ELEPHANT MOON (17 page)

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Authors: John Sweeney

BOOK: ELEPHANT MOON
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The sight of Emily walking towards him was, something to savour for the rest of his days. Muscle and mind, see?

 It hadn’t taken him long to find somewhere – a fissure in the rock, a good two hundred yards from the camp, well out of the way, protected, leading down to a drop in the jungle floor, covered with a spongy moss that wasn’t so bad to lie on. He’d cut some ferns to make it nice and comfy. No one would find them.

She was a real looker all right, the sweetness of her face shining through the muck, as she came towards him, keeping to the edge of the little clearing the elephant men had managed to hack out of the jungle. A whisper, ‘Emily,’ and she took a step into the greenery and she was in his arms, trembling. Soothing her, he ran his index finger down the side of an arm, saying: ‘Don’t worry, darling, I’m not going to hurt you. Just want a little natter, that’s all,’ and he took her hand and led the way to his new hiding place.

Once inside, they both had to kneel. He put a finger to her lips and said, ‘I’ve got a little treat for you, Emily,’ and produced from his knapsack half a bar of chocolate, stolen from the one of the boxes carried by the pack elephants. Chocolate was as precious as gold, reserved for the sick. To steal it, a crime. Unwrapping the silver foil for her, he placed the chocolate just in front of her mouth, steadying himself by resting a hand lightly on the side of her ribcage, his fingers brushing her left breast. She’d had no proper meal since leaving Rangoon. The bar smelt delicious. Tilting forward, she bit into the chocolate and nibbled.

‘Nice?’

‘Mmmm.’

He suppressed a grimace.

‘Are you all right?’

‘It’s nothing.’ He pulled out a cheroot from the packet in his shorts, lit it with a match, sucked in the smoke and exhaled.

Dying sunlight slashed through the trees, falling on her face.

‘It’s hard work keeping clean.’ He started to speak.

‘If you don’t mind my asking.’ But so did she.

Laughing, he invited her to go ahead.

‘The bandage. How did you…?’

‘Someone hit me with a frying pan.’

‘No!’

He paused for perhaps a beat too long, then started to laugh. ‘No, I’m pulling your leg. It was the Japanese.’

‘Tell me what happened.’

‘It’s a long story.’

‘There’s not much competition, is there?  I mean, I can hardly go to the movies tonight, can I?’

‘Fair enough.’

His mind went back to what had happened before the ferry left. Better not tell Toots here about that.

‘We’d been shot up pretty badly by the Japanese. The captain, God bless him, had bought it, a bullet in the face. With him dead, that meant I was in charge. We found the ferry crossing, but we had to dump the guns, and our dead. We did our best, saying prayers and marking their graves, but we couldn’t hang about for long. Then we hopped on the ferry. Half-way across, along came the Zeroes. The first strafing run shot up two men.’

The others were fussing over the injured, uselessly, panicking, but he wasn’t going to nurse dead meat. Gregory ignored the commotion and had his ears wide open, staring
downriver, his eyes trained on where the Zeroes had gone to, and where they would come back from.

‘I was patching up the injured best as I could manage, when the Zeroes returned.’

No relaxing of the muscle or the mind – the Leader was spot on about that. He’d realised what those Zeroes were up to, the military logic was clear. Knocking out one of the last ferries left working on the Chindwin was a must for the Japs. If they missed the ferry first time, they’d be back to finish the job.

The chop-axe of aero-engines came towards them, fast.

‘I didn’t give it much thought. Just heard the engines and dived in and swam for it. I don’t want to sound boastful, but I’ve always been a good swimmer. For a bet, once, I swam the Thames just below the Tower. Have you been to London?’

‘No,’ said Emily. ‘But I’ve read all about it. “I will fill my pockets with change for a sovereign in half-pence and drown myself in the Thames… I will become a damned, damp, moist, unpleasant body!’

‘Come again?’


Nicholas Nickleby
. Dickens. It’s a book.’

‘Books, eh? Haven’t read that much, myself. I was only a kid when I did it. The tide was on the way out and moving fast so I got worried I’d end up half the way to France. But I got stuck in and swam like I’d never swum before and I managed to stagger ashore at Shadwell. Bloody cold, excuse me, Emily. Still, I won the fiver. Luck of the devil, see?’

‘You’re not a devil. You saved me from that snake.’

‘I’m no angel, sweet.’

‘Go on. I love hearing your stories.’

‘You’re making me feel like an old war hero, now. Anyway, as the Zeroes came in, they hit the explosives we had on board, and the ferry blew up. I’d held my breath and dived
deep, until my lungs were fit to burst and my ears were popping. And still I stayed down, until I could no longer bear it. When I came up, gasping for air, the water was blood-red. I’d got a nasty nick in the back of the head somehow. That was scary because I didn’t know what kind of creatures were in the river, crocodiles or snakes or whatever. But the cold of the water kept me conscious and I carried on swimming and my feet touched bottom on a sandbank, some five hundred yards, maybe more, from the west bank, from safety.’

 Muscle
and mind
. Yes, that was the true test of a man. The mind to survive, the mind to win. It would have been the easiest thing in the world just to have given up the ghost, lain down on that sandbank and gone to sleep. God knows, there hadn’t been enough of that. He hadn’t had a good night’s sleep since they had been on that old rust bucket troopship chugging across the Indian Ocean.

‘But I fought the temptation to have a kip, and I crawled across the sandbank – it was blazing hot and I burnt my hands and feet - and I forced myself to get back into the water. I swam to the far bank and climbed out onto a bit of grass, and only then did I allow myself to close my eyes. And the next thing I knew, I was being woken up by the elephant men. Bloody marvellous, it was.’

 ‘Emily! Emily!’ She could hear Ruby’s voice, calling out for her.

‘I’d better go,’ she said. ‘I’m just so pleased you managed to survive. So that you saved me from the snake.’

‘Stay.’

‘I can’t.’

‘Stay.’ He needed her badly.

‘No. I’ve got…’

‘Go and tell her you’ve got the shits, and that you want to steer clear of the others, lest it’s catching, and you will be back shortly. Then come back here.’

She hurried off, and he didn’t really know whether she’d come back. He hadn’t had a tart for a very long time. Not that Emily was like the other women he’d slept with.

The sun had dropped below a ridge to the west, but a rock face above them was still lit a brilliant ochre. He puffed on the last of his cheroot, thinking back to that day. The la-de-dah captain had been asking for it. If he hadn’t dealt with him, well… And that cheeky black bastard by the ferry? He had had no choice but to shoot him. Military necessity. They had no time to wait and besides, there were plenty more from where he’d come from. Blacks don’t tell whites what to do. He had it coming.

Come to think of it, it was a good job none of his mates had survived the attack on the ferry. That fat bastard gunner, he smelt a rat when Gregory told them all that their officer had been shot in the face. The cheeky sod had turned the officer’s body over with his boot and checked out the back of his head and, blow me, the hole was tiny, the size of a bullet going in, like it was the true entry hole, like he’d been shot from behind, not by the Japanese. Fatty hadn’t said anything, but he’d looked at the tiny hole in the back of the head and the great gob-stopper mess where the officer’s mouth and nose had been and he looked up at Gregory and he knew Fatty was trouble too. And they’d seen what had happened to the Indian, the Jemadar. Fatty would have sung, had he had the chance. Some of the others too. Dead men can’t sing.

But that teacher, she knew what he’d done all right. She’d warned the girls against him, said Emily. The way Teacher had looked at him when he caught her bathing, the deadness in her voice when she said: ‘You shot the Jemadar.’ Not much doubt about it, there was real hatred in her. He wasn’t scared of much – not after what he’d been through – but he knew he could never rest easy with her around.

Still, that was a problem that could easily be fixed.

The ferns parted and there she stood, a dark silhouette.

‘We’ve got to move at four tomorrow. The Japanese are getting closer. I’d better go now.’

He winced, feigning pain.

‘Are you all right?’ Her voice was soft.

‘When I got shot up by the Japanese, I hurt my back somehow.’

‘Let me see.’

Unbuttoning his shirt, he lifted it above his head and rolled on to his stomach. Fingers kneaded his shoulder muscles, knotted and tense, the pressure easing as the feather-light pads of her fingertips trickled down his spine, a caress of astonishing gentleness. A lifting, a pause, then it started again, down by his ankles, her fingers idly stroking, inching towards his thighs, whirling patterns on skin.

He rolled over onto his back and she knelt between his legs and pulled her frock over her head. Inside the hide the light was a deep green, becoming gloomier by the minute, as she bent down and kissed his tummy button with her lips and her fingers undid his fly, button by button by button.

‘I’ve never done this before,’ she whispered, blushing.

‘Makes it all the sweeter for me, love…’

 

Sated with pleasure, he lay on his back and lit a cheroot. No one would ever see the smoke, and besides, he no longer cared whether they found him or not.

Kneeling beside him, her fingers stroked his hair, soothing him.

‘This lump on your head? How did you get it?’

‘Someone tried to kill me.’

‘What happened?’

‘I don’t want to talk about it. I was framed for a murder I didn’t commit, and went to prison.’

‘No!’

‘I’m innocent, love. But no one believed me.’

She half-reared, cupping his head with her hands and arcing her back so that her left breast brushed against his face, his lips finding the nipple.

‘You’re in trouble. I’ve heard Miss complain about you to Colonel Sam, that you’re a killer. Is that true?’

His eyes widened. ‘I’m no killer.’

Emily was a whole woman now. She’d made love to a man and that emboldened her to tell her secret.

‘Listen…’

She began with the story of the school’s exodus from Rangoon, the naked lunatic, the disappearance of the old headmistress, ‘a lovely woman, worn out by war’ is how she described Miss Furroughs, and the arrival of the Jemadar, their saviour.

Blushing, she told him of her unrequited love for the Jemadar and her growing resentment for her rival. That night, when the Jem and Grace had thought the whole party was fast asleep, she had followed them, hiding in the bushes when they almost fell on top of her, writhing, coupling a few feet from the undiscovered listener. She had laid down, closed her eyes and listened to every judder of lust, every gasp of pleasure and every word that they exchanged.

‘Quite the little spy, aren’t you, Emily? Eh?’ teased Gregory.

She smacked his hand with a mockery of force. But her mind was lost in that time, the night before they crossed the Chindwin, when the Jem’s voice had lost its natural gentleness
and the schoolgirl consumed with jealousy listened to the man she adored spit out his secret to his lover…

 

‘What if I became a Jiff not because I was a traitor but because I had been jailed by the British, jailed for trying to do my job, jailed for fighting for the very Empire that has imprisoned my grandfather? In Malaya, before the fall of Singapore, an officer, British, gave the order to retreat, yet again. I challenged him, saying that we should stay and fight, at least to protect the wounded. If we fell back, our wounded would end up in Japanese hands. He hit me. I hit him back. For this, I was sent back to Singapore under arrest and locked up in Changi prison, pending my court martial. I protested my innocence, banged on the cell door. No one came. We could see nothing, only a shaft of light coming through a high window. But we could hear, hear the drone of the bombers coming, high in the sky. We could hear the whistle of the bombs as they fell, the explosions, the screams, the barking of dogs. It was hard to bear.’

He fell silent for a time. Then: ‘My first visitor? The cell door opened and I was looking at a Japanese captain. He spoke beautiful English, he’d read my Special Branch file, he was solicitous, clever. The Japanese gave me back my liberty. So what kind of traitor am I? How can I be a traitor if I never surrendered? It was the British who surrendered me.’

‘Is that all of it?’

‘No.’

‘Go on, Jiff, the whole story.’

‘I was disgusted by the surrender at Singapore, at the disdain of the British towards their loyal Indian officers like me, the patronising contempt. But there is something more.’

‘Ouch, you’re hurting me, Jiff. Please, let me go…’

The Jem released Grace, and the silent listener heard her gasp with relief as he released his grip on her arm.

‘If I don’t carry out my task, they will kill me. If I do, I would rather be dead. So it is no trivial question. Can I trust you, Grace? Can I tell you the truth, and you promise to me that you will never reveal it to a living soul?’

A long pause. When she spoke, her voice was very quiet, barely audible. ‘Yes. Even though I have no idea who you really are. You can trust me.’

‘My satchel…’

‘Yes, I’ve wondered why you hold on to it all the time.’

‘I am carrying secret messages from the Netaji to his men in India, the signal for a new mutiny.’

‘From Bose? Hitler’s Indian?’

‘Yes, Bose himself. If these men do the Netaji’s bidding, at his command there will be an uprising across all India. The Raj will be finished, and Hitler’s soldiers and the Japanese will be shaking hands in Delhi or Baghdad.’

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