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Signal Loss
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PRAISE FOR GARRY DISHER AND THE PENINSULA CRIMES
WHISPERING DEATH
‘This is a world-class police novel and Disher
continues to be one of our best and most consistent
crime novelists. Highly recommended.’
Canberra Times
‘This very fine novel submits to the thriller conventions
but with an easy freedom that makes it seem as if Disher
made the rules himself…a compulsive and unsettling novel
that should win Disher many new readers.’
Sunday Age
‘Disher’s layered plotlines, peppered with
familiar Mornington Peninsula references, make
this an engaging yet unsettling read.’
Sunday Herald Sun
‘Classic Disher, the taut writing bringing a complex
plot into as sharp relief as the vivid settings and dread-laden
atmosphere do the fully rounded characters.’
West Australian
‘Like the best of the Swedes, his writing is compelling
and atmospheric, the relentless social realism disturbing.’
Australian
‘Close to the best thing Disher’s yet written.’
Hobart Mercury
‘Unmissable. If you haven’t heard of [the Peninsula Crimes
series], reading this will have you backtracking.’
Sunday Examiner
‘One of my absolute favourite
Australian authors…I think this series
is getting better and better.’
Sue Turnbull, ABC local radio
‘Exceptional crime fiction.’
Courier-Mail
‘Clever writing and a satisfying ending.’
Otago Daily Times
CHAIN OF EVIDENCE
WINNER, Ned Kelly Award for Best Crime Fiction 2007
‘This instalment puts Disher up on the
world stage among the best in the business
at this style of crime fiction.’
Age
‘Chain of Evidence deserves a fanfare…
Multilayered and multistranded…written
in vivid and uncompromising prose.’
Sydney Morning Herald
‘Disher is one of Australia’s very best crime
fiction writers and this is a compelling read.’
Sun Herald
‘A must-read mystery.’
Woman’s Day
‘Another powerful statement from one of
Australia’s top crime writers.’
Courier-Mail
‘Disher strips away the glamorous views
to reveal desperation, deviants and depressives…
and that’s just the police force. The plot twists like
a back road short cut and pulls like the rip.’
Sunday Age
‘His best novel yet in what has been a
distinguished career…Now on the same procedural
shelf as international greats such as John Harvey,
Tony Hillerman and Ian Rankin, Disher brings crime
fiction back to simple facts, the painful themes that
churn beneath banal surfaces. No one works the
flat, elided plains of realism better.’
Australian
‘Intelligent, atmospheric…Fans of such gritty
yet cerebral crime novelists as Ian Rankin and
Jack Harvey should be well pleased.’
Publishers Weekly
‘Challis is a fine creation: strong and resourceful,
yet with enough human frailty to satisfy the tastes of
readers raised on Connelly, Rankin, or Patricia
Cornwell. This is intelligent, well-crafted fare.’
West Australian
‘A slick, fast style that’s delightfully free of
filler and extraneous plotlines. Once the hook is
set, he just lets the story pull you along…
Disher is definitely not to be missed.’
Toronto Globe & Mail
‘Disher is delivering the best crime fiction around.’
Peter Corris
THE PENINSULA CRIMES ARE:
The Dragon Man
Kittyhawk Down
Snapshot
Chain of Evidence
Blood Moon
Whispering Death
Signal Loss
Garry Disher has published almost fifty titles—fiction, children’s books, anthologies, textbooks, the Wyatt thrillers and the Peninsula Crimes series. He has won numerous awards, including the German Crime Prize (twice) and two Ned Kelly Best Crime novel awards.
garrydisher.com
textpublishing.com.au
The Text Publishing Company
Swann House
22 William Street
Melbourne Victoria 3000
Australia
Copyright © 2016 by Garry Disher
The moral right of Garry Disher to be identified as the author of this work has been asserted.
All rights reserved. Without limiting the rights under copyright above, no part of this publication shall be reproduced, stored in or introduced into a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means (electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise), without the prior permission of both the copyright owner and the publisher of this book.
First published in 2016 by The Text Publishing Company
Cover design by Text, based on jackets by Susan Miller
Page design by W.H. Chong
Typeset by J & M Typesetting
National Library of Australia Cataloguing-in-Publication entry
Creator: Disher, Garry, - author.
Title: Signal loss / by Garry Disher.
ISBN: 9781925355260 (paperback)
ISBN: 9781922253859 (ebook)
Series: Peninsula crimes ; 7
Subjects: Drug traffic—Investigation—Fiction.
Criminal investigation—Fiction.
Suspense fiction.
Dewey Number: A823.3
for Ann and Peter
1
LOVELOCK AND PYM. They sounded like some kind of show-business duo—magicians, maybe; folk singers.
In fact they worked for Hector Kaye, who used to run with the Finks out of Kings Cross. That was before he set up as a legitimate businessman and started importing crystal meth from China. They didn’t come cheap, Lovelock and Pym. Kaye paid them well and he’d bought them each a house and a car in the past year.
Their next project was to knock off a guy named Owen Valentine down in Victoria. Fifty grand plus a thousand a day each for expenses. Four days minimum, two days on the road from Sydney, two days back. The coast route, not the Hume: fewer cops. There was no reason why they couldn’t fly down on fake IDs, they had plenty to choose from, but neither of them had ever seen the south coast. They’d be renting a Mercedes with one of the fake IDs, a big sedan with room in the boot for a body.
That was the basic set-up. Now Hector moved on to the finer detail: ‘Grab this Valentine prick as soon as his girlfriend and kids have left the house, pack up his clothes and toiletries and shit so it looks like he’s done a runner, whack him, disappear the body.’
The three of them were on Hector’s deck overlooking Double Bay, sitting around a glass and stainless steel outdoor setting, sipping margaritas. Lovelock, a literal-minded man who despised fag drinks like margaritas, said, ‘Whack him at his house, or take him somewhere first?’
‘Not at his fucking house, genius. He’s done a runner, right? No blood.’
‘Then disappear him,’ Lovelock repeated flatly.
‘Bury him,’ Kaye specified. ‘Deep. You’ll need a shovel.’r />
Lovelock had never been to Victoria. ‘Where?’
‘Here,’ said Kaye, tapping a map. He had the long, clean forefingers of a businessman. No grease, scars or swollen knuckles. Only with his sleeves rolled back you could see a scroll of black ink: Respect Few, Fear None.
Lovelock and Pym studied the map dubiously. It was a bad fax, or more likely a scan, showing a twenty-kilometre-square detail of the Mornington Peninsula south-east of Melbourne. Kaye had used pink highlighter to mark a coastal town, Moonta, and an inland track named Lintermans Lane.
‘Grab the guy in Moonta, bury him in Lintermans Lane. Got it,’ said Lovelock.
Meanwhile Pym was examining the other paperwork on the table: head-and-shoulders shots of their victim, typed information, a mobile number. A slight, nervy man who liked to query and quibble, he stared at Kaye. ‘You’re sending us to the dark side of the moon, boss.’
‘It’s not the fucking Simpson Desert, it’s an hour from Melbourne,’ said Kaye. ‘If you don’t want the job, I’ll send someone else.’
‘Can’t you use a local guy?’
‘It’s a favour for a local guy, all right? He doesn’t want anything to come back on him. You go in, do it, get out. Jesus, you’re getting paid enough.’
Sea birds wheeled above the water, blindingly blue under the early summer sun. A solitary cloud above. Pym ignored all that. Curious to know how far he could push, he said, ‘What’s your cut?’
‘The satisfaction of doing a favour for an associate,’ Kaye snarled, ‘all right?’
Pym saluted him. ‘You’re the boss.’
‘That I am.’
SO LOVELOCK AND PYM took the coast road, the ocean only occasionally visible. Stopped Wednesday night at Bega, where they fitted the Mercedes with plates from a Victorian car, and then down through Gippsland to the tip of Westernport Bay. After ascertaining that Moonta was no more than a bunch of beach houses with a single shop, they drove another ten minutes to the town of Waterloo, which had a motel. Pym went for a run as soon as they checked in, then drove to the Bunnings on the edge of town and bought a shovel and tarp. Paid cash, the visor of his John Deere cap low on his brow. Lovelock stayed in, sinking a six-pack of Victoria Bitter as he watched the T20 game on Fox. Over dinner—chicken salad for Pym, meat-lovers pizza for Lovelock—they studied the paperwork again.
Lovelock chewed, swallowed, burped. ‘Guy looks like a meth head.’
Pym nodded. In photographs, Owen Valentine had a narrow, bruised, hunted-looking face under a firebreak haircut, his parted dry lips revealing mossy teeth.
Lovelock snatched another bite and ruminated. ‘You ever ask yourself what we’re doing?’
Christ, thought Pym, hating it when Lovelock got philosophical. ‘No.’
Lovelock waved his pizza slice, tumbling a lump of greyish meat onto the nasty bedspread. ‘I mean, all we ever do is what we’re told. You ever thought of going independent?’
‘No,’ Pym said, without much hope it would shut Lovelock up.
‘Okay, so ask yourself: here’s a meth head, and we’re getting fifty grand to waste him. Makes you think, right? All that money?’
‘Think what?’
‘Whatever this Valentine character did to piss off Hector’s mate, it must have been big. I mean, fifty grand.’
‘So?’
‘So he knows something, stole a shitload of drugs, something.’
‘So?’
‘So yeah, we top him, bury him. But why not ask a few questions first?’ Lovelock said, getting out his cigarettes.
Pym made him take his filthy habit outside, Pym who didn’t touch steroids, ice, nicotine, alcohol. He was a killer these days, but quite a bit of the old Pym lingered from before. Clean, straight. Good job as an aide to a Liberal Party MP, before a small misstep in the form of a Facebook post. A few frank thoughts on immigrants and Muslims that prompted a swift change of careers.
He made Lovelock take his filthy habit outside, but still kissed him goodnight.
ON FRIDAY MORNING—AFTER Pym’s run and Lovelock’s sleep-in—they drove back up to Moonta. Through farmland that backed onto the mudflats and mangroves, along small, tight roads to the little township. It was no more than a collection of short, sandy streets settled with beach houses of various kinds, some costly, others renovated cottages, with a few wood and plaster kit homes of the kind pictured in brochures with names like ‘The Inlander’ or ‘The Californian’.
The house where Owen Valentine lived with his girlfriend and their kids was a shabby fibro structure set amid ti-trees on a narrow dirt track unobservantly named Banksia Court. Pulling the Mercedes under a nearby tree, Lovelock and Pym watched and waited, and presently a rusty white Corolla pulled out of the car shed at the side of the house, a woman and one child aboard.
‘So far so good,’ Pym said.
‘There’s supposed to be two kids. Where’s the other one?’
‘Maybe it’s too tiny to see,’ said Pym, irritated. ‘How the fuck would I know?’
‘I’m just saying.’
They stared at the house gloomily, wondering if they’d have to factor in a second killing. It would mean more work.
‘Okay, time to rock and roll,’ Pym said.
THEY ENTERED BY THE CAR shed and a connecting door to the kitchen. Found Owen Valentine asleep on a sofa in the sitting room. Pym was disgusted. Takeaway food containers, wine bottles, overflowing ashtrays, a greasy meth pipe on the coffee table. And the place stank. Drugs, garbage, pine sap from a miserable Christmas tree in the corner, dog shit.
‘Hey there, cutie,’ murmured Lovelock, bending to a tiny black toilet brush of a dog. Dogs loved him, and this one licked his hand.
‘Leave it,’ snapped Pym.
He kicked the sleeping man’s leg. Valentine snorted, a skinny, ice-ravaged creature dressed in shorts and a T-shirt. Gummy eyes, when they finally opened. Three or four days’ worth of whiskers, grubby feet with a yellow talon at the end of each toe.
‘Get up, arsehole,’ Pym said. To get the message across, he scraped the blade of his boning knife along the ridges and whorls of his left thumb.
‘Who the fuck are you?’ croaked Valentine.
‘Your worst nightmare,’ Lovelock said, grabbing Valentine by the shirt, lifting him out of the chair, driving his fist into the skinny belly.
The dog yapped, appreciating the game.
‘Careful,’ said Pym. ‘No blood, no signs of disturbance.’
So they moved to the car shed, shut the street door and duct-taped Valentine to a cobwebby green plastic garden chair. Lovelock scooped up the dog and tickled its ears as he looked around. Old paint tins, packaged screws and nails on a work bench, various edged tools hanging from the walls. Engine oil in the air; a hint of brine from the nearby beach.
And sweat. It was hot in the shed, getting hotter, the early December sun beating hard upon the roofing iron. Pissed pants now, too. Valentine bewildered and afraid, his eyes bugging out.
‘You’ve been a naughty boy, Owen,’ Lovelock said, aiming at the general, not the specific, hoping Valentine would spill some information they could profit from. ‘Haven’t you, eh? A liability. Some unhappy people.’
A look of resignation passed over Valentine’s face, chased by fear and ice twitches. He thrashed about in his chair and opened his mouth to yell. Lovelock slammed his fists left and right at Valentine’s head and stomach, and Valentine, reduced to skin and bone, rattled and jerked in the chair, not riding the blows at all.
Pym, fastidious, stood clear of the flying blood, sweat and mucus. Presently he said, ‘That’ll do.’ The two of them paused for a moment, regarding the miserable figure in the chair.
Valentine did nothing, said nothing, his head lolling. It made Lovelock mad. And his fists hurt.
He moved in again, screaming, ‘Where the fuck is it, you piece of shit?’
Valentine lifted his misshapen head. His eyes were reduced to puffy slits. He whispered, ‘I’m sorry,’ worki
ng his tongue and lips to moisten the rotting mouth.
‘My turn,’ Pym said, nudging Lovelock aside. He drew a line of blood beads along Valentine’s forearm with the tip of his knife. ‘You’re holding out on us, Owen.’
Valentine’s eyes rolled back and his chin dropped to his chest. Blood dripped from his arm, bloody drool gathered on his chin, a poor glistening thread of it stretching, finally reaching his lap.
‘Faking it,’ Lovelock said.
He leaned in, jetted smoke into Valentine’s face and shouted, ‘Where the fuck is it?’
Valentine tried to lift his head and failed.
‘What’s that?’ said Lovelock comically. ‘Can’t hear you, mate. Work those tonsils.’
Valentine’s chin fell to his chest but he was conscious, his eyes open. Lovelock said to Pym, ‘You have another go.’
Pym, gagging at the smell, flicked his blade tip at Valentine’s nostrils, earlobes, eyebrows. Fluids leaked, pooling around the chair, darkening the cement floor, and Valentine shuddered, his eyes fluttering, his head tipping to his shoulder.
Lovelock’s impatience grew. This shouldn’t be taking so long. Elbowing Pym away, he delivering another flurry of punches, left and right. ‘Wake up, bozo.’
Nothing. He tapped the bruised cheeks, lifted the mashed eyelids, felt for a pulse.
Found a pulse. Muttered, ‘Not dead, then,’ and slapped Valentine’s face. ‘Come on buddy, wake up. Don’t piss us about.’
Still nothing.
He stood back. ‘I’m not buying it, Owen,’ he said critically. ‘Wake the fuck up.’
‘Can I try?’ said Pym, his voice a whispery rasp, almost indistinguishable from the sound of the hot wind outside, leafy branches scraping the nearby walls, fences and rooftops.
‘Go for your life.’
Pym used his fingers this time, pinching and flicking, darting in like a wasp. Finding pleasure where, for Lovelock, administering a beating was merely work.
No response. Pym stood back and Lovelock took his place again. ‘Maybe he’s unconscious.’
‘Oh, do you think?’ said Pym. ‘You did hit him quite hard.’
Lovelock flushed.