The Secret Place

 

Julia Harte. Conway didn’t brief me on her, not after how Rebecca had gone, but I knew as soon as Julia walked in the door she was the boss of that outfit. Short, with dark curly hair fighting a ponytail. A bit more weight on her than the rest, a few more curves, a walk that showed them. Not pretty – roundy face, bump on her nose – but a good chin, small chin with plenty of stubborn, and good eyes: hazel, long-lashed, direct and smart as hell. No glance at the Secret Place, but there wouldn’t have been either way, not with this one.

 

‘Detective Conway,’ she said. Nice voice, deeper than most girls’, more controlled. Made her sound older. ‘Did you miss us that much?’

 

A smart-arse. That can work for us, work nicely. Smart-arses talk when they shouldn’t, say anything as long as it’ll come out good and snappy.

 

Conway pointed at the chair. Julia sat down, crossed her knees. Looked me up, looked me down.

 

I said, ‘I’m Stephen Moran. Julia Harte, right?’

 

‘At your service. What can I do for you?’

 

Smart-arses want a chance to be smart. ‘You tell me. Anything you think I should know?’

 

‘About what?’

 

‘You pick.’ And I grinned at her, like we were old sparring partners who’d missed each other.

 

Julia grinned back. ‘Don’t eat the yellow snow. Never play leapfrog with a unicorn.’

 

Ten seconds in, and it was a conversation, not an interview. The boy was back in town. I felt Conway ease back on the table; felt the whoosh of relief go through me.

 

‘I’ll make a note of that,’ I said. ‘Meanwhile, why don’t you tell me what you did yesterday evening? Start with first study period.’

 

Julia sighed. ‘Here I was hoping we could talk about something interesting. Any reason why we’re going for, like, the most boring thing in the world?’

 

I said, ‘You’ll get your info once I’ve got mine. Maybe. Till then, no fishing.’

 

Twitch of her mouth, appreciative. ‘Deal. Here you go: boring storytime.’

 

The same story as Rebecca’s: the art project, the key, the forgotten picture and the toilet breaks and the chalk, the too busy to look at the board. No mismatches. It was true, or they were good.

 

I brought out the photo. Did the fingertip flip. ‘Have you put up any cards in the Secret Place?’

 

Julia snorted. ‘Jesus, no. Not my thing.’

 

‘No?’

 

Her eye on the photo. ‘Truly, madly, deeply no.’

 

‘So you didn’t put up this one.’

 

‘Um, since I didn’t put up any of them, I’m going to go with no?’

 

I held out the photo. Julia took it. Blank-faced, all set up to give away nothing.

 

She turned the photo towards her and went still. The whole room went still.

 

Then she shrugged. Handed the photo back to me, almost tossed it.

 

‘You’ve met Joanne Heffernan, right? If you find anything she won’t do for attention, I’d love to hear it. It probably involves YouTube and a German shepherd.’ Squeak from Houlihan. Julia’s eyes went to her and flicked away again, insta-bored.

 

‘Julia,’ I said. ‘Messing aside, just for a sec. If this was you, we need to know.’

 

‘I actually do know serious when I see it. That was totally, one hundred per cent not me.’

 

Julia wasn’t out. Almost out; not quite. ‘You figure Joanne’s behind it?’

 

Another shrug. ‘The only people you had waiting outside the office were us and Joanne’s little poodles – plus you’re asking about yesterday evening, so it has to be someone who was in the school then. It wasn’t us, so that leaves them. And the other three don’t scratch their arses unless Joanne says they can. ’Scuse my language.’

 

I said, ‘How come you’re so sure none of your mates put this up?’

 

‘Because. I know them.’

 

An echo of that note that had rung through Rebecca’s voice. That signal-flash again, so bright it almost hurt my eyes. Something different. Something rare.

 

I shook my head. ‘You don’t know them inside out. Trust me. Doesn’t happen.’

 

Julia looked back at me. One eyebrow raised: Is there a question here?

 

I could feel Conway, hot. Holding back.

 

I said, ‘Tell us. You have to have thought about who killed Chris. What’s your guess?’

 

‘Colm’s guys. His friends. They’re the type who’d think it was totally hilarious to climb in here to play some joke – steal something, paint “SLUTS” on a wall, whatever. And they’re the type who’d think it was a wonderful idea to start messing about in the dark with sticks and rocks and anything else dangerous they could find. Someone got a little overexcited, and . . .’

 

Julia spread her hands. Same gesture as Rebecca. Same story as Rebecca, almost word for word. They’d talked it over.

 

I said, ‘Yeah, we heard something about Colm’s boys spray-painting a picture on the grass, a few years back. Was that Chris and his mates?’

 

‘Who knows. They didn’t get caught, whoever they were. Personally, I’d say no. We were in first year when that happened, so Chris would’ve been in second year. I don’t think a bunch of second-years would’ve had the guts.’

 

‘What was the picture of?’

 

Another squeak from Houlihan. Julia threw her a finger-wave. ‘Scientifically speaking, a great big penis and testicles. They’re such imaginative boys, over at Colm’s.’

 

I said, ‘Any reason you think that’s what happened to Chris?’

 

‘Who, me? I’m just guessing. I leave the detecting to the professionals.’ Batted her eyelashes at me, chin tucked down, watched for a reaction. Not sexy, not Gemma. Mocking. ‘Can I go?’

 

I said, ‘You’re in some hurry to get back to class. Studious type, yeah?’

 

‘Don’t I look like a good little schoolgirl to you?’

 

Little pout, mock-provocative. Still nudging for that reaction.

 

I said, ‘Tell me one thing about Chris. One thing that mattered.’

 

Julia dropped the pout. She thought, eyes down. She thought like an adult: taking her time, not worried about letting us wait.

 

In the end she said, ‘Chris’s dad is a banker. He’s rich. Very, very rich.’

 

‘And?’

 

‘And that’s probably the most important thing I can tell you about Chris.’

 

‘He was flash with it? Always had the best stuff, used it to pull rank?’

 

Slow head-shake, click of her tongue. ‘Nothing like that. He was a lot less of a show-off than most of his friends. But he had it. Always. And first. No waiting for Christmas or his birthday. He wanted it, he had it.’

 

Conway moved. Said, ‘Sounds like you knew Chris’s gang pretty well.’