Read The Marmalade Files Online
Authors: Steve Lewis & Chris Uhlmann
GETCHA!
It was a cheeky nod to one of the most famous newspaper headlines of all time, the âGOTCHA' announcing the sinking of the
General Belgrano
by the Brits during the 1982 Falklands War.
Now another Murdoch tabloid had grabbed it, on the other side of the world. It wasn't a warship that had copped it, but Jamie Santow, that sanctimonious high priest of online outrage. Oh, and he'd taken it where it really hurt, by the very medium on which he'd built a virtual empire.
One misdirected tweet from Santow to one of his co-conspirators at
GetSet!
had been sent to each of his 100,000 followers.
The cripple crusade has gone off. Maybe we need to get some spastics on board 2. What U think mate?
In the short history of Twitter, it was perhaps the biggest cock-up of all; well, at least since US congressman Anthony Weiner had sent a picture of his penis to his army of followers.
Maybe there is a God after all, George Papadakis thought, as he scanned the tabloid that was otherwise full of dire news for the Toohey Government.
Santow had desperately tried to lay the blame elsewhere, even suggesting his Twitter account had been hacked à la the
News of the World
. But the twitterati were having none of it, and the calls for his resignation were getting louder by the tweet. In a final act of online irony, one infuriated
GetSet!
member had kicked off a petition on the group's website to have Santow replaced â on the grounds he had brought the organisation into serious disrepute. There were already 1400 backers for this, and the numbers were building steadily.
The online beast of discontent that Santow had helped create was about to devour him.
Emotionally shattered, physically drained. Harry Dunkley had been working on pure adrenalin for almost a week, trying to keep focused on the biggest political story of his life, while feeling overwhelmed by the loss of his friend and the shadow of guilt it had cast.
Dunkley closed down his PC, grabbed his keys and quietly slipped out of the parliamentary building. Checking his watch, he calculated it would take him no more than five minutes, ten max, to reach the rendezvous.
His car was parked in its usual place on level four, deep in the bowels of the Senate. The remnants of a discarded cigarette stained the stairwell, its odour still lingering in the concrete walls. The time had clicked over to 8 p.m., the temperature barely registering above zero.
The Toyota coughed a few times and began the slow climb out of the Senate car park onto the one-way road that ringed the
Parliament. Security on their mountain bikes were rugged up against the cold, still patrolling the precinct, despite the hour and the freeze.
The drive tonight was so quick that the car's aged heater barely had time to crank out any warmth. Red Hill was one of the highest points in Canberra, and a favoured meeting place for fitness freaks who would slog up its paths on foot or by bicycle. It was also a trysting place for lovers, particularly those seeking illicit liaisons away from the city's watching eyes.
Dunkley had last been to its pinnacle a year ago, dining at Beyond Red with a Shadow Minister whose ambitions clearly outweighed his talent. Tonight food would have to wait. A quarter past eight came and went, and the few vehicles that eased up the hill disgorged only hungry diners heading for the restaurant. A tune played on the CD, Jeff Buckley's âHallelujah' with its soft ode to lovers past. Canberra's night lights danced and an approaching vehicle flashed its high-beam twice. It was the signal.
Finally, after two months of intrigue and subterfuge, Dunkley was to meet Mr DFAT, the man who had initiated the downfall of Bruce Paxton.
A slight man emerged from a late-model Citroën, his face partly obscured by a fur-lined hood. He walked the few metres to Dunkley's passenger door, nervously checking to make sure no one was close by, and then got in. It was close to 8.30 p.m. The man lowered his hood and looked straight into Dunkley's eyes. Dunkley was speechless for a few seconds.
âWell, well, the man at the funeral, second-last row, dark suit.'
âNot bad, Mr Dunkley, not bad at all.'
âAnd you're Mr DFAT, the one who first rang me more than two months ago. It is you, right?'
âOne and the same. Might I say, you delivered a very nice eulogy the other day.'
Dunkley offered a handshake to his source. âHarry Dunkley.'
It was accepted without hesitation. âCharles Dancer.'
âCharles Dancer? I've been around this place for a very long time and I've never heard of you.'
âI'm flattered, I pride myself on being invisible.'
How strange then, Dunkley thought, that this nervous-looking man, evidently steeped in Canberra's bureaucratic ways, was now outing himself as the mother of all Deep Throats.
âI have one trivial question to start with,' Dunkley said. âWhat was with the diplomatic plates and the Embassy of Taiwan envelope?'
âOh, come on, Mr Dunkley. A man must have some fun; it was a theatrical flourish, nothing more.'
âSo why me? What was this all about? And why are you here now? And, not to put too fine a point on it, who the fuck killed my friend?'
âCorrection, Mr Dunkley â¦
our
friend. Kimberley and I were close, though we had a different kind of relationship to the one you shared. Perhaps a tad more fractious, too. So that answers the question of why I am here. And why I am potentially risking a two-year stint in jail for breaching the Official Secrets Act.'
âYou did that when you handed over a picture that came from an ASIS file.'
âI had permission to do that, from serious people â that's my job.'
âWhy?'
âBecause Bruce Paxton was a real and present danger to the realm. He threatened the alliance with the United States and he was clearly a security risk. And, Mr Dunkley, he was in bed with Chinese intelligence, literally.'
In the half-light of the car interior, Dunkley's confusion was apparent.
âLet me make it simple for you. While you chased one face in a thirty-year-old photo, our friend Kimberley was pursuing the other. And that man, Zhou Dejiang, introduced Paxton to one of his best â and most alluring â spies. From the Chinese perspective, it worked a treat,' Dancer said.
âPaxton had been compromised for thirty years. We would have let it pass ⦠but then he rekindled that relationship earlier this year. That dalliance in the Orient was the tipping point â how could we allow a Defence Minister like that to continue?'
âWhat do you mean
we
? Who is we?' Dunkley was getting annoyed. âThe Prime Minister? He gets to decide who serves, doesn't he? Who are you talking about?'
âI'm talking about the people who will be here as a half-dozen Prime Ministers come and go. The patriots who serve this country in silence and who defend its interests, and those of our allies.'
âWhat, faceless bureaucrats and diplomats? Is that who you're talking about? And who else? The Yanks?'
âWell, the Americans certainly had an interest in the lustful habits of Paxton. But theirs was a more fundamental concern, as was ours.'
âWhich was?'
âThe Alliance, Mr Dunkley. Paxton was a risk to this country's security, pure and simple. He had already triggered major concerns in Washington with his plans to wind back the Joint Strike Fighter program. Added to that, he was sleeping with a skilled Mata Hari. That's some double act, I would say.'
âAnd did your employers and their mates kill Ben?'
âNo ⦠well, I don't think so.' For the first time Dancer seemed genuinely distressed. âI'm as confused as you are about that. It doesn't make any sense. It's not ⦠it's not our style.'
âWhat about the Americans? They don't seem to have an issue with capping inconvenient people.'
âThey are capable of it, certainly. But it's not usual. They'd do it in Pakistan maybe, or Colombia. But here, never, and we would not take it as the act of a friendly nation.'
âWell, who then? And what did Ben have that was so damaging that someone wanted him dead?'
âI want to know as badly as you do.'
âWell, what if he had information that linked the United States and senior Australian bureaucrats to a plot to topple a democratically elected Minister?' Dunkley asked. âI would say that's pretty damaging, wouldn't you? People would want to keep him silent, wouldn't they?'
âYes, they would, but believe me, there are other ways to discredit a story. And Kimberley had some certain disadvantages
when it came to being a credible source. We could have destroyed her credibility. Worst case scenario, we'd plant kiddie pictures on her computers and have the police raid her house. Game over. That's also my job.'
âThat's some job, your job.'
âThis nation has many enemies, Mr Dunkley. I help guard it. You might not like my methods but you sleep soundly in your bed because people like me stand watch.'
Dunkley felt rage boiling inside him.
âEven if it kills me, I will find out who killed Ben. Give me a number I can contact you on. This isn't the end of our conversation. It's the beginning.'
It was the end of August, and the day dawned fine and mild in the national capital. The first sprigs of wattle signalled the approach of spring. Canberra had yielded to an uncommon beauty, the kind of day that explained the allure of the bush capital.
From its lofty perch, the Australian flag that normally flew proud above the Parliament hung limp, seemingly ashamed of unfurling its full banner to the skies. Perhaps it was a silent message to those men and women below who bickered and fought over the laws governing this nation. Because, for the past fortnight, the flag had stood sentinel over one of the most explosive â and tawdry â periods in the history of Australia's century-old Federation.
Defence Minister Bruce Paxton had resigned in disgrace, his past finally catching up with him. Elizabeth Scott had rolled the dice and lost, another in the long line of Opposition leaders to have been killed off by an impatient party room. The Toohey Government was reeling as an energised Coalition engaged
in bare-knuckle politics, led by Emily Brooks, one of the most effective street fighters the Parliament had seen. âA rabid rottweiler on steroids,' a Liberal colleague had dubbed her.
The parliamentary pantomime had descended into pure farce as the resurgent Coalition tied the House of Representatives in procedural knots, refusing to grant a pair for stricken Foreign Minister Catriona Bailey.
âIt's a joke. This is now a place where getting stuck in the dunny could see the government fall,' one long-serving Labor MP was heard to moan.
Only skilled manoeuvring by the Leader of the House had seen the government survive to week's end. But the games in the chamber had dashed any chance of getting business done. It was political gridlock and some of the nation's most experienced commentators were predicting the government would fall by Christmas.
Martin Toohey's decision to rip up the accord with the Greens had contributed to the instability. Firm friends had turned into mortal enemies and the Greens' new leader â emboldened by a recent Newspoll showing the Greens' primary vote surging to 15 per cent â had launched a campaign targeting Labor's inner-city base ahead of the next election. That, in turn, had seen a revolt by sections of the Labor Left, who were agitating for some kind of symbolic action to win back the luvvies.
âSo what do we do now?' an exhausted Toohey asked George Papadakis, as the two sat in the prime ministerial suite, attempting to wash away some of the grime from the last fortnight.
âPray, my friend. It won't work but nothing else we try does either.'