Authors: Marc Santailler
Tags: #Fiction - Thriller, #Fiction - War, #Fiction - History
âTake this man Dang van Loc,' Roger said. âThis Vietnamese leader who's coming out here. I don't know how much they've told you about him â probably that he's evil, he's a communist and therefore must be destroyed. But let me tell you something about him. So you know the kind of man they're planning to kill.'
I listened as he ran through Loc's life. Much of it I'd already heard from Quang, but there were details I didn't know. Loc was a southerner, as I knew, and he'd been a communist all his life. In 1954 at the age of seventeen he had gone to the north, with his mother and his younger brother. He'd already lost his father, who had been a leading Vietminh in the Mekong delta, and had been shot by the French. His elder brother had also been arrested by the French and had died in a French gaol.
In 1960 Loc had come south again. He was married by then, with one child, but his wife and child stayed in the north. He'd fought in the south until 1966, when he had been badly wounded in a B-52 strike. He had been evacuated secretly out through Cambodia and back to the north, where he recovered.
There was a gap of a few years, but it seemed he'd returned south in 1972, and stayed there until the end of the war. By then he was a senior cadre with the Viet Cong. He'd had another child by then, a boy. But during the American bombings of the north his wife and both his children had been killed. He also had a younger sister, who'd stayed south after 1954 and joined the Viet Cong. She'd been captured by the South Vietnamese, under the Phoenix programme, which tried to turn captured Viet Cong and run them back against their own people. She'd refused to cooperate and they'd tortured her to death.
After the communist victory in 1975, Loc, who was then very senior in the party, had become deputy chairman of the Ho Chi Minh City People's Committee â a kind of deputy mayor, as Quang had said. That was when Quang had first met him. Roger talked a bit about Quang, without revealing that he knew Quang personally. He stressed that Quang was not a communist, never had been, didn't like them very much, but had deliberately stayed behind rather than flee abroad, to help his country through a difficult transition. He had been a high official under the previous government, and because of that had had to go into re-education.
Loc himself didn't approve of re-education, he thought it was unnecessarily harsh and wasteful. He'd heard about Quang and arranged to have him released and attached to his staff. They had become friends, and Quang had helped him a lot in running Ho Chi Minh City. Later, Loc had seen that things weren't working out well for Quang, and had helped Quang leave Vietnam. He himself had stayed. He was a communist, Vietnam was his country, he wasn't going to leave it just because things weren't working out quite as he had hoped. He had fallen from grace for a time, lost his job as deputy mayor, but later had come back into favour when the conservatives became less powerful in the party, and he had gradually moved up until he was now Deputy Premier for the whole country.
âHere is a man who lost his father to the French, and his brother, whose family was killed by American bombs, who lost his sister in a very nasty way to the old South Vietnamese government â and yet he has no feelings of revenge. He's never wanted revenge. He wants Vietnam and the US to be friends.'
âThat's the man they're planning to kill. The top liberal among the communists in Vietnam. One of the few people there who understands the west, and wants to open up his country and maybe liberalise it a little.'
âSo you'd have to ask yourself. Is that the right way to get revenge on Vietnam, and punish the communists for what they did in the past?'
Roger paused. Eric had sat riveted throughout, even the rest of us, who knew more about the subject, were impressed.
âYou see what I'm getting at, don't you Eric. And why I think you've done the right thing in coming here to talk to us. We need your help, Eric. You're probably the only person who can stop this mad scheme, to kill the one man who's in a position to do something good for Vietnam.'
âNow it's your turn, Eric. Paul has told us a lot of good things about you. So we've decided to trust you. But now we need you to trust us. So I'd like you to tell us what you know about this group. How you came to join them, and what you've been doing up to now. Tell us what you've told Paul.'
This was the tricky part. But by then Eric was completely in their thrall, and he told them everything he had told me over the past two weeks, willingly or otherwise. By the time he'd finished they knew as much about the Mad Buffaloes and their leaders as Eric was ever going to be able to tell them, and more than I'd found out.
âTell us about that last session up in the hills.'
Again more detail. Besides the .303 rifle they'd fired an M16, the standard American infantry rifle in Vietnam, and also a couple of pistols: a North Vietnamese Tukarov and a .38 Smith and Wesson revolver, which they'd learnt to strip and reassemble. But most interesting was another weapon, which only Eric had been allowed to fire: a .22 pistol, a Walther PPK apparently, with a silencer. That was a professional assassin's weapon, and Eric had become proficient with it.
âOK.' Roger called a halt. It was now twelve thirty. âThere are still a few things to discuss, but let's break off for lunch. Are you still with us, Eric?'
âYes, most definitely.'
âGood. I need to take Paul away for a bit, but we've arranged for Sam to take you to lunch and show you something of Canberra. You haven't been here before, have you?'
âNo sir.'
âYou can call me Roger. We all use first names in the Agency. We'll all meet back here after lunch. Keith has something else on but he'll be back then too. Does that suit you?'
âYes. Thank you very much.'
I bet it does, I thought as he cast a quick glance at Samantha, who gave him her slightly wicked smile.
âHe's really very good,' Roger said in the car. âI hope we're not asking too much of him.'
âI hope so too! You were going at it a bit strong there for a while.'
âI wanted to make sure we had him on side. We can't afford any backsliding.'
âI'm sure there won't be any.'
Roger wanted to go to Parliament House. I took Northbourne Avenue and began the long drive south towards the lake.
âGet any more details about the visit?' I asked.
âWe've got some dates now. He's arriving on the second.' The second of May. Just over two weeks away. âThat's a Tuesday. Coming first to Canberra, just transiting Sydney on the way in. One night here, back to Sydney the next day, one night there and then out again. Here he'll be having meetings with the Deputy Prime Minister and the Foreign Minister, a courtesy call on the PM, and addressing a lunch at the National Press Club.'
âBringing many people with him?'
âOnly a couple of aides. He's travelling light. Someone from their Ministry of Foreign Trade. I think he mainly wants to talk aid. And a security guy, some senior minder from their Ministry of Public Security.'
I drove through Civic, the old Canberra city centre, then followed Commonwealth Avenue over the lake and up the long slope to the new Parliament House. I parked in the underground car park and we took the lift to the top of the building and the grassy slope which overlooks the main entrance, stopping on the way for sandwiches and drinks at the cafeteria. We stood for a while looking at the view. We were facing north, back over the lake, towards the War Memorial away on the other side, with the wooded hump of Mount Ainslie at its back. Down the slope in front of us the old Parliament House stood like an old-fashioned wedding cake. Beyond, more official buildings, open spaces, further away residential suburbs, and on the far right faded khaki hills on the horizon, beyond Canberra Airport. It looked very peaceful, an unlikely setting for murder.
âHe'll be staying at the Hotel Canberra, just down the road.' Roger pointed the way we had come. âWe're picking up the tab. From there he'll be coming straight here for his official calls. Driving up the road here, dismounting in front of the main entrance. Dinner that night in one of the smaller dining rooms. Only a small gathering, hosted by the Deputy PM, with a few MPs interested in trade with Vietnam. Their ambassador of course. No wives. Driven back to his hotel. Next day, lunch at the National Press Club. Then straight to the airport. He'll no doubt be spending the morning with their embassy, but we'll be providing escorts to and fro.'
âWhat about demonstrators? Aren't they coming in buses from Sydney?'
âThey'll be kept well away.' He pointed to a roadway that cut across our front, some distance down from the main entrance. âThere'll be barriers along that road, and they'll remain on the other side. There'll be lots of police about, both here and at the hotel. I don't see anyone taking a pot-shot at him here, do you?'
I looked down at the scene.
âYou think they're more likely to try it in Sydney?'
âThat's my guess. The trouble is we don't have all his programme there yet. He'll be meeting the Premier and some business leaders, trying to get them interested in investing in Vietnam, and there's another meeting organised with local Vietnamese businessmen. All closely monitored, only people with a clean slate. Interestingly, your Mr Bach is among them. He really seems to be playing both sides of the street! And New South Wales police will provide protection of course. But that's all we have, no timings or anything else yet. We don't even know where he's staying.'
âDoes he know about all this? Are you going to try and warn him?'
âWe'll probably do it through the Foreign Minister. They're having a separate session, behind closed doors, we're hoping to get Bill in there for a private chat.'
âWhy don't you do it through his embassy?'
He hesitated. âWe think it's better if we tell him direct. Otherwise they might use it for propaganda, against the Vietnamese community here. I'm told he speaks passable English, but we'll have our own interpreter there too.'
âYou'll have a job getting him away from his minders.' There was something funny about that arrangement, but I didn't seize upon it there and then.
âWhat about Bach?' I asked. âFound out anything about him yet?'
âWe're starting to get a few details. We found out how he got here. From Immigration, as you suggested.'
âAnd?' I prompted. He seemed reluctant to give out trade secrets, even to an old hand like me.
âHe came out through Pulau Bidong, in Malaysia, that's where he was processed.'
âDid you manage to get hold of Svensson?'
âWe did. But he doesn't know anything. He remembers the boat, more or less, but for some reason he wasn't involved in those interviews.'
âWho did him then? The Americans?'
Again that hesitation.
âCome on! I did that job too, remember? I know the drill.'
âWe're still waiting for traces from them.' And then he closed up. Once again I had that uneasy feeling.
âWhat are you planning for this afternoon?' I asked. âMore of the same?'
He grinned.
âNo. We've covered all that. Now it's just a question of detail. Meeting arrangements and so on. It shouldn't take long. You don't have to be there, if you want to take time off.'
âNo, I want to be there. You're going to be discussing contact arrangements, that involves me too.'
âNot any more. We want to set up our own direct arrangements with him.'
âHow are you going to do that? Through his aunt? She may not want to talk to you. I had enough trouble persuading her that it's OK so far.'
âWe don't want to involve her either. We've worked something out, you'll see. It's much safer that way.'
âI don't want him put in any danger, Roger!' I said sharply.
âRest assured, neither do we.'
âHow long do you plan to use him?'
âJust a few days. All we want is information. That's all. It's all well and good knowing they're planning to kill Loc, but until we know how the information's not much use.'
âAnd when you've found that out? What happens then?'
Again he hesitated.
âIt depends on what he tells us. Look, stop worrying! We're being very careful here, Paul. He's in more danger associating with you than anything else right now. We're moving up to Sydney tomorrow. Setting up an operational base there, with Samantha on standby, ready to meet him whenever he calls a meeting. And we've started talking to ASIO. In fact we need to set up a meeting with you there. They want to talk to you. And we're also talking to the police. Don't worry, we're making sure he's protected, we're not going to let him get hurt.'
âI hope not!'
âNow if you have no further questions we'd better get back.'
He turned away but I stopped him.