Deni Ellis Bechard

My Favourite Crime


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      2  Title Page

      3  Part I Essays on Crime and Family

      This book brings together many parts of a journey that began when I was growing up poor in rural British Columbia and Virginia, struggling to make sense of my ex-con father and his past as an impoverished, largely uneducated Québécois. As I began writing about him, I became increasingly aware of both his and my place within the larger history of our rapidly changing society. But to document change, one must look at the tools of change, and as I did so, I understood the ways that the act of writing could transform cultures and that education and political knowledge could shape my life. What I couldn’t have imagined was how much my study of the historic forces that had influenced my father would help me engage with social and political change elsewhere on earth. The journey often felt faster than I could keep track of – from my earliest memories of living in a run-down trailer without running water or electricity, to earning several university degrees, to doing journalism in dozens of countries on five continents, writing about women’s rights, the environment, and the impact of war on people’s lives.

      Despite these central concerns, the writings here cover a wide range of subjects in a variety of ways. The collection begins with essays about my father and criminality before shifting to long-form journalism and then shorter dispatches from Afghanistan and other countries, among them Cuba, Iraq, and the Congo. It concludes with a series of essays that reflect on the role of writing in my life and the importance of political engagement, social accountability, and a sense of outrage at the abuses of the governments that preside over the places I have called home.

PART I

      (2015)

      One summer, after a few years of travelling, I decided to return to Montréal, where the living was cheap. While waiting for my flight in Charles de Gaulle Airport, I arranged an apartment rental through Craigslist and arrived that evening to find it located in the Gay Village. I was thirty and broke, trying to finish a novel slated to be published in a year. Every day, I wrote until the late afternoon and then went out looking for lower rent, hearing the occasional wolf whistle from a balcony. In the supermarket, a burly, shirtless man on rollerblades followed me from the apples to the crackers. At the soymilk, I called my mother. “Is this what it’s like to be a woman?” I asked.

      “Until a few years ago,” she said. “Oh, how I miss it.”

      For research purposes, I got a card at the McGill University library. Walking home one evening, I passed a drab, century-old row house on Rue Prince-Arthur, in what’s called the McGill Ghetto. A red For Rent sign hung in the window. I rang the doorbell, and Henry, a tall, balding man, let me in. The house was divided into cramped student apartments. He showed me his: eight square metres that smelled of bread and cheese, a chandelier occupying the ceiling like a dusty spider. He needed someone to take over the lease. He’d been selling gourmet pizzas to a caterer, using the tiny gas stove in the corner, but gambling had gotten the better of him. He was moving back in with his parents so he could regroup. I said I’d been through times like that, omitting that I was going through one right then. I agreed to take over his apartment. With the rent only $400 a month, I could afford to focus on the novel.

      I didn’t go outside often. Instead, I wrote, trying to contain the hunger for living, for real life, that literature stoked in me. I prowled the stairs to the top floor and back, hoping to ease this craving, to find inspiration without straying too far from my computer. During one such prowl, I stopped on a landing. There were three apartments on each floor and one in the basement, but the only people I ever saw were two neighbours, whom I’d passed in the street and taken to be homeless before learning they lived in the building. The woman kept a shopping cart locked to the porch; the old man, who shared a wall with me, howled at night. We’d crossed paths in the hallway, his face the colour of ash, his eyes sunken.

      Fred, the building’s owner, was a short, stout man with dark hair and eyes. He’d grown up in an anglophone village in Gaspésie – the descendant, he proudly told me, of United Empire Loyalists who’d left America after the Revolutionary War. I met him when he dropped by to pick up the rent, and I asked who else lived there.

      “Only those other two,” he said. “They were here when I bought the place. The rest have moved out.” He’d been buying up property across the city and was now too busy to rent out the other apartments, he told me. I proposed finding tenants in exchange for free rent, and he gave me a ring of keys. He also agreed to let me move into the apartment of my choice, which was on the top floor, a larger space with canted ceilings and dormers that looked down into the street.

      The backhoe arrived with the spring weather. The building shook and heaved, and the tenants knocked at my door. I reassured them the noise would soon be over. We watched from the alley as the backhoe clambered out from the basement like an insect, crawled over the blocky hill of ancient compressed clay it had gouged up, and drove onto a trailer. “All done,” I told my tenants. We went back inside. That night, the building settled, ticking and creaking, producing an occasional hiccup in the floor or a loud crack in the frame, like the popping of an immense knuckle.

      In the morning, sunlight flashed against my eyelids. I looked up at a six-foot-long rift in the wall. With my eye to it, I could see through two rows of bricks and out the window of the gutted house next door. I dressed and took stock of the apartment: cracks in the walls and ceilings, window frames askew. My door was stuck, and I used a hammer to knock the pins out of the hinges. When I pried it from the frame, the surrounding