Authors: Dave Warner
âAnd I mention Lisa Keeble and you react like I've suggested you suck face with the devil.'
âShe's a colleague and she has a boyfriend.'
âYou'd be doing her a favour if you got rid of Osama.'
Clement had been turning over Earle's first question. âI suppose I still want her.'
âThe ex?'
âMarilyn, yeah. Not for sex, although there is that.'
âYou miss her.'
âNo. That's the thing. I don't miss her, I'm always aware of why it's better we're not together. And I don't need her. But I want her, sometimes. There's something there I don't know if it can be repeated. Or if I'd want it repeated.'
âYou don't, believe me. Chemistry is bad for relationships. You want total non-reaction. Inert elements or whatever the fuck they are called. That works best in the long run.'
âYou speaking from experience?'
âKind of. I learned my lesson back in high school but I've seen plenty of other guys like you. You don't need the girl but you need what she gives you. Like junkies still chasing that perfect first high.'
âI know what you're saying but I don't know that's me.'
âSo why aren't you together?'
He'd thought about that a lot. âI think when we're together we make each other realise how far we fall short of what we should be.'
Earle didn't pursue it after that and it elevated him in Clement's estimation. Two guys who weren't bullshitting but there's a limit. It must have been a good twenty minutes before Earle broke the silence.
âWho is this? He's fucking good.'
âDr John the Night Tripper. You never heard him before?'
âI'm a Led Zeppelin guy but I like this. I don't think I've heard him on the radio.'
âI doubt it.'
âHow do you know about him?'
âIt's a long story.'
âWe've got time.'
So Clement told him about the homicide ten years ago in Bayswater. A man about forty had been bashed to death in his house. No suspect, nothing to go on. The victim had a big old vinyl record collection. Clement had spent weeks in the murder house listening to all the records trying to understand the victim, thinking it might help find the killer.
âDid it?'
âNo. We never got him. But I found Dr John.'
It was just after two when he dropped Earle at the station. Shepherd had called in en route. He had located Schaffer's doctor but she had only treated him twice and had nothing of import to reveal.
âI'm going up to Osterlund's, see if he can help make me make this call to Germany. People should be awake there now.'
Earle said he'd chase up the warrant for Karskine's.
It took Clement only ten minutes to drive to Osterlund's. Osterlund's wife was on the veranda using a large watering can on a bevy of colourful potted flowers. In a simple shift of bright batik design and wearing a pristine bonnet, she had that elegance Clement associated with Japanese women.
She smiled in recognition. âDo you have news on Dieter?'
âNot yet. I need help in translating something from German. Is your husband in?'
âHe is walking along the beach.'
âI can come back.'
âI might be able to help.' Her accent elongated the vowels.
âNo it's okay. Actually I need somebody to call Germany for me and speak in German.'
âHe won't be long. Come in. You want a drink?'
âThanks, I'm fine.'
He followed her into the house. She turned left towards the large kitchen area and indicated he take a seat at a kitchen table big enough for six. It was made of a type of marble stuff that cost more than he could afford. He knew this because years before it was what Marilyn had wanted for their kitchen. Geraldine had insisted her daughter have it and had paid for it herself, so that even over breakfast or a quiet glass of wine she had a presence mocking her son-in-law for his inadequacy.
âPlease.'
He sat down.
âSo you haven't found the person who killed him?'
âNot yet.'
She pursed her lips and shook her head.
Clement said. âDid you know him well?'
âHe used to telephone my husband, a couple of times a week. We saw him sometimes in town. He was always friendly but her nose wrinkled, âhe smelled of beer, a bit drunk, you know?'
Having seen the Pajero, Clement could well imagine that.
âWe believe he grew his own marijuana.'
âReally? Dieter?' She clearly disapproved. âI did not know that.'
âDid he talk about his friends at all, whether he was worried about anything?'
âNot to me.'
A scuffing of soft shoes in the hallway advised of Osterlund's arrival.
âGood morning, Detective. Any news?'
If he was annoyed at finding Clement cosy with his wife he didn't show it.
âNot really. A few leads we're following.'
âHe says Dieter smoked pot.'
âGrew it actually,' Clement said.
Osterlund pulled a face. âI smelled it on him sometimes.'
âHe never offered you any?'
âHe may have, early on. I don't take drugs except for cholesterol.'
Clement wasn't sure if he was telling the truth. âI came to ask a favour. I'm trying to track his sister and I need somebody who can speak German.'
âNo problem.'
Osterlund spoke to his wife in German, requesting a coffee, Clement thought. She was off the stool with alacrity.
âTuthi is making me a coffee. Anything for you?'
âThanks, I just had one. I have a phone number on his sister.'
He handed across the number Earle had given him. There was a telephone number and the name Christiane Hohlmann. Osterlund pulled reading glasses from his pocket and studied it.
âThis is a Munich number. You want me to call for you?'
âIf you don't mind.'
âOf course not.'
Clement offered his phone. âI think this will work.'
Osterlund waved him away. âI have an all-in-one deal.'
He swung the laptop towards him and dialled the number as
the espresso machine roared into life in the background. Osterlund called out for his wife to stop and waited as the phone rang on the other end. Clement was not used to people using computers for phone calling, well, Skype; he'd tried a few times but it looked like Osterlund did this every day. A woman answered. Clement deciphered Osterlund's enquiry in German, was it Christiane Hohlmann to whom he was speaking? He understood the reply ânein.'
Osterlund followed up in rapid-fire German. Clement lost track then. Osterlund fired off a few more questions, typed something on his computer, thanked whoever it was on the phone and hung up. The espresso machine recommenced its gasping.
âChristiane Hohlmann left that apartment two years ago for a retirement home. She doesn't know the name of it but one of her neighbours might, a woman who was friends with Christiane Hohlmann, a Frau Gerlanger. She gave me her number. Want me to try it?'
âCould you?'
âNo problem.'
Astuthi Osterlund arrived on cue with his coffee, black. She slid quietly into a seat. Osterlund sipped as he dialled. The phone rang out the other end.
âI'll try it again. Are you sure you won't have a drink? I have beer if you prefer?'
âNo, I'm fine thank you.'
Once again the phone rang out.
âNo answer machine even. She must be elderly.'
âI'll try later.'
âYou can come here anytime.'
âThank you. Did Dieter by any chance mention to you he was coming into money?'
Osterlund infused a snort with a sense of comedy. âBut I didn't know him that well. Maybe one of his bets paid off. You think that's why he was killed?'
âWe can't discuss cases.'
âOf course.'
Clement noted that Astuthi Osterlund did not attempt to answer questions when her husband was present so he directed his question specifically to her. âTo you? Did he say anything about coming into money?'
âNo.'
âDo either of you know what he did after leaving the police?'
A quick calculation told Clement that Dieter Schaffer had been out of the police force for around twenty years before coming to live here. Osterlund spun his coffee cup.
âHe talked about working the docks one time. I can't remember the context. It didn't sound like it was for that long.'
âHe told me he wanted to go to South America but had never been.'
Osterlund looked at his wife as if this was some revelation. âSee, my wife knows more than me about him.'
She blushed. âNo, he just asked me one day if I had ever been to South America. I haven't. He said all his life he had wanted to and maybe one day soon he would. But he didn't mention money. I just thought it was a dream.'
âJa, that was Dieter, the dreamer.'
Clement stood and thanked them both again.
The garden was fragrant and made him feel relaxed. Living here would be like permanent holiday. He supposed he should talk to the neighbours to confirm the Osterlunds' alibi but on second thoughts decided that was something that could be delegated. Osterlund did not strike him as the kind of man who would make a stupid alibi in the hope that it would not be checked, and Astuthi Osterlund had a kind of innocence about her that reminded him of the Balinese people he'd met when he'd holidayed there twenty years ago. Everybody was going there these days, especially from up around here. A lot of the fly-in fly-out mine workers were actually living there. Maybe he should take Phoebe for a week or so? It was inexpensive, they could have fun getting rough âmassages' on the beach. Geraldine would be against it of course, âtoo dangerous'. That negative image pulled him back down.
For the time being he was grounded on Schaffer's identity, who he was, how he ticked. He was keen to talk to the sister and try to discern a little more of the elusive ex-cop. What he had learned was intriguing but far from solid evidence. There may be a pattern though. Schaffer worked Vice and Narcotics. He comes thousands of miles away, grows his own dope and distributes it, albeit to no obvious profit. But, he is seen arguing with a biker and somebody who rides a bike turns up at Schaffer's the night after his murder and clobbers a cop. It was suggestive at the very least.
When Clement re-entered the station and saw the look on Graeme Earle's face he knew something was wrong. His immediate thought was of Phoebe. Some disaster had befallen the boat. He should neverâ¦
âYour mum rang. Your father has had a stroke. He's in Albany Regional.'
âHello, love.' His mother sounded like she was holding it together but just.
âHow is he? Can he move? Can he talk?'
âI don't know. They've been running tests. He's in a coma. They said he was fortunate I was there and called the ambulance straight away.'
When Earle had told him the news Clement had first off entered some weird state where objects seemed stagey, props without substance. He half expected the computer to be light as cardboard but it wasn't and he momentarily forgot why he had sat down at it, then remembered he was after the number for Albany Hospital. His fingers felt like somebody else's as he typed on the prop computer, picked up the prop phone and dialled. His mother and father were just shy of eighty and neither used the mobile phone he had bought them. It had taken him two receptionists to locate his mother at the ICU. At least by that time he was returning to something normal. She ran through what had happened. A typical Saturday morning, they both liked to rise early and walk. His father had emerged from the bathroom dressed and ready to go. She'd turned to get her scarf and when she looked back he was on the floor. She called the ambulance straight away. The paramedics came quickly and said his heart was beating strongly which was a relief, for her first fear had been a massive heart attack.
âI've been here since and they've run lots of tests on him. The main doctor said it was a stroke. He is in a coma. He could come out of it soon or never.'
He felt for her, alone, trying to hold it together. âI'll come down today.' He was wondering if he'd be able to get seats on the various planes required to get from here to there.
âYou don't need to.'
Of course he did. His sister Tess lived in New Zealand with her family.
âDoes Tess know?'
âYes, I rang her. I told her to wait until things became clearer but she said she'll make some arrangements.'
âDo you need anything?'
âJess Granger is being an angel. You don't need to come, really.'
âI'll be there. Take care.'
He went online and searched for a flight to Perth. A flight was leaving in an hour. A connecting flight to Albany was leaving within forty minutes of his arrival in Perth. He booked seats at full-tote odds, mindful that that put an end to any hope of flying somewhere for a holiday with Phoebe. Western Australia was a big state and he'd be covering most of its length but he estimated he could make the hospital by eight thirty p.m.