Monty scuffed his way over the concrete slab to the makeshift tearoom and gazed between the pillars to the clear view of the floodlit skip. It was hard to ascertain quite what the old man might have seen earlier in the grainy darkness and the dazzle of car headlights.
‘Go on then, what did you see?’ he asked when he returned.
‘I heard it first, the squeal of brakes, then I saw a four-wheel drive crash through the fence and fishtail across the building site.’
He peered in the direction the man was pointing. One section of the cyclone fence had been knocked down and the supporting poles bent out of shape. A police officer was taping up the gap. Traffic on the highway beyond the fence-line had slowed to a crawl as motorists sought to take in the drama. Bloody ghouls, he thought.
‘Then a bloke come out, opened up the back door and grabbed hold of this heavy thing,’ the old man said. ‘At first I thought he was just some mug dumping rubbish illegally. He threw the thing onto the skip and climbed onto it, scrabbling around for a bit like he was trying to bury something. I radioed it in from here while I watched him.’
‘He drove through the mesh fence, and you just stood and watched?’ Monty said.
‘What the hell else was I supposed to do at my age and with my back? Besides there was another fella sitting in the front seat, I wouldn’t have stood a chance if they got aggro. The fella on the skip must have seen me, I reckon, cos he jumped down real quick and scarpered back to his truck and took off.’
Wayne frowned and said to the man, ‘You didn’t mention this second person before, Mr Browne, did you get a look at him?’
‘Yeah, well, I only just remembered him didn’t I? Nah, I didn’t hardly see him.’
Monty wondered how he could have forgotten this, wondered just how drunk the old man really was.
‘And this second man didn’t get out and help the first man at all, he just sat there, watching?’ Wayne said, meeting Monty’s eyes.
Browne must have sensed their doubt. ‘I’m telling you what I saw, mate, no more, no less.’
‘But surely you weren’t alone here?’ Monty spun on his heels and waved his arms around. ‘This place is huge.’
‘George was over the other side with the dog. Every half an hour or so we take it in turns to do a circuit.’
‘And where’s George now?’
‘I sent him home, boss,’ Wayne said. ‘He saw nothing. But Mr Browne here got a good look at the bloke who took the body from the car and he’s given us a detailed description and the rego.’
Fair enough, Monty thought, calming himself; old Mr Browne had probably done them the greater service. If he had tried to apprehend the men they might very well have had two victims on their hands.
Wayne read from his notebook, ‘Khaki coloured Toyota Troop Mover licence number MDG 76X. Scene of crime officers also found skid marks and tyre prints matching that kind of vehicle. The guy is described as short and stocky with darkish curly hair, late forties to early fifties.’
‘Anything else you can add, sir?’ Monty asked the old man.
‘Nah, can I go home now, mate?’
Monty said he could. The detectives stood in a group and watched him hobble off until he was out of earshot.
‘Jesus,’ Barry smoothed his bald head. ‘Iron Bar Security must’ve scratched the bottom of the barrel for that one.’
‘He had a half bottle of bourbon sticking up from his holdall,’ Wayne added. ‘Not exactly a reliable witness, he never even mentioned a second man the first time around.’
‘He’s all we’ve got at the moment,’ Monty said.
‘I hope to God he’s wrong. One child killer is bad enough, a team of them’s a bloody nightmare.’
‘At least we’ve got the rego—have you run it?’ Monty asked Wayne.
‘Waiting on it now. Meanwhile the developer of the site and the builder are on their way. They’re not going to be too happy when they hear that work will have to be halted for a few days.’
‘A darn sight happier than the kid’s mother, I’m sure,’ Monty muttered.
There was an uncomfortable silence, some shuffling of feet. Barry cleared his throat. ‘So who gets the short straw?’
Monty had no idea how Mrs Webster would react to the news that they had found her daughter’s body. All he knew was that he couldn’t face her alone. Angus Wong, his first choice, was briefing the local police and unavailable. That left bald Barry with the grin of Alfred from Mad magazine, or Wayne Pickering who looked like something freshly exhumed from a graveyard—on a good day.
‘Don’t worry, it won’t be either of you.’ He turned to Wayne. ‘As soon as we get a name for that car, haul the owner in.’ Then to Barry he said. ‘You stay here. No comment to the press yet. I’ll give a statement when I’ve informed the next of kin. Help with the search, tell SOCO everything in that skip needs to be sifted, the whole building site thoroughly scoured and secured. You’ll need to get more uniforms in and get some door knocking underway.’
Monty reached for his phone and called Stevie.
6
EXCERPT FROM CHAT ROOM TRANSCRIPT 071106
BETTYBO has entered the chat room
HARUM SCARUM: were u been?
BETTYBO: Sry. Things bad hear. He cam round agin.
HARUM SCARUM: wats rong? He hrt u?
BETTYBO: pir
BETTYBO has left chat room
There wasn’t much traffic at ten o’clock at night and it didn’t take Stevie long to drive from Cottesloe to Shenton Park where the heady scent of frangipani replaced the briny tang of the sea. She parked her unmarked car between the other police Commodore and a white Ford Escort, outside a block of state housing flats. A beige rectangle with clunky concrete balconies, Shenton Rise wasn’t much to look at, but it did offer a pleasant view of the floodlit park on the other side of the road.
Monty joined her on the footpath and briefly took her hand. ‘Was there any problem getting Mrs Nash to mind Izzy?’
‘She was watching the late movie, didn’t seem to mind switching venues to watch it at your place. I said I wouldn’t be long.’
He filled her in on the details as they scuffed up the stairs. They climbed slowly, the caged lights on every level casting a crisscross of shadows across the graffiti-streaked walls. Had this been a prison or a place of refuge for little Bianca Webster? Stevie wondered.
They heard a door slam from the floor above, then the sound of heavy footsteps echoing around the stairwell. Seconds later a man pushed passed them on the stairs, shoving Stevie against the handrail.
‘Hey, watch where you’re going, mate!’ Monty called out.
Stevie glimpsed a stocky, denim-clad figure. ‘Go fuck yourself,’ the man said, leaving a trail of beer fumes behind him.
Monty mumbled under his breath and moved quickly down a couple of steps as if to follow him. The feint worked, the footsteps sped up and the man made a hasty escape, slamming the door of the stairwell behind him.
Stevie and Monty made their way along the verandah until they came to number 34.
Monty took a breath and knocked. ‘Here goes nothing.’
Stevie would never forget the first time she’d been the bearer of tragic news; a twenty-two year old PC telling a forty-five year old woman that her son had died in a car crash had seemed unnatural. She knew it was only the authority of her uniform that had let her get away with it. No uniform necessary these days, she mused, with age and parenthood the universal leveller.
The thin woman who opened the door had one arm in a greying sling. The sudden movement of her free hand to her mouth sent a draught of cigarette smoke wafting at them through the flyscreen. Despite their civvies they radiated the unmistakable aura of cop to Stella Webster.
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