Read THE HEART OF DANGER Online
Authors: Gerald Seymour
Tags: #War Crimes; thriller; mass grave; Library; Kupa; Croatia; Mowatt; Penn; Dorrie;
Canadian could smile when he remembered how they had been, the mothers
in the village, the old men and the kids, when the jeeps had shown
up
in the week before, and not been able to deny that he had the
permission of old shit-sour face to go hunting a mass grave. The
Canadian could smile when he imagined old shit-sour face coming back
from the Belgrade knees-up to find a nice corner of a dug field, empty
.. . "Mister, do you think we could have given him something for his 35
bowel movement, a pill, something to make him happy .. . ?" The
Canadian said, "A stone turned, under the stone was a secret, and
the
secret's abroad and public knowledge, that might just have stopped
his
bowel movement." "But, mister, you're not talking evidence."
The Canadian police sergeant, far from Toronto and Yonge Street, and
far from the whores and the pushers of home, had not caught a good
night's sleep since they had prised the black-grey earth from a young
woman's face. No, he was not talking evidence ... It was that sort
of
place, Sector North, the sort of place where evidence did not come
easy.
It was rare for Arnold Browne to lose his temper.
'.. . Don't ever do that to me again, Penn, or you're lost,
forgotten.
Just remember what you are, and you are ex, Penn. You are ex-Five,
you
are ex-A Branch. You may once have, stupidly, harboured the illusion
that there is a way back let me tell you, Penn, that the way back
is
not via spitting in my face. You don't think on it, you don't
consider
it, you damn well jump to it, and I was doing you a favour ... I can
get a score of ex-Herefords who would give the right cheek of their
arses for a job like this, and I gave your name .. . Got me?"
"Yes, Mr. Browne."
"You don't patronize by thinking and considering, you bloody well
get
on with it."
"Yes, Mr. Browne. Thank you, Mr. Browne."
He slapped down the telephone. Yes, rare for him to lose his temper,
and he felt no better for it. His anger was because of his memory
of
Dorrie Mowat, and God alone knew what a pain the child had been ..
.
He had left home early.
36
He had left home while Jane was still feeding Tom. He had called
once
from the front door, and she must have been distracted because she
hadn't called back to him from upstairs. She was too damned often
distracted.
He had driven down through the countryside to the Surrey/ Sussex
border.
Penn was thirty-five minutes early for his appointment at the Manor
House.
He parked up the Sierra in the space beside the shop. There were
old
half-casks outside the shop filled with bright pansies,
and there was a notice congratulating the community on a runners-up
prize in the Tidy Village competition. Bill Penn and Jane and baby
Tom, in the maisonette, lived in Raynes Park, near the railway
station,
and there were no Tidy Village competitions where he lived. Time
to
kill, and he went walking. Away from the Manor House, away from the
shop, past the village cricket pitch where the outfield grass was
wet
and the square was thick with worm casts, towards the church. Below
the church was the graveyard. He saw her in the graveyard. Penn
felt
a shiver. She was sitting on the grass and her weight was taken by
an
arm braced to the ground. She was beside the heaped earth on which
was
the bright carpet of flowers. Her head was ducked and her lips might
have moved, as if in quiet conversation, and the two dogs were close
to
her. The two dogs, cream-white retrievers, were on their sides and
chewing at each other's ears and pawing each other's faces. She wore
old jeans and a baggy sweater and sat on her anorak; he wondered if
Mary Brad-dock would have gone home and changed and presented the
controlled appearance to him if he had arrived at the time given him.
He went through the church gate and his heels crunched the gravel
path.
Because she had still not seen him, he paused for a moment to check
that his tie was straight, to check there was no dandruff on his
blazer, to check that his shoes had not been scuffed. When he came
up
37
off the path and onto the grass, the dogs were alerted. They bounded
away from her, and from the grave, and their leads trailed crazily
behind them, and their hackles were up. He knew the basics of dogs;
Penn stood still and talked gently to them as they circled him, and
he
kept his hands still. She looked up at him, seemed to mutter
something
to the flowers, then pushed herself up. He knew what he would say,
and
he had rehearsed it in the car, just as he had rehearsed it in bed
while Jane had slept beside him ... "I said, Mrs. Brad-dock, that
I
would think on the assignment, that I would consider it. I am a free
agent, Mrs. Braddock, I am not owned by anyone, most certainly not
by
the Security Service who sacked me, most definitely not by Arnold
bloody Browne who did not stand in my corner. What I do not need,
Mrs.
Braddock, is you ringing Arnold bloody Browne, so that I get a quite
unwarranted bollock-ing down the phone, when I am thinking and
considering taking an assignment .. ." It was the same as when he
had
spied on her in the waiting room of Alpha Security. She shed her
sadness, summoned up her composure. What he had rehearsed was gone
from his mind. "Good morning, Mrs. Braddock." "Thank you for coming,
Mr. Penn." She walked well, tall, out of the churchyard, and he
followed a half-pace behind her. The dogs looked back at the grave
and
the flowers, whined once together, then trailed after her. It didn't
seem to matter that he had left his car beside the shop. She led
him
back through the village. She walked him up the wide tarmacadam
drive
of the Manor House. The climbing roses on the brickwork were drooped
dead, and the honeysuckle was ragged, not yet in leaf. The sort of
house that was photographed, For Sale, in the magazines left in his
dentist's reception. She took him into the hall, and there was
furniture that he would have noticed through the windows of showrooms
when he was doing central London surveillance. She did not tell him
where she was taking him. Up the stairs, wide, polished oak. Along a
corridor, dark and panelled. Through a small door. A bright and
airy
room. A child's room. A neat and cleaned child's room. She waved him
38
to a chair, and he carefully moved the soft bears and made himself
the
space to sit. She was on the bed. Bill Penn had been brought to
the
shrine .. . She said briskly, "My daughter, Dorothy, was a horrid
young
woman. She could be quite foul, and enjoy it. My husband, her
stepfather, he says she was "rubbish", he's usually right about things.
I am a spoiled woman, Mr. Penn, I have everything that I could
possibly want, except a loving daughter. She was a messer, a waster,
and costly. I think she took a pleasure in hurting me ... and, Mr.
Penn, she was my daughter .. . and, Mr. Penn, her throat was slit
and
her skull was bludgeoned and she was finished off with a close-range
shot .. . and, Mr. Penn, not even a rabid dog should be put to death
with the cruelty shown to my Dorrie. Do I carry you with me, Mr.
Penn?" He nodded. "We'll go down to the kitchen, Mr. Penn, I'll make
us some coffee ... I called her "horrid", and when we have some coffee I'll give you examples I don't believe in putting dirt under stones,
Mr. Penn ... By the by, this isn't the room she left when she went
away. I had it redecorated. I made the room the way it should have been. The room is a fraud. New curtains, new duvet, new carpet.
I
went out and bought new books and new toys. A stupid woman trying
to
believe she could start again .. . We'd taken her up to London and
put
her on a plane to Brisbane. The last we saw of her was her going
through the departure lounge, and she didn't even bother to look back
and wave, and we were so damned relieved to see her gone that when
we
were back here, home, my husband split open a bottle of champagne.
Am
I boring you, Mr. Penn? The morning after she'd gone I rang the
decorators. I come in here each morning, Mr. Penn, while my husband
is dressing, and I cry. Do you know anything about Yugoslavia, Mr.
Penn?" He shook his head. "Somebody else's problem, isn't it?
Somebody else's war, correct? My trouble is that "somebody else"
is me
... I didn't even know she was there, I thought she was still in
Australia .. . Will you go there, please, Mr. Penn?" "If we sort out
my fee, my expenses, yes, I think I would consider it." It was
boorish
39
of him. "You were in the Security Service, that's correct, isn't it?"
He said, sharply, "That's not an area I can discuss." She looked at
him, direct. "I just wondered why you left. If I'm to employ you
... I
just wondered why an officer of the Security Service ended up where
you've ended." "Wonder away, but it's not your business." Not her business .. . Not anyone's business but his and Jane's. His and
Jane's
business, and all the bastards that he had looked to for support.
No,
there hadn't been written commendations that would lie in his
personal
file. Yes, there had been congratulations, back-slapping, snake
words,
but nothing to lie in his file. He had gone to his team leader, to
his
section leader, and to his branch leader, all graduates. He had
requested their support for his application to be accepted into the
inner core of the Service, General Intelligence Group .. . and he
had
gone to Gary Brennard in Personnel. It was not her business ... In
the
new-style Service the men of the Transit van teams were dinosaur
history. The new style was squatting in front of a computer screen.
The Middle East squad was being wound up. The trades union squad
was
being cut back. The Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament squad was being
phased out. The future, without a degree, was being stuck, tied,
trapped in front of a computer screen with the other middle-aged,
passed-over no-hopers. The future was scanning the surveillance
photographs from the hidden cameras in railway stations and shopping
precincts and over busy pavements. The future was searching for men
with scarves across their faces, women with their coat collars turned
up, carrying bags and dropping them into rubbish bins, to hurry away
before the bloody Semtex detonated ... It was not her business that
he
had tried for Belfast, not told Jane, and been rejected, told it
wasn't
for 'marrieds', not at his level. Dougal Gray, best mate, divorced,
had won the Belfast appointment.. . Not her business that he had
believed in his work, reckoned he protected his society, taken a
pleasure that the great bloody ignorant unwashed snored in their beds
at night, safe, because he sat in the damn Transit van with a piss
bottle for company and a Leica .. . Not her business that in the last
two years there had been bloody kids, graduates, set in charge of
40
him
and lecturing him on procedures, and running up the bloody ladder
that
was denied him .. . Not her business. He felt no warmth towards her,
no gentleness. Another rich woman at war with another rich child
.. .
But there was just a flicker, in her weakness. Just a moment, in
her
pleading .. . His mother and father lived in a tied cottage, his father
was a farm labourer who most days drove a tractor, his mother went
out
most mornings and dusted and cleaned in the big house on the estate.
He
hadn't much time for the rich. And she took him downstairs to the
kitchen and heated the old iron kettle on the Aga and made him instant
coffee, and told him horror stories of the behaviour of Dorrie Mowat.
An hour later he said, "I'll work out what it would cost, how many
days
I estimate it will take. Goodbye, Mrs. Braddock. You'll hear from
me."
Three.
The pub was down the road from the launderette, and round the corner,
"You know what you are, Penn? You are a jam my bastard." The pub, Basil's 'watering hole', was mean and dirty and dark. There was a
table beyond the bar that was his, out of danger from the darts board.
Basil, one-time detective sergeant, had made the table his own since
retirement from the Metropolitan Police nineteen years back. Most
lunch times, Basil was at the table with Deirdre. "You milk that
one,
my son, because it's cream for the cat. You spin it out, my son."