Rainbow, No End
By Lloyd Knight
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About this ebook
Lloyd Knight
Lloyd Duncan Knight was born in Sydney, Australia in 1932. He left high school at a pre-matriculation level and joined the Royal Australian Air Force in 1951. His flying career spanned an unbroken period to his retirement in 2003. It comprised three approximately equal phases, as an air force pilot, commercial pilot and examiner of airmen. Apart from a home study course in Instrument Flying, published in 1980, this is his first literary endeavour. He now lives in Melbourne with his wife, Bonnie.
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Rainbow, No End - Lloyd Knight
1
‘What the hell am I doing here?’ he mouthed. He realised he had passed out in the ditch while trying to get away from the pub and had been dreaming, or hallucinating. His head hurt from the bump and the stench of the stagnant muck he lay in almost made him throw up. It was rather ironic that in his dream, or flashback, he should be worried about the CO putting him on a charge, because, if the Director could see him now, he would be drummed right out of the service.
Leo climbed up out of the ditch on the side opposite the hotel and crawled into the bushes. From there he could watch to see if anyone, or anything, followed. Was he in a hallucinatory state? Or was there really some sort of monster chasing him? Right now he wasn’t sure of what was going on. He sat there in the dead silence, trying to regain his bearings and his self-composure. He could feel his heart pounding and hear the blood pulsing through his head.
There was a movement in the bushes to his left. He drew his weapon and readied himself to repel an attack. A low hissing sound came from the direction of the movement. He remembered that Harold Thwaites, his partner, was out here as his back-up during the surveillance of the publican across the road. He was obviously trying to get Leo’s attention.
‘Hey Leo! Whatever happened to you?’ Harry asked, as he shone his pinpoint torch in Leo’s face.
Was this déjà vu, or was he hallucinating again.
‘You look like you’ve been on the slops for a week, but you were only in there for twenty minutes.’
The light dawned. The publican had been onto him and slipped him a Mickey. He muttered a garbled explanation to Thwaites.
‘I think I’ve been drugged. I fell into the drain down there and knocked myself out. That creep must have cottoned onto me, so now I’ve blown my cover.’
‘Well, we’d better call it a night and hightail it out of here,’ said Harry. He checked the area was clear and they stealthily made their way back to where they had left the car, several blocks away.
Leo considered Harry as one of his friends; as much as you could expect a colleague to be a friend in his uncertain world as an operative in the Australian Secret Service. Harry was a little shorter than Leo, slightly podgy in build, with balding, grey hair and a somewhat complaining nature. Leo thought he had been a one-time police detective, but people in this business didn’t want or need to know too much about their colleagues’ past lives. He did know that Thwaites had been in security intelligence for about fifteen years. They had been partners for about two years and Leo assessed him as a fairly trustworthy soul. He was, however, a bit weak and indecisive and easily led. Leo didn’t mind this though. It allowed him to be the decision maker and made for fewer hassles.
Harry drove them back to the office. They knew the Director would be waiting for a debriefing on the night’s activities. He had ordered them to refrain from electronic contact for the time being and explained the reason for this blackout. The security section had discovered that some outside group had intercepted communications on the agency’s operations two days before. They had not yet been able to identify the culprits.
This could explain how his cover had been blown at the pub earlier in the evening. Now he was personally compromised and didn’t see how he could possibly continue his involvement in this mission. His head felt like it was going to explode.
Barely able to focus on the road or the buildings that were flashing by, he muttered to himself, ‘Must stop his heavy drinking.’
Except that this time, the consequence was not of his doing.
As they drove in silence through the narrow winding streets, Leo pondered this recurring problem.
Janine, his daughter, had warned him many times, ‘If you don’t pull yourself together, you will not be able to hold down any sort of responsible job.’
It had only started since his divorce from Gloria and her subsequent demise. How long had it been? Must be about twenty years! Her death was almost like something out of a second-rate movie, bad braking, or worn tyres on a wet and winding coastal road. Losing control on a hairpin bend, the car had plummeted into the gorge. She had been heading for Sydney to visit her mother after having a nasty telephone argument with him.
He thought the quarrel, which was about his leaving her without any explanation, might have affected her driving. He had always partly blamed himself for the accident. Janine believed the accident was just misfortune. He had never discussed this with her, but one day he would set the record straight with his loving daughter.
As Harry drove on in silence, Leo wondered what she was doing at this time.
2
Janine had a tall willowy figure, with blond hair like her mother’s, and her father’s blue eyes. She was single, approaching forty and lived alone in a northern Sydney suburb. She often thought about her dad and wondered what he was doing. Right now, she hadn’t heard from him for several weeks, which was a little unusual. She hoped he wasn’t back on one of his binges. These lapses seemed to her to be less frequent. She prayed that he would soon overcome the need to imbibe.
Janine didn’t really know what her father’s job was. Most men of his age would be retired. She knew he had completed a long air force career and had seen active service as a fighter pilot in the Korean conflict. In Vietnam he flew C130 Hercules transports and later, helicopters in the combat role, during that terrible war. He hardly ever talked about those episodes in his life. He had never really confided to her anything about work matters since her mother died.
Now it seemed as though he was still his ever-secretive self. At times, when things appeared to get too tough, he would go on three-day binges and make an awful mess of himself. This had bothered Janine deeply over the years. However, the last time they had discussed his problem, he had approached it differently from his usual defensive attitude. He told her he was really working hard to beat the demon, and was applying some of his old military discipline to take better control of his life and emotional weaknesses.
No, he hadn’t always been so secretive. When she was younger, before her mother’s death, they had been very close. Her father had an intrinsic love of the outdoors and the Australian bush. He had always been a bush-walker and nature lover. He used to take her everywhere.
The most memorable excursions were the hiking trips, filled with mystery and adventure. He would always set some goal, like finding a lost cave or relic, or solving some tricky orienteering problem. He taught her all sorts of bushcraft, navigation, survival and even the Morse code. She sometimes wondered if he wished she had been a son. He never intimated in any way that this might be the case.
Janine had wanted to fly, like him, so she joined the local aero club during one of his postings to Canberra and took flying lessons. She eventually gained her private pilot licence, which made him rather proud of her.
She often flew with her father and although he wasn’t her formal instructor, he gave her many good pointers to safe flying, airmanship and navigation techniques. She learned to love the feeling of freedom that aviators can get hooked on when they soar up to meet the fluffy white cumulus clouds. Sometimes they flew into the overcast where he showed her the nuances of controlling the machine solely by reference to the flight instruments. She always found it exciting to fly, and understood completely why he loved it so much. They had been wonderful years.
On one of their excursions into the bush, he had set her a problem that required her to de-cipher a rather simple code from map references. They had a couple of secret codes, which he had devised, and only the two of them knew. The aim of this particular exercise was to try to locate a secret piece of equipment, a black box that had been hidden by an imaginary downed fighter pilot before he walked out of the bush. She had figured out the co-ordinates, and they had set out to hike to the spot in a rather remote place down the South Coast of New South Wales. The terrain here was fairly rough going. They needed to traverse a rocky plateau covered with scratching tea tree. This area had few helpful landmarks. Then they descended into a deep gorge with taller saplings and black boy grass trees. This was much more pleasant trekking.
The final five or so miles was up a long spur-line, which was broken by false summits. They were like long, sloping steps, each of which gave her the impression that she was almost at the pinnacle. Having pushed herself almost to the limit to reach the top of one, it was shattersville to find there was yet another long haul to the next. As she progressed up each of these, she prayed that it would be the last. Her father told her at the time that life was just like that. Each time you think you have made it and can begin to rest on your laurels, a new challenge presents itself and you have to virtually start all over again.
He suggested that each level strengthens you for the next, and if you don’t give in you will eventually reach the top, a stronger and better person. He always tried to instil his philosophy of life into her. She was only fourteen at the time, but she managed to navigate, with very little prompting from him, right to the site.
Part of the cryptogram indicated that the subject of the search was ‘somewhere between a rock and a hard place’. After one and a half days of solid hiking, she finally led them to within spitting distance of what must be the spot. Sure enough - there was a shallow cave with a smooth sandstone wall at the back and a large boulder toward the front. Instantly she knew the object of their search was behind that rock. She ran to it in eager anticipation and there, jammed under the back of the rock was indeed, a black box.
It was actually a black-painted biscuit tin that looked rather worse for wear. She was amazed! How did it get there? What did it contain? He didn’t let her succumb to the desire to rip off the protective sealing tape to open it, and discover it’s hidden treasure. She had to secure it in her backpack and carry it until they found a suitable place to camp for the night. This was all part of his method of discipline training that he had learned from his father.
She always remembered a story that he had told her one night as they sat by their campfire after a hard day’s hike. When he was six, his father had taken him on one of his many wood-gathering trips into the Blue Mountains to the west of Sydney. They were not far from North Richmond in New South Wales where the family lived. His father was a Wireless Operator Mechanic in a Royal Australian Air Force bomber squadron at the RAAF Station, Richmond. The year was 1939, just before WW II started and it was only a couple of months before his father was killed in an air crash near the base.
As his father was loading a rather heavy log into the back of his Model A Ford he slipped, jamming his hand between the log and the far door of the car. He passed out. Leo tried in vain to open the door or pull the log back, while his younger sister, the only other person present, tried to wake their father. All was to no avail. Now the father came round, but he feigned continued unconsciousness to see what the children would do. Leo had proceeded to calm his sister, sit her next to her father to comfort him, and set off down the road to seek help.
His father made a rapid recovery and called Leo back. Much hugging and assuring followed and father commended son for the way he had handled the situation. It was a fairly tough test for a six-year-old, and maybe even harder on the little girl.
So now Leo was applying a similar teaching technique to his daughter. He believed in the truth of the old adage, ‘patience is a virtue’. She would have to wait.
Once they had pitched camp, the fire lit and supper taken, they set about opening the box. It was hermetically sealed and had a faded notice printed on the lid.
THIS IS PART OF A BOY SCOUT EXERCISE PLEASE DO NOT REMOVE
After peeling off the many protective layers, she prised it open and found a can of peaches, and chocolate bars sealed in alfoil. There were similarly wrapped toffees and beef jerky, and a small bottle of lemon drink concentrate. The box also contained a letter of congratulations to the members of the Charles Darwin Patrol, who were supposed to find it. It had been there for over four years, but the contents were all still edible. The careful preparation of the package and the coolness of the south-facing cave had preserved them.
Leo told her the story of how it came to be there. While based at Canberra in a helicopter squadron, he had become an Assistant Venture Scout Leader with a local troop. She remembered this well because, apart from being an old scout himself, he was blackmailed into taking on the task as part of an agreement to let her join the associated Girl Guide Company.
The scout leader and he often planned adventures for the teenage lads in the patrol. This had been part of one of those excursions, planned during one of Leo’s quixotic moods. He had prepared the box and secreted it during a helicopter navigation training flight. Circumstances had prevented the completion of the scouting exercise and soon afterwards he was posted to Vietnam. The package had remained there undisturbed until that day.
3
Harry turned into a laneway and parked. Leo’s mind returned to the present and the job in hand. They climbed the three flights to the solicitor’s office in the crummy, old, back-street commercial building in downtown Redfern. A rat scurried down the dingy hall that was littered with torn papers and smelled dank. Most of the offices were unoccupied and everything was in a state of disrepair. This was their temporary HQ, set up by the agency as a command post for this operation. The translucent glass panel in the door at the top of the narrow staircase carried a faded sign:
BROWN, BROWN and DUNSTAN
Barristers and Solicitors
How corny can it get? They were used to this sort of old-fashioned cover. Perhaps the rationale was one of reverse psychology. Something so obviously fake would have to be construed as being genuine. They let themselves into the darkened office.
The old man was sitting behind the desk, his feet up, puffing on his infernal pipe. The Director was several years younger than Leo. He was about Harry’s height but quite slim, with steel grey hair, a cold pinched face and grey, penetrating eyes. Leo did not like him very much. He was certainly a pro and had served in a long, successful career, but there was an evil streak in his nature. This had really come to the fore during the Cold War days. He maintained a dogged pursuit of communists and fellow travellers long after the censuring of the old McCarthyism era. He was not above using torture to gain his interrogation outcomes and at times appeared schizophrenic.
‘So, why are you back so soon?’ he asked gruffly.
‘We were sprung!’ offered Harry
‘What happened?’
They proceeded to tell him of the night’s activities and how Leo’s cover had been blown.
‘Well, I half suspected that might occur.’
‘What!’ whined Harry. ‘Why weren’t we warned? All we knew was that there was a break-down in coms security.’
‘Yeah. Well I didn’t realise it had gone outside the government set. I thought it was the Feds or the NCC trying to cut into our action.’ After a pause he added. ‘Okay, Kirkland, you’re off this case. I know you’ve put time and effort into it, but your cover’s gone. Now they know they’re under surveillance, they’ll go further underground and we’ll possibly lose them altogether.’
He looked at Harry, scratching his head. ‘Thwaites, I’ll keep you on it, but we need to rethink our whole approach.’
‘Yes,’ muttered Harry.
‘Leonard,’ said the Director, turning to face him squarely, ‘I want you to take a month off. You need to get your s… together. I suggest you go bush, no liquor, get yourself laid, have a good break, heaven knows you’ve earned it.’
Bristling at the reminder of his mother always calling him Leonard, Leo nodded assent, or was it acquiescence?
‘OK,’ he answered. ‘I suppose I could go up to my hangout’
Leo was a little taken aback by the sudden decision. Something didn’t gel. He was already wondering why they were surveilling a drug-running suspect. This should have been a job for the State Police drug squad or the Federal Police. He knew however, never to question assignments in this job. There were probably other, national security aspects. Intelligence was always strictly on a need-to-know basis. To seek more information than one needed was not only unprofessional, it could be illegal, or even dangerous.
He had been in trouble in the past for attempting to buck the system by trying to apply reason to some of the decisions made by higher authority. In the old days this had meant a severe reprimand that was recorded on his personal file as a misdemeanour. He had accrued a couple of those.
In more recent and enlightened times the punishment had been replaced by counselling from the Director or some higher management official. Sometimes the top brass realised that if they’d listened to advice, or even sought counsel from field operatives, the outcome of an operation may have been more efficacious. Most times, however, life was more survivable if he just did the job right and kept his trap shut.
4
A few years earlier Leo had secretly built a small cosy hut, back in the Blue Mountains in the Great Dividing Range west of Sydney. It was in a very secluded spot. For personal security reasons, he had told only Harry and the Director of its existence, in case they needed to find him urgently.
It was a log cabin built with modern materials. The roofing consisted of securely attached shingles and the single room contained all the comforts of home. The cabin had a vehicle hideaway attached to the back wall. This was fully lockable, built into the side of the hill, and camouflaged to discourage vandals. The hut was well stocked with non-perishable foods, warm clothing and fuel. Equipped with an eight panel solar-powered system for charging a bank of batteries, it was a very hi-tech, compact retreat. The electrical system was automatically backed up with a Honda generator. This allowed him to install a freezer/refrigerator and supplied power for his laptop, sat-phone, other battery-operated devices and a modest amount of lighting.
There was a large propane bottle on the back wall of the hut, inside the vehicle hideaway. This supplied energy for cooking, water heating and space heating if he ever needed that.
Apart from freezing some meat, vegetables and ice cream, he had a good stock of frozen bread. He had learned the frozen bread trick for supplying some fresh food on one of his early Antarctic trips to the Casey base. They used to take frozen milk back then, enough to see out a whole winter season when the supply voyages from Hobart were suspended. These days, with UHT and a modern kitchen where they can bake fresh