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Authors: Felicity Young

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BOOK: Flashpoint
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18

‘Let's go pick up Smithson now,' Leanne said, leaning a buttock against the side of Cam's desk, as casual as if she were in a school common room.

Cam shook his head. ‘Slow is fast, remember, Leanne? It's early days yet. We'd never be able to build a case against him with what we have. He's not going anywhere. He hit him, but it doesn't mean he killed him.'

‘You said Mrs Smithson acted all weird when she introduced you to Jo. Maybe that's why. Maybe it suddenly dawned on her that Jo might tell you what really happened in that potting shed.'

Cam nodded, thinking. ‘I think you might have something there. We know Smithson hit Bell, but it's the only fact we have. That he murdered Bell is pure speculation.'

He took off his glasses and rocked back in his chair. Absently scratching at an itch on his leg, he started to think out loud. ‘Another fact we have is that Bell was drowned; we know that from the autopsy. After he was drowned his body was moved to the bush and set alight. He was drowned at around 11 pm on the Sunday night, but his body wasn't torched until the next morning.'

‘Maybe it was dumped in the bush straight after the drowning? The killer had second thoughts about just leaving it like that and returned the next day with a can of petrol to burn it.'

Cam nodded. Arching the fingers of his hands together he tapped his fingernails against his teeth. ‘Alternatively, the body could have been stored somewhere overnight. It could have been brought to
the bush the next morning, then set alight. There were wool fibres between the toes, so maybe he was wrapped in a wool blanket.'

‘But the pathologist thought the fibres looked untreated.'

Cam sighed, wondering when the lab results would come through.

Leanne said, ‘It's hard to imagine Smithson capable of drowning anyone. Motive or not, he would never have been able to hold Bell's head under water on his own – unless Mrs Smithson helped, of course.'

Cam raised a dubious eyebrow. ‘Hardly. Anyway, they can both account for their whereabouts on the night he was killed, and for Sunday's bushfire.'

Leanne began to kick her foot against his desk, as if the rhythm helped her thought processes. After a while she said, ‘I spoke to Super Tech in Adelaide. Apparently when Smithson left he was still their golden boy. He wasn't sacked, just resigned for personal reasons.'

‘Did he get much money out of the company?'

‘He sold his shares, also got a big payout – a couple of mill in all. It seems he put a lot of his own money into remodelling the school.'

Cam tapped his pen against his teeth. ‘That's a lot, but still not enough to cover all those renovations. Enough for a good loan though. Stop kicking my desk. You're giving me a headache.'

‘Sorry, Sarge.' She paused to get her thoughts back on track. ‘Yeah, but some of the money came from that old biddy's endowment. Remember, they were going to name the new boarding house after her?'

‘Yes, I remember, Jane Featherstone,' Cam said. ‘It might be worth looking into the affairs of this generous benefactor.'

‘She used to live in a big old mansion down Tannery Road. She was supposed to be the richest person in the district. Her father made his money in mining after the First World War.'

Cam thought about this while Leanne continued. ‘Anyway, Smithson sold all his shares in the company then moved to WA when his wife got the principal's position at GLC. He spent a year getting his Dip Ed, though as far as I can tell he hasn't done much teaching.'

‘Yeah, he seems to be more the power behind the throne. What about her?'

‘She was deputy head at some posh girls' school in Adelaide. Resigned during long service leave, then got the job at GLC.'

‘I was speaking to Ms Bowman about her. She says she's a terrific head but has been acting strangely since the underwear theft.'

Leanne giggled, and Cam gave her a sharp look. ‘It's no laughing matter, Leanne. Many serial sex offenders start off as snowdroppers. They get like alcoholics. Why stop at a sip when you can have the whole bottle?'

Leanne hung her head for a full two seconds, but looked up when Pete Dowel knocked and entered the office. Pete had spent his day organising the search for the primary crime scene and was still wearing his mud-splattered black overalls. Cam knew the search had not gone well, even before the scowl the handsome young constable shot Leanne's way. Cam shooed her off his desk as if she were an annoying child.

‘Still no luck?' Cam asked.

‘Nothing but heatstroke, mozzie bites and wet socks. I had to send one of the SES blokes home, thought he was about to have a heart attack. We were one vehicle short for the rest of the afternoon.'

‘Send them out again tomorrow.'

Pete constricted his expressive mouth, a dimple deepened on each cheek.

‘Nothing from SOCO either, Sarge,' he said, ‘but the finance guys in Toorrup wanted me to pass on a message to you. They said Toby Bell recently withdrew ten thousand dollars from one of his accounts.'

Cam arched an eyebrow.

‘What do you reckon, Sarge?' Pete continued. ‘He could've paid someone to do his brother in for him.'

‘But why would Toby kill his brother? What has he got to gain?' said Leanne.

‘At this stage of the game, the killer is the only one who knows the whys,' Cam said.

‘Who knows what's in a man's heart?' said Pete. It sounded like a quote though Cam couldn't place it.

‘Show off,' Leanne muttered under her breath.

Cam asked Pete, ‘Have the money boys and girls questioned him about it?'

‘No, they want us to do that,' Pete said.

‘Christ, I feel like I've just about worn a path over to Toorrup over the last few days.' Cam flung his glasses to his desk and rubbed the bridge of his nose.

‘Well, how 'bout I go and talk to him, then?' Pete said, obviously hoping to get out of tomorrow's continued search.

Cam regarded the young man's sweat-streaked face. ‘OK. Go see him first thing tomorrow morning.'

Pete slapped his hands together. ‘Sure thing, Sarge.'

‘How did you go with the stolen tanker case?' Cam asked.

‘I found out the company name, name of the driver and where it was going but nothing else. What about
you? Any luck with Vince yet?'

‘I called by on my way back from the autopsy but he wasn't home. I'll try again tomorrow. Did you find out what the tanker was carrying?'

Pete pulled a face. ‘Liquid fertiliser, for what it's worth.' He met Leanne's eyes and shrugged.

Leanne grinned. ‘Liquid fertiliser? Jeez, someone must be getting into their veggie patch in a big way.'

Pete threw her a scathing look. ‘Maybe the contents were irrelevant. Maybe it was the parts they were after. There's good money in truck parts. It happened nearly ten weeks ago. It's probably in bits all over the country by now.'

Cam agreed, glancing at the clock on his office wall. ‘I guess it's almost knock-off time for you two then?'

‘Word, Sarge,' Leanne said.

‘I beg your pardon?' Cam frowned.

Pete said, ‘It's Afro-American slang, meaning enthusiastic agreement. She gets it from the internet chat rooms she's always hanging about in.'

Cam stared at Pete blankly. These kids were losing him.

‘I'm not always hanging about in chat rooms,' Leanne said, her hand edging towards her mouth.

‘Hey, keep your hair on. Anyone would think I was accusing you of not having a life or anything.'

‘I have a lot more of a life than you do. At least I don't sit around the house all my days off, reading law books. At least I . . .'

Cam put his hands up like a traffic cop. ‘Children, shut the hell up.'

Pete pushed a raven's wing of hair out of his eyes, refusing to look at Leanne whose lips had stretched into a thin white line.

‘That's better,' said Cam. He still hadn't worked out the relationship between these two. Most of the time they behaved like competitive brother and sister, but there had been at least one instance when he'd caught Pete looking at her in a most non-brotherly way. She, though, always seemed oblivious.

‘Oh, Sarge,' Leanne said, ‘I traced down Lou Blayney. He's an absentee landlord from the city. He told me where the key to his gate is kept and says we can help ourselves to Bell's caravan whenever we want.'

‘What did he say about Bell?'

‘He said something like how he didn't like to speak ill of the dead, but that he was a good for nothing old so-and-so and he was going to give him the boot when he saw him next.'

‘What about the woman, Gay?'

‘Yes, she was there when he last visited.'

‘Good, we'll tackle her tomorrow, too. You're on call tonight, remember, Leanne. Off you go then.'

19

Cam dug his vegetable patch until the sun had all but dipped below the ridgeline of the western hills, leaving a floss of pink in its wake. The ground had baked hard over summer and he'd had to crack through it with a pickaxe before he could even attempt to shovel it into the mounds for the vegetable beds. He threw down the garden tools only when his hands were puffy with blisters, his shirt soaked with sweat.

A quick shower left him feeling tired but loose, and with just enough time to knock up an omelette for dinner.

‘What's with the shirt, Dad?' Ruby asked while he was cooking.

‘What's that supposed to mean?' Cam said, glancing down at his checked shirt, looking for a tear or a smudge of grease.

Ruby sniggered. ‘I mean you must be planning a hot date tonight. You're in your dress flannel.'

‘Ha ha, very funny.' She squealed when he flicked the tea towel at her.

It was the first meal Cam had enjoyed with Ruby since moving to Glenroyd. There was little conversation, but the silence didn't hang with the usual tension, only the lingering smell of frying mushrooms, bacon and onions.

He did the washing up while Ruby sat at the table, head bowed over a photography magazine Jo had lent her. Mrs Smithson was right: Jo did have a way with young girls. She'd made quite a connection with Ruby already.

Ruby was still reading the magazine when Cam left for his appointment.

Now his headlights punched through the darkness of the dirt road leading to the school. He turned off the radio and rolled down the window to breathe in the sweet dusty scent of the bottlebrush and feel the whip of the breeze in his hair.

The spectral shape of a frog-mouthed owl watched from his perch on a wooden fence post, blinked and turned his head almost 360 degrees to follow the car as it came to a stop at the school.

It was dark in the deserted car park; no lights shone from any of the school buildings. Cam stood still for a moment to allow his eyes to adjust. A cloud unveiled the full moon, making the path to the photographic lab shine.

He walked on, until the sound of shattering glass made him stop mid-stride. Somewhere ahead he heard the thud of soft-soled footsteps. Then he caught the smell on the breeze: scorched wood, carbonised plastic, oxidised metal.

Riveted to the spot, he tried to control the sudden panic that threatened to paralyse his limbs. A sharp breath caught in his throat and his gut tightened; it was what he needed to get himself moving.

The smell grew stronger as he jogged towards the prefab. One of its windows was broken and shining with a flickering light. He stopped dead, his eyes fixed on a group of small dancing flames. A trickle of fear, a slow moving terror, began to wash through him. For a moment he wasn't looking at a burning blackout blind, but at floral curtains billowing from a broken kitchen window. The small flames ignited with a whoosh.

Now he could hear their screams. He had to get them out.

Oh God, not again. He fought the panic that
threatened to overcome his reason. Slowly, deliberately, he reached out and brushed the door handle with his fingertips.

Still cold.

He flung the door open and dropped to his knees. The room was alive with dancing light and flickering shadows. On the far window one of the blackout blinds writhed and flapped in the flames. Near the adjacent window, he made out Jo's still form. And then that blind went up too, turning the front of the prefab into a wall of fire.

She began to stir, then moaned and lifted her head. ‘Elizabeth!' he cried, ‘stay down!'

As he crawled towards her, another whoosh set the side wall alight, sending greedy tongues of flame ever closer to the shelves of photographic chemicals. And then the door banged shut and the room filled with choking clouds of smoke.

Cam scrabbled forward, coughing as the noxious fumes seared his lungs and bit into his eyes. On her hands and knees now, Jo looked at him through a shroud of smoke.

She must have seen him though her face remained blank, her body still and trance-like. He grabbed her by both shoulders and gave her a shake. She responded with a sharp intake of breath then lurched into a fit of coughing that was drowned in the fire's roar. On hands and knees he guided her towards the closed door, reached for the handle and twisted the knob.

Nothing happened.

Now it was his turn to panic. He wriggled and pushed at the knob with both hands.

It was locked rigid.

He sprang to his feet, took a step back and threw himself
at the door, shoulder first. It still refused to budge; he might just as well have been hurling himself against a brick wall.

‘The key, where's the key?' he gasped at her through the smoke.

Jo moved her head from side to side, unable to get the words out. He dropped down beside her and cupped her face in his hands, the heat stinging his neck, pushing at his back.

‘The key!' he yelled.

‘In the lock. Outside,' she managed at last, hauling herself to her feet.

As the fear detonated inside him, a sudden burst of clarity released a memory: a robbery case; thieves bashing through the wall of a transportable home because they couldn't break the lock.

With a well-placed kick Cam crunched the toe of his work boot into the fibro panel. When Jo realised what he was doing she started to help and soon they'd created a jagged space large enough to crawl through.

They collapsed onto the brick path, filling their lungs with heady drafts of the sweet night air, until she gasped, ‘The chemicals!'

Throat too dry to reply, Cam pulled Jo to her feet and half-dragged, half-carried her through the flowerbeds. They struggled on until their legs gave out and they fell onto an open patch of lawn.

They lay still for a moment, catching their breath. She tried to speak but her words were snatched by a paroxysm of coughing. When the fit passed, he helped her to sit up.

‘Are you OK?' he croaked.

She passed a hand across her face and nodded.

‘The chemicals you use in the lab; are they flamm–'

The ground shook as an explosion blew out the last of the prefab's windows, spraying glass and smoke into the night sky. Cam threw himself over Jo as the sound reverberated inside his chest and pushed against his head with ear-bursting pressure. Debris rocketed into the air and small particles rained on his back. He tensed, any minute expecting the big one that would tear them to pieces.

But only silence came.

He looked up. Shredded photographic paper drifted down on them like confetti.

Jo stirred. He eased himself off her.

‘The photographic chemicals aren't, but the fixing agents are.'

Her voice was low and hoarse. She attempted to smile but as he looked, the smile faltered and the tears began. She started to shake.

He pulled her towards him and wrapped her in his arms, as much to stop his own shaking as hers. As he buried his face in her singed hair, he took deep breaths, trying to slow the pulse racing in his ears.

He remembered the first time Ruby had visited him in hospital. One look at his bandaged face had made her tear loose from her grandmother and flee. They'd eventually found her in a city park, sobbing so much she had to be sedated. Now it was he who wanted to run. To stop himself, he clung to the woman harder and screwed his eyes shut, fighting to get the air into his lungs.

Slow down. Breathe. Focus. Breathe.

Focus on what just happened. Be rational; think. A fire bomb in the photographic lab, but why? To destroy something – the photographs of the crime scene, perhaps? Maybe, but why the locked door? How many people knew about Jo's photos? Had word of them
spread to Vince? Would he kill to protect his job? Vince was a lot of things, but not a killer – or was he? Cam had been policing long enough to know there were no constants in human behaviour. He could still see the image of Vince slumped on the veranda floor of the pub, the immaculate uniforms hanging in the near empty room.

My job is my life.

‘Cam? Are you all right?'

He'd been mumbling. Her voice brought him out of himself. He released her from his grip, nodded and took a deep breath.

‘Are you burned at all?' he said in a stranger's voice.

‘I don't think so. Maybe just my hair.' She looked at him with concern. ‘You?'

‘I'm fine,' he responded quickly, too quickly. His abrupt reaction startled her.

The sound of voices rose above the gentle crackle of the flames. A switch flicked and the lawn was flooded in bright light. He pressed at his stinging eyes with the heels of his hands. When he could finally focus, he saw three people standing near the smouldering remains of the prefab.

He climbed unsteadily to his feet and stumbled onwards on rubbery legs, shouting and waving at them to get away. Movement from behind told him Jo was trying to follow. He turned and put a gentle hand on her shoulder, pushing her back into a sitting position on the lawn.

‘Stay where you are. I'm going to get you some help. You need to see a doctor.'

She started to protest, but her words were choked with another fit of coughing. She probably had smoke inhalation, concussion at the very least.

He gave her shoulder a squeeze. ‘It's going to be OK, but
you have to stay here.' He hated to have to push her down, but she hadn't the strength to walk and he hadn't the strength to carry her.

Cam made his way over to the onlookers who'd retreated to the edge of a grove of trees. The first person he saw was Jeffrey Smithson, wearing a brown dressing gown and carpet slippers. His face was grey in the spotlight, his eyes hard as pebbles as they took in Cam's dishevelled appearance.

‘Good God, man, what the hell happened?' he asked.

Anne clutched at Smithson's arm. She was in a pink nylon dressing gown and had a yellow scarf over her head.

Cam was about to answer when she interrupted in a faltering voice. ‘We called the bushfire brigade when we heard the explosion.' She turned to face the blackened ruins. ‘Though it doesn't look like there's much left to put out.'

Smithson extracted his arm from her grasp and placed it around her shoulder, drawing her close in a gesture of tenderness, moving in its sincerity. What was it with this couple? Cam asked himself. What could be the reasons for Smithson's hostility towards Cam and his inquiries, other than guilt over Bell's death? So much of his behaviour seemed driven by an almost paranoid desire to protect his wife – what was he trying to protect her from?

‘We're waiting for your explanation, Sergeant. Have you any idea how valuable the equipment was in that lab?' Smithson said.

He spoke as if he was holding Cam personally responsible for the damage. His accusing tone felt like a jab to a raw burn and jolted Cam back to his senses. He rubbed his sooty face with his hands and fought to keep the tremolo from his voice.

‘Ms Bowman was working in the lab when a fire bomb was thrown through the window . . .'

Mrs Smithson gasped and put her hand to her mouth. ‘Jo?'

Another voice said, ‘Jo? She was in there? Where is she? Is she all right?'

Ruth Tilly's staccato questions fired into Cam's head like bullets. He paused, trying to reconcile her presence. Then he remembered that she too lived on the school campus, in a flat above the science lab.

‘She's over there.' Cam pointed to the perimeter of the lawn.

Mrs Smithson untangled herself from her husband, saying to Ruth, ‘She'll need water. I'll run to the school and get some.' She looked back over her shoulder as she hurried to the school's front entrance. ‘I'll bring some back for you too, Sergeant.'

Cam thanked her, then called out to Ruth who was disappearing in the other direction, into the shadows. ‘Can you take Jo over to the medical centre, Ms Tilly?' There was no acknowledgment, and he raised his voice. ‘She's not badly hurt, but I think she has concussion.'

Jeffrey met Cam's eye and gripped his arm. ‘Vandals, you think?'

He heard the sound of coughing and Ruth's soothing voice coming from the darkened perimeter of the lawn. ‘I can't say yet,' Cam said, switching his focus back to Jeffrey. ‘Did you or your wife see or hear anything unusual this evening?'

‘We were watching television. Channel 2 – a program about the wildebeest migration across the Serengeti. The first thing we heard was the explosion.'

He was on the defensive again. The question only required a yes or no answer but Cam felt as if he
were being presented with another alibi.

A siren wailed in the distance, coming closer. Jeffrey cocked his head to one side, narrowed his eyes. ‘And what about you, Sergeant? Who invited you here at this time of the night?'

‘I was here to pick up some photographs from Ms Bowman. The prefab was on fire when I arrived.'

Cam turned his back on Mr Smithson and reached for his mobile phone. First he dialled Toorrup Police Station to report the incident, then he phoned Leanne at home.

Leanne's mother answered. He could hear her yelling for her daughter above the clatter of dishes and the strangled violins of a TV melodrama. It seemed to take forever for Leanne to pick up and he could feel Smithson's eyes boring into his back while he waited. When she finally came to the phone, Cam explained what had happened.

‘Are you all right, Sarge? Your voice sounds kind of weird,' Leanne said.

‘I'm fine. I want you to call Ruby and tell her I'll be late home. Tell her I've been called out on a case or something, but for God's sake don't tell her what's happened here.' He'd have to get rid of his shirt and jeans before he saw Ruby, have a shower at the station. Just one whiff of the smoke could set her off. ‘After you've seen Ruby, go fetch Pete and get over to Vince's.'

‘Vince? Surely you don't think . . .'

‘Just get on over there, Leanne. I don't know what to think.'

He sounded harsh; he knew it. The pause at the other end of the phone told him she thought so too.

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