“Ah, what the fuck does it matter. You got anything else to say?”

“No. Just that I’m sorry.”

His answer was the sharp click of the connection being broken. That did wonders for me. I sank some liquor and poured some more. The glass suddenly felt as heavy as lead, full of reproach. I set it down and started working through my little red book of telephone numbers. My first call was to Grant Evans. The second, back to me, was from a policeman in Macleay. My next call was to a security organisation in the city. I followed that with a call to Major Ian Mahony who was head of the security firm that guarded Macleay hospital. I had to give him references in the constabulary and the military. They seemed to satisfy him and I got an interview arranged with him for the following morning, in Macleay. I poured the liquor back into the bottle and went grimly off to bed to prepare myself for my busy day.

My last conscious thought was that I had put the finger on Jimmy Sunday for Coluzzi.

26

Busy is right. The radio alarm woke me at six o’clock. I came swarming up out of a dream in which I’d been fighting a ring full of people with my bare fists. I must have set my jaw resolutely in the. dream because it was aching like fury when I got out of bed. I made coffee and swilled down aspirin and caffeine tablets. The coffee was stale, this case had dragged on and I’d neglected my domestic necessities. I promised myself some fresh coffee and clean sheets when I’d done what I had to do. I had a shower and let the water play on my injuries, a split scalp and battered knuckles, both beginning to heal. I had lost two teeth, knocked out clean, and another was very loose. That wasn’t such a bad score except that I was still waiting for the cheque to justify them. Today, I’d be on my own time, the way to go out of business someone once told me.

I drove to the airport through a clear, mild morning. The traffic seemed to acknowledge the clemency of the day by parting in front of me and staying back to allow me through. As before, there was no crush for the flight to parts north. I handed in Penny’s unused return ticket and my unused Newcastle to Sydney section plus some cash and got a return ticket to Macleay. I had no luggage, no guns, no hand grenades, just my bright, sharp wits and my tarnished old soul. I bought the papers and a copy of Ragtime and boarded the plane. The papers told me everything that was going on in the country around that time which was nothing; Ragtime gripped and held me like a new lover and I didn’t lift my face from it for the whole trip. I knew what I was going to do in Macleay. I didn’t have to think about it any more. I got a taxi into town and arrived at Major Mahony’s office punctually at nine-thirty which was just as well. Mahony was a Britisher in his fifties. His face spoke of hot parade grounds and long nights over the bottle in the mess. He was bulky behind his mahogany desk. Pink scalp showed through thinning silver hair but he still had a few good, bullying years in him.

“You come well recommended, Mr Hardy,” he barked, “but you ask a lot. Convince me.”

It was an old tactic and the only way to confront it was head-on.

“What do you think of drugs Major – hemp smoking and things like that?”

He glared over the pipe he was stuffing, a big black job that looked fit to roast a quarter pound of shag.

“Hate it. Degenerate. Catch any of my people at it and out they go.

“Precisely. That’s why I’m here. If you co-operate with me it’ll help to close down a drug-growing and distribution point in this part of the country.”

He grunted and puffed at the pipe.

“Hemp you said?”

“Hemp certainly, but you know where that leads.”

“Do I not. I was in the Middle East for long enough – people lolling about, pansies…” He broke off choked, I suspected, by his excitement, but he coughed as though the tobacco smoke had caught in his throat. I followed up quickly.

“All I need is access to the woman, ten minutes alone with her, then the services of a stenographer for a few minutes.”

“Sick woman, Mr Hardy, very sick. I checked with the hospital this morning. She’s dying.”

“Does she know?”

“Yes, they told her. She insisted on knowing. Does that alter your plans?”

“No.” I could have added “on the contrary” if I’d intended to be perfectly frank with him, but I didn’t.

“I suppose it can’t do any harm considering the circumstances,” he mused. “The woman might be glad to perform a last service.” He looked at me enquiringly.

“I think she will.” I hated myself for indulging him in his pompous humbug, but I had no choice.

“Very well then.” He picked up a pencil and scribbled a note.

“Take that to the operations desk outside and you’ll get what you want.”

I stood up and assumed as respectful an attitude as I could without saluting. I don’t think he’d have minded if I had saluted.

“Thank you Major. Great help.” We shook hands. He managed to turn the gesture into a condescension for him and a privilege for me.

I went out to the office where all the work was done and handed in the note. A tired-looking man with red- rimmed eyes lifted a phone and spoke briefly into it. I looked around the room. There must have been ten or more telephones and the walls were covered with maps of Newcastle and Macleay and other towns in the area with red-headed drawing pins sticking in them. I waited five minutes before a young woman in a white blouse and blue skirt came into the room. The weary man nodded at me and she walked across and stuck her hand out.

“I’m Pam Henderson. Mr Hardy is it?”

I shook the hand and said it was. She picked up a notebook from one desk and slid a portable typewriter out from the cupboard. She was all business. Her hair was drawn back and well pinned. She wouldn’t waste a second of a working day fussing with it. She collected a set of keys from a hook by the door and we went out to a car yard behind the office building. She got behind the wheel of a big Valiant station wagon and had the car out of the yard and heading down the street while I was still fastening the safety belt. She parked in a reserved bay outside the hospital and marched up the front steps with me trotting along behind her. She was just what I needed; if I’d had an assistant like her I could have sat in my office and thought up wisecracks. I could just turn up for the denouement and make sure the client had the name right for the cheque.

The hospital reception desk stayed her for maybe five minutes and the ward sister for about three, then we were inside Trixie Baker’s room. I summoned all my courage and spoke to my companion.

“I won’t need you for a few minutes Miss Henderson. Please wait outside close by.”

She spun on her heel and went out. I breathed a sigh of relief and approached the bed. Neither the appearance of the Baker woman when I’d found her at the farm, nor the desiccated voice on the tape had prepared me for the head on the pillow. Flesh had fallen away from her bones and she looked mummified. I couldn’t remember what colour her hair had been when I first saw her, but it was white now, snow white. Her eyes were open but they were filmed over with pain, or perhaps morphine. I hoped it was the latter.

“Mrs Baker,” I said softly. “Mrs Baker, how are you feeling?”

The pale eyes widened a little and the creases beside them deepened.

“Bloody awful, but not for long. Who’re you? Doctor?

“No, I’m a detective. My name’s Hardy. You’ve heard of me.”

“I have, from the darkie. I seem to be able to remember everything just now. Too much really, too much. What do you want detective?”

“Some help, Mrs Baker. Some help for Albie Simmonds in a way.”

The smile that spread across her ravaged face was almost sweet.

“Oh Albie. He was a dear, Albie. How is he?”

“I’m afraid he’s dead Mrs Baker. He was shot. A friend of his is dead too and that’s where I need your help.”

The information didn’t trouble her. Somehow she’d acquired some strength in her last hours. I felt guilty about manipulating her.

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