‘Why?’ I ask.
‘Standard procedure,’ Tamil says. ‘Sometimes people remember things differently after a few days, when the adrenaline has settled.’
‘But it was a suicide.’
‘Even so, we are required to investigate all deaths with an open mind before we can rule it a suicide. So, we need to dot our i’s and cross our t’s.’
I wonder if she’s heard from Max.
‘Fine,’ Gabe says. ‘Go ahead.’
‘All right. Let’s go over what happened again. From the start.’
Gabe goes over the story again, with only a little prompting from Tamil. Conroy doesn’t speak at all. I wait for one of them to drop the bombshell – We know that you worked for Max Cameron – but neither of them mentions it.
‘All right,’ Tamil says, after Gabe has finished. ‘That’s it.’
Gabe and I exchange a glance. That’s it? I want to feel relieved – and I do a little – but the feeling of dread remains lodged inside me.
Tamil and her colleague rise to their feet. ‘Oh. Just one more thing.’
And there it is. The reason for the dread.
I wonder if it gives her a perverse sort of pleasure to lull someone into a false sense of security, get them all comfortable and relaxed, and then stick the knife in. I suppose it would be quite satisfying. When they did this in Line of Duty, I always gave a fist pump. Not today.
‘The victim’s husband told us that she kept a USB on her keyring,’ Tamil says. ‘It was silver and her name was engraved on it. But the USB wasn’t on the keyring when it was returned to him.’ She’s looking at her notebook as she reads the description of the USB. Then she looks up. ‘Do you know anything about it?’
I feel blood pulsing in my face, my arms, my body. I think I might faint.
‘No,’ Gabe says. ‘I didn’t see any USB. But then, I didn’t see her keyring either.’
‘I thought it was a long shot, but we had to check. All right, we’ll leave you to get on with your evening.’
Tamil returns her notebook to her pocket, and we file back down the hall. As I reach for the door to let them out, the girls take their opportunity to pounce.
‘Did my mummy or daddy do something wrong?’ Asha asks.
Tamil chuckles. ‘No. I’m just asking them about something that your daddy saw.’
‘The lady at the cliff?’
The detective lifts her gaze to meet mine. ‘That’s right.’
‘She didn’t jump,’ Asha says seriously. ‘Grandma said she jumped, but it was an accident. She fell.’
‘Is that right?’
‘Yes. My daddy said so. That’s why we should never go too close to the edge. Because you can fall.’
It is entirely explainable, of course. Out of the mouths of babes. What’s less explainable is Gabe’s facial expression when Tamil looks up at him. He is horrified. Pale. Your classic deer in the headlights. He is the very image of someone who has just been caught in a lie.
44
AMANDA
BEFORE
After those men broke into the house, our security increased dramatically. Cameras, alarms, keypads. I had a panic button in every room, and another to always carry on my person. Max’s office was similarly set up with cameras and alarms. Everything, Max told me, was state-of-the-art.
There was also a full-time personal security guard stationed at the house around the clock, an ex-military officer called Baz. I’d been terrified of the two men who’d come to the house that day, but Baz was something else. He was the tallest man I’d ever seen, built like a rugby player, with one of those heads that flowed straight into his neck. Each of his limbs was wider than my torso and pulsing with veins. He had a mean face, huge, mangled knuckles and a snake tattoo that crept out of the collar of his shirt. Before Baz, I hadn’t known that you could feel both safe and petrified at the same time. But after a while, I started to get used to it. This level of security became our new normal.
*
‘It’s done,’ Max said, six months after the break-in. We were at home, in the lounge room. Max had been working on his computer, while I was editing some photographs I’d taken at the opening of the Ai Weiwei exhibit at the art gallery. We were sharing a bowl of Pringles.
I looked up from my laptop. ‘What’s done?’
‘My business with Arthur Spriggs.’
He closed the lid of his own computer with a thud of finality. It was the same computer he’d been working on that day in the study, the one he kept locked in the safe.
‘What do you mean it’s done? What did you do?’
‘The less you know . . .’
‘No way, Max,’ I said. ‘No more of that. I want to know. I deserve to know.’
A flash of something crossed Max’s face. I couldn’t quite place it, but it gave me a sick feeling.
‘I asked Baz to return Arthur’s money. In person.’
‘Baz went to see Arthur Spriggs?’
There was a note of disbelief in my voice. I understood on some level; Baz was intimidating as hell. But I would have thought someone like Arthur would have been used to that. I was shocked that all it would take was a visit from Baz to end this nightmare.
‘No. He didn’t see Arthur.’
Suddenly it made sense. Arthur hadn’t sent his men to Max; that wouldn’t have had the desired effect. He had to be cleverer than that. And so, apparently, did Max.
‘He left it with Arthur’s wife? Girlfriend?’
Max hesitated. There it was again – that flash. ‘He left it with Arthur’s daughter.’
A sick feeling came over me. ‘How old is his daughter, Max?’
A short pause. ‘I understand that she is two or three years old.’
Baz, I discovered later, had scaled Arthur’s fence and handed the little girl an envelope of cash while she played in the backyard. Her mother had ducked inside, so he waited for her to return before he left. It was important, Max said, that she saw Baz and understood what they were up against.
No harm came to the little girl, Max was clear about that, and I believed him. Then again, I’d also believed him when he said he’d never cheat on me. Goes to show how dangerous it can be, thinking that you know someone.
45
PIPPA
NOW
The Pantry is bustling. It’s impressive for a weekday. Certainly, it wouldn’t have been an unfamiliar sight in the middle of summer, but down here many cafes and restaurants rely on the weekend and school holiday trade from Melbourne.
I am sitting at a back table by the window, in front of a sandwich I didn’t order but that I’m enjoying desperately. I haven’t eaten a proper meal in days and there’s something calming about a full stomach. It doesn’t entirely relieve my anxiety, but it helps a bit.
‘If they knew about the connection between Max and me, they would have said so.’ That’s what Gabe said to me last night, after the police had left. ‘It just felt like they did because we’re nervous. You don’t have to worry.’
Easy to say.
This morning, when Gabe had taken the girls off to preschool, he’d been an entirely different man from the nervous, shaken one of the evening before. He’d decided that the police visit was a good thing, and that the most likely scenario was that they would have closed the case by the end of the day, ruling it a suicide. Even if Max had been here in Portsea, Gabe said, he’d have left by now. He was probably back in Melbourne, planning the funeral. Gabe seemed so confident. I envied him.