Authors: Shivaun Plozza
âWell, what school does Xavier go to?'
âSomething High.'
âWell, you've just been a wonderful help.' I imagine my fist smashing into his teeth â even better.
Bill itches his chest. Before he closes the door in my face, he says, âDo yourself a favour, kid. Forget about Xavier. He'll drag you through the shit and rip you off on the other side. He learnt that from your mother.'
The door slams, glass rattling.
â
Aiutati che Dio t'aiuta!
' shouts the old lady.
I'm trembling as I walk the path out of there. No jumping this time. Unless you count the pulsing beat of my heart, close to jumping out of my chest.
I bend to pick up a palm-sized stone from next to the gatepost. I think it might be a chunk of old path.
I weigh it in my hand, giving myself a few deep breaths and a count of ten to change my mind.
I don't change my mind.
âThis is something
I
learnt from my mother.' I hurl the rock at the front door. It crashes through the bevelled glass.
As I run down the street, the old lady claps her hands. â
Bravo
,' she shouts after me.
I pause long enough to bow.
The bowels of the Collingwood police station open up, ejecting two uniformed officers arguing about football. They don't look at me as they pass. No one's looked at me.
Last time I was here they gave me colouring-in books and lollies. Of course, back then I was four and newly dumped. Now, I'm a soon-to-be-expelled miscreant worried about her missing, thieving half-brother.
Still, the service has really gone downhill.
It's been thirty-seven minutes since I spoke to the officer on the front desk, a policewoman who rolled her eyes before saying someone would be down to take a statement âreal soon'. Guess I missed the sarcasm.
I thought people made a big deal about missing kids. I thought they cried on TV and offered rewards and made public vows to never stop searching. It's what Harrison Finnik-Hyde's parents are doing. I watched a clip on my phone â tears, hiccups, scrunched-up faces, pleas.
I tried picturing Bill Green weeping into a hanky on TV. Not likely. And I called Xavier's school. Actually, I called every high school in Reservoir until . . . jackpot. âHaven't seen him for a week,' said the coordinator. âI'd be more surprised if he actually showed up.'
What the hell? Some Malvern kid doesn't front up to school for one measly day and we get a state-wide manhunt, but my brother goes AWOL for a whole week and no one gives a shit?
I shove my head between my knees and run my fingers through the long strands of hair swaying in front of my face. Buttons does this thing where he sits over the back of the chair, grabbing at his tail like he doesn't know it belongs to him. I can't pretend the hair's not mine because it tugs whenever my fingers get caught in a knot.
Why doesn't Xavier just call? âHi, it's me. I don't want to be found but you should know I'm okay.' That would take, what? Five seconds? I've left enough messages on his phone today for him to know I'm freaking out.
Unless he can't call.
A bear-hand clamps down on my shoulder.
I flick my head up: cheap polyester, coffee breath, stale cigarette smoke and a sparse comb-over.
âWhat are
you
doing here?' I sneer. I'm all charm.
Marzoli doesn't even blink. âIt's a police station. I'm a cop. You do the math.'
âI failed Maths.'
âShall we head to the interview room? I need to take a statement from you.'
I stand and he grabs my arm, steering me toward a nondescript door to the right of reception. âIn here.' He guides me into a windowless room painted mental-asylum green.
âSit,' he says, pushing me into a chair.
I freeze. I can't even breathe.
It's the same room.
They haven't painted the walls of this room for fourteen years â and they were scuffed and dirty back then. It's smaller than I remember and the roof is lower. The light flickers and hums.
I leave my life up to fate for a few minutes and look what happens. If karma's a bitch then fate is her psychopathic cousin. You know, the one no one invites to family reunions because she makes the little kids cry.
I shove the tip of my thumb into my mouth and start chewing the nail.
Marzoli plonks a manila folder stuffed with papers on the table in front of me. The cover is stained with two coffee rings overlapping like a Venn diagram. Papers in different shades of white are stuffed inside, their edges curled, torn, manhandled. The words âXavier Green' are scrawled in pencil across the top right-hand corner.
Shit.
He closes the door and takes a seat.
âThe PC on the front desk said you think a young gentleman by the name of Xavier Green is missing.' He drags the folder across the table and into his lap, loosely crossing his right leg over his left. âWhat makes you think that, Miss Vega?'
He begins to flick through the folder. Slowly. It's a pretty thick folder for a fourteen-year-old boy.
I shrug. My stomach is cramping and, despite the icy temperature, my face is burning.
âWhat's a DI doing taking a missing kid statement? You short staffed or something?'
âHow do you know Xavier Green?' Marzoli doesn't look up.
âHe's my half-brother.'
âDidn't know you had a brother.'
âHalf. And neither did I.'
âWhen did you last hear from him?'
âHe left a message on my phone two days ago. I've called him a gazillion times and he's not answering.'
âAny particular reason why you think something's happened to him?'
I give him a were-you-dropped-as-a-baby look followed by a well-duh voice. It's a classic combination. âNo one has seen him. He's missing.'
âBut why do you think he's missing and not just a runaway?'
Okay. First off, âjust a runaway'? Stellar empathy there, Marzoli. Secondly, the answer to Marzoli's superb question is actually: because he stole over four grand from his dad, maybe even more from someone else, and then did something possibly more illegal, possibly more stupid to get the money back. But that's not an answer I can give.
âBecause, Detective Inspector, he didn't have a reason to run away. He was happy.'
Marzoli sighs and then rattles off more questions, scribbling notes the whole time. Missing person's full name, date of birth, description? Any scars, tattoos, birthmarks, distinctive jewellery, clothing? What kind of car does he drive (he's fourteen, dipshit)? Credit card details, favourite places to hang out, friends, contact details for friends, medical conditions, medications, GP? Blah, blah, blah.
I'm able to answer two-and-a-half questions â the rest get a shrug. God only knows what Marzoli is scribbling.
âWhen did you see him last?'
âThursday.'
âYou two have a fight? Maybe said things? I know you're not the type to blow up at someone and say stuff you later regret but . . .'
I glare at a stain on the laminate table. Probably some crim's brain matter from when Marzoli roughed him up for a confession.
âHe's missing,' I say. âWhat are you going to do about it?'
Marzoli picks at the corner of the folder. âHave either of his parents seen or spoken to him?'
âI don't know. I'll just go ask Mummy dearest. Oh wait, I can't. She's missing too.'
âHis dad?'
I shake my head.
Marzoli scans the folder, pursing his lips like he's reading a bestseller. âDid you know Xavier's run away before?' He pulls out a single page, holding it at arm's length to read. âHe's been in trouble with us a fair bit. Done community service. Currently on probation.'
âHe's missing. You forgot to add that to the list. Missing and only fourteen.'
âI'm just putting it out there that maybe â
maybe
â he's not missing. Maybe he's run away. Again.'
âDid you give the Malvern kid's family that line?'
He doesn't look at me. Just the stupid folder. âThat's not my case, Frankie.'
Of course it's not his case. They'd only have the best for Harrison Finnik-Hyde.
âJust say you'll look into it.'
It takes him a second longer than it should to answer me. âOf course we'll look into it.'
He can't meet my eye. So I figure that by âlook into it' he means âthrow the report into the bin the second I'm out of here'.
This was the worst idea ever.
Fuck you, brain. Fuck you very muchly.
He clears his throat. âRest easy, Frankie. I always get my man.'
âIs that your tagline on RSVP or are you trying to comfort me?'
His lazy smile says âhardy-har-har' but his eyes say âI'm going to stand over your dead body and cackle'.
âListen, Frankie â'
âForget it, Detective. We all know the son of a junkie doesn't get a front-page spread so let's just call this what it is â a waste of everybody's time, mostly mine â and move on with our lives. You obviously have an RSVP profile to update and I have kebabs to make.' I stand, my thighs bash into the edge of the table, ramming it into Marzoli's crossed leg. He swallows a curse and drops the folder, pages spilling all over the floor. One of them is a mug shot.
The dimpled smile is there. And so much of Juliet I want to puke.
I push straight past Marzoli and burst into reception, everything blurring around me.
âFrankie, wait.'
No chance.
I'm so busy thinking about how the hell to get out of this place that I don't see the guy until I've face-planted his chest.
It's Shia LaBeouf.
âHey,' he says. âWatch where you're . . .'
I figure the point that his voice trails off is the point at which he recognises me. And boy does he recognise me. It's the look of horror and all-consuming anger that gives it away.
He doesn't say anything though. Neither do I. We just do the whole open-mouthed stare thing for way too long.
Under his cooler-than-cool jacket he's wearing a â gasp â Smiths t-shirt. His dark hair falls messily across his face, almost hiding a purple bruise circling his right eye. Guess I'm not the only one Nate has pissed off.
âExcuse me, miss,' says the cop behind him. It's Peters, the snot-nosed guy from Marlee's. âNeed to get past.'
My gaze travels down to where Nate's got his arms pulled behind his back and Peters is gripping Nate's handcuffed wrists.
âDidn't you hear the man?' says Nate. âGet lost. VIP coming through.'
âBy VIP you mean “vulgar impotent pig”?'
âCareful with the name-calling. I might have to start calling you “snitch”.' Nate jiggles his arms, handcuffs rattling. âYou just like hanging around cop shops, do you?'
âWhoa. I'm not here to â'
I smell Marzoli's cologne before he opens his mouth. âNate Wishaw,' he growls from right behind me.
âDetective.' Nate grins. Long-lost friends apparently.
Marzoli stands like the sheriff facing an outlaw at high noon: hands on hips, pushing back his trench coat, slightly bowed legs, narrowed, wizened eyes. âYou don't get frequent flyer points round here.'
I get squeezed out of the way as he steps up to Nate and they have a stare-off.
âAsk Mr VIP where my brother is. I bet he knows.'
Marzoli chuckles, rubbing his stubble. âYou mean Nate Wishaw and Xavier Green are mates? Why doesn't that surprise me? A match made in heaven.'
Nate throws me a look, something halfway between a smile and grimace.
Interesting. Looks like Mr Unflappable is getting a teensy bit flapped.
âGreen's missing,' says Marzoli to Nate. âKnow anything about it?'
âNate was the last person I saw Xavier with. Of course he knows something.'
Marzoli looks at me like I've just dumped a million dollars into his lap. âYou saw Wishaw on Thursday? What time?'
Nate is staring at his boots, jaw set firm.
As I glare at him, I mentally run through everything I know. I know Nate and Xavier robbed my neighbour's house Thursday afternoon. I could easily tell Marzoli everything. I know Marzoli's investigating the burglaries and he's positively salivating at the idea of sending Nate down for it. I know it's a crime to lie to the police but I also know pinning Nate for this crime dumps my brother in the shit too. Which he deserves. But Vegas don't snitch.
I know Xavier owes a heap of money. What I don't know is what Xavier did to get the money back, where he went instead of delivering it and how I'm going to find him.
And if I can't find him, how can I make sure he's okay then beat him over the head with Uncle Terry's baseball bat for being the second blood relative to skip out on me?
But maybe Nate knows the things I don't.
And he can't tell me anything if he's rotting in jail.
âFive pm,' I say. Which isn't a lie.
Marzoli licks his lips. âAnd where did you see them, Miss Vega?' I think he's already planning a victory party. Would Marzoli do the conga?
âInside the Emporium.'
Marzoli turns his pit-bull stare my way. If he was doing the conga in his head then he just tripped and fell on his lei. âRepeat that, please.'
Breathe, Frankie.
âMy brother came for dinner and he brought Nate with him. We played Scrabble. It was fun.'
I look at Nate. He looks at me. There's a lot of looking. Those eyes are
very
blue.
Nate swallows hard. âGot a triple-word score with “indebted”.' For a second he looks genuinely thankful. Sincere. Humbled.
Then he winks.
And we're back to normal transmission. Do not adjust your TV sets.
Marzoli's jaw twitches. âAre you sure about that, Miss Vega? It's really important you're sure.'
I glare pointedly at Nate. âThey stayed until closing â one am. He's lying about the triple-word score, though. He didn't make a single word bigger than four letters all night.'
Nate shrugs. âThere are plenty of good four-letter words.'