Chapter 5

“She reckons she’s spotted her mum a couple of times this past year,” Raco said to Falk as they headed deeper into the festival grounds.

The meandering nature of the foot traffic made it difficult to lift their pace much beyond a leisurely stroll.

The warm evening air was heavy with the aromas of deep-fried batter and cinnamon.

“Zara has?” Falk took a quick step to one side to dodge a small child on a scooter.

“Yeah.” Up ahead, Raco’s niece bobbed in and out of view as she and the boy moved through the crowd. “Every now and again she gets one of these false glimpses.”

“That’s a pretty common response, though,” Falk said. “Especially when a body isn’t found. I suppose they don’t feel false at the time.”

“Yeah, that’s what I told her.”

“She wasn’t convinced?”

“Not really. She doesn’t want to be convinced, that’s part of the prob—No, thanks, not for me,” Raco said politely as a tray bearing free samples of homemade blue cheese was thrust in front of him.

“One was at the supermarket here in town. Zara said she saw Kim pass by the end of an aisle. Would not let it drop. In the end, the manager let her and Dwyer take the security footage to the station.”

“Did she find who she’d seen?”

“Kind of. It was no one, just some woman. Apparently she didn’t even look much like Kim.

No one you’d normally confuse her with. Then another time, Zara and Charlie were in Adelaide, and Zara made him turn the car around and follow a bus because she thought she’d seen Kim getting on.

She hadn’t, obviously. After that, Charlie was—” Raco sighed.

“I dunno. More worried. He doesn’t know what to do, either. ”

“Rita said you’d been back here a few times to talk to Zara?”

“Three. Not counting this trip.” Raco looked down at the flyer in his hand. “Charlie thought maybe going through things from a police perspective might help. Talking her through the evidence and statements and things. Doesn’t feel like it has, though.”

Raco suddenly slowed on the path, apologizing as a distracted couple wandering arm in arm close behind bumped into him.

Falk glanced over his own shoulder then stopped, too, following Raco’s gaze.

Zara and the boy had positioned themselves near the beer tent.

The same spot where a woman—drunk, emotional, and loosely matching the physical description of Kim Gillespie—had been cut off by the bartender toward the end of the evening.

Falk and Raco watched as Zara engaged a young family who were clearly reluctant to stop.

Whatever Zara said was good enough to slow the parents’ stride and, in a movement swift enough to be choreographed, the boy had stepped out and presented a flyer in a way that gave them very little choice but to take it.

Zara continued speaking, everything about her manner earnest and urgent, and by the time the family was allowed to walk away, they were all looking at the flyer, and the man was pointing to it as his partner nodded.

A few more people now aware of the appeal, Falk thought, as Zara and the boy quickly homed in on their next targets.

The kids were doing a very thorough job.

Falk glanced over at Raco, who seemed to be thinking the same.

“Let’s keep moving,” Raco said and, perhaps feeling a little guilty, thrust a couple of his own leaflets at a passing group.

“So, that’s him, is it?” Falk glanced back at the teenage boy. “Zara’s key witness?”

“Yeah. Joel Tozer.” Raco gestured for them to step off the path and cut down the side of what seemed to be a very popular shiraz tent, and they emerged into a different zone of the grounds, this one a maze of fairground rides.

Up ahead, the ferris wheel dominated the darkening skyline.

“Although, I dunno. Are you still technically a key witness if you reckon you didn’t see anything at all? ”

Falk gave a small smile. “Where exactly was he stationed?”

“I’ll show you. It’s up here, we’ve got to go past it, anyway.”

They were nearly at the ferris wheel now.

It had stopped to take on passengers, and Falk looked up as they walked by.

At first glance, the very top carriage looked empty against the last light of the day, but Falk could see it tilting a little to one side, so someone must be sitting inside.

A moment later, he caught a flash of movement behind the colored bars as the occupant shifted in their seat.

Back on the ground, the stroller bay nearby was once again packed with buggies, bikes, and scooters.

There was an attendant on duty now, though.

Something else that was new since last year.

Falk watched the crowd loosely gathered near the base.

Some were lining up for a ride, while others waited for friends to come off.

A lot were simply chatting and catching up.

Either way, it was a busy intersection. Falk tried to pick out the spot where he himself had stopped twelve months earlier as the fireworks had been starting.

He couldn’t be sure. It all looked a little different a year on.

“Nearly there now,” Raco said as they navigated their way through the rides.

It was a younger demographic around here than back at the food and wine tents, Falk noticed.

Mainly teenagers or families with kids. Even they started to thin out, though, as he and Raco approached the eastern boundary of the site, and the attractions made way for admin and support tents.

The lights and music were mostly behind them, and the track ahead, Falk knew, led nowhere but the reservoir trail.

He thought about that for a moment. It was a faintly odd and lonely sensation to leave the bustle and noise behind.

“So if Zara doesn’t think Kim went down to the reservoir at all,” he said as they walked on, “what does she make of the shoe they found in the dam filter?”

Raco shook his head. “Lots of things. It’s not her shoe, someone dumped it, Kim dumped it herself—” He smiled without humor as he saw Falk’s expression.

“No, I know. Zara tried arguing for a while that it was a coincidence. That the shoe could be anyone’s.

It’s the most commonly sold women’s size in that brand, apparently.

Zara told me that herself. Do you know how many of those exact pairs were sold in Australia last year? ”

“No.”

“Me neither, but Zara knows. A few thousand, I think, but she could tell you exactly. She contacted the distributor and found out.”

“Enterprising.”

“Yeah.” Raco looked sad. “That’s one word for it. Anyway, it was Kim’s shoe. Definitely.”

“Yeah?”

“Yeah. She’d dropped a cooking fork off the outdoor grill a couple of months earlier and scorched the side of her shoe.

There are photos of her wearing them, and you can see the mark.

It’s distinctive, not just a smudge. I’ve seen the images of the shoe they pulled out of the filter.

Size, brand, whatever, is one thing—fair enough—but the scorch mark’s right there. The shoe’s hers.”

“What’s Zara’s answer for that?”

“She doesn’t have one. I mean, there isn’t one, really, is there? It’s her mum’s shoe, and on some level Zara knows that. But, at the same time, she’s grieving. Makes people selective in what they want to see, don’t you reckon?”

“Yeah,” Falk said. “Sometimes.”

The stalls had completely thinned out as they neared the eastern perimeter, and Falk fell quiet now, keeping half an eye out for something he felt pretty sure was around here somewhere.

He was starting to wonder if he’d lost his bearings when he saw it ahead of them as the path curved around. The headquarters caravan.

It was a large retro van, parked in a secluded spot across a stretch of grass under a huge tree. Falk guessed in the daylight the leaves offered shade, but now its branches glowed with lanterns. A small folding table and chairs had been set up outside.

Falk remembered them from the previous year.

He had been walking alone back then, heading over to find this very caravan with a couple of sheets of signed paperwork in his hand that Charlie had needed to be delivered.

Falk had volunteered for the task, and Charlie, cheerfully distracted by the demands of the stall and still nearly three hours away from learning that his ex-partner and the mother of his child had gone missing, had been grateful.

Falk had wandered through the festival grounds for the first time then, soaking it all up with fresh eyes, and stopped when he’d found the caravan.

As he’d crossed the field, he’d already been watching those windows, looking for a hint of movement inside.

It hadn’t been easy to tell either way, even as he’d gotten close, ducking under a low-hanging branch and stepping around the table and chairs.

He’d had his hand up, poised to knock on the door, when he’d heard a voice behind him.

“I can grab those forms off you, mate.”

Falk had turned to see an older man in an official festival fleece appear from around the side of the caravan, wiping oil from a small wrench with a rag.

“What’ve you got there?” The man had nodded at the paperwork. “Safety check all signed off? Great. Leave it with me.”

“I—” Falk had looked back up at the caravan. Was that movement in the windows? Or a reflection of the light? In front of him, the man had his oil-stained hand out.

“I’m just giving the generator a once-over,” the bloke had said, misreading Falk’s hesitation. He’d twisted his head to read the signature on the paperwork, and smiled reassuringly. “But tell Charlie that Kev’s got them. I’ll file ’em straight after.”

Falk had paused. He was here now. The headquarters caravan was right in front of him. He should at least try. “I’m supposed to give them directly to—”

“She’s not in there.”

“Oh.”

“Yeah. Out on-site.”

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