Authors: J. M. Green
Tags: #FIC050000, #FIC031010, #FIC000000, #FIC062000, #FIC022000
I hung up, and opened my laptop and booked a seat on the next morning's red-eye special to Perth. Then I made a meal sourced from tins â four-bean mix, corn, tuna â and tossed it together with a dash from a bottle of ready-made French dressing. I ate standing up, and washed it down with a glass of Italian sparkling mineral water I'd just purchased in a moment of madness.
Clacker had a point about Tania. It seemed unlikely that Gaetano, an ice-selling kingpin, would dabble in kidnapping off his own bat. He had to be working with someone. Mr Funsail. But Maurangi was a thug, not a criminal mastermind. No way was he Funsail. How to find out? Who knew Gaetano intimately and was privy to his business affairs?
Price. Finchley Price. High-powered lawyer to the underworld. I googled his name and found his chambers on William Street. It was barrister central, handy to every type of court and half the law firms in the city. I rang the number and spoke to a secretary. âI would like an appointment to see Finchley Price.'
âI'm afraid Mr Price is fully booked until October.'
âIt concerns his client Mr Cesarelli.'
âAnd you are?'
The bottle of mineral water was near to hand. âGalvanina Monte, a friend of Gaetano, a very
close
friend, if you take my meaning â and tell Mr Price that Gaetano gave me something to give to him.'
âJust a minute.'
I waited, but not for long.
âMr Price will see you in his chambers at three this afternoon.'
Galvanina, as I was now, called for the exotic â and that was exactly what I wasn't. I improvised with my best jeans, my sluttiest low-cut top, and a black blazer I'd bought years ago for a job interview but which I'd only worn to a funeral. I applied eyeliner and dark red lipstick. I tipped my head down and teased the underneath hair. Then I studied the results in the mirror: my face was now framed with big Italianate hair, foofed up yet still sleek after yesterday's cut. The overall effect was of a high-class, if mature, vamp. I was ready, but there was one more thing; if it all went to hell, I needed backup. I made a quick call to Raewyn Ross and fed her some crap about impressing the boys. She was more than willing.
I drew breath to keep the nausea from taking over. Thinking about my dad, for some inexplicable reason, I steadied myself against the wall. I'd done it â I killed his dog. Levelled the barrel and pulled the trigger. It was perverse of him to make me do it. I couldn't speak to him for three weeks. And then his Cessna stalled and fell out of the sky.
And I was thinking about Brophy; I knew the situation was settled. Despite his brainless letter, it was over. A bit sooner than even I had expected. I put on my scarf and smelled Brophy. The situation was not settled, not yet. It was decidedly unsettled. The terrible burning in my chest was proof of that.
30
LESS THAN
an hour later, I was at the south-western end of the Melbourne CBD standing in front of the lockers at Southern Cross Station. I chose a locker and put the key in a yellow envelope I'd just bought at a newsagent along with a copy of the
Herald Sun
. From there, I walked north up Spencer Street. It was exactly 3 o'clock when I reached Price's chambers.
The brass name plate said
Mason Dickson Chambers
. Here they gathered â a billable hour of barristers, a picnic of lawyers, a murder of crows. And sure enough, a bewigged gentleman barged past me, followed by a woman in a dark suit pulling a wheeled suitcase. I entered, and after a bit of hunting, found Price's rooms. I let myself into the waiting room. It was empty; no associate to greet me. I sat on the edge of the chair and put the newspaper and the yellow envelope on my lap. From my handbag resting primly on my knees, I withdrew a tissue and proceeded to rub my nose and dab at my eyes.
Price appeared, silent as death, tall as Lurch â and bowed his head. âMiss Monte, if you please,' he said, pointing to his office. The wood-panelling was dark, the rug Persian, the bookshelves vast, and the law reports many.
âMake yourself comfortable.'
I did; the armchair was yielding yet firm.
He sat behind his desk, put his elbows on the blotter, and touched his fingers together. It struck me as not unusual that he would use a blotter. There was a phone and a photo frame turned away from visitors, but no computer. Perhaps he used a tablet, or had a laptop stashed in a purpose-built drawer under the desk. His eyebrows were raised in mild interest. âHow may I be of assistance, Miss Monte?'
âGaetano and I, we had a special relationship.'
The eyebrows came down. âSpecial in what sense?'
âPrivate.'
âQuite,' he said. âHe certainly never mentioned you to me.'
âWell, why would he? You're his lawyer, not his priest.'
That sent the eyebrows up a good five centimetres.
âYou see, Gaetano had needs.
Unusual
needs. That only I could satisfy. I think it was me being from an Italian background.'
âYou don't look Italian,' Price said dryly.
âMy mother was Irish. From County Clannad.'
He frowned. âIs that a county?'
âAs I was saying, sometimes he needed me to be his mother, sometimes a member of religious order specialising in harsh discipline, and sometimes,' I lowered my voice, âa podiatrist.'
âI'm sorry, I don't quite â'
âHis feet, Mr Price. I was required to â'
âI know what a podiatrist is.'
ââ to touch them, do
things
on them, to put them â'
âPlease, get to the point.'
âWell, it was strictly business at first, but after a few months we became close. Inseparable. It's only natural if you've done particular
activities
with a person. You know what I'm saying? We've been
exposed
to each other, vulnerable. And â'
âMiss Monte, I'm sure â'
âCall me Galvanina.'
âYes, fine.' He cleared his throat. âBut my time is limited. And expensive. My associate said you had something for me, from Mr Cesarelli.'
âGaetano had evidence.'
I held up the yellow envelope, waved it, and his eyes followed like a six-week-old kitten.
âWhat you want to see, it's not actually
in
here. There's no money, either, because I've looked.'
Appalled, the corners of his mouth came down. âIndeed.'
âHey, don't judge me. I've got bills to pay like everyone else. Seems to me that everyone's got their spot at the trough â politicians, union bosses. Why's it so bad if a working girl gets her turn?'
Price worked his jaw around, the long face stretched to one side and then the other. I could tell he was nearing the limit of his patience. âMiss ⦠I mean, Galvanina, what do you have in the envelope?'
I smiled. âThe thing is. He didn't exactly say who to give it to. He only said to give it to someone he trusted.'
Price let out an incredulous snort. âAre you questioning my integrity?'
âSomeone he
trusted
murdered him in cold blood, so â¦' I let that insinuation hang in the cool office air.
His inhale flared his great nostrils, but his eyes never strayed from the envelope. âAnd how do you propose to assess my trustworthiness?'
Cometh the hour, cometh the pretend prostitute. I pulled the newspaper from my bag and threw it down on his desk, with the photo of Tania face up. âNina Brodtmann.'
âWhat about her?'
âIf you can tell me all about Gaetano's involvement with this woman
then
I will know he confided in you. That you are a man he trusted.'
I thought I saw Price's version of a smile. It was pretty sexy actually. And then the phone on his desk rang. âYes,' he spoke into the receiver. âYes, that will be fine. Thank you.' He hung up and leaned back in his chair, hands behind his head.
A bead of sweat worked its way down my back. I sensed danger. âReason being, I need to know if she was a rival. I mean, it's bad enough to lose him, but to discover he was cheating on me with a skinny blonde bitch.'
Price rose and went to open an oak cabinet, where a whisky bottle and glasses waited on a silver tray. He held up the bottle.
âIt's a bit early for me, thank you.'
He seemed surprised. He shrugged and poured a couple of fingers into a heavy glass.
âIf that's lead crystal, you're gonna get a mushy brain.'
He let out a hoot and drained half the glass. âNina Brodtmann had no intrinsic interest for Mr Cesarelli.'
âIntrinsic? What the hell does that mean?'
âHe didn't fancy her. Is that simple enough for you?'
âHell no. Why did he lock her up if he didn't fancy her?'
Price sipped his drink, closed his eyes, allowing the whisky to linger in his mouth. âOh,' he said airily, âhe was helping out a friend.'
âWho?'
He smiled, amused. âI think that is enough, don't you?'
âEnough? Um. Sure.' I shifted in the leather, the vibe of menace from him was disturbing. I had been slow to understand that Finchley Price was not the man I had imagined, the good and sober citizen. There was a hint of the sadistic in his cold stare. âGood enough for me.' I stood and dropped the envelope on the desk. âHere you go.'
He looked at it with disinterest. Why the change in attitude, I wondered.
âThere's a key in there to a locker at Southern Cross Station,' I said. âI haven't opened it so don't ask me what's in there.'
âSit down, Galvanina.'
âNo thanks, I'm late as it is. I'm meeting someone. If I don't show up, they'll worry.'
The door opened and in came a Maori man in shorts and thongs. He was not wearing his customary yellow hoodie but rather a black T-shirt, allowing us full view of his massive biceps and the sleeve tattoos that came down to his wrists. His long hair was tied with a sloppy elastic band.
I sat down as cold fear washed over me. Maurangi was a murderer. Price was in this up to his square jaw. Perhaps
he
was Funsail. Either way, I was going to die. Today, probably.
âSorry I'm late, bro. Traffic, ay.' Maurangi said and flopped down in the other visitor's chair.
âThis fellow is my ⦠colleague. He will go with you to the locker.'
I assumed that Maurangi didn't know the police were looking for him â otherwise he would not risk being seen; this part of town was crawling with cops. One cop in particular I hoped was crawling outside, and knowing that was a small advantage to me. His advantage was that he was a cold-blooded killer who seemed not to care or think too much.
âYour colleague's a big boy, he can go by himself,' I said.
Maurangi nodded, being of the same opinion.
âHe might get lost,' Price said coldly.
âI told you, I'm late for a client.'
âI doubt that very much, Galvanina.'
âThis client is a stickler for punctuality.'
He bared his perfect teeth. âThat's a big word for a woman in your line of work.'
âSome women in my line of work have PhDs, you arrogant prick.'
âTitch, take Miss Monte to the station and get her to open the locker.' Price handed him the envelope. âDepending on what you find, you'll know what to do.'
Maurangi shrugged. All he knew was busting heads. He came to me, side-on, and slid two hands under my armpits. It was unnecessary â I was up out of the chair and standing on my tiptoes.
31
âTHOSE ALL BLACKS,'
I said. âThey're pretty good at rugby.'
âBest fucking team in the world,' Maurangi said. At least, I think that's what he said. It sounded like
bustfeckintumuntheweerld
.
I was hoping like hell that Ross was waiting for me outside. I picked up my handbag and pretended to check its contents. âYou know what I like? Sauvignon Blanc. New Zealand makes the best, don't you reckon?'
Maurangi shrugged, though he seemed quietly pleased. âDrink beer.'
âEnough!' Price said. âTake this sickening conversation outside.'
Once in the hall, all I had to do was scream, half the Victorian Bar was within earshot, plus sundry tipstaffs, bailiffs, sheriffs, magistrates, and justices, not to mention sworn officers of the law. On the other hand, if I did make a fuss I'd have a lot of explaining to do. Instead, I scurried along beside Maurangi, listening to my heart pound. We went down some stairs at the back of the building and into a covered back lot, where a couple of dark, late-modelled European cars were parked. He led me to a SUV, the one I'd seen at the Diggers Rest house. The one the cops were looking for. If they pulled us over, there'd be a shootout. Maurangi struck me as the type to think it would be cool to die in a hail of bullets. If they didn't pull us over, and he found the locker at the station empty, I'd be in a ditch by evening. âWhy don't we walk?' I said. âIt's quicker. Besides you'll never get a park down there.'