longer and straighter, Joel struggled.

‘He’d be stuffed if it wasn’t for his short game,’ a man in the gallery said. ‘Christ, can he get it up and down.’

‘Abo eyesight,’ another bloke said and his tone was admiring.

Towards the end of the round Joel started to pull himself together. He pounded the ball down the middle and got it on the green close to the cup on three holes in a row. Shouts went up as his putts dropped and I gathered he was in with a chance. The crowd following him built suddenly.

‘I’m new at this, mate,’ I said to the bloke who’d commented on Joel’s eyesight. ‘What’s going on?’

‘He needs to birdie the last to make the cut.’

‘Which means?’

He looked at me as if I shouldn’t be allowed out alone. ‘It’s a par five, means he has to get a four or better.’

‘I get it. What if he doesn’t make it?’

‘Then he’s out his travel and accommodation, and his entry fee and his caddie’s fee. He goes home with bugger-all.’

Joel hit his drive into the trees on the left and the gallery groaned.

‘Great out,’ my informant said as Joel’s ball came sailing out of the trees onto the fairway. ‘He can do it.’

‘Too far,’ another spectator said. ‘He can’t get on from there. Christ, he’s taking driver.’

My informant told me what I needed to know without me having to ask. ‘He’s using his driver off the deck. It’s really designed for hitting off a tee. Incredibly hard shot.’

Joel took a deep breath, set himself and swung. I feared for his spine from the way he wound himself up and let go, but he made contact and the ball took off low and climbed like a fighter jet until it was sailing high towards the green. A roar went up from the crowd gathered there and I felt a thump on my back.

‘He made it,’ my new friend said. ‘He bloody made it.’

We moved as quickly as we could to the green. I was caught up in it now and shouldered my way forward to get a good look. There were two balls on the green, one a little short of it and another in the sand bunker on the right.

The man in the bunker took two shots to get out and the crowd groaned. The guy who was short of the green rolled his ball up close to the cup and the crowd clapped. Then it was Joel’s turn because he was furthest away. The distance wasn’t quite as long as a cricket pitch but near enough. There seemed to be several rises and falls in the surface between him and the hole. He walked around, surveying the putt from every angle, consulted with his caddie, then walked quickly up, took one look along the line and struck.

‘Baddeley style,’ someone said.

The ball took the slopes, rolling first away from the hole and then towards it. It gathered speed, then lost it as it got nearer. If the birds were singing and the cicadas scraping I didn’t hear them. The ball seemed to be drawn towards the hole. Then it stopped, half a roll short. A sigh went up from the crowd and Joel dropped his putter and buried his face in his hands in anguish.

I spoke to Joel briefly after the game but he seemed to have lost interest in everything. His coach, Brett Walker, a big, red-faced, freckled character, had a few words with him and then turned away to talk to a journalist.

‘I’m a broken down ex-Queensland copper,’ I heard him say. ‘But I can hit a six iron two hundred yards.’

Joel drank a couple of quick cans and then headed for the car park. I followed him at a discreet distance. Disappointed and with drink inside him, he’d be vulnerable if his enemy was about, but nothing happened. He drove steadily enough and turned off into the park a couple of hundred metres from the Walker house. I kept him in view, staying out of sight. He left the car and joined a girl who was sitting on a bench under a tree. They went into a clinch that seemed to last for ten minutes, and when they broke it they stayed as close together as they could.

They talked intently and interspersed the talk with kissing and hugging. There was some headshaking and nodding and more kissing and then the girl turned away and headed back towards the road on foot, leaving Joel sitting on the bench. I followed her, feeling slightly ridiculous ducking behind trees. She turned and looked back and for a second I thought she’d spotted me, but she was waving to Joel. I was closer now and saw that she had tears on her face and was young, very young.

She walked up the road and turned into the driveway of the Walker house. A woman came down to meet her: same slim build, blonde hair and body language-clearly her mother. They argued heatedly.

I drove back to the course, where players were still finishing their rounds. My pass got me back in and I found Brett Walker sitting on his own at a table near the beer tent. There were four empty cans in front of him and he had another in his fist. Fourex. I sat down opposite him and he stared at me blearily.

‘You did it, didn’t you?’

‘Did what?’

‘Sent the threatening messages to Joel.’

He swigged from the can. ‘Bugger off, whoever you are.’

‘I’m the private detective Joel hired to find out who’s been threatening him. And I have. You don’t like his relationship with your daughter because he’s Aboriginal.’

For a minute I thought he was going to throw the can at me and I almost hoped he would. It would have given me an excuse to hit him. But he drained it and crushed it in his big, freckled fist. ‘I can’t help it,’ he muttered. ‘It’s the way I was brought up. I can’t bloody stand the thought of it.’

‘What did you hope to achieve?’

‘Get him to sign with SMI and piss off to America.’

‘Brilliant. He’d probably take her with him.’

‘She’s seventeen, just.’

‘I’ve seen them together, mate. You’ve got Buckley’s.’

‘Jesus. I need another beer.’

He staggered off and I almost felt sorry for him. He returned with two cans and thrust one at me. I cracked it and took a swig. ‘Thanks. I hope you’re not planning to drive home.’

‘Wife’s coming to get me.’

‘Is she with you on this?’

‘Christ, she doesn’t know.’

‘She does. I’ve seen her and your daughter going at it hammer and tongs. Couldn’t have been about anything else.’

‘Bloody snooper.’

‘That’s right, and I’ve snooped on things like this for twenty years and learned a few things. You’re out of your depth. The surest way to pair them up is for you to stick your nose in.’

‘I didn’t think he was smart enough to do something like hire a detective.’

‘I’d say he’s very smart. Smarter than you. You need to come down out of your tree into the twenty-first century.’

Maybe I was still hoping he’d cut up rough, but it didn’t take him that way. He sighed and shook his head and seemed to lose interest in his beer. He lifted his head and glanced across to where players were hitting on the practice fairway. I followed his glance and saw Joel Grinter spill balls onto the ground and start hitting.

Walker watched Grinter’s long fluid stroke. ‘Missed the bloody cut, knows I’m pissed off with him about something. And he’s out there practising. He’s got a beautiful swing, hasn’t he?’

‘He does.’

‘Shit, I think you might be right. I’ve been a mug. Well, that’s the end of us.’

‘Why?’

He looked at me. ‘Well, you’re going to tell him, aren’t you?’

I drank some more beer. ‘It’s a good drop, Fourex. I don’t have to tell him, not if you’re fair dinkum and leave it alone. What’s the expression? Play it as it lies?’

Вы читаете Taking Care of Business
Добавить отзыв
ВСЕ ОТЗЫВЫ О КНИГЕ В ИЗБРАННОЕ

0

Вы можете отметить интересные вам фрагменты текста, которые будут доступны по уникальной ссылке в адресной строке браузера.

Отметить Добавить цитату
×