Read A Line in the Sand Online
Authors: Gerald Seymour
shy, darkened love between them, but the bare thighs of the girl in the
car intruded and disturbed him. He could not shake from his mind
the
white skin of the girl and the outline of her breasts. Vahid Hossein tried, but he could not.
The bell rang three times.
Meryl said she would answer it. She said coldly that she didn't want to see him cowering in the shadow of the unit hallway again when the door was opened. The detectives had said they'd use three short
blasts
on the bell when they wanted entry to the house.
Blake was at the door and seemed surprised that she opened it. His face fell a little when he saw her. She thought he would be one of those creatures who expected only to deal with the man of the house.
Blake said, fumbling for the words, that there were more personnel down
from London, uniformed, armed and static, and that they needed to
look
over the house. She thought him supercilious. He did not ask
whether
it was convenient, but stood aside for them as they came out of the darkness. They shouldered past her, as if she did not exist, and
pushed the door shut behind them.
Frank stood in the living-room doorway. She heard the names they
gave
him, Paget and Rankin. She grimaced, a bitter little smile, because neither asked Frank if it suited him, just said that they needed to walk round the house, look it over. They went together, as if there was an umbilical cord between them.
They wore blue-black overalls and webbing belts, on which were
holsters
and weapons and what she thought were gas canisters, ammunition
pouches
and handcuffs. When they had been waiting for her to answer the bell, have been in the mud at the side of the road and the green,
they must
and their boots smeared it over her carpet. They seemed not to
160
notice.
They looked around the living room, at her furniture and her
ornaments,
as if they were all dross, and the glass cabinet where she put the china pieces she'd collected, and the pictures of the seashore,
prints,
by the local artist that Frank had bought. She strained to hear the murmur of their voices.
"Have to get it taped up, Joe."
"Too right, Dave, nothing worse than glass cabinets."
"Have to get the pictures down."
"What you think of where the television is?"
"Not happy, should be back against the wall, right back."
"Shouldn't Davies have done this?"
"Should have, didn't."
"Pillock - I don't like all the stuff on the fireplace."
"Quite right. Let's do the windows."
The tall one, Rankin, went to the standard lamp and switched it off.
She stood in the darkness and could sense the rising impatience of Frank beside her, could hear the sharp spurts of his breath. The
curtains were pulled back. A faint glow eased into the room from
the
street-lights on the opposite side of the green. She heard the
scrape
of their fingers on the glass and the window casing, then the noise as
the curtains were yanked without ceremony into place. Only then was the standard lamp switched on again.
"Thought they were supposed to have been laminated, Joe."
"They haven't got round to it the work order's in, be done by the end
of the week."
"Bloody marvelous."
161
"I don't like that window, Dave, not without the lamination."
"Don't tell me, I've got bloody eyes. What is it, a hundred metres, to
those houses? A sniper, piece of cake, or an RPG."
"What you say, Dave, piece of cake for a rocket launcher or a rifle.
God, this place needs sorting out. Come on... They did the hall,
the
dining room and the kitchen. Frank trailed behind them and she
followed. She didn't have to ask. Everything that was glass, china or
pottery, everything that was heavy and unattached, would shatter,
and fly, maim and wound. They said they needed to see
fracture
upstairs. She stiffened. Frank muttered that they should go
upstairs
as necessary, but they hadn't waited for his answer and were
if that w
already on their way up. There wasn't any more mud from Rankin's
boots
to dirty the carpet. They looked around her bedroom.
"Don't like the mirror, Dave."
It was the big mirror on her dressing-table.
"Tape it over."
She imagined the mirror, where she made up, where she worked the
brushes before they went out for an evening, with packers'
delicate
adhesive tape crossing it.
"Look at all that loose stuff."
On her dressing-table were the cream jars and the glass eau-de
toilette
bottles, the vase of dried flowers and the silver-backed hairbrushes.
"Have to get it boxed up, Joe."
She would have to rummage in a cardboard box on the floor for her
eye-liner and lipstick. She imagined everything that was precious to
her put away on the instructions of these men.
The pictures would have to come down, of course. The photograph
162
frames
would have to be put into the drawers, and she wondered if she would be
allowed to take out the photographs and stick them to the walls, if they would permit that. In the bathroom, at the back of the house, she
couldn't have said they lingered on anything that was hers. They
were
merely indifferent to each item that belonged and mattered to her.
if they had lingered on them because then the items might have
Better
seemed important. They went into the spare room and discussed what n to the pictures, the mirror and the ornaments there.
should happe
They
e landing outside the last door.
paused on th
It was as if they had
cked
ki
the fight out of her, and the resentment was flushed on Frank's
t neither of them protested. She could hear her boy's
cheeks, bu
ice,
vo
making the noise of a lorry. They didn't ask her to go first, or
The short one went in, the tall one behind him.
Frank.
ello, sunshine my word, aren't they brilliant?"
"H
ulage business."
"Great lorries, sunshine, proper little ha
ncle Joe..."
"Just call me U
, that's a real good one, the Seddon
and I'm your uncle Dave
kinson."
At
Seddy's good, Dave, but the Volvo's fantastic."
"The
t's a great fleet, sunshine.. . No, sorry, don't touch."
"I
your name? Stephen? Well, Stephen, you mustn't touch
"What's
what's
Uncle Dave's belt.
on
It's gas, it's handcuffs and it's the Glock..
.
ke
Li
what?.. . He did what? That must have been fun, sunshine. You
hear that, Joe?
yground
DS Davies chucking his Glock round the pla
at's nice to store away for when he gets all pompous. I expect
th
it's
me you were in bed, sunshine..."
ti
e door was closed softly. They had come, she thought,
Th
effortlessly,
her family's life and brought with them their gas, their
into
163
handcuffs
and their guns. And, in the morning, her home would be prepared for defence against a sniper's attack and against the devastation of a rocket launcher's explosion. When they had gone outside, into the back
garden, she went for the vacuum cleaner to remove the mud they'd left on her carpets, and before she started it up she heard Frank's voice.
ver do that again.
"Don't e
Don't dare ever treat me and my wife like
we're rubbish. We're human beings and deserve to be treated with
decency and respect. This is our home, so show a bit of sensitivity ome into it.
when you c
Don't look at me in that dumb, insolent way,
just don't. We live here. If that's not convenient, soft shit."
She didn't hear their reply.
When they'd finished in the garden and gone out through the front
door,
and it had been bolted and locked again, while she was in the living room with the vacuum cleaner, she heard Blake's voice.
"You shouldn't have done that, sir, bawled them out. They're at the end of a pretty long day. But don't worry, they won't take it
, they're used to principals being stressed up.
personally
But you
shouldn't have bawled them out, sir. One day you might depend on
them
to save your life, one day soon."
not a zoo. You don't come here to rubber-neck. It's a
"This is
working area you're causing disruption."
He'd been told but it had slipped in his mind. It could have been the
ime the detectives had confronted the duty doctor, but it
fourth t
was
more likely to have been the fifth.
"I will say when you can talk to my patient and it is the same answer ast time, and the time before that. No. My patient is
as the l
severely concussed, quite apart from the effect of the drugs
g the pain of a triple femur fracture. No."
alleviatin
They were at the end of the ward.
d
Beside the door to the partitione
cubicle, Geoff Markham hovered a pace behind the two Branch
es.
detectiv
ng and on the
The doctor was young, harassed, probably sleep-walki
164
ge
ed
of his temper.
"It is not my concern what my patient is alleged to have done, my is his health and welfare.
concern
I understand he has been neither
arged.
cautioned nor ch
So, he is in my care, and I decide if he is
to
be questioned. My answer.. . No."
on a hard chair, facing the
A policeman was sitting beside the bed
or, his hands on the snub weapon resting on his legs, his face
do
ed policeman sat outside the door,
impassive. The second uniform
adling his own gun, a wry smile flickering at his mouth.
cr
l you, it's bad enough for my patients to have guns paraded
"I tel
et the
around, but right now they are trying, unsuccessfully, to g
st
re
they need. They are not resting, as they should be, because this
ward
being treated by you like a high-street pavement.
is
Just get out,
go
ay.
aw
rkham's fingers were locked together, clasped tight, flexing
Geoff Ma
hard enough to hurt. He thought Littelbaum was somewhere behind him.
rican had said this was the big and lucky break, but it didn't
The Ame
seem as if they knew how to use it.
isten to me. You are interfering with the running of this
"Just l
rd.
wa
I will protest most strongly in the morning to the administrators
about
nce.
that interfere
If the condition of this patient, or any other
tient in the ward, were to deteriorate because of your refusal to
pa
t my personal business to see
accept my guidance, then I will make i
u
yo
broken. Get off my territory."
There was a dull blue sheen of light in the cubicle.
off Markham
Ge
ought, could have sworn to it, that he saw an eye glinting from
th
the
und of white pillows. The head of the patient, the face that
mo
Rainbow
ld had identified as Yusuf Khan, was half hidden by the left leg
Go
t.
raised in traction. The glint was momentary, but he'd seen i
165
e
Th
patient now seemed unmoving, unconscious. The detectives turned
away.
"He's fooling you."
Markham said,
"You're a doctor? Familiar with this case history, are you?"
ersisted, "He's alert, listening. He's feigning."
Markham p
n expert on concussion? You know about the effects of
"You're a
in-depressant drugs?"
pa
hat I am telling you-' "No. I do the telling on my ward, and I
"W
am
you to get out."
telling
Markham spat, "There could be blood on your
hands."
"I doubt it."
"A man could be murdered because of your refusal-' "Get out."
He had failed to exploit the break. The faces of the uniformed
en were expressionless, as though they didn't need to tell
policem
him
he'd made a right idiot of himself. Geoff Markham turned
that
angrily
ked up the central aisle of the ward towards the low light
and wal
at
the far end where the night sister sat at her table. The detectives were alongside and he could hear the soft pad of the doctor behind him.
He saw the American sitting on a visitor's chair, in deep shadow,
atient's locker. The patient was passing him a grape,
against a p
and
before he took it the American had his finger on his lips. Markham kept walking.
stion:
Beyond the ward's swing doors, there was a last snapped que
"How
long?"
The doctor said that it might be two days and it might be three, or it