I stopped her. âAre these instructions written anywhere on the map Debs gave me?'
âNo.'
âI'll call you when I get there.'
I examined the key ring Debs had given me. There were nineteen keys on the Snoopy ring, and an attached subsidiary ring, distinguished by a fetching Artisan Baker Association tag, held an additional eleven.
We pulled up outside an old warehouse. I paid the driver and hit redial on my phone. âI'm here, I think.'
âWalk towards the far-right end of the warehouse and you'll see a largish, rusty, industrial garage.'
I followed her instructions. âLargish' was an understatement. The red, corrugated garage door was three times my height.
âNow use the fat key to unlock the garage.'
I looked at the key ring. âThere are three relatively obese keys. Which one is it?'
âThe one with the bit of old gum stuck on the end.'
A sticky, heavy key unlocked the door. I turned the handle.
âDon't turn the handle.'
âHelp!' I yelped. The door jolted upwards and rolled inwards, taking me with it. Dangling precariously close to the top, I let go of everything and fell to the ground with a thud. My phone was now on top of the garage door four metres in the air.
âAUNT DAPHNE,' I screamed, âIF YOU'RE STILL ON THE PHONE, I'M NOT VERY HURT, BUT MY PHONE IS ON TOP OF THE GARAGE AND THE KEYS ARE IN THE HANDLE. I WILL CALL YOU BACK WHEN I'VE FIGURED OUT A SOLUTION.
âCock,' I said, looking down at my freshly waxed knees to find them gashed and bruised. They now matched my toe. I picked myself up, and dusted the leaves and twigs from my frock.
First, I tried jumping on the spot. A short piece of rope dangled from the door but no amount of self-generated bounce would propel me three metres off the ground. I am not the tallest person, even in my elongating Miu Mius.
Next, I turned to nature, grabbing a branch to hook onto the rope. MacGyver would be proud, I thought, leaping into the air and splitting the lining of my already sullied shift dress. My days as a truant of athletics class had come back to bite me. âIt was your idea,' I yelled back at my laughing head.
With silk lining trailing tail-like behind me, I slumped against the garage wall, where I bumped into a button. âNo,' I whispered, disbelievingly. I pushed it. Sure enough, in a smooth motorised motion, down came the door. I pushed it again to halt the door halfway, hobbled out of the garage, retrieved my phone and keys and redialled my aunt.
She answered immediately. âAre you all right?'
âStephen King would have nightmares about that door.'
âDid you hurt yourself?'
âNo, I didn't hurt
myself
,' I said. âYour evil beast of a door hurt meâI haven't had grazed knees since I was six!'
âI'm so very sorry, darling.'
âJust talk me through the rest of it.'
âGet the eighth keyâ'
âThey're unnumbered.'
âI know, sweetheart. Count clockwise from the green key.'
I fumbled through them.
âThat one's for the top lock on the door inside the garage.'
âNext?'
âThe key two back from the eighth key goes in the lock below and then the green key works with the third lock.'
So far, so good.
âAre you in?'
âYes, thank you.'
âYou're so much like your mother when you're angry.'
If I hadn't been so furious, I'd have been able to appreciate the place. It was a striking old warehouse converted into a large loft with high ceilings and graffitied walls. The kitchen was the centrepiece, with an enormous woodfired stove between two electric ovens.
I tended to my knees using the plasters in my Toolkit, and called Debs.
Her PA answered. âShe's in a meeting,' he said. âIs there something I can help you with?'
I explained about my luggage.
âI'm sorry, Ruby. She hasn't been able to get there yet. She should be there by sixish.'
I looked at my watch. It was 4.30 p.m. âI need you to get an urgent message to her,' I said. âI'm flying with the Leader of the Opposition to Sydney at half six, so I'll need it within the hour.'
âThat's not possible,' he said. âEven if she leaves now, which she can't, with peak-hour traffic she won't be at your aunt's in time.'
âCock.' I was dishevelled, dusty, bruised and bloodied. I had nothing to change into except the spare bra and pants in my Toolkit.
âRuby?' he said. âYou need to get to the airport pronto if you're going to make that flight. I'll arrange a cab. In the meantimeâand this didn't come from meâDebs keeps an overnight bag in Daphne's closet.'
Close to despair, I limped into the vast, main bedroom and rummaged through the rainbow of Irish linen in Daphne's wardrobe for something structured. Nada. But there, at the end, was the pot of gold: an ostrich-leather overnight bag embossed with Debs' initials. I grabbed it along with my handbag and ran down the stairs and out the door, locking it behind me. I sent up a quick prayer to the Goddess of Garages, pressed the button and jumped into the waiting taxi.
âTullamarine. Fast.' In the back seat, I dug through the overnight bag. âHallelujah!'
The cabby shot me a quizzical look as I held up a stunning pair of black Scanlan & Theodore cigaretteleg trousers. Size eight and clearly intended for giraffes, judging by the length of them. Underneath was a folded white-collared shirt. It would be a squeeze, but one worth making. The pièce de résistance was the cosmetics bag containing a range of travel-sized La Prairie products.
Out the window, everything about Melbourne appeared artistic; from buildings to overpasses, there was an eye for the aesthetic. Beneath a phallic yellow sculpture arching over the airport expressway, my driver asked which terminal I was going to. I showed him the instructions Beryl had given me.
âThat's for charter jets, mate.'
Until that moment, it hadn't occurred to me that I would not be boarding a commercial flight. My plan to occupy the disabled cubicle at the airport and force my body mass into the hopelessly skinny trousers had to be scrapped. There was no way in hell that I would board a private plane in torn couture. I needed to be Jackie Onassis, not Jackie Oh-no-sis.
âPull over.'
âWe're in the middle of the bloody Tullamarine Freeway, love.'
âI need to change.'
âChange what?'
âClothes.'
âI can't pull over, mate. It's not safe.'
âI'll have to do it here then. Now, if you wouldn't mind keeping your eyes on the roadâ¦'
âDon't flatter yourself,' he said, turning up the radio.
I took a deep breath and held it, hitched my dress up over my hips and wriggled into the beautifully tailored trousers, hoping the recent higher-than-average carb intake hadn't added critical centimetres to my circumference.
Grunting and panting, I thrust my pelvis skywards, untangled my underpants from the knot they'd formed between my buttocks and gave the trousers one last tug before zipping the fly. I was in. The hard part was over. I pulled my dress over my head and slipped into the crisp, clean shirt, buttoning it from the top down.
âThat was quite a show,' said the cabby while I folded the trouser legs under with the help of a little double-sided tape from my Toolkit.
âYou were
supposed
to be watching the road.'
âI bloody did!' He pointed out the window. âIt's those guys that got the showâisn't that the Masters bloke?'
I ducked. âAs in
Max
Masters?'
âI'm pretty sure that's him.' He waved excitedly at the car next to him.
âStop waving!'
âIt's my taxi; I'll wave if I want to.'
I moaned. âIs he waving back?' My head was firmly between my knees.
âYeah, he seems real nice.' The car slowed to a stop. âHey, I reckon he's going to the same place you areâwhat a fluke!'
I kept my head down.
âHe's coming over to talk to us. I can't wait to tell my wife about this.' He jumped out of his cab to greet Max.
Reaching forwards to put fifty dollars on his seat, I shuffled to the passenger side in a bid to escape unnoticed. There was a tap on my window.
âG'day, Roo,' Max said, grinning down at me. Di giggled; Luke blushed; Flack the Cop couldn't stifle his smile. Clutching at scraps of dignity, I slung my bags over my shoulder, lowered my sunglasses and walked towards the terminal, my head held high. âDon't we have a plane to catch?'
Luke's phone rang, cutting short the second awkward moment in as many days.
Di ran to catch up with me. âWe didn't have a chance to meet properly before,' she said, chivalrously overlooking the fact that she had just seen my pelvic floor muscles at work. âI'm Dianna FreyaâI handle Max's media.'
âRuby Stanhope,' I said, my face still hot with humiliation. âI do complimentary mobile peep shows with a bit of financial policy advice on the side.'
She laughed. âWe've all done it,' she said. âI love your shoes, by the way.'
âThanks. I was admiring your red ones earlier.'
âThey're my arse-kicking shoes,' she said, âwhich come in handy on a day like this. Anyway, we've got
Sunset
coming for a prerecord in ten, so I'd better find somewhere quiet to do itâdo you mind helping me out?'
âSure.' I added a handful of new items to Google to my list.
âJust give my bags to the RAAF lady over there. This is our first trip on the BBJ, but I'm told they just put our luggage in the hull.' She gestured towards a uniformed officer who stood at the foot of a small white jet marked ROYAL AUSTRALIAN AIR FORCE .
Before I could ask her for a quick translation, she'd already taken a call on one phone and was texting from another while running towards an approaching satellite truck.
The uniformed lady came across the tarmac to help with the two handbags, overnight bag, suit bag and Di's dilapidated briefcase.
âHello,' I said, not knowing whether I should be addressing her by title. âI'm Ruby Stanhope. These belong to Dianna Freya and me.'
She crossed our names off the list on her clipboard as if she was front of house for the opening of a club. âWould you like to come aboard?'
âIs anyone else there?'
âMr Harley is taking a phone call.'
I followed her up the flip-down stairs. The last time I'd been on a private jet was when I flew to an oil project in western Kazakhstan in a ârevamped' Soviet plane that had all the interior charm of a Soho dustbin on a Saturday night. Now I walked down a narrow corridor with shiny wood panelling on my left and silk-covered walls on my right. It opened onto a small room. Twenty or so large leather lounges sat on either side of glossy coffee tables, which displayed a spread of newspapers and magazines.
âCan I get you a drink?' asked the flight attendant.
âI'd love some water,' I said, taking a seat.
She returned shortly with a bottle and a selection of biscuits. âMr Harley asked if you would join him when you're free.' She showed me to a small meeting room at the front of the plane, which contained four seats and a large table. Luke, who stood in the corner staring out the window, was on the phone. He turned to usher me in.
âHow awesome is this?' he said when he finished his call. âQuite. Who owns it?'
âThe people,' he said. âThis will be our maiden voyageâ the Opposition doesn't get to use them until we're in campaign mode.' When he finished the sentence, it seemed to dawn on him that he was now running a spontaneous election campaign. He closed his eyes and pressed his index fingers to his temples.
âWhat am I doing here?' I asked.
âWell, I'm glad you asked.' Luke opened his eyes and removed the lid from a takeaway cappuccino with pathetic froth. âWe need help.'
âOkayâ¦'
âNone of us saw this coming: we haven't started fundraising properly; the party is completely drained of dosh thanks to two recent state campaigns; we're polling terribly on the economy because people lean on the incumbent to take them through these sorts of global cluster fucks; and now we're up against the first female PM, who is bound to have a bit of a honeymoon between now and polling day.'
We watched people scurry around the tarmac, juggling phones and luggage.
Luke continued: âSomehow, we've got to get our shit together and get the message out that we know what we're doing and that we're better than they areâbut that's a pretty big ask with virtually nothing in the coffers, only a handful of fully developed policy platforms and a shitload of semi-marginal seats without preselected candidates.' He stopped to draw breath.
âHow, pray tell, can I, an unemployed Brit with not an iota of political background, help you do that?'
Luke slurped the froth from his cappuccino. âI'm so sick of these hacks who've done nothing else with their lives but politics. Sure, they're useful because they understand the process, but we need a few new ideas if we're going to make it through.'
âI don't have a working visa,' I blurted out.
âWe'll sort something out.'
I imagined what Bruce at Immigration would say to that.
âBut,' he continued, âthis is going to be a miscellaneous gigânot quite the straight financial stuff I had in mind for you when we first met.'
âHow so?'
âIt might mean that you need to donate the occasional hair-removal tool and salad-scented paraphernalia in the middle of writing a policy speech for the Business Council of Australia conference. Or provide adult entertainment for weary colleagues en route to the airportâ¦' He stopped to laugh at his own joke then cleared his throat.
âVery funny.'
He changed tenor. âThe LOO's on
Sunset
so we'd better get someone down there with a dictaphone. Do you mind?' For a second, I contemplated his proposition before realising I barely understood it. âSure,' I bluffed. âWhere's this loo?'