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About The Book
A Look at the Murder on
The St. Lawrence
A maiden voyage, a river that feels like destiny, a ship full of strangers carrying secrets as carefully as luggage. In the spring of 1953, Guy Charmant, a bilingual Québécois with a gift for hospitality and a hunger for something more, launches his family’s refurbished cruise along the storied St. Lawrence. From Kingston to Montréal to Québec City, the water widens, the sky opens, and the dance floor fills. At his side is Lucille Bédard, poised and brilliant, her smile as steady as the current. Together they promise elegance, order, and delight. The river promises its own ideas.
Across three glittering decks, a hundred passengers mingle. Italian restaurateurs, Parisian financiers, Scottish bankers, newlyweds from Long Island, dreamers from Spain, Argentina, Portugal, Egypt, Mexico, and Canada. They eat, waltz, and watch the shoreline drift by like memory. There are rules. A curfew. Keys held by only a few. A quiet room few will ever see. Beneath the music and the silvered chatter, tensions begin to hum. A look lingers too long. A story does not add up. The river carries every whisper forward.