Read Blood Is a Stranger Online
Authors: Roland Perry
âCan we go in this?' Cardinal asked.
Maylin frowned as he came over and handed him the keys.
âCould you drive, please?' Cardinal said, taking off his glasses. âI want to take in as much as I can.'
The bulkier Cardinal had some trouble easing into the MG, and Maylin had difficulty in mastering the gear shift on the drive to a clearing five kilometres from the reactor along the road to Sydney. They drove off the road along a dirt track and stopped.
âThe car was found camouflaged under those trees,' Maylin said, pointing to his right, âthe body over there.' He waved his hand to the left. Cardinal insisted on seeing the rough grave. Maylin led the way through the scrub.
âWere they in a hurry or what?' Cardinal said, as he walked around a shallow hole.
âThe body was found with most of the torso exposed,' Maylin said.
They began to walk back to the car. Cardinal stopped and stared at the ground where the body had been.
âWhat did you make of his wounds?' Cardinal asked so
quietly that he had to repeat himself for the detective.
âLike you,' Maylin said, choosing his words, âI was baffled.'
He began to walk to the MG. Cardinal followed, deep in thought.
âCould you take me to the reactor?' he said, as they drove away.
Maylin seemed untroubled by the request, and in a few minutes they were near the high front gates of the reactor.
Cardinal had been looking at his watch.
âI guess you know when my son checked out of here?' he said.
âTen am.'
âExactly?'
âIt was in a book all employees had to sign on and off in.'
âActually put their initials too?'
âA full signature was required each time. This is a top security establishment. Has been since 1986.'
Cardinal sat in silence. His eyes fixed on the reactor's dome.
âSo the official story is that Harry left here at ten and was murdered at . . .'
âHe was found at five the same day.'
âSeven hours later, but the murder must have occurred soon after he left, because the clearing is only a few minutes away.'
âNo one knows exactly.'
They began to speed back to the station.
âIt's unlikely he would have toured around for any length of time,' Cardinal said, glancing at Maylin. âThe most obvious scenario would be that he was side-tracked into that clearing and killed.'
âAs you say, the most obvious.'
Cardinal remained silent until they pulled up at the station gates. âCould I see the guy who actually found him?'
âAfraid I can't allow that.'
âI remember you at the morgue being a little pissed off at something,' Cardinal said.
Maylin got out of the car and Cardinal followed. The gate opened automatically.
âI brought you out here to claim the car and sign papers,' Maylin said. âI was told you had power of attorney over your son's property here.'
âYeah. If he had gotten sick, or . . . if he died.'
âNormally I would need proof of that power. But your Embassy seems to want things expedited.'
âIs that what irritated you?' Cardinal said, as he was led into the station.
âThat was part of it,' Maylin said. âI sort of resented the way your people muscled in and gave their version of the events as the official one.'
âWhat was the other version?'
Maylin pushed some papers in front of him and asked him to sign them. âI can't answer any more questions, Mr Cardinal.'
Cardinal felt the throbbing in his head returning. âI used to be a cop,' he said as he put down the pen.
âIn New York?' Maylin said, his expression lighter. He handed over the car keys.
âHarlem.'
âThat must have been tough.'
âI didn't bother much about it then. Now I wouldn't go near the place.'
âHow long were you a cop?'
âSix years,' he said. âI must admit it was just a job to get me through night school.'
âDoing?'
âLaw.'
âYou in practice?'
âNot any more,' Cardinal said. âYou married?'
âYeah. And I've got two kids,' Maylin said.
âHang on to them,' Cardinal said. Maylin's lugubrious
expression returned.
The phone rang and the detective answered it. In a one-way conversation, Maylin gave negative responses to a string of questions. He scribbled a name on a pad.
âBloody Melbourne reporters,' he mumbled, âthey even ignore âD' notices these days.'
Cardinal was standing a few paces from Maylin's desk. âThank you for all your help,' Cardinal said, stepping forward to shake Maylin's hand. He came close enough to Maylin's desk to make out one word on the pad â Mills.
It was dark when Cardinal drove the MG back at a crawl towards Sydney. He was nervous of driving at night on the âwrong' side of the road and in a right-hand drive car. The gears on the high-revving MG didn't help either, for Cardinal had been used to automatic vehicles. The battle preoccupied him, and it was several seconds before he realised that the van that had followed him the previous night was behind him again. It's lights were on high beam, making it impossible to read the number plate. This time the driver wasn't so shy. And the van was edging close. Cardinal struggled with the gears and shuddered to an increased speed. The van accelerated. It nudged the MG's rear bumper. Cardinal looked for a chance to slide off the road, but the trees to his left were a blur. As he approached a sharp bend, Cardinal fought the steering wheel and slid his car into the oncoming traffic lane. The move made the van driver cautious. He hesitated a second before deciding to follow, but pulled back to safety as a truck rounded the bend. Cardinal just managed to slip back into the correct lane as the shocked truck driver sounded his horn. Cardinal accelerated into top gear and kept his foot down until he reached the busier outer suburbs. He kept checking the car mirrors, but the van was not in sight.
Cardinal took a nerve-steadying drink in the Wentworth's piano bar. He couldn't trust his own Embassy, and he couldn't be certain of the local police. If he had seen the van's number, he may have had something to report. But he had just managed to avoid serious injury, if not death.
Cardinal began to wonder why he had become the target for surveillance and an attack. He had, after all, done no more than any other father would faced with a similar situation.
Cardinal wandered to the lift and his room. The door was unlocked. He pushed it open. His belongings were strewn over the floor. Cardinal edged in and checked the bathroom. The culprits had gone. He began to pick up his clothes, but suddenly dropped them, and began rummaging through his briefcase. His son's photographs, wrist watch, wallet, ring and neck-chain had been stolen. Only his will and bank statements had been left.
Hours later, Cardinal thought the items taken suggested that those responsible were trying to expunge all memory of Harry. Except for evidence of his demise.
Darwin Police Chief Neil O'Laughlin,
a powerfully built redhead in his mid-forties entered the ante room of his office to greet the small group of elders from the Bididgee tribe who had come to complain about intrusions on their sacred land. They, like everyone else in the Northern Territory, had a healthy respect for this tough, no-nonsense cop who had a reputation for being fair. He had been selected by the local government, after pressure from Canberra, for his intelligence and authority was needed to mediate problems in Australia's north.
O'Laughlin had made his name by rounding up criminals who had escaped to the north to hide in the remote mining and bush communities, or to leave the country illegally. Despite this he felt he was soon to face the biggest test of his thirty-year career, which stretched back to a police cadetship in Adelaide.
The conflict between the Aborigines and Richardson's
company over uranium mining on sacred sites needed strength and tact, especially when dealing with Burrum Murra â known to everyone simply as âBurra' â who now confronted him. He was a handsome full blood, whose cherubic features made him look younger than his thirty-two years. They also belied a shrewdness and sharpness that O'Laughlin had never encountered in anyone, black or white. They had had too many problems to be friends, but they had often had a beer together, a sign of respect in the Territory.
O'Laughlin greeted the elders by name and showed them into his modest office. His trestle-table desk had ugly grooves and scars. It was cluttered with files, law books, and used coffee cups. Four stiff-backed wooden chairs and steel files made up the rest of the sparse room. Its one noisy ceiling fan was losing the battle against the heat and humidity. He trusted all but one of the visitors, Tom Beena, who was less moderate than the others. He was a tall man approaching fifty who resented the power of his younger rival, Burra.
âI've been trying to speak to Richardson,' O'Laughlin began, âto let him know we have to meet before he takes a new drill to the mine.'
âWe don't want the drill on the mine,' Burra said, âand we don't want any uranium ore trucked out either.'
O'Laughlin was used to Burra as a tough negotiator. Burra had dropped out of his last year as a law student to take up the cause for his people a decade earlier.
âSince the last Supreme Court decision,' he said, âthere have been several violations of agreements with Richardson and his company, Digex Corporation. We want you to enforce the law while we present his violations to the court. We shall be seeing our lawyers today.'
âWhat are you saying he has done?'
âPolluted the environment with radioactive waste seepage. It has been found outside Digex's Ginga mine
area, and it has radioactive readings twice the average.' He handed O'Laughlin a five-page report. He read half the first page before an impatient Burra continued.
âWe also believe Richardson has been on sacred land,' he said. âYou're aware of the rumour that a huge high-grade uranium ore-body runs under Mount Brockman and the Green Ant boulder area?' Burra added.
The police chief nodded. âIt's only talk. Richardson denies it.'
âDenies it to you, Chief, but he seems to be telling a lot of prospective uranium buyers that he intends to mine the sacred land.'
âRichardson has agreed not to open any new mines.'
Burra smiled cynically. âHe's planning to break those agreements.'
âI need proof of that, Burra.'
âSome of our people have seen him on sacred sites.'
âHe has had an Indonesian delegation on his property in recent days. Are you sure some of them didn't wander on sacred land by mistake?'
âJimmy Goyong saw him with somebody on the Green Ant site yesterday morning around six.'
O'Laughlin frowned. âJimmy's word wouldn't stand up anywhere,' he said. âYou know that.'
âHe may be a drunk, but he's not a liar. He says Richardson threw his telescope down a cliff. Jimmy wants it replaced, and he wants some sketches back that Richardson stole from the spot on the ridge where he works.'
âI want more proof than Jimmy's word,' O'Laughlin said.
Burra's expression tightened. âOur people have heard them working at night. There has been lots of activity. We believe they've been taking core samples.'
âI'll have a word to Richardson,' O'Laughlin said, âand see what he has to say to the charges.'
âYou'll tell him he cannot open any more new mines?'
âI'll remind him of his obligations.'
Burra had a brief discussion with the other elders.