Authors: Dave Warner
âBut his mate bought the car and took it to Derby, that'll screw up all the kilometres and fuel and everything.'
âFind out how much petrol was in the car when the mate bought it, if he filled up, when, where, calculate the ks. Most likely Bourke headed into the desert, far enough for privacy but not so far he can't get back. Forty minutes to an hour, plot it out on a map.'
He sent Shepherd off immediately to work on it.
That was two hours ago. Not long after Shepherd had gone he'd called Risely who was genuinely pleased to speak to him. No sign of Bourke yet. The search for Osterlund was continuing as best it could in the circumstances. They'd tried calling Bourke on the police radio but he was not responding. Manners and two others were checking CCTV footage for any signs of a white Rav4 since the abduction.
âYou might want to go back a few days before. He might have prepared somewhere,' said Clement grimacing. He was still investigating the positions in which talking was possible without inflicting pain on himself.
The cyclone was through, said Risely. Rain was still spitting from its tail but choppers and fixed wing would be up soon. He saw the only hope of finding Osterlund alive now was locating Bourke. Astuthi Osterlund had finally fallen apart and was being medicated so she could sleep.
Clement ran his theory of a desert burial.
âEven so, it's too vast an area.'
âMaybe not. They've had choppers and whatnot out the last few days reporting on the weather, maybe one of them saw a white car stuck out in the middle of nowhere.'
Risely said he would try but Clement could sense doubt seeping down the line.
âHow about Lisa?' he asked.
âShe's processing the car but the roommate contaminated it driving it around Derby.'
âHas anybody spoken to the grandmother?'
âI think Perth might have.'
âYou should get her involved. He said he did all this for her. Maybe he's listening to police radio. Get her to ask him to give up Osterlund's location.'
âThat's a good idea. I'll get onto it. Take it easy, Dan, I mean it, you've done a great job but you need to rest. I've told the internal guys to give you forty-eight hours. Rest, mate.'
And that's what he had done since, going on for two hours now, nothing. It was driving him nuts. There had to be something he could do except just wait.
Think, he commanded himself. His phone rang. It was Marilyn.
âHi,' he said, easing himself on his left side.
âHow are you doing?'
âI'm pretty good. Sore, sore as hell actually on my right side, and a bit weak but I'm alright.'
She asked him the details. He recounted what he could remember and what he'd been told had happened after it went blank. While he was talking he was thinking about Bourke planning this thing. Did he just bury Osterlund in a box and then bury that?
âIs Phoebe there?' He wanted very much to speak to her.
âNo, I thought I better wait till she was out just in caseâ¦'
Just in case the news had been real bad.
âWhat's he like, Peter Bourke?' Her question caught him off guard. He didn't actually recall anybody else asking that. Risely had questioned whether Bourke was injured or psychotic but not what he was like.
âProbably would have been a nice kid but he's damaged. He could have killed me, he chose not to.'
He could feel her on the end of the line, her presence, he could almost smell her. They were one and indivisible, they were divided and apart, they were sympatico and discordant, they had a relationship that needed a theological mindset to explain because it was all contradiction, they had no relationship at all except what held by a gossamer thread in a single moment.
âYou're very special, Dan, you always will be. I'll get Phoebe to call when she's back.'
What did that mean, very special? That I love you but can't stand you? I loved you once but not now?
âIs Brian special too?'
He couldn't help himself and felt the immediate emotional disconnect on her part. He was stupid. He had learned nothing.
âI'll get Phoebe to call you when she's back. Take care.'
He sat there, the light weight of the phone in his hand. It reminded him of the heavy gun he could no longer hold, the pistol that Peter Bourke stripped from him. Thoughts of Marilyn evaporated suddenly. There was something about weight, the arithmetic of subtraction, the use of absence to deduce past reality, omission as a dynamic principle.
He saw it now, a way of tracing Osterlund, well, an aid to tracing him. And something else he should have spied an eon ago. Bourke had to have known the cyclone was closing in, even a deaf mute living in Broome knew that. So why didn't he fly out the previous evening after he'd quit his job and sold his car? Because he wanted one last triumphant moment with his captor. Clement dialled Shepherd: engaged. He waited, worked it through again in his head. Bourke had already sold his car, so how did he get there? He
dialled again. This time Shepherd was free.
âShep, you need to find out if somebody loaned Bourke a car Tuesday night or early Wednesday.'
âWhy?'
âBecause he went out to wherever he buried Osterlund. And there's been a mini-cyclone so if somebody did loan him the car they probably haven't driven it since. You can check ks travelled, fuel consumed and Keeble can check soil on the inside of the vehicle and compare it to the car Bourke sold his mate. Also, Bourke might have had to fill up on the way out or back and he won't have been careful, he thought he was going to Bali, right, so there might be CCTV of him with that car. Are you getting this?'
Shepherd said he was.
âOkay, now what you do is, you work out the arc of where he might have travelled and you eliminate every direction where he would have been captured by camera, you understand? If we work out all the routes he didn't take we are left with the few he must have taken and if we catch him coming in or going out with the other vehicle, we know where to concentrate the search.'
He asked Shepherd again if he got it. Shepherd claimed he had. But he knew what Shepherd and Risely and everybody else was thinking. What does it matter if some murdering drug dealer, pornographer is found dead? We are safe, the good people of the Kimberley are safe; or most of us at any rate, because we know now who the killer was and he wasn't after us. As Shepherd had said earlier, Osterlund was a side-issue, Peter Bourke was the main game, Peter Bourke was the glory.
âPlease Peter, give yourself up. I still love you. But it's time to stop this, please, for me.'
The woman's accent, a weird mix of German, English and Irish, sent by the wonders of technology via satellite into a receiver in far-off Perth was further distorted by the crackle of the two-way radio. She persisted over and over. âPlease, Peter, speak to me, pick up.'
At the radio itself there was no response but the chatter so organically different from the slow drumming of rain on spare earth, the default sound for hundreds of ks, was caught by the tall skinny man who had ventured out today to see if anything of his family's fishing hut remained. He was not confident. The hut was just a few sheets of tin over a wooden frame, no more than a shelter, really. The sound of a small plane buzzing above had persisted for more than an hour now, since he'd started walking from his cousin's. Just when it's too wet for mosquitoes you get a big one buzzing over your head, he thought to himself. He assumed it was to do with the storm, maybe taking photos for TV. He hadn't seen TV for a couple of days and his radio needed batteries but his experience told him it would all sort itself out soon enough. All he was thinking about was any of those big tides washing crocodiles in closer. Little dry gullies become creeks overnight, you had to watch yourself. That's when he heard the crackling sound and diverted to investigate. Campers, is what he was thinking, and laughed. They picked a bad time for a camping holiday. The sound was stronger now, sounded like an old woman's voice but all distorted. He stopped and once more there was only drumming rain and that electronic scratch. The police vehicle was ten metres away from him. He was looking at its rear. Seemed to him it might have been on one of the narrow walk tracks here and then, wham! A big branch had fallen right across the cabin, crunched it down like a soft-drink can. He jogged over, his old runners squelching with every stride. He approached
cautiously from the driver side. The young man at the wheel, a policeman he guessed, was twisted, looking away into the distance with eyes of a dead fish in the bucket on the way home. The cabin had been pushed down right onto his neck by the big branch on top of it. Not a mark on him, but he was dead for sure. The old woman's voice crackled through the radio again.
âPeter, please answer me if you can hear me. It's not too late, love.'
When the call came, Clement, with great difficulty, was edging his way out of the bed for a pee. It was Graeme Earle.
âOne death from the cyclone and it's our multiple killer. Is that what you call karma?'
Clement did not feel sad for Peter Bourke, not really, but he did feel a great hollowness and a sense of loss of what could have been. Earle was heading back from Beagle Bay now. He fed Clement what he knew of progress on Osterlund. Peter Bourke had been carrying phones and camera but none of them contained obvious pictures to point them to Osterlund. But he had indeed been captured in the borrowed vehicle filling up to head out to his dungeon. The girl who had loaned him the car had warned him it was near empty and she had only driven him out to the airport since. This had allowed them to calculate the distance he had travelled in a round trip to about thirty-five k. The service station gave them the rough direction. Planes and choppers were out looking.
âIt's got to be bush or a clump of trees. He would have needed cover.'
âImagine if we found Osterlund alive? That would be ironic.'
Irony however had run its course on the case. Six hours into the search a chopper spotted the partly collapsed pit and a little over an hour later Osterlund's body was hauled out. He was still bound, an arrow protruded from his knee. Rhino send word later that drowning was the official cause of death but that the autopsy showed he was likely already unconscious and probably would never have regained consciousness anyway.
âDrowning in a desert, that's ironic,' said Rhino.
On Monday, the day of his hospital discharge, two experienced detectives from Perth were sent to interview Clement, a man and woman, Eastaway and Chapman. He knew them both: good people, efficient. He was reconciled that they had to ask questions about how he'd lost his weapon and car and after the introductory stuff they got down to where they all knew it was heading.
âYou decided not to wait for Detective Sergeant Earle but to pursue alone. Why?'
It was Chapman. She was in her forties now, originally Fraud squad.
âWe had hopes of finding Osterlund, every minute counted.'