Read Alan McQueen - 02 - Second Strike Online
Authors: Mark Abernethy
Tags: #Fiction, #General, #Thrillers, #Espionage, #Action & Adventure
Looking out over the sprawling mass of west Jakarta, Mac thought about that waiter he’d seen. He’d been athletically built and moved like a soldier, although he’d tried to conceal it with a baggy hotel tunic. It wasn’t just that the bloke was watching Mac and Grant with a different intensity to the waiter scanning a room for a raised glass. No, there was something strangely familiar about that waiter. He couldn’t put his fi nger on it. The face? The hair? Or was it the gait?
Faces, eyes and hair could trigger connections but it was gait that really formed code deep in the brain. Scientists at the Shin Bet academy in Tel Aviv had concluded that humans were reliant on gait analysis to identify friend and foe because before the advent of language, anthropologically very recent, that’s all they had to go on. Even from a distance the human brain could pick up if someone was a warrior, injured, tired, aggressive, male or female, strong or weak.
Mac knew that waiter’s walk, but couldn’t place it.
Behind him the sofa squeaked slightly. ‘Pay extra for the view,’ said Diane, who wasn’t a great fan of Jakarta’s vistas.
Mac turned, took her in and struggled to keep it tight. She was sitting on the edge of the sofa in white bra and panties, rubbing lotion into her tanned legs. Looking up, her sapphire orbs sparkled like she was taking the piss. She knew he was married but she couldn’t help herself. Mac hated that and, in spite of himself, he felt his jaw clench, searching for the best way to tell an ex-lover that her charms were still working but he was no longer a buyer.
‘Look, Diane -‘
‘Yes,
Richard
?’
Diane was an extraordinarily manipulative person. To offset her own betrayal of Mac with Peter Garrison, she was highlighting that even when he was on the verge of proposing marriage to her, he let her call him
Richard
rather than coming clean. She was daring him to take the high moral ground, an unstable place for a couple of pros.
‘Got some more info on the NIME guys - the real principals,’ said Mac, trying to take his eyes off her.
‘Want to talk about Michael?’ she said, knowing that it would irritate him to hear Vitogiannis referred to by his fi rst name.
‘Sure - did he hit on you?’ said Mac.
She chuckled. ‘Of course not, darling. He saw how devoted I was to my husband.’
Without taking her eyes off him, she started with the lotion on her belly.
‘So that’s it?’ he asked.
‘No, Michael’s very excited about the deal. He says Australia has the right technology and expertise for Asia during an infrastructure build-out, and he thinks NIME is an exciting partner.’
‘So, he’s legit?’
Diane looked at him. ‘He said something about how the Australian government weren’t coming to the party, or something like that?’
Nodding, Mac pushed. ‘So he was open about it all?’
‘He didn’t lie, except for when he said
partner
and
partnership
. Why would he lie about that?’
‘Because he’s got no interest in a partnership with anybody. He’s a venture capitalist - he wants to exit, wants to be bought out.’
Mac was getting really annoyed, uncomfortable. Then he smelled the liquid she was rubbing, and he lost it. Before he knew what was going on, he was in front of the elevator banks, breathing shallow, gulping, banging on the ‘down’ arrow and muttering to himself.
He got to the bar by the lagoon and settled into a bar chair where he could scan the comings and goings out of the hotel lobby. Positioning himself so he wasn’t looking straight into the security camera above the top shelf single malts, Mac looked for eyes, but could only see animated businessmen. Exhaling, he let the tension run out of him.
‘Evening, Mr Davis,’ said the barman.
Mac smiled, realised he still had his name-tag on. He unclasped it, slid it across the bar and, looking at the bloke’s name-tag, asked for a beer, and Bundy on a rock.
The beer arrived and Mac said, ‘Thanks, Clyde,’ then drank from the long neck and felt its coolness rush down his throat. He remembered the days when he was dating Diane between Sydney and Jakarta. It had been early summer in Sydney, and on a beautiful Saturday morning the woman he’d fallen in love with had wanted to go swimming at a beach. Mac had suggested Bondi or Manly, something with a bit of oomph, something to put the willies up a Pommie girl. But Diane wanted to go to Camp Cove, a harbour beach in Sydney’s east with no waves and a lot of fl oating rubbish.
Mac remembered carrying a big seagrass bag behind Diane, who was dressed in a see-through pink sarong that revealed she was topless. He tried to be sophisticated and not too Rockhampton about the topless thing. He was trying to impress this bird.
They had walked up the Camp Cove beach and continued under the trees and around the point. He wanted to tell her they’d gone too far but they’d kept walking around the point and gone down a cliff path at the next beach. He’d followed her to a position in the middle of the sand where a lot of tanned bodies lay around like seals, and as Diane was fi nishing off a story about a nympho secretary at the British High Commission in Islamabad, she unfurled her mat on the sand and removed her sarong. And then took off her undies.
He could remember it like it was yesterday. He’d turned slowly to see what reaction the crowded beach was going to have to this dramatic nude form and then the penny dropped: it was a nude beach.
Everyone was starkers.
Mac had been running full speed to try to stay with her, to downplay the provincial Queensland thing and make it about his education, his worldliness. But when Diane had said, ‘Come on, get those shorts off - it’s good for you,’ Mac had run headlong into who he really was, which was a Mick footballer from Rockhampton who had never been on a nudist beach in his life and had no intention of removing his shorts now he’d found himself on one.
He’d stood there humiliated and embarrassed as Diane lay down on her mat, pulled her Evian and then her squirty bottle of carotene oil from the seagrass bag. He’d tried to leave that nudist beach quick-smart but Diane wouldn’t go, just lay there laughing at him from behind her Ray-Bans. ‘You silly old thing,’ she’d taunted with her plummy English accent. ‘No one’s looking. You are
so
funny, Richard.’
He’d broken the deadlock that day by dropping his daks and lying down on the damned towel, clenching his bum like he was trying to crack a walnut, praying to God that no one from HMAS Watson up on the cliff could recognise him. His enduring image of that day was the smell of carotene and the vision of a tanned woman who was waxed all over. An enigma of a woman who had left him for dust.
Now, sitting in the pool bar at the Shangri-La, Mac felt physically relieved not to be standing on the beach at Lady Bay. Clyde put a glass on the bar, dropped in one large rock and poured a double of Bundy rum over it. Jenny said it was a hick’s drink but the Queensland rum was comforting for Mac. He gulped a mouthful and, opening his mouth slightly, felt the fumes evaporate into his mouth and sinuses.
An Anglo male, fortyish, with an IBM salesman haircut, sat down at one of the tables near the pool and, leaning back, read the
Economist
.
The
Economist
at nine-thirty in the pm? Spies always carried a prop such as a magazine or newspaper into a public place, but to Mac’s brief glance the bloke didn’t seem like a dire unfriendly. Maybe a Canadian or Kiwi embassy intelligence designate, just merging into a conference and seeing if Mac was up for a chat. It’s how the vast majority of human intelligence was conducted: with a smile, over a beer.
He smelled her before he saw her, and then Diane’s arm was over his shoulder and she was kissing his ear.
‘Hello Mr Grumpy Pants,’ she whispered. ‘Still sulking?’
Before he could reply, she ordered her own drink. ‘I’m having what he’s having, thank you, Mr Clyde.’
She had changed into white tennis shorts, navy tank top, fl at espadrilles and lots of tan. She looked stunning and as she folded her arms and cleared her throat, Mac found her a barstool, dragged it over and Diane sat down as her Tiger arrived. She clinked glass with Mac and drank from the bottle.
Diane had been annoying with the whole bra-and-panties act, but they made up over a few drinks, and attempted to bore Mr
Economist
into leaving with a louder-than-necessary marital conversation about mortgage rates and mobile phone plans.
At 11.43, Mr
Economist
left without looking at anyone. He’d been made and was hitting the hay.
Mac had forgotten how funny Diane could be when she drank.
She kept trying to order more Bundys and he made the mistake of asking her if she was trying to get him drunk.
‘I’m trying to loosen you up,
Richard
,’ she said, prodding him in the chest. ‘Emotionally, you’re like a fucking oyster.’
Clyde kept the drinks fresh and Mac and Diane agreed to take turns having their whinge about events of the past, and then never mention it again. Diane wanted him to start, but Mac said, ‘Ladies fi rst.’ She rolled her eyes so Mac suggested they fl ip a coin to which she said, so the whole poolside area could hear her, ‘You are
such
a child!’
‘Keep it down,’ mumbled Mac into her ear, and Diane whispered that this was perfect husband-and-wife cover - a drunken dis-agreement about something petty.
‘Rock, paper, scissors?’ asked Mac.
‘Oh, for fuck’s sake,’ said Diane and grabbed a coin from Clyde.
She lost the toss and went fi rst, reminding him of a night in Jakarta when they’d got drunk at the old harbour, and they’d slept in Diane’s cottage in the British residential compound.
‘You remember?’ she asked. Mac nodded, looking into his beer and hoping she wasn’t playing him.
‘You said you had been going to ask me to marry you, when we were at that restaurant in Sydney, a few days before,’ she said.
‘Yep,’ said Mac. ‘I remember.’
‘And I said, “
Really
?
”
, and you said, “
Yes
“?’
Mac nodded, a little unsettled by the memory.
‘Do you realise,
Richard
, that I lay there in the dark, waiting for you to ask me? I thought that was the
point
of the fucking conversation,’
she said in a low, hissing tone of anger and hurt that only women can do.
Mac stared into his Tiger, thinking, and when he turned to face her she was looking into his eyes.
‘Look, Diane, I was scared. You were very new, very different.’
‘It could have changed our lives, if you’d asked me,’ she whispered.
‘What?’ he laughed. ‘You’d have said
yes
?’
The hardness came back into her face. ‘You’ll never know that, will you,
Richard
?’
Mac sat against the far wall of the breakfast restaurant. He’d been taught in craft school always to arrive early when courting an asset, and to sit where there is the greatest vision available to you and the least to the other bastard. Wincing through his headache, he asked for a cooked breakfast and a pot of coffee.
Mac counted three black goldfi sh bowls in the ceiling and he had a quick look at the
Asian Wall Street Journal
, taking the opportunity to scan for eyes, see if a bit of counter-surveillance was called for. Around him were tables of networking, jabbering business types who were in town for the conference but were really hoping to be introduced to the type of person who could make them a lot of money. Waiters and fl oor staff wafted about and by the time the waitress came back with the coffee Mac had found no reappearance of the surveillance team from the previous evening, and no encore from Mr
Economist
.
Alex Grant came in with Michael Vitogiannis at 7.04, greeted Mac and they all headed for the bain-maries.
Back at the table, Mac poured coffee all around and let Grant drive the discussion to where he wanted it to go. One of the reasons Mac was a relative natural at what he did was that he was a good listener.
People who talked more than they listened made terrible spies, and there were a lot of them.
‘So, I brought Michael up to speed on our discussion,’ said Grant, wearing offi cial leisure clothes that looked new. ‘You know, from last night?’
Mac nodded, and Grant cleared his throat. ‘And I suppose we’ve agreed that we’d like to have a chat about your services, Mr Davis, with a view to … umm … bearing in mind …’
‘We have to move quickly,’ said Vitogiannis, leaping in with certainty but not arrogance. ‘These deals are like vapour - you think it’s all go, and then
poof
-‘ he opened his hands as he widened his eyes,
‘it’s gone. Up here the game moves fast.’
Taking a long draught on the coffee, Mac thought about what he was going to say. He wanted to keep the discussion away from the sensitivity of the uranium-enrichment code, or even the secret provisions of the deal with NIME. The way to steer around that issue was to make the entire discussion about Mac and the money. If he could do that then Bennelong Systems might do all the hard work for him.
‘So, you’ve checked me out?’ asked Mac, friendly, nothing to hide.
‘Well, actually, Richard, that’s why we were late down here -
making some calls,’ said Vitogiannis.
‘Gotta do it, guys - mad if you don’t,’ said Mac.
Vitogiannis shrugged at Grant as if to say
I told you,
and looked back at Mac. ‘Your accounts person was helpful about how we might initiate an agreement. It sounds like a solid set-up.’
Mac gave Terri - the accountant at the Southern Scholastic offi ce in Sydney - an inward high-fi ve. Depending on which line was used into the switchboard, it would trigger a computer screen with all the details of that operative and his commercial cover. The Davis Associates cover had been set up only recently and Terri had brought herself up to speed nice and fast, probably set Vitogiannis back on his heels with a few basic credit inquiries of her own. To most business people, a grumpy fi nancial controller was the mark of a good operation.
‘Well, Michael,’ said Mac, laughing, ‘may I start by revealing how comfortable I am with a man who starts at the most important point