Authors: Dave Warner
Hospitals might offer a small degree of variance on the outside but Clement found once inside they were of a type, almost interchangeable, the same cool air with the faint smell of heated meals, the same church hush. His father had been shifted to a private room. Clement found him on his back, seemingly asleep among a tangle of monitoring devices. His mother sat in the chair beside the bed gazing into space. It took her an instant to come back. She stood up and hugged her son. Clement dragged over the remaining chair in the room.
âThey say he's serious but stable. His body is functioning normally but they don't know what damage there might have been.'
âYou want something to eat?'
âI'm alright. They brought me a roll, they're angels. What about you? You must be starving?'
Actually he was. He asked again about what had happened and listened to the same details in more or less the same order. Since they'd last spoken there had been more doctor visits but his mother knew nothing substantial although they had said he was stabilised. Clement excused himself, found a dispenser machine up the corridor fumbled in his pockets for coins as he read instructions without taking them in and selected Mexican-flavoured corn chips. His fingers felt stiff and awkward as he fed coins. He managed to work it all somehow, came back and resumed his seat.
âTess called. She's booked to fly in Wednesday.'
âThat's good.'
He said it even though he was neutral on whether Tess would be much help. Had it been his father having to cope she could have done the basic â cook a meal, clean, washâbut his mum was capable of fending for herself in that regard. Decoding the medical half-truths was where she needed assistance and he doubted his sister would be much use. Tess had never been able to pick up an inference, she had to be hit over the head with directness and her manner could seem brusque for the same reason. Still, he supposed it would be company for his mum, and if his dad was not showing signs of recovery by Wednesday she might need a lot of support.
âHow's he been?'
âFine. Really good. He's been on blood pressure tablets for a few years now but he's usually good.'
âNot stressed about anything?'
The slightest hesitation. âNo.'
Clement realised the stress was probably to do with him. He was a forty-two year old man whose life had at best stalled, at worst fallen apart.
âYou're on a murder case?'
âYes. I'll have to head back tomorrow.'
His mother understood. She still had vivacity in her eyes but the price for those days in the deck chair was written over her skin. Like a sheet washed and left to dry too many times it was thin and fragile. She wore cream slacks and a light-knit long-sleeved top.
He'd already reached the end of the corn chips and licked his fingers as he asked, âHow have you been?'
âGood. Your father and I have both been really very good. The garden looks beautiful.'
She glanced over at her husband. A smile played on her lips. âLike he's sleeping. How's Phoebe?'
âShe's off sailing with a friend of hers.'
âHe would have loved that.'
âHe likes sailing?'
âOh yes. Well, he likes the idea of it.'
âAnd yet he went to Broome. Did he fancy himself as a lugger captain or pearl diver?'
It was never too late to try and learn more about him.
âNo. He did what he had to for the family. He couldn't see much of a future at Roads. Those days you had to wait for somebody above you to retire or die. And somebody did retire but then one of the other blokes got the job and he thought, “that's that”. He could see himself waiting another twenty years for his next chance so he said we're going north, that's where the future is.'
âI bumped into Bill Seratono. He's still up there. You remember him?'
Her small eyes narrowed as she tried to fish his name out of a deep memory.
âSmall, dark hair?'
âTall, dark hair.'
The conversation petered out. Neither of them wanted to go
to unpleasant places but he had not travelled this far for nothing, things had to be said.
âHave you thought what you might do if he doesn't come back he tried to find a good way to say it, â⦠how he was?'
âThere's a good chance he's going to be fine.'
âBut if he's not. We have to ⦠I'll help. I'll get time off.'
âI can manage. We have a good circle of friends here.'
âYou're not as young as you were, Mum. Neither are your friends, right? Tess won't be able to stay for long. I'll be there to help.'
She reached across and held his hand and they sat there like that for some time. Eventually they began to talk about small things, her friends and their various health ailments, Broome and what had changed and what had not. And Phoebe. Her disappointment her only grandchild was more an idea now than a reality manifested itself in every mannerism she adopted to disguise it. Clement realised he would have to tell Phoebe about her grandfather; Marilyn too. One advantage in Phoebe being away on the boat was he could postpone that. His mother was too polite to enquire about Marilyn and probably had no need because they remained in touch. He wondered if she knew about Brian, reasoned she most likely did but was not keen to go there with his mother.
âI'll bring Phoebe down in the holidays,' he said, knowing it would be a promise difficult to keep.
âWe'd love that.'
We, his mother was not affecting the royal plural, she was including his father, refusing to concede an inch on his prospects. By now Clement had adjusted to the air-conditioning and found it almost too cool. A nurse entered and checked the monitors. She was mid-twenties and considerate. She said if they were hungry they were welcome to make some toast in the nurses' kitchen. There was coffee and tea also.
Around eleven o'clock, after two or three nurses' visits, he suggested his mother go home, have something to eat and a decent sleep.
âI'm here. I'll call you if anything important happens.'
It took a little while but eventually he convinced her that she would be a lot better off continuing her vigil in the morning as he would have to return to Broome. She was worried about him not eating but he said he would check out the nurses' kitchen. He organised the cab and waited with her until, with the vulnerability
of the elderly in a foreign land, she stepped into the taxi. It may well have been the very one that had delivered him. Before returning to the room he wandered along the hushed corridor to the toilet and peed, thinking of his father showing him how to piss standing up. He guessed he must have been four. On the way back he passed the small kitchen and after a momentary debate, diverted to it. Initially he was going to just make himself an instant coffee, as if to eat would have been disrespectful of his father's condition but hunger won out and he wound up consuming two slices of toast and vegemite. It was then he saw the number written on his arm and on the spur of the moment called Mathias Klendtwort in Hamburg. The phone rang for some time and he was about to hang up when a man answered.
âJa?'
âMr Klendtwort? This is Detective Daniel Clement in Western Australia.'
âOh yes, you got my message. The Hamburg police gave me the number to call.' His English was better than good. âPoor Dieter. He's dead eh?'
âYes, I'm sorry. You were a friend of his?'
âWe worked together, quite a long time ago. How did he die?'
âHe was murdered. At a remote fishing area.'
Klendtwort uttered a curse in German. Clement thought he heard a soft sigh. He imagined the German gathering himself. âSorry. He seemed so happy there. Finally. Shit. You have the person?'
âNo, we don't, no clear suspect and we really don't know very much about Dieter. Did you speak to him often?'
âWe wrote, usually longhand. I tried emails but they have no personality. I'm sixty-three, I like the old ways. And if you're going to ask me if he told me of anybody he was worried about, the answer is no. He seemed to enjoy his life there. He loved the heat, being in the open. He had become a hermit I think.'
âHe had no lover?'
âNot that I know of.'
âHe wasn't gay?'
âDieter? No. He was married before. When that fell apart he was really cut up.'
âHow long ago was that?'
âTwenty, thirty years.'
âIs there any possibility, however remote, some criminal from his past might have held a grudge and killed him?'
âIt's a long way to go for that.'
He thought he heard a match striking.
âI need a cigarette. My ex used to nag at me but now I'm on my own I can smoke indoors. Pardon, I don't mean ⦠it's a bit of a shock.'
âThat's okay, take your time.'
All the time Clement was acutely aware of his own father battling for survival in a room down the corridor. The German came back on.
âWe had some hard customers, mind, but none who were that angry. And it's so long ago.'
âYou did Narcotics with him?'
âWe started around the same time with another guy, Heinrich, working out of the station at the Reeperbahn, mainly what you call Vice then. But heroin became a huge problem real quick in the late seventies and they formed us into a narcotics unit around seventy-seven, I think.'
âWe know that Dieter was growing cannabis plants here but so far it seems just for himself and a few mates.'
âIt doesn't surprise me. We smoked a little reefer back then. Who didn't? No hard drugs though. Anybody dealt hard drugs, we fucked them over. Dieter was a good cop. He drank too much and he gambled too much but it goes with the territory, right?'
âDid anybody hold a grudge against him?'
âFrom those days? No, it's too long ago. I mean we made enemies but no, I can't see somebody travelling halfway around the world to kill an old cop.'
âDid he have any problems with his gambling?'
âHe gambled a lot but only small stakes.'
âDo you know where his ex is?'
âNo, I lost track of her years ago. She remarried.'
âI found a download of German news. There was an article about a man, Klaus Edershen, who was killed, shot through the neck by an arrow. Do you know why he would have that?'
âEdershen?'
Clement could feel the German trawling.
âThe name does not seem familiar but, shit, it's so much harder nowadays, the brain just leaks. Killed by an arrow?'
âIn a park in Dortmund, I think the case is still unsolved.'
âWhen was this?'
âSeptember two thousand and twelve.'
âI was away with my younger daughter in Spain from August to
October then. I must have missed it.'
âHow about a seventies drug czar who got away?'
âThe Emperor.' There was bitterness in Klendtwort's inflection. âWe worked that together. We lost a colleague. None of us forget that.'
That would explain why Schaffer had downloaded that. Clement carefully gave Klendtwort his details. âI might need to speak to you again.'
âFeel free. I hope you get your guy.'
Before he ended the call Clement had the urge for one more question. âDo you miss it?'
âIt screwed my life up but then maybe it would have screwed up anyway. I've got a girlfriend, my kids and I are fine. You bet your arse I miss it. Enjoy it while you can.'
Clement had long finished the toast and his coffee grown cold. He dwelled on what he had learned of Dieter Schaffer and once again had the uncomfortable feeling that Schaffer might be an early prototype of where he himself was headed. Maybe Klendtwort was a closer fit but even that didn't inspire him with confidence.
Back in the room he sat in the armchair in the dim light and studied his father's features. Truth be told he didn't see that much physical similarity but he knew there were mannerisms they shared, a way of phrasing sentences, something he did with his neck.
More memories came back now they were alone, his father teaching him how to shave, and drive. âYou have to learn in a manual,' his father had insisted, âyou may not have the money for an automatic and I won't be buying you one.' True to his word he hadn't. But he had lasted through the kangaroo hops and the clutch grinding. He tried to impart tennis to his son but with little success. Clement never really had the balance. He was better at cricket where he could club the ball artlessly or charge in and bowl fast.
Out of the blue another memory, before Clement's wedding reception, his father worried about the speech he would have to perform. Clement had caught a peak of him at the reception centre practising in the mirror. He had never let on, a small detail in such a momentous day. He remembered it now, that vulnerability sons rarely associate with fathers. He felt a pang of empathy that he'd ignored at the time when it had been no more than a curiosity. His dad had done a fine job, spoken of him as a determined young man who would strive to do his best for Marilyn.
He'd let him down, hadn't he?
He recalled his father and mother dancing. His dad was an excellent dancer and enjoyed owning the floor, spinning his mother expertly. Light on his feet, was the old expression. Clement gazed over again and could see the slight rise and fall of his father's chest. He tried to contemplate what it would mean if his father died. He supposed it made him responsible for his mother. This was more proof to Clement of his retroactive life, lose a wife and daughter, gain a mother.