Read A Line in the Sand Online
Authors: Gerald Seymour
"Mr. and Mrs. Blackmore are unhurt. They won't leave what remains of
their house and they're staying put."
Grimly he turned away and disappeared among the shadows of men whose names Frank Perry hadn't been told. Perry closed his eyes, but knew he
d not sleep.
woul
He could hear Davies on the telephone. It would
be
any of them had criticized him.
easier if
dier took the call, which woke him from a light sleep on
The briga
the
camp-bed in his office. The voice was very faint. The brigadier
shouted his questions, but the answers were vague and there was
on the line.
break-up
In his frustration he shouted louder and his
voice rippled from the office room, down the deserted corridors and into empty, darkened rooms... He heard the muffled voice of the man d trusted like a son and barked out questions. Had he
whom he ha
succeeded? Was he clear?
on the
Could he make the rendezvous point
Channel beach? How many hours would it be before dawn? What was
his
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location? Had he succeeded?
The call was terminated. The pad of paper, on which he would have written the answers to his questions, was blank. He played back the tape and heard the insisting shout of his questions and the indistinct answers. In the background, competing with the answers he could not understand, was the splash of water. The cold of the night was around him. He thought of a beach in the black night where the sea's waves rippled on the shingle-stone shore, where Vahid Hossein was hurt and
.
waiting
In his mind was the death that would follow his failure.
He
options of survival, his own survival.
weighed the
The hush of the
night was around him, and moths flew,
ted,
distrac
at the ceiling light
above him. He rang the night-duty officer at the offices of the
National Iranian Tanker Corporation across the city, and he spoke
the
coded message. Twice, in the minutes that followed, the brigadier the number of the mobile digital telephone and there was no
called
response. He was alone, surrounded by darkness.
Frank Perry heard the approach of the lorry, and then its engine was cut. He heard the voices and, the clatter of iron bars being thrown down, as if dropped from the lorry's flat bed. He was thankful, a ercy, that the child slept and did not criticize him.
small m
e of the village slept, with guilt and with self
The peopl
justification
doubts and with resentment, or stared at their dark ceilings.
with
There were few who had not walked up the road and along the lanes
and
gone to look at the cottage home when it was floodlit by the
s.
generator
Most had seen the wide hole where a window had been and
the torn curtains that fringed it, and some, even, the long bag of lastic carried away to the closed van, and the
zipped black p
uncomprehending eyes of a child escorted from the building by the
n in their vests and carrying their guns.
policeme
No one believed
the
d explanation of a gas explosion. None had cared to examine
blan
their
part in what they had seen, heard, with their friends and their
s.
familie
They had gone home when the show was over, and they had
e
darkened the village, made it silent, switched off their hous
lights,
crept to their beds. In a few short hours it would be the start of another day, and there were not many for whom their lives would be the
421
same. The rain, over the village, had gone as fast as it had come, leaving the moon to pour bright white light into the homes where they lay.
"What's that? What the hell's happening?"
Frank Perry was careful not to wake Stephen. He eased himself into a
half-sitting position but did not shift his arm, against which the child slept. There was the noise of sledgehammers beating against metal at the front of the house and the back.
Davies was cold, without emotion.
"You said you were staying."
"That's what I said."
"So, it's because you're staying."
"What is it? What is it that's happening?"
"We call it a blindicide screen. It's old Army talk. In Aden, thirty
years back, the opposition had a Swedish-made anti-tank rocket that was
used against fixed positions. It detonates the boring charge
early."
"Why?"
"You should sleep. It'll keep till the morning."
"You know what? The bastard let me sleep. Joe bloody Paget let me sleep, didn't wake me to tell me. I bloody knew, but there wasn't a
body and there wasn't any blood, and the bastard said I'd missed,
Joe
t you are?
bloody Paget... You're a miserable sod, Joe you know wha
Not
just a miserable sod, a mean fucker."
Perry, half listening, dozed, with Stephen's warmth against him.
"Letting me sleep when you bloody knew I'd hit him, that's below the bloody belt. How long have you known, you bastard, that I got the 422
shite?"
He could feel Stephen's slight spare bones. For a moment he had
he
thought
lay against Meryl's warmth. He shuddered. The morning's
light seeped into the house through drawn curtains and reached into the
safe area between
the mattresses and the sandbags. Rankin was cocky,
bouncing. Paget was behind him with a slow grin spreading. The
assembled company didn't see him. He thought he did not matter to them
any more.
He heard the lorry drive away.
"I mean, telling me I'd missed when I knew I'd hit, that is a nal slur, Joe. If I say so myself, forty metres minimum
professio
and
no light, a moving target, that is one hell of a shot. What is it, Joe? Come on, I want to hear you bloody well say it..."
They were all laughing. Blake and Davies had been up all night, but Rankin had dossed down on the kitchen floor to catch a few
Paget and
hours' sleep.
Perry asked quietly, "If he was hit, why do we need the blindicide screen?"
rupted them. They turned to look down at him and the
He had inter
sleeping child. They were the only friends he had and none of them r him, they were strangers.
cared a damn fo
said, "His name is Vahid Hossein.
Davies
He fired a single grenade
from the launcher. There's a flash at the front and a flame signature ack.
at the b
Mr. Paget and Mr. Rankin were going off their duty
shift. They engaged him. He ran into the churchyard. Mr. Rankin was
presented with a difficult shooting opportunity. He took it, fired twice, but with a handgun at the limit of its effective range. There was no blood and nobody. Mr. Paget assumed that Mr. Rankin had
his target, that's phase one.
missed
Later, a woman walking her dogs
on the common starts bawling about "Black Toby". God knows what she's
doing out with dogs in the middle of a deluge. She says she saw a woman and a black-faced man on the ground.
lifeless
She's going on
e that happened two hundred years ago. Police
about some nonsens
officers went to the scene and found a young woman raped and dead, 423
but
no man. The young woman was a Muslim convert, and the eyes, ears, fetcher and carrier for Vahid Hossein. She was covered in blood but it
wasn't hers. The man who raped her, while he strangled her, bled
on
her from his gunshot wound. Mr. Paget and Mr. Rankin use
soft-nose
bullets in the Glock, and that is phase two. Phase three is
incomplete. He is wounded, Mr. Perry, but he is not dead.
Although
he'd lost considerable quantities of blood, he was strong enough to leave the murder scene. He is out there, in pain, and still in
possession of the RPG-7 launcher. The rain in the night has washed away the chances of tracker dogs finding him. He did not take the convert's car. We do not believe he has tried to leave. An hour
ago,
an inflatable was launched from an Iranian tanker in the Channel and came to a rendezvous on a beach. He was not there to be lifted out.
We
had it under surveillance, but took no action. Thus we believe he's still here. The military are beginning a search for him. Now, we classify Vahid Hossein as more dangerous than at any time. You, Mr.
Perry, are the cause of his pain, his suffering. If he has the
strength, in our assessment, he will make a last attack on your home.
That, Mr. Perry, is the reason for puffing up the screen around the house that will prematurely detonate we hope an armour-piercing
grenade."
"And is that why you were laughing?"
The wind swept the cloud away, leaving the sun balanced precariously on
the sea's horizon.
Geoff Markham thought the young man tolerated his presence on the
bench
overlooking Southmarsh.
They had dossed down in the car. He had woken at the first smear
of
light, but Chalmers had slept on, curled in the back seat with his by's peace on his face. Only when he'd woken had the
dogs, a ba
sourness replaced the peace. Once it had been light enough to see the
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village, the expanse of the green and the high iron poles in front of
the house with the close wire mesh netting hanging from them, he had f the car.
eased out o
hadn't spoken, hadn't given any explanation, but had called
Chalmers
for his dogs and emptied out the last of the biscuits from his pocket hem.
for t
He hadn't said where he was going, or what he intended,
but
lked away with the dogs scampering at his feet.
he had wa
rkham, not knowing what else he could do, had heaved himself
Geoff Ma
out of the seat, locked the car, had stretched, coughed, scratched, t after him.
then wen
hed with water, his socks were wringing wet, and his
His shoes slos
shirt and coat had not dried out in the night. The letter was damp in
his pocket. The wind was sharp off the sea, raw on his face. A
al cargo ship nestled on the sea's horizon line.
coast
The birds were
up over the beach and over the marsh. He was cold, damp, and his
ch growled for food. Where did the arrogance come from, the
stoma
at his small efforts had changed the movement of events?
belief th
He
wanted to be in bed, warmed, close to Vicky, and ordinary, without ibility, free from the consequences of his actions. If he
respons
ngs he thought he
posted the letter he would have none of the thi
nted.
wa
He slogged on. It would be the supreme moment of conceit
if
the letter, it would be the statement of his belief that
he posted
he
changed events.
He found Chalmers sitting, very still, on the bench, and the dogs
were
beside him. Chalmers, never looking at the sea, wouldn't have seen the
cargo ship; he was watching the Southmarsh.
coastal
What disturbed
m was that the young man seemed merely to
Markham most about hi
tolerate
him and feel no need for his company.
The bench was where Geoff Markham had met Dominic Evans, the
shopkeeper. It was set high enough for him to overlook the sea, the beach, the sea wall and the marshland where the reed-tips whipped
in
425
the wind. The sun, throwing low light shafts, made it pretty. His uld have liked it there, and his father would have taken
mother wo
a
graph.
photo
ght of them materialized, in single file, along the path behind
Ei
the
nch where Markham and Chalmers sat in silence.
be
d
Burie
under the weight of their equipment they marched past the bench
and briskly down towards the trees that shielded the shore-line of the
marsh from his view. It would have been settled after the death of Meryl Perry. The secretary of state would have bowed to irresistible pressures and taken the control out of poor old Fenton's hands. The y would have stepped eagerly into the void he knew the men,
militar
or
at least the unit, from Ireland. He knew the kit they carried and the
weapons. He had seen the troopers from the Regiment slip away at
dusk
from Bessbrook Mill and the fortress at Crossmaglen, seen them run towards the threshing blades of the helicopters on the pads in the barracks at Dungannon and Newtown Hamilton. They were the quiet men spoke, who waited and nursed their mugs of tea and rolled
who seldom
their smokes and moved when the darkness came or the helicopters
started up the rotors.
Markham watched the column snake down the path towards the
rsh
Southrna
ater where the wildfowl bobbed in the low sun's light.
and the black w
o carried the Parker Hale sniper rifles. One had the snub 66mm
Tw
gun
anti-armour launcher, another cradled a general-purpose machine-
d
an
orso, one had the radio,
was swathed with belt ammunition across his t