Read THE HEART OF DANGER Online
Authors: Gerald Seymour
Tags: #War Crimes; thriller; mass grave; Library; Kupa; Croatia; Mowatt; Penn; Dorrie;
Jim
didn't use the pub at lunch time, left Basil clear with Deirdre, but
he
came by at five most evenings. Jim, one-time detective constable
in
the Fraud Squad, liked a game of pool in the bar and a swift pint,
or
three, with Basil. It was where the hard business of Alpha Security
was talked through. "They don'c come on trees, young fellow, they're gifts from heaven. You fell on your feet, young fellow." Henry,
one-time Telecom engineer, came to the pub only at Christmas,
birthday,
or celebration time, and nursed orange juice. Henry was valuable,
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always sober, and spent his drinks money on bug equipment and the
gear
for tapping hard lines, and the new pride and joy was a UHF room
transmitter built into a thirteen-amp wall socket. "Milk it .. ."
"Run it .. ." "Enjoy it .. ." It wasn't talked about, but Penn assumed that Basil and Jim and Henry did odd-job work for Five. Work
that was boring and work that was illegal would be farmed out, Penn
assumed. It had to be a good assumption because when he had been
working out his notice at Gower Street, when he was getting all the
flak from Jane as to where the mortgage money was going to come from,
there had been the quiet call from the fourth floor and the request
that he attend the office of Senior Executive Officer Arnold Browne.
A
soft word of sympathy, a frowned nod of understanding, and a
suggestion
that Alpha Security, SW19, might be looking for an able man. He
guessed a little empire had been built, the tentacles spread, and
Henry
never seemed short of gear that cost, and plenty more than he saved
by
drinking only orange juice. They were a good little team: give Basil
three phone calls, he could find a burglar, a mugger, a safe-breaker;
give Jim half a day, he could get an Inland Revenue annual statement
print-out; Henry could fix, in twenty-four hours, best quality audio
and. visual surveillance. They were a good little team, but
needing
young legs and young eyes and a guy prepared to sit through the
bread-and-butter crap .. But it wasn't bread-and-butter crap they
were
celebrating in the pub, with Penn buying the drinks, it was a hell
of a
good overseas contract, with money going half share to the partners
..
. Penn felt quiet satisfaction, because Basil was almost jealous,
and
Jim couldn't quite hide the envy, and Henry didn't seem too cheerful.
Penn was reaching for their glasses, and none of them was shouting
that
it was his round. Penn said, "Actually, she's quite a decent woman
..." "Bollocks, she's a punter." "Daily rate, plus per them expenses,
plus Club-class flights." "Half the daily rate up front, per them expenses in your greasy hand for a clear week before you go, and that
doesn't include the hotel of your choice." Penn said, "Pity is that her daughter was a right little tosser .. ." He scooped up the
glasses
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and headed for the bar. Two pints of best bitter, an orange juice,
and
Penn was taking low alcohol because when he was shot of them he would
be going back to the office over the launderette and he would be typing
up the finances and faxing them down to the Manor House on the Surrey/
Sussex border, and then he would be going home to Jane, and hoping
to
God, some hope, that the baby slept hard .. . and hoping to God, some
hope, that Jane wasn't flat on her back with exhaustion ... It was
going sour with Jane, not solicitors and courts stage, just going
stale, and he did not know what to do about it, nor whether it mattered
if he did nothing about it. He brought the drinks back, shouldered
his
way through the shop people and the mechanics in their overalls and
the
building site workers who were all on the 'black'. Wouldn't have been
seen in there, not seen dead in there, when he had been at Gower
Street. It still seared him, and it would do so for a goddamn long
time, the memory of when he had come back home to Raynes Park off
the
train from Waterloo, and told Jane that he was washed up, working
out
his notice, gone. Jane, seven months pregnant, and hysterical, and
him
not able to staunch the screaming. She'd done it, Jane, she had wound
him up when she had packed her job in because the baby was coming.
She
had done the sums of the household accounts, told him they couldn't
survive, not with the baby coming, not without her money, unless he
had
himself promoted. She had told him he should have been made up from
executive officer to higher executive officer, and like a bloody fool
.. . Basil took his drink. "Cheers .. . I'm going to give you advice, you jam my bastard. Don't go sentimental on it, don't get yourself
involved." Jim grasped the pint glass and nodded his agreement.
Henry
sipped at the orange juice. "Good trip .. . Just pile the paper up, reports, analysis, interview transcripts, like you've been a busy
boy."
"I hear you." He made his excuses and left them still talking, debating, arguing, what the rate of per them expenses should be. He
walked out onto the street. They were closing the shutters down on
the
fruit and vegetable shop, and locking up the jeans and denim store,
and
the launderette was packed full. Gary bloody Brennard, Personnel,
43
wouldn't be unlocking a paint-peeled door beside a launderette and
going back to work at 6.33pm, and Gary bloody Brennard, Personnel,
wouldn't even remember his little talk with Bill Penn, executive
officer. His own fault, because he had not copped on to the new scene
at Five. Too dumb, too stupid, to have evaluated the new mood at
Five.
Entry to General Intelligence Group was restricted to higher
executive
officers, new scene, didn't he know? Entry to General Intelligence
Group was restricted to university graduates, there was a new mood,
didn't he know? They didn't want watchers, nor leg-men, nor
ditch-men
.. . they wanted analysts and information control management, and
they
wanted graduates. "Don't have a degree, do you, Bill?" Gary
Brennard's sneer. "Didn't make university, did you, Bill?" His feet
hammered the linoleum above the launderette. He snatched the cover
off
the typewriter. "Without a degree, without a university education, you've reached your plateau, haven't you, Bill?" He began to type.
He
accepted the assignment. He listed the daily rate and a half to be
paid in advance, and the per them expenses rate .. . He pounded the
keys of the typewriter. "If that's the way you feel then you should consider transferring your talents to the private sector. We
wouldn't
want disaffected junior officers, would we, Bill?" He read through the
paper. No, he wouldn't be sentimental. No, he wouldn't get himself involved. He dialled the number. He watched the fax sheet go.
There
was not enough light for him to make a clean job of the sewing. He
did
it as best he could, and it was poor work because he could barely
see
where he pushed the thick needle, and his hands shook. His hands
shook
in fear. Ham sewed strips of black elastic onto the arms and the
body
of the tunic. The others watched him and waited their turn with the
one needle and the reel of heavy cotton. He tried hard to hide the
shaking because each of the other five men who would go across with
him
believed in his professionalism. It was what he was paid for, what
he
44
was there for, to communicate professionalism. There were eight
lengths of black elastic now on his tunic, and he had already sewn
five
lengths onto his combat fatigue trousers, and when they were down
at
the river, when they were ready to slip into the inflatable, then
they
would collect old grass and they would tuck the grass lengths in
behind
the elastic straps. They were important, Shape and Silhouette. He
passed on the needle and the cotton reel and the roll of black elastic
tape. He set himself to work on Shine. He spat into the palms of
his
hands and then scooped the cream from the jar and worried the mess
together, and made the sweeping smears across his eyebrows and nose
and
cheeks and chin, and his ears and throat and wrists and hands. He
handed the jar to those who were waiting to use the needle and the
cotton roll. He had told them about Smell, and he had bloody lectured
them that there should have been no smoking since the middle of the
day, and he had checked that the tinfoil was in his own battle pack
for
their shit and the burying of it. He had lectured them about Sound,
and he had shaken each of the webbing harnesses they would wear for
the
rattle of loose ammunition magazines, and he had made them all walk
round him in a circle until he was certain that their boots were
quiet.
Ham had learned Shape, Silhouette, Shine, Smell, and Sound at the
Aldershot depot, and none of the others, the dozy buggers, cared ..
.
They needed it, too fucking right they needed Shape and Silhouette
and
Shine and Smell and Sound, where they were going .. . the others were
from 2nd Bn, 110 (Karlovac) Brigade, and they had been pissed up since
morning and Ham was stone sober and his hands shook and his gut was
tight. They were dumb bastards to be spending the night with, across
the Kupa river, behind the lines. On down his checklist .. .
ammunition magazines for the Kalashnikov, knife, gloves, the radio
that
thank Christ he wouldn't be bent under, cold rations, the balaclava,
the water bottle that wasn't full of bloody brandy or the usual
slivovitz piss, map and compass, field dressings .. . The big fear,
what tightened Ham's gut, shook his hands, was of being wounded, of
being left. It was better in the old days, better when there were
45
Internationals on the ground like flies on meat, because then there
was
the promise that the Internationals, the 'meres', would look after
their own if one was wounded. You wouldn't know with this lot,
wouldn't know if they'd fuck off and get the hell out in a stampede
back towards the river from behind the lines. They were chuckling
at
him, the others, and it was because they laughed at his care and his
thoroughness that Ham felt the fear.
They were dumb bastards to be with, but there was no one else who
would
have Sidney Ernest Hamilton, late of 3 Para, late of east London,
late
of the Internationals attached to the Croatian army. His fingers
found
the twin dog tags hanging from the dulled chain at his neck. The
tags
were bound in sellotape to keep them quiet. The tags gave his number
from 3 Para, his name, and his blood group, and his number and name
and
blood group from the Croatian army. He knew it would be bad bloody
news for any of them if they were wounded, captured, across the river,
and double bad bloody news for a mercenary.
Ham didn't eat any of the bread that was offered him, and he turned
down the alcohol, and he thought the Croatians must have known that
he
was shit stiff scared.
It would be late evening when they moved off down towards the Kupa
river where the inflatable was hidden.
Under the new scene, the new mood, there were little chores for a
senior executive officer.
The little chores were adequate to remind Arnold Browne that he was
outside the mainframe of Service operations. Once a week, a little
chore, he met with a senior executive officer from Six, and they
talked
platitudes, nothings, for an hour before going to lunch on expenses.
A
little chore because it was unthinkable that the Service would offer
valuable information to Six, and inconceivable that Six would
volunteer
worthy information to the Security Service, Valuable information,
46
worthy information, was power and would not be squandered on the
sister
organization .. . So, Arnold Browne who was old guard and old time
would parry and probe for a straight sixty minutes with a man who
was
also without a future, and then go take a damn good lunch. The
probing
and parrying that morning had involved the tedious matter of
Ukrainian
nuclear warheads and he had extracted nothing that was worthy or
valuable. It was ludicrous, of course, that Six should not share
their
information from the Ukraine so that Five could follow and monitor
the
Kiev government's attempts to get the hardware of the former Soviet
Union operational, bloody pathetic but, then, Arnold Browne was not
sharing with Six what Five had learned of PIRA arms acquisition on
the