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They nodded.

‘Wait. Bad breath.’

Since starting in the job, Challis had come to believe that rottenness of character often manifested itself physically. He doubted there was any science to support the notion, but believed it all the same. ‘From alcohol, drugs, bad teeth?’

Holst shook her head miserably. ‘I don’t know.’

‘Doesn’t matter. You’re doing brilliantly. This won’t take much longer. I’m sure you want to see your parents.’

Holst tossed in distress. ‘This will ruin them, my dad.’

‘I’m sure it won’t,’ said Pam.

‘What would you know?’

Pam patted the skinny forearm. ‘You’re doing so well, Chloe. Let’s get all the details out of the way so you can rest. After the man overpowered you, I assume he took you to his car and-’

‘You assume wrong. He told me to drive.’

Challis shifted from the wall. ‘His car, or yours?’

‘Mine.’

‘He left his car there?’

‘Yes.’

Challis hadn’t been told this. He’d assumed-and so had the others, apparently-that Holst had been abducted and raped in the culprit’s car. He smiled, held up a finger and said, ‘Murph?’

‘Boss.’

‘Give me a moment.’

Challis stepped into the corridor, flipped open his phone and called John Tankard, who was with Scobie Sutton and a forensics team, searching the bushland clearing where Chloe Holst had first been seen. ‘Anything?’

‘We found the clearing, big rock in the centre, blood and tissue,’ Tankard said.

‘Got another job for you,’ Challis said, telling him about the cars. ‘Our guy probably dumped her, then drove back and swapped cars again, but can you get over there and check? If her car’s there, have it trucked to the lab.’

‘Will do,’ Tankard said. He paused. ‘This is not going to follow me, is it?’

‘No John, you’re in the clear. The man who took her claimed to be police. She was just reacting to your uniform.’

‘Thanks, boss.’

Challis returned to the room. Nothing had changed: the space was sterile despite the air of distress, Pam Murphy was sitting in the chair beside the bed, holding Holst’s hand.

‘Sorry, Chloe, please go on,’ he said. ‘He told you to drive. Do you remember where?’

‘I don’t know. It was dark.’

Pam asked, ‘Are you from the Peninsula?’

Chloe Holst shook her head. ‘Not really. Moved down here with my mum and dad last year. Safety Beach. I don’t know the Western Port side very well.’

‘Did he take you to a beach, a park, a house? What can you remember?’

‘Just along some dirt roads. Kind of farm smells.’

‘Was he alone? You didn’t meet up with anyone else?’

‘No.’

‘Did he phone anyone?’

‘He hardly talked at all. Kind of grunted what he wanted me to do. Except he got really angry when I started crying, like he hated it, told me to shut up and punched me in the side of the head.’

‘Edgy? Unstable?’

‘Like he was on drugs,’ Chloe Holst said, then shrugged. ‘I don’t know,’ she wailed, ‘how would I know?’

Pam clasped her hand, waiting, and asked gently: ‘He made you take your clothes off?’

‘Yes.’

‘Where are they?’

‘I don’t know.’

Burnt, thought Challis, dumped. Unless he was a souvenir hunter. ‘Where did he rape you?’

‘Where do you think? My mouth, my vagina, my-’

‘I mean, in the car? On the ground?’

‘Both.’

‘What did you do or say?’

‘I begged him at first, then when I tried to bite him he hit me really hard. It really, really hurt.’

Pam said gently, ‘I was called to an incident earlier this afternoon, someone reported seeing a body in a clearing a couple of kilometres from where we rescued you.’

‘We were on this dirt road. He told me to get out and I saw these trees and I just ran,’ Holst said. ‘It was dark and I fell over a stump or something and hit my head.’

Pam clasped Chloe’s forearm. There was a school of thought that you shouldn’t get close to a victim, shouldn’t try to share the burden, because you couldn’t. Pam worked best when she didn’t take that notion too far. ‘We’ve tested for fluids. If he’s in the data base we’ll-’

‘He used a condom.’

‘Oh.’

‘This guy’s like really organised. You know what he did when he was finished? Washed me all over with this wet cloth, then combed my hair and pubes, then ran this kind of sticky roller thing all over me. Like some kind of super CSI freak or something.’

A part of Hal Challis calculated the odds of finding any forensic evidence. Another began to measure the mind of the man responsible. ‘How did he carry all these items?’

‘Backpack.’

‘Colour? Brand?’

She shrugged. ‘A daypack. Really organised.’

‘Have you been aware of any unwanted attention lately?’ Challis asked. ‘At work, or where you live? Anyone following you, accosting you in the supermarket, that kind of thing? Phone hang-ups, heavy breathing, stuff left on your doorstep?’

A miserable head shake. ‘No.’

‘Boyfriend trouble?’

She stared at her hands. ‘Don’t have a boyfriend.’

‘Any unwanted advances? Friend or work colleague who won’t take no for an answer?’

‘Nothing like that.’

Pam squeezed her forearm again, then turned to Challis with a question on her face. Challis stepped away from the wall. ‘Chloe, we’ll leave you in peace now. You’ve been a great help, very observant.’

She was weeping. ‘For what good it’ll do. I don’t know what he looks like, and the way he cleaned up afterwards…’

Pam Murphy stood, gave the forearm a last pat. ‘There’s always something a guy like this overlooks. We’ll get him.’

That’s how Challis and Murphy were going to leave it, rote parting words, said thousands of times over the years by thousands of police officers. But Chloe Holst said, ‘Do you think it was my fault?’

Pam sat again, clasped the limp hand, and said feelingly, ‘Never in a million years, Chloe. Don’t ever let yourself think that. It was his fault entirely.’

The young woman looked away as if she didn’t believe it. ‘He said I made it easy for him, if I’d been more security conscious it wouldn’t have happened.’

7

And so Challis was not feeling receptive to the newspaper reporter who ambushed him in the hospital car park.

‘I can’t comment on that.’

‘Oh, come on, Inspector. If I write that a senior officer refused to confirm or deny that the suspect in an alleged abduction and rape is a policeman, everyone’s going to know it’s a cop.’

‘Not an alleged abduction and rape,’ snarled Challis. ‘The real deal.’

The reporter had given his name as Jack Porteous, of the News-Pictorial. A small weekly newspaper-local Waterloo, Mornington, Cranbourne and Frankston editions-owned by a national media outfit. Challis had never spoken to the man before. All he wanted to do was get in his car-parked beside Pam Murphy’s Subaru-and return to the police station. He’d already made a mental checklist: request assistance from the sex crimes unit at police headquarters; obtain a list of local offenders, another of stolen police uniforms and ID; ask for preliminary forensics from the nature reserve and the victim herself; find the rapist’s car…

‘Okay,’ Porteous said, ‘I’ll drop the “alleged”. Can you at least tell me anything about the victim? The state of her injuries, her mental state, her-’

‘You’re not serious,’ Challis said.

In the act of unlocking the Triumph, he turned to reassess the man.

Jack Porteous was about sixty, with a grizzled face, limp grey hair, a tight little drinker’s belly, deep parenthetical lines on either side of a truculent mouth. A time-worn man, dignified by his clothing: pressed trousers, crisp shirt, fashionable jacket, glossy black shoes. An old hand, Challis thought. If Porteous had been pensioned off or sought a sea-change after years of toil at one of the big dailies, he was unlikely to be satisfied with covering the Under 15s netball final. He tried a more diplomatic tack.