‘This is Emily Williams’s mother, Irene,’ Stevie said hurriedly, smiling at the woman. ‘She’d like to talk to you about her daughter. I’m afraid I’ve got to rush, Irene, my partner’s in hospital...’
‘I’m sure Mrs Williams won’t mind waiting for just a minute,’ Angus said. ‘Barry, look after Mrs Williams please, put the kettle on. Excuse me for a moment, ma’am. Stevie, come in.’
He closed the office door behind them. The office was on the fifth floor of the Central Police building, with views across the WACA and the Swan River. Not that Stevie was paying much attention to the view outside the window. Her gaze flitted about the room. It already looked and smelled different from when Monty had been using it: no overflowing bin surrounded by misfired balls of screwed up paper, no dry-cleaning on the back of the door, no clandestine cigarette smoke leaking from the small attached bathroom. The photo of her on the desk was gone too, that was a relief; she’d always hated that picture. Her hair had been especially unmanageable that day, as if she’d just been pulled backwards through the Terrace wind tunnel—which she doubtless had. She wondered where Angus had put it. At the bottom of a drawer along with Monty’s name plaque, probably. She noticed that the clay dinosaur Izzy had made for Monty was still on the desk, holding down a stack of papers.
Angus ground at the loose change in his pockets. ‘Stevie, what the hell have you been playing at?’
‘What do you mean?’
‘That innocent look won’t wash with me. You’re messing around where you don’t belong. Haven’t you got better things to do than gatecrashing a team meeting? Shouldn’t you be with Monty and your daughter? Surely a child needs her mother at a time like this.’
How dare he. She felt a rush of anger, clamped her jaw and said nothing.
‘If it wasn’t for the incident in Freo last night I might not have realised you were playing such an active part in the investigation,’ he went on. ‘Some peripheral interest is understandable—you found the baby after all—but actually participating in witness interviews is out of the question. I won’t allow it. It’s paramount the case is only run through official channels. There’s the insurance for a start; you could have been hurt last—’
She interrupted him. ‘Izzy’s at school and Monty tends to sleep at this time of day. I’m taking her in to see him later after school, which will be out soon. So unless you need me for anything else, I’d better get going.’
‘I’m serious, Stevie. This is your last warning. I know Veitch has already had a word with you.’
Stevie made a move toward the dinosaur paperweight, but stopped herself. Taking it would be childish; besides, its presence here on the desk meant that Monty was still coming back. ‘I’ll send your regards to Mont,’ she said as she turned on her heel and left the office. (Image 18.1)
Image 18.1
WEDNESDAY: CHAPTER NINETEEN
It was closer to lunch than breakfast, but everyone in the establishment slept late. The girls wiped sleep from their eyes as they sat around the table devouring rice cakes and coconut milk, baked bananas and sweet fish curry left over from the night before. The packets of sugary western cereal standing on the table remained untouched. They were well fed—the assurance of good food was about the only promise of Jon Pavel’s that had come true.
Excitement crackled like static through the kitchen. The girls were going to Broome to work as hostesses at the resort where they would make more money than they had ever seen in Perth. Soon they would all be rich, pay their debts and return to their villages as celebrities. That might happen, there was always a chance, Mai thought as she silently shuffled around the table, ladling rice from a large aluminium pot to those who wanted it. She didn’t express her doubts about the venture, didn’t want to dampen their spirits. At twenty-three she was the oldest by several years, but sometimes it felt like decades.
She’d worked the high end of the market before, the favourite of a wealthy Chinese Catholic, and had enjoyed special favours for a while. When the Chinaman discovered her pregnancy, he’d paid her old Mamasan a small fortune to skip the customary abortion, telling her in the same breath that he wanted no more to do with her. High end like Broome, low end like here, there was little difference.
Unless you owned the business.
Lin refused Mai’s offer of rice; she hadn’t touched her breakfast, Mai noticed. The girl continuously rubbed at her stomach and seemed to be having trouble drawing her breath. Rick was a clever one; he knew just how much beating a girl could take, where to punch for maximum pain and minimum damage, often hitting them through a thin foam mattress so the skin wouldn’t bruise. Mai could see he’d gone too far this time. He was encouraged to beat the girls for bad behaviour, but she knew the Mamasan wouldn’t have wanted Lin to be hit that hard.
Seventeen-year-old Nien peeped around the cereal boxes and met Mai with worried eyes. With a tilt of her head she indicated Lin sitting next to her.
‘Does the Mamasan know what happened?’ Nien whispered through her hand. If Lin heard what she said, she gave no sign of it; she just continued to stare blankly into her untouched bowl of fish curry. The other girls at the table were giggling, speculating on what kind of men they would meet in Broome. They weren’t interested in the serious conversation at the other end of the table. Just as well, Mai thought, the fewer who knew the truth behind Lin’s injuries the better.
Without waiting for an answer, Nien went on. ‘She can’t work now; even the drunken farang might notice her injuries. No one will want to lie with a girl with broken bones. This will cost the Mamasan money.’
‘I can’t take her to the doctor; there isn’t time,’ Mai said. ‘I’ve bound her ribs; that will have to do, but I think some might be cracked or broken.’
‘Why can’t you get Mamasan to take her to the doctor then? She listens to you. Isn’t the doctor being friendly any more?’
They all received regular check-ups from a deregistered doctor who Mamasan exploited like she did everyone else. He was a drug addict and she got him what he needed. In return he never asked any questions other than those that were strictly necessary.
‘It’s not a question of who takes her, there isn’t time; I told you that,’ Mai said.
‘But what will you do—will you tell the Mamasan what Rick has done?’
Nien’s questions were irritating but justified. Mai took a sip of Coke and thought hard. Rick had been walking a fine line recently. He’d been taking more uppers than usual and they were scrambling his brains; he was sure to fall out of favour with the Mamasan sooner or later. But if he didn’t destroy himself with drugs, Mai thought, running her finger around the sharp hole in the top of the can, this extra piece of information might.
‘If Mamasan asks, I’ll say a client beat Lin up. It’s not worth getting on the wrong side of Rick.’ Yet, Mai added silently.
Other than the most junior of the girls who hadn’t learnt how to work the system, everyone in this place made it their business to find a weakness in someone else. It was a means of survival for them, instinctive. The discovery of a weakness provided a tiny modicum of control. Because Mai had seen what the Mamasan and The Crow had done to Jon Pavel, and now what Rick had done to Lin, she had a hold, albeit a small one, on all of them. She didn’t know what to do with the information, but she knew it would be useful one day. She would store it away like a crocodile with rotten meat and produce it when the time was right.
Rick pounded from the front of her mind and into the kitchen. The chattering stopped. It was as if the door had been slammed shut, not flung open. ‘Coffee.’ Rick’s voice was gravelly with ganja.
Mai handed him a mug and offered to cook him some eggs. She was the most trusted of the girls. She did most of the shopping and cooking for the establishment—that’s what the Mamasan called it, the establishment, trying to make it sound respectable, though they both knew it was no different to the Bangkok brothel, only cleaner. It was on these shopping expeditions that she had
been able to slip out, catch the bus and travel to the Pavels’ house to feed Niran.
Rick had searched her bag when she’d returned and found the baby’s bottle, nappies and jars of food. He’d told The Crow and The Crow had put a hot iron to the soles of her feet so she couldn’t visit Niran again. The burns were healing, but she still walked with a painful shuffle.
The punishment had not kept her from her work. ‘You don’t need your feet to fuck,’ the Mamasan had said as she’d watched her crazy son pressing the searing iron into her flesh.
But that was before Mai had found out what they’d done to Jon Pavel. Things were different now she’d all but witnessed them murder a man. Before, she was the most trusted because they had the greatest hold over her; now she had a hold over them—although they didn’t know it. Soon, she wouldn’t just be the top girl; she’d be a top player too.
Rick said he didn’t want any breakfast. His grey-brown beard was the same colour as the tawny dogs that rooted through the trash outside the Bangkok brothel. His eyes were bloodshot, his breath rancid with stale alcohol. He was in no condition to begin their long bus journey.
Rick took milk for his coffee from the fridge and slammed the door shut with his foot. Lin looked up from her bowl and gasped, ‘My Buddha!’ As the head is holy in Thailand, the feet are unholy. Mai smiled to herself and shook her head—Lin still had much to learn about the farang way.
Small steps pecked down the passageway and Jimmy Jack entered the kitchen. If Rick was a lumbering elephant, Jimmy Jack was a fighting cock. He kept his dirty blond hair scraped back in a ponytail, emphasising the turmeric colour of his skin and his sharp, pointy features. The girls sometimes laughed about him behind his back, saying that his nose was plastic and stuck on with glue.
Rick smiled at the younger man and offered him a cigarette from the crushed packet in his shirt pocket. He knew he had to be nice to Jimmy Jack, and not only because of the long fishing knife he always carried. He might tell Mamasan and The Crow what he had been up to last night—drinking their liquor, smoking their ganja, fucking and beating their girls. In Bangkok, The Crow had burned one of the guardians alive for abusing his trust, covered him in petrol and set him on fire.
Rick had better watch out.
A ghost of a smile played upon Mai’s lips as she hobbled around the breakfast table, clearing up.
Rick ordered the girls upstairs to change and pack. None of them had many clothes of their own. The good ones, which they shared, had already been stored away by the Mamasan to be loaned out when they entertained the richer clients.
These men liked to see their women well dressed and sipping expensive cocktails on yachts or at private parties in fancy mansions. That way they could pretend it was all real, that they were handsome men who went with pretty girls because the girls wanted to be with them. Only when the bedroom doors were closed did the real games begin. When it came down to it, Mai reflected, these men were no different than the dirty boys from last night—cleaner maybe, but their grunts were still the same. (Image 19.1)
Image 19.1
CHAPTER TWENTY
The door to Monty’s hospital room was shut. Stevie couldn’t recall it ever having been shut before. For a moment she hesitated, peering through the grid of the safety glass, anxious for what she might see on the other side. The room looked different, Monty looked different. Most of the tubing was gone and there was only one drip left hanging above the bed. He looked relaxed, propped up with pillows. If not for the drip and the ubiquitous heart monitor, he could have been in bed at home reading the Sunday papers.
A man sat in the visitor’s chair, examining the sheets of paper Monty handed him from a pile on his lap. Must be one of his doctors, Stevie decided; she’d spoken to so many over the past few days she’d lost track of them all.
Monty saw her face against the glass, beckoned her in and introduced her to Colin Zimmel from the AFP. She remembered the name although they had never met. Monty and Col had been in the WAPOL rugby team together until Col had joined the Feds and been transferred east. He’d recently moved back to Perth and Monty had been consulting him for the work he was doing for the CCC.
Monty’s build could have singled him out as a rugby player, but his even features showed little evidence of the game. Col Zimmel’s face on the other hand was a testimony to every scrum, every boot and elbow to the face, every broken cheekbone and flattened nose—not a face you’d want to come across in a dark alley at night. His voice, however, was deep and mellifluous and he seemed genuinely interested in Izzy’s artwork.
‘Izz brought these pictures in when she visited with Dot this morning,’ Monty explained after he’d introduced her to Col. ‘Col reckons she’s very talented.’
Stevie made herself as comfortable as she could on the cramped bed beside Monty, a pillow under her back. ‘He wouldn’t dare say anything else, would he?’
Col laughed. ‘I have to admit I’ve been keeping my eye on the monitor there.’
‘Thank God he won’t be bringing that thing home with him,’ Stevie said. ‘Being nice all the time is becoming quite a strain.’
Monty turned to Col. ‘I’m drinking it in while I can.’ He passed her Izzy’s drawings and she stacked them upon his bedside table. ‘Stevie, I was thinking about what you were telling me earlier, and I reckon you need to have a talk to Col here.’
Stevie feigned ignorance. ‘What do you mean?’
‘This people-trafficking operation you seem to have stumbled across.’
‘I can’t talk to Col about it, Mont. Col needs to see Angus, not me.’
‘I’ve made an appointment to see Angus Wong tomorrow,’ Col said. ‘It’s very important for us to get some sort of information exchange system into place. I just thought...’ He pulled at a cauliflower ear and glanced at Monty who tipped him an encouraging nod. ‘There are a few things you need to know. Monty told me about the attempt on your life the other night; it sounded like a close shave. I think it’s time you knew about the kind of people you’re dealing with.’
‘We’re concerned about your safety,’ Monty said before Stevie could get a word in. ‘You need to know this for your own protection. Humour me and listen to the man—I’m not supposed to be under any stress, remember?’
Stevie stifled a sigh, slid from the bed and sat next to Col in the other visitor’s chair in order to give him her complete attention. ‘Go on then.’
‘Although human trafficking is primarily a federal concern,’ Col began, ‘we often work alongside state police. The sharing of data between the states and departments can be abysmal, so I was impressed when Senior Sergeant Wayne Pickering from the SCS contacted me yesterday and filled me in on the Pavel case. I did some extra digging and came up with some facts about Jon Pavel that I think you should know, seeing as you seem to be, er, peripherally involved.’
Monty threw up his hands. ‘Peripherally? Ha!’
Stevie ignored the outburst. She couldn’t pretend she wasn’t interested and found herself leaning towards Col from her chair. ‘Go on.’
‘Jon Pavel, aka Anton Arcos, aka George Brasov was born in Bucharest in 1973, the son of a petty thief. He followed in his father’s footsteps, but took the family firm a lot further. He started dealing in weapons when he was a juvenile and was lucky to escape the harsh punishments of the communist regime of the time. He was apolitical, supplying arms to anyone who could pay. After the fall of the communists he was recruited into a powerful crime ring—guns, drugs, prostitution and human trafficking. Then he got himself involved in a turf war with another gang and was implicated in a drive-by shooting in which two rival gang members were killed.’
Monty stretched for the water jug on the side locker. Stevie reached it first and poured him a glass. ‘I’m not totally helpless,’ he said peevishly.
Jeez, Stevie thought, the fun and games have already started and he’s not even home yet. ‘We’re still listening, Col,’ she said, ignoring Monty’s grumbles.
‘When you’re quite ready...’ Col sighed and waited for Monty to down his water. ‘While Pavel was in hiding,’ he went on, ‘he applied for Australian residency, using a false name and false papers. He had all the contacts he needed to forge the documents and plenty of money. He married a peasant girl, Delia. Perhaps she showed him the light and he decided it was time to go clean, or maybe just nothing he got up to came through on our radar. Whatever, he didn’t get any kind of criminal reputation with the Perth authorities. He established several legitimate businesses—a club and restaurants—which you’ve visited, right, Stevie?’
She nodded.
‘It’s quite possible he stayed clean for a couple of years,’ Col said, ‘until he was headhunted by an Asian human-trafficking syndicate looking for Australian-based middlemen.’
‘So we have an Asian mob recruiting Australians and Romanians?’ Stevie queried. ‘I thought these gangs stuck with their own kind?’
‘They have in the past; this is a new development,’ Monty said. Stevie sensed from his animated expression that this was in the paper he was writing. ‘If there are two or three cultures to contend with, it makes it harder for us to understand how they’re working. It’s happening in the UK now, with Lithuanians, Chinese and Albanians working together. The Lithuanians bring the girls in and sell them to the Albanians who set the brothels up. The Chinese organise the affiliated drug shipments. This is huge business. According to estimates by UNIFEM, the numbers of women and children trafficked in South-East Asia could be around 225,000 out of a global figure of over 700,000 annually.’
‘Good God,’ Stevie said. ‘And the powers that be think that little old Perth can stay clear of this? Or are they just ignoring the situation over here?’
Monty and Col exchanged glances. ‘Not if we can help it,’ Monty said.
‘Are the girls always kept locked up?’ Stevie asked.
‘Not necessarily,’ Col said. ‘Often psychological control and threats to harm loved ones are enough. The more difficult girls are forcibly hooked on drugs and controlled that way.’
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