Web of Deceit

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Authors: Katherine Howell

Tags: #Australia

ABOUT WEB OF DECEIT

When paramedics Jane and Alex encounter a man refusing to get out of his crashed car, with bystanders saying he deliberately drove into a pole, it looks like a desperate cry for help. His frantic claim that someone is out to get him adds to their thinking that he is delusional.

Later that day he is found dead under a train in what might be a
suicide, but Jane is no longer so sure: she remembers the raw terror in his eyes.

Detective Ella Marconi shares Jane’s doubts, which are only compounded when the case becomes increasingly tangled. The victim’s boss tries to commit suicide after being questioned, a witness flees Ella’s attempt to interview her, and then to confuse matters further, a woman is beaten unconscious in front of
Jane’s house and Alex’s daughter goes missing.

Ella is at a loss to know how all these clues add up, and feels the investigation is being held back by her budget-focused boss. Then, just when she thinks she’s closing in on the right person, a shocking turn of events puts more people in danger and might just see the killer slip through her hands.

Praise for Katherine Howell:

‘Howell is good at panic and rush… at character and dialogue… what she does best: relationships in all their complexity… the real strength of this always interesting series’

Sue Turnbull, SYDNEY MORNING HERALD

‘Howell’s books are always suspenseful and her plots thicker than minestrone’

SATURDAY AGE

‘Not to be read on public transport: you might miss your
stop’

SUN-HERALD

For Benette

ONE

I
n the ambulance’s passenger seat, paramedic Alex Churchill checked his mobile. There was no text from Mia. He sent her another:
I’m calling Frances in five.

‘Sixty-three to Control.’ The voice burst over the radio with the sound of screaming in the background.

The hairs rising on his arms, Alex looked through the rain-speckled windscreen. His partner,
Jane Koutoufides, turned in the coffee shop and met his gaze. People in the shop around her stared at the portable radio in her hand.

‘Go ahead, Sixty-three,’ Control answered.

‘Urgent backup, please. We have four code nines and one of those unconscious, six walking wounded, one car leaking fuel.’

The screaming grew louder. Alex had been there; he knew how it made you feel. He
could feel it again now in the hammering of his heart.

‘Copy that, Sixty-three,’ Control said. ‘I’ll get rescue and more cars on their way.’

Alex leaned forward, ready to grab the microphone. In the shop, Jane moved towards the door. They’d heard Sixty-three dispatched five minutes ago to Botany Road, near the airport. Although they were in Glebe, Alex had done longer runs many times.
You never knew how many ambulances were tied up on cases between here and there. Jane was still looking at him. He glanced away. He understood her concern, but also felt belittled by it.

At the start of the shift, she’d said in a distinctly gentle voice that they could work however he wanted, swap roles back and forth between driving and treating as often as he liked, he just had to let
her know. He’d nodded, uncomfortable. This was his second week back, and sure, on a shift last week he’d had a humiliating panicked few minutes at a car accident in which a twelve-year-old girl had been trapped, but he’d pulled it together. They’d got her out, she was going to be fine. He’d hoped that this morning – his first shift with Jane since – he could walk in like nothing had happened. But
perhaps it was unreasonable to expect that.
She’s just trying to be helpful.

The seconds ticked by and Control didn’t call. Alex knew there were crews on closer stations being phoned and dispatched. He gestured. Jane gave a thumbs-up and faced the counter.

Alex sat back in the seat. The psychologist had talked about bringing yourself back to the present, being aware of your surroundings
and breathing. He put his hand on his stomach and took a deep breath. The rain had stopped and sunlight poured through a break in the clouds to sparkle in the drops on the windscreen. He stared at the colours. It helped.

He looked at his phone again. Mia was fourteen going on twenty-one, and she’d done this before: delayed texting him back even though she was already with her after-school
carers, Frances and Donald. He remembered being fourteen and feeling like he was always being told what to do and when to do it, and finding little ways to exert his own bit of control. But rules were rules, and he’d seen too much to let them be bent.

Breathe.

Jane opened the driver’s door and handed across his coffee. ‘You okay?’

‘Fine.’

Something crossed her face at his
tone. She climbed behind the wheel, then nodded at the phone in his lap. ‘No response from Mia-mouse?’

‘Last time I called her that she said “I’m fourteen, not four”,’ Alex said.

Jane angled her cup towards him in salute. ‘The joys of parenthood.’

‘Yours were teens once,’ he said, feeling better now they’d changed the subject. ‘How do you survive?’

‘It’s like being a patient
in a major trauma. Some of it you blank out, the rest of the time you take drugs.’ She sipped her coffee. ‘And you’re in rehab for a long time afterwards.’

‘That good?’ Alex said. ‘Perhaps I should have another.’

‘Thirty-five,’ Control said.

‘Damn,’ Jane said.

Alex grabbed the microphone as adrenaline thumped into his bloodstream again. ‘Thirty-five’s on Glebe Point Road.’

Not the screamers. Please.

‘Got an MVA for you,’ Control said. ‘Car into a pole on Wattle Street, Ultimo, outside the park, opposite the school. Cross is Quarry. Person still in vehicle, query code nine.’

‘Thirty-five’s on the case,’ Alex said.

‘Damn,’ Jane said again.

She dug a cardboard tray out of the centre console and tucked their cups into it while Alex clipped
in his seatbelt, trying to calm his heart.

Jane started the engine and hit the lights and siren and pulled out into the traffic. Cars lumbered out of their way and the sun shone silver on the wet road. ‘When we get there, let me know if you want me to treat,’ she said.

He gave a terse nod. ‘I’m guessing Mia’s probably at a friend’s.’

‘Yeah,’ she said after a moment, with a sideways
glance. ‘Probably. My kids were always doing that – nicking off somewhere after school and saying they forgot to let me know. You’d think the bullocking I gave them would make them remember next time, but it never did…’

He tuned her out as he pulled gloves onto his already clammy hands. Roads got slippery after rain. Skid, bounce up the kerb and into a signpost, minor damage, driver’s
freaked out and not got out of the car yet. The way the call-takers’ computer system worked, they had to ask if the person was still in the vehicle, and if the answer was yes it automatically came through to the controller as a query trapped. Better safe than sorry, but it meant most code nines were fixed by merely opening a door. That’s all it would be this time.

‘We laugh about it now,
of course,’ Jane said, doglegging through to Bay Street and popping out halfway along Wattle. ‘I tell them, wait till you have kids of your own, because then…’

Alex looked left and saw the accident: a silver late-model Mitsubishi sedan head-on into a power pole. Cars had stopped behind it and a couple of people stood by the driver’s closed door. The powerlines were intact, nothing was
on fire. The people by the vehicle looked concerned but weren’t panicking.
It’s okay.

Jane pulled up next to the car. Alex saw a thirtyish man in a business shirt in the driver’s seat, his hands white on the wheel, his forehead pressed to its top. There were no passengers.

‘He in one piece?’ Jane said.

‘As far as I can tell.’ Alex picked up the microphone. ‘Thirty-five’s on scene,
will report shortly.’

‘Thanks, Thirty-five,’ Control said.

Alex grabbed the Viva out of the back and went to the driver’s door. The window was up, the lock button down. He tapped on the glass, but the man gave no indication that he’d heard. His shoulders shook as if he was crying.

Alex checked the back door, but it too was locked, as were both doors on the passenger side. He
started as a truck crunched its gears on the road behind him and covered it up by turning to the four bystanders. ‘Has he been like this the whole time?’

‘First he was looking around, all panicky,’ a woman in her late teens said. She had a round face, wore jeans and a frilled white top and held a blue handbag by the strap. ‘We kept asking him through the window if he was okay, whether he
could get out, but he didn’t answer. Then he just hid his face like that.’

The others nodded.

Alex looked up at the powerlines again, then down at the car. The bonnet was crumpled but not badly. It had been a fairly low impact. He shielded his eyes from the sun and leaned close to the window, peering into the car, checking what he could of the man’s body. There was no visible blood.
The dash wasn’t pressing against his knees. The airbag had gone off and now lay sagging on his lap, but it was clean and bloodstain-free. He could hear the man’s weeping. He rapped on the glass again.

‘No joy?’ Jane said behind him.

He shook his head. ‘Ambulance,’ he said, close to the glass. ‘Will you please open the door?’

The man let go of the wheel and covered his face with
his hands.

‘Thirty-five,’ Control called, loud and clear from the portable on Jane’s hip. ‘What’s your status?’

Crap.
Alex needed this guy to unlock the doors. Until then, they couldn’t be completely certain that he could get out, and they were obliged to tell Control, who’d have no choice but to call for rescue, probably diverting them from the Botany Road job where they were really
needed.

He knocked on the window with a hard fist. ‘Mate, open your door.’

The man didn’t move.

Jane leaned close to the glass. ‘C’mon, buddy, we just want to make sure you’re okay.’

Down the street, somebody blasted their horn and the man started and looked up. Alex felt the jolt of nerves too, but knocked on the window again. The man glanced at him, his face full of fear.
Alex smiled and motioned for him to lower the window. The man stared wild-eyed past him at the people watching on the other side of the road.

‘Thirty-five,’ Control called again.

‘We just want to make sure you’re all right,’ Alex said to the man. ‘Then we’ll leave you alone.’

The man said something, his voice muffled by the glass.

‘Show you what?’ Alex asked.

‘He
wants to see our IDs,’ Jane said. She lowered her head as she undid the button on her shirt pocket. ‘As if our uniforms and the whopping great truck behind us aren’t enough.’

Alex got out his wallet too, and they held their ID cards to the window.

‘Okay?’ Alex said.

The man hesitated, looking past them again, then reached for the button by his shoulder. The rest popped up with
it.

Alex opened the door. ‘Do you have any pain? Can you move your legs?’

The man didn’t answer. His face was angular, his eyes red from crying. He wore grey trousers and a blue business shirt, the sleeves roughly rolled up, the collar unbuttoned, no sign of a tie. His hands trembled on his knees and he smelled of sweat and fear.

‘Sir?’ Alex said, knowing how that felt inside,
and sympathetic, but still aware of the people who were really trapped. ‘What’s your name?’

‘I’m all right.’

‘Can you turn sideways and put your feet on the road?’

The man did so easily, still staring at the people across the street. There was no hint of pain in the anxiety on his face.

Jane stepped away to tell Control they had good access and no backup was needed.

‘Let me check your neck.’ Alex leaned into the car.

‘Don’t.’ The man’s voice was full of panic. ‘I can’t see when you get so close.’

‘I’ll be quick.’

‘I said don’t.’ The man dodged his hands and peered across at the crowd.

‘Okay then, you keep watching and I’ll reach in from behind you.’ He opened the car’s rear door and leaned in to examine the man’s neck. His skin
inside the shirt collar was slippery with sweat under Alex’s gloves. ‘Any pain? Tenderness?’

‘No.’

Alex checked the man’s head too.
See, you’re managing fine. Everything’s going to be okay.

The way the man was acting suggested a head injury, but he had no swelling or lacerations. Alex pressed the man’s scalp with his fingertips. ‘Does this hurt?’

‘No.’

Alex came back
around to crouch inside the open driver’s door. ‘What’s your name? Do you remember what happened?’

But the man’s eyes were glued on something in the distance, this time further down the street. Alex glanced that way, but couldn’t see anything other than the usual gawkers. ‘How about we get in the ambulance? We can talk on the way to hospital.’

Still no reply.

‘Sir?’ He touched
the man’s hand.

The man flinched and tried to pull the door closed.

‘Hold on a second, mate.’ Alex glanced over his shoulder at Jane. Some patients responded better to men, some to women. It was worth a try.

Jane crouched inside the open door. ‘Hi, I’m Jane.’ Her voice was warm and calm.

Alex took the gear to the ambulance and stowed it, then stood listening to Jane murmur
to the man and looking down the street to where the man had stared. There was nothing to see but people, some in suits, a few kids with their parents, maybe fifteen or so all up, and the number starting to dwindle as they realised there’d be no dead bodies or blood. His thoughts slipped to the night when there had been bodies and blood, but he caught his mind and hauled it back.
Stay in the present.

Jane motioned him over with her head. She’d taken off her gloves and was holding the man’s hands. He’d hunkered down into the seat and was peering up over the dash, not only at the shrinking crowd but in all other directions too.

‘Marko,’ Jane said to him, ‘Alex is going to step in next to you and take your left arm. I’ll be here holding your right. We’ll stand up together, then walk
across to the ambulance and climb in that door on the side.’

Alex stepped in close. Marko’s eyes jittered to the open door then back to the street. Alex felt for him.

‘Nobody can hurt you,’ Jane said.

‘He can see,’ Marko said.

‘Not once we’re in the ambulance,’ Jane said.

‘It’s dangerous for you as well,’ he said.

‘Nothing bad’s going to happen,’ Alex said.
His own mantra. He hoped it sounded more believable to Marko’s ears than it ever did to his own.

‘You don’t understand.’ Marko pulled his hands out of Jane’s grip. ‘You’re both putting yourselves in danger just by talking to me. You don’t know what he’s like.’

‘Who?’ Jane said.

‘If I tell you his name things will be even worse.’ He stared sideways down the street. ‘He’s probably
watching now. He can find out things about you so easily. It’s like he can read your mind.’

RPA had a good psych unit. They just had to get him there.

‘So let’s go,’ Alex said. ‘If things are that dangerous, we need to move.’

Jane took Marko’s hand again, and he resisted for a moment then got to his feet and half-crouched between them.

Alex grasped his other hand. ‘You’re
safe between us.’

‘I’m not safe anywhere,’ Marko said.

‘You will be in a moment,’ Jane said. ‘Ready?’

They ran the three metres to the ambulance and Marko leapt inside. Jane followed him up the steps.

‘I’ll check the car,’ Alex said.

She nodded.

Alex left the side door open so he could keep an ear on what was going on while he walked around the car. To trigger
the airbag Marko would’ve had to have hit the pole at around twenty kilometres per hour. There was no damage apart from the crumpled front end, and no skid marks on the asphalt. He pressed the boot release button and looked in. It was empty.

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