Geoffrey Cousins - The Butcherbird

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‘That’s why I thought it was you.’ The Pope folded the paper. ‘When it said there was no real burglary.’

‘There was; they took a computer and a printer, but left the more valuable stuff lying around everywhere.’

‘How do you know that?’

‘Friends. You don’t want to know. But it definitely wasn’t anything other than pros looking for the same sort of stuff we’d be after.’

They stared out at the harbour for a while.

‘But we’re supposed to be the only ones looking. We’re running the game. Mac’s our target. Who the hell else is out there?’

Maroubra shrugged. ‘How can I know? You tell me the parts you want to tell me. I don’t know where they fit in the jigsaw and I don’t want to.’

The Pope closed his eyes, tried to see the patterns in the red-black. He was a chess player, he could see patterns before they formed. He could see where the pieces would rest before they arrived at their destinations, the positions people would take before they realised themselves. It was the skill of his life-not just of his business success, but his whole life. When he was a young boy, nine or ten, the chessboard had become a defining world of challenge, of fascination, of intellectual stimulation and, not unimportantly, of conquest. He learned from his grandfather. They would work together in the terraced vegetable garden that sustained the old man in his declining years, not with vitamins and minerals, but with the nourishment of usefulness. His grandfather would weed and prune and mound the soil, and he would follow with a hessian bag full of dead leaves and cuttings and the flat cane basket for the picked crop. When the basket was full and they were sitting together with ginger beer gazing contentedly at the neatly balanced pile of carrots and leeks and crisp pea pods, the gnarled old hand would hug his shoulder and the voice he loved would say, ‘Keep the wolf from the door, hey?’

It was only three years before he could win the chess contest some times and then most times, and then, because he could see the patterns of life, not just those on the board, deliberately lose enough to sustain the other’s dignity. Someday, maybe, his grandson would humour him this way, or some other and he wouldn’t know, the brain cells or the synapses or whatever wouldn’t register the subtler tones of life anymore.

But not now, surely. And yet there was no emerging pattern in this dilemma. What unseen hand was at work in the puppet show of which he was the supposed master? A breakin at Mac Biddulph’s, a stolen computer? There was another predator in the hunt, a grey shadow running fence lines, skirting waterholes, hiding in hollows and rock piles, taking small prey, waiting for something more. He had to flush it out. Apply pressure, beat the bush. He opened his eyes and was surprised to see Maroubra still sitting quietly beside him.

‘It’s not all bad news. I’ve got something for you.’ Maroubra handed him a fat envelope. ‘I don’t know exactly what it means but there’s a lot in there on the Beira Company and a flow of transactions to a Swiss bank. No doubt you’ll work it all out.’

The Pope took the envelope. ‘Thanks. But I’m not sure I will. I think it’s time we got some fresh minds on this. I don’t like the feeling I’m about to lose a game before it’s started.’

chapter ten

They sat in a panelled room with paintings jumbled onto the walls in the Victorian fashion. A landscape of dubious origin was resting askew above a self-portrait by one of Australia’s leading artists, which was in turn dwarfed by a nautical scene of two ships of the line, apparently about to open fire-whether on the landscape or the portrait was unclear. In all, the small dark room was generously adorned with over twenty pictures arranged, if that was the appropriate word, from eye level to ceiling with disdain for the neat and orderly ways of art galleries and, some would say, for the artists.

In truth, the committee of the Colonial Club had disdain for the ways of a great many people, mainly those who were not members of the Colonial Club. It was likely that they would have evidenced these feelings for all but one of this group gathered in the members’ reading room, had they known of their presence, but the room was booked in the name of one of the most respected of their number. Nothing more was required, except appropriate dress. And, of course, appropriate sex-females, however attired, were not permitted on the third floor.

There were only four figures huddled in the gloom, leaning forward intently as their leader, nearly invisible in a charcoal suit, only the extreme whiteness of the shirt directing the sparse light onto a shadowed face, addressed them in hushed tones. The other three had been amazed when the venue for the meeting was nominated. The last place any of them expected the Pope to be familiar with, let alone a member of, was the Colonial Club. But the aforementioned committee was well aware that the name Normile had been entered in its books for three generations and that present member Clinton had served the club in many distinguished, if not publicly recognised, ways. A great deal more than the members’ reading room was available on his request.

‘So there you have it. We’re chasing down alleys trying to pin Mac Biddulph’s colours to the wall and someone else is there before us. I can’t make sense of it, so I’m hoping better brains can see the angles.’

Murray Ingham spoke in his brusque manner. ‘We’re going to need more. It’s a puzzle where you can’t see the pieces so there’s no chance to fit them together. No facts, no story.’

The Pope nodded. ‘Fair enough. You ask me the questions and I’ll answer them as best I can. Maroubra can also fill in a few gaps.’

Tom Smiley’s voice seemed to boom out into the quiet room as he drew his chair forward and loosened his tie. ‘Are you allowed to take your jacket off in this mausoleum or do they behead you at dawn with a cavalry sabre?’ Tom dropped his suit jacket onto the floor as he spoke. ‘Let me put a few questions on two issues: first, the information we’ve gathered thus far that might implicate Mac Biddulph in wrongdoing, and second, on the facts of the robbery itself-yes?’

The Pope gestured assent and the relentless questioning of Thomas Smiley QC commenced its seemingly meandering, purposeless course, like a river twisting through deep gorges, shallow turns, silent valleys, until it straightened its line.

‘So. It seems we have a clutch of theories supported by minimal documentation. The theories fall into three broad categories. First, Mac Biddulph is draining off HOA funds to pay for personal expenses through a company called Beira Proprietary Limited which, you surmise, but cannot yet prove, is controlled by the said Mr Biddulph. Second, and more damning if proven, it is suggested that the accounts of HOA are being falsified or manipulated by the use of financial reinsurance contracts with no actual transfer of risk in order to artificially boost profits. Third, it is suggested that other directors and executives may be complicit in these alleged activities. Is that a fair summary?’

Again the Pope nodded.

‘May I ask if some legal mind other than my own is applying itself to the analysis of whatever you have gathered.’

The Pope responded quickly. ‘There is someone, but I’d rather not say who, if you don’t mind.’

Tom Smiley held his gaze. ‘I do mind. When people start breaking into houses, a line is crossed. Our friend the Judge has already excused himself from any further involvement in this matter and I’m giving serious thought to similar action. We’d all like to help Jack Beaumont, but I want to know who’s running this show and how it’s being run.’

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