Finally Beauvoir broke the silence. “And yet there he was in your house. Dead. Why would a strange body be in your house?”
“You see?” Gilbert thrust his hand toward Beauvoir. “You see? That’s why I didn’t call the cops. Because I knew that’s what you’d think.” He put his head into his hands as though trying to contain his scrambling thoughts. “Dominique’s going to kill me. Oh, Jesus. Oh, God.” His shoulders sagged and his head hung, heavy from the weight of what he’d done and what was still to come.
Just then the phone rang. Agent Morin reached for it. “Sûreté du Québec.”
The voice on the other end spoke hurriedly and was muffled.
“Désolé,” said Morin, feeling bad because he knew he was interrupting the interrogation. “I don’t understand.” Everyone was looking at him. He colored and tried to listen closely, but he still couldn’t make out what was being said. Then he heard and the color in his face changed. “Un instant.”
He covered the mouthpiece. “It’s Madame Gilbert. There’s a man on their land. She saw him in the woods at the back.” Morin listened again at the phone. “She says he’s approaching the house. What should she do?”
All three men stood up.
“Oh my God, he must have seen me leave and knows they’re alone,” said Marc.
Gamache took the phone. “Madame Gilbert, is the back door locked? Can you get to it now?” He waited. “Good. Where is he now?” He listened, then began striding to the door, Inspector Beauvoir and Marc Gilbert running beside him. “We’ll be there in two minutes. Take your mother-in-law and lock yourselves in an upstairs bathroom. That one you took me to. Yes, with the balcony. Lock the doors, close the curtains. Stay there until we come to get you.”
Beauvoir had started the car and Gamache slammed the door and handed the phone back to Morin. “Stay here. You too.”
“I’m coming,” said Gilbert, reaching for the passenger door.
“You’ll stay here and talk to your wife. Keep her calm. You’re delaying us, monsieur.”
Gamache’s voice was intense, angry.
Gilbert grabbed the phone from Morin as Beauvoir gunned the car and they took off over the stone bridge, around the common and up du Moulin, to stop short of the old Hadley house. They were there in less than a minute. They got quickly and quietly out of the car.