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The camera worked beautifully-but two things had become apparent to Mara: every nanny they hired was blameless; and her husband liked to watch them undressing on his laptop. Not that Mara minded too much, it kept him occupied. And now it might prove useful in other ways.

She glanced out of the kitchen window. Tayla was bundling Natalia into the car. ‘We’ve got maybe forty minutes.’

‘I’m on it.’

About the only thing he was.

Five minutes later, Mara was jabbing her forefinger at Warren’s laptop screen. ‘Freeze it there.’

Their thief was a young woman dressed in black. They’d watched her scouting around the nursery quickly, offering no clear image of her face, but then, for a brief second, she’d gazed straight at the teddy bear. ‘ She was here,’ said Mara, outraged. ‘I recognise her. She rolled up one day last week, wanting to look at the garden. It crossed my mind at the time she might be a cop.’ Warren was peering at the image, eyes a little glazed, probably hoping the burglar would start undressing for him. ‘Wakey, wakey.’

He jumped. ‘What?’

‘Can you clean the image up, print out a head-and-shoulders shot?’

‘No problem,’ said Warren, the go-to man when you wanted something practical done.

Mara chewed her lip. ‘How did she find us? Who knew about the Klee? Was it stolen to order?’

‘And the icon.’

‘Forget the icon. It’s got nothing to do with anything. The Klee is another matter. We need to put the word out.’

‘Where?’

‘Where do you think? Not that many places you can move high end art in these parts.’

40

Friday, the light of pre-dawn, Grace waking with a hammering heart.

In her dream, Galt’s little posse of bent coppers had entered her room, surrounded her bed and stared down at her, faceless, remorseless, vigilant.

She scrubbed her cheeks with her hands, swung her feet to the floor and crossed to the window. The motel parking lot was cold and still, the street lights casting a miserable wash over the empty road.

She ran the shower. If Galt came for her-and he would come, she knew him-wouldn’t he come alone? She’d always thought of him as a loner, even as he’d kept the gang close to him. Secretive men, economical; the type attracted to police work because it allowed them to bully and connive. The type that became, if not policemen, criminals. Dictators, union thugs, CEOs…Vigorous men, brawny, cunning, cynical, contemptuous. Heavy drinkers. Divorced, usually. Not well educated but quick and intelligent. The policemen you sometimes saw on the news, towering over their lawyers as they walked free down courthouse steps.

She’d spent a lot of time with such men. Under their gaze, the flat eyes that said they knew things and nothing impressed them. And Grace was nothing, women were nothing.

In the face of that coldness, she’d often found herself hugging and kissing Galt as if to thumb her nose at them.

Galt was like them and he was different from them. A hard, suspicious, sideways looking man. Clever. A killer, she’d thought, from the first time she met him.

She was seventeen years old, living in a Glebe squat. One day she’d lifted $5000 cash, a string of Broome pearls and a Bulgari watch from a Darling Harbour apartment, unaware that it belonged to a call girl who was paying Galt for client referrals and protection. Galt had started hunting Grace the moment he got the phone call. By late afternoon, he’d found her fence. By nightfall, he’d found her.

She’d just burgled some houses in Vaucluse. She had three diamond rings, a drawstring bag of Krugerrands and a couple of grand in cash in her little daypack, and was tossing the pack onto her grungy mattress when he jumped her. The beating was long, clinical, remorseless. He left her face intact but her breasts, ribs, stomach and back were a mess. No more slipping through windows for a while.

A killer. A killer with a wife and three children of whom he never spoke.

And compelling. When she’d fled and he’d found her again, a part of her was ready to yield. ‘Don’t hit me,’ she’d said. ‘I don’t want to hit you,’ he’d said, ‘I’ve come to give you my card.’

Work number, private number, and before long she’d called those numbers. Arrested for loitering at the rear of a Paddington terrace house, she was back on the street within an hour.

She should have kept clear; she should have done the time. But he offered a kind of job security. He had contacts in insurance and burglar alarm companies. He told her who to rob, and when, and where the alarms and cameras were located, and who, if anyone, would be home, and probable police response times and how to evade patrols and roadblocks. He told her what the police were trained to see and expect. All the time he was extending her natural abilities, teaching her to think, anticipate, take pains, assess risks, and hone her body: weight training, aerobics, distance running. Finally, Galt taught her how to pass through life without a trace-no name, no history, no lever that might tip her out into the open.

‘You need me,’ he’d say. ‘You’re the queen of cat burglars but without me you’d be in jail now. I took you off the street, I protect you, I pay your rent. You like the Harbour view, right, Neet? That cute little Audi? Without me you’d have nothing.’

And one day he cocked his head at her and added, ‘Without me you’d be nothing. I was doing some digging: you’re practically invisible, Anita, no past to speak of. Who are you?’

Well, she’d barely known that herself. The only past she had, apart from the orphanage, the foster homes, were the Harbin photograph and a couple of ghost names in her subconscious.

And now, she thought, towelling her hair, I have Galt.

Grace was at Goddard Road before dawn. Any later, there’d be farmers getting an early start on the day, the newspaper delivery guy, shire workers, local residents walking the dog.

Driving the WreckRent Camry, she steered by her side lights to the Niekirks’ driveway entrance, raising only a little dust. Nothing there to indicate that the property had been a crime scene. Reaching the culvert, she pulled over, motor running, and got out. She stretched the kinks in her spine, checking both ways for the gleam of approaching headlights. Only stillness and the murkiness of another predawn, as the sun waxed and the moon waned.

She darted into the ditch, her fingers masking the lens of a tiny torch, and found the waterproof sack. Ten seconds later, she was behind the wheel again, driving straight ahead to Balnarring Road, which she took to Frankston-Flinders Road, turning left and looping up through Waterloo and finally back to her motel.

Here she showered, changed into jeans and a T-shirt and found a cafe for breakfast. Then she checked out, returned to Waterloo and entered the VineTrust bank. The sooner she had Felsen in der Blumenbeet stowed away in her safe-deposit box, the better.

Not the icon. It was a part of her and she took it home.

Steven Finch knew he’d been a little sloppy, allowing the Fed to surprise him like that. So he was alert that Friday, watching his security monitors, and saw Mara and Warren Niekirk park their BMW, get out, look both ways along the street and enter the shop- Mara the witch wearing a spring dress, fair hair loose around her shoulders, legs bare. Not that Finch was fooled; grew tense, in fact. As for the Ken-doll husband, he just trailed behind Mara looking stupid.

‘Mara. Warren.’

‘Steven Finch, Esquire,’ said Mara breezily, and his insides curdled a little more.

His mind flashed back through their recent encounters. He’d once offered them a dicey Dickerson, not knowing it was a fake. No money had changed hands and they’d accepted that he’d acted in good faith and continued to do business with him. But Mara’s wrath had been pretty impressive.

‘Everything okay?’ he asked, matching her breeziness.

He wished he could say, oh by the way, he happened to have a Nolan for them, a Blackman, even a Central Australian dot painting, anything to ease the tension. But it wasn’t as if he bought and sold art works every day.