Authors: Steve Lewis
He wondered what the social media wowsers â the Twitter mullahs who loved to stand in judgement â would make of this liaison.
They'd hand me to the lynch mob.
But fuck 'em. This was 2013 and if he wanted to sleep with a 32-year-old then the self-appointed morality police could go take a running jump.
Besides, he'd made enough sacrifices as he'd pursued his career. A marriage that had never got out of second gear had broken down; his ex, Belle, had taken refuge from the national capital, escaping to Sydney, then Byron. She had never come to grips with his selfish commitment to political reporting, his âfucking obsession with that fucking paper'.
His relationship with his daughter had also turned fractious. He'd all but ignored Gaby during the difficult final year of her degree, a double arts major at his alma mater, Sydney University. He'd nearly missed her graduation, arriving half an hour late and with the academic jamboree in full swing.
He wondered how she would respond to her dad having an affair with a woman a handful of years older than she was. He could hear her reproach in his head.
Disgusting!
Maybe it was better to keep his beautiful sleeping muse a secret. Besides, the only people who counted in this arrangement were the two of them. He was fifty-four and Celia was several months shy of thirty-three.
So she was perfectly capable of deciding whether to throw herself, butterfly tattoo and all, into this relationship.
She isn't Lolita, for Christ's sake.
He checked his watch: 7.56am. It was a Wednesday and there was plenty to get on with. If only he could drag himself away from Ms Butterfly Wings.
He slipped out of bed and into the kitchen, filling the kettle. He was contemplating listening to
AM
when his mobile rang, and he swiftly answered it before it woke Celia.
âGood morning, Harry.' It was a voice he didn't know.
âHello. Who is this?'
âSomeone who'd like to meet with you. Alone.'
âI usually like to know who I'm meeting.'
âI can appreciate that, but I think you'd find our conversation interesting â and useful. Let me just say, I think Ben Gordon would probably appreciate it too.'
The mention of his friend's name triggered a familiar surge of emotion in Dunkley. Remorse. Guilt. Sadness.
Then there was a different feeling as a deft hand teased his lower torso, urging him back to bed. He turned to Celia, putting his index finger to his mouth.
âOkay Mr Anonymous. Where and when?'
âHansel and Gretel Cafe in Phillip. I'll meet you there in, say, forty minutes, around 8.45.'
Dunkley felt a soft tug on his arm, a whisper of encouragement.
âYep, okay . . . but can we make it an hour please?'
âCertainly, Harry. I'll be wearing a blue-and-white checked shirt, glasses, sandy hair. Look forward to meeting you then.'
The Mazda 3 was a sporty number with leather seats and a sound system to die for.
Dunkley loved revving Celia's vehicle around Canberra's quiet streets, although he was careful to avoid the city's myriad speed cameras. He squeezed the car into a parking space in Prospect Court, just around the corner from the coffee shop.
He was a few minutes late, checking his watch as he weaved past three ambling tradies. It had been a while since he'd visited Hansel and Gretel. As he entered, a harried-looking woman was helping an elderly man struggling to grip a coffee cup with arthritic hands. âDad, it won't bite,' she said with a hint of annoyance.
He spotted the sandy-haired man with the checked shirt, his head buried in a copy of that day's
Australian.
Carefully, the man folded the broadsheet before offering Harry a cautious smile, beckoning the reporter to join him.
âHarry, nice to finally meet you in person. Trevor Harris.' A freckled hand stretched out with a firm grip.
âCoffee?'
âFlat white, thanks.'
As Harris motioned to a waitress who'd just emerged from the small kitchen, Dunkley struggled to place him in Kimberley's circle of friends.
âLet me make it easy for you, Harry. I was Ben's immediate boss at DSD when he died . . . was killed. What was it? Eighteen, twenty months ago?' Harris shook his head with genuine regret written on his face.
âKimberley's boss? What's your role at DSD?' Dunkley probed.
âSo you call Ben “Kimberley”? I never really got the hang of that.'
Harris placed their order and continued.
âWell, my former role was head of the Scientific and Technical Analysis branch. I spent quite a bit of time there, at DSD. About ten years all up. But I've been out of the agency coming up to six months now.'
There was a hesitancy in Harris that hinted at a larger story.
âWhy did you leave?'
âVariety of reasons, a touch too complicated to discuss right now. You know the agency's in the process of being reorganised and will be integrated into the broader intelligence framework?'
âYeah, I've heard some stuff about it, although the secret society of spooks isn't really my speciality.'
âReally? I've read several of your recent pieces in
The Australian.
That article about the “Challenge of the Dragon” was quite perceptive, I thought. And well informed.'
Harris was fishing for his intelligence sources and that was something Dunkley never discussed. He drew on his flat white, smiled and took a moment to soak up the cafe's ambience.
The dark chocolaty aroma of freshly roasted arabica hung in the air, blended with the scent of nuts and the glacéd fruit that Hansel and Gretel was renowned for. He and Belle had been regulars at the company's original outlet in Manuka, introducing Gaby to the pleasure of frothy milk when she was tiny. The memory brought on a momentary pang of nostalgia.
âSo why am I really here?'
Harris clasped his hands and shifted his gaze to his coffee before looking directly at Dunkley.
âHarry, first things first. I don't want to get into trouble, I don't want to breach the Secrets Act. I am most definitely not a whistleblower. But you need to know some things about our dead friend.'
He stole a quick glance around the cafe. No one was close enough to hear them over the background clatter. Still, Harris was taking no chances, and leaned further towards Dunkley.
âYou only have part of the story of Ben's death. When I was informed of it, I assigned a colleague to close down his IT profile. It's usually a straightforward task â access the person's files, download any unfinished business to a common user hard drive, provide a report to management. To me. That sort of thing. But Ben's profile was stubbornly hard to access. That's when I took over the task. Personally.
âSome interesting stuff came floating out. I found a gmail address that he'd set up. You recall the email that Ben sent you, the one that referred to “shades of '75”?'
Dunkley looked blank. âNo, can't say that I do.'
âReally, Harry? Ben sent you and another of his friends a very similar email â about twenty minutes apart â on Thursday, August the fifteenth, 2011.'
âSorry, but I honestly don't recall receiving any email like that. I mean, I get literally dozens of the buggers each day, but I reckon I'd remember something Kimberley sent me, particularly so close to when it happened. She was killed three days after that.'
Harris shifted in his seat, seemed to reflect for a moment, and then reached into a green shopping bag. He took out an A4 sheet and placed it between them.
âHere it is.'
Dunkley was about to pick up the document when a shrill voice interrupted. âAnother coffee for you two?'
The waitress, wearing a black dress with a silly-looking apron embroidered in lace, stood with pen poised. She was just doing her job, but Harris shot her a dark look.
âYes, same again.'
Ms Gretel took the hint and scurried away, allowing the reporter to read the succinct email.
Harry
Starting to look like shades of '75. We really need to talk.
Call me
Kimberley
The two men looked at each other. Harris spoke.
âWell, Ben sent it. I found it and made a copy. He meant you to have it and he sent it from a private account, so I'm not breaking any rules by giving it to you.'
Dunkley read the note several times before speaking.
âWhat does it mean?'
âWell, Harry, maybe it means you've been looking in the wrong direction.'
Canberra
A film of dust confirmed that the box had been undisturbed for a while, dumped in a corner of Harry Dunkley's cluttered garage. He'd all but forgotten this carton filled with bits and pieces recovered from Kimberley's apartment. As the executor of her estate, Dunkley had settled her will and filled the box with the items left to him. None had appeared to be of much value.
Had he, in his absent-minded grief, sought to consign its contents to history? Maybe. But now, eighteen months later, Dunkley had a reason to prise the box open.
Shades of '75? What was that about?
He carried the box into his flat and sliced the tape sealing it with a sharp kitchen knife.
âOpen Sesame!'
Celia had brewed a fresh pot of filter coffee and joined him at the dining table with two mugs. Dunkley worked his way through the top layer of job-related letters and files, a public service manual â
Ethics in the Workplace
â and piles of Christmas and birthday cards.
He examined each item in turn and continued digging till he reached the layer of books lining the bottom of the carton. Richard Dawkins's
The God Delusion
was there, and a couple of tomes on Asian art. Wedged tightly in a corner was a paperback version of Paul Kelly's
The Dismissal
.
Dunkley turned to Mathieson who had picked up a bundle of Kimberley's old birthday cards.
âShe was obsessed with the Whitlam Government and hated John Kerr and Malcolm Fraser with a passion,' he explained.
Celia had found a couple of cards from Dunkley and was smiling at the inscriptions.
âMalcolm Fraser's not so bad; he's the only Liberal I like.'
âBelieve me, in 1975, you would have hated him.'
âWaaay before my time, grandad.'
Dunkley tensed at the reminder of the difference in their ages and looked more closely at the well-thumbed book. It had been bookmarked with an old plastic pass card at the opening page of a chapter titled âThe Security Crisis'. Mathieson gently kneaded Dunkley's shoulder as they both leaned in to read two words scribbled in the page's margin.
Reg Withers
.
âWho's that?' she asked.
âReg Withers? He was the leader of the Senate when the Coalition blocked supply. Fraser's upper house henchman during the crisis in '75.'
Celia opened up her MacBook, keen to find out more.
âHe was a minister under Malcolm Fraser but apparently got the bullet and never forgave him for it. Surly-looking type, if you ask me. Harry, pass me that card . . .'
Dunkley pushed the plastic bookmark across the table as he began to read the chapter's opening paragraphs. Like most political animals he found the Dismissal intriguing and somewhat unbelievable. But he'd forgotten the questions raised at the time about the role of the CIA in Whitlam's downfall.
âIn the days preceding 11 November there were two major upheavals in Australia's system of government. The first was the political and constitutional crisis which covered the newspapers and engulfed the country,' Kelly wrote.
âThe second was a security crisis that centred on the United States' communications base at Pine Gap near Alice Springs and the cover of American CIA agents operating in Australia. Only the tip of the security iceberg was ever apparent.'
Dunkley shivered.
â“Shades of '75.”'
Then, it hadn't been the Chinese accused of meddling in domestic politics. It was the Americans. And they'd been charged with helping to bring down a democratically elected government.
âHarry?'
Dunkley looked up from the book. Mathieson was turning the card over in her hand.
âThis is a crypto card. It's one part of a series of keys that you need to get into a highly secure Cloud archive.'
âA what? Can you speak slowly and in words of one syllable?'
âSorry old man, I forgot.'
âOkay, that's twice now. You don't need to be nasty, miss.'
âThe Cloud is a huge memory bank. Anyone can store documents in it. It means that you don't have to put everything on a hard drive and can access it from anywhere in the world. It's dead simple, Harry. Even you could do it on Google.'
Mathieson chuckled and Harry narrowed his eyes.
âThree times.'
âBut this is much more secure. It plugs into the side of the computer and I'm pretty sure it works with Amazon Web Services. But I'll need the other keys â a username and a password â to get into it.'