Authors: Anita Bell
âBoarder patrols are only away two or three days, Colonel. How long ago did you notify 2Cavalry?'
Pike looked briefly at the floor, realising only now how many days had slipped by while he'd been caught up supervising interviews with the other witnesses. âEight days, sir. But the unit he was with left three days before that.'
Broxton's face set like a grenade timer.
âActually, General,' Allen interrupted to disarm him, âI sent a message to 6Battalion this afternoon to request Lance Corporal Locklin be transferred back here as a medical emergency.'
âMedical emergency? Why, if he'd been fit enough to return to duties?'
Allen shook his head. âYou know me, Pete, overcautious. It looks like he hasn't had his stitches removed yet. Apparently, he hasn't reported to the field medics for so much as a paracetamol, let alone a follow-up antibiotic. If he's picked up an infection out there in the fields, he could be a very sick boy by now â¦'
âYou had your own suspicions about him,' Broxton added, reading his friend's face. âAdmit it.'
âYes, Pete,' Allen said without apology. âI suppose I did.'
âVery well. Have they sent notification that he's on the way?'
âNot yet, no. They've confirmed they'll take care of it, but so far there's been no verification.'
âI don't like the sound of this,' Chang said. âWe interviewed Locklin the day after he was patched up. That must have been just prior to his release, as it turns out.'
Allen nodded. âThe leg wound wasn't too bad. We kept him here overnight for observation for his concussion, any sign of delayed shock, that sort of thing, but he was fine aside from the fact that he was still groggy on a few things about the extraction. He seemed keen enough to help out if he remembered though, and he was itching to get back to active duty, so we just put him on the next flight headed west to Maliana.'
âNo sign of the shakes, psychological trauma or shock?'
âSure, but just the usual. He was a bit queezy, staggering off the chopper when he first got here,' Allen said. âBut I wouldn't hold that against him. I've seen marine vets lose their stomachs completely after a wet mission. It's a fairly standard response to being released suddenly from stress.'
âThat's exactly my point,' Chang said, knowing that a wet mission was one in which blood was spilled, and if you were lucky, it wasn't your blood. âTo survive, your body draws on every reserve it has to keep you alert and alive. It's not until you know for certain that you're safe that you let go. But Corporal Locklin felt the need to let go like that, even though he was the least wounded in his unit. I'm thinking he went through a bit more stress under fire than the others maybe?'
âYou could be right,' Pike said.
âThen you know why I'm worried,' Chang answered. âThe boy could be a walking time bomb. If he's disappeared there's no telling when, or how, he could go off.'
âThat's taking it a bit far, isn't it?' asked Allen. âThey were all in shock to varying degrees. Why single him out on that?'
Pike scratched his cheek. âHe seemed cool enough when we interviewed him, but if I remember right, this was his first close encounter with hostiles. He should have been anything but cool.'
âRight,' Chang said. âWe should expect some delayed reaction from all of them. But the problem could go deeper for our mystery man. You've read the reports on the village clean-up. If Corporal Locklin's our boy, he's been baptised by blood as well as fire. Eleven kills. At least one of them the hard way.'
By hand, Broxton realised. That's all he needed. A psychologically unstable soldier on the loose, who could jeopardise the political stability of the entire region, not to mention his country's continued presence in East Timor.
âLook I'm not saying this boy is the next Jack the Ripper,' Chang said, reading the general's expression. âI'll admit it looks like the others could be keeping quiet out of fear of him. But his record is clean. He works well in a team and he's shown enough leadership potential to make it a long way up the ladder in future, but he's still basically the same loner who enlisted with us nearly two years ago.'
âThere's no way an experience like that wouldn't affect
anyone
to some degree,' Allen agreed. âWithout counselling, he could be carrying their coffins around in his head for some time.'
Broxton's jaw tightened to the point of twitching.
âGentlemen,' he said gravely. âWe need to find this boy. Do whatever it takes, but do it quietly.'
Locklin handed the bottom of the rope ladder to his cousin.
âAfter you, Sport,' he said, shining the light up towards the others.
Helen leaned out further over the pit, her face illuminated in the beam. âYou mean it was full last time you were down there?' she called. âWhat with?'
Locklin licked his finger and wiped a wet line up Scotty's leg as he climbed the ladder. âSnakes,' he hissed, making his cousin jump.
âGet out!' Scott yelped. âI nearly fell on you!'
âAs if I'd feel it, paperweight. Tell Gran you need more red meat in your diet.'
âYes, Mummy,' Scott whinged and Helen clicked her fingers beside his ears as he came up.
âManners, dumpling,' she said. âIt's after your bedtime.'
Scott rolled his eyes. âI'm fifteen years old! Do I look like a dumpling?'
âCrates,' Locklin said, ignoring Scott as he followed him out. âBut not full. There was only one left by the time I got down here. That's where I got the little crystal coffin from. The other crates were bigger and had already been loaded.'
âOn what?' Scott said.
âA plane. They had a Cessna sea-plane out there on the water.'
âA sea-plane? Wow!' Scott said.
âHow'd they get crates down that rope ladder in the first place?' Helen asked. âI'll bet that was a good trick.'
Locklin looked up at the central ceiling beam and their eyes followed his to the rope pulley, which hung directly over the trapdoor.
âSo what was in the other crates?' asked Connolly. âMore coffins?'
âMaybe,' Locklin said. âBut they were different sizes, some of them so big it would have been a tight squeeze getting them down there, even with the pulley. Tell me what you think of this, Helen,' he said, unrolling the velvet pouch from his empty cigarette packet and revealing the lone earring of the angel with its Bible.
âNow give me that one again,' he said, pointing to his sister's ear.
She sighed. She'd been hoping to keep it. âIsn't it cute?' she said, handing the earring to her brother. âIt's sucking on its little cross.'
Locklin held them both up for the group to compare and then laid them gently on the satin bedding inside the coffin.
âLike putting little children to sleep,' Helen said with one hand on her belly. âHang on. I've got my digital camera in the car. I'll take a few snaps and see if I can find out who makes this kind of stuff.'
âA set,' said Connolly as Helen disappeared.
âA set with something missing,' said Locklin.
âYeah of course!'
âTest time then, Sport. What's missing?'
âI don't know. A necklace?'
âTen points. You win a cookie. Someone got to this box before me and removed the necklace. What's got me really stumped is how they managed to do it from Sydney.'
âSydney?' Helen asked returning. âNow you've stumped me.'
âSorry, sis,' Locklin said, rolling both earrings back into their velvet pouch. âI meant to ask you before. Can you do an internet search for me on the keywords Fletcher Corporation and Eric Maitland?' He pushed the velvet pouch back inside the cigarette packet, and slipped the pack into his chest pocket, where it almost felt like it belonged now.
âYes okay,' Helen said. âAny other specifiers?'
âTry Nick, Nick Fletcher, Nikki, Nikki Fletcher and Sydney, that's the place name not a person's name.'
âNick and Nikki are only nicknames,' Father Connolly pointed out. âYou might have better luck, if you search the proper Christian names as well. Try Nicholas and Nicole,' he suggested.
âYeah, I'll try Nicola too,' she said. âAre you going to hand that over to the police?' she added, pointing to the coffin.
âNot yet,' Locklin said. âI don't trust police. It might fall into the wrong hands.'
Scott laughed. âIf you've already stolen it,' he said, âthen yours are the wrong hands!'
âDon't you have school tomorrow?' Helen said. âIt must be past your bedtime.' She ushered him out while Locklin returned the lantern and table to their original position, and adjusted the padlock on the outer door so it appeared as if it had never been opened.
âYou've had your fun now,' Locklin warned Scott a few minutes later.
âOh no!' he cried, hearing the finality in Locklin's voice. âI want to keep helping!'
âYou will in a way,' Locklin said, seriously. âYou can be my eyes and ears in Lowood.'
âBut I hardly talk to anyone!'
âTrue, but you work with Janet Slaney,' he said. âAnd she does.'
Locklin opened the front passenger door of his sister's station wagon and helped her in while Connolly slid behind the steering wheel on the other side.
Scotty wasn't sure if he should smile or not as he fastened his seatbelt in the back seat. He'd finally discovered a use for Janet Slaney, but it was going to cost him â probably his sanity.
Helen blew a kiss to Locklin, reciting the new keywords he wanted her to research as soon as possible.
âThanks, Hel,' he said. âAnything to help me figure out how the necklace was swiped from the crate before it got here, would be great.'
âYou know, Jays,' she said, âif there really was a necklace, I thought you'd be more worried about who swiped it rather than how they managed it.'
Locklin shook his head, swinging up onto Jack's back for the lonely gallop home. âNo,' he said. âI already know who.'
âOh, go to
sleep
,' Meggie Slaney begged her sister, rolling over. âIt's like, after midnight, babe.'
âWhat are you, solar powered?' Janet said. âAren't you the least bit excited? Am I the only one who's looking out for you? Helloooo.' Janet clapped her hands towards the sensor light on the chest of drawers between their beds and the lamp kissed aside the darkness, filling the converted verandah bedroom with a warm purple glow. âThis is exactly what happened last time,' she said. âForget those magazines you read, Meggie. Trying to manipulate him didn't work. You gotta get out there, girl. Get in his face or he'll think you really did want to dump him. And you didn't. I know you didn't. You can't hide that from your baby sister. You can't. Uh-uh.'
Meggie pulled her purple bed sheet over her head, not wanting to be reminded of the biggest mistake of her life. âOh like, I've got a chance of getting him back now,' she said tiredly. âA plain Jane like me.'
âHey, if you don't have a chance, what hope have I got? Besides, look at Sarah Ferguson. Everyone called her a plane Jane but she got to be a duchess. And Bette Midler, everyone says she's divine! Mind you, Fergie got divorced. But that wasn't her fault. It was the Queen's, wasn't it? I mean, the royal family never really wanted her. And you don't have a Queen to worry about. Nobody's going to stand up and say,
you can't be Mrs Jayson MacLeod
, now are they? Well? Are they?'
âStuart MacLeod did.'
âWhat do you mean? Oh, the thing about Jayson having to use his mum's maiden name,' she said, answering her own question. âWell, Stuart MacLeod is dead now. Jayson Locklin can be Jayson MacLeod again if he wants to.' Her lips puckered and then frowned. âI reckon his dad had a hide signing him up in the army like that anyway, practically calling him a girl and all. Oh yeah, like Jayson is pumped on oestrogen â
not
. Like as if “Locklin” is an Aboriginally significant name or something. It's German, isn't it? Or Welsh? I mean, his mum wasn't even a quarter Aboriginal. I heard she didn't even like witchetty grubs. So how is this hoo-ha over what name he goes by significant? Would someone please explain this to me?'
Janet scratched her chin and the movement reminded her to take her seven gold bracelets off for the night. âI mean, he was born MacLeod, wasn't he?' she went on. âWith his dad gone, who's going to make him feel guilty about that kind of archaic, cross-cultural tradition crap? Earning the right to be called a man,' she hissed. âWho ever heard of such a thing in this day and age? Besides,' she added. âMeggie MacLeod sounds heaps better than Meggie Locklin, don't you reckon?'
Meggie sighed under her bedcovers, realising that it was actually a relief sometimes to have a sister who could put words to her thoughts so she didn't have to. Somehow, it made things easier to hear her problems on someone else's lips.
âCome on, Meggie,' Janet insisted. âYou gotta do something! Walk up to him and kiss him, or something!'
Meggie pulled her pillow over her face.
âYou think he came back for his dad's funeral?' Janet persisted. âI didn't see him there, did you? Maybe he was late. You know what the army's like. I'll bet they stuck him on the wrong jet or something. Oh no, jets are air force. Well, tank maybe. Hey, do you think he's resigned?'
âI don't know,' Meggie said, her voice muffled now under her pillow. âHe has to finish his tour of duty first, I think. Can we hang this up for the night,
please
?'
âYeah, but he only joined cause his dad made him,' Janet said, scrunching her pillow up against her belly like a giant stress ball. âIf he didn't resign then he must be on leave, emergency leave or something 'cause his dad died. That's even worse. It means he has to go back. Come on, Meggie!' she insisted.
âYou gotta do something soon, or you'll lose him forever! Hey, I know,' she added, throwing the pillow into her sister's back. âHow about tomorrow night at the carnival? Yeah, you could kiss him. That would be sooo romantic,' she added, yawning. âThe carnival would be great.'
Meggie's eyes opened, but it wasn't because of the lump in her back. It was the one in her throat. âI dumped him at the carnival last year,' she said, more to herself than to her sister. It does seem kinda right to make up with him at this one.' She thought about that for a long time, seeing herself walk up, to him a hundred different ways. âHow do you reckon I should get him to apologise,' she said, awake now and fixing up her pillow, âYou know, for not trying harder to get me back?'
Meggie threw Janet's pillow back, but Janet didn't flinch.
âJanie?'
âThere was no answer. Her sister had flaked.
Meggie slumped back against her pillow with her hands behind her head. The article she'd read on âdumping your man to catch him forever' had promised he'd crawl back to her if she followed the right steps. There was also a quiz at the end that offered three ways to cope if it didn't work. One was to scream and shout and make his life a living Hell. One was to crawl into a dark corner and pretend he never existed, and the other was to â¦
She couldn't remember.
She threw back her bed covers and started searching through clothes and shoes and magazines that were jumbled in the bottom of her wardrobe. She had to find that article. She had planning to do, and only one day in which to do it.
Jack trotted out of the lake after midnight with four filthy white socks. The shoe polish had churned to a gluey paste during the swim and snared practically every bug that passed them in the water. The blaze on his face had fared nearly as badly and greasy globules ran like charcoal effluent down his long broad nose. Droplets teased the stallion's nostrils, and the big horse tossed his head, snorting to shake them off.
Locklin patted Jack's neck and clicked him back to a gallop when the earth firmed beneath them.
He spent the last few minutes of their ride trying to think of something other than shoe polish that wouldn't transform the stallion's white markings permanently or scald the soft pink skin underneath them, arid he was still trying to come up with an alternative as the big horse rounded the cattle yards on the near side of the Freeman stables.
One word from Locklin after the long ride and the animal pulled up kindly under the bit and walked the last few paces to the rails, where Locklin swung his leg over and slid quietly to the ground. He landed facing the homestead and saw something else that he'd been waiting for â a silver Landcruiser.