The High Commissioner

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The High Commissioner Page 27

by Jon Cleary


  “Do you think that was what she was trying to do? Bring them to justice?”

  Malone shook his head. “No. But I’m not going to contradict them. Would you, sir?”

  “As I said, you can’t catch them all. And sometimes it’s for the best.” He smiled and put out his hand. “Good-bye, Sergeant. It’s a pity you’re not staying longer. We could have gone and seen a few cricket matches together. I could have told you again how I bowled Wally Hammond for a duck.” He winked and smiled more broadly. Why, the old bastard can even laugh at himself, Malone thought. “Sergeant Coburn sent you his best. Said to tell you his girl – he called her his bird – she’s just given him a present to celebrate his escape from that bomb. A purple weskit to go with his purple tie.”

  Malone grinned. “He’ll look good in that at the Yard.”

  “Over my dead body he will,” said Denzil, and with a final wave of his hand walked away, stolid, dependable, eroded only by memories of other days.

  Lisa was the last to say good-bye to Malone. “I’m coming home,” she said. “But not for a few months. Mr. Quentin has asked me to stay on till the new High Commissioner is appointed. I’ll be training a new girl to take my place.”

  “You might like the new High Commissioner.”

  She shook her head. “It wouldn’t matter who he was, what he was like. I couldn’t stay on, not after—” She took his hand, began to walk towards the passengers’ entrance with him. They had been in the V.I.P. lounge, the last time, Malone knew, that he would ever receive that sort of treatment. Two days from now he would be back in his proper status. “I think I’d like to try Sydney for a while.”

  “Sydney? Not Melbourne, with your parents?”

  “Sydney,” she said, and lifted her face and kissed him for the first time. “Will you write me each week till I come back?”

  “Every day,” he said, and returned her kiss. “I like that perfume.”

  “I’ll douse myself in it just before I get off the plane.” She gazed at him for a moment, then nodded, as if satisfied she had made some sort of right decision. Then the had turned away and gone across to say good-bye to Quentin.

  Now Quentin, in the small restaurant in Sydney, said, “Are you ever going to tell Lisa the truth?”

  Malone waited while Quentin paid the bill, then they walked out into the bright spring sunlight of Macquarie Street. The lunch-time crowds were hurrying reluctantly back to their offices. Flushed, tousled-haired girls who had been playing basketball in the Domain went by in their brief bright skirts; it was difficult to imagine that in ten minutes they would be cool, modestly clad typists. A tanned healthy-looking street singer stood in the gutter telling the passing girls he couldn’t give them anything but love; nobody dropped any money in his upturned hat, nobody believed in his destitution. Sydney in the spring was a city where people were too gay, too preoccupied with their own awakening sap, to want to know the truth about other people. The street singer’s sign said: Heart Disease, Unable to Work; but no one believed him. They laughed, were sure he was joking, and passed on.

  Quentin stopped by the singer and dropped two shillings into his hat. “Thanks, mate,” said the singer. “And good luck.”

  “Thank you,” said Quentin with a touch of his old grace.

  He and Malone walked on and at last Malone said, “No, I’m not going to tell her. Lisa, I mean. I told her I’m a policeman, I was on special duty. But that’s all.”

  “Why?”

  “I don’t know. When I was in London I thought the truth would help you and Mrs. Quentin. Now I don’t know that it’s going to help anybody. It won’t help Lisa. She had – has a lot of time for you. Why disillusion her?”

  Quentin walked in silence for a while, then he said, “Are you going to marry her?”

  “I’m going to ask her. It’s another thing whether she’ll say yes.”

  “She wants her head read if she doesn’t. And if you don’t ever tell her the truth about me – well, thank you. But you don’t owe me anything, you know.”

  “Well, let’s say I owe it to myself,” said Malone.

  They came to a corner. Quentin stopped and put out his hand. “I have a doctor’s appointment. I have some vaccinations to be done. Good-bye, Scobie. If I write to you from Malaysia, will you—?”

  Malone nodded. “I’m a poor letter-writer, so Lisa tells me. But I’ll write. And like that bloke back there said – good luck.”

  Quentin nodded his thanks, went to say something, then seemed unable to get the words out. He put his hand up to his moustache and tugged at it; behind his hand his mouth quivered with emotion. Then abruptly he turned and walked off up the street. Malone watched him go, a man who might have been great, till he disappeared, anonymous and alone, into the careless, incurious crowd.

  If you enjoyed The High Commissioner, check out these other great Jon Cleary titles.

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  About the Author

  Jon Cleary, who died in July 2010, was the author of over fifty novels, including The High Commissioner, which was the first in a popular detective fiction series featuring Sydney Police Inspector Scobie Malone. In 1996 he was awarded the Inaugural Ned Kelly Award for his lifetime contribution to crime fiction in Australia. His last novel, Four-Cornered Circle, was published in 2007.

  Also by the Author

  THE SCOBIE MALONE NOVELS

  The High Commissioner

  Helga's Web

  Ransom

  Dragons at the Party

  Now and Then, Amen

  Babylon South

  Murder Song

  Pride's Harvest

  Dark Summer

  Bleak Spring

  Autumn Maze

  Winter Chill

  Endpeace

  A Different Turf

  Five Ring Circus

  Dilemma

  Bear Pit

  Yesterday's Shadow

  The Easy Sin

  Degrees of Connection

  STANDALONE NOVELS

  You Can't See 'Round Corners

  The Long Shadow

  Just Let Me Be

  The Sundowners

  The Climate of Courage

  Justin Bayard (aka Dust in the Sun)

  The Green Helmet

  Back of Sunset

  North From Thursday

  The Country of Marriage

  Forests of the Night

  A Flight of Chariots

  The Fall of an Eagle

  The Pulse of Danger

  The Long Pursuit

  Season of Doubt

  Remember Jack Hoxie

  Mask of the Andes (aka The Liberators)

  Man's Estate (aka The Ninth Marquess)

  The Safe House

  Peter's Pence

  A Sound of Lightning

  High Road to China

  Vortex

  The Beaufort Sisters

  A Very Private War

  The Faraway Drums

  The Golden Sabre

  Spearfield's Daughter

  The Phoenix Tree

  The City of Fading Light

  Miss Ambar Regrets

  Morning's Gone

  Four-Cornered Circle

  Copyright

  Published by HarperCollinsPublishers

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  First published by William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd 1966

  Copyright © Jon Cleary, 1966

  Cover layout design © HarperCollinsPublishers Ltd 2014

  Cover photograph © Shutterstock.com

  Jon Cleary asserts the moral right to be identified as the author of this work

  A catalogue copy of this book is available from the British Library.

  This novel is entirely a work of fiction. The names, characters and incidents portrayed in it are
the work of the author’s imagination. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, events or localities is entirely coincidental.

  All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. By payment of the required fees, you have been granted the nonexclusive, nontransferable right to access and read the text of this e-book on-screen. No part of this text may be reproduced, transmitted, downloaded, decompiled, reverse-engineered, or stored in or introduced into any information storage and retrieval system, in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereinafter invented, without the express written permission of HarperCollins e-books.

  HarperCollinsPublishers has made every reasonable effort to ensure that any picture content and written content in this ebook has been included or removed in accordance with the contractual and technological constraints in operation at the time of publication.

  Source ISBN: 9780006167051

  Ebook Edition © JUNE 2014 ISBN: 9780007554300

  Version: 2014–06–06

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