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Niall turned toward the river. At one point he passed between a streetlight and the flank of the brewery, his headlong shadow soaring then shrinking across the blank brick wall. He had a day-pack strapped to his back. Wyatt stayed two hundred metres behind him, keeping pace, waiting for the kid to weaken or break stride.

But Niall was twenty years younger than Wyatt and driven by panic. In a series of left and right turns Niall closed in on the river, the old convent on the western bank, and Wyatt lost him in the Children’s Farm behind it.

It was a good place and it was bad. Niall belonged on the street; that’s where he should have run to, hailed a taxi perhaps, shoved the crossbow under someone’s nose at a traffic light. The bushes, pens and grassy paddocks on the river bank would be incomprehensible to someone like Niall. Then again, so long as he had nerve and patience, he could hide all night there and not be found. The traffic noise on Studley Park Bridge, the darkness and the unfamiliar terrain, would provide all the cover he’d need. They’d cover Wyatt, too, but otherwise they were a liability.

Wyatt could flush Niall out in the morning light, but he wasn’t prepared to wait. Starting at a point near the entrance to the Children’s Farm, he began to quarter the area, sweeping left and right across each segment. He concentrated on the centre, knowing that if he spent too long on the margins he might lose Niall. Now and then he stopped to listen. Cars accelerated over the bridge and up into Kew. He heard wind in the trees, and something else, low but constant in the background, that he supposed was the river between its many bends. There was a cough, almost human, as he passed among some sheep in the grass.

Then a squeal of terror. This also was not human but it was terror. By the time Wyatt reached the pig pen the cry had been taken up by other piglets and the heavy old sow, a crossbow bolt in her flank, was ranging back and forth, simultaneously protecting them and menacing Niall Rossiter, who was on his backside in the mire, struggling to rearm the crossbow. Wyatt saw all this in the moonlight and said, ‘It’s over, Niall. Just drop the weapon and climb the fence.’

Niall swung around, loosed a bolt at him. Wyatt heard the phutt of it close to his head. He fired the.38, three well-placed shots that straddled the rail behind Niall’s back and slapped into the mud near his crotch. ‘You get the next one in the stomach. Drop the crossbow, climb out of the pen.’

Niall disintegrated then, letting out a peevish sob and throwing the crossbow at the sow. When he lifted free of the sucking mud he looked helplessly at the filth that clung to his hands and pasted his jeans to his legs. He turned, climbed over the rail. His feet slipped, he fell, and Wyatt was there on the other side.

‘Give me the bag.’

Niall shrugged free of the day-pack, moving exhaustedly, rocking on his feet. ‘There’s nothing in it, only my stuff.’

Wyatt took the bag, stepped back, and opened it, keeping the.38 trained. The things that tumbled onto the grass did not add up to his two hundred thousand dollars. It was an escape kit: a change of underclothes, a wallet, a sheathknife, spare bolts for the crossbow. In the wallet there were sixty-five dollars and four stolen credit cards.

Wyatt threw the pack away. ‘Let’s see what your old man has to say.’

Niall spat. ‘He don’t know nothing.’

‘Your mother then.’

‘She’s gone. Shot through a couple of hours ago.’

That’s all Wyatt could get out of Rossiter’s son. They went back the way they’d come, Niall walking slump-shouldered before him. When they got to the house there was a light on above the front door. The Valiant was in the carport but the VW was missing. ‘Around the side,’ Wyatt said, prodding Niall with the gun.

The back door was ajar, the screen door unlatched. Wyatt pushed Niall inside. ‘No warnings,’ he said softly, guiding Niall’s spine with the barrel of his gun. They went that way past the laundry, the leaking lavatory, through the empty kitchen, to the sitting room, where Rossiter was sitting in darkness, punishing a bottle of supermarket Scotch. He heard them, reached for a switch, and lamplight threw the shapes from bad dreams over the walls and ceiling. His eyes were red-rimmed and cigarette ash dusted the Collingwood football jersey he was wearing in place of a pyjama top. He nodded morosely. ‘Thought you’d show up.’

Wyatt gestured both men to the couch and handcuffed them together. They were heavy and unresisting, Rossiter saying uselessly, ‘You don’t have to do this.’ Then he changed expression, looking up at Wyatt for understanding. ‘Mate, she let me down, I’m sorry.’

But Wyatt gave him nothing, only a stare that did not shift or stray but stayed locked on him. Rossiter had to turn his head away from the force of it.

‘Did she take the money with her?’

Rossiter laughed. ‘She took the VW and my last fifty bucks.’

The anger building in Wyatt stripped his face of flesh and colour. He slammed the old man’s head with his fist. ‘She traded me for Niall. That’s why he’s out of jail.’

‘Yes.’

‘You spilled the whole job to her, where we were staying, everything.’

Rossiter’s eyes flickered briefly at Wyatt. ‘Mate, she’s the wife.’

‘As if that explains it,’ Wyatt said. ‘Who did she spill to? A lawyer? A magistrate? A cop?’

‘A cop,’ Rossiter muttered.

‘Name?’

‘Napper. From the local nick.’

‘She’s with him now,’ Wyatt said, ‘splitting the money with him.’

Rossiter thought about that. His face said it was a cruel possibility. Then he said, ‘No, doesn’t sound right. She did it for the boy, not the money.’

Wyatt watched him neutrally. After a while he said, ‘The Outfit sent someone to knock me at Ounsted’s tonight.’

Rossiter flushed and looked away. ‘Well, yeah, she did that. She was expecting to hear Napper had arrested or maybe shot you tonight, so when you rang here she panicked, knowing you’d come after her sooner or later.’

‘So she tipped off the Outfit they could find me at Ounsted’s?’

There was no spirit left in Rossiter. He looked down, nodded his head.

‘Have you always been on friendly terms with them?’

‘Mate, that price on your head, forty thousand, everyone knew who to call.’

‘The pair of you should have cleared off with her.’

‘I wanted to put it right with you,’ Rossiter said.

Wyatt stared at him. It might have been true. He gestured at Niall. ‘What about him?’

Rossiter looked at his son and there was no pride in it. ‘Stupid fucker reckoned he’d be able to take you if you came here.’

Niall jerked away from his father, turning his shoulder to shut him out. The movement pulled Rossiter’s arm with it, and Rossiter’s veiny mottled hand flopped onto Niall’s thigh. Niall shrugged it off, swearing bitterly. Wyatt saw what blood ties could do to people and it looked small and vicious to him.

Then both Rossiters stiffened, listening. The front gate creaked open. They seemed to wait for it to close.

****

Forty

Napper had got the idea from a rapist he’d arrested after a stakeout one night several years ago. The rapist would climb onto his victim’s roof, remove a few tiles, crawl into the space above the ceiling, then drop into the house through the manhole. Except the rapist had been a weedy little squirt. Napper’s broad thighs felt scraped and bruised from squeezing through the manhole of the house in Northcote where Wyatt and Jardine were staying and he’d landed hard, hurting his shins.

Added to which he’d panicked when the pistol jammed. Next time he pocketed a drug-raid gun, he’d make sure it was a double-action revolver, not a semiautomatic. If a pistol misfires and jams, you’re stuffed. If a revolver misfires, you don’t have to stop and clear the jam, you just pull the trigger again.

Still, he was home safe and two hundred and nine thousand dollars better off. Napper clapped his arms around himself on the edge of his bed, rocking a little, relieved and exultant. He reached out and touched the twenties, fifties and hundreds. He’d unbundled and scattered the notes to give an impression of bulk. Somehow, bundled together, it hadn’t looked like a lot of money. In fact, he’d been disappointed until he’d actually counted it. And-probably owing to all the vodka he was drinking-the more he looked at the money the less real it looked, like a spill of jam jar labels, rectangles of coloured paper, swimming, swimming.