Spring Showers Box-set

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Spring Showers Box-set Page 123

by Avell Kro


  face split into a grin and he stuck out his hand. ‘Jedi! How are you?’

  The other man grabbed his hand and pumped it once, bone crushingly hard, a smile crossing his

  face too. He was a small sandy haired man with not an ounce of fat on him, despite being now in

  his late forties. Known as Jedi, Jed Ingoe was a former Regimental Sergeant Major, with a fearsome

  reputation. He had served with distinction all over the globe and was renowned as one of the

  hardest men to ever wear the sand coloured beret.

  His active soldiering had ended during Archer’s last tour of Afghanistan when he lost his left leg to

  an IED.

  ‘Good to see you Craig. How’ve you been?’

  ‘Very good thank you. This is not a social visit then?’ he enquired of the CO.

  ‘No, not at al . Take a seat.’

  The CO went behind his desk and Archer joined Ingoe across from him in the visitors’ chairs.

  Archer noted that Jedi seemed more comfortable now with his prosthetic limb than when he’d last

  seen him a year ago.

  ‘Everything went okay in Indonesia?’ the CO enquired, and Archer nodded, not realising the boss

  had even known he’d been there. It had been a short job, just a month doing risk assessments and

  CP work for an aid agency, and he’d been back only a couple of days.

  ‘No problem, boss. Things are the same as ever over there.’

  The CO nodded again, not an emotion to be seen in his face. He liked to keep an eye on his troops,

  and also liked them to know it.

  ‘We have the annual Lawman exercise coming up, as you know,’ he said, ‘and you were earmarked

  for a role in it, like last year.’

  Archer said nothing, noting the use of the past tense ‘were.’ Lawman was an annual joint Army-

  Police CT exercise, and last year he had been stuck in a backroom role which he had hated.

  ‘However.’ The CO cleared his throat and turned towards Ingoe. ‘The RSM has something to discuss

  with you.’

  Archer shifted in his seat for a better angle towards Ingoe.

  ‘Do you know what I’ve been doing since I left the Group?’ Ingoe asked.

  Archer twitched his head. ‘I’ve heard a whisper.’

  ‘Of?’

  ‘That you were working for a government department on security issues.’

  Ingoe inclined his own head.

  ‘Something like that,’ he said. ‘Obviously everything that gets said in this room stays here. The boss

  has clearance, but nobody else here knows, or needs to know, anything. Right?’

  ‘Of course.’

  Ingoe paused before continuing, obviously selecting his words carefully.

  ‘I have been tasked to speak to you. I have a shortlist of people to speak to, and you are just one of

  them. The people on that list have all been selected by myself and one or two others with the

  relevant knowledge.’

  Archer waited, feeling a thrill run through his core.

  ‘I need to ask you two things.’ Ingoe held his gaze calmly. ‘Firstly, are you interested in a

  government role?’

  ‘It would depend on what it was,’ Archer replied careful y, ‘if it’s what I think it probably is, then

  yes.’

  ‘Okay.’ Ingoe considered that for a moment. ‘Secondly, if you were to take it, are you available

  immediately?’

  Archer rubbed his jaw.

  ‘I’m available now, but I do have work lined up in a couple of weeks. I may be going back to Jakarta.’

  Ingoe nodded again, looking away for a minute. Archer saw him make eye contact with the CO, who

  gave the tiniest incline of his head. Ingoe turned back to Archer.

  ‘It’s a field role suited to your skill set, based in Auckland but with an international flavour. It’s

  attached to the department I work for, but appears on no org chart anywhere. For all intents and

  purposes, it does not exist. Understand?’

  ‘Absolutely.’

  The thrill got faster in Archer’s gut, and he squeezed his fists together.

  ‘If you were to take the role, you would be classed as a case officer, with Top Secret clearance.

  There would be various training requirements to meet, however the role would commence almost

  immediately with a task that needs urgent attention. Clear?’

  ‘Crystal.’

  Ingoe nodded slowly.

  ‘Interested?’

  Archer felt a smile break his lips.

  ‘Of course.’

  5

  The suite reeked of sweat, sex and methamphetamine smoke.

  Cody could feel the light burning through her eyelids and screwed her eyes shut harder, fighting

  consciousness for as long as she could.

  After a week in this room she was wrecked. She’d smoked more drugs and had more sex than

  she’d had in the previous month. The Arab dude, Chester or whatever the fuck he called himself,

  was a fucking demon. He was high most of the time and fucked anything with a heartbeat.

  Last night she’d done a 69er with Chanelle while he watched, and she wasn’t even a lesbo; Chanelle

  didn’t care, she was off her tits anyway.

  Fuck that chick could smoke a lot.

  After the 69er Chester had fucked each of them then let a couple of his bodyguards have a crack as

  well.

  Cody was sweet with that-one of the guards was kinda cute anyway, in a camel-jockey sorta way-so

  she’d blown him and let Chanelle have the ugly one.

  Today was her last day though, and she was looking forward to getting home. Home to her shitty

  apartment in Mt Eden and her shitty boyfriend pissing and moaning and wanting to know how

  much dick she’d had that wasn’t his own.

  You’d be counting that in metres, honey.

  Fucken Bad-Bad Leroy Brown-that was actually his name, thanks to wastoid parents-and his

  pansy-assed whingey little boy routine.

  Cody rolled on her side and opened her eyes properly. Chanel e was passed out on the other side of

  the king sized bed, naked as a jaybird and with her bleached hair all over the place. A tattoo of a

  snake slithered up her left leg from the ankle, wrapping itself around like a branch, and ended with

  a flickering tongue reaching for her pussy.

  Chester thought it was cool; Cody thought it was fucken stupid. Most of the girls from the agency

  had tattoos of some sort-it’s not the sort of industry that attracts prissy librarians, right?-and Cody

  was particularly proud of the pair of tumbling dice on her hip. It was a reminder of the first time a

  client had attacked her, when she was just a naive sixteen year old runaway sel ing her gash on K

  Rd. Every interaction was a roll of the dice. Sometimes luck went your way; sometimes it didn’t.

  As Cody’s focus came back and the meth haze started to clear from her head, she became aware of

  somebody else in the room. Her gaze shifted slightly and she saw Chester standing at the end of

  the bed, holding a cell phone up and smirking to himself as he filmed Chanelle’s unconscious form.

  He was naked too, and obviously aroused by whatever the fuck he was doing.

  What the fuck is he doing?

  She shifted her gaze again to Chanelle and took a moment to realise. The other girl was on her

  back, legs spread and arms splayed to the sides. Perching on her crotch was a full grown mouse,

  white and whiskery, slowly nibbling a chunk of cheese. It was facing towards the tattooed snake.

  From where Chester stood it would look like the snake was about to eat the mouse.

 
Cody grimaced to herself and watched the mouse with fascination. It looked lethargic, like it was

  drugged or something. Probably was. Chester had a fucken medicine cabinet with him. More than

  once in the last week she’d woken up with someone fucking her, and she knew she hadn’t been

  that out of it. The other girls had said the same.

  He was one weird fucken dude.

  He must’ve sensed her looking because his head snapped around and his eyes darkened as he

  looked at her.

  ‘I wondered who would wake up first,’ he said, switching the phone off and tossing it onto a chair.

  He came towards her. ‘Just having a little fun, baby.’ He started to climb onto the bed at her feet.

  ‘Party time for you and me, baby. She can sleep a bit longer.’

  Cody pushed herself up into a sitting position and slid backwards a bit, giving him pause. ‘Party

  time’s over, baby. Today’s a new day.’ She rubbed her fingers together to indicate cash. ‘Time is

  money, honey. If you got the money. .’

  ‘I pay you for today,’ he retorted. ‘Already done.’

  ‘No baby, you paid me up until this morning.’ She sensed him getting angry and tried a softer

  approach. ‘But we can deal again, it’s all good.’ She smiled now. ‘I’ll just go have a shower while you

  get some cash and then we’ll party, okay?’

  ‘No!’ Chester’s tone was angry now. ‘I wanna party; we party now.’

  ‘I need to freshen up, sweetie. We had a long night, remember?’

  ‘You freshen up when I tell you to freshen up, whore.’ Chester’s eyes were dark slits and he

  continued to move up the bed, over her legs now. ‘I pay you to fuck me, so you fuck me. I own you!’

  ‘Nobody owns me you fucken creep,’ Cody snarled, and instantly regretted it.

  Chester’s right hand shot out and belted her across the cheek, knocking her sideways onto the

  bed. He was on her in a flash, straddling her and jerking her head around by the hair. She tried to

  fight back but for a wiry guy he was very strong. He pinned her arms down with his knees and

  grabbed two handfuls of her hair.

  ‘You don’t talk to me like that, you filthy fucking whore,’ he shouted. He leaned down and spat in

  her face. ‘You make me sick to my stomach that I let you fuck me. Ungrateful whore!’

  He spat again then punched her in the face. Her left eye went numb and when she tried to move

  her head he punched it again, and again. After a couple more hits Cody couldn’t open her eye

  anymore, so he started on the other one, before leaning down and whispering in her ear.

  ‘I will teach you a fucking lesson, you feral whore. You will never speak to me again like this.’

  And while he did his business Cody tried to block it out, but all she could think of was the fucken

  mouse eating its cheese.

  6

  The building near the top of Queen Street was home to a couple of non-descript Government

  departments involved in trade and labour. On the first five floors standard Government employees

  came and went, working in standard Government offices for standard pay and conditions.

  Access from the sixth floor upwards was restricted to a select group of non-standard Government

  employees who did an exceptionally non-standard job.

  Every intelligence agency in the world utilised what were known as black ops agents, whether on

  the payroll or as contractors. These operatives carried out the tasks that nobody ever spoke

  openly about but that everybody knew somehow got done. The SAS had the Counter

  Revolutionary Warfare Wing for special jobs; this was blacker still.

  It was the sort of dirty work that kept the balance in favour of the puppet masters. Whether it was

  catching a diplomat el flagrante with a mistress or a whore, or organising for a foreign intel igence

  operative to be discovered at the airport with enough Class A drugs to guarantee a long stretch in

  maximum security, or recovering a wayward asset from a foreign power, there were certain people

  to do these certain tasks.

  Or even, from time to time, eliminating a foreign asset. Assassination and dirty tricks had been

  part of the intelligence world since the beginning of time, and anybody who thought that the

  modern world, with its heightened risks and terror threats, had banished such archaic practices to

  the annals of history was sorely misguided. If anything, the practices had become more common.

  The Cold War may have been over for more than 20 years, but the War on Terror was a whole new

  ballgame.

  And the rulebook had been re-written.

  Aside from the signals espionage facilities operated by the Government Communications Security

  Bureau New Zealand had never been a major player in the intelligence scene, but with the opening

  of borders had come more pressure from international partners to get involved.

  The Security Intelligence Service took most of the attention and did a good job of maintaining a

  bland public façade. Press releases were rare and vanilla by nature, and little was known about

  what they did. What was known gave the impression there was nothing worth knowing anyway.

  Part of this agency officially carried the fairly non-descript title of Division 5, and operated out of

  the eighth floor, which was protected by the highest level of security of any floor in the building.

  Its unofficial title was the Special Operations Division.

  Archer arrived there at 815am and upon stepping from the elevator he was put through a metal

  detector, an electronic fingerprint scanner, checked for recording and transmitting devices and

  eventually allowed to sign in. His photo was taken by one of three plain clothed heavies and a Visitor’s Pass was immediately issued.

  Ingoe was summonsed and came to meet him. He wore a non-descript black suit and a striped tie,

  and looked equally comfortable in this as he did in DPMs.

  ‘Thanks for coming in.’

  That was the extent of the small talk as they rode the elevator up two more flights. Ingoe had never

  been a talker and that suited Archer; he had to admit, he felt nervous about meeting the Director.

  The doors opened straight into a reception area which was lined with wooden panels and floor-to-

  ceiling bookcases. The shelves were full of what looked like legal tomes, and a large Persian rug

  adorned the polished floor in front of a PA’s desk.

  Behind the desk sat a trim middle-aged lady with glasses and short grey hair. She looked up from

  her screen and smiled. ‘Morning Jed. This must be Craig?’

  ‘It is. Craig, this is Trixie.’ Ingoe waited while they shook hands. ‘Trixie is the Director’s PA, and

  knows everything about everything in the department.’

  Trixie smiled warmly at him. ‘You’re such an old flirt, Jed,’ she scolded him, ‘but keep it up.’ She

  checked her screen. ‘Go on in, he’s aware you’re here.’

  Ingoe led the way to the large panelled door to the left. He knocked twice and opened it. They

  entered a spacious corner office with views through tinted windows over the city on two sides.

  The massive oak desk facing them was almost completely clear aside from a computer screen, a

  phone, a coffee cup on a coaster and folded copies of the morning’s Herald and Dominion.

  The man crossing the floor towards them was short and slightly chubby, maybe sixty, with iron

  grey hair and, Archer saw as he got closer, inquisitive blue eyes. He was sharply dressed in a dark

  pin-s
triped suit and a sombre blue tie. He looked like a lecturer or a doctor.

  Archer had no idea what his name was, and Ingoe had only referred to him as ‘the Director.’

  ‘Good morning, Jed.’

  ‘Morning, sir.’

  He shook Archer’s hand firmly. He didn’t smile, just met his gaze then stepped back and ran a

  quick appraising eye down the newcomer.

  ‘Welcome.’

  The Director went back behind his desk and Archer was waved to a chair across from him. Ingoe

  sat offline, making a triangle between the three of them with a clearly marked pecking order.

  ‘You’ve had something of a distinguished career, Captain Archer,’ the Director said, elbows on the

  arms of his chair and his eyes on Archer. ‘People with credibility speak well of you. .in general.’

  Archer said nothing, just waited.

  ‘Ten years in the Regular Force, Jed’s old regiment Queen Alexandra’s Mounted Rifles, Intelligence and the Group. You have a bent for languages and speak reasonable Arabic, Bosnian and Tetum,

  along with a bit of French and Russian.’ The Director’s eyes gave nothing away. ‘Interesting mix.’

  Archer nodded and waited. He already knew all this.

  ‘It indicates to me a man with one eye on the past and one on the future. Is that right, Archer?’

  ‘The enemies of the past don’t just fade away,’ Archer replied. ‘If you forget the past you set

  yourself up to fail in the future.’

  ‘The first man you killed was a militia fighter in East Timor. It was in a contact near the border and

  you were blooded at close range.’

  Archer was surprised at the Director’s knowledge of the incident, but tried not to show it.

  ‘How did that feel?’

  He felt the Director’s gaze penetrating his head, and it made him uncomfortable. He was not used

  to being in the spotlight like this. He shrugged non-committally.

  ‘We were both doing our job. It wasn’t his day.’

  ‘Do you like killing?’

  Archer held the other man’s gaze evenly.

  ‘I do my job very well. If I had a problem with killing bad guys, I’d be in the wrong job.’

  The Director didn’t reply for several moments. Silence hung in the office. Finally, he turned his

  chair towards Ingoe and raised his eyebrows questioningly.

  ‘Anything, Jed?’

 

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