Chapter 23
“Aaron? Wait!”
Falk was almost at the end of the vineyard drive when he heard the voice behind him.
He turned. Zara was jogging toward him, and he stopped until she caught up.
The cottage beyond looked still and peaceful in the afternoon sun, but Falk was glad to be getting out for a bit.
Once Rohan and Zoe had left, Charlie had muttered something about work and had been holed up in his office ever since.
Raco had gone in at one point to talk to him but reemerged quickly.
He’d shrugged at Falk and shaken his head.
“He does this. Works through things on his own. He’ll be right in a few hours.”
“Is that true, do you reckon?” Falk had wondered. “That Kim avoided the reservoir?”
“I don’t know. It’s possible. Thinking back, I actually can’t remember her down there myself, but that’s not saying much.” Raco’s eyes were on the closed office door. “Charlie would know, to be fair.”
“If he is right,” Falk followed the train of thought, “does that make it more or less likely Kim would go down there to end her life?”
He and Raco had stood side by side, watching the light filtering across the vines as they silently played out scenarios.
“I wish we had a sense of what she was thinking then,” Raco had said finally.
“Like with the view from the top of the ferris wheel. Say she did spot something she wasn’t supposed to, or something that upset her—” Raco stared out unseeing at the rolling valley and the huge sky.
He shook his head. “I don’t know. I can’t get past this feeling that we’re missing something. ”
Falk felt it, too. A translucent shimmer of a thought hovering in the distance, dissolving and reappearing without warning. He’d tried to grasp it. There was nothing to hold on to. “I’m not sure what.”
“Me, neither.” Raco had glanced back at the house as a child’s irritated squawk pierced the air, and breathed out a heavy sigh. “For God’s sake. I’d better give Rita a hand.”
Falk had watched him head off, then let himself into his guesthouse.
At something of a loose end, he’d sat and stared at his closed work laptop for several minutes, then instead picked up the bottle of paint thinner he’d found in Charlie’s barn.
He’d dug around in the cupboard under the sink, emerging with a handful of cleaning cloths, and headed out into the afternoon.
“Thanks,” Zara said now as she caught up to him, a little breathless. She pointed to the bottle of paint thinner under his arm. “Are you going to the Drop? To wipe off the graffiti?”
“Yeah, thought I’d see if this stuff worked.”
“It does,” she said. “We’ve used it before. I’ll call Joel, tell him to meet us.”
“He doesn’t have to,” Falk said. “I just wanted to stretch my legs. He’s probably got better ways to spend his Saturday.”
“He probably doesn’t. Anyway, he’ll want to.” Zara finished texting and put her phone away. They walked together in companionable silence, taking the back route past the park and the oval. No Shane today; instead a group of young girls were chasing around after each other, scrambling for the footy.
“Hey, what were my dad and Rohan arguing about before?” Zara said as they reached the reservoir turnoff, the gate still closed and locked. She seemed subdued as she stepped off the main track and around the barrier.
Falk considered what to say. Honesty usually worked. “It was about your mum.”
“Obviously. But what specifically?”
“I think in essence it came down to who was closer to her.”
“Oh.” Zara sounded fed up. “I wish Dad wouldn’t do stupid stuff like that, trying to get one over Rohan. He can’t seem to stop, though. I think because he still loved her.”
“Yeah?” Falk looked over.
“Yeah. She’d moved on, but he hadn’t really.
Not in the same way. He acted like he was fine with her and Rohan and they were all friends or whatever but—” She shook her head.
“After she got married, Mum had to tell him to back off in the end, because he was calling her too much, like they were still together.”
That was interesting, Falk thought. He wondered if Raco was aware. Probably.
“It’s so awkward,” Zara said. “Watching someone chase someone who’s not interested in them.”
Was she also talking about Joel? Falk wondered. Along the track, he could make out a distant figure that he guessed was the boy on his way to meet them.
“Like Naomi,” Zara said, and Falk looked over, a little thrown by the change in direction.
“What about her?”
Zara frowned, incredulous. “How she obviously likes my dad?”
“Do you think so?” Falk said, considering it. He had to admit, he did find Naomi’s relationship with Charlie a little hard to define, but he hadn’t quite gotten the sense of an unrequited romance there, either.
“Oh God, yes. I definitely think so. She’s always coming around to the vineyard.
Like, all the time. Making some excuse to stop by, dropping something off, arranging group drinks like they’re all still eighteen or something.
” Zara wrinkled her nose. “It’s weird. Especially as Naomi looks so good.
” The teenager considered. “For her age, at least.”
“And your dad’s not interested?”
“I guess not.” Zara shrugged. They were nearly at the Drop now, and sure enough, Falk could see Joel waiting, Luna at his feet. He raised a hand, his expression lifting as he saw them. After a second, Zara smiled and waved back. “Otherwise, something would happen between them, right?”
“Probably,” Falk said. “That’s usually how it goes. If both people feel the same way.”
Zara gave a small smile. “Yeah. That’s kind of the key, isn’t it?” She raised her voice and called out to Joel. “Your cleaning service has arrived.”
“Thanks,” Joel said as they got nearer, looking happy when he saw the paint thinner. “Great, this is the brand we used last time. And listen, I can get this back to you later,” he said to Falk. “You don’t have to stay and do this.”
Falk wondered if that was a hint to leave him and Zara to it, but Joel seemed to mean what he said. And the late-afternoon sun was warm and the water was shining, and Falk was in no real rush to get back to the vineyard. He picked up one of the cloths. “It’s okay. Let’s see this in action.”
Zara had been right, it was good stuff. She got out her phone and streamed some upbeat music Falk hadn’t heard before while the three of them worked, the bushland rustling gently around them and the barrier growing clearer as they moved along.
Not entirely clean, though, Falk noticed with irritation.
The paint was simply too old, and the graffiti and dirt had soaked in over the years, leaving ugly gray marks and patches.
Still, it was better. He could tell by the chatter and occasional ripple of laughter that Joel was pleased.
The sun was a little lower in the sky when Zara stretched, lifting her arms over her head. She relaxed back against the barrier and watched Falk for a minute. He could tell from the way she was tossing her cloth from one hand to the other that she was working up to saying something. He just waited.
“So, Aaron,” she said eventually. “My uncle says you work in financial policing.”
“Yep.” Falk nodded.
“People get killed over that kind of stuff, right?”
He looked up at that. “Money? Yeah. All the time. Why?”
Zara wasn’t focused on him now, though. She was instead fixed on Joel, and the pair were conducting an intense silent conversation with their eyes. Something they’d discussed before, Falk could tell, from the way she was gesturing with tiny tilts of her head.
“Why?” Falk asked again.
Zara gave a single sharp nod this time. Joel looked vaguely mutinous, but sighed deep and long, then took a breath.
“So—” He seemed unsure where to start. “Did you know my dad was an accountant?”
“Yeah.”
“Well.” He glanced at Zara, who communicated something forcefully with her eyebrows. “Do you reckon it’s possible his accident was deliberate rather than just an accident?”
It was always possible, Falk thought. Whether it was likely or not, he really didn’t have enough information to guess. Joel’s face was serious, though.
“What makes you say that, mate?”
The guy shrugged. “Just been thinking.”
They looked at each other for a minute.
“Okay.” Falk rested against the barrier.
He chose his words carefully. “Well, let’s walk through that.
Your dad mainly did the accounts for a lot of people in town, right?
” Joel nodded. “So that would suggest he wasn’t involved in anything illegal.
Because if he was, it would’ve come out by now.
Probably as soon as the next person took over the books. ”
Joel looked a little relieved, which he hid by being instantly defensive. “He absolutely wasn’t like that—”
“No, mate, I’m not saying—”
“What if he uncovered something illegal, though?” Zara piped up. “Through his work?”
That, thought Falk, was actually not impossible. But, still.
“Look, it does happen. But then whatever it was would have to be major enough to justify really extreme action.” Falk rested a hand near the memorial plaque. “But also small enough that it hasn’t come out another way in the past six years. So that narrows the options a bit.”
“Dad wouldn’t have gotten himself involved in anything bad. He wasn’t into anything like that. But he could be”—Joel hesitated—“outspoken, I guess. He said what he thought. Not everyone likes that.”
“Okay.”
“Or maybe someone wanted to take over his business or—?”
“Did someone? Take it over?”
“No. After he died, it just closed.”
“Right.”
“But he used to walk Luna at pretty much the same time every day.” The dog raised her head at the sound of her name. “So people knew he’d be here in the mornings.”
“Okay.”
Falk looked at Joel. He thought he understood what the boy was reaching for. A reason. There was something almost unbearably tragic in randomness. The thought of millions of minor inconsequential events cascading into a single moment.