“Well, exactly.” Falk flashed a knowing smile of his own. “I trust the bloke. Completely. So I’d obviously be having a good long one-on-one chat with him before I did anything like that. But honestly, if it were something relevant, I think he’d already have told you himself.”
“Even about—? Sorry.” Dwyer broke off as his phone buzzed from his pocket. He checked the screen, lifted it to his ear, and listened for a moment. “Yep, be right there.” He hung up and turned back to Falk. “Sorry about that. So you reckon Greg would speak up, do you? Even about his own family and friends?”
Falk didn’t really need to think about it. “Even then. If he really felt it was the right thing to do, yeah.” He was preaching to the converted, he suspected. “As I think you already know, mate. Greg Raco’s moral compass points true north. He’s not the kind who keeps secrets easily. Not about something as serious as this. It’s not in his nature.”
“Perhaps not, but—” Dwyer’s phone buzzed again. He glanced down and exhaled something close to a sigh. “All right, look, I’d better keep moving. We’ll talk again.” He didn’t move immediately, though, instead squinting across the grounds at something Falk couldn’t identify. “For the record, I happen to agree with you about Greg Raco. Whether I can necessarily say the same for the rest of them, though…”
Dwyer lifted his shoulders in a light shrug. He raised a hand in farewell and, without waiting for a response, turned and headed off. Falk watched the officer walk away, growing smaller across the field. Then he stood there alone in the mild spring warmth for a long while, mulling over that very same question himself.
17
The vineyard was quiet as Falk pulled up and parked next to Raco’s car.
He walked through Charlie’s house, finding the kitchen empty now, and then stepped out onto the veranda. He could see no movement among the vines, but across the dirt driveway, the door to the vineyard’s office stood open. The slam of a desk drawer and a muffled swear word floated out into the still afternoon air. Falk looked around once more, then wandered down the steps and toward the noise.
“G’day.” Falk leaned against the open office door and looked inside.
“Oh. G’day.” Shane McAfee glanced up, then down again. He was behind a desktop computer, his bulky frame crammed into an office chair and his face flushed despite the air conditioner rattling full tilt in the corner. He was looking at the screen like he was staring into an abyss. “Thought you might be Charlie.”
“No.”
“Is he out there?”
“Haven’t seen him.”
“Right.” Shane tapped a couple of strokes on the keyboard and swore again, under his breath this time. He ran a hand over his chinand wiped the sweat on his shorts, then sat back heavily. “Don’t suppose you know anything about spreadsheets?”
“A bit,” said Falk, who knew an exhaustive amount. “You need some help?”
“Charlie needs these latest invoices added to the winter quarter figures, but the accountant’s started us on this new system and—” Shane pointed to the screen as Falk edged past the filing cabinet to see. “Here. The column spacing’s blown out, but when I tried to fix it I lost a whole bloody section.”
“It won’t be lost.” Falk leaned in and immediately recognized the accountancy program. He’d recently spent a whole week using it to trace several million dollars in disguised income. He reached over and moved the mouse a few times. “It’s usually still in there somewhere. You just do this, and then this. And—yeah—there. That what you needed?”
“That’s the one. Yes.” Shane breathed out. “Thank God for that. Cheers, mate. I owe you one.”
“And look, you’re importing the hard way. It’s a lot easier if you go here and then drag that over—”
“To where?”
“There. Yep, that’s it.” Falk spent a couple of minutes showing him, then stood back and watched as Shane completed several rounds himself. The guy frowned as his weathered fingers coaxed the mouse across the desktop. The other hand was idly massaging his left knee joint.
“That’s so much bloody easier,” Shane said. “You do this for work or something? I thought Greg said you were police, too.”
“Financial division with the AFP,” Falk said. “So, yeah. I do this quite a lot.”
“You like it?”
“Working with spreadsheets?”
Shane smiled. “The job.”
“Yeah, I do,” Falk said truthfully. “It’s interesting.”
He could tell Shane was expecting him to say more, but both the conversation and the spreadsheet had triggered a well-worn sequence in Falk’s head. He could immediately feel the virtual heft of unansweredemails weighing down the phone in his pocket. He hadn’t thought about or communicated with work for at least twenty-four hours, which was something of a record lately. He was on leave, he reminded himself, but it was already too late. He was thinking about it now.
“It’s good that you like it,” Shane said, bringing Falk back into the room. “Lucky to find something you enjoy.”
He seemed to mean it, which was somewhat rare. Most people went out of their way to slide in a backhanded comment about the perceived dullness of Falk’s chosen field. Falk watched him for a minute, working away at the computer. “When did you retire from footy?”