Authors: Lindsay Tanner
Tags: #FIC000000, #FIC050000, #FIC022000, #FIC031010
Emily took charge of the situation. âI think we should get you ladies home. Where are Yusuf and Omar now, Farhia? Are you hurt? Do you need the doctor?'
âThey are with my friend Hodan. She is on the same floor, with boys also.'
âLet's go and pick them up. You still going to be okay to help me move, Jack? Don't worry about it if you're hurt.' In spite of himself, Jack noticed a hint of the innocently seductive smile that had struck him when they first met.
He was still spinning out, though. He buckled at the knees a couple of times, and had to use the desk for support. He didn't want to sit down and show any sign of weakness.
âEr, yeah, it'll be fine.' He had almost forgotten his earlier promise. âTomorrow okay? Say two, two-thirty?'
âOnly if you're alright. You might have hurt yourself more than you think.' Emily touched the side of Jack's head gently, in a small gesture of solidarity.
âIt was very brave to protect us, Jack,' Farhia interposed. âThat is two times you have done this. You have a good heart.'
âI don't like blokes who beat up women â or little kids.' Jack's head stopped hurting for a moment. He was so unused to dealing with female admiration that he was at risk of going into shock.
âI am frightened of this man,' Farhia added, her calm voice now quavering. âHe will hurt my children.' Jack sensed panic rising beneath her impassive exterior.
âStill got my mobile number?' Emily asked, as the three women huddled into a protective cordon and Jack made to depart. âGive me a call in the morning. Shouldn't take long, just a couple of car-loads'll make all the difference. Only a few minutes away, too.' She paused for a moment, then added: âOnly if you're feeling up to it, of course.'
Jack sensed a touch of manipulation, but he didn't mind. Could Emily spot his infatuation with Farhia? Was she exploiting his need to appear noble and generous in front of her? Maybe so, but it didn't really matter: a long-forgotten niceness gene was stirring under his layers of cynicism and bitterness.
Jack asked Farhia and Aicha if they were okay, and said goodbye. It wasn't even lunchtime, but he felt like going to bed. He thought about buying the Sunday paper and doing the big crossword. He was going to have to do something both undemanding and yet sufficiently stimulating to distract him from his growing collection of aches and pains.
As he walked away from the high-rise towers, Jack tried to take stock. The appearance of the man he only knew as Rooney had added another layer of confusion to the situation.
He was gratified that he had again helped Farhia escape from threatened violence, but he suspected his infatuation with her was approaching a dead end. She had an invisible wall of reserve surrounding her, an impenetrable barrier that he didn't know how to deal with. It wasn't just about race or culture: there was something else. She was clearly terrified, too scared even to disclose the real nature of the threat she was facing. And every time Jack found himself in her presence, serious violence wasn't far away.
Jack mulled over his options for the remainder of the day, but couldn't think of anything particularly appealing. He could go to the pub, watch the footy, fiddle around at home maybe. He considered pursuing Rowan for an explanation of Friday night's events, but remembered that he was usually hard to track down on Sundays. He thought about hiding out at Billy's for the rest of the day, but was too stressed and disoriented to even attempt that. He felt paralysed, surrounded by threats, but unable to respond to them.
As he climbed the stairs to his flat, Jack was hit by a wave of nausea. He felt disoriented and light-headed. It looked like watching the football was the best option: he suspected he had given his head a nastier bang than he'd first thought.
He was asleep on the couch before quarter-time. When he woke up nearly three hours later, he was shivering and woozy, and his head ached. Jack didn't know much about concussion, but he thought that he probably had a mild dose of it. He took some Nurofen, and turned on the old gas heater on the far side of the lounge room.
Once he began to feel better, he decided to go for a walk. He walked a lot, because he only had the cab part of the time, but rarely for pleasure. A bit more walking might help reduce his spreading belly and wheezy breathing.
His body was still recovering from his recent run around Carlton. Since then, he'd been assaulted twice. He could feel the hayfever tickling his sinuses.
I'm an absolute mess
, Jack concluded, as he stepped out into the cool, sweet air of early spring.
He thought about the latest developments. The
ASIO
guys had got what they wanted, so they probably wouldn't be back. And Leather Jacket, Karl, and Rooney didn't know where he lived â or at least he didn't think they did. His situation with Farhia had reached a stalemate. Every time he was in her presence, he sensed how ridiculous his fantasy was â an unhealthy, pot-bellied, round-shouldered bloke in his mid-fifties, a chronic loser, pursuing a beautiful young Somali woman.
If I pull this one off, I'll be able to flog the movie rights
, he muttered to himself as he walked along Albion Street. He was unnerved by Rooney's assault. He could be anything: Farhia's husband, her lover, a terrorist â maybe even a drug dealer. Farhia didn't seem to be a dishonest person, but her reluctance to disclose personal information made Jack wary of treating everything she told him at face value.
He walked along Albion Street to Lygon Street, intending to walk up to Sydney Road. As he crossed Lygon Street, he noticed a familiar figure striding towards him. It was the unmistakable gait of Scabber McPhee, the look of a retired boxer on speed.
âScabber, how're you going?'
âGood mate, good,' Scabber hissed.
âJust going for a walk.' Jack felt obliged to explain what he was doing.
âA walk, eh?' Scabber looked sceptical. His bluey was half zipped up, and he was moving his feet up and down. He didn't want to hang around.
âYeah, been in the wars, got to walk it off.'
âLike Sunday-morning footy training, hey?' Scabber cackled, with a rasp born of decades of heavy drinking and smoking.
âYeah, something like that.'
âHeading for a drink. You'd better come.' This was more of a command than an invitation.
âOnly got a few bucks on me, better not stay long.'
âGood point. I'm meeting this bloke from Preston in half an hour. You'd better scarper when he turns up â not the kind of bloke you need to know.'
Jack was grateful for this surprise encounter. He'd only walked about three hundred metres, and he was bored already.
âSo what've you been doing to yourself?' Scabber asked, as they lounged at the small section of the Lyndhurst that hadn't been swallowed by poker machines, and ordered a couple of pots.
âGot jumped by this Somali guy this morning, bit of a domestic. And I was in a blue at the Dan the other night.' Jack usually kept his words to a minimum around Scabber.
âYeah, heard about it.'
âHit the road when some bloke started waving bits of glass around. Druggie, probably.'
âHow'd it start?'
Jack wasn't exactly close to Scabber, but they had a friendly relationship. He wasn't a threat to Scabber, and he was useful sometimes. He sensed a chance to get some advice.
âHard to say. Bit of a mess I've landed in.'
As Scabber tore a beer coaster into small pieces, Jack outlined his encounters with Matt and Rowan. Scabber wasn't impressed.
âSlippery piece of shit, mate. Steer clear.' Jack assumed he was referring to Rowan.
âYeah, after the other night, reckon you're right. So why'd this bloke in the leather jacket lay into me, you reckon? Never met him before.'
âMaybe he didn't like your aftershave.' Jack let out an involuntary chuckle. He barely knew what aftershave was, and he had certainly never used it. He was pretty confident Scabber hadn't, either.
âSo how am I going to fuck them off?'
âWhen are you supposed to do the trip?'
âNext weekend.'
âLet me know when they tell you a time and place. I'll sort it.'
âI've had enough violence for a bit â¦' Jack wasn't sure he wanted to escalate the level of it.
âNothing like that. Just expose them to some people higher up the food chain, give them some advice. I'm in the advice business, mate. Cat'll lose interest in a mouse when a big dog turns up.'
Jack took no offence at the suggestion that he was comparable to a mouse. He wondered if this was how the world looked to Gideon. Maybe he was Gideon's Scabber.
âThanks, mate. Free cab rides for a while if you get me out of this one.'
âDone.' Scabber flashed a broken grin at Jack, and started sorting his pile of beer coaster pieces into the shape of an X.
âOne more, mate?' Jack asked.
âWhat're Sundays for?'
They sipped in silence for a while, and then Jack spoke.
âFunny thing, you know. I'm getting to know the Somalis. Who would've thought?'
âNasty bunch. Stay out of that ethnic stuff. Stick together, you know, don't play by the rules. Where they come from, bloke'd slit your throat for five bucks. Be careful.'
âYeah, will. Thanks for the chat, mate. I'll let you know when they tell me the pick-up time. You around?'
âYeah, I'm around.'
Jack knew most of Scabber's favourite haunts. He was confident he could find him in a hurry.
âSee you, then.' He walked out of the Lyndhurst feeling a whole lot better. His head still ached, but the beer had dulled the throbbing, and he now had someone serious on his team.
People didn't mess with Scabber. He'd done time for armed robbery when he was young, and nearly killed two men in a brawl a few years after he got out. With the assistance of witness amnesia, he'd got off on self-defence. Now he was a freelancer. He was older and smarter, so he only involved himself in lucrative, low-risk stuff. Standover work for trusted clients was his main line of work these days. His network of contacts â even insignificant people like Jack â was a vital intelligence asset.
Jack could feel the alcohol bubbling around in his system as he walked home. It was time to take some more painkillers, and crash. He didn't feel like eating. God only knew what he'd feel like in the morning, but he had to work. And move Emily's stuff.
13
Connection
Emily's flat was on the tenth floor. For once, the lift was working, to Jack's great relief. The lifts in the high-rise were notorious for breaking down, and they didn't always get repaired in a hurry. He didn't fancy going up and down ten flights of stairs several times, even if he only had to lug stuff on the downward trips.
Getting past security and into the lift lobby was a big-enough challenge getting into most tower blocks. These days, visiting a resident involved talking your way past security on the ground floor. Jack thought this was ridiculous. Why spend money to protect the tenants from outsiders, when the real need was to protect the outside world from them?
Luckily, the security virus hadn't spread as far as Elgin Square yet, and he was able to go straight up. The door to Emily's flat was open, so Jack took a few tentative steps inside and called out: âHello, anyone at home?'
The part of the lounge-dining area he could see was a mess. There were all kinds of boxes scattered around, small items of furniture, green garbage bags, presumably full of clothes, and other clothes on hangers lying on a small table.
Jack strained to pick up a response, but apart from the howling south-westerly whistling its way through the tower block, there was no sound. He walked further into the flat, and took note of some of the other items lying around. There was an antique gramophone that played 78s, a framed Violent Femmes poster, a large chess set in a box, and a small mound of basket, rugs, fur, and fluff that looked like a cat's home. He was fascinated by the chess set, which was almost too large to be practical, like a large-print version for the visually handicapped.
As he stepped around the assorted bits and pieces, he heard the muffled sound of a door closing. Then Emily appeared out of nowhere, startling him.
âOoh, hello, Jack. Been here long? Stupid cupboard, I can't get the drawer open.'
Jack was lost for words. He wouldn't have thought it possible, but Emily was even more colourfully dressed than the last time he'd seen her. His mind flitted to a picture of an exotic tropical bird he'd seen on a nature documentary recently â a macaw, if he remembered correctly.
âCan you help me fix it?'
âEr, sure.' There was something about Emily that elicited awe from Jack. He didn't know how to deal with her. She sure was out there.
âThrough here.' She ushered him down a cramped corridor to the left, and into the main bedroom. She pointed to a built-in wardrobe that was almost empty. A couple of drawers were lying on the floor, but one remained in its slot.