Program for a Puppet

Read Program for a Puppet Online

Authors: Roland Perry

Allen & Unwin's House of Books aims to bring Australia's cultural and literary heritage to a broad audience by creating affordable print and ebook editions of the nation's most significant and enduring writers and their work. The fiction, non-fiction, plays and poetry of generations of Australian writers that were published before the advent of ebooks will now be available to new readers, alongside a selection of more recently published books that had fallen out of circulation.

The House of Books is an eloquent collection of Australia's finest literary achievements.

Roland Perry is one of Australia's best-known authors. Born in 1946, he began his writing career at
The Age
newspaper in Melbourne, starting in 1969. After five years spent in the United Kingdom making documentary films, he published his first novel,
Program for a Puppet
, which was an international bestseller, in 1979. He has since written over twenty-five more books, many of which have gone on to become non-fiction bestsellers, including
The Don
, the definitive biography of Donald Bradman,
Miller's Luck, The Changi Brownlow, The Australian Light Horse and Monash: The Outsider Who Won a War
.

HOUSE
of
  BOOKS

ROLAND
PERRY
Program for
a Puppet

To the memory of my parents, Trevor and Lillian

This edition published by Allen & Unwin House of Books in 2012
First published by W.H. Allen, London, in 1979

Copyright © Roland Perry 1979

All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording or by any information storage and retrieval system, without prior permission in writing from the publisher. The Australian
Copyright Act 1968
(the Act) allows a maximum of one chapter or 10 per cent of this book, whichever is the greater, to be photocopied by any educational institution for its educational purposes provided that the educational institution (or body that administers it) has given a remuneration notice to Copyright Agency Limited (CAL) under the Act.

Allen & Unwin
Sydney, Melbourne, Auckland, London

83 Alexander Street
Crows Nest NSW 2065
Australia
Phone:  (61 2) 8425 0100
Email:   [email protected]
Web:    
www.allenandunwin.com

Cataloguing-in-Publication details are available from the National Library of Australia
www.trove.nla.gov.au

ISBN 978 1 74331 437 1 (pbk)
ISBN 978 1 74343 092 7 (ebook)

Contents

Part 1

Chapter 1

Chapter 2

Chapter 3

Part 2

Chapter 4

Chapter 5

Chapter 6

Part 3

Chapter 7

Chapter 8

Chapter 9

PART
1
THE
COMPUTER
CONNECTION

“This computer … is the greatest expansion
of the human mind since writing.”

1

It was drizzling in the early morning of a July day in Paris as a black Maserati pulled up opposite a hotel at number 31 Boulevard Duval in the city's Latin Quarter.

A tall, attractive woman with short auburn hair alighted from the car and waved to the driver as she turned to cross the boulevard. Just as she stepped off the road onto the sidewalk, the car swung over toward her. There was a dull “whack” as the car mounted the sidewalk and hit her. The woman was knocked unconscious and thrown about four yards against a brick wall. The driver had stopped the car about ten yards farther along. He looked in the side mirror at the crumpled body and calmly steered the car back over the woman, changed gear and drove away with a squeal of tires.

In less than thirty seconds, lights went on in apartments and hotels on both sides of the street as people moved to the motionless figure. First on the scene was an elderly man who shone a flashlight at the woman. At first sight the woman seemed undamaged, her long black evening dress intact. But seconds later, when a woman tried to move her, blood had begun to seep around the body….

Edwin Graham was stunned. A voice on the other end of the line was telling him his girl friend had been killed in a hit-and-run accident in Paris. He tried to speak but the meaningless words got in the way.

After a long silence Graham replaced the receiver. He ran both hands through his black hair from the temples to the back of his head and stared out through the glass of the press office in the
ballroom of the Washington Hotel. A look of anguish covered his rugged features as his serious dark blue eyes narrowed on the convention going on to elect a candidate for the presidency of the United States. For a moment the thousands of party faithfuls waving banners and chanting the names of the winning candidates appeared to be out of focus, dancing a silent ghostly pantomime.

He sank into a chair. For a few minutes he sat in front of the typewriter, his face buried in his hands, and wept. As fellow journalists gathered around him his brain began to telegraph uncoordinated messages. Stand up. Shuffle papers. Sit down. Collect things. Try to dial London. He found the number he wanted and minutes later in a conversation he would never recall, the shocking news was confirmed by a close relative of the dead girl.

Fifteen hours later, during a flight from Washington to London, Graham was able to think more rationally. Yet he could not stop his brain from going over the depressing realization of what was lost. With Jane Ryder he could have made it, had it all. Since he had left his native Australia a decade ago she was the first with whom he had had the confidence to take on a more permanent relationship.

It had taken a long time to find the right chemistry. There had been many affairs in Graham's free-wheeling, hard-living existence as a journalist. But he was the first to admit they were superficial. Never as good as the deeper, warmer, more meaningful real thing. Dead.… He shook his head and fought more tears by gritting his teeth. Read a book—impossible.

What had made it worse was his guilt. He had left her to grab the opportunity to cover a U.S. presidential election for a London publisher. At thirty-five, it was the big break he felt he had to take to enhance his career. Ultimately the move was to be for both of them. But the vivacious, attractive, tempestuous Jane had said no. She didn't like the idea of giving up her job as a reporter on a London daily to live out of a suitcase the length and breadth of the States. For a start, she did not have his love for the place. And after a year of living together Jane wanted marriage and children. At twenty-nine the timing for her was now. Not in the promise of another year.

Graham had argued that the time would go quickly. He
would be able to take trips back from Washington to see her and they could go on that holiday to Greece together. There had been arguments and no compromises.

The finality was unbearable.

The Australian tried hard to think about the circumstances leading up to her death. Before he had left for Washington he had suggested she go after a big writing assignment herself. Something to challenge her journalistic skills. He had thrown her a few casual suggestions.

One of them had been about a computer scientist in Paris who had recently delivered a lecture on the “uncontrolled flow of strategic equipment from the West to the Soviet Union.” He had read of the lecture and filed the idea away. It was the kind of story he might follow up himself, if he had more time. Yet the Australian thought he had bigger fish to fry. An American presidential election.

Due partly to bitterness, frustration and ambition, Jane had managed to get six months' leave from her job to chase the story. She had convinced her book-publisher grandfather, Sir Alfred Ryder, that it would make a successful fact-novel. He had given it his indulgent blessing with a handsome advance. It was partly an attempt to appease her. Sir Alfred had given Graham the contact with a newspaper publisher which led to the Australian's American assignment.

After her initial research, Jane decided her story would center on advanced Western computers being smuggled into the Soviet Union against American and NATO regulations. She was not a computer specialist writer, she needed good contacts.

Although Jane had tried to interview the scientist who had given the controversial lecture in Paris, he had refused to speak to her when she telephoned him from London.

That was all Graham knew when he touched down in London at 6:00
A.M
. on July 25. He felt uneasy about the whole affair because of his knowledge of computers, which stretched back sixteen years.

After a brilliant college record in computer sciences, and a lot of soul-searching, he had made the switch to journalism. First, because of his background, as a science correspondent, then a political writer. Always in the background, as a hobby, almost, he kept a keen interest in computers. He loved the logic of systems
analysis—the design of computer networks. Networks that controlled air traffic, hospitals, rocket systems, nuclear reactors. Networks for everything. Yet Graham cared as much for how the metal beasts affected society and what they meant for mankind.

He often went on complex part-time courses, some of them run by universities, others by private organizations—the leading computer corporations.

He became aware of the power wielded by the corporations in business and politics. Over the years the Australian learned of the interrelationship. And his instincts and knowledge told him that if Jane Ryder had been right about computer smuggling, she could have run into trouble.

His fears intensified when he returned to his apartment in King's Road, Chelsea, where he and Jane had lived together for six months before he went to the States. Jane's relatives had asked him to sort out her belongings. It was a depressing task. Her books, records, guitar and many objets d'art were agonizing reminders of the tragedy.

As he was going through her filing cabinet, he came across his own name in the index. Graham had no idea the file existed. In it was a sealed package marked clearly in Jane's handwriting:
Ed. Open in the event of my death
.

He stared at the package, and turned it over a few times. Then he took a deep breath and tore off the top. A small note accompanied about sixty pages of unedited material—background material to her computer smuggling operation. “If you are reading this, Ed darling, then something has happened to me. Follow it through. For once in your wavering life follow through. I love you always, Jane.”

A cruel, slightly bitter joke? His failure to follow through with her? Had he not many times explained the reasons … why he had to take the American assignment?

Perhaps Jane meant his failure to make it as an actor? Or because he had not gone on with his career as a scientist …?

His thoughts gave him the answers.

The Australian began to read the notes, which took him well into the night until jet lag caught up with him. He got to bed around 2:00
A.M
., and was glad of a sound sleep.

The next day Jane was to be cremated.

Graham could not help thinking about her investigation as he drove his battered old red Alfa Romeo saloon in the funeral procession to a small crematorium just north of London. Questions that had been swimming around in his subconscious during the night were percolating forward. Why had she left the background material for him to find? And why “in the event” of her death? Did she fear for her life? Had she been threatened?

In the church these thoughts were temporarily blotted out by sadness and emotion as the minister delivered the address. Graham could not help staring at the knotted pine coffin and thinking how unreal everything seemed. A thousand thoughts, all incoherent, rushed through his mind. He thought of the laughing, dynamic personality that had been Jane. He had loved her deeply, passionately. Then the irrational feelings of guilt returned and his eyes welled with tears. He felt weak at the knees and was sure he was going to break down like several of her family around him.

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