White Crocodile (2 page)

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Authors: K.T. Medina

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BOOK: White Crocodile
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3

Tess watched Johnny cross safe ground to the edge of the minefield and the start of Huan’s clearance lane. He looked relaxed, his detector swung over his shoulder, visor propped over the top of his head. She almost called out to him – told him to pull it down before he entered the field – but she thought better of it.

Her gaze moved past him to the lone tree in the middle of the mined land. Its tight mass of branches and leaves cast an almost perfectly circular disc of shade, so dark that in this bright light it looked like a stain on a projector image. Beyond the tree, Johnny’s clearance teams were still working silently, the heat staining their armpits with circles of sweat even though it was barely 8 a.m.

Tess hadn’t noticed the heat while she’d been talking with Johnny, but now, standing alone, she felt its intensity. She dragged a hand across her forehead, wiping sweat into her hair. Somewhere near her ear an insect buzzed. She swiped at it, heard its buzz fade then become louder. Then, out of the corner of her eye, she noticed a mine clearer standing looking towards her, his hand raised in dumb show. A mine had been found. Pulling her visor down over her face she walked swiftly towards him.

The explosion was just a muffled, insolent little bang.

 

*

 

Later, the only thing Tess would be able to recall clearly was the lack of noise: the absolute silence. She had been here before, in this exact moment, in this exact minefield, but with another man dying, over and over.

Each nightmare had been different.

Sometimes the colours were extraordinary, the ravaged grass in the mined paddy fields an unfeasible shade of emerald, silvers and golds ringing the burnt-out craters. At other times, the landscape had been washed to watercolour by a monsoon rain. Still others, the scene had been monochrome – one man, alone, bleeding his life into a strange lunar wasteland.

But whichever dream, there had never been this overwhelming silence. She realised, when she was able to think back, that it must only have lasted for a second or two, but in that moment – the moment after Johnny stepped on a mine – each second had stretched and gaped.

Gradually the sound of her own ragged breathing crept around the edge of her consciousness. And suddenly there was mayhem. Panicked mine clearers dropped kit and sprinted down their lanes towards safe ground, some screaming and stumbling, others running, silent, fast. The smell of TNT filled the air. Somewhere to her left she could hear someone yelling – helicopter,
helicopter
.

And there, twenty metres in front of her, lying under the lone tree in the middle of the field, was Johnny, moaning, broken. His right leg twisted and sheared off mid-calf. Shrapnel wounds ploughed his face and neck and even from this distance she could see that his skin had gone dead white. His eyes were wild with panic.

Move, Tess, move
. Her flak jacket felt heavy, constricting, a buoyancy aid filled with sand instead of air, a sensation, a memory she hadn’t had since home: a frivolous memory of dancing around the living room in Luke’s flak jacket, nothing else on but red lace knickers and a wicked smile.

Metal detector? Where was her detector?

But she couldn’t see it, and now that she was moving her blood began to pulse again, bringing with it energy – pure adrenalin. As if her legs belonged to someone else she felt herself begin to move, one foot and then the other, carrying her forward, towards the edge of the minefield, towards Johnny.

Hands grabbed at her suddenly, hauling her back.

‘No.’ A voice was screaming in her ear. ‘You no go in.’

She fought to free her arm. ‘We have to get to him now. He’ll die.’

‘No. Stop! You no go in.
No go in!

She could see Johnny panting now, gulping, as if there was not enough air in the world. His chest heaved and lifted and heaved again and then he was sobbing.

The other clearers – his clearers – were huddled in silence around the Land Cruisers. No one was moving. Why was no one doing anything? What the fuck were they waiting for?

The young man holding her arm had a face distorted with fear. She jerked back, fighting against his hands.

‘Wait? Wait for what?’

‘Lady. Listen – you listen.’

‘No! For God’s sake, we have to get to him now.’ She was yelling, she realised, her throat raw with it. She could see the other Khmer men drawing back, retreating from her, shutters closing over their faces.

‘Lady, this field. The White Crocodile came here.’ He was pointing at Johnny. ‘Twelve times. Mr Johnny thirteen—’

She wrenched her arm from his grasp, shoved past him and broke into a run, her feet slipping, heavy combat boots dragging at her legs, flak jacket pressing against her chest, making it hard to breathe. Her heart lurched as she passed the red-and-white mine tape marking the edge of the field, but she didn’t stop.

He looked calm now.
Sit back and sunbathe. Don’t get burnt.
His eyes were closed and he was silent, his breath slow and shallow.
I certainly don’t intend to.
Only the blood didn’t fit. She couldn’t believe how much there was.

It poured from the ragged remains of his calf and the shrapnel wounds on his face and neck, slick underneath him, forming a glossy halo around his head. His skin had darkened to navy blue around the edges of the wounds. A stain was spreading across the front of his shorts. The burnt, twisted case of the anti-personnel mine lay a couple of lanes away, and next to it, a boot – a splintered, sopping boot.

Forcing her mind to blankness, Tess lowered herself gently down beside him. Knelt in his blood. Smelt scorched flesh and fear. Felt the shade of the tree on her face. Gripped his hand. Gestured for the first-aiders to come forward –
It’s clear! I just ran down the fucking lane, there’s nothing else here!
It’s clear!
– listened to the slop of their boots in the mud, to the rustle of the stretcher, to the static from a radio somewhere in the distance, to Johnny saying something that didn’t come out as words, just babble, before he groaned and coughed a red mess on to his flak jacket.

She looked from his jacket to his face and saw that his eyes were open now, flickering blue lights that were brightening, dimming.

4

The complex was situated on the fringes of central Battambang, on a potholed road, tree-lined and oddly peaceful given its location. Tess drove through the gate into a dirt courtyard shaded by palms and a huge, spreading frangipani tree, and hemmed in on three sides by shabby, single-storey whitewashed buildings. Each building was rectangular, with a deep covered veranda running down the side that faced the courtyard. Their glassless windows were dark behind mosquito mesh.

Cutting the engine, she slumped forward, pressing her forehead against the steering wheel and closing her eyes. The pain in her skull, which had come on the moment she’d seen Johnny loaded into the ambulance, refused to subside. She fought a wave of nausea, panicky at the thought of seeing him again, maimed –
bitten
, she found herself thinking, remembering the boot. She had tried to maintain her professionalism at the field – ducking behind a Land Cruiser, out of sight, to throw up – but she knew that she must stink of it. Vomit, and his blood, which had dried to brown paste on her trousers.

Sitting back in the seat, she opened her eyes and took a few long breaths, sucking the hot air into her lungs. For a moment, her mind flashed back to England, where winter would now be approaching. She suddenly yearned to be cold. Flipping the rear-view mirror down, she glanced at her reflection. Drawn and pale. She shoved a strand of hair behind her ear, moistened her fingertips with her tongue and scrubbed at the tracks on her cheeks, until the lines merged into the rest of the dirt. She detested herself when she cried, couldn’t start out in Cambodia like this, whatever had happened. The woman who cried had to be left behind with the bills on the mat and the rancid milk she’d forgotten to empty from the fridge. Giving herself another quick glance in the mirror, she climbed out and slammed the door.

The three buildings facing the courtyard were nearly identical. The one to her right was in semi-darkness, wooden slat blinds pulled low over the windows. The building at the back of the courtyard was also deserted, but a couple of metal chairs rested on the veranda and two lines of faded washing hung listlessly. To her left, doors were open and she could see the outlines of people moving around inside, hear the gentle hum of conversation. Two Khmer men were sitting on a low bench in the shade of the veranda, watching her in silence. She made her way over.

One was young, in his teens she guessed, with dark curly hair. The leg-hole of his green shorts sagged around a pinched stump; his other leg was pitted with scars. The other man was old, white hair, eyes glazed by cataracts. His right arm was a knot of rough skin hooked over a wooden crutch, his left ankle a swell of distorted flesh, with no foot attached.

‘A man, a white man,
Barang
, was brought in here a few hours ago. He trod on a land mine. Could you please tell me where he was taken?’

The young man gave a shy smile, the old man nodded and grinned, but it was clear that neither had understood.


Un homme blanc
. Accident.
Il arrive ici, deux heures
. . .’ She waved her hand. ‘Ago . . . Where . . .
Où? Où est-il?

It was poor. She waited, chewing her lip. Slowly a hand was raised. The old man pointing, with his good arm, across the courtyard.


Ça c’est l’hôpital
.’

 

*

 

At the far end of the building, the corridor opened out into a small waiting area, where narrow wooden benches were set against the wall.

A dark-haired man was slumped on one of the benches, legs stretched out in front of him, head hanging, smoke curling from a cigarette in his hand. Butts made a pile on the floor by his feet. He was wearing navy-blue MCT fatigues, shorts and shirt, long-sleeved despite the heat, faded and stained with tidemarks of sweat. As she walked through the doorway, he lifted his head and she recognised him from his photograph on the team-room wall. Alexander Bauer: early thirties, dark brown hair, eyes so dark they had looked almost black. ‘Croatian,’ MacSween had told her. ‘Keeps himself to himself. But he’s good. Tough, reliable and knows his shit.’

In the photographs he had seemed a broad, tall figure. Here in the hospital waiting room, his size was magnified – the bench he was sitting on seemed absurdly small and delicate by comparison.

‘Alexander, Alex? I’m—’

‘I know who you are.’

He took a drag of his cigarette and blew the smoke slowly through his nostrils, dark eyes fixed on her face.

‘What’s happening?’ she asked. ‘Where’s Johnny?’

He answered with a tilt of his head. She glanced towards closed double doors on the far side of the waiting area, which bore a sign written in Khmer.

‘Operating theatre. No entry. Operation in progress,’ he read, slowly, sardonically.

‘How did you hear about . . . about Johnny?’

‘Radio, it is open band. We all heard.’

‘Do you know where MacSween is? Is he coming?’

‘He’s meeting local military commanders. Sweet-talking. He won’t know yet probably. When he does, he will come.’

She nodded. ‘I followed as soon as I could.’

‘You didn’t need to.’ His eyes were hard.

Tess slumped down on one of the benches; Alexander stayed where he was, smoking, looking at his hands.

The double doors to the operating theatre swung open and a small Khmer in green surgical robes slipped out. Head down, eyes fixed on the floor, he hurried up the corridor, and returned a few moments later clutching two transparent sacs of blood.

Alexander held out his arm. ‘
Ohm
.’

The orderly paused; Alex spoke quietly in Khmer. The orderly replied in monosyllables. When they had finished speaking, he whirled past Alex and into the operating theatre.

‘What did he say?’ she asked. ‘How’s Johnny? Did he tell you?’

Alex stood without answering and moved over to the window, where he raised his arms, using splayed fingers to rest against its frame, staring through the mosquito netting.

‘Is he OK? Is he alive?’

Alex nodded. ‘Alive.’

She fell silent, stared at his back, at the contours of his shoulders and arms tense against the material of his shirt. Her gaze slid past him to the outside, where a group of Khmer mine victims were walking around a brightly painted obstacle course, some stumbling at every hurdle, others coping better on their prosthetics and battered wooden crutches. Alex watched them. After a while he cast the butt of his cigarette to the ground, reached in his pocket for the packet, opened it, but didn’t take one. Instead, he turned back towards Tess, leaning against the windowsill.

‘Why are you here?’

‘What? In Cambodia? Or in this hospital?’

‘What brought you to Cambodia? Why are you doing this?’

Tess waited a beat before answering. She had never worked for a humanitarian mine-clearance charity, but had five years in the Royal Engineers under her belt, including three tours of duty clearing mines in Afghanistan. She had more than enough experience to make her valuable to a small charity like MCT – and to provide a convincing cover story for her being in Cambodia. She wasn’t about to open up to Alex, or to anyone else, about the real reason.

‘Why not? There’s nothing else I’m good at.’

He was studying her face, searching it for clues. She met his gaze unblinking. There was truth in what she’d said, and the rest was none of his business.

‘What about you? Why are you here?’

He didn’t speak for a few moments. ‘It’s a long story, and not one that is very interesting.’

‘You’ve never been injured clearing?’

He shook his head. ‘I’ve been lucky. But once, almost—’ He broke off, turning back to the window. It had begun to rain, a soft patter against the mesh. Somewhere out in the street a tinny radio blared hip hop, and a rooster squawked. ‘I got too close to someone else’s fuck-up.’

Her mouth was suddenly dry. ‘What happened?’

‘Not important.’ His fingers tapped against the windowframe. ‘You should go home.’

She shook her head. ‘I’m happy to stay.’

‘Go home. There is no need for you to be here.’

‘I want to stay, see that Johnny’s OK.’


Go
,’ Alex hissed. ‘Just go. This has
nothing
to do with you.’

 

*

 

He watched her walk across the yard to the Land Cruiser, watched the tense set of her shoulders. He had watched her come too, had felt the extraordinary pull of those green eyes, of her aloofness and her vulnerability. She was wound as tight as a spring. She was everything he’d expected.

Holding the cigarette against the back of his hand, Alex watched the dark hairs curl and melt, the flesh start to blister under the red-hot ash, felt the heat sear right through to his nerve ends. He held it there longer, closed his eyes and ate up the pain, feeling the tide of anger and guilt receding. Lifting it free, he gazed dispassionately at the other burns on his hands and the scars of knife marks threading their way up his wrists to the cuffs of his shirtsleeve, as though they were words set down in a language he’d forgotten how to read.

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