Raymond C. W. S cott was born in Kent, in England and lived for many years in the Midlands near Birmingham. He did National Service in the Royal Navy and was later employed in the insurance industry in Birmingham and Wolverhampton. Immigrated to Australia in 1970 and joined the insurance industry in Melbourne.
Has lived with his wife Mary in Frankston, Victoria for 42 years and they became Australian citizens in 1976. They have two sons living in Australia, both are married and with families.
His first novel:
The Man Who Had Five Lives
was published by Amazon as an e-book in 2012.
Published in Australia by Sid Harta Publishers Pty Ltd,
ABN: 46 119 415 842
23 Stirling Crescent, Glen Waverley, Victoria 3150 Australia
Telephone: +61 3 9560 9920, Facsimile: +61 3 9545 1742
E-mail:
[email protected]
First published in Australia 2014
This edition published 2014
Copyright © Raymond C. W. S cott 2014
Cover design, typesetting: Chameleon Print Design
The right of Raymond C.W. S cott to be identified as the Author of the Work has been asserted in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.
This book is a work of fiction. Any similarities to that of people living or dead are purely coincidental.
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means without the prior written permission of the publisher, nor be otherwise circulated in any form of binding or cover other than that in which it is published and without a similar condition being imposed on the subsequent purchaser.
Scott, Raymond C. W.
Cut to the Chase
ISBN: 9781742984056 (eBook)
Digital edition distributed by
Port Campbell Press
Conversion by
Warren Broom
To my wife Mary who has offered consistent support, and has also been a severe critic when my knowledge and use of English grammar has been lacking.
S
ir William Wainwright, Director of British Intelligence, picked up his telephone and gave an irritated âHallo!' He was in the process of compiling a difficult report for the Home Secretary and did not wish to be disturbed. His deputy, Richard Murray was on the other end.
âInteresting development, Bill,' Murray said. âI have news of a defector.'
âOh Christ!' Wainwright felt his heart sink. âNot one of ours?'
Murray gave a dry chuckle.
âNo, far from it,' he replied. âA Russian cipher clerk walked into the CSIS (he pronounced it Seesis) building in Ottawa a few hours ago and asked for political asylum. They were somewhat taken aback, it took them some time to arrange an interview, but they've now placed him in protective custody.'
âHas he said anything yet, anything that affects us?'
âCSIS informed Ron Carraway of MI 6, he's arranging to send two operatives over there to interview him and see what he's got.'
âWell that's interesting. Keep your eye on it Richard.'
âWill do.'
Francis Burton, head of Australian Security and Intelligence, waved Alan Kelsey to the vacant chair opposite his desk. Kelsey moved the chair slightly to one side, the afternoon Canberra sun was streaming in through the window and tended to hit Burton's bald head and reflect sunlight in all directions. Having removed himself from the line of fire Kelsey sat down and raised one eyebrow.
âYou said it was urgent.'
âI lied,' responded Burton. âUrgentâ¦no! But important â yes! It's about Operation Weasel.'
âWeasel?' Kelsey raised one eyebrow. âOh God! Is the bloody government on our backs again?'
âNo, it's better than that. We've had a wire from CSIS in Ottawa, apparently a Russian defector has walked into their building with a sheaf of papers, computer discs and flash drives. I haven't much more information than that as yet, but according to Esme Lewis of CSIS this chapâ¦erâ¦what's his blasted name⦠hold onâ¦Leonid Radchenko, used to work in Moscow Centre on their South Pacific desk and, amongst other things, apparently has information in his possession that could identify this bloody mole that we've suspected has been here for years.'
âWho is it?'
âWe don't know yet, I had their Assistant Director Ken Paget on the blower this morning. This Russian defector is being very cagey so far and is demanding guarantees, he's holding onto as much of his information as he can until he gets what he wants, but Ken said that one hint he's given is that there's a Russian mole in the Canberra Defence Ministry and that he knows who he is.'
Kelsey sat back and felt adrenalin surge through his system. In his capacity of Assistant Director-General Counter Terrorism and Counter Espionage this had been a problem he, and others, had been living with for over three years. Over that period of time ASIO had been aware that confidential information had been leaked out of government offices and passed to Moscow Centre and that the leak could only be in one of the government Ministries. They had received intelligence via London, who had their own sources of information from within the Russian administration, that information was being leaked to Moscow from Canberra. They also had some idea what class of information had gone walkabout, but despite trying to track those who had access to this information within Canberra so far nobody had been isolated or apprehended. According to the MI 5 and MI 6 sources the flow of information had slowed in recent months, which to Kelsey indicated that the mole could be aware of procedures being taken to track him down, and consequently had slowed his activities, but so far they had nothing to establish the mole's identity.
âHow long before we have something concrete?' he asked.
âDepends what his demands are,' snorted Burton. âNo doubt he wants a free ticket to the United States, new identity, an expensive house and an unlimited supply of women.'
âThat sounds reasonable.' commented Kelsey. âI'd probably ask for the same.'
Burton chuckled and shuffled the papers on his deck.
âI'll let you know as soon as I hear anything, Alan.'
The telephone on the desk rang; Murray Craddock was standing some distance away chatting to the head of department, Alfred Peabody, when the latter drew his attention to it.
âYour telephone is ringing,' said Peabody. âYou'd better answer it.'
Craddock nodded and made his way over to his desk and picked up the phone.
âHello! This is Craddock,' he said.
âIs that Mr Craddock from Redfern or Punchbowl?'
Craddock tensed and looked around him. Anyone within possible earshot was either on the phone or talking to someone else. He turned away so that he faced the window.
âRedfern,' he replied.
âA good choice. There is a situation that affects you,' said the voice at the other end. âOne of ours has transferred out. You don't know him but he knows of you. Action immediate. You understand.'
âI understand.'
Craddock put down the telephone and looked around. He looked at the clock which indicated that the time was about half past three. He picked up his brief case, checked the contents of an envelope that was inside a zipped compartment inside it, and then extracted the flash drive from his computer. He looked around his office, gave a sigh as he realised he would never see it or the view from the window again and opened his office door.
âYou off, Murray?' asked a man sitting at his computer monitor at a nearby desk.
âYes, I have a call to make, see you on Monday.'
âYes, see you later.'
Craddock made his way to the lift shaft, he took a circuitous route around the office to prevent Alfred Peabody catching sight of him as he made his way out, Peabody was an officious bastard who was always checking what anyone was doing or where they were going. The lift arrived and Craddock stepped into it. As the doors eased shut, it seemed to Craddock to be an act of finality.
Francis Burton's telephone rang. It was Esme Lewis in Ottawa.