‘Luck, and the help of good friends,’ she corrected. ‘Oh, by the way, how was the champagne?’
‘Oh, ripper, thanks! You said you’d send me a thank-you gift, and you weren’t kidding. Two cases of proper vintage bubbly shipped to my door? Hell of a nice surprise.’
‘Well, you did save our lives.’
‘By phone, too!’ said Trulli. ‘Didn’t even have to get my feet wet, for a change.’
‘Hopefully you won’t have to this time, either,’ said Nina as they reached the harbour front. Ahead, over the sparkling water, rose the impressive arch of Sydney Harbour Bridge. She took in the sight. ‘Okay,’ she admitted, ‘maybe, just maybe, that’s
almost
as good as the Brooklyn Bridge.’
‘Ah, give it a rest, Nina. We’ve got you beat and you know it. And you haven’t even seen the Opera House yet.’
‘Funny how you stop worrying about bad guys when your Aussie pride’s at stake,’ Nina remarked with amusement.
‘Well, a man’s got to have his priorities!’ Trulli smiled, then became more serious as they continued along the harbour. ‘So these Covenant guys, they’re looking for some lost city, but you think you can beat them to it. What do you need from me?’
‘Maps, to start with,’ she told him. ‘UNARA did a complete radar survey of Antarctica not long ago, didn’t they?’ The United Nations Antarctic Research Agency was a sister organisation to the IHA, and Trulli’s current employer.
‘Sure did - it’s what I used to pick a test site for the project. The ice is over four kilometres thick in some places, but the satellite scans were still able to reach the bedrock. Any underground lakes should be on the map.’
‘Do you have a copy of GLUG on your computer?’ He nodded. ‘Great. That should narrow things down.’ She tried to visualise the frozen continent. ‘Is there any land down there that’s above the Antarctic Circle?’
‘Yeah. Actually, the test site’s above it - the Wilkes Coast. I picked it because it’s about as warm as the place gets,
and
it’s in Australian territory.’
‘All the comforts of home, huh?’
They rounded a large apartment building, and for the first time the instantly recognisable stacked-seashell shape of the Sydney Opera House on its low headland was revealed to Nina. She had seen it many times in photographs and on TV, but viewed in person it was still a startling piece of design.
‘See? Now tell me you’ve got anything like
that
in New York,’ Trulli said gloatingly, seeing her expression.
‘The Guggenheim?’ Nina suggested. He made a dismissive noise. ‘Oh, all right, I’ll give you a point. Just one, mind.’ They shared a smile.
‘Glad to hear it. But yeah, I should be able to help you find this lake, no problem. Then what?’
‘Right now, just finding the thing’s my first concern. Then Eddie and I can start worrying about what to do next.’
‘Where is Eddie, by the way?’ Trulli asked.
‘He’s gone to visit an old friend . . .’
Chase stared at the twin sawn-off shotgun barrels pointing at his chest. ‘Is that any way to say hello to an old friend?’ he asked, hands raised.
A figure emerged from the darkness behind the gun, regarding him suspiciously. ‘Eddie?’ said the shaven-headed, thick-necked man. ‘Eddie Chase?’
‘Yeah, it’s me.’
The shotgun was lowered, the man’s frown replaced by a sunny smile. ‘Why didn’t you say so, you stupid pommie bastard? Come in, mate! Eddie Chase, fuck me!’
‘No thanks, you’re not my type,’ said Chase, returning the grin and lowering his hands. ‘I’ve got someone with me - okay if she comes in?’
‘Sure, mate, sure!’ The man stepped forward, revealing multiple tattoos. He squinted at the bright daylight, then raised a bushy eyebrow as the Englishman unlocked the handcuff bracelet that he’d used to secure the annoyed Sophia to the run-down bungalow’s porch. ‘Public bondage, mate? Save that for the mardi gras.’
‘I didn’t want her doing a runner,’ Chase explained.
Sophia pulled her arm away from him, the empty bracelet dangling from her wrist. ‘Yes, because this charming neighbourhood is exactly the kind of place where I want to start a new life.’
The man looked her up and down, impressed. ‘Christ, Eddie. Is she a crimo or a supermodel?’
‘Definitely the first one,’ Chase told him, leading her inside. ‘Sophia, this is an old mate of mine from the Australian SAS, Bob “Bluey” Jackson. Bluey, this is . . . my ex-wife. Sophia.’
‘
Ex
-wife?’ Bluey said. ‘You must have had termites in that fucking wooden blockhead of yours to let a cracker like her slip out of your hands!’
‘Oh,
Bluey
Jackson,’ said Sophia icily. ‘You know, I think Eddie might have mentioned you.’
‘Oh, really?’ Bluey puffed out his chest. ‘What’d he say?’
‘Nothing terribly memorable.’ His face fell. ‘Though I do seem to recall something about, what was it, Eddie? Oh, yes. Appalling flatulence.’
Bluey gave Chase a hurt look. ‘You told her about my Afghan squirts? Christ, mate, that was supposed to be something to keep between blokes!’
Chase smirked. ‘Just be glad I didn’t tell her about the—’
‘All right, all right! Christ.’ Bluey ushered them inside, surveyed the untidy garden and the street beyond with a wary eye, then shut the door, plunging the interior into near-darkness.
‘Why’s it so dark?’ Chase asked.
‘We need to keep the windows covered. So we don’t get any stickybeaks seeing what we’re up to.’
‘And what
are
you up to these days?’
‘Still in the same line of work,’ Bluey said as he led them through a door. ‘Just being a lot more high-tech about it.’
‘You’re not kidding,’ said Chase as he took in the room’s contents. Several computers were lined up on a row of tables along one wall, connected to numerous scanners and colour laser printers. A large laminating machine was whirring away in one corner, and there were several other pieces of equipment he couldn’t even identify.
Perched on a stool by the laminator was a petite Asian woman. From her features, Chase guessed she was Vietnamese, in her early thirties. Although she was pretty, her pinched, sour expression detracted from her looks. She glared at the new arrivals. ‘Bluey! Who are they?’
Bluey put the shotgun down on a table and went to her. Sophia eyed the weapon, edging almost imperceptibly closer; Chase firmly interposed himself. ‘It’s all right, he’s an old mate,’ Bluey said, tone conciliatory. ‘Eddie Chase.’
‘Eddie Chase?’ The woman perked up. ‘Oh, Eddie Chase! The one who helped you?’
‘That’s the one. If it hadn’t been for him, we’d never have met. Eddie, this is my wife, Hien.’
‘Nice to meet you,’ said Chase. Hien hopped off the stool and shook his hand vigorously.
‘Nice to meet you too!’ she said. ‘Bluey talks about you. Says you’re . . .’ She screwed up her face again, trying to remember. ‘Ah! “Not a bad bloke for a smelly pom.”’
Chase gave Bluey a look. ‘Cheers, mate.’
‘Don’t you just love her?’ Bluey said through a sheepish grin.
‘Although I have to say, Eddie,’ Sophia piped up, ‘there certainly were occasions when you could have spent more time in the shower.’
‘I should’ve got a gag to go with those handcuffs,’ Chase muttered.
Bluey chuckled. ‘Now I see why she’s your ex, mate. So . . . what can I do you for? I’m guessing this isn’t just a social visit.’
‘’Fraid not. Someone’s after us, and we need help.’
Bluey’s eyes narrowed, and he moved back towards the shotgun. ‘What kind of someone? Police?’
‘No, more like mercs. But mercs with some very high-up connections.’
He put a hand on the gun, eyeing the door. ‘You weren’t followed, were you?’
Chase shook his head. ‘No, I checked. But they’re not going to give up.’
‘So you need new IDs, right?’ He looked back at Hien, who now had an odd expression as she regarded Sophia. ‘What’s up?’
Hien didn’t answer. Instead, she raised one hand to block out Sophia’s blonde hair . . . and her eyes widened in shock. She yelled in Vietnamese, prompting the confused Bluey to pick up the shotgun, then ran to a computer. A few seconds of typing, and Google brought up a page full of pictures of Sophia with long dark hair, taken at the time of her arrest in New York. ‘Terrorist! She’s that terrorist! With a nuclear bomb!’
‘Jesus!’ said Bluey, recognition crossing his face. He pointed the shotgun at Sophia, who sighed and raised her hands. ‘She bloody is, too! Eddie, what the fuck are you doing bringing her here? We’d be up shit creek far enough if we got caught making new IDs for refugees - but fucking
terrorists
?’
‘Hey, I’m not exactly happy about it either,’ Chase told him. ‘If it’d been up to me, I would’ve left her with the bad guys.’
‘Oh, thank you, Eddie,’ Sophia said coldly. ‘Good to know where we all stand.’
‘But we need her, which means we need to get her an ID so she can travel. And we’ll probably need new passports and stuff ourselves to be on the safe side.’
‘Who’s “we”?’ Hien demanded.
‘Me and Nina, my fiancée. Nina Wilde.’ Chase saw them both react to the name. ‘Yeah,
that
Nina Wilde. Discoverer of Atlantis? Found the tomb of King Arthur? You know the one.’
‘Jesus,’ Bluey said with a half-disbelieving, half-admiring whistle. ‘And she’s your fiancée? Y’know, mate, for an ugly bugger you don’t half pick up some cracking sheilas.’ Hien scowled. ‘But they’re nothing compared to you, darlin’!’ he hurriedly added with a big smile.
‘Why do you need help from a terrorist?’ demanded Hien, not mollified.
‘The bad guys needed her - we’re trying to stop them,’ said Chase, deciding to simplify the explanation. ‘They’re looking for something, and we need to find it before they do. If we don’t . . . well, we’re dead, pretty much. And that’s why we need your help.’
‘And what happens after? To
her
?’ Hien jabbed an angry finger at Sophia.
‘I hadn’t really thought that far ahead,’ Chase admitted.
‘Then you should!’ She indicated the handcuffs. ‘You think she’s going to try to escape - what happens if she does? We’ll have helped! I’m not going to be part of that. Helping people start a new life is one thing, but this? No!’
‘I wouldn’t have come if there was any other choice. But you’re the only people who can help us.’ Chase gave Bluey a pointed look. ‘As a favour.’
‘Aw, Christ, mate, that’s not fair,’ said Bluey plaintively. ‘If it was just you, then no problem. But . . .’
‘You
owe
me, Bluey,’ Chase insisted. ‘Like you said, you wouldn’t have met Hien if it hadn’t been for me.’
Bluey chewed his bottom lip, then turned to his wife. ‘Hien . . .’
‘No!’ She turned on her heel and stalked out.
‘Back in a minute,’ he told Chase and Sophia, before following Hien and closing the door behind him. Shrill shouting came through the wood.
‘Well, this takes me back,’ said Sophia, listening. ‘You know, I rather miss married life.’
‘Yeah, but your arguments ended with a gunshot,’ Chase reminded her.
‘Oh, only twice. I must say, she’s got an awfully big voice for such a little woman. No wonder he carries a shotgun in his own house. What exactly did you do to help him, by the way?’
‘Got him out of some legal trouble,’ he said evasively.
‘What kind?’
‘The putting a bullet into someone he shouldn’t have kind.’
‘Really?’ Sophia seemed almost impressed. ‘And I thought I knew all your dark secrets. So you helped cover up a murder, did you?’
‘It wasn’t like that,’ said Chase, uncomfortable at the memory. ‘The guy was a total scumbag - he deserved it. He was an Afghan warlord who was robbing every refugee who came through his territory, and raping and killing anyone who didn’t pay up. Problem was, he could get away with it because he was one of
our
Afghan warlords, who was supposed to be helping us fight the Taliban.’
‘But your friend Bluey took matters into his own hands, I take it.’
‘Yeah. We were coming back from an op when we ran into this arsehole and his men beating up some refugees. Bluey told him to stop, he told us to fuck off and let him get on with it . . . so Bluey shot him. Then his men tried to kill us, so we shot them as well.’
‘And then you lied about what happened on the official report, I take it.’
‘I said that the guy pulled a gun on Bluey, so it was self-defence. The politicos weren’t happy about their “trusted ally”,’ the words dripped with sarcasm, ‘getting killed by one of our guys, but the refugees backed us up, seeing as we’d just saved their lives, so that was the end of that. If I hadn’t, Bluey’d still be in some shithole Afghan prison right now.’
‘How very noble of you,’ said Sophia, equally sarcastic.
‘What the fuck would you know about being noble?’ Chase snapped. ‘Kill a bad guy to protect an innocent, I’d do it again in a second. Remember that.’ The last was delivered with a clear undertone of threat. Sophia took the hint and remained silent.
The shouting stopped and the door opened again. Bluey entered, red-faced. Behind him, Hien’s expression was black with anger, her arms folded tightly across her chest. ‘All right, mate,’ said Bluey with exaggerated heartiness, ‘we’ve, ah, reached an agreement. We’ll help you out.’ Hien muttered something through clenched lips. ‘So long as this means we’re all square. Sorry, Eddie, but, well . . .’
‘That’s okay. I understand.’ Chase extended his hand, and Bluey shook it. Hien’s scowl deepened, but she said nothing more.
‘So, what do you need?’ asked Bluey. He indicated the machines around him. ‘You name it, we can do it.’
‘Passports?’
‘Just tell us the country! Got Australian, American, British, Canadian, Russian . . . even rustle you up a North Korean one if you fancy.’
‘British’ll do us,’ Chase said. ‘What about the biometrics?’