Read A Line in the Sand Online
Authors: Gerald Seymour
blackberry
pie to him.
He said his name was Blackmore. There were half-emptied packing
cases
in the hall behind him. He told her no more about himself other than name.
his
A woman came down the stairs, picked her way between the
rolled carpets and the boxes, but the man did not introduce her and 290
rdly held the pie he had been given.
awkwa
attered.. . Her name, where she lived, the societies and
Peggy ch
groups in the village... The woman had a sallow skin, a foreigner, from the Mediterranean.. . The bus timetable, the early
perhaps
the village, the walks,
closing day in the town, the best builder in
the milk delivery... Neither the man nor the woman responded... The ut of the village, the pub, the hall, the shop, the green -and
lay-o
they should not go near the green because of the disgraceful attitude le who lived there, endangered the whole community,
of the peop
t for
protected by guns, showed no respec
the safety of the village...
e man shrugged limply as if to indicate that he had work to be
Th
d passed the pie to the woman behind him.
getting on with, an
ds to take it, Peggy saw, very clearly
When she reached out her han
at
th
the woman had no nails on the tips of her fingers and thumbs. Peggy's inted sharp red to match her lipstick, but where the
nails were pa
dried, wrinkled skin.
woman's nails should have been there was only
and unlikely to
She came away feeling that they were uninteresting
contribute to the life pulse of the village, and that her pie was
wasted on them.
"Show me."
She had waited all through the night in the car, huddled in the
seat.
passenger
As she had waited, her mind had been churned with
the
torment of her split identity. The quiet had been broken by the owls, and once a fox shadow had passed close. She had sat, hunched, cold, and waited. She remembered Yusuf's kindness, and the calmness of
the
teaching of Sheik Amir Muhammad, and the strength given her by the lim faith, and she thought of the confidence
conversion to the Mus
that
the name Farida Yasmin had brought to her. It was as if
the old world,
the existence of Gladys Eva Jones, demeaned and diminished her.
Again
and again, alone, she murmured the name that had given her strength and
confidence. Without it, she was base and trivial. The old world
was
lustful and cheap, the new world proud and worthwhile.
291
"Show the wound to me."
Through the night she had listened for the crack of distant gunfire and
heard only the owls.
she had
e hours had slipped away, so her anxiety for him had increased,
As th
nagging and worrying at her, until she could no longer bear the
ss of the vigil. She had felt an increasing sense of
loneline
disaster
.
breaking
In the dawn light she had left the car and tried to trace
the route he had taken her the day before. In Fen Covert,
she'd avoided fallen dead branches, stepped lightly on the leaves
and
not scuffed them, kept wide from the path, as he'd shown her, and
she
had heard the baying of big dogs. Then she had walked more quickly and
her anxiety for him had been at fever point. Across the marshes,
d Covert, she had been able to see right to the tower of
beyond Ol
the
age church. The early sun gleamed on the river that ran from
vill
the
marshes, and by the river were the dogs.
Behind the dogs, controlling them, were the handlers. Behind the
, guarding them, were the marksmen with the guns on which
handlers
the
ng telescopic sights were mounted.
bulgi
They hunted for him. They
had
lled him, and the knowledge of his survival brought pricking
not ki
tears of happiness to Farida Yasmin's cheeks.
"You don't have to be shy but you have to show me where you are hurt so
I can help."
un had risen and the clouds
While the s
had gathered off the sea and
chased it, the dogs had tracked back on the riverbank, then searched from it, and she'd known they'd lost the scent.
away
When the cloud
had crossed the sun, and the greyness had dulled the marsh reeds,
she
had seen the handlers call off the dogs. But she had taken note of he marksmen settled, where they watched from after the dogs
where t
had
292
gone. She had kept in the trees. She had gone into the woodland
of
Fen Hill.
Because of what she had endured, the anxiety, her anger snapped.
"Fine, so you won't show me where, so you don't want help well, get up,
keep walking, turn your back on it, go home. Don't think about me, what I've done."
If it had not been for the bird Farida Yasmin would not have found him.
It had lifted off, flapped away, cried, then circled the bramble clump into which he'd crawled. He had seemed to be sleeping, which had
amazed her because his face was furrowed in pain. She had wriggled on
her stomach into the back of the thicket and been within arm's reach of
him when he had woken, jerked up, slashed his face on the thorn barbs, gasped, grabbed at her, recognized her and then his eyes had closed, his body had arched as if the pain ran rivers in him. He had told her
of his failure, of the car, the lost rifle. The words had been
whispered and his head stayed down.
She whipped him with her hissed words, "Because of you what I've done for you I've police waiting for me. I'm on the line for you. Are you
staying or are you going? Are you going to let me treat your wound or
not?"
The rent was at the side of his fatigue trousers. The car must have caught his hip and upper thigh, ripping the seam of his trousers at the
pocket. She had seen the long distance he had come, from where the that
dogs had lost his scent to Fen Hill. He could not have come
far
with a broken femur or fractured pelvis.
Farida Yasmin thought the failure would have hurt him the worst.
Her hands trembled as she reached for his belt, unfastened it and
dragged down the zip. It was hard to pull down.
s were
The trouser
sodden wet. She crouched low above him, under the roof of bramble 293
and
thorn, then pushed her arm under the small of his back and lurched his
buttocks clear of the ground. He didn't fight her as she dragged
the
trousers down towards his knees.
She saw the mottled purple and yellow bruising.
She saw the hair at the pit of his stomach, the limit of the bruising, and the small contracted penis. He stared up at her.
Her fingers, so gently, touched the bruise and she felt him wince.
She
tried to soothe his pain. She told him of the dogs and where the
marksmen were. She told him what she would do and how she would help him. Her fingers played on the bruising and caught the hairs and
she
saw him stiffen. It was where her fingers had never been before.
His
breathing came more slowly, as if the pain lightened. It was what the
girls had talked about in the schoolyard, and in the coffee shop at the
university, and in the canteen at work, and then she, the virgin,
had
thought their talk disgusting. Her fingers caressed the bruising
as
his fingers had stroked the neck of the bird.
The voices were soft, atmospheric, metallic, coming over the monitor.
t know whether she can take it, not much more."
"I don'
ssure you, Mr.
"I have to a
Perry, that your security is constantly
under review."
d known, realized, what I said to you and that jerk who came
"If I'
with
you, what it meant, Geoff what it would do to me, and, more important, do to her..."
what it would
re now two more ARVs sorry, that's armed-response vehicles
"There a
in
the village, four in total, and eight highly trained men. That's
in
294
on to Mr.
additi
Davies and Mr. Blake, and the men in the shed. You
should see it, Mr. Perry, as a ring of steel dedicated to you and your
family's safety."
In the hut, the speaker was turned down low. Paget was eating
, Rankin watched the screen and flicked between the image
sandwiches
of
garden and the front door, while they listened to the two
the rear
men
talk.
dy changed your tune. Why?"
"You've bloo
"There are questions I cannot answer."
"That's convenient."
"You have to believe, Mr. Perry, that everything that should be done ing done. Look, take last night, a professional and expert
is be
defence-' "Are you serious? It was fucking chaos."
After the han dover and the debrief, Joe Paget and Dave Rankin had been
up into the small hours going through, in exact and minute detail, moment of the alert.
every
Had the camera given them a target? Why
was the next garden not covered by the beams? Why had they not moved frame from the side of the house?
the cold
They had been close to,
bloody disaster, Rankin had said, maybe a few seconds off it, and
Paget
hadn't disagreed.
"That's not the way Mr. Davies reported it."
"What the hell do you expect him to say?
up.
Grow
Get real! She
n't take the punishment, not much longer."
ca
e've made our commitment, Mr. Perry."
"W
I told you and that jerk we were staying, it was because I
"When
g friends. That's the worst."
believed we were amon
"Don't you read newspapers? It's how people behave when they're afraid
each week it's in your newspapers. A family have a child recovered from
itis
mening
and they're about to fly back from a sunshine holiday,
295
but the other passengers won't travel with them for fear of infection.
They're bumped off the flight, no charity. How many examples do you want? It doesn't matter where
you are. An American Navy ship shoots
down an Iranian passenger aircraft, and it's a mistake, but the
r driven by the
Iranians don't accept apologies and bomb the ca
captain's wife on some smart street in San Diego. The detonator was incorrectly wired. She lives, but she's chucked out of her job,
she's
a pariah and might endanger others. I can reel them off. It's a
herd
mentality. The fear makes them vicious, dictates they turn on the victim. It's human nature, Mr. Perry..."
There was the squeak of the planks at the door of the hut. Rankin swung, Paget gulped on the last of his sandwich. Meryl Perry was
in
the doorway.
On the speaker was Markham's metallic voice. '... I suppose it's
so
because
few people, these days, ever get really tested that they're
so scared of the unpredictable."
Her tone was dead, flat, like her eyes and the pallor of her cheeks.
"I hope I'm not disturbing you, I came for Stephen's tractor."
Paget remembered her screams over the detective's radio, and Rankin had
heard them as he had tried to get round the house and fouled up in the
cold frame. Paget scrambled to kill the speaker. Rankin groped
under
his chair and found the boy's tractor.
"Do you always listen to us? Is everything we say, Frank and I, listened to?"
rteen.
oment, Meryl hated them.
At that m
"Do you hear everything? What I say to Frank, what he says to me, are
you listening? Is that how you spend your days?"
She could hear the rising pitch of her own voice. Paget wiped old 296
umbs from his mouth and looked away from her.
cr
Rankin passed her
Stephen's tractor. She snatched it.
r, they were huge, dark
To he
apes
sh
in the baggy boiler suits with the big vests over their chests.
r than Frank, and they seemed not to
They were older than her, olde
re.
ca
Standing at the door before they'd known she was there, she'd
to
seen one of them grin at the smooth reassurance being dished out
ank.
Fr
ou get a big laugh out of what we say. Do you snigger when you
"Y
hear
bed? Not much noise when we're in bed, is there?"
us in
trol was gone. Meryl was over the edge. They would think
Her con
her
upid, or just a woman. They would wonder why she
hysterical, st
didn't
st shut up, start the ironing, do the dusting, make the beds.
ju
She
rself.
squeezed the tractor in her hand, tighter, hurting he
Nobody
ld her anything. The wheels fell off the tractor. When any of
to
them
lked
ta
to Frank, and she came close, they stopped, and Frank cut short