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      Two Weeks Each Year 
      
      
      
      by 
      
      Stephen Collicoat 
        
  
  
    
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      'We have a problem.' 
       
      Alice Kay bit her lip in vexation. As chief steward it was her job to 
      resolve any problems brought to her by the cabin crew. Until the moment 
      that 
      hostess Barbara Kingower came to her looking pale and worried, Flight 587 
      had been perfect. The plane had left on time. There was a minimum of 
      turbulence. The microwave ovens in the galleys had worked perfectly. 
      Dinner 
      and breakfast had been served promptly and there had been no demanding or 
      abusive passengers. 
       
      'A serious problem?' Alice asked, trying to hide her weariness. 
       
      'Very.' 
       
      'Concerning?' 
       
      'A gentleman seated in First Class. 2A. Mr. David Sheridan.' 
       
      'He's still on board?' Alice felt puzzled. The plane had landed in Manila 
      thirty minutes before. Usually all passengers disembarked within 20 
      minutes: 
      first class passengers well before any others. 
       
      'Yes.' 
       
      'Why?' Alice began to feel irritated. Drawing answers from Barbara in her 
      present mood was difficult. 'What's his problem? Does he refuse to leave?' 
       
      Barbara shook her head. 'No. He can't leave. He's dead.' 
       
      'Dead! You better show me.' 
       
      They entered the compartment. There among the usual debris of crumpled 
      blankets, magazines and newspapers a handsome, well-dressed man lay back 
      in 
      his deep chair as though sleeping. His lips were parted in a slight smile. 
      Alice took his pulse. He was certainly dead. 
       
      'When did you realize what had happened?' 
       
      'A few minutes ago,' Barbara said tearfully. 'Mr. Sheridan told me when he 
      came on board that he wanted to sleep through the entire journey. I 
      offered 
      to wake him for his meals, but he was adamant that he didn't want to be 
      disturbed. I felt sorry for him. He seemed so tired. So I left him 
      undisturbed until now when I thought I better wake him. 
       
      'This is terrible,' she continued. 'It's never happened to me before. He 
      might have been dead all the time I was serving food. If I had known he 
      was 
      in trouble, I could have asked for help.' 
       
      Alice shrugged. 'Don't worry. You did the right thing. It was what he 
      requested. No one will blame you.' 
       
      'Has any passenger died on you?' Barbara asked hopefully. 
       
      Alice smiled wanly. 'Not so far, but you know Susan Moran?' 
       
      'Vaguely. Is she on the Bangkok run?' 
       
      'That's the one. She's lost five in the last 14 years.' 
       
      'That's dreadful!' 
       
      'It happens. She's works mainly in Business Class. It's not surprising. 
      All 
      those fat men, gorging on rich food, swilling alcohol and worrying 
      themselves sick about their high pressure jobs and whether the plane will 
      fall out of the sky. It's a wonder more men don't die in flight. Many are 
      prime candidates for strokes.' 
       
      'How awful! But Mr.Sheridan was thin. He looked fit, but I guess he was an 
      old guy.' 
       
      'Not so old.' Alice said, suddenly feeling the burden of passing time. 
      'When 
      you've been in this job a while you'll realize a man that in his seventies 
      these days isn't really old.' 
       
      Barbara was unconvinced. Seventy was old. Even at 39, Alice was clearly 
      getting past it. Barbara couldn't imagine growing old. There was no way 
      she'd still be working in this job in five years time. 'Why do you think 
      he 
      died?' 
       
      'No idea. Here's what we'll do. Tell the cleaners to stay out of here. 
      I'll 
      inform the captain who'll notify airport security. Mr.Sheridan may have 
      someone waiting for him in the terminal. They'll bring in the police 
      who'll 
      no doubt come with a doctor. Don't forget to keep the cleaners out. This 
      might be a crime scene.' 
       
      'Crime? Do you think he was poisoned or something?' 
       
      'No, but the police will need to make sure. It wouldn't be the first time 
      someone's been murdered on a plane. There was that flight to Hanoi three 
      years ago for instance. Most likely, he died from natural causes. A weak 
      heart perhaps. People die all the time and some are a lot younger than 
      this 
      gentleman. Anyway, let's get on with it. There's plenty to do.' 
       
      Barbara looked at the dead passenger with compassion. 'How sad to die like 
      that,' she sighed. 
       
      Alice looked at her in surprise. 
       
      'Why?' she demanded tartly. 'He died in first class. True, he missed the 
      smoked salmon and Bollinger, but it doesn't look as though he suffered.' 
       
      'Still to die so publicly with no one he loved at the end.' 
       
      Alice shrugged indifferently. Mr. Sheridan was probably lucky, she 
      thought. 
      When she died she doubted her death would be in luxury. 
       
      .... 
       
      The next day the phone rang in Tom Arnold's Sydney office. 
       
      'Thank you for taking my call,' the smooth, educated voice began. 'My 
      name's 
      Carter Freeman. I'm a senior officer in the Department of Foreign Affairs 
      and Trade stationed in Canberra. Am I correct in assuming that you're Mr. 
      David Sheridan's solicitor?' 
       
      'Yes,' Arnold replied guardedly. 'May I ask how you have my name?' 
       
      'You're listed as an emergency contact in Mr. Sheridan's passport.' 
       
      'I didn't know he 'd done that. David is both a client and a friend. Is he 
      is trouble?' 
       
      'I'm sorry to tell you that Mr. Sheridan died yesterday on a flight to 
      Manilla. DFAT was contacted this morning by the Philippine authorities via 
      our Embassy. They asked us to notify Mr. Sheridan's relatives, but so far 
      you're the only contact we've been able to make' 
       
      'How did he die?' Arnold asked, still shocked at the sudden loss. 
       
      'The police believe it was a stroke, although Mr. Sheridan wasn't old and 
      appeared to have been in good physical condition. An autopsy will be 
      carried 
      out next Tuesday at two o'clock their time. There'll also be a coronial 
      inquest, but that'll probably be a formality.' 
       
      'I'm so sorry. David was a good man. Your news has shaken me.' 
       
      'As Mr. Sheridan's lawyer, can you tell me who else I should be 
      contacting? 
      Was he married?' 
       
      'No. David was a widower. His wife, Anne passed away about three years 
      ago. 
      He had a son, Nelson but they were estranged. I don't have a current 
      address 
      for him, but I'm sure he can be traced. Could we liase on this? I'll need 
      to 
      contact Nelson anyway. He's the sole beneficiary.' 
       
      'That's a good idea. Mr. Nelson Sheridan may wish to attend the inquiry. 
      Certainly the Filipinos will want to know from him what to do with Mr. 
      Sheridan's remains.' 
       
      Tom winced. Already David was being thought of as 'remains'. 
       
      After taking down details, including Freeman's contact number, Tom sat 
      back 
      and stared unseeing out his window. He doubted Nelson would take the 
      trouble 
      to fly to the Philippines even if he had the money for an airfare, which 
      was 
      unlikely. He'd probably expect Tom to make all the arrangements. Nelson 
      would doubtless prefer to have his father buried in Manila. It'd be 
      cheaper 
      and easier. Tom had seen little of Nelson. What he saw, he didn't like. 
      The 
      guy was a no-hoper; a talentless musician and drug addict who lived off 
      women. He was violent, putting several girlfriends in hospital. 
      Unfortunately, none of them pressed charges. He also had a criminal record 
      for petty theft. Nelson it seemed wasn't suited to anything, including a 
      life of crime. He hated his parents, but not because they had done him 
      harm. 
      As far as Tom understood they had given him a good education and plenty of 
      support. He was simply an ungrateful, selfish and useless bum. Nelson 
      would 
      be unmoved by Sheridan's death but excited to find he was the sole 
      beneficiary. For a while, he'd think he'd won the lottery. He's in for a 
      nasty shock, Tom reflected. Everything David Sheridan owned was mortgaged 
      to 
      the bank. What David and Anne had done with their money Tom couldn't 
      imagine. He knew them as well as anyone could know that very private 
      couple 
      but for two weeks each year they left home and Tom never discovered where 
      they'd been. The news of David's death, he reflected, wasn't that great a 
      shock. The man seemed to have lost interest after his wife died. Tom 
      wondered if it really possible to die from a broken heart. 
       
      .... 
      'What an interesting life you lead!' she enthused. 'How I envy you!' 
       
      I met the elderly lady by chance at a party, celebrating the wedding 
      anniversary of a distant relative. I was surprised that she recognized me 
      as 
      an occasional travel writer and pleased she had not only read but admired 
      several of my books, most of which sank without notice shortly after 
      publication. 
       
      'What fascinating people you've met!' she continued, 'That impoverished 
      Russian nobleman in your latest work, the Italian prince who murdered his 
      wife and that Turkish arms dealer. What characters!' She glanced around 
      the 
      crowded room and sighed. 'It must be thrilling to mix with the rich. They 
      lead such glamorous lives. You're the only person that I can recall 
      meeting 
      who was even slightly different and interesting.' 
       
      In truth the Russian, Italian and Turk exist only on the written page. The 
      rich people that I meet on my travels are generally a disappointment. 
      Fitzgerald was wrong: the rich are not different from the rest of us. 
      Generally, they are just as dull as the poor. In fact, the Sheridans 
      immediately attracted my attention because they looked so right for the 
      part, being handsome, charming and assured. Unlike most wealthy couples, 
      with their habitual, ill-concealed expressions of boredom, snobbery or 
      resentment, the Sheridans clearly savored every moment of their lives. 
       
      Most trains enter or leave Bangkok through Hualampong station, a large, 
      grubby white Art Deco building situated in a run down section of the city. 
      Up to two hours before the Eastern and Oriental train sets forth on its 
      leisurely journey to Singapore, passengers assemble at a small lounge that 
      is located on Platform 11. It was here that I first saw David and Anne 
      Sheridan. The lounge is small and dreary, but the framed reproductions of 
      travel posters from the 1930's that line the walls offer a tantalizing 
      promise of exotic adventures ahead. 
       
      Chance - or was it fate - threw me into the Sheridan's company over the 
      next 
      three days. Although I asked to be seated alone, the couple were often 
      behind, in front or across the aisle from me and we exchanged civilities. 
      Although I often preferred to stay in my State Compartment reading a book, 
      recording my impressions or idly watching the unfolding scene, I 
      occasionally enjoyed pre-dinner drinks in the bar car, the second dinner 
      setting commencing at 9pm. It was there I had several casual, wide ranging 
      conversations with David and Anne. They were a stylish couple and I was 
      flattered at their interest in my ideas and experiences. Clearly they were 
      great travelers, but unlike most people, were good listeners. I was 
      surprised to later realize how much I had talked about myself and how 
      little 
      they revealed. 
       
      Rail travel is best suited to people with a calm and reflective 
      temperament. 
      Sitting in your luxurious cabin with its walls of burled walnut, fittings 
      of 
      gleaming brass, muted lights and heavy drapes, one can easily imagine one 
      is 
      traveling in the stylish 1930's. You sip your fine china cup of Java 
      coffee 
      or Earl Grey tea, nibble cakes or oven fresh, warm flaky croissants 
      brought 
      in a silver basket nestled within the thick folds of snowy white linen for 
      afternoon tea by your attentive steward. Thus fortified, you contentedly 
      watch the countryside sliding past like a slowly paced film. I remember 
      the 
      small groups of children waving frantically as we passed and their delight 
      when I waved back, the lazy plumes of blue smoke from village fires and 
      the 
      glimpses at night through lighted windows into the small world of other 
      people's lives. I remember a herd of pitifully thin bulls that bolted at 
      our 
      approach, running beside the train until the road abruptly swung away. I 
      recall the silent wonder of people sitting patiently in the hot little 
      railway stations staring into the fairy tale world that I inhabited. We 
      only 
      seem to live in the same world. Actually, each of us inhabit parallel 
      worlds 
      where five feet may separate one man luxuriating in comfort from another 
      who 
      will go to bed hungry. 
       
      The Sheridans were in every way ideal traveling companions, being polite, 
      amusing and undemanding which made a small incident that occurred on the 
      second evening seem all the more puzzling. 
       
      My day had begun early when I watched the train easing its way across the 
      wooden trestle bridge at Wang Po. Most of the morning was then spent 
      visiting the achingly sad Death Railway Museum at Kanchanaburi and the Don 
      Rak war cemetery. I was sweaty and tired when I returned to the train and 
      after a shower and delicious lunch, I curled up on the sofa for what I 
      thought would be a short nap in my cool and quiet compartment. I was 
      surprised when I woke to find that a pale moon was rising above the black 
      fringes of the palm trees. 
       
      The first dinner seating was announced and the lady went on to tell us 
      that 
      an astrologer had joined the train and was available for consultations in 
      the library. I decided that I had spent more than enough time by myself in 
      the compartment and though astrology leaves me cold, I decided to look in 
      at 
      the library before going for a drink in the bar. 
       
      When I reached the library, I found David and Anne standing outside the 
      library with another couple. The couple seemed determined to attach 
      themselves to the Sheridans, who I doubted cared for them but were too 
      well 
      mannered to cut. 
       
      'Oh look, ' the woman shrieked. She was tiresomely loud and endlessly 
      dramatic. 'An astrologer. What fun! Shall we have our fortunes told?' 
       
      'You go ahead,' Anne smiled. 'David and I will have a drink and you can 
      tell 
      us about it later.' 
       
      'Oh, you must come,' the woman insisted. 'Who knows what your future 
      holds?' 
       
      'Oh, for heaven's sake,' David snapped. 'Anne said she wasn't interested. 
      Can't you just leave it alone?' He stalked off, leaving Anne smiling 
      apologetically. 'Please forgive my husband,' she began, but the woman cut 
      in, 'Well, I never! What a rude man! Come on George. We're going back to 
      our 
      cabin.' 
       
      She turned to Anne tartly, 'Tell your precious husband he won't bothered 
      by 
      us again. There are plenty of other guests on the train who'll be more 
      than 
      happy to enjoy our company. George, are you coming?' She stormed off 
      trailed 
      by her red-faced husband. Anne shrugged helplessly to me and we continued 
      without speaking to the bar car. 
       
      How strange, I thought later that talking about Anne's future seemed to 
      irritate David Sheridan. Before the trip ended, I understood the reason 
      for 
      his anger. 
       
      Policemen and priests have a term for it: the urge to confess. Over the 
      years, I've lost count of the number of people who have said ruefully to 
      me, 
      'I can't believe I'm telling you this.' 
       
      Something about me - my kind face, sympathetic manner, what I say - seem 
      to invite confidences. It's a mysterious gift and one that I'm not sure is 
      a 
      blessing or a curse. Certainly it helps that I'm a stranger, that I want 
      nothing from others and that I never gossip. 'You're a strange person,' 
      one 
      perceptive young woman once said. 'A still center. A vacuum most of us 
      feel 
      we need to fill.' But this story isn't about me. Suffice to say that I 
      made 
      sufficient money while young to allow me to enjoy a comfortable though 
      solitary middle age. I travel the world in ease, observing and recording, 
      sometimes in books but mainly for my own private amusement, the foibles of 
      human nature. I mention these personal details only because it helps 
      explain 
      why David Sheridan, a man who guarded his privacy almost to the point of 
      obsession finished up revealing to me so much of his life. 
       
      On the third and last night of the journey, I entered the club car. David 
      Sheridan was there by himself, staring morosely into his drink. He spoke 
      before I could leave. 
       
      'Join me.' 
       
      'If I'm not intruding.' 
       
      'Sometimes it's good to talk.' His words were pleasant but he spoke so 
      absently that I wondered if I should leave. 
       
      'Your wife won't be joining us?' I asked, settling down reluctantly 
       
      'No. She had a headache and went to bed early. 
       
      'Trouble is,' he added with unexpected frankness, 'she's having more 
      migraines and they're getting worse. She's on painkillers and we keep 
      increasing the dosage, but we've almost reached the limit.' 
       
      'I'm sorry to hear that,' I said lamely. 
       
      'Not your fault,' Sheridan muttered bitterly. 'Nobody's bloody fault. The 
      fact is Anne's dying.' 
       
      I was appalled. What could I say? 
       
      'Anne has a rare form of brain cancer. It's horrible to think that each 
      day, 
      the tumor grows, eating deeper into her mind. She'll be dead within weeks, 
      perhaps a month at the most. She prays - we both pray - that she'll go 
      before it gets much worse. Above all, she fears losing control. You have 
      no 
      idea how brave she was coming on this trip, but she said it was her last 
      hurrah. A time we could shine once more before the lights were turned out 
      forever. We've been dreaming of this trip for years and she wasn't going 
      to 
      let anything deny her this last pleasure. She also knew how much I wanted 
      to 
      go on the E & O train. She's like that. Always doing things that will give 
      me pleasure.' 
       
      David Sheridan's voice broke and burying his face in his hands he wept 
      quietly. It was pitiful to watch. 
       
      I sat in silence. It seemed the cruelest irony that such a handsome, 
      confident and outwardly happy couple carried such a dreadful secret. 
       
      We sat there for a long time as the train sped through the black forests. 
      Finally he rallied and asked quietly, 'What are you thinking?' 
       
      'The truth?' I couldn't lie though my answer was wretched. 'How happy and 
      healthy Anne looks. I'd never have guessed.' 
       
      Sheridan smiled wanly. 'Anne would love to hear you say that, though she 
      must never know we've spoken like this. She's not a vain woman which makes 
      her all the more beautiful. There's nothing more repulsive than a lovely 
      person who judges their effect on others. Anne just wants to look her best 
      for as long as she can. Some people might see that as vanity, but I 
      believe 
      it's her dignity. Who was it that said that we have a duty to others to be 
      happy?' 
       
      'Forster or Kipling? Whoever said it was right. ' 
       
      'Generally we don't talk about the future. Soon after she was diagnosed, 
      Anne said, "Do you know worst thing about dying? It's that while you 
      desperately long to feel normal, everyone treats you as a victim. That's 
      why 
      I don't want you telling any friends. I know some will be hurt I didn't 
      ask 
      for their support, but that's not my way. I want my early death to shock 
      as 
      many as possible." 
       
      'I've always felt women are generally much braver than men,' Sheridan 
      continued thoughtfully. 'They stoically endure mental and physical pain 
      that 
      would turn most men into gibbering idiots. Anne is very centered and she's 
      right about most things.' 
       
      He paused, 'But there's something about which she's completely wrong. 
      She's 
      told me that she expects me to marry again. She thinks it will happen 
      about 
      a year after she's gone. I don't argue with her, because the thought that 
      I'll be looked after gives her comfort. It won't happen. I just pray that 
      I'll join her soon. I won't kill myself but it won't be long. That belief 
      helps when I'm awake at night, lying beside her, crying but afraid to make 
      a 
      sound.' 
       
      At the time I confess I thought Sheridan was being dramatic. Nobody, I 
      reasoned can hasten his or her death simply by an act of will. I'm sure 
      that 
      David imagined his death would be quicker than it was, but when I read his 
      obituary notice four years after our conversation, I realized how 
      prescient 
      he had been. 
       
      'So much of our life is based on deceit, but surely it's a harmless deceit 
      if it gives ourselves and others pleasure? It's not as though anyone can 
      do 
      anything and Anne would loath being pitied. I'm sorry that I've told you 
      about her illness. It was selfish of me. I've made you miserable and 
      frankly 
      I regret putting myself in your power.' 
       
      I felt mildly insulted, but knew that I shouldn't. Sheridan knew nothing 
      of 
      my character. 'It's not something I wished to know,' I agreed carefully, 
      'But you're certainly not in my power. What you've told me tonight will 
      remain our secret forever.' 
       
      Well, not forever as it turned out, otherwise I wouldn't be telling you 
      this 
      story but Anne and David Sheridan are both dead. Whatever I reveal won't 
      affect them and perhaps even I, receiver of the world's secrets 
      occasionally 
      need to lift the burden I carry of other people's confessions. 
       
      Sheridan looked me curiously 'Do many people confide in you?' 
       
      'A few. Actually, all the time.' 
       
      'Strange. That must sometimes seem like a curse.' 
       
      I nodded. 
       
      'Would you like to hear my story? Perhaps you'd prefer to sit in silence 
      or 
      go to bed. I won't be offended.' 
       
      I almost flippantly replied, Plenty of time to sleep when I'm dead, but 
      thank heaven stopped myself. Instead I murmured, 'I'd like to hear it'. 
      Knowing Anne's condition, I wasn't sure I did. 
       
      'Let's freshen your drink. Then I'll tell you about the Sheridan's two 
      weeks 
      each year.' 
       
      'Do you remember Poseidon?' he began when the steward withdrew. 
       
      'Vaguely. I wasn't in Australia at the time, but the 'Straits Times' gave 
      it 
      extensive coverage. That's really going back. Was that in the nineteen 
      sixties?' 
       
      As Sheridan nodded, I recalled fragments of this exciting and for many 
      shareholders calamitous time. 
       
      'My life changed for the worse a year before the Poseidon crash in another 
      less publicised stockmarket disaster. The sixties introduced a period of 
      feverish speculation. Most young Australians were fed up with the Menzies 
      era - a fusty 1950's double-breasted worsted way of looking at life. 
      Someone 
      was making serious money out there and it certainly wasn't our parents 
      with 
      their Depression ethos of keep your head down, nose clean and pray you 
      live 
      long enough to draw a pitifully small age pension. I was 25 and a year out 
      of uni having taken a double Honours in maths and law. I secured a job in 
      a 
      stockbroking firm. The company was long established and conservative, but 
      I 
      reasoned it was a good place to learn the craft. I was full of myself in 
      those days. I met Anne the same year and we were engaged within six 
      months. 
      She's the only woman I've ever loved. 
       
      'I'd been in my job less than a month when news broke of an exciting 
      nickel 
      discovery in a remote area of Western Australia. It's easy to be wise 
      after 
      the event, but no one, least of all myself, asked fundamental questions 
      about the company and what the 'evidence' really was. The company that 
      announced the find was virtually unknown. Its stock value was a joke. We 
      used to call these shares 'penny dreadfuls'. Yet within days, the stock 
      was 
      worth more than the combined market value of huge blue chip miners like 
      BHP 
      or Rio Tinto. That should have woken someone up. The evidence for the find 
      rested solely on a highly favorable assay report. Normally, it wouldn't be 
      long before other experts weighed into the debate. Experts are generally 
      only too happy to correct the mistakes of others in their field. The 
      nickel 
      field however was in an area that was hard to reach being thousands of 
      miles 
      from the nearest town, as hot, dry and dusty as Hell and bordered on three 
      sides by restricted tribal lands. For a while everything the company said 
      was believed, mainly because it was so hard to prove the opposite but also 
      because we wanted to believe what we read. Galbraith once said there are 
      two 
      parties to a successful con. The ruthless and the greedy. In those days 
      many 
      of us needed to believe in caverns of gold. Australia seemed to be 
      teetering 
      on the brink of massive mineral wealth. Every red blooded man or woman 
      wanted to be part of the action, particularly someone like myself being 
      young, impatient, self important and hopelessly naïve. The trouble was 
      everyone knew I that was honest, my family was respected and a lot of 
      people 
      in those days had an exaggerated respect for formal education. Most people 
      of my generation were lucky to complete high school while our parents 
      generally didn't get beyond primary school. Seeing how well a poor boy 
      like 
      myself had done at uni winning scholarships to pay his way led them to 
      believe that as a stockbroker I was smart enough to help them make a 
      fortune. The stock market was then an arcane art for most people and I 
      seemed to be a bright guy with the inside running.' 
       
      Sheridan signaled to the steward and with fresh drinks, he resumed. 'It 
      wasn't long before I ran into a brick wall with my employers. Day after 
      day, 
      I fretted watching the mining company's stock soar. Day after day, I urged 
      my firm to take a position in the market for our clients. "Young man," I 
      was 
      told loftily. "Our clients are our long-term friends. These people - 
      wealthy 
      graziers, charitable foundations, socialites - rely on our good sense, our 
      balanced judgment, in developing portfolios that weather the test of 
      time." 
      Yes, people really did talk like that then! I became increasingly 
      contemptuous of my superiors. How dare these arrogant people deny their 
      clients the opportunity to make solid profits. Some of the clients begged 
      me 
      to buy the miner, but my firm refused to lodge their orders. 'Let them go 
      elsewhere," the insufferable senior partner smirked. "We'll still be here 
      when they come crawling back, begging for us to take their business 
      again." 
       
      'Finally, I couldn't stand it any longer and I quit. Immediately I was 
      free 
      to place orders for the stock for myself and others. I bought heavily into 
      the stock, watching as the stock doubled, tripled then quadrupled in 
      value. 
      Soon I was a paper millionaire five times over. I invested every cent I 
      could borrow and encouraged others, including my parents to do the same. 
      There was my father: a man whose principal ambition was fulfilled when he 
      paid off his mortgage suddenly borrowing heavily with his home as sole 
      collateral. What on earth was I thinking of? Why didn't I establish stop 
      loss orders so they 'd be sold out if the stock dropped below a certain 
      point? It was madness. I remember my father saying, "I don't know where 
      you 
      got your smarts from, son. Certainly not me. I wish I had a tenth of your 
      intelligence when I was young. Still, it's not too late to start enjoying 
      life. We'll take that trip your mother always planned and maybe buy a 
      bigger 
      house. She deserves much better than I could ever give her." Of course no 
      one wanted to listen to reason. If you cautioned people about the risk of 
      losing money, their faces would tighten. I remember one of my uncles 
      became 
      abusive when I suggested he make a smaller investment. "That's bloody 
      typical," he exploded, "It's all right for you to make a fortune. It's all 
      right for your parents to do well, but I'm supposed to stay poor for the 
      rest of my life. Well, I'll tell you what. If you don't want to invest my 
      money, if it isn't good enough for you, then I'll find someone else who'll 
      take my business." And he did, the sad fool! 
       
      'For almost a month, the stock soared. Everyone, journalists included 
      accepted the assay report as gospel. 
       
      'Then one day, a young investigative reporter called Bruce Winterthur 
      published a three part examination of the mining company. Winterthur did a 
      fine job. He looked at every aspect of the company, including a detailed 
      history of the directors and its sources of working capital. He looked at 
      the assayer's history. He traveled privately to the fields and he spoke to 
      people on the spot. Before publishing, the newspaper's legal counsel went 
      through his articles word for word. They agreed it couldn't be faulted. It 
      was a brilliant and devastating piece of journalism. The articles shredded 
      the company's reputation and its claims. The directors if not criminals 
      were 
      sailing perilously close to the wind, the assayer was young and may have 
      been bought off. A lot of damaging material was printed and much more was 
      implied. Clearly, the regulatory authorities had been asleep at the wheel. 
      Minutes after the 'Change opened, brokers were falling over themselves to 
      rid their clients of the poisoned stock, screaming at the chalkies to take 
      their bid. All day, the stock was savagely sold. There was a brief rally 
      the 
      following morning, they call it the 'dead cat bounce' but by lunchtime, 
      the 
      value of the stock had dropped through the floor. Men and women were 
      standing watching the Board, their faces frozen in shock or quietly crying 
      as they saw their lifetime's savings disappear. I was shattered. Not only 
      was I ruined, but my parents, relatives and close friends who I had helped 
      lost everything and were plunged into debt. 
       
      'My parents lost their home. A year later, my father died. The doctor told 
      me it was the direct result of intolerable strain. My mother lived another 
      20 years and gradually lost her mind. In some ways, it was a relief for me 
      when I no longer saw the quiet reproach in her eyes. I lost my friends and 
      my relatives shunned me. Everyone blamed me for their loss. I've carried 
      that guilt since. A year after Anne and I married, we went interstate to 
      begin again. I got a low-level job in an accounting firm, but my 
      confidence 
      was crippled. We lived very modestly for many years as I paid off every 
      cent 
      of my debts. Finally, I did, but by then it was too late to think about 
      becoming rich. Anne uncomplainingly stuck by me all those years and it was 
      thanks to her that I finally turned my life around.' 
       
      Sheridan told me that one Sunday morning, he woke from a long and 
      untypically refreshing sleep to see Anne smiling at him. 
       
      'Good,' she began. 'You've finally woken. Last night, just after you went 
      to 
      sleep, I had an idea. I felt so excited I was tempted to wake you. I've 
      been 
      fidgeting here for hours. Honestly, I've never known a man who can sleep 
      so 
      much. Not,' she added hastily, 'that I've watched many men sleep.' 
       
      'So what's your wondrous idea?' David invited, still groggy from sleep. 
       
      'It's so simple that I wonder we didn't think of it years ago. It's about 
      never having enough money.' 
       
      That woke David up. 
       
      'It's always worried you more than me,' Anne continued, 'but it would be 
      nice not to always scrimp and save. My idea, I should warn you means that 
      for 50 weeks each year our budgeting will be even stricter than it is 
      today. 
      If it was tight yesterday, it'll be far tougher today.' 
       
      David was disappointed. 'That sounds awful,' he groaned. 
       
      'Yes, but it's the price that we'll willingly pay for the other two weeks 
      each year. Two weeks of utter bliss that we'll enjoy year after year for 
      as 
      long as we wish.' 
       
      'What happens in that fortnight?' 
       
      'In that time, we'll live as though we had won, rather than lost a fortune 
      from those wretched shares. We'll go on amazing holidays: stay at 
      exclusive 
      resorts in exotic locations. We'll drink fine wine, sample delightful food 
      and meet interesting people. And we'll look the part. We'll buy 
      well-tailored clothes that won't date. And they needn't cost a fortune. 
      The 
      secret to looking rich is bluff. I've seen silver-plated necklaces in 
      marketplaces in India for instance you'd swear were worth twenty times 
      their 
      price. We'll live like kings, then at the end of each fortnight, we'll 
      disappear to emerge here as plain old Anne and David Sheridan.' 
       
      Anne giggled, 'It's a modern take on the Cinderella story. At the stroke 
      of 
      midnight, the belle of the ball becomes Cinders again. 
       
      'Of course,' she added seriously, 'it won't be fun scrimping for most of 
      the 
      year, but at least with my plan we'll know it's for a good purpose, not 
      just 
      because we're poor.' 
       
      They bought a small, quality digital camera and during the long months of 
      deprivation, often turned the pages of their scrapbooks to relive their 
      triumphs. 'Remember that evening with Jeffrey Archer?' David would ask.' 
      What an entertaining man!' Anne agreed. 'Shrewd though. I felt that 
      another 
      few minutes with us, he'd have us sussed. Thank goodness for his urgent 
      phone call from London.' 'That's because Jeffrey's observant. Most people 
      only want to talk about themselves. They're like the old joke, 'But that's 
      enough of myself, let's talk about you. What do you think of me?' 
       
      Many people who met the Sheridans on their travels were charmed by the 
      couple and would beg for their address to keep in touch. All were 
      surprised 
      and disappointed to find that emails, letters or telephone calls never 
      connected. Occasionally the Sheridans encountered the same person on 
      another 
      trip. Anne would laughingly apologize that she'd unwittingly transposed a 
      figure in the address or phone number. To increase their privacy, they 
      took 
      a silent number and always made sure they recorded incoming phone calls 
      before responding. 
       
      Few of us can keep a secret. We might last a week, fortnight or even a 
      month, but sooner or later after a few drinks or during a moment of 
      misguided intimacy, we lower our guard. This never happened with David and 
      Anne. They would have made perfect spies. They were totally comfortable 
      with 
      their double lives. 
       
      Before closing, I asked David Sheridan if he felt on balance that the two 
      weeks experiment had been successful. 
       
      'Not a shadow of a doubt!' he enthused. 'Anne and I squeezed so much life 
      into that small time. The stories I could tell! People were often puzzled. 
      They'd say, "You two get so much more out of life than the rest of us. 
      What's your secret?" It's often tempting to say, "Poverty. It keeps us 
      real." ' 
       
      I thought his response sounded smug. There was always a troubling hint in 
      David's confession that they enjoyed deceiving others. That they were 
      secretly laughing at both their poor friends and rich acquaintances. 
       
      Well, that's my story of the Sheridans. I can't decide if theirs was a 
      plan 
      that others should follow or whether they just were a vain and shallow 
      couple. My judgment on their lives doesn't matter. David and Anne did what 
      they wanted, enjoyed themselves for as long as fate allowed and departed 
      with dignity. Perhaps that's enough.  | 
     
   
  
 
  
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