Read THE HEART OF DANGER Online
Authors: Gerald Seymour
Tags: #War Crimes; thriller; mass grave; Library; Kupa; Croatia; Mowatt; Penn; Dorrie;
butchered in the pit dug by the bulldozer "Why was she important ..
.
?" Staring all the time into the face of the big man, and the eyes
above the matt of the beard darting away, and the tongue in the midst
of the beard sliding on dried lips. '.. . She was English, and that is why I came. She was not Serbian and not Croatian and not Muslim.
She was not a part of the quarrel. She was English and her name was
Dorrie .. ." Staring into the face, and hearing the drip of the
translation. He had spoken the name and there was a little gasp and
a
small murmur in the circle around him. He was trying to hold the
pain
and the tremble, trying to ape the mischief moments of Dorrie Mowat.
'.. . Her name was Dorrie Mowat, and there was no cause for her
killing. It was cowards' work killing Dorrie Mowat." "Who sent you?"
"I was sent by the mother of Dorrie Mowat. I came to find how Dorrie Mowat died. I came so that I could tell her mother how she died,
in a
pit. And I came so that I could tell her mother who killed her, the
name of the man, the man who was responsible .. ." Penn felt the
moment of power. He heard the engines of big vehicles away behind
the
door. No one moved in the circle around him. He didn't know where
it
would lead, couldn't know .. . "Who knew her? Who knew Dorrie Mowat?"
He heard the echoing ring of his voice. The woman interpreted. "Who met her when she lived in Rosenovici before the fight, before she
was
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butchered?" He turned from the shifting eyes, from the licked lips.
It was all a fraud. "Did you know her .. . ?" It was a fraud because it was pretence that he held the high ground, when he held fucking
nothing ... He searched the faces. An old man, a young man, a teenage
girl... It was a sham act. "You, did you know her .. . ?" He searched the faces, challenged them, and they would not meet him. He ranged
over the faces of the circle.
"Who met her ... ?"
He reached the woman who held the photographs, who interpreted the
questions and answers. She dropped her head.
"I met her."
Penn whispered, "Why did you meet her?"
"I met her so that I could talk English with her. I met her before the
fight for the village so that I could better my language of English."
Penn said, "I came so that I could tell Dorrie's mother the name of the
man who killed her daughter, so that she would know the name of that
man. I came to prepare a report for Dorrie's mother, I came to find
the evidence against that man .. ."
He saw the fingers of the woman twisting on the photographs, tearing
them and she did not notice.
"What was the name?"
The wall around him was of shame. He had won his dignity, as Dorrie
had claimed hers. He had stamped his death warrant, and fuck them.
The
circle about him was of guilt. She would be laughing at him, laughing
loud, from her mischief face. Dignity was won .. . Somewhere he heard
the roar of lorry engines pulling away .. . Fuck them, because they
couldn't hurt him, if he had his dignity, they could only kill him.
It
was Penn's moment. It was, to him, as if he were alone with the big
man facing him. It was as if all else was suppressed, as if each
other
person in the circle held no importance. It was a handsome face,
a
leader's strong, good face.
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"I have the evidence for my report that Dorrie Mowat was killed by
..
."
Penn heard the voice of the woman who interpreted.
'.. . Was murdered by Milan Stankovic."
And in front of him the face flushed in anger, and the fists caught
at
him.
Penn shouted, "His name is Milan Stankovic."
Men around him, the circle broken, hands grabbing him. He saw the
face
the last time, the anger flush in the matt of the beard, and the woman
who had interpreted was sobbing. He kicked and he struggled, and
he
was forced towards the door of the hall. He had his fucking dignity.
He bit at the hands that held him. His fucking dignity, what Dorrie
had had. He writhed with them as they pushed him through the door,
into the night. The lorry in the line was starting to roll. The
line
of the lorry lights speared the darkness of the village and the lorry
was in front of him, beginning to move. The opening of the door of
the
hall flushed the inside light onto the Union flag on the lorry's door.
Only two men were able to hold him as they came through the tight
space
of the doorway. Penn saw the small round startled face. He bit the hand on his arm. He elbowed into a stomach. It was his chance. He broke free. There was black darkness beyond the lorry. Penn
yelled,
"Kill your lights." The one chance only. The lights died. Night darkness around him. He ran. The darkness was his friend. He
threw
himself under the moving wheels of the lorry, and rolled. He didn't
know what the hell happened, but he had killed the lights. Just the
glow of the dashboard in the cab and the fluorescent buttons of his
radio. He was nudging the lorry forward. The far door of the cab
came
open and there was a quick blast of night air. There were hands
groping by his shins and ankles, and something, Benny didn't know
what,
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was thrown from the cab floor. It hit the wooden fence across the
road, clattered in the dark. There was weight across his legs and
panting, wriggling movement. Something else, Benny didn't know
what,
was thrown from the door of the cab, and that seemed to go further
and
it hit glass across the width of the road, perhaps a greenhouse,
perhaps a cold frame. The door closed quietly on the cab, and the
weight came over him and prised into the gap behind his seat and the
passenger seat. There were men running round the Seddy, going across
the road towards where something had hit the wooden fence, and
something else had smashed a glass surface. There was shooting, he
could see the gun flashes in the big side mirror of the Seddy, could
see the fireflies of the bullets going towards the fence and where
the
glass pane had been broken .. . and all the lorries were hammering
it
now, because of the shooting. The lorries swerved, each in their
turn,
for the road they should have taken. Benny was cool. He didn't
favour
panic. The radio in his cab was a jabber of voices, all calling for
the convoy to get the hell out, get the distance in. There was the
sharp panted breathing behind him, and Benny realized the man stank.
He was in cruise gear and they were doing good speed, and the village
was behind him, and the sound of shooting was fading. He was cool,
no
panic, and he could think well. Benny reckoned it to be about, give
or
take a bit, twenty-five minutes to the crossing point at Turanj ..
.
and he was in deep shit, deepest without a bloody bottom. Because
the
first rule, aid convoy driving, is don't get involved, but the yell
had
been English. The second rule is not to take sides, but the shout
had
been English and desperate. All the rules, up to one hundred and one
bloody rules, said the aid convoy system went through the window if
the
drivers weren't, all the way, impartial, but the cry of "Kill the
lights' had been English. What he had done was get involved, take
sides. And what he'd done, when they hit the crossing point at Turanj
... if back in that black village they'd gotten their act together,
raised the radio, lifted the telephone, sent a fast bloody pigeon
.. .
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what he'd done was to hazard the whole of the aid convoy programme.
People survived because the aid convoys went through without getting
involved. People would starve if the aid convoys were banned because
the drivers had taken sides. People depended on the aid convoys
crossing the lines, impartial .. . Perhaps, Benny thought, before
they
were at the crossing point at Turanj, he'd just chuck him out, push
him
clear. In the convoy queue, spearing the night with its lights, the
Seddy hammered forward, going sweet. Benny unhooked the pencil
torch
from the dashboard clip. He shone the light around his feet.
"Now then, my old cocker, you have just lost me my sandwich box, that my Becky gave me and you have just lost me my fire extinguisher, and
I
am not allowed to drive without a fire extinguisher in the cab and
I'm
thinking you should do the decent thing and, please, close the door
after you .. ."
Benny shone the torch behind him, into the gap behind his seat and
the
passenger seat. He turned to look fast behind him. In the narrow
beam, Benny saw the blood on the face and the cuts and the bruises.
Back to the road. He thought he had seen the face of a man who was
softened for death. He twisted again. Benny saw the stubble growth that dammed the blood, and the eyes that squinted between the puffed
bruising, and the swollen split lips. He dragged down the switch
of
his torch, and again the cab was in darkness.
"You are, my old cocker, a heap of trouble .. ."
Fourteen.
When the big torches came and the guns, they would have him against
the
stream. Milan shouted orders among the babble of the men of the
village. "Make a line .. . Search everything, coal sheds, tool
sheds,
the barns .. . Search your houses .. . Keep the line .. ." The men of
the village stood in line as they had been told to, waiting for the
big
torches and the guns to be brought. Between shouting the orders,
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his
eyes flicked down to his watch. Milan stood on the steps of the
school
building and behind him were the two swing doors into the hall. They
had only their small torches, sufficient to light a way from their
homes to the hall for the social evening, and they had no rifles until
the firearms were brought from the locked armoury of the headquarters
building .. . Five clear minutes lost .. . Five minutes lost since
Branko had pushed his way back into the hall, licking at his wrist
that
was bitten, and Milo had followed him with his hands held across his
groin. Five minutes lost since they had blurted that the bastard
had
gone .. . and been heard to crash through Petar's fence, and been
heard
to run into the greenhouse where Dragon brought on his spring
lettuces.
He had not seen it for himself and he must take their word on trust
..
. Behind Petar's fence and Dragon's greenhouse was wire and then
sodden
fields, and then the stream. That was where they would get him, the
bastard, when he came to the stream. The first orders he had given
with his barely suppressed fury had been that they should run, shit
quick, to the bridge, alert the bridge guards and get themselves
across
the fields on the far side of the stream. They alone had guns and
a
torch. They'd gone fast, scuttling in their goddamn shame. Five
minutes lost and men were running back to the school steps with their
torches, and Vuk was panting his way back from the armoury at the
headquarters with an armful of rifles, with his pockets bulged by
the
magazines.
The line was formed.
It was a muddled story, it was something about the bastard breaking
clear, and rolling under the lorry, and then going through Petar's
fence, and then breaking Dragon's greenhouse .. . Where was the
goddamn
lorry? But Milan had to move the line. The torches caught at
Petar's
fence, and the broken glass of Dragon's greenhouse. There was the
clatter in the line of rifles being loaded and cocked.
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He glanced again at his watch. They should be in position now on
the
far side of the stream, and they would be raking the bank with their
flashlights. They would drive the bastard to the bank ... He gave
the
order for the line to move .. . and the minutes were crawling and
lost.
Milan heard the curses from the line. The men wore their best
trousers, and their best shoes, and their best sweaters or jackets.
The
women in their best dresses were streaming from the doorway behind
him,
and they carried away on plates the bread that had been baked for
the
evening and the fruit and the cheeses that had been taken earlier
to
the hall. It had been an attempt by his trapped village to throw
off
the mood, his own mood and everybody's, of being held prisoner, and
the
bastard had destroyed the attempt. He searched the faces of the
women
who carried the food home, because they had all heard his name given,
and all heard the name of Dorrie Mowat, and the bastard had used the