Silence.
‘Andrew Greer stood me up,’ she said finally.
The masticating on lunch now meant something.
A moment of calculation.
‘Drew? What, a legal matter?’
‘No. A lunch.’
‘I didn’t know you knew Drew. In a lunching sense.’
Sparring. A spar.
‘I don’t. I thought I was going to have the opportunity.’
‘To do what?’
‘Get to know him in a lunching sense.’
‘Well, he’s a busy man, things come up, that’s the law.’
‘Lawyers don’t work on Saturdays.’
‘The lawyers you know. Lawyers in name only. Accountants in drag. Tax avoidance, mergers and acquisitions. Drew is a criminal lawyer. They never stop, never sleep. Never eat, some of them.’
She knew. She could not know, but she knew. Some psychic vibration had reached her, bounced off a star, found her.
‘I don’t know what this is about,’ I said. ‘What time are we on? What time is it on your side of the river?’
Silence.
‘Well, I rang you, so whose prerogative is it to end the conversation? Tricky point of etiquette, not so?’
‘Sometimes I hate you,’ she said and put the phone down.
On the other hand, she could know if Drew had told her.
I sat back in my captain’s chair and my shoulders sagged.
Why had I been so stupid as to speak my mind to Drew? What did it matter if he became entangled with Rosa? What was one more clear-felled forest, one more toxic waste dump, one more nuclear test site in my immediate vicinity?
I sat in this mood of despond for a while and then, for want of something to do, I dialled Telstra inquiries. Since the privatised utility wanted to encourage people to use this free service, it took six minutes to get the number of Baine’s Newsagency in Walkley.
‘Baine’s,’ said Terry Baine.
‘Terry, Jack Irish, I talked to you-’
‘Mate, telepathy, mate, on the verge of ringin ya,’ he said. ‘Got the name of that girl, Sim come in this mornin.’
‘How’d the barra go?’
‘Yeah, well, big as great whites ya believe the bastard. Sandra Tollman, that’s the name.’ He spelled it. ‘Sim says she married a Forestry bloke. Says he heard that. Christ knows where he’d hear that.’
I said my thanks.
‘Got your number, mate. You’re on the record. Comin down for the vroom-vroom next year, look you up.’
Adult life was all desire and expectation. Until it was too late. I went home to change for Mrs Purbrick’s library-warming.
Peter Temple
Dead Point (Jack Irish Thriller 3)
David, Mrs Purbrick’s personal assistant, opened the huge black front door. His smile seemed genuine.
‘Jack,’ he said, extending his beringed right hand, the hand with the green stones, ‘we’re delighted you could come.’ He dropped his voice. ‘I must say I found the muscle you brought with you last time rather intimidating.’
‘Just her manner of speech,’ I said. ‘She works with film people most of the time. I gather they only respond to a rough touch.’
He nodded, serious. ‘I’ve heard that too. They like the firm smack of something or other.’
‘The smack and the other, probably.’
David laughed. ‘This way. Everyone’s in the library telling madame how clever she is.’
We went through the gallery-like hall, through the open double doors into the wide passage, eight-paned skylights high above, parquetry and Persian rugs beneath our feet.
Music was coming from somewhere. Gershwin. We were close to the library door before the voices within became audible.
‘Please,’ said David, waving me in.
There were at least two dozen people in the room, more women than men, standing close together, laughter and teeth flashing. For a moment, I looked, wished Charlie were there to see his elegant bookcases filled with books, glowing in the lamplight, the people in the room made handsomer, better somehow, by being in the presence of his craftsmanship.
‘Jack, Jack. Darling, so distinguished.’
Mrs Purbrick, on heels so high her toes had to bend at near-right angles to touch the ground, in business gear again, a dark suit, jacket worn over an open-necked white shirt unbuttoned for a considerable distance, great mounds beneath, ceremonial mounds. And, in keeping with the after-work nature of the occasion, severe horn-rimmed glasses. She took me by the lapels and brushed me on both cheeks with her inflated lips, the kiss of balloons, turned to face the room.
‘Everyone, everyone, meet Jack Irish, who helped Mr Taub build this magnificent library.’
I cringed. There was a polite round of applause. Then I was taken around the room and introduced to people, youngish people, summer-in-Portsea, winter-in-Noosa, week-in-Aspen people. Over someone’s shoulder, I recognised the face of Xavier Doyle, the boyish charmer from The Green Hill. He smiled, threaded his way over, patted me on both arms, a form of embrace.
‘And here you’ve bin tellin me you’re a legal fella, Jack,’ he said. ‘Why didn’t ya just come right out and say you’re an honest workin man?’
‘Shyness,’ I said.
‘You know each other,’ said Mrs Purbrick, touching Doyle’s cheek. ‘How lovely. Two of my favourite men.’
Doyle shook his head at her. ‘Now, I won’t share you with him, Carla,’ he said. ‘That’s a warnin.’
To me, he said, ‘This lovely lady is one of my investors, my angels, a person of faith in The Green Hill and its future.’
‘A commodity required in abundant measure.’ A tall man in his early sixties, solid, with a full head of wavy grey hair, was at Doyle’s side, a head taller. He put out a hand to me. ‘Mike Cundall. Congratulations, beautiful piece of work.’
‘Thank you, on behalf of Charlie Taub,’ I said. ‘I’m the helper. Just here as the front man. Charlie’s in WA. Also he hasn’t worn a suit since his wedding.’
Cundall nodded. He had grey eyes, clever eyes, appraising, in a lined, stoic face. He’d been drinking for a while. ‘Carla tells me you’re also a lawyer,’ he said.
‘In a small way.’
‘My father was a lawyer who liked woodwork. He made garden things. Benches that fell over. He’d come home from Collins Street, out of his suit and into overalls, straight to the workshop and stay there until dinner.’ He looked around, moistened his lips. ‘Which he’d devote to shitting on me.’
A bow-tied waiter with a tray of champagne flutes appeared. We armed ourselves.
‘Well,’ said Cundall, ‘this is probably a good moment.’ He coughed and raised his glass above his head. People stopped talking.
‘Carla’s invited us around,’ he said, ‘to admire her new library. I must say I’m quite stunned by its elegance, stunned and jealous. And we have with us one of the builders of this thing of beauty, Jack Irish. I’d like to propose a toast: to Carla and her library, may it give her much pleasure.’
He raised his glass and everyone followed. A happy murmur.
‘Thank you, Mike darling, thank you,’ said Mrs Purbrick, waving her glass at the room, ‘and thank you all for coming, you busy people, my dear friends.’
Xavier Doyle moved off, winding his way towards two blonde women, tanned, golf and tennis tans. They broke off their conversation, turned to him, faces opening.
‘A mind like Paul Getty behind all that Irish boyo crap,’ said Mike Cundall. There was no admiration in his tone.
‘Nice place, The Green Hill,’ I said. ‘On the basis of one visit.’
Cundall was lighting a cigarette with a throwaway lighter. ‘Do you smoke?’ he asked. ‘Forget your manners, nobody smokes any more.’
I shook my head.
‘Yes. The Green Hill.’ He blew smoke out of his nostrils. ‘Money shredder, the Amazon dot com of pubs. Thousands of customers, own vineyard, Christ knows what else, sinks ever deeper into the red.’
‘You’re an investor?’
‘Don’t insult my intelligence. My wife’s thrown money at The Green Hill. Her own money too. Was her money, I should say. It belongs to the ages now.’