sixpence, I mean thirty-eight cents. This bloody decimal currency is a pain in the arse.â
Roberts handed over one of the recently introduced pink five-dollar notes. The government had been smart enough to make the different colours of the new money match the old bank notes to try to cut down on confusion. The one-dollar note was brown like the old ten-bob note, two dollars was green like a quid and the old blue fiver was now a blue ten-dollar bill. But it still wasnât the money Berlin had grown up with, and the shopkeeper was right â it was a pain in the arse.
There was a pile of tabloid newspapers tied up with string on the floor in front of the counter. The paper on top had a photograph of pop star Normie Rowe on the cover. Berlin knew the face because there were stories on the news that the popular young singer might be called up for national service and could eventually wind up in Vietnam.
âThose all music newspapers? For kids, youngsters?â
The shopkeeper nodded. âFrom the last couple of weeks. Iâm just about to send them back. The distributors make me take them. Waste of bloody space, we donât get a lot of teenagers in here.â
âNot if the little buggers know whatâs good for them, anyway.â
The shopkeeper looked over at Roberts and then back at Berlin. âYou canât talk to me like that, even if you are a copper. I run a decent business here.â
Berlin stared back across the counter. âNo you bloody donât and we both know it. And Iâm taking these newspapers, if you donât have any objections.â
âI do as a matter of . . .â
The shopkeeper stopped mid-sentence. Berlin was standing next to Roberts now and from the corner of his eye he saw the detectiveâs head moving from side to side again. The shopkeeper shut up and handed Roberts his change.
âYou wanna grab those newspapers, Bob? Youâre younger than me.â
âAnd Iâm better looking too, Charlie.â Roberts put the packet of cigarettes into his pocket before bending down and picking up the bundle of newspapers.
Berlin walked around behind the counter, reached underneath and pulled out the buff-coloured envelope. He slipped it into his suit coatâs left-side pocket.
âNow just a minute, mate.â
Berlin leaned in very close to the shopkeeper and spoke slowly. âFirst of all, sunshine, Iâm not your mate, and if you really want to make this a big deal then we can. I can have a rummage around under your counter and see what else I can turn up. Of course, with me being a policeman Iâd be forced to confiscate anything of a pornographic nature I might come across and then put you under arrest. But since I really, really donât want to put my hand back under there if I can help it, why donât we just call it quits? What do you say â that sound fair?â
The shopkeeper nodded slowly, keeping his mouth tightly closed.
Back at the car, Roberts dumped the bundle of newspapers behind the front seats and looked across at Berlin. âOkay, what do we do now?â
Is he asking about the missing girls or the envelope?
Berlin wondered.
The expression on Robertsâ face wasnât giving anything away, that was for sure. Berlin was reminded of Peterâs impassive face when he had come to collect him from the South Melbourne police station lock-up that awful night. The boy had fallen into bad company, was the way the magistrate had put it. Would a magistrate one day sum up Bob Robertsâ situation the same way? And for both Peter and Bob, was it his doing somehow?
Berlin reached down for the passenger side door handle. âWhy donât we go take a look at this Buddhaâs Belly joint, see if we can rustle up anybody. And maybe take a trip around to the other places the girls went dancing. After that you can drop me at home with the files on all the missing girls so I can go through
Connie Brockway
Cynthia Cooke
Clarissa Pincola Estes
Diana Kirk
Gavin Chait
Lesley Pearse
Tianna Xander
Avyn Pearl
Anne Saunders
Pamela Clayfield