The voice came from behind them and both men turned to see Roar standing in the doorway to the mudroom. He was four-square, stocky and powerful. His hands were on his hips and his elbows out, like a threatened animal trying to make itself appear larger.
“Then perhaps we can speak to you,” said Gamache.
Roar didn’t budge.
“Please, come into the kitchen,” said Hanna. “It’s warmer there.”
She led them deeper into the house and shot Roar a warning look as she passed.
The kitchen was filled with natural warmth from the sun that spilled in.
“Mais, c’est formidable,” Gamache said. Out of the floor-to-ceiling windows he could see field then forest and in the distance St. Thomas’s steeple, in Three Pines. It felt as though they were living in nature, that the house was no intrusion at all. It was unexpected, certainly unusual. But it wasn’t foreign. Just the opposite. This home belonged here. It was perfect.
“Félicitations.” He turned to the Parras. “This is a magnificent achievement. It must’ve been something you’d dreamed of for a long time.”
Roar dropped his arms and indicated a seat at the glass table. Gamache accepted.
“We talked about it for a while. It wasn’t my first choice. I wanted something more traditional.”
Gamache looked at Hanna, who’d taken the chair at the head of the table. “Must’ve taken some convincing,” he smiled.
“He did,” she said, returning his smile. Hers was polite, without warmth or humor. “Took years. There’d been a cabin on the property and we lived there until Havoc was about six, but he was growing and I wanted a place that felt like ours.”
“Je comprends, but why this?”
“You don’t like it?” She didn’t sound defensive, only interested.
“Just the reverse. I think it really is magnificent. It feels as though it belongs here. But you must admit, it’s unusual. No one else has a place quite like it.”
“We wanted something completely different from where we grew up. We wanted a change.”
“We?” asked Gamache.
“I came around,” said Roar, his voice hard, his eyes wary. “What’s all this about?”
Gamache nodded and sat forward, splaying his large hands on the cool surface of the table. “Why did your son work for Olivier?”