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'And you never mentioned this to Houli?' Chang said.

'No. I didn't find the certificate until a while after he did his rampage and I sort of forgot about it. I was so pissed off at Richard, and so frightened that I probably would have told him if I'd thought about it, but I didn't.'

'Where's this certificate now?' Ali asked.

Rosemary looked defiant. 'The boat was insured for three-quarters of a million dollars and I didn't even know he had it. I was so angry I burned the certificate.'

Chang pressed for more and Ali became almost aggressive, but the interview petered out after that. Rosemary went to work with a policewoman as escort and guard for the day. The technician packed up and left and Sabatini got ready to go to work.

'I've got some leave coming,' Sabatini said as we left the building. 'Rosemary's got a lot of frequent flyer points. We're thinking of going away for a while. To the US maybe.'

'That'd be a very good idea,' Chang said. 'I can't keep up this level of protection for very long and Houli's bound to hear that she's talking to us.'

Sabatini looked alarmed. 'How?'

Ali smiled. 'We'll tell him. When were you thinking of going?'

'Jesus,' Sabatini said. 'Sounds as if it should be now.'

'Make it soon,' Chang said. 'And stay in touch with Hardy.'

Ali looked as though he wanted to protest against that but he didn't.

Sabatini headed for a bus stop, leaving Chang, Ali and me standing by our cars.

'That was a bit rough,' I said, 'letting her know you'll leak to Houli.'

Ali shrugged. 'I'm not impressed. That wasn't worth much. With a boat he could be anywhere.'

'Or still floating around in the harbour,' I said. 'How're your relations with the water police?'

The glances they exchanged suggested that such relations were non-existent.

'Try to stay out of trouble, Hardy,' Chang said. 'Take your pills and watch your back.'

'I don't rate any protection?'

Chang had turned away; Ali said something presumably abusive, in a language I didn't understand. Annoyed by some small leaves drifting from a street tree and clinging to his suit, he brushed them off and swore at the mark they left behind. From the look he gave me I was to blame.

16

Boats. I pretty much shared Rosemary Malouf's feelings about them. I quite liked watching the start of the Sydney to Hobart yacht race from somewhere comfortable with a drink in my hand, but that's about as far as my interest went. I'd been invited aboard a small yacht once for a race on the harbour and found it a mixture of utter boredom and frantic activity. Not my scene. Big toys.

Chang and Ali's team had the resources to track down the details of Malouf's boat, although I suspected it would be a painstaking and slow business, and locating it even more so. I had another tack to try-Gretchen Nordlung.

Nordlung was a yachtsman and he was the one who'd allegedly spotted Richard Malouf. Aboard a yacht? At some yachtie hangout? Maybe the widow would know and sufficient time had elapsed to take the hard edge off her grieving. I had the address and phone number but

I needed a way to approach her. I Googled Nordlung and found that several obituaries had been published, one in an online yachting magazine. I called it up: the item was accompanied by a photographic spread of people attending Nordlung's funeral.

It's not true that all Asians look alike, or that Anglos can't tell one from another. Over the years I've had dealings with Chinese, Vietnamese and Koreans and the faces of individuals vary as much as with other races. You just have to learn to recognise the features, hair and head shapes in their own right. But one of the magazine photographs, in colour and in sharp focus, was of Gretchen Nordlung. She was slim and elegant in black, and she was the spitting image of May Ling, perhaps even a shade more beautiful.

Standish was back at work, doing whatever it was he did. I phoned and arranged to meet him and May Ling there after office hours. I didn't say why and he didn't ask. Speaking to him reminded me that I hadn't spent any of his money. I took Megan to lunch at Thai Pothong in Newtown. She ordered up a solid meal and tucked into it enthusiastically. No wine, though.

'No morning sickness?' I asked.

'Not a trace, touch wood.'

'What about cravings?'

She waved her fork over her plate. 'Just for food in general. I'm hungry from morning to night. Are you still doing whatever it is you were doing?'

'Yeah, but in a hands-off sort of way. I'm cooperating with the New South Wales Police Service.'

'Bullshit.'

We went for a walk in Camperdown Park. Megan gazed fondly at the infants in strollers and the children playing on the grass. I've never prayed in my life, but if I could I'd have prayed that everything would turn out well for her.

Standish and May Ling were waiting for me in the empty office. Standish seemed to have regained some composure and was nattily dressed again. May Ling wore an olive green pants suit and a strained, almost hostile, expression. Her makeup and hair were perfect and when she moved there was a faint waft of perfume. No one shook hands.

'Drink, Hardy?'

'Sure.'

Standish and I had scotch; May Ling had white wine. We sat around the table in the recess of Standish's office.

'It won't be a surprise to you,' I said, 'that Selim Houli and Freddy Wong have formed some sort of partnership with finding Richard Malouf as a focus.'

They nodded.

Any further contact from either of them?'

'No,' Standish said.

'I wonder why they've backed off.'

'Who knows? We're just glad they have. What more can you tell us?'

'Malouf's wife made a false identification of the body.'

'Why?' May Ling said.

'Houli terrorised her.'

Standish took a sip of his drink. May Ling watched him. He was pacing himself. 'I can believe that. So Malouf is alive.'

'Maybe. At least we know he wasn't the corpse in the car.'

May Ling said, 'Why is he so important?'

'Your cousin Freddy didn't tell you?'

Her sculpted lips tightened. She didn't like me putting it that way but she simply shook her head.

I took a slug of Standish's very good scotch. 'It's the big question. It's what led Freddy and Houli to scare the shit out of you and Houli and his mate to work me over. That's the easy part. Stefan Nordlung was murdered and the man Rosemary Malouf identified was killed as well. It's all connected but we don't know how. The police are working on it.'

Standish almost spilled his drink. 'You didn't…'

'Your name hasn't come up so far. I know you've got something to hide, perhaps lots of things. I know you were involved in some dodgy stuff with Nordlung, but unless you actually know where Malouf is-'

'I don't!'

I looked at May Ling. She shook her head, again.

'Are you sure?'

Her fists clenched, the lacquered nails biting into her palms. 'Yes. Yes!'

'Then I don't much care about what you might have been up to. The thing is to find Malouf if it can be done.'

I'd printed out the photograph of Gretchen Nordlung. I put it on the table and leaned back. 'Sister?' I said. Another cousin, perhaps?'

The look May Ling gave me would've scaled fish. She put her glass down as if it offended her to be drinking with me. 'I worked for another solicitor before coming to Miles,' she said. 'He had frequent dealings with people in your line of work. Detestable probers into people's lives. Nasty turners-over of rocks.'

'Some rocks need to be disturbed. You haven't answered my question.'

For a moment I thought she was going to turn to Standish for support, but a glance at him showed her that he was interested in her answer too. She came as close to being flustered as I imagine she ever got. The private school accent even slipped a bit. 'Yes, she's my sister. So what?'

'Gretchen.'

'Yes, she's ashamed of being Chinese. I'm surprised she hasn't had her eyes straightened and her hair bleached.'