The eleventh book in the Cliff Hardy series Gareth Greenway wasn't all he seemed, but Cliff Hardy was used to that. What he wasn't used to was the shadowy world Greenway leads him into: neurosurgeons, mental patients, AIDS sufferers, all negotiating a landscape of dreams and delusions. An old friend of Hardy's ends up dead while Hardy chases the shadows, catching some, losing others. The accompanying stories find Hardy on more familiar ground. When organised crime, political corruption and the Australian army are involved, Hardy battles the odds. But when it comes to a man-to- man contest, put your money on Hardy to win.

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Man in the Shadows
1
A long shadow fell across the corridor outside my office. The shadow obscured the scuffed lino tiles on the floor and almost touched the card thumb-tacked to the door. The card reads āCliff HardyāInvestigationsā. Itās not the original card, not the one I pinned up almost fifteen years ago, but itās very like it. Iāve always felt that a nameplate or stencilled letters might bring bad luck, so Iāve stuck with the card.
I walked towards the door and a man stepped from the shadow. He was tall and thin and I instantly felt that there was something wrong with him. Not something to make me reach for a gun, if Iād been wearing one, but something to be sorry for. It was there in the way he movedāslowly and tentativelyāand in the way he stood as I came closer. He looked as if he might suddenly flinch away, retreat and dive down the fire stairs.
āMr Cliff Hardy?ā he said. He swung the small zippered bag he was carrying awkwardly.
āThatās right.ā
āYou . . . investigate things?ā
I pointed to the card. āThatās what it says. You want to come inside?ā
The question seemed to cause a struggle within him. He wasnāt a bad looking manāunder thirty, full head of dark hair, good teeth, regular features, but there was something missing. His face was immobile and was like a painting which the artist hadnāt quite finished off. But he nodded and moved closer as I unlocked the door.
āThank you,ā he said.
I got him settled in the clientās chair. He put his bag on the floor beside him. For some reason that I couldnāt account for, I pulled my chair out from behind my desk and sat more or less across from him with nothing in between. He wore a grey suit, white shirt, no tie. I smiled at him. āI usually start by asking my client for a name. I donāt always get the real one.ā
āGareth Greenway,ā he blurted.
āOkay, Mr Greenway, how can I help you?ā
He looked slowly around the room. There wasnāt much to seeāfiling cabinet, desk, calendar on one wall, a bookcase of paperbacks and a poster from a Frida Kahlo exhibition. āYou havenāt got any recording devices or anything like that, have you, Mr Hardy?ā
āNo, nothing like that.ā
āGood. Have you ever heard of psychosurgery?ā
āYes.ā
āPsychosurgery was performed on me nine months ago against my will.ā
I let out a slow breath as I studied him more closely. There were no physical signs; he didnāt twitch or dribble, but he had the air of an alien, of someone for whom everything around him was strange and new. āHow did that happen, Mr Greenway?ā
āI donāt know. Thatās the problem. I canāt remember. I know I was in the hospital for some time.ā
āWhat hospital?ā
āSouthwood Private Hospital. Itās what youād call a loony bin.ā
That was the first flicker of aggression Iād seen; he opened his eyes wider as he spoke and seemed to be flinching back, although in reality he didnāt move a muscle. I didnāt react; Iād seen enough psychoanalytical movies to know how to behave. āGo on,ā I said.
āThey did this to me, made me like this, and I donāt know why. All I know is that theyāre going to do it to Guy and theyāve got to be stopped.ā
āWhoās Guy?ā
āHe was my friend, my only friend, in there.ā
āI see. Why do you think heāll be . . . treated the way you were?ā
āThis is the hard part,ā he said. āI donāt know why. I just have these impressions. They wonāt come together properly. Thatās what things are like since they cut into me. Thatās the idea. You donāt make connections between all the things thatāre wrong in your life so they donāt bother you as much. You see?ā
āYeah.ā
āWell, it didnāt quite work with me. Iām still bothered. They tell me I was violent. I donāt feel violent anymore. I was an actor. I couldnāt act now, I wouldnāt know how. Thatās what it does to you. How would you like it, Mr Hardy? Would you trade in all your anxieties for the sort of peace of mind that stopped you from doing what you do now? Even if thatās what causes the anxieties? I assume you have some?ā
āSure,ā I said. āNo, I wouldnāt. What do you mean about it being the hard part?ā
He leaned forward. āIāve been to see the police, doctors, the health authorities, everyone. They wonāt listen. I know, from something I saw or heard that I canāt . . . reassemble now, that Guy is in danger and that that place is hell on earth. But no one will listen because Iāve been certified insane and psychosurgeried. Iām a vegetable, Iāve got no rights, I . . . ā
āEasy. Why did you come to me, Mr Greenway?ā
āAnnie Parker told me to.ā
āAnnie Parker!ā That made me sit back and set memories running. Annie was a heroin addict Iād had some dealings with a few years back. The daughter of an old friend, sheād been in big trouble which Iād extricated her from. Sheād gone to England. āIs Annie at this hospital?ā
āShe was. She died of an overdose a while back. We used to talk. Annie was pretty wrecked; some money sheād inherited from her mother was keeping her going.ā
āI see.ā
āYou probably donāt. Iāve got a few thousand dollars. I can pay you.ā
āTo do what?ā
āTo help me get Guy out of there. To stop him ending up like me. To save his life.ā
He put his back against the chair rest and held himself straight. He looked tired suddenly, almost exhausted by the effort heād made. I felt confused. I was sympathetic towards him; he seemed like a serious, responsible person whoād taken a terrible knock. He had a friend he cared about. Iād cared about Annie and her mother. It should have been straightforward, but mental illness and the medical profession set up strong feelings.
He waited for me and I floundered.
Do you want to be on the side of the patients or the doctors? I thought. Neither. Donāt touch it. Walk away. Say youāre sorry and go out and have a drink in memory of Annie and all the other damaged people youāve helped but not enough to make any difference.
āTell me more,ā I said.
2
GREENWAY gave me five hundred dollars in cash which was unusual but not something for me to tear my hair out over. Then he surprised me by standing up, grabbing his bag and jerking his head at the door. āYouāve got a car, havenāt you?ā
āSure.ā
āI donāt like small rooms very much. Let me show you the place weāre talking about.ā
We went down to the lane at the back of the building where I keep my 1984 Falcon on a slab of concrete Primo Tomasetti the tattooist rents to me. Primo was standing in the lane having a smoke. He recently declared his tattoo parlour a No Smoking zone on a trial basis. He looked at the car which has replaced a 1965 model, same colour, fewer miles, less rust.
āLooks great, Cliff,ā he said. āJust like youād be with a facelift.ā
āAre you thinking of going into that business?ā I asked him. āItās only a sort of sideways move.ā
āYeah,ā he said. āThe firstād be the toughest. You volunteering?ā
Greenway was standing by, not paying any attention. I unlocked the passenger door and opened it for him. He got in slowly and gracefully. Primo stared. āWho is he?ā he whispered. āA doctor?ā
I winked at him. āThe Popeās grandson. Keep it under your hat.ā
It was the last week in March. Daylight saving was a recent memory and the sun was still high in the late afternoon and a problem as I was driving into it. I asked Greenway to get my sunglasses out of the glove box.
āYou should have better ones than these,ā he said. āThese are shit.ā
āI lose āem; leave āem places. Makes no sense to buy good ones. Arenāt you hot? Take your jacket off.ā
I was in shirt sleeves, light cotton trousers and Chinese kung fu shoes; behind the windscreen it was like a greenhouse as we drove into the sun. I was sweating freely.
āI donāt feel the heat or the cold. Not since the treatment.ā I glanced at him: sweat was running down the side of his face and wilting his shirt collar.
āTell me about this place. I thought they were under strict supervision. Arenāt there . . . visitors, or something? Official inspections?ā
He snorted. āThe visitors are senile hacks. They should be in there, not . . . the patients . . . us. Youāll see. The place? Itās like a concentration camp. Fences, out of bounds areas. Cells . . . ā
āCells? Come on.ā
āYouāll see.ā
āHow? If itās a registered private hospital we canāt just walk in and make a private inspection.ā
āI know a way in. Donāt worry.ā
I was worried, very worried. For the rest of the drive I watched Greenway closely. He appeared to take no interest in the surroundings, spoke briefly to give me directions, and otherwise seemed to be asleep with his eyes open. We were forced to a crawl by the road works at Tom Uglys bridge where theyāre putting in another span. I followed the signs to Sutherland.
āYou know Burraneer Bay?ā Greenway said abruptly.
āHeard of it.ā
āThatās where weāre going. Left here.ā
I followed the road through Gymea into the heart of the peninsula. The houses tended to be big on large blocks with expensively maintained lawns and carefully placed trees; a few were smaller and struggling to keep up appearances. Greenway directed me past the bowling club towards the water where the houses seemed to be craning up for a good view. We stopped in a short cul-de-sac occupied by a few Spanish-style houses; one had added a mock Tudor effect for insurance. The street ended in thick bush.
āTurn the car around,ā he said.
Five hundred dollars made him the boss for three days. I turned the car so it was facing back up the street. Greenway got out carrying his bag. For the first time I wondered what was in it.
āHave you got a gun?ā he said.
āNo.ā
āGood. The hospitalās down here.ā He pointed to the trees. āWe can take a look from the high ground and I know where we can get through the fence.ā
āWhy?ā
He looked at his watch. āItās exercise time. I want to see that Guyās all right. Thatās all. We can talk about what to do next afterwards.ā
He was suddenly much more decisive and alert. I was still worried; I wanted time to think about it but he plunged into the bush ahead of me and I followed him, feeling confused but protective. The trees shut out the light and made it seem later in the day than it was. I squinted ahead as Greenway forged on, pushing branches aside and crunching dried leaves underfoot. Then we were through and light flooded over a large open space ringed around by a high cyclone fence. There were buildings inside the area, concr...
Table of contents
- Cover
- About the Author
- The Cliff Hardy collection
- Title
- Copyright
- Dedication
- Contents
- Man in the Shadows
- Cloudburst
- High Integrity
- āBox on!ā
- The Deserter
- Byron Kellyās Big Mistake
- Norman Mailerās Christmas
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Yes, you can access Man in the Shadows by Peter Corris in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Literature & Literature General. We have over 1.5 million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.