Authors: Alan Carter
âAre you?'
âI'm only nineteen. Bit early to write me off, don't you think?'
Cato thought about his own parents and their disapproval of his career choice when the expectation was medicine or law: the lawyer kind of law, not cop. âFair enough. How about your mum?'
A smile and a filling of the eyes. âWe were really close. She understood me, defended me whenever Dad was having a go. Didn't judge. She was ⦠warm.' The tears rolled down his face.
Cato nodded. âSo why did you send her an email last Friday calling her a “fucking bitch”?'
En route to the post-mortem, Cato picked up a chicken roll and a Mars bar. He had just polished off the former and was about to unwrap the latter when his mobile went. He slotted it into the hands-free cradle.
âLara. Hi.'
If she was still feeling tetchy about Hutchens putting up the barricades, her voice didn't show it. âThirty hours and counting. How's the investigation going?' She made the word âinvestigation' sound like some hobby of Cato's.
âFantastic.'
âGreat. Had the PM yet?'
âHeading there now.'
âNeed company? Somebody to hold your hand in case you spew?'
âNo, I'm good, thanks.'
âCool, no sweat, we'll take a look at the professor's report when it's ready.'
âLook, I have no issue with you guys coming in as soon as you like.' That glance of Henry Hurley's, the personal interest angle of attack they would take. Once Cato brought up the abusive email from son to mother it had gone âNo Comment' after that. At the end of the session Hurley had a âgloves are off' demeanour about him as he guided his apparently distressed client out of the interview room. Some objective, expert, arms-length overseeing from Major Crime was probably a good idea and sooner rather than later. âBut you know the boss as well as I do.'
Cato had his own misgivings about Hutchens being distracted
by the hostel inquiry right at the time he needed to be focused on a major murder investigation. Headline Hannah from Police Media was doing a fair job of feeding the ravenous press pack but already the seasoned hacks were wondering aloud why their favourite Major Crime hotshots weren't in on it yet. Hutchens couldn't have it both ways. If he was out of the game then some other big boys, or girls, needed to be in.
Lara stayed as bright and bouncy as Tigger. âSure, mate. My boss is pretty relaxed for the moment. She knows DI Hutchens has a lot on his plate with the Inquiry. Doesn't want to add to the poor bloke's burden.' Code for kick him while he's down. âIn the end we're all on the same team, good versus evil.'
Somehow she made it sound like a threat. âRight,' said Cato.
âMeantime you might want to take a look at some of Francis Tan's business deals. He's been keeping some interesting company.'
âReally?'
âI'll send you an email. Regards to the professor.'
Cato pulled into the hospital car park. It reminded him he had a bone to pick with the parking ranger. He gobbled down his Mars bar and headed for the mortuary.
Professor Mackenzie, a petite Glaswegian with rosy cheeks and an accent right out of
Braveheart,
pointed Cato to a bulky A4 envelope on a nearby desk as she finished zipping young Joshua Tan back into his body bag.
âA hard copy of the reports on the mum and dad plus photos, toxicology, et cetera: the rest to follow later today by email. Time of death estimated at somewhere between ten p.m. and about two a.m. If I can narrow it down any further from subsequent tests, I'll let you know. Indications are that Mrs Tan had sex that day but so far nothing suggesting any of it was improper. In summary it looks like they both died from being hit with that spanner you found in the wheelie bin; the blood traces, indentations and wounds correspond.' She slid Joshua Tan back into his drawer. âSame with the young lad. Mother and son had defence injuries. Particular ferocity applied to
the mother, especially the face. Obliterated. Mr Tan didn't even get to wake up, luckiest of the lot I suppose.'
Cato found himself thinking about Genevieve Tan, about the birthmark on her hip, about college days and happier times. About how infatuated he had been with her. He also thought about the savagery applied to her and about the anger in Matthew Tan's email. Matthew, bouncing a solid steel ball off baby Jake's head and never saying sorry.
âWhat about the daughter, Emily?'
âNext cab off the rank.'
The professor opened a body drawer and got to work. Cato retired to the gallery and checked phone messages while the preliminaries were done. The Y-incision, the snapping of ribs, the cranial saw, the peeling and cutting and weighing were all things he was happy not to witness.
âThis might be of interest to you, Philip.'
Cato looked up from the square metre of floor tiling he'd been examining for the last ten minutes. âYes?'
âThe young lady was pregnant. I'd estimate two months.'
âNo confession yet, then?' Hutchens blew on his coffee and munched absent-mindedly on a king-sized Anzac dotted with Smarties.
âNot as such.' They were in a city-centre Dome: kids with silly hats serving so-so coffee. Outside in gloomy bus shelters, commuters braced against the wind tunnel of St Georges Terrace. Cato had left his car near a station on the Fremantle line rather than try to park in the city; life was too short and pay too meagre. Cato filled his boss in on the day's developments, starting with the doorknock.
âSo his Beemer's still parked there within the murder timeframe?'
âYep,' said Cato.
âAnd he's come up with a story and you're checking it.'
âYep.'
âWhat's a nineteen year old layabout doing with a car like that?'
âGood question. Probably paid for by the parents. We need to look at the money thing: it's come up in emails between Matthew and his mum, and Major Crime think Francis is a bit iffy in his business dealings.'
âStill sniffing around are they? They should mind their own fucking business. Go and buy a nice set of matching ties or something.' A bite of the bikkie.
âIt makes sense. You're otherwise engaged, they've got the experience. I haven't.'
âBullshit. You know your stuff. You've taken a few scalps. You might take a while, go round the houses, sniff the daisies, but you get there.'
Cato realised there was probably a compliment in there somewhere if he went looking.
Hutchens picked a blue Smartie off his Anzac and put it to one side. âNeighbours heard nothing?'
âWhat neighbours? You've seen it. Most of that part of the suburb is still a building site. The lot next door on one side is only half-built, across the road it's just sand, and the other neighbour is semi-retired and didn't have his hearing aid in. His wife was off visiting the rellies down south.'
âPort Coogee.' Hutchens snorted. âWhy are the Tans living there anyway?'
âThey like it?'
âBut I thought they were filthy rich. Why take up residence in Legoland?'
Cato hadn't got around to thinking about that but, on reflection, Hutchens had a point. The suburb aspired to be exclusive and, in terms of value for money, it was certainly expensive: a cramped collection of off-the-peg McMansions. Okay, if you liked that sort of thing, but compared to the Tans' previous residences this was indeed, well, not Bicton.
âI grew up down that way,' Hutchens said. âUsed to fish and swim along that beach before it became private property. It was fine as long as you stayed away from the PCBs they dumped from the power station.' Hutchens fiddled with his teaspoon. âUp and down the coast, everywhere you look it's Samesville. They should ban those fucking white-shoe tossers from building those crappy plastic shitholes.'
Cato suspected an element of anger displacement. âSo how's the Inquiry going?'
âShit. There's something brewing, some trap they're getting ready.'
âWhen are you up?'
âTomorrow or the day after; they're behind schedule. Who knows?'
Cato studied his boss. He seemed taut, on the verge of snapping. Cato almost felt sorry for him. He finished off his report with the preliminaries from the post-mortem confirming the ferocity of the attack on the mum, Matthew's email, and Emily being pregnant.
âThoughts?' said Hutchens.
âWe'll take a look at Emily's boyfriend, see if he knew she was expecting, and how he felt about it. The violence on Genevieve Tan still makes me think it's Matthew.'
âSure, he definitely warrants a look, but chucking an email tantie with your mum is a big step from slaughtering your family.' Hutchens finished his coffee. âTell me where you fit into all this.'
Cato did.
Hutchens yawned and checked the time on his mobile. âSo you and her had a thing going at uni but she ended up with your best mate?'
The man had a way with words. âYes,' said Cato.
âAnd you reckon Matt's a little psycho because at the age of six he chucked a bocce ball at your baby boy and didn't say sorry?'
âYes.'
Hutchens frowned, popped that last blue Smartie in his mouth. âYou really need to build a bridge, mate.'
Cato collected his car at Karrakatta station. His mobile went off just as he was coughing the Volvo into action.
âClock's ticking,' said Lara Sumich. âChecked your emails recently?'
âI'm trying to maintain a healthy work-life balance. Thought I'd do it back at the office.'
âWe'll be moving in first thing tomorrow.'
âSays who?'
âMy boss.'
âHas she talked to my boss about this?'
âDoesn't need to. She's bigger than him. But yes, she has anyway.'
âWhat'd he say?'
âFuck this, that and the other. My boss reckons he needs a new dictionary.'
âSo what's the point of this call?'
âCourtesy. I sent through some info about Tan's business dealings that has come to the attention of the ACC.' Australian Crime
Commission. âOne associate in particular is booked on a flight out of Perth tonight that will have him in Shanghai by morning.'
âShanghai?'
âIt's in China. Thought you'd know that.'
âThat expensive education of yours wasn't wasted. What about him?'
âHe's a really bad guy and we need to stop him getting on that flight before we've had a word.'
âDo we have just cause?'
âMurder good enough for you?'