Read THE HEART OF DANGER Online
Authors: Gerald Seymour
Tags: #War Crimes; thriller; mass grave; Library; Kupa; Croatia; Mowatt; Penn; Dorrie;
something bad. They had cleared the homes leading into the square.
They cleared the church and the store and the home that had been used
as the HQ. They put the dog into the cellar of Franjo and Ivana's
farmhouse, and while the dog was down in the cellar he had stood on
the
stone flags of the kitchen. Most times that he came to the farmhouse,
Branko had been given a slash of brandy in the kitchen while they
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opened the letters from Franjo's nephew who was in Australia or
Ivana's
aunt who was on the West Coast in America. No concern to him, the
brandy, because Franjo and Ivana were the same as the others, goddamn
Ustase. If it was no concern to him then he did not understand why
it
concerned Milan. They cleared the school. They shouted their
progress
across the village, across the fields, up to the tree line on the
hill
where Milan controlled the cordon. Branko watched the dog. It
would
have been the first time that the dog had been taken back to Rosenovici
since its family had gone, left it, let it run beside the wheels until
it could run no more. The first time that the dog had been back since Milan had gone to the edge of the village and called the dog and
brought it home to his son. And the goddamn Ustase dog was
remembering. The dog whined at a heap of collapsed rubble. The dog whimpered beside the wall section with the green flowers on a yellow
base of interior wallpaper. The dog curved its tail over its
privates,
sniffed, crawled on its belly over the wall section with the
wallpaper.
The postman was not concerned that the old American had come with
the
UNCIVPOL and dug for the bodies .. . They could dig where they goddamn
wanted, they could cart the bodies, stinking, back to Zagreb, and
then
they could do goddamn nothing .. . And he did not understand why Milan
had such morose misery. What could they goddamn do, nothing? He
shouted for the dog and it came back to his side. They were going
up
the lane.
A small shed. A stone shed with a roof of rusted corrugated iron.
Precious dynamite would have been wasted on the shed, fire would have
had little to burn. In the shed the dog found a plastic bag. The
bag
was white, and inside the bag were dried crumbs of bread. The shed
was
forty paces short of what had been the home of the Dubelj pair, goddamn
Ustase. Between the shed and the home of the Dubelj couple was a
small
paddock, thick with weeds. A cow had been kept in the paddock and
a
goat and two pigs. Stevo had the cow, and Milo had the pigs. The
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postman had taken the goat, but had killed and eaten it. He had felt
strong until they reached the house of Katica Dubelj.
The door hung open, held only by the lower hinge. It was dark inside.
The dog held back. The postman kicked the dog through the door. The carpenter was behind him and there were the raw scratch scars on the
cheeks of his face, he was not hurrying to push past him. He went
inside, into the goddamn smell and the darkness. He held tight to
his
gun. He had to stand, very still, and wait for his eyes to work for
him. The dog was in the corner. The image cleared. The dog
scratched
in a heap of rags, maybe sacks, in the corner. He saw the hurricane
lamp that had died and the bow saw and the jemmy and the lump hammer
dropped on the old linoleum. There was another bag, white, and he
lifted the bag and crumbs of bread crust fell from it. The dog had
come from the corner and sniffed at a chewed apple core.
The dog held a scent down the lane from the house and through the
entrance to the field where the bulldozer had crushed the wooden
gate.
The dog followed a scent that skirted the low wall of grey black mud
around the pit, went over the tyre marks of the jeeps. There had
been
heavy rain in the night and Branko slipped and fell in the field as
he
tried to keep pace with the dog. He could see Milan above him, close
to the tree line. The dog went past the grave.
The dog reached the small ditch that came down the field and, at the
ditch, the dog lost the scent.
They tried the dog up the ditch, right side and left side, but the
dog
had lost it.
The postman trudged up the field, sliding, cursing, until he reached
Milan. He showed Milan the plastic bags in which they had found the
crumbs, and the chewed apple core. He told Milan that someone had
been
there, recently, had eaten there, slept there, the scar scratches
on
the carpenter's face proved it. He asked Milan to come down into
Rosenovici so that he could see for himself where they had found the
plastic bags and the apple core. Milan refused him.
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Milan was the postman's leader, he would never criticize him. He
watched Milan walk away. He had taught Milan, boy and man,
everything
he knew of the game of basketball and he had been superb. Milan
walked
away along the edge of the tree line, took the long route so that
he
would not have to cross the village. He could remember when Milan,
in
attack, brilliant in the dribble, fantastic jumping for the net, had
led Glina Municipality to victory against Karlovac Municipality,
taken
the cup, a player without doubts. Milan was going the long way round
the village towards the bridge.
The postman did not understand the goddamn problem.
Ham had slung a white T-shirt, filthy as if it had been used to clean
the plugs of a car engine, across a low bush of thorn. They sat a
dozen paces back from where the T-shirt was draped and Ham talked
Penn
through the maintenance and cleaning of the Browning 9mm automatic
pistol, and then made Penn do it, and then tied a handkerchief round
the front of Penn's face and made him do it again, and he made Penn
load a magazine with the blindfold still in place. It was seven years
since the two-day firearms course and it was more forgotten than he
had
realized.
Later Ham would show him what he had also damn near forgotten: how
to
crouch, lock his legs, extend his arms, find the target, aim and hold
it, how to fire the pistol. Ham talked low and keen, as if firing
the
pistol was of importance.
In the grip on the back seat of the Cherokee jeep were seven video
tapes, nine hours of audio recording, thirty-seven pages of
handwritten
notes.
Marty drove along the wide highway, back to Zagreb.
They were good 'snapshots', the video and the audio and the notes
from
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the stories of the latest refugees from the village outside the
Bosnian
town of Prijedor. He drove steadily, did not exceed the speed limit,
although the road ahead was empty. EWT 19, traumatized but coherent,
had said that he had seen seven pairs of fathers forced to have oral
sex with their sons, before the fathers and sons were shot evidence.
EWT 12, thirteen years old but with a visage going on sixty, had said
that he had seen prisoners ordered to castrate fellow prisoners with
their teeth evidence. And plenty more .. . eyewitnesses telling his
microphone of rape and beating and killing, telling it like it was
evidence. The evidence would go from his notes onto disk. The disks
and the video tapes and the audio would go on the courier flight back
to the second-floor office in Geneva. But it was just damned
ridiculous ... It had hurt him that he had not seen the German lady
when he had pulled out from the Transit Centre. He had wanted to
see
her, wanted to be with her, had checked her office, actually gone
up
the staircase and through each of the third- and the second-floor
rooms, and the dispensary, and the kindergarten and the kitchens,
been
told she wasn't there, anywhere, and kept looking for her. It had
been
a long time since he had last gone looking for a woman, and wanted
to
be with that woman ... It was just damned ridiculous that his work,
work of this importance, should be dumped off in a damned converted
container.
He was coming into Zagreb, picking up the traffic.
Had he looked at himself, which he did not, Marty Jones might not
have
liked what he saw. His mind did not acknowledge the ravages of
stress.
The videos that he filmed were of rape, the audios he recorded were
of
torture, the notes that he wrote were of foul cruelty. The woman
he
reported to in Geneva, three weeks back when she was down in Zagreb,
had said to him, "Don't you get sick of it, Marty? Why don't they
just
kill each other? What does it do to you, Marty? Why do they have
to
cut out eyes, cut off noses, cut off heads why can't they just kill
each other. How do you stay sane, Marty?" He had not known how to 162
answer her.
But he never looked in the mirror. He had a dream, and the dream
was a
prepared case ... It was just damned ridiculous that he had to make
the
dream in a converted freight container.
He drove into Ilica barracks. The parking lot available to him was
up
by the A block, where the big shots were. There were workmen carrying
prefabricated partitioning and timbers in through the main doors.
The
big shots were extending their office space, reaching into the roof
area. The big shots had space, and he had the damned converted
freight
container.
For the rest of the day he would get his notes onto disk, and get
the
package off, and then he might just raise some damned noise.
He unlocked the door of his container, pulled it open, and the wall
of
heat hit him.
The crows above them had scattered with the first shot. The quiet
came
again to the woodland of birches. The magazine was exhausted. Four hits on the T-shirt, two hits for every three misses. Ham didn't
criticize. Back on the training course the instructor had given him
hell with three hits for every five misses. Penn guessed that Ham
didn't criticize because it was too late to rubbish him. Quite
relaxed
he had been on the training course, but time was not running then
.. .
When he had cleaned the pistol, he sat with Ham and they went over
the
maps. They had a tourist map that Ham had bought in Karlovac, and
they
had the sketch map that Ham had drawn. The sketch map would take
him
to within six miles of Rosenovici. There were minefields marked on
Ham's hand-drawn map, and strong points and villages where there
would
be patrols and roadblocks. And all the time Ham seemed to watch him,
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in a manner open but sly. Ham watched him as if he were meat hanging
from the hook in a butcher's window, evaluated his quality. Penn
thought Ham was making a reckoning on whether he would get himself
back
to go for the hunting of Karen and Dawn, and he thought also that
Ham
judged him capable of bringing back intelligence bullshit that the
mercenary would present to his officers ... He was a rotten little
man
but he had taken the one chance and perhaps would be remembered.
Dorrie
was a horrid young woman but she had taken the one chance and was
loved. Jovic was a prickly bastard who learned to paint with his
left
hand, and might succeed ... It was about winning his own respect,
about
walking his own path, taking the one chance .. . And the afternoon
was
slipping.
"Of course we'll have another .. . Well, how's the self-inflicted
wound? .. . It'll have to be a cheaper one."
Georgie Simpson had his arm raised for the attention of the wine
waiter. The food wasn't good. The monkfish didn't taste as if it
had
been swimming too recently. Best to kill another bottle. Arnold
Browne didn't believe he cared too much about the freshness of the
fish; he wiped his mouth with the napkin.
"Not a lot moving on that front."
Which was economical with the truth. The truth, and it rankled, was
that he had been summoned, the last evening, to the snug at the bottom
of the neighbour's garden at about the time he was looking to his
bed
and his book. Given a token whisky, not generous, and berated.
Hammered. Penn did not respond to telephone messages. Penn had
been
away nearly a week and not a squeak from him. Penn was on the gravy
train. Penn was a bloody waste of money .. . No shortage of money,
Arnold wouldn't have thought it was small change to Charles bloody
Braddock .. . Penn was the wrong man.
"What sort of chap?"
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"I beg your pardon .. ."
"The private detective you told me last week you'd arranged for a
private detective to travel."