On to Danni’s chamber. Unlike the other rooms, it was a mess, and a mess teenage style. I remember seeing an episode of Bill Cosby’s TV show where he opened the door to his son’s room and said, ‘This is where clothes come to die.’ It was like that. Clothes scattered everywhere; video cassettes and compact discs likewise; wall posters pulling away from the Blu-Tack, and pizza and hamburger boxes competing for space with wine bottles and beer cans. The bed was a tumbled ruin with a blizzard of used tissues covering it. The room was large, say twenty-five square metres, but the chaos made it seem small.
Light flooded in from where a Holland blind had come adrift from one of its moorings. The other blind was drawn down tight, as if the intention had been to keep the room as dim as possible. You hear untidy people say they know where everything is; I’m no housekeeper but I don’t believe it. There was no way Danni would be able to tell that someone had sorted through her detritus. I set about looking through the cluttered closets and impossible-to-close drawers without a thought for secrecy.
Danni evidently carried everything of importance on her person because the drawers and shelves and discarded handbags and purses contained nothing of interest. I found a scrap of silver foil but no sexy silver dish, no spoon, no lighter, no syringe or syringe cap. The only thing of interest I found was another photograph of Jason Jorgensen. He was standing in what looked like a wine bar. He appeared happy and relaxed with a glass in his hand and was wearing casual clothes — sports shirt, shorts, sneakers. The photograph had a quick snap look about it and had been tucked under the satin pillow on the sleeper’s side of Danni’s unmade bed.
Cross had made a good job of repairing Sammy’s arm and he was helping her back into the house when I stepped into view.
‘What the hell are you still doing here?’ Sammy almost shouted.
‘Calm yourself,’ the doctor said.
‘I don’t want that man snooping through my house.’
‘I’m the man who saved you from bleeding to death,’ I said. ‘Remember?’
‘Hardly that,’ Cross said. ‘A clean wound. Glass is a sterile medium, more or less. I think you’d better leave.’
I followed them into the sitting room. ‘What about the mess?’
Sammy allowed the doctor to ease her down into a chair. ‘Do you think I could have a brandy, please?’
‘Of course.’ Cross left the room briskly, obviously knowing where they kept the liquor.
‘What’s Marty going to say about all this blood?’ I asked.
‘I’ll have it cleaned up before he gets home. He gets home very late these nights, now that he’s got that… But I suppose you’ll tell him all about it.’
I liked that choice of words — I’ll have it cleaned up. Sammy hadn’t cleaned anything herself in a long while. It occurred to me that the best way to handle Sammy at the moment was as the man of mystery. I’d lifted the cigarettes and lighter from where she’d tucked them under the padded cover on the porch bench and I dropped them into her lap. ‘I don’t know that I will.’
Cross came back with an inch or so of amber liquid in a small brandy balloon. Nice touch. He’d taken a while and I edged closer to get a sniff of his breath. ‘Here you are, Mrs Price,’ he said. ‘A few sips over the next few minutes, I would suggest.’
I had to admire Sammy. She’d secreted the smokes and lighter again as smoothly as Houdini with his all-purpose handcuff keys. She accepted the glass and gave Cross one of her full candle-power smiles and eye massages. I caught its effect even standing off at an angle. ‘Thank you, doctor. Thank you for everything.’
‘I’m sure she’ll be all right,’ I said.
He ignored me. He had smoothness to spare and he couldn’t quite help himself. He took a card from the breast pocket of his immaculate suit coat and placed it on the velvet-covered arm of Sandy’s chair. ‘If you need me, Mrs Price, at any time, you know where I can be reached.’
I’d expected him to have a last throw at professional authority but he thought better of it. He was as clean as when he walked in but suddenly unsure of his ground, despite the jolt of spirit I’d picked up on his breath. I was bigger and uglier, poorer, blood-smeared and obviously there on other business. He adjusted the card a nervous millimetre and walked out of the room. I heard the bleep as he touched the panel to open the gate and the soft purr of his engine starting. Dr Cross knew his way around in this little part of Lugarno.
‘So,’ Sammy said. She fished up the cigarettes and lit one. She drained the brandy, took a deep drag and knocked some ash into the glass.
‘Think you’ll be all right?’
‘I know I’ll be all right!’
‘I wouldn’t be so sure, Mrs Price. Think Danni’ll be all right?’
‘Is this about Danni?’
I only had one more bullet to fire. I picked up Cross’s card and flicked a fingernail against it. ‘I’ll tell you one thing — it isn’t about Jason Jorgensen, because he’s dead.’
10
Think time. I drove around Lugarno for a while as the day turned sour. The cloud that had built up through the morning and early afternoon had turned dark and had those wind-driven light streaks in it that promise a storm. The wind had swung to the east and it looked as if the city was in for a lashing. I drove as close as I could get to the river and looked out at it over the protective strip of reserve. The water was a murky grey now and the knowledge that Jason had been dumped in it just hours before didn’t make it more appealing. I wondered whether the boat that dragged him up had taken the body ashore somewhere else on the river or whether the police had been contacted straight off. Many houseboats have phones, so the second possibility was likely. It hardly mattered. There was no way to tell where the boy had died or where the body had left dry land — boats leave no tracks. Still, it was curious that the dumping place had been Lugarno. Was it noticeably quieter than elsewhere? The police would be pushing shit uphill on this one and if it started to roll back they’d be calling on me.
I got out of the car to stretch and sniffed the conflicting smells of Sydney in the air — the industrial odours of Botany warring with the salty tang of the wide blue Pacific further east and the scents that were being given off by the trees that were bending to the wind and shedding leaves. The rain was only minutes away and the air was getting cooler. I stuffed my hands in my pockets and felt something unfamiliar — Dr Cross’s laminated card. I’d taken it for no particular reason and not looked at it. Now I did. Dr Ephraim Cross’s surgery was located in the Essex Arcade, Burwood Road, Canterbury. He was in Suite 3 and in Suite 4 was the Lord George Introduction and Social Escort Agency.
The sky cracked open and the thunder rolled and lightning forked and the rain came down in sheets. I got soaked just scurrying a few metres back to the car. I drove towards the city and my office to check on the state of my business and because I can sometimes think better in there than anywhere else. There was a good deal to think about. The male mind is a twisted thing; as I drove carefully along the roads with their gutters filling and the traffic crawling, I couldn’t get the image of Samantha Price’s breasts out of my mind. I tried, but I couldn’t clear the screen. She was a damaged creature, shooting God knows what drugs into her system and drinking champagne as she shot up and with her own Dr Feelgood on tap. Her reaction to the news of Jason’s death was hard to interpret. Her expression hadn’t changed much. Had she been stunned? Hard to say. Models seemed to be trained to display aloofness and indifference; maybe Sandy’s training had come into play.
I swerved to avoid a skidding ute going too fast for the conditions and swore at the driver, who gave me the finger. Sammy hadn’t worried about Jason seeing her with her tits hanging out. He’d seen it all before and a lot more in that motel room. It wasn’t hard to figure — the car, the suit, the motel. Jason was Sammy’s lover and she had been giving him the things a young man would find hard to resist. Price had told me that she had money of her own and I could well believe it. Looking the way she did she must’ve earned a fortune in her modelling days. I could guess at the chronology — Jason’s on with spunky Danni first, then Sammy snatches him away with sophistication, better looks and money. Danni takes revenge on her stepmother by getting her hooked when she’s depressed and vulnerable.