Read THE HEART OF DANGER Online
Authors: Gerald Seymour
Tags: #War Crimes; thriller; mass grave; Library; Kupa; Croatia; Mowatt; Penn; Dorrie;
word that was coward. He searched the faces, and none met his, and
the
minutes on his watch were frittering away.
Evica was beside him, carrying in a linen cloth the food she had
brought for the evening.
"Do you have him?"
The excitement of the chase, of being the king who gave the orders,
slipped in him. "No."
Evica said, simply, "I could not help myself, when he looked at me, when he asked who had met her. He was so ... so bold.
I could not help myself when he faced me ... What does it mean, the
man
coming to make a report .. . ?" There was a shout. He did not answer her. Milan ran across the road. At the side fence in Petar's garden he was shown the plastic box. There was a single bread roll in the
box, with squashed tomato and pressed cheese in the cut in the roll
251
and
half a bar of chocolate. He felt his nerves squirm in his belly.
Another shout. The torches showed him the way. He climbed the fence
between Petar's plot and Dragon's garden. Milan saw the broken glass
pane on the roof of Dragon's greenhouse, and more torches shone inside
the greenhouse. On the trays of spring lettuces was the fire
extinguisher amongst the plants and the shards ... It had been gone,
it
had been buried, and some nights he could even forget it, and the
bastard had come to bring back for him the face of the young woman
...
He was shouting. Who saw the lorry? Was it just one lorry? What
colour were the lorries? Which way did the lorries go, towards Glina
or towards Vrginmost? The minutes slipping on his watch. Were the
white lorries from a convoy of the United Nations? Milan Stankovic
ran. He ran like the athlete he had once been. He ran for his life,
and for the bastard's life. Hoarse, chest heaving, Milan scrambled
into the office area of the headquarters. The minutes slipping.
'..
. They all bad-mouthed her back in England. She was just a horrid
young woman. There seemed to be a story about her for every year of
her
life, the stories seemed to queue up to foul-mouth her. Her mum told
the stories worst, like it was something she had to get release from.
The way of the release was to find out what happened to her. There
was
no release until her mother knew what happened to her, who killed
her.
They were throwing money at it because they'd cash coming out of their
ears. "Just go there, Mr. Penn, and write a bloody report, and then we
can forget little Miss Dorrie who was an awkward bitch", it was
something like that .. ." Benny listened. Sometimes the voice
behind
him stopped, when the radio came on, when the convoy manager had some
crap to tell them from up front. He drove carefully, and the whole
of
the convoy was going fast. '.. . And I came here, and it was all
lies
that had been said about her. Perhaps, at home, she had just been
a
bloody nuisance, perhaps she was just a bloody cuckoo child in a
second
marriage, perhaps she just got in the way, perhaps she didn't start
to
live until she was at Rosenovici... I came here to pocket the money
252
and
write a report, good bromide stuff, a few names and a few quotes,
good
money. You know how it is, Mr. Stein, when you're sucked into
something, it's like you're being pulled towards a cliff. Why did
this
one killing in one village matter? Can't answer it ... Best I can
do,
it's something about that young woman. I learned about her, each
time
I was told about her then I was pushed closer to that bloody cliff
..
." Grabbing for the telephone, whirring the handle of the field set that linked to the Glina military, hearing the deathly response of
silence .. . Milan pushed it aside so that it fell useless to the
concrete floor. He turned to the radio set that was the back-up,
that
sometimes functioned. When they had powered out of that God-awful
village then the cab radios had gone ape shit Each driver, and the
convoy manager, wanting to know what the fuck was going on, what was
the shooting. Benny hadn't given them a laugh, hadn't given them
anything until right at the end of the exchanges. He'd waited to
the
end, then pressed his 'speak' switch, and he just said he'd seen
nothing, because they'd have kicked him half to death if they'd known.
Benny listened. '.. . She was just brilliant. I don't think I'm
just
some mooning bloody sheep. She was incredible. It wasn't just that she stayed with the wounded because she loved one boy. You see, Mr.
Stein, Dorrie could have carried out one boy. She was a tough little
thing, made of barbed wire. She could have put one boy on her
shoulder
and she would have stood a good to middle chance of hiking him into
the
woods and finding a hole in their lines, but that would have been
walking out on the other boys. She was just brilliant because she
gave
all of them her courage. I was dragged to that cliff, dragged over
that cliff ... I looked him in the face, I looked into the face of
the
man who used a knife on her, the man who shot her. It was like she'd
given me the courage, like she was with me, to look into his face
and
not be afraid ... I don't suppose that makes much sense, Mr. Stein."
Benny said, "I was going to chuck you out." "Because the shit's in the
253
fan, because they'll be waiting at the crossing point .. . ?"
"Because
I'm not supposed to get involved." "I reckon if I laid up for a couple of days, rested, then I reckon I could swim the river .. ." "Like hell
you could," Benny snapped, short. "There's a rendezvous tomorrow night, where there's going to be a boat, but I'm off line for the
pick-up, I don't have a map for the location, but I reckon I could
swim
the river .. ." He hadn't used his pencil torch from the dashboard, not since right at the beginning. From what Benny had seen, when
he'd
used the torch, the guy wouldn't make it to halfway, not against the
current of the Kupa river. The rest of the drivers would kill him
if
they knew. "You won't be swimming. You'll be staying bloody put ..
.
we'll see what's there, at the crossing point .. ." It was so slow for
Milan to make the radio link with Glina militia. The man who knew
the
radio was away back at the greenhouse in Dragon's garden, and the
procedure for transmission was written up in scrawl on the wall above
the set. And an imbecile at the other end when he had made the
contact. '.. . And it's a spy you lost? In Salika village, you
lost
a spy? What would a spy want with Salika village? A foreign spy
.. .
?" A bored man, sitting the night watch on the radio in the Glina
barracks, nursing a bottle, and at last there was amusement for him.
"A foreign spy has come to Salika village, that centre of military
secrecy? Should they know in Belgrade that a foreign spy chose to
visit Salika village .. . ?"
Losing the minutes. Could not tell a bored man sitting the night
watch
on the radio at Glina barracks about a grave, about an investigator
with evidence, about a young woman who had not shown fear.
Milan shouted, "If the crossing point is not closed, if the convoy
is
not searched, I will come for you, my friend, and I will flay the
skin
off your face .. ."
When the alarm clamoured for the Close Support platoon, Ham was on
254
his
bed in the dormitory quarters, and reading his best magazine. His
mother sent it him, not often because most times the old cow forgot.
Nagorno Karabakh, wherever the fuck it was, seemed the right place,
and
there were guys already there, but then there was also an article
with
photographs of guys who had made it down to Tbilisi, wherever the
fuck
that was .. . The alarm shifted him.
He was snatching webbing kit, going for the Dragunov marksman's rifle
that was his personal weapon when Close Support platoon was on
'immediate', buttoning the flies on his camouflage trousers, running
for the stairs of the old police station.
And no fucker in the lit yard taking the trouble to explain to him
why
the alarm had gone. He heard, among the bloody yelling, there was
heavy radio traffic on the other side, there was a guy running on
the
other side, there was some sort of flap at the crossing point,
something about a bloody convoy ... It was all to do with their radio
traffic, on the other side.
He was in the lead jeep going down sharp to Turanj. He thought about
Penn, crazy guy.
They were slowing.
The convoy manager was saying, distorted, in the cab, "I'm hooked
into
their radio. There's a problem, but I can't make sense of what it
is,
probably just that we're so delayed .. . They're saying they need
to
search the lorries. You know the form, guys, that we are not supposed
to allow UN vehicles to be searched .. ."
He lay behind Benny Stein's seat and the passenger seat. He had a
rug
that covered some of his body. He heard the sharp whistle of Benny
Stein's breath and heard him mutter an obscenity. Going down through
the gears, crawling. The voice was saying, "What I'm thinking, guys, is that the laws of the game might just get bent a bit. If the choice is between bending or sitting here for the rest of the night high
255
on
principle, and since we've not any loose women from Knin on board
.. .
OK, guys?" Penn said, "I'll do a runner, which door?" The answer was
very quiet, so calm. "What I'm seeing on my side is a big jerk with an
ugly machine gun. And on the other side, three jerks with rifles,
and
what I'm seeing further up front doesn't get better." Penn said,
"I'm
sorry, I mean that." "Bit late, my old cocker .. . They've stopped ahead. We're all closing up." So helpless. It had all been for
nothing. For nothing he had found the Headmaster praying in a grave.
They were inching forward. For nothing he had found Katica Dubelj,
eyewitness. He waited for the grinding of the brakes. For nothing
he
had found Milan Stankovic, war criminal. "What are you going to do?"
"They're opening up the cabs ahead, my top cat's letting them in.
You
know what Oscar Wilde said? He said, "In matters of grave
importance,
style, not sincerity, is the vital thing." Give it a go." Penn was looking into Benny Stein's face, and it was calm as if he was taking
the kids out for a Sunday afternoon ride. Going very slow, and
swinging the big wheel so that the lorry went out of the line that
was
pulling up, then straightening the wheel. Penn saw the hands go to
the
gear lever, then to the ignition, and the engine slurped to quiet.
A
silence around Penn, and the gentle rocking of the cab going forward.
The pace of the lorry quickened. Benny Stein was winding down his
door
window. "Time to see if old Oscar had it right .. ." They were rolling faster. Penn heard the first yell, and Benny Stein had his
head out of his door window and was howling it into the night. The
brakes .. . The brakes gone .. . No control because the goddamn brakes
had gone. Going down the incline through Turanj. Penn saw the white
sides of the freight lorries slipping by, quicker. All the time
Benny
Stein was yelling that his brakes had gone, and waving every miserable
mother out of the road. Going by the Land-Rover, and Benny Stein
was
turning, side of his mouth, muttering about "Shit or bust', saying
they'd shoot or they'd laugh. They hit the checkpoint. The cab of
256
the
lorry clipped the corner of the sandbag wall. He had his head down
and
he had his hands over his head, and he would have said, and reckoned
he'd not lied, that Benny Stein had twisted the wheel the necessary
fraction to take out the corner of the sandbags. The cab lurched,
and
Penn bounced, and he thought there was a popping of tyres, as if there
had been a chain with spikes on the road. They were waiting for the
shooting, or the laughing. They went clean through the UN barrier,
broke the pole across the road. And the cab pitched worse, and he
felt
the tyres shredding, and all the time Benny Stein was yelling himself
hoarse that the brakes had gone. The lorry jerked and he saw the
wall
loom against the cab's passenger side window, and that slowed it,
and
Penn saw Benny Stein's hand furtively slip to the brake handle, and
he
saw his foot pump the brake pedal, but gently so that the ripped tyres
did not scream. They came to rest. Penn croaked, "That, Mr.
Stein,
was style .. ." "Get out. You told a good story." "I said that I was