She stroked my hair. âIt's only been a day,' she repeated.
âIf it was someone, I could've â ' âHenry.'
I looked at her. âJanice has helped me a hundred times,' I said. âAnd maybe, this one time, she needed me.' Then I was off again, bawling like a baby. Rosa put her other arm over my head so no one could see me.
Eventually we walked to the cold stores. They could be there, I suggested. No one would've thought of that. And Rosa just walked beside me, thinking but not saying, stopping at the gatehouse to see Con. âWe're going to check the cold stores,' she said to him.
Con looked up from a timetable. âHenry,' he said, âI've checked it again. If they'd caught the 5.10 from Semaphore, they would've changed trains at Woodville.'
Something else to tell your dad, he explained. Although later, when I did tell Dad and Bert, they both dismissed it.
They weren't at the cold stores, so we checked the Port Road netball courts, the Cedar Street reserve and the Croydon and West Croydon station underpasses. Then we checked the Elizabeth Street shops (all except Doctor Gunn's). Joe Skurray told me to keep my chin up and Ted Bilston told me to tell Liz that everyone was keeping their eyes open. Mr Eckert pretended not to have heard but gave me a free sherbet anyway and John Cox the bootmaker gave me a holy card of St Bartholomew. As we walked home, Rosa said, âThis happened in the twenties, in a village near ours.'
âWhat happened?'
âIt was a little place, hidden in a valley, with five or six kids. One day the parents went to pick up their children and they were gone. Turns out the teacher wasn't a teacher. But these things happen. Afterwards everyone says, “We should've done this or that”.' She shrugged. âThomas Street is a village,' she explained, indicating how small it was with the space between her thumb and forefinger. âAnd the people you meet are good. But not everywhere is Thomas Street, and not everyone is Mister Page.'
âWhat happened to the children?' I asked.
âNever seen again. There were stories: a teenager in Norway, a few kids moving in next door to someone, a child's body found under the floorboards of a home . . . stories . . . lies . . . or people just wanting an answer.'
âWhat do you think happened to them?' I asked.
âAll you can hope is . . .' She stopped, but I could finish her sentence.
Soon we were standing in front of the Rileys' house, and Rosa turned to head home. âTell Liz I'll bring some stew over,' she said, crossing the road. âNobody likes curry.'
I didn't want to go into 7A. It looked and felt like an oven that had been left open, the fan still running. I didn't want to go home either, that was just an empty box echoing with Ernie Sigley, smelling of Brasso and populated with tight-suited American detectives catching their man in forty-eight minutes. So I went to my hutch. I sat on my Michelin tyres and fetched my diary from the hole in the wall. Then I stopped, thinking, imagining, and eventually wrote:
The boy was kept in a box in a cupboard in a caravan. He'd
been there since he was three. His skin was white because it
never saw light. He was covered in cigaret burns. Every day
his stepfather would open his box and put in some food. His
legs were crooked from being pushed up in front of him. Even
if he did get out he wouldn't be able to walk. One leg had
broken and healed itself wrong. It was painfull. He went to the
toilet in a bottle, and the other he did in a newspaper. But he
was alive, sort of. He breathed, and knew when it was hot or
cold, and heard noises. He smelled food cooking and felt the
rumble of cars from the carpark. Sounds. TV. He could laugh
at Jerry Lewis, imaganing what he was doing. Music. Elvis
Prezley. As he tapped his foot in his box and a voice screamed
out to shut up. But most of all he loved the sounds of birds.
Because birds were free. No one hit them, or spat on them, and
their mothers protected them.
Bert and Dad walked along Semaphore Road. They were hoping the Rileys had come this way. That is, if Mr Patterson was right. But, of course, he must have been right, he was a postie. Posties carried people's bills and love letters, ransom letters and invitations to christenings, weddings and funerals.
If that's what Mr Patterson had said . . .
They searched the ground as they walked. Bert picked up a hair clip. âFamiliar?' he asked Dad.
âSearch me.'
So Bert put it in his pocket. There was a comb and a handkerchief and a couple of shillings, but how was that going to help them find the kids? Dad asked.
They stopped people walking home with their shopping and showed them a photo. They asked people sitting on benches and waiting at bus stops. âAbout this time yesterday,' Dad explained. âMighta been waitin' for a bus.'
No, no and no. Sorry, I'd love to be able to help you. I read about it. They had this copper talkin' on the radio. I'm here the same time every day, but I didn't see those kiddies.
They stopped at Soto's fish shop. Two girls said they'd been working at the time but neither could remember the children. Bert looked out of the window â streams of blue water trickled down the inside, pooling beside fish fillets sitting on green plastic, cut frilly around the edges like bonbons. The faces and bodies of pedestrians were hazy through the water. Even so, a moment later, they were forgotten.
âAustralia Day is just about our busiest,' one of the girls said, wiping her hands on her apron. âDid they have money?'
âYes,' Bert replied, thinking she was taking him for stupid.
They tried a furniture shop, a hairdresser and a bank (although it hadn't been open). They asked an old man wearing Arthur Calwell glasses, reading a Bible, and a couple of housewives in netball uniforms.
Nothing.
Then they went into a bakery.
âNo, never seen them,' the manageress told them, loading frozen pasties into a pie warmer.
âYesterday?' Bert asked. âThey mighta been hungry around this time. We think they walked by here.'
âNo, sorry. She's a beautiful lookin' girl though, eh?'
A fat-faced, middle-aged baker came up behind her. âThey yours?' he asked Dad.
âNo, we're looking for them,' Dad replied. âWe're detectives.'
The baker squinted and studied the photo more carefully. âThe older one,' he said, pointing. âShe bought three pasties and a pie.'
Dad looked surprised. âWhen did you see her?'
âYesterday, about this time.'
âYou sure it was her?'
âYep. I'm good with faces. Three pasties and a pie. Said she wanted the pasties in one bag and the pie in another.'
Dad looked at Bert, who lifted his eyebrows and sighed.
Dad returned to the baker. âHow did they pay?'
He shrugged. âLet me think.' He stroked his chin a few times and then said, âI think, perhaps, it was a one pound note.'
âHow sure are you?'
âI got a good eye, Mister . . . and a good memory. Comes from doin' crosswords.'
Dad looked at Bert again. âLiz said she gave them 7/6,' he said.
âMaybe it was Janice's.'
Dad smiled. âWhose money would you use first? Your parents' or your own?'
âMight have already spent it.'
âThose kids lost?' the baker asked.
âYes,' Dad explained. âYesterday morning.' He grabbed a paper from a pile for sale, opened it to page seven and pointed. âListen, if you're sure, this will help.'
âI don't forget a face,' the baker insisted. âThe little ones stood near the door, and the girl came forward.'
âAnd there was no one with them?'
âNot so's I could tell.'
âA man, tall, blond, mighta had blue bathers?'
âDoesn't ring a bell.'
âOkay, you got ten minutes, so Bert can take a statement?'
The three of them went outside and sat on a bus stop bench. After they were finished the baker went back inside and Bert said, âSeparate bags? Does that mean he wasn't staying with them?'
âWho knows?'
A woman walked out of the shop with a bag full of six or seven pasties.
Dad and Bert finished their trawl of both sides of Semaphore Road. There were no more sightings. They returned to their car, still parked on the esplanade, and sat in full sun in their suits. âWhat now?' Dad asked, scratching the tip of his nose.
Bert watched Bill in the near-distance as he made his way along a path behind the dunes, stopping to talk to people and show them his photos.
âWhat else do you know about Bill Riley?' Bert asked.
Dad shrugged. âI've known him for years. You don't need to worry about Bill.'
âNo?'
âNo.'
âYou sure?'
Dad stared at him. âWhat are you getting at?'
âHe's a sales rep, eh?'
âYes.'
âMust come into contact with a lot of people.'
âHe sells them linen.'
Bert took out his notebook and started to leaf through it. âI know he sells linen, but . . .'
Dad turned his body to face Bert. âEh, this is my best mate . . .'
âSomeone's gotta say it.'
âIf there's cause.' Dad stopped and there was a long pause. They watched more officers coming and going from the caravan. âJim's got 'em workin',' Bert said.
âI can vouch for him,' Dad replied, refusing to be distracted. âYou get to know a person, Bert.'
âOkay.'
âAnyway, I hate how you skirt around things. Just come out and say it.'
Bert took a moment and then asked, âWhat did he do before he sold linen?'
âHe was on the stage. J.C. Williamson. The Tivoli circuit.'
Bert smiled. âDoin' what?'
âHe can sing, dance, juggle . . . tell a few jokes.'
âWell bugger me.'
Dad had heard all about it: Bill in an over-tight velvet jacket, wearing a boater and brandishing a cane like his old Latin master. âBill Riley has been treading the boards since he was five. He has sung for the King, and every fruit seller in Hindley Street. Bill can carry a tune from here to Alice Springs and play the ukulele like Heifitz plays the fiddle.'
âMy folks used to take me,' Bert said. âI mighta even seen him.'
Bill sat on a bench and lit a cigarette. Then he got an idea. He stood up and walked into the dunes, looking behind saltbush and samphire. Bert shook his head. âFrom the Tivoli to tablecloths â and then this.'
âSee, you're barkin' up the wrong tree,' Dad said.
âPlayed the halls, and you think you know everything about him?'
âThat was a long time ago.'
Bert read from his notebook. âMissus Catherine Sayer,' and looked at Dad. âRamsay Avenue, Hillcrest Gardens. And she's the only one, eh?'
Dad pulled on his seatbelt. âThat's miles away.'
Bert looked for his keys in his pocket. âLet me do the talking.' He started the car. âYou gotta be a little bit discreet with these sort of things.'
Now we get to the bit that Dad only hinted at. There were no names, addresses, or details. I suppose it went like this.
The paint on the house was barely dry. Everything was new and Dad felt uncomfortable. The tar on the road smelt like the chemical works. The nature strips didn't look that old, but had died through lack of water. The soil was clay so the houses had been stumped. There were dozens of big blue and lime-green asbestos boxes with wooden feature panels around the doors. Diosmas and neatly edged lawns. A silver birch for shade in fifteen or twenty years' time. Concrete drives and paths littered with trikes and beach pails that had never seen the beach.
Bert pulled up and looked at the house. He could see into the lounge room through four half-wall sized glass windows, and could make out a woman, standing at an ironing board, working intently, occasionally looking up at a television and laughing. âChrist, what was Bill doing out here?' he asked.
âHe gets around,' Dad replied.
They walked down a driveway, bordered with box hedge that had died but not been removed. They knocked on the door and watched through a glass panel as the woman left her ironing and opened the door.
âYes?' she smiled.
âMissus Catherine Sayer?' Bert asked.
âYes.'
He showed her his warrant card. âHave you got a few minutes?'
âWhat's this about?' she asked.
âYou know Bill Riley?' Dad replied.
She stopped to think. âNo.'
Dad shook his head, and stepped into the living room anyway. âHow about a drink?'