Read A Line in the Sand Online
Authors: Gerald Seymour
butcher',
out half the night and
and had been
all of the next morning with his
dogs to find the beast and limit its misery.
Chalmers was encouraged by the quiet of the reed-banks: there should ement and spats over nesting territory and the cries
have been mov
of
the birds.
from Germany who had demanded to shoot the stag with the
The client
only six years
greatest crown spread of antlers but that beast was
d
ol
and in the prime of its breeding life. The client had hissed the
sum
he was paying and what he needed as a trophy. Chalmers had told him e 'showed no respect for the
that if h
beasts' he could go back down
to
len with his rifle unused.
the g
The man had crumpled then, whined
about the money, and had been led forward to shoot an old beast at the
end of its life. They'd passed within thirty yards of the younger stag
towards the target beast, and at the end the client
as they'd moved
d
ha
thanked him for the best stalk of his shooting days. Chalmers had om him because he acknowledged neither gratitude nor
walked away fr
aise.
pr
thought the quiet was because the man was good, was among the birds He
in the reeds and on the water, and was still.
The guest, panting and unfit, had been in dead ground and had pulled a
343
packet of cigarettes from his pocket. Chalmers had snatched the
tte from the guest's mouth. He'd made the stalk last ten
cigare
hours,
two of them crawling against the rush of a stream-filled gully.
Finally, when the beast was seventy yards from them, he'd told the guest, 'you're not fit to shoot, you're a bloody ruin," and hadn't given him the rifle.
The birds were
The memories kept the cutting edge to his senses.
too
quiet. He knew that the man was good and that the man was there,
in
the marsh.
He waited, patient. He felt a respect, brother to brother, for the man
out there, in the water, the same respect that he felt for the big beasts he stalked and tracked.
sted through Monday."
"We've la
had to feed the boy and himself.
He'd
He'd heated the last of the
precooked meat pies in the fridge, and taken the remaining tub of
ream from the freezer.
ice-c
He'd found a science programme on the
television for Stephen, and they'd eaten off their laps.
e'd taken
H
e trays back into the kitchen, and gone upstairs.
th
She was on the
bed, in darkness. He sat beside her.
"They say he has a week. He can't endure more than a week. It's closing round him. We're on the fifth day. We have to hang on in there..."
"Where is he?" Fenton asked.
"I don't know."
rkham's voice, distorted by the scrambler, echoed
Ma
back at him.
"I only know that he's sitting out there in the bloody bog."
"Have you called him, has he sit-repped?"
"I wouldn't dare to call the ungracious little beggar, I'm only the fetcher and carrier I reckon he'd garrotte me if I disturbed him."
"Doesn't he know the importance of continuous contact?"
344
"He knows it if you told him it."
"Geoff, does he realize how much is riding on his back?"
"That, too, I expect you told him. I'll call you when he deigns to make contact.
"Bye, Mr. Fenton."
Fenton shivered. He was alone, but for the company of a third-year probationer who watched the telephones. It was always late at night, when an operation was running towards climax, that he shivered, not from cold but from nerves. In the day, surrounded by acolytes, the confidence boomed in him. But Parker had gone, the American with
her,
and the elder of the probationers, the old warhorse from B section.
Cox
had left early to prepare for a dinner party. It would be the end of
him if the boy, Chalmers, failed. He would be a casualty, washed
up,
sneered at, shown the early-retirement door.
Half-way across the world was another man who would be sweating on the
fear of failure. He did not know what an office high in the Ministry of Information and Security would be like, but he seemed to sense
that
man shivering in the same sweat as dribbled on his own back. He had talked of contftil but late at night, he reflected, there was not
a
vestige of control for either of them. It was always like that, never different, when the little people took charge and the power of the high
and mighty was stripped from their hands... He would sleep at Thames House that night, and the next, sleep there until it was over...
Because he had volunteered to take responsibility, the career of
Harry
Fenton lay in the grubby hands of Andy Chalmers.
"Home is where we are. Home isn't about people, isn't about things.
Home is where you are, and Stephen and me. There isn't anything for us
here.
e
You said home was about friends but there aren't any, they'v
gone. Anywhere we are together is home.
ot any
I can't take it, n
more."
345
She lay with her back to him. Her voice was low-pitched and flat
calm.
ng.
Perry thought she was beyond weepi
It was coming to the end of a complex day for the intelligence officer.
The
d
deman
for information, clarification of a situation, from Tehran
led to his walking along the corridor with the flowers on his arm
and
the grapes in his hand, one among many visitors.
The brigadier in Tebran had insisted. The intelligence officer,
ary, had left his embassy office in the middle of the day.
nervous, w
He
had not seen a tail but always assumed one followed him. He had
driven
to the
in
home
west London's suburbs of a colleague from Visa Section,
parked outside the front of the house, been greeted at the door and invited inside. Without stopping, he had gone out of a back door, crossed the rear garden to the gate, tracked along an alley between and taken his colleague's car.
garages
He had driven to the offices
and yard of the car-hire company at the extreme of south London, and asked about a BMW rented out to Yusuf Khan. A shadow of hesitation crossed the young woman's face, and he had eased his wallet from his pocket. A hundred pounds, palmed across the desk, in twenty-pound notes had lightened the shadow. He was shown, hurriedly, a
h
photograp
from an insurance file of the wrecked vehicle. He was told of the where the injured man was treated..
hospital
. Did she know about
a
passenger? The police had not spoken of one... It was already early evening by the time he reached the hospital. After checking for the of Delivery/ Post-natal, he headed for the casualty ward.
location
another visitor, one of many who anxiously came to see the
He was
sick,
the injured and the maimed. He had the flowers and the grapes, as if
they guaranteed him admittance.
He walked slowly down the centre of the ward, through the aisle
between
the beds, scanning the faces of the patients.
He seemed lost and confused but none of the harassed nursing staff came
346
forward to help him.
A corridor was ahead of him, signs for the fire escape, and to the side
a trolley carrying resuscitation equipment. He took a risk because Tehran required it of him. He edged forward with the fool's smile on
his face.
Only when he was beside the trolley did he see the policeman with
the
machine-gun on his lap.
"I am looking for my sister and her baby."
There was a door with a glass window in it. Behind it a second
policeman was reading a magazine that half hid the bulk of his
firearm.
He saw the bed, and the bandaged head of Yusuf Khan.
"Not here, no babies here thank God."
"This not the place for babies?"
He gazed at the bandaged head, the linking tubes, the opened eyes.
The
head shook, the tubes wavered, the eyes blinked with recognition.
"Absolutely, pal, this is not the place for babies."
He saw the tears gathering in the eyes, and he thought he saw a trace of guilt flicker there.
"I must ask again."
He walked away. He had seen what he needed to see. He laid the
flowers and the grapes on the ward sister's desk. When he left his colleague's house in west London, he sped back to central London and his office at the embassy, with the urgent report to be sent by secure coded communication to Tehran locked in his mind.
"Is that what you want, a van coming to the front door? All those bastards out in the road, watching. You want to give them that
satisfaction? Your things, everything that's personal to you your furniture, your clothes, your pictures, your life paraded for them.
ey'll spit at the car as it takes us away.
Th
Is that what you want?"
347
His hand was on her shoulder and his fingers massaged Meryl's bones and
muscles. She never looked at hiWi and she didn't speak.
The brigadier was a careful man. If his back was to be protected, it
s necessary for him always to be careful.
wa
He was that rarity in
the
the Ministry of Information and Security, an intelligence
service of
officer who had made the transition from the previous regime. He
had
crossed sides. The majority with whom he had worked as a captain
in
the SAVAK were long dead, hanged, shot, butchered, for their service to
the Shah. But three days before the mob the street scum from south Tebran had entered and sacked the SAVAK offices on Hafez Avenue, he had
taken a suitcase of files from his workplace and made contact with his
enemy. The files were his credentials. With them were his memories of
ocations and faces.
names, l
In the confused days that followed he
was,
the new men of Iran, a small, treasured mine of knowledge.
to
The
names of former colleagues, the locations of safe-houses and the
faces
as he bought himself
of informers, all had tripped off his tongue
rvival.
su
The new regime, of course, was innocent in the matters of security and
counter-revolution. The change coat prospered as his colleagues
died.
When the captured Americans from the embassy protested that they were employees of the Agency, the change-coat could identify them.
not
When
iddin rose in revolt against the Imam, he could put faces
the Mujah
to
ad been promoted to major and then colonel in the
names. He h
Vezarat-e-Ettelaat Va Ammyat-e Kishvar, and now held the rank, in
the
VEVAK, of brigadier, but he was too intelligent, too cautious a man to
e that his position would ever be secure and above suspicion.
believ
348
A
few detested him, a few more despised him, the majority, those who knew
his past, were wary of him.
The protective screens with which he surrounded himself were the
zealot's commitment to the new regime, coupled with a total, ruthless efficiency. No word of criticism for the mullahs in government and influence ever crossed his lips, no mistake in his planning of
operations was ever admitted. If the mildest words of criticism were ever spoken he would be denounced and pitched from his office. There were many, and he knew it, who would clamour to fire the bullet or tighten the noose around his neck.
Vahid Hossein had been like a son to him.. . The communication from London was on his desk. The hot, fume-filled night was around his high
office. Tears and guilt meant betrayal, were evidence that a coward, Yusuf Khan, had talked. It was his hope,
alone in the cigarette-smoke-filled office, that the man who had been like a son to him would be shot dead.
It would be worse if the great tanker, which was the pride of the
fleet, were intercepted as it slowed in the shipping lanes to launch the inflatable, was boarded and impounded. He weighed the
possibilities open to him, then wrote an instruction for the VEVAK
officer who worked as an official at the building of the National
Iranian Tanker Corporation. The ship was to sail in the morning.
There
was to be no attempt at a pick-up.
For his own survival, to avoid an inevitable fate, he cut the link to
Vahid Hossein. He did not hesitate.
"I want to go shopping, I want Stephen to go to school, I want you to
go to work, I want us go walking I don't want, ever again, Frank,
to
see a gun. I want to be happy again. There's nothing left for us here."
Downstairs the television droned on, under Davies's tuneless
ng
whistli
at
to himself. There was a muted cackle of laughter from the hut
349
e
th
back, and the revving of the engine of the car at the front to keep the
heater going. Everything they listened to, all around them, was
e guns.
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