The Other Side of Sorrow

The Other Side of Sorrow by Peter Corris Read Free Book Online Page B

Book: The Other Side of Sorrow by Peter Corris Read Free Book Online
Authors: Peter Corris
day’s work. It was certainly worth a drink or two and I was looking forward to it. The fact that I’d be having the drink alone made me think briefly of Annette and then, for somewhat longer, of Tess Hewitt.
    Back when Bob Hawke was ruling the roost, there was a proposal that all Australians should be issued with an identity card to be called the Australia Card. The idea was that the card would make it easier for the authorities to catch up with tax cheats, welfare frauds and other fiddlers with the system. The outcry against it came from the left and the right and the proposal was scuttled. I was against it instinctively as a sort of crypto-anarchist and a reader of George Orwell. Big Brother didn’t need any more of a leg-up. Civil libertarians spelled out how it would’ve violated privacy in the affairs of the citizens from sexual preference to political affiliation and back again. As it turned out, they were right and they were wrong. These days, if you know how, you can find out just about anything about anybody if you can tap into the vast computerised data banks held by government agencies, financial and educational institutions and the free-wheeling marketplace.
    I drove to my office in Darlinghurst, ignored the mail and the faxes, and made a series of phone calls. Pressing all the right buttons is costly, but if you’ve got a name and a birthdate, not to mention extra information like a mother’s maiden name, it’s astonishing what’s on record and how easily freelance hackers can access, assemble and market it. Everyone in my business is a subscriber to one or more of these services. You pay off in lots of different ways—depositing in TAB accounts, permitting items to be debited to your account in various stores and outlets, providing services free, doing favours. It’s dirty, but it’s essential to survival in the modern inquirer business.
    When I’d finished I tidied up the paperwork, made a few calls to keep other cases ticking over and declared my unavailability to two would-be clients I’d normally have gobbled up. I spread Cyn’s cheque out on the desk and debated whether to deposit it. What kind of a bastard would take money from a dying woman to locate and protect his own daughter? On the other hand, what professional would devote time and resources to chasing a fantasy? So far, the pursuit of Damien Talbot and Meg (aka Margaret? Megan?) French had cost time and petrol, lost me some business and the bills from the hackers would come in. Cyn’s cheque would cover it but there wouldn’t be a lot over.
    It was after five and the rain was washing the windows—the only way they ever got washed. I’d bought a bottle of Teacher’s on the way in. I opened it, poured a good measure into a paper cup and put my feet on the desk. The ankle I’d jarred making my famous jump twinged and I grimaced as I swallowed some medicinal Scotch. The most I’d ever cleared in the broad jump at school was a bit over sixteen feet which placed me third in the Sydney inter-school athletic carnival. That recollection brought back a memory of who’d won it—a pale, orange-haired, stocky kid named ‘Redda’ Phillips from Fort Street High. He’d also won the hop-step-and-jump, the high jump and the two sprints. It was a privilege to be beaten by him. I had another drink and wondered if kids still called redheads ‘Redda’ or ‘Bluey’. Somehow I doubted it.
    I knew what I was doing—putting off calling Cyn. I folded the cheque and put it into my wallet. Indecisive. That wasn’t me. I picked up the phone, dialled and got her answering machine. I left a message that I was making progress but had nothing solid yet. The easy way out. I took the bottle home with me.

7
    At 9.30 the next morning I answered the phone to a solicitor named Hargreaves who told me that unless I presented at his office by 11 o’clock that

Similar Books

Roberson, Jennifer - Cheysuli 08

A Tapestry of Lions (v1.0)

Guardian of the Storm

Kaitlyn O'Connor

Magnificat

Chelsea Quinn Yarbro

Beating Heart

A. M. Jenkins