Saving Billie (16 page)

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Authors: Peter Corris

Tags: #FIC022000, #FIC050000

BOOK: Saving Billie
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There was access to the house through the garage because McGuinness didn't appear again. I sat in the Falcon with its engine ticking as it cooled down and considered my options. There was really only one. I crossed the street, opened the low gate and walked up to the front porch. The house was brick and fairly newly occupied to judge by the state of the garden, struggling to get established in poor soil under the water regulations. The screen door was a semisecurity job but not much use since it was unlocked. I swung it open and pressed the buzzer.

Chimes sounded inside and a woman came to the door. She opened it, probably expecting the screen to be between her and anyone calling, but she didn't seem too worried about it.

‘Mrs McGuinness?'

‘Yes.'

‘Is your husband at home? I'd like a word with him.'

She was attractive in a well-worn and slightly brittle way, and, at a guess, ten years younger than McGuinness, who I took to be about forty. She wore beige cargo pants and a black shirt with three strands of gold chain around her neck. My bruises and wounds had pretty much healed up and I was looking respectable enough in drill pants and a blue business shirt. I gave her one of my most reassuring smiles.

‘The security door was unlocked,' I said. ‘Tch, tch.'

She returned the smile, but only just. ‘My fault. Don't tell Clive. He's out by the pool having a drink. Would you like to come through?'

I followed her down the passage, walking on a thick carpet runner over polished boards, past a living room and a couple of bedrooms. We went through the well-appointed kitchen to a door leading to a deck. I could see the evening light glinting on bright blue water. She paused at the door. ‘Can I get you a drink?'

‘Thank you. I'll have whatever Clive's having.'

There were lights on in the big yard and by the pool. McGuinness was on a chaise beside the pool, talking on his mobile. He was wearing a T-shirt, swimming trunks and was barefooted. The gate was open. I went through without him hearing me, put two hands under the side of the recliner and flipped him into the water. He shouted and came up spluttering, standing in the shallow end. He recognised me and opened his mouth to shout something but I put my finger to my lips and pointed to where his wife was coming from the house. He began feeling in the water for his phone.

‘Clive! What on earth are you doing?'

‘It's all right, Dottie. I just overbalanced. Dropped my phone.'

‘It'll be ruined. Oh, here's your drink, Mr . . . ?'

‘Cliff,' I said. ‘Thanks. Why don't you get Clive a robe or something, Mrs Mac. I'm afraid we have to talk in private.'

She was suspicious. My manner and tone told her that I wasn't the innocent caller she'd taken me for. She glanced at McGuinness, who nodded, and she went back to the house. McGuinness located the phone, put it on the side of the pool and used the ladder to climb out. Wringing wet, with his hair in his eyes, he'd lost all his poise and smooth competence. He was well built, or had been, but there was a soft look about him—too much sitting down, too many working breakfasts and lunches—and he didn't fancy his chances against me.

Dottie came down the path and tossed a towelling robe to McGuinness, who only just managed to stop it falling into the pool. She turned on her heel and went back to the house. McGuinness took off his T-shirt and pulled on the robe, righted the chaise and sat down. His drink was on the tiles and he picked it up, fighting for composure.

I took a pull on the glass I'd been given. Gin and tonic, a bit weak but very acceptable. ‘That's better now, Clive, isn't it?' I said. ‘Let's cut to the chase. Where's Billie Marchant?'

‘I don't know what you mean.'

‘Either you tell me or I toss you in again and hold you under until you do. I might even hold you there a bit too long.'

‘You wouldn't.'

I kicked the phone back into the pool. ‘I've seen it done by a master. If you judge it right you promote just that little bit of brain damage. Can lead to a stroke later on.'

‘Jesus, Hardy.'

‘Your choice. That woman was sort of under my protection and I feel bad about her going missing. So do a few other people.'

He finished his drink and maybe thought briefly about throwing the glass at me, but it wasn't really glass, just some kind of heavy plastic, appropriate to poolside drinking. I sipped my drink, smiled and shook my head. That gesture seemed to take a toll of him and I realised that he was very frightened, more frightened than he should have been by my actions and threats.

‘I had nothing to do with it,' he said.

It was almost as if he was taking a polygraph test and confident of giving a right answer, but there was still that fear.

I knew the reason. ‘What about Louise Kramer's suicide?'

‘Oh, God.'

He ran his hands over his head and the water dripped into his eyes. He scrubbed at them, making himself a picture of misery. This was a man with things on his mind. He lifted his head. ‘I saved you from being bashed by that big—'

‘That was then, this is now. Since then you've been an accessory to murder and abduction. Things've changed a bit. Of course Greaves could get you a lawyer and he could get you bail and all, but d'you want to take that chance?'

He shook his head.

‘Didn't think so. Don't worry, Clive. I'm sure we can do a deal here.'

16

D
oes your wife know about the sorts of things you do for Greaves?'

‘Leave her out of it.'

‘I just want to be sure she doesn't run off and phone up your little mate.'

‘She won't.'

‘Trouble in Paradise?'

‘We're not as close as we were.'

‘Too bad. I'm pretty sure I can convince the police Louise Kramer didn't suicide. I can get them to investigate things—phone calls, sightings of cars, purchase of vodka . . .'

He started to speak but I stopped him.

‘I don't want to know what you did or didn't do personally. I know you were involved,' I said. ‘She lied to me and used me and I don't owe her anything. What I'm interested in is the whereabouts of Billie Marchant.'

‘Why?'

‘I'm working for her sister now.'

‘You're a leech.'

‘Poetic. Listen, you'll like this—she's fixing to pay me with the money you gave her to go away.'

‘It wasn't like that.'

‘She thinks it was and she's not happy about it.'

In the not-so-far distance I heard a car door slam and a metal gate slide open, grinding a little. I looked at McGuinness, who shrugged.

‘Dottie's taken herself off somewhere.'

‘Like?'

‘Don't know, don't care.'

‘That's not a good attitude.'

‘I knew you were trouble the minute I set eyes on you and I told Barclay so. Get on with it, Hardy. I'm cold and I need another drink.'

‘Best to keep you that way. What has Greaves got against Jonas Clement?'

He gave me a shrewd look. ‘Don't know everything, do you?'

‘I know enough to put you in prison for conspiracy to commit murder and abduction.'

‘I could charge you with assault.'

‘You fell in, told your wife so.'

He shook his hair and water dripped down into his eyes again. He rubbed them red. ‘Shit, this was getting too heavy for me anyway. Will you give me some time to get clear?'

‘If I like what you say.'

‘I don't suppose you listen to Clement's radio spot?'

‘Why would I? Why would anyone?'

‘Right, well, about five or six years ago, no, maybe four years, Clement blew the gaff on a deal Barclay was trying to put through. It was a loans thing to some Pacific country, I forget the name. Essentially it was a money laundering operation. Clement had the inside story and exposed it on the air. It didn't make a big splash; his audience wasn't that big then, but it stopped the deal dead. Barclay arranged a quick retreat and cover-up but he lost a lot of money and face.'

‘Why'd Clement do that?'

‘Because Barclay was screwing his wife.'

I cast my mind back to the party, an event that was starting to seem like a long time ago. ‘That'd be . . . Patty.'

‘No, Tara, the one before Patty.'

‘Jesus, d'you mean this whole thing's about a couple of rich bastards competing over models?'

‘Yeah, and over money. They can scarcely tell the difference between sex and money. In my experience they get equally excited about both.'

Two things troubled me. I'd thought McGuinness had an active background of some kind, but the way he spoke suggested something else. If I was going to strike a deal with him I needed to size him up better.

‘What's your history, Clive? How did you get involved with nasties like Greaves and Clement?'

‘Why?'

‘Just tell me. Your future depends on it.'

‘I was a statistician. I worked with Barclay in the tax office. We were both into that Iron John shit back then. You know, weekend bivouacs and paint guns. Kids' stuff, but it gives you some moves and some sort of confidence, I suppose. Barclay persuaded me I could do better by working for him in the private sector. I have. Until now.'

‘Okay, what about this? Greaves was at Clement's party a while back. He was putting shit on him, but how come he was there if there's so much bad blood between them?'

McGuinness drew the robe tighter around him for warmth and reassurance. ‘You don't understand about these people, do you? They love to rub each other's noses in the dirt. You think mega-rich rivals don't invite each other to their big bashes? They do, all the time. They're polite on the surface and they fester underneath.'

What he was saying had a ring of truth to it, although I'd only glimpsed both protagonists briefly. McGuinness was acting like one of those Mafia informants who'd decided to spill all the beans and take his chances. In his case the risks weren't as great, but his involvement in Louise Kramer's death, whatever it was, had convinced him they were great enough.

‘I believe you, Clive,' I said, ‘and I'm prepared to let you drive the Beemer to Queensland or to Mascot with your passport in your pocket or whatever, but I need to know where Billie is.'

He nodded. ‘I've got about a million frequent flyer points. I've got contacts in the States. I can make a living there.'

‘What about this joint, and Dottie?'

He shrugged. ‘Both rented. Dottie's not my wife. I don't know where the Marchant woman is, but I know who does know.'

‘And who's that?'

‘I need my guarantee.'

‘So do I, that you tell me and then don't tell whoever it is that I'm on the way.'

‘Why would I do that?'

‘Because you're a slimy, slippery bastard and I can see the wheels turning in your head.'

We kicked it around for a while, with the evening grower cooler and McGuinness feeling it sharply in his wet state and needing a drink worse than I did. Eventually we came up with a solution: McGuinness booked a seat on a flight to Bangkok leaving in about three hours. I didn't allow him to shower and I watched him closely. He dressed in his tan lightweight suit, no tie, packed a bag and collected his passport. I'd drive him to the airport and stay with him all the way to the departure gate, keeping his boarding pass, ticket and passport in my pocket to that point. No phoning permitted. He agreed to tell me what I wanted to know when he was due to board. I told him that if what he said didn't check out I'd arrange for him to be arrested in Bangkok.

‘Nasty gaols there, they tell me,' I said.

He looked sceptical. ‘I don't think you'd have the clout. A crummy private eye.'

‘Mate, all I'd have to do would be to say you were a terrorist, head of a cell here in Frenchs Forest with plans to set Ku-ring-gai Chase ablaze this summer. Drop a couple of cans of petrol in your garage with a few standard lighters. I've got your passport number and your flight details. They'd jump at it, the level of paranoia being what it is.'

‘I suppose you're right.'

Give him his due, that was when he made his move and it was smart to do it after a reluctant compliance. I'd moved a little too close to him; he sensed it, got set, pivoted, and aimed a hard chop at my neck. We'd had another drink and he'd made his strong. Maybe the dousing in the pool had affected him. Either way, I saw the blow coming and swayed back in time. I shoved him hard while he was still moving and his hand cracked into the doorjamb. He let out a yell.

‘That'll bruise,' I said. ‘Might be broken.'

‘Fuck you.'

‘Never mind, those nice hosties on Thai Air'll look after you. Especially in business class.'

All the fight went out of him as he nursed his hand. He left the house without a backward glance, as if his life to that point was disposable. I took his wallet with his credit cards and his passport and put them in the door pocket on the driver's side of the car. He had to manage his suitcase with his left and he struggled to get it into the boot. Too bad. Another struggle to get buckled up and we were on our way.

We scarcely exchanged a word on the way to Mascot. McGuinness was slumped in his seat, obviously depressed and uncertain of his future. I was calculating the odds on his lying and leading me up a garden path or into something worse. I thought I had him bluffed, but it's a strategy you can never be sure of.

At the airport, I parked and he struggled to the check-in with his case and collected his ticket and boarding pass. I took them and his passport from him and we went to the bar.

We had almost an hour to wait and McGuinness got stuck into the scotch. I drank coffee. His right hand was changing colour but he could move and flex his fingers so it looked as though nothing was broken.

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