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'Bingo,' Linda said.
I looked at her. Her eyes were s.h.i.+ning.
'I've got more names,' she said. 'Can we get the maps and the data printed out?'
'What do you think?' Gerry said. 'This is a business.'
The rest of it took about fifteen minutes. Then we took the folder of printouts around to Meaker's and ordered long blacks. We sat opposite each other, my back against the wall. Linda was wearing a white turtleneck and a leather bomber jacket. Very fetching.
'What's going on?' I asked.
She drank some coffee. 'Well, I was thinking about Anne Jeppeson after our dinner and I mentioned it the next day to a guy at work who was a State political reporter on the Herald in those days. Before the drink got to him. He said he remembered there was a huge fight in Cabinet about selling the Hoagland site. The Planning Minister was Kevin Pixley. Remember him?'
I nodded.
'Lance Pitman was the Housing Minister who closed Hoagland. He wanted to sell the site without calling for tenders. Pixley wouldn't have a bar of it and he had a lot of support in Cabinet. Then Harker, the Premier, reshuffled the Cabinet and suddenly Pixley was Transport Minister and Lance Pitman was Planning. And then Pitman approved the sale of the site.'
'Who would have wanted to buy it ten years ago?'
'That's what I asked myself. And why didn't Pitman want to go to tender? The site was bought by a company called Hexiod Holdings, a shelf company with an accountant called Norman Jovanovich and two other people as directors. Hexiod held on to the property until three months ago, when it was sold to Charis Corporation, the Yarra Cove developers. It was sold the day after Pitman and company got back into government.'
'What about the waterfront land, the properties we've been looking at?'
She put out her slim hand and touched my arm. 'Jack, there's something like seventy properties involved. If I read this UrbanData stuff right, at least seven companies started buying or taking options on the riverbank sites about eighteen months before the government announced it was closing Hoagland. At some point, I don't know when yet, another outfit, called Niemen PL, emerged as owner of all the properties. Six years ago, Niemen consolidated all the waterfront properties into one and applied for rezoning of the area as residential.'
Linda paused while what appeared to be members of a female bike gang came in, talking at the top of their voices. Across the street, a white Holden with tinted windows was parked outside a furniture shop. A tall, balding man in a grey windcheater came walking along from the city side and got in the pa.s.senger door.
'Anyway,' said Linda, 'the government knocked them back. They went to the Planning Appeals Board and won. Then the Planning Minister overruled the board.'
'Why was that?'
The driver of the white Holden was getting out of the car. He crossed the road to our side and disappeared from view.
'Said rezoning wasn't in keeping with the government's long-term plans for the area.'
I saw a match flare behind the Holden's tinted driver's side window. The man who had got in the pa.s.senger side was now in the driver's seat. He opened the window a couple of inches to flick out his match.
Linda looked at her watch and drained her coffee. 'I've got to go,' she said. 'The last act in this saga is that six weeks ago Niemen sold the consolidated waterfront land to Charis.'
'So Charis now owns the whole site?'
'That's right. There's a road between the waterfront properties and the Hoagland land. The government sold the road to Charis a few days after the waterfront deal. And soon after that Charis announced the Yarra Cove development.'
'Tell us thinkers slowed by age and drink what all this means,' I said.
Linda gave me her slow smile. 'I think it means that closing Hoagland was part of a plan to put together a thirty-acre waterfront site. That's a developer's wet dream. The only reason Yarra Cove didn't get started a long time ago is that the Harker government got thrown out at the '84 election. That meant a ten-year wait till Pitman and company got back in.'
I thought about this for a while. 'And if Hoagland hadn't been closed in '84?'
She leaned across the table. 'Then someone was stuck with a whole lot of falling-down old warehouses and polluted factory sites backed by the toughest Housing Commission flats in the city.'
The driver of the Holden was lighting up again. I said, 'Are we both concluding that Anne Jeppeson's death suited some people?'
'I've got to find out more about the companies involved. But the answer is Yes. I think we should talk to Kevin Pixley.'
'What became of him?'
'Retired. Lives in Brighton. The bloke at work is an old drinking mate of his. I'll see if he can get Pixley to talk to us.'
I said, 'Can we have dinner? I've got to tell you something about Ronnie.'
She gave me an interested look. 'Ring me before eight-thirty. I'm working till then.'
I took my time finis.h.i.+ng the coffee. Then I took a stroll down Brunswick Street, marvelling at the dress sense of the young, crossed over to the other side at Johnson Street, walked back to my car.
The white Holden was gone.
19
I went back to my office and rang the last number Cam had left. He didn't seem to leave the same number twice running. A woman with a French accent invited me to leave a message. My eye fell on the mobile phone in its little plastic case next to the Mac. I'd bought it in a fit of technological anxiety and used it about four times. I left the number with the French lady and walked over to Charlie's.
'So,' he said. 'Had the breakfast. Ready for the day's work.' He was preparing a length of wood for steam-bending, using a block plane to chamfer the edges that would be in tension. This was to stop the wood fibres breaking loose. In the corner, the low potbelly stove was fired up, and Charlie's ancient steam kettle was starting to vibrate.
'I've been out since dawn,' I said. 'Looking for people.'
He shook his head sadly. 'A man with a profession. What does he do? He goes to the races and he looks for people who should stay missing.'
The mobile phone went off in my pocket, a nasty, insistent electronic noise. It was Cam. 'The big man wants to have breakfast tomorrow,' he said. 'You on?'
I said yes.
'Pick you up quarter to eight.'
I felt Charlie's eyes on me as I closed the flap and put the phone in my pocket.
'So,' he said. 'Mr Big Business Man. Mr Executive. So busy he can't go to the telephone anymore, has to take it with him. Next it's no time even to go for a s.h.i.+t. Take a little s.h.i.+thouse around with you, do it in the motor car.'
'You need to keep up with things in my line of work,' I said.
'Yes,' he said, disbelief in his tone. 'When you going to finish that table, Mr Walking Telephone?'
'Friday. Well, Sunday.'
'Got a big job yesterday,' he said. 'Man wants me to make him a library in Toorak. Panelled. Carved. Don't know if I'm up to it anymore.'
'No,' I said, 'you're not up to it. Play bowls instead. Give the work to somebody who can do it.'
'I just might,' Charlie said. 'Or maybe I'll get an apprentice, hey? Smart girl. Strong. Not afraid of work. Reliable even.'
'Good idea,' I said, heading for my bits of table. 'Anyone would want to spend five years making mortice and tenon joints and finding out about the finer points of lawn bowls.'
Charlie finished his planing and took the boards over to the steam box. It was a length of glazed sewerage pipe, eight feet long, sixteen inches in diameter, plugged at both ends. The steam went in at one end and escaped through a hole at the other. He gave it an appreciative smack with a huge hand. 'You want to know something?' he said. 'You can give a schmuck a walking telephone. But what you got then is a schmuck with a walking telephone.'
'Gee, you can learn a lot around here,' I said, 'just by listening.'
The workshop was warm from the steam box and the rest of the afternoon slipped by. At quarter to six, we called it a day and went around to the Prince. What Charlie called the Fitzroy Youth Club was in position at the bar.
'Jack, my boy,' said Wilbur Ong. 'Did I tell you I tipped eight out of eight three weeks in a row now? In me granddaughter's tipping pool, round this place she works. Hundreds in it. I give her me tips Thursday nights when she comes for tea. Me daughter's girl.'
Norm O'Neill's huge nose came around slowly, like the forward cannon on the USS Missouri swivelling to speak to Vietnam. 'You can only get eight out of eight, Wilbur,' he said slowly and with menace, 'if you tip against the Lions.'
Wilbur gave him a pitying look. 'Norm,' he said, 'if you was forty years younger I'd take you outside for jumpin to that conclusion. 'Course I don't tip against the Lions. It's the girl. She takes all me other tips and changes that one. She reckons tippin against the Lions is the only sure thing left in the footie.'
'I don't think you brought your daughter up right,' Eric Tanner said.
Stan came out from behind the bar and switched on the television set on the wall in the corner. It was news time. When the set was first put in, Stan tried to keep it on all the time but the Youth Club kept switching it off. Now it went on for the news and football.
The news opened with a helicopter view of Dr Paul Gilbert's health centre with at least ten vehicles parked outside the front gate.
'Two men have been found shot dead at an isolated property bordering on the Wombat State Forest outside Daylesford,' the woman newsreader said. 'One of the bodies was in a hot spa bath. Police said the men might have been dead for as long as a week.'
The helicopter went in for a closer look. I could see two men in plain clothes standing outside the house. They looked up at the helicopter and the one on the left's lips said, 'f.u.c.k off.'
'Police said the bodies had been identified. Their names are expected to be released later this evening. The property is owned by Dr Paul Gilbert, a Melbourne general pract.i.tioner who was permanently barred from practice in 1987 after being found guilty of a variety of drug offences. He served two and a half years of a six-year sentence. Dr Gilbert lived on the property. He has not been seen in Daylesford for more than a week.'
The news went on to other things. I finished my beer and drove home. The streets seemed to be full of white Holdens. Had a white Holden followed me to Daylesford? My neck hair p.r.i.c.kled.
20
When I got home, I rang Linda Hillier. She wasn't at her desk, said a man. He took a message. I was looking sadly into the near-empty fridge when the phone rang.
'We need to talk,' Linda Hillier said.
'Endlessly,' I answered. Then I went for it. 'Can you come around here? No. Will you come around here?'
'What's the address?'
I walked around the corner to Papa's Original Greek Taverna and bought some bread, olives, dolmades and an unidentified fish stuffed with thyme and basil from Mrs Papa. Menu price less fifteen per cent, that was our deal.
I was just out of the shower when the bell rang. I pulled on underpants, denims and a s.h.i.+rt.
'Well, h.e.l.lo,' she said. There was rain on her hair.
'You're wet,' I said.
'So are you. At least I've got shoes on.'
She had changed since this morning. She was wearing a trenchcoat over grey flannels, a cream s.h.i.+rt and a tweed jacket. I caught her scent as I took the coat and jacket. It was, in a word, throaty.
'This is nice,' she said, looking around.
We stood awkwardly for a moment, something trembling in the air between us. I looked around at the books in piles on every surface, the CDs and tapes everywhere, the unhung pictures, seeing the place for the first time in years.
'It's sort of gentlemen's club mates with undergraduate student digs,' she said.
I cleared my throat. 'Come into the kitchen and I'll give you a drink. What would you like?' The kitchen was respectable. I'd cleaned it recently.
'Whisky and water if you've got it.'
She had a good inspection of the contents of the open shelves while I got the drinks, watching her out of the corner of my eye and telling her about my visit to Father Gorman. I poured myself a gla.s.s of Coldstream Hills pinot noir from a bottle I'd started on the day before.
'Cheers,' I said.
'Cheers. I've met Gorman a couple of times. He's a walker for high-society hags. Something slimy about him.'
'A walker?'
'Takes them to the theatre, to parties. When their husbands are too busy f.u.c.king the secretary.'
'You're very knowledgeable,' I said. 'I've got a fish. If you're hungry.'
'A fish,' she said thoughtfully. Our eyes were locked. I couldn't look away. I didn't want to look away.
'It doesn't have to be fish.'
She bit her lower lip. 'What else have you got?'
I wanted very much to bite her lower lip. 'There's some steak,' I said. 'Sirloin. Frozen.'
We had somehow got closer. I couldn't remember moving. She put out her left hand and touched the hollow in my throat with one finger.
'Sirloin,' she said. She put her gla.s.s down on the counter and slowly folded her arms under her b.r.e.a.s.t.s. It was somehow a hugely erotic gesture. 'Anything else?'