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Shadow Puppet
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DAN SHARP MYSTERIES
Lake on the Mountain
Pumpkin Eater
The Jade Butterfly
After the Horses
The God Game
Shadow Puppet
Copyright © Jeffrey Round, 2019
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise (except for brief passages for purpose of review) without the prior permission of Dundurn Press. Permission to photocopy should be requested from Access Copyright.
All characters in this work are fictitious. Any resemblance to real persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental.
Cover image: © istock.com/CribbVisuals
Printer: Webcom
Library and Archives Canada Cataloguing in Publication
Round, Jeffrey, author
Shadow puppet / Jeffrey Round.
(A Dan Sharp mystery)
Issued in print and electronic formats.
ISBN 978-1-4597-4060-0 (softcover).--ISBN 978-1-4597-4061-7 (PDF).--ISBN 978-1-4597-4062-4 (EPUB)
I. Title. II. Series: Round, Jeffrey. Dan Sharp mystery
PS8585.O84929S53 2019 C813’.54 C2018-903160-3
C2018-903161-1
1 2 3 4 5 23 22 21 20 19
We acknowledge the support of the Canada Council for the Arts, which last year invested $153 million to bring the arts to Canadians throughout the country, and the Ontario Arts Council for our publishing program. We also acknowledge the financial support of the Government of Ontario, through the Ontario Book Publishing Tax Credit and the Ontario Media Development Corporation, and the Government of Canada.
Nous remercions le Conseil des arts du Canada de son soutien. L’an dernier, le Conseil a investi 153 millions de dollars pour mettre de l’art dans la vie des Canadiennes et des Canadiens de tout le pays.
Care has been taken to trace the ownership of copyright material used in this book. The author and the publisher welcome any information enabling them to rectify any references or credits in subsequent editions.
— J. Kirk Howard, President
The publisher is not responsible for websites or their content unless they are owned by the publisher.
Printed and bound in Canada.
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In memory of
Dr. Mark Ernsting
(September 9, 1976–December 15, 2015)
Mark Round
(May 18, 1961–July 21, 2017)
A good puppet master disappears into the shadows above while sustaining the illusion of life below.
Dr. Sardonicus
CONTENTS
AUTHOR’S NOTE
PROLOGUE: 2010: The Master
ONE: Burial
TWO: Serial
THREE: Missing
FOUR: Cupid’s Bow
FIVE: Two Brothers
SIX: Leathermen
SEVEN: Lucky Charms
EIGHT: Under Pressure
NINE: The Rose
TEN: The Popular Choice
ELEVEN: All That Stuff
TWELVE: Second Coming
THIRTEEN: Mr. Big
FOURTEEN: Resistance
FIFTEEN: Trolling
SIXTEEN: Dangerous Things
SEVENTEEN: Pumping Iron
EIGHTEEN: Blunders
NINETEEN: Mu’tazili
TWENTY: Betrayal
TWENTY-ONE: Pulling the Strings
TWENTY-TWO: The Nature of Evil
TWENTY-THREE: Secrets and Lies
TWENTY-FOUR: Chill
TWENTY-FIVE: That Sinking Feeling
TWENTY-SIX: Meet Your Local Pornographer
TWENTY-SEVEN: Venus in Polythene
TWENTY-EIGHT: Buzzed
TWENTY-NINE: Disappearance
THIRTY: Tableau
THIRTY-ONE: Out from the Shadows
EPILOGUE: A Killer’s Return
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
MYSTERY AND CRIME FICTION FROM DUNDURN PRESS
BOOK CREDITS
AUTHOR’S NOTE
ALTHOUGH THIS VOLUME IS THE sixth title to appear in the Dan Sharp mystery series, it comes fourth chronologically between The Jade Butterfly and After the Horses. And while it was inspired — if that is the correct word for it — by a series of disappearances in Toronto’s gay community between 2010 and 2017 that seemed obviously the work of a serial killer, at least to many in the community if not to the Toronto police force, my book was in fact finished and submitted for publication before an arrest was made and revelations ensued. Apart from the most obvious facts, any similarities between factual events or people and the fictional events or characters in this book are, as they say, coincidental.
PROLOGUE
2010: The Master
HE FELT LIKE THE WORLD’S greatest puppet master. No matter who they were or where they came from, he could make them sing and dance. All it took was a little reassurance. With a gentle smile, he let them know he understood their suffering. The shame and fear, the condemnation and humiliation. Oh yes, all of that and more.
Best of all, he could make them weep.
That was when he felt most powerful, an avenging angel, as though he could scoop up their tears and wash away their sorrow. It was also when he felt closest to the lost lambs who followed him home and undressed for him, shedding their innocence along with their clothes. Giving up the purity that would take them to paradise. He stripped them of all of that.
†
The man over in the corner had been eyeing him across the bar for the past ten minutes. Light-skinned, a hint of facial hair. Muscular, but not too big. Just the right hesitation in his glance: Are you interested in me, brother?
Music pounded as video screens threw shadows across the room. He glanced back, gave a gentle nod: Yes, I am interested. Then he turned away, not to let the other get too cocky. The time would come to spark his confidence, to let him think he was in control. But not yet. Not right from the beginning, when his hands had deftly begun to pull the strings, bringing the puppet to life with each twitch and flutter.
The song ended and a new beat edged in. The two headed for the bar at the same moment, random atoms propelled by chance. The bartender, in black leather, looked up at the shaved-headed man.
“Dude?”
“A Molson Dry, please.”
He turned to the other. “For you?”
“Same, please.”
“Two Molson Dry coming up.”
As the bartender moved off, the larger man let his arm brush against the young man’s arm. The crowd was packed in so close there was no room to step aside, just the subtle warmth of skin touching skin.
“Habibi.” They were facing each other now. “You like this place?”
The younger man nodded shyly. The bartender returned, deftly clipped the caps off the bottles and pushed them forward where they gleamed under the lights.
“I’ve got it.” The larger man passed a bill across the counter and waved away the change.
The new acquaintances picked up their beers and made their way through the crowd to a pair of stools against the far wall.
“Chokron.” The younger man lifted his glass and swallowed long and hard.
“You like beer?”
“Yes. I like it.”
“That’s good. It relaxes you.” The shaved-headed man laughed and clasped him around the back of his neck, feeling the smooth skin and warm flesh.
“Tell
me, where are you from?”
“I am from Iran,” he said. His eyes skittered nervously, knowing what it meant to discuss such things openly.
“A great country.”
Talk ensued. The older man had lived in Toronto for almost a decade; the younger had been there less than a year, he said. Do you get lonely? Yes, I miss my family all the time. All good men missed their families. They agreed and clinked bottles. Of course, the families did not know they frequented bars and drank alcohol and invited the devil into their beds.
“I am Joe. What’s your name?”
“Sam.”
“Good to meet you, Sam.”
“And you.”
“Back home I was a dentist,” the shaved-headed man said. But his certificate was useless in Canada. In a year or two, he said, he would go back to school and upgrade his papers. But everyone said that, the dream easier spoken of than accomplished.
They talked of being immigrants, of the ridiculousness of all things Western and the treacherous stranglehold the West had on world affairs. Their bottles were empty now. The younger man bought another round. He was already on his third, stumbling when he stood to use the bathroom.
“Let me help you.”
The older man took him by the arm and led him to the urinals. They stood side by side looking down, the older man’s hands lingering, stretching and letting go with a snap before the stream of piss came with an impressive splash.
He looked over. “We are friends, yes? Same-same? You and I?” He rubbed two fingers together in case the other hadn’t already got the message.
The younger man nodded, a lamb drawn to the slaughter. “Yes, brother. I like you.”
“Come, habibi. We’ve had enough drink. It is time for us to go and make ourselves better friends together, away from this place.”
Their walk took them through quiet streets. Despite the hour, people lingered here and there. Two men together in that neighbourhood would not be noticed.
The moon was full, its light obscured by an oncoming storm. High-rises towered above. A slate of new condos being erected showed how fast the city was growing. Rain began to fall, lightly at first then more heavily. The pavement glistened, the lights of passing cars picking up their silhouettes then sliding softly away.
Beware, they seemed to say.
The younger man stopped to lean against a street lamp, the silvery glare from above outlining his features. The older man put a hand on his shoulder, gently turning him till they faced one another. He leaned in. Their lips met. The younger man shivered and turned away.
“Please, I cannot!”
“It’s okay. I know what you want. No one will ever know.”
The wind was picking up, the leaves thrashing and turning overhead like startled birds trying to escape the storm that was nearly on them.
“Yes, it is true. No one will ever know.”
The younger man nodded, conquering his fears as the pair moved along.
The game was on again.
“Is it far?”
“Not far. Just another block.”
As they walked, the younger man spoke more openly about his family, how he’d grown up with goats, a backyard that opened onto the desert, relatives who lived in tents. More than anything, he talked of his father, who did not understand his desire to remain in the land of Satan. But a good father nonetheless, he conceded.
“I will be your father here,” the other claimed.
“You? But you are not old enough.”
“I am almost old enough. Or maybe just a big brother then. I will show you the sure way among the treacherous paths of the city. Would you like that?”
“Yes, I would.”
They all wanted something: fathers, brothers, sons, loyal friends to love them forever. He wanted to be all those things.
A walkway led to a three-storey affair recessed from the street. The light over the vestibule was burned out, all the windows facing the street darkened except for a dim glow in an upper right-hand frame. They could barely make out the building’s name: The Viking.
“Is this it?”
“Yes.”
“I’ve been here before.”
“Really?”
“Yes. Just a job I did once. It was nothing.”
Fingers manipulated the lock. The door snapped open onto a hallway that reeked of something gone off, like sour milk. The walls were rough, but recently painted. The floor tiled black-and-white harlequin.
A sign identified the superintendent’s apartment. A handwritten note had been pinned to the door — AWAY FOR THE WEEKEND — with an emergency number scribbled beneath. No one to see, no one to hear.
On the right, at the end of the hallway, a heavy industrial door was padlocked and secured. The smaller man’s footsteps scuffed drunkenly as they made their way to the apartment on the left.
A black filigree key slid easily into the lock. It was the sort of key that had secured thousands of doors like this until the middle of the previous century, but was now more likely to be a curio consigned to a dusty antique shop.
The door opened into a fresh-smelling apartment where they hung their jackets side by side in the hallway. Lights glowed softly as they passed into a living room. Heavy curtains shrouded the space. The furniture was hand-carved, intricately upholstered.
Against the far wall a row of faces leered at the newcomers, an army of puppets hanging limply from metal frames. The tiny audience silently watched the men enter, as though waiting for the cue to spring to life.
“You have friends.”
Fingers reached up to caress the wooden figures. Like the lock and key, they, too were old-fashioned, the sort of puppets only a master craftsman could make.
“Very nice. You made these?”
“Yes. I am a puppet maker.”
“Beautiful. Back home we had puppet makers, but I never met one here.”
“Please. Be at home.”
The younger man stumbled as the other pushed the drunken boy onto the couch, removing his shoes and socks for him. The boy giggled at the touch, but did not pull away from the hands caressing him.
The older man sat back on his heels and unbuckled his belt, pulling until it slithered free of the loops. “That bar we were in tonight — it’s a leather bar. Do you know what that means?”
Concern lit up the young man’s face. He eyed the belt. “No, I do not. What does this mean?”
“It means that men dress up in leather — like this.” He gripped his T-shirt by the bottom and pulled it smoothly over his head, revealing a muscular chest and a harness fastened behind his shoulders and under his armpits. The studs gleamed. “Habibi. You are lovely,” he said, rubbing the younger man’s thighs. “Do you like this?”
“Yes, I like it.”
“Have you done this with other men before?”
“Once or twice.”
“And did you enjoy it? Even though you know it’s wrong for our kind?”
“Yes, yes.” The younger man leaned forward and buried his face in the older man’s shoulder. “I want …”
“What do you want?” he asked, lifting the boy’s shirt over his head. “Tell me. I am going to be a good father to you.”
“I want you to do it to me.”
“You want us to be together? Same-same?”
The look on the younger man’s face was pure intoxication, though fear still danced in his eyes. “Please. Shall we have another drink first?”
The older man ran a hand over his shaved head. “Of course.”
They had come so far; it was just a matter of time. Puppet masters were patient.
Drinks were poured and sipped, the glasses set aside. The older man unbuckled the younger man’s pants, ignoring his feeble protests as he tossed them on the floor. He slipped a condom from his pocket.
The younger man shook his head. “No. This is for gays.” His eyes pleaded with his companion. Only gay men get AIDS, they said. We are not gay. We are real men.
So be it.
The older man rose up, some force in him coming alive. The boy squirmed beneath his touch, his legs parting with a brief protest as the older man entered him all at once.
“Habibi!”
He thrust forward and placed his fingers around the younger man’s neck, gripping and squeezing. There was no resistance. “Do you like this?”
“Yes,” the boy cried. “I like it!”
Their actions were quick, the excitement palpable. Then suddenly it was over. After all that effort.
With a groan, the older man lay back and closed his eyes. He reached out for his drink but his arm fell back, knocking the glass onto the carpet. When he opened his eyes the puppets were gazing down in mute wonder.
Without warning, the boy straddled him again.
“Brother, are you ready for paradise?” the puppet master asked, securing the hood over the other’s head, deftly tying the knots and pressing against the older man’s eyelids.
He glanced up at his puppets. How contented they looked. He carried a chair over to the couch and sat watching as each inhalation pulled the bag tighter and tighter.
ONE
Burial
THE CHURCH WAS PACKED, THE pews full to overflowing. Half an hour before the service it was already clear that not everyone would be accommodated if the crowds kept coming. And come they did, braving the chill and the rain. Extra chairs were hastily set up and new arrivals directed to the basement where loudspeakers broadcast the proceedings one floor above. These were the lucky ones. Others had to be content to stand outside on the sidewalk, armed only with their umbrellas and overcoats, to say goodbye to a much-loved friend.
The minister spoke in soft, confident tones about the cancer researcher they were mourning that day, addressing the gathering at length. Then, his commemoration over, he introduced a large man with a bewildered expression.
The man leaned forward to speak into the microphone. “Thank you all for —”
His words boomed in their ears. He looked up, amazed by the sound of his voice, then stepped back and tried again.
“Thank you all for coming today. My brother would have been honoured to see so many people here. Anyone who knew Randy knew he was a philosophical guy. He often wondered what kind of impact his life would have. I think it’s what drove him so hard in his work, to make life better for others. This gathering would have told him he was pretty important to a lot of people, not just his patients and other researchers. As I stand here, it strikes me that I know so few of you. I wish I had been a bigger part of Randy’s life in Toronto. Even though I don’t know you all, I know he cared for all of you because he talked about his friends constantly. I just didn’t realize how many he had.” His voice cracked with emotion. “My brother had the biggest heart of anyone I’ve ever known. He was an extraordinarily gifted man, both in life and in his work. It’s with a very heavy heart of my own that I take leave of him here today.”