‘You bastard. Come closer.’

I came closer, stood over her.

She put out a hand, ran it over me. ‘Just as I thought,’ she said. ‘You’re still excited.’

I leaned down and undid the top button of her shirt. ‘No,’ I said. ‘This is a new excitement. I am capable of several excitements in the same evening.’

‘Better damn be,’ she said as she pulled me down. ‘I’ve got a newsagent waiting.’

‘Butchers are meatier,’ I said as I sank.

When the lust was spent, we warmed the duck pies Linda had brought, sent them down with a Mill Hill shiraz. Mid-pie, Linda looked at her watch, found the remote control.

‘News, got to have the news,’ she said. ‘News is my life.’

I said, ‘I was taught it was rude to have sex wearing your watch.’

‘Not if it’s on your wrist.’ She blipped through channels, found what she wanted, a dollwoman speaking.

Six people have been found dead at a remote house on the Gippsland lakes. One of them is Susan Ayliss, a member of the panel that decided the multimillion-dollar Cannon Ridge ski resort and casino tender.

I saw Dead Point from above. Then the television helicopter went in low. I didn’t want to watch.

The item went on for a long time. At the end, dollwoman said: The Premier has announced a full-scale inquiry into the Cannon Ridge tender process.

Linda cut the power. She didn’t look at me, snuggled down on the sofa, looked at me.

‘What would a seedy suburban solicitor know about that?’ she said, suspicion in voice and eyes.

‘No more than a newsagent. What he hears on the news, reads in the paper.’

She sat up. ‘Shit, I forgot. A courier came. It’s next to the front door.’

It was a square package, stoutly wrapped, taped like an injured footballer. I took it to the kitchen, performed surgery on it.

An album. An album with a red leather cover. I opened it, paged through it.

Mr Justice Colin Loder was a person of much greater versatility than I’d imagined, a man of wide-ranging interests and exotic tastes. The problem was he didn’t photograph well. He had a tendency to slit his eyes.

‘What exactly are you doing in there?’ said Linda.

‘Opening a bottle.’

I closed the album Xavier Doyle had decided he didn’t need, put it in the cupboard with the dud French frying pan that had a hot spot, opened a bottle of Seven Hills.

‘I’m not finished with you,’ said Linda.

‘And nor am I complete.’

I took the bottle and went next door.

‘You’ll tell me,’ she said, athlete’s legs on the arm of the sofa, bare. She opened my old dressing gown, revealing more flesh.

‘I’ve taken an oath,’ I said. ‘You must respect that.’

‘Put that down and come here.’

‘It’s late. I run in the mornings.’

‘Come here, sunshine.’

All bad things come to an end. Almost. Now all I had to do was get justice for Enzio and the Meaker’s gang. I put this out of my mind for the moment. A long moment, but not long enough.

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