Read That Devil's Madness Online
Authors: Dominique Wilson
Nicolette took a deep breath, wincing again. He could almost see her thoughts, her pride fighting her fears.
âOkay,' she said at last in a small voice. âI did panic. Maybe you're right. Maybe I shouldn't be here.'
âGood, admitting you panicked's what's important here. I'm going to let you in on a little secret here. We
all
panic. Me, DJ, Jean-Paul. Every one of us. Sooner or later we freeze â or run â depending.'
She looked at him, disbelieving. âI can't imagine you ever panicking.'
âWell, you're wrong. With me it was a train derailment in India. I was pretty new at this, thinking I was this crash-hot journalist. Then this cop yelled at me to help him carry a body out, and I just froze. That body â it just didn't look human anymoreâ¦'
âWhat happened?'
âNot much. He just called me every name under the sun, then got someone else to help. I threw up and went home with my tail between my legs. The point is, Nicky, you've got to get tough. You can't go letting what's going on around you get to you, or leaving a little piece of you in every shot you take, because if you do, soon you'll be a total wreck and there'll be nothing left.'
Nicolette nodded. âIt's not that easy.'
âNo-one said anything about easy. But for your own sake, you have to learn to turn your feelings off when you're out there.
All
your feeling, including the fear.
Capisce
?'
â
Capisce.'
âOkay, now let's see where you're hurt.'
Nicolette lifted her jumper and lowered her jeans a little. She had an angry bruise around a couple of ribs, a lesser one on her hip.
âDoes it hurt to breath?'
âA little.'
âHave a shower and see how it feels then. If you want, I can bandage it up firm for tomorrow.'
âHm. Tomorrowâ¦'
âYes,
tomorrow
. You're a tough photojournalist, remember? You can handle it.'
Nicolette nodded.
âHave that shower and come have some food. You'll feel better.'
âSteven?'
âYeah?'
âWhen do you stop being scared?'
âShit, kid, never. That's half the fun.'
#
All of the next morning the radio and television continued to urge people to stay in their homes, assuring them that the funeral would be televised in complete detail. In a thirty-kilometre circle around the city the army set up barrages across all roads, to stop people from neighbouring towns and villages coming into Algiers. Fifteen thousand men from the police, army, and gendarmerie formed a double line on both sides of the route that the funeral procession was to take.
Nicolette was sticking closer to Steven today. Her short-cropped hair and black eye gave her a funny, beaten-up-waif appearance, rather than the tough image she'd hoped for, but Steven wasn't about to tell her that. She showed no sign of fear or hesitation today, and he noticed that when she got close to the crowd, she frequently checked her back. He saw the TV crew he had talked to the previous day, and signalled to her to follow him. From the top of the TV van, they had a good view of the Palace and the crowd.
At exactly one o'clock in the afternoon, the flower-covered coffin of President Boumedienne was lifted from the Grand Salon, where the President had rested for these past two days, and placed on a gun carriage, which was then pulled by officers of the armed forces. When it reached the gates it was surrounded by a cordon of motorbike police. The crowd went mad, pushing past the police to touch the coffin. The convoy of official cars tried to move forward, but the crowd blocked their path. Soldiers held their rifles close to their chest, the weapons useless and cumbersome in this crowd. Police officers lost their caps as people yelled
Yaya Boumedienne â Long live Boumedienne
â and
Allah Akbar
â
God is great
. The procession moved forward and the official cars tried to catch up but were hindered by people climbing onto the roofs of the cars.
âCome on,' Steven said after a few minutes. âWe're going with these guys. Get in the van.'
From within the van Nicolette kept her lens focussed on the crowd outside. The TV crew's driver kept his fist on the horn and his foot on the accelerator, and the crowd moved to let them through. They turned into side streets, less crowded than before.
They reached the Place des Martyrs at the foot of the Casbah moments before the procession. Tens of thousands of mourners had gathered there. Trees and kiosks, unable to withstand the weight of those hoping for a better view, had collapsed and were squashed underfoot. The crowd was being held back by a double line of soldiers and police, and surprisingly, all was relatively calm. As the procession made its way along the Boulevard Che Guevara, in front of the ocean, dozens of sirens from boats at anchor sounded their respect.
The procession stopped in front of the Great Mosque. The coffin was taken into the Mosque by members of the President's family, where the President of the Superior Islamic Council â Sheikh Ahmed Hamani â pronounced the ritual prayer. At that precise second the whole of Algeria became silent. Everywhere, in the cities and villages, in the streets and the houses of the rich and the poor, the people held one minute's silence for the President they had lost. The silence was eerie after the shouts and sirens and cries. It was when the coffin was brought out again â to be taken to the green and white cemetery of Dar-El-Alia â that everything turned sour.
Thousands of people who had been following the coffin reached the seafront. The line of soldiers and police was unable to hold back this huge new wave of mourners, and they broke their cordon to run in the same direction as the crowd, hoping to regroup a little further forward. But the crowd was as fast as the police, and it was when they were just thirty metres from the coffin of the President that police began their bludgeoning, kicking and punching. The crowd slowed, many becoming hysterical. Some were knocked to the ground but still the crowd didn't disperse. Abdelghani â the Minister of the Interior â gave the order to clear the street, so that water cannons and police in riot gear were brought in, adding to the chaos. People screamed, fell to the ground and were trampled underfoot. Others fainted. Still the police and Military attacked until the procession was able to make its way to the cemetery. But for Steven and Nicolette, and the TV van, it was impossible to move any further.
#
âIt's funny you know. It was worse today, but I wasn't as scared.'
âYou worked smarter today.'
âYeah, I did okay.'
âMaybe.'
âNot maybe. Definitely. Say it. Say
You did well today, Nicolette
.'
Steven smiled. They were on their way back to Lesage's from the news bureau. Since the crowd of the funeral had dispersed, Nicolette had been in a playful mood. It was a reaction he could understand â she was still high from the adrenaline pumping through her body. âOkay â you weren't bad today, kiddo.'
âHmm⦠It'll have to do, I guess.'
She walked beside him for a while without talking. With her hands in the back pockets of her jeans, and her camera bag banging against her back, Steven thought she looked like a schoolgirl.
âJean-Paul was in a hurry to leave,' she said then.
âNo reason for him to stay. He got his story.'
âYeah, true. I just thought he'd stay another day or so.'
âWhy? Would you?'
âActually, I wanted to talk to you about that. When are we going back to Constantine?'
âWhat for?'
âThat gun negotiator story. I still want to chase it up.'
âDon't start on that again, Nicky. You saw what happened to that farmer. It's too dangerous.'
âWhy are you so against it? I would have thoughtâ'
âLook, it could take months before we find out anything, and even then we've no guarantees. We don't have that much time â we only came here for Boumedienne, remember?'
âYeah, I know. But it'll be easier this time. Jean-Paul explained how it works â they use cells. I think if we start at the bottom and work our way up, we'll get to the top guy.'
âYeah, I know about cells. All the more reason why you really don't want to go there. You'll never get anywhere.'
âYes I will. I can go see Jamilah â she said Rafiq was still fighting for the cause. She'd help. And you can ask your contacts. If we crack this, I can get a
contract,
even out of Reuters if I wanted to. I wouldn't have to take my annual leave to follow anything interesting anymore.'
âThe answer's no â you're asking for trouble. You're letting the excitement of the last few days cloud your judgement. And I've got other things on my plate.'
âAnd I think you're chickening out. A few extra days wouldn't matter.'
Steven stopped walking. He looked at Nicolette walking ahead, hands still in her pockets, head up. She didn't turn and he knew she was baiting him.
âAnd if I don't go,' he said, catching up with her, âwhat will you do?'
âI'll do it on my own.'
âAnd if you get in deeper than you thought?'
âI'm tough, remember.'
He grabbed her by the shoulders and turned her to face him. âStop it,' he said, angry at the way she met his gaze. âThis isn't a game.'
âI know.'
âAnd you insist on going.'
âYes.'
âYou're an idiot.'
âMaybe.'
He sighed and let go of her. âSo be it,' he said.
âDoes that mean yes? You'll come with me?'
âI'll come.'
Nicolette smiled. She had won.
24
The road to Constantine was almost free of traffic at this time of the morning; it wasn't even light yet. Steven had woken her around one a.m., saying he couldn't sleep and they might as well head off. Since then, he'd been sitting up front next to Amoud, barely saying a word. Nicolette was sure he was doing it on purpose, to make the trip as unpleasant as possible â his way of letting her know he didn't approve. She had tried chatting to him, teasing him, even complimenting him on the new polo-necked jumper he was wearing, all to no avail.
She looked out of the car window into the darkness, and thought of the pictures she'd taken these last couple of days. She knew there were some good ones there; she might even make the front page. She'd been here just over two weeks, but it felt like months; she'd experienced so much, learned so much. She should find out where Steven was going next â see if they could team up again. But she'd wait until he was in a better mood before asking. She leaned back in her seat and closed her eyes. Might as well catch up on some sleep.
She felt the car slow, and heard Steven say something to Amoud. She sat up. Stifled a yawn. âWhat's happening?'
In the beam of the car headlights she could see a jeep across the road ahead, and two men signalling them to stop.
âSome sort of road block,' Steven answered. âLet me handle this.'
As Amoud stopped the car, the men hurried towards them, rifles at the ready. From the description Jean-Paul had given her, she was pretty sure those were AK-47s.
âSteven?'
But before Steven could answer her, the men ripped the doors open.
âGet out! Out of the car. Now! Outoutoutoutout!'
Nicolette was hauled from her seat and thrown face down into the dirt. Small rocks pressed into her forehead and the fall reawakened the pain on her side. She turned her head slightly, but only for an instant before someone grabbed her by the hair and pushed her face down into the dirt once more. âKeep your head down,' the man said in French.
But she'd seen Steven. He too was down on the ground, on the other side of the car, and so was Amoud. She felt the same rising panic she'd felt on the second day of Boumedienne's funeral and she fought against it, pushing it down her body, down down down into the ground. Her senses were more acute. She could smell the stale sweat on her captors' bodies. Hear the blood whooshing through her veins.
Someone yanked her hair, pulled her face off the ground and put a burlap sack over her head. Hoisted her to her feet. Her ears roared. The bones in her legs felt as if they were liquefying and could no longer hold her up. The sack smelt of stale urine and she retched. She heard the jeep start up. Her arms were pulled back and her wrists tied, so she twisted her hands out in an attempt to make the binding loose but her captor noticed and smashed the butt of a rifle into her back. White pain scorched its way up her spine and exploded into her head and she fell to her knees.
âGet up. Now.'
The rope cut into her wrists, cutting of circulation.
âClimb in.'
She sat as far back into the seat as she could, afraid of the swerving of the jeep. The speed of the vehicle made the burlap sack stick to her face and she thought she'd suffocate. The sockets in her shoulders throbbed from the awkward angle of her arms, her fingers numb from the too-tight rope. She wriggled them but the pins and needles were worse than the numbness.
From the angle of the car she judged they were heading down the mountainside. The noise of the engine echoed and she heard tyres scrunch on gravel. They must be going down the tracks leading down to the gorges. She sensed someone sitting next to her.
âSteven? You there?'
âNo talking.' The sudden slap silenced her. Warm liquid ran down to her upper lip. She licked it. Tasted blood. She concentrated on the pain in her shoulders, welcoming it, using it to force down the ever-present panic. The jeep bumped over rougher terrain and she muffled a cry as her arm sockets crunched. She leaned forwards in an attempt to ease the pain in her arms but was pushed back. The jeep stopped.
âOut, out.'
She stumbled.