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Authors: Felicity Young

Tags: #Police Procedural, #UK

Take Out (27 page)

BOOK: Take Out
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‘But still possible for the passenger to angle himself and slash from behind with negligible difference to the slash mark provided it was performed in one swift motion, left to right.’ Hurst switched her gaze from Angus to a woman bearing down on them with a tray of coffee. The hospital worker’s gaze slipped to photos strewn across the table. Hurst hastily bundled them underneath the file. The woman’s complexion took on the green hue of her hospital uniform. Stevie wondered how long she had been eavesdropping and waited for her to leave before she continued.

‘So the angle of the blade in these two scenarios can’t tell us whether he was killed in or out of the bus. What about blood spatter?’

‘We’re getting there,’ the pathologist said. ‘There was some of Notting’s blood on the bus, but also some of Robinson’s. The lab concluded it was from the impact of their heads on the windscreen. The spatter patterns are just trickles and drops and not indicative of a powerful spray.’ She removed the photo of Notting once more, this time tapping it with a neatly trimmed fingernail. ‘The neck was pulled back, making the muscle and the trachea more prominent, protecting the carotid artery but exposing the jugular. He would have died of suffocation from the severed trachea before he bled out; still, there would have been a massive gush of blood. It flowed away from the wound when he was lying down, as dictated by gravity. If you look at this photo you can see the pattern flow down either side of the neck and across the ground. The clothing along the victim’s back was also saturated, but as you can see, there is only a little on his shirt front. If he was sitting on the bus when he was killed most of the blood would be on the front of his shirt and in his lap.’

‘Would it have got on the murderer?’ Fowler asked.

‘If the carotid artery had been damaged, yes, most probably; but since only the jugular was affected here, the spray wouldn’t have been as powerful. The murderer might have been able to avoid it if he or she was careful.’

‘She,’ Angus mused. ‘The girl, Mai, was the only one conscious when the paramedics arrived. She was lying alongside her friend Lin on what was left of the floor of the bus with a badly broken leg.’

‘Could either of the girls have done the deed after the accident and crawled back into the bus?’ Stevie asked Hurst.

Hurst tapped her pen thoughtfully on the table. ‘Well, there was a considerable amount of red dust found on Mai’s clothes—much more than on the other survivor...’ She shook her head as if to silence the improbable thought. ‘But I don’t see how she could have done it. The pain from her broken femur would have been excruciating. Even if she was thrown clear of the bus during the accident, I don’t see how she could have crawled back into it after having slit Notting’s throat. And the Lin girl is out of the equation totally. She has serious head injuries. She would have lost consciousness on impact.’

Stevie drew circles through the coffee rings of the table. ‘But if Mai was determined enough...’

Fowler’s phone rang and he climbed to his feet: the interpreter was ready for her appointment. Speaking to Col and Stevie, he said, ‘Let’s go and meet this young lady. Find out how determined she might have been.’ (Image 27.1)

Image 27.1

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

CHAPTER TWENTY-EIGHT

The interpreter from the Thai Consulate, a straight-backed young woman in a raspberry-coloured skirt suit, met them at the nurses’ station. They were told they could stay with the patient for fifteen minutes maximum. Stevie saw the head nurse look at her watch. She envisioned a stopwatch and a starter’s gun and had to hold back from sprinting to Mai’s room.

It was decided that Stevie would conduct the interview. Their footsteps clattered down the corridor. They must sound like approaching storm-troopers to the frightened girl in the room, Stevie thought. While it was unavoidable that Fowler and Col accompany her, she would have given a month’s pay to see Mai alone.

A uniformed AFP guard jumped to his feet as they approached. Col showed his ID even though it was obvious the young man knew exactly who he was. Mai could be an important witness against the people-trafficking mob and they weren’t taking any chances over her safety.

Fowler and Col sat as far away from the bed as the small room would allow; Stevie and the interpreter, Pimjai Sarangrit, on chairs pulled up close to the bed. A plastic bag containing the green housedress sat on the floor between them.

Mai’s face was as pale as the pillow on which she lay propped and highlighted the darkness of her deep-set eyes. A cascade of eggplant-black hair framed her face. Her bandaged leg rested in a splint that looked like a medieval torture contraption, exposing bare toes, swollen and blue. It seemed the overworked nurses had not yet had time to give her a thorough wash. Streaks of red dirt were still visible between her toes. To Stevie, the sight of the dirt made Mai’s presence in the clean white bed less surreal. It served as a vivid reminder of what might have happened out there in the desert.

Stevie introduced herself through Pimjai, pulled her notebook from her bag and with Pimjai’s help carefully wrote down the girl’s complete name, Mai Prawanrum. She explained that the interview was to be recorded. Out of the corner of her eye she saw Col tap the record button of the camcorder.

When Stevie asked the girl how she was feeling, Mai’s shrug said it all: how do you think I’m feeling?

‘Can you tell me where you were going on the bus?’ Stevie asked, careful to keep her eyes on Mai and not Pimjai.

The delay between question and answer was like an overseas telephone conversation on a faulty line. ‘She says she was going to Broome,’ Pimjai said at last.

‘Why were you going to Broome, Mai?’

A quick reply.

‘To work,’ Pimjai said.

Stevie glanced at the two men in the corner of the room. ‘And what is your work?’

‘She works at...’ Pimjai hesitated while she listened to Mai, then lowered her eyes, ‘at pleasing men.’

Mai seemed to share none of Pimjai’s embarrassment. Her sloe eyes remained fixed and unwavering upon Stevie, clear proud eyes that seemed to be challenging her to react as Pimjai had done.

Stevie had no trouble keeping her expression neutral; in her job, this was just par for the course. ‘You were brought into this country illegally. Did you want to come here or were you forced?’

Mai looked at Pimjai as she answered Stevie’s question. The interpreter from the consulate sat straight in her chair, stockinged legs clamped at the knees. ‘They said they would kill her baby if she did not come to Australia with them.’

‘And where is your baby now?’

Mai turned her head away, her voice cracking with her first sign of emotion.

‘Somewhere in Australia,’ Pimjai said. ‘She doesn’t know where, but she thinks he is safe now. She saw him on the television news after he was found in the house.’

Mai pointed to Fowler as Pimjai spoke.

‘She saw that man on the news too,’ Pimjai said.

Stevie reached for Mai’s hand and noticed streaks of red dirt embedded in the creases of the girl’s fingers. She wondered what those hands had been up to, if this young girl really was capable of cold-blooded murder. Could that delicate hand have pulled a knife across a man’s throat? As she looked at Mai she attempted to smile away the thoughts. She must diffuse the suspicion in her eyes and keep the girl on side. For the time being she would stick to those least likely to cause distress: get details; clarify what they already suspected. And meanwhile, any minute now, the nurse might appear and ask them to leave.

‘Your baby is safe, and soon you will have him back.’ Stevie leaned toward the housedress in the bag on the floor. Stopped. That was another thing that would have to wait. Timing, strategy and interpretation was what it was all about, with everything to gain and everything to lose.

The temperature had risen in the overcrowded room; the antiseptic air tinted with the metallic smell of dried blood and Pilbara dirt. Unbuttoning her shirt cuffs, Stevie slid her sleeves up her arm.

Pimjai clapped her tiny hands as she translated Stevie’s words, telling the girl her baby was safe. This interpreter was showing more emotion than she should, Stevie thought; then again, so was she.

Bugger it.

When Mai’s face transformed with a joyful smile; Stevie grinned back.

‘But there are still some things we need to ask you,’ she said, wishing she didn’t have to dispel the euphoria by getting to the heart of the case. ‘I know you’re tired, but I need to know everything that happened, starting with how you came here to Australia.’

She waited patiently for the echo of her question. Mai’s reply seemed to take forever. Crossing her legs, Stevie relaxed back into her chair as if she had all the time in the world. Inside, her pulse ticked like a clock. She tried to focus on the soothing rhythms of the girl’s voice, the swooping movements of Mai’s delicate hands, small and pale except for the creases of Pilbara dirt.

Earlier she’d googled the Thai language, discovering that it contained forty consonants and twenty-four vowels—not an easy language to learn, surely. When spoken, it relied on five tones: middle, high, low, rising and falling, meaning that up to four different words might have the same spelling. Being an experienced interrogator was not enough, a different set of skills was needed to analyse this translated version of events. Tone and innuendo did not exist in the same manner as they did with an English speaker. As she continued to sit on the hard hospital chair, hearing but not understanding, she could have been listening to someone speaking from under the sea.

‘She was sold to a brothel in Bangkok when she was a small girl,’ Pimjai eventually translated. ‘She stayed there for a few years and sent money home to her parents. Then a few years later she had her baby and was sold to a different group. They said if she didn’t go overseas to work for them they would kill the baby. They said she could take him with her. But then, when she came to Australia, they took him away from her. They said it was the only way they could be guaranteed that she would work for them and not run away.’

‘What happened to her baby?’ Stevie asked as Mai flopped back against her pillows and closed her eyes. Stevie still hadn’t reached the questions at the forefront of their minds. She glanced over to Col who made hurry-up motions with his hands.

‘The man who arranged for her to be brought over,’ Pimjai said, ‘decided to keep Mai’s baby for himself because his wife could not give him a child.’

Fowler and Col straightened in their chairs; Stevie sensed them all asking the same question—Jon Pavel? But she couldn’t feed the girl the answer; for legal reasons she still had to ask the name of the man.

When Mai answered, there was no need for translation. A collective sigh of relief reached Stevie from the corner of the room.

‘Do you know what happened to Jon Pavel?’ Stevie asked.

She heard the word ‘Australian’ in Mai’s reply.

‘They killed him. They also killed his wife and the Australian man, Ralph,’ Pimjai said.

Stevie moistened her dry lips with her tongue. ‘Who killed them?’

‘Mamasan and The Crow.’ No hesitation. Mai did not seem to be frightened of recrimination.

Fowler hissed out a breath.

‘Why did they kill them?’ Stevie inched to the edge of her chair.

‘Pavel brought the girls over for the Mamasan,’ Pimjai said, ‘but he also brought others of his own, using the Mamasan’s network of contacts, even the Mamasan’s money—he lied to her about what he paid for them. He kept them at his house while he waited to sell them on. Mai was one of the ones he organised to keep for himself. Then the Mamasan found out. His excuse was that he didn’t think she’d mind because she had never been interested in girls who’d given birth...’ The pale skin of Pimjai’s neck flushed. ‘She says the clients don’t like them as much...’

These girls were investment commodities, Stevie reflected, items to be bought, sold, stolen and devalued.

‘Mamasan warned him to stop and set his house on fire to make him listen. He gave Mai back to the Mamasan, thinking that would be enough to please her. But he and the Australian, Ralph Hardegan, continued to bring the girls in. They were making so much money it was like a drug to them, they couldn’t stop. When the Mamasan found out, she killed Pavel, his wife and the man Ralph as an example to anyone else who tried to cross her.’

Just as they had suspected, Pavel and Hardegan had paid the price for undercutting the Mamasan. You take my girls and I take you: skin for skin.

‘We haven’t been able to locate Jon Pavel’s body yet,’ Stevie said.

Pimjai listened to Mai. ‘Mai saw them kill him,’ she said with a shudder. ‘They tortured him, burned off his skin, and then took his body out to sea in a boat, weighted it down and dumped it over the side.’

No wonder they hadn’t found the body. Stevie decided not to press for details of the torture, not yet, even though they would have to be documented later. Looking from one pale face to the other, she wondered how much more either girl could take.

BOOK: Take Out
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