‘Welcome,’ said Villani. ‘Haven’t seen you for a while, detective. Speak freely to us.’
‘Been out there, boss. Talked to everyone in Prosilio over the time. Nothing. Also the staff records. Clean, just speeding, some juvenile, that kind of thing.’
‘That’s promising,’ said Villani. ‘That’s marvellous.’
Guilty, contrite, Weber looked at the grey public-service carpet.
‘What about the owner of the apartment?’
Weber looked at Dove.
‘Just getting there,’ said Dove. ‘Shollonell, this Lebanese company, bought it six months ago. Directors are Mr and Mrs Ho from Hong Kong. In their late seventies, Mr Ho is in a wheelchair. Prosilio housekeeping now remembers they got everything ready then, beds, the champagne, in case they arrived without notice. But they’ve never arrived.’
Villani became aware of the dullness of his mind, the ache in his ankles, his knees, his shoulders, his neck. ‘I’m inclined to rule the Hos out. Just instinct.’
The phone.
‘Chief Commissioner Gillam for you, inspector.’
‘Yes.’
‘Stephen?’
‘Commissioner.’
‘Good result on Metallic, yes. Turned out well. Possibly better than a SOG move on Kidd’s premises would have produced.’
‘The possible gun battle,’ said Villani. ‘The possible loss of officers’ lives. The possible collateral damage to the innocent.’
Gillam coughed. ‘That sort of thing, yes. So, well done. The minister will be pleased.’
Villani put the phone down, looked at his watch. ‘I’m leaving the building now,’ he said. ‘My day is over. I leave you with the thought that we, that’s the three of us and by extension the whole fucking squad and the whole fucking force, we have failed the little Prosilio girl.’
The men both looked down, Weber nodding.
Singleton would be so proud.
‘And see if the Hos have kids. Junior Hos. And grandchildren. Concentrating on the male line.’
THE APARTMENT was in a redbrick building a few streets down from Brunswick Street, Villani knew it from when he was eighteen and it was standing empty, boarded up. They went there early one morning to evict squatters, he remembered sleepy, spunky women and dirty-haired men holding at least two guitars.
The removal people carried out a remarkable number of amps. Fender, Vox, Marshall, they looked as if they had been dropped and kicked many times.
The parking garage was off a pissed-in, puked-on lane, through a graffitied roll-up door Birkerts opened with a remote. Concrete stairs led to a steel door, opened with a key.
Villani followed Birkerts up more concrete stairs to a long landing, they turned left. The apartment’s front door was steel too, studded. Beyond it was a long room, high ceiling, done over in jarrah, granite and stainless steel, a sitting-down area, a television-watching area, a cooking and eating area. The table was made from ten-centimetre thick gum slabs, it could seat twelve, provide shelter from a missile attack.
‘More than I expected,’ said Villani. He went to the window, looked through treetops to the city’s towers, vague in the smoke.
‘She wanted a cash payout from the boy,’ said Birkerts. ‘He offers one mill. Take it, says her brief. I said, the family home plus new car, plus five hundred grand. As of last valuation, recession and all, the settlement’s now worth one point eight mill.’
‘Amazing,’ said Villani. ‘The foresight.’
‘Long ago, my old man said, inner city, never mind price. Always on the button, my dad.’
‘I recall he also said only the truly ignorant are truly happy,’ said Villani. ‘Does that include the truly ignorant about real-estate opportunities?’
‘I wish I’d never told you that,’ said Birkerts. ‘You forget nothing, you wait. There’s bedrooms at each end. With en suites.’
‘I’ll find one.’
‘Okay. I don’t want to look in the fridge. Chuck out the dead stuff, will you? There’s booze in that cupboard.’
They went to the door. Birkerts gave him a key ring. ‘Buzzer, keys. Garbage instructions on fridge.’
‘Appreciate this,’ said Villani. ‘But don’t expect any favours.’
‘Bugger,’ said Birkerts, ‘I had hopes.’ He looked around. ‘Got a bit of domestic drama on myself.’
Villani didn’t look at him, that encouraged confession.
‘Job’s a breaker, no question,’ said Birkerts. ‘Ever ask yourself why you do it?’
A moment between them.
‘No day passes,’ said Villani. ‘Just don’t curl up.’
Just don’t curl up.
Bob Villani’s instruction. Bob and Cameron and Colby and Singo and Les, the men in his life, they’d all given him plenty of instructions.
Had Bob ever curled up? On his own in Vietnam, a lone operator in a strange place, strange people, so far from home, had he crunched up in his sleeping bag, whimpered? Even once? One tiny whimper?
Not likely.
‘Curl up?’ said Birkerts.
‘You feel so sorry for yourself, you lie down and curl up,’ Villani said.
‘You done that?’
‘No day passes. See you in the morning,’
Alone, he chose a bedroom. It was the size of a double garage, white walls, no decoration. The bed was made. He put his clothes in a walk-in closet, a room, went back and inspected the fridge: solid milk, limp coriander, two flaccid cucumbers, no meat.
Dozens of bottles of wine, spirits, mixers in the drinks cupboard. Whisky and soda. There was ice. He sat in a leather armchair, tinkled the ice, drank, listened to the building, the street, beyond. Faint music, piano.
Tired, nodding off, he should eat something. When had he eaten? Breakfast with Rose. Terrible bread but good everything else-the scrambled eggs, his cherry tomatoes done in the pan, popped, the juices.
Lizzie. Why had he cut her out so early? Felt so little for her? Even now, his strongest feeling was resentment, betrayal. Why didn’t Tony cross his mind more often? Tony got the best he had to give. He found time for Tony, he had been a decent father. In a way.
He began taking Tony to Carlton home games when he was tiny, carrying him in a backpack. He was Fitzroy, but it had never been serious and he’d drifted into supporting the Blues when he was stationed at Carlton. You had to have a team. You couldn’t say you didn’t care. Cashin came to the football with them. He was Geelong but he came. Sometimes Laurie came, it was just to please him.
Bob Villani didn’t care about footy, they didn’t talk football when he was a kid, they didn’t have a family team. One day, Villani asked him.
‘Who do we go for, Dad?’
Bob was reading his book, The Faber Book of 20th Century Verse, brown-paper cover with big grease blots, he took it with him in the rig.
‘Go for?’
‘Footy. They ask me who we go for.’
‘Fitzroy,’ his father said, he did not move his head.
‘Why, Dad?’
‘Need all the help they can get.’
He didn’t know Bob had played football until he found the photograph of the 1960 Levetts Creek Football Club Premiership Team, fifteen men and three boys. Twenty-odd years later, they went up there for a girl, throat cut, it was a hard little town, all mullets, feral utes and punched women, beer cartons blown flat against the fences. He saw the faces in the picture, the sons and grandsons. They would have been woodcutters or sawmill workers then, the man holding the ball was two fingers short on his right hand.
On the back, in violet pencil, someone wrote: Robert Villani (centre half-back).
Perhaps sixteen, short hair, chisel chin, long upper arms, bruise on his right cheekbone, as tall as the men in his row and half their thickness. And the eyes, they caught the light.
One bitter Saturday when Tony was seven, he put the navy-blue scarf around the boy’s neck, they went to Princes Park to see Carlton play the Bombers, met Cashin there.