Read THE HEART OF DANGER Online
Authors: Gerald Seymour
Tags: #War Crimes; thriller; mass grave; Library; Kupa; Croatia; Mowatt; Penn; Dorrie;
take
her place as the village's queen. They would turn back when they
reached the perimeter line of their vicious and ignorant world ..
. And
her village would become an armed camp, isolated, guarded close.
The dog had the scent and moved easily ahead of her, loping on the
trail on which her man had been taken.
Marty was told it by an Austrian of UNCIVPOL, told that the balloon
was
up in Sector North. He was a good friend of the Austrian policeman
because they had shared a house, when the snow had fallen in January
on
Bosnia, away down east in Srebrenica, and it had been goddamn cold
because the house had only half a roof, a place where men became good
friends. The Austrian policeman had been coming off duty, he had
a new
posting at the UNCIVPOL desk in the operations room, and he had told
Marty that all hell was loose across in Sector North, and that the
crossing points were closed at Turanj and at Sisak, that a bigshot
guy
from a village in Glina Municipality had been kidnapped, that it was
some crazy stuff about a war crimes investigator, and more crazy that
there was the German woman from the UNHCR Transit Centre at Karlovac
in
tow. The Austrian policeman had told him all of this and his eyes
had
been going past where Marty stood in the doorway of the converted
freight container, hooked on the shining steel ring set in the floor
of
the container, and the chain that was padlocked to it, and the
351
collapsible bed that was made up in the far corner behind Marty with
the sleeping bag laid on it and the folded blanket and the handcuffs.
And Marty had told him, dead serious, that because he was homesick
he'd
gotten a big brute of a bear, a proper grizzly, being crated in from
Anchorage, and he had gotten rid of the Austrian policeman as fast
as
was half decent. He drove into central Zagreb.
Marty thought of the photographs on the walls of the freight
container,
pictures of the weak and the outnumbered and the defenceless who had
been caught behind the lines.
He parked among the new black BMWs in their sleek rows, the wheels
of
the fat cat bastards who were doing fine.
He went up to her room.
Marty Jones told Mary Braddock that Penn was coming with his prisoner
towards the river ... he looked for her excitement .. . that Penn
had
taken Milan Stankovic away from the village of Salika ... he watched
for her triumph .. . that a huge manhunt was in progress in Sector
North between the village of Salika and the Kupa river ... he expected
to see her flinch .. . that the whole of the goddamn place beyond
the
cease-fire line was alive, roused ... he expected to see her wilt.
"I want to look into his face. I want him to know that he murdered my
daughter. I want to be there when he's brought across."
"That's positive thinking, ma'am, and positive thinking is always
good.
Could just be premature thinking. Do you have any appreciation of
the
odds against .. . ?"
"Penn'll bring him across the river, I don't doubt it."
He felt almost an anger. She was sitting in an armchair and her legs,
narrow and fine, were crossed in elegance, and Ulrike Schmidt, the
best
woman he'd known, was hacking through a bucket of hell with Penn and
352
the prisoner, and the jaws of the goddamn trap were closing tight,
as
they had closed on those who were photographed on the walls of his
converted freight container. One thing to goddamn talk about it,
one
thing to make the great goddamn plan, quite another to ... "Ma'am,
it's
not a picnic."
"He didn't have to go ... He never met my daughter, of course not,
but
he talked some unpleasant rubbish about loving her. I find that
repulsive. I don't need lectures in motherhood. But I have the
right
to demand the punishment of my daughter's killer ... He took our
money."
It was like a dismissal. He said he would go ring the mercenary down
in Karlovac.
It was a recklessness that pushed Penn forward. Thought through,
well
considered, he would have made the decision to lie up through that
long
day, and then after the fall of dusk complete the last charge for
the
river bank. He did not ask her for her opinion, and she did not
challenge his decision. He was drawn towards the river bank, goaded
towards it. So tired, and wanting only to be there, where he could
gaze out across the slow depth of the water, he was driven towards
it,
towards the danger of the last barrier .. . The sun was up above them
and slanted down diffused by the upper branches .. . The danger would
be at the last obstacle and that was where they would set their men,
where they would run their tripwires, where they would make their
ambushes ... He had now used the gag cloth, wedged it between Milan
Stankovic's teeth and knotted the ends tight against the shaggy
long-grown hair at the back of his neck. Milan Stankovic accepted
the
gag, and at the last stop of two minutes Penn had thought he had seen
the first slipping of his arrogance, the first breaking of the
conceit,
as if fear had begun to gnaw at the man, and Penn heard the breaking
of
a branch behind him. They were away from the path. They were far
into
353
the cover of the trees, and Ulrike had heard what he had heard and
swung on her hips to look into his face. They were frozen. The
movement of the forest woodland was around them, and both were
straining to hear the sound again of the breaking of a branch, and
Penn
held the knife hard against Milan Stankovic's throat. She broke the
moment of stillness. She moved on. He went after her, pushing the
man
forward, and he did not know if they were followed ... He would not
tell her that it was all ahead of them, that the worst was in front
of
them. The day supervisor scowled down at him. "Oh, you're so kind, thank you so much .. . and another thing, I'd be very grateful if
you
could get me a few guidebooks, former Yugoslavia .. ." God, what
a
miserable woman. '.. . Yes, I'm very nearly through .. . Those
books
that get to the second-hand shops, full of photographs, I'd
appreciate
it so much." Henry Carter smiled his sweetest. She walked stiffly away, and he regretted that he had insufficient courage to call after
her and request a beaker of coffee .. . If she brought him coffee
she
would probably accompany the visit with a further dose of that
obnoxious sickly air freshener .. . As a major favour, she had brought
him a set of photocopied newspaper clippings. He was, indeed, nearly
through. Perhaps he was nit-picking, perhaps he was far beyond his
brief, but he did not care. A job worth doing, that sort of thing.
He
was sifting the clippings, believing they had a place in the file
even
though they were dated months after the events that consumed him.
The
Secretary General of the United Nations, should know what he was
talking about, guaranteeing his organization's support for the
international war crimes tribunal: We will put on trial those who
have
contributed to civilian suffering and it will not be forgiven .. .
will
deal not only with the people accused of committing the crimes, but
also those who inspired the human rights violations .. . We have to
denounce it ... civilians are being bombed, starved and mistreated
and
children are targeted by killers in the shadows. Good solid stuff,
and
354
a pity that no one had bothered to tell the bureaucrats in their
offices above Library, and not told the Foreign and Commonwealth
Office, and not told UNPROFOR. Worth entering in the file because
Penn, that ordinary and decent man, and maybe a bit of a clairvoyant
and most certainly blessed with common sense, would not have believed
a
word of it. He grasped at another clipping and wrote a brief summary
to go into the file with the clipping, and hoped quite fervently that,
one fine day, the file would be examined by a mandarin or an
apparatchik with enough honesty to feel humility .. . some chance.
FRITS KALSHOVEN: Dutch academic, had been appointed to job of Chief
Prosecutor, but resigned. Cited 'refusal of Great Britain and
France
and Germany and Italy to co-operate'. Noted positive attitude of
United States of America, Canada and Norway. Also blamed
'obstruction'
of sister UN agencies.
Ah, getting better .. . Gratifying to read it. Another clipping,
another digest. Henry Carter squirmed, but it was necessary for the
full picture to be drawn if it were ever to be understood why Penn
had
made that desperate and poorly considered expedition behind the
lines,
into the heart of danger. Leave it to those bastards to sort out
and a
man may as well wait for his Bath chair .. . More brave talk.
A new PROSECUTOR named: Ramon Escovar-Salom (Venezuelan
attorney-general). Total budget of $30 million. Eleven judges
appointed (nice work if you can get it!), at salary of $150,000 per
annum, payable regardless of whether charges are brought.
The voice was cold behind him.
"I have your guidebooks, Mr. Carter. I have also to tell you that I
will be complaining, most forcibly, to In-House Management about the
demands you have placed upon us, and your quite disgusting lack of
personal hygiene."
Henry Carter breezed, "Not much longer, nearly finished."
Nineteen.
The man was snivelling. Penn reckoned Milan Stankovic to be in bad
355
shape and there were low grunting sounds in his throat that were
muffled by the gag. Maybe it was exhaustion, or maybe it was the
tightness of the fine rope binding his wrists. They were going
slower.
They were close now to the inner line of the forward zone. He
reckoned
the forward zone would be five miles, a mile either way, deep, and
in
the forward zone would be the maximum concentration of strong points
and minefields and tripwires and patrols, and the forward zone could
not be avoided, could not be skirted. He had shown her the way they
should move: weigh each footfall, stop and listen and go, and he
thought she had learned well. He had the knife so hard against Milan
Stankovic's beard that the man no longer seemed to doubt him, and
took
as great a care with each stride as they did. She would go forward,
she would stop, she would listen, she would flick her fingers for
him
to come with the prisoner. They would both listen for a moment, and
then she would move forward again. It was when the tears were coming
faster on Milan Stankovic's cheeks that she began, again, to
interpret
what the man said through the gag. "He is telling you about his
grandparents. His grandparents were taken out of Salika village ..
.
There was a cordon round the village, made at first light by the
Germans and by the Ustase fascists .. . Before the German troops and
the fascists moved into the village his grandparents were able to
hide
his father in the barn where they kept two cows and their cart. His
father was eleven years old .. ." Going forward again, stopping,
listening. "When the German troops and the fascists came into the
village they took all the men and women they could find, and then
the
German troops stood back .. . Many of the Ustase fascists were from
Rosenovici village, and the German troops allowed them to take charge
of the villagers from Salika. They were walked, his grandparents and
many others, to Glina town. It was said to them when they reached
Glina, without food or water, that the Serb villages provided help
and
support for the Partizans who were hidden in the Petrova Gora forest
which is near .. . They were put into the church at Glina, his
grandparents and the other people from the village and from other
villages .. . He says that many of the Ustase fascists were from
Rosenovici, and many would have known his grandparents and the other
people .. . The church was set on fire by the Ustase fascists .. ."
356
Going forward, stopping again, listening. "He says the German
troops
were from a regiment of Wurtem-berg, and they were country boys and
they would have no part of it.. He says the fascists, and there were
many from Rosenovici, had blocked the doors of the burning church
and
they fired their rifles at the windows so that there was no escape
from
the fire ... He says it is the first story that his father told him
..
." Going forward, stopping, listening again. "He says the story of