‘The last decade saw it turn into what it is now. Everyone assumed that whoever was buying it knew something others didn’t, so they bought too. Everyone assumed it was just a successful company, which it was.’
‘Who is this investor?’ Red Queen asked. ‘We have no file on him? Seriously?’
‘No. Not one. But his name comes up in connection with Banacharski. He’s called Fred Nieman.’
Red Queen thought. ‘The man who was due to visit Banacharski before he disappeared. Mentioned in the letters.’
‘And,’ said Porlock, ‘the name Banacharski himself used to sign his final letter.’
Red Queen raised one eyebrow. In the windowless room there was a sense of something coming to an end. ‘You think Banacharski’s alive?’
‘Nobody ever found a body,’ said Porlock. ‘And MIC paid him a lot of money over the years. What do you suppose he did with it? Under any number of guises, through third, fourth, fifth, to the Xth-term parties, Nieman’s fronts had been buying shares in MIC steadily since the beginning of 1999. He didn’t work for MIC. He owned it. Had a controlling interest within a couple of years, if you added it all up. Did nothing with it. No record of any involvement in board meetings, not through any of these fronts, and, you know, agencies like ours – governments, senior pols – it’s the sort of thing we’d expect to know. All that happened was the money came in, and made more money, and now it’s gone.’
Red Queen struggled with the thought. Nieman had been buying stock since around the time of Banacharski’s last disappearance. But where would he have got this sort of money? The company had gone up in value by powers of ten since then – but that holding, still… it would have cost.
‘They can’t have paid him that much money. Not nearly that much money. There aren’t more than a handful of individuals on the face of the earth with that much money. And why reinvest it? And why take it out? Why would anybody build it up just to destroy it?’
While he talked, Red Queen moused over the computer. There were jagged red lines on graphs, excitable reporters, flashes of men in dealing rooms with their ties held out sideways from their necks like nooses, shouting. It seemed a wonder planes weren’t falling out of the sky.
‘Never bright confident morning again,’ Red Queen said flatly. ‘Where’s the money gone?’
Porlock shrugged. ‘MIC will be lucky to last until the exchange closes this afternoon,’ he said. ‘No government’s going to risk trying to bail it out.’
‘No?’
‘They’ve got game theorists on it. Your department, usually. But, no. Bottom line – nobody wants to jump first. They’d rather just watch the dominoes go down; hope the bomb drops everywhere.’
Porlock moved his hand to his tie, straightened it.
‘Not good news for you, Porlock,’ said Red Queen. ‘Is it?’
‘Not good news for anyone,’ Porlock repeated.
‘Especially bad for you.’ Here, Red Queen sent out a questing thumb to scratch diffidently, almost coquettishly, at the scratched leather of the desktop. Looked down, then up again. ‘Not sure you’ll get paid, after all this, though I imagine you’ve thought of that yourself.’
Porlock frowned. The lightbox on the wall of the room gave his face an unhealthy lustre, reflected as twin white rectangles on the balls of his eyes. He looked wary. Red Queen continued.
‘Your friend Ellis is going to be out of a job, isn’t he?’ Porlock’s composure started to break. ‘And I don’t think there’s much chance of anyone getting a finder’s fee now, is there? Money’s a little tight over there…’
‘I still don’t follow you,’ said Porlock, although he did.
‘…and if I’m frank about it, I’m not sure how much use we’re going to have for you now there’s no MIC for you to pass information to. You’ve served your purpose, as far as the Directorate is concerned.’
‘You’re accusing – me – of passing information to MIC?’
‘Only the information I wanted passed,’ said Red Queen. ‘But, yes. Very much so.’ Red Queen picked up the telephone and spoke without dialling: ‘Porlock’s out. Call in Our Friends to pick him up for that talk. Yes. Thank you.’ Replaced the receiver.
Porlock bridled. Red Queen looked at him directly, without emotion.
‘You’ll find your canteen card has been revoked.’
Bree jerked awake. She heard her own mouth slap shut, and felt the pig-belch of an interrupted snore detonate in her throat. The green-white sub-aqua light of the waiting area hurt her eyes. She closed them again.
For an instant, she was in and out of sleep. Her thoughts had been sinking down through layers. She was in and out of a sheaf of fragments. Jones’s eye, filling with blood, black in the moonlight. Watery recursions: standing at a table, drinking fast and anxiously, someone always about to come in. And then, again, the death-dream: the walls peeling away and the gathering roar of voices.
‘…Nobody knows where he is…?’ was a phrase that cut over, in a voice she seemed to know, from nearby. She opened her eyes, and her neck ached, and the ceiling was still there, attached to each wall by a right angle.
‘My boyfriend. He’s hurt. Someone called me from this hospital. Where the hell is he?’
The voice came, high on the air through the noise of the room – a girl still not long out of her teens, high and hysterical and slightly slurred, somewhere on the other side of the room. Bree didn’t know why, but as soon as her dream slipped away, something cold entered her diaphragm and stayed there. Her head moved to find the source of the sound. She felt the room retreating from her.
At the entrance to the corridor deeper into the hospital there was a girl arguing with a woman in a medical orderly’s outfit. The girl was turned half away from Bree, and the sleep in Bree’s eyes.
‘…you’d just calm down…’ the orderly was saying.
‘…English, his name is Alex. ALEX SMART. He’s got a…’
‘…I told you…’
‘…Jesus, I can’t believe this place, don’t you keep any sort of records…?’
‘…I’ll ask the duty nurse…’
Bree pulled herself out of her chair, started to move towards the scene. Her legs were stiff from the chair. She came up on the girl. Pink vinyl bag hanging from a shoulder strap; faded T-shirt; a rash of goosebumps over the skin of her upper arm. What had he said the girl was called?
‘Carey,’ said Bree.
The girl turned round, wild. Her face was naked and her eyes puffy from drink and crying and sleeplessness, and there was a mole at the hinge of her jaw. Bree wasn’t aware of inhaling.
‘Cass?’ Bree said, with the walls of the world lifting up and light crashing in.
The girl who had once been called Cass and was now called Carey and had lost her mother years ago in that instant forgot her nearly fiancé and her foster-parents and her exhaustion. She stood there in a T-shirt that said ‘Fresh Fruit For Rotting Vegetables’, and opened her mouth in astonishment and said: ‘Mom?’
‘Help you, ma’am?’ said the orderly.
It wasn’t as Bree had imagined it. It wasn’t as Carey had imagined it either. Both of them had run the scenario over and over again. Often, at the same time and in different places – one on one coast, often, one on the other – mother and daughter had fantasised their meeting in any number of ways, their different scenarios echoing in invisible antiphony through the churn.
Carey had imagined herself coldly eloquent – had imagined herself quietly but politely informing her mother that she had shed her name, that she didn’t want to see her, that she owed her nothing. Bree had imagined being forgiven.
Carey had imagined meeting her mother. Carey had imagined telling her mother that she had changed her name because she didn’t want to hear the name her mother used in the mouth of her foster-parents. Bree had imagined being slapped.