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Window Dresser's Arms, Pig & Whistle

Author Archives: Therese Trouserzoff

Jeff St John Anthology

06 Friday Apr 2018

Posted by Therese Trouserzoff in Algernon, Bands at the Pig's Arms

≈ 14 Comments

Tags

Billy Thorpe and the Aztecs, Chain, eff St John and Copperwine, Jeff St John, Jeff St John and Wendy Saddington, Jeff St. John and Yama, Max Merritt and the Meteors, music, Tamam Shud, The Id

jeff st john

 

Playlist by Algernon

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yKyp5xko1F8

Big time operator – The Id

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1LzMRBTKgfI

You got me hummin’ – The Id

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HrOUMbrhxZA

Nothing comes easy – Jeff St. John and Yama

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8UJESsN-MHQ

Lady Sunshine – Taman Shud

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5kip8y6YJq0

Good morning little school girl – Billy Thorpe and the Aztecs

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B0oCmPUrx1Q

Hey Western Union Man – Max Merritt and the Meteors

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iEN7Iv5KM-E

Show me home – Chain

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=00ibOKFXYb4

Reach out – Jeff St John

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dJsQZ6faZ8E

Teach me how to fly – Jeff St John and Copperwine

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aFypm-kLrjE

Hummingbird – Jeff St John and Copperwine

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hFnU0ObajFQ

Yesterday’s music – Jeff St John

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hy50EvMTsZU

In the window of your love – Jeff St John and Wendy Saddington

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=44rZaCC6rMo

Survivor – Jeff St John

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DM-eR2bR61I

Mr James – Jeff St John

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KQrSVFEsCvE

A fool in love – Jeff St John

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w9ClO0Csgkw

Rock’n’roll man – Jeff St John

 

 

 

Music for pleasure Volume 4

24 Saturday Mar 2018

Posted by Therese Trouserzoff in Algernon, Bands at the Pig's Arms

≈ 17 Comments

Tags

Al Green, Barrett Strong, Jeff St John, Keith & Tex, Leon Bridges, Loretta Lynn and Conway Twitty, Marlon Williams, Miriam Makeba, Missy Higgins, The Bees, The Marshmellow, The National, The Teskey brothers

Music for pleasure volume 4

Playlist by Algernon

Just like the last list some old, some new, some quirky, some just bizarre and some from those you’ve not heard of. Oh and something from the late Jeff St John.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JnQTGNcNpI4

Stop that train – Keith & Tex

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kFg3Tp5D3lM

Futon couch – Missy Higgins

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zchdH3zAYAE

What’s chasing you – Marlon Williams

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2dJyHroulrc

Wash in the rain – The Bees

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EVK_mZgiQAw

Forever you and me – The Teskey brothers

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6k7serm9nZI

Turtleneck – The National

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LL9O0B0gzZE

Why don’t we get drunk – Jimmy Buffett

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iFq6eZBS1iM

You’re the reason our kids are ugly – Loretta Lynn and Conway Twitty

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l73FkH3v7yg

Here I am (come and take me) – Al Green

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FJOGT1axUV4

Bad Bad News- Leon Bridges

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_0RwRmRvwIk

Bet ain’t worth the hand – Leon Bridges

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AVzI6Gh08Ns

Theres a bastard cat

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t5KU34DrrPI

Money (that’s what I want) – Barrett Strong

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p6obRxQ2V0A

A Messge Malcom – The Marshmellow

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gsDfHvIFwiU

Pata Pata – Miriam Makeba

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4Jf7TJkrSI4

Teach me how to fly – Jeff St John

Music for pleasure Volume 3

18 Sunday Mar 2018

Posted by Therese Trouserzoff in Algernon, Bands at the Pig's Arms

≈ 17 Comments

Tags

Ben Camden, Colin Buchanan. For the good people of Batman, en Folds and Nick Hornby, Frankie Laine, Hollie Cook, Merry Clayton, Nash and Young, Ray Charles, Shannon and the clams, Snout, Steely Dan, Stills, The B52’s, The Chemical Brothers, The Damned, Tom Jones and Crosby, Tori Amos

music for pleasure 3

Playlist by Algernon

Some old, some new, some quirky, some just bizarre and some from those you’ve not heard of.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cPugdXQ09uU

Wanted Man – Frankie Laine

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WCfjRIf91Wg

Cro magnon man – Snout

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VvCng7-za1Y

Song for a future generation  – The B52’s

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d2S50BndAC0

Strawberry Jam – Ben Camden

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s5FyfQDO5g0

Let forever be – The Chemical Brothers

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nxAiukuKL34

Standing on the edge of tomorrow – The Damned

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N1–GrdPQWc

Stay Alive – Hollie Cook

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QNDEsjsPn5w

Not quite Australian –Colin Buchanan. For the good people of Batman

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XCyTqnizcvI

Gimme shelter – Merry Clayton

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w_HA5Czhtx4

Cornflake girl – Tori Amos

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hm3cf3jsWNw

The Boy – Shannon and the clams

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X5peqCDJi0A

Picture window – Ben Folds and Nick Hornby

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OWVhvoAeaFk

Barrytown  – Steely Dan

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0xS0rftsgsg

Them that got – Ray Charles

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dIDzA0YDso8

Long time gone– Tom Jones and Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young

 

 

Bess Stafford Investigates – 04 Bess Disappears (2019)

14 Wednesday Mar 2018

Posted by Therese Trouserzoff in Warrigal Mirriyuula

≈ 5 Comments

Tags

Bess Stafford, Zero Sum

04 On The Scent

On the Scent

Story and maybe also photograph by Warrigal Mirriyuula

Zero Sum

It was Constable Hourigan who raised the alarm. After his shift he’d gone down to The Riverside hoping to catch up with Bess. It was a punt but he’d enjoyed their few brief encounters and he was hoping for more of the same.

Narelle, the young Barkindji receptionist at the Riverside, told him she hadn’t seen Bess since she drove off in the Landcruiser at about seven o’clock last night. Which was odd because Bess had sent Hourigan a text at about the same time saying that she was going out to the old Hansen place for a recce and would contact the station in the morning.

Bob had checked with the Duty Sergeant several times during the day but there had been no contact with Bess at all.

Bob asked Narelle if he could take a quick look at Bess’ room and sure enough the bed had not been slept in, her pack was lying open on the floor with more of the same practical clothing she’d been wearing, all the towels and toiletries were untouched and there was the full compliment of tea, coffee and biscuits.

Narelle mentioned that Bess liked her tea and biscuits and had called for additional stock, as well as a proper tea pot and leaf tea.

They were there, the pot was cold and empty with a pad of stewed leaves sitting in the bottom, an empty cup with with a few drops left sitting nearby on the table, its saucer covered in biscuit crumbs.

At Bob’s prompting Narelle rang the lady that made up the rooms to ask what time she had done Bess’ room. She said that she’d tidied and made up the room about three o’clock. Bess had been in the room, drinking a cup of tea, they’d chatted for a while as she vacuumed and wiped. “She was a lovely lady.” the woman had said, and they’d left the room together. She said that the last thing Bess had said to her was that she was going to walk over to The River Gum Lodge to see someone there.

“Who would Bess know at The River Gum?” Bob wondered.

The River Gum Lodge was an aged care facility run by The Masons and a committee of locals. It had been under threat of closure about ten years ago until the Masons stepped in and ensured its long term survival. It was a small place. Only a dozen or so places and Bob thought he’d go there next.

The young policeman began to feel uncomfortable, as though he were intruding. There was something about the absence of Bess from the room while he poked through her few things that made him decidedly uncomfortable. It dawned on him that this was one of those moments in a young copper’s life when the next thing he did might determine the direction and outcome of his time in Bourke. There in that room at The Riverside young Bob Hourigan grew up a little, and, in that moment, slipped unconsciously into his career.

Gone was the boyish pride in the uniform, the camaraderie and childish sense of service; to be replaced by a harder edged, more thoughtful, more adult and interrogative mental frame.

Narelle, standing quietly by, noticed the change as a firming of his face, a focussing of his eyes. It wasn’t something that she would, or could, verbalise, but she was strangely impressed and she would find herself looking out for Bob around town in the weeks and months ahead.

Bob had raced round to The River Gum but it was dinner time and the residents were all in the dining room. He hadn’t stayed to try and find out who Bess had spoken to there. He was becoming increasingly anxious and, as is often the case with agitated young men, he sublimated his agitation with action.

Later Bob Hourigan would be unable to say what it was that caused him to become so concerned for Bess so quickly. All evidence pointed to her being quite able to handle herself in tricky situations. She had a reputation for going alone, she had advanced firearms training and was a brown belt in some unpronounceable martial art. Her CV had any amount of situations in which she had confounded expectations, overcome adversity, to triumph against the odds. She’d been “missing” for less than 24 hours and yet Bob Hourigan knew there was something wrong.

Call it intuition, call it guesswork, call it inspired analysis of the few facts available, but when Bob rang the Super on his mobile his tone, urgent with just an edge of alarm, was enough to convince the Boss that they really should get out to Hansen’s “toot sweet”.

It wasn’t the evidence that had convinced the Superintendent, it wasn’t really the tone in young Bob’s voice. It was because this was Bess and both men knew that Bess was special, precious in a way, and she was “missing”. Of course neither would ever admit to this as being the primary driver in their breakneck rush to get out to the old Hansen place.

Having picked up the Boss and one of the station Landy’s, Bob drove through town and out to the crossing over the Darling at North Bourke. He put the hammer down and pushed the Landcruiser to top speed along the Hungerford Road.

Neither man spoke. Indeed Bob was now quite nervous and he fidgeted his grip on the wheel as he drove, chewing on his bottom lip. The occasional look at the Boss showed that he was worried too. His face was slightly flushed, he was sweating even though the AC was operating flat out, and he kept snapping his head from position to position and rubbing his face, first with one hand and then the other as if trying to wipe away the fear rising in his mind. It was obvious that he resented this time that it would take to get out to the old place.

In half an hour they reached the overgrown dirt turn off leading to the abandoned farm and Bob only slowed enough to get the Landy off the bitumen without too much oversteer in the dust and gravel of the turnoff. When the Landy straightened under Bob’s hand over hand on the wheel, he dropped a gear and floored the accelerator again; his driver training paying off and his control over the speeding four wheel drive leaving a lasting impression on the Boss, who was hanging on, one hand white knuckling the grip on the window column while his other tried to hang on to the the webbing of the seat belt. It was ballsy driving by any standard.

As they pushed up the track at speed, bouncing and jouncing, following the flattened Gidgee and saltbush, they came upon the place where Bess had moved the rocks. Bob hit the anchors and they slid to a rough stop. Both men got out to take a look. What had happened here?

They both noted the boulders now situated at the base of the berm on one side of the track. The salt bush and other plants had been mashed from berm to berm for a distance of about 20 metres on the track. The red earth had been torn up and turned over by the removal of the rocks. The tracks left as Bess had manoeuvred the Landcruiser where still quite fresh. Bob and the Boss both silently acknowledged Bess’ practical abilities as they wondered about the rocks, but there was no more to see here and so they both got back in the Landcruiser and pushed on, though now they were more careful, their progress slower.

It was getting on for eight o’clock and the last orange ochre light of the day was dimming along the horizon as they followed Bess’ tracks toward the house. Above them, the Milky Way was blazing in all its glory; so beautiful, distant and indifferent.

Ahead in the blue-white light of the spots they could make out the low rise leading up to the house, which appeared first as a black silhouette on the horizon, then suddenly illuminated; the swinging beams of the spots flashing back off the broken glass in the collapsing window frames. Bob gently eased the truck up the last of the rise toward the house.

Bess’ Landcruiser was parked at an angle to the dilapidated building, about ten metres from a couple of precariously leaning old tank stands, the tanks having fallen off and rusted where they fell.

Bob slowed to a crawl and stopped well away from the house, not wanting to disturb the scene too much before they knew what they were dealing with.

The Boss was out of the truck immediately and calling out, flashing his torch about, “Bess, you here? Its Phil and Bob from the station.” There was no response. “You there Bess?” then louder, with his hands cupped to his mouth, a bellowing “Beeessss”. Still nothing.

The two men stood together, each looking out into the darkness, listening. There was the soft susurration of the breeze and insect song, nothing more.

“OK, Bob, you check the truck and I’ll have a look about the outside. We’ll go in together when we’ve “cleared” the outer area.”

“Right” Bob nodded, pulled some gloves from the side pocket of the door and, pulling the gloves on, trotted over to the Landcruiser, approaching the open driver’s door from the rear quarter. Bob had changed into his civvies to visit Bess at The Riverside so he wasn’t armed but he could see the Boss moving cautiously in a half crouch around the side of the house. He looked a little silly until Bob noticed he had a two handed grip on his police issue Glock.

“Jesus!” young Bob exclaimed silently, his hands beginning to shake thinking the Boss might be right. This could be that serious. Bob had been thinking “injured” but he could be wrong. He got himself under control, pushed down the fear, took a few good deep breaths. He really had no idea what to expect.

The cabin of the Landcruiser was empty except for a couple of crushed plastic water bottles and some empty biscuit wrappers. The keys were gone. Bob cantilevered himself over the gear change and opened the glove compartment; nothing, except the usual police fleet papers and vehicle ID. She’d taken the torch he surmised.

Bess’ hat sat upside down on the passenger seat, her sunglasses folded inside. Seeing these two very ordinary but personal items just sitting there like that filled Bob with a kind of dread he had never before experienced.

“She’s not here”, Bob sang out anxiously as he backed over the transmission bulge and, bum first, out the driver’s door. He opened the rear door. Again, nothing, except a fat old manila file full of dog eared pages, photos, print outs. He didn’t touch the file just in case. He went around to the back and swung wide the doors. There appeared to be nothing missing from the usual compliment of equipment and tools such vehicles routinely carried and Bob noted the red dust on the floor and pushed into the outer webbing of the spansets Bess had used to move the rocks. She’d apparently just dumped the lot, shackles, chain and the spansets, after she’d finished. Bob pondered the rocks for the first time. “Why were they there, who put them there?”

The Boss appeared around the other side of the house emerging out of the almost complete gloom now descended on the spot. He’d holstered the Glock, and, looking about into the deepening gloom, came over to Bob.

“I don’t think there’s anyone else about. Not a sign of Bess.” he said quietly then looked about nervously and sang out Bess’ name a few more times. There was still no response.

“OK, lets get inside, but first get a couple of the QI’s out and set up so we can see what we’re doing.” The Boss was in charge now and operating straight out of the manual.

Bob grabbed two of the lamps and stands out of the back of their truck and promptly set them up so that they brightly illuminated the entire frontage of the house, the bright lights penetrating into the house through the broken timbers and window frames

Now that the area was well lit they could see that Bess had exited the truck and immediately moved straight to the broken boarded front verandah and apparently gone inside. Her boot prints clearly marked her path. Apart from the prints left by the men they were the only fresh tracks visible. It appeared that no-one else had been walking over the area at least since the last significant rain about a month ago. In Bourke all good rain was significant, and memorable. Both men made sure not to disturb the dusty track.

They made their way to the verandah and, avoiding Bess’ dusty foot falls, entered through the front door.

There was a short hall with a room off to either side. Continuing to avoid disturbing the footprints they shone their torches into the rooms, nothing. The footprints didn’t enter either of the rooms so it was a perfunctory look, and they exited the hall into what had been the living room.

Under the ubiquitous dust there was a rotting overstuffed couch and two matching armchairs which had been colonised by various small creatures, the stuffing bursting out around well formed entries into the interior of the cushions and stuffed frame, there was an old style bakelite radio on the mantel; Bob absently wondering whether it still worked. There was all you’d expect and nothing out of place. Except for Bess’ phone and the truck keys sitting on the top table of a nest of three tables beside one of the armchairs. Bess’ footprints moving that way and indicating that she had sat in the chair before moving off to the kitchen further to the rear of the house.

Bob and Phil both looked at the phone and keys for quite a while before saying anything.

“She wouldn’t leave her phone, would she?” Bob was looking at the Super hoping he might offer some explanation for the presence of the phone and the absence of Bess.

“No she wouldn’t.” was all the Boss replied; his face showing very real concern.

The two men moved into the kitchen. It was darker here, the light from the QI’s not penetrating this far into the building, the beams from their torches taking visual “quotes” of the room as they swung them about trying to light on something, anything that might provide a clue as to the whereabouts of Bess.

Once again the room was as expected. Everything covered in dust, there was an old cast iron stove sitting in its nook. There was even a small pile of kindling and firebox sized wood, but no-one had lit this fire in decades. There was an old style ice box but it had been used to store bits and pieces of broken tools, old knives and various broken bits of bric-a-brac. There was a an ancient Frigidaire, the door hanging open, that explained the icebox. There was a 30’s vintage dresser with leaded glass filled with a motley collection of mismatched plates and other crockery and glasses. The heavy concrete sink had collapsed to the floor bending its attached lead piping, the one big tap barely managing to hang on the wall above it.

In the centre of the room, looking like it probably had after the last police investigation had left decades ago, was an old aluminium and formica table and its matching vinyl covered chairs, though the vinyl had shredded and blown away in the relentless summer heat of years of abandonment. Most of the stuffing had been robbed away by animals intent on making a nice comfy nest for themselves elsewhere. One of the chairs was lying on its side.

The men moved on again into the laundry under the skillion roofed lean to out the back. There was an old copper with ash still in the hearth under the brick containment, and a mangle over a double tub; in one of which was a collection of desiccated, rotted clothing. There state showing that they had been soaking, probably prior to mangling, but they’d been abandoned too, the water evaporating away and the clothes now just an undifferentiated mass of rotten cotton. There was the remains of a shirt collar sticking out of the mass with no tag in the back of the neck.

Satisfied that there was nothing to see in the laundry lean to they moved back into the kitchen for a better look.

“Bob, go out the back way and get one of the big LED battery lanterns, we need to get some more light in here so we can see what’s happened.” The Super was a proper copper and though he was feeling at a loss as to what had happened and was growing fearful of what they might find, he was going to run this thing straight down the line.

As Bob scooted out the back to get the lamp the Super looked around the kitchen taking his time to look for any disturbance of the dust that might indicate recent activity. There was Bess foot falls walking into the kitchen from the living room. It looked like she’d stepped into the room and then stopped a pace or two into the space, shuffled a little at that spot and then gone and stood near the table. Perplexingly it appeared as though she hadn’t moved from that spot. There was an indication that she had stood there for at least a few minutes. There was a lot of shuffling and a few short steps this way and that, but nothing to indicate that Bess had ever left the area adjacent to the table. If the evidence was to be believed she should still be there, standing by the table. But she wasn’t.

Bob came back through the rear of the house carrying the heavy battery lamp and its stand. He got it set up and looked at the Boss for direction.

“She’s not here Bob,” the Boss said to the young copper, “and take a look at this.” Pointing his torch to the footprints on the floor around the table.

Constable Bob Hourigan looked at the foot prints illuminated in the circle of blue white light shone by the Boss’ xenon torch. His face lost all tone.

“That can’t be right.” he said looking at the Boss.

“No it can’t, this is all beginning to feel very wrong.” The Boss lifted the torch and shone it on an ashtray on the table, more a pointer now that space was fully lit by the LED lantern. “Now have a look at this.”

Bob saw the ashtray and the two “roll your owns” that had been left to burn down on its lip.

Making sure not to disturb any of the footprint evidence, which was what it had become in Bob’s mind, he moved in closer to the table so that he could bend over and smell the ashtray; there being no dust on the ashtray meant that it had to have been used recently and seeing as Bess had apparently been the only visitor to the place, must have been used by her.

Bob took a deep sniff and jerked his head back.

“Its dope!” He couldn’t have been more surprised if Timothy Leary had suddenly materialised and offered him acid.

“Does Bess smoke?” Bob asked, incredulous.

“Not that I know of and she certainly isn’t the type to arrange mysterious meetings just so she could toke on a little weed.

“Meetings…..?

The Boss indicated the two burnt down joints. “She either smoked them both herself or she had company.”

“But there’s no sign of anyone else.”

“No, but there are two joints. Which scenario seems more plausible to you?”

Bob took a while to develop an answer to that question. “Neither.” he finally said flatly.

By nine o’clock the following morning the Super had arranged a full forensic response to the abandoned farm. It was a full court press sanctioned and paid for out of headquarters in Surrey Hills.

The Super had already taken two calls from the Commissioner making sure that he had all the resources he needed, manpower, logistics, did he need a chopper. “I’ve got the dog squad on its way and I’ve got a number for a tracker in Brewarrina if it comes to that.” The commissioner taking a personal role confirming the power of Bess biography.

“She’s the best of us Phil. Don’t you lose her.” The Commissioner’s voice revealing how much he personally cared about the outcome. “I know you think there’s something screwy about the evidence you’ve found Phil, but that’s always been the case with Bess. Just do a thorough job, leave nothing out, and let’s hope that the evidence leads us back to her.”

“Yes Sir.” Superintendent Phil Kaloutis, feeling completely at a loss as to what to do next, closed the call and rubbed his stubbly chin. He was tired, running on nervous energy, he needed sleep but he wasn’t going to leave the scene until he had something, anything concrete.

The forensic team had taken over the house and the immediate surrounds, moving about in their white paper coveralls, poking through everything, selecting this object, that sample, for later analysis. The photographer pointing his big Nikon at anything and everything, the flash capacitors squealing before each loud “pop” of blinding light.

Phil began to poke his home number into his phone. He needed to hear his wife’s voice, her practical and pragmatic voice, he needed her calm; but he put the phone away as he realised he’d lost track of the time, she’d be at school by now. Phil’s wife was a teacher at the local high school.

He sighed and looked about the busy scene. The forensic collection phase was always difficult for investigators. Each new sample, each piece of evidence, leading to speculation and theorising; but Phil knew that nothing concrete would emerge until the totality of collected evidence had been categorised and analysed. That picture wouldn’t emerge for days, possibly weeks, as the results came in according to their own analytical timetables.

“She’s the best of us Phil. Don’t you lose her.”

Bob had fallen asleep in the back seat of the Landcruiser he and the Boss had arrived in but was woken when the dog squad pulled up next to him, the dogs barking in the back of the ute keen to get out and get at it as their handlers got their harnesses together and sorted out their kit.

They’d need something to go on and Bess’ hat seemed like the best bet. Bob got out of the truck and went over to Bess’ Landcruiser. Her hat was still sitting on the seat as a forensic officer brushed the dash area for prints.

“Have you finished with the hat? The dogs need a scent.”

The woman extracted herself from the truck holding the fat black powder brush rather daintily in one hand and the bag of black fingerprint powder similarly in the other.

“Yes, I’ll just bag it and sign it over to you. When you let the dogs at it just open the bag. Try not to let the dogs touch the hat. They might contaminate any evidence on it; though I suppose that the hat wasn’t any part of what went on inside, but you never know.”

“Yeah, no, of course.” Bob waited while the SOCO bagged and tagged the hat and sunglasses, handing him the lock sealed bag with Bess’ hat inside.

He took the hat over to the senior dog handler and reiterated the SOCO’s warning about contamination. The handler gave him a rather old fashioned look, “We’ve done this before son.” His face softening as he noted the look of loss and confusion on the young copper he added, “We all know Bess. We’ll do all we can”. He opened the bag and let the three dogs get a good nose full of the hat.

“Yes, of course. I didn’t mean…., Sorry.” Bob was feeling completely lost. He was tired, he was confused, and he was fearful. He didn’t think the dogs would find anything as they fanned out into the rough scrub round the old house, there noses down, tugging their handlers as they applied their keen sense of smell to the task of finding the scent of the person to whom the smell on the hat belonged.

Bob was convinced that whatever happened had happened inside the house. The Boss and he had gone over every square inch of the place during the long small hours of the night, taking photographs with their phones in case anything might happen before the crew arrived. They were both convinced, screwy or not, that Bess had entered the house and disappeared from inside shortly thereafter. The evidence said so.

—ooo—

Bess Stafford Investigates – 3 Back O’ Bourke

12 Monday Mar 2018

Posted by Therese Trouserzoff in Warrigal Mirriyuula

≈ 10 Comments

Tags

Bess Stafford, Hansen

Exif_JPEG_PICTURE

The old Hansen place

Story and photograph by Warrigal Mirriyuula

Zero Sum

Bess cautiously nosed the Landcruiser up the over gown track. It was past dusk and the last feeble glow on the western horizon heralded a dark moonless night. It was still hot but Bess had left the AC off and had all the windows down. Her senses were all on alert for any sight, sound, smell or change in the air. She wasn’t quite sure what she was reaching out for and the deepening evening seemed all too perfectly normal.

The lights and spots on the bullbar illuminated the surrounding scrub. Saltbush was well established across the twin ruts of the old track to the house, a few spindly Gidgee saplings were also trying their luck among the grass tussocks. Apparently no one had come up this way for a least a few years. The track was almost obscured and was now more recognisable as a narrow depression snaking its way across the flood plain. The growth was very thick in places so Bess was gently pushing the Landy slowly along the track when suddenly the underside of the bullbar banged and rang as the truck rode up onto something lurking in the rough scrub that had been disappearing under the front of the Landcruiser.

When she got down out of the truck Bess discovered that there were three fairly large rocks effectively blocking the track. She’d run up onto the first. Bess soon decided that the arrangement wasn’t random. They had obviously been placed this way to bar further progress towards the house. Their size and layout would make it impossible for any vehicle, even a powerful four wheeler, to ride up over the rocks; a Unimog might have done it, but nothing smaller, and the way erosion and flooding had deepened the line of the track meant it would have been impossible to back out and try to get up out of the track and go around the rocks. All in all, Bess had to admit it was a well thought out barrier; effective for most contingencies.

Besides, what was there that might have pushed the rocks to their current positions? Too big to be moved by wind or rain, Bess finally decided that they must have been specifically brought in and placed here on purpose. They had obviously been in place for some time having settled well into the trackway and showing the usual thickening of plant life around their bases. The rocks were local stone but there were no outcrops nearby.

Bess got out the xenon torch from the glovebox and checked the underplate for damage. It was banged in but still serviceable. Nothing else seemed damaged, the tie rods were still straight, hoses and lines OK, nothing had been holed or bent.

It was the work of an hour or so to rig a few spansets round each of the rocks in turn, and using the power of the truck in low range/low gear, to drag them out of the way. The Landcruiser complained and spun its wheels in the mashed plants, the dust and gravel at the base of the track, but it got the job done. It was all the confirmation Bess needed.

Why would someone go to the trouble of trucking in these three stones; and there were just the three, there were no others lurking off the track; to block access to an abandoned house? Abandoned, by all local reports, since the early sixties.

Having cleared the track and thrown the rigging into the back of the truck Bess didn’t move off straight away. She just sat half in the truck, one foot in the drivers well the other on the running plate and looking out into the dark distance. In her mind she wandered through the evidence for a moment.

The last owner of this block, name of Eric Hansen, had lived on the property for as long as any old local could remember. He had died in the house and not been discovered for some time. Bess had gone through the Police reports and Coroners investigation from the time with a fine tooth comb. She’d intended to speak to any person named in any of the paperwork that was still alive only to discover that there was only one left; a young constable from the Bourke station who had been assigned to the Coroners Investigator, pro tem.

He was now an old man, retired from the force after a burnished if not brilliant career that had seen him reach the rank of Sergeant and receive a citation for rescuing a teenager from a flood swollen Darling. He did have something to say about the death that hadn’t been in the reports. It was similar information, but the old boy viewed it from an entirely different perspective.

He’d told Bess, when she caught up with him at The River Gum Lodge around 3:30 that afternoon, that he’d been a fresh young constable, still quite wet behind the ears, and was a bit hesitant to really involve himself in the matter for fear of cocking something up. The old hands seemed on top of the task and just went about it in a methodical and professional way. He gladly helped when asked but not having anything pertinent to actually add or do at the scene, he had taken the time to take a good look around the place including the few outbuildings.

“Y’know, when I look back on it now, after all these years, it seems to me that there was much about that death that wasn’t normal.” the retired policeman looked into Bess’ eyes, “They said he died in summer, yet he was dressed for winter. He was wearing moleskins and a tweed jacket over a jumper. Not exactly Bourke in summer is it?” He paused to collect his thoughts and a look of concentration came over his old face. “There were no labels in the clothing, yet it was all good stuff, y’know, quality stuff. And no flies. The body wasn’t blown at all, not a mark on it as far as I can recall. How does that happen?”

Bess shrugged; the old boy pursed his lips then pushed on.

“At first we thought, the local cops that is, thought that he must have died as a result of a heart attack or something similar, ya know, sudden like; he was pretty old; although his body was slumped at the kitchen table as if he had just fallen asleep.”

Bess had nodded in encouragement. She’d read similar details in the report she had ferreted out of central records when a body had disappeared from a locked cooler at the morgue. Bess saw that the old man had discerned the outward expression of her inward recollections. He looked at her hoping she might be able to reveal some of the mystery but she just nodded, indicating for him to go on.

“His head was resting on his crossed arms. People said that he must have been in his nineties and had always lived in the house alone. but no-one really knew him. He was considered a loner, a bit of a throwback to the early days of the river settlement at Bourke. A birth certificate turned up, 1870, you’d have seen that in the file, and would have made him 92 when he died; that is if he was the Eric Hansen on the certificate. We could never fully confirm that he was.”

A flock of yellow green budgies had circled and descended onto a pond in the garden of the retirement village. It was already occupied by several pairs of Corellas. There was a flurry of colour and sound as they all began squabbling, whistling, flapping and screeching, the late sun sparkling in the water droplets thrown up by the dispute over occupancy. The old boy watched the birds, smiling at their antics.

“Hansen used to grow hemp until the late 20’s when it was outlawed.” he was still watching the birds, but then turned back to Bess with a puzzled and slightly worried look on his face, “Apparently both industrial hemp and the whacky baccy kind.”

“I only found that out about fifteen years after his death. Kids were turning up stoned in town and so of course in the end we rounded them up and they all told the same tale about recognising the plants growing wild by the side of the Hungerford Road just beyond the turn off to the old Hansen place. It was the first time the cops in Bourke had to confront the new hippy order. Not that these kids were hippies. They were just local teenagers getting stoned on free weed. The Bush Fire Brigade got sent out and put the lot to the flame. There were some red eyes back at the shed that night, I reckon. I don’t know whether anyone else made the connection to Hansen though.”

He pursed his lips again and lowered and tilted his head a little, looking kinda sideways at Bess.

“I can understand the hemp. He had rope making machinery he’d knocked up in one of the sheds and apparently he sold locals bailing twine, string and some rope to the steamers on the river, when there were steamers on the river, but what did he do with the exotic stuff that early on in the piece?”

“I don’t know.” was all Bess could reply. Though she had some small idea of what he might have done with a bit of his crop. She remembered the coronial photos from the 1962 case. In the full shot of the body she had noticed, a little out of focus out on the edge of the image, an ashtray on the table. It was clean except for a few small tubules of unbroken ash and the burnt remains of a roll your own cigarette that must have been laid on the lip of the ash tray and left to burn down to nothing. A possible half smoked joint. She could never know for sure. The ashtray and its contents had simply never risen to the level of evidence and so had never been analysed. It was another possible, odd confluence lurking in the disparate evidence.

“Look, there’s one thing I noticed but I never said anything at the time because it seemed so odd and I didn’t want to look foolish, and in the end they never looked in the outbuildings anyway. It just didn’t seem necessary at the time, they all said there was no suspicious  circumstances; but in the shed with the rope making machinery there was a lot of dust all over the floor, all over everything actually. Blown in through the doors I s’pose, and a lot of it was just pulverised hemp dust.

When I first went in there were footprints in the dust all over the floor and around the machinery. I didn’t think much of it at the time. I thought, y’know, that’s natural, footprints in the dust, but then I notice that there was one set of prints that walked away from the machine over to a spot near a bench he had set up with various tools, but they didn’t walk back. There was no return or ongoing track. It was like he must have walked over there and then just disappeared, or floated away. I was a bit knocked back by that so I had a proper look at the footprints, but this one set of tracks, like I said it just appeared out of the confusion of other prints and made a straight line for the bench, and never came back”

“You didn’t get a photograph did you?” Hope springs eternal.

“No. Like I said, the real investigation never got into the shed” The retired copper shook his head. “Those prints though, well they…; look, all the other prints showed normal movement about the space. What you’d expect, steps over other steps, tracks crossing, places where he must have spun on a foot. Y’know, normal moving about, but not this one.” He shook his head again.

“In all honesty, after all these years, I couldn’t really say I’ve kept it straight in my head but that is how I remember it.”

Bess had stayed on with the retired copper, just talking, reminiscing, until the sun had begun to descend toward the distant horizon. They’d talked about his career; he’d only served in two stations, Bourke and later Wellington, and had retired back to Bourke because his wife’s Mum was a local and was getting on at the time. His wife was gone now and his only son was a solicitor in Nyngan; small time, but he visited regularly, and his wife always brought a batch of freshly baked honey oat cakes. Too many just for him, the honey oat cakes made him popular with the other residents in the common room.

The old boy said he’d led a charmed life really, but that business right back at the beginning had always puzzled him and he asked Bess, as she stood to leave, that if she did find anything, he’d be really grateful if she could let him know.

Bess promised she would and left him, still sitting in his chair looking out over the penumbral garden as the evening air began to cool, just a little.

As Bess had walked back to the Riverside she recalled the meeting some weeks ago when she had managed to track down the security guard on duty the night the body in the library was discovered. It turned out that he’d also been the one that went to investigate the reported “disturbance” on L6 some time later, though Bess had to deploy a very special smile to winkle the truth of events that night out of him. Bess had pressed the guard on the description of the man that he knocked into and as she had half suspected, he described a tall thin man “dressed like a farmer at The Royal Easter.”

Pushing deeper Bess had finally gotten him to remember the fleeting smell of burning; “Like burning compost really, but y’know, really faint. Ah, look, it might’a just been the pong of the books. It wasn’t anything really.”

She had the fingerprints and DNA of the dead academic but unfortunately the circumstances surrounding the discovery of the Bourke corpse back in ’62 meant that no-one had bothered to fingerprint the body, there having been no suspicious circumstances. DNA analysis was still more than twenty five years in the future.

The Pathologist’s report from 1962 had been interesting. That document suggested that Hansen had died in summer and the body had rapidly desiccated in the closed house. Strangely, as the retired Sergeant at The River Gum Lodge had mentioned, there was no indication of insect attack. The state and age of the body had made determining cause of death very difficult. Eventually it had been impossible, so the Coroner, probably on the Pathologist’s advice, had simply put “Senescence” down as the cause of death. “Old age” might have sounded a bit weak from a state coroner. And after all, the man was very old, he was dead, and his cells had stopped dividing and growing. Senescence it was.

Except that he’d turned up again 44 years later researching perfectly incomprehensible physics, written an impossible note only half deciphered; Bess still had no clue why “it wouldn’t have been any good”; and then popped his clogs. But the most impossible thing was the disappearance from the morgue. How does a dead body remove itself from a locked cabinet leaving no trace on the CCTV, let alone on the stainless steel of the tray? No-one had any idea specifically when the body had upped and left. It had been there for one check and gone at the next, one month later.

Bess got fully into the truck ands started it up. Pushing a little slower now, she made her way up the track hoping there were no other traps.

When Bess finally came up the low rise to the house it seemed to be just as she had expected. Captured in the headlights and spots, the old weatherboard place showed all the signs of neglect such old buildings assume after years of abandonment. The stumps had settled into the dirt and the frame had warped and skewed in the heat; the weatherboard, sun dried and shrunk, in some places had simply fallen off its nails. All the remaining window glass was broken and some of the window frames had fallen out as the timber surrounding them had dried and shrunk.

There were two big corrugated steel tanks lying bent and rusting where they had fallen from their stands. Those stands now so many short thick piles standing at odd angles to one another, only held up by the few heavy planks that made up the platform from which the tanks had fallen.

There didn’t seem to be any one about, but then what was she expecting? If she was right about the date on the library note nothing would happen until after midnight at the very earliest, after midnight being February 15. That’s if anything happened at all. Bess looked at her watch. The display showed it was getting on for 10.

She pulled up just short of the collapsed tanks, killed the engine and pulled the keys, got the torch out and stepped down out of the Landcruiser. “In for a penny..” Bess said under her breath and walked directly over to the house, up onto the verandah and went inside.

 

—ooo—

The Milthorpe Murphy Marathon

10 Saturday Mar 2018

Posted by Therese Trouserzoff in Warrigal Mirriyuula

≈ 7 Comments

Tags

Milthorp, Molong

Grand Western Lodge in Millthorpe (c) David Roma

Grand Western Lodge, Milthorp

Epic and Photograph by Warrigal Mirriyuula

It was an August Sunday that began as winter Sundays often did in Molong. The watery sun rose over the shoulder of Mount Canobolas, racing down the western flank and across the orchards and morning paddocks, setting the frost asparkle and chasing the wispy mists from the hollows and shadows. Clear blue sky with a few high thin clouds, it looked like it was going to be a glorious day.

A little after the sun had bathed all Molong in its Sunday beneficence the church bells began ringing. Across Molong chimneys issuing that thicker smoke confirmed the stuffing of kitchen fireboxes; that tea, and toast, and pots of porridge were being prepared.

But there was one kitchen, on Shields Lane, that had been warming up since well before sunrise. In that kitchen Porky, Algy and Harry had feasted on a big breakfast of porridge, sausages, eggs and fried tomatoes, doorstep slabs of toast and butter, thickly covered with Beryl’s dark marmalade, and all washed down with buckets of sweet black tea. This was a big breakfast for Porky’s big day and the whole household including Mongrel and The Runt were focussed on the task at hand, and not a day too soon. All three men were heartily sick and tired of spuds at every meal. Even Mongrel and The Runt had turned their noses up at more chips, more mash.

The last training bag of King Edwards had finally been abandoned, left slumped in the corner of the garden shed. Harry thought he might dig them in and wait for spring to bring a bumper crop of spuds, and they’d fix some nitrogen in the vegie garden too; but that was for later. Today was Porky’s day. The future of that last bag of training spuds was deferred, waiting on the fortunes of another bag of spuds currently sitting in Milthorpe with Porky’s name on it.

Porky had been working towards this day for months now. Right from the time he heard it first mentioned in the bar at The Freemasons. That mention, of course, orbiting around the opportunity for a punt. To carry a hundred weight bag of spuds for a mile, let alone run the distance. Well, that was ripe for plunge.

But for Porky it had come to represent something else; a right of passage, a way that he might shuck off Fairbridge using the only things Fairbridge had ever given him; his bodily strength and his strength of character.

To run a respectable race and not come last had been his original goal, but with Tommy Molloy lately assuming the role of athlete trainer and advisor, his aspirations had grown a little. He didn’t really think he could win but he might be able to place.

Porky was determined to make a good show of his appearance or go down in the attempt: and in that way that Fairbridge boys can be, when they’d no-one else to rely on but themselves, he was certain he had it in him. He just needed to find it and get it going.

As the church bells were ringing Harry, Porky and The Runt, Algy and Mongrel jumped into Harry’s little Anglia van and, with Tommy Molloy riding point on his Matchless, set off for Milthorpe; the dogs hanging their heads out the passenger window, their ears twitching and there tongues and jowls flapping.

It seemed that half of Molong had made the 30 odd mile trip to Milthorpe for this quintessentially country contest. Indeed the little village of Milthorpe had swollen to four or five times its weekday size. The streets were full of visitors, and though the pubs were closed they were still doing a roaring trade for “legitimate travellers”, discretely of course.

All the shops, ordinarily shut on a Sunday, were bannered and bunted, there were potato pictures all over the place and a gay air of carnival filled the town. There was even going to be a ball and a fashion parade in the evening, put on by the local CWA, where local beauties would disport themselves down an improvised catwalk in The Amusu Theatre wearing clothing fashioned from hessian spud bags.

Before that shindig though the day included many other potato related events including the “Tug O’Spuds”, a tug of war contest broken down into age and weight divisions for boys, girls, teens and men and women. There was a peeling competition, a spud throwing competition and various pick up and carry a spud contests all leading up to the big event, The Milthorpe Murphy Marathon mid afternoon.

Down at the Redmond Oval finishing line the bunting was flapping fit to bust, bar-b-ques were sizzling and all the kids had gathered for their events. It was bedlam in the marshaling area.

The Tannoys barked out a call for all contestants competing in the tug’o’spuds finals to gather in the marshaling area. Young George Cassimatty got his Molong Under Twelve’s Tuggers, “The MUTT’s”, together in the corner of the dressing sheds for a pre pull pep talk.

“We got a strategy we practiced,” George said earnestly looking at each boy on the team, “and we gotta stick with it. So don’t forget, it’s all on Paul.” Young Paul Cassimatty smiled shyly at the team. For once he was enjoying the celebrity his size was bringing him. George continued, “If Paul goes down we lose; but if we can keep him tipped back on his feet and we all pull together we got a good chance of beatin’ The Warriors.”

It seemed simple enough.

The Wolaroi Warriors were the team to beat. A private school team from Orange, their under twelves, dressed in new blue track suits, with white piping and their names on the back, had blitzed the knockout. The team had some very big islander boys with muscles on their muscles and it was clear they meant business. The seeding in their age division meant that The Mutts and The Warriors had yet to face off on the field of battle.

With the rules limiting total team weight, the inclusion of George’s younger brother Paul as Anchor Man, who at only ten still topped out at just over twelve stone himself, meant that the rest of the team had to be all muscle and sinew.

George reckoned he was pretty tough himself and he had picked the strongest, toughest under twelves he could find; an odd bunch of big shouldered. thick legged solid farmer’s sons. Looking a bit untidy if not scruffy, the team’s appearance was made somewhat absurd by the fact that the new MUTT’s “blueys” the boys all wore courtesy of Mrs Cassimatty were “one large size fits all”. Which meant Paul’s was stretched almost to splitting, while on the rest of the team they flapped in the breeze. The boys didn’t care. This was the big day. If they won no-one would even notice their oversized blueys.

When it came to the actual contest the two teams were almost perfectly matched and from get go the rope crept first one way then the other as the teams fell back and pulled for all they were worth. There were some slips and recoveries, strategy and tactics out the window as the imperative of moving the tape on the rope became all the two teams were focussed on. The big islander boys on the Warriors did their damnedest to pull the Mutts in but every time they seemed about to pull the Mutts over, the Mutts would find that extra bit, legs pumping in unison like a train, George shouting at the team like a demon demanding his due.

At ten minutes the marshals began to discuss amongst themselves the possibility of calling a draw, there being no clear superiority of strength shown by either team.

A crowd had been drawn in by the commentator excitedly calling every move of the tape and a group of Molong teens had gathered and begun shouting “Mutts, Mutts Mutts!” while others amongst them were just barking like dogs. Mongrel and the Runt joining in as Harry and Algy joined the crowd to cheer on the plucky boys.

Those fans of the Warriors that had gathered were more restrained, “Oh, good show Warriors! Good show!” They simply couldn’t believe that their team might be bested by a scruffy bunch of public school boys in home made singlets who’d had to borrow their tugging boots from the local CMF.

It seemed like they’d been pulling for hours and young George Cassimatty knew that the team was fading. He could feel the loss of power through the rope. If they didn’t pull these Warriors over soon they’d lose.

George shouted “Drop!” and the team, without losing grip or diminishing their pull, all eased down such that their boots dug in, their legs extended to the front while they leant all the way back. “Train!”

The Mutts went into automatic; a synchronised pull and fall with a quick step to pull back on the rope. The Warriors just leaning back trying to absorb the bursts of energy in the Mutt’s tactic. It took a huge effort to stage each tug and George felt like they might only have a dozen of these staged pulls in them. He began to count them off. By number 8 it was working, by ten a Warrior had fallen and it was all over on the twelfth pull, the Warriors co-ordination just falling apart and the Mutts dragging the tape on the rope well over the line.

No sooner did the whistle blow than both teams just collapsed where they were in heaving, gasping, sweaty heaps. They’d been pulling for almost fifteen minutes and they were all completely exhausted. The crowd, now grown to quite a number, cheered madly, whistling and hooting like this was a major sporting final.

Young George Cassimatty rolled slowly over the grass to his brother Paul lying spread eagle on his back, his face beetroot red from the exertion; “We beat ’em mate, we beat ’em!”

“Yeah, we did…”, Paul gasped with a huge grin, before rolling over and throwing up. He really had given it everything and George had never been prouder of his little brother.

In the shade of a tree over by the oval fence a keen observer of the post tug celebrations would have noted Jack Hornby discretely but happily receiving a wad of folded fivers from a man in  “plus fours” and a tweed jacket.  That wad of fivers wouldn’t be paying the Wolaroi fees this term.

As ever, Jack Hornby from The Freemasons had made the journey to Milthorpe for the usual reasons. It was whispered in the back bar at The Grand Western Lodge, The Commercial and Railway Hotels in Milthorpe that there was going to be a heavy plunge of late betting on one of the big McClelland brothers from Spring Hill. The brothers were odds on anyway, but you know how punters get when they think they sniff a winning dividend and Jack was just there for his cut.

The McClellands had pioneered spud farming on the rich basalt soils of the area. The brothers had been humping spuds since they were just tackers so the smart money was already heavily backing the three huge brothers for the win and places. The brothers were all built like brick outhouses but young Dick was the biggest of them. He stood six foot four and had once lifted a Massey Ferguson off the trapped operator after it’d rolled on a slope. A happy, hard working bloke; Dick McClelland would give you the shirt of his back and then buy you a beer to seal the deal.

The Tannoys announced a break in the proceedings at Redmond Oval and called for all Marathon entrants to assemble in Station Place for final checks before the race.

Tommy and Porky were already there trying to deal with Porky’s pre race nerves. Tommy Molloy was really getting into his role as trainer and athlete advisor. Porky couldn’t care less what Tommy was getting out of this adventure but Tommy’s constantly whispered encouragement and conspiratorially whispering  “Champ” in his ear while he massaged Doc’s secret embrocation into Porky’s neck and shoulders; well it did seem to be doing some kind of trick. Porky had it in his mind to win and Tommy’s conspiratorial whisperings where no small part of that idea.

After all the final checks the contestants were assembled outside the railway station on Station Place. This was it, Porky thought licking his lips . It was time to piss or get off the pot.

Tommy held Porky’s bag by the stitches so he wouldn’t get in the way of Porky’s pick up by the “ears” of the bag. They’d practiced this so often now that it was second nature to them both.

“Gentlemen,” the starter’s stentorian voice intoned as he looked down the line. All the competitors’ eyes turned to him. The crowd near the line was pushing back just a little to give the runners a bit more spread. “…you may grab your bags.”

The runners did as instructed and for a fleeting moment Tommy and Porky’s eyes met. They questioned their practiced pick up technique as they spied the various grips the others applied to their bags. Tommy saw the relaxed look of anticipation on the faces of the three McClelland brothers and thought he had to put a spoke in those wheels.

“We’ll go with what we know.” Tommy whispered to Porky, who was nodding and licking his lips. “You can win this Champ. Believe it and it’ll happen. These big blokes’ll run outa steam, see if they don’t. They gotta haul that fat with ‘em too remember.”

Tommy then cheekily looked over at big Dick McClelland, blew him a kiss and winked at him, then turned to give Porky a very serious look. Porky’s face screwed into a huge grin. He figured he was in with a chance. Just how big a chance he’d know soon enough.

Dick McClelland had been feeling relaxed, ready, taking it all in his stride until just a moment ago. Now he’d come over all queer, or maybe that was the other bloke. Dick wasn’t sure. He’d met Porky at registration and liked Porky’s pluck. He figured the stripling didn’t stand a chance against him and his brothers, but what a heart he must have. Dick liked blokes with heart; but that Porky’s bagman; he was just queer; blowing a bloke a bloody kiss. What was the bugger up to? It took him a moment to get his concentration back on the starter, every now and then taking another quick glance at Tommy; but Tommy was busy whispering narratives of triumph into Porky’s ear

The starter had them now, all lined up on Station Place, the crowd descending into a murmuring hush. The scrutineers quickly shuffled up the line of starters; just to be sure no one was cheating. Apparently satisfied, they turned their back to the crowd near the starting line, and with arms out, backed them off just that bit more. A clear start was imperative when you had a man with a hundredweight of spuds pushing like the devil to get ahead.

The scrutineers nodded to the starter in turn, and the starter raised his gun.

“Gentlemen, let’s have a good clean race, and may the best man win!”

The starter took one last quick glance along the starting line. There were no over eager feet edging across the yellow paint. He looked up Station Place. It was all clear and the crowd, formerly buzzing with anticipation, now fell absolutely silent. With his eye on the line of competitors, the starter paused briefly for effect, then squeezed the trigger. The starting shot shattered the air with a crack that echoed up the street.

As the reverberation of the starters gun died away the runners tightened their grips and hefted their bags up onto their shoulders; and with a communal grunt of exertion took off up the low rise to Elliot Street.

Simultaneously the Tannoys mounted on the telegraph poles commenced barking an incomprehensible commentary, each horn seeming to argue with all the others and the lot drowned out by the cheering of the crowd.

The runners’ exertions brought an immediate thick sheen of sweat to their faces and shoulders as they tried to build up speed and get into their stride.  The whooping and cheering crowd fell in behind the competitors and followed them up the street shouting encouragement and advice to their favourites. Kids on bicycles kept up with the front runners, barracking and shouting for all they were worth.

Predictably it was the McClelland brothers who were away best. All three of them, their bags held high on the shoulder, the sinews in their muscled arms and thick necks straining with the load, held the front running while a small group of hopefuls including Porky did their best to catch them up. The rest of the field strung out down Elliot Street as the McClellands approached the corner into Victoria Street.

Porky had got a clean start and got his bag up and himself moving all in one smooth movement. The months lumping bags of spuds around Molong were paying off.

As Porky rounded the corner of Elliot Street the spuds shifting inside the bag unbalanced him and wrong-footed his stride. He almost toppled sideways but recovered well, if inelegantly, and found the slight downhill slope to his advantage as he pushed himself to top speed, making his way around the outside of the trailing group until he saw clear air between him and the big McClelland brothers, now a good fifty yards ahead and going strong. Urging one another to greater efforts for further family glory, the three brothers looked unbeatable as they grunted up the Victoria Street Hill.

By the time Porky had turned into Victoria Tommy Molloy and The Runt had caught up with him and were egging him on from the sidelines. “Do it for Fairbridge!”, young Molloy shouted at Porky, “Run son, run!” The Runt barking and running alongside Porky.

“Bugger.., bloody.., Fairbridge!” was all Porky could breathlessly respond between footfalls, his face, neck and shoulders a cascade of dripping sweat; his eyes never leaving the McClellands ahead.

The McClellands, meanwhile, had fallen into single file with big Dick at the front followed by Jack and the eldest brother Eddie bringing up the rear. It looked for all the world as if they couldn’t be beaten. The three brothers seemed like a single machine, three freight wagons in train, their stride a vision of commensurate locomotion, their feet pushing off and falling together, the bags moving in unison like a camel with three humps. It was like that for the best part of the half a mile past the Great Western, down Montgomery Street, round on Blake and then the last uphill run before the long slope down to Redmond Oval; it remained the McClellands, daylight, then Porky just managing to keep ahead of the rest of the pack.

These were the hard yards for all the competitors and Porky’s lungs felt raw as he gulped in huge lmouthfuls of air, every muscle screaming to keep the hundredweight bag of spuds across his shoulders and his legs pumping to carry it and him just that bit closer to catching up with the McClelland potato train chugging along remorselessly ahead of him down the long slope to Redmond Oval.

Then Porky noticed that Eddy was faltering. He was falling behind, just a bit and from Porky’s view he seemed to be in trouble. He stumbled and almost lost his footing but he recovered awkwardly and soldiered on, though now he was a good fifteen yards behind his brothers. who took an occasional concerned backward glance for Eddie.

A few more paces and it became apparent that there was something definitely wrong with Eddie. He broke pace and sort of toppled to the side of the street, dropping his bag and falling to the ground grabbing at his ankle, his face contorted in pain.

Porky was never one to let a bloke in trouble face it on his own.

“You right mate? Porky asked breathlessly as he came along towards Eddie, who was now rolling on his bum, looking at the sky, while his hands held his injured leg. “Ya need a hand?”

“Done me ankle..” Eddie winced, “…but you get on. Give them brothers o’mine someone to worry about.”

Porky just nodded and pushed himself on. He’d slowed just a little and the bag of spuds now felt like a mountain across his tiring shoulders. His legs feeling like two logs, it was all he could do to keep them going. He had fallen well behind slowing up for Eddie McClelland and the pack had gained on him, now just a few yards away.

The crowd had noticed Porky’s concern for his competitor and cheered him loudly as he took off after the younger brothers. Being a good sport the equivalent of being a winner in the bush ethos, one punter shouting “Go, you skinny thing! Go!”, another offering, “Its like watchin’ a speedin’ spud on a toothpick!”

Well, that was all Porky needed. He had no clue were the extra came from but it came just in time. Without losing stride he bounced the spuds to a slightly better position across his shoulders, locked his lower abdominals and willing his legs to do his bidding, pushed himself as he had never done before.

Porky never took his eyes off the the two McClellands until they crossed the finish line at Redmond Oval, by which time he had gained enough on them to not only come a very respectable third, but to become the subject of a great deal of debate. Particularly amongst those that had taken a losing flutter on the outcome.

In the immediate aftermath of the marathon a consensus had formed amongst those that had taken the outsider bet on the stripling from Molong, that had he not slowed down to offer help to Eddie McClelland, the gain he made on the other brothers in the final stages of the marathon might have been enough, had he achieved that pace without the slowing, well, to have come home a winner.

It was a convoluted argument and that guaranteed that it would have a life of its own as everybody talked and argued about the marathon and its outcome into the afternoon and evening. Punters might have lost their bet on Porky but to them he was a champion.

Porky was still a bit delirious from the exertion of the race when Tommy Molloy found him lying back against his bag of spuds in the marshals area behind the finish line. The Runt sat between Porky’s spread legs grooming himself, guarding Porky. Tommy Molloy brought a wet towel with ice rolled into it and he wrapped Porky’s head to cool him off, then began rubbing more of Doc’s special embrocation into Porky’s shoulders, and then his legs, all the while keeping up a soothing banter about real champions, and sportsmanship, and doing the best you could, and maybe that best was better than you thought, and how he was really the winner; according to certain persons Tommy wouldn’t name.

Porky didn’t care. He just wanted to breathe, and enjoy the warming of Doc’s special embrocation in his poor tied muscles. When he did speak it was only to pour scorn on any idea that big Dick McClelland didn’t win fair and square, with his brother Jack a pace or two behind.

“You’re a bloody hero. That’s all there is to it, and you’ll have to get used to it.” Tommy said with conviction as he adjusted Porky’s ice turban. The Runt was still getting used to Tommy and watched him closely with a cynical eye.

Big Dick McClleland was approaching them. Still red and gasping himself, he none the less managed a great big wide eyed grin.

“Maaate, that was unbelievable! Third, mate! Jesus! Look at you compared to some o’ these blokes. Bloody outstanding!” There was no insult intended. It was just how Dick saw it. “Had to come over and say congratulations, we’ll have to have a few beers after. Eddie said to say thanks. He’s got a badly twisted ankle. Lucky bastard’ll be on his arse for a week. You shouldn’a slowed down though, you might have caught us.”

“No real chance of that Dicky” Porky shook his head, “You blokes were like a train. Pity about Eddie though. Ya coulda had a family trifecta.”

“Nah, don’ worry about it. Its not important, just a bit’o fun.” Dick said squatting down with Porky; Tommy Molloy noting the huge difference in bulk between them. “No one’s ever called me Dicky before,” Dick furrowed his brow, then relaxed, “but I don’t mind it. Gotta kinda skip in it. Yeah, Dicky.” Dick was nodding vigorously. “But only you, alright? I dunno if I could take the brothers calling me Dicky.”

Then, noticing The Runt. “Hey Titch.” Dick said, as he reached out a gave the Runt a scratch under the chin, which astoundingly the Runt allowed. He even seemed to enjoy it. “What a good little soldier, yes you are, a good little soldier.”

“He must like you.” Tommy said somewhat sourly, having never been able to get a hand on the Runt himself.

Dick McClelland looked up at Tommy and fixed him with a hard look.

“What was that bullshit at the start? Blowin’ me a bloody kiss and a wink.”

“Just a bit of friendly psy-ops against the opposition. Didn’t work did it? There was that wicked Molloy grin again.

“No it bloodywell didn’t ya queer cove,” Dick said emphatically, “but ya must have somethin’ to get this beanpole into third, so I s’pose you can join us for a beer.” Dick continued to look at Tommy, “Bloody ratbag!”

Dick’s assessment of Tommy made Porky laugh but it was more than Porky’s tortured lungs could stand and the laughing turned to coughing and hacking, which eventually produced a huge bolus of phlegm that Porky was trying to hold in his mouth while he looked around for some discrete place to expectorate.

He took the towel off his head spat into a corner, wadded the muck and tucked the towel under the edge of the spud bag. “Sorry, but I’m absolutely rooted.” Porky said looking a little sheepish.

“Course you are. Effort like that’d put the biggest bloke on notice,” Dick said reaching down to help Porky up. “Come on son lets get some water into you, you must be dehydrated after all that.”

“I think I’ll just lie here a bit longer, I’m finished.”

I’ll go and get ya some water then. Back in a minute” Dick trotted over a to table loaded with water bottles and grabbed one as Algy, Mongrel and Harry made their way through the mass of abandoned spud bags, recovering runners, trainers and marshals.

When Mongrel saw Porky and the Runt he loped over and gave Porky a bit of a sniff, the pong of Doc’s embrocation causing him to sneeze violently. Mongrel then licked Porky’s face as Porky ruffled the top of his head. The Runt wasn’t going to miss out on all this good feeling and he clambered up Porky’s chest and began licking too, causing Porky to topple sideways off the spuds, the three of them becoming a ball of exhausted man and excited dogs rolling on the grass. Dick returned, offering Harry his hand.

“G’day, Dick McClelland. You gotta real hero here.” Dick said shaking Harry’s hand and giving the water to Porky.

“Harry McCafferty. Yes, it seems we have.” Harry said proudly, shaking Dick’s hand.

“Yes, there’ll be fellows who’ll think less of themselves that they weren’t here today. Algy Hampton” Algy proffered his hand, hoping that he’d managed to paraphrase Shakespeare without sounding too posh.

“Good t’meet ya, mate.” Dick generously enclosing Algy’s mitt with both hands and giving it a good country shake.

Porky just gratefully, greedily, guzzled the whole bottle of water.

The rest of the day fell into a round of congratulations and back slapping, beer drinking and swapping yarns of Marathons past and yet to be run. As the day began to wain the boys had fallen in with a couple of local girls who were involved in the fashion parade to be put on in the Amusu later that evening. From that nascent association a plot was hatched for a special item to be presented as the finale of the fashion parade.

Later as the evening progressed, the crowd in the Amusu, having sat through the hessian fashion parade where surprised to hear the announcement of an additional “special item” for the finale.

There was some general hubbub as movement in the curtain suggested some sort of unseen activity on the stage. The lights went down and two lines of girls dressed in skimpy hessian outfits lined up on either side of the catwalk. There was a full blackout with follow spot on the curtain.

From the radiogram backstage The Chordettes burst into “Mr Sandman”, the opening figure of the quartet harmonising like bells establishing a leitmotif that prefigured the madness to come.

The girls lined up on the catwalk began to strut their stuff as though they were The Milthorpe Rockettes, a few high kicks causing a scramble amongst those in the front rows as they hurriedly got out of the way of those wide swinging legs, but it was Porky and Dick’s night.

Dick and Porky half fell through the hessian curtain into the spotlight, spilling their pint pots over each other and the giggling girls assembled around them. Smiling sheepishly at the audience they turned to each other and gave one another the nod.The boys, each with a fat spud to chew raw, wandered off down the catwalk like a couple of old time boulevardiers, winking lasciviously at the women in the audience and pinching the bottoms of the girls in the chorus, chomping on their spuds and toasting one another with their beer. Dick was a big bloke in all respects while Porky looked like Jack Spratt beside him. It was an absurd sight.

When the song reached its chorus with the Chordettes harmonising like bells, the boys bent over and turned their bums to the audience and slapped them in time, singing out loudly “Bum, bum, bum, bum, bum, bum!”

The crowd didn’t quite know what to make of this spectacle. Should they laugh at these champions or should they be appalled? In the end, as is so often the case, they did both, the men laughing at the boys antics while the women, strenuously deploring the “bum” chorus, were laughing too but with looks of shocked horror every time the boys slapped out the rude bits.

The song played through to the mounting hilarity of the crowd and the big finish saw the two girls of earlier acquaintance jump into the arms of Porky and Dick, arms thrown wide and legs kicking. The boys then, planting a big kiss on their partners, spun the girls around and carried them off the stage while the girls of the chorus took the bow, encouraged by the clapping and whistling from the audience, all of whom had finally decided that the “bum” chorus was just a bit of fun really, and it was hilarious.

Backstage the boys had fallen together, slapping one another’s backs and hanging off each other, laughing like the good times were here to stay, the girls giggling and some of them rubbing their bottoms where the boys had applied a little too much pinch.

The boys finally got themselves together and stood facing each other, hands on one another’s shoulders. It was a moment when each of them in their own way acknowledged that this day had been important, not just for the win and place, but for the friendship found, the likeness of mind, something shared.

The moment passed and the boys separated looking a little embarrassed.

“Mates?” said Dick quietly.

“Yeah, mates” replied Porky

“That was a bloody fine effort. You can be proud of today.”

“You too.”

“Ah well, I dunno, really…., Its not rocket science is it, carryin’ a bag of spuds”

“Lets go and get a beer.” Porky said, giving Dick a manly slap on the back.

“Yeah, that sounds like a plan.” Dick said, happy that the awkward soppy moment had passed.

And so they did, several in fact, and not one of them required the boys to reach into their own pockets. It seemed every one wanted to stand the stripling a beer, and Dick, well he was the champion of the day.

Harry, never having been much of a drinker, was sober enough to drive and finally tumbled the Molong contingent back into the Anglia van sometime toward midnight. Tommy was on duty in the morning and had already gone home on his bike much earlier, so it was just the little black Anglia winding its way through the late winter night back to Molong.

By the time Harry was driving up Summer Street in Orange, the stars peaking down between the shops, Algy and Porky were snoring slumberously, the dogs too. The gentle rhythm of the snores occasionally broken by the sound and following stink of a fart. Beer always gave Porky gas but Harry didn’t mind. He was so proud, almost like a father.

Finally pulling up outside the house on Shields Lane, the five of them got out, Porky unsteady on his feet singing “You say poe-tato, I say Potarto…” He’d had a lot to drink and was quite drunk but Algy and Harry got him inside and, stripped down to his Y fronts, tossed him in bed. Algy following him soon after.

Harry refreshed the dogs water bowl and gave them each a pat as they settled into the big wicker basket by the fire place. The two of them snuggled up together as always.

“Mates. What would we do without mates?” Harry wondered, looking at the dogs and reviewing the day.

Harry turned off the light and went to bed himself.

 

 

 

 

 

Bess Stafford Investigates – 2

04 Sunday Mar 2018

Posted by Therese Trouserzoff in Warrigal Mirriyuula

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Bess Stafford

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Story by Warrigal Mirriyuula

 

Zero Sum

02 An Open Investigation (2019)

It had been a long, hot, 5 hour drive out from Wellington as Bess Stafford finally nosed the  Landcruiser into a parking spot outside the Bourke Police Station. She threw it out of gear, pulled the handbrake and killed the engine.

The sudden, simultaneous silence of the diesel, the air-conditioning and Patsy Cline’s “Walkin’ After Midnight” on the audio system, felt more a palpable presence, than a sudden absence. The early afternoon heat immediately began to broil the interior of the truck.

Bess took up the song under her breath, “I go out walking after midnight”, undid her seatbelt and gathered up her phone and hat. “I’m always walking, after midnight, searching for you”. She looked at the thick old manila and paper file sitting on the passenger seat, decided she didn’t need it and just gave it a pat as if to say, “I won’t be long”. She opened the door and stepped out into the hard light.

The heat was like a smack in the face. She pushed her phone into the thigh pocket of her trousers, adjusted her aviator style sunglasses and pushed her Akubra onto her head, tugging the front brim down low.

The heat was intense, the display in the truck had said 45; hot, even for Bourke. The air was incredibly dry, Bess ceased singing as she looked about, up and down the main thoroughfare. Her drill cotton shirt began to cling as the sweat started to run on her body.

There was no-one out on the street. Not a bird in the sky, not even the occasional dog bark. Even the insects were quiet. It was too bloody hot!

A few hundred metres down a B Double cattle truck rumbled through an intersection kicking up a low, translucent cloud of dust in its wake. The heavy growl of the engine, the spit and hiss of the air brakes died away and the dust just hung in the hot still air, suspended in the heat plume rising off the tar. The street went quiet again, the silence seeming to intensify the heat.

Bess walked over to the station and under the low verandah that surrounded the old colonial building. Glad to be back in the shade, even after so short an exposure to the early afternoon sun, she pushed through the heavy single government-green wooden door into the reception area. The high ceilinged, cool interior exerted a quick chill on Bess. She smiled and shivered delightedly as she took off her hat and wiped her brow and the interior band of the hat with an old hankie she kept wadded in a pocket for just this purpose.

It was quiet inside the station too. The whir of a ceiling fan and the occasional crackle and unintelligible bit of yak on the LAC frequency in the com.’s room off a corridor to the side was all that disturbed the peace and quiet of the station interior.

A ruddy faced young constable with a fresh haircut was behind the counter sorting a sheaf of papers into some kind of order. He held the sheets like a hand of oversized cards and deftly pulled a page out and inserted it higher in the order. The tip of his tongue was just visible between his lips.

He noticed Bess and hurriedly, self consciously, put the papers down and ran his left hand over his hair. He smiled his best public service smile.

“Yes missus, what can we do for ya t’day?”

Bess removed her sunglasses, “That’s Detective Superintendent “Missus” to you young constable,” Bess smiled as she flipped her warrant card at the young officer.

The young constable leaned over to take a look at the card and badge. “Yes Ma’am, sorry Ma’am”, the now straightened junior replied, “What can I do for you? Who do you want to see?”, he asked hurriedly, now at attention.

“This your first posting?” Bess asked fondly. She had a soft spot for embryo coppers and smiled warmly at the young bloke, “You can relax. I’m just here as a courtesy. I’m passing through to a place over the river. An old open case and I thought, before my retirement, I might just give the whole thing the once over again, you know, just in case.” Bess’ eyes brightened and focused on the constable’s face.

“You weren’t born round here were you?” she asked him directly, “You might be able to help with some background.” There was a little hope in the question but these days young constables were placed all over.

“Nah, I grew up round Hexham just out’a Newcastle.” The young constable visibly relaxed and leant on the counter, “You’re right, this is my first posting.” He smiled back.

“Well good luck to you Constable Hourigan.” offered Bess generously, spying the young man’s light blue name badge. “Keep it tidy, play a straight bat and you’ll do alright;” Bess smiled again, “but as I said this is just a courtesy to say I’m in the area and I might like to drop in some time in the next few days to go through your intelligence files and old case notes.”

O’ yeah,” he nodded, “well that shouldn’ be a problem.”

“If you could let the Boss know I’m about. I’m not sure where I’ll be staying but I’ll call once I’ve booked in and let you know. In the meantime here’s my card with my mobile and email details.” Bess had opened her wallet and taken out a standard police card. She handed it over as she flipped and clipped her wallet and stuffed it back in the right rear pocket of her worn desert camo trousers.

“Righto. No worries.” The constable looked at the card. Except for the details it was the same as the ones in his own wallet.

“I’ll let the Super know when he gets back in later. He’s down at the town hall with some councillors. We’ve had some trouble lately with bloody kids going joy riding and then torching the stolen ride. Its a real bastard, if you’ll excuse my French.” The young constable was trying to give the impression that he was intimately involved with the matter. “We’ve had three of them so far.” he said shaking his head.

“Bloody kids, eh?” Bess said shaking her head too. “Not a lot else for them to do, I suppose. Well I’m sure you’ll sort it out in the end,” Bess offered indulgently, “but right now I have to get on, so I’ll say hoo-roo until next time.” Bess gave the young bloke her best smile, turned and walked out the door.

The sudden heat felt like a pressing iron, as she stepped out again into the hard hot light. Pulling her brim down and pushing her sunglasses up her nose, she walked over to the Landcruiser, got in and lit it up, pushing the AC to maximum.

“…I walk for miles along the highway, Well, that’s just my way”, Patsy sang as Bess reversed out, and headed down Oxley Street, turning right on Sturt and driving through to the old Bourke Dock on The Darling.

Back inside the station young Hourigan entered Bess’ visit in the log and put her card front and centre on the counter so he could pass it over to the Super immediately he returned. He didn’t go back to sorting the papers. Instead he thought about Detective Superintendent Stafford and her brief visit.

She was an odd stick, he thought. She said she was nearing retirement but she looked quite vigorous. She was short, only about 165cm, and had a little barrel of a body, big arms and thick legs, big bum and bust. “Solid”, was how young Hourigan thought of her, “but nice with it.”, he added in his mind. She had a thick head of unruly salt and pepper curls, cut short and allowed its own way; and really bright green eyes. When she smiled her chubby cheeks dimpled.

She’d been dressed for Bourke he noted. All hardwearing practical fabrics, strong boots, good hat, and it all looked like it had a working life before the visit. He’d noted that her watch had one of those old fashioned bands that included a leather cover for the watch face. Hourigan’s grand dad had one like that.

But it wasn’t what Bess looked like that fascinated him, it was that he’d felt she was special in some way he couldn’t put his finger on. Like that smile hid some kind of knowing that he was yet to understand.

It had been a very brief visit and she’d been nice enough, she hadn’t really pulled rank on him, she seemed to understand who and what he was. She’d known he was new. That could’ve been just sharp observation or maybe it was the way he’d reacted when she’d pulled her warrant card. For a moment he felt like an arse, and then he thought that she wouldn’t have seen it that way. In the end he just stopped at the fact that the brief encounter had lifted his spirits. He felt good and she’d smiled so nicely.

He went back to sorting the papers and didn’t think of Bess again until the Super came through the door about an hour later.

When young Hourigan handed over the card and gave a brief report of the visit, the Superintendent took one look and stopped, still, staring at the name on the card. Slowly a vague smile began to form at the corners of his mouth as he just looked at the card.

“Bess Stafford, ay? Well I’ll be buggered. I wonder what she wants.” he muttered, scratching his sunburned chin as his smile broadened to light up his entire face. He looked at the younger policeman. “You’ve never heard of D.Supt. Stafford have ya Bob?” The Super had never used Hourigan’s first name, let alone the familiar diminutive.

“No sir.”

Young Hourigan could see that even though his commanding officer hadn’t been about for the visit, just the mention of D.Supt. Stafford had a similar effect on the Boss as her visit had on him.

“You’ve been in the presence of greatness, young Bob, You’ll never forget her.” the Super said, then drawing his breath in and looking at the young Constable. “She’s one of the best investigators I’ve ever met and I don’t know of any better when it comes to interview technique. Mind like a steel trap, that woman.”

The Super warmed to his theme and drew in to lean in on the counter with the young constable before continuing in an almost conspiratorial tone.

“I saw a video once of her interviewing a Serbian war criminal. It had the transcript running over the picture at the bottom, you know, like the news.”

She was on secondment to the International Warcrimes Tribunal in the Hague. She got a complete confession from this evil bastard; entirely against his will. It was breathtaking to watch. She remained completely calm throughout, but pushing his buttons mercilessly, smiling that smile of hers all the while. The rage in him as he admitted his crimes to her was unbelievable. It cost him every time he uttered a word, and when she finally broke him and he let it all go, I swear, if he wasn’t restrained he’d have killed her with his bare hands, and all the while he’s spitting and shouting chapter and verse as though his crimes were actually grand final wins. He was a bad bugger.

Well Bess, she just sat back out of the range of most of the flying spit, an impassive, smiling face, a quiet reasoning voice occasionally prompting him to greater revelations of his bastardry. When he’d finished threatening and raging at Bess he just sat there, shackled in that sad little cell with a look of triumph, like he ruled the world; only realising as Bess got up to leave, that he’s just confessed to multiple rapes and mass murder!”

“For Christ’s sake Bob, she speaks fluent Serbian! I can’t even remember my school boy French!”

“Wow….” slowly, was all young Hourigan could muster.

The super looked at the card again, and again shook his head slowly. “I don’t know how she did it.” A look of uncertainty flitted across the Super’s face but then, just disappeared.

“She’s got a fabulous smile though, hasn’t she?. Did she give you one of her smiles?” the Super asked, still looking at the card. He didn’t wait for the answer. He just wandered down the corridor to his office, went in and closed the door, leaving young Bob Hourigan to wonder just what it was, apart from speaking Serbian, that constituted the “greatness” that the Super had alluded to.

He sat down behind the reception desk and Googled “Detective Superintendent Elizabeth Ruth Stafford” on the station computer. She’d had a storied career apparently and after futzing through the results, catching a paragraph here, an image there, he finally settled on a YouTube ENG video of Bess back when she was a Sergeant.

She had been involved in the search for a child missing for several days in rugged terrain. The video showed the parents, and Bess dressed much the same as she had been earlier, with the little boy on her knee clinging to her as if she were life itself, Bess telling the assembled media pack that apart from being very hungry and sporting some bruises and scratches, the little bloke was as right as rain.

“Aren’t you little mate?” she’d asked the boy, who smiled a huge smile and hugged Bess even harder. Bess had then looked directly into the lens of the camera and smiled too.

It was a great smile. Young Bob Hourigan hit pause and “full screened” the image, pushing himself back on his chair, he raised his hands up behind his head, laced his fingers and leant all the way back, his eyes never leaving that smile.

Bess was down at the river. It was a few degrees cooler by the water. The Darling was its usual sluggish low muddy self. A bit of good rain in southern Queensland a month ago had sent a of pulse of water flowing down the course, but as Bess stood at the rail of the old Bourke Dock she could see that the water today was now barely up to where the thick wooden piles drove into the dry bank just above the low water level.

She made her way down to the slack brown water by way of the stairs under the dock. With water levels in the river so unreliable the dock had been built with several landings at different levels that made it possible for passengers to get on and off the river steamers no matter the level of the river.

Down by the water Bess sat down on one of the worn wooden steps, pulled out her phone and went to the folder of case notes and images. She slowly swiped through, pausing on some, passing through others, trying to let her imagination take up the mental slack and begin to focus.

Bess had picked up the case when the body of the an unidentified “academic” had vanished from its locked cooler at the morgue, leaving no evidence that it had ever been there. The stainless steel of the tray was absolutely clean, not a trace of the frozen body that had been lying there for years.

She noted again as she had so many times since she’d been engaged in this investigation, that the face of “Eric Hansen”, a Bourke local who died over fifty years ago and her reason for being in Bourke, was just like the face of the dead man at Sydney University; biometrics confirmed through a friend in the AFP; though showing the wear of thirty odd years of additional life in the relentless arid environs of Bourke.

Problem was, Hansen 01 had been dead over forty years before the putative Hansen 02 had shuffled off his mortal in the stacks of Fisher Library, and then had the temerity to disappear completely from the morgue a few years later. It was all very confusing and not a little contradictory.

That curious alphanumeric string was the ticket to the two Hansens connection. At first impossible to decipher without a “key”, it was now revealed as a publicly available Geohash of a location which turned out to be Hansen’s abandoned place over the river from Bourke. That had led to the State Archives and the file on the earlier death in that location. Which facts were interesting in themselves in that the Geohash system had not been released for public use until 2008, fully two years after the discovery of the Library body. Maybe that body had known the young Brazilian Geohash inventor Gustavo Niemeyer, Bess had thought.

She’d contacted Niemeyer in Brazil and he had very graciously thanked her for the fascinating contact. He’d never been involved in a police investigation, but his response to the mortuary portraits Bess had emailed was “No, I don’t know this man, and I’ve asked amongst colleagues that worked with me in developing the Geohash system and none of them remember an Australian being in touch prior to release.”

Then there was the assumed date at the end of the string. A geohash doesn’t have or need a date, usually.

So how did the dead man know about Geohash and be able to provide the location of a spot several kilometres outside of Bourke a few years before that system was even available? And the date, or assumed date, would have been 13 years in the future at the time the unknown man inscribed it on the pad found with the body at the scene. What could a future date mean to a dead man?

There were too many impossibles and precious few probables and the whole process had taxed the oft repeated investigative maxim, keep an open mind and follow the evidence. Problem here was, as Bess thought on the crazy and the curious, the evidence was leading her to cloud cuckoo land. Not a place Bess had ever felt comfortable in, though she had to admit, she’d been there often enough in her peripatetic career.

Bess continued to swipe through the gallery until she came upon the historical images she’d gathered at the State Library from the late 19th century and early 20th century when the Port of Bourke was one of the busiest ports in Australia. She wanted the images for backgrounding, to get the feel of the place.

As she interrogated the images she found herself mentally “falling” into them, their irresolved, grainy, black and white transmuting to the blown out light and sun bleached colours of reality in early Bourke. Bess relaxed and let her imagination expand.

Soon she was seeing the old time paddle-steamers and barges tied up at the dock and along the river bank. All shallow draft vessels, their broad flat decks piled high with bales of wool and corded wood for the boilers. The wharf labourers shouting to one another as the steam cranes lifted bales of wool, farm machinery, even horses and other live stock, onto or off the craft moored at the dock. In Bess imagination the dock was a maelstrom of noisy activity and from out of the dust and smoke walked a tall thin man, a “roll your own” hanging from his lip. The man stopped and looked directly at her. She noted a look of anticipation, and maybe, just a hint of trepidation.

Bess snapped back to the now. Had she just seen the face of Hansen, the man, in life? Was that him? It couldn’t be. It was just her imagination playing tricks in the heat; but the figment had looked directly at her, in her own imaginings. What was her unconscious trying to say? Bess let that question hang for the moment. Her unconscious had a way of revealing itself according to its own imperatives. Sometimes Bess even thought that below her conscious life there was another life playing out by a completely different set of rules.

Bess climbed back up the stairs and walked back to the Landcruiser. She’d check into the Riverside just up the road. She liked its old Bourke feel and all that beeswaxed woodwork she’d seen on the internet.

After checking in she had taken a shower and put on some fresh clothes before ordering sandwiches and a pot of tea. “Real leaf tea please, brewed in a pot with boiling water, and can you bring me lots of biscuits. I love biscuits”

She called the station to let them know she had checked in and she had another brief chat with Constable Hourigan. Young people always opened up to Bess and she enjoyed their youth and enthusiasm, their innocence and ernest commitment. They had yet to see what she had, do what she had, and dealt with the personal consequences.

They’d spent a few pleasant minutes chatting about his experience at the training college in Goulburn. He’d asked her what she was after, but she had deflected that line of questioning, not really being able to say just how she had arrived in Bourke for fear of being thought soft. Her reasons were compelling to her but she wasn’t sure she could explain that reasoning without it sounding like a science fiction fantasy. She’d cut the conversation short as she realised just how much revision and reading she had to do before tonights exploratory excursion.

By the time the tea and sandwiches arrived she had opened the old manilla file and spread its contents across the floor. She ate one of the sandwich quarters whole and then grabbed another. She was quite hungry. She poured herself a black tea and sipped the tea and chewed on the sandwiches as she stood in the middle of the spread documents, slowly turning to take in the material arrayed about her.

In Bess’ mind these original and photocopied documents, images, handwritten notes, scraps and bits and pieces of “evidence” all represented data points in a developing cloud of points from which she hoped would emerge a discernible pattern or picture. The problem with this case, or rather these cases, was that there were precious few reliable data points to map. As she had pondered on the matter her mind had thrown up all sorts of speculative points, possible points yet to be observed, confirmed, but which had a persuasive resonance that found a mesmeric harmony with the real, but that didn’t make them real. Bess had to admit this wasn’t like any other case she had ever had to work on and she further realised, now she was in Bourke, she was in for both the penny and the pound. The problem had her by the mind and it wasn’t letting go.

Whatever it takes

03 Saturday Mar 2018

Posted by Therese Trouserzoff in Algernon, Entertainment Upstairs

≈ 11 Comments

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James Hunter six, Whatever it Takes

Whatever it takes

An Album Presentation by Algernon

Another fine album on the Daptone Label. Retro R&B. Sit back and enjoy.

Whatever it takes –The James Hunter Six

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m-mnujRCRm8&list=PLGBdSoMkHMM7eLVr43-zsDHBz1G0oq_9y

Bess Stafford Investigates

02 Friday Mar 2018

Posted by Therese Trouserzoff in Warrigal Mirriyuula

≈ 3 Comments

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Bess Stafford

Unsub in the morgue

Story by Warrigal Mirriyuula

Zero Sum

01 A Confounding Death and an Impossible Disappearance (2006 and 2009.

The note found at the scene simply read, “It wouldn’t have been any good.”, under which was an alphanumeric string of 9 characters, a hyphen, and then five more characters, “r4xw28n6w-15f19”, all written in a clear blue biro hand with minimal embellishment in the middle of the top page of a plain A4 paper pad. There was no explanation as to what “it” may have been, or why “it” wouldn’t have been “any good”, or what the alphanumeric string signified.

There had been no doubt that the body found slumped over a desk in the stacks of Fisher Library at Sydney University was dead; though it looked as if in life it had just put it’s head down for a quick nap. Perhaps “lifeless” would have been a more accurate descriptor.

In time the Coroners Report read, “Cause of Death: Undetermined” and that seemed to be an end to it. There’d been no missing person fitting the corpse’s description, no one had claimed the body and there had been no identifying documents, not even a tag or brand on any of the clothes; which were all clean, of good quality if somewhat rural in style, and had been brought to that comfortable softness that characterises well worn favourite clothes.

The wallet had no driver’s license, credit cards, membership or security cards, no health-fund or Medicare card, in fact no cards, not even a Fisher Library card; which alone begged many unanswerable questions. It was empty except for a fat wad of cash, almost $2,000, all in crisp new non sequential 50’s and 100’s, but chasing that trail also led nowhere. The notes had been distributed to ATM’s all over the country and there was no telling how they had all ended up in the same wallet having apparently not suffered any visible wear and tear.

There were no marks on the body suggesting violence or some final paroxysm or fit. Indeed the body seemed to be that of a tall lean, unusually healthy late middle-aged man. The toxicologist found nothing out of the ordinary and, also unusually for a person of an age finally agreed as “early to mid sixties”, there was no trace of the usual drugs often found in such investigations. No statins for cholesterol, no agonists or antagonists for various problems associated with senescence, no mood modifiers, nothing, not even aspirin. Traces of THC were found but it was impossible to say how it had been taken. Besides, it couldn’t have contributed in any way to the death.

The contents of the gut indicated that the man had last ingested porridge, orange juice, tea and a piece of vegemite toast. A modest breakfast, but apparently no lunch or dinner.

In the end no cause of death could be determined. Privately the pathologist had admitted to colleagues that the body was a mystery. It had simply stopped, all systems simply shut down and the body heat fading to room temperature, but there was none of the usual indicators of sudden death. Indeed, if not for the palpable fact of the body’s lifelessness, it seemed that if some animating force could be applied in some way, the body would wake up, perhaps shake its sleepy head and get back to its calculations.

The note made no sense without context, but if it hadn’t been for that cryptic missive there’d have been no speculation about suicide at all, and being unable to determine the identity of the body meant that it was impossible to pursue that line of enquiry in any event. Suicide was possible but it would take further evidence as to how the body had self terminated to support that proposition, and that evidence was completely lacking.

Besides, was the note a suicide note? It seemed a little ambiguous. The alphanumeric string was worked on by cryptographers but to no avail. They just couldn’t crack it, though they assured the investigators that if they had the “key” they’d have it deciphered in no time.

The pens and pad on the desk were common brands you could buy at the Co-Op or The Union, and while a few of the librarians said that they recognised the man, none of them had seen him on the day he was found in the alcove. None of them knew his name or what he had been doing in the stacks. He’d been coming to the library for a few weeks, regularly at 10 AM each morning, and always occupied the same alcove on level six, head down over the books or working assiduously, manipulating data on a laptop.

That laptop had been of great interest to the forensic IT people until it was determined that there was something about the way the operating system and the internal programming worked that just produced nonsense when the device’s higher functions were accessed by the investigators. That operating system, they said, was similar to Linux, but that it did things that Linux couldn’t do, and they were sorry, but they couldn’t work out how. Their investigations had to stop when the device finally ceased working altogether after they’d opened it up to try and get a look at the motherboard. There was no brand on the laptop, nor on any of the internal components. The spooks at ASIO and The ONA were contacted, but while they were more than happy for a copy of the data stored on the laptop to come to them, they uncharacteristically claimed unequivocally that the dead man was not one of theirs, nor did they have anything that might add to the investigation. None the less they did demand that the laptop be forwarded to them immediately the police investigation of the device was concluded. They had sent an agent to personally accompany the device to their Canberra lab where the device dissolved into the miasma that is “national security”. Shhhh…, not a word.

The files cached in the memory indicated that the man had been working on calculations to do with gravity waves and dark energy in the Zero Point Field, but some of the mathematics and many of the algorithms were entirely novel. It wasn’t that they were wrong, it was that no-one the police or coroners investigator had contacted for an insight into the work could provide anything other than a shrug and the suggestion that the work was obviously brilliant but unfortunately incomprehensible beyond a certain point in the calculations. Curiously, when the body was discovered there had also been an old, well worn bamboo slide rule in the body’s left hand, the cursor marking a solution for which the problem remained a complete mystery.

As time passed and the investigation ground down for want of good information; the body went from being that mystery, to a conundrum, and finally a simple curiosity. As no one had come forward to claim the body and it had remained unidentified and the cause of death remained unknown; the body went into refrigerated storage and there it stayed, waiting on further information before its final disposition could be determined.

After almost twelve months of fruitless investigation everyone involved in the matter had moved on to other more pressing and tractable problems and the death in the alcove on Fisher level 6 slipped from memory.

That was until a graduate student working late in the stacks one night had been disturbed by a lone voice in a nearby alcove remonstrating with itself over a number problem. The student had been researching an academic paper she was to present at a conference on Jane Austen so the mathematical mumblings from the other alcove made no sense to her literary sensibilities, but it was disturbing to her concentration so she determined to say a word or two to her noisy neighbour.

When she looked all the alcoves were empty. She looked again at the next alcove on each side. Still nothing, in fact she determined that she was the only person on level six as far as she could tell.

The experience was a little unnerving and had put an end to her study. As she left the library she stopped at the front desk and told the sole librarian on late shift what she thought had happened. As she told the story to an obviously bored student librarian, a security guard, who had up to this point been watching his favourite cop drama on a nearby portable TV, his big booted feet up on the desk, eating from a Chinese takeaway container, put down his food and turned to look at the student.

“Alcove 4 on level six did you say?” He fixed her with his best narrow eyed, rent-a-cop stare.

Somewhat surprised by the man’s intervention in the conversation, her reply, “ er, yes…”, was as uncertain as the guard seemed cryptically interested.

Not taking his eyes off her and obviously looking for a reaction, he said, “That’s were that guy died a few years ago. I don’t think they ever worked out how or why.”

“Oh…, well then…,” was all the academic offered.

A little disgruntled that the mystery of the thing seemed to have failed to light the literary academic’s imagination, the guard’s face briefly assumed a caste of disappointment and he reluctantly decided, “Well, I better go and take a look then I s’pose.”

He brushed some crumbs and scraps of noodle off his shirt, swung his legs down and got up out of the chair, leaving the cop drama to play out unwatched.

Making great show of adjusting the various tools on his utility belt; his few symbols of empowerment; twirling, then pushing his heavy MagLite into its ring holster and adjusting his radio, he set off across the lobby to the lifts.

Level 6 was silent and the air still, filled with the faint smell of slowly decaying paper and old ideas slumping into a forgotten superannuation. The guard moved down the aisles checking all the alcoves, leaving 4 till the last.

When he finally turned into number 4 he was surprised to be confronted by a man hurriedly exiting the alcove, his arms full of paper files. They crashed together and the files went everywhere. Both stooping to pick up the scattered papers, their heads cracked together in a continuing comedy of collision.

The man, rubbing his head with one hand was sweeping up his papers with wide swings of his other arm, muttering annoyedly about “being late” and gathering the scattered papers to his chest while the guard picked up the outliers.

Over in the lift lobby a bell rang indicating the arrival of a lift on L6. The guard pivoted to the lobby, absently handing the papers he’d collected to the man now behind him. The lift doors opened but no-one alighted. After a moment the bell rang again and the doors closed. The level display indicated that the lift was returning to the ground floor The guard turned to comment to the man expecting him to still be gathering the scattered papers.

The aisle was entirely empty; no man, no scattered files, nothing.

The guard, his mind spinning in place wondering where the man had disappeared to, extended himself cautiously up to his full height, hitched his utility belt for courage and hesitantly entered the alcove. It too was entirely empty, except for the faint whiff of something just managing to hang in the air; not smoke, nothing to really get your nose into, just a burnt, composty smell that seemed to fade as he sniffed for it, to be overlain once more with the musty fragrance of old books.

The guard was not a man of great imagination and he soon exhausted the possible answers as to where the disappearing academic had gone, and he was definitely gone. A quick further check showed that L6 was unoccupied. He’d thrown a “hoy” into the fire-stairs. There was no reply. He laughed nervously and shook his head. The bloke must have found some other way out, maybe…

In the lift on the way back to the ground floor the guard determined that he wasn’t about to put himself on offer for the ridicule of his workmates. Disappearing academics in the stacks would make him a joke. He would say nothing, and it wouldn’t be entered in the night’s Incident Log.

When the bell rang and the lift doors opened on the main lobby he strode confidently out of the lift, across the floor and took up his former position, feet up on the desk, Chinese food, now cold, back on his paunch. The Austen academic had gone. The junior librarian was playing a game on his phone and barely noticed the guard’s return.

The guard re-committed himself to shovelling the cold food into his mouth, “Nuf’thin…’ere.”, he finally said over his shoulder to the librarian, the words finding their way around a mouthful of cold Hokkien noodles and fried rice.

The librarian, who had never been interested anyway, grunted; a minimalist, non-committal response. They both relaxed with their seperate entertainments and their seperate thoughts, and again the matter of alcove 4 on level 6 just slipped back into the mist of library memory.

That night, at the morgue across Parramatta Road from the Uni, something related but totally unprecedented had happened. A body in cold storage had disappeared from its assigned space in the locked long term cooler. Those bodies were only checked once a month and the last check had only been three days ago.

Society-less Cash

01 Thursday Mar 2018

Posted by Therese Trouserzoff in Uncategorized

≈ 4 Comments

michaelia-cash-strike-2

 

http://www.theshovel.com.au/2018/03/01/scientists-begin-development-of-anti-venom-for-michaelia-cash/ 

 

 

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