In the Frame - By Dick Francis Page 0,42

Law from way back.’

Sarah gave me a glance. ‘Have you got iced water in that head?’

‘Emotion is a rotten base for politics. He used to say that too,’ Jik said. ‘Envy is the root of all evil. What have I left out?’

‘The most damaging lies are told by those who believe they’re true.’

‘There you are,’ Jik said. ‘Such a pity you can’t paint.’

‘Thanks very much.’

We reached the restaurant and ate a meal of such excellence that one wondered at the organisation it took to bring every item of food and clothing and everyday life to an expanding town of thirteen and a half thousand inhabitants surrounded by hundreds of miles of desert in every direction.

‘It was started here, a hundred years ago, as a relay station for sending cables across Australia,’ Sarah said. ‘And now they’re bouncing messages off the stars.’

Jik said, ‘Bet the messages aren’t worth the technology. Think of ‘See you Friday, Ethel’, chattering round the eternal spheres.’

With instructions from the restaurant we walked back a different way and sought out the Yarra River Fine Arts gallery, Alice Springs variety.

It was located in a paved shopping arcade closed to traffic, one of several small but prosperous-looking boutiques. There were no lights on in the gallery, nor in the other shops. From what we could see in the single dim street light the merchandise in the gallery window consisted of two bright orange landscapes of desert scenes.

‘Crude,’ said Jik, whose own colours were not noted for pastel subtlety.

‘The whole place,’ he said, ‘will be full of local copies of Albert Namatjira. Tourists buy them by the ton.’

We strolled back to the motel more companionably than at any time since my arrival. Maybe the desert distances all around us invoked their own peace. At any rate when I kissed Sarah’s cheek to say goodnight it was no longer as a sort of pact, as in the morning, but with affection.

At breakfast she said, ‘You’ ll never guess. The main street here is Todd Street. So is the river. Todd River.’

‘Such is fame,’ I said modestly.

‘And there are eleven art galleries.’

‘She’s been reading the Alice Springs Tourist Promotion Association Inc.’s handout,’ Jik explained.

‘There’s also a Chinese Takeaway.’

Jik made a face. ‘Just imagine all this lot dumped down in the middle of the Sahara.’

The daytime heat, in fact, was fierce. The radio was cheerfully forecasting a noon temperature of thirty-nine, which was a hundred and two in the old fahrenheit shade. The single step from a cool room to the sun-roasting balcony was a sensuous pleasure, but the walk to the Yarra River gallery, though less than half a mile, was surprisingly exhausting.

‘I suppose one would get used to it, if one lived here,’ Jik said. ‘Thank God Sarah’s got her hat.’

We dodged in and out of the shadows of overhanging trees and the local inhabitants marched around bareheaded as if the branding-iron in the sky was pointing another way. The Yarra River gallery was quiet and air conditioned and provided chairs near the entrance for flaked-out visitors.

As Jik had prophesied, all visible space was knee deep in the hard clear watercolour paintings typical of the disciples of Namatjira. They were fine if you liked that sort of thing, which on the whole I didn’t. I preferred the occasional fuzzy outline, indistinct edge, shadows encroaching, suggestion, impression, and ambiguity. Namatjira, given his due as the first and greatest of the Aboriginal artists, had had a vision as sharp as a diamond. I vaguely remembered reading somewhere that he’d produced more than two thousand paintings himself, and certainly his influence on the town where he’d been born had been extraordinary. Eleven art galleries. Mecca for artists. Tourists buying pictures by the ton. He had died, a plaque on the wall said, in Alice Springs hospital on August 8th 1959.

We had been wandering around for a good five minutes before anyone came. Then the plastic strip curtain over a recessed doorway parted, and the gallery keeper came gently through.

‘See anything you fancy?’ he said.

His voice managed to convey an utter boredom with tourists and a feeling that we should pay up quickly and go away. He was small, languid, long-haired and pale, and had large dark eyes with drooping tired-looking lids. About the same age as Jik and myself, though a lot less robust.

‘Do you have any other pictures?’ I asked.

He glanced at our clothes. Jik and I wore the trousers and shirts in which we’d gone to the races: no ties and no

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