‘Give it thirty seconds, brother,’ said Bongo.
‘Really?’ panted Mac.
‘Yep…’
As Mac waited, another troop of four Brimob stormed out of the cemetery.
‘Didn’t want to run into them, right, Mr Davis?’
‘See you in five,’ answered Mac, and set off.
Scaling the wall he landed in the shelter of the trees. The locals in the graveyard – mostly women, children and grandparents – mobbed together like sheep waiting for the wolf to show itself. In the massacre at the Santa Cruz cemetery in 1991, more than two hundred Timorese mourners had died after Indonesian soldiers and their irregular ‘teams’ had opened fire.
So the locals didn’t feel safe in the cemetery anymore, and Mac was with them on that. He watched as they flocked towards the south of the cemetery, which put them further from the site Mac was focused on. When the ground in front of him looked clear, he broke his cover and stealthed through the plots. Making good time, he reached the twentieth path and paused behind a white crypt with a gold-painted crucifix over the door. Panting, he cased the area while the firecracker bangs continued.
Crossing the path Mac walked in a crouch between the plots, irritated that the cemetery was so spotless that there wasn’t even any long grass or wild shrubs to hide in. The twenty-first path looked different by day, but Mac was alone and the locals had moved a hundred metres away. Mac crept towards the Salazar grave, trying to stay lower than the surrounding headstones.
Crawling the last few metres, he got into the lee of the casement and lay flat on the brown grass around the plot, listening for vehicles or footfalls. Raising his head slightly, he realised the bangs had stopped but the smoke was now high in the sky. Taking a deep breath, he pushed himself to his elbows and slid the casement sideways, opening it easily to reveal the cavity.
Which was empty.
Mac paused for a second, the ramifications pounding in his head.
‘It says,’ came a voice very close by as Mac started in surprise, ‘She’s not here. In case you’re wondering.’
Very slowly, Mac turned his head away towards the neighbouring gravestone, and found himself facing a small Colt handgun that was gripped firmly in a beautifully manicured hand. Rahmid Ali’s other hand screwed up a small piece of paper and threw it at Mac. It bounced off his damp forehead as he lifted his hands in surrender.
‘This is a little dramatic for me, Mr McQueen,’ said his captor. ‘Can we talk now?’
Staying as still as he could, Mac let Ali talk. Since being let loose on his first work-alone assignment six years earlier, Mac had dreaded the moment a Chinese or Indonesian agent got hold of him and demanded answers. He’d trained for it, thought about it and done all the mock exercises, and for good measure, he’d never tried to establish the identity of other field guys. He’d cultivated his own ignorance so if someone really wanted to pull his teeth and get intimate with the crocodile clips, they’d get a few corporate front addresses and nothing more. Now, sitting in Santa Cruz cemetery, a bit zonked from dehydration and the heat, he wasn’t sure he had the fortitude for an interrogation.
‘Things aren’t what they seem,’ smiled Ali, gesturing Mac up with the Colt.
Standing slowly, Mac let Ali expertly frisk him, taking the Beretta from his waistband and the Nokia from his breast pocket. Then, feeling a small push, he moved out onto the path and waited for instructions.
‘Get your hands down,’ said Ali. ‘Go right.’
Mac did as he was told, his brain racing for the options. Either Ali was going to torture him and get one or two basic answers, or he was going to take him into the trees by the wall and execute him. Either way, Ali was heading to the wall where Mac was meeting Bongo. Would Bongo come looking for him? Probably not, mused Mac. Having created the diversion, Bongo would want to be heading away from the fire. He wouldn’t even get out of the car.
Entering the shade of the trees, Ali kept his distance and gestured for Mac to sit down against the wall.
‘Please listen,’ said Ali, voice controlled. ‘You must hear something.’
Pulling a folded sheaf of white A4 paper from his back pocket, Ali tossed it at Mac and shook a cigarette from a soft pack.
‘Read it,’ he said, as he lit up and inhaled.
There were three pieces of paper, stapled at the top left corner. The first page bore the Indonesian Army crest of a large eagle, wingtips touching over its head, a red and white shield on its chest. At the head of the document was the heading OPERATION EXTERMINATION, with the injunction in large bold type: GENERAL STAFF – EYES ONLY.
Scanning it, Mac picked up the gist from the intro and the headings. It seemed the Indonesian military intended to intimidate the Timorese population out of voting for independence; they were going to kill, imprison and deport pro-independence figures and their families, and if the ballot still favoured independence rather than integration into the Republic, the military and its militias were going to destroy public infrastructure, destroy crops and livestock, burn villages and…
Mac had to shake his head, get his eyes focused. The heat and fear were killing him.
Having wasted the villages and their farms, the military would engage in mass deportations of East Timorese to West Timor – the Indonesian side of the island – and Irian Jaya. The document was chilling; East Timor was a subsistence economy. If you wiped out the villages, the livestock and the crops, you’d be looking at a famine. The Indonesians had already killed a third of the East Timorese population since their invasion in 1975. Adding famine and mass deportations was a blueprint for genocide.
Throwing the paper on the soil beside him, Mac shrugged.
‘Proud of yourselves?’
‘Not me, McQueen,’ said Ali. ‘The generals.’
Mac wasn’t sure what that meant. ‘Is this new?’ he asked, nodding at the papers on the ground.
‘You read it before?’ asked Ali, still steady.
‘Well, I think we’ve come to conclusions about -’
‘Have you seen that document?’ Ali insisted, his eyes on Mac’s.
‘No,’ said Mac, ‘but the generals releasing their documents in English is a nice touch, Ali. On a silver platter for the Australians to go running off on a wild-goose chase.’
‘We translate them,’ said Ali. ‘And get them to your guys at the section in Jakarta.’
‘Really?’ said Mac, surprised.
‘Really.’
‘This one?’ asked Mac.
Ali paused, exhaled his smoke and finally broke his stare with Mac. ‘No, McQueen – not this one.’
‘Why not?’
‘Because your people aren’t interested,’ said Ali.
Mac blinked hard to maintain concentration. ‘You said we – who are you, Ali?’
‘I’m working for the President.’
‘Oh really?’ scoffed Mac. ‘Don’t tell me, personally working for Habibie, that it?’
Ali stared back, no comment.
‘Okay,’ said Mac, slightly intimidated by a direct approach from the President’s office. ‘What do you want?’
‘We need enough people in your DFAT and ASIS, and your armed forces, to see this. It’s genuine.’
‘Why not go direct to the Prime Minister’s office?’ asked Mac, confused now. Presidents dealt with prime ministers, not with spies crawling around in cemeteries, pretending to be sandalwood merchants.
‘No use,’ said Ali and shook his head. ‘The Australian government has been swayed by the generals’ propaganda, and the President is in no situation to stop this Operation Extermination. He wants a genuine ballot and a peaceful transition to independence if that’s what East Timor wants.’