Authors: J. M. Green
Tags: #FIC050000, #FIC031010, #FIC000000, #FIC062000, #FIC022000
âWhere were you?'
âBailey Range,' Ida said. âHow's that for irony.'
A man came from the back of the van, wiping his hands on a rag. âCleared the pipes. Won't last. Connections are buggered.' Once upon a time, Rod had been a spunk: tall, square chin. He raised his head, flicked the mop of peppery hair away. âWho's this?'
âThe Blue Lagoon business,' Ida said. âHer name's Stella Hardy.'
âIs that so?' The grip of Rod's handshake was a touch too strong. He nodded. âYou better come inside.'
The seating was cramped but an improvement on the recliners. I slid around the table and put the folder on top.
âThey got you, too?' Ida asked.
I fiddled with my pen. âNot me personally, a friend.' Vince had advised me to go in soft, hedge and hint. To draw out their information. Cover my arse. âI said I'd have a look at it for them. See if there was any recourse.'
âLot of people got fleeced,' Rod said. He had a blank stare but there was a tremor at his temple. âGood people. Not a legal leg to stand on.'
âThe other investors, you mean. Did you get to know them, personally?'
âAll those creditors meetings we sat through, but we never really spoke. I saw the same people each time. There was a couple of retired folks like us, but the rest seemed to be investment groups, represented by lawyers and sometimes they didn't even show up.'
âAnd when Blue Lagoon stalled on changing the terms, Bailey Range was out of time?'
âCorrect,' Rod said. âWhen the bank called in the debt, Bailey Range had no option but to go into receivership.'
âWe lost everything,' Ida said to the table. âAll our savings.'
âAnd you know that a company called CC Prospecting, a parent company of Blue Lagoon Corp, has the Bailey Range tenements now?'
Rod held my gaze. âWe know.'
âTell me why you tried to crash the Blue Lagoon offices.'
Rod's hands rested on the table in front of him. âWe made official complaints to ASIC. We went to the police. Got us nowhere.' The voice was calm but the knuckles were white.
âGot us an intervention order â and a hell of an anecdote at dinner parties,' Ida said.
âIf we ever get invited to one.'
âYou accused Blue Lagoon of making false statements regarding the gold deposits, and demanded their test samples.'
Rod nodded. âWe had time to go over it all. When we looked back on the fiasco from the beginning, we realised the entire venture hinged on their geology report. In hindsight, we thought this bloody gold business was fishy. Too positive. These geologists use equivocal language, but this report was all certainty and over-confidence.'
âYou think Blue Lagoon Corp was aware that the gold deposits were minimal before 2010?'
The Lloyds swapped a glance. Rod nodded and Ida said, âYes. But we couldn't prove it.'
I cleared my throat. âSome evidence has come to light.'
Rod's eyes travelled to the file on the table in front of me.
âIt's not conclusive, but it may provide grounds for further scrutiny.'
Ida's eyes were bright in the gloom. âWhat evidence, Stella?'
I put the printout of the original report on the table. âThis is an analysis of samples from the area, written a year before the joint venture.'
Rod put his head to the side. âThe original report?'
âYes. Stating that the likelihood of gold deposits in the claim area was slight. Essentially unlikely.'
Ida's mouth fell open.
âWe believe the directors of Blue Lagoon withheld that report and had another report written. The one they submitted to Bailey Range.'
âYou believe? Why don't we ask the bastard who wrote it?' Ida said. âGet the police to interview him, get sworn testimony?'
âYou can't speak to her, because she's dead.'
Ida put a hand to her mouth, with an audible inhale.
âI need a beer,' Rod said. âYou thirsty, Stella?'
They locked the van and we walked to the pub. In the main lounge, Rod went to the bar and came back with a jug of beer and three glasses held in his fingers.
Ida pointed at my bag, where I'd put the printout. âWhat do you intend to do?'
âAs yet, I haven't revealed its existence to anyone. The fact that the report is not public yet gives us some leverage with Blue Lagoon Corp,' I said.
âNo point,' said Rod. âWhatever you've got there, it won't hold up in court. The lawyers Brodtmann has â unbelievable. We can't win that way.'
Ida drew a tissue from her sleeve and sniffed. âThat girl who wrote the dodgy report? What happened to her?'
âShe was found murdered in a drug den near Melbourne.' I hesitated. âBrodtmann's daughter.'
âHis daughter? Good heavens. We didn't ⦠I mean, we've been out prospecting for the last two weeks, no contact with civilisation. No wonder we haven't heard about it,' Ida said.
âThen you probably haven't heard that one of the directors of Bailey Range committed suicide in a car near the mine site.'
âWhich one?' Rod asked, his steely eyes unblinking.
âTrevor Michaels. The police have pieced together his last known movements. About two weeks ago he checked into the motel here in Laverton, left some of his stuff there, and headed out to the desert. His car was found at the site.'
A few blokes in bright orange boiler suits gathered round the bar, others stood smoking in the small courtyard. Jugs of beer were handed around. The noise level steadily increased.
âI was thinking I might go out there, have a look around,' I said.
âWhy?' asked Ida.
âDoes the name Funsail mean anything to you?'
Ida shook her head. âNever heard that name.'
âLook out, here's Chris.' Rod topped up our glasses.
âWho?'
âChris Randall, the local sergeant.' Rod nodded at the bar, where a fellow with a pink face and white, feathery hair was sharing a joke with the barmaid. He picked up his beer and scanned the room, clocked Rod and Ida and ambled over. âRodney, old son. Ida, lovely as usual. Any luck?'
âSome. You know Miss Hardy?'
âHave not had the pleasure.'
âStella.' I put out my hand. He grabbed it in his paw, turned it sideways, and planted his gob onto it. âYou work for?'
âOn holiday.'
He pulled up a chair. âAnd what are you folks chatting about so earnestly over here? Lasseter's vein of gold?'
âA bloke died in the desert,' Rod said.
âWhich bloke? Not the tool out on Yamarna Road? Up to the axles in sand. He rings his mate with the winch â he comes to get him.
He
gets bogged. Had to rescue the pair of them.'
âNot those men,' I said. âTrevor Michaels, from the motel.'
âTerrible,' Randall said. âSearch and Rescue came up from Perth. They're handling it after the Germans found the car.' He drank half the glass. âPlace called Dead Mans Soak.'
âWhat's the best way to get there?' Rod asked.
âTwo choices. A well-prepared adventurous type might take the Great Central Road and turn right near Cosmo Newbery territory.'
âCosmo Newbery?' I asked.
âA great whack of Aboriginal land north of here. You need permits to go through it. Keep going and in three days â non-stop, mind you â you end up in Alice Springs.'
âGreat Central Road sounds the way to go,' I said to Rod.
Randall agreed. âThe other way's quicker but only a suicidal lunatic would risk it. The White Cliffs road to Yamarna goes all the way to Coober Pedy. Half of it is loose sand. Zero water, food, fuel on the way â and that's if the road's open. There's corrugation two-feet deep, with the added fun of rocks and breakaways. So, you know, I wouldn't advise it.' Randall spoke without condescension. I sensed only the concern of someone who didn't want to get a call for the use of his winch.
âOkay. Great Central it is,' said Rod.
âGo off-road and there's abandoned bores and mines all over the shop. Tell me you're not going to do something stupid.'
âDon't worry, Randall.' It was Ida. âWe know what we're doing.'
âRightio,' said Randall. âI'll follow you out there. Good excuse to have a look around. Been meaning to do that ever since the poor bastard dropped off the radar.' Randall's name was called out and he placed both hands on the table and heaved himself to standing. âThat'll be my lunch. See you all later â say, meet back here in about an hour?' He hitched up his shorts and elbowed a path to the counter.
Rod stared at his beer. âShe has peacocks,' he said quietly.
âWho?'
âCrystal,' Ida said. âWe got a call one day. After she'd had us removed from the Blue Lagoon offices, she invited us to afternoon tea at her house.'
Stunned, I burped and said, âAre you fucking kidding me?'
âYou go up the drive, a good hundred metres of city real estate before you see the house, and there's someone feeding peacocks on the lawn.'
âWhat did they say?'
âNot
they
, only Crystal. He was overseas.'
âHe doesn't know the half of what that woman is capable of,' Ida said. âThe blonde airhead thing is an act. Behind those sad eyes lurks the business acumen of Kerry Packer.'
âShe offered us money to back off, stop the protests.' Rod finished his beer. âWe took it, too.'
Behind the bar was an open window, through which an Aboriginal man with a bushy beard was buying a carton of beer. I recognised him as one of Walkabout Annie's companions. And for some reason I wondered why the museum was called The Great Beyond. The idea made me vaguely nauseous. I thought of Trevor Michaels â going into the great beyond and not coming back.
I turned to Ida. âI might get changed, if we're going out to the desert; pack a few essentials.'
The air outside was cool and pleasant, and baking aromas drifted from the pub kitchen, something buttery with lots of sugar and fruit. Rhubarb? I was tempted to head back inside, get that sweetness into me. Surely it could drive out this awful sense of everything being wrong. I felt a loneliness that bordered on the existential and found myself drifting over to the public phones across the street, but I changed my mind and started to walk back to my unit at the caravan park. It was quiet out and only a few people were sitting under the trees in front of the pub. The lady in the caravan-park office was sweeping the path out the front. All the way back to my unit, I had a strong sensation of being watched.
37
I PACKED
the bread and pinched the knife from the drawer, and filled my water bottle from the tap. The printout was still in my backpack and it seemed prudent to keep it with me â as well as my laptop, even though it was heavy. I didn't trust the dodgy locks on the unit. For company, I turned on the TV and caught the news.
Flamboyant South African mining magnate Merritt Van Zyl discusses the new Shine Point refinery deal, said to be worth billions of dollars, and which will create thousands of new jobs and boost the flagging economy. He sat down with Shelley Swindon in Darwin:
Swindon: Mr Van Zyl, this deal was a long time coming, what sealed it?
Van Zyl: Veldt Minerals required certain guarantees from its partner.
Swindon: You mean the Australian government?
Van Zyl: Yes.
Swindon: And what has the Australian government brought to the table?
Van Zyl: That's confidential, but the deal is done. And it's a win-win.
Swindon: Can you explain how you were able to secure the deal when you're facing fraud charges in South Africa related to the manipulation of share prices to prevent the hostile takeover of one of your companies.
Van Zyl: I deny all charges. It's a beat up by my competitors. I will be found innocent and then I will take legal action to clear my name.
Swindon: One of your top executives was beaten nearly to death at his home in Port Elizabeth, rumours abound that you were involved.
Van Zyl: I assure you I had nothing to do with the assault on that man, a man who is a personal friend. I have done everything in my power to see that he and his family are taken care of. Now, if you will excuse me, I have a busy schedule and I'm due in a meeting.
There was something odd about the way the journalist pronounced Van Zyl's name, like Vun Zail
â Mr Vun Zail.
I turned off the set and stood still as the room began to move. I was plastered in a film of sweat.
Mr Funsail.
Outside, the wind picked up, moving through the power lines and making them howl, stirring the dirt on the road. I could feel it stealing through the gaps in the unit, rattling the roof. Worse noises were coming from inside the room: groaning, and the agonised repetition of
oh fuck, oh fuck
.