Dunbar Case

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Dunbar Case Page 4

by Peter Corris


  I was stiff from the drive and I wandered around the streets for a while to get the kinks out. It was cold with a sharp breeze and I upped the pace to keep warm. Back in the motel I plugged into their connection to use the laptop to check for emails. Nothing important. I took some of my prescribed pills and poured myself a solid scotch to offset the indignity. That gave me an appetite and I went to a nearby Indian restaurant with Conrad for company.

  I had battered cauliflower for an entrée and goat curry for a main. The food was good and the small carafe of house wine washed it down well. Jim was getting himself deeper and deeper into trouble. I’d seen the film many years before; Peter O’Toole was well cast, but the book was a good deal darker than the film.

  Wakefield had asked, or rather told, me to contact him as soon as I reached Bathurst. But I was still irked by the feeling that he had an agenda I wasn’t aware of and I was taking petty revenge by delaying the call. I dialled his mobile and got a message. A few minutes later the text came through:

  Ask him what he remembers about his paternal grandparents.

  Ask him where they were living when he was young.

  Ask him about the family Bible.

  Tell him there could be a six figure sum for him if things work

  out well.

  Experience has taught me that when people deliver messages with more than one clause, the important subject is in the middle, not at the beginning or the end. Wakefield really wanted to know about the Twizell family Bible: so, I had to admit, did I.

  I slept the way you do in motels when you’re on your own, especially after a few drinks. You miss the usual house and neighbourhood sounds that reassure you subliminally, and you need at least one piss. I got up at 3.30am and couldn’t get back to sleep. Again, as in most Australian motels, the bedside lights weren’t well placed for reading. I turned on the television, flicked through the channels and turned it off. I couldn’t find Radio National, the only station I ever listened to. I did the crossword and eventually fell asleep just as light was showing through the dusty venetian blinds.

  As a person accredited by a legal practitioner I was permitted to visit in the morning; others could only visit in the afternoon. The gaol was three kilometres west of town and I was in the parking area at 10am sharp. The place would have been forbidding enough on a bright sunny day, but the heavily overcast sky and gusting cold wind gave it an extra air of gloom. I’d read up on it a bit. The sandstone gate featured a hand-carved lion with keys in its mouth, supposedly a symbol of the might of the law. They were keen on that sort of thing in Victorian times when the gaol was built. As they will, prisoners found a way to undercut the symbol—legend had it that when the keys fell from the lion’s mouth all the prisoners would be freed. The gaol had had a foul reputation as harsh and ill-run until the prisoners rioted in 1970 causing enormous damage. An official inquiry brought reforms and, as far as I knew, it now ran on the standard lines.

  I’d been briefly on remand in Long Bay gaol in the past and had served a short sentence in Berrima, and I’d visited clients, friends and enemies inside, so I knew how to behave in a prison. You have to desensitise yourself to sounds, sights and smells. The absence of freedom sits like a cloud of smoke in the air and nothing on the outside resembles the sensation of waiting for the door behind you to be locked before the one in front of you can be opened.

  I went through the procedure of divesting myself of keys, mobile and coins. The supervising officer was a woman.

  ‘Can I give him the smokes?’

  ‘The prisoner will receive them later.’

  ‘Can I trust you?’

  There’s a TAFE course for correctional officers; they probably have a technique for removing the sense of humour.

  I was conducted down corridors smelling of institutional cleanser to a windowless room with a lino-tiled floor and walls in the same grey shade. There were three tables and six chairs and heavy staples set in the floor near three of the chairs for the prisoners to be shackled if necessary. There was a clock mounted high above a door opposite the one I had come through. There are lots of clocks in prisons and they don’t offer comfort.

  The door opened and a guard escorted in a man I had to convince myself was John Dalgarno Twizell. I thought I was accustomed to the impact prison makes on people, but I was shocked at this man’s appearance. Four years ago he’d been stocky, running to fat and aggressive-looking, now he seemed very different. His green overalls hung loosely on him because he’d replaced the fat with lean muscle and the fuck-you look of his staring eyes and shaved skull had changed to a calculating smirk. He had shaggy brown hair.

  The guard backed away to the door, out of earshot of low voices, close enough to step in if there was trouble. I stuck out my hand.

  ‘Cliff Hardy.’

  He ignored the hand and stared past me.

  ‘Mr Braithwaite says hello.’

  ‘What do you want?’

  I studied him; it was hard to believe he was the same man as in the photograph I’d seen. I had the feeling that the thug was an act and that this composed character was the real man. I was pretty sure Wakefield planned to exploit him in some way and I was prepared to play my own game if it came to that. On the other hand, he didn’t look like a victim.

  ‘You must be having a bloody great time in here, Johnnie,’ I said.

  That reached him. His pale eyes screwed up and his thin lips twisted into a sneer. ‘Yeah, I’m doing great.’

  ‘It’s funny,’ I said. ‘I was told you had charm.’

  A transformation came over him. He squared his shoulders and expanded his chest; he patted his hair into place, smiled broadly and slapped some colour into his grey cheeks.

  ‘Now, Mr Hardy,’ he said in a pleasant, almost tuneful voice, ‘it’s a great pleasure to meet you. Sorry I can’t get you a drink or perform a few other civilities. How’s the world treating you today?’

  I nodded. ‘I get the point.’

  ‘Do you? Charm is bullshit. I could always turn it on and off like a tap. Look where it got me.’

  I wasn’t going to let him snow me. ‘I understood drugs and booze got you here.’

  He laughed, still in his positive, engaging pose. ‘They helped, they certainly helped, but I’m not blaming them.’

  ‘You’re going to do well with this act at the parole hearing. When’s that again?’

  Some of the brio went out of him. He slumped a bit in the chair but much of the animation stayed in his face. ‘Why’re you here? Old Courtenay gave up on me a long time ago, I thought.’

  ‘He’s the one who said you had charm, but this is about something else.’

  He tensed, looked suddenly alarmed. ‘I’ve got you now. You’re the private eye who tried to blow Paul Brewer away and would have if the gun had fired. He’s in here. He talks about you.’

  It had happened a few years ago. Brewer had killed my lover, Lily Truscott, and I’d tried to kill him. It was one of the things that had cost me my licence. I hadn’t expected to come up against those memories again. I’d slotted them well away, I thought. It was Twizell’s turn to put me off balance.

  ‘That’s right,’ I said slowly. ‘I . . . was off my head at the time. I didn’t know Brewer was here and I don’t give a shit about him now.’

  ‘You used Braithwaite to get in to see me. The Tanners—’

  ‘Relax, it’s nothing to do with the Tanners, at least not directly.’

  ‘That doesn’t sound too comforting. What the fuck is it about?’

  I felt I couldn’t just put Wakefield’s questions to him without any context and I had the outline down pat now after telling it to Megan and Braithwaite. I gave Twizell an even more edited version, stressing his family connection to an important historical event without being specific. The animation he’d shown stayed with him more or less and he listened intently.

  When I’d finished he leaned back and smiled.

  ‘Are you telling me I’m related to some aris
tocrat and in line to be Lord Twizell of Twizell fucking Hall? Always thought it was a weird name. Wasn’t there some guy way back tried to claim a fortune that way?’

  A film about the Tichborne claimant had been on television not too long ago. I’d seen it and so, apparently, had he. A young aristocrat on his way to Australia in the nineteenth century had gone missing, believed drowned, and a man had turned up years later claiming to be him. He had supporters, but was eventually exposed as a fraud and went to gaol.

  ‘No,’ I said, ‘nothing like that, but there’s talk of some kind of document, a letter or a journal or some kind of writing, that’s historically important. I have a client who wants to find it and if you can put him on the right track there could be money in it for you.’

  ‘Not much use to me now.’

  ‘When you get out. You know and I know that getting back on your feet after a gaol stint is . . .’

  ‘A slippery slope to climb.’

  ‘Nicely put. The ancestor we’re talking about is said to have had a way with words. Maybe you’re a chip off the old block.’

  ‘Don’t . . . what is it? . . . patronise me,’ he said. ‘You’ve given me the first thing to interest me in this fucking hole apart from what the Tanners had in store for me. I was trying to close every fucking thing out. We’ve still got a while. Tell me more.’

  6

  I put the first of Wakefield’s questions to Twizell. It wasn’t a response to his request, but I didn’t want to lose control of the agenda.

  ‘Grandpa Bob and Grandma? Jesus, they were ancient, or that’s how it felt when I was a kid. They were pretty old. He had some tatts. He’d been a sailor. There was a story that he owned some ships once but not by the time we came along. He was just a retired sailor. Not a bad old bloke. He used to give us money. Grandma? She was quiet; pretty well educated, I think. She read a lot of books. I remember that they were both pissed off at my dad. He was a loser.’

  I put the next question.

  ‘They had an old dump of a cottage out of Newcastle near the beach. They reckoned it was historic. Grandma had a vegie garden and Grandpa Bob went fishing all the time. I suppose they had a pension, but they seemed to live on vegetables and fish. We used to stay there when Dad was off somewhere and Mum couldn’t handle us, and we got fucking sick of fish, I can tell you.’

  ‘Do you remember the address?’

  His eyes went shrewd. ‘I might, why?’

  ‘Could be important. What do you know about a family Bible?’

  I was watching closely and, although he tried not to react, he could not quite control his eyes. The lazy, out-of-focus stare he’d been affecting dropped away for a split second when he blinked.

  ‘Hey, what’re you talking about? I don’t know anything about a Bible.’

  ‘Yes, you do,’ I said. ‘And my client has authorised me to say that a six-figure amount could be due to you if . . . things work out.’

  ‘That’s very vague.’

  ‘Do you have anything more solid to think about just now, Johnnie?’

  He leaned forward and all the cocky aggression I’d seen in the after-trial newspaper photograph was back in his face and body language. ‘You bet I do, arsehole—getting out of this place.’

  I shook my head. ‘Year away, if you’re good.’

  ‘I’ve been good, bloody good, and they’ve brought my parole hearing forward. It’s on next week.’

  ‘Well, good luck.’

  ‘No, these bastards play games with you. There’ll be a hearing and you get your hopes up but they’ll knock me back for sure. You never get out on a first hearing, the blokes in here tell me. That’s unless . . .’

  He paused strategically.

  ‘Unless what?’

  ‘Unless someone with clout puts in a good word. Hey, I bet your guy’s rich or a museum dude or a professor or something, and you’ve got old Courtenay onside. They could swing it.’

  He was a lot smarter than anyone had thought.

  I left the prison with only Twizell’s proposal to take back to Wakefield. He wouldn’t be pleased. The odd thing was that it didn’t feel like failure. Twizell wasn’t likeable but neither was Wakefield and I’d be interested to watch the interplay between their devious minds if it went that way. It all might end right there for me, but, again, it might spin out for a time and earn me some money.

  While I’d been inside the car park had filled up a bit with a variety of vehicles including vans and utes apparently making deliveries to the prison. I reached my car, felt for my keys and was suddenly aware of three men emerging from the station wagon parked next to the Falcon. They arranged themselves to block me into the space between the vehicles. One, a compact type in early middle age, wore a suit, the others jeans, T-shirts, jackets. One of them was very big, another was rangier.

  ‘A word with you,’ the suit said.

  Two I could possibly have handled, even in the confined space, but not three. I leaned against my car with my hand not too far from the radio aerial, a possible weapon.

  ‘Okay,’ I said.

  The suit shook his head. ‘Not here. Come with us.’

  ‘I don’t think so.’

  I reached for the aerial but the lean, wiry one was too quick for me. He chopped down savagely on my arm, numbing it. The one behind me moved up and pulled my other arm halfway up my back. There was no space to kick or head-butt.

  ‘You’ve done this before,’ I said.

  ‘You bet we have,’ the suit said. ‘And we’ve done worse. Be smart.’

  Being smart meant getting into the back seat of the station wagon between the one who bent my arm and the suit while the other guy drove. I sat, working my arm to restore the circulation, and cursing myself for not being more careful.

  ‘Who do I have the pleasure of meeting?’

  ‘There’s no pleasure involved, Hardy, not for you or us. My name’s Joseph Tanner. Who my friends are doesn’t matter.’

  ‘It matters to me. Someone hits me and someone else bends my arm, I like to know who they are before I get even. I’m funny that way.’

  There was an amused snort from the arm bender. I leaned forward; he reached to pull me back and I slammed my elbow as hard as I could into his ribs. He gave a gasp, coughed and fought for breath.

  ‘I had to make an exception in his case.’

  Tanner took a small pistol from his pocket and pressed it against my knee. ‘Settle down. You all right, Clem?’

  ‘Let me . . .’

  ‘No. Maybe later. We’ll see how it goes.’

  The driver said, ‘What’s going on?’

  ‘Nothing,’ Tanner said.

  ‘What’s wrong with Clem?’

  Clem was gasping as he breathed.

  ‘I think he’s got a broken rib,’ I said. ‘Maybe two if I did it right. I’m not sure.’

  ‘Fuck you,’ Clem gasped.

  ‘It’s okay,’ I said, ‘I’ve had a few. They hurt for a while but they get better.’

  ‘Shut up, Hardy,’ Tanner snapped.

  I did. Part of my chatter was nerves and it was important to get that under control. We were back close to the town now, moving through suburbs and then into an area of shops and light industry. The van turned and went up a lane. It stopped at the back of what looked like a small warehouse. The lane dead-ended a little further on and there were no obvious signs of activity.

  ‘Out,’ Tanner said. ‘Any trouble from you, Hardy, and you’ll be sorry.’

  I nodded in keeping with my stoical decision and took in everything I could see. The thing to do in these situations is to know the ground, spot weapons and, if possible, play some of the people who have you off against each other.

  Again, I was in a confined space with three men who had no love for me. One disabled, but one with a gun. No time for heroics. The driver opened a door at the back of the building and Tanner shepherded me in with Clem, wheezing, bringing up the rear.

  Boxes stacked high around the walls
, windows too dirty to allow in much light, fluorescent tubes glowing. The place had a concrete floor with red paint worn mostly away by feet and time. The man sitting in one of a set of three deckchairs could only have been Tanner’s brother—similar hard lines to his body and face, similar suit. A couple of years older, perhaps, and more controlled.

  Joseph grunted something unpleasant I didn’t catch and slumped into one of the chairs. The older, more composed brother gestured for me to sit. He waved away Clem and the driver.

  ‘Hector Tanner,’ brother two said. ‘You’ve met my brother Joseph.’

  ‘I’ve had that pleasure.’

  ‘He’s a smartarse, Hec. I don’t reckon you could believe a word he says.’

  Hector looked across to where Clem was crouched, holding his side. ‘What’s wrong with Clem?’

  ‘Hardy cracked one of his ribs.’

  ‘I told you to be courteous.’

  ‘He’s a smartarse who thinks he’s a tough guy.’

  ‘Not really,’ I said. ‘It’s just that Clem was underexperienced at this sort of work.’

  Hector smiled. ‘I’m not.’

  I shrugged. ‘We’ll see.’

  ‘Have you any idea why we’ve brought you here?’

  I shook my head. ‘You’re not doing so well, Hec. I’m not playing that game. You talk to me to start with, not the other way around. If you’ve got something to say to me, say it.’

  ‘You’ve been to see Johnnie Twizell.’

  ‘Have I?’

  ‘What about?’

  I shook my head.

  Joseph shifted in his chair. ‘We can make him answer.’

  ‘Doesn’t matter,’ Hector said, then turned to me: ‘I expect you’ll be seeing him again.’

  ‘I expect I will.’

  ‘I want you to deliver a message to him.’

  ‘Come on,’ I said. ‘You know so much you’ve obviously got connections inside the gaol. You can get a message to him any time you like.’

 

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