Authors: Hammond Innes
âWhat's happened? What's the news?'
The empty truck bumped and skidded its way down the track, and for a moment he didn't answer me. Then suddenly he said, âIf I'm not there, they make a balls of it. If I am there, they say I'm trying to run things myself. I told them to put a guard on that tote road when I found you'd come out that way. They didn't, of course, so now they've got these redskins in Arawa, and they don't know what to do about them.'
âHow many of them?' I asked.
âI don't know. Sapuru said several hundred, but he's probably exaggerating. Why do you think they insist on talking to Perenna? All their leader keeps saying is: “Yu send Miss Perenna, we speak with her.” That's what Sapuru says.'
I was remembering Perenna in conversation with that thickset Chimbu Councillor outside the Immigration Office. âDid he say what the man looked like?'
He shook his head. âJust one of those PNG people
they employ for the hard manual work up at Paguna. If it were only a few of them, it wouldn't matter. But the riot squad was always having trouble with those people. They get on the beer â they're not used to beer â and now if they go on the rampage, like they did a few years back â¦' He turned and looked at me, a hard stare. âYou asked me what their leader looked like. Why? Do you think you've met him?'
I hesitated, but there was no point in not telling him what Perenna had said, and when I had finished, he nodded. âChimbu,' he said. âThey're most of them Chimbu. But a fight leader. I never heard of a fight leader coming over to work at Paguna.' I was still trying to explain what she had told me about that when we drew up at the ferryboat jetty.
I thought he would have forgotten the letter by now, but as we walked along the wooden boards to the tug, he started asking about it again. âWho's read it? Yourself, McAvoy â anybody else?'
âWhat's it matter?' I was wet and irritable, my shirt sodden. âIt happened seventy years ago, maybe more.'
âPerenna.' He stopped there, staring at me hard, his face so close to mine I could see every pale line of the crease marks in his skin, exaggerated by the water streaming off his bare head. âWhat about Perenna, has she read it?'
I shook my head slowly, something in the expression of his eyes warning me. âNo,' I said.
âYou didn't show it to Jonathan? No, you couldn't, of course. But anybody on the LCT? Who else has seen it?'
âI've told you, nobody. Just myself and Mac, that's all.'
âYou're lying.' He stood there in the rain, staring at me, and suddenly, for a moment, he was a different man. There was something in his eyes, a sort of madness â or was that my imagination? I seemed for a second to be looking into his soul, into pools of unfathomable darkness. A trickle of water reached my crotch, and I shivered.
âOkay,' he said, his voice and manner suddenly normal again. âAs soon as I get back from Sohano, we'll go over to Madehas â you, me, Perenna, McAvoy, too. I want that letter, understand? Meanwhile, you stay on board.'
Hans took the ferry, the
Barreto Chebu
, across to Sohano, one of his Buka guards going with him, and while he was away, a truckload of armed men came in from Queen Carola. Their weapons were World War II rifles, and they sat nursing them in the back of the truck, staring out at the rain, none of them doing anything except relieve themselves against the banyan tree. The
Barreto
stayed moored to the Sohano jetty, which was only just visible through the rain.
The rest of the morning passed slowly. The tug was primarily a harbour tug, and the quarters, entered by a companionway at the back of the little caboose of a wheelhouse, were cramped and pretty basic. Perenna and her brother, as well as Hans, had spent the night dozing with their clothes on in the tiny saloon. Now she was lying curled up on the bench beside the small mess table. I don't think she was asleep, but she didn't speak to me. The incessant
rain and lack of sleep had affected us all, the rain particularly.
About 10.30 we moved to the bunkering wharf close by the market and took on fuel. With no truck-load of armed men to stop me, I thought it an opportunity to slip ashore, but I was stopped by the fair-bearded Australian skipper. âMuch as my job's worth to let you go wandering in the bush, mate.' He wasn't armed, but there were armed men at the Cooperative he could call upon, so I stayed with him in the caboose. He was aiming to make his fortune backing the new Sapuru regime, and Holland he regarded as a guy who was going places. âGot it all planned, finance for ships, everything. Stick with him, mate, and you won't go wrong.' Half an hour later we were back at the jetty.
At midday we picked up a news bulletin on the radio. The Australian government had ordered the frigate
Dampier
, on fishery protection duty off the Barrier Reef, to proceed at once to Bougainville to stand by to evacuate Australian civilians. Papua New Guinea was reported to have sent an ultimatum to the rebel Council of the Sapuru regime giving them until noon to release all prisoners and hand over power to the legitimate administration; if not, the forces at present standing by would be ordered to take the necessary action to restore the legal government. Since the time was now four minutes past midday and no reply had been received from the rebel regime, it was presumed that military action would be taken. Preparations for such an eventuality had already been
made. There followed an eye-witness account from Port Moresby of troops embarking in the harbour, also an announcement that Air Niugini Fokker Friendships were being requisitioned to act as air transports.
Then, right at the end of the news, there was a news flash:
A report has just come in that security forces of the PNG administration in Bougainville recaptured Buka airfield in the early hours of this morning. The time limit for surrender of power by the rebel regime having expired, we understand that the airlift of troops to Buka, the island to the north of Bougainville that is virtually a part of the mainland, has already begun. We will keep listeners informed as soon as we have further news.
Within minutes of that announcement the little
Barreto
had cast off and was sidling across the tideway towards us. Somewhere in the distance a shot was fired. I thought it came from the direction of the airfield, but then there were more shots, a sporadic outburst of firing that clearly emanated from the rising ground in the vicinity of the Administration buildings.
Hans Holland had already seen the truckload of men waiting, and he was shouting somebody's name as the ferryboat bumped alongside and he jumped on to the jetty and went running towards the truck. A stocky jet-black man, bare-chested and with a great shock of hair, climbed out of the cab. They stood there for a moment, the two of them in the rain, Hans's voice
loud and angry, the other's soft and sullen. Finally the man from Queen Carola got back into the cab, and the truck drove off. âThey should've moved on the airfield an hour ago,' the tug skipper said. âLooks like they've lost the initiative now.'
Hans was walking back towards the tug, his head bent, oblivious of the rain. He was walking slowly, pausing every now and then to turn his head and listen to the sound of firing, which continued very sporadically. He reached the bulwarks and climbed on board, then stood there a moment as though undecided. The skipper stuck his head out of the caboose window. âYou heard the newscast, did you, boss?'
Hans nodded. âYes. And the stupid bastards have got themselves cut offâ' He seemed to take a grip on himself, his mouth shut, his lips a hard line. Water poured off him as he came slowly down the deck. The firing had ceased now, everything quiet except for the sound of the rain and the faint hubbub of voices from the shops across the road. He stood listening for a moment outside the caboose door. âThat firing â from the Sub-District office, wasn't it?'
âReck'n so.' The Australian pushed open the door for him. âSounds like the police have captured it now.'
He nodded, still listening intently, his shirt and trousers clinging to him, his head lifted and his eyes staring at nothing with great intensity. Then he looked at his watch. âStill plenty of time. If those aircraft really did take off ⦠What is it â five, six hundred miles? They'll be nearly two hours yet.' He looked at the pair
of us, and suddenly that cocky jauntiness was back. âCome on. We'll grab a truck and some arms and get out to the airfield. Three trucks. That should do it. Three trucks parked on the runway should stop them, and in this rain â¦'
He was already heading back along the jetty, and such was the magnetism of the man that we were both out of the caboose and actually running after him when we heard it. At first we didn't stop. It was coming from behind us, out of the west, a soft whisper like a line squall whipping up the sea. It grew steadily, swelling to a solid, high-toned cacophony of sound that we must have identified at the same instant, for we stopped in our tracks, all three of us, standing there listening, our eyes searching the leaden overcast beyond Sohano, beyond Minon. And suddenly, there it was, coming in low over Madehas, the roar of its engines getting louder and louder.
It was the first of four, and already it had its wheels down. It was so low they seemed to brush the marker posts. It came straight down the Buka Passage, sweeping close over our heads, the Air Niugini bird of paradise insignia bright against the low-hanging cloud, and by then the others were in sight, coming in like dragonflies low over the water.
âThe bastards! The bloody, cheating, sodding bastards!' Hans's voice was strangely shrill. âThey were in the air,' he cried. âThey must have had them in the air ⦠' His voice was drowned in the scream of the engines close over our heads as they peeled off to circle the airfield, and we stood there, rooted to the
spot, as all four of them were lost to sight beyond the plantations.
The market was in turmoil, people standing staring up at the sky, others running. And down at the Government wharf the crew of the freighter were throwing off her warps, pausing every now and then to glance up at the overcast sky, as though expecting bombs to fall, for the sound of engines was growing again. Then one by one the aircraft reappeared to make the approach run. We watched them descend in quick succession, the sound of their engines dying to a gentle murmur as they completed their landings and began to taxi.
The Australian was the first to speak. âWell, mate, I guess that's it.' He was looking at Hans. We both were, and in that moment I was sorry for him. He had taken one hell of a gamble, and now ⦠âLooks like those bastards in Port Moresby have called your bluff.' The skipper's face was sour with disappointment.
Hans turned and stared at him, anger in his eyes, and something else â âI wasn't bluffing,' he said, his voice a hard whisper of sound that was more implacable than if he had shouted.
âYou mean â¦' The Australian gazed at him, open-mouthed. âChrist! I believe you would, too.'
I didn't know what they were talking about, but the words had a curious effect, the Australian with a shocked look on his face and Hans actually smiling. âWe lose Buka, it doesn't matter. So long as they can't land at Kietaâ' He began walking back to the tug.
The last of the aircraft had cut its engines, and in the sudden silence the sound of human voices from the
shops and from the market seemed very loud. The freighter had pulled out into the stream. She was very high out of the water, and the slowly revolving prop was making a steady thumping sound as it flailed the surface.
Hans reached the end of the jetty and turned to the skipper. âWe'll go across to Sohano now. They're arranging radio contact with Sapuru for me. President Sapuru! He likes the sound of that. And now that he's in a fix I guess he'll do it.' He nodded. âYes, I think so. He's no alternative now. And you,' he added as he climbed on board. âWhile you're waiting for me at Sohano, see if you can raise the LCT on VHF, tell Captain Holland to dump the prisoners anywhere he can and return here immediately. Madehas. We'll meet him at Madehas. By then we should've stopped those bastards in their tracks.'
The tug was manned by one Mortlock and two Shortland islanders. The engineer was from Buin in the extreme south-west of Bougainville. They knew their job, all of them, so that a shout from the Australian skipper and we were cast off with the engine turning over almost before our feet touched the deck. And on the other side we didn't stay at the Sohano jetty after Hans had leapt on to it, but backed off and anchored out past the first of the water loos that stood like a little wooden bathing machine with its legs in the water. âNobody's going to rush me, I tell ya.' And then he was looking at me closely as he said, âYou think they'll do it? You think Sapuru's got the guts? Or will they just lay down their arms?'
âDo what?' I asked.
âStart killing them. Do you think he'll do it?' And when I asked who Sapuru was expecting to kill, he stared at me as though he thought I was trying to be funny. âWhy, the whites, of course. The expats. And don't pretend you didn't know. You heard what the boss said. I thought he was bluffing, that's true, mate. I really did think it was a bluff. But it isn't, is it? He's gone to get Sapuru on the air, tell him to go ahead, to start killing. And that frigate, the
Dampier
, hasn't a hope of getting here in time to stop it. Do you think Sapuru will do it?' He was staring at me, nervous and excited at the same time.
âHow the hell should I know?' I was appalled, aghast at the thought that I had got myself into a position where I could be accused of complicity. âI've never met the man.'
âNever met him?'
âNo.'
âWell, he's not much to look at, I can tell ya. A dried-up little mummy of a man, a sort of elder-cum-wizard, and very much feared by his people. âFact, they're dead scared of him, so if he tells them to start killing, the odds are they'll do it.'