One Sunday (40 page)

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Authors: Joy Dettman

BOOK: One Sunday
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train whistle blowing

Tom turned towards town. He'd have to go back. He'd meant to have a shave before Morgan got in, meant to put on a clean shirt and his other trousers. The ones he was wearing looked as if he'd slept in them – which he had.

Time enough to get around to the station when he heard the train's first whistle; it started its blowing, waking up the little town, a good two miles before it got there. A lot of stops between Melbourne and Molliston, it wouldn't be coming in early, not two nights in a row it wouldn't. Some nights it was an hour late. Plenty of time to shave and change his clothes.

He was five yards from Kennedy's Road when he trod on her slipper. It felt alive, and for a second he thought he'd put his foot on a snake. It shook him to his liver. Then from three feet back, where a reflex jump had taken him, he recognised it, and wished it had been a ten foot serpent with three heads.

She was down here. He picked up the slipper, stood with his jaw hanging loose, head turning. She wouldn't go bush. She hated the grey bush. She might be curled up on the widow's veranda, on that cane couch – could have turned down Kennedy's Road.

‘Rosie?' For fifteen seconds he waited, his ears tuned in to the night. No answer. Facing the town, cupping both hands to his mouth, he let go with the bushman's cry: ‘Cooee!' He repeated his call, and a voice from up the hill called back.

Walking fast now, heading for the hotel, he was at the murder site when his feet stopped beside the teapot – and her second slipper not far away. He picked it up, picked up his teapot, found its lid too, then sighted a patch of light against the dark of the earth not far ahead. For an instant he thought he'd found her. He ran to it. Only her old gown. He picked it up, held it high – empty.

‘Jesus wept,' he moaned, wanting to go bush and hide his head up a hollow log full of twenty foot serpents with ten heads each. ‘Jesus bloody wept. She's getting around somewhere out here, stark bloody naked!' The grit shaken from the gown, he turned in a circle, wishing he hadn't called those cooees back to town. ‘That's the end of it, girl. You've done your dash this time. You're going back into that state home, and this time you're staying there.'

Two slippers, teapot, lid and gown, he had his hands full, but he'd need that gown if he found her before the others got down here. He was squatting in the shadows, making a neat parcel, tying the sleeves tight, when he heard two fast rifle shots from nearby and he sprang to his feet, aware that trees and shadows were not good places to be poking around in with someone taking pot shots at foxes.

Securing the parcel beneath his arm, he swung around to face the town. Maybe someone up the hill was letting him know they'd found her – and found her stark bloody naked? No. Those shots had been fired from close by.

There was a third shot, followed fast by another. The widow practising her aim, just in case Morgan came looking for a room?

Reichenberg's gate hung open, and that gate was never open. Headlights were coming up Dolan's drive, spraying the land with light. Maybe the widow's aim was off, so she'd decided to leave town.

The fifth shot was followed by a woman's scream, and it didn't sound like Rosie.

Tom ran down Reichenberg's drive, holding tight to his bundle as the widow's headlights swung in through the gate behind him, and with her coming down this drive like a bat out of buggery, the drive wasn't a safe place to be. He headed for a tree, those headlights blinding him.

There was a final blast, and somehow he knew it was final. It left an eerie stillness behind it, left Tom lost in that stillness – until the long, haunting hoot of the train woke up the town, letting it know it had no time to waste on Molliston – there were two more stops to go before it could rest.

Blinded by the widow's headlights, he didn't see Joe Reichenberg step from the shrubbery until the old bugger's gun barrel was in his back.

‘What the bloody hell are you doing with that thing?'

‘Ah. Is the law. The crazy bastard, he shooting everybody,' old Joe said, heading off towards the rear of his house, clad in his white knee-length nightshirt.

A small hump of white huddled in the shadows, twenty-odd feet from the house. Rosie, crumpled in a naked hump beside the shrubbery. A different sort of silence then. A hollow, blood thumping in his ears kind of silence, broken by that bloody train whistle, tooting in the distance as if this was an ordinary night.

Then the widow was running from her car, running into her own lightbeams, standing beside Tom, staring down at that awful nakedness, squatting when Tom squatted, helping untangle Rosie, rolling her over, gently and slowly, their shadows covering her awful nakedness, but not covering the blood. Black tar pumped out through a bloody great black hole in her throat, the withered bouquet still clutched in her hands.

Tom tried to cover the hole with his palm, tried to hold the blood in. Nothing to hold on to. No place left on her throat to seek a pulse. He tried her wrist.

‘It's no use, Thomo.' The widow stood, her shadow long.

No use at all. He started taking off his shirt with bloody hands, thinking to cover Rosie – and expose his own nakedness. He'd forgotten the bundle, dropped when Joe Reichenberg had shoved the gun in his back.

‘Oh, Christ. She didn't deserve this. She didn't deserve this,' his words not much more than a moan. ‘Who did it?'

‘I was in my car, coming in to see you, when I saw someone creeping along the side of their house. Then the shooting started and I heard breaking glass.'

‘Turn your lights off her,' he said, standing stiff legged, shaky, and walking back to find the bundle he'd dropped and give Rosie some dignity in death.

The widow turned the car until those beams played on two elm trees, turning them from black to green, then she walked towards those elms while he hunted for Rosie's nightgown.

‘There's someone over here,' she yelled.

He knew it was young Chris. Didn't want to see him dead, and where were the rest of them? Kurt, big Elsa? Didn't want to see any more death, but he was a copper and he had to, so he picked his way across the grass to where she waited.

It wasn't Chris. It was Dave Kennedy – or most of him. He lay sprawled on his back, dressed in his lieutenant's uniform, his medals glinting. He'd eaten the barrel of his .303 army rifle, blown the top of his head off.

Walking in circles then, walking through dry grass, getting grass-seeds in his socks, looking for young Chris's body, and all he could think of was talking to Rob this morning, drinking his beer and discussing a similar scenario. Forewarned was supposed to be forearmed. He could have stopped this. He should have locked that mad bastard up this morning and stopped this.

Old Joe was nowhere to be seen, but there was a noise inside the house now, Elsa's voice. She was alive. The widow ran to the house, poked her head inside. ‘Mrs Reichenberg? Are you all right in there?' Walked inside uninvited.

Tom didn't hear the reply but seconds later they came out, Elsa with a blanket that she placed over Rosie. Always trying to cover up Rosie, always trying to keep her decent.

‘Where are your boys?' Tom yelled.

‘Christian has been shot. His father and brother have brought him into the house. We need to get the doctor.'

‘Where's he wounded, Mrs Reichenberg?'

She gestured to her thigh, shook her head and returned to the house. The widow was in her car when Tom followed Elsa indoors.

Kitchen window shattered, glass all over the floor. Young Chris was on the kitchen table, the leg of his trousers cut away, Kurt leaning on the wound as old Joe, looking as if he knew what he was doing, strapped a belt around the injured thigh. Tom left them to it.

He knelt again beside Rosie and, working fast, spread the blanket flat on the earth, lifted her onto it. He untied the sleeves of his bundle and got her into that gown fast. He'd had a lot of experience at dressing her, of straddling her kicking feet while her nails maimed him and her eyes accused. Even by moonlight those eyes accused him. She'd had a long list of accusations, ranging from getting her pregnant with Johnny to sending both boys off to war. She'd accused him because he'd never made chief inspector, accused him of buying stale butter, of soiling the necks of his shirts – any flamin' thing she could think up on the spur of the moment. He'd never worked out how to avoid her accusations.

Shouldn't be thinking of that sort of thing now. What a bastard of a man he was. He closed her eyes, couldn't close the buttons on her rag of a gown; two had gone missing and he'd only just stitched them on a couple of days ago. He wrapped her in that blanket then, wrapped her feet, her arms, her shattered throat. Moonlight was kind to her face, relaxed finally by death, softened by her fluffed-up hair.

Half of the townsfolk were wandering down Reichenberg's drive now. The widow's car scattered them, then disgorged Rob Hunter, who was no doubt pleased to be climbing out of it intact. He touched Tom's shoulder as he walked by to the house. The others didn't come close, but formed a silent half-circle behind him as Tom kissed that withered cheek.

He'd lusted after pretty Rosie Davis. Morgan had lusted after her too, as had every lad in the street. Tom had won her. He'd thought he loved her. And can any eighteen year old lad know with certainty where lust ends and love begins? He'd thought he was Jesus Christ himself, too, when she'd told him she was pregnant, that he'd have to wed her. He'd been the happiest man alive that day.

Happiest man? He'd been a hot-blooded fool of a boy, most of his brain in the crutch of his trousers.

He'd suffered days of guilt when Ronnie came along three weeks late and big enough to almost kill his mother with his coming. She'd loved that one, though. For a time they'd been happy, until he'd got her pregnant again.

Tears started rolling from his eyes as he covered her face, sealing her in the blanket, salty tears of sorrow for the waste of her life and his. He sniffed, wiped at his dripping nose with a wrist, wiped at his eyes with a thumb first, then with his shirt sleeve. What a stupid, weak bugger of a man he was, squatting there, bawling like a baby and the folk from town all staring at him.

Someone was still cooeeing from the hill, wanting to know where the action was. Someone cooeed back. Madness. This whole day had been madness. And what had gone on down here tonight was utter bloody madness. Rosie had nothing to do with that crazy bastard's war. And what the hell had brought her down here to get caught up in this? In the past twelve months she hadn't walked further than the school. It was as if this heat had raised the devil himself up from hell and he'd been hovering over this town since midnight, seeing how much havoc he could cause in twenty-four hours.

Looking back on it, Tom thought, this whole day had been a lead-up to tonight. The way Rosie had been first thing this morning – and giving her that opiate, making her sleep away half of the afternoon. It was all preordained; she'd been chosen to play a part in the devil's diversion, drawn down that hill to end her life as a pawn in his game of bloody chess – like Kennedy had been drawn here, to do what harm he could before blowing his own brains out.

Rosie would have gone fast, maybe died happy, holding on to her bouquet of roses and thinking her own crazy thoughts. Tom sniffed, sighed deeply. He had to believe she was happy at the end.

‘Shite!' Rob Hunter said, walking from the house, a cigarette burning in his mouth. ‘Shite on this day.'

‘How's he doing?'

‘He's lost a lot of blood, but the bone feels intact, thank Christ. They're saying it was Kennedy?'

‘You said this morning that he'd go after young Chris.'

‘Did I? This morning is too far away to remember and I'm sleepwalking,' Rob said, sucking another long draw from his smoke before tossing it away and walking back indoors.

Train still tooting. Probably pulling out. ‘Morgan's on that train.'

‘He's off it by now,' the widow replied. ‘I'll drive you in and see if I can run him down, if you like.'

That bugger of a woman with her bugger of a tongue, but it was that tongue that got him to his feet, got him taking charge. He told Bill Morrison and Len Larkin to clear everyone off the place. He took charge of Kennedy's rifle, and told old Joe to put his shotgun away or the city coppers would probably confiscate it, then he took his life in his hands and rode in that little green roadster up the hill – and all he could say about her driving was, if a man was a bit bound up in the bowels, that ride would probably have cured him.

Miss Lizzie had already called the ambulance, and the Willama coppers, and anyone else she felt might have been interested in the news, so Tom took his life in his hands again and accepted a lift to the railway station where he found the Russell Street duo sitting in the waiting room, swatting mosquitoes and expecting to be picked up. And how? The flamin' handlebars of Tom's bike?

They'd had a long day, both looked worn out by it, both burned beetroot-red. They'd walked a good few miles in that sun today.

Tom loaded their gear into the widow's car, then walked his colleagues back to the house. Jefferies, the young bloke, seemed a decent enough sort of kid, or he looked like a kid when standing beside Morgan, who didn't have a solitary hair left on his head, though the bush growing in, and on, that red conk of a nose compensated. And if Tom had shrunk an inch or so in the last eight years, then Morgan had shrunk three and worn another inch off the soles of his feet today.

Tom led them up Station Street, filling them in on the massacre. Morgan offered his hand when he heard that Rosie had gone sleepwalking, that she'd walked into one of Kennedy's bullets – which was close enough to the truth. They detoured around the side to the lock-up where, by lantern light, Morgan admired Tom's collection of murdering mongrels, who probably weren't murdering mongrels now, though they were some sort of mongrels. Morgan was pleased to see them.

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