Guntur’s body moved slightly. A grunt came from his vocal cords. Then another grunt.
Anton stood and walked over to his brother. Guntur’s eyelids flickered and then opened.
“How do you feel?” Anton asked.
“Fabulous,” Guntur whispered. “Are we done?”
“We are done,” Anton said, “and you responded beautifully.”
Guntur reached his hand out and took Anton’s. “I am doing well because I was just operated on by the finest surgeon in all of Indonesia.”
“You are prejudiced, Guntur.”
“Prejudiced, but also truthful. When can I resume my duties?”
Anton released his brother’s hand. “You will have to attend to your duties quickly, Guntur. Infection is inevitable. You know that.”
Guntur’s eyes narrowed. “Yes, I know. My choices are death by bacteria or death by bomb. It is my destiny.”
“It is our destiny.”
“Tomorrow.” Guntur’s black eyes glazed. “Tomorrow I have an important examination to conduct. Will the antibiotics hold me until then?”
Anton hesitated. Guntur knew the answers to these questions as well as he did. But he seemed to be relishing his role as patient. Perhaps he knew that he may be Anton’s last patient.
“This depends on how rapidly infection sets in, my brother. I am going to take you home and keep you on an antibiotic drip. I am canceling all of my patients today.” He took his brother’s hand again. “Whatever happens tomorrow, my brother, I am with you.”
Guntur smiled beatifically. “To tomorrow.”
“To tomorrow.”
Chapter 10
United States Embassy
Jakarta, Indonesia
9:00 a.m.
The waiting area outside the ambassador’s office was surprisingly plain, Zack thought, especially in contrast to the embassy offices in Singapore, where the anteroom outside Ambassador Griffith’s office was ornate, complete with intricate wood carvings adorning the bookcases, swanky loveseats, silver tea trays, and an expensive grandfather clock.
But here in Jakarta, a black leather sofa and a couple of end tables that could have come from OfficeMax filled the room. The secretary’s pitiful, Rooms-to-Go-ish desk was not even manned at the moment.
Perhaps this should not be surprising.
Indonesia, for all its geostrategic importance to the free world, was out of sight and out of mind for most Americans.
Unlike Singapore, Indonesia was a poor country. Poor countries rarely get noticed by rich countries.
Its moderate Islamic government had made no waves, and other than the horribly devastating 2004 tsunami, Indonesia had pretty much stayed out of the news in the United States.
Most Americans could not say, if pressed, which country around the Indian Ocean had been most devastated by the tsunamis, nor could they finger Indonesia on the globe if someone put a gun to their heads.
Yep. Out of sight, out of mind.
He turned and looked at the stunning naval officer, sitting in her summer white dress uniform, complete with white skirt and shiny white pumps. He gave her an affectionate tap on the hand.
“You sleep okay?”
“Like a baby,” Diane said. “You?”
“Like a baby, baby,” Zack said. “I fell asleep during takeoff from the carrier.” He grinned teasingly.
She gave him a half-mischievous, half-adoring gaze. “That takeoff didn’t bother me that much, you know.”
He feigned a coughing spell, which provoked her to lightly punch him on his shoulder board.
“Your boss always running behind like this?”
“Who knows?” Diane looked at her watch. “He had a conference call with Washington this morning.”
The door to the ambassador’s office opened and a slim, fiftyish woman in a dark blue dress walked out. With her gray hair wrapped in a tight bun, she looked the part of the lifelong State Department bureaucrat she was. When she spoke, it was obvious that she was American.
“I’m Ms. Kowalski, Ambassador Stacks’ secretary. The ambassador will see you now.”
Zack rose and followed Diane into the ambassador’s office.
Inside, a gray-haired man in a white dress shirt and red tie sat behind a large mahogany desk, looking down and scribbling something on a legal pad. On his desk sat a nameplate engraved in gold and set in marble that proclaimed, Martin Stacks, Ambassador.
Behind the desk, on wooden poles and planted in gold round stands, were the Indonesian and American flags.
On the wall behind the desk were diplomas-undergrad University of Texas, Harvard PhD-and a military commission, showing that the ambassador was once a lieutenant in the naval reserve. Good. Perhaps they would speak the same language.
Ambassador Stacks laid his pen down and looked up with a smile.
“Well, it looks like I’ve got two naval attachés instead of one.” He came around his desk and first extended his hand to Diane. “Welcome aboard, Diane.”
“Good to be here, sir.”
“And, Zack, I’ve heard a lot about you.” He extended his hand. “I know we’ve got a real mess in Singapore. Please be seated.” Ambassador Stacks motioned the naval officers toward two maroon leather chairs, each positioned at forty-five-degree angles from his chair. “Coffee? Tea?”
“Coffee,” Zack said. “Black.”
“Cream and sugar, please, sir,” Diane added.
The ambassador nodded at Ms. Kowalski, who nodded back and quickly walked out of the office.
“So,” Stacks began, “how was our visit to the Rock?”
“Productive, Mr. Ambassador,” Diane said. “We’ve established a definite link, we think, to at least some Indonesian involvement in the attacks.”
“Really?” Ambassador Stacks raised his eyebrow as Ms. Kowalski returned to the office, holding a silver tray with a silver coffee pitcher, three steaming mugs, a white bowl of cubed sugar, and a small pitcher of milk. “Thanks, Alma.” Stacks nodded at his secretary, then took a plain white mug and sipped from it. “Care to elaborate, Commander Colcernian?”
Diane stirred a cube of sugar in her coffee. “Sir, we believe at least one of the four terrorists killed in the attempted attack on the tanker SeaRiver Baytown was a member of the Indonesian navy.”
The ambassador set his coffee on the table. “What evidence do we have?”
Diane nodded at Zack. That was his cue. He reached into his briefcase and retrieved the military identification card found on board USS Abraham Lincoln. “This is an Indonesian navy identification card we found with the belongings of one of the dead American sailors on board Abraham Lincoln, sir. The photo matches one of the bodies of the terrorists taken aboard USS Reuben James.”
Ambassador Stacks studied the identification card. “Hmm. Susilo Mulyasari. Indonesian navy. Chief Warrant Officer.” He laid the identification card on his desk. “And this was found on board the Lincoln?”
“Yes, sir,” Zack said. “There were four terrorists on board the speedboat that was taken out by the Reuben James. Two were American sailors off the Lincoln. The other two had southeast Asian features, and the JAG officer on the Lincoln found this Indonesian sailor’s ID in the seabag of one of the dead American sailors on board the Lincoln. This Mulyasari dude must have given the American sailor his identification card at some point before they started all this. Who knows why? We haven’t been able to identify the fourth terrorist. He could be Malaysian. Could be Indonesian. We’re not sure.”
The ambassador held up the identification card against the light and squinted at it. “Say this matches some autopsy photos or something?”
“They’re pretty gruesome, Mr. Ambassador,” Zack said. “But I have them here, if you really want to see them, sir.”
“Well, I’ve already had breakfast,” Stacks said. “And that’s what I get paid the big bucks for.” He gave Zack a hand-’em-over gesture.