He breathed, wiggled his toes, fl exed his fi sts. The right hand was still swollen and painful. But he was alive and in one piece – for the moment.
He wondered who it was. Garrison’s thugs? The Chinese? He prayed it wasn’t the boys from Beijing. When intel hacks got gossiping they inevitably came to the Chinese torture scenarios: the drugs, the hypno, the implants, the beatings, the surgery.
There were no restraints. Whoever it was, they didn’t see him as a threat.
He sensed movement. A face looked down on him. Large, round, male.
Maori. Fuck!
‘How’s the head, chalks?’
The guy smiled. A big, confi dent smile. Mac didn’t know what to say.
‘Sonny?’
The big Maori laughed, a high-pitched chortling giggle. ‘You remember me, eh Chalks?’
Mac was a stunned mullet. He was looking at a ghost from his past: Sonny Makatoa.
Mac carried something on his CV that he reckoned he shouldn’t. He was a veteran of Desert Shield/Storm. Technically. Straight from the Royal Marines he’d rotated into Basra in ‘91. The fi rst Iraq war was winding down, the wells were burning, Bush Senior was pulling the boys out and novices like Mac were being sent into a war zone to see how intelligence worked in the shit. It was the only way to get that experience. The only way for the spy masters to know if this was your thing.
It was Mac’s thing.
He deployed with a couple of older Australians, one of whom was Rod Scott. They were doing lots of sweeps for hidden missile silos and bio-warfare factories. There were loads of snitches and turncoats coming out of the woodwork in those fi nal days. Saddam military wanting US dollars. Saddam military wanting Australian visas. Saddam military planted by his intel people as doubles and provocateurs.
Mac worked the ‘show-me’ detail, as in, So this is the Brucellosis weaponisation program you were telling us about? Show me!
The Australian SAS was in demand elsewhere, so in one of the last factory-checks the spooks were doing for bio-warfare manufacture, the New Zealand SAS stepped in as the escort. It was scary work: mines in walls, snipers on the peaks, everything booby trapped. They were into the cave systems of southern Iraq where the turncoat colonels reckoned the bio-labs were.
That’s where Mac had met Sonny Makatoa. Sonny was only six years older than Mac but already leading his own unit. Senior ranks deferred to him, lesser ranks were shit-scared. His boys loved him.
He stood fi ve-eleven and was built like a tree stump. It was hard to imagine who or what could intimidate him. Sonny was tough in the strangest way. Tough like he was born to be in a war zone. Careful and professional but not nervous. Almost as if he liked it.
He remembered Sonny because on his fi rst day Mac had turned up with a different kind of hat to the rest of the spooks and soldiers.
They all wore khaki boonies while somehow Mac had ended up with a blue one.
Sonny had thrown him a spare hat at breakfast. Told him to put it on. Mac had hesitated. Sonny eyeballed him. Mac put it on.
It wasn’t till late morning when they were waiting – and for some reason, war is all about waiting – that Mac had got talking to one of the Kiwi SAS. Asked him about the hat.
‘Corporal’s saving your lily-white,’ said the Kiwi. ‘Snipers round here fi x on anything out of the pattern. Assume it’s a commanding offi cer, or someone important. He likes you.’
So Mac had remembered Sonny. And Sonny had remembered too, probably for other reasons.
Mac swung his feet to the fl oor. He was in a demountable and from the decor and size of the room, he assumed it was the sick bay. The room was air-conned but that wasn’t helping with his head. He had a dizzy spell, thought he would chuck. Put his hand to his mouth.
‘Hem – fucking get in here, now!’
It was the same old Sonny. Barking, yelling, expecting everyone around him to be on the ball. A large Maori man in a black T-shirt and olive fatigue shorts scooted into the sick bay. Barefoot, tucking in his shirt. Sonny nodded at the bloke and they got on either side of Mac and helped him up. The headache subsided slightly as they walked him out the door.
‘Put on some weight, Chalks?’ said Sonny. ‘You were a skinny little runt when I knew ya.’
The sick bay opened into a communal area with loads of natural light. Mac winced and squinted. There was a kitchen down one side, bench tables and chairs in the middle, and an area with sofas and a La-Z-Boy in front of a big plasma-screen TV at the end of the room.
Barcelona was playing Liverpool. Mac took one guess who got to sit in the La-Z-Boy.
They sat him on the sofa and he saw rainforest through a window.
He nodded to the offer of tea and the big guy called Hem moved to the kitchen. Mac had him at one hundred and eighteen kilos, about six-two, all muscle and moving like a cat.
Sonny grabbed a chair, sat on it, leaned forward with forearms on his fatigues. His black T-shirt had a white crest on the left breast, the words TOKOROA RFC printed in white.
‘That’s Hemi,’ Sonny pointed. ‘Played reserve grade for Canterbury-Bankstown. Couldn’t control the temper, though, eh?’
Sonny chuckled, then whistled low, shook his head slowly. Sombre.
‘Big, strong cunt that Hemi. Good soldier, great fi ghter. Tough as.’
Sonny looked back at Mac, smiling. ‘Just can’t let him drink, eh Chalks?’
The teapot came back, along with a glass of water. Mac sank the water in one, wincing at the pipe that bulged in his brain.
‘So what’s the set-up?’ asked Mac, who was getting his bearings and starting to worry about where Sawtell and his boys were.
‘Private work, mate. Contracting, protection, a bit of law and order. You know how it is.’
Mac had a fair idea how it was. In places like Sulawesi, the foreign miners, loggers and oil companies wanted to be able to work their concession without complication. Mercenaries like Sonny removed the complications. Accountants back at head offi ce called it ‘pacifi cation’.
Hemi moved to Mac’s nine o’clock and Sonny changed the pace.
‘So what brings you up here, mate?’
‘Girl,’ said Mac. ‘She went missing from the embassy. Just checking she’s okay.’
‘Little out of the way to go missing, eh?’
Mac was getting his instincts back. He was going to tread very, very carefully. Sonny had said he was mercing. But not for whom.
‘Well, she might be up to no good,’ said Mac. ‘Might be nothing.
They sent me out for a chat. No biggie.’
Mac reached for his tea. He realised Sonny hadn’t offered him any clothes. He was still in his undies – no Beretta.
‘Coming out for a chat with the cavalry, Chalks?’
Mac looked up and Sonny looked straight back. It was a steady gaze and it gave Mac the creeps.
‘Those boys would be, what, Yank special forces?’ asked Sonny.
‘Probably came in from Zam, right? Or Guam?’
Mac looked away.
‘What’s she done?’ said Sonny.
Funny, thought Mac; three days ago he had asked the same question in exactly the same tone. And now here he was in the middle of Sula-fucking-wesi and still none the wiser.
‘Don’t know.’
‘Don’t know?’ Sonny raised his eyebrows.
‘Don’t know – on the lam with an American as best I can fi gure it.’
‘American, huh?’ Sonny looked quickly at Hemi, looked back.
‘Tall cunt? This Yank?’
Mac nodded.
‘About my age? Dark hair?’ asked Sonny.
‘That’s the bloke,’ said Mac.
‘And?’
Mac’s training and natural inclination told him to always withhold names and histories. ‘Need to know’ was a well-worn cliche but it saved a lot of complications. Then again, Mac didn’t have many options. He decided to horse-trade. ‘Where’re my boys?’