‘Just a small one. I’m driving,’ I said. It sounded lame.
Milan laughed as if I’d said something very entertaining. Steve poured two full glasses, handed me one.
‘Pineapple and vodka,’ said Milan. ‘Good for you, builds up acid, cleans the bowel.’
He put back half his glass. ‘No, mate, I’m just a fucken Serb. Nobody likes Serbs, right? Be fine if I was a Kosovar. Right? Remember that lot?’
I nodded.
‘Everybody bleeding about fucken Kosovars. Mate, they not even Christians. Christian country this, right? Those people are fucken Arabs. Not from Europe. You see the women? Hide their fucken faces. Got no pity, either. Kill children. Right, mate?’
I didn’t say anything. What was there to say to six hundred years of breeding?
‘So what’s this Marco shit?’ he said. ‘You NCA, Feds, what?’
I shook my head. ‘I saw you mentioned in the newspaper. I’ve got a client who needs some information. That’s it.’
Now he had a good laugh. I was becoming funnier every minute.
‘Listen, you not from the Feds, okay, you give the Feds a message from me. Okay? Okay?’
‘If they ask me, okay.’
‘You tell those bastards, Jack, I tol em, they don’t listen. They never gonna make this drugs stuff stick on me. I don’t deal drugs, I never deal drugs, never will. Not interested. People come to me with offers all the time. I say no. That’s right, Steve?’
‘Right,’ said Steve.
‘Right. I’m not sayin I don’t know some stupid people, they get involved in this shit. Not sayin that. Everybody knows stupid people. You can have a stupid brother, how’s that your blame, hey? But I tell them, keep away from me, keep that shit away from me.’ He leaned over, belly creases deepening. ‘Jack, you think I’m such a dumb cunt I’m dealin while I’ve got the fucken Feds on my fucken hammer?’
‘It wouldn’t be smart, no,’ I said.
‘Tell em that, Jack, tell em. Tell em to get off my fucken back. Adult entertainment, that’s my business. That’s fucken all. And property, I got a bit of property. Plus a couple investments. All in the open.’ He looked at Steve.
I said, ‘Can I ask you about Marco Lucia?’
‘You ready?’ Milan said to Steve.
‘Ready.’ Steve went below and came back with a flat case. He opened it and took out a small machine-pistol and two long magazines. A magazine made a snick as it went into the butt.
Milan took the pistol, showed it to me. ‘Nice, hey? Ingram. Better than a Glock. Don’t trust fucken Austrians.’
Steve shouted something from the bow of the boat. We slowed to walking speed. A blow-up pool toy drifted by: a swan.
Milan stood up, went to the side and fired a short burst at it. The swan collapsed without a sound.
‘And another thing, Jack.’ Milan turned to me, took on a sad look, a man injured to his core. ‘I’m hurt there’s no gratitude.’
‘Gratitude?’
‘Gratitude. What these pricks in Sydney do when their fat boy gets in the shit with whores? They come to Milan, that’s what. I squeeze that cunt Papagos for them like a grape, end of problem. So where’s the gratitude?’
‘You deserve more,’ I said.
‘Fucken right. You tell them, Jack.’
‘Any time I get the chance. About Marco Lucia?’
A blow-up crocodile came by, followed by several big balls, two ducks and Mickey Mouse. Milan went into a firing frenzy, changing magazines in mid-carnage. The objects deflated, slumped on the water.
‘Marco,’ I said.
Steve appeared. ‘Hey, shootin,’ he said.
‘Pretty boy cunt,’ said Milan. ‘People say I topped Marco. Bullshit. Wouldn’t fucken waste my time. Cut his cock off, that’s somethin else. Find him, I sew it up in his mouth.’
‘Have to stick half down his fucken throat,’ said Steve. He laughed, showing his teeth.
‘Gimme another drink. Jack, have another one.’
‘No thanks. Why do they say you topped him?’
‘He just fucked off, no-one seen him, so they say he’s dead, they point at me.’
‘Why at you?’
Milan eyed me over the top of his glass, lowered it. ‘Warm as piss,’ he said. ‘More ice, Steve. Why?’
‘Why do people point at you over Marco?’
‘He did some work for me.’
‘What kind of work was that?’
Steve was putting ice into Milan’s glass with tongs.
‘Just work,’ said Milan. ‘Things I give him to do.’
‘Marco’s dead,’ I said.
Milan looked at Steve, eyes eloquent, looked at me. ‘Says who?’ he said.
‘Drug overdose in Melbourne.’
Milan drank some pineapple juice. ‘Melbourne,’ he said, as if hearing the name of some remote cattle station. ‘What’s he doin in Melbourne?’
‘Working as a part-time barman.’
I could see a huge powerboat coming our way at speed, foaming bow waves. It slowed, veered away to increase the distance between us when we passed. Perhaps the idea was to lessen the risk of spilling Milan’s drink.
The three men and a woman on board all waved. Milan moved a hand at them. ‘Everybody knows Milan,’ he said.
‘Marco was calling himself Robbie Colburne,’ I said.
Another exchange of looks.
‘Robbie what?’ said Milan.
‘Colburne.’
‘You sure the dead one’s Marco?’ said Milan.
‘I’ve got a picture. It’s in my jacket. Inside pocket.’
Milan looked at Steve. Steve felt around in my jacket, found the photograph, showed it to Milan without looking at it.
‘Hey,’ said Milan, a broad smile, real pleasure. ‘The Pole. Marco Polo.’
Now Steve looked. ‘Good fucken riddance,’ he said. He was smiling too.
‘Overdose?’ said Milan. ‘What?’
‘Smack.’
Another boat came from nowhere, rocked us with its wake. ‘Arsehole.’ Milan shook his head. ‘So a needle?’
‘Yes.’
Milan puffed out his cheeks. ‘Needle’s a big fucken surprise to me,’ he said. ‘What’s the Feds’ interest?’
This was not progressing. ‘What kind of work did Marco do?’
Milan smiled at Steve. Steve smiled back. ‘What you reckon, Steve? What kinda work Marco do?’
‘I dunno, Milan.’
‘Marco’s all cock,’ said Milan. ‘Work it out.’
‘If someone wanted to kill him, why would that be?’
Much laughter. Milan held his empty glass out to Steve. ‘More,’ he said. ‘Whattabout you, Jack?’
I shook my head. ‘I’m not getting anything here,’ I said. ‘You want me to pass on messages, you won’t answer a simple question.’
Milan considered this, working his tongue over his teeth. Then he leant over. ‘Listen, Jack, the cunt’s just a big prick and a thief. Maybe he stole somethin, made people angry. He’s no fucken loss.’
He straightened up. ‘But don’t lookit me. You know how I’d a killed Marco? You know?’
I shook my head.
‘I bring him out here, I open him up a little, just for blood, tie him to a 200 kilo line. Then I throw him over and I tow the cunt around lookin for sharks. Tow him till all I got on the line is a bit of bone.’
Steve’s mobile shrilled. He said a few words, handed it to Milan.
Milan listened. ‘Tell him to fucken wait,’ he said. ‘I’m comin.’
He gave the phone back to Steve. ‘Home,’ he said.
The first you saw of Haven Waters was the clock tower. What need did these people have of the time?
21
Tired, the feeling of the whole body being tired, not the earned tiredness of exercise, of physical work, just tired in the bone marrow. I went down the dark passage to the kitchen without bothering to switch on a light. The clock on the microwave said 9.14. I’d been up for seventeen hours, four hours in aircraft seats, three hours driving.
And bubbles of sour pineapple juice kept rising. Milan was right. It built up acid, it would probably clean the bowel. Scouring, they called it in horses.
Milk. I needed milk, drank two glasses, not terribly old. Then I opened a bottle of red and sat on the couch in the sitting room waiting for the place to warm up. Food I had no need of — I never wanted to eat again.