Read THE HEART OF DANGER Online
Authors: Gerald Seymour
Tags: #War Crimes; thriller; mass grave; Library; Kupa; Croatia; Mowatt; Penn; Dorrie;
rods. Her dog whined at the bank beyond the pool, and her torch
showed
the sliding marks of boots and bodies.
She had the dog on a lead and she tugged it down into the fierce flow
of the stream.
"You sort of people, you always back a loser."
The First Secretary said it drily. He drove his big Rover along the
night-empty highway from Karlovac towards Zagreb. A heavy brute to
drive, but it was weighted with armour plating on the side doors and
with bullet-proof glass for the windows, and the self-sealing tyres
that could absorb small shrapnel and low-velocity gunfire were
unresponsive.
Ham whined, "What'll happen .. . ?"
"Good to know you care."
"What'll happen to me .. . ?"
"God, just for one moment, for one fleeting second of time, I thought you were concerned with someone other than your own miserable self.
A
constant disappointment, Freefall, you have been to me. What'll
happen
to you .. . ? You'll be shovelled on, like any other bag of rubbish
that's dumped on someone else's front step. Nagorny Karabakh,
wasn't
it? Not Nagorno, best you learn how to say it first .. . They're
welcome to entertain you. Myself, if I were you, I'd choose the
Armenian side rather than the Azeris, but knowing your track record
it'll be the Azeris because they're the losers."
He prided himself that he retained some small influence in this awful
corner of Europe. He had done an insignificant deal with the Croat
military, a personal arrangement with the Intelligence Officer
involving an insubstantial roll of German banknotes and the promise
of
future contact .. . Anyone could be bought in this awful corner,
surprisingly cheaply in this case. He had won the release of Sidney
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Ernest Hamilton, code name Freefall, into his personal custody.
Just
the matter of handing in the wretch's uniform, his kit, his ID, and
the
Dragunov, and the little list of contacts for the moving on of black
market supplies of Marlboro cigarettes, and he had been given the
wretch in handcuffs.
"Will you snitch him?"
"I beg your pardon, try to speak English, please."
"Shop him, tell the Serbs where to be waiting for him, will you?"
"You should just stick to losing .. . Affairs of state aren't your
business, Freefall, never were and never will be."
"They'll make you watch. They'll put you in a chair so that you are comfortable, and they'll make you watch .. ."
It was close to dawn. They could start to see the way ahead of them
and there was no longer a need for her to shine the torch in front
of
her feet. Penn had stopped twice to rest and he had allowed Milan
Stankovic to eat a small piece of bread and he had given him a broken
piece of sharp cheese, and once he had unzipped the man's trousers
and
handled him so that he could urinate without messing his trousers.
He
felt exhaustion and Milan Stankovic also fought tiredness, but she
still had strength and she set a pace that was hard, and from the
side
of her mouth she gave, briskly and without feeling, the
interpretation
of what he said.
"When they have you sitting down and comfortable then they will put her
down onto the floor and they will strip off the trousers from her,
and
they will take the knickers from the bitch, and they will all come
to
her, all serve her. What it's like when a big boar pig comes to serve a sow, big so that it hurts. One after the other, all of them in
the
village, old men, young men, me last of all, and they will make you
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watch .. ." He did not know how she could translate and how she could not cringe. He did not know how she could not turn on him and hit
him.
Each time that they made the short stops he would listen, and
sometimes
he would hear far distant shouts, and then they would press ahead
faster. The decision that he had to make was where to lie up, whether
they should go forward as the light grew and lie up until darkness
at
the bank of the Kupa river to wait for the inflatable to come across
at
the rendezvous point, or whether they should lie up through the
daylight and then make the charge in the dusk to the river. He was
not
ready to make the decision, and he could not think clearly while the
voice of the man droned on and while she gave her clipped
interpretation. "Before they shoot her, we will play with you.
Which
do you prefer? Electricity .. . ? Fire .. . ? Knife cuts .. . ?
Electricity on your balls, is that what you would prefer? Fire on
your
feet, on your body, needles from the fire under your fingernails?
Knife
cuts at your testicles and your penis, on your fingers, at your ears,
the knife going into your eyes. The last you will know of the
electricity and the fire and the knife will be from me. You will
be
crying for me to finish it, and you will be shouting for me to go
to
her with the electricity and the fire and the knife cuts .. . But
you
can let me go free .. ." Penn understood. He remembered the
arrogant
conceit, a long time ago, of an Irishman, not a big Provo but a
second-rater from the feeble Irish National Liberation Army faction,
who had been picked up when Five, their role as watchers completed,
had
deigned to call in the Anti-terrorist Branch for the formality of
the
arrest. The Irishman, skinny little creep, had been spreadeagled
on
the carpet of his pig-sty living room, and he had been silent, but
the
arrogance and the conceit had been large on his bloody face, as if
to
say they'd crack nothing out of him. "Is that what you want? Do
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you
want to sit comfortably and watch all of the men, and me, screw the
arse off her .. . before she dies? Do you want to let me go free?
Do
you want to feel the electricity wires on you and the fire burns and
the knife cuts, they make pain but they don't make death, not till
we
are ready, do you want that? Or do you want to let me go free ..
.
?"
Ulrike spoke in his language, and his words withered.
They heard vehicles. They were straining four-wheel-drive jeeps and
they were manoeuvring in the slipping rutted mud of the loggers'
track.
They were crouched down and he held the knife so tight against the
bulged adam's apple at the bearded throat of Milan Stankovic that
the
skin was nicked and he drew blood. They were away from the track,
in
the depths of the trees, and they could see the soldiers in the jeeps,
and he could see the guns that the soldiers held. He held the knife
so
close against the throat of Milan Stankovic and the images were
splayed
in his mind, of Ulrike laid out on a floor of concrete and her legs
held open, and the electricity wires clipped to his skin .. . The
vehicles bucked on the track, and passed.
His decision was taken. They would go on until they reached the Kupa
river.
"What did you tell him?"
Ulrike said, "I told him that I wanted to hear him speak of his shame when he killed Dorrie Mowat .. ."
"What does it fucking mean, in a simpleton's terms?" He stood in front
of the wall map.
Not a military man, the Director of Civilian Affairs found the big
wall
maps, so beloved of the military, to be sanitized and cold viewing.
He
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assumed that the neat laundered officers around him, the Canadian
colonel and the Jordanian major and the Argentine captain, could make
sense of the whorls and lines. The wall map, nine feet in height
and
equally broad, covered the entire area of former Yugoslavia and was
draped with a clear plastic sheet on which had been written in china
graph crayon the disposition of UNPROFOR units.
The Jordanian major held a long pointer and identified Sector North,
and then Salika village.
The Argentine captain said, "They have a mass of radio traffic, mostly out of Glina, but hooked in to Vojnic where they have Command and
Control, and linked to Petrinja and Lasinja and Skakavac and Brezova
Glava which are close to the cease-fire demarcation line. We have
the
situation reports, from our monitoring, of their units that have been
put to state red alert along the Kupa river. We have the transcripts
of the radio transmissions made by the field troops that are deployed.
We have visual confirmation of their movement from the Dan Batt fixed
observation posts, X-ray 9 and X-ray 11 .. ." "And it means .. .
?"
The Canadian said, "It means that he's coming, coming with his
prisoner, coming to the river. It means that he's being hunted."
"What chance .. . ?" "They've lost him in the immediate vicinity of
his snatch. They reckon to block him on the river." "I said, what chance .. . ?" "If the Serbs were to know where he planned to cross the river, no chance. They do not have that information ... He has
a
slight chance." He was looking up, and the tip of the pointer was
against the bland green of the map surface, cut only by the Kupa river,
no roads. He imagined it as a morass of swamp. The Director thought he was playing God Almighty with the life of a man coming to the river
with his prisoner, and he thought that the man coming to the river
with
his prisoner was playing God Almighty with the lives of all those
within reach of the artillery and the missiles. He turned his back
on
the map, went slowly and subdued out of the operations room. He
wondered what it was like, the swamp morass to which the man was coming
with his prisoner. It was a small farm, not more than five hectares,
where Zoran Pelnak and his wife lived. The farm gave, at best, a
hard
living and it was poorer now that his two sons were taken by the army.
Before the boys had gone, one to the garrison at Osijek and one down
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in
the south at Gospic, Zoran Pelnak had had their help in the never
finished work of cleaning and deepening the drainage ditches that
cut
his land. The fields were too low set for good farming ground, too
near to the river that flooded its banks most winters, and most
winters
the farmhouse of brick and wood was set upon a small island in a
shallow lake. It was Zoran Pelnak's home, had been his father's
home,
and his grandfather's and his great-grandfather's home. His
great-grandfather and his grandfather and his father had dug the
drainage ditches and cleaned them and deepened them. There were
three
fields for the farm and in two of them he harvested a hay crop and
grazed animals, and in one of them he and his wife grew their
vegetables for their own eating and for sale in the market at
Karlovac.
He and his wife could survive the isolation of their life on the farm
that fronted the north bank of the Kupa river. Their neighbours had
long gone, left their homes and their farms and their livestock,
abandoned them. He would not leave. He would not have cared to have gone to the graves of his great-grandfather and his grandfather and
his
father, sat on his haunches beside the stones, and explained why he
was
running from the drainage ditches they had dug. He moved slowly from
the front door of the farmhouse. From the porch of the door he could
see, across the field and the bog land where the cattle could go only
in summer, the far bank of the Kupa river and the trees. He moved
slowly from the rheumatism that came from living in a place so damp,
towards the barn where his four cows were bedded, and the pigs and
the
goats, and the hens. On the far bank, behind the trees, maybe the
bastard fuck Partizans watched him, and he was too old to care if
they
saw him. Zoran Pelnak knew most of what happened, each day and each
night, on the far bank of the Kupa river. He pressed on into the
barn,
and he hoped that the soldiers would soon be down from their camp
for
their well water, because the soldiers would help him lift down the
baled hay for the animals.
It was many hours since Evica had last heard the advance behind her
of
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the search party, and their shouts.
She guessed they would have turned by now, cold from the night, down
because of their failure. She guessed they would be heading back
to
their village, arguing between themselves, going back to food and
warmth. And going back to dispute the new command of Salika, and
to
fight for control of the diesel supplies and the sacks of seed
potatoes. Two would fall; she thought Branko and Milo would fall.
One
would rise; Stevo would command the village. She thought the wife
of
Stevo the most stupid woman she knew, and the wife of Stevo would