Authors: Tony Park
âThat's a forward question.'
âI'm a forward man where a pretty girl's involved.'
Sonja glanced at Bruce, weaving his way towards them. âHe's nothing. I was hitchhiking. He picked me up and offered me a lift.'
âSure, and that's a bit dangerous, isn't it? Going into a pub with a stranger who's just picked you up?'
Sonja stirred her drink with her finger, making the ice cubes rattle on the glass, then licked her fingertip. âNothing wrong with a little danger now and again, is there?'
âSorry?' she said, aware the older man sitting by the camp fire had said something else. A hippo grunted out in the Chobe River.
âI said I'm Chipchase, Sydney Chipchase. You looked like you were in another world for a few seconds there, staring into yer tea. Were you?'
âInteresting name,' Sonja said, attempting to change the subject.
âMy father was a sailor in the Royal Navy. Served in the Pacific and liked Sydney when he stopped there on leave.'
âI meant Chipchase.'
He smiled and shrugged, as though he'd heard it all before. âYou were distracted. What's on your mind? Zimbabwe â or maybe Northern Ireland?'
âYou seem to know all about me, Sydney. Whatever you heard about me, in Ulster, was true, and you likely haven't heard the half of what went wrong.' She clasped the tin mug tight, feeling the burn. She didn't want to be reminded of the pain, nor of Daniel Byrne. âWhat are you going to do? Turn me into the police?'
Chipchase shook his head. âI don't live in the past any more. I left the army, hit the bottle for a while longer, then found sobriety and the Lord, around about the same time. I'm a travelling missionary here in Africa, distributing Bibles and religious text books to remote schools and missions. I don't condone the path you seem to be on, but I won't surrender you to the squalor of an African jail. You'll have to find the right path for you, but you'll be safer for a wee while if you let me take care of that leg of yours.'
She drained her tea. âDon't think I'm not grateful. If the police had found me before you I'd be in trouble.'
âLike as not you'd be dead of blood loss.'
She shrugged. âI had a sat phone with me.'
Chipchase nodded. âThere's a storage locker under the bed in the camper. I put all your kit there. Your rifle and pistol are in there. Best leave them for the moment if you don't want to attract undue attention around the camp ground.'
Sonja set the empty mug down on his fold-out table and climbed gingerly back into the Land Cruiser. She opened the locker and found her bag and vest. She checked the M4 â there were still rounds in the magazine â and slipped her nine mil into the waistband of her pants, which Chipchase had turned into shorts to get to the bullet wound in her leg. The phone's casing was cracked and the battery cover had come loose. There were wires hanging out of it. When she went outside she held it up to the Irishman.
He raised his palms. âWasn't me. Here,' he said reaching into his shirt pocket, âyou can use my mobile phone. Dial overseas if you wish.'
âThanks.' She left the camp site with a nod to his generosity and wandered down to the water's edge, by the thatch-roofed Sedudu Bar. She stopped by a sign that said
Beware of crocodiles
and dialled a mobile phone number in the UK.
âHello?'
âEmma?'
âOh. It's you,' her daughter said.
âHello, my girl. It's nice to hear your voice.' And it was, after what she'd been through in Zimbabwe. Sonja did what she did for Emma â to ensure her only child wanted for nothing in life. She knew she'd missed too much of Emma's life, as a trade-off, but at least Emma had, until recently, been safe and happy in the
care of her grandmother when Sonja had been away. There were things Sonja liked â loved â about her work, but she tried hard not to dwell on them.
âWhatever.'
Sonja drew a breath and tried to remain positive. âHow's school?'
âHow do you think? I hate it and can't wait for it to be over. Situation normal, all fucked-up. SNAFU. Isn't that what you say in the army?'
âNot my army.' Sonja knew Emma was simply trying to provoke a reaction with her swearing. âUniversity will be much more fun and it's just a few short months away. You're too clever for your teachers. How are you going with your pre-law subjects?' Sonja prayed the pause on the end of the line meant Emma was continuing to do well, and that she might, reluctantly, show some pride in her academic achievements. She loved that her daughter was so bright â gifted according to her teachers â and took some solace from the fact that the things she did to earn a living would pay for Emma to become a lawyer. Sonja told herself the disciplinary incidents at school were a natural part of Emma's intellect and strong personality â a tendency to challenge convention, rather than warning signs of delinquency. She was a teenager. She'd get over it.
âWe were studying human rights law. We discussed Iraq and Afghanistan and torture ⦠rendition, that kind of stuff. It made me ashamed, like, to think you'd been part of it.'
Sonja gritted her teeth. âHow's your friend ⦠Gemma, isn't it? She seemed nice when I met her at the last parents' day.'
âIt's Jemima. And she's a slag. I hate her. Look, Mum, don't pretend like you know or even care about my friends. You don't. You're not part of my life any more.'
Sonja put her fingers against her temple. She'd nearly been
killed and, while she wasn't looking for sympathy from her daughter, she found it frustrating that she couldn't even tell her what she'd been up to â even if she could, Emma would disapprove. She hated, too, the way Emma used words such as âlike' to dumb herself down.
âWhere are you anyway?' Emma yawned.
âBotswana.'
âAll right for some. It's fucking dire here. Cold and raining.'
Sonja saw the opening. Perhaps she could console herself with some small talk about the weather. âIt's lovely here. The sky's clear and it's a beautiful warm day. Perhaps one day â¦'
âI have to go. Perhaps one day you'll give up your bloody bodyguarding or whatever it is you do when you're away and, like, really take an interest in my life for a change. At least Gran used to know who my friends were, but then again she did come and visit me on weekends in this jail.'
âEmma, I â¦'
âOr maybe it'll be just like Gran all over again. I might die and you might miss the funeral. Wouldn't that be sad?'
âEmma â¦'
The line went dead.
Sonja stared out over the wide expanse of the Chobe River, which glittered blindingly in the midday sun. It was the reflection, she told herself, and the fact that she had been cooped up inside the stifling darkness of the campervan for so long, that made her screw up her eyes and push her palm against each of them, in turn.
Sam felt toes sliding up the inside of his right calf, and he was fairly sure they weren't Stirling's. Two men had tried to hit on him at parties since he'd become a household name in the States, but mostly it was women, an uncomfortable number of whom, like Tracey Hawthorne, were already in relationships.
He coughed, hoping Tracey would take the hint and ease off. Instead, he felt her toenail trace a path to his knee and along his thigh. She had long legs, that Tracey, as he'd seen in the pool.
Sam had known from a previous dip that the plunge pool was over-chlorinated, so when he dived in he had kept his eyes shut and his hands out, so he could feel for the wall. Tracey had slid into the water and positioned herself so that he swam into her. His palm had connected with her hipbone and she had fallen backwards in the water as he'd surfaced.
âYou must think me a pushover, Sam,' she'd giggled.
Stirling and Sam were seated diagonally opposite each other, in the centre of the long dining table, with other guests and the members of the film crew on either side of them. Every now and then Stirling would lean over to Tracey, who was seated next to him, directly opposite Sam, and draw her into his conversation. At the precise moment that Tracey's dainty, manicured toes found Sam's crotch, Stirling laid a proprietary hand on her shoulder as he recounted a story about her and a python. Sam grimaced and Tracey winked as Stirling carried on talking.
Shit, Sam thought. A beautiful, sexy young woman was coming
on to him and he knew he couldn't do anything about it. Sam knew from past experience that any of the dozen retirees and well-heeled guests from New York, Texas, Florida and London around the table wouldn't have a second thought about emailing a gossip magazine or Fleet Street if they caught a whiff of a celebrity involved in a scandal abroad.
His on-again, off-again relationship with Rebecca Lloyd, a Hollywood starlet who presented part-time on Wildlife World, had come to an end when footage of her kissing a Baldwin on a beach in Bermuda had aired on
ET
. In truth, the relationship was dead by then as for the third time, despite her protestations that she had given up, Sam had found a line of white powder in their hotel room in Denver. He'd offered to help her stay off drugs, but she'd told him she didn't need him. Apparently it was the truth.
But a Baldwin? That still hurt.
âCheryl-Ann,' Stirling said, âhave you thought about my offer to meet with the Delta Defence Committee when they get here? We've hired a public relations guy from Jo'burg. He could be good material for an interview about the negative effects of the dam.'
Cheryl-Ann dabbed her mouth with a serviette. âI don't think a PR flak is going to be your best spokesman, and in any case it's really not the sort of thing we could use in our program ⦠but I'll think about it.'
Stirling seemed about to try his pitch again, but one of the African safari guides came to the table and whispered something in his ear. Stirling excused himself from the table and pushed back his chair. âI just have to check the generator, ladies and gents. Back soon.' He walked into the night, followed by the guide.
âWe've got an early start tomorrow, don't we, Ray?' Sam said.
The cameraman had been focusing intently on the words and the breasts of a divorcee from Houston at the far end of the table.
âWe do? I mean, sure, we do, but, hey Sam, it's still early yet.'
âWell, I just don't want you getting sick in the helicopter like last time, is all,' Sam said.
Ray sighed. âYou go, if you like.'
âOh, Sam, please stay and tell us another story about trapping coyotes,' said the divorcee. Perhaps, Sam wondered, she wanted to be freed from Ray's halitosis as much as he did Tracey's roaming foot.
âYou need someone to escort you back to your tent, in case of dangerous animals,' Tracey said across the table.
âThat's right,' Sam said, relieved to feel Tracey's foot slip out of his lap. âLet's go, Ray.'
âBut â¦'
âNo, it's fine, Ray,' Tracey said, smiling brightly. âYou stay here and finish your dessert ⦠have an Amarula. I'll be happy to show Sam back to his tent.'
Sam looked over his shoulder and out into the gloom behind the deck, but there was no sign of Stirling, who was presumably still off checking the generator.
Tracey grabbed the torch, with its heavy rechargeable battery slung underneath. She switched it on and shone it out into the darkness. She wasn't looking for lions or leopards, but for Stirling. There was still no sign of him. The adrenaline and desire was burning her from the inside out.
âOK, Sam?'
She saw the reluctance on his face as he glanced one more time at the cameraman. Sleazy Ray with his bad breath who had already hit on Tracey, suggesting she come back to his tent for champagne the night before, was busy staring at the American woman's cleavage.
She wondered if Sam was shy, or if he was genuinely principled
and avoiding her because he thought she belonged to Stirling. Tracey liked Stirling â loved him maybe â but she wasn't owned by any man. Whether bashful or high-minded, the more Sam tried to resist her, the more his unwillingness excited her. Both Stirling and Sam were handsome men, but the TV star had something over the safari guide. Both were big men in their fields â alpha males â but Sam's territory was the whole world. Women adored him and men wanted to be him. Tracey just wanted him. She hoped to god he wasn't gay, although he was pretty enough.
âThis way,' she said. âCome on,' she added in a whisper once they were away from the riverside deck, âI won't bite. Not unless you want me too, of course.'
âTracey â¦'
âShush.'
âNo, really, I just want toâ'
âNo, shut up, Sam. For real. I heard something out there.' She shone the powerful beam into the bush, away from the river. âThere, see?'
He had been behind her and as he moved alongside and crouched a little he was within range of her, at last. âThere â¦'
âI don't see a thing.'
She held the torch out with one hand and rested a hand on his shoulder, as if guiding his gaze to the point she was looking at. As he lowered his head she looked into his gorgeous brown eyes and, as he stared intently at nothing at all she slid the pointed tip of her tongue into his ear.
âTracey!'
âWhat's wrong? Are you gay, Sam?'
âNo, I am not gay. Was there anything dangerous out there, really?'
She smiled, but left her hand on his shoulder. âThere's nothing out here except me, Sam, and I am danger with a capital D.'
âThat you are.' He brushed her hand off his shoulder, but she moved in for the kill, pressing her body against his. Despite his protests she felt the bulge of his erection against her belly. She dropped her hand and traced it through his khakis.
âTracey â¦'
She heard the waver in his voice. It was what she was waiting for. Men. They were all the same. Bad. Even the good ones. It was what she loved most about them. She switched the torch off and led him behind the thick girth of a massive mopane tree.