Read THE HEART OF DANGER Online
Authors: Gerald Seymour
Tags: #War Crimes; thriller; mass grave; Library; Kupa; Croatia; Mowatt; Penn; Dorrie;
coal sacks with a thermos and a plate of sandwiches and a bucket.
"I
don't understand ..." "Never was your strong point, Freefall, understanding." Ham was given into the custody of the military
policemen and they looked at him with a savagery that stripped off
his
face the first trace of the cheeky smile. He was handcuffed to the
younger of them. He was handed the envelope of travel documents and
checked them awkwardly, one-handed. "Why did you help me, why didn't you leave me with the bastards?" "Now, don't dally, not in Budapest, 362
not in Sofia, not in Istanbul. Just get yourself straight through
to
Yerevan. Frankly, if you survive that train journey then you'll come
through any war intact, even Nagorny Karabakh's little scrap .. .
of the code, Freefall. I don't like to leave colleagues dangling,
not
in mid-stream." The announcement was made over the loudspeakers and the passengers surged to the train's doors. The cases were being
passed up, and the knotted bundles, and the cardboard boxes
reinforced
with string. The older military policeman elbowed a way through,
and
Ham was pulled forward and the First Secretary trailed him. "You
think
I let him down, Penn, you think I caved too bloody easy?" "I'm having you met off the train at Istanbul, you'll be given the ticket for
Yerevan. Armenia is the side to be on, Freefall. Keep your nose
clean
and your bottom wiped, and you can be quite a useful asset to us there.
It would be very sad if you were silly, could have dangerous
consequences for you ... Of course you let him down, of course you
caved too quickly. You're a coward, Freefall, but not an idiot, that
pleasant lady would have killed you if you hadn't been a coward, and
she would not have lost five minutes of sleep over it." He was taken up the steep steps and the handcuff ring cut at the flesh of his wrist.
He looked down onto the First Secretary, and the man was peering at
his watch as though already bored. "Where is he?" "Somewhere behind
that bloody line, stumbling forward .. . yes, with his prisoner ..
.
stumbling forward towards your promised rendezvous .. . Enjoy Nagorny
Karabakh." The door slammed behind him. The handcuff jerked him
towards the corridor of the carriage. He stood his ground, sod the
buggers. There was the whistle's blast and the first shudder of the
train lurching away. Ham shouted, "Tell him it wasn't my fault.
Tell
him I wasn't to blame." A faint reply, through the filthy window
of
the door. "Goodbye, Freefall ... If I see him, I'll tell him." The train ground out of Zagreb station. Three passengers, Bosnian
refugees, with all that they owned around them, were cleared from
their
seats by the military policemen. They would be with him until the
Slovenian border, then the military policemen would free him, leave
him. From Ljubljana he would go on alone into Austria, and at Vienna
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he would start the long journey, via Budapest and Sofia and Istanbul
and Yerevan, to the war in Nagorny Karabakh, wherever the fuck that
was. Of course it was not his fault, of course he was not to blame.
Nothing in his life had ever been the fault of Sidney Ernest Hamilton.
In the dropping light the train cleared the concrete outer suburbs
of
Zagreb. He was without blame. He reached with his free hand into
his
pocket for the carton of Marlboro cigarettes, and for his playing
cards
.. . She said it softly. '.. . He says that you have seen his wife.
His wife is a fine woman. He says that you have seen his boy, and
that
I hurt his boy. His boy is a good son .. . Everything that he knows
is
in the village of Salika, and everything that he loves is there. He
asks you, begs you, pleads with you .. ." He looked away from the
wreckage of the man. He remembered the power of the man and the glory
of him in the hall of the village's school, and his boots and fists.
He could not make the link. She said it quietly. '.. . He says that his wife should have a husband, and his son should have a father ...
He
says that he will swear to you, promise to you, on his mother's life,
that he will never hold a gun again, will never fight again. He says
that you are a man of honour, a person of courage, and that you will
understand his weakness ... He begs you to let him go back to his
wife,
he pleads with you to let him return to his son .. ." Her voice
dripped in his ear. He stared again into the face of the broken man.
The eyes of Milan Stankovic ran wet and his mouth dribbled saliva
against the folded material of the gag. The man was pitiful. He
could
not make the link between the man who was laden with conceit and the
man who grovelled for his freedom. The birds clattered in the
branches
above him and there was the panting of Ulrike's breath spurts and
the
moaning in Milan Stankovic's throat. "I told you." Her face and her
eyes and her short bob-cut hair were close to him.
"You told me to be cruel."
"And it is hard for you to be cruel."
"It is hard."
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"Because you do not see the evil in him."
"I cannot make the link between what he was, what he did, and what
he
is now, pathetic."
She was so strong. He could see that she did not waver, and that
she
had no doubt.
Ulrike said, "It is what they are all like, it was the same long ago, and it is the same now ... It was the same long ago in my country,
when
the men and women who had committed acts of evil were stripped of
that
power and put in the cells to await trial, and left in the cells to
await execution, and when they were taken to the scaffold some had
dignity and some were pitiful.. . they could not be recognized for
what they had been, what they had done .. ."
Penn hissed, "Don't worry, don't bloody worry your pretty head,
because
I will try to be cruel."
He went on. Penn led. It came to him again, the instinct ... He
thought they might be a mile from the farm with the outbuildings where
the troops were billeted. Twice he looked behind him, long and hard,
and his eyes that were drifting with tiredness saw only the swaying
trunks of the trees and the spreading shadows. He thought that the
worst would begin after the farmhouse where the troops were billeted,
and the worst would be all the way to the Kupa river and he still
could
not escape the instinct that they were followed in their flight.
There was no minute taken of the meeting, no stenographer present,
no
tape recorder in use. The room allocated for the meeting was on the
third floor of the Ministry of Defence building with windows that
looked down onto the central courtyard where the lights now burned
bright. The room was the office of a senior civil servant, young
and
Harvard-trained.
"It will be done with discretion. There will be Special Forces, of the
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Black Hawk unit, under the direct command of the Intelligence Officer
of 2nd Bn, 110 (Karlovac) Brigade. They are to be given no help,
the
German woman and the Englishman, in crossing the Kupa river. They
are
in charge of their own destiny. Under no circumstances, none, will
they be permitted to bring Milan Stankovic across the river. From
what
I hear, if Stankovic crosses then Karlovac and Sisak will be shelled,
Zagreb will be attacked by missiles. There can be no
misunderstandings
in this matter." The First Secretary leaned forward, elbows on the table. "No misunderstandings .. . because if Stankovic comes across and into your jurisdiction then international opinion would demand
your
own dark corners be examined, your own psychopaths be arraigned, and
that would never do." Parked in the courtyard below was the Mercedes of UN PRO-FOR's Director of Civilian Affairs. "The meetings that
we
are brokering, from what I hear from my sources on the other side,
will
be immediately curtailed if a Serbian is kidnapped and brought before
a
war crimes tribunal. Gestures are unimportant. It cannot be
allowed
to happen. Gestures are trivial and cost lives. A substantial
window
for peace would have been closed." The First Secretary swung back
in
his chair. "And we must not block the path to the appeasement of
violence, good God, no. Peace in our time, peace at any price. Why not .. . ? And you should know, what I now realize, she was a very
fine young woman, Miss Dorothy Mowat, and such a shame that her
murderer, by our hand, should walk free ... If you'll excuse me ....
It's my job to be on that bloody river bank tonight." He had made
four
telephone calls and all had been deflected. Four separate times he
had
dialled the number of the old police station, the number of the 2nd
Bn,
110 (Karlovac) Brigade. He had asked, in turn of the duty officer
and
the commanding officer and the liaison officer and the adjutant, if
he
could be hooked through to Hamilton, Sidney Ernest, on a matter of
importance. Four times asked to wait no problem four times asked
366
the
business of the call personal four times asked his name mumbled and
unintelligible four times told that Hamilton was not available to
come
to the telephone and asked again for the nature of the business and
the
repetition of his name.
Marty Jones was not easily unsettled, less often now that he had been
in Croatia and Bosnia for close to a year. But now apprehension
crawled in him. Dusk was coming to the parade ground beyond his
converted freight container .. . Hell, he was not going to take
goddamn
crap from them .. . After the fourth deflection, Marty telephoned
Mary
Braddock, told her he was coming soonest to collect her, that she
should have warm clothes.
He did not know the place of the rendezvous on the bank of the Kupa
river, and Ham should have rung him. He felt a bad night was taking
shape.
Before he locked the door of the freight container behind him, he
looked a last time, longingly and almost lovingly, at the camp bed
with
the sleeping bag and the blanket primly folded, at the brightness
of
the handcuffs, at the length of the chain and the strength of the
ring
set in the floor.
The last of the sun, rich gold, came from the trees on the far side
of
the river and made sweet lines on the moving water, and bathed the
worn
face of Zoran Pelnak and hurled his shadow back against the old
timbers
and the weathered brick of his home.
Too much of his time, he liked to joke with the soldiers who came
from
their tent camp for his well water, was spent gazing at the great
Mother, the force, that was the Kupa river. He could spend more hours
than the day gave him just watching the movement and the flow of the
river. Each day, each hour, he could find something that was new
in
367
the movement and power of the river .. . And the river was something
to
respect, as worthy of respect as had been his own mother, because
the
river was strength. They did not comprehend, the soldiers who came
with the scrubbed old milk churns for their water from his well, the
force of the great Mother. Zoran Pelnak did .. . His respect, his
awe,
of the river had been with him since he was a child, since the evening
that the sunken log had come without warning to beat against the bow
of
his small boat and trip it. He had lost his footing, fallen,
scrabbled, slid into the dark cold of the water. What he could
remember was the helplessness that he had felt, long ago as a child,
thrashing against that force, and his father had pulled him clear.
The
force would never be forgotten by Zoran Pelnak, never trifled with.
He
had not swum in the river that bordered his fields since that day
when
he had struggled in panic against the cold darkness of the current.
He
knew the force of the great Mother .. . And there was always something
new to see.
He paused at the door of his home, and he scratched the debris from
the
animals' fodder off the sleeves of his greatcoat.
There was a place in the first line of the trees opposite, where the
herons made their nest. He could not look into the low sun at the
nest, but he could see the male bird erect in the shallow water by
the
reeds poised and waiting, perhaps for a frog.
He considered the male heron to be the most beautiful of the river's
birds.
And when he was inside, warm from the fire, his meal taken, then he
would sit by the window and light his lamp and wait for the moon to