Authors: Peter Temple
Tags: #Fiction, #Crime, #Mystery & Detective, #General
DSS FARADAY: You have to understand, Mackie was new on Howie. I’ve listened to hundreds of Howie’s conversations. This stuff wasn’t weird for him.
D-I RAPSEY: Nothing else happened that night?
DSS FARADAY: No. Loud music. Stopped about midnight. Often that way.
D-I RAPSEY: No more calls.
DSS FARADAY: No.
D-I RAPSEY: Let’s go to the morning. What kind of routine did Lefroy have?
DSS FARADAY: Call to his broker. Six forty-five, Monday to Friday.
D-I RAPSEY: This Thursday he didn’t.
DSS FARADAY: No.
D-I RAPSEY: What else did he always do?
DSS FARADAY: Open all the curtains. Make coffee. Walk around naked. Phone people.
D-I RAPSEY: Didn’t happen either.
DSS FARADAY: No.
D-I RAPSEY: Who was on duty?
DSS FARADAY: O’Meara. Stand-in.
D-I RAPSEY: Briefed on Lefroy’s habits? Knew what to expect? Shown the log?
DSS FARADAY: He was a stand-in. He was covering for two hours.
D-I RAPSEY: What time did you show up?
DSS FARADAY: Just after seven am.
D-I RAPSEY: Was that late?
DSS FARADAY: Depends. I had a flat. Happens.
D-I RAPSEY: What did you do when you finally arrived?
DSS FARADAY: Listened to the tape. Two minutes. We went straight in.
Howard Lefroy was in the wide hallway, near the sitting room door. He was wearing one of his big fluffy cotton bathrobes, the one with navy blue trim. The carpet was pale pink, the colour of a sexual blush. Except around Howie’s head and upper body, where it was dark with his blood. He’d been killed where he lay, his head pulled back by the ponytail and his throat cut. More than cut. He was almost decapitated. The bathrobe was bunched around his waist, displaying his short hairy legs and big buttocks.
Carlie Mance was in the bathroom, naked. She had tape on her mouth and her wrists were taped to the chrome legs of the washbasin. The man had been behind her when he cut her throat, kneeling between her legs, a fistful of her dark, shiny hair in his right hand, dragging her head back.
Her blood went halfway up the mirror over the basin, a great jet that hit the glass and ran down in neat parallel lines.
I should have stayed to ID Dennis. Or I could have put Mackie in a car right outside the garage to ID him. Or we could have had Traffic Operations pull him over nearby and had a good look at him. Carlie would have been alive. Lefroy too, not that I cared about that: cheated, that’s all I felt when I saw him.
But I didn’t do any of those things…And I didn’t put a tail on the car. Thirteen years on the job and I didn’t do any of those things.
The portable phone had a device that looked like a dictation machine attached to it. Howard Lefroy was on the tape, the two phone calls that had made Mackie suspicious. They were composites.
D-I RAPSEY: Tell us about this lockup of yours.
DSS FARADAY: As I’ve said about twelve times, it’s not my lockup. I hired it for my wife. I took some of her stuff there. Once. I gave her the key.
D-I RAPSEY: We’re assuming here that it would be out of character for your wife to keep 100 grams of smack and $20 000 in cash in her lockup. Fair assumption?
DSS FARADAY: I’d go with it.
D-I RAPSEY: So it would belong to someone else. Right?
DSS FARADAY: Jesus, charge me, why don’t you?
D-I RAPSEY: In good time. You’ve had dealings with Howard Lefroy, haven’t you?
DSS FARADAY: Dealings? I don’t know about dealings. I was on a job where we tried to get in touch with him. Seven, eight years ago.
D-I RAPSEY: You tried to roll a bloke. One of Lefroy’s runners.
DSS FARADAY: We rolled him.
D-I RAPSEY: But it didn’t work out.
DSS FARADAY: No. We put him in a safe house and somebody came around and took him away.
D-I RAPSEY: Dead, would you say?
DSS FARADAY: I would say.
D-I RAPSEY: You aware the talk was Lefroy was tipped off?
DSS FARADAY: That is what generally happens in Sydney. People get tipped off.
D-I RAPSEY: By you?
DSS FARADAY: I’ll say yes? I’m supposed to say yes, am I? Trick question, is it?
D-I RAPSEY: So first Lefroy gets lucky with you around and then he gets unlucky.
DSS FARADAY: I’m sorry, is that a question?
D-I RAPSEY: It’s the central question on my mind, Detective Faraday. It’s the central question on many people’s minds. And we’ll answer it before we’re finished. Interview terminated at three twenty-five pm.
That wasn’t the last interview, not by a long way. But as I had sat there, looking at the men who weren’t looking at me, I had known without doubt that I wasn’t one of them anymore. It was the end of that life. Thirteen years. Thirteen years of belief and self-respect. Pride, even. Come to an end in a grubby little formica-lined office reeking of disbelief.
I could have lived with that. What I couldn’t live with was that my negligence, my confident negligence, killed Carlie Mance.
I put the file away, made a phone call and set off for Melbourne to look for the scene of Dr Ian Barbie’s end.
It took me the best part of two hours to get to Varley Street, Footscray. And when I got there, I didn’t want to be there. It was a short narrow one-way street that ended in the high fence of some sort of container storage depot. Newspaper pages, plastic bags, even what looked like a yellow nylon slipper had worked their way into the mesh.
The right side of the street was lined with the high rusting corrugated-iron walls of two factories. The steel doors of the first building appeared to have been the target of an assault with a battering ram, but they were holding. At the end of the street, one of a pair of huge doors to the second building was missing, leaving an opening big enough for a truck.
The left side of Varley Street consisted of about a dozen detached weatherboard houses, small, sad structures listing on rotten stumps behind sagging or collapsed wire fences. Several of them had been boarded up and one was enclosed by a four-metre-high barbed-wire fence. About a tonne of old catalogues and other pieces of junk mail had been dumped on the porch of the house three from the corner.
My instinct was to reverse out of Varley Street and go home. There was nothing to be gained here. But I parked at the end of the street outside a house that showed a sign of being lived in: a healthy plant was growing in a black nursery pot beside the yellow front door. I got out, locked the door, put on the yellow plastic raincoat I kept in the car, and crossed the street.
The missing door had opened on to what had probably been a loading bay, a large concrete-floored space with a platform against the right-hand wall, which had two large sliding doors in it.
Opposite the entrance was another doorway with both doors open. Trucks had once driven through to the tarmac courtyard visible beyond.
I walked out into the courtyard. There was a blank corrugated wall to the left, a low brick building that looked like offices to the right and ahead a high cinder-block wall. The day of the weeds had come. Everywhere they were pushing contemptuously through the tarmac and their reflections lay in the cold puddles in every depression.
To my right, about twenty metres along, there was another doorway, big enough for a vehicle.
I walked over and stood on the threshold.
It was a big space, dimly lit from small windows high in the street wall. People had been using it recently: there were deep ashes in a corner, surrounded by empty cigarette packets, beer cans and the ripped cartons and wrung-out bladders of wine casks. In the air was the chemical smell that comes from burning painted wood.
I walked into the middle of the space and looked up. The beams were low.
A voice said, ‘Not there, mate. Over to ya right, that’s where.’
There was a man standing in the doorway, a dark shape against the light. He came towards me, his details emerging as he moved into the gloom: long, unkempt grey hair, grey stubble turning to beard, thin body in a black overcoat over a tracksuit, battered training shoes, one without laces.
‘Ya come to see where the bloke strung hisself up, have ya?’ he said, stopping about five metres away.
‘That’s right,’ I said.
‘Not a cop,’ he said. It was a statement of fact.
‘No.’
‘Got a smoke on ya?’
I shook my head.
‘Should be chargin admission. See that beam up there?’
He pointed at the roof to my left, to one of the trusses. The crossbeams were about four metres up. ‘Rope went over there. Jumped off the car roof.’
‘How d’you know that?’
‘No other way, mate. He was hangin there right up against the car, bout three feet off the ground. Head looked like it was gonna pop.’
‘Did you find him?’
‘Na. Me mate Boris. But I was right behind.’
I took a short walk, looking up the beam, looking at the floor, looking at the campfire zone. I came back and stopped a short distance from the man. The skin under his eyes was flaking.
‘The bloke’s mum asked me to take a look,’ I said.
He nodded. ‘Be a bit upsettin, rich bloke an all.’
‘What’s your name?’
‘Robbo, they call me. Robert’s me proper name.’
‘Robbo, how do you know he was a rich bloke?’
He thought for a moment. ‘Had a tie on, y’know. Funny that.’
‘Anything else catch your eye?’
‘Na. Tell ya the truth, I’d had a few. Went down the milk bar to call the cops.’
‘You and Boris know this place well?’
He looked around as if seeing it for the first time. ‘I reckon,’ he said. ‘Make a bit of a fire, have a drink.’
‘You do that often? Every night?’
‘When it’s warm we just stay in the park.’
‘Must have been pretty cold that night. How come you weren’t here?’
‘When?’
‘The night the bloke hanged himself.’
‘Dunno. Can’t remember.’
‘So you came here the next day. In the morning?’
Robbo fingered the skin under his left eye. ‘I reckon,’ he said. ‘Boris’d know. He’s a youngster.’
‘I might like to talk to Boris,’ I said. ‘Is he going to be around some time?’
Robbo looked off into the middle distance. ‘Well,’ he said, ‘ya see him and ya don’t.’
I took out my wallet and found a ten-dollar note. ‘Where do you buy your grog?’ I said.
‘Down the pub. Geelong Road. Just near the park.’ He waved vaguely.
‘They know your names there?’
He thought about it. After a while, he said, ‘Reckon.’
I gave him the ten dollars. ‘I’ll leave a message for you at the bottle shop. Be sure you tell Boris. I’ll give you another twenty each when I see him.’
He gave me a long look, nodded and shuffled off.
I carried on with my look around. The wood for the fire came from cupboards and counters in the office building. Only bits of the carcasses remained. Ripping up of the floorboards had started. To the left of the office building was a laneway ending in a gate, its frame distorted and with large pieces of mesh cut out.
There wasn’t anything else to look at, so I left. As I was driving away, I looked in the rear-view mirror and saw a boy of about twelve, one foot on a skateboard, watching me go. I hoped he didn’t have to do all his growing up in Varley Street.
The Streeton pub. Solid redbrick building, twenty metres long, small lounge on the left, bar on the right, standing at a skew crossroads on a windy hill. I made a hole in a steamed-up pane of a bar window and watched a Volvo pull up outside: Irene Barbie, short red hair lighting up the sombre day like the flare of a match. What daylight was left was retreating across the endless dark-soiled potato fields. She was wearing a tweed jacket and jeans, didn’t seem to notice the thin rain falling, took a small black suitcase from the front passenger seat and locked it in the boot. Vet’s bag, full of tempting animal drugs. It wasn’t an overly cautious thing to do: there were men drinking at the bar who looked capable of snorting Omo if it promised a reward.
I drained my glass and went through to the empty lounge to open the door for her. She was medium height, slim, nice lines on her face. It was hard to guess her age—somewhere in the forties. There was no grey in the springy red hair.
‘Mac Faraday,’ I said. ‘Irene?’
We shook hands.
‘I’ll take a drink,’ she said. ‘Double scotch. Just had a horse die on me. Perfectly healthy yesterday, now utterly lifeless. Massive bloody things go out like butterflies. Thank God there’s a fire.’
When I came back, she had her boots off and her feet, in red Explorer socks, warming in front of the grate.