Authors: Roland Perry
It was still raining. Puddles had begun to form on the lawn under an impressive plane tree, which dominated the high-walled yard. Beyond the rear wall, tiers of an ugly grey carpark spoiled the atmosphere. It was an intrusion into a setting that otherwise had not changed in fifty years.
It was cold. I stood up and lit my third cheroot. My nerve had returned. I strolled under the awning towards the carpark end of the courtyard.
Cassie appeared. She seemed distracted by something behind me. There was a figure on the fifth level of the carpark. He had binoculars. When I looked round he retreated into the shadows.
âWhat was he doing?' Cassie said as she reached me.
âWould have to be a strange pervert to spy on old farts here.'
âThey're talking about you in there,' she said, putting her arm round me. It was like a shot of cognac.
âI'm not surprised.'
âThey're arguing over whether or not you're
the
Duncan Hamilton.'
âWhat fun.'
âYou've taken a bit of a risk, haven't you?'
âI had to see you.'
âIt's awkward being here with Peter,' she said, âbut I had asked him weeks ago.'
I sat on a bench. Cassie hesitated and sat next to me. âI'm going to call it off after the wedding,' she said. âI just haven't had the time to say anything.'
I touched her forearm and kissed her.
âThis is not too romantic,' I said, âbut I want to tell you something about Freddie May.'
Cassie hunched forward and rubbed her hands.
âFreddie told me that all the women at the funeral had a link to Claude Michel,' I said. âI'm sure he meant Martine, Danielle Mernet and you.'
âI don't understand.'
âI wondered if you might have an inkling of who he is?'
âI would have said,' Cassie frowned.
âIt may be that you know him and don't realise it,' I said. âIt struck me when you looked at Michel's photo.'
âI thought the face was familiar. That's all. It was a nervous reaction more than anything else.'
âYou're absolutely certain you have not seen him before?'
âI'm ninety-nine per cent sure, yes.'
âIt's that one per cent I'm interested in.'
âSometimes faces can be close. You can make a mistake.'
âTell me about any “mistake”.'
âI can't think where I've seen a face that may be like Michel's. I can't pinpoint it. Makes me think I'm just imagining it because of what's happened, or it's somebody that has the same expression, that's all.'
We were interrupted by the squeak of the double doors and a flash of fear rose in me. It was Bill the flunkey again. There were people behind him. Four men came into the courtyard and I took a deep breath to stop the panic radiating from me. They were led by Benns.
T
HE HOMICIDE
interrogation room had a wooden table with four uncomfortable chairs, and a video camera mounted on a TV in one corner. There was no uncovered light, but two neon strips, one of which flickered and was about to give out.
A policewoman came in and took five minutes lining the video camera up with where I was sitting. I asked for coffee. She returned with a black, no sugar and left. Seconds later Benns and O'Dare entered, themselves carrying cups, clipboards for note-taking and a tape recorder, indicating it would be a long session. I asked for Hewitt and was told he was on his way.
Benns stroked his wispy moustache and rolled his head round on that gorilla's neck. O'Dare seemed to hover like a gangling schoolgirl in her first hockey match. Benns' thighs got in the way as he waddled round me in a tight circle. He rubbed his neck. A book fell out of his jacket pocket. It was entitled,
The Serial
Killer.
He picked it up, placed it on a mantelpiece and took a seat next to me. He pulled out a cigar packet and offered me one. I refused.
âDon't you realise that we are going to crucify you in court?' Benns said.
âI'll take my chances.'
Benns slammed a fist down. My coffee mug did a fandango. Cigar ash spilled on his fly.
âDo you realise you could get life!?'
I swallowed. Benns dragged a chair to the end of the table away from me.
âI think you're a dangerous man,' he said, âyou've murdered two people at least.'
I glanced at the book.
âYou mean I could be a serial killer,' I said incredulously.
âWe're considering all possibilities.' I shook my head.
âIf you had been reading
Jack the Ripper
,' I said, âI'd be him too, wouldn't I?'
Benns didn't like that. He could barely contain his rage. O'Dare sat at the other end of the table.
âMr Hamilton,' she said, sounding like Margaret Thatcher with an Aussie accent, âyou've practically admitted to killing Maniguet . . .'
âNo I have not. My written statement explains what happened. It was an accident.'
âSo you claim,' O'Dare said, âbut the Martine Villon situation is different, isn't it?'
âOf course,' I shrugged. Benns stopped dragging on his cigar and glared. O'Dare blinked several times.
âSorry,' I said shaking my head, âI'm not about to confess to something I didn't do.'
âBut if it was an accident too,' Benns said, âwe understand. You got drunk, you danced with her, you made
love with her. She decided to have a bath. You . . . you got those pills. Maybe she wouldn't come across a second time. You got playful . . .'
âWhat you're saying is fabrication,' I interrupted, âjust stupid.'
âYou got frolicsome and you drowned her,' he added, raising his voice.
âUtter baloney.'
I gave them my interruption-free version of the night. I shouldn't have been talking but my nerves were frayed. O'Dare and Benns were now playing good cop/bad cop. It was all macho lines and eye contact with Benns, who was intimidating, and politeness and rationality with O'Dare. I found myself looking to her for relief.
âWe don't accept any of your story,' Benns said, flicking ash carelessly on the floor, âand it doesn't explain why you went into hiding.'
âCochard and Maniguet were trying to kill me,' I said, âI thought you were connected to them. I couldn't make that ten o'clock meeting you had agreed to with Hewitt. They were outside HQ waiting for me.'
âSo you skipped the country?' O'Dare said.
âYes.'
There was a long silence. Benns took a deep breath and flexed his neck muscles again. I wondered if I should explain what happened in France but thought better of it. Hewitt had to have some surprises in court. O'Dare, however, had more guile than expected. âIt would help if you told us what you think is the motive for Martine Villon's murder,' she said.
Should I tiptoe through the minefield, I wondered. Perhaps it would be better to keep talking, and say nothing.
âI think she was murdered by Claude Michel, a French
cancer research specialist,' I said, and went into a scenario, mixing fact with theory and hunch. Michel was in this country and was behind the stealing of Cassie Morris's all-important files. He was going to connect up with a European drug manufacturer to market certain anti-cancer drugs and cash in on Cassie's decade of brilliant work.
Michel had to kill Martine because she could expose who he was. Cochard and Maniguet were experienced thugs hired by Michel and the drug company to steal the research, protect Michel and keep his operation secret. He wanted to use Cassie's research to experiment on hospitalised Polynesians who were victims of French nuclear bomb tests in the Pacific. Michel wanted me out of the way because he wanted to take over Benepharm, which would be used to market new drugs around the world. My attempt to take over the Magenta Institute might have wrecked his plans. The fact that I was at Martine's on the night of the murder was coincidental; he had initially tried to use that to pin the murder on me. He must have changed his mind and decided to eliminate me. He probably convinced Cochard and Maniguet that I killed Martine and then sent them after me.
I toyed again with the idea of telling them about Freddie's demise, but decided against it. It was too much too soon, and it would have added fuel to Benns' loony serial killer concept.
âMichel and Cochard,' I concluded, âwould kill anyone who could expose Michel and his operation.'
I heard my own words at the finish and I believed them. If Cassie or I ever found out who Michel was, he would have to kill us, or hide forever. As matters stood, he could surface under an assumed name anywhere, even France, and continue his inhumane activities.
After a half hour's droning on, Benns and O'Dare stopped me and began presenting the evidence against me.
âYou had the drug Serophrine in your Rolls Royce,' Benns said, pulling the capsule bottle from a plastic bag.
âIt was planted,' I said, sliding forward in my seat, âand the pharmacist who dispensed the drug will support my claim that Martine had taken, or had forced down her throat, capsules from the
un
marked bottle.'
Benns took the cigar out of his mouth, and searched round his teeth with his tongue. He took some time relighting the cigar, which was down to a stub.
âIf I had been the killer,' I said, âdo you really think I would have left the capsule bottle I used lying around, with my company's connection to the “Benepharmacy” clearly marked for all to see?'
Benns and O'Dare glanced at each other.
âBut you were there, Hamilton,' Benns said, trying to regain the initiative, âyour prints are over everything.'
âI've never denied being at Martine's place.'
âAll the facts point to you,' he said, hunching forward and angling an accusing finger under my nose. âYou didn't go to the police, but instead went into hiding. Then you murdered Maniguet, a friend of Martine's, because he knew you had killed her. You had to get rid of him.'
âAnd tell me my motive for killing Martine!'
âYou were using her to steal files from the Magenta Institute.'
âWhat!?'
âShe was there often enough during her treatment.'
âShe wouldn't know what to look for.'
âShe was an experienced spy.'
âRubbish!'
âThe Libyans used her to spy on the French Consul!'
âFor God's sake!' I said, âyou shouldn't read fiction stories, you should write them!'
âWhere were you when Dr Morris's files were stolen last night?' O'Dare said.
âAt an apartment above the Society restaurant.'
âAny witnesses?' O'Dare said. She was turning tougher now too.
âYes.'
âWho?'
âNone of your business.'
Benns sighed and looked at his watch. He nodded at O'Dare and they filed out, leaving the video running and me sweating. A half hour later they returned with five sheets of twenty-two charges.
âYou're down for murder on two counts,' Benns said, showing me the sheets.
âWhere's my lawyer?' I said.
âHe hasn't arrived. We've tried to contact him.'
âWhat happens now?'
âWe find a Supreme Court judge. They're the only ones who can hear bail applications for homicide charges.'
âYou'll be locked up until we find one,' O'Dare said.
âThey don't like being pulled off golf courses or paged at the footy finals on weekends,' Benns said, with a sneer.
The cell in the remand centre had a small window, two double bunks and a writing table. I had to share it with a man called Bert Glover who was on an armed robbery charge.
Bert was shorter than me but beefy and menacing. He had a wide-eyed stare, small handlebar moustache and a
weakish jawline. The tattoos on his weightlifter-gone-to-fat arms were of naked women of the Rubensesque variety, a stiletto knife and a handgun which could have been a Mauser.
Bert stank. His body odour was horrific and made worse by his insistence on doing press-ups. His mood fluctuated and he tried to assert his authority over our eight-metre-by-eight-metre abode within minutes of my arrival.
âYou're the big media star,' Bert said after refusing to shake hands. âWell you're not gunna be a celeb in here, mate.'
I decided to keep my mouth shut. This bothered Bert.
âDid you murder that darkie?' he said. âShe was a good-lookin' sheila even if she was a boong.'
âNo, I didn't. What are you here for?'
He had delight in describing in detail the job he was supposed to have done.
âBut I didn't do it,' he concluded, âno way Jose.'
âThere's no justice.'
âCome again?'
âWe're both innocent. There's no justice.'
âShit, man! You're fine. The media's on your bloody side.'
âThey're fickle.'
âHey?' Bert glared at me. Any word he didn't understand was a threat.
âThe media can change like that,' I said with a click of my fingers.
âYeah,' he said, lying on a bunk and resting on his elbows. He scrutinised me. âYou don't look like a killer.'
âThat figures.'
âHey?'
âI'm not a killer.'
âCrap!' I reached for a newspaper.
âThey say you rooted her and then strangled her,' he said, sitting on the bunk.
âWho's “they”?'
âAw, the screws. The cops told them.'
âIt's rubbish.'
He laughed. It was a strange, high-pitched whinny. Bert didn't like my lack of attention as I tried to concentrate on the paper. He was making me uptight.
âI reckon you did it,' he said.
I ignored him.
âCan't even defend yourself,' he persisted.
I kept my eyes on the paper.
âI'm talkin' to you.'