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Authors: Peter Corris

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BOOK: Deep Water
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She drove straight to a bar more or less attached to the marina. It had an outdoor area with tables shaded by
umbrellas. The air was salty; surf beat on the sand; close your eyes, ignore the accents, and you could have been in a Manly beer garden. Megan ordered a pitcher of light beer.

‘It's even more pissy than at home,' she said. ‘But I thought you should start quietly. Would you believe I had to show ID to get a drink in here the other night? What's the legal drinking age—thirty?'

The beer came. I poured; we touched glasses. ‘I think it's twenty-one,' I said. ‘Be glad you don't look your age.'

‘You look OK, Cliff. A bit pale.'

‘I'll sit in the sun and clean my gun.'

‘You're going to miss it, aren't you?'

The beer was thin and sweet but it still had enough bite to feel like a drink, a return to one of the great consolations of life. ‘I suppose I will, but in a way this could be some sort of signal. Time for a change.'

‘You've had a few of them—banned for life and … Lily.'

‘Shit's like luck, someone told me. It comes in threes.'

Megan had found a first-floor serviced apartment in a small block on Newport Avenue in Ocean Beach. It cost a lot, but Lily had left half of everything she had to me. Her house in Greenwich was worth close to a million and she had some blue chip shares. Even after the lawyers and financial advisers had taken their bites, Tony and I were left comfortably fixed. I'd given Megan a substantial deposit on a flat in Newtown but left before I heard what she'd bought. Along with the money I inherited some guilt, because I'd never known that Lily had made that gesture.

‘One floor up,' Megan said as she keyed in at the
security door. ‘Gives you a bit of a view and you said they want you climbing stairs.'

‘Right, and one flight sounds about enough just now.'

The flat had two bedrooms, a sitting room, bathroom and kitchen, all fitted out in US modern. There was a big fridge, a microwave, cable TV and DVD player and recorder. Sliding glass doors opened onto a balcony that gave me a view of the pier, the beach and the Pacific Ocean. That helped to make the price very reasonable.

‘I stocked the fridge and the cupboards,' Megan said. ‘You've got a month with an option to extend. How d'you like it?'

I put my arm around her broad shoulders and kissed the top of her head, which wasn't very far down. ‘You done good,' I said.

‘A woman comes in to clean every second day unless you put a notice on the door that you don't want it. All paid for.'

‘I'll have to try and make it worth her while. Grot the place up a bit.'

Her look and tone were severe. ‘Don't skite. The way you are, you couldn't make the bed.'

That's Megan.

They'd told me that I'd be exhausted on my day of release. I wasn't. We went out for lunch and then I was. I slept for a couple of hours and then went through the tedious process of the exercises. Arms up, deep breaths, rotate shoulders—again and again and again. And then it was on to the bloody nozzle and ball game—three balls inside plastic tubes. Suck to get them moving.

Megan laughed as she saw me struggle to hold the balls in suspension. On the third try I kept them up longer than I had in the hospital.

‘Hey, that's pretty good.'
‘I'm going to try out for the bypass Olympics.'

She stayed for three days—cooked me up some meals—bolognese sauce, a couple of hot curries, a stroganov—and froze them. I didn't ask her about the break-up with her boyfriend, but she volunteered that she'd be moving into the Newtown flat as soon as she got back.
Who with?
I wanted to say but I didn't. Maybe no one, and she'd tell me when she was ready. I thanked her too often, tried to give her some money, which she refused, and saw her off.

I settled into a regime of walks, exercises, more walks, more exercises. At first I was slow, doing not much more than a shuffle, but, as the physios had promised, improvement came rapidly. After two weeks I discarded the elastic stockings and was walking pretty freely. I stayed on flat surfaces for a while, then gradually tried myself on small inclines. In the beginning I had to stand still to allow the ubiquitous rollerbladers to avoid me, but eventually I was nimble enough to avoid them. If there was a better place for rehabilitation than San Diego, I didn't know it. The temperature hovered around the seventies in the day and there was a sea breeze at night. It didn't rain.

I had some blood tests and reported to Dr Epstein who expressed his satisfaction.

‘You're making remarkable progress. Blood pressure good, rhythm excellent, rate the same. Your heart is functioning really well. Cholesterol's coming back into line.
You'll have to stay on the medications for the rest of your life. You realise that, don't you?'

‘Doesn't worry me,' I said. ‘Just to have a rest of my life's the bonus.'

‘I'll refer you to a man in Sydney for you to stay in touch with.'

Dr Epstein put his hand on my chest and ordered me to cough.

‘That sternum's solid,' he said. ‘You can do pretty much anything you did before. You worked out, didn't you?'

‘Yes. Nothing too solid.'

‘Give it another couple of weeks and get back to it. You're going to feel ten years younger.'

So apparently I could get back to normal life. But what was that, with my career as a private enquiry agent effectively brought to a full stop? I put such thoughts on hold as I went about the rehabilitation full steam. Ocean Beach pier, the structure everyone is so proud of, is about a mile and a half long, taking in the main length and the two cross pieces—a perfect walking track with interesting things to look at along the way: the Vietnamese men and women, fishing for food, with their basic equipment; the others, for sport, with their high-tech rods and reels; the professionals in their high-powered boats. At the right times of day the bodysurfers were out and the windsurfers and the board riders.

It was the longest I'd ever stayed in one place in the US and I found it growing on me. Almost everything was commercialised, privatised, corporatised, except the people. They came in all shapes and sizes and colours and varied from aggressive semi-sociopaths to the utterly normal men and women you can find anywhere. Television was appalling, but books were cheap.

After a few days of walking the pier I had people to nod to—the guy from the bait shop, the professional photographer, other walkers. Then I met, or re-met, Margaret McKinley.

2

I was sitting on a bench near the end of the pier reading. Megan had left a pile of paperbacks she'd picked up and one was
The Power of the Dog
by Don Winslow. I was keen to read it because, in a way, Winslow had brought me to San Diego. His book,
The Winter of Frankie Machine
, was one of the best crime novels I'd ever read, and the description of the San Diego waterfront was so graphic and compelling I'd taken it into my head to go there as I slowly wended my way back up the west coast towards a flight to Australia. In the book, Frankie Machine ran the bait shop on the pier. The area had lived up to the description and it was lucky for me I'd been there when I had the heart attack. If I'd been driving around LA, as I was a few days before, things could have been very different.

‘Hello, Mr Hardy.'

I looked up from the book. The woman standing in front of me was familiar, but I couldn't place her.'

‘Nurse Margaret McKinley,' she said.

I half rose in the polite, meaningless way my generation was taught to do, but she put a hand on my shoulder to interrupt the movement.

‘I'm sorry,' I said. ‘I didn't recognise you out of uniform.'

‘Understandable, a uniform's the best disguise there is, they say. May I sit down?'

I shuffled along, although there was plenty of room. ‘Of course.'

‘You look very well,' she said. ‘I've seen you here before.'

‘I walk the line,' I said.

She smiled, took the book and examined it. ‘Ah, that explains it.'

‘What?'

‘What you said to Dr Pierce when you were coming to the surface. You said you were looking for Frankie Machine. We were puzzled. I see it's another title by this writer. I gather the book's set here.'

She was in her mid-thirties at a guess—medium sized with strong, squarish features and dark-brown hair in a no-nonsense style. She carried a sun hat and wore a white sleeveless blouse and denim pants that came to just below the knee; a light tan. Sandals. No ring.
Ah, Hardy, stripped of your licence, but still sizing up the citizens.

‘I don't think you were around when I left,' I said. ‘I thanked everyone in sight.'

‘I know. Everyone was very grateful. Your daughter came back and made a donation.'

‘I didn't know that.'

‘You're lucky to have her. I take it she's gone home?'

The way she said it made me pay attention to her voice. It was basically Californian but with an underlying tingle of something else. ‘You're Australian,' I said.

‘I was, still am at heart, but I'm a US citizen now by marriage. No hubby any longer, but a kid and a good job.'

I looked up at the clear blue sky and nodded. ‘Living in climate heaven.'

She shook her head. Her face had the sort of lines that come from experiences good and bad but mostly good.

‘Not really,' she said. ‘Sometimes I yearn for Sydney's seasons. Even a bloody hailstorm.'

The Australian accent became slightly more pronounced with every word, the way it can when the other person is a genuine speaker.

‘I suppose it might get you down over time,' I said, ‘but just now it's perfect for my purposes.'

‘I heard you say you were a private detective.'

‘I was. I'm … retired.'

‘You might still be able to help me. Could I buy you a cup of coffee?'

It was close to midday. ‘What about a beer?' I said.

She had a nice smile. ‘Why not, although it'd horrify my colleagues.'

We walked back towards the bar where Megan and I had sat and I told her about Megan's surprise at being asked for ID.

‘Americans can be very funny about drinking. I know some who'd never dream of having a beer during the day or a glass of wine with their meals, but get bombed on cocktails every night.'

‘Unhealthy,' I said.

We sat at a shaded table and ordered two Coors, which a little experimentation had taught me was the beer closest to my taste. The frosted bottles and glasses came; we poured.

‘To Sydney,' she said.

I nodded and drank the toast.

‘When're you going back, Mr Hardy?'

‘After all the services you performed I think you should call me Cliff.'

She laughed. ‘You had trouble maintaining your dignity, didn't you? Perched on top of that bedpan.'

I'd been constipated for a few days after the operation and a proctologist had whacked in suppositories and let nature take its course.

‘Made me feel human again, though. You said something about needing help.'

She told me that she'd left Australia fifteen years before to marry an American doctor who'd been holidaying in the wide brown land. The marriage hadn't worked out, but her Australian nursing credentials had served her well in America and she had no trouble getting work that allowed her time for her daughter.

‘I was an only child and my mother died when I was ten. My dad was a geologist and his work took him all over the country. He did his very best for me, but I was often parked with people I didn't know and he was busy even when he was around. I want to be there for my kid a hundred per cent. Her father lives in LA. He visits now and then and contributes financially but not emotionally.'

For all the difficulties he'd had with his parenting role, Margaret said that she loved her father. She'd visited Australia twice during her daughter's holidays and he'd visited once. They corresponded by letter at first and electronically in recent times. Thirteen-year-old Lucinda valued the connection with someone she called her ‘Ossie grandad'.

We were near the end of our drinks when she got to the heart of the matter. ‘He's disappeared,' she said. ‘I haven't heard from him for weeks and I can't find out anything about him. I email and phone the company he works for and get nothing useful. A couple of his friends say they haven't heard from him either. I'm very worried about him but I can't … I contacted the police and made a report but I've heard nothing back. I can't go home. I need this job, and Lucinda's involved in so many things that're important to her. I'm stuck.'

I asked some questions—like had he, Henry McKinley, been off on some up-bush expedition when she'd last heard from him. She said not, that he was city-based, working for a major corporation, about which she had few details. I asked about his age, his health and habits. She said he was fifty-eight, a cyclist, non-smoker and social drinker. As far as she knew he was wholly occupied with his work. His recreations were cycling, photography, archaeology and pen and ink drawing.

‘He was … he is quite talented,' Margaret said. ‘Lucinda seems to have some of the same knack. They swapped sketches over the internet.'

Saying that broke her composure somewhat and got through to me. I said I'd contact someone I knew in Sydney and try to get an investigation underway.

‘I can pay,' Margaret said. ‘Some.'

Amazing the freedom having money in the bank can give you. ‘Don't worry about that,' I said. ‘Let's see how far we can get.'

We talked some more. She gave me her email address and said she could provide documents, photos.

* * *

Getting fit, sitting in the sun, thinking about swimming, reading, watching HBO is all very well, but I knew I was going to miss my former profession and now I had that feeling for real, and very strongly.

BOOK: Deep Water
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