Tell the Truth (22 page)

Read Tell the Truth Online

Authors: Katherine Howell

TWENTY-TWO

A
t the morgue the next morning Ella and Murray had to wait while one of the pathologists finished a post-mortem. They stood in the corridor, listening to water washing down the drains, the clatter of steel instruments, and someone whistling to a radio. Outside, it was a bright and sunny morning. Ella was always surprised when she left the morgue and found anything but rain and gloom.

‘I talked to Rowan Wylie last night,' she told Murray, and filled him in about Rowan's son and what Rowan had said about arguing with Stacey.

‘We should've been doing that together, this morning,' Murray said.

‘I made an executive decision. Then I went home and tried to map it all out. There's something we can't see, I'm sure of it.'

‘There's always something we can't see. Once we see it, the case is solved. Seriously though, you should've waited for me.'

She shrugged. ‘How was the dinner?'

‘Excellent. Nat was thrilled. Made her cry.'

‘You two,' Ella said. ‘And the forecast?'

‘Steady at five.'

They grinned at each other.

The pathologist came out, safety glasses still in place, drying his hands with a paper towel. ‘Right. You're here about the toe, correct?'

Ella nodded. The doctor said something to a tech, who fetched it and handed it over.

‘Interesting.' The pathologist took it back inside the room and they followed.

Two naked bodies, both male, lay on the steel tables, one about twenty, the other much older with a grizzled beard. Gowned and goggled staff were stitching up their chests.

The pathologist held the bagged toe under a bright light, turning it this way and that. ‘Hmm. Sent to you in the post, you said?'

‘By courier, but to me, yes,' Ella said.

He looked at her over his glasses. ‘Lucky you.'

‘Yeah, you'd think it was her birthday,' Murray said.

The pathologist said, ‘I'll need to examine it more closely to be more specific, but I can tell you a couple of things right now. First, it looks to me like the fifth, or little, toe of the left foot of a white adult female. Secondly, the cut is through the middle of the joint and quite precise. No obvious hacking, a neat slice: probably done with a scalpel or similar, and by someone who hasn't necessarily done it before but was reasonably confident about what they were doing. Third, see these puncture marks here? They're caused by a fine-gauge needle, most likely a twenty-five, most likely for the purpose of delivering local anaesthetic. The spacing is slightly less than what a GP might use when preparing an area for an excision, so again, done by someone who hasn't necessarily done this before but is fairly confident. And who also wanted to make sure the tissue was, as far as possible, anaesthetised.'

‘They'll cut off her toe but they don't want her to feel it?' Murray said. ‘What sort of kidnappers are these?'

Ella was asking herself the same question.

*

Paris woke to the sound of knocking on her bedroom door.

‘I'm sleeping,' she shouted.

‘I need your help,' Marie said.

‘I have nightshift tonight. I need to sleep.'

‘Five minutes.'

Paris glared at the ceiling. ‘For what?'

‘To help me.'

She threw back the quilt and got up. If she refused, there'd be noise all day, but it'd been nice being asleep and not thinking about Mr Leary. She'd been so exhausted last night she hadn't even dreamed. Now she was awake, and it was all going around in her head again, and she'd be lucky to get back to sleep later at all, let alone into a deep and peaceful one.

She threw open the door. Her mother stood there, sipping coffee. Paris looked around. ‘So what is it?'

‘Lounge room.'

She went down to find one of the armchairs stuck in the doorway. ‘Where in god's name are you moving it to now?'

‘My room,' Marie said. ‘I need a space of my own.'

‘It's not going to fit.'

‘I've already moved the bed over.'

‘I mean through here.' Paris pushed at the chair. It didn't budge.

‘It went in,' Marie said. ‘It has to come out.'

‘Yeah, well, Dad probably took the door off and used a couple of hefty mates,' Paris said.

Marie harrumphed. ‘So take the door off if you're so smart.'

‘I can't now you've jammed it in.' Paris climbed over the chair and tried to tug it free. ‘Push, will you?'

Marie pushed while Paris pulled.

‘How the hell did you get it in so tight?' Paris said, cheek on the upholstery.

‘Don't damage the paint.'

Paris straightened. ‘This isn't going to work. I'll get Liam to come around sometime and he can help.'

‘It's not staying stuck here until then.'

‘It's going to have to.'

‘No,' Marie said. ‘I got it this far on my own, so I can't see why between us we can't get it all the way.'

‘It doesn't fit.'

‘We just have to find the right angle.' Marie tugged. Her narrow hands looked as useless as paws on the chair's big rolled arm.

‘This is insane,' Paris said. ‘I'm going back to bed.'

‘We can't just leave it. I can't live with this thing stuck here.'

‘Should've thought of that before you started yet another pointless rearrange.' Paris climbed back over the chair. ‘I mean, why can't you just sit on your bed?'

‘It's called a parent's retreat,' Marie snapped. ‘And I need one.'

‘Retreat from what? The entire house is yours. You even come into my room whenever you like and without knocking.'

‘Pay half the mortgage and then you get your own space.'

‘I pay more than enough board for one little room.'

‘Just help me,' Marie said.

‘No. I need to go back to bed.'

‘You just woke up.'

Paris laughed, a hollow sound. ‘It's true what they told me when I joined the job. Only people who've worked nightshift understand not to disturb you in the day.'

‘The job,' Marie said, mocking. ‘You're all so precious.'

‘Yeah, we are,' Paris sniped. ‘We're family too. You know what they asked when I went to work yesterday morning? Whether I was okay. You haven't asked me that once.'

‘You haven't asked me, and she's my sister,' Marie snapped.

‘I have so. I asked you yesterday.' Paris wasn't certain she had. But she must have, surely.

‘Would you just help me move this thing?' Marie said.

‘If Dad and his mates got it in there, it's going to take more than you and me to get it out.'

‘Your father had nothing to do with it. Left me to deal with it all. Went off working.'

‘He did not,' Paris said.

‘When we moved in here, you were seven and he was driving interstate,' Marie said. ‘I packed the old house myself, moved it all over myself, and unpacked it, guess what, by myself.'

‘So it wasn't Dad but a couple of removalists,' Paris said. ‘Whatever.'

‘Yes,' Marie went on, as if she hadn't spoken, ‘because your sainted father had other priorities.'

‘Oh, like paying the mortgage? Putting petrol in the car and food on the table?'

‘Paying for your private school, more like,' Marie said. ‘He could've worked locally, could've been around more, but he had to do long-haul. Had to make that bit more money just for the damned school fees.'

‘Oh yeah, it's all my fault,' Paris said. ‘It all comes down to me. I made him go out driving, I made him crash and die. Yeah, I did it. Blame me.'

Marie tugged at the chair without answering.

Paris stared at her. ‘You do, don't you? You do blame me.'

‘Don't be ridiculous,' Marie said. ‘Talk about self-centred. Why's it always have to be about you? Your sleep. Your job. You think there's nobody else in the world? Only you, and what you think and feel?' She let go of the chair. ‘Oh, forget it. Forget this whole thing. Don't bother getting Liam over. I'll deal with it, I'll manage by myself, just as I always do. By myself. Talk about being your father's daughter.'

Paris stormed into her room and slammed the door. She scowled at her bed. She'd never get to sleep now. Not here anyway.

She stuffed a clean uniform into a bag and stomped back out. ‘Enjoy your retreat.'

‘Where are you going?'

‘What do you care?'

She got in her car and drove away, glancing back once and seeing that her mother was nowhere in sight.

*

A woman in a white polo shirt with a navy Alice band in her hair looked up over the physiotherapy clinic's desk and smiled. ‘Good morning. How can I help you?'

Ella held up her badge. ‘Detectives Marconi and Shakespeare, New South Wales Police. Is the owner or manager here?'

The woman's smile wavered. ‘Just a moment.'

She disappeared down a corridor. Murray fiddled with a plastic spine on the desk and Ella tried to sort out her thoughts. The anaesthetised toe, the breaking down in tears, the text messages. She felt that they all added up to mean something, but she couldn't see what.

The woman came back with a sandy-haired man of about forty-five, wearing an identical white polo and navy pants.

He put out his hand. ‘Gerald Bobbin, owner and physio. How can I help?'

His grip was firm, his skin soft. Behind his gold-framed glasses his eyes were nervous.

Ella said, ‘Is there somewhere we can talk?'

Bobbin's office was neat and small. He sat behind his desk and clasped his hands on the top. Ella and Murray sat in the ergonomic chairs across from him.

‘We have a couple of questions about Marie Kennedy,' Ella said.

‘Oh,' he said. ‘Ah. Because of what's happened to her sister?'

Ella noticed his tone. ‘What is she like as an employee?'

‘Fine,' he said, too quickly.

‘There's some problem with her?'

‘No. Not really.'

She and Murray waited.

Bobbin sighed and glanced out the window. ‘Marie is an excellent physiotherapist, let me say that right upfront. But we did recently have an issue.'

‘Regarding?' Murray said.

Bobbin blushed deep red. Ella could see the colour climb right up his scalp through his sandy hair.

‘Marie made, uh, advances towards me,' he said.

‘Unwelcome, I presume?' Murray said.

‘Of course. And very firmly rejected. My wife, Neroli, on reception out there, can attest to that.'

‘She saw it?' Ella asked.

‘She walked in when Marie was, uh, touching my person.' The blush grew more intense.

‘When was this?'

‘A fortnight ago. Things have been awkward since, so in a way I was pleased when she asked to take leave. Not that I'm pleased about her sister, I didn't mean that. It's terrible. I hope you find her.'

Ella said, ‘Did she say anything before you rebuffed her?'

‘She said that, uh, she thought I was very handsome, and that she had certain feelings towards me that she felt it was time she acted upon.' He pushed his glasses further up his nose. Ella thought she detected a slight sheen of sweat. ‘She said she was happy for it to be purely physical, that as physiotherapists we know the value of touch and that she was badly in need of some. She grabbed me by the, uh, in the region of my trousers, and that's when Neroli – thankfully – walked in.'

‘Okay,' Ella said. ‘And after?'

Bobbin shook his head. ‘She was very quiet. I said that it was unacceptable, that I'm her employer and a very happily married man. She mumbled an apology and left, then came in the next day as if nothing was wrong.' He pushed his glasses up again.

‘Have there ever been complaints from other staff, or clients?' Ella said.

‘No, nothing. Thank goodness. Is this relevant to your case?'

‘We were just after some background,' Ella said. ‘Apart from that incident, have there been any other issues with Marie?'

‘Personality-wise she can be intense, but I've always been satisfied with her work.' He blinked, owlish. ‘How is she managing?'

‘She's managing all right,' Ella said, thinking of how she was stroking James's hair. ‘Thank you for your time.'

Outside, Murray said, ‘Do you think Marie has motive?'

‘She used to go out with James Durham, she's keen for male company, she doesn't seem a happy woman. But is that enough to want to hurt her sister? And then with all the texts and so on?' The knot of thoughts in Ella's mind was tighter than ever.

‘Being a physio she'd know enough about anatomy to cut the toe off,' Murray said. ‘And there's the weird bleach cleaning.'

‘The toe was anaesthetised before it was cut off. If Marie wanted to hurt Stacey, why not make her suffer?'

‘Maybe her target's someone else,' Murray said. ‘Maybe she wants to hurt James.'

‘Not judging by the look in her eyes when I interrupted them on the lounge.' Her phone rang in her pocket. She saw the office number on the screen and answered. ‘Tell me you have something good.'

‘The Durhams' other neighbours checked in,' Dennis said. ‘They've been away, and called in this morning. They heard a loud argument Wednesday night last week in the Durham house. An argument bordering on screaming, and between two women.'

‘Stacey and Marie, surely,' Ella said, excitement building. ‘Time to bring her in for a formal interview?'

Dennis said, ‘I've just sent someone to get her.'

*

Paris couldn't think where she was when she woke up, then remembered she'd knocked timidly on Abby's door to ask if she could sleep there for a couple of hours. She'd been welcomed and hugged, then got into Liam's rumpled bed and snuggled down with her head sandwiched between two pillows.

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