Lou Sabatino, in Whipped by William Deverell, is on the
run in a Canadian way.
After writing an expose on the
Montreal mafia and corruption in the construction industry there is an
assassination attempt that he survives in a classic Canadian escape
from death. In mid-February, Sabatino, back home after some celebratory drinks,
is “wheeling the big green recycle bin to the curb”:
Fortunately for
the slightly tiddly ace reporter he slipped on the icy walkway, and the bin
went down and so did Lou, just as a black sedan cruised by just before a burst
of automatic fire went over his head and took out the snowman behind him.
In the spring, wearying of life in
the witness protection plan and wanting to find his wife he takes the bus to
his the home of his mother-in-law and father-in-law in northern Quebec. When
she is not there he decides to go to Calgary in western Canada where her sister
is resident. It is a journey of about 3,000 km. With little money he travels
west hitchhiking and riding the bus.
On June 21 he runs out of money in
southwest Saskatchewan at the small town of Porcupine Plain. I was startled at
the name for there is a real life town of Porcupine Plain about 110 km east of
Melfort.
It is ironic that the fictional town
is set up in treeless hills of the southwest while the real life town is in the
midst of bush and farmland in the northeast.
I was not sure if Deverell was
creating a subtle joke with the placement of the fictional Porcupine Plain.
Real life porcupines live in forests. Southwest Saskatchewan barely has any
trees.
In the fictional Porcupine Plain
Sabatino finds an unlikely inroad into the community. Finishing an all day
breakfast with the last of his money at the Quill Café he overhears another
customer, Oscar, lamenting issues with his laptop computer. Sabatino, proficient in
building and repairing computers, offers to take a look and repairs Oscar’s
wonky computer.
Other customers ask him to deal with
their electronic devices. A small business is born.
Oscar offers Sabatino a bedroom in
his home while Sabatino establishes himself in town.
The real life Porcupine Plain is an
equally friendly community. Our law firm has a branch office there which my
partner attends weekly.
The community mascot of the real life Porcupine Plain is a statue of
a porcupine called Quilly Willy. A photo of the distinctive mascot is at the
top of this post.
In the fictional town Sabatino earns
a modest income from his computer repair expertise. He supplements his business
income by creating and selling those ubiquitous lists with photos that infest the internet. Examples of his work include “TWELVE JESUS QUOTES YOUR MINISTER
WILL NEVER READ” and “YOU’LL BE WIPING TEARS OF LAUGHTER AT THESE KITCHEN
VIDEOS” and “EIGHT SECRETS TO A LASTING ORGASM”.
While I am not aware of any real
life people devising such lists it is credible he could make a living dealing
with problem computers. Much of rural Saskatchewan is a long drive from any
place a computer might be repaired.
I do not know if Deverell has a
connection with the real life town. He did live in Saskatchewan and go to law
school here before moving to British Columbia.
As to being able to hide out in
rural Saskatchewan we are a long ways from the major cities of Canada but a
newcomer does stand out and the tentacles of social media stretch around the
world.
I acknowledge it was nice to see
Deverell write positively of life in small town Saskatchewan.
****
Deverell, William - (2011) - A Trial of Passion; (2011) - Snow Job; (2012) - I'll See You in My Dreams; (2012) - "D" is for William Deverell; (2014) - Kill All the Lawyers and The Lawyers of Kill All the Lawyers; (2015) - Sing a Worried Song and Truth is Stranger Than Fiction - Sing a Worried Song; (2018) - Whipped
These are really interesting insights, Bill - thanks. I can really imagine the sort of small town where Sabatino helps one person, and then word gets around... And I wonder, too, whether Deverell knew about the real Porcupine Plain. Perhaps that was his way of having a little fun...
ReplyDeleteMargot: Thanks for the comment. Word does spread quickly in small towns.
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