Authors: Zane Lovitt
I say, âDon't leave it out for Rudy to see tonight.'
âWhy not?' He seems to genuinely wonder.
âBecauseâ¦' And I realise he's right. There's no reason why not.
âSo I've been thinking,' Tyan says, putting the box on the kitchen table. âMaybe we should do that test. The DNAâ¦the paternity test. So that it's official and everything.'
âYeah, noâ¦That'd be great.'
âI don't really know how to do itâ¦'
âThat's okay. I'll look it up.'
âAnd if Friday night is free now, how about we go for dinner? I'll pay.'
Friday. It feels like years away.
âThat sounds great.'
He holds out his hand and we shake. Just like I did with Rudy half an hour ago.
âGood luck,' I say. I think that's also what I said to Rudy.
âYou'll never have to draw that silly thing there again.'
He's talking about the fake tattoo.
I'm like, âCan you call me tonight? I meanâ¦Just to tell me it's over.'
He nods his sage nod. âAll right. Yeah.'
âOkay. Good luck.' I try to find something else to offer but it's not there.
Tyan walks me to the porch and I leave with an awkward wave. From the gate I look back and see him disappear behind a closing door.
61
By the time of Beth's second call today, I've found a clipping that mentions a young Desmond Jeremy Carne, the name he was born with. It's on the State Library website, from their archive of the
Truth
.
The heater pukes its warmth in my face but somehow I'm still cold. Clouds outside gather like a gathering storm, but don't they always look like that? The light from my displays is a soft sideways snow.
I do not answer the phone. I hope she's fretting that she won't get to me in time. Hope she's pacing that tiny living room, waiting for the call back that's never going to come.
YOUNG WIDOW HAS HER DUCKS IN A ROW
12 March, 1975
JEFFREY MARCHAND
Society Writer
POULTRY
baron Henry James Blake, 50, announced on Tuesday his engagement to Lydia Anne Carne, 29, confirming rumours that have had tongues wagging ever since the pair were photographed together on Oaks Day last November.
Despite the 21-year age gap, close friends of Blakeâa millionaire by way of his syndicated Gippsland farmingâtold the
Truth
the pair were âsimply perfect for one another.'
Mrs Carne became a mother when she was
only 16, and her first marriage, to Franklyn Carne, took place, it would appear, to the sound of a shotgun ratcheting a shell.
However, Franklyn Carne was killed in a machinery mishap in 1973.
Since that tragedy, Mrs Carne has employed herself as a seamstress while also raising her son, Desmond Jeremy Carne, 13, who is said to remain deeply affected by his father's death.
Mrs Carne has been at her wits' end to provide young Desmond with a father and financial security. It seems that fortune has now smiled on them both. And a very broad smile it is.
Mr Blake first met Mrs Carne when she was engaged to produce a First Communion gown for his son, Gary, also 13.
It would seem that romance lingered not long upon the vine, but blossomed and was harvested in quick succession. The pair shared regular picnics together with their sons (and Gary's pet dog, Conan!), soon to be stepbrothers and to share the name of Blake.
It is said the boys are becoming fast friends.
While there has been much tut-tutting in response to the announcement, given Mrs Carne's Anglican upbringing, this writer heartfully congratulates the pair. Gone are the days when sanctimonious wowsers should be permitted to come between a man and a woman very much in love. Heaven forbid they come between a nubile young woman and such a poultry amount of money (pun intended!).
It is worth noting, however, that the bride-to-be and young Desmond were baptised in St Patrick's Cathedral in a hastily arranged service in February, attended by Blake and close relatives. That should put anxious minds to rest.
A wedding day has yet to be announced.
Superimposed behind the words is a photo of Henry and Lydia, their faces clean white in the overexposed style of the day. He is smiling, hair thinning, tall and dripping with wealth. She does not smile, her
hair held aloft in the form of a miniature beehive, but peers back at the camera like she knows what the accompanying text implies.
There's no picture of Desmond.
After another hour's searching, it's clear that Desmond Jeremy Blake is one more numpty with no existence on social media. Just like Tyan and Rudy. All the players in this comedy seem to have missed the digital revolution. It's like they never
left
1999.
So I have to scrounge.
By the time of Beth's third call, I've found tax summaries. His primary occupation at the time of Cheryl's murder was âpest extermination'. He gave his address as a Mornington caravan park.
Desmond had a son of his own in 1985, with a woman named Maria Talumbi. They named him Franklyn after his late father. Des and Maria were never married and from what I can tell they never lived together. That they
met
at some point is about all I can discern.
His income tax is regular and neat and he never paid money to Maria or his son. It's not clear he had any contact with them at all. They were listed as dependents when he applied for a small-business grant in 1998, but that appears to have been a lie. And he didn't get the grant.
Then, in 2000, there's this.
LIFE SENTENCE FOR GRANNY MURDER
June 21, 2000
NINA CHIANCELLI
Crime Reporter
A Mornington man has been sentenced to life imprisonment for smothering to death his 53-year-old mother in her Ivanhoe mansion last year.
Desmond Jeremy Blake, 37, pleaded guilty to the charge of murder but otherwise made no comment to investigators. His motivation for the crime remains unknown.
On June 15th 1999, police were dispatched to the Ivanhoe address after Blake telephoned emergency services and said his mother, Lydia Blake, was not breathing.
Paramedics found the front door unlocked
and treated her at the scene. She died en route to Royal Melbourne Hospital.
Desmond then attended the home of his stepbrother, Gary Blake, 38.
Gary, his wife Katrina and their 5-year-old son were shocked when Desmond entered the house carrying a cotton sack at around 3 o'clock that afternoon.
Inside the sack were animal remains.
Gary told the court that Desmond believed the remains were that of a family pet that had been missing for more than twenty years.
He told Gary that he'd killed the dog in 1975, and had dug up the body âjust to see the look on his face.'
Desmond also told them that he'd suffocated his mother. He didn't know if she was alive or dead.
Police were called and Desmond made no attempt to resist arrest.
Lydia Blake was twice widowed. Her first husband died in a workplace accident in 1973, her second husband succumbed to emphysema in 1989.
She was known for her charity work and her commitment to children's health.
Gary Blake, speaking to reporters outside court after the sentence was handed down, spoke fondly of his stepmother.
âShe was always raising money for something.
âThe whole bottom floor of the house is lined with certificates and letters from people thanking her for her work.'
Desmond Blake was estranged from his family in the years leading up to the crime.
âDes was always the bloke who didn't fit in. He moved out when he was a teen and we only saw him on and off.
âHe told us he was working. But who knows what he was up to all that time?'
So a week after Cheryl Alamein is murdered, Desmond Jeremy Blake kills his own mother for no discernible reason and goes to
Severington for life. The end. Despite a load of google dorks on Desmond Blake, Gary Blake and Lydia Blake, there's nothing more to the story. Blake never explained what his motive was.
But then, at the precise moment of Beth's fourth call, I find this postscript on Blake's LEAP file: he was moved to a prison hospice in Fairfield last year. The treatment he received, is probably still receiving, appears only as âsevere psoriatic arthritis' and âSCLC extensive stage'.
Words that mean very little to me.
What I might do next is squeeze my way into the Adult Parole Board database, wallow in that glut of information. But an exploit like that is a monumental timesuck and isn't going to answer the biggest question of all.
By the time of Beth's fifth call, I'm in Mum's old Mitsubishi Magna, heading east.
62
There's an entrance off the street that's as sad as I imagined. The concertina wire around the carpark appears to serve no purpose but to reinforce that this is indeed a correctional facility. Inside, the absence of windows serves likewise. Young faces of security personnel meet me at the archway of a metal detector, but even as I step through they don't appear to notice me. Like
I'm
the ghost, despite their translucent skin and walled eyes.
My mother died in a place like this. Except that the inmates could come and go as they pleased, if they were capable of it. Most of them weren't so I suppose it probably felt like a correctional facility. The same stench of sweat, bleach and microwaved soup as I walk the long corridor. No posters about the strength to be found in hope or the miracle of each day; the echoey beige walls are nothing more than functional and the beige lino is somehow less colourful for the coloured lines that lead you where you want to go, chipped and faded and entirely worn away in parts. At the end of this walk is the visitation wing where weak green light struggles out from the fluorescent tubes with a buzzy moan. Another uniformed stooge at the reception desk tries to look busy, but if his job is to preside over an overwhelming sense of hopelessness I can't imagine what more there is to be done. Saddest of all is the set of bench chairs and the shiny spots on the wall behind them, the paint worn away by a thousand heads tilted back to ponder the reality of a loved one dying in jail. But for now, at least, no one else is here.
The uniform seems to roll his eyes as I approach the desk. Not
another
visitor in the visitation wing.
I'm like, âGood afternoon.' Try to be cheerful.
He says nothing. Beyond him there's a set of heavy double doors with enough steel around its frame to indicate a magnetic lock. On the reception desk are three displays, two of which feature live vision of what's going on behind those doors, broken up into nine segments apiece with running timecode. Most of the segments show hospital beds, people in them.
âI was just wondering how I can arrange to see Desmond Blake?'
The uniform doesn't look at me, presses keys on his keyboard.
âVisiting times don't start for another fifteen minutes.'
He's got a lisp, I think. But it might just be how little effort he's putting into speaking with me.
âSo I can see him in fifteen minutes?'
âThere's a stipulation on Desmond Blake.'
And he looks back flatly, like that settles it.
âWhat does that mean?'
A digital bell rings somewhere. The man analyses his displays and his hand moves under the desk. One of the heavy doors swings open and a female officer exits, another cool blue uniform. She walks past, purposeful, back the way I came. As the door falls shut I glimpse an empty bed and a curtain in a bleak hospital space. Less like a hospital, more like a dorm.
The uniform says, âNo one can see him without written permission.'
âWritten permission from who?'
The man sighs. This means clicking a button on his keyboard and it's awful for him.
âFranklyn Blake,' he reads. Desmond's son.
âHow do I get in touch with him?'
âCan't give you that info.'
âThen how can I get permission?'
He shrugs with a dour face, like that question's a doozy but it's not his problem.
âYou can tell me I need permission, but not how to get it. So you're, like, the Riddler?'
The man says nothing, seems to wait for me to go away. For less than a second I consider blindsiding him, triggering the doors from under the desk. But who am I kidding?
âIs there a manager I can talk to?'
âOnly me, mate.'
I sigh in search of a remedy. If Franklyn Blake came to visit today, maybe he'd let me in to speak with Desmond. I can wait. And sooner or later this blue-clad power trip has to be relieved. Maybe by someone more helpful.
The bench chairs are empty because no one else has shown up early, but as I slump into one a slow trickle commences, emerging from the wide corridor, registering at the desk. They look like people who would leave stains of misery on the walls. None considers this a pleasant Tuesday outing. Some are more stoic than others.
A woman sits next to me and immediately breaks wind. She's about as old as people get, but apparently she's come to visit
someone else
who's dying. What a maudlin row of pain we make, me and her and the Sudanese man next.
My mother died in a place like this. Only it had fewer security guards and more windows, some with flowers on the sill. But the spirit of death was ubiquitous there, too. Is it the smell of the place, or your state of mind?
Facing me is a Japanese woman with a rugged-up kawaii
A gentle tug on my sleeve. I wouldn't have known what it meant on any other day but I leaned in close, put my ear to her lips because that's the only way I would hear. She said, âJason.' Like she wanted me to know that she knew who she was talking to. She said, âDon't go.' I told her I wouldn't. She whispered again and I couldn't understand, thought to go to the door and beckon a nurse, someone who could maybe translate. But I just nodded like a dingus and told her I was here.