Authors: Robert Sims
Tags: #Serial Murder Investigation, #Australia, #Australian Fiction, #Detective and Mystery Stories; Australian, #Melbourne (Vic.)
The title belt was mounted in pride of place behind his desk. Not so prominent was a photo from the bout in Melbourne where he lost the title with a tenth-round TKO that ended his sporting career. The referee had stopped the fight as blood gushed from Billy’s split eyebrows. The scar tissue was still visible.
The injury had evoked the sympathy of gangland figures and opened up a new career for which Billy was both physically and psychologically qualified: clubland celebrity and part-time enforcer. It was a role he relished and excelled at. Eventually he had moved north to the Queensland coast, establishing his own regime and branching out from drugs, vice and black-market deals into showbiz promotions and property development. Billy ‘The Beast’ Bowers, who’d come from a bush town and started out as a cheap teenage brawler in prize-fighting tents, was now wealthy, connected and able to assert power over others. All he wanted was more.
‘I’ll let you off the hook this time,’ he told Freddy. ‘I’m sure we’re all sorry about what happened to Rachel and so on. I’m especially sorry it happened on my doorstep. But I suppose we can’t expect a serial killer to be considerate, can we?’
Freddy knew him well enough to spot that Billy was spinning a line. It was there in the tone of voice and the slight sardonic twist to his lip. It meant that a private joke was being played on Freddy, something he was unaware of, something to do with Rachel’s death.
If it hadn’t been for the elevating effect of the drug, Freddy might have lost his temper, surrendering to the urge to do something stupid - like taking a swing at Billy - before being beaten to a pulp. Instead, with heightened clarity of perception, he could see that the reason for Rachel’s fate was no mystery to Billy. That’s why his reference to a serial killer was almost tongue in cheek.
He must have been involved or informed or even instrumental in her death. Why? The question hammered at Freddy’s thoughts but he left it unspoken. Better to bide his time.
So he just said, ‘You wanted my services?’
‘Yes,’ answered Billy, straightening up. ‘And by coincidence it’s partly to do with your dead girlfriend. Something she had access to.’
‘Like what?’
‘A disk.’
‘Any particular disk?’
‘A computer disk, smart-arse. One smuggled out of Whitley Sands by some whistleblower. She must have told you.’
‘I didn’t listen much to her campaign stuff,’ said Freddy. ‘She mentioned some technical printout she was getting.’
‘That’s it, you dork. It was downloaded from a disk by Stonefish, and he’s even harder to find than you.’
‘I’ve been trying to get hold of him myself.’
‘Well that’s why you’re here!’ snapped Billy. ‘I want you to find him, get me that disk and I’ll cut you in on the deal.
Twenty thousand bucks. You can split it with Stonefish if you feel obliged.’
‘What deal?’
‘Some customers have come to me. They’ll pay handsomely
- but just for the disk. No hard copy, no extract. They want the original disk.’ Billy leant forward, dropping his big meaty hands onto the arms of the chair, his chin out, his face in Freddy’s.
‘Get it, and we’ll all do business. Fail to deliver, and you and Stonefish will be taken for a dip on the far side of the reef - and left there.’
The timeline began with Dr Steinberg completing his report and burning a disk containing technical data from inside Whitley Sands. Next came its delivery to the go-between known as Stonefish.
If Rita’s reasoning was right, Stonefish printed off more than one hard-copy extract. Her guess was that the first went to the anonymous man in the mud, while the second was given to Rachel Macarthur. Both were subsequently killed because of it. There were plenty of gaps and inexplicable links in the timeline, but currently it ended with the sanctioned murder of Steinberg himself.
Her confidential talk with Eve had convinced Rita that the police were wrong to assume that a random serial offender was on the loose. Worse, it might even be an assumption they were supposed to make. The unofficial testimony was compelling - Eve’s words, Steinberg’s comments and Rita’s own direct experience. If a psychotic killer was stalking the streets of Whitley, his crimes were inextricably linked to the interests of the research base. Of course, how to pursue this line of inquiry without ensuring her own downfall was a dilemma. Until she came up with a plan she’d continue to go through the motions. Tomorrow morning she would visit the crime scene down by the docks and try to track down Freddy Hopper. Perhaps then she’d find out more about his friend Stonefish.
Her concentration was broken by Detective Sergeant Steve Jarrett.
‘It’s bloody nippy in here!’ he said as he came through the door.
‘You must’ve brought the weather up from the frigid city.’
‘The what?’
‘It’s how we think of Melbourne.’ He chuckled. ‘That frigid wind blowing up Collins Street. Nearly cuts you in half.’
‘Careful, Jarrett, or I’ll book you for slander. Blaming me and Melbourne for a cold front off the Tasman.’
‘Well, it’s the same general direction - the south - and this sort of weather doesn’t come from around here. The temperature’s supposed to be dropping to eight degrees tonight.’ He emphasised it with a shiver. ‘This is the tropics. We don’t have winters.’
‘Sounds like you believe your own tourist propaganda.’
‘Don’t you feel the cold?’
‘If I could find any heating,’ she said, ‘I’d switch it on.’
‘You’ve got the fireplace - that’s it. I’ll sort it out.’
He went out again.
Jarrett was right about the chill in the room. Maybe it was the ghost, she thought, as she rubbed her temples. Concentrating too hard had left her with a headache. She needed to relax and clear her mind, forget the investigation for a while. Thinking about the ghost reminded her of the room’s history, arousing her curiosity about the man who’d occupied it more than a century before her, Sergeant Kenneth Logan.
She walked over to the antique bookcase and was browsing through the morocco-bound volumes when Jarrett returned with an armful of broken palings.
‘We’re having the back fence replaced,’ he explained. ‘It’ll make good firewood.’ He dumped it on the hearth. ‘What are you looking for?’
‘Sergeant Logan’s journal.’
‘Ah, the diary of a ghost,’ said Jarrett. ‘I thought that’d interest you.’ He came over and stretched to reach a slim ledger on the top shelf. ‘Gotcha.’ He blew off some dust and handed it to her.
‘Here - see what you make of him. Lawman or psycho.’
Rita opened the old book and moved beside the window, leafing through the ink-scrawled pages while Jarrett knelt down by the hearth, splitting the wood into kindling and stacking the grate. The writing was in an untidy and elaborate Victorian script, but she could read it without much difficulty as she scanned the pages. The paper was dog-eared and stained with age. A mid-June entry caught her eye: The unseasonably cold weather has persisted through yet another night and day of storms blowing in off the ocean. A wind from the south continues to batter the coast, bringing gusts laden with stinging sand and horizontal rain. Squatter Brodie decreed there would be no hunt again today. Therefore, with no other pressing duties, I stoked the fire and opened the volume of Livy which was presented to me by Squatter Brodie.
Rita looked over at Jarrett, who’d got a flame going and was encouraging it with a poker. She imagined Sergeant Logan in exactly the same place and exactly the same pose a hundred and forty years ago and a tingle ran down her spine. Some things don’t change.
As flames took hold and the wood began to crackle Jarrett stood up and adjusted the fire guard.
‘That’ll warm the room once it gets going.’
‘Thanks,’ said Rita, coming over to admire his effort. ‘Makes me feel at home.’
‘Good,’ he said. ‘I want you to know you’re welcome here.
Seriously.’
‘Bryce still on the warpath?’
‘No. He’s more sound than fury. Sees himself as head prefect around here. Likes to catch you out and recite the rules. You can expect a ticking off, that’s all. I haven’t known him to bear grudges.’ Jarrett folded his arms, his expression stern. ‘I’ve been mulling over what you suggested this morning at the cafe - the possibility of professional hits.’
‘Forget it. I was being hypothetical.’
‘Yeah, and hypothetically it scares the shit out of me. The idea the base is mixed up in murder has a certain logic to it, especially given some of the heavy-duty head-kickers available.’
‘Maddox?’
‘Not just him. There’s a national security adviser out of Canberra called Luker. He briefed us when the anti-war protesters pulled their first stunt with bolt-cutters. Friendly enough, but the sort of guy who knows how to kill you with a clipboard.’
‘Any other charmers?’
‘A couple of Yanks. They’re supposed to be Pentagon observers but they’ve got military intelligence written all over them. Rhett Molloy’s the head honcho and scary enough. But his buddy’s the one you’d hate to bump into on a dark night - Kurt Demchak.
Special Forces background, I reckon. He’s got eyes that freeze your blood.’
‘Where’d you meet them?’
‘A town hall reception thrown by the mayor to welcome our American friends and allies. Makes sense. GIs contribute enough to the local economy. And there’s a team of bean counters from Washington. I’ve been wondering how far they’d go to protect their investment.’
‘You really have been thinking about what I said,’ smiled Rita.
‘But your own advice was right. We have to shelve it. From an official policing point of view, it’s a dead end.’
‘In more ways than one, perhaps.’ Jarrett nodded. ‘How’d you go with the lovely Eve?’
‘She cooperated up to a point, but she’s understandably wary.’
‘What next?’
‘I’ll visit the crime scene and the club tomorrow. For now I’m giving my brain a rest.’
‘Okay, I’ll leave you to it,’ said Jarrett, opening the door. ‘So you can cosy up with the late notorious Sergeant Logan.’
‘Just what I had in mind.’
He couldn’t be found at the net cafes or the bowling alley or the back rooms at the amusement park. In fact, none of his fellow dealers had seen him in more than a week. As much as Freddy was reluctant to disappoint Billy Bowers, he couldn’t track down Stonefish. It appeared the most recent contact, and that was only by phone, was with Freddy himself. No doubt Stonefish had since ditched that mobile for another.
With the sun setting behind the ranges and the temperature dropping, Freddy drove his van back up into the hills to the rented split-level house he’d shared with Rachel. The place was cheap but comfortable. It had a gravel driveway, a garden plot out front with an unruly rhododendron, a backyard of dirt and weeds, termites in the woodwork and a spectacular view over the islands in the passage. As he pulled into the driveway, he paid little attention to the big black limousine with tinted windows parked two houses up along the crescent. He got out, strolled to his front door and unlocked it. As he opened it, he was grabbed by both arms. Two men in dark suits escorted him through the door and rode him down the hallway to his lounge room, where they tossed him onto a sofa.
‘Where’s Stonefish?’ one of the men demanded.
He looked up at them.
‘Who are you?’ he asked.
One of them punched him in the face. Freddy spun off the sofa onto the floorboards, his cheekbone aching.
‘We ask the questions. Where’s Stonefish?’
‘I don’t fucking know!’ Freddy shouted. ‘Did that bitch Audrey put you up to this?’
He was punched again. Blood was gushing from his nose.
‘Get up!’
Shakily, he got to his feet, holding his nose.
‘Where’s Stonefish?’
‘I told you -‘ he began.
This time he took a punch in the stomach that put him back on the floor with a thud. As he sat there, winded, a third man emerged from the hallway. He was tall and solid, with an expressionless face, cold eyes and a receding hairline. When he spoke, it was with an American accent.
‘Let me deal with him.’
The other two backed off.
‘Sit on the sofa, Freddy.’
Freddy sat.
The American sat down next to him and put a slab of a hand around the back of Freddy’s skull, forcing Freddy’s face close to his own. The other huge hand clamped Freddy between the legs, crushing his testicles in an agonising groin hold.
‘I’m going to ask a series of questions,’ said the American quietly. ‘And you’re going to answer truthfully. Yes?’
‘Yes,’ squeaked Freddy, eyes watering.
‘Do you know where Stonefish is?’
‘No. Been looking all day. Can’t find him.’
‘Do you have his phone number?’
‘No. Keeps ditching his SIM cards.’
‘That’s a damn shame. We want to talk to him. When did you last see him?’
‘More than a week,’ answered Freddy, his voice a constricted whisper now. ‘No one’s seen him.’
‘One more question,’ said the American, his knuckles cracking as he increased the pressure. ‘What’s his real name?’
‘He won’t tell,’ groaned Freddy. ‘Won’t tell anyone.’
‘And just one more. Where’s he from?’
‘New Zealand.’
‘He’s a Kiwi?’
‘Yes. That’s all I know. I swear.’
‘I believe you.’
The American released his grip. Freddy doubled up and dropped off the sofa, slumping sideways into a foetal position on the floor.