So, chances were, the person who moved my car also knew my name, my face and where I could be found. Was I being watched, even now? By Jake Martyn, perhaps? The mystery ingredient.
My eggs arrived. I wolfed them, warily scanning the dog-walkers and newspaper-buyers as they strolled past. Cars cruised the strip, the sunlight from the ocean searing their windows.
Lucky the boys weren't at the house, I thought. I'd have to get out of Lorne, of course. A draft agenda began to take shape. Deal with the cops, try to persuade them at least to organise a helicopter sweep of the camp area and have the airport watched. Get my car back. Pick up the boys as arranged at midday. Should I phone Faye and Leo, I wondered, who were due to arrive later in the day?
A man appeared on the other side of my toast. Wiry and fiftyish, he wore shorts and a threadbare tee-shirt. A towel hung over his shoulder as if he'd just come from an early-morning swim. Without asking, he pulled out a chair and sat down.
âMurray Whelan?' He squinted at me with a kind of cockeyed leer.
Straggly greyish hair hung to the nape of his neck. His face was tanned and weather-lined. It was a face I had seen before, I realised, nearly gagging on my multigrain. Just once and very briefly. But I remembered. It had been a memorable occasion. The owner of the face had been tossing the finger over his shoulder from the helm of an escaping shark-cat.
There were maybe thirty or forty people in the immediate vicinity, sipping coffee, browsing newspapers, nursing hangovers.
âThere's witnesses,' I said, loud enough to turn heads. âTry anything, these people are witnesses.'
The abalone poacher looked at me like he'd been warned that I was somewhat eccentric. He chuckled, letting the onlookers know that he was in on the joke. At the same time, he made a small placatory gesture with his hands, stroking the air between us.
âMy associates are hoping for a word.' He spoke softly, reasoning with me.
âI'll bet they are,' I said. âBut if you think I'm going anywhere without a fight, pal, you'd better think again.'
He furrowed his brow, disappointed and perplexed at the vehemence of my response.
âBefore you make a scene,' he said, âI suggest you take a look at this.'
He took something from his pocket and placed it on the table between us.
It was a business card.
The logo of the Department of Natural Resources was embossed at the top. Printed beneath it: Bob Sutherlandâ Director, Fisheries Compliance.
âBob said to remind you, if need be, that you met him a couple of months ago in San Remo. He'd like a few minutes of your time, if possible. He's a couple of minutes' walk away.'
I picked up the card and studied it. It looked real enough.
âSo you've got Sutherland's card,' I said. âDoesn't prove he sent you.'
The man shrugged, stood up and handed me a mobile phone. âAsk him yourself.'
He strolled away and stood on the footpath, a hand shading his eyes as he stared across the road towards the sea.
Two phone numbers were printed on the card, office and mobile. I punched in the office number. Sutherland's voice said he wasn't at his desk, that I could leave a voice-mail message or call him on his mobile. The number was the one on the card. I dialled it.
It was answered immediately. âSutherland.'
âMurray Whelan,' I said.
âThanks for calling, Mr Whelan. Excuse the cloak and dagger. Appreciate a few minutes, face-to-face.'
âWhat's this about?' I said.
âNutshell, hope you can clarify some matters.'
Typical skewiff priorities, I thought. Sceptical about my tale of a wanted fugitive, murder and mayhem, the cops report the shellfish-rustling aspect to the fish dogs.
âThe police have been in touch, have they?'
âNot as such,' said Sutherland after a brief pause. âFar as we know, they're not aware of our presence in the area.'
âI'm not sure I understand.'
âCoastal communities, all kinds of connections, family and whatnot. Word gets around pretty quick, fish dogs in the neighbourhood.'
That wasn't what I didn't understand. âSo how did you know where to find me?' I said.
The lank-haired man was watching me keenly, not pretending otherwise.
âStrayed onto our radar,' said Sutherland. âAnd like I said, we think you might have information of interest.'
Damn fucking right I did. This was manna from heaven. If the cops didn't believe me, perhaps the fish dogs would. I'd thrown up on his boat and been seen with Dudley Wilson, but at least Sutherland didn't think I was a fruitcake.
âI'm just up the road,' continued Sutherland. âMy man will show you where.'
âWith the department, is he?' I said.
âNot as such,' said Sutherland. âTechnically.'
âSeems familiar,' I said.
Again, a pause. Then, âEmployed by the Abalone Industry Association, the licensed divers. Liaises with us, enforcement-wise. See you soon.'
He hung up. The man in the falling-apart tee-shirt tilted his head sideways, a question. I nodded. He began to walk away.
I downed the last of my coffee and followed, weaving through the foot traffic. Twenty paces up the street, outside Tourist Information, I fell into step and gave him back his phone. âYou work for the licensed ab divers?'
He nodded, not stopping.
âLiaison with the fish dogs?'
He nodded again.
âDoing a little liaising down Cape Patterson way a few months ago, were you?'
He looked at me sideways.
âYou must be mistaking me for someone else.'
I heaved a heartfelt sigh of exhaustion. âI've been a member of the Labor Party for more than twenty-five years,' I said, âso I've been bullshitted by grand masters. And I've had a long night. I'm not in the mood to be treated like a moron.'
We were passing a surfwear shop with racks of swimsuits on the footpath. New Year Special, announced a sign on a bin of footwear just inside the front door.
âGive my regards to Bob Sutherland,' I said. âTell him maybe some other time.' I turned into the shop, rummaged in the bin and selected a pair of rubber-soled strap-overs. I paid a not very special price and tossed my perished police-issue thongs into the wastepaper basket under the counter.
My escort was waiting on the footpath. âWas it that obvious?'
âFooled me,' I said. âAt the time.'
âWhat about Dudley Wilson?'
âHe was the target, was he?' I said.
âHe's the influential one. Ear of the Premier and all that. We thought it'd be a good way to dramatise the poaching problem.'
âIt was dramatic, all right.'
âThe guy overboard? Yeah, that was a real bonus. We only planned on a chase sequence and a bit of show and tell. But Wilson ended up believing he'd compromised a real operation.'
âHow did you know he'd insist on gate-crashing the expedition?'
âCalculated gamble. And if he hadn't risen to the bait, it would've been no problem to cancel. We were only fifteen minutes ahead of you. Bob would've got on the blower, pulled the plug. Nothing ventured, nothing gained.'
âI can see Sutherland's motives,' I said. âFending off staff cuts. How about your lot? What was in it for the Abalone Industry Association?'
âThe same thing,' he said. âOur members pay up to a million dollars for a licence, then find themselves competing with poachers. Complain that the resource is under pressure, we run the risk the government will respond by lowering the quota rather than beefing up the enforcement.'
I was impressed. Behind his sturdy bosun exterior, Bob Sutherland was a crafty bugger.
âSo what's all this about a hush-hush operation?' I said. âNot another pantomime, I hope.'
The pretend poacher shook his head. He'd said too much already. âTalk to Bob.'
He moved ahead and I followed in silence, dodging pedestrians. At the corner of Erskine Falls Road, the shuttle bus arrived from the concert. A horde of tired-but-happy campers tumbled out, chattering in a range of foreign languages, several of which might have been English.
We turned up the hill, tramping along the nature strip past a shop window where a woman in a sailor's hat was arranging a display of distressed sheet-metal pelicans. After that, it was mostly houses. There were few other pedestrians and most of the road traffic was flowing the other way, down from the festival. It was a little after nine-fifteen, still almost three hours before I was due to pick up Red and Tarquin. A police divisional van came down the street. The driver was Constable Heinze from the wild goose chase for the Magna. I raised my forearm in a gesture of recognition as he cruised past.
Just before the water supply reservoir, we entered a side road and went through a gate into a compound of utilitarian, shed-type buildings surrounded by tall trees. My guide indicated a door marked âForestry Survey', then turned and walked away.
My skin was sticky with sweat and I was puffing from the hike up the hill. I was just a tiny bit short of sleep, standing alone on an apron of sun-baked concrete, not sure why I was there.
I'd jumped at the chance to talk to Sutherland, who represented another way of getting at Syce. But now I was beginning to think I had been a bit rash. What if this was a set-up?
âAppreciate your assistance, sir.'
Bob Sutherland stepped from the doorway, hand extended. He was dressed for a round of golf. Pastel yellow polo shirt, beige slacks and a wide-brimmed white hat, shark logo on the band.
He gave me the once-over, but said nothing.
âI hope this isn't another of your theatrical productions,' I said. âNo use lobbying me, you know.'
Sutherland grinned. âTold you, did he?'
âSang like Pavarotti,' I said. âCouldn't shut him up.'
Sutherland guided me to the open door. âLow on resources, high on resourcefulness, that's us,' he said. âAnd I'm not wasting your time today, sir.'
The door opened into a room with frosted windows and a row of tables running down the middle. Grey steel map cases lined two of the walls. An all-in-one televisionâvideo sat on a desk, together with some kind of radio communications equipment. Looked like the fish dogs had borrowed the place from their tree-counting colleagues. A boyish bloke was sitting on the desk, legs dangling, murmuring into a mobile phone. About thirty, he wore hiking boots with khaki socks, shorts and shirt.
Sutherland took off his Greg Norman hat and wiped his brow with the back of his wrist. âThis is Geoff Crowden,' he said. âRuns things for us in this part of the world.'
Crowden snapped the phone shut and clipped it to his belt. He pumped my hand, a real eager beaver. Cheerful as Chuckie the Woodchuck. âYou look like you could do with a cold drink.'
Not to mention a shave, a comb, a change of clothes and twelve hours' shut-eye.
He reached into a bar fridge and tossed me a tetra pack of apple juice. I half-expected him to break out the trail mix and rub two sticks together.
âSo what's this all about?' I said, lowering myself into a chair at the table.
Sutherland was propped on the edge of one of the map cases, hat in hand.
Crowden climbed back onto the desk and picked up a clipboard. He leaned forward, bare elbows on his bony knees. When he spoke, his tone was formal, interrogatory. âYou drive a dark green Mitsubishi Magna sedan?' He checked the clipboard and recited the registration number.
âThat's correct.'
âYour vehicle was observed in a remote location in the state forest last night.'
I felt a surge of elation. âBy who?'
âOfficers of this department.' He turned the clipboard towards me, displaying a list of rego numbers, makes, models and times. âWe have the area under surveillance.'
âExcellent,' I said. âThat's great news.'
Crowden and Sutherland exchanged perplexed glances.
âWe'd like to know why you were there,' said Crowden. âAnd if you encountered any other vehicles or individuals.'
I wanted to leap to my feet and cheer.
âBefore I answer,' I said, âcan you tell me the target of your surveillance?'
Crowden looked at Sutherland.
Sutherland looked at his hat.
âThese enquiries relate to an ongoing investigation into a poaching and distribution ring,' said Crowden. âYou'll appreciate we can't say more than that.'
âThis ring,' I said. âDoes it include Tony Melina and Jake Martyn?'
Sutherland's hat was suddenly less interesting. His head came up sharply. âYou know these individuals? You saw them last night?'