of photographs in his professional lifetime, in some of the wildest regions of the planet: the Tomes de Paine, the plateaus of Tibet, the Gunung Leuser in Indonesia. There he had photographed species that were in their last desperate days, rogues and man-eaters. But he had never come close to capturing what he had seen in the jeep's headlamps minutes before: the power and the glory of the bear, risking death to defy him. Perhaps it was beyond his talents to do so; in which case it was probably beyond anybody's talents. He was, by general consensus, the best of the best. But the wild was better. Just as it was his genius to wait upon his subject until it revealed itself, so it was the genius of the wild to make that revelation less than complete. The rogues and man-eaters were dying out, one by one, but the mystery continued, undisclosed. And would continue, Will suspected, until the end of the rogues and mysteries and the men who were fools for them both.


CHAPTER III


Cornelius Botham sat at the table with a hand-rolled cigarette lolling from beneath his blond feather moustache, his third beer of the morning set at his elbow, and surveyed the disemboweled Pentax laid out before him.

'What's wrong with it?' Will wanted to know.

'It's broken,' Cornelius dead-panned. 'I say we hack a hole in the ice, wrap it in a pair of Adrianna's knickers and bury it for future generations to discover.'

'You can't fix it?'

'Yes, I can fix it,' Cornelius said. 'That is why I'm here. I can fix everything. But I would prefer to hack a hole in the ice, wrap it in a pair of Adrianna's knickers-'

'It's given good service, that camera.'

'So have we all. But sooner or later, if we're lucky, we'll be wrapped in a pair of Adrianna's knickers-'

Will was at the stove, making himself a ragged omelette. 'You're obsessing.'



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