Tonight, when security wouldn’t be up to scratch. ‘Any questions?’
‘We won’t need the drill this time?’
‘Correct.’
‘Maybe the local boys will think there’s a new crowd at work.’
‘Maybe.’
They rested during the afternoon and were stationed in the alley by 2 a.m., in a white van marked ‘Food Transport Vehicle’ this time. Niekirk sat in the driver’s seat, Mansell next to him, Riggs in the back. Now and then while they waited to go into operation, Mansell fine-tuned the police band radio. Niekirk listened with half an ear as the dispatcher’s voice, ghosting with signals from the atmosphere, reported burglar alarms, broken glass, a knifing near the clubs in King Street.
Shortly after two o’clock, Riggs got out and walked away from the van toward the Soreki 5 building. The department store sat black and glassy on the street facing the alleyway. Riggs passed from the alley into the lighted street. He wore a security patrol uniform, gold cloth badges, black trousers, brown shirt, black peaked hat, and Mansell said softly, ‘All he needs is a pair of jackboots.’
Niekirk ignored him, intent now as Riggs crossed the street and stopped at Soreki 5’s heavy glass doors. He saw Riggs rap on the glass with the base of a torch. A moment later Riggs switched on the torch and illuminated a fistful of documents in his other hand.
Soreki 5 employed its own security guards. They watched for shoplifters during the day and yawned over skin magazines at night. They were trained, but men like that got soft on the job and knew that they were Mickey Mouse guards compared to the men who worked the big contract patrol firms, who regularly got shot at or beaten up and generally led a riskier life. That’s how Niekirk had explained the psychology behind Riggs’ ploy at the briefing session, and now he fastened a set of headphones over his ears and began to monitor Riggs’ conversation with the Soreki 5 guard.
The voices came through sharply, transmitted by a pickup in Riggs’ lapeclass="underline"
‘Come on, pal, I haven’t got all night.’
Sounds of disengaging locks, then a muffled voice growing less muffled: ‘What’s your problem?’
‘Medicare.’
The Soreki 5 man was slow. He didn’t say anything and Riggs repeated, ‘Medicare. You know, on the top floor.’
‘Everything’s jake here. I’ve got it covered.’
Riggs said, barely patient: ‘Maybe so, but the thing is, Medicare isn’t one of yours, right? We’ve got the contract for that, even though they rent space in the building.’
‘I don’t know. Nobody said anything to me.’
‘Well, that’s your problem. So how about it, going to let me in?’
‘I don’t know. I better just-’
‘Look, pal, they had ninety grand delivered there today, to cover the next week. If anything happens to that money and it comes out that you refused to let my firm in for a look-see, then your head’s on the block, not mine. If anything happens to that money and you have let me in for a look-see, then it’s my head on the old chopping block. Right? So do us a favour, just sign me in, I’ll be out of your hair in two shakes of a dog’s dick, no problem.’
‘More than five minutes and I’m calling my supervisor.’
‘No problem.’
‘And I come with you.’
‘No skin off my nose.’
Niekirk saw Riggs go in. Then he heard the big locks smack home and heard Riggs say, ‘After you.’
The Soreki 5 guard worked some contempt into his voice. ‘We can’t just barge upstairs. I’ve got to activate some bypass switches on the alarm system first, you know.’
‘You’re the boss.’
Niekirk heard nothing for two minutes after that. But plenty was happening inside the building and he ran it through his head like a film strip: Riggs waits for the guard to deactivate the alarms on the stairs and the lifts. Riggs tickles the man’s ear with his automatic pistol. Riggs pulls a hood over the man’s head and cuffs him to a display case. Niekirk’s instructions had been clear: ‘We don’t need a hero on our hands and we don’t need a panic merchant. Keep him calm, tell him he won’t be hurt so long as he does what he’s told. If the guard is hurt, I’ll want to know the reason why.’
Niekirk looked at his watch, thinking that Riggs should be giving the all-clear about now. He waited, still and silent, a shutdown so absolute that he might have been one of the living dead. The city streets were deserted. There was a hint of dampness in the air, a sheen of moisture glistening on the silent cars, on a beer can in the gutter, on the Elizabeth Street tramtracks. Thirty seconds later, Niekirk heard the heavy main door being unlocked, Riggs saying simply: ‘It’s a goer.’
Niekirk nudged Mansell. ‘Anything from the boys in blue?’
‘Not around here.’
‘Let’s go.’
They got out, walked to the end of the alley and across the street to Soreki 5, as unhurried as men who did this sort of thing every night of the week. Riggs was waiting for them in the foyer. The guard, his head hooded, was on his back, one wrist in the air, bracketed to the rim of a fire hose. He was as rigid as a dead man and Niekirk looked hard at Riggs. Riggs stared back unwaveringly, shook his head in denial.
Niekirk left it at that. There was no point in asking the prone guard how he felt. That would only risk giving the man another voice to describe to the cops and it would certainly irritate Riggs.
He jerked his head. Riggs led the way to a narrow door set flush into the wall behind the foyer desk. He opened the door with the security guard’s keys and leaned forward to examine the bank of switches behind it.
Niekirk watched Riggs. The big man ran his finger and eyes rapidly across and down, seeking the isolation switches to the alarms in the little gallery on the first floor. He identified three, murmuring as he deactivated each one: ‘Gallery door… electric eye… pressure pads in the display cases…’
Then he looked at Niekirk. ‘All clear.’
Mansell went back outside to the van. Niekirk led Riggs up the staircase in the corner of the building. There were lifts, but Niekirk considered a lift to be a potential trap. You can fight or run in a stairwell. The only way out of a lift is up, into another trapped place, a shaft narrow, dark and deep and smelling of stale air and grease-slicked cables.
The stairwell door on the first floor released them into a vast room of women’s dresses, mannequins and fashion displays, all of it shadowy, the irregular shapes like islands in a dark sea. Niekirk turned over a couple of price tags with his gloved fingers as they passed through the room: $999, $1,200.
The gallery was a glassed-off area at the far end of the first floor. He pushed the twin doors experimentally: they swung open and no alarm that he knew about sounded or flashed where he could see it.
They went in. The rings, necklaces and bracelets were displayed on black velvet-covered blocks under heavy glass domes. Niekirk and Riggs lifted off the first dome, revealing a pressure switch under the rim. No lights, no sirens, no metal grilles sealing them off from safety.
They were out of there in three minutes. Niekirk carted the Asahi collection out of the building in a photographer’s camera bag. Seven hundred and fifty thousand dollars worth, and it took up no room at all.
Mansell picked them up at the entrance to the alley. He was mild, silent, grinning a little to see them. He swung the van onto Elizabeth Street, they left into Flinders Street. At the top end of Flinders Street he turned left again, past the Windsor Hotel, past the solitary policeman on the steps of Parliament House, and finally away from the city centre.
Relieved now, Riggs and Mansell started to congratulate themselves. Niekirk had nothing to say. In his mind he wouldn’t be safe until he was alone again and the jewels were in the U-Store locker. He asked Mansell to stop at the junction of Nicholson Street and Johnston Street and watched the van drive away. A few minutes later he was in his cab, turning toward Spencer Street and a date with the courier.