Authors: Jon Cleary
“Was he coming here to see you?”
Malone looked at him as if he had been accused of corruption. “Here? Wal, I don't even let
cops
come here! Except Russ Clements.”
“Well, we're here now.” But Dukes said it as gently as he could, though gentleness was not one of his talents. He looked out at the drifting Grime, who had floated close to the far side of the pool and was now staring up through the skim-net at one of the uniformed men as he reached out for the long pole. “Watch out, Kenny, you're gunna fall in!”
Kenny fell in, with a loud splash and a muffled curse. Dukes turned back to Malone. “How do we divide this one up? It's in my territory, but he's your property, as it were.”
“I'll hang on to him, Wal, if it's okay with you. If I need any helpâ?”
“Sure, all you need.” The uniformed cop, Kenny, had pushed the body to the side of the pool. It was now floating at the feet of the two senior detectives. Dukes looked down at it. “Fuck 'em!”
“Who?”
“
Crims. Why don't they go out into the middle of the Nullabor Plain when they wanna bump each other off?”
Ten minutes later Russ Clements and the Physical Evidence team arrived simultaneously. All at once the back garden was seething with activity, a police production; for the first and last time in this life Scungy Grime was a star. The Cayburn family stood on their balcony, the parents and their two teenage sons, Gloria Cayburn with her hand over her mouth as if stifling a scream; beyond the opposite side fence the Malones' other neighbours, an elderly couple named Bass who normally minded their own business, stood on a ladder, one above the other, like a geriatric trapeze pair about to climb to the high wire. Malone, catching a glimpse of them, waved to them, then looked sourly at Clements.
“You reckon we should charge admission?”
“Take it easy, mate. They're neighbours, for Crissake. You'd rather they turned their backs on you?” But the big, rumpled man knew what was causing the tension in Malone; he had gone into the house as soon as he had arrived and spoken to Lisa and the children. He was the surrogate uncle and he was as anxious as Malone to see that this murder did not throw too long a shadow over this house. “Let's go inside.”
Then he looked past Malone and suddenly smiled, an expression of abrupt pleasure out of keeping with his sombre mood of a moment ago. “G'day, Romy. You didn't say you were on call today.”
“They've given all the Old Australians the day off. We've been told we can wave the flag next year.” She was smiling as she said it, there was no sourness. She was the GMO, one of the government medical officers from the Division of Forensic Medicine in the State Department of Health. She was Romy Keller, slim and attractive, dark-haired and dark-eyed, with just a trace of accent, ten years out of Germany and still trying to be an Australian, “I didn't know this was your place, Inspector. When they called me, they just gave me an address . . . When did it happen?”
“The murder? I don't know. My daughter found him in the pool.”
“Poor child.” She glanced towards the body, which was now lying on the bricks beside the pool, a green plastic sheet thrown over it. “Anyone looked at the body?”
“
Sergeant Dukes gave him a once-over,” said Clements. “There's no sign of any wound. It could be a heart attack.”
“Then it wouldn't be murder, would it?” She looked at Malone.
He nodded. “Righto, you're right. I jumped to conclusions. Maybe it's some sick joke. Some mate of his found him dead and decided to dump him in my pool. I just don't think that's the way it is.”
She sensed the tension in him, gave him no immediate answer, looked once more at the sheet-covered body, then said, “Okay, we'll take him away and look at him in the morgue. I'd rather do it there than give a show for them.”
She made a sweeping gesture, at the Cayburns, the Basses and at the back fence, where a family whose name Malone didn't know were lined up, all seven of them, on chairs, their faces hung above the palings like pumpkin halves.
“Take him away then,” said Clements. “You doing anything tonight?”
She glanced at Malone before she answered Clements. “No. Call me at the morgue.”
“I've never had a girl say that to me before.”
“You haven't lived, Russ.” She smiled at him and Malone and left them.
Malone opened the screen door and ushered Clements into the kitchen ahead of him. “Is there something on between you and her?”
“Just the last coupla weeks.”
“You kept that pretty quiet.”
“You know what it's like. It gets out you're dating someone connected with the Department and they put out an ASM. There's nothing in it. She's just a good sort.”
“Who's a good sort?” said Lisa, coming into the kitchen. She was dressed in slacks and shirt and her hair was pulled back from her face by a bright blue band. She looked composed enough, but Malone, a sixteen-year veteran of marriage and a policeman to boot, could recognize the signs of tension.
“You are,” said Clements and pressed her arm. Over the years he had gradually fallen in love with Lisa Malone, but neither she nor Malone thought it was anything more than just affection.
“
Where are the kids?” said Malone.
“I told them to stay in our bedroom, not to come stickybeaking out here. At least till they've taken theâthe body away.”
“I think it'd be an idea if you took 'em over to your parents' for the day. The Crime Scene lot could be here for a while.”
“I've already rung Mother. We'll go over to Vaucluse after I've made breakfast. Have you eaten, Russ?”
Malone left the two of them in the kitchen and went into the main bedroom at the front of the house. The two girls, dressed in shorts and shirts, were lolling on the bed; Lisa, with her Dutch neatness, had already made it up. Tom, in shorts and T-shirt, was flopped like a rag doll in the armchair in the corner by the window. Occasionally he would raise his head and peer out at the police cars in the street and the small knots of people outside the neighbouring houses. Disappointment clouded his small face: all that excitement going on outside and here he was stuck in the house as if he was sick or something!
“What's happening, Daddy?” Maureen had regained her natural curiosity; she would never allow the world to keep its secrets from her. Of course she would never know even half its secrets; but Malone knew her questioning would never cease. She still had not regained her normal bouncing energy, but at least she no longer seemed frightened. “Have they taken the corpse away?”
“Not yet. When they take it out, don't hang out the window like a lot of ghouls, okay?”
“What's a ghoul?” said Tom, who had his own curiosity, not about the world but about words.
“Explain it to him,” Malone said to Claire. “Don't lay it on too thick.”
She gave him her fourteen-year-old-woman-of-the-world look. “I'm not
stupid,
Inspector. But what was that man doing in our pool anyway?”
“I wish I knew,” said Malone and went out into the hallway and rang Superintendent Greg Random, commander of the Regional Crime Squad.
“Sorry to ring you at home, Greg, but I've got a problem.”
Random listened to what Malone told him, then said in his slow voice, “You want to stay on
the
case? Not to be too obvious, it's a bit close to home.”
“Grime was my pigeon, Greg. I'm not sure it's murder yet, I'm only guessing. But if it is, whoever did him in has got something against me. I'd like to find out who it is.”
Random took his time; silences were part of his personality and character. Then: “Okay, stay with him. But if this gets any closer to home, I mean if there are any threats against your family, you're off the case, understand? Who's assisting you?”
“Russ Clements is already here.”
“I might've guessed it. Are you two holding hands?”
“Only when my wife isn't looking.”
He hung up and went back out to the kitchen. Lisa had drawn down the blinds on the window that looked out on the swimming pool; Clements and the children were now seated at the kitchen table waiting for her to serve breakfast. The scene looked cosy enough, but there was an alertness to everyone, that stillness of the head and stiffening of the neck of someone listening for a warning cry. Outside the house the Physical Evidence team were keeping their voices to a low murmur, as if this crime was on a new level, committed in an environment that had to be protected.
Dr. Keller came to the screen door. “Inspector Malone? I'm finished here, we're taking him away.”
Malone pushed open the door and went out, aware of Lisa's and the children's eyes following him. “You find anything on the body?” He kept his voice low. “Any needle-marks or anything?”
“Not so far.” She moved away back to the pool fence and he followed her, thankful for her discretion. She had a low pleasant voice; she stood close to him, as if sharing an intimacy. Which they were, in a way: the death of Scungy Grime. She was wearing some sort of light perfume, a sweet-smelling GMO; he wondered if she wore it against the pervasion of formaldehyde and other laboratory odours. “Was he a drug-user?”
“Not as far as I know. You don't use junkies as informers, unless you have to. They're too much of a risk.”
“
He could have died of just a heart attackâI shan't know till I get to work on him.” She looked after the green-shrouded body as it was carried past them. Crumbs, thought Malone, we all finish up looking like garbage; the body-bags of war were made by manufacturers of garbage-bags. Suddenly he felt a pang of pity for the dead man.
Wal Dukes and the senior constable in charge of the Physical Evidence team joined them. Constable Murrow was a chunky man in his early thirties with a pale blond moustache and almost white eyebrows; yet his eyes were dark brown. The first impression of his face was that his features were totally unrelated, that he could be the mix of half a dozen fathers. He had the air of a man not quite sure of source or destination, but Malone knew that he was, at least, on top of his job.
“What have
you
got, Wayne?”
“We found some heel impressions around the side of the house. It looks like he was carried in here by one guy.”
“He was small enough,” said Wal Dukes, who was big enough to have carried a couple of men of Grime's size.
Malone looked past him, saw the TV cameraman come round the back corner of the house, camera already whirring. “No!”
“I'll fix him.” Clements had come out of the screen door, was moving on heavy, deliberate feet towards the cameraman, who was still glued to his eye-piece when he was grabbed by the shoulders from behind and spun round out of sight beyond the corner.
“Jesus!” Malone could feel himself quivering.
Romy Keller and the two policemen looked at him sympathetically; he was surprised that it was the GMO, the outsider, who put her hand on his arm. “They're always scavenging, you know that. It's part of the business.”
“I'll see there's a guy posted out the front to keep the vultures out,” said Dukes. Relations between the Department and the media were always touchy. The media were fortunate, they were responsible only to toothless tribunals. The police were responsible to public opinion, which has fangs, “I
think
it'd be an idea if you moved out for a day or two, Scobie.”
“No!”
Then Malone abruptly simmered down. It was unusual for him to allow his anger to erupt as it had; he was not without anger, but normally he could put a lid on it as soon as it started to bubble. But these were not normal circumstances; not that murder in itself was a normal circumstance. His
home
had been invaded, his family threatened: he did not immediately think in such melodramatic phrases, he was too laconic for that, but his feelings were dramatic enough. Now he had himself under control again, he was mapping out the immediate future.
“No.” His voice was quieter. That'd be a point scored for whoever did this.” He gestured at the pool, empty now of Scungy Grime but still surrounded by members of the PE team. “I'm moving my wife and kids over to the in-laws, but I'll stay here.”
“Have it your way then,” said Dukes. “I think I'd probably do the same. We can't let the shit get away with it. Sorry, Doc.” He was the old-fashioned sort who didn't swear in front of women, at least women he didn't know.
Romy smiled. “I think I'd better be going. I'll call you, Inspector, at Homicide as soon as I have something.”
She left them, stopping at the corner of the house to speak to Clements as he came round from evicting the cameraman. Then she was gone, but not before she had put her hand on the big man's arm and left it there a moment, a gesture of intimacy beyond her sympathetic touch towards Malone.
Clements looked at Murrow as he joined the three men. “Any prints or anything, Wayne?”
“They're trying to get some prints off the pool gate. Did you touch the gate, Inspector?”
Malone nodded. “I wasn't thinking . . . Whoever dumped him in the pool made sure of the security lock when he was leaving.”
“Nice of him,” said Clements. “Didn't want some toddler from up the street wandering in and falling in with Scungy.”
“Anything on Scungy?” Malone asked. “Wallet or anything?”
“
Nothing,” said Murrow. “He's skint. Anyone know where he lived?”
“I do,” said Malone and looked at Clements. “I'll get changed. You and I can go and have a look at his flat.”
“You haven't had breakfast.”
“I don't feel like it.”
“Tell that to Lisa.” Clements was not only an adopted uncle, he was sometimes an adoptive brother. “Get something into you. You know she won't let you leave the house till you've eaten.”