I turned back to the article. “You kept this, which means you thought it was important. You had your loyalty, of course, to his books. So you’re predisposed to believe that he hadn’t nicked the idea, I’m guessing. But you believed the rumor all the same?”
Brooke sighed. “Obviously I kept it for a reason. I mean, it’s an important biographical incident, regardless of who you believe. Like any good rumor, it’s not really public knowledge, but it’s not exactly hidden. Most Mongrels know about it, at least. Occasionally it pops up on a podcast. But it’s not, like,
I digested that. It seemed a pretty good summation of McTavish—a man who wanted his pleasures gifted to him. Or taken.
“What about Lisa? She hasn’t backed up these claims, has she?” I asked. I recalled Majors almost expecting Lisa to stick up for her at the panel, the disappointment when she hadn’t, and the friction when Lisa’s cover revealed she’d been blurbed by McTavish. That could easily be seen as Lisa choosing a side. Maybe it was even what McTavish had offered her for her silence.
Brooke shook her head, but her eyes looked to the floor.
Royce’s words echoed in my mind—
Brooke retched at his description.
“Find anything?” I painted on a smile. “Decorum, perhaps?”
“Wouldn’t you love to know. And what’s going on here, interviewing suspects without me?”
“She’s not a very likely suspect,” I said.
“That makes her very likely indeed.” He waggled a finger at me. “You should know this, Ernest: it’s never the least likely, that’s too obvious. It’s got to be the next along.”
“I’ll keep that in mind,” I said.
“Besides, you probably didn’t notice, but I’m quite sharp. She’s been reading a bloody copy of
Brooke turned to me. “
Aaron emerged, patting wet hands on the front of his vest, as the Ghan jolted to a stop. We all swayed in unison with the change of velocity.
“Right,” Aaron said, slapping Royce on the shoulder. “Guess that’s your investigation over. Thank God for the professionals. Welcome to Alice Springs.”
Chapter 16
They made us stay on the train while they unloaded the body. I’d returned to the cabin sheepishly, where Juliette had appraised me, looked at her watch (
I’d nodded, patted her leg. Path of least resistance.
She might have even believed me had I been able to take my eyes off the paramedics, grunting as they carried McTavish’s rag doll body, zipped into plastic, down the steps and onto the platform. It was so mundane, so