Read Blood Is a Stranger Online
Authors: Roland Perry
âMany Aussie die there,' the driver said, waving at a cemetery.
âWhen?'
âIn war.' The driver took a hand off the steering wheel and made a chopping motion. âJapanese. Five hundred in one day.'
âWere there any survivors?'
âThree. But one die in jungle, one die in water. Only one made it to Australia, on raft.'
Cardinal felt uncomfortable. The driver grinned into the rear-vision mirror. âYou be okay,' he said. âRobert's wife tell me he come to Ambon soon.'
Perdonny waded through the early morning crowd of locals. They were dressed in traditional saris and skirts of red and white. They cheered their most successful son who had just flown in on a military aircraft from Jakarta. He waved, shook hands and moved into the terminal lounge to collect his luggage. He was about to leave when he noticed Webb huddled in a corner.
âWhat the hell are you doing here?' a tired-eyed Webb asked. âLet's have breakfast.'
âWhere's Cardinal?' Perdonny asked, when they'd found a private spot.
âI had to send him around the island,' Webb said, his
intense eyes darting to the lounge. âThe place is crawling with Bakin!'
âIs that who you were speaking to?'
âYes,' Webb said lighting up a cigarette. âThey've been asking a lot of bloody questions.'
âSuch as?'
âHad I seen any Americans? Why did I switch routes and not go into Bali? What cargo was I carrying?'. Perdonny noticed that his hand was shaking. âI've been up all damned night. First the army threatened to take my plane. Then those bastards in there bailed me up.'
âYou'll be able to get out, though?'
âShit! I hope so.'
âWith Cardinal?'
âIf things have cooled down by mid-morning.'
They ordered breakfast. Minutes later, eggs, bacon and toast was placed in front of them.
âWhat restrictions have been placed on you?' Webb asked.
âI have to check in with the police every morning.'
Webb laughed. âBig deal. You own most of them, don't you?'
Perdonny looked up at the Australian. âThis is no joke,' he said. âI can't get off the island without permission. Nor can my wife. I'll be watched.'
âBut this is your bloody island!'
âPeople can be bought to betray me.'
âWhy do you think Utun did it?' Webb asked. âBit of a desperate move, wasn't it?'
âI don't know what his motives were. But I do know I'm one step away from Buru.'
âUtun wouldn't have the nerve to put you on Buru!' Webb scoffed.
Perdonny stared at him.
âDo you want to get out?' Webb asked, leaning forward.
âNo,' Perdonny said. âI still have much to do here.'
âBut if more pressure is put on . . .'
âI'm staying,' he said. âYou concentrate on getting Cardinal out. That's more important at the moment.'
Cardinal had trouble sleeping in the guesthouse called Witsana in the heart of Ambon, a small Dutch colonial town. He had not liked the delay and was not comforted by Webb's over-confident attitude.
He got up before dawn and wandered into the town to watch the sun rise. Its warmth cheered him as did the guesthouse proprietor, a bustling old Ambonese woman who fussed about making breakfast. As he sat down to eat the phone rang.
âSpider.' The woman grinned.
âI've been grilled by Bakin this morning,' Webb told Cardinal, âso things are tight. But come around the island in the next hour.'
âHave you been given clearance for Darwin?'
âNot yet. But we can go to other islands where the heat will be off.'
âWell, where should I go? I can't just wander into the terminal.'
âGet out of the car at a turn in the road about a kilometre from the airport. You'll see a well right there. Cut across the fields next to the airport and come around the back of the hangars. I will move the plane nearer to them and be on the look out for you.'
âWhat about the soldiers?'
âThey're all in or around the terminal. I can't sit on the phone here too long. See you soon.'
On the return ride, Cardinal felt uneasy, his fears accentuated by the low-flying helicopter.
âWhat's he doing?' Cardinal asked the driver as he craned his neck to see it.
The driver looked troubled and shook his head.
âSometime they do that,' he said. âArmy very powerful on Ambon.'
Cardinal kept his eyes on the chopper as it circled above and then drifted off north-east of the road. He could only just hear the dull roar of its engine when they reached the well. Cardinal asked the driver to pull over. He sat motionless in the rear seat scanning the field between the jungle and the airport. He was uncertain about moving straight across because it seemed to give him little or no cover. Instead he told the driver to reverse to the face of the jungle.
Cardinal stayed close to the field's boundary and paused to hide in the undergrowth. He was about half-way across when he heard the sound of a chopper looming up from the airport area. It kept climbing almost vertically and then drifted across towards the field which it hovered above. Cardinal side-stepped into the foliage until it circled low and returned to the airfield. Just as he started to walk again, a jeep came careering out of the airport across the field. He glanced back at the road and saw several soldiers running his way. Everywhere he looked he could see figures running. He turned to the safety of the jungle but had not gone two metres when he stopped. Two soldiers were propped behind trees with rifles aimed at him. He dropped the suitcase and raised his arms.
An officer advanced from the field, shouting orders. He approached Cardinal cautiously and slid the suitcase away from him.
âPassport!' Passport!' he yelled. Soldiers formed a tight ring around Cardinal. He nodded to the suitcase. The officer waved a revolver at Cardinal, knocking his Bogart off, and he fumbled in the side pouch and handed the document over. He grabbed his hat
The officer was ecstatic. He gabbled to the soldiers, and they guided Cardinal towards the jeep. He was bustled in and driven to the airport hangars where the chopper had
landed. Its rotors were still spinning. Cardinal was pushed out of the jeep and ordered to run to it.
When Cardinal was aboard, the chopper took off. He looked down to the Beachcraft only thirty metres away. Webb was sitting in the cockpit. He seemed to be looking at him.
Cardinal's first view of the infamous prison
on Buru island west of Ambon was the leaning watch-tower known as âPisa'. He was accompanied by four armed soldiers on the three-hour journey, first by helicopter to a clearing north-east of the island and then by motor boat down the muddy Wayupa River to the prison landing site.
Cardinal could see a barbed-wire fence around the buildings, which needed repair. The small contingent was forced to wait in the tall alang grass outside the main gate while one of the rifle-toting sentries climbed listlessly from a tower. Cardinal leant against the gate and it seemed to give a little under his weight. He thought that one hard shove could bring the whole Jerry-built construction tumbling down.
Cardinal was marched alone to the commandant's offices in a cabin of split logs, and was left in a spartan
room. He could see the soldiers leaving the prison grounds as the commandant appeared. He looked as if he had been the victim of napalm. His facial skin had purple splotches and was stretched across his flat cheekbones like a hideous mask. His tall, lean frame was bent as he shuffled past Cardinal to a cluttered desk. He sat down without acknowledging him and stared at scribbled notes. He lifted his eyes to meet Cardinal's gaze. The commandant sniffed and rubbed his face, which heightened the colourful patches.
âYou are accused of murder and subversive activity,' he said in stilted English. âDo you wish to make a confession?'
âI only wish to speak with the American Ambassador to Indonesia,' Cardinal replied.
âAnswer my question.'
âI do not wish to make a confession - only to speak with the American Ambassador.'
âThe ambassador can not help you. This is Bum.' The commandant spoke throatily.
âOn what authority are you detaining me?'
The commandant frowned.
âWhere were you three nights ago?' he said, looking at his notes.
âOn vacation.'
The commandant stared at the ground. He brought a fist down on the desk. âYou murdered a member of the Kampuchean Embassy!'
Cardinal felt numb. He looked out the office window and could just see the heads of the retreating soldiers above the grass.
âWhy did you commit this crime?'
Cardinal was about to ask whom he was supposed to have killed, but checked himself.
âI don't have to answer anything,' he said defiantly. âThe ambassador's name is David Temple. Please contact him.'
The commandant stared up at Cardinal and stood up.
âMy advice is to co-operate, Mr Cardinal. You are in big trouble.'
He searched Cardinal's face for a sign of capitulation. âYou are a professional CIA assassin? Yes?'
Cardinal shook his head. The commandant flicked a hand at the guards and snapped orders.
They seized Cardinal and led him to a wooden two-level cell block a hundred metres from the commandant's office.
Cardinal was marched upstairs to a long wide corridor with cells on either side. Prisoners straggled to their cell bars and watched the new arrival. Cardinal noted their emaciated appearance and felt a sharp wave of depression wash over him. His cell was isolated and contained just a bunk and bucket. There was one small window above eye level which provided the only view and air in the fetid room.
Cardinal heard the key turn in the lock. He stood on the bunk to see twenty men being walked around in the midday heat.
He sat on the bunk and was attacked by biting gnats. He tried to think positively, but could not see any way out of his predicament. He recalled what a fellow-inmate had said to him in a POW camp in China: âIf you have nothing, you always have hope.' His main expectation was that Webb would raise the alarm and alert the American Embassy.