Hijack, page 15
They waited while Chloe enveloped Matt in a hug and kissed him on both cheeks. When she finally released him, he grinned and winked at her. Chloe then made her way out of the bar.
She threw Ling a scathing look. “Thanks for nothing, I was just starting to enjoy myself.”
“Yes, it sure looked like it,” replied Ling.
“What are you implying? Matt’s a nice guy.”
“How do you know?” challenged Ling.
Chloe stared at her in disbelief. “You don’t trust boys very much, do you?”
“No,” replied Ling, leading her toward the jetty. “Especially ones I don’t know.”
42
“What a night!” said Ling, collapsing in one of the recliners on the Orchid’s foredeck. The area was secluded from the rest of the yacht and little used by the Sterling family, who preferred the more spacious and wind-sheltered living quarters toward the stern.
Lying back in the adjacent recliner, Connor gazed in awe at the galaxy of stars overhead. He’d never seen so many in his life. Unobscured by clouds or light pollution, the sky seemed dusted with glimmering diamonds.
“Well, we survived and both Principals are safe,” he replied, making himself comfortable.
“Yeah, no thanks to Chloe,” muttered Ling. “Look, I’m sorry about what I said to you earlier.”
“Not a problem. I deserved it.” Connor glanced over at Ling. “But Chloe was only enjoying herself.”
Ling tsked. “Well, you would take her side, wouldn’t you?”
“What’s that supposed to mean?”
Ling rolled her eyes. “Boys! She has you wrapped around her little finger. Oh, Connor, I need your protection,” she mocked in Chloe’s voice, waving a pretend bottle of suntan lotion at him.
Connor brushed off her jibe. “Come on, you must admit you were a little heavy-handed with her tonight.”
Ling huffed. “She shouldn’t have gone off on her own in the first place. But it’s not just that. She’s a huge pain in the neck. She treats me like her personal slave. Expects me to carry her bags, get her drinks, pick up her clothes. And she never listens when I try to give her safety advice. Doesn’t she understand that my job is to protect her, not serve her?”
Connor’s eye caught a shooting star trace its way across the sky. “You should cut Chloe some slack. She’s never had a bodyguard before, so she probably doesn’t know what we’re actually supposed to do.”
“Well, Emily seems to understand. And there’s no reason to be rude or bossy about it. I’m sorry, but I don’t find it easy to sympathize with people who have everything.”
“Don’t forget their mother died in a car crash, one of them’s been kidnapped and their father’s too busy with work, or his fiancée, to spend any time with them. They don’t exactly have an easy life.”
“Well, their life isn’t exactly tough either,” countered Ling, indicating the multimillion-dollar super-yacht.
Connor thought about his own situation. His gran had always said, “Wealth is empty; it’s family that fills the heart.” He looked at Ling. “Money doesn’t necessarily mean happiness.”
“Yeah, but it sure helps,” said Ling, staring hard at Connor. “I’ll tell you what tough is. I grew up as a street kid in Shanghai. It was survival of the strongest and meanest. I had nothing apart from my wits to live on. And as a girl I was at an immediate disadvantage. I used to live in a cardboard box down an alleyway.”
Connor stared at Ling in shock at this sudden revelation.
“The only good thing about it was the kung fu club in a nearby basement. I’d spy on their lessons through a grating in the wall, teaching myself the moves. It wasn’t exactly an easy life. I had stomach cramps on the days I couldn’t scavenge food. But the kung fu kept my mind off it. The shifu used to say, ‘It’s hard to beat a person who never gives up.’ I lived by that mantra every miserable day of my life on those streets.”
Connor was speechless. He’d had no clue about Ling’s troubled past. Did anyone else in Alpha team know? At least now he understood what the colonel had meant by her “tough” background, and it partly explained Ling’s constant need to prove herself.
“How did you ever become a guardian?” he asked.
“Colonel Black caught me picking his pocket.”
Connor sat up in surprise. “Doing what?”
Ling knitted her fingers behind her head, grinning at the memory. “Yeah, I almost got away with it too. But at the last second the colonel grabbed my wrist and put me in a lock. Not that it stopped me. I simply spun out of it, kicked him in the knee and ran. But he was with Steve, our combat instructor, at the time. Gee, was he fast! He cornered me in an alley. I thought I’d be beaten within an inch of my life, but rather than punish me or turn me over to the police, the colonel recruited me.”
Connor was stunned. “Why did he do that?”
Ling shrugged. “Said he was impressed with my stealth and fighting spirit. Being streetwise, he thought I had the makings of a bodyguard.” Ling laughed. “Anyway, the colonel arranged a passport and a visa for me, and I ended up at Guardian HQ. The rest is history.”
She looked at Connor and narrowed her eyes thoughtfully. “I do sometimes wonder, though, whether he let me pick his pocket.”
Recalling his own recruitment, the corner of Connor’s mouth curled into a smile. “Sounds like the colonel’s tactics to me.”
43
Connor looked at his watch. “Time to do our final security sweep.”
“Yep, better make sure the princesses are safely tucked into bed!” quipped Ling, hauling herself out of the recliner.
Connor switched on his flashlight, the bright beam shining off the smooth wooden deck. They headed aft along the port side of the yacht. All the crew members were in their quarters, except one of the deckhands, Scott, who was on official watch duty on the bridge. There was no real need for an additional security check, yet since Brad had said the more eyeballs the better, Connor thought it couldn’t do any harm.
With the girls having gone to their cabins and Mr. Sterling and his fiancée tucked away in their personal suite, all was quiet on board. Only the lapping of the sea against the hull and the distant beat of music from the beach intruded on the tropical night’s peace. Connor could see the bonfire burning on the shore, its glow reflected in the rippling waters of the bay.
As the two of them reached the stern and headed back up the starboard side, Connor wondered if they’d overreacted to Chloe’s “disappearance.” It wasn’t as if she’d been gone long, nor had she gone far. In hindsight, they could have spent a bit more time looking before jumping to the wrong conclusion. It was certainly a sign of their inexperience as guardians, but Brad had been kind in his appraisal. He considered they’d made the right decision, saying it was better to act on a potential threat and be wrong than ignore it and find out to their detriment that the threat was real.
“Look! The crew’s left the gangway down again,” said Ling, pointing to the steel steps leading up from the waterline. “I thought Brad warned them about that.”
She pressed the button to retract the gangway. As they waited for it to whirr quietly back into its recess, Connor’s flashlight caught a gleam on the deck. He looked closer. It was a damp footprint. Fresh.
He widened the arc of his beam and more footprints appeared, leading away into the darkness.
“One of the crew?” suggested Ling.
“Swimming at this time of night?” said Connor, shaking his head dubiously.
They followed the trail to the first flight of external steps. Silently ascending to the upper deck, Connor felt a growing disquiet at the thought of an intruder on board. Brad had informed them about a spate of thefts that had occurred on yachts docked at Victoria Harbor and the surrounding bays, but those boats hadn’t generally been occupied at the time.
Peering around the final step, they saw no one on the upper deck at first. Then Ling spotted a shadowy figure spying through a window into the VIP guest room.
“I think we should get Brad,” whispered Connor.
“Too late for that,” replied Ling as the intruder opened the door leading to the suite. Chloe was standing on the other side. The intruder grabbed her. She squealed.
“Quiet!” he hissed, his hand over her mouth.
Without waiting a second longer, Ling leaped up and ran full speed at the intruder.
“Let her go!” she cried, kicking at the attacker’s knee from behind.
His balance broken, he toppled backward. Ling seized his hair in one hand and his chin in the other, then twisted his head and pushed down. But, rather than guiding the intruder to the deck, she launched him over the rail.
Where the head goes, the body follows, Connor recalled their combat instructor saying when he’d first taught them the “head-twist” technique.
Screaming, the intruder somersaulted through the air and splashed into the sea.
“What did you do that for?” Chloe cried, her jaw dropping open in shock and horror.
Ling stared in bafflement at her Principal. “He was attacking you.”
“He was my guest! That was Matt you just threw overboard.”
“Oh!” said Ling, putting a hand to her mouth. Connor couldn’t quite tell if it was to hide her embarrassment at the mistake or her amusement.
“Well, you know, we can’t just let anyone on board,” said Ling in her own defense. “It’s a security risk.”
Chloe threw up her hands in despair. “You are a nightmare!” she cried before slamming the door in Ling’s face.
44
Ruth McArthur lit her second cigarette of the night. Exhaling a puff of acrid smoke, she watched it rise to the grime-stained ceiling of the pedestrian underpass running beneath Manning Road on the University of Sydney campus. The fluorescent strip lights, naked and harsh, cast a sickly glow onto the colorful scene surrounding her. The walls, the ceiling, and even the floor were infected with a profusion of graffiti and tags, as if the tunnel itself were bleeding paint. Cutting through the smog of her cigarette, the lingering fumes from aerosol cans filled Ruth’s nostrils and made her slightly nauseated.
Yet as editor in chief of Sterling’s flagship paper, Australian Daily, she’d experienced her fair share of war zones, drug dens and slums. This particular location didn’t spook her at all. Not that this meant she was naive. She kept a firm grip on her car keys in one hand, a tip she’d learned from self-defense lessons. The protruding metal points made an effective improvised weapon if the situation demanded it.
The tunnel was deserted, the silence almost echoing in on itself. In these late hours of the night, the only life passing through would be the occasional tagger or graffiti artist wanting to make their mark.
Ruth glanced at her watch, beginning to wonder if her contact from the government’s Department of Resources and Energy would show. Acquiring information on the Harry Gibb case had been like getting blood from a stone. No one seemed to want to pursue any other line of inquiry than death by natural causes. Case closed. But her inside contact claimed to have proof otherwise.
Stamping out her cigarette, Ruth reached into her bag for her phone. Her contact might have left a message. She thumbed in her password, but there were no missed calls, and her inbox was empty. One of the strip lights flickered and buzzed overhead, dimming the passageway momentarily. She glanced up and had to stifle a scream in her throat. Where there had been just shadow now stood a man in a gray suit. She had not heard or seen his approach, and it was as if the man had materialized straight out of the graffiti, leaching all color in the process.
“Ruth McArthur?” the man said, his voice dry and somehow soulless.
“Yes,” she said, unclenching the keys in her fist. This must be her contact. “And you are . . . James?”
The man was older than Ruth expected, yet at the same time strangely ageless. Like a well-preserved corpse, she thought, before shuddering away the unsettling image in her mind.
“You want to know about Harry Gibb?” he said.
Ruth nodded.
The man glanced up and down the tunnel. “You’re not an undercover cop or federal agent, are you?”
“No, of course not.” Ruth produced her press ID.
He studied her photo and credentials. “Press passes can easily be faked.”
Ruth appreciated the reason for her contact’s wariness. The fallout from Harry Gibb’s corrupt dealings was catastrophic for the current government. Many in power had been glad of the politician’s death and were hoping the scandal would be buried along with him. But Ruth had caught the scent of a bigger story, a far wider and more sinister conspiracy, and she wanted to know the truth. She sensed this might be the journalistic scoop of her career.
“Well, how about I tell you what I think happened? Then you can just confirm or deny it,” she suggested.
The man neither nodded nor shook his head, so she continued, “My theory is that Harry Gibb was murdered. Or to put it more accurately, assassinated.”
There was a barely perceptible twitch of his eyebrow. “You have proof of this?”
“No, nothing concrete,” admitted Ruth. “I was hoping you could provide that.”
“How did you come to this conclusion about Harry when the cops didn’t?”
“I’m a journalist. I always look more deeply than the police. I get the sense that something’s missing. Literally, in this case. Harry had known heart problems. When I spoke with his secretary, she told me that he always kept a bottle of beta-blockers in his desk drawer. But there was no bottle there or anywhere at the scene. That I consider suspicious.”
The man nodded. “Suspicious, but not conclusive. What else have you discovered?”
Ruth didn’t usually give so much away during an interview with a contact, but she needed to win his trust. “Well, his PC’s hard drive was secure-wiped to a zero state. The accepted truth was that Harry did that to cover his tracks. But a malware virus, linked to his computer, infiltrated the rest of the office network. The IT technician said he’d seen nothing like it. The virus was highly advanced, targeting specific keywords and files and leaving holes throughout their system, despite multiple firewalls and antivirus software. In his opinion, it smacked of governmental espionage. Then there’s the missing physical file from the archives.”
The man took a step closer. “You know about the missing file?”
Ruth nodded. She was definitely onto something. “It took me a while to discover it. On that day, the building security camera malfunctioned. Yet a digital record showed that Harry had accessed the archive room ten minutes before his death. A folder labeled MINING RIGHTS, GOLDFIELDS, WA, was logged in the filing system but wasn’t there when I looked. However, I did find this at the bottom of the cabinet.”
Ruth produced a slip of crumpled paper from her bag. “It lists investment amounts and sources, although I’m not sure how useful it is, since a number of the companies don’t actually exist—”
“Have you made a copy of that?” interrupted her contact.
“No . . .” began Ruth, frowning. “Look, it should be me asking you the questions. I was led to believe you had evidence relating to Harry’s murder.”
A flicker of a smile registered on her contact’s lean face, almost too fast and certainly too cold to pass off as a real smile. “That I do. You’re right on all counts. Harry was assassinated.”
Ruth’s eyes lit up. She had her story. “By whom?”
“One of his investors.”
“Which one? As I said, most of the ones listed here were shell companies. Unless you mean”—she held up the piece of paper and smiled slyly—“the organization behind them?”
The man’s eyes became glacial. “What information do you have on this organization?”
Ruth suddenly felt uneasy in his presence. She tightened her grip on her car keys.
“Tell me,” said the man, seizing her arm and preventing Ruth from using her “weapon.”
“Let me go!” demanded Ruth.
“No, not until you tell me.”
The man’s fingers dug deep into her flesh, finding a nerve point and sending a spasm of pain through her.
“Not much,” Ruth admitted through teeth clenched in agony. “There were only ghost trails from the false companies. I know it goes by the name of Equilibrium and has interests in everything from oil to water to mining. But for what purpose I can’t quite fathom. The company isn’t registered on any stock exchange.”
“Who else have you told?” He tightened his grip on her arm.
“No one. I’ve only just discovered it for myself.”
He released her arm, the pain instantly subsiding. “Good. Equilibrium is a dangerous organization to know.”
Ruth rubbed her arm. Her contact was clearly paranoid as well as unpredictable. “Listen, if you’re worried for your own safety, then I know people who can help protect you.”
The man laughed, hollow and cruel. “No one is safe from Equilibrium.”
“Well then, if you have proof they’re connected to Harry’s murder, perhaps we can draw out this organization. Expose them.”
The man gave a long considered sigh. “Ruth, you certainly deserve your reputation for investigative journalism.”
He reached into his jacket pocket and pulled out a fountain pen. “I have someone you should talk to. Who can explain everything,” he said, slowly removing the top of the pen. “Do you have a notepad? I’ll write his contact number down for you.”
“Yes, of course.” Ruth scrabbled inside her handbag. She wanted to end this meeting as quickly as possible.











