Comeback - [Cliff Hardy 37] Read online

Page 5


  The GPS instructions got me to Hood Street more efficiently than I could have done. Spent almost no time on Parramatta Road. The house was a big Federation job on a corner. Biggish block, neat front garden, car access at the side. The area was quiet with an almost oppressive feeling of respectability I parked outside, opened the low gate and walked up a tiled path to the front porch. The porch was tiled as well and the house carried a brass plate with the name ‘Sherwood’ in elaborate script. Some kind of joke. The brass was polished to a high shine.

  I rang the bell. Footsteps sounded on a wooden floor. I had my licence and the photo of Mary Oberon or ‘Miranda’ at the ready. The woman who opened the door checked that the screen door was locked before she looked at me.

  ‘Yes?’ she said.

  She was middle-aged, dumpy, overdressed in expensive matronly clothes. I showed her the licence and told her I wanted information about the woman in the photograph. Her heavily ringed hand flew up to her mouth.

  ‘Oh my God, is she dead?’

  ‘Why would you think that?’

  She shook her head. ‘Please go away, I don’t want to have anything more to do with her.’

  ‘This is important. I gather she’s not here. Can I come in and talk to you?’

  ‘No. Go away.’

  ‘This could be a police matter.’

  Her hand against the screen door trembled and I took a punt.

  ‘Or a tax matter.’

  The trembling increased.

  ‘I don’t want to make trouble for you,’ I said. ‘I don’t even need to know your name. I just need to know everything you can tell me about this woman.’

  ‘You’d better come in.’

  She unlocked the screen door and I followed her a few steps inside and then into the front room on the right. It was a big room, overfurnished, with a bay window. The shelf in the bay window was covered with knick-knacks.

  ‘Do you want to sit down?’ she said.

  The big armchairs would have swallowed me. ‘No thanks.’

  She subsided into one of the chairs. ‘I should never have taken her in. She was unsuitable.’

  ‘What name did she give you?’

  ‘Mary Oberon.’

  ‘Do you know what job she had?’

  ‘She didn’t seem to have one. She slept most of the day. She didn’t have breakfast or lunch as far as I could see. I asked her if she was dieting and she laughed. She went out for a little while in the evening, to get something to eat, I suppose. Then she stayed in her room playing dreadful music.’

  ‘She was hiding?’

  ‘Hiding? I don’t know. She seemed nice at first but she wasn’t. Wouldn’t give me the time of day.’

  ‘How long was she here?’

  ‘A few weeks.’

  ‘She paid her rent?’

  Tricky territory for her. There were, at a guess, four or five bedrooms in the house. She could be raking it in. She nodded.

  ‘Why did you think she might be dead?’

  She began to twist one of the rings on her finger. The sort of fidgeting that usually precedes a lie. My guess was that she’d poked into Mary Oberon’s belongings or overheard something and didn’t want to admit it. She looked around the room and didn’t speak.

  I shrugged. ‘Okay, well I’ll have to take it further, Mrs ... ?’

  ‘She was terrified.’

  ‘Of what?’

  ‘A man.’

  I sat on the arm of one of the chairs. That perched me well above her in a dominant position. No great achievement; she was a guilty, frightened woman and I wasn’t proud of pressuring her.

  ‘Tell me,’ I said.

  ■ ■ ■

  She said Mary Oberon had paid a month’s rent in advance. I’d have been willing to bet she’d extracted an extra month as a bond of sorts but I didn’t interrupt her. She’d left before the month was up taking everything with her, which wasn’t much to start with—clothes, toiletries, a computer, a mobile phone, an mp3 player which the woman called an earplug thing. I asked how she knew the music was terrible if Mary Oberon had listened through earplugs. She said she heard it sometimes when Mary played it without the earplugs just to annoy her. She left after being threatened by the only visitor she ever had—a bearded man driving a white car.

  ‘Threatened how?’ I said.

  ‘They had arguments the couple of times he called. He woke her up in the morning and I could hear their voices raised.’

  I bet you could hear them, I thought. Raised or not.

  ‘Then one afternoon he came and they went outside. It looked as though he was trying to make her get into his car. I was watching from the side window. She wouldn’t go. He got into the car and he tried to run her over. He drove the car over the gutter and up onto the nature strip and she had to jump out of the way. She fell over and he drove off. You can still see the marks the car wheels made on the grass.’

  ‘Did you go out to her?’

  ‘No, I was too frightened. I thought he might come back.’

  And you didn’t want to get involved. ‘What happened then?’

  ‘She came in and I heard her crying in her room for a while. I went shopping and when I came back she was gone. No note. She took the key to the house and her room. I had to change the lock on the front door and get...two more keys cut.’

  And then some, I thought. I felt sure she knew more than she was telling me but had no idea how to tease it out other than by being direct. I stood and then sat down abruptly. She almost yelped in alarm.

  ‘There’s something you’re not telling me. What is it? Quickly.’

  ‘It’s nothing.’

  ‘Tell me.’

  ‘Will you leave if I do?’

  ‘Probably.’

  ‘Wait here.’

  I didn’t. I followed her out of the room and down the passage to the kitchen. Her purse was sitting on a bench. She opened it, took out a banknote and handed it to me. It was a Fijian fifty-dollar note.

  ‘I found it down behind the bureau in her room. Please take it and go.’

  I put the note in my pocket and moved away. ‘Why did you try to keep this from me? Don’t tell me you thought she might come back for it.’

  ‘Because I don’t like you.’

  ‘It’s mutual.’

  I left the house and went around the corner. There were two deep gouges in the grass on the nature strip about a metre in from the kerb. Impossible to tell whether it had been a serious attempt to run the woman down, but it was certainly enough to give anyone a hell of a fright. I looked up and saw the woman watching me from the house. The curtain twitched back closed when she saw me looking. I wondered if she’d reconsider her next tax return. Probably not, that kind of greed is ingrained.

  Back in the car I looked again at the photo of Mary Oberon. Her skin appeared to be dark but not very dark, her eyes slanted slightly and she had a fine blade of a nose. A strong suggestion of Indian ancestry I hadn’t noticed before. I started the engine and at that moment what had swum at the edge of my consciousness about the driver of the Commodore came into clear focus. The man had a jutting chin and a beard.

  ■ ■ ■

  On the drive back to the city I considered the information I’d picked up. An Indian prostitute being threatened by a man who looked likely to be the one who’d killed Bobby Forrest. Hard to make sense of, but it suggested a course of action if I was inclined to take it. Should I? I knew I wasn’t directly responsible for Bobby’s death. He wouldn’t have wanted me to bodyguard him. I anticipated that he might be under surveillance and had warned him, but I hadn’t thought he was in mortal danger. But that raised another concern. Had he put himself in that danger by hiring me? That possibility nagged at me all the way back to Pyrmont.

  My mobile had been buzzing and chirping practically all day. I sat in my office, scrolled through and thought about deleting all the unfamiliar numbers and names. Most of them were bound to be media people, calling and texting, looking for dir
t on Bobby Forrest, but you never can tell. I worked through them, deleting the media stuff, which left me with calls from Frank Parker and Megan and a text with the source blocked that read: leave it alone, he had it coming.

  ~ * ~

  5

  I rang Frank and assured him that I was okay and probably not facing any serious problems with the police. He offered to help in any way he could and I told him I’d keep that in mind. ‘You’re not going to follow this up, are you?’

  ‘Only if it follows me.’

  ‘Jesus, Cliff. Let it go.’

  ‘Probably will.’

  It was a constant theme with my friends—advising me to stick to the nuts and bolts of my business and not go involving myself in the labyrinth of people’s problems. My ex-wife Cyn had said it was a psychological quirk that I should try to do something about.

  ‘How?’ I’d asked.

  ‘See a psychiatrist.’

  ‘I’ve seen too many Woody Allen movies to take them seriously.’

  That started a fight, one of many. Cyn didn’t find Woody funny.

  Megan didn’t join the ‘leave it be’ chorus, not explicitly, but she did want to know whether I’d need the couch again and I told her I wouldn’t. Part of me wanted to let it go and just maybe I would have if it hadn’t been for the text message. That made it personal and Bobby had paid for at least a few days’ more work. I scribbled down the text message and looked at it. ‘Had it coming’ suggested something in the past rather than the trouble Bobby had brought to me, but I had no handle on that. Sophie Marjoram hadn’t helped.

  I left the office still undecided about what to do. I drove to Glebe and took a careful look along the street before pulling up at my house. Still no sign of the media pack. I got out of the car and was about to lock it with the remote control when I became aware of someone bearing down on me from across the road. He was big and moving fast.

  ‘You bastard,’ he shouted and swung his fist at me.

  It’s a good idea to be moving forward when you punch but only if it’s a straight punch. Move forward and swing roundhouse and you’re liable to lose your balance. That’s what he did. The punch missed anyway because I swayed back away from it. I caught his fist as it moved past, twisted his arm and had him pinned against the car with one bent arm and the other flapping ineffectively. I leaned my weight against the bent arm. He swore and the fight went out of him.

  ‘All right, all right. Let me go.’

  He was big but a lot of the bulk was fat. He was breathing hard from just a few rushed steps and a poor attempt at a punch. I didn’t think he could cause me much grief. I released him, stepped back and let him unwind himself. He grabbed at the car for support. He was red in the face and older than I’d expected. It was my day for putting the moves on unequal opponents.

  He was wearing a dark suit over a black T-shirt; a pair of heavy sunglasses stuck out of the pocket where people used to wear display handkerchiefs. Maybe some still do. If he put them on he’d have something like the hoodlum look, but one who should leave the heavy work to younger men. He brushed himself down.

  ‘Sorry,’ he said.

  ‘For what? That you didn’t break my jaw? Who the hell are you?’

  ‘You don’t recognise me?’

  ‘No.’

  ‘Yeah, well, I’ve stacked on the kilos a bit. You don’t look all that much different, Hardy. Greyer, few more wrinkles, but I knew you straight off. I’m Ray Frost—Bobby Forrest’s father.’

  ■ ■ ■

  We went into the house and I made coffee while he used the toilet.

  ‘Crook prostate,’ he said when he came out. ‘Crook just about every other bloody thing but I’m still here.’

  I poured coffee into two mugs. He refused milk and sugar.

  ‘Got anything to give it a lift?’

  I put heavy slugs of Hennessy brandy into both mugs and we went into the sitting room. He put his mug on the coffee table and felt in his jacket pocket.

  ‘All right to smoke?’

  I put a saucer on the table and drank some of the laced coffee while he coughed, got a cigarette lit and coughed some more.

  ‘No point quitting,’ he said. ‘I could go any day and a few fags aren’t going to make any difference.’

  I nodded. He took a big slurp of coffee and a couple of lungs full of smoke and probably felt better, although he looked worse.

  ‘You did me a very good turn twenty-odd years ago. Remember that?’

  ‘I didn’t remember the name but when Bobby told me about you I looked up the file. Yeah, it worked out okay for you, didn’t it?’

  ‘Right. When Bobby told me about his bloody problem I advised him to look you up. Charlie Bickford, the shyster— remember him?’

  I nodded.

  ‘Dead now. He always reckoned you were one of the few blokes in your game he could trust. He said you did the job and didn’t play both ends against the middle like most of them.’

  ‘I’m sorry for what happened. I didn’t see it coming. It was a tricky business, all that online stuff, but it didn’t seem...’

  ‘I know. I know. Look, I’m sorry I took a swing at you. Not your fault. I just had to take it out on someone. My only kid. I’m going to miss him like hell. I have to do something about it.’

  ‘The police are on it.’

  ‘The cops.’ He dismissed them with a wave of the hand that held the cigarette. Ash fell on the floor. ‘Sorry. How many contract killings do they clear up?’

  ‘You think it was a contract killing?’

  He finished his coffee in a gulp. ‘I can’t get over the feeling that it was to do with me.’

  I didn’t tell him that I had something of the same reaction, but what he said put us on the same page. I took a good look at him while he worked his way through his cigarette. Apart from all the weight he would’ve been reasonably presentable but without Bobby’s bone structure. That must have come from his mother. And Frost was dark. The gangsta clothes might have been an affectation or a necessary look. I went back to the kitchen and recharged our mugs. He had another cigarette going.

  ‘What do you do that could get Bobby killed?’

  ‘I run a business that provides men and machinery to construction companies. You wouldn’t believe what goes on in the tendering process, the bribes, the deals, the fucking politics of it all. I step on toes all the time.’

  ‘What kinds of toes?’

  ‘Big ones. Bad ones.’

  ‘Why the clothes? The Mafia image?’

  ‘The people I deal with—union types, security guys— you’ve gotta look the part. I need your help, Hardy.’

  ‘You’ve got a funny way of going about getting it.’

  ‘I said I was sorry, for Christ’s sake. What do you want me to do, kiss your boots?’

  He was naturally aggressive, but so am I. ‘Drink your coffee and make that your last cigarette. Passive smoking kills. Have you stayed out of trouble the last twenty-odd years? I seem to remember you were in a spot of bother once.’

  He drained his mug and stubbed out the cigarette. ‘I’ve sailed a bit close to the wind a few times, I suppose, but I’ve never had any charges laid since...what you’re talking about. I was young and dopey back then.’

  ‘Not that young. What d’you mean you need my help?’

  ‘What do you bloody think? I want you to find out who killed my boy.’

  ‘And then do what?’

  He felt for his cigarettes, remembered and stopped. He shook his head. ‘No, I’m not asking you to drop him in a hole. Let the law take over.’

  He was hard to read. The aggression was real enough; it masked the grief, but that was real, too. Believing and trusting him was another matter. But how many of my clients had I fully believed and trusted? A majority I thought, but not a big majority.

  ‘Well?’ he said. He wasn’t pleading but he wasn’t demanding either.

  ‘Why me?’

  ‘I remember that you were good
. Discreet, didn’t blab about what you were doing and you got it done. You’re involved in this anyway. I’ve got blokes I could get...ask to do it, but they’re too close to my business.’