âYour phone's off,' Wu said.
He had hardly any accent, though he wasn't from Hong Kong originally. They said he'd come across as a refugee in the early eighties, done the long swim. The idea that Wu must have taught himself almost perfect English as an adult did not surprise Randall. Henry did everything well: he was not like other men. Randall had to call him Mr Wu in conversation, but he thought of him as Henry. He had to force himself sometimes, but it was worth it. It made the man seem more human.
âI was sleeping,' he said. âIt was a rough night.'
âSo I can see,' said Wu, pouring coffee.
Randall tried to concentrate on the newspapers but he was thinking about the man who'd been here with Henry when he'd arrived, and who was now downstairs. The big man. Henry had always liked to have people around him, but it had become more consistent six months ago. Randall wondered if there was some sort of security threat, but it was not something he felt he could ask. He forced himself to read. The
Telegraph
story, like the one in the
Herald
, was mainly about the shootings on level thirty-one. The journalists were right on top of the detail. Both stories mentioned his own presence.
âThanks,' he murmured, taking the coffee, and then: âThe pricks.'
Last night, Warton's PR woman had been assured by the police media unit that nothing beyond a bald account would be released until today. That would have given Warton and Morning Star time to dampen the whole thing down, or at least try to influence the story. And now this. There was a picture of the shot cop on the front page of both newspapers. Their websites would be pushing the story too, alerting readers from around the world to the latest disaster from The Tower.
âI talked to my police contact,' Wu said, staring at Randall. There was a cop he talked to, someone high up, although Randall didn't know who it was. Wu liked boasting about what he'd been told, and usually it was good stuff, but the source was always just âmy contact'. Maybe it was the commissioner. With Henry, anything was possible. âThis detail doesn't come from themâthere's been a leak.' Wu touched the papers. âThese illegals. Did you know anything at all?'
âNothing.'
âNothing?'
Randall repeated his denial. He doubted it was enough to save his job. What he would like to know, before he left, was whether Wu had known. Peer over the edge of his own box for a moment and see what was happening in one of the others. There was no reason for Wu to have known anything, of course, except that money was involved.
âI'm sorry,' he said. âI know it's a disaster. Bazzi had me completely duped.'
With Wu, you needed to admit your mistakes up front. It seemed to relax him. Once you did that, he could even be quite pleasant, in his own twisted way.
Wu said, âI seem to recall you recommended him for the job.'
Randall nodded. âHe worked for the company that did our security before, seemed to know what was going on. Tryon handled him the wrong way.' He could feel the sweat running down his sides now, and wondered how long it would be before Henry could smell it. He said, âI'm a fool.'
He'd never said that to another man before, and the words sounded strange. But with Henry, you did what you had to do.
Wu thought about this, looking out to the bay.
Then he said, âI believe you.'
For a moment Randall wondered if Henry was trying to be funny. But Henry didn't do humour very often. He pointed at the closed door and said, âThat guy in there?', regretting it the moment the words were out. But he couldn't help it.
Wu looked around vaguely, smiled at Randall. âHe's not here for you. Don't worry, Sean.'
Wu put a hand on his arm and he tried not to flinch.
Why me?
he felt like saying,
Why would you have thought I meant that?
He shook his head to try to clear it. This was weird stuff, but lively too.
âAre you going to sack me?' he said.
Shit, he shouldn't have asked.
As if he hadn't heard him, Wu said, âIt's a rogue element.'
The way he spoke the words, Randall could tell the phrase had been used by his police contact. Wu rubbed the back of his hand across his jaw. âIn the circumstances, maybe not so bad. Those two idiots have distracted attention from the illegals.'
Randall blinked, realising the idiots were the two police, the victim and the hero. At least, the newspapers seemed to think Nicholas Troy was a hero.
âSo that's good?'
âIt could be worse.'
Randall felt a bit better. There'd been a pain in his stomach since he woke up this morning, but it was going away now.
He said, âWhat do we know about the illegal workers?'
âYou tell me,' Wu said, looking at him closely.
âNothing.'
âThere it is.'
Not giving him all that much.
âOkay.'
âIt's not okay,' Wu said. âWe need to know what's going on with the police.' He stared at Randall. âYou make some friends. This man McIver, if he wakes up, send him a bottle of something expensive.'
âRight.'
âYou need a contact in the investigation. In my experience, policemen can be lonely men.'
That wasn't Randall's experience, but he nodded politely. âThey're looking for friends?'
Wu smiled. He liked it when Randall picked up things quickly.
âTell me if you need some money,' he said, and pointed at the bandage around Randall's head as though seeing it for the first time. âYou okay?'
It was over, Randall knew. Everything was all right again.
âMore coffee would be good.'
âLet me see the bandage. Oh, poor Sean.'
Usually Wu was a prick, but occasionally he'd act as though Randall was the son he'd never had. It was strange, because Wu had two sons up the hill in his house. And Randall surely had a father, a builder and alcoholic back in Dungarvan. The last thing he wanted was to be adopted by Henry Wu. The man was stimulating and he was necessary, but Randall had always grasped the necessity of keeping a distance from him.
Wu gave him the coffee, which was lukewarm, and said, âHave you got the new film?'
Randall reached into the inside pocket of his coat and pulled out a DVD in a flat plastic case. It showed one of his first sessions with Kristen. Wu put a hand underneath the map table, and he must have pressed something because a small part of the wooden wall behind him sprung open to reveal a white cavity, in which sat an identical DVD case. This was a trick Randall hadn't seen before. This case had the word
Bolivia
handwritten on it, and Wu exchanged it for the one Randall was holding, putting Randall's inside the cavity and closing the door.
The man enjoyed his toys, Randall thought. Imagine having a craft like this, anything you wanted on it. Custom-made.
âShe's from Iceland,' he said, pointing to the part of the wall now concealing the DVD.
âShe knew you were filming her?'
âNo.'
âI'm impressed you can fool them so often,' Wu said.
This was going better. âWe all have our talents.'
The first time they'd used the camera he'd told Kristin it was running only when the red light was on. She'd believed him. It was Henry who'd arranged to have the camera altered almost a year go, after he'd told him of the problem with the light.
âDid you know about Bazzi?' said Wu.
Randall shook his head. âI believe he had at least one accomplice.'
He realised Henry hadn't even asked him for his account of last night. As though he knew about it already. As though Randall's account didn't matter.
âAnother guard has gone too,' said Randall. âAndrew Asaad.'
Wu nodded impatiently. âWe need to find these two men, find out what they were up to in my building. This girl.'
âYou don't know who she was?'
Wu frowned. Randall had been told, the first time he went out east, that Chinese people didn't show emotion. Wu was the Chinese man he'd spent most time with, and it wasn't true of him.
âThis is my main job, Sean,' he said, pointing vaguely at his briefcase on the floor. âYou know I have my little hobbies, but I wouldn't let them interfere in this.'
Randall didn't know much at all about Wu's hobbies. Not most of them, anyway. âFine,' he said quickly. In fact he placed little faith in Henry's denial, believing the fellow to be fundamentally dishonest. But that was not something you wanted him to know.
Wu said, âWhat does Jamal say?'
Eman Jamal was the local manager of Tryon.
âBazzi fooled him too. They've gone back over his records and there's no sign of anything wrong.' Randall cleared his throat. âJamal says they blew it on Asaad, though. Turns out the fellow's in a bikie gang, the Wolves. They missed it when they vetted him.'
âHow long's he been there?'
âSix months.'
Wu grunted. âHe was brought in by Bazzi?'
Randall nodded.
Wu said, âI hope Mr Jamal is improving his vetting procedures.'
âIt's a pretty good company actually. Heads will roll.' Not a good choice of words.
Wu looked at him as though reading his thoughts. But all he said was, âI want you to find Bazzi and Asaad.'
âThe police will do that.'
âI want you to do it first, with the help of Mr Jamal. He will help?'
âHe'll do what I tell him to.'
Wu nodded. âIt's a disaster, Sean, the attention this has drawn to The Tower. We're all very upset. You do understand that?'
âYes.'
âDo you know what it means?'
âI guess it could affect your capacity to attract tenants whoâ' âIt means everything has changed. Lots of lives have changed forever, Sean. Yours too.'
Wu said no more, just stared at him. The man liked his dramas.
Randall shrugged, just wanting to get out of there, over the bridge and into the city.
Wu looked at the wheel. âI'm sailing to work this morning,' he said. âYou want a lift?'
âI've got my car. Need to get to the site. Closing it down will cause chaos.' He looked at his watch: he should be there now.
Wu said, âTell Taylor to hold on. I'm meeting Superintendent Siegert and the head of the Homicide Squad shortly. The decision will be reversed.'
âYou are joking?'
For a moment Wu looked offended, but then he smiled and gestured towards the open door that led onto the rear deck. Randall felt immensely relieved. Wu said, âHappy hunting.'
âI'll see what I can find out from the cops.'
Wu smiled. âYou take care out there, Sean. Don't forget, the people in this town are descended from convicts. They're not honest people.'
âNo.'
It was one of Henry's jokes.
âNot like you and me.'
Randall wasn't sure if he should laugh, he'd heard the line so many times now. But he did, instinctively, giving it all he had. For a moment he saw a flicker of pleasure on Henry's face.
As he walked out and across the gangplank, he knew he'd done the right thing. It was all going to work itself out.
T
he sea was like a washing machine for people, Troy thought. He would plunge into the surf, it would roll him around, and he would emerge clean and renewed. This was how he'd seen Maroubra Beach since moving there four years ago. His swimming had improvedâhe had a strong chest and good lung capacityâand before long he'd become an expert bodysurfer. Walking along the beach in cut-off jeans, with a tan in mid-summer, he felt as though he'd lived here all his life. But he always knew, when he went in, that the sea was in charge. Some people, the ones who were born here, could go through life without realising that. They were the ones who became champions.
He was catching a wave, gliding towards the beach with one arm outstretched, when Anna shook him. As he woke up he tried to pull his arm in, before realising he'd been dreaming. The clock on the bedside table showed it was almost seven, and for a moment he lay there, disoriented, not hearing what she was telling him. Then she was sitting on the bed, leaning down and pressing herself on him, and he could feel her tears on the side of his face.
âI love you,' she whispered.
He wondered if this might bring them back together.
âI love you too,' he said, her hair in his mouth. âI didn'tâ
' She sat up and put a finger on his mouth, and just looked at him for a long time. Then she took the finger away and wiped her eyes.
âSo you heard,' he said.
She stood up, her lovely face full of emotion, brushing the long dark hair back, the brown eyes warm in a way he hadn't seen for a long time.
âYou're in the newspaper. Tracia brought it over.'
He recalled the two journalists, and wondered how they'd used what he'd given them. But that could wait. They'd taken his gun and he was on leave, so everything could wait. Pushing himself up, he took the mug of coffee Anna had left on the bedside table and sipped it. She was still standing there, looking at him as though he were something new.
âI'm on leave,' he said. âUntil further notice.'
Her face lit up and she asked him to tell her about the night before. He patted the bed beside him, wanting to feel her close to him again. She shook her head and said lightly that she had to go check on Matt. She left the room.
Troy sighed and stretched his arms, wondering how he felt. Not too bad, he decided, and swung his legs onto the floor. He sat for a while, longer than he realised, for when he looked at the bedside clock it was seven thirty.
After he'd showered he went into the lounge room and found Matt in his bouncinette, playing with his baby gym. Anna was in the kitchen, washing up. Troy sat down on the floor and talked to his son, running a finger over his soft cheeks. Matt gurgled back. Troy listened carefully, but there were no words he recognised. Matt was a late developer: he hadn't stood up yet, either. He took a tiny hand and pushed it gently against his own nose, breathing in the smell of it, so faint there was hardly anything there.