âYou're a doll,' he said and disappeared.
Ludowyk eyed Challis with amusement. âThe dope-head look is an affectation. I doubt he takes anything stronger than aspirin. Clever, too.'
âYou like teaching?'
Another smile. âFrankly, I'd rather work with the art than those who profess to study it.'
Challis wondered where he stood. He'd rather work with the evidence than the people who left it? âI'm glad you're not teaching this afternoon.'
She snorted. âNot that universities teach anymore. Revenue farming mostly.'
Challis nodded. âI can see a day when the police force is less about solving crimes than running workshops.'
Ludowyk bent her head over the Klee again, and murmured, âThis was stolen.'
âYou can tell by looking?'
She straightened her back. âSee here in the corner, flecks ofâat a guessââwatercolour paint.'
âMeaning?'
âI'll check the stolen art register in a moment, but my guess is this was stolen from a regional gallery somewhere in Europe. Little or no security. The thief snatched it off the wall and walked out with it, and smuggled it out of the country by posing as a tourist on a painting holiday. He or she painted an inept watercolour over the Klee and concealed it among an armful of other inept watercolours.'
âIt's not Nazi loot?'
âI doubt it. A bit too modern for Nazi tastes. Anyway they went in for wholesale removal from galleries and private homes, looting by the truckload. They didn't need to conceal individual items with a layer of watercolour paint. But let's check.'
She went to one of the computers and logged on to a site that asked for a password. Challis watched briefly as she flashed through the links, then he idled around the room for a while, flipping through the pages of the art histories on the shelves. Five minutes later, Ludowyk pushed her chair away from the computer and said, âEureka.'
Challis read the account. The little painting had disappeared from a regional gallery in Switzerland in 1995. âPity it doesn't say who stole it and brought it to Australia.'
âThat's assuming it's the same person,' Ludowyk said. She opened her arms as if to encompass all possibilities. âThe thief might never have been to Australia. The painting might have passed through many hands. Was it stolen with the Sydney Long?'
âWe don't know,' Challis said. âThey were stored with coins and stamps, butâ'
Ludowyk smiled. âBut if your thief stole from a thief, then you'll hit a brick wall.'
Challis felt weary to be reminded of it. âTrue.'
âWe know the Klee is stolen, but there's no indication on-line that the Long is. Someone might have bought both items in good faith, or the Klee knowing it was stolen and the other knowing it was legit⦠There are many variables.'
âGreat.'
âIf you do find someone who admits to being the legitimate owner, check if they also own drawings and paintings by local artists such as Whiteley, Nolan and Blackman. Artists with a big, undocumented output. Fakes are turning up all the time. Some are recognised in time and quietly destroyed, others disappear after the alarm is raised, only to be offered for sale again years and years later.' She paused. âIndigenous art, too. As much as twenty per cent of it is fake.'
Challis closed his eyes. âI'm just a humble regional plodder.'
âI'll bet.'
Challis decided that he liked Ludowyk; he liked the practical, chemical smell of her room. It must be a good job, he thought, to work with your hands, recreating, solving puzzles. âLet's say someone acquired the Klee knowing it was stolenâ¦What's your reading of that person? What makes him or her tick?'
Ludowyk cocked her head at him. âI'm not a profiler.'
âYeah, butâ'
âOkay. We might be looking at a collector who couldn't afford to pay the market price. Or an art lover who liked to gloat over the painting in private. Or a crook who intended to wait a few years then put it up for auction with false provenance papers.'
âBut it was stolen in 1995.'
Another who-knows gesture. âInspector, you don't know where it's been all these years. It might have financed several drug deals in the meantime, or been used as collateral for loans. Anything.'
Challis heaved his shoulders and said, âI'd like you to look at this photograph.'
He tapped the icon on the wall between the old couple. âIs that valuable?'
âNowhere near the value of the Klee. A family keepsake?'
âCould be.'
âIt looks old, certainly. But icons were not produced to make an individual artistic statement in the way that the Klee probably was. There was no ego involved. A master artist and a handful of apprentices in some little Russian village would have made dozens of these to the glory of God.'
Challis stared gloomily at the man and the woman. Were they long-lost relatives of the woman who called herself Mrs Grace?
âThe place and date are significant,' Ludowyk said, reading the back of the photograph. âAfter the 1917 revolution, thousands of White Russians fled to Harbin, joining an already established population. Then in the late 1940s and early 1950s many of them were allowed to settle in Australia. Very traditional and patriotic, some of them. The church, Mother Russia. This icon mattered to someone.'
Challis knew all that. He'd typed âHarbin' into Google before making the drive up to Monash.
âI have an officer checking burglaries here and interstate.'
âA big job.'
âOh, yes.'
âWant me to contact the gallery in Switzerland? I imagine they'll want their Klee returned.'
âThank youâbut tell them it could take a while.'
Challis was back at CIU by 4.30 that Tuesday. Murphy wasn't there. Scobie Sutton was.
He unfolded his gangly legs as Challis walked in, got to his feet and said, âSir, a ton of phone calls have come in, plus I have some odd bits and pieces to tell you.'
âOkay.'
âFirst, that list of fences you asked for, those specialising in coins and stamps and art.' A pause; Sutton simply stopped talking. He often did this, waiting for encouragement to continue.
âAnd?'
âOne of them was shot dead outside his house last night.' Sutton glanced at the sheet of paper in his hands. âSteve Finch, second-hand dealer in Williamstown. His shop was torched fifteen minutes later.'
Challis stored the information. There wasn't much else he could do with it yet. âWhat else?'
âPam had a few calls in to the AFP and the New South Wales police.' Another pause.
âScobieâ¦'
âOh, okay, well, the man calling himself Towne is not employed by the federal police. His name is Ian Galt and until a couple of years ago he was state police, sacked on suspicion of corruption.'
âDo they know why he's poking around down here?'
âPam had to go out, I didn't get the full gist of it.'
âWhere did she go?'
âNote on her desk,' Sutton said. He walked around Challis to fetch it. âSays she's doing a follow up with those Niekirk people.'
Challis didn't know what that meant and he was mildly annoyed. There were more pressing cases she could be working on. âIf she comes back or calls in, tell her I need to see her.'
âSir. Oh, and some woman called you.'
âWho?' said Challis.
Then his office phone rang and he turned away from Sutton to take the call. âChallis.'
A young, uninflected voice said, âThe blankets over the head, that was my idea.'
Challis missed a beat, the slightest beat, then nudged the door shut. âI thought it might have been.'
âDon't try to trace this. It will only waste time and resources and get you nowhere anyway.'
âOkay.'
âI need your e-mail address.'
âAnd what
I
need is to know the current location of the guy with the shotgun.'
âI let him go.'
Challis laughed. âYou let him go.'
âHe thought he was in control. He wasn't. I got him out of the bank and told him to run. I don't know where he is. But he's not clever, just lucky.'
âYou staged the scene by the drain, the abandoned car?'
âDid it mess with your head? Your e-mail address, please.'
Challis complied, nudging the mouse to awaken his computer. He logged on to his e-mail and said, âWhat are you sending me?'
âPhotos, if you can be patient.'
âWhat's your real name?'
âToday? Today I'm Nina.'
âRight. Russian?'
It was her turn to hesitate. âYou've been doing some homework.'
âA little. Care to tell meâ'
âShut up. Sending now.'
Challis waited. Then a number of images arrived in his in-box: the icon and the Klee, photographed in situ, and close-ups of several documents. âIt seems you're keen on home interiors,' he said. âWe found a camera card loaded with snaps.'
âI like to keep records,' Nina said.
Challis was about to deliver another wry observation when his attention was caught. He peered at the icon and the painting again. âI know this house.'
âIt was broken into recently.'
âThe occupants claimed nothing was taken.'
âWell, they would say that.'
âWould they? Why? How did you know they owned the icon?'
âI didn't know. Chance encounter, and that's the honest truth. The thing is, it's not theirs. Mara Niekirk's family took it from my family.'
Challis chewed on that. âYou possess an old photograph that depicts a similar icon and you call that proof?'
âWhy don't you do some digging into Mara's family, hotshot? The apple doesn't fall far from the tree, as you'll discover when you examine the other stuff I sent you.'
Challis shrugged, clicking on the documents one by one, adjusting the zoom until the text filled the screen. âInvoices, receipts, catalogue entriesâ¦So what?'
âFirst, I think you'll find they're not kosher. The Niekirks have been faking histories for years.'
Challis couldn't see much point in playing the policeman in this situation, but went through the motions anyhow. âI need you to go on record as saying that you found, photographed andâ'
âYou need me to get killed, you mean.'
âWhat?'
âI've just sent you a copy of an e-mail sent to me by a man named Steve Finch. He was trying to get the Klee painting back on the Niekirks' behalf.'
Challis went cold. âSomeone shot him last night.'
âExactly.'
Challis got to his feet, thinking of Pam Murphy. Going around the desk, he opened his door and signalled wildly to Scobie Sutton, miming hands on a steering wheel, meanwhile saying, âBy the way, a man named Galt is looking for you.'
âWas,' the woman named Nina said.
Pam Murphy had driven to the house on Goddard Road, musing on the statement made by the nanny.
Why, if the Niekirks knew they'd been robbed, had they persisted in claiming it was a failed break-in?
âI'm invisible to them,' Tayla had said. âThey don't know I'm there.'
Meaning she'd overheard them talk about a missing icon and a missing painting.
And now they were
burning
paintings?
Reaching the entrance, Pam braked. The words
IF YOU THINK THIS
IS TASTEFUL
had been spray painted on one gate support;
TAKE A
GANDER AT OUR HOUSE
on the other. She laughed, released the brake, let her Subaru roll through the gap.
And braked again. She was nose to nose with the flat white face of a Mercedes van, Warren Niekirk at the wheel. They stared at each other for a few long seconds and Murphy saw, even through both sets of glass, a flicker of panic, a search for a way out.
She decided not to reverse but slid the gear lever into park and switched off. She wanted answers. She had no intention of coming back later, at the Niekirks' convenience.
As she stepped away from her Subaru she saw a four-wheel-drive rock to a halt behind the van, heard a door slam, and then Mara Niekirk was advancing on her, furious, erect, nose tilted like a woman born to rule, the driveway gravel complaining under her feet.
They're
both
going somewhere? Separately? âHello, Mrs Niekirk.'
âAre you going to leave your car there like that? We have a business to run.'
At 5 p.m., when most people are heading
for
home, not away? âA couple of quick questions.'
âDid you see what they did to my gate?'
They
, the great unwashed, the faceless, the nameless.
My
gate, not
our
gate. âShall I report it for you, Mrs Niekirk?'
âWhat's the point? You peopleâ¦' My people what?
And here was Warren, leaving the van and joining his wife, getting some courage and stature from that simple act. âIs there a problem?'
âNo problem,' Pam said. âAs I told your wife, Iâ'
With his new found determination, Warren cut her off. âHave you found the woman who broke into our house?'
Woman
? thought Pam. How did they know it was a woman? On her guard now, wondering what was in the van, she said, âSometimes when people are burgled they don't realise they're missing certain items until days afterwards. Weeks.'
âNothing was taken,' Mara said.
She was angular, powerful, her mouth a slash across the tight flesh of her face, her body a vibrating spring inside tapered black pants and a grey cotton top. Hair scraped back from her forehead, no makeup. One scary woman, Pam thought.
To see what would happen, she said, âPerhaps I could talk to the nanny. Is she up at the house with your daughter? Maybe she's missing something, an iPod or a camera.'