Wherefore Love’s Shadow?
by
Kurt Ulmer
SMASHWORDS EDITION
Published by Kurt Ulmer on smashwords.com
Copyright © 2011 by Kurt Ulmer
All rights reserved. Without limiting the rights under copyright reserved above, no part of this publication may 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 written permission of the copyright owner and the publisher of this book.
Disclaimer
This novel is a work of fiction. Any resemblance to persons living or dead is purely coincidental. Company names, characters, products and incidents are the product of the author's imagination and are used fictitiously.
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Note to non-Australian readers:
ANZAC: Australia and New Zealand Army Corps, World War 1 contingent.
ANZAC Day: 25 April. A national holiday to commemorate ANZAC troops landing in Gallipoli, Turkey in 1915.
Argyle diamond: from Western Australia’s Argyle diamond mine.
Cuddle: hug, also colloquial for sexual intercourse.
CWA: Country Women’s Association.
Fair dinkum: colloquial for genuine, real, ‘I kid you not’.
Flat: apartment.
Digger: colloquial for soldier.
RSL: Returned and Services League, serves the interest of members, veterans, ex-service community and members of the Australian Defence Force.
Stubby: beer, Australian beer bottle shape.
TAB: Totalisator Agency Board, betting organisation.
Wherefore Love’s Shadow?
Chapter 1
He was now further than ever from having what he wanted most in life: someone to love and someone to love him. He had found love a fickle bitch, so very different from what he had imagined. Love remained out of reach like someone’s desperate grasping at leaves in a wind gust. He had been a tumbleweed on the highways and byways of sex with disillusionment as a destination. He was always a step behind love, incomplete without that special someone. He was alone and lonely. There is no true love for me, he had decided long ago. Only a shadow of love. Fake love, the whore’s moaning in sham ecstasy. Wherefore love’s shadow? Why not the real thing?
He had believed himself to be a good and decent man who deserved love. He had never expected a great love, the grande affair, the unforgettable one or the lightning bolt of love at first sight. He yearned for the real thing and if it didn't come his way, then at least someone to walk joyfully and contentedly beside him on a sunlit path to happiness. Not for always; just for a long while but long enough to replace emptiness with a love to remember. Her affection and tenderness would make his despair but a mere memory. Surely that wasn’t asking the universe for too much? He knew the sinister side of love and had experienced what lurked in the shadows. He was done with betrayal, deceit, lust and shallow casual encounters. Wherefore love’s shadow? Maybe he had to suffer love’s imitation so as to recognize the real thing when it touched him?
***
Certainly no love to be found here, not here in his lonely island sanctuary. This picture post card paradise, at first a safe retreat from a violent past, had become a prison. He ached for nothing more than a shadow to merge with his own in a tender embrace. He would be happy even with less right now. He would be overjoyed just see a shadow other than his own. Someone to share his pain.
And then this nasty complication: this boy, now man from a long forgotten encounter, had caught up with him and with an awful vengeance. He had not seen it coming and he blamed none but himself. He had meant well at the time but others had disagreed.
Safe. You are safe now, he assured himself. Safe at home where he belonged with the security his isolation accorded him. He had spent the previous two nights and a day and a half in the Sydney General Hospital after a brutal assault, a payback for a dutiful act on his part years earlier.
Right now, even the slightest pressure on his spine hurt like hell. He hugged the pillow because he couldn’t lie on his back. Three codeine forte painkillers and two valiums would soon see him through the night and give him painless and the dreamless sleep he wished. Until then, concentrating on the injuries and focusing on the pain itself took the edge off it. He would feel better in the morning. Rain drummed softly on the tin roof and helped him drift into sleep. He was chasing shadows and dream shadows hunted him. They were shadows from a violent past and none looked like the shadows he would welcome.
At daybreak, the sound of wind rushing through the surrounding bush was too soft to bother him. He only woke when a cool breeze blew the mustiness of damp earth through wooden shutters and made him shiver under a thin blanket. A noisy bird chorus greeted the rising sun that cast blurred shadows on the opposite wall. Bloody birds. This was the first morning back in his safe haven, a Whitsunday island in Australia’s Great Barrier Reef to where he had returned to rest and to heal body and mind.
The seagrass matting near the bed looked sodden. The water stain in the corner had spread, a reminder that he still had not repaired the leaking roof after the last storm. Or the one before that. It had always leaked. Let it for now. He’d definitely have to mend it before next cyclone season.
Wind from the North-East brought drizzle, then light rain and a gently rolling surf. But there wouldn’t be a morning swim this day-not for a while. Small compensation: he wouldn’t have to set up the stinger net for a few weeks. He lay still for as long as he could and ignored a full bladder. Rolling over to his left brought instant pain. He breathed in sharply through clenched teeth and rose slowly, carefully taking his weight on the right arm and sat on the edge of the bed already short of breath. Moving about with four cracked ribs and a bruised spine hurt as did every breath. The thought of returning to Sydney was as painful as the throbbing in his side. He had unfinished business there and elsewhere, urgent business. He switched on the satellite phone for he had to be on call. A few days rest, then a return and dealing with the unpredictable events his actions had triggered.
His present troubles, like other assignments, had started with a phone call.
“Get your arse down here!” An all too familiar voice had ordered. Harsh, like a shovel scraping on concrete.
He knew how to needle the caller. “Yes, sir!”
“Don’t call me sir!”
The caller then asked about the fishing and he as usual, issued an invitation to come up and find out.
“Hate Queensland sun. See you, Will”.
“Bye, Kel.”
Down here was Sydney, Australia and the year 2005. The caller, Kelvin Arthur Gillespie was a powerful and wealthy man. Will Parker was his highly paid security man, his minder. Whatever resources he needed to get a job done, Gillespie provided them. He never questioned expenses and didn’t want to know how Parker came by the results. Whatever it took. Gillespie had his unquestioned trust, loyalty and a commitment that had grown strong over the years. The current assignment was very different. Gillespie was in serious trouble. Doing the man’s bidding this time had been tricky and the dangers, with vast sums of money and lives at risk, were all too real. There was a nagging doubt in Parker’s mind. Was he supping with the devil? With much too short a silver spoon?
Both men called Sydney home, but had little else in common. Gillespie’s upbringing, so it was said, had been one of privilege whereas Parker had grown up in a Sydney working-class suburb. His name then had been Will Pearson. He had scraped through High School and much to his parents relief, qualified for the New South Wales Police Force. There was none prouder than his parents who came to see him graduate.
“Doesn’t he look smart and dashing,” his mother announced to no one in particular.
“Which one is your son?” someone asked. She pointed to a tall, athletic recruit.
“The one with the broad shoulders.”
The formal graduation photograph took pride of place on the mantelpiece. It showed a handsome, tanned face with a finely chiselled nose, hazel eyes and a strong chin.
“He is the spitting image of your father,” Mrs. Pearson declared and her husband agreed.
“It’s nice to see him following in his footsteps. He was a good cop.”
Pearson served his probationary year in Dubbo, New South Wales but country life was not for him and he was glad to get back to Sydney, away from a predatory landlady who had stolen his innocence. The first week on the job in Darlinghurst ended with free drinks with another newly transferred constable and superior officers. Senior Sergeant David Murray beckoned him aside.
“Your share for the week, Willie boy,” he said and thrust an envelope into Pearson’s hip pocket. Pearson handed it back with a sheepish grin. ”I don’t need this.”
He stood uncertain, alone and apart. When he tried to rejoin the group, stupid idiot comments made it clear that he was on the outer already. Police corruption was real whether he ignored it or not. Like it or not, he knew that sooner or later he would have to make more moral choices. After a month on the job, he knew whom to trust, who was on the take and how to keep out of trouble, which was much harder than he ever imagined.
Drug use and dealing was rampant but as an ordinary copper walking the beat, he couldn’t really do much about that. He knew that his friend James Ng was a regular cannabis smoker. Pearson had re-established a friendship with the Ng family, Vietnamese boat people and saw them often, now that he was back in the neighbourhood. He had warned James that the drug squad would soon make a special effort to arrest a few street pushers who came too much to the public’s attention.
Prostitution likewise was none of his business and he ignored the working girls, disgusted by their trade and habits. If he ignored them, they wouldn’t.
“Tell him, Chantel,” one of them said.
“We know what we are and we don’t need you to remind us. Every day,” Chantel spat the words at him with venom as she walked towards him.
“It’s money for services rendered,” she insisted. “Better than a bent cop.”
“I’m not on the take.” Pearson’s protest made the girls laugh.
“Yeah, right!” said Chantel: “Lilywhite. Fuck off!”
She returned to her doorway, lit a cigarette and chin high, looked up and down the footpath for customers.
He hadn’t sought such aggravation and certainly didn’t need pointless confrontation. He put on a polite face. “How are you, Chantel,” Pearson greeted her next time and walked on. Over coming days, he nodded at the others one by one, stopped and questioned unfamiliar faces especially when they looked too young. Pearson saw many come and go.
First thing, it was on a Wednesday, the duty sergeant called them together, clipboard in hand. On a day other than a Monday, this was bad news. He cleared his throat and straightened his tie. This was going to be really bad. He read from his clipboard:
“Senior Constable Jackson was killed in a traffic accident late last night.”
There was a hubbub of mild cursing and mumbled outburst. Some turned and spoke quietly to their mates. There was more.
“Constable Emery was also in the car and is listed as critical after the high speed pursuit crash.”
He let them sit in stunned silence for a moment.
“I’m sorry to have to do this. But work must go on. I need two volunteers to do late doubles.”
No one volunteered, not even when he offered half a day off and a $20 cab fare to attend the funeral.
“No one? OK. Constables Pearson and Clarke please report to Detective Turner at 20.00.”
It could have been me! The raw, ugly realities of the downside of a policemen’s life twisted Pearson’s guts. He felt numb and walked his beat aimlessly. He didn’t care about double parked cars and stepped over two early morning drunks. He ignored “Coffee officer?” and walked eyes cast down past the girls, found a vacant park bench and shut his eyes. Doubts about his life had snuck up on him recently. He was an honest cop but the public did not care or respect him for that. He only mattered when people were in trouble. Clearing up other people’s mess, that’s what police are for, he concluded. And getting killed chasing joyriders! He didn’t look forward to doing a late double to make up the numbers in Detective Turner’s rotten drug squad. A new experience for little extra pay he didn't need and no thanks for an often violent job.
Around midnight, they smashed into a second floor flat where three men sat at a kitchen table measuring out doses and counting a pile of cash. James Ng was one of them. Had he not warned him? Stupid! James didn’t acknowledge him and avoided eye contact. Two detectives had him face the wall, about to frisk him when James spun around, karate chopped one in the throat and darted through the kitchen into the hallway and out the open front door. Pearson ran after him and saw James sidestep a constable guarding the door, trip and tumble head first down the concrete stairs.
Pearson ran to comfort his friend. James had come to rest face down on the landing, still conscious. When he turned his head, Pearson saw James’s broken and bleeding nose and glazed over eyes. Pearson helped him sit up and pressed a handkerchief over his nose to still the blood flow.
“Ah, that’s kind of you, Constable,” said Turner. “And so unnecessary.” He scruffed James by the neck and pulled him upright.
“What’s this then. A knife?” Turner said taking one out of James’s pocket.
“You don’t need this where you’re going. Get downstairs.”
James took a step forward. Turner kicked him viciously in the back and James toppled. His face hit the concrete steps halfway down and bounced twice.
“Bring him up,” Turner ordered. “By the legs.”
Pearson watched in horror as two officers pulled James up the stairs. Like a rag doll, his head bobbed at every step and left a bloody trail. Blood flowing from his ears, nose and mouth formed a crimson puddle. They pulled him to a standing position and shoved him down the stairs again. Pearson gagged, just made the toilet and threw up.
The others were busy counting the money. Turner pocketed half and sealed the remainder in an evidence bag. Pearson had turned a blind eye to payoffs but was aghast when sachets of heroin were similarly divided. Turner rang for an ambulance.
Back at the station, the detective split up the take between members of the raiding party and kept a bundle for himself. Half the heroin became evidence and Pearson could only guess as to the destination of the remainder. Glad to be ignored and no longer needed, he went home and drank until he passed out. He woke around noon and rang the station to say that he would not be in for the rest of the week.
“You better bring a medical certificate!”
“Get stuffed.”
Richard Jackson stood with his mother at his brother’s grave. Pearson was shocked at his colleague’s appearance. Richard had gone completely bald and his face had deep lines that hadn’t been there at the start of the week. Poor Richard.
“He’s taking it very badly,” a bystander felt obliged to explain. Pearson had seen such a rapid deterioration before. His Uncle Bert’s hair had turned grey overnight at the news of his son killed in action in Vietnam. That was the closest Pearson had come to personal grief. And now a colleague’s death.
He stood in front of his bathroom mirror and didn’t like the reflection. He was 19 and looked ten years older. If a year had done this to him, he’d look like an old man at 30. No grey hairs yet but time to get a haircut. There was a small patch on his chin without whiskers. Nothing to be concerned about. But there was, at far as Gino, the barber was concerned.
“I don’t want you to worry,” he said.
“That’s a stupid thing to say. Now I am worried,” Pearson snapped.
“You have a small patch of alopecia in your scalp.”
“What’s that?”
“Your hair falling out. And you have alopecia on your chin too.”
“What causes that?” Pearson wondered.
Gino ignored the question and kept on clicking his scissors.
“Didn’t you hear?”
“Yes, I heard. Many things. Stress can cause it. Don’t worry about it. Worry makes it worse.”
“Thank you, Doctor Gino.”
James Ng had gone into a coma during the night the flat was raided, never regained consciousness and died three days later. Pearson attended the funeral service but was too ashamed to face his mate’s parents. Their younger son Ian fronted him in the funeral parlour car park.
“You knew him didn’t you?”
“Yes. From school,” Parker replied.
“You’re a liar. You played 8 ball with him last week. I saw you at basketball too,” Ian contradicted and looked Pearson in the eye.
”Where you there when he was busted?”
“No.”
“Liar. You’re fucking scum,” Ian shouted and spat at him.
“You were his mate and you let them kill him.”
Ian’s parents intervened. Mrs. Ng spoke to Ian and he calmed down. She spoke in Vietnamese and the son translated.
“My mum says you are as bad as all the other corrupt police. You are to blame.”
“I’m not corrupt. Please, Mrs. Ng, believe me. I tried to help, but it was too late. I’m not corrupt. I’m just a constable. There is nothing I can do that would make the slightest difference to what goes on,” Pearson protested.
Mrs. Ng understood what he had said and asked her son to translate again. “Mum says it’s better to light a candle than to curse the darkness. And I’m telling you, if you come near us again, I’ll kill you. Cuntstable.”
There he stood, hated and tarnished by the brush of corruption. He was deeply ashamed of serving with officers on the take and bitter about the Ng family not understanding. He hated the drug squad with a vengeance and despaired at not finding a way to pay them back. He didn’t want to resign. That would be an admission of defeat. He didn’t want to continue, especially not at Kings Cross where, in the public’s eye, all officers were corrupt. The sergeant laughed him out of his office and tore up Pearson’s transfer request.
Thoughts and plans to avenge his friend’s death took hold. Imagining ways of punishing Turner for killing James and how to even the score preoccupied him much of the time. So much so that his parents worried at the change in his personality. He no longer stopped by Friday nights and his father went to the football alone. He forgot his mother’s birthday. The face of the smiling recruit on the mantelpiece now bore only a distant resemblance to their son. Recent events of which they knew little, for he would not talk about them, had carved deep lines in their son’s face. A worry frown and a jaw set in anger spoke of bitterness in his heart.
At the station, those who didn’t know him well didn’t care and those who did, withdrew when he snapped at them. Pearson went to see the Police Association representative for help but the reaction was icy and indifferent. He was entitled to advice on industrial matters, legal assistance, representation at disciplinary hearings and promotional appeals.
“Beyond that, if you know what I mean, sorry.”
“Get fucked, all of you!”
His sergeant disciplined him formally when his mates complained about being let down by his frequent absences and uncooperative manner. A doctor thankfully put him on three weeks stress leave and recommended a counsellor who didn’t want to know as soon as Pearson mentioned corruption. Fuck you too!
Pearson bypassed his sergeant and sought an appointment with the inspector. A dressing down, a reminder of procedures to be followed and lines of communication to be observed, was what he got for his troubles and the run-around now wherever he went. The sergeant put him on night patrol. Things went much better, at least until the night when Pearson made up the numbers in a brothel raid. Those hapless patrons, who did not have $100 cash or did not want to explain why they had to make a withdrawal from a Kings Cross ATM, had their names taken. Many paid up as did the brothel manager. The combined take was $5,300 and Pearson was offered none of it. The sergeant was busy the next day receiving visitors whose names, for a consideration, would go unmentioned. There was no escaping corruption and the working girls delighted to remind him.
“Hey look, here comes Constable Lilywhite!” one of the prostitutes called out.
“Sourpuss. He does look down at the mouth!” Chantel agreed and with hands on hips, stopped Pearson from walking on.
“Didn’t you get your share last night?”
Pearson didn’t bite.
“Grumble bum. What’s the matter? You need a good root, that’s what you need copper.” Chantel poked her fingers into his chest.
“Fuck off, you old tart,” Pearson retaliated, much angrier than intended.
“How much did youse make last night?” she demanded to know.
“Nothing.”
“Nothun! Bullshit! I heard youse took five grand.”
“Don’t know. Don’t care,” Pearson said.
“I think he’s depressed,” was Samantha’s verdict. “Has been for a while,” and cupping her breasts, walked up to him and whispered:
“Give you a freebie, Constable.”
“No thanks, Sam. That’s not what I need.”
Pearson had no need for sex, or love or affection. Paid for or otherwise, he simply was not in the mood for female company and had not been on a date for more than six months. And that had been a blind date. Women did not interest him or rather it was the other way round, he had come to realize. Women were not attracted to this young constable, not in his present state anyway. Pearson dismissed the idea of marrying a nurse as a hopelessly romantic illusion. Romance and marriage would have to wait. It was not for him and wouldn’t last anyway. Sour grapes, perhaps? Life was complicated enough as it was.
Quite unexpectedly, help came in a phone call one Saturday afternoon.
“A friend says I might be of use in certain matters.”
“Ah, yeah. And who might you be?”
“A retired inspector. I’ll wait downstairs while you make up your mind.”
“You might as well come up.”
Pearson shook his hand. “What would you be doing if you weren’t here?” Pearson wanted to know.
“Call me Angus. I’d be at the pub with your dad,” he replied.
“Is that so,” Parker said and laughed, the first time in weeks.
“What’s troubling you, son?”
“In a word, corruption. A friend paid with his life because of it. I joined to do good. I want to be respected by the public. I want to maintain self-respect too. Cops make thousands shaking people down and even more from the drug trade. I don’t know whether to stay and take it, or fight or just quit,” Pearson revealed.
“You have few options. Just keep asking for a transfer. You might get a station that deserves you. Then again, you might be unlucky and worse off.”
“That’s why I stopped asking. It means the drug squad gets away with murder.”
“A death in custody?”
“After an arrest. A mate showed me the report.”
“No joy there?”
“None at all,” Pearson replied. “Accidental death. All cut and dried.”
“If you try to fight corruption from the inside and on the quiet, you will fail. Word will get out and no one will talk to you. If you persist, they’ll give you a hard time. You’ll get threats and then if you don’t back off, you’ll get beaten up.”
“Or worse?”
“Yes. Don’t go that way, Will. Or resigning and becoming a whistleblower. You’ll end up disillusioned and bitter.”
“Tell me Angus, what did you do?”
“I was lucky. I worked my way up in a station and helped clean out the stable. It took years.”
“What would you do, if you were in my shoes?”
“Stay. Face it: there will always be greed and corruption. And there are always opposing forces. It’s a question of balance and timing. When corruption becomes intolerable, the stench gets a government voted out of office. Wait for the wheel to go full circle. Greed brings its own destruction. The more they have, the more they want, the more chances they’ll take. That’s how they get undone.”
“I take your point about staying and waiting.”
“It’s a question of when, not if,” Angus suggested.
“Precisely. Circumstances, timing, patience, opportunity. I feel better already.”
“I wish you luck,” Angus said. “Got anything wet in your fridge?”
Pearson felt better about himself and the world, much to his parents’ relief. He had lit a candle and no longer cursed the darkness and ongoing evil around him. Sergeant Murray was happy too when the transfer requests stopped. In return, he promised to keep Pearson off vice and drug squad raids.
“It won’t sit well with them. They like you. You know that?” the sergeant complained.
“Yeah,” Pearson nodded. “Because they get my share.”
“Shut up about that! Now, I’m assigning you to a gaming squad raid.”
“Fair go, sergeant,” Pearson grumbled. “I don’t want to go! Don’t make me, please.”
“Too late. I’ll be there too. There’s a bit of overtime, Willie boy,” Murray promised.
“Alright then. When?”
“Next Tuesday.”
“On a public holiday?”
“So?”
Pearson shrugged his shoulders. “As long as it’s the last time!”
“Promise. Meet me at the Penrith RSL car park, 12 o’clock. Wear something casual.”
Pearson sat with his sergeant in an unmarked car near the back door of the RSL Club.
“Where is the rest of the squad?” Pearson wanted to know.
“Somewhere in the car park.” Murray looked at his watch for the tenth time and got out of the car for a smoke.
“So what are we waiting for?”
“Won’t be long. Here they come,” the sergeant said. “Let’s go.”
They strolled over to a group of men standing in a circle and mingled.
“Just watch,” the sergeant cautioned. “Act natural. Can you see any of the squad?”
“Sorry. Can’t see anyone I know,” Pearson replied.
“I’ll the back in a minute,” Murray replied. He spoke to a man in the crowd and returned with a big smile.
“Well, Willie boy, this is your day. Considering this is your first raid, you’ve been authorised too make the arrests. How do you like that?”
“I don’t mind.”
“Let money change hands a few times, then pounce on the man spinning the coins. The fellow I was talking to, will give you the nod.”
“He’s one of ours?”
Pearson worked his way to the centre as the call went out:
“Come in spinner!”
He watched the man toss two coins and everyone rushed towards the coins, heads bowed and watched them land. “Heads!” the spinner declared and people paid out and collected their bets. After 25 spins, Pearson got the nod, walked over and held the new spinner by the shoulder.
“Police! You are all under arrest!” he announced loudly.
The reaction was not what he expected. Not resistance or protest, but howls of laughter.
“It’s ANZAC Day you idiot!” someone shouted in the crowd.
ANZAC Day? What about ANZAC Day?
“Come here,” the spinner whispered. “It’s legal to play Swy on ANZAC Day.”
“Swy? What’s Swy?”
“Two-up. The World War I diggers called it Swy. It’s from the German number zwei, meaning two. Two coins,” the spinner explained.
“Sure made a fool of myself,” Pearson mumbled.
“No harm done,” the spinner replied, laughed and whispered a suggestion.
The old-timers continued their gambling on coin tosses. They had seen Murray play the same trick many times. When they wound up the school, Pearson pounced again.
“Righto! I’m arresting youse all. You are going to gaol, directly to jail. Do not pass go. Do you want to stop at the bar on the way?” Pearson shouted and everybody laughed and adjourned.
The sergeant smiled and Pearson’s grimaced.
“Very funny, Sergeant.” Pearson emptied his glass and pointed at it. “Your shout.”
“My pleasure.”
“What shall we drink to?”
“Crime and punishment,” Pearson replied.
“You’re too fucking serious,” Murray snapped. “Lighten up!”
Pearson’s patience was rewarded when the NSW State Government announced the establishment of a Police Integrity Commission in response to the latest inquiry into police corruption. The new commissioner promised to ‘get it right this time’ and to ‘get rid of the rotten apples in the barrel.’ Pearson took up the commissioner’s invitation to inform on corrupt officers. There was no response to his phone call for more than a week. Was he getting the run around again?
The weather didn’t look all that promising but he still went for a jog to start the week. He was soaked by the time he turned the first corner. He ran through the park, walked cautiously down the slippery stone steps and ran along the foreshore. On the way home, he paused at the top of the steps as usual, to catch his breath. He heard the footfall of a runner but took no notice until he heard a voice.
“Police. Follow me.” She let him catch up and once by her side, said: “I’m Debbie. There is a parcel in your rubbish bin. Stay back.”
She quickened her pace and Pearson couldn’t help but admire her fitness and style. He turned into the park while she continued on the footpath, crossed the road and disappeared. He ran home, quickly dried himself and took a bag of rubbish downstairs. There was an unusual model mobile phone in the parcel and a handwritten note, ‘Switch it on now’. The mobile phone rang while he was having breakfast.
“Hi. It’s me, Debbie. Look out the window. Third-floor, second window from your left.” Pearson saw a curtain being pulled back and Debbie waving to him.
“Hi, Debbie. What now?”
Debbie’s voice was serious:
”Listen carefully. We have checked you out. You are clean. I’m Federal Police and I will be running you from now on if you are certain that you want to go ahead. You’ll be protected but I must tell you there are no guarantees.”
“AFP? Why the Federal Police in a State Commission?”
“It’s an extra safeguard to satisfy those who believe that the NSW Police Force should not investigate itself.”
“Fair enough. Count me in, Debbie. I’m sick of the bastards.”
“Good,” Debbie replied: “We’ll talk mostly by mobile. Yours looks like an ordinary mobile but isn’t. For your safety, it doesn’t record numbers dialled or the calls coming in. All calls to and from it, go through our own network. We record all your calls.”
Pearson listened in amazement as Debbie explained that in stand-by mode, the mobile worked like an ordinary telephone. When switched off, it picked up and automatically transmitted voices within earshot for recording. Pearson liked the final safeguard Debbie’s phone offered. It had a tiny charge that would cause its electronics to fuse when the battery compartment was opened.
“We know where you are even after you switch off the phone. It has an inbuilt radio beacon that transmits constantly. This is important: the hash key is your panic button. When you press it once, it sends out an alert meaning you want us to listen in real-time. Press it twice if you want a meeting. When you are in extreme danger, press it three times. We’re never more than two minutes away.” Debbie ended the call with a request. “Keep this evening free. I will call you later to tell you where to meet me.”
They waved goodbye and Debbie drew the curtains. It was a signal that all was well. Half drawn signified caution.
“Curtains fully open means extreme danger. Get out,” she had warned.
I’m a dog now. There’s nothing lower than a dog. He had turned informer, a man more hated and despised than any other in the force. He couldn’t live with himself otherwise. He had also unknowingly charted the journey for his remaining days. It was going to be a wild ride on an unfamiliar road with incredible, explosive and unforeseen consequences.
He left the flat at seven and as instructed, waited on the footpath. A taxi drew up with, much to Pearson’s surprise, Debbie the driver.
“You are an amazing woman. Is there no end to your talents?”
She wasn’t into flirting and they spent the next half hour discussing ways and means of Pearson become a corrupt cop. Entrapment was Debbie’s idea. The plan called for him to start off small, gradually becoming more important to his station by contributing to the brotherhood’s revenue stream. Ultimately, if things went their way, he would become indispensable to the point where he could direct much of the illegal trade and amass evidence for the task force.
He had to become better at corruption than the brotherhood. He would have to find opportunities for the drug squad to extort money, new ways of offering protection, new standover tactics and novel ways of relieving drug dealers of their stock and selling it back to them. He would create money-making opportunities from leads given to him by the task force and the Australian Federal Police with Debbie busy all the while collecting evidence.
Pearson returned to the dayshift and went back on the beat. In an odd way, he looked forward to seeing the girls. Samantha was there.
“Where have you been? You been sick or what?”
“I’ve been away. Night shift”, Pearson explained.
“It’s done you good. You look younger. How old are you? You getting enough?” Samantha asked with cheek and went on: “Got a new girlfriend? She hot?”
“No, Sam. That’s not it. I’ve had personal issues.”
“I meant what I said about the freebie. Whenever you like,” Samantha reminded him, her tongue darting between parted lips. Pearson ignored the offer.
“Don’t see Chantel. She still around?”
“She overdosed,” Samantha said and sniffed up a few tears.
“I’m really sorry to hear that.”
Pearson walked away. He didn’t want Sam to see how much he really cared.
No opportunities came Pearson’s way to demand a share of anything. So, at the end of the second week back on the job, he sought out Sergeant Murray who was drinking with the regulars. They ignored him. He followed Murray into the toilet and in a flippant tone, as best he could, asked:
“What does a constable have to do around here to get promoted?”
The sergeant looked at him askance.
“You short of money?”
“Not at the moment. But I want to get married one day, but not on a constable’s wages.”
“You should have thought of that earlier,” the sergeant remarked and rejoined the others at the bar. Pearson let the matter rest there. He had baited the book. Be patient.
Pearson was getting annoyed and frustrated when he had nothing to tell Debbie after a fortnight. Then he had a small success. Someone had slipped $50 into his locker! This was a tiny share of the overall weekly take but progress nevertheless. There had to be a way of becoming more important so as to gain their trust.
After weeks of frustration, an opportunity came his way. The NSW Government announced it intended to intensify the war on drugs. The Darlinghurst precinct too had to become more effective in getting drugs off the streets. This meant more work for everybody and the more successful they were, the less they made. The immediate effect was a reduction in everybody’s cut as drug-trafficking diminished. Pearson’s little bonus dried up. Word got round that the drug squad wanted to let the whole thing blow over. Detective Turner’s plan was ridiculed. Pearson saw an opening and had an idea. Debbie submitted Pearson’s proposal, which was as simple as it was ingenious. The task force liked it and gave the go ahead.
Pearson asked Murray to arrange a meeting with the drug squad detective. The sergeant wanted to know more but Pearson did not budge, saying only that it was important.
“This better be good!” Murray snapped as they sat down in the pub’s beer garden.
“Don’t fuck with me,” Turner threatened but listened with growing interest to Pearson’s proposal and agreed. “Clever boy.”
Pearson’s proposal called for dealers to be arrested and where needed, to plant trafficable quantities on them to increase the conviction rate. Turner made out that the idea was his own, but Pearson got the behind the scenes credit. The Police Commissioner was pleased with the quick results and the Minister for Police spoke highly of the station’s efforts to rid society of drug.
The next phase of Pearson’s plan made it known that new dealers could establish themselves to replace those arrested. Within a week, there were three new dealers who, on paying a one-off $50,000 concession each, had the green light to sell their own and the drug squad’s stockpiled heroin. They station was back in the money. Ten cannabis licences were snapped up for $10,000 each. Amphetamine dealerships came at low $2,000 promotion specials. Ten dealers took up the offer and Pearson collected a $5,000 bonus. Those officers on the take treated him with much increased respect and he decided to push harder.
He called at the drug squad offices and walked in on Turner unannounced, mobile phone in hand to provoke him. He sat down and demanded:
” My weekly cut goes from $50 to $500.”
“Switch off that frigging phone.”
“It’s off, Derek,” Pearson said and put it in his pocket.
”How can you afford a nice phone like that?” Turner asked. “On your pay?”
“Don’t change the subject. I’m not asking for a raise. Derek, I’m telling you.” Pearson stared him down.
“That’s Sergeant Turner to you, Constable.” The detective’s face turned crimson.
“Not in here, Derek. We’re making more money than ever and there is plenty more to be had.” Pearson wasn’t backing down. “I’ll be earning my keep.”
That’s more than I can say about myself, Turner felt like saying. Pearson’s scheme had put him back in the good books with his inspector, Colin Denison, who was doubly pleased with recent arrests and having his cut restored.
“OK, $500 it is. Now you can afford the mobile.”
“The phone cost me nothing. It was a gift,” Pearson said. “I’ve got a spare if you want one.”
“Don’t do me any favours, Constable,” Turner replied.
Pearson wasn’t intimidated: “Suit yourself.”
He rose without being dismissed, paused in the doorway and looked back at the sergeant. He shut the door, walked back and bent forward with straight arms resting on the sergeant’s desk.
“You’re stuffed without me and you know it. I’ve got ideas and you know they’ll work. You and I are going for a drive in the morning. I’ll bring your new mobile, Sergeant. Sir.”
Pearson was right, Turner had to admit. His new woman was costing him a bundle in their one-bedroom love nest. What he made on the side paid for the rent, the food and a few presents to keep her sweet. But if he was going to retire on the coast, he needed money and lots of it.
Pearson drove the unmarked car, with Murray and Turner in the back to Bondi beach to watch the surf and talk. He put to the detective the proposition that only a few of the arrested dealers should be convicted. Understandably, the police could argue, with the extra workload there had been errors and some of the evidence would not stand up in court. Pearson suggested that for a fee, physical evidence could get lost and statements doctored. Murray looked at Turner. “Worth giving a go, don’t you think?”
Turner nodded in agreement.
Pearson started the car and said: “It’s my idea. I’m entitled to know precisely who’s going to avoid conviction and what they paid for the privilege. I don’t want to be diddled. We’ll cut it three ways only.”
The two sergeants look to each other and said as one: “Can’t be done.”
“Leave it to me, Derek. I’ll have to explain to Willie boy how it works.”
“Only as much as he needs to know. How do you like my new mobile?” Turner showed him his new gadget.
“It’s a little beauty. It doesn’t record dialled numbers and incoming calls don’t register either. No one knows who’s talked to whom,” Turner explained with satisfaction. “No bills to pay either. Nice and safe. You’ve got one for your Sergeant, haven’t you, Willie?”
Frightening and productive. That’s how Debbie assessed the contacts the two sergeants cultivated. She didn’t tell Pearson that Turner’s calls revealed a secret meeting room which was subsequently bugged. His corrupt network included his own inspector, officers in the vice squad, a magistrate and two barristers. He had regular contact with six dealers. The task force had names for all his callers and their hands full keeping tabs on them. Turner had contact with three others who used disposable mobiles to contact him. Because Turner used only first names, their identity remained a mystery.
The task force had a sizeable list of Murray’s contacts also. Taped conversations revealed his connection with Turner. Murray had a flat from which his young lover distributed drugs to street dealers. He was a barman at the hotel where most of the Darlinghurst police officers drank.
Pearson pressed Debbie for names and wanted to know just how far the investigation had penetrated the corrupt circle.
“I can’t disclose names. It’s for your protection. Prevents slip-ups. But I can tell you this: we’ve moved up the ladder.”
“How far?”
“Inspector and that’s where we are stuck for the moment. He is super cautions and uses different public phones to contact people we dearly want to identify. We can tell that he is calling mobile phones from the number of coins used.”
“Not much point then in giving him one of your mobile phones,” Pearson commented.
“He wouldn’t go for that anyway. We need to find a way of taping his calls from public phones.”
“It must be bloody inconvenient to carry that much change. Why doesn’t he use prepaid phone cards?” Pearson wondered.
“That gives me an idea,” Debbie said. “We can doctor a card in such a way that the call is relayed through our system. We can get a court order for that.”
“So how do we get him to use the card?” said Pearson stroking his chin.
They sat in silence in Debbie’s car for a while longer. He turned and looked at her.
“This is what, the second or third time we’ve met and all I know about you is your name, that you’re fit and very good at your job.”
Debbie laughed: “And that’s how it’s going to stay.”
Pearson wasn’t put off: “How come?”
“Because the less you know about me, the safer I am. And what you don’t know about me can’t be forced out of you.”
She thought for a moment and added: “But I’ll do this much for you. When all this is over and if you’re ever in deep shit, call the Australian Federal Police in Canberra. Choose a codeword.”
“Make it Eleanor—it’s my mother’s name.”
“Eleanor it is. Now before we go, the task force wants you to move up. Try getting assigned to the drug squad. Once you’re there we’ll raise the stakes to flush out the bigger players.”
Debbie dropped Pearson off around the corner from the hotel where he decided to have a quick drink before going home. This had been their second face-to-face meet. He still knew nothing about her personal life. She was average in height, had brown hair or was it darker than that? She wasn’t exactly thin but then she wasn’t chubby either. She looked 25 but could be older or younger. She wore make up or was it a natural tan? She was plain but attractive at the same time. She was a nameless face in a crowd, nondescript and anonymous. Ideal qualities for an undercover cop.
“Oi! Constable!” Both sergeants and the regulars were there already, well primed. Most of the officers on the take spent their extra cash on drinking, gambling and sex. Turner greeted him and paid the next round.
“To your good health, Constable.”
“To you good health, Inspector.” Pearson replied.
Turner chuckled, turned around, leaned against the bar and called out:
“The constable here wants a promotion!”
“We’ll drink to that,” a few called out.
“To senior constable,” Sergeant Murray declared. “All agreed?”
“And transferred to the drug squad!” Pearson said, his cheek loudly applauded. He stayed and drank with the mob till closing time.
“We’ll see,” Murray cautioned. “Let’s not be too ambitious.”
“You’re in.” The two sergeants agreed that Pearson could best serve their purpose in the drug squad. Debbie was also pleased. She explained Pearson’s next move, a dangerous manoeuvre designed to boost his standing and reputation.
Turner opened a hand delivered envelope and read the enclosed typed note: ‘Pearson is a dog. Watch your back. A friend.’ He turned pale and went to see Murray.
“If this is true, we’re fucked.”
“Rubbish,” Murray replied. “He is in it too deep to rat on us. I can trust my judgment. Believe me, he’s no dog.”
“Then what’s the point of dobbing him in. Is it jealousy for the promotion?” Turner wondered. “Let’s check him out. Just in case.”
The deception had worked. Debbie monitored Turner’s phone call to Malcolmson, an inspector in the Internal Affairs Department. Turner couldn’t afford a genuine investigation, as it would draw unwelcome attention irrespective of the allegation being true or false. He negotiated a $5,000 fee to have Pearson put under surveillance immediately for a week. Turner had acted pretty much as expected, having little choice but to enlist the help of another corrupt officer. Debbie added Malcolmson to the corrupt list.
She kept him and two others, civilians by the look of them, under surveillance. They took turns watching Pearson who routinely went to work and home. On the third day of the surveillance, Pearson was at the station when Debbie said “go”, the next step in their deception.
Pearson told the desk he would be doing the rounds, back by midday. He walked to his bank as planned and waited in a queue at the ATM to withdraw $50. Debbie was in position to see Malcolmson arrive.
“Malcolmson is watching you. He is in the white Commodore parked across the road from you. Don’t look in his direction.”
“Got him,” Parker confirmed when he saw the vehicle in a shop window reflection.
“After you’ve withdrawn your cash, wait for Johnson. You’ll see him coming shortly from your right. Jeans, white T shirt, short blue jacket and baseball cap. Let him walk past and follow. Leave your mobile on.”
Pearson followed Johnson who sat down at a vacant footpath table, motioning him to join.
“Shake hands. Look at the menu. Do you have the envelope?” he asked. “Smile. You can’t see Malcolmson, I can. When I ask you, hand me the envelope.”
He explained: “Turner and Murray don’t know me. I’m a Federal cop under deep cover with Customs. They’ll contact one of our bad eggs, to check me out.”
There was only one $50 note in the bulky envelope, a wad made up of sheets of newspaper. He finished the coffee and when Johnson gave him the nod, Pearson slid over the envelope from which Johnson withdrew the $50 note.
“Malcolmson is watching. He’ll follow me. Go back to the station.”
Johnson pocketed the envelope, shook Pearson’s hand and walked away. Pearson took the long way back to the station and was relieved when Debbie’s call came.
“Malcolmson is tailing Johnson to the city. Don’t turn, you’re being followed on foot. I can see you both. Young bloke, mid 20s, tan, tall, jeans, grey jumper, nice bum. Go back the station and act normal. You’ve done well.”
He felt like saying nice bum, my arse but ended the conversation laughing.
Pearson was at home when Debbie called.
“Say nothing. We think that someone might have bugged your flat today. Careful what you say.”
“That’s news to me.”
“Charlie saw someone acting suspiciously,” Debbie replied.
“That’s very interesting.”
“Don’t look for the bug. Do nothing that makes them suspicious,” Debbie said. “I’m given you Charlie as a new backup because I’m having a couple days off. Nothing else will change. By the way, Turner rang one of Customs’ bad apples to find out whether Johnson was on the take. The net is getting bigger and the corrupt list longer. You’ve done good.”
“That’s fine, Mum. Meant to ask you about your headaches,” Pearson said and paused. “I’m glad someone’s watching over you.”
“I don’t think that anyone is watching you at night, because of the bug. Ring me back now.”
“That’s good. Bye then.”
Pearson then phoned Debbie. “Pete, how are you?”
“Good. Set up a pretend meeting with me for eight o’clock tomorrow morning. Your flat.”
“Sure. Come to my place. That suits me better. Tomorrow morning. Before work. Eight’s OK,” Pearson said.
“Stay in your flat until eight, then leave. If someone’s watching, that will tell us that the flat is definitely bugged. Just act normal.”
“See you tomorrow.”
He left for work the next morning by bus as it had started to rain. He answered his mobile. It was Charlie:
”We’ve done a scan. Your flat is definitely bugged. Someone’s was hanging round waiting for your contact.”
“Interesting. Anyone we know?”
“Hard to tell from up here. I’ve got him on camera though. He’s on the move. Gotta go. Meant to tell you that Debbie says go ahead with the Dubbo sting.”
“Great. Bye.”
Dubbo was the Federal Police’s codename for a marihuana plantation. Six months into the surveillance, the crop had been harvested, dried and could be trucked to Sydney within days. The Feds wanted to discover the warehouse, the distributor, the dealers and who was financing the operation.
Pearson went to see Turner and requested a meeting with Murray. They met in Turner’s office just before knock off time. Murray looked happy and rubbed his hands in anticipation when he saw Turner’s beaming face.
“What’s up?” he asked of Turner.
“Ask him,” was the reply.
Pearson offered the bait:
“How would you like to hijack a truckload of dope?”
The sergeant and the detective looked at each other, saying almost as one: ”Shit!”
Pearson nodded and waited.
“A truckload?”
“From the country,” Pearson replied, deliberately vague.
“Whereabouts?” Murray wanted to know.
“Yeah, how do you know?” the detective added.
They were sniffing the bait.
” I’ll tell you more when I know more. For now, this is what’s going to happen.”
“No way!” Turner maintained. “I decide what goes down, not you, Willie boy!”
Pearson looked him in the eye, held his gaze until the detective blinked and looked away.
Got you!
“This is what we’re going to do.”
“We?” Murray said. “You can’t tell ...”
“Shut up! Let him talk,” Turner interrupted.
“This is what we do,” Pearson explained. ”We set up a random breath test on the highway, accidentally find the dope, take the truckie into custody and the truck to the Roads Department depot. We then take the driver to the warehouse and meet the distributor. We threaten to take him into custody for conspiracy, trafficking or whatever. He can’t afford to let the shipment go-he’s probably already paid a deposit.”
Pearson looked at the detective.
“Go on,” he said. “What then?”
“We ransom the load for-I don’t know. What’s a truckload worth?’ Pearson asked?
“A bloody lot of money!” the sergeant offered. “He won’t be in a position to pay for the lot straight away.”
The detective laughed: “We’ll take a deposit and he can pay the rest on lay-by!! Terrific-let’s do it.”
“Not so quick mate,” Pearson cautioned. “We’ll ask the truckie to phone home to say that we have the truck and that it’s about to be confiscated as evidence. What’s a semi worth?”
“Geez you’re dangerous,” admitted Murray, happy to take a backseat position. “So that’s it?”
“Almost”, said Pearson. “After we ransom the truck, we put the screws on the distributor. We get the names of his dealers and we go on their payroll from then.”
“And the distributor coughs up for every truckload. Brilliant,” the detective said. “Let’s do it.”
“Before you go,” Pearson insisted: “This is what’s in it for me. Whatever we get for the truck is mine. I take a quarter of what we get for the load. My weekly cut goes from $500 to $1000.”
“Did all this come from your customs buddy?” Turner wanted to know as Pearson walked out the door. Parker froze.
“What Customs buddy? I have no Customs buddy.”
“Yes you do. We know who he is. We’ve had you followed.”
“Why did you do that?” Pearson asked. “Don’t you trust me?”
“Someone dobbed you in. Jealous we reckon. But you’re in the clear, Constable. Dismissed.”
“See you at the pub,” Murray called out.
Pearson breathed a sigh of relief and had a couple of quick beers with the sergeants. He phoned Charlie on the way home to tell him that the surveillance had come to an end, but he didn’t answer his mobile. Strange.
Pearson called him again from home. Still no answer. There was somebody knocking on his front door. He looked through the spy hole at a stranger.
“Who is it?”
“Charlie.”
Pearson opened the door, grabbed Charlie by the arm and pulled him in. He slammed the door and whispered: “What the fuck are you doing here?”
“Don’t worry. I’ve got to…”
He couldn’t finish the sentence. Pearson had punched him hard in the guts. Charlie was on the floor writhing in agony. Pearson kneeled next to him and hissed:
“You stupid bastard. The bug.”
“Don’t worry about it,” Charlie said. “Help me up.”
Pearson helped him to the kitchen table. “Sorry mate. Are you saying the bug’s gone?”
“As good as. I’ve jammed it so we can talk.”
“Fair enough,” Pearson said and walked over to the window. The curtains in the flat opposite were fully drawn back. Trouble! Shit! Had Debbie told Charlie about the signal? What now?
“I’ve tried a couple of times to get you on your mobile. I meant to recharge it. Better do it now,” Pearson said and left the room.
The bastard’s lying about the bug. Does he know about Debbie’s signal?
Pearson went to the bedroom for the recharger, unholstered his pistol and put it under his police hat on the hall table. He returned to the kitchen with the recharger and picked up his mobile.
Only one way to find out.
Charlie couldn’t see him pressing the hash button once. Nothing. He pressed back. Then twice to arrange a meeting. Nothing. Back. Then three times: his panic button. Nothing. NOTHING!
Charlie’s phone hadn’t rung. He was on his own. No backup and someone in his kitchen whom he couldn’t trust. He had to play along.
“What’s your number Charlie,” Pearson asked. He entered all the digits Charlie called out but changed the last one. A phone rang, someone answered and Parker hung up.
“Bloody phone,” Pearson cursed. “Maybe the memory numbers work.”
He searched the memory and found Eleanor, the Federal police number, his last lifeline. He crossed his fingers and started the charade when the operator answered: “What name please?”
“Hi, Debbie. It’s me. Will. Can I speak to Eleanor, please.”
“Are you in danger?”
Pearson laughed: “You can say that again.”
“How many?”
“Only one, as far as I know.”
“What is your last name?”
“Pearson.”
“Is Eleanor your emergency code?”
“Yes, I told Debbie on the quiet,” Pearson said.
“I need time to check your file. Can you stall?”
“Don’t take forever,” Pearson pleaded, turned to Charlie said:
“Eleanor’s my sister. She’s giving the baby a bath. Shouldn’t be long. Charlie, help yourself to a beer. Get one for me while you’re there.”
The operator said: “The phone in the flat is not answering. Charlie’s phone is not answering. If the person with you says he’s Charlie, then he is not our Charlie. Put the phone down but don’t switch it off. We are ten minutes from your flat.”
“I’m glad to hear that. Thanks, Debbie,” Pearson said and put the phone on the kitchen bench. His hands were clammy and his knees trembled. He twisted the top off the stubby.
“Thanks, Charlie. To your good health.”
“And yours.”
“Do you want to watch the news? It’ll be on in a minute,”
Pearson looked at the clock, eight minutes were nearly up. He turned to Charlie during an ad break:
“So what did you come for?”
“You know that Turner had you under surveillance?”
“So I heard this afternoon. Turner said I was in the clear.”
“He was having you on, pal. He wants to make sure. That’s why we bugged the place.” Charlie finished the stubby, hurled it at the tiled kitchen wall and sent glass flying everywhere.
“You’re a dog Pearson. I know, because you mentioned the bug. You’re cactus,” Charlie said and pulled a gun.
“Don’t be stupid,” Pearson warned. “Put the gun away. You can’t expect to kill a cop and get away with it.”
“Maybe I’ll get lucky. The daily double!”
Charlie saw the puzzled look on Pearson’s face.
“Your mate from the Feds. Got him too. And about the bug? Still here,” Charlie said laughing his head off.
There was a knock on the door.
“Whoever it is, tell them to fuck off.”
Charlie held the gun to Pearson’s back as he marched him out of the kitchen. Pearson moved as close as he could to the hall table. Charlie suspected something when Pearson reached under the hat, but he was too late. Pearson swung around and put the pistol to Charlie’s forehead.
“Drop your weapon, you shit! Open the door.”