Read The Washington Club Online
Authors: Peter Corris
PETER CORRIS is known as the âgodfather' of Australian crime fiction through his Cliff Hardy detective stories. He has written in many other areas, including a co-authored autobiography of the late Professor Fred Hollows, a history of boxing in Australia, spy novels, historical novels and a collection of short stories about golf (see
www.petercorris.net
). In 2009, Peter Corris was awarded the Ned Kelly Award for Best Fiction by the Crime Writers Association of Australia. He is married to writer Jean Bedford and has lived in Sydney for most of his life. They have three daughters and six grandsons.
The Cliff Hardy collection
The Dying Trade
(1980)
White Meat
(1981)
The Marvellous Boy
(1982)
The Empty Beach
(1983)
Heroin Annie
(1984)
Make Me Rich
(1985)
The Big Drop
(1985)
Deal Me Out
(1986)
The Greenwich Apartments
(1986)
The January Zone
(1987)
Man in the Shadows
(1988)
O'Fear
(1990)
Wet Graves
(1991)
Aftershock
(1991)
Beware of the Dog
(1992)
Burn, and Other Stories
(1993)
Matrimonial Causes
(1993)
Casino
(1994)
The Washington Club
(1997)
Forget Me If You Can
(1997)
The Reward
(1997)
The Black Prince
(1998)
The Other Side of Sorrow
(1999)
Lugarno
(2001)
Salt and Blood
(2002)
Master's Mates
(2003)
The Coast Road
(2004)
Taking Care of Business
(2004)
Saving Billie
(2005)
The Undertow
(2006)
Appeal Denied
(2007)
The Big Score
(2007)
Open File
(2008)
Deep Water
(2009)
Torn Apart
(2010)
Follow the Money
(2011)
Comeback
(2012)
The Dunbar Case
(2013)
Silent Kill
(2014)
This edition published by Allen & Unwin in 2014
First published by Bantam Books, a division of Transworld Publishers, in 1997
Copyright © Peter Corris 1997
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording or by any information storage and retrieval system, without prior permission in writing from the publisher. The Australian
Copyright Act 1968
(the Act) allows a maximum of one chapter or 10 per cent of this book, whichever is the greater, to be photocopied by any educational institution for its educational purposes provided that the educational institution (or body that administers it) has given a remuneration notice to the Copyright Agency (Australia) under the Act.
Allen & Unwin
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Crows Nest NSW 2065
Australia
Phone: | (61 2) 8425 0100 |
Email: | |
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Cataloguing-in-Publication details are available from the National Library of Australia
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ISBN 978 1 76011 021 5 (pbk)
ISBN 978 1 74343 801 5 (ebook)
For help in the preparation of this book thanks to Joel Becker, Jean Bedford and Adele Horin. Special thanks for technical information to Patrick Whitty of ADI
In our twenty-year-plus relationship, there were only two reasons why my lawyer, Cy Sackville, ever called me. One was to remind me that I owed him money. In my time as a private detective Cy had bailed me out of gaol, headed off suits for assault, threatened welshing clients with litigation and performed other services. He didn't need the money and I usually didn't have it, but Cy said the reminder kept us on a professional footing. The other reason was to invite me to play squash. I hate squash, play it like tennis and mostly lose, even to Cy who is no athletic marvel. He's had the lessons though, has all the gear and gets lots of practice. He enjoys winning and I see losing as like paying interest on the debt. A twenty-year pattern is pretty fixed but patterns can be broken.
âI want to hire you, Cliff,' Cy said.
âI still owe you money.'
âThis could clear it and then some.' Cy did his Masters at the University of Chicago and has resolutely hung on to the Americanisms he
picked up in his days as a brilliant student. Some, like âcool', meaning uncomplicated, have gone in and out of fashion since he graduated.
I was interested. Getting out of debt is almost as interesting as actually making money. And if I was out of debt I could refuse some squash invitations, or even try harder to win. And working for Cy would certainly mean doing something legal in both senses. Cy is too smart to need to be dodgy.
âI guess I could fit you in,' I said.
I could hear Cy's snort of amusement over the line. âI know you're snowed under with big cases, but if you could get along here at two this afternoon I'd be most terribly grateful.'
âGive me a taste.'
âI'm representing Claudia Fleischman.'
âIs that good?'
âI suppose in your usual ignorant fashion you haven't been reading the papers.'
âNot true. I read that Sampras beat Stich in straights in Munich.'
âSo one millionaire pops it over the net a few more times than another millionaire. Who cares? Claudia Fleischman . . .'
âI know who she is, Cy. I was having a lend of you. You're not exposed to enough irony in your trade. You're rusty, if you get the pun.'
Cy groaned. âI wish I hadn't heard any of that. See you at two, Cliff. Don't be late.'
Claudia Fleischman was accused of murdering her husband. Julius Fleischman was a
mysterious figure, the only absolutely clear thing about him being that he was very rich. Some newspaper accounts had him as English, others as South African. I seemed to remember that there was dispute as to whether he had become a naturalised Australian. He had a big house in Vaucluse and a slightly smaller one with a lot of land around it at Kiama.
His yacht was one of the biggest and best. Among his other toys were a few racehorses, a Lear jet and a vintage Rolls-Royce said to be worth a million dollars. It might as well have been a 1956 Volkswagen for all the good it was to him now. Three months back Fleischman had been shot to death in his bedroom.
I'd followed the case in a desultory fashion. At first there were âno suspects', then âinvestigations were continuing' and finally Claudia Fleischman, along with one Anton Van Kep, was up for committal, charged with murder. Motive obviousâthe dough. Means, well, Van Kep was the means and if a wife doesn't have an opportunity to murder a man the law doesn't know who does. Almost nothing was on the record as yet. To judge from a press photo that was published in defiance of the ban, Claudia Fleischman was a spectacularly attractive womanâthirtyish, tall, fashionably slender, dark. Journalists speculated circumspectly about a love triangle, about a purely commercial hit, about a bungled attempt at intimidation. They didn't know and the public didn't know.
Only the cops and lawyers knew anything solid and I was about to join their exalted company. I had to admit that I was intrigued. Summons-serving, bodyguarding and money-minding are all very well and pay the bills, but there's bugger-all about them that's âinvestigative' and it was primarily my snoopiness that had got me into the business in the first place. My ex-wife said that I had no respect for people's privacy and I'm afraid she was right. My bookshelves gave me awayâ
The Diary of Pete Seeger, The Letters of Ernest Hemingway,
that sort of thing, took up a fair bit of space. I had the paperback of the letters of Paddy White all ready to go. How the old bastard would have despised Julius who, so far as I knew, had never read a book, looked at a painting or been to a play in his life.
It was close to midday when Cy called and almost one o'clock when I finished musing about Fleischman, money, life and death. I had a few small things on my plate, nothing that couldn't be delayed for something more interesting. I ate lunch at my deskâthree bananas and a bigger-than-standard glass of wine. Since Glen Withers left me to marry another cop, I've found it hard to think of meals as anything other than necessary fuel. The fruit shop in Glebe Point Road has seductive bananas the year round and they'd become my staple foodâtasty, easy on the clackers, full of goodness and no plate or cutlery needed. I'd discovered that bananas don't go really well
with any kind of alcohol and that was a plus. Nourishing food that kept my grog consumption down had to be a good thing. I'd even thought of doing the bookâ
A PI's Balanced Diet,
eight bananas and eight glasses of red wine per diem.
I wandered down William Street and took in a little slice of Hyde Park on my way to Cy's office in Martin Place. People occupy the park in numbers unless it's pissing down rain. This December day was fine, a bit muggyâshirt sleeves and drill trousers weather for me, no jacket. I wondered if any of the people lunching on the grass, strolling about or hurrying through were millionaires or murderers. I was pleased with the speculationâit showed I was getting involved and using my imagination. When I'm working on a case and no bizarre ideas or unlikely suspicions enter my head it means I'm not properly wired into it.
Cy's office is everything it should beâwell appointed but not opulent, suggesting competence rather than ostentation, effective service rather than massive fees, but with those professional touches that showed you why you needed him probably more than he needed you. His secretary hadn't changed in twenty-plus years. Miss Mudlark, I called her to myself, because she always wore brown. She was a tall, rather angularly built woman, wearing a beige blouse and loose dark brown pants, high heels. Her hair and eyes were
brown and I bet she took her coffee with a dash of milk. Her name was Janine. She knew how matters stood between me and Cy and she was tolerant. Our communications were almost entirely banter.
âMr Sackville is expecting you, Mr Hardy. Go right in.'
âThanks, Janine. Nice outfit.'
âYou always say that.'
âIt always is. Is
she
in there?'
âYes. Try to stay on your feet.'
I knocked and entered in what I hoped was a smooth, confident sweep. Cy was sitting behind his desk and stayed there. A woman was in a chair slightly to his side; not exactly where you'd expect a lawyer's client to be but not in his lap either. She stayed seated too. That made me, at six feet and half an inch, the tallest thing in the room, but a long way from the most powerful.
Cy checked his watch. A reflex action. I'd done the same a few minutes earlier and ensured that I was on time.
âCliff Hardy, Mrs Fleischman,' Cy said. âClaudia, this is the man I spoke to you about.'
She turned her head slightly to look up at me and I suddenly understood what Janine the Mudlark meant. This was a woman to melt your bones. She was nothing like beautiful and much, much more than that. Her dark hair was frizzy and her nose was big, like her mouth. Her eyes had a strange slant and she was slightly buck-toothed. The effect was
devastating and utterly unlike the newspaper photographsâbetter.
She said my name and I muttered hers out of a dry throat. Cy pointed to a chair that more or less put his desk between me and Mrs Fleischman. Good thing too, if I was to do any thinking. I sat down and tried not to let the flash I'd caught of her long legs under a short white dress activate any free-range hormones.