overnighter wheelie and backpack, Mac headed down the alloy stairs to where a large man from the Australian Protective Service stood in front of a white Holden Commodore. Sliding into the back seat, Mac asked if they could go the Gold Coast Highway route and the driver said, ‘No worries.’

They made good time north to Broadbeach and Mac thought over the conversation with Tobin. He didn’t particularly like the bloke but he had no reason to mistrust him. Tobin had listened to Mac and he’d acted, in stark contrast to Atkins’ and Garvs’s responses. Even sadder was the revelation that Atkins had lied about Mac’s recall by Canberra, the fact he hadn’t asked Mac for a report effectively sidelining him.

Mac was slightly hungover from drinking with Ted and his mind spun with what he could or should be doing about Hassan. A clear way forward wasn’t obvious. He’d told Tobin and from there it should become a case for the counter-terrorism machinery, of which Mac was not a part. If a situation presented itself, Mac would leap in. But for now he was focused on his family’s security.

As they went through Burleigh Heads, with the Norfolk pines towering overhead and the morning walkers doing their thing along the beach, Mac keyed in Rod Scott’s number in Canberra and hit the green button. Scotty liked to be at his desk at eight am and he picked up on the second ring.

‘Yeah?’

‘Scotty, it’s Mac.’

They joked around a bit. Scotty had been Mac’s fi rst mentor in the fi rm, way back when Mac was straight out of the Royal Marines and into the tail-end and clean-up of the fi rst Gulf War. Scotty had shown him not just how to be cool in a war zone, but how to be safe in a post-war zone – a much more dangerous place in some respects.

Scotty never strove for great heights in his career – there were other things he got off on – and he was ASIS’s odd-jobs man. He could tail, entrap, interrogate, induce and fi x up other people’s mistakes with some clever craft tricks. He was Old School, with an elephantine memory and a gift for deceptions and provocations. Mac often turned to him when offi cial channels were fruitless.

‘So you’re back in, eh Macca?’

‘How’d you know?’ asked Mac.

‘Phone call from Tobin an hour ago – war room stuff. Got a meeting with the Feds and Defence in a few minutes and Customs and Immigration are already on alert. Then Tobin and Urquhart are going to sell the action plan to the PM.’

‘Nice.’

‘What’s this about a fucking mini-nuke?’

‘Mate, I’ll let you get back to it – I’ve got my security, how are we with the Sydney end?’

‘Yeah mate – Feds’ Sydney offi ces are on it.’

‘I needed to talk,’ said Mac.

‘So talk, Macca.’

Mac heard a ciggie being lit and the fi rst inhale, meaning Scotty was standing outside.

‘Remind me about Dave Urquhart.’

‘Me? He’s your old uni mate.’

‘Yeah, but as soon as we joined the fi rm, I went off to Iraq and Urquhart burrowed into the political end.’

‘Gee, that was a short book. What are you getting at, mate?’

‘I’m clutching at air, that’s what I’m doing.’

‘Gimme a clue.’

Scotty was a good bloke and Mac didn’t want to use him or hurt him professionally, but if anyone could turn over the stones right now it was him. Besides, Scotty was one of the internal watchers of Australian intelligence. He surveilled people from ASIO, ASIS, Foreign Affairs, the military, Trade, Customs and the Feds, Treasury and PMC.

And he did so in Australia and all over the world. The job was his because he knew every damned trick in the double-agent’s manual.

Mac took a breath, ‘Okay – long shot, right?’

‘Go,’ said Scotty.

‘Mate, on the way to Sydney I remembered you telling me about a spot check you were doing of Commonwealth employees in the United States, maybe ten years ago?’

‘Sounds like me.’

‘There was a navy bloke in New York, at the UN. Word was he was on the piss and you thought the Chinese had hooks in him.’

‘Yeah, but it turned out he was actually depressed. And the Chinese wasn’t PRC – she was Singapore. Good sort, too.’

‘You told me once that you ended up taking a lot more notice of a Pommie bloke. He was MI6, but posing as UN.’

‘Yeah. Tall bloke, slick dresser.’

‘And it annoyed you because you had better things to do than wonder if some wanker from Six was cultivating one of ours.’

Scotty laughed. ‘Shit, you’re good. Yeah, what was that wanker’s name?’

They tossed it around and it fi nally dropped for Scotty. ‘Fitzgerald, Fitzsimons… ‘ he mumbled. ‘That’s it! Fitzgibbon. Danny Fitzgibbon.

Shit, what a tosser! Swear to God.’

The APS car fl ashed past Miami High School’s sports grounds and Mac felt the excitement come up. ‘Mate, I have to know. Was the person he was cultivating Dave Urquhart?’

‘Nah, mate,’ said Scotty. ‘Dave was out of New York by then.’

‘So who, Scotty?’

‘That smarmy prick who’s in Jakkers now. Martin Atkins. Didn’t warm to him much either.’

There were two Ford Falcons parked in the street outside Mac’s townhouse when he got out of the car. One of the federal cops in blue overalls and a Kevlar vest made straight for him, hand on his Glock handgun.

Mac put his hands out.

‘Agent Hamilton, Australian Federal Police – sorry, sir, but this is a restricted area right now.’

The APS guy introduced himself, introduced Mac, and handed over to Agent Hamilton before getting back in his car and speeding away.

There was a mix-up with Mac’s ID – he wasn’t carrying any Alan McQueen collateral – and so another cop knocked on the townhouse door while Hamilton kept an eye on Mac. Jenny opened the door, Rachel on her hip, both of them breaking into smiles as they saw him.

Jenny ID’d him for the cops and they kissed as he kicked the door back. Mac tried to pull back but she pushed in on him as he dropped his bags, pinning him to the wall. Whatever other problems Mac had with his wife, she was a fantastic kisser. Rachel smiled and waved her red plastic spoon at him excitedly when he came up for air, and Jenny passed her over.

Jenny looked at Mac closely, ran her fi ngers up to the gash on his left forehead and into his hairline. When she looked into his eyes, he didn’t want her to see his pain and fear, so he turned to Rachel and tried to kiss her but she whacked him on the nose with the red spoon, her little legs going crazy in the sleepsuit as she said da da over and over. He looked into her big dark eyes, full of love and hope, and he smelled her unique smell and he wondered why he couldn’t just be a standard loving dad.

They lay on the sofa watching Rachel do her thing on the rug with her plastic boxes and abacuses. She was now dressed in nappies and the yellow Singapore T-shirt with the red dragon on it. Ke, the Thai boy Jenny had told Mac about, sat at the kitchen table with a colouring book. He looked at them occasionally, his face solemn, not talking.

Jenny shrugged. ‘He’ll start talking soon. He’s a kid, he won’t be able to help himself.’

Mac kept his conversation vague about the Diane shooting and Jenny let him tell it his way.

‘I didn’t sleep with her, okay?’ he said and she nodded. ‘I didn’t kiss her and I didn’t want to. Whatever happened in the past, it’s more like she’s a sister now.’

They looked into each other’s eyes, Mac happy he had nothing to hide. ‘Please believe me.’

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