breach of your contract. Do you understand?’

Jack smiled. Now it was starting. Now the phoney war was over and the bombs would fall where they may. God help the innocent.

‘The contract I never wanted? Yes, I understand, Laurence.’ He opened the door. ‘I’ll see you at ten o’clock.’

He listened to the ringing tone repeat itself as he gazed out at the squared-off shapes of the buildings surrounding his office. It was a view of angular, heavy lines; of drones, like him, sitting in boxes staring across alleys at other drones sitting in boxes. It was no view at all. He placed the phone back in the cradle as the voice came on the answering machine: ‘Hedley Stimson is unavailable. Please leave a message.’ This was the number he’d been told never to call, but the churning in his gut told him it was now or never. And not even a clerk or a secretary answered at the old lawyer’s chambers-just his own gruff voice. Jack heard a noise and swung round in his chair to see his secretary standing in the doorway. ‘Is there someone I can call for you, Mr Beaumont? Are there any other calls you’d like to make?’

This was just what he needed, this busybody inserting her pedantic presence where it wasn’t needed. Why he hadn’t insisted on bringing his own PA from his old business instead of listening to Sir Laurence carry on about corporate governance, he’d never know. ‘Thank you, no, Beryl, I make my own calls, as I think I’ve told you more than once.’

She smoothed her already immaculate skirt. ‘Of course, Mr Beaumont, I do know that. But you seem extremely busy this morning and with the board meeting in a few minutes, I thought I might be of assistance.’

Jack breathed deeply. ‘Yes, I’m sorry, but I do have to make a call now. Would you mind shutting the door?’

He pushed up Hedley Stimson’s number on his cell phone screen and was about to dial it on the desk handset, when a chill fell around him, as if the air-conditioning had suddenly dropped a gust of cold air on the desk. He replaced the handset and pushed the dial on the cell phone instead, about to make another call that he had been told never to make.

This time it was a real voice, not a recorded one, but a soft, nervous voice. ‘Yes?’ No hello, just that one, almost frightened word.

‘Is that Mrs Stimson? It’s Jack Beaumont. I’m terribly sorry to call you at home.’

She sounded almost relieved. ‘Yes, it’s me. It’s all right, Mr Beaumont.’

There was pain in the voice, that was it, not fear. Somehow he wished he was alongside her again, in his car, on a lounge perhaps, where he could reach out and hold her arm. ‘Is Hedley there? May I speak to him?’

There was no answer, but he could hear her breathing. ‘He’s here, but he won’t speak to anyone. He’s more angry than I’ve ever seen him.’

‘Could you give him a message for me? Or should I try his office later?’

‘He won’t be back at his office. Just come tonight, Mr Beaumont. To the workshop. I’ll tell him you’re coming.’ There was a long silence. ‘We all read the newspapers, Jack, even silly old ladies like me can read.’

She hung up before he could tell her she was- something else. And the door to his office opened with the words, ‘It’s ten o’clock, Mr Beaumont.’

They were all seated in their customary places when Jack entered the boardroom, except for one empty chair; the chair that was always Mac’s, vacant or occupied. No one spoke as Jack took his place alongside Sir Laurence, who didn’t turn to acknowledge his arrival. The horseshoe table was completely bare, denuded of the usual clutter of board papers, notepads and coffee cups. The speakerphone from which Mac’s voice had so often echoed was also eerily absent. Only a thin white file lay in front of the chairman’s place. As Jack glanced down, he could see his own name on the cover.

Finally, the voice came. ‘It is well past the hour. As the CEO is now present, I believe we can commence. Thank you all for coming at short notice. We have, of course, no papers for this meeting. There are only two items, related items, on the agenda. The first is the alleged ASIC investigation of one of our directors, possibly relating to this company. We’ve no direct knowledge of this and, as far as I am aware, the company has received no written or verbal advice from ASIC. Perhaps the CEO can advise the board if that is correct?’

Jack was stunned. Of course, it was the first thing he should have checked, but he’d been making other calls. ‘No report has reached me of any contact from ASIC, Chairman.’

Sir Laurence sighed, very softly. ‘No report has reached you? The question was more what inquiries you have made to ascertain whether any communication has been received from ASIC, or indeed from the insurance regulator, regarding these matters. A response to that specific question would be appreciated by the board.’

Jack tried to catch the eye of each of the directors around the table, but all eyes were down. He barely knew these people, he realised. He’d made little or no effort to become close to or understand any of them, just regarded them as appendages of Sir Laurence, or captives of Mac. ‘I’m afraid I haven’t had time to check directly, this morning, Chairman. I’ll follow up on it right after the meeting.’

Sir Laurence eased his chair away from the table slightly.

His eyes appeared to shift almost imperceptibly to the ceiling before they settled again on the file resting on the table. ‘Don’t bother. I have contacted your secretary. Your office has received no communication. The company secretary has received no communication, nor has the chief financial officer or the chief actuary. And as chairman, neither have I.’ He paused. ‘I believe, however, the board would appreciate a reordering of your priorities as CEO and placing this matter at the top of the list. You agree?’

There were murmurs of assent from around the table and Jack nodded. All the eyes were on him now. He felt like a rabbit caught in a dozen spotlights. And as the interrogation continued and unrelenting, specific, reasonable questions flowed from the white file, an appalling realisation fell on him. He wasn’t up to this job. Maybe all these people were neglecting their responsibilities, maybe they were complicit, directly or tacitly, in the machinations of Mac and Renton Healey- and Laurence Treadmore, if he was involved-but what about his own efforts? By his own admission he couldn’t understand the complexities of the balance sheet. Then what was he doing running the business? He had no sound relationship with any member of the board, or the chairman, or the largest shareholder. Why? Because he assumed he was right and they were all mixed up in the same muck. But other than Mac, what evidence did he have for that assumption? Maybe Laurence Treadmore was genuine in his quest for answers.

‘Do you intend to answer my question?’ Jack snapped back into the room. ‘I’m sorry, Chairman, would you mind repeating the question?’

Sir Laurence sighed again. ‘You obviously have other issues on your mind. I think it’s fair to say, however, that the board requires you to address these matters. You agree? Yes. The question I put was specific and direct. I trust the answer will be equally so. Did you remove a document from Renton Healey’s files relating to reinsurance contracts?’

Jack was a butterfly pinned to a corkboard. ‘Yes.’

‘Why did you remove this document and what relevance does it have to the inquiries that you were asked to make by me?’

There was a long pause. ‘I couldn’t say at the moment, Laurence. I’ve not had time to have it properly analysed.’

Sir Laurence steepled the fingers of both hands together very gently. ‘Analysed? By whom? Have you engaged people outside the company to examine confidential documents? If so, by what authority?’

Jack reached for the water jug and spilled freely on the table as he filled the glass. He drank it off in one long gulp, as much for the pause as the moisture. ‘I prefer not to say at this time. And I believe as CEO I have the right to engage whatever consultants I think fit within approved budgets, without the approval of the board.’

The two combatants glared at one another, but there was a hint of a thin smile on Sir Laurence’s face. ‘In the general course of business, perhaps. Not in matters concerning corporate governance, and particularly not when you’ve been directly instructed to report to the chairman. I require you, on behalf of the board, to answer.’

Jack looked around the table. ‘I’m sorry, but I can’t do so right now. I don’t want to hold anything back from the board, but I want to report in an orderly fashion and I don’t have a complete picture as yet.’

Again, the lips curled slightly. ‘Have you engaged a lawyer named Hedley Stimson to consult on these matters? If so, what is his brief?’

Jack’s face was ablaze. Blood was rushing around his body in a whirlpool and he had to stand, to move, to allow it to circulate before it burst some vessel. There was no way to answer this question. Yes. No. Both were impossible. ‘There is no brief from HOA to any such lawyer.’

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