Read A Line in the Sand Online
Authors: Gerald Seymour
She had wa
the
overgrown garden and a sold sign over a for-sale board, short of
church, on the other side of the road. The curtains were loosely
drawn
on the windows facing the road, but at the back of the house they
were
not pulled across and spilled light on to the garden. The grass at the
back, ringed by untended flower-beds, was long and leaf-strewn. The shirt the child wore was bright red and there was a crest on the chest pant leopards and the logo sign of a vehicle-insurance company,
of ram
the same shirt she had seen him wearing in the car. The child kicked ll round the grass. He played on his own, the hero and
the footba
the
star.
'd met him at the
As soon as she
field gate, she'd told him what she'd
seen, and now she repeated it. In the car, as she'd blistered him with
the information, he had seemed no more willing to believe her than he
did now.
391
"The cars came back without him and his wife and the child. It was done fast, to deceive you, in the darkness. They've moved him to
make
it easier for themselves. Can't you see it? They've made a trap
and
now they don't have the responsibility of protecting him when it's sprung. They want you at the house on the green they want to kill you
there when they don't have the responsibility for him."
e doubt creased his voice.
"You are sure?" Th
She told him that she was sure. She had seen the boy, the child,
with
the football on the lawn lit by the back windows of the cottage.
e
Th
trap was the house on the green where the guns waited for him. They were beside the car, in black darkness, among the scrub of the common ground beyond the village. It hurt her that she could not convince him.
"Don't you trust me? You should. Without me, on their terms, you would walk into a trap. Trust me. We are a partnership, that's
equal
parts don't you see that?"
She told him that he was nothing without her, and he seemed to reel away from her. She would go back, walk through the village a last time
come back and tell him what she had seen. He squatted down, holding the launcher in his hands, as if it were a child's valued toy or a believer's relic. She told him how long she would be. He had
already
gobbled down the sandwiches she had brought him. He stank of the
mud
ck into
in the marsh and the still water. Farida Yasmin walked ba
the
village.
There were lights on in the church, throwing multi-colours through the
high windows, and she could hear the organist practising.
Over the hedge she saw the child boot the ball into the far darkness beyond the spill of the light, and leap and whoop with pleasure as if
he had found freedom.
392
She walked the length of the green. She saw the cars outside the
house
and the same drawn curtains as had been there before. She could see, he street-light, that the camera set high on the front wall
from t
of
tracked her, then lost interest, its lens veering away.
the house
enough. She was certain.
It was
d the rustle of a sweet-paper.
She hear
lo, it's the student, yes? My friend Peggy told me about you
"Hel
hope
startle you, just walking the dog.
I didn't
I'm Paul. I'm your man
when you start your interviews..."
She endured his patronizing talk as they went back past the green, the
darkened house and the lens, through the village.
o
It was useful t
have him beside her when she went by the lens, when she was caught in
the headlights of one of the moving cars. Walking with him gave her earance of being a part of the community.. . She told the
the app
man,
Paul, that she would definitely find him when she came to do her
interviews, and he left her at the pub.
The child was no longer in the garden. She saw the shape of a man through the gap in the curtains.
She cut off the road, stumbled across the common ground, wove between e, trees and bramble thickets, to the car.
the gors
"It's as I said it was. I'm certain."
After she
bought
had
the sandwiches for him she had gone to a chemist's
in the town, and selected a perfume. Before he had come to the field she had anointed her body with it.
gate
ve to be trusted," Farida Yasmin whispered.
"I deser
still hunched down beside the wheel of the car, holding the
He was
launcher. He had not moved.
"I want to be with you..."
393
His eyes stayed down, locked to the launcher and the ground at his feet.
"I've done enough to deserve that. I can help, carry what you need.
You've taught me. I want to be there when you fire the launcher.
I
want to see it happen and be a part of it."
She was crouched close to him and her fingers touched the smooth,
oiled
surface of the launcher's barrel.
"I can do it, help you.
She saw his head move decisively, side to side. He denied her.
Her eyes tightened in confusion.
"Haven't you thought about me? Haven't you considered what I want?
What about the risks I've taken? Where's my future? Because of you, because of the people who sent you, I've lost everything. I'm
hunted.
You'll go, be picked up on the beach so, who's thought about me? I'll be caught, interrogated, locked up is that what you want?"
He never looked at her. She caught his hand and held it tight in
her
fist. There was no response.
"Are you going to take me back with you? That's best, isn't it, that I
go back with you to the beach and on to the ship? There'd be a life there, for us, back where you come from, wouldn't there?"
It was her dream. They were together on the great deck of the tanker.
It was night and the stars were above them, and they ploughed through the endless water, and they were alone. And the same perfume that she
wore now would be on her neck then. She would be introduced to high functionaries and her part in the death of an enemy would be
explained,
men would bob their heads in
and grave
re sped and thank her for what
e had done.
sh
She could see the startled faces of her parents, and
the
astonished, dull faces of the girls at work, when they learned the 394
at Farida Yasmin had achieved.
truth of wh
"I'm finished here. So, you don't take me with you tonight, I understand... But I go on to the ship with you, don't I?"
ness, he began to clean the firing mechanism of the
In the dark
launcher.
light, he had been shown the tyre marks.
By torch
Geoff Markham had been marched through the wood, had blundered after the light-footed shadow of Andy Chalmers in front, tried to keep up with him and his dogs, and had then been pushed without ceremony down on to his knees as the torch was shone into the cavity at the back of
the bramble thicket.
He had queried it again, rejecting what he didn't want to hear.
He had been dragged up, pulled towards the water. He capitulated
and
said it was all right, yes, he accepted Chalmers's conclusion. If he
had queried again he would have been pulled in his city clothes into the water and he'd have been propelled towards a tree-trunk and a
submerged oil drum.
There was a crunched sound under his feet. The torch beam pointed out
the stripped rabbit bones he stood on.
"I just want reassurance there is no other explanation?"
"He's gone.~
He had been lost. He had driven round a web of lanes. He had finally found Chalmers sitting with his dogs by the gate of a field. He.
had
expressed his first doubts at the grunted report of the tracker, then been hijacked and taken off into the woods. He didn't want to believe what he was told because of the catastrophic implications of
Chalmers's
assessment.
"Could he merely have moved deeper into the marshland?"
395
o."
"N
itterly, "But we don't know where he's gone."
He said, b
one in the car."
"G
ould he be returning?"
"C
o gear left hide's empty. He's cleared out."
"N
ey walked back to his car.
Th
It was the worst situation. He would
be
secure line to Fenton from the crisis centre to report that
on the
they
d lost their man.
ha
There'd be the hissed slip of Fenton's breath,
and
repeat that they had lost their man, and then a volley of
he would
ths would bleat in his ear. He was familiar with analysis and
oa
ons and with the computer spewing answers.
intellectual storm sessi
at
Wh
he had been shown was a short length of tyre marks in the dirt at
the
side of a lane and, by torchlight, a hollowed place in the depth of a
took on trust the description of the
bramble thicket. He
ding-place.
hi
The torch had been switched off. They came through the dense
nd
woodla
ranches all seemed to whip his face and not Chalmers's,
and the low b
d where there was a soft pit in
an
the ground his feet found it and
not
. With his scratched face and sodden feet, he followed
Chalmers's
the
ell and could not see the man ahead
sm
of him until they reached the
car.
The stench of the man and the filth of the dogs filled the small
he water dripped off Chalmers and the mud on the dogs
interior. T
was
across the seats.
smeared
want to go home."
"I
" Markham snapped.
"Too right,
you will go, but not much of the journey in my bloody car."
"Home
396
He drove at savage speed down the lanes towards the main road and
the
town, and the crisis centre. They had lost him. It would end at
the
house on the green, where the bloody goat bleated at the end of its bloody tether. He hit the brakes, swung the car through the lanes'
bends, pounded the accelerator. Beside him, Chalmers, stinking and dripping, slept.
"Do you like to talk about it?"
"No, Mrs. Perry, I don't like to."
"I don't want to pry.
ll say one thing to you only, and then, please, it is a closed
"I wi
book... It was over. Molotovs don't win against tanks. We went back to our homes, which was stupid. I was denounced by people who lived in
my street. When the soldiers came, I and others tried to flee over the
roofs from my parents' apartment. We were identified by the people in
our street. When we were on the roofs they pointed the soldiers
towards us. They were the same people I had lived with, played with as
a child. They were my friends and my parents' friends, and they
showed
us to the soldiers ... We saw what happened last night. We heard
what
Mr. Perry said."
"Thank you, Luisa, thank you from the depths of my heart."
"What I like to talk about is old furniture, and gardening."
"It's a good time to get cuttings in," Meryl said.
"I'd like to help you with that."
vies had dozed on
Blake was long gone, back to the house. Bill Da
his
bed. The room was in chaos, Blake always left it that way, clothes on
the floor, towels on the bed. Davies was reminded, and it hurt, of 397
the
room his boys shared.
still hadn't rung home, couldn't face it...
He
climbed off the bed and sluic
He
ed some of the tiredness out of his
eyes at the basin. He'd call by at the house to collect his car,
then
search for another dreary little pub to eat in... He reflected that the
home where Meryl had been taken in was oft-limits, but he'd have
have gone there, talked to her.
preferred to
She'd kissed him when
m, and had cried as he'd held her awkwardly.
she'd thanked hi
She'd
en so bloody soft and vulnerable.
be
Too long since it had been like
that with Lily.. . He changed his shirt.
back to the
Couldn't go
house in a shirt with Meryl's lipstick on the collar.
He went down the stairs. The door to their living room was half
open.
He realized she had been waiting for him, listening for his descent.
She came with a quick, scurrying step out of her living room and he could see her husband in his chair by the fire, and the poor bastard shame in his eyes. She held the sheet of paper in her
had some
fingers. He understood.
She handed him the account.
He didn't argue, and didn't say that he had seen her standing in the ws behind the mob.
shado
He took the banknotes from his pocket and
paid
her for
s
hi
bed and for Blake's. He went back up the stairs and packed
their bags.
She was waiting by the door.