Pasko."

"Never is, until it is."

She withdrew an envelope from her purse and laid it on my desk. I ignored it. "Why don't you tell me why you're here? I hate letting money get in the way of friendship."

I motioned to the chair nearer my desk. She looked at me, uncertain.

"Please sit. I rent it by the hour."

She cleared her throat. "I think I'd rather stand over here. If it's all the same."

The door must have looked inviting, she kept inching toward it.

"Something on your mind, Carmen?"

She took a breath and said, "You're moot, Mr. Pasko."

I sighed, camouflage blown. "Well done, most don't notice. What was the tell?"

"You haven't blinked since I came in."

"That'd do it." I slipped my sunglasses on. "Better?"

"By degrees. Also, your eyes are different colours."

I sat up at that, rattled. "What?"

"Your left eye is brown. The other is green. Were they like that before?"

I clawed a mirror from my desk drawer and peered in, not seeing what she saw. I'd lived in tones of grey for months. Forgetting myself, I scooped the right out, scowling.

"Are you sure?" I asked.

"Quite."

"I'll kill him." I shoved the marble back in. "He swore they were twins."

"It's hardly noticeable."

"Not the point. In my line, appearance is important." I spat the cigarette to the floor and ground it beneath my toes, forgetting that my shoes were in the closet. I heard the flesh crisp as embers singed through the wool of my left argyle, not feeling a thing.

"Now that my mootness has been uncovered, sit and spill, will you? It only looks like I have all day."

I gave her a moment. She gnawed at a fingernail, caught herself, and sat, crossing her legs. In another life that would've been it for me.

"I do apologize, Mr. Pasko. I wasn't expecting ..." I waved her quiet. "No one ever gets used to it. Moots, I mean."

"You look ..." She struggled for the word. "... real. Alive, I mean."

"My pay mostly goes to upkeep these days."

"Why do you ...?" Miss Lopez blushed, ashamed of her curiosity. "Please forgive me. I shouldn't pry."

I finished her thought. "Why play lifer? Tell the truth, would you have come to my door otherwise?"

"Perhaps not," she admitted. "It's not that I'm deathist, you understand. My maid is moot. But she's not ... what's the word? She's not smart?"

"I prefer the term 'sentient reanimate.'"

"Yes. Cora's beginning to ..." She looked around, hesitant to utter such unpleasantries. "... spoil. There was a burglary. She was struck with a crowbar. Here." Miss Lopez drew a line across her forehead with her finger. "It's unpleasant, of course. She makes almost as much mess as she cleans. We took her to Greytown once. I thought she'd prefer it there, among her own, but she wandered back the next day. Not that I mind. Cora's family."

Family. I swallowed my irritation at her necrophobia. Family, just not capital F family. Family, but not family enough to set Cora up in a resurrection community.

"Start again," I said, taking out a pad and pencil. "Begin with why."

She composed herself. "It's my sister. Isabel's always been unpredictable. Went to all the best schools, because none could handle her for more than a month. Can't sit still, won't take anything seriously. A hellraiser, as my father says. She's only sixteen, and already she has been involved with men. And drugs. My family has spent a great deal to keep her out of the papers."

"And she's taken off for parts unknown." Kid nobody understands runs away, takes up with a bad scene. Not the oldest in the book, but a classic for a reason. "Have you called the police? They're helpful with missing persons, especially well-off missing persons."

"We'd prefer this be handled quietly. My father feels Isabel has embarrassed us enough."

"Your dime. Luckily, you've caught me with a gap in my schedule. I get thirty per plus expenses, which you'll receive itemized once I've found her or the trail runs cold."

It was more than I usually charged, but she could afford it. Plus, my doc wasn't the cheapest in town, and I was only going to get worse. Especially if I killed him for the peeper switcheroo.

"There's more." Her eyes began to mist. "Isabel was never interested in religion. We couldn't even get her through Sunday school. But when Cora returned last year, Isabel started going to church."

"Not surprising. I hear attendance in the pews has quadrupled since this all started."

"Suicides, too," she said.

I nodded, fiddling at my shirt cuffs.

"It hit Isabel particularly hard. Cora is the closest thing to a mother Isabel knows. She was the one who discovered the body. Cora returned in Isabel's arms."

"Unsettling."

"After that, Isabel started taking things more seriously. After the inconstancy of death became clear."

Inconstancy. I liked that. Nicer than random chance or fickle finger of fate. Or worse, God's Will Be Done.


(Continues...)

Excerpted from The Exile Book of New Canadian Noir by Claude Lalumiere, Nickle Lalumiere. Copyright © 2015 Exile Editions Ltd. Excerpted by permission of Exile Editions.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

Table of Contents

Contents

INTRODUCTION ALL NEW, ALL CANADIAN, ALL NOIR Claude Lalumière,
SUN MOON STARS RAIN Silvia Moreno-Garcia,
MOOT Corey Redekop,
DONNER PARTIES Keith Cadieux,
UNREDEEMABLE Michael S. Chong,
THIS IS THE PARTY Rich Larson,
HEDGEHOGS Kevin Cockle,
SAFETY Michael Mirolla,
PEARLS AND SWINE Colleen Anderson,
CHOKE THE CHICKEN Shane Simmons,
GOOD FOR GRAPES Kelly Robson,
A SQUARE YARD OF REAL ESTATE Steve Vernon,
JACK WON Edward McDermott,
BURNT OFFERINGS Hermine Robinson,
CIRCLE OF BLOOD Simon Strantzas,
ROOKER Laird Long,
THE LAST GOOD LOOK Chadwick Ginther,
NUNAVUT THUNDERFUCK Dale L. Sproule,
FERN LEAVES UNFURLING IN THE DARK-GREEN SHADE David Menear,
THREE-STEP PROGRAM Alex C. Renwick,
A NOTHINGALE Patrick Fleming,
LADY BLUE AND THE LAMPREYS Ada Hoffmann,
THE FRIENDLY NEWFOUNDLANDER Joel Thomas Hynes,
AFTERWORD CANADA POST ALWAYS RINGS TWICE David Nickle,
AUTHORS' BIOGRAPHIES,

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