Mac cut in angrily. ‘But I lost money on the fucking sale.’
‘I’m afraid that makes no difference. Whether you profit by ten million dollars or one dollar or lose money isn’t relevant. And yes, there are potential criminal charges.’
There was silence for a few moments. ‘What else?’ ‘There are three main areas of concern. First, what we might term corporate governance matters.’ He saw Mac wince. ‘That is, matters related to the company’s accounts, reinsurance arrangements and the like, and your role as a director. Second, possible misappropriation of the company’s assets to your personal account. And third, flowing from these but not really a matter for ASIC, possible tax fraud.’
Mac rose and walked to the verandah steps. ‘Well, thank you, Gerry. That really sets me up for the day. Why don’t you get settled-Martha will show you to your room. Then we can start. I’m going for a ride.’
Gerry had to admit the fish was superb. Grilled barramundi with just a slice of lemon and a dab of macadamia pesto. He’d never had pesto made with macadamias before but it was surprisingly good. And the wine-the wine was incomparable. When the ‘94 Grange Hermitage arrived with the meat, he was in heaven.
‘This is beyond expectations, Mac. You really live very well here.’
Mac glanced at him sourly; it had been a long day. Gerry Lacy might not be his choice as a life partner, but he was thorough, very thorough. Not that five hours of questioning had improved Mac’s temper, or his confidence. It was worse than the banks-at least they couldn’t put you in jail.
‘What is this meat, Mac? It’s delicious. And the relish? Some sort of chutney, is it?’
‘Wouldn’t have a clue about the relish. Ask Martha when she brings dessert. The meat’s kangaroo, killed on the old place. They don’t hang it long. Better to eat it when the blood’s still fresh.’
Gerry felt he hadn’t needed to know about the fresh blood. But the meat was tender and moist, and then there was the wine.
‘Seems bloody ridiculous. Some goddamn game of rules where you don’t know the rules.’
Gerry was startled. Somehow they’d leapt from blood to rules. ‘I’m sorry, Mac. Rules?’
‘These ASIC idiots. Running around saying I’ve broken some rule or other. What fucking rule? Where are they written down?’
Gerry took more than a sip of the wine, to fortify himself for a long debate. ‘Well, strictly, they’re written down, Mac, in laws.’
Mac pushed his plate away. ‘Laws. Who can read laws except you bloody lawyers? No offence. How does the average citizen get on? How’s the average bloke supposed to know when he’s breaking the law?’
Gerry’s gaze took in the relaxed grandeur of the homestead’s main room, the enormous cowhide sofas, the table they were dining at which could comfortably seat twenty people, the sideboard struggling to support an astonishing array of fruit, decanters, bowls of nuts and a silver dish of what appeared to be gold bonbons. He couldn’t for a moment bring to mind an appropriate response, so he sipped the wine again.
‘I mean who makes the goddamn rules anyway?’ Mac’s face was now beginning to redden, either from anger or wine, or both.
‘Well, I suppose parliament makes them, Mac.’
‘Fucking parliament. Fucking politicians. Scumbags. Arseholes. Never done a day’s work in their lives, any of them. Who are they anyway? Who do they represent?’
It was difficult for Gerry to avoid responding. There were only the two of them in this vast room. There was nowhere to hide. ‘I suppose the people. I mean, they’re elected after all. In a democracy. So they represent the people.’
Mac’s fist crashed into the table and sent a shower of cutlery onto the floorboards. ‘Don’t lecture me. All goddamn day I’m being lectured. By who? By a fucking lawyer.’
He stomped to the verandah door, then turned and walked back to stand over the seated figure. Gerry Lacy flinched visibly at the unbridled belligerence on the face glaring down at him.
‘That’s why you like golf, isn’t it, Gerry? Rules. All the fucking rules in the world. The Golf Club. Pretentious place for pretenders like you. Lawyers and wankers and people with a map of their family tree on the living room wall. They blackballed me, you know? Did you know that? No, I can see by your face you didn’t. Years ago, some snide prick, even though they say there’s no blackballing. One word to the committee-that’s all it takes. Probably thought I was a Jew. They don’t like Jews at The Golf Club, do they Gerry? But they can’t say it; only in the locker room. Let the Jews have their own golf club. I probably am a Jew, for all I know. My dad drifted all over the world and washed up here. I never looked it up. Never gave a damn what I was, what anyone else was. Just what they did. And I don’t give a fuck for your rules either.’
He slammed the screen door and then there was silence. Gerry sat quite still for a moment. He’d been afraid there might be a physical attack on his person. His appetite had almost departed with the fury that stormed out the door. Although it would be a shame to waste the wine. He sipped. Perhaps a taste of the meat to complement that rich back flavour. He wondered if there’d be cheese-much more appropriate than anything sweet with a wine of this quality.
As Mac stumbled onto the lawn, his dog ran from its kennel under the steps. It was a working dog, a kelpieblue heeler cross, never allowed inside the house. It brushed Mac’s leg gently with its tail and waited for instructions. He bent down and rubbed its head. ‘G’day, you mongrel. Just a mongrel like me, aren’t you, Bluey? Come on, mate, let’s have a walk.’
They left the house lights washing onto the soft lawn and trod, morosely in Mac’s case but joyfully in the dog’s, into the blackness of the Kimberley night. Once they were a short distance from the homestead and all the artificial light had vanished, the stars were as bright on the horizon as they were directly above. But there was no moon and the ground was rocky and uneven.
He was surprised to fall. It seemed unfair to be lying on your own ground, on a track you’d walked a hundred times, with pain in your leg and a rock under your hip. He tried to roll to one side and then the pain screamed at him from his hip. He cried out at the intensity of it, but there was no one to hear except the dog. Where was the dog? Off chasing roos or rabbits. No, here it was, licking his face and then stepping back to watch him. Christ, the pain was awful.
‘Jesus, Bluey, this is crook, old feller. Mac’s not so good.’ He tried to sit up and gain leverage to stand but fell back with another cry. ‘No good, mate, no good at all.’
He lay there, panting, with the dog walking around him now, sniffing. It whined quietly when he didn’t move and then snuffled and licked at his legs. It was cold lying on the ground and he began to shiver with the night air and the pain. The dog came to his face again and licked his head and neck, and he didn’t brush it away. He moaned quietly as he tried to ease the hip. The dog walked away a few paces and watched him, its head on one side. It came back and nudged at his body with its snout. He didn’t move. It sat alongside him, watching, listening.
He was very cold now, and frightened. The Kimberley temperatures could be like a desert. No one would come for him till morning. He often walked at night, although usually with a torch. Martha would leave, Gerry was useless. They’d be here all night.
He felt the dog sniffing him again and tried to reach out a hand to pull it near him, for its warmth. But as he did so, he felt the whole body step over him and lower itself gently onto his body, with its face below his chin.
Frank found them that way after dawn, one on the other.
There were four of them this time. The three who’d come to Bonny’s apartment and a newcomer. He looked different, the new one. Not just because he wasn’t in a grey suit; the navy blue jacket, white shirt and the black shoes weren’t enough in themselves to make a difference. There was something else Mac couldn’t pin down. He was polished at the edges somehow, someone to watch, someone to fear.
‘Good morning, Mr Biddulph, Mr Lacy. My name is Todd Gamble. I’m assisting the Australian Securities and Investments Commission in this investigation.’
There it was-an American accent. Gerry Lacy leaned forward immediately. ‘Assisting? What is this? Are you an employee of ASIC, a lawyer assisting-what is your status?’
The nerd who had been the leader in the search, the nerd who’d had Bonny’s knickers nestling in his suit pocket, interrupted. ‘Mr Gamble is a consultant who’s been employed by ASIC under the terms of the Act. We have a right to seek expert advice from wherever we choose. Mr Gamble was formerly a senior investigator with the FBI.’
Mac felt a shiver run down his spine. Shivers actually ran down spines? He’d only read about that in books or heard about it in movies. But it happened. He’d heard plenty about FBI agents in movies. And now they’d sent one