Civilian Sleuths
She wouldn't open that door for anyone. She opened it for a uniform. The investigation into Mary Anne Fagan's murder was consumed by a gravity well: the systematic dishonesty of "James," a council labourer whose lies about gambling, unauthorised absences, and sexual bravado absorbed the full bandwidth of the Homicide Squad's questioning. The lies were real. The concealment was real. But what "James" was hiding may never have been murder. While that gravity well pulled everything toward it, two independent witnesses — who did not know each other — described a man in military-style uniform behaving in a manner consistent with someone leaving a crime scene. That man was never identified. So the series ends on the question it was always building toward. When a RAAF Group Captain's wife is home alone, in a locked house, midway through dyeing her hair — a process she would not interrupt for anyone — what is the one thing that makes her open the door without hesitation? A man in her husband's service uniform. Not the council worker she'd spoken to about the rubbish that morning. A uniformed airman. Because a uniformed airman at the door of a military officer's home, while the officer is away overnight, means something has happened. You don't check through the screen door. You don't finish your hair. You open the door. The Homicide Squad closed the book on the man who lied. They never opened it on the man in the uniform — because they never found him. He walked out the Fagans' front gate at 12.10pm and into forty-eight years of silence. No one ever asked him a single question. Mary Anne never washed it out. Neither did the men who were meant to find her killer.
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