Authors: Roland Perry
I glanced at Morris to feel better about the world.
Detectives Benns and O'Dare came into view about
forty metres away. Next to them was a photographer with a telephoto lens so long it seemed to poke into the mourners. O'Dare was directing the photographer, a young woman in a blue-and-white police tracksuit, to take snaps of the mourners. She crept round the outskirts of the gathering and clicked away as if at a Scouts' picnic.
Nothing could be done to avoid being photographed. Like me, the police were hoping that a lead would come out of the event. Another lens protruded from a white Commodore and it took me a minute to realise that it belonged to Tony Farrar. He was on the job already. I was apprehensive when he loped over to the detectives and shook hands with them. It niggled me that he might say I was his client â a fact sure to make them clam up.
The priest moved forward to supervise the lowering of the no-frills box and I caught a glimpse of the woman next to Freddie, presumably Danielle. She was tall and looked French. She had long auburn hair and her dark complexion and angular face suggested she was from Marseilles rather than Paris or Lille. She had dark eyes, which along with an impressive Roman nose and a few lines, made her handsome rather than a catwalk beauty. She was elegant from her wide-brimmed white hat with a navy band to her Lagerfeld navy blue suit, and matching accessories.
Behind them was an odd couple of men. One looked like a one-hundred-kilogram Rugby prop, complete with cauliflower ears, thick neck and a flattened nose which formed a straight line with his forehead, like the nose metal of a mediaeval helmet. He wore a dark green turtleneck sweater and light brown jacket and slacks. There was a European manner about the way he held his Gauloise, the unfiltered kind favoured by working-class
Parisians. He had a body tic, which went full cycle from a neck roll, to a chin jut, and then a shoulder roll. His cigarette became soggy, so he flicked it away and lit a new Gauloise. His companion who held the umbrella was taller, with a wiry build, and wore dark glasses that looked silly in the foul weather. His manner and clothes were flamboyant enough to indicate he was gay: he wore tight mauve jeans, a silk black skivvy, a black-and-white check jacket and enough jewellery on his hands to make knuckledusters. He also had very short hair and a preciously neat moustache, a feature of European and American homosexuals. His skin was fair and so tight across his face that you could see the cheekbone and jaw muscles. The man pursed his lips to conceal bad teeth, but it only served to highlight scars round the mouth usually associated with someone being thrown through a windscreen. Despite the glasses it was easy to see that he too couldn't have given a fig about who was being buried. They both could have been spectators at a bad chess match.
The pallbearers had some trouble with the coffin in the mud and the priest slipped and landed on his rump. I leant forward and held him under the arm as he began to slide into the grave; Walters grabbed the other arm and we pulled the poor man out of a embarrassing predicament that only served to upset the mourners further. The coffin had almost upended itself and for a terrifying moment I could see it snapping open. The priest recovered and directed the pallbearers to use ropes to right it. Flowers were dropped on top and swallowed by the shovelfuls of mud being heaved in. A group of Polynesians turned away and cried. It didn't seem a fitting way for anyone, let alone such a young beauty, to be sent underground. Forever. I felt more
than a twinge of regret and moved off with Lloyd slushing along beside me. We crossed in front of two men who had been standing behind us under a beach umbrella. One I recognised as Karl Krogen, Libya's representative in Australia since the Libyan Embassy or Peoples' Bureau had been closed years ago. Next to him was a pock-marked man in a light cotton double-breasted safari suit. He also sported dark glasses that drew attention to him. I whispered Krogen's name to Lloyd.
âBloody extremist loon,' he mumbled.
âWhat about the bloke with him?'
âCould be a Libyan,' he said contemptuously. âI read somewhere that the government was considering letting in a small group of Libyan nationals to act as trade reps. But they don't have diplomatic status. They're on short-term visas for trial purposes.'
I watched them get into a white stretch limousine. There were other people inside it. We got into the Rolls as Freddie drove off fast without daring to look in my direction.
There was a tap on my window. It was the woman who'd been standing next to Freddie.
âExcuse me,' she said, âI'm Danielle Mernet.'
âI guessed,' I said.
âI was wondering if we could speak,' she said, âin private.'
âDid Freddie send you?'
âIt's fairly urgent,' she said, ignoring my question.
I got out of the car. Lloyd looked at his watch.
âIf you can't wait, see if Tony Farrar can you give you a lift back to town,' I said to him with a wave in Farrar's direction. He was still talking with Benns and O'Dare. Lloyd appeared put out, but because he often did, I had learnt to ignore it.
I walked away with Danielle, who held her hat with one hand and an umbrella with the other. She had a limp and from the way she swivelled her body, it seemed to be a hip injury.
âFreddie is very upset,' she said. âHe's worried because the police think that Martine may have been murdered. He had several visits from them and by the end of it all was confused about what actually happened.'
I bit my tongue. He could have been lying.
âHe told me you were unsure also,' she said looking up for confirmation.
âI am, but I recall some detail. My memory has come back a little.' We were strolling towards a mausoleum being built for a Lebanese billionaire, whom I recognised ahead of us. He was speaking animatedly with four workmen, all of whom appeared to be Lebanese. He was no older than fifty-five, and apart from a pot belly hanging over an ostentatious belt, he seemed in good health. Like the Pharoahs he planned to visit his eternal home and become familiar with it before he took up permanent residence.
âWhat happened exactly?' she asked me.
âFreddie and I slept until four. But I had a chat to Martine before I fell asleep.'
I waved to Lloyd who had taken a lift with Tony Farrar. He held up a car phone and indicated he would call me.
âAnd what did she say?' Danielle asked, her interest heightened.
âThat's a matter for my lawyer and the police.'
âMr Hamilton, you must understand that Freddie thought you might have been setting him up.'
âThat's a laugh,' I said, a trace bitterly, âI thought the same thing about him.'
âThe police found a bottle of pills prescribed for Martine in his apartment.'
I stopped walking and stared at her.
âWhat kind of pills?'
âSerophrine.'
âDid they have a label?' I asked.
She nodded.
âThey had been dispensed from a pharmacy in Bourke Street.'
âHow did the police come to search his apartment?'
âHis story was confused. They became suspicious and turned his place upside down.'
âWhat did Freddie do when they found them?'
âSwore that he didn't take them from Martine's place.'
âYou believe that?'
âI do. I really do.'
If I believed her, and Freddie was on the level, it meant someone was trying to pin the death on either or both of us.
We passed the Lebanese, who bowed.
âDo you mind if we have a look inside?' I said.
âMy pleasure, Mr Hamilton,' he said and then shrieked an order at the mausoleum. Two Lebanese security men wearing gun holsters emerged. They were keeping it in the family. We reached the entrance to the structure which was about half complete, and took steps down to the vault. Unprotected light bulbs lit the place and gold dominated the inlays of a podium, the ceiling and the floor. The walls had frescoes of Beirut before it had been flattened.
âHow do you think Martine died?' I asked.
Danielle shrugged. Her eyes moistened just a bit.
âI suspect it was murder,' she said.
âWhy?'
âShe was not the type to suicide. She had spent years battling against a serious lymphatic cancer and had beaten it. She was so happy with life.'
âHave you any ideas on what happened?'
Again that Gallic shrug.
âFreddie says he left a few minutes after you at about ten past four. I went to pick her up to go to the Victoria Market, which we did every Saturday at eight. She was always so punctual. I found her . . .'
Her voice fell away as she recalled the moment.
âAnd that was at what, about nine?'
âEight thirty.'
âOK, so there is a gap of about four hours in which a murderer could have got in and killed her.'
âYes.'
The mausoleum was giving me the creeps. We walked back to the Rolls and got in. I offered her the lift which she had been banking on since Freddie had driven off alone. I didn't start up. âHave you any idea who may have killed her?' I asked.
Danielle hesitated.
âThere are a few possibilities,' she said.
I switched on the windscreen wipers, their monotonous hum penetrated our conversation pauses, and allowed us to see cemetery workers putting the finishing touches to Martine's grave.
âDid she tell you about what happened in Paris?' she asked.
âA little,' I said, leaving an opening. Danielle told me more or less the story Freddie had.
âThe doctor who maltreated Martine in France was Claude Michel,' Danielle said, touching her glasses. She was distracted by a man standing on the edge of the roadway facing Martine's grave. He was tall and thin
and wore a hat and an expensive suit. He seemed to be waiting for the workers to flatten down the mud and erect a plaque.
âDid Martine think Michel was in the country?' I asked.
âShe thought she was being watched.'
I turned to her.
âWatched? What do you mean?'
âShe claimed her phone was bugged and that she was being followed.'
âDid you think she was?'
No pout or shrug this time from Danielle.
âI'm not sure. She seemed obsessed with the idea that she would be murdered.'
âWhat other threats did Martine have?' I said.
âShe lived a, how can I say, “different” life,' she said. âThe English would call her a “good time girl”.'
âAre you telling me she was a high-class hooker?'
âIn a way. You see she had her professional life as a good model and beyond that she liked to live well. To do that she needed money. And Martine would do almost anything for money.'
âCould she have made enemies amongst her clients?' I asked.
âThere was a Libyan amongst the mourners,' Danielle said. âMartine hinted that he was perhaps a terrorist.'
âHe was a client?'
âDon't think so. She had an affair with a Libyan terrorist in London.'
I pulled a piece of paper from my wallet and scribbled. If I was going to play assistant to Farrar I should be making notes.
âName?'
Danielle's forehead creased in concentration.
âSomething like Al Shahati or Al Shahata. The Libyan at the funeral was a friend of his.'
âYou don't know his name?'
âNo.'
âDid you meet him?'
âNo and I didn't want to.'
âMartine had something to do with him here?'
âYes. It may have just been on an old acquaintance basis.'
Martine was proving to be quite a woman, but my sympathy for her was wavering. She had trodden dangerous ground in her high-class hookery. We had passed in the night, like two ships. Since then she had been torpedoed two metres into the mud and I was rudderless and in danger of being sunk.
I started the Rolls just as the dapper gent in the hat took some flowers from his dark green Peugot and took them over to the head of the grave.
âWonder who that guy is?' I mumbled. I glanced at Danielle. Instead of saying she didn't know, she remained silent.
âDo you know him?' I asked.
âThat's the French Consul.'
âMust have been a good friend,' I observed. There must have been sixty roses in the bunch and roses were for a lot more than friendship.
âWas he a client of Martine's?' I asked.
We watched him retreat.
âMore than that,' she said, âhe was a lover.'
H
UNGER PANGS
were attacking me when I arrived back at the office round five fifteen p.m. after dropping Danielle off in the city, but I couldn't grab more than a cup of coffee. A lot was happening. My secretary/assistant/confidante, Rachel Carlotti, a computer-efficient, ex-school headmistress of forty-five, had a daunting list of messages for me. It was important to speak with Farrar and Dr Morris. Rachel said I had better also call Detective Benns, who had made four calls. I had told Rachel not to use the car phone because I didn't want to be burdened with âurgent' messages while trying to see Farrar and attend Martine's funeral. At the top of a five-billion-dollar-a-year organisation like Benepharm there is a never-ending stream of decisions to make, things to sign, reports to review, people who wish to see the boss and so on, and no matter how much I delegated, many things somehow managed to seep through to me. On a bad day I was at
my desk at seven a.m. and on a good day six thirty-five a.m. That had allowed me to work a hundred hours a week and to keep on top of things for fifteen years. I found discipline and routines not just important, but vital. It therefore unbalanced me to arrive at the office at five fifteen p.m. Before I reached my desk, Hewitt was on the line. The police said they had more evidence and wanted me for further questioning.
âWhat evidence?' I said through gritted teeth.