Read THE HEART OF DANGER Online
Authors: Gerald Seymour
Tags: #War Crimes; thriller; mass grave; Library; Kupa; Croatia; Mowatt; Penn; Dorrie;
trying .. . The car came forward, going faster, between the rubble
of
the fought-over village of Turanj.
She was apart from the militia checkpoint, and when the car reached
them the militia men pointed to her, and there were smiles on their
faces and she imagined they called her the 'silly bitch' or the 'daft
whore'.
The door of the car opened. She knew the Liaison Officer. He was
often at the meetings she attended at the Karlovac Municipality.
He came to her. Perhaps it was something in her face, but the smirk
was wiped off him.
"You have a problem, what is the problem?"
"Why is the British convoy late?"
"A difficulty down the road .. ."
Said breathily, "What difficulty?"
"A route interference, they have had to divert. Why do you ask?"
"What is the interference?"
"Some kids, mines, near to Slunj .. . Why do you ask?"
"No difficulty in the Glina area, nor near to Vrginmost?"
"It is the usual interference, and the Glina area is quieter than
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the
grave .. ."
"You are sure .. . ?"
"I am returning, Miss Schmidt, from the liaison meeting with the
people
from Glina Municipality. There is no difficulty in that area, the
difficulty is at Slunj. May I repeat, please, my question .. . Why
do
you ask?"
"It's not important."
It was only the first beating.
Starting with a slap, then punches, then kicks.
But he had not been burned.
It was the fire that the Headmaster dreaded. The flame would be the
worst.
He had known Milan Stankovic through all of the young man's life,
known
his mother and his father before they had gone to live in Belgrade.
The Headmaster had once liked Milan, when the boy was the basketball
star of the village school, when the young man had been the hero
performer of the Glina Municipality team. He had always had time
for
Milan Stankovic before the war .. .
All through that day he had lain in his cell and waited for Milan
Stankovic's return from the liaison meeting, and he had thought of
the
fire against his body ... It had been just slapping and punching and
kicking so far, and he had held the secret tight in his mind.
Only staccato questions, not an interrogation.
When the interrogation came, then there would be the fire against
his
skin .. . But he did not understand why Milan Stankovic had shown
no
appetite for hurting him, and he had seen between the slaps and
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punches
and kicks the confusion of the expressions of the postman and the
carpenter and the grave-digger, as if they also had not understood.
It was important to the Headmaster to keep his secret as long as it
was
possible for him to survive the pain.
The music from the hall in his school beat at the meshed grille high
in
the door of the cell.
' After the music, after they were drunk, they might come back to
the
cell with the fire ... He did not know how long he could protect his
secret, but by the night, by the time they were drunk, surely the
young
man would have turned away from the evil that was Rosenovici. It
was
his hope. "Run hard, young man," he murmured to the walls of the cell.
"Run hard so that I do not betray you .. ." She had offered him berries from her store that was under the rags of her bed, while they
waited. The berries were bullet-hard, dried through, and he estimated
they had been picked the last autumn from the dog rose brambles in
the
wood, and from the branches of thorn trees. They had waited an hour
in
the cave, as the shadows had fallen into darkness, for the Headmaster.
It was all in gestures because they had no language. He showed her
the
palms of his hands, rejecting the berries, then declining the root
section that she offered. The Headmaster had said he would come,
and
they had waited. And he knew as certainty that she did not have the
strength to come, across country, with him to the cease-fire line,
and
he did not have the language to persuade her, nor to tell her that
the
Headmaster must record her statement. Penn would have bet, high
stakes, that the Headmaster would return. After the first trumpet
call
of the big owl from a high tree down towards the valley, she wrapped
her shawl tighter around her face, she knotted the string more closely
around her overcoat, and she replaced the berries and the root in
her
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food store under the rags, and she stood. Penn smiled at her, to
reassure her, and did not know whether she saw his smile in the cave's
gloom. He had the pistol in the pocket of his coat and a spare
magazine, and he checked that the pistol was armed and on 'safety'.
He
felt a skein of worry, that the Headmaster had not come. It was
Katica
Dubelj's decision that they should wait no longer for the Headmaster.
She took his hand, as if she could reassure him. He was trained by
A
Branch of the Security Service, he carried a Browning 9mm automatic
pistol, there were four hand grenades in his backpack, and the
shrivelled-up woman, eighty plus years of life lived, reckoned he
needed her reassurance .. . Christ. She babbled words at him, and
the
only word that he caught was the name of "Dorrie'. Going back to
Dome's place, Dome's death .. . and he knew her only by the words
of
others who held the love, and by the photograph, and nothing before
in
his life had mattered so much as the truth of Dorrie Mowat's village,
Dorrie Mowat's killing. He would go from Rosenovici. He would not
return to the cave. It was the best time for him to say his thanks
to
her. He had his hands on her light shoulders and he kissed the old
woman softly, on her forehead, below the line of the stinking tight
shawl, and she pecked at his cheek, stretching up, with her dried
mouth
that had no teeth. The humility dug into him. He hoped that he would
never again feel the arrogance that was the trademark of a watcher
of A
Branch. He hoped that he would never again swagger in conceit ..
. She
laughed, guttural, and dragged him out of the cave. They went fast
down the narrowed track from the cave. All the time she held his
hand.
He scrambled to keep up with her skipping short stride. They came
nearer to the high tree where the big owl shouted. Gaps in the tree
trunks, and Penn saw the small pin lights of the village across the
stream. The wind was coming into the trees, and Penn heard the murmur
of music from the village across the stream. She went quickly and
pulled him clumsily after her. It was the movement of a scavenging
vixen fox. When they were out of the wood, she used the overgrown
hedge at the side of the field, scurried close to the spread hazel
and
the thorn. Stopping and scenting and seeming to sniff for danger,
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and
going on. No shadows now. The gold from the sun gone grey behind
the
trees above Rosenovici. She never lost her grip of him .. . He
grinned
to himself. First she had felt the need to reassure him, now she
did
not trust him to move silently in darkness. They went by the corner
of
the field, not stopping. A sharp thought .. . where was the
Headmaster, why was the Headmaster not with them? .. . Sharp,
because
she hurried him past the black pit of the dug grave. She stopped,
suddenly, and he cannoned into her back, and she turned, only a slight
outline in the darkness, and her finger jabbed at him, as if she
criticized the child she led, as if bloody Penn knew nothing of covert
movement. She waited, the vixen fox, at the broken gate at the end
of
the lane, and listened to the night. He heard only the bleating music
and the grind of a swinging door and the creaking movement of fallen
rafters. Penn was led to her house. He was taken into the house,
through the open and hanging door. She was miming what she had seen.
She stood at the window at the front of her house, and she pushed
her
head against the shards of the broken glass, identified what had been
her viewpoint. Penn was not yet accustomed to the dark of the
interior
before he was pulled again and his feet crunched the glass and he
cursed, and she hissed her complaint. She took him back out into
the
lane. Now she loosed his hand. He stood in front of Katica Dubelj's house and he watched, squinting to see, the mime act of the
eyewitness.
She was the guards, and she seemed to kick some forward, and to beat
others as with the stock of a rifle. She was the walking wounded,
and
she seemed to carry some, and she seemed to drag others. She spoke
the
name, she was Dorrie Mowat, and she seemed to support two heavy men,
and her arms were out, and she seemed to buckle under the weight of
the
men, and she seemed to turn once and aim a kick back behind her. She
took his hand again. She walked Penn back through the fallen gate
and
into the field. They slithered together on the wet of the grass and
the weeds, and across the tyre ruts left by the jeeps. Penn was led
230
to
the edge of the pit. She made the mime again. She was the guards,
and
she moved to take their places in a half circle facing the pit, and
she
seemed to aim down towards the ground. She was the wounded, sitting.
She was the wounded, lying. She said the name, and she was Dorrie
Mowat, and she seemed to crouch down on one knee and her arms were
outstretched as if she held the shoulders of two men against her small
body, and her mouth moved as if she shouted a defiance. She was the
bulldozer and she growled and she jerked up her arms as she walked
the
length of the pit, and she seemed to throw back the pit's earth. He
watched, and he would forget nothing. He would not forget that
Dorrie
and the wounded men had watched the bulldozer gouge out their grave.
She scrambled across the earth wall and down into the pit. He could
barely see her, the black-grey shadow shape against the black-grey
earth of the pit. The music, across the stream, was a frenzy. She
lay
in the mud at the bottom of the pit. She was the wounded and waiting.
She stood. She made the knife thrust and she made the chopping blow
of
a hammer .. . She moved, a pace. She seemed to stand above the next
of
the wounded, waiting, and she thrust with the knife and chopped with
the hammer .. . another pace .. another.. . Penn forced himself to
watch. Dorrie had been the last in the line, Dorrie and the boy that
she loved. He had to watch Katica Dubelj, because it was what he
had
come for. She was a guard, she was a man from the village where the
music played across the stream. She seemed to try to pull them apart,
Dorrie and her boy, and she recoiled back and held her eyes as if
extended fingers had been punched into them. She spoke the name. The
whisper. "Milan Stankovic." She went crab fast to the near end of the
pit, and her hand was first at her face to show the length of the
beard. "Milan Stankovic." She was Milan Stankovic, and she seemed to
hold a pistol in her hand. Stopping, aiming, the pistol hand
kicking,
a pace .. . stopping, aiming, the pistol hand kicking, a pace .. .
This
was hard for Penn to watch, Milan Stankovic working methodically down
the line and fetching the last life from the wounded who had been
stabbed and bludgeoned .. . Stopping, aiming, the pistol hand
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kicking,
a pace .. . She did not hurry herself, she made each movement as she
had seen it, she was the eyewitness .. . Stopping, aiming, the pistol
hand kicking, a pace .. . Going closer to Dorrie Mowat and her boy.
She seemed to stand above them, then reach down as if to break the
hold, and then she seemed to double away and clutch her hands at her
groin as if that was where the kick had gone. She was reeling back.
She was reaching for the knife and slashing. She was reaching for
the
hammer and crashing it down. She was aiming the pistol. The pistol hand kicked twice. She whispered the name, "Milan Stankovic."
He turned away.
It was what he had come to find .. .
The power of the light seared into Perm's face.
Thirteen.
His eyes saw only the white brightness of the light. There were
excited shouts from in front of him and then all around. The light
stripped him bare. He stood in the white brightness. He dared not
move. If the fear, the panic, had not been frozen into him in that
moment when the light caught him, then he might have tried to duck