Still, this was better than talking about the illegals, which had occupied the first part of the meal. He checked his phone to see if Troy had rung, but there was no message. That afternoon Wu had called, told him Troy had taken the bait, told him never to tell anyone about the number he'd given the cop the night before. For a few hours, Randall had ignored the implications, just like he'd been ignoring them ever since Wu gave him the number yesterday. But they sunk in. He realised Troy might work it out and come after him, full of anger. He was a very physical fellow, although these past few days he'd hardly been acting impressively. Last night at the restaurant he'd been all over the place. Randall felt a small glow of pride at the thought that he'd come out of Sunday night in better shape than Troy. And Henry was happy with him again, because of how he'd handled the detective. It was as though he'd had a disease and it had been passed on.
Margot Teresi's name had been released to the media, so now the whole world knew she was the victim and was talking about it. Jack Taylor hadn't said a word. They'd been in meetings together twice that day, and Taylor had said nothing, he'd treated Randall the same as normal. It looked like his job was safe. Thanks to Henry.
The problem was, as he sat there waiting for Kristin to come back, Randall found he didn't feel good about Troy. He didn't know precisely what it was he'd done, but he had a strong feeling it might be painful. Troy was a decent sort of fellow doing an important job for poor pay. He didn't deserve to get Randall's germs. I have not always been a good man, Randall thought, but my crimes have usually been victimless, or at least done to strangers. This is different. But then, Troy is such a decent fellow, he might not blame me. He might blame himself.
Kristin came back from the toilets, all bouncy as she flopped into her chair, complete mood transformation. He'd given her some stuff earlier in the evening, in the bar where they'd met, and she must have done a line or two in the ladies' just now. He hoped the waitress wouldn't notice, but she probably would. They needed to go, and he shovelled the last of the wild rice on his plate into his mouth. Kristin seemed to have lost interest in her food, and looked around for someone to bring them the bill.
Kristin reached out and put a hand on his wrist. He liked the way her skin was so pale it made his look dark. He was fair himself, and usually with women it worked the other way round.
âThis Thai girl, Sally,' she said, and he nodded, recalling the prostitute picked up by the cops on Sunday.
âImmigration were very enthusiastic at first,' she said, âbut it's gone wrong. They say there's not enough evidence for them to charge anyone with sex trafficking.'
âDidn't the papers say she had some huge debt she could never pay off?' He'd read that she only came here because they'd told her she'd be a dancer. But then, she would say that.
âI know.' Kristin grasped his wrist more firmly. âIt's terrible. Can you imagine? Forced prostitution.'
A waiter turned up with the bill at last, and Randall gave him his card. Kristin put hers on the tray too; she always insisted on paying her share.
âSo it's a question of evidence?'
âIt's a question of police determination. They've backed off, it's all too hard.' She stood up, face flushed, realised the cards hadn't been brought back yet, and sat down.
âWhat can you do?' he said.
âOne of the detectives, Susan Conti, was really keen to pursue it,' she said. âBut now the police have been taken off Sally's case.'
âIs this Conti any good?'
âShe's sympathetic. But has no power.'
Their cards came back and Kristin stood up. âNow let's go and fuck.'
Jesus. âI went to the doctor today about a pain in my stomach. She gave me some medication that has a side effect. It interferes with my libido.'
âIt's the cocaine,' she said, so loudly that a woman at the next table looked over. âYou need to ease off.'
âNo it's not. I have this pain.'
âIn your stomach?'
âThat's right.'
He stood up and took his briefcase, and they walked out of the restaurant.
âWhat is this medication called?'
What the doctor had recommended, until the tests could be run, was something called Mylanta. Off the shelf. He had a big bottle in his bag, and if Kristin thought the medication was in there, she'd grab it and do a search. Right now she was very frisky.
âI don't remember,' he said. âIt's back at the office.'
âI think there must be some mistake. Tomorrow, you tell me the name.'
Outside the restaurant, Randall said, âTonight, do you mind if we just sleep?'
Some girls would have thought this rather sweet, but Kristin didn't look happy. He knew she had strong needs and took them very seriously.
âI think I'll go home to my place then,' she said. âI'm a healthy woman. In bed with you, I might be too frustrated.'
âWellâ' he said.
âI think it's best.'
She stuck her arm out, and a passing taxi pulled over. He could see she was furious.
âHow about we go away together for the weekend? I'll pick you up at five on Friday.'
âThat's tomorrow. Where will we go?'
He had no idea. âSomewhere nice. A surprise for you.'
âOkay.' She kissed him hard on the lips. âBut tomorrow, I want to know the name of your medication.'
He watched the taxi pull off. She was so efficient, he thought, at just about everything. She hadn't encountered messiness yet, and would probably make sure she avoided it for life. He wondered where they would go tomorrow night. Leave the mobile at home. Somewhere far away from Troy.
T
roy woke early, just before dawn. Matt started to grizzle so he went to the boy's bedroom and found the door was now unlocked. Anna must have got up during the night. She was still asleep on the couch, and he changed and dressed Matt as quietly as he could. Then he took him out to the kitchen and prepared some hot water to warm the bottle of formula standing ready in the fridge. Anna had stopped breastfeeding a few months ago. While the bottle stood in the water, he took Matt into the main bedroom and propped him up on some pillows on the bed while he changed into jeans and a warm top. The baby looked at him earnestly as he got dressed and began to cry. Troy put on a little pantomime act, held his finger to his lips, tried to look concerned. The baby stopped crying and furrowed his brow, apparently in concentration. As he returned to the kitchen, Matt held in the crook of his left arm, he continued this one-sided dialogue.
When they left the house it was light, and there was more than a trace of heat in the air. Troy pushed the stroller down in the direction of the beach. It would be two months before the water was warm enough for most people to swim, but from now on the sand and the broad pathway above it would attract more and more people in daily rehearsals for summer.
Troy steered the stroller around a long stretch of pavement covered in broken glass. Unusually for a beachside suburb, Maroubra had lots of public housing. Anna had a friend who was a midwife and made home visits in the area. If she went to one of the blocks, it was procedure to notify the local police as she went in. If they hadn't heard from her within half an hour, a car would be sent around immediately. Despite this, the suburb was now an expensive place to buy a house, although the new owners coexisted uneasily with the welfare population. Someone at the surf club had suggested this was why so many of the new houses looked like concrete fortresses.
When they reached the beachfront, Troy turned right and pushed the stroller towards the Malabar headland, a vast area of grass and trees that contained a riding school and several rifle ranges. On its far side there was a sewage treatment works and then, a little further on, the site of a former hospital recently turned into housing for the wealthy, and then the large and still very current Long Bay jail. It was an unusual combination of elements for the coast, which elsewhere consisted largely of houses, beaches and national parks. Troy liked it.
It was only by accident that he lived here and not inland. Four years ago, a solicitor had called to say someone had left him and Georgina a house. It turned out their mother had an uncle they'd never heard of, a single man who'd lost touch with her decades before she died. Now he had died too. Georgina and Troy had met the solicitor at the house, a small, dark-brick place built in the 1940s. They'd walked through it and Troy had liked the bare, grassy backyard and the way the sunlight came in through the windows, making patches on the old carpet. It seemed peaceful, and reminded him of the house they'd lived in before their parents' deaths. It reminded him of a time when he had been a different person.
âHis name was Wal Barton,' said the solicitor. âHe said to apologise to you, and left you all his possessions. Which means the house and contents.'
âApologise for what?' said Georgina.
âHe didn't say.'
Troy said, âWhen's the funeral?'
âIt was last week. He didn't want you to be told until now.' The solicitor thought about what he was going to say next. âThere were no mourners.'
After they'd finished at the house, Troy and Georgina had gone to a cafe near the beach. She told him she didn't want her share: the house was his. When he protested, she described her husband's earnings and career prospects. âWe don't need any more money,' she said, putting a hand on his arm.
He knew it was not just that. It was about the different lives they'd been handed after their parents died. He said he'd think about it.
At the time, he'd just started seeing Anna. She was a nurse and they'd met when he was at Westmead interviewing an assault victim. Things between them grew serious, and the house at Maroubra became part of it; suddenly he could see a future for himself and her, there. A family, for heaven's sake. Him. It was a future he'd never imagined, but which he found he desperately wanted. So he'd called Georgina and said he accepted her gift.
Much later, Anna had pointed out their lucky financial situation meant he could walk away from his job any time he liked. He could afford to take a few months off and do nothing. At the time he'd wondered why she'd said this, but she hadn't mentioned it again. Money wouldn't have been a problem in their lives even if they'd had a mortgage. He could always find work in the private-security sector, earning much more than he did now. Like Ralph Dutton, who was coming over on Sunday with his family. He'd left the police a while back, and these days he lived like a king.
But that was not for him. Troy knew that being a homicide detective was his vocation. No matter what Helen Kelly might be doing to the squad, it was the only place he wanted to be.
When they reached the car park at the southern end of the beach, Troy took Matt from his stroller and walked through the trees and across the sand to the rock pools. Troy crouched to look into a few of the pools but they were bare, long since stripped of anything edible by the city's expanding population, with its varied range of culinary desires. He held Matt tightly, breathing in the baby smell of his hair.
âWe're fifty years too late, mate,' he murmured, looking into the rock pool.
He stood up and walked back slowly across the sand, feeling the sun warming his back, basking in a contentment he had not had in a long time. He resisted the temptation to hug Matt again; sometimes he held him so close the boy had trouble breathing.
There was a sign saying
DANGEROUS RIP: SWIMMING PROHIBITED
. He stood in front of it for a while, watching twenty surfers in their wetsuits paddling on the swell. It wasn't a good day for it, and after a bit Matt began to grizzle, so he turned back to the road. He put the boy in the stroller and soon he was fast asleep.
When they reached the shops he decided to go into a cafe. Often Matt would wake up when the motion of the stroller stopped, but when Troy parked it next to a table and sat down, he continued to sleep. Troy ordered a flat white and reached for a copy of the
Telegraph
on a nearby table, trying to make as little noise as he could. The main story was about a leadership struggle in the federal government, something Troy had stopped paying attention to long ago. The other item on the front page, concerning the murder of a South Korean student in a flat in Pyrmont, occupied his attention as the coffee came and he began to sip it. Maybe he'd be assigned to the investigation. Then he turned the page and saw a photograph of himself. The one from Dubbo. He blinked and checked the date of the newspaper, thinking it might be from Monday. But it wasn't, and he should have known this because there was a photograph of Margot Teresi next to his own. On Monday they hadn't known the victim's identity.
TERESI MURDER INQUIRY IN CHOAS, ran the headline.
Police Commissioner Frank Rogers has rejected claims the investigation into the death of heiress Margot Teresi has been compromised by a political agenda. Informed sources claim inquiry chief Detective Sergeant Brad Stone has been using interviews with workers at The Tower, where Teresi died on Sunday night, to gather information on the activities of union organisers.
Matt began to cry but Troy read on. The article described Stone as âa Victorian detective formerly attached to the royal commission into the construction industry'. It reported that Detective Senior Constable Nicholas Troy, Stone's deputy, had been stood down from Strike Force Tailwind yesterday. The official reason was his need to recover from the shooting incident at The Tower, but an anonymous source claimed the real reason was that Troy had expressed concerns the political agenda was compromising the homicide investigation. As Troy was the only experienced homicide officer on the team, the source said this would affect its chances of finding Teresi's killer.