Cold Light (87 page)

Read Cold Light Online

Authors: Frank Moorhouse

Tags: #FICTION

BOOK: Cold Light
12.9Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

He changed the subject, saying, ‘I should try to sit in on the consultative committee to stop some of the silliness that will come out.’

She changed her tone too. ‘You’re hard on the others.’ She was even harder. They both shared a contempt for those who thought it all could be reversed – the uranium put back in the ground; the secrets of science locked away in a safe. To run the film backwards.

She leaned over and was about to put her hand on his, but instead took his hand and placed it over hers, concealing the faint blemishes of her hand. She joked, ‘So far at this conference, we have yet to hear the expression “History will prove the cynics wrong”.’

Throughout the conference they had been jokingly compiling a list of Dullard’s Conference Wisdom. He now played along, saying, ‘But we have heard “Only time will tell” and “Crying wolf will lead to dangerous complacency”.’

She added, ‘ “The biggest danger we face is complacency” and “We have nothing to fear but fear itself” and “History will be the judge”.’

They laughed at the last – nuclear weapons were the one matter on which history might, in fact, not survive to judge.

He added, ‘ “It will not be accomplished overnight”.’

They bonded in a smile and then he looked away and lapsed into silence.

Without looking up, she said, ‘If you change your mind about Spain, I would gladly come. But don’t expect me to help with the driving. I have had a car with a driver for so long I think I’m rather below par. I dare say it’s not that much different from back home, but I do recall many donkeys and flocks of sheep on the roads of Spain.’

Her proposal was sheer, breathless audacity.

‘Thank you, Edith, but as I’ve said, I’ve given up on the Spanish adventure.’ His voice was cold.

She found her consoling voice. ‘You poor boy, you make it sound so tragic.’

‘No, I don’t,’ he said, again showing irritation with her. ‘It’s not tragic at all. It’s just something that’s passed through my life. Abandoned plans. Acceptable losses. Nothing tragic.’

She wondered if he thought her offer to take the place of the girl was pitiable. Others looking on might think her pitiable. She did not see herself as pitiable. There was a certain steeliness now in her behaviour. It was no longer a time for artful reticence. Having served as a handmaiden to Eros in the pursuit of the young girl for him, she could at least ask Eros for a favour back.

Did Eros still have her name on his list?

Did Eros even remember her name?

Caviar Manoeuvres

T
he conference was drawing to an end. The delegates agreed to start a two-year survey to assess the possible use of nuclear power in developing countries using smaller-sized power reactors. She argued for an intensification of the IAEA programmes on the safe management of nuclear waste, and there was a good chance that a convention would be adopted banning sea dumping of wastes. Ian and she would then go on to London, where the International Maritime Organisation was meeting with the IAEA secretariat. Then it would be on to a fact-finding mission in Israel, where they did not hold out great hopes of finding any facts. At least, not from the Israeli officials. In Vienna she had learned unofficially from an old friend that Nixon and Meir had made a secret agreement – Israel could go ahead with its weapons program as long as it didn’t test in a detectable way, didn’t advertise their possession of the weapons, and didn’t threaten any country with them. Mr Whitlam and Richard Victor Hall would be interested in that piece of information. Then, finally, they would go to France, where Edith would see Sam Atyeo and where she would drink French wine and rest.

Ian explained to her that he wanted to work it so that he spoke last at the plenary session. ‘I don’t want the Russian to speak last.’

‘You wish to be the star – to have the final word.’

‘I want Australia to have the final word.’

She laughed at him. ‘You want to have the last word.’

Frederick had lived with a feeling that any established order of things meant that those things had been pre-manipulated in his absence by individuals known or not known – or by the historical process, or by the distorting hidden hand of ideology – and that the order as he found it had to be forced into another shape that would better serve the Party and, through the Party, the future of the human race.

Ian was waiting for an answer from her. ‘It’s best to accept these things as they have been agreed,’ she said. She moved the flowers on the breakfast table and straightened her cutlery, staring into the flowers as if she were looking into the foliage of the years of her life.

She went on, ‘Otherwise, you waste your life on very minor, childish political victories by which advisors and aides and small-minded politicos –’ she refrained from saying lackies – ‘measure their lives while the important world passes them by.’

She supposed there could be a manipulators’ Rule of Small Advantage. One had to cunningly exploit every small advantage against an enemy until these small advantages came together to overwhelm. That, she supposed, was the political manipulator’s understanding of the world.

‘I don’t like petty schemes,’ she said. ‘They lead to squabbles, which deflect you from the matter at hand. They distort priorities.’ She smiled. ‘You have already involved me in some trickery with that girl in London.’ She didn’t say that schemers wasted everyone’s life by dragging those around them to the wrong level of concern. Those people who were forever saying that life was all a game.

He sat there, probably hunting his mind for a reason that might swing her to his plan.

Then he sang, ‘Let’s do it for Australia, let’s do it because we’re mates.’

She squashed her smile. ‘Be careful with nationalism,’ she said matter-of-factly. ‘Be careful how you love your country.’

She concealed a wishfulness about their being mates, which would do, she supposed, if nothing more passionate was to happen. Mates – mating. Close. He seemed always to appear to be shifting the boundaries of their bureaucratic relationship slightly into something else with inherently more complicated and interesting emotional flavours, but ultimately, it seemed, just old-fashioned manipulation. So now they were mates; now they were sharing not a bed, but a trench at Gallipoli.

True, there was her own use of him. She used him as a social companion because she was no longer an enthusiastic mixer. She now found few conversations of any value, and long ago learned that it was strategically more comfortable to enter a crowded room with someone, and to be seated with someone with whom you could have useful side chat. And yes, she had fallen into a dependency on him because it was, officially, a dependency relationship. It was his duty and her due.

And she liked him a lot.

She said, ‘I had a brother who was once a professional schemer for the Communist Party.’ She remembered the corruption involved with Frederick and Arthur Circle. Surely it was not of catastrophic magnitude; did not deserve the firing squad? She had not been severely punished. Or had she? Did the big house lead her to try to make a family from the leftover of another family? Was that her punishment?

‘Come on, Edith. Treat it as a game – a scam.’

She knew that ‘it’s just a game’ would come up.

‘I can’t really treat the problem of nuclear weaponry as some sort of boyish game,’ she said, with an irritating solemnity. ‘I’m sorry.’

And then she added, ‘I don’t know what a scam is.’ That voice again, the voice of the older woman. She could guess what a scam was. ‘I mean, I need to be sure what the legal and strategic implications are of any scam, at least before I am involved in it.’

He reached over to put his hand on hers again. He was fond of that. She liked it too much.

He went on, ignoring her inquiry about scamming. ‘Who got you a better room here at the hotel? Who got you out of the meeting with the guy from the Netherlands whom you detest?’

‘Who chased that girl’s telephone number all across the world for you – which, in all likelihood, you should not have had?’

It was something like a duet.

She ate her way through the last of the breakfast food. She should perhaps watch her weight. Not when travelling. Food was a way of keeping one’s equilibrium when travelling. A source of poise and some sort of reward.

He gestured to the waiter and, in his clumsy German, ordered a fruit bowl.

‘You can’t bribe me with food and you shouldn’t encourage me to eat,’ she said, as if to an over-indulgent lover. ‘You know I am eating too much.’

‘Maybe Dr Kum’a Ndumbe would do it,’ he pondered aloud, challenging her. His Cameroon Commissioner friend.

‘What is your plan, then,’ she asked, in a right-to-know voice, competing with Dr Kum’a Ndumbe for his allegiance.

‘It’s simple,’ he said. ‘There are seven reports to be given. I’m in number five position. The Soviet guy, Ulyanov, has got last place – he demanded it, for God’s sake, at the housekeeping meeting. I’m going to take it away from him. And that’s where you come in.’

‘If I choose to play politics.’ She was, she realised, on another level happy to thwart the Russian. To manipulate a manipulator was no sin.

He became enlivened. ‘All you have to do is deliver a message to the chair during the fourth report. This message will call me from the dais and, while I’m gone, Ulyanov will be forced to speak in position six. I’ll come back and give my report in the last position.’

She stared at him. She suspected that something remained unsaid. She still thought the victory too trivial; the consequences too unpredictable.

She had learned that with plots you had to calculate the embarrassment and damage if your deception were to be found out. You had to know what to do if you were found out.

‘We get the last say. The last speaker is remembered. Do you think they don’t cheat? What about Ulyanov’s famous news release on Wednesday? It’s just gamesmanship, Edith.’

‘You’re corrupting me,’ she said. ‘Again. I suppose it could be seen as a
ruse de guerre
. I forget all the rules of the
ruse de guerre
.’

He was interested. ‘I didn’t know there were rules. I thought that was the whole point of a
ruse de guerre
.’

She supposed the manoeuvre with the girl was a
ruse de passion
. All was fair in love and in war. She didn’t believe that. Why did people keep saying it? It was cruel nonsense.

She said, ‘I worked with some military people on revising those conventions. Nothing came of it.’

‘When was this?’

She laughed. ‘When I worked with the noble Romans in the third century BC.’

He was looking to her; he did seem interested. She threw something else in the air to see if the seal jumped for it. ‘For example, it’s a perfectly proper ruse to trick an enemy unit into surrendering by pretending to it that it’s surrounded by a large force, by transmitting misleading radio or telephonic messages. But there was debate over whether wearing the uniform of the enemy is acceptable, or the misleading use of national flags or, obviously, the use of the flag of truce to lure the enemy to expose itself and then to shoot them. That was not an acceptable
ruse de guerre
.’

That was enough of that, and that was about all she could remember.

But she couldn’t resist throwing in another tidbit. ‘I remember that the military men I spoke with about this said that most
ruses de guerre
weren’t worth the trouble or risk – armies are too clumsy to engage in smart tricks. One officer said that just getting tired men to stand up after they had sat down was about all you could expect of soldiers.’

He said that he had heard that, during the D-Day invasion, the allies had created a fake army by using dummy tanks and artillery and radio traffic.

‘That’s correct.’ She did not tell him that she had once dined with the uncivil and rather vain Patton, who, after having been disgraced, was made general of that fake army.

He then said, ‘I think we have to accept that, in a desperate war, just about anything that works will be used – and therefore wars must be fought on the assumption that, at times, in some circumstances, all the rules will be thrown out the window.’

Other books

The Eye Of The Leopard by Mankell Henning
The Documents in the Case by Dorothy L. Sayers
Gluttony: A Dictionary for the Indulgent by Adams Media Corporation
The Five-Day Dig by Jennifer Malin
Open Roads by Zach Bohannon