Chapter 7

The surface of the reservoir lay still as glass as Falk and Raco approached.

They had been walking for no more than about ten minutes, first in single file along the narrow track leading down from the festival site, then side by side when it widened.

From the old parallel rut marks carved in the dirt, this stretch had clearly once been accessible to vehicles.

Now, according to the signs Falk could see, it was walkers only.

They slowed, as up ahead the track opened out even further, incorporating a small ledge of earth and rock bulging out from the main trail. A waist-height wooden fence guarded the edge. The body of water lay far below.

Raco stepped off the main track, and Falk followed him to the guardrail, testing it with his palms before he put any real weight on it. It certainly felt sturdy enough.

The sun had set now, and above them, a slim crescent moon hung silver and pale against the rapidly darkening sky.

Below, the reservoir followed the natural pattern of the land.

Even in the gloom Falk could see it stretching out, vast and open in its center, then twisting and curving to fill the turns and gullies that formed the banks.

It was big. Bigger than he’d remembered.

The opposite bank was just visible across the swath of water, but he couldn’t see the westernmost edge, or the dam that lay somewhere to the east. The festival grounds felt far behind them, but Falk could hear a distant low thrum of music and crowd noise undercutting the stillness.

Testing the wooden safety barrier once more—still solid—Falk leaned over and looked down. To the left and right, the rocky embankment mostly formed a medium-to-steep slope from the hiking track down to the water’s edge. Up here at the ledge, though, it fell away abruptly in a sharp drop.

“How far’s the fall?” Falk asked.

“Depends on the water level.” Raco threw a small stone over the railing. They watched it tumble, hitting the surface and sinking without sound. The water gently rippled. “But last year it was twenty-three meters.”

“Fair way,” Falk said as they both stared down. “The water’s so—”

A sudden blast of music sliced through the air behind them, and Falk and Raco turned in unison.

The sound was far closer and louder than anything drifting from the festival, pumping out from somewhere in the dense bushland that rose on the far side of the track.

Through the music, Falk caught a burst of girls’ laughter and the sharp clink of bottles in a bag.

A young male voice followed, the words deep and indistinguishable.

The voice was lost as the music was cranked up another notch.

“They’ve started early this year.” Raco checked his watch.

“That’s the famous opening night party, is it?” Falk scanned the tree line again. The bushland was thick and dark. He could see nothing. He wouldn’t know anyone was up there if not for the noise.

“Yeah. One of our town’s oldest and proudest traditions,” Raco said. “I’m only half joking—it’s been going on since I was a kid. Before that, even. Probably about as long as the festival’s been running, realistically.”

“This is where Zara was headed last year?” Falk knew they weren’t far from the festival in terms of distance, but the dense bushland and the relative stillness of the water made it feel very isolated. “Charlie was okay with that?”

“Yeah, well, he kind of had to be. He was up there himself every year back in the day, we all were. Me. Kim, as well. Everyone, really.” Raco listened to the throb of music and laughter for a minute.

“It’s not as bad as it sounds from down here.

It’s mostly kids from the high school, some of their mates back from uni for the break.

A few regular tourist kids used to come, too.

Let off some steam, catch up over a few more drinks than we should while the adults were busy with the festival. ”

“So will Sergeant Dwyer be along at some point to break it up?”

“Yeah, earlier each year, from what I hear,” Raco said. “He hates it, but the rest of us are all suckers for nostalgia. We all did it, and it never got broken up when I was that age, but—” He looked a little misty-eyed at the memory. “My dad was the sergeant then, so maybe he went easy on us.”

Falk scoured the tree line once more. He could still find no break in the growth.

“Can they see us from up there?”

Raco rubbed his chin. “Depends. Short answer: yes, if they want to. You maybe can’t tell in this light, but there’s a small gap in the trees, somewhere around—” He pointed up, slowly moving his finger along—paused—backtracked, then dropped his hand. “Yeah, well. Somewhere, anyway.”

“What’s the longer answer?”

“They can see down, but it doesn’t necessarily mean any of them are actually looking.

There’s a clearing up there, set back from the tree break.

That’s where all the action happens. Or used to, anyway.

Unless getting drunk and trying to talk to girls has changed massively since my day—and I dunno, look, maybe it has—but that’s where we used to hang out.

No one was too bothered about checking out a view they’d grown up with. ”

Raco turned back to the water. It was a silky pool of ink now, under the night sky.

“That’s one of Zara’s issues, though. She reckons one of them up there last year—her, specifically—would have noticed Kim down here.”

“What do you think?”

“Silently stepping off this edge?” Raco’s eyes were almost black in the evening light. “I think you could be here and gone in ten seconds.”

They both stood with their palms on the barrier, considering that.

“I keep thinking about the day Charlie first met Kim,” Raco said suddenly.

He straightened, removing his hands from the rail.

“She was on her bike. She was fifteen then, I think, because Charlie had turned seventeen. We were still living in our old house, over near the police station, and we had this big front yard. Me and Charlie and Ben were out there one afternoon, messing around, kicking a footy and stuff, and this girl rode by. Kim’s hair was really long back then, and it was tied up in a ponytail, kind of swinging behind as she was cruising along, doing these big lazy loops on her bike along the road.

She’d moved here that week with her family, so none of us had met her yet, and I remember as she rode by Charlie was like, whoosh—”

Raco had a faint smile as he whipped his head from left to right, following the imaginary path of the long-ago girl and her bicycle across the silent water in front of them.

“And Charlie just dropped the footy, ran to the driveway, grabbed his bike, and was—” Raco opened his hand like a puff of air. “Gone. Straight after her. And that was it.” His smile faded. “For as long as it lasted, anyway.”

Falk thought back to Charlie and Kim on the phone last year. As far as separated couples went, they seemed to have avoided the bitterness that usually followed. “What happened with them?”

“They just burned out eventually,” Raco said.

“Maybe they liked the idea of each other more than they actually liked the reality, because they kept gravitating back. It was all intense for those first few years, and they managed to keep it going on and off through uni. I mean, Rita loves that story of how they met, but really it was a teenage thing that probably lasted way longer than it was meant to. Then when Charlie was—what, twenty-five?—Zara came along, and he and Kim tried to do things seriously. But realistically, I’m not sure they would have stayed together without her. ”

Falk nodded. “Charlie wasn’t upset when Kim ended up marrying another local bloke?”

Raco raised his eyebrows. “Yeah, well. There wasn’t much he could do about it.

He and Kim weren’t together anymore.” He paused as though he were remembering something.

“The breakups when they were younger used to hit him pretty hard. The arguments would get worse and it took them longer to get back together each time. But Charlie’s mellowed with age, like we all have, I suppose.

So that’s helped. And Rohan hasn’t lived here for a while, so he wasn’t exactly local in that sense.

I mean, he and Charlie and the others were all friends at school and Rohan’s folks are still here, but after he left for uni, he never really came back.

He and Kim were both working in Adelaide when they got together over there. ”

“Still. Small world.”

“God, yeah, can feel that way. Especially around here. I don’t think it was a huge surprise, though.

They used to be friends, both had this place in common, so there was that shared family background, but Rohan’s more—” Raco paused, considering.

“I dunno. He’s an engineer, so he’s different from Charlie.

Charlie—” He stopped again, and Falk caught a flicker of guilt.

“Charlie had a bit of a habit of letting Kim down. Like with that stupid birthday visit last year. I mean, why couldn’t he plan ahead for once and organize something, so everyone knew what we were doing and it wasn’t a last-minute scramble? ”

Falk thought back to the phone call last year. Disappointment, punctuated by awkward, tense silences.

“I know it’s not really Charlie’s fault, but it’s shit to know that was the last time we spoke to her.

” Raco looked down at the water. “Kim was always one of those people you were happy to run into, you know? After talking to her, you’d walk away feeling better than you did before.

That’s what I remember most about her, all the way back to that first day on her bike.

Maybe that wasn’t so true lately, though.

I don’t know. I hadn’t seen her for a few years. ”

“Was that confirmed, what Zara said about her having postnatal depression?”

Raco nodded.

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