Ecstasy Lake (28 page)

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Authors: Alastair Sarre

Tags: #book, #FH, #FIC002000

BOOK: Ecstasy Lake
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Fern looked in amazement at Jenny, and was silent. Harry started to cry again.

‘In fact I'm shooting the little fucker now,' said Coy. ‘Give me the gun.'

‘No, we need the boy,' said Jenny. She looked at Fern. ‘Shut him up.'

Fern somehow found the composure to reach out to Harry for another embrace. It took her a few moments, but calmness came to her face, a certain resolve. ‘Hush, hush,' she whispered. He kept crying. Fern was looking at Tasso's feet. ‘Throw me a sock,' she said.

‘A sock?' Tasso shrugged, and with my help he removed one of his socks and tossed it to her. She sat Harry on the ground and put the sock on her hand as a puppet.

‘Hello, I'm the friendly sock jock,' she said, in a funny voice. Harry stopped crying and stared at the sock. The sock jock looked around, and sniffed. ‘Do I
smell
?' Harry laughed. Fern continued her monologue, and Harry was entertained. Fern was a natural with the kid, and it made me wonder what Tasso had missed out on for all these years.

Jenny reached into her briefcase and took out a notepad and a pen.

‘Give me the coordinates,' she said.

‘I'll need to write them down,' said Tasso. ‘I can't recite them.'

Jenny looked at Coy. ‘Do your thing with the tape, Peter.' Coy came to us and grabbed Tasso by the ankles and pulled him off the couch onto the floor. I went with him. Coy grabbed a large roll of duct tape from the sports bag and wound it round Tasso's feet, up his legs to the tops of his thighs. Then he did the same to me. I tried to kick him but in socks I was ineffectual and it earned me another jab in the ribs.

‘Keep struggling, West, and I'll give the kid a smack,' he said. He bound me tightly.

‘You like duct tape, don't you,' I said. ‘You used it on Hiskey, too.'

‘Yeah, I like duct tape.' I received a dose of his bad breath. His eyes were moving back and forth, as always. ‘When we've got what we want, I'm going to wrap you up in it, all the way to the top of your head. Imagine it. I'll poke a little hole in the tape so you can breathe. I might be a mummy's boy, but you'll be a mummy.' He sniggered. ‘Want to know what's going to happen? Jenny knows plenty of places in the outback where we can dump a few bodies. I'm going to wrap you up like a mummy but I'm not going to shoot you for a long time, a few days at least. You're going to be uncomfortable. Numbat and Tiny are keen to give me a hand. Maybe you'll be missed, but people go missing all the time. Like your girlfriend's sister. Ghosts, that's what you'll be, just a few more Adelaide ghosts. People will wonder, maybe for years, what happened to you, and every time your name is printed in the paper, I'll just smile to myself. And eventually you'll all be forgotten, just skeletons in a mineshaft somewhere.' He took a breath and stared hard with his shifting eyes. ‘What's the matter? Nothing to say? Maybe you've just run out of smartarse remarks.' When he finished with the duct tape he took a small pair of pliers from his duffle bag and used them to snip the plasticuff that bound Tasso's hands. There was a slight release of tension in my wrists, still bound in their own plasticuff, and I worked my fingers to get the blood circulating again. Tasso flopped like a seal to the table and pulled himself onto a chair. Coy reclaimed his gun from Jenny and sat on the sofa, sniffing the gun and feeling the barrel and pointing it at my forehead.

Jenny gave Tasso the notepad and a pen and he wrote on it. ‘Of course, there's no point giving me the wrong coordinates,' she said. ‘We'll be watching Harry for months. We start drilling and don't find gold, Harry gets a bullet in his head. We'll keep tabs on him, don't worry.' When Tasso finished she took the paper and keyed the numbers into the laptop. ‘They're in the lease area.' She smiled and closed the laptop. ‘Thank you, Tasso. You've no idea what this means to me.'

‘And no interest.'

‘You killed Hiskey, didn't you?' I said to Jenny.

‘That was Harlin.'

‘No it wasn't. I've figured out how it happened.' I looked at Coy, who was rubbing his nose with his gun.

‘Go on,' he said, waving it.

‘We don't have time,' said Jenny. ‘And who cares what he's figured out, anyway?'

‘I want to see how clever he is,' said Coy. ‘He doesn't look clever.'

‘I think Harlin was involved, like you told me,' I said to Coy. ‘You and Harlin went to see Hiskey about the missing safrole. Harlin hit him a couple of times with the hammer but he didn't kill him. He just smashed a couple of fingers, is my guess. Later you called Jenny and told her what had happened and Jenny thought it might be a good idea to go visit Hiskey, too. Somehow you had heard about the find, Jenny, and you were mad with him.'

‘Of course I was mad with him. He was stealing from me.'

‘It was nothing to do with you,' said Tasso. ‘You didn't even have a share in Black Hill.'

‘My
daughter
did,' said Jenny. She almost barked it. ‘My daughter was entitled to a share of that find, and Hiskey was stealing it from her.'

‘How did she even know about it?' I said.

‘Hiskey told her, the stupid bastard,' said Jenny. ‘They had a fight just before he went up north with Tasso. It was nasty. He told her about the find and said she wouldn't get a cent of it. He was filing for divorce. He laughed in her face.'

‘So you decided to get revenge for the sake of your daughter.'

‘For the sake of my
family
. No one laughs at my family.'

Tasso sneered. ‘It's not about family honour. It's about greed.'

‘No, you're wrong, Tasso,' said Jenny. ‘It's
all
about honour. My father was a geologist, a prospector. He was a great man, and he was cheated out of a find.'

‘What find?'

‘You know the La Jolle formation?'

‘Of course I do.' It was a large iron-ore deposit west of Kimba, discovered in the 1960s and worked for more than thirty years. The mine had closed a few years ago.

‘My father discovered it. He staked the claim. He did everything by the book, and he was cheated by his partner and a corrupt dick in the mines department.' There was an unexpected quiver in her voice, but her eyes were hard. ‘Kimba Iron is a billion-dollar company now, but it's been built on a swindle. My father was cheated and he never recovered. He remained a poor man, and I watched him die. He died of a broken heart. I was very close to him.'

‘A daddy's girl,' I said to Coy. ‘And you're a mummy's boy. I don't think she's going to keep you around too long.'

‘I'm not going to be cheated again,' said Jenny.

‘You went to Hiskey's office that night, knowing he had already been beaten up.'

‘Yes.' I supposed she saw no harm in giving information to the dead. ‘Coy called me and told me what had happened, just like you said. I had an idea, and we went there. Harlin had smashed some of his fingers, but he wasn't feeling any pain. He had shot himself up with heroin. The stupid, stupid man. He was just sitting there, out of it, a stupid grin on his face. Coy taped him to the chair and we tried to get sense out of him. I hit him a few times with the hammer but he was too high. He wouldn't say anything. He just grinned. Eventually I lost patience.'

‘And smashed his skull in. You used the same hammer as Harlin.'

‘Yes, and I wore gloves. The hammer only had Harlin's prints on it, and Coy hid it until he gave it to you.'

‘You've been a good mummy's boy, haven't you?' I said to Coy. ‘Doing everything you're told. You wanted Harlin's drug business.'

‘And now I have it,' he said. ‘Harlin's a fugitive and Barenfanger's in hospital. I have the contacts, the know-how, a little bit of capital. Sure, we lost a lab, but we'll build others.'

‘And there's just a little problem of us,' said Tasso.

Coy shrugged. ‘You're no problem.'

‘Let Harry go now.'

‘We let the boy go when we've dealt with you,' said Jenny. ‘He's our little insurance.'

‘Are you sure you want to let him go?' said Coy. ‘He might remember us.'

‘He can't even talk,' said Jenny. ‘It's worth the risk.'

‘I don't think it is.'

‘I do.'

Harry started crying again. ‘For fuck's sake. At least can I belt the little shit?' said Coy. He strode over to Harry and Fern. Fern stood up and swung at him with the aluminium saucepan. Coy wasn't expecting it and it caught him on the side of the head.

‘
Bitch
,' he said. He backhanded her with his pistol. The suppressor caught her on the cheek, and there was instant blood. Harry started screaming, and Coy aimed the gun at him. Fern lunged at Coy. Her ankle chain stopped her short and she knocked him off-balance.

She tried to grab the gun and it was forced against her stomach. There was a muffled gunshot and she fell to the floor. Coy aimed at her again. Seated at the table, Tasso reached over and grabbed Jenny's laptop and threw it at Coy. It spun through the air like a Frisbee. Coy didn't react to it and it hit him in the temple. He appeared to think about things for a moment, and then twisted, crumpled and fell. I lurched towards him. The duct tape was tight round my legs and I couldn't bend at the ankles or knees. Coy wasn't moving. I fell on top of him and my shoulder wound screamed at me. My bound hands were on his gun hand. Jenny was coming at us, a small gun in her hand—it must have been in the briefcase. I rolled Coy on top of me by pulling at his arm. Jenny fired twice, and I felt the impacts in Coy's chest. I lifted Coy's dead hand, still holding his big silver gun, and pointed it at Jenny. I squeezed on Coy's trigger finger, and the gun spat. Judging from the look on her face, the bullet, when it hit, cut short the blossoming of an outraged sense of entitlement.

42

There was a phone in Jenny's briefcase. Fern was still breathing and we did our best to stem the bleeding until the ambulances arrived. The bullet had struck her in the lower abdomen, just above the groin. The ambulances were quick, and the first one took her away with its siren blasting.

‘I've always had mixed feelings about that sound,' said Tasso. He was holding Harry in his arms as he watched Fern's ambulance disappear around the corner. Harry watched it go, too, fascinated by the siren and the flashing lights, and then went to sleep against Tasso's chest, Tasso stroking his curly hair.

‘You mean the siren?'

‘Yeah, the siren. On the one hand it is the sound of civilisation, you know? The sound that tells us we are an organised and humane society and we'll do our best to save every life.
Every
life, even the dicks. That's civilised.'

‘I never really thought about it.' I was pulling duct tape from my jeans. We had sliced through our bindings with a kitchen knife, but the pieces were still sticking to me.

‘But on the other hand, it's the sound that reminds us that death stalks us all and that there's always someone out there who is breathing his final breath, fighting his last fight, letting go his white-knuckled grip on the world. One day the siren will call for you, Steve. It'll call for me. It'll call for us all.'

‘Yeah, I guess it will. But I'm fucken just not going to answer it.'

Tasso gave a grim little grin. ‘And in the end, what was it all for?'

‘We all have to find our own meaning, Tasso.'

‘Yeah.'

The first cops sealed off the scene, and eventually the forensics guys turned up in their hairnets and white overalls. Tasso and I sat on the back of one of the ambulances and a local resident brought us a cup of tea. A paramedic tended my shoulder wound, which had opened up in my struggle with Coy and was hurting like buggery.

‘Tell them everything,' Tasso said. ‘The cops.'

‘Even about Ecstasy Lake?'

‘Yeah. You know what?'

‘What?'

‘Ecstasy Lake wasn't worth this.'

Bert arrived, bringing Melinda. She ran to Harry and grabbed him from Tasso. She kissed him about fifty times and woke him. He started crying.

‘He's hungry,' I said. She ignored me.

Bert spoke to Tasso. He asked just enough questions to find out what he needed to know. He had a word with the uniformed cops who were standing guard. With the cops' agreement, he took Melinda and Harry away.

Next to arrive were Tarrant and McGarry, both looking exhausted. Tarrant glanced at me, shook his head and went into the house. He was inside for half an hour, maybe longer. The bodies were brought out. Tasso and I had to vacate our seats and the ambulances loaded up and moved out. It was nearly midnight.

‘Who shot who?' said Tarrant, when he emerged.

‘Coy shot Fern, Jenny shot Coy, and I shot Jenny,' I said. ‘And by the way, Jenny was trying to shoot me, not Coy.'

Uniformed cops took Tasso and me in separate cars to the station on Wakefield Street. We were questioned separately. It took a long time. The adrenalin had worn off long ago and by three in the morning I was nano-napping. I told Tarrant I wanted to go home. He wanted to go home, too. He put me in a holding cell.

‘Just until morning,' he said. ‘After everything that's happened in the last couple of days, I can't afford to take chances by letting you loose on this poor little town. Tasso's in another cell. I've got to write a report for the commissioner. Then I'm going home. I'll see you tomorrow.' I was too tired to argue. In fact, the idea of a holding cell appealed to me. The bed was hard and narrow, but I would have slept on nails.

We were released the next afternoon. Our stories had tallied with each other's and with the evidence at the crime scene.

‘Any news about Fern?' I asked Tasso.

‘Tarrant said they operated last night. She's still alive.' He looked tired. The skin on his face was flaccid, and there was no energy in his eyes.

‘Think we'll still qualify for the lease?' I said.

‘At the moment, I couldn't care less about the fucken lease.'

Bert and Melody met us in the foyer of the station and we went our separate ways. Melody and I went to my flat. She cooked noodles and brewed a cup of tea, and we chatted while we ate and drank, and when night fell we went to bed and gripped each other in the dark.

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