The elbow snapped back against Marlon’s chest, busting the joint, his right shoulder popping out in an anterior dislocation. Marlon’s eyes went wide with fear as he cannoned backwards into the hotel room wall, air sucking straight out of him with the pain and shock. He was unconscious before he hit the fl oor, his arm mangled and twisted into a shape it shouldn’t have been in.
Mac reached into Marlon’s shoulder rig, pulled out the Glock and stood. Boo was mumbling, trying to raise his head, his hand fumbling around for the Glock on his hip. Mac stepped over, brought his Glock down hard on Boo’s right wrist, breaking something. Boo screamed and pulled his hand to his chest. ‘ Faaarrrkkk! ‘
Mac left Boo’s gun. No time. Sweeping the room, he saw a phone, couldn’t remember the numbers. He raced to Boo’s black briefcase, riffl ed through it and found his cheapo mobile phone. Shoving the Glock into the belt of his chinos, he pulled his shirt over it, put the phone in his pocket and made for the door. Bursting through it, he came face to face with another Glock 9 mm, behind it a person he knew as Sami. The driver of the blue Commodore.
‘Fuck!’ said Mac. ‘You too?’
Sami shrugged. ‘It’s a living.’
Mac put his hands up, shook his head. Behind him Marlon was moaning, Boo was gasping.
‘Mate, I need to make a call,’ said Mac, going for his pocket.
Sami started to say something.
Then his head shifted sideways so fast his hair stayed put for a split second. It looked like a Buster Keaton gag. In place of his face was a large fi st and forearm.
Male.
Maori.
A bloke in a set of grey ovies stepped in front of Mac and brought his right foot down hard on Sami’s gun wrist. Sami shrieked, moaned then passed out. The Maori turned back to Mac, raised his chin and widened his eyes.
‘G’day, Chalks.’
CHAPTER 25
Boo and Sami sat on the wicker-sided sofa, right forearms cradled in left hands, ashen-faced, tons of pain, no fi ght left. Marlon lay on the fl oor, in la-la land.
When Billy arrived with his medic’s backpack he set it down on the table, looked around and said, ‘Shit, guys, didn’t leave much of them.’
Billy unzipped the medic pack, went to Marlon who’d been vomiting, passing in and out of consciousness. Didn’t matter how big and tough you were, a dislocated shoulder was more trauma than the human body could handle. Billy gave Marlon a green stick of laughing gas, told him to breathe deep on it. Then he got him upright and tried to get his jacket off. Marlon screamed and passed out again.
Sonny spoke in a low voice with Hemi at the table, which had a pile of Glocks sitting on it, then he picked up his sat phone, hit a speed-dial and wandered out to the terrace. Hemi got up to help Billy.
Mac put his hand in his pocket, grabbed his mobile.
Boo looked up and said, ‘Gotcha phone, eh Macca? Hope it was worth it.’
Mac looked at him, thought about the situation. If he ever got out of this there’d be a lot of explaining to do to a lot of offi ce guys. ‘What can I say, Boo? I told you I just wanted the phone. It was urgent.’
Boo shook his head. ‘What is it with spooks? Think you’re above the law?’
‘What is it with I-team and straitjackets?’ said Mac, though his heart wasn’t in it. Wished he hadn’t said that.
‘Mate, ever seen what a girl looks like on ice? Scary, mate. That jacket was for her protection,’ said Boo.
Mac scoffed.
Boo shook his head. ‘And don’t give me that shit, neither. I didn’t ask her to take that junk.’
Mac weighed the phone, watching Hemi get the blazer off Marlon, dribble coming out of the Samoan’s pale lips, his head lolling. Mac looked back at Boo and his broken wing.
Mac breathed out, said, ‘Sorry ‘bout the arm, Boo.’
Boo laughed. Big, bamboo-toothed laugh. ‘Missus won’t be happy, I can tell you.’ He let his mouth fall open in a big leer. ‘Might have to play nursie to poor old Barry. Know what I mean?’
Mac shut the bathroom door, sat on the toilet lid and fi red up the phone with his left hand. His right was so far gone he couldn’t even make a fi st with it. He scrolled down ‘dialled calls’ and hit the one starting with 63.
The switchboard bloke came on and Mac asked for Captain John Sawtell. Mr Switchboard said, ‘No can do,’ like he was relishing it.
When Mac asked why not, the bloke said, ‘He’s operational.’
Mac thought back to their last conversation. Sawtell had said he was on stand-by to go into Manila. Now the CBNRE boys needed more special forces? It must have turned weird.
‘Can you patch me through?’ asked Mac. ‘It’s urgent.’
‘Sorry, sir. Can’t do that from a civilian line.’
Mac knew the rules and why they existed. If you had the right gear and a bit of luck you could pinpoint a military handset from a civilian-originated call. Not something most people would think about, but a handy tool for terrorists and spies.
‘Can I get a message to him?’ Mac pushed.
‘I can try, sir, but no guarantees.’
Mac gave him a mobile number and the Indonesian country code.
He didn’t want to do it that way, but since the I-team had found him he fi gured there wasn’t much cover left to blow.
‘Tell him I’ve got something down here that the Twentieth are going to be very interested in, okay?’
Sonny wanted to move out. He gestured at Mac. ‘Let’s go, Chalks – got something you might want to see.’
Sonny, Hemi and Billy stowed real quick and made for the door.
In their grey ovies they looked like the Beagle Boys.
Mac lingered, wanting to ask more questions. Sonny stood at the door with a Glock behind his back and fl icked his head at Mac.
Impatient.
Mac held his hand up and, turning back to Boo, asked, ‘Mate, how did you track me to Makassar?’
Boo shrugged. ‘Didn’t.’
Mac looked at Sonny, and Boo got the picture quick-smart.
‘You know, Macca, let the mountain come to Mohammad,’ said Boo.
‘What the fuck’s he talking about?’ Sonny demanded.
Mac said nothing.
‘We didn’t have to chase you, mate,’ said Boo. ‘Just sit back and wait for you to come to Garrison.’
Sonny let the door spring shut, came straight over, got in Boo’s face, fi st clenched. ‘Garrison?! What the fuck you know about Garrison, huh Chalks?’
Mac put his hand out to pull Sonny back, said, ‘Boo, why were you tailing Garrison?’
Boo shrugged. He was into territory that was now confusing him too. ‘We came in from Tokyo couple of nights ago. Jakarta put us on you; briefed us on Garrison.’
Mac still didn’t get it. ‘Yeah?’
‘The theory was since you were associated with Garrison, if we could fi nd him then you’d be around the shop somewhere.’
Mac was incredulous. ‘ What? I’m not associated with Garrison.
They sent me out here to kill him fi ve days ago! Jesus Christ!’
Boo shrugged. Sorry.
Mac pulled his temper back a notch. ‘Who briefed you, Boo?
Garvey? Urquhart?’
‘Nah. Internal, APS.’
‘Who?’
‘Steinhardt and that sheila with the bloke’s haircut.’
‘No one from the Service?’
Boo shook his head. ‘They met us as at the airport, wanted us into Makassar quick-smart.’
Mac breathed out. He’d been set up. Getting briefed at the airport or a bar was how it worked when someone didn’t want the order taped and logged. It was like a briefi ng that had never happened, a
‘tasking’ that never existed. He’d bet the Australian Protective Service had no record of Boo’s assignment and no paper trail linking it to ASIS. All that would remain was a verbal connection between Mac and Garrison. It was as good as saying that Alan McQueen was rogue.