Second Strike am-2

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Second Strike am-2 Page 33

by Mark Abernethy

‘I’ll do it now.’

  ‘Thanks, Fred. By the way,’ he said as an afterthought, ‘any updates on the plane they were using?’

  ‘Yeah, POLRI talk to local in Idi and they say white plane with two engine come in from Peninsula at daybreak.’

  ‘What size?’

  ‘Five or six circle window down side.’

  ‘Sounds like a King Air 200.’

  ‘Think you’re right, McQueen. The local say plane then went back same way twenty minute later.’

  ‘Back to Malaysia?’ asked Mac.

  ‘Sure.’

  ‘What did Malaysian intel or police have to say?’

  ‘Still waiting to hear. Asked them to check KL and Penang airports too. Especially freight interchanges.’

  Mac tried to understand Freddi’s thinking. ‘Airports?’

  ‘Well it airplane, McQueen. And it got cargo. So it has to land sometime. And if it going onto a truck or into a van or into shipping container, then it go into the freight interchange.’

  ‘Confi dent?’

  ‘Yeah, the Malaysians are good. May take a day, but they should tell us something. They know it a device, so they motivated.’

  Breathing out, Mac reached for his beer, looked out over the gentle waves hissing on the beach. Whenever Jenny got upset about some of the human-traffi cking intercepts she was trying to effect, it was always the myriad transport options that the traffi ckers and the slavers could use that drove her nuts. Mac had known her to work three days with a total of four hours’ sleep. It was maddening and he was getting a headache just thinking about how many different ways a device the size of a backpack could be brought into Australia, if Australia was even where it was coming.

  ‘Freddi,’ said Mac, watching a woman with a bathing cap try to bodysurf, ‘looking forward to that latent, and you’ve got my number now, mate, so please keep me in the loop?’

  ‘Always do, mite, always do.’

  The air went quiet between them and Mac broke the awkwardness.

  ‘Mate, about what you said?’

  ‘Yeah?’

  ‘You’re right, it’s not for me to judge you. I’m sorry.’

  ‘Thanks, Mac,’ said Freddi, putting the harsh Javanese vowel sound into it.

  ‘Thanks, mate.’

  Mac’s last call rang-out and he was about to hang up when a male voice picked up. ‘Yes?’

  ‘Ari! Fancy a quick polka, you old tart?’

  ‘McQueen – such nice surprise!’ said Ari.

  They talked and Mac fi lled him in as much as he could. Over the past twenty-four hours Mac’s natural reluctance to spill to rival fi rms had ebbed away as his own mob indicated they didn’t want to know.

  If the Israelis and Indons were the only ones interested, then Mac wasn’t going to cut them out just to boost his ego. Besides, he needed to stay close to them and that meant showing he had information they needed.

  ‘Ari, all those years ago I showed you those papers I rescued from the burning building, remember?’

  ‘Sure,’ said Ari.

  ‘Well I held one piece of paper back – it had some handwritten scrawls on it. Yesterday I realised the scrawl was shorthand for Mantiqi Four, which is -‘

  ‘The JI cell for Australia, yes, McQueen? This Fourth Brigade?’

  ‘That’s it, mate. We think they lifted the device yesterday morning from Idi in Sumatra and fl ew it into Malaysia. If you have any lines into -‘

  ‘We do, yes. Let me -‘ said Ari, and Mac heard him ask for a pen.

  Mac told Ari all he could.

  ‘You got my number now, Ari, so please let me know what’s going on. I’m down here in Australia and if you hear anything, let me know so I can catch this end, huh?’

  ‘Sure, and you do same for us, yes?’

  Mac agreed and they signed off. Mac fi nished the VB in one slug.

  It was time to fi nd Davidson.

  CHAPTER 50

  Mac had a fairly strong picture of who could help him. He would be a retired spy – one of the many around Noosa – and he’d be a part of the broader fabric of the Noosa intelligence community. When spies retired they often found it hard to relax with civvies and inevitably they’d be drawn into the networks of old cops, diplomats, soldiers and spooks.

  He found what he was looking for at a sidewalk cafe called the Sierra. The menu board looked okay and, stopping, Mac looked over it and cased his man: he was in his late-fi fties or early sixties, with calm but alert eyes and wearing clean leisure clothes. He was sitting along the side wall of the cafe, where his view of proceedings was panoramic while giving no one a view of himself. He had eyes that didn’t miss a thing and a face trained not to show it.

  Taking the table next to his mark, Mac saw the man’s Business Review Weekly magazine dip slightly.

  Ordering a Perrier and a seafood salad, Mac looked around casually and caught the bloke’s eye.

  ‘G’day, gee, you guys turned on the weather,’ said Mac, like a mug but with enough confi dence to get Mr ex-Spook interested.

  ‘Yes, it’s nice right about now,’ drawled the man through his nose, too Anglo for Jo’burg and not posh enough for Cape Town. Mac had him as Durban. ‘You’re up from Sydney?’

  ‘Brissie, actually,’ said Mac cheerily. ‘On a bit of a mission.’

  ‘Oh yes, um -‘

  ‘Alan. Alan McQueen.’

  ‘So what’s the mission?’

  ‘Well, actually, ah…’

  ‘Ted,’ said the South African, leaning across to shake.

  ‘I’m looking for a controller.’

  Ted froze momentarily, his eyes sweeping the cafe and the street in an instinctive search for backup. Just as quickly, he regained his humour. ‘Well, PlayStation fan are we?’ said Ted, smiling.

  They both laughed falsely, Ted sliding his hands slowly off the table. He looked like an auditor but with hands that could hurt.

  ‘I’m not armed, Ted,’ said Mac. ‘And I just told you my real name.’

  Ted stared at him.

  Mac leapt into the silence. ‘Give me sixty seconds and if you want, I’ll walk away, okay?’

  Ted’s shoulders relaxed. ‘Okay,’ he said, reaching for his tea. ‘Sixty seconds, but keep your hands on the table, okay?’

  ‘Ted, I’ve come down from Indonesia overnight. My operation ended with my partner being shot, and now my controller hasn’t answered the phone for three days. His name’s Tony Davidson, and I’m worried about him. He’s never off the air for three days. We go a long way back, and I owe him to at least check. He’d do the same for me.’

  Ted was silent, thinking. At an outside table a bunch of lunching ladies shrieked at a piece of gossip.

  ‘Alan McQueen, down from Indonesia?’ said Ted, like he was savouring a wine.

  ‘I can wait,’ said Mac, taking off his sunnies. ‘I don’t need to see his place. Just need to know he’s okay. That’s it, Ted.’

  ‘Let’s walk,’ said Ted, standing.

  Mac left a fi fty-dollar note on the table and they walked north, Ted casing the streets and doing a series of perfect counter-surveillance patterns. When they got to the public park at the end of Hastings Street, he asked Mac to stay in one place, in the open, and then moved off.

  Twenty minutes later, Ted approached him from behind and held out his hand. ‘Sorry about that, Alan,’ he said. ‘Can’t be too careful.’

  They got into Ted’s fi ve-year-old BMW 3-series and drove back along Hastings, around the point and along Sunshine Beach, before veering right and into the suburb behind the famous beach. Mac fi nally asked Ted who he’d checked with.

  Ted smiled, and Mac said, ‘Forget I asked.’

  ‘Since you did ask – Joe.’

  ‘Did he carpet me?’

  ‘He said if McQueen’s trying to pick up men in seaside cafes, he’s either desperate or lonely.’

  Mac laughed.

  ‘No,’ said Ted. ‘He said you’re a good operator, that you’d have your r
easons.’

  At the end of a quiet cul-de-sac about six streets back from the beach, Ted stopped the car and pointed at a cute cottage nestled among wattles and frangipanis. As he got out, Ted pulled something from the glove box and shoved it in the small of his back, then walked towards the cottage. Mac noticed there was no letterbox, no street number.

  Along with Tony not being in the phone book or the electoral roll

  – and having a false address on his driver’s licence, he’d bet – the old guy had kept all of the habits used by the gainfully employed spy.

  ‘I was at Tony and Vi’s anniversary dinner last week,’ said Ted. ‘But they had it at a restaurant in town. Only know about this address because my wife and Vi do fundraising for the children’s hospital.’

  The property seemed quiet as they walked to the cottage and none of the curtains were pulled. Moving around to the front, Mac noticed an inside light was switched on and, as they stepped onto the veranda, Ted pointed down at a stainless-steel bowl of peas and a plastic bag of pea pods beside it. The peas had cracked dry and the pods were yellowing, misting up the bag with condensation. The fl y screen was shut but the door behind it was open.

  The quiet of the day was eerie. Ted pulled a Colt Defender from the small of his back and expertly pulled back the slide. Mac pulled a heavy cricket stump from an old canvas cricket bag on the veranda.

  Stalking to the door, Ted leaned into the jamb and slowly pulled the screen door open. It was cooler inside but the smell hit them at the same time and they looked at one another in the gloom. They both knew that smell.

  ‘Trip wires,’ mouthed Mac, his adrenaline starting to pump in his temples. Then he followed Ted down the hallway, the Saffa holding the Colt in cup-and-saucer.

  They slowly cased the house, the smell becoming stronger as they proceeded, although the place seemed to be clean of booby traps.

  They found Vi Davidson in the kitchen, lying face down, a pretty fl oral-print dress hiking up her athletic legs. The fl ies rose in a furious buzzing as they walked towards her. Blood had poured from her head and spread to the edge of the fl oor and under the refrigerator. Now it was congealed, fl at. Kneeling down, they saw a small hole behind her right ear.

  Mac had always liked Vi. She was a very friendly, very smart woman, born to wheat money but who gave her life to charity, mainly working with intellectually handicapped kids.

  Ted looked up at the ceiling, breathed in and out, put his hand up and rubbed his face into it.

  Before leaving the kitchen, Mac used the sharp end of the stump to pull down Vi’s dress, give her some modesty. Vi would have laughed at that gesture – shrieked at the silliness of it.

  There was nothing in the living areas or bedrooms. Ted checked in the bathroom. Nothing. As an afterthought he pushed open the door to the toilet. Mac yelped as a swarm of fl ies fl ew out and a tide of cockroaches scattered along the fl oor. Tony Davidson was slumped against the cistern and the green tiled wall. His face was almost unrecognisable and the entire back wall of the toilet was covered in blood, viscera and bits of bone and matted hair. His pants were around his ankles.

  They headed out into the sun again, both of them paranoid though they needn’t have been. The hit had been done two or three days ago, around the time when Mac and Diane had attended the opening reception at the Lar, and Mac had phoned through what he had on NIME and Bennelong, Grant and Vitogiannis. Someone had known, someone had ordered that not only Vitogiannis and Grant be taken out, but that Davidson and Mac had to go too. They were the four people – outside of the Hassan gang – who knew what NIME really was and what the real deal was for the enrichment codes. Diane would make a fi fth person, but it wasn’t clear that she was supposed to be whacked by the room-service shooter. She was only shot at the tennis courts when she opened fi re.

  But someone had to have known that Mac was talking to Davidson, that he was putting it together. Who?

  Ted and Mac stood still, not talking for a while.

  ‘I’m – I’m sorry about this, Ted, I -‘

  ‘Don’t be, mate,’ he said, shaking his head. ‘This is the game. Tony knew that.’

  ‘No such thing as retiring, huh?’

  Ted fi xed him with a look. ‘Know a way to tell your wife that?’

  Ted said he’d take this one, since Mac was still in the fi eld. The last thing intel guys wanted was to get involved in a detective’s quest for the truth. It wasn’t that Mac had anything to hide, but once the questions started – Name? Age? Address? Occupation? How long did you know the deceased? Why were you here? – the lies would just start piling up and Mac would confuse their investigation. They’d end up trying to build a case out of Ted and Mac: Excuse me, Mr McQueen. Did you say you got off the plane from Singapore, went to Hastings Street and trawled the cafes for an ex-spy who could lead you to the deceased?

  Mac gave Ted his new mobile number then walked away from Tony and Vi’s house, leaving Ted to ring it in.

  He walked along the beach track back to his apartment, fi ghting the nausea, trying to get the taste of Tony and Vi’s house out his mouth.

  Pausing near a stand of shrubs on the side of the path, he dropped to all fours and vomited, tears running down his face as the dribble hung from his bottom lip. He breathed in and out as deeply as he could then, rolling around to sit on his bum in the sand, he looked out on the Pacifi c. A middle-aged woman with a German shepherd and a purposeful stride walked towards him with a look of concern.

  Before she could say anything, Mac raised his hand in the sign of, I’m okay, thanks.

  Getting to his feet, he felt overcome by a pain way beyond the body and deeper than the mind. Putting one foot in front of the other, he made himself walk on, his whole body shaking.

  Janice handed him Freddi’s fax as he came into the lobby. His voice sounded ten miles away as he said, Thank you.

  Sitting on the edge of the bed in his undies, he stared at the fax.

  Freddi was right – the other latent was gibberish. He let it fall to the ground and fell back on the bed. For an age he looked at the ceiling, feeling empty, useless and scared. Someone who knew what Mac was uncovering, who somehow had been able to fi nd out where Davidson lived, had moved to shut down Operation Mainstreet. The sellers, the spooks, the controller. Clean slate, no blowback.

  Someone knew. Someone on the inside.

  CHAPTER 51

  A slight beep sounded and Mac woke with a start, immediately on alert. The Nokia’s screen projected an eerie orange light onto the ceiling, and Mac fought a pins-and-needled left arm to roll over and pick it up. The text message read, Dinner? Ted.

  Looking at his G-Shock, Mac saw it was 6.09 pm. He texted back to say ‘yes’ to dinner and get the venue and time. Then he had a quick shower, dressed and sat at the writing table, fumbling the numbers into his phone. The non-identifying, non-committal answers came thick and fast until Mac was fi nally put through to Pru, Greg Tobin’s PA.

  ‘I need him for thirty seconds, Pru,’ pleaded Mac. ‘I mean – no games, okay?’

  Greg Tobin – the head of operations for the entire Asia-Pacifi c region, and Tony Davidson’s successor – picked up less than thirty seconds later. ‘Macca! Nice surprise!’

  ‘Greg, he’s dead,’ managed Mac.

  ‘Who? What’s going on? Mate, are you okay?’

  ‘And Vi too.’

  ‘Vi? Shit, you mean, as in Tony and Vi? What -‘

  ‘Dead, shot – both of them. Professional hits.’

  ‘Where are you, mate? You at Noosa?’

  Mac nodded, face in his hand.

  ‘Macca? You there? Are you in Noosa?’

  ‘Yes!’ he snapped.

  ‘We need to bring you in. Who else knows about this?’

  ‘Local cops,’ said Mac.

  Mac heard Tobin speaking to someone in urgent tones before coming back on the line. ‘Six am at the airport, okay Macca?’

  ‘Okay.’

  ‘And Macca?’r />
  ‘Yep?’

  ‘Stay out of trouble.’

  The last of the Queensland continental light was turning the Pacifi c purple as Mac took a refi ll of chardonnay from Ted’s wife, Ellie. Ted was lighting the citronella fl ares around the large sloping lawn and Ellie said her goodnights. Mac thanked her for a beautiful meal and sat beside Ted on a restored park bench overlooking Sunshine Beach.

  ‘Does Ellie know?’ asked Mac.

  Ted shook his head, looked into his wine. ‘That can wait. I have to be careful, she may want to move on and, well -‘ He gestured at the view. ‘This is me, mate. They’ll bury me in Noosa.’

  ‘Nice up here, Ted. You did well.’

  ‘Lost nine kilos, lost ten years,’ he smiled. ‘So what about you, mate?’

  ‘I was out for a while, you know, when my daughter was born.

  Been living down on the Gold Coast.’

  ‘Sure.’

  ‘But Tony was running this new economic team, and I came in to work with him. I was up in Jakkers for this new job. It was my fi rst time there in a long time and -‘ he raised his eyebrows.

  Ted sighed, shook his head.

  ‘Thing was,’ said Mac, ‘the gig was working. The infi l was successful, we were getting the intelligence, it was nice and soft, and then wham.’

  ‘Is there anything we can talk about? I mean, are you supported?’ said Ted.

  Mac laughed at the sky. ‘That obvious, eh Ted?’

  ‘Mate, it happens to any good operator at least once in his career.

  It’s not you, okay?’ said Ted.

  Mac weighed his options. He couldn’t rely on Canberra or the section in Jakarta, so instead he was trying to claw cooperation out of Mossad and BAIS. Davidson had trusted Ted, liked him, invited him to his anniversary. And the thing about old timers is that they always knew something that could change your thinking: the new machines and cameras were great, but you could never discount sheer experience.

  ‘Okay,’ Mac exhaled, ‘the two Aussie business people we were infi ltrating in Jakkers were doing a deal with an Indon power generation consortium, right?’

  Ted nodded.

  ‘So Canberra wanted to know who was behind the deal and confi rm exactly what was involved before they wrote a loan guarantee for this big export of control systems to this consortium. A political safety check, really.’

 

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