‘How would you do that?’
‘I’ve got ways.’
She accepted that but still shook her head. ‘I can’t see it. I can’t see some developer killing two people to get hold of that land. It’s all subject to slip, it’s honeycombed with mine workings.’
‘So Sue Holland said. There’s an entrance on her property.’
She blinked at the name. ‘Mine too. But as well as that, there’s a height limit to any buildings. Where’s the profit?’
‘Why did Matilda offer to buy it?’
‘Just to screw me’s my guess. Pick it up cheap. Although come to think of it, the offer was on the high side. It’s a great spot, as you must’ve seen.’
I nodded. ‘Pretty good. Bit cold under the scarp in winter I bet.’
‘Barbecues, wood fire inside. Lovely.’
‘Could the land have any other value?’
She laughed. ‘I suppose you could grow a lot of dope there, but it’d be a bit obvious. The spotter planes go over all the time and with the yuppies moving in there’d be dobbers galore. In case you’re thinking otherwise, I don’t consider myself a yuppie blow-in. I’ve been going down there for more than twenty years.’
‘You’ll rebuild then?’
‘You bet. Something as close to the original as I can.’
She looked at her watch. ‘I have to get back. You’re not going to stop are you? There must be something behind this.’
‘Sue Holland said zoning could be changed. It’s happened before.’
She shook her head. ‘Not down there. No way. Something else.’
‘I’ll stay with it. I’ll run checks on Matilda, find out what I can about MacPherson, see if there’s some big money around taking an interest. But…no promises.’
‘Fair enough.’ She stood, formidably tall in her boots, and I immediately thought of Marisha Karatsky, who wouldn’t have come up to her shoulder. We shook hands and she wound her scarf back, buttoned her coat. ‘And mind your head.’
11
I’d outsmarted myself. The two cases I thought wouldn’t amount to much and could be run parallel had turned out to be more involved, both requiring time and attention. And there was the extra factor of the emotional involvement with Marisha. That probably tipped the balance, but I decided that the hunt for Kristina had priority anyway. The question of who wanted the Farmer land, why and what they were prepared to do to get it wasn’t going to go away and was unlikely to change shape quickly. Or so I reasoned.
I dug out the material Marisha had provided and looked at the list of Kristina’s alleged friends. In my experience, young women with a secret admirer feel the need to confide in someone. I rang Marisha, told her the police business had resolved itself for now, and asked her which of the names she’d given me was most likely to be Kristina’s confidante.
‘Cliff, it’s hard to tell. How would I know?’
‘The most mature one. The most… experienced, say.’
‘I see.’ She paused. I could imagine her in her silk smock standing by the phone, her hand up to her tangled hair.
91
My juices flowed and I realised I wanted to find Kristina, not out of professionalism, but to impress her mother. Not a good reason.
‘I think Lucy Kline,’ Marisha said. ‘I gave you her address. She left school or was expelled, I’m not sure. She has a flat with other young people.’
‘I’ve got it. One more thing. That stuff you were asked to translate by Parnevik. What was it about? Might help me to trace him. I should have asked you before, but we got sidetracked.’
Her throaty laugh was like a caress. ‘Skiing. I could follow just enough to know it was about skiing. When am I going to see you, Cliff?’
‘Very soon,’ I said. ‘Probably tonight. I’ll try to find Lucy Kline and talk to her and see what comes of that.’
‘Good. My daughter is in danger and I have made love to the man who has put her there and the man who is trying to save her. Life is strange, isn’t it?’
‘It is,’ I said.
Lucy Kline’s address was in Petersham but I was more interested in Karen Bach. Kristina tucking her name and address away in her hidey-hole had to mean something. Karen Bach’s address was in Five Dock, in a street running down to the canal that threads through the area. As I drove I tried to figure out why a place would be called Five Dock when it had no docks at all. I didn’t come up with an answer, but with all that’s happened to Sydney Harbour since 1788, anything is possible.
The flat was in a nondescript block not far from the canal and the stretch of park running alongside it. Cream brick, no balconies, aluminium windows, cement paths- a l960s suburban dream. Connections of my father, who were better heeled than him, took this route. They bought an old house, knocked it down, built the four flats, lived in one, rented the others. They either died of boredom or got tired of paying to fix the leaking roofs and dodgy plumbing and sold out.
There was no security. I went up to the door of flat 2 and rang the bell. The young woman who answered looked at my licence folder short-sightedly through thick glasses. She had a paperback book in her hand with a finger marking her place.
‘Really?’ she said. ‘A private detective?’
‘That’s right. No gun, no trench coat.’
She giggled. ‘Can I help you?’
‘Are you Karen Bach?’
‘No.’
‘Do you know Kristina Karatsky?’
She shook her head.
‘Can you tell me where to find Ms Bach? No trouble for her-a missing person enquiry.’
She pointed towards the canal. ‘She’s walking her dog.’
‘Okay, thanks. What does she look like? What sort of dog?’
A kind of shadow passed across her face. She was plain with mousy hair and sallow skin. She was shortish, neither fat nor thin. She wore a sloppy Joe and baggy jeans, socks, no shoes. ‘Karen’s a tall blonde,’ she said. ‘You’ll find her.’
The light was dropping as I walked down to the strip of green. It made the scene softer, more attractive than it would look in the clear light of day. There were a few people around-joggers, dog-walkers, aimless strollers. A tall blonde woman wearing tight red pants, snowy sneakers and a faded denim jacket was striding along the path by the canal with a prancing white poodle on a lead. I like dogs but I don’t like poodles-don’t know why.
I trotted across the grass and fell in beside her. ‘Ms Bach?’
‘Go away,’ she said.
‘I can’t, sorry. I’m a private detective looking for your friend, Kristina Karatsky. I have to talk to you.’
‘She’s not my friend. Never was.’
‘We still have to talk.’ I could handle the pace, but it was brisk. ‘Looks to me like Fifi there needs a rest. I suggest you slow down.’
That got her attention. ‘Her name’s Tasha and she could outrun you any day.’
‘No doubt about it, but she must be due to find a tree. Come to think of it, I am too.’
She laughed and that brought her to a halt. With Tasha skittering at the end of the plaited lead, she turned and faced me. She was young, late teens at most, and beautiful, but there was something older about her. Her big blue eyes had seen more than they should have.
‘Shit,’ she said. ‘I knew this’d happen one day. An underage, child molestation, minister of religion thing, right? That’s all I fucking need right now.’
We were standing in the middle of the path with joggers bearing down on us. I took her arm and steered her towards a park bench. Tasha tugged at the lead but came along.
‘Nothing like that,’ I said, lying. ‘Nothing to involve you directly. I just need information about…I guess you know who I mean?’
‘Stefan.’
I suppressed a sigh of satisfaction. ‘Right. Stefan Parnevik. Do we talk here or back at your flat?’
Inside, the flat was surprisingly well furnished and appointed. It had been thoroughly renovated and redesigned. Tasha had the run of the place so there were dog hairs on the rugs and the sofa and chairs and probably in other places. Karen Bach introduced me to Becky, the flatmate, who promptly disappeared into a bedroom.