Authors: Barry Maitland
The bulky figure of Toby Wagstaff steps out of the shadows to greet him.
âThanks for coming, Harry. Godâ¦' he nods towards the Rizzo place, âwhat an abomination.
What monsters we are, eh? And they've found heaps more drug chemicalsâprecursors,
reagents, solventsâa regular little industry. The drug squad have no idea where it's
all come from.
âThis place is the pits.' Wagstaff turns and makes a sweeping gesture with his arm.
âYou know its history, do you, Harry? Lieutenant Perch's expedition?'
Harry doesn't know it, and Wagstaff tells him.
âSo those blokes are about here where we're standing now, up
to their knees in the
stinking bog, sweating like pigs in their worsted army redcoats in an Australian
summer for God's sake, long-suffering grunts like us,' he cracks a rueful smile,
âjust trying to get a job done. And they look up thereâthere, the trees between those
shedsâand see the Aborigines. And Perch gives the order, and they heave up their
muskets, Brown Besses they would have been, five kilograms, six foot long, eighteen
millimetre bore, and they blast away.'
Harry shifts his weight on his feet, wondering when he'll get to the point. Is he
trying to draw some parallel with the bodies in the pit?
âSo, Harry,' Wagstaff says, still staring up at the trees in the little park on the
knoll, âdid you find out who killed your mum and dad?'
He says it as if it's all part of the same story, and Harry has to blink and take
a breath. What does he know?
Wagstaff goes on, âYou worked out that Bebchuk and his pals drove them off the road
that night, and made sure they were dead. I guess they didn't realise that your Jenny
was lying injured in the well of the back seat.'
Harry says, âHang on. Where is this coming from?'
âThis is the Bob Marshall theory, Harry. So why'd they do it?'
Harry hesitates, then says, âI know they were acting on orders from Oldfield.'
Wagstaff nods.
âBut I don't know why, and I don't know who else wanted them dead.'
âWhat makes you think there were others?'
âOldfield more or less told me as much.'
âDid he now. No ideas?'
âNo, but I'll keep looking.'
âCourse you will.' Wagstaff turns to face him and now Harry sees the pistol in his
right hand.
âSir?'
âJust have to get the job done, Harry. Nothing personal.' And he pulls the trigger.
Once. Twice. And watches Harry fall.
Wagstaff moves in to the prone body, the gun trained on his head, when he feels somethingâHarry's
hand?ânudge against his leg. He tries to kick his foot free, but for some reason
can't. He crouches down and finds to his surprise that Harry has handcuffed himself
to his ankle.
âYou bugger!' Wagstaff mutters, almost admiring. âHow did you manage that?' He reaches
to Harry's throat and finds no pulse. Automatically reaches to his hip pocket where
he keeps his own handcuffs, and the key, before remembering that he doesn't have
them with him today. Impatient now, he reaches down and starts groping through Harry's
pockets, turning them out, one after another. Nothing. There is no key.
He straightens, forcing himself to slow down, to think. His car is up there on the
perimeter road, maybe thirty metres away. In the glove box he has a notebook, a pen,
a screwdriver, a torch andâa knife, with which he can cut off Harry's hand.
He pockets his gun and bends down to grip the body under the armpits and begins to
drag it up the concrete driveway, watching the long dark trail of blood growing behind
them. When he reaches the street he stops at his car and takes out his gun again
so that he can get at the car keys in his pocket, and at that moment a patrol car
swings around the corner and catches him in its headlights.
The two officers see a man crouching over a body. They jump out of their car and
see a gun in the man's hand, and begin shouting together, âPolice! Drop your weapon!'
The man swings upright, yells something, the gun still in his hand, and they both
squeeze their triggers, three rounds each rapid fire, and the man falls.
They run over to the two prone figures.
âThis one's gone.'
âThis one too.' The officer shines a light on Wagstaff's face. âJeezâ¦he looks familiar.'
Jenny hears someone approach, then seat themselves in the chair at her side.
âMrs Belltree? I'm Detective Inspector Deb Velasco. I amâ¦I was a colleague of Harry's.
I came here as soon as I heard. I'm so sorry.'
âYou worked with Harry in homicide?'
âYes.'
âCan you tell me what happened? No one seems to want to tell me.'
âThey're not telling anybody. I'm sorry, I just don't know. Apart from the fact that
they found him at Crucifixion Creek.'
The woman's voice comes closer to Jenny's ear and whispers, âDo you know what he
was doing there?'
âNo. He didn't tell me. I'd been expecting him home.'
They fall silent, unable to find words. Then Deb says, âWe all liked Harry. We allâ¦admired
his dedication.' It's as if she's practising the phrases for a eulogy.
Jenny says, âHe's done this before.'
âWhat? How do you mean?'
âIn the army, in Afghanistan. Eighteen minutes that time.'
âYesâ¦Iâ¦heâ¦' Deb sounds confused.
âThis time it took longerâthirty-eight minutes, as near as they can tell.' She still
feels the numbness that seized her when they told her Harry was dead. It made her
close down somehow, and now she is finding her brain only accepts information a little
drop at a time. âThey call it Lazarus Syndrome, apparently.'
âI don't understand,' says Deb.
âHe was dead for thirty-eight minutes. Can you imagine that?'
âWhat, they brought him back?'
âThey're operating on him now.'
âButâ¦they think he'll be all right?'
âThey don't know. It may be weeks, months, before we know.'
âMy God.'
âBut he'd damn well better be all right. I've got something important to tell him.'
Clearly Harry Belltree is an entirely fictitious character, and his activities in
no way represent the real behaviours of the New South Wales police. However I am
indebted to a number of people who have helped me to breathe into him whatever life
the reader may detect. In particular I should like to thank Detective Superintendent
Matt Appleton APM, Alex Mitchell, Dr Tim Lyons, Lyn Tranter, Mandy Brett and especially
my wife Margaret.