Read A Line in the Sand Online
Authors: Gerald Seymour
do
the
alians. They have submitted to the blackmail. They want to
It
trade,
ey want to offer export credits, and they believe, if they are
th
generous and restructure the debts, that the killer' squads will stay erritory. Prisoners are returned, investigations are
off their t
alled. Have the Germans helped you over Lockerbie? Have they
st
fuck.
all the killers the French have caught within their
What about
jurisdiction? No prosecutions. They appease. And you in Britain,
, on your little island, you do not believe that the problem
Harry
of
187
Iran is real. How can I say that? I say it because of what I see from
my embassy window. You allow, unchecked, on your streets,
flourishing,
such organizations as the Hizb ut-Tahrir, or the Young Muslims who de the cheap charter flights to Iran, or the Al-Muntada
provi
al-Islami
raise for the Algerian fundamentalist butchers who are in
who fund-
their turn trained in Iran. You allow it to happen, Harry. You
refuse
to recognize the cancer in your belly."
The Israeli declined coffee, which was a relief. What had been
served
at the next table, coughed and spluttered over, had looked like
tarmacadam sludge.
"A great meal, Harry, and a great opportunity to talk with you. I say
hit the bastards wherever you find them. It is the only language
they
understand. They are clever and determined, they are not to be
underestimated. Good day to you, Harry."
He stood, the gold Star of David bouncing in the greyed hair of his chest behind his open-collared shirt.
Fenton finished the beer then followed him out on to the street. The is sleeve.
Israeli tugged at h
"Remember what I said. To stop them you must crush the skull, crush it
under your heel, crush the life from it. And then you have to have the
courage to shout it to the world, and fuck the consequences. You
got
the balls, Harry, to tell the world you crushed the skull?"
The Israeli had said, deviously, that he had a man to meet. Fenton was
abandoned.
He walked at least a mile before, thank God, he was able to flag down a
taxi.
188
He told Cox that he'd been networking again. He dropped the name
of
the senior Israeli intelligence officer in London and saw that Cox was
reluctantly impressed. He was tired and his feet hurt, and he
complained that the Israeli policy position was in total
contradiction
to their own.
"I'm supposed to be learning but the pointers conflict. That's where we are, between a rock and a hard place. But, I will press on."
"Of course you will," Cox said.
here for, isn't it?"
"That's what you're
The crane came across the green, past the keep-off-the-grass sign, the
ng a track on the rain-softened ground.
big wheels gougi
Peggy stood
on
nd staring.
the far side of the green, leaning on her bicycle a
The hut, the size of a large garden toolshed, had already been hoisted off the flat-top lorry that had reached the village in slow convoy with
the crane, and now dangled from a cable under the crane's arm.
Frank Perry watched the crane's manoeuvres from the dining-room
window,
with Paget and Rankin. They had asked for, and been given, a spare blanket from the airing cupboard and had draped it over the polished table.
He'd said earlier, "I'm sorry about last night, what I said."
"Didn't hear you say anything, sir."
"Nothing to apologize for, sir."
A pleasant afternoon of watery sunshine threw sufficient glare to
highlight the garish yellow of the crane and the rusty brown creosote seal on the planks of the swinging hut. The crane's engine coughed umes as it powered towards the gap between his house and the
diesel f
Wroughtons'. Davies edged his car clear to make space.
Behind him, Paget and Rankin were discussing kit. They seemed
189
uninterested in the arrival of the hut. On the blanket, with their machine-guns and the small black-coated gas grenades, with a book
of
crossword puzzles, was a kit m*gazine. They turned the pages and
pored
over the advertisements.
His face against the window glass, Perry peered at the crane's
advance,
and heard the scraping noise. He tilted his head, looked up and to the
side. He could see that the hut swayed against the Wroughtons'
plastic
guttering. Wroughton was the deputy bank manager in the town, his wife
was the surgery manager and their twins were in school; a small
blessing that they weren't there to see the destruction of the plastic guttering. The crane hoisted the hut higher, clear of the
Wroughtons'
guttering and roofing tiles. He imagined a crowd cheering as a man swung and twisted from such a crane. The crowd here was just Peggy, Vince, who was out of his van and watching with her, and Dominic,
standing in the shop doorway. Paul held tightly to the leash of his dog, which yapped incessantly and strained forward on its hind legs.
He
could no longer see the slow swing of the hut, but could hear the
shouts of the men guiding it. In Iran, from what he had seen on
television when he was there, they didn't blindfold a man before he was
lifted high for the crowd to see, and they didn't pinion his legs
to
deny the crowd the sight of him kicking.
Behind him, in low voices, Paget and Rankin talked through the brand names of windproof sweaters, thermal socks and rainproof trousers.
They
sat huddled close beside each other. It was more than twenty minutes since the crane and the lorry had come to the village and they'd not passed comment on anything other than the advertisements in the
magazine for kit.
He left them, and went into the kitchen. Meryl didn't look up. She was at the kitchen table with her sewing machine, and her boy was
the lengths of cut net.
feeding her
In the back garden more of the
men
from the lorry were laying heavy planks on the grass lawn, cursing 190
because they were awkward to move and heavy. She'd spent half of
last
summer's evenings working at that grass, digging out the weeds to
make
it perfect. The kitchen, in spite of the long fluorescent
strip-light,
was dark. She was looking at the window and he could see her teeth gnawing at her lower lip. The hut was being lowered past the window to
the shouted instructions of the men, who eased it towards the planks on
her perfect lawn. He'd heard that a man was left hanging dead for a
whole day before they lowered the arm of the crane. The hut jolted, and the cable slackened. Davies was calling their names.
Paget and Rankin came through the kitchen. They had the
machine-guns,
their rucksacks, their food-boxes, their magazine and the crossword book. The tall one tousled Stephen's hair. It was the first time Perry had seen the child half smile since Meryl had brought him home.
They walked out through the kitchen door to inspect their hut. There was the roar from the front of the house as the crane backed out of the
gap between the houses.
"Are you all right?"
"Yes." Her head was down, but her tone was aggressive. She fed the net on to the needle of the machine.
"I was only asking..."
"Why shouldn't I be all right? I've got you, I've got my home, I've got my friends. What have Ito complain about?"
"Look, don't be sarcastic."
Davies rapped at the kitchen door. He was carrying his gear: the
case
achine-gun, his heavy coat, a duf
with his m
fel bag for his sandwiches
and Thermos, a clean shirt on a hanger, and a pair of heavy boots.
Through the window, Perry saw Paget and Rankin taking possession of their hut. They'd dumped their kit inside, and were supervising the link-up of the cables from the house. One of the lorry men brought them two plastic chairs and a kettle; another, a small television
191
set
and a microwave cooker. Outrage had been building with Meryl
oughout the day, but she had held on to her control because of
thr
the
men in her dining room. If Davies hadn't been at the door he thought d have screamed.
she woul
Everything around them was worse for her
than
for him.
"Yes?" He turned on Davies.
Davies said quietly, "It's been decided that I should be inside with you. It's not a matter of comfort or anything like that, it's about my
fety when I'm sitting in the car.
sa
It's because of a reassessment
of
e security threat. The car is too vulnerable, that's the
th
assessment
now. The boys in the hut are behind armour-plated walls. They're proof against low-velocity bullets and there's a good
certainly
chance
they'd stop high-velocity, but the car doesn't have that protection.
me inside."
They want
"I've been asked, again, to run away. I'm staying."
"I've been told that, Mr. Perry. That's your decision, not for me to
comment on. But, the car outside, with the new assessment, is too vulnerable."
The strangers were with them inside the house, and in the hut, which blocked the precious view of their garden. Later, the strangers
would
be all around them as the laminated plastic was fixed to the windows.
It would be late in the afternoon, When Paget and Rankin were safe in
when Davies was safe in the dining room, before the lorry
their hut,
rumbled away and the crane's wheels dug another track across the
green.
And there was nothing he could do, except run. All his life he had r himself the decisions that mattered. He had always been
made fo
self-reliant: at school he, not his parents and not his teachers,
had
decided what subjects he would specialize in; at university ignoring 192
his tutors' advice, he had decided what braHch of engineering he would concentrate on; at the company, his only employer, he had decided
that
the opening he wanted was in the sales division, and he had explored the tentative, difficult trade openings that were possible with Iran.
First his wife, and then Meryl, had left decisions to him. He had been frightened of backing his judgement, and now he was
never
helpless
and snared in a web. It was a new sensation to him. He couldn't, of
course not, go out of the house and man a personal roadblock at the end
e village and check the cars coming in, and couldn't beat across
of th
the common ground beside the road for the people sent to kill him, and
couldn't thrash around in the marshland. No action was open to him, to run. He was neutered, and the men were all around him,
except
inside and outside his house, and they ignored him as if he were an and incapable of independent thought. There was nothing
imbecile
he
but sit and wait.
could do
n't my fault."
"It is
me where and when he had told her to come.
She had co
Farida Yasmin
Jones hung her head, pressed her face against her knees. The damp of
the evening was in the air. She had driven her car down the narrow e off the wider, busier road, and after the bend that prevented
lan
it
om the road she had
being seen fr
parked near to the track that led
to
the tumulus.
riticize you."
"I do not c
"You look as though you do when I came with Yusuf there wasn't protection."
"Perhaps he lived."
"You said he'd die."
lived and talked."
"Perhaps he
han would never talk."
"Yusuf K
193
"All men say they would never talk, and believe it."
"You're insulting him."
"He was stupid, he was like a child. He spoke too much and he could not drive why should I believe he would not talk?"
"You've no right to say he'd talk. What're you going to do?" He had
come from Fen Hill and across Fen Covert and he had sat for close
to
twenty minutes hidden in bushes watching her before he had shown
himself. After twenty minutes Vahid Hossein had gone in a wide loop around her to check that she was not followed, was not under
surveillance. He had seen the men at the house with the guns. He had
no trust in anything he had been told. There had been an Iraqi ruse in
the marshland in front of the Shattal-Arab: an ambush would be set by a
patrol; they would lie up and their guns would cover a raised pathway he reed-banks; a cassette recorder would play a
through t
conversation,
oices, in the Farsi tongue; men of the Revolutionary Guards
men's v
would be drawn towards the voices of their own people. Friends had because they trusted what they heard. He had watched
been killed
her.
She had eaten mint sweets from a packet, and scratched the white skin s above her knees, and looked frightened around her in the
of her leg
quiet.
She had rubbed hard against the softness of her breast, as