Day 287
Writing exercise
…
The race was over before it began
If something is too good to be true, then it generally is. Those words bounced around in my head only moments after the winner of the award had been announced.
And it wasn’t me. I had worked hard, done everything that was asked of me, and yet at the eleventh hour, I had been usurped
Of course, I had only myself to blame.
Some other words that rattled around in what could probably now be called an empty space in my head, because no sane person would have believed that McGurk was a worthy recipient, were that good guys come last.
They did.
I have been too trusting.
I wanted to believe that McGurk honestly wanted to help me win, but all the time he was getting the information needed to win the award for himself.
After all, the prize was worth a million pounds.
And he was never going to stay long enough to show them anything for the money. The proposal was slick, the pitch was slick, and the man himself was slick personified.
However, one item I did know about him was that he had done this before. A number of times, and after each success, he disappeared with the money and wasn’t seen again.
It was exactly what he would do this time if we let him.
Everyone was also oblivious to the deception. He was far too affable, far too obliging, far too kind. And too accommodating. He was everybody’s friend.
Except mine.
Jason McMaster, the head of the selection committee, came over to offer his commiserations.
“Sorry, old boy,” he began, “but it was a close call, 4 to 5. You put in a brilliant prospectus, but the numbers didn’t quite add up.”
I noticed far too late that someone had slipped in a revised budget, and it had the look of a grade six student’s horrible attempt to balance a small budget.
I had tried to fix it, but the committee decided the submissions would be as is, where is. I knew McGurk had a hand in getting those papers, and I was sure it was someone on the selection team who helped him; without proof, I was not going to change the result.
At least one of the members dared to tell me what had happened and not let me be shocked on the night.
Evelyn had worked as hard as I had, and it seemed to me he had not approached her. Perhaps she would have seen him for what he was. More than once, she told me to be wary.
Like I said, it was on me.
McGurk was in his element, the centre of attention, soaking in the adulation as the man who had beaten the sure thing.
Some people didn’t like me, not many, because what they mistook for determination was really the desire to be fair and equitable.
His acceptance speech was the sort to be expected, praising the competition, acknowledging the help I’d given him, and stating that he was going to make a lot of people’s futures much brighter.
I was not sure who those people were, because no one in this county would.
After shaking the selection committee’s hands and thanking them all, he wandered over to see me.
He was brave or stupid, I wasn’t sure which, but then he didn’t know what I knew.
“You do realise the race was over before it began.”
He was all smiles and shaking my hand for the cameras.
I was all smiles for a different reason.
“Not at first, but I did get a sense of it towards the end.”
“You didn’t seem to be all that well-liked.”
No. I got that. Alfred Knopper, next door neighbour and staunch enemy when I won the council election over him, was on the committee.
I should have tried harder to win him over.
“Happens in small towns. You can’t please everyone all of the time. You will discover that “
“I’m sure I won’t. I understand the brief.”
I smiled. “I hope you do.”
I could see Evelyn coming over, and so could he. Her face was set, and I could feel the heat from where I was standing. Seeing her approach, he quickly excused himself.
Her eyes followed him as he retreated.
“Snake.”
“He’s the one they deserve.”
“No one deserves a creature like that.”
I shrugged. “Well, like him or lump him, he’s all they’ve got.”
Until he cashed the check.
A week is a long time in politics, or so I was told the first time I ran for council.
I didn’t want to, but a lot of people said that it was time for a change.
I rode the crest of that wave of change for three terms, after which those same people voted for another change. It didn’t bother me. I had tried to be fair and equitable, but not everybody’s definition of those words was the same.
I tried to please all of the people all of the time and failed miserably.
We lived in a different world from the one I thought I knew.
It was time to move on, and the plans Evelyn and I had made a few months before, plan B, were in motion. The children had moved on. We had sold the house, where I had lived my whole life and my father before me.
All I was waiting for was…
The phone rang, its shrill insistence penetrating the fog of sleep, and only years of training forced me to answer it.
“Yes.”
“He’s gone.” Jason McMaster sounded panicked.
“Who has gone?”
“McGurk. Office cleaned out, residence as clean as the day he walked into it.”
McMaster had been very generous in giving him the house rent-free until he was settled.
“The funding.”
Silence. Then, it’s not in the corporate account.”
Of course not.
“It was transferred to a Cayman Islands bank.”
“You called them?”
“Transferred to a JN Corporation, a shell company. It’s going to take an army of forensic accountants to find it, and McGurk, if that’s his real name.”
It wasn’t, but I wasn’t going to tell him that.
“Why are you telling me?”
“The selection committee asked me to ask you to come back and maintain continuity while we sort this mess out.”
“Too late. I’m off on holiday this morning. Time to take a break from everything.”
“Then, in a few weeks, when you get back. We’ll talk.”
“Can’t. Not coming back. Not getting the award settled a few things for me, and the main one, our future. Twelve months in a cottage in Tuscany and then, well, who knows. Have a nice life, Jason.”
I hung up.
Evelyn rolled over. “McGurk?”
“Not at the office for his first day.”
“Jason?”
“Nearly hysterical. He went to the house, and there’s no sign he had ever been there.”
“McGurk wasn’t. He’s been dead since the day after he was born, but Michael Oliphant, that’s a different story.”
“That his real name?”
“So Viktor told me. Took three days, but he broke him. They all break eventually.”
“And the money.”
“It’ll be in Geneva by the time we get there. Now, come back to bed.”
…
© Charles Heath 2025