Read THE HEART OF DANGER Online
Authors: Gerald Seymour
Tags: #War Crimes; thriller; mass grave; Library; Kupa; Croatia; Mowatt; Penn; Dorrie;
"Revenge
killing is useless. It is necessary to find truth, then justice ..
."
The man coughed thick phlegm to his lips. Penn had been told by Jovic
that it was the ministry office for accumulating evidence on war
crimes. They had sat a long hour before they were ushered from the
corridor and into an office. He had tried conversation to kill the
time and failed. "It is necessary to have meticulous preparation
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of
evidence. I am determined we will not move outside legality. If,
when, it comes to trials, it would be catastrophe for a prosecution
to
collapse on technicality .. ." The man talked as if to an audience and
the smoke eddied in the wisps of his beard. An hour in the corridor,
and now half an hour as the working of the office was portrayed. Penn
wrote his notes carefully. He could not complain at Jovic's
translation, steady and at a good pace. He had the name of the man,
and his title and the notes made good reading. The pity was that
the
notes were rubbish, they didn't matter. He had tried to steer the
conversation, twice, and twice had been ignored because this was
prepared speech time for visitors, and visitors were supposed to duck
their heads in respect. A secretary had put her head round the door,
grimaced at the man. Penn knew the form. The speech would end.
Handshakes, farewells, and the man would be sweeping out of the office
to a new appointment. "I work in conjunction with the United Nations Human Rights Committee and Amnesty International .. ." "Rosenovici, in
the Municipality of Glina." Penn said it loud. "I receive no money from my own government .. ." "There was a battle in December of 1991
for the village of Rosenovici, in the Municipality of Glina." Penn battered on. "The material I gather will go to the United Nations
Commission for the Prosecution of War Criminals .. ." "You are a busy
man, I am a busy man .. ." Penn saw that Jovic queried him and his eyebrow was lifted in trifled amusement. '.. . I am not interested in
war crimes. I am not concerned with the prosecution, or freedom,
of
war criminals. I want to know what happened in Rosenovici in
December
of 1991 when Miss Dorothy Mowat was murdered. I apologize, but that
is
all I am interested in." He saw the annoyance furrow the head of
the
man. "The greatest human rights abuse in Europe for fifty years,
you
are not concerned?" "I want to know what happened in Rosenovici in December in 1991 when Miss Dorothy Mowat died. Point .. ." He saw the
sneer creep over the man's mouth. "You cross the great continent
of
Europe, You visit our poor and humble country. You arrive late after
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the war in which my poor and humble country has fought for its very
survival. You come when the finest of our young people have made
the
ultimate sacrifice of their lives, after our old men have been
tortured, disembowelled, after our old women have been beaten, raped,
after our children have been slaughtered .. . But you want only to
know
how a young Englishwoman was killed .. . You are not concerned with
law
and justice, but with making a report .. ." Penn said evenly, "I have
been paid to make a report on the circumstances of Miss Dorothy
Mowat's
death." The sneer played wide. "And she was precious, and the thousands who have died were without value? To make her so precious,
was she a queen?" There was the scrape of Jovic's chair beside him.
It was the end of the interview. Penn stood. He felt so damned
tired.
It had been time wasted, as time had been wasted at the embassy. Penn
said, "From what I heard, what I was told, she was a pig of a woman."
"There's no goddamn hot water ..." Marty stood in the door and shouted
in frustration. The towel was loose at his waist. '.. . I want
goddamn hot water."
"There is no hot water."
"Heh, smart man, I am not a fool. I know there is no hot water. I want my shower, I want hot water. I pay for hot water .. ."
"There is no hot water. There will be hot water for your shower in the
morning."
The doctor sat at the bare wood table and his study books were in
front
of him. The evening had come and the light was poor in the room,
but
the doctor had not switched on the electricity nor had he switched
on
the immersion that heated water for the shower.
The American yelled, "Damn it, I pay for hot water. It's part of
the
rental that I can go take a shower, and not in the morning. I want
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..
."
And Marty let it go. He let it go for his own survival. If he did
not
let it go, if he kept shouting about the need for hot water for his
shower then he would get the big story, again. The big story was
Vukovar. Not that Marty Jones did not think the story should be told,
just that he knew the story of each day, each night, each hour, of
Vukovar, because the doctor had told him it. The doctor had been
in
the hospital through the siege of Vukovar. Marty paid $175 a week,
$700 each calendar month, for his room and for the shared use of the
sitting room and the kitchen and the bathroom, and the rental was
supposed to include hot water, each evening, for a shower. He let
it
go ... and the doctor should not have been studying close print
without
the electricity, and he let that go. The doctor was paying his way
through the college for surgeons and he was keeping his mother,
widowed
in Vukovar, and his nephews, orphaned in Vukovar, and he was keeping
the family of his close friend, killed in the hospital at Vukovar
when
the 250kg cluster bombs fell. He knew it all because he had been
told
it. It was not easy for an American, employed out of Geneva by the
United Nations Human Rights Committee, to find good accommodation
in
Zagreb. It was damn near impossible, on the allowances paid him,
to
find anything that was a personal apartment with its own front door.
He
lodged with the doctor, it was the best he could get. And if Marty
Jones complained that, again, there was no hot water for his shower
then he would get the story of the amputations carried out with a
firewood saw, and the casualty wounds cleaned with boiled rainwater,
and the surgery patients kept warm by a woman's hair dryer, and the
fatals stacked in the yard because it was too dangerous to go bury
them
and there were no coffins and the pigs and dogs running wild and going
for them ... He didn't need the stories, not when he was scratchy
and
hot and at the end of his day. "Right, no shower. No shower and
no
problem .. ." He went back to the bathroom. He turned the water
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tap
and sponged soap under his armpits. The doctor called to him,
"Marty,
did you have a good day ... ?" He shuddered under the cold water.
It
was hard to have a good day in the converted freight container that
had
been dumped on the corner of the parade square of the barracks on
Ilica, his work place. It would be a good day tomorrow when he drove
the jeep down to Karlovac and got to talk with the new arrivals from
some village in the Prijedor Municipality. But the best days for
Marty
Jones were indeed when he sat in the converted freight container,
where
the sun cooked the interior, where he had his computer. The best
days
were when he scanned the memory of the computer through what he called
his 'snapshots'. These were his interviews with refugees, now from
Bosnia, earlier from Croatia. The pick of the best days was when
he
scanned the memory with the trace, when he hacked through to a
recurring name. The name might be that of an officer in the former
JNA, or it might be the name of a local policeman, or a mayor's name,
or the name of a man who had come through from civilian life to take
a
position of command in the militia, or the name of a warlord like
Arkan
or Seselj. The interviews in the memory were always recorded either
by
audio or video tape, and because he was a lawyer by training, Marty
knew what was necessary as evidence. The best days were when he found
the traces, when a name recurred, when a name gathered evidence. It
was what he was paid to do, to prepare cases and accumulate evidence.
The close friend of the doctor had been butchered after the fall of
Vukovar when the wounded had been given by the regular army to the
militia, when the grave had been dug at Ovcara, when the wounded had
been shot. There was a named man, there were good traces, there was
evidence of the order being given for a war crime.
"Getting there, not too bad a day .. ."
He tore the message pages into many pieces.
Two message pages, telephoned from England, from Mrs. Mary
Braddock,
requiring him to call back.
90
He tore them up, dropped them into the rubbish bin in the bathroom,
and
let himself out of the hotel room.
No way that he was going to jump to her, no bloody way that he was
going to be on the end of her string. She would wait until he was
ready to report, and she could sweat, fret, whatever, until he was
ready .. . And he had little to report. He could have reported a
failed meeting with a First Secretary at the embassy, and a failed
meeting with an official from an out-of-reality office believing that
the cavalry would come, one sweet day, and take the bad guys off to
the
thorn bush tree where the rope hung .. . Jovic had said that he would
fix something for the morning. What would he fix for the morning?
It
was not often that Penn felt loneliness, but he felt it here after
two
wasted days, which was why he had snatched the offer of a few drinks
with some friends of the interpreter.
Jovic was waiting outside, as if the hotel was dross. They walked
in
the darkness away from the hotel.
"I don't know yet, but something, I have to make some more calls.
You
worry too much, and there will be something .. ."
"Now, see here .. ."
"You want to do it yourself? You're free. You make your own
programme, just tell me what time, what place, and you arrange it
.. ."
But then Bill Penn was not a graduate, didn't have the bloody
intellect, and had been heaved. Bill Penn was not material for
General
Intelligence Group. Bill Penn was clerk grade, executive officer
grade, pathetic grade, with need of a nanny to hold his hand tight.
Bill Penn was the jam my bastard' who had londed the big fat one,
and
who was out of his depth, and who shpuld have stayed on debt collection
and rummaging through dustbins and Service of Legal Process and
surveillance tailing of a jerk who didn't know he was watched. Two
days had been wasted, and he had nothing to report. "Do what you
can,"
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Penn said. The streets were bright and full. The windows lit the
young faces gazing at the heaped goods from old Europe. The best
of
London and Paris and Rome and Frankfurt brazened in front of the wide
teenage eyes. Cameras and computers, furs and fridges, Scotch and
silks, all there and piled high in the windows on Trg Bana Jelacica.
Perhaps Jovic read him. "An illusion," the artist said. "We have nothing but independence. Old men say that independence is
important.
Myself, I prefer to have two arms, no war, and I prefer to paint rather
than trail round with an innocent. You are goddamn patronizing, Mr.
Penn .. . Surprise, surprise, they have nice goods in their shops.
They are affluent .. . Innocence to me is shit. Innocence means that
you did not bother to find out before you came .. . Right, Mr. Penn,
understand our truth. We have no work, we have inflation, we have
no
factory production, but our shops are full and so you congratulate
us.
Who has money, Mr. Penn, to go to the shops? Profiteers? Black
marketeers? Pimps, spivs, crooks? Anything can now be bought in
our
independent nation state .. . What do you want, Mr. Penn? If you
want
a woman, you can buy her. If you want a gun, you can buy it. If
you
want a life, Mr. Penn, you can buy it. You would be surprised, in
your innocence, at how cheap comes a woman or a gun or a life .. ."
They had reached the club. The music battered out onto the pavement.
And the lights strobed from the doorway and fell on the anger of
Jovic's face, and he thrust the stump of his arm into Penn's face.
'.. . But you would not be interested in the price of a woman or
a gun
or a life. I apologize for forgetting your interests .. . Would you
feel everyone who died here was a pig? Was it only Miss Dorothy Mowat