I fell on to my knees at one stage and discovered some rocks concealed beneath the mud. I sat there for a while in the dirt, rain running into my eyes and ears and down my neck, waiting for the pain to ease. At least it was warm.
I got up, still resisting the temptation to scratch my back rash to death. A few more metres and a large rotted tree trunk blocked my way. I couldn"t be bothered working around it then back on to my compa.s.s bearing, so I just lay across it on my stomach and twisted myself over. The bark came away from the rotting wood like the skin on a blister and my chest throbbed from the beasting Sundance and his mate had treated me to in the garage.
As I got to my feet, looking down, brushing off bark, I caught a glimpse to my right of something unnatural, something that shouldn"t have been there.
In the jungle there are no straight lines and nothing is perfectly flat; everything"s random. Everything except this.
The man was looking straight at me, rooted to the spot five or six metres away.
FOURTEEN.
He was wearing a green US Army poncho with the hood over his head. Rain dripped from the wide-brimmed straw hat perched on top of that.
He was a small guy, about five five, his body perfectly still, and if I could have seen his eyes they would probably have been wide and dancing around, full of indecision. Fight or flight? He must have been flapping. I knew I was.
My eyes shot towards the first six inches or so of a gollock (machete) that his right hand was resting on and which protruded from the green nylon of his poncho. I could hear the rain pounding on the taut nylon, like a drum roll, before it dripped down to his black wellies.
I kept my eyes fixed on the exposed part of what was probably two feet of gollock blade. When he moved, so would that thing.
Nothing was happening, no talking, no movement, but I knew that one of us was going to get hurt.
We stood there. Fifteen seconds felt like fifteen minutes. Something had to be done to break the stand-off. I didn"t know what he was going to do I didn"t think he did yet but I certainly wasn"t going to be this close to a gollock and not do something to protect myself, even if it was with just a pair of pointed pliers. The knife on my Leatherman would take too long to find and pull out.
I reached round with my right hand, and felt for the soaking, slimy leather pouch. My fingers fumbled to undo the retaining stud then closed around the hard steel of the Leatherman. And all the time, my eyes never left that still static gollock.
He made his decision, screaming at the top of his voice as he ran at me.
I made mine, turning and bolting in the direction of the road. He probably thought my hand was going for a pistol. I wished it had been.
I was still fumbling to get the Leatherman out of its pouch as I ran, folding the two handles back on themselves, exposing the pliers as he followed in my wake.
He was shouting stuff. What? Shouting for help? Telling me to stop? It didn"t matter, the jungle swallowed it.
I got caught on wait-a-while, but it might have been tissue paper to me right then. I could hear the nylon poncho flapping behind me and the adrenaline pumped big-time.
I could see tarmac ... once on that he wouldn"t be able to catch me in those wellies. I lost my footing, falling on to my a.r.s.e but gripping the Leatherman as if my life depended on it. It did.
I looked up at him. He d.i.n.ked left and stopped, eyes wide as saucers as the gollock rose into the air. My hands went down into the mud and I slipped and slithered, moving backwards, trying to get back on to my feet. His screams got higher in pitch as the blade flashed through the air.
It must have been a cheap buy: the blade hit a sapling and made a thin tinny sound. He spun round, exposing his back to me in his frenzy, still screaming and shouting as he, too, slipped on the mud and on to his a.r.s.e.
As he fell, the rear of the poncho caught on some wait-a-while and was yanked vertically. With the Leatherman still in my right hand I grabbed the flailing material with my left and pulled back on it as hard as I could, not knowing what I was going to do next. All I knew was that the gollock had to be stopped. This was one of Chan"s men, those boys who crucified and killed their victims. I wasn"t going to join the queue.
I pulled again as he landed on his knees, yanking him completely backwards on to the ground. I grabbed another handful of cape and pulled, constricting his neck by bunching the nylon of the hood as I got up. I could hear the rain hitting the tarmac outside as he kicked out and I dragged him and our noise back into the jungle, still not too sure what I was doing.
He had his left hand around the hood of his poncho, trying to protect his neck as the nylon squeezed against it. The gollock was in his right. He couldn"t see me behind him, but still he hit out, swirling around in desperation. The blade slashed the poncho.
Still screaming at the top of his lungs in fear and anger, he kicked out as if he was having an epileptic fit.
I bobbed and weaved like a boxer, not knowing why it just seemed a natural reaction to having sharp steel waved in my face. His a.r.s.e bulldozed through leaves and palm branches. The struggle must have looked like a park ranger trying to drag a p.i.s.sed-off crocodile out of the water by its tail. I was just concentrating on getting him back into the jungle and making sure the whirling blade didn"t connect with me.
But then it did big-time sinking into my right calf.
I screamed with pain as I held on, still dragging him backwards. I had no choice: if I stopped moving he"d be able to get up. f.u.c.k if anyone heard us, I was fighting for my life.
The crocodile thrashed and twisted around on the floor as there || was another almighty clap of thunder, a deep resonant rumbling that seemed to go on for ever. Forked lightning crackled high above, its noise drowning out his shouts and the clatter of rain.
The sharp pain of the cut spread out from my leg, but there was I nothing I could do but go on dragging him into the jungle.
I didn"t see the log. My legs. .h.i.t it and buckled and I fell backwards, keeping my grip on the poncho as I crashed into a palm. Rainwater came down in a torrent.
The pain in my leg was gone in an instant. It was more important to fill my head with other things, like living.
The guy felt the material round his neck relax, and instantly turned round. As he scrambled on to his knees, the gollock was up. I crabbed backwards on my hands and feet, trying to get myself upright again, trying to keep clear of his reach.
Cursing and screaming in Spanish, he lunged forward in a wild frenzy. I saw two wild dark eyes as the gollock blade swung at me. I thrashed backwards and managed to get myself on to my feet. It was time to run again.
I felt the gollock whoosh through the air behind me. This was getting Outrageous. 1 was going to die.
f.u.c.k it, I had to take a chance.
I turned and charged straight at him, face down, bending forward so that only my back was exposed. My whole focus was on the area of the poncho where his stomach should have been.
I screamed at the top of my voice, more for my own benefit than his. If I wasn"t quick enough, I"d soon know because I"d feel the blade slice down between my shoulders.
The Leatherman pliers were still in my right hand. I got into him and felt his body buckle with the impact as I wrapped my left arm around him and tried to pinion his gollock arm.
Then I rammed the pointed tips against his stomach.
Both of us moved backwards. The pliers hadn"t penetrated his skin yet: they were held by the poncho and whatever was underneath. He screamed, too, probably feeling the steel trying to pierce him.
We hit a tree. His back was against it and I lifted my head and body, using my weight to force the pliers to penetrate his clothing and flesh.
He gave an agonized howl, and I felt his stomach tighten. It must have looked as if I was trying to have s.e.x with him as I kept on pushing and bucking my body against him, using my weight against him with the pliers between us. At last I felt his stomach give way. It was like pushing into a sheet of rubber; and once they were in, there was no way they were coming out again.
I churned my hand up and down and round in circles, any way that I could to maximize the damage. My head was over his left shoulder and I was breathing through clenched teeth as he screamed just inches from the side of my face. I saw his bared teeth as they tried to bite me, and head b.u.t.ted him to keep him away. Then he screamed so loudly into my face I could feel the force of his breath.
By now I wasn"t even sure if the gollock was still in his hands or not. I smelt cologne and felt his smooth skin against my neck as he thrashed his face around, his body bucking and writhing.
The stab wound must have enlarged, as he was leaking over me. Blood had got past the hole in the poncho and I could feel the warmth of it on my hands. I continued to push in, keeping my body up against his, using my legs to keep him trapped between me and the tree.
His noises were getting softer and I could feel his warm s...o...b..r on my neck. My hand was virtually inside his stomach now, taking the poncho with it. I could smell the contents of his intestinal tract.
He collapsed forward on to me and took me down with him on to my knees. Only then did I withdraw my hand. As the Leatherman emerged and I kicked him off, he fell into the foetal position. He might have been crying; I couldn"t really tell.
I moved away quickly, picked up the gollock from where he"d dropped it, and went and sat against a tree, fighting for breath, unbelievably relieved it was all over. As my body calmed down, the pain came back to my leg and chest. I pulled up my slashed jeans on my right leg and inspected the damage. It was to the rear of the calf; the gash was only about four inches long and not very deep, but bad enough to be leaking quite badly.
My hand, clenched around the Leatherman, looked much worse than it was as the rain diluted his blood. I tried to fold out the knife blade but it was difficult; my hand was shaking, now that I"d released my tight grip, and probably through shock as well. In the end I had to use my teeth, and when the blade was finally open I used it to cut my sweatshirt sleeves into wet strips.
With these I improvised a bandage, wrapping it around my leg to apply pressure on the wound.
I sat there in the mud for a good five minutes, rainwater streaming down my face and into my eyes and mouth, dripping off my nose. I stared at the man, still lying in a foetal position, covered in mud and leaf litter.
The poncho was up around his chest like a pulled-up dress, and the rain still beat on it like a drums king Both his hands clutched his stomach; blood glistened as it seeped through the gaps between his fingers. His legs made small circular movements as if he was trying to run.
I felt sorry for him, but I"d had no choice. Once that length of razor-sharp steel started flying around it was either him or me.
I wasn"t feeling too proud of myself, but placed that feeling in my mental bin with the lid back on when I began to see that this wasn"t exactly the local woodcutter I"d stumbled across. His nails were clean and well manicured, and though his hair was a mess of mud and leaves, I could see it was well cut, with a square neck and neatly trimmed sideburns. He was maybe early thirties, Spanish, good-looking and clean-shaven. He had one unusual feature: instead of two distinct eyebrows, he had just one big one.
This guy wasn"t a farmhand, he was a city boy, the one who"d been standing in the back of the pickup. As Aaron had said, these people didn"t f.u.c.k about and he would have sliced me up without a second thought. But what had he been doing in here?
I sat and stared at him as it got darker and the rain and thunder did its thing above the canopy. This episode spelt the end of the recce, and both of us were going to have to disappear. For sure he was going to be missed. Maybe he had been already. They would come looking for him, and if they knew where he had been, it wouldn"t take them long to find him if I left him here.
I folded down my bloodstained Leatherman and put it back in its pouch, wondering if Jim Leatherman had ever imagined his invention would be used like this.
I guessed that the fence must be closer than the road now: if I headed for that, at least I"d have something to guide me out of the jungle in the darkness.
Unibrow"s breathing was shallow and quick, and he was still gripping his stomach with both hands, his face screwed up in pain as he mumbled weakly to himself. I forced his eyes open. Even in this low light there should have been a better reaction in his pupils; they should have closed a lot quicker. He was definitely on his way out.
I went in search of his hat, gollock in hand. It was a bottom-of-the-range thing, with a plastic handle riveted each side of very thin, rust-spotted steel.
What to do with him once we were out of here? If he was still alive I couldn"t take him to a hospital because he"d talk about me, which would alert Charlie and compromise the job. I certainly couldn"t take him back to Aaron and Carrie"s place because that would compromise them. All I knew was that I had to get him away from the immediate vicinity. I"d think of something later.
Hat retrieved, I went back to Unibrow, got hold of his right arm, and hoisted him in a fireman"s lift over my back and shoulder. There were moans and groans from him and he tried in a pathetic way to kick out at me.
I grabbed his right arm and leg and held them together, jumping gently up and down to get him comfy round my shoulders. The small amounts of oxygen that his injuries allowed him to take in were knocked out of him again, no doubt making him feel even worse, but I couldn"t help that. The poncho flapped over my face and I had to push it away. I grabbed his hat, and then, gollock back in hand, I checked the compa.s.s and headed for the fence line It was getting much darker; I could only just make out where my feet were going.
I felt something warm and wet on my neck, warmer than the rain, and guessed it was his blood.
Pushing myself hard I limped on, stopping occasionally to check the compa.s.s.
Nothing else mattered but getting to the road and making the RV. Within minutes I came on to the fence line The BUBs were reaching a crescendo. In another quarter of an hour it was going to be pitch black.
Ahead of me, in the open, semi-dark s.p.a.ce, was a solid wall of rain, thumping into the mud with such force it was creating mini craters. Lights were already on in the house, and in one area, probably a hallway, an enormous chandelier shone through a high window. The fountain was illuminated but I couldn"t see the statue. That was good, because it meant they couldn"t see me.
I followed the fence for a few minutes, my pa.s.senger"s head and poncho constantly snagging on branches of wait-a-while so that I had to stop and backtrack to free him. All the time I kept my eyes glued on the house. I came across what looked like a small mammal track, paralleling the fence and about two feet in. I followed it, past caring about leaving sign in the churned-up mud. The rain would sort that out.
I"d gone no more than a dozen steps when my limping right leg was whipped away from under me and both of us went crashing into the undergrowth.
I lashed out in a frenzy: it was as if an invisible hand had grabbed hold of my ankle and thrown me to one side. I tried to kick out but my right foot was stuck fast. I tried to crawl away but couldn"t. Next to me on the ground, Unibrow gave a loud groan of pain.
I looked down and saw a faint glimmer of metal. It was wire: I was caught in a snare; the more I struggled, the more it was gripping me.
I turned round to make sure where Unibrow was. He was rolled up in his own little world, oblivious to the thunder and forked lightning rattling across the night sky.
It was simple enough to ease open the loop. I got to my feet and went over and heaved him back up on to my shoulders, then set off along the track.
Just another five minutes of stumbling brought us to the start of the whitewashed rough-stone wall and, ten metres or so later, the tall iron gates.
It was good to feel tarmac under my feet. I turned left and moved as quickly as I could to get away from the area. If a vehicle came I"d just have to plunge back into the undergrowth and hope for the best.
As I shuffled forward with the weight of the man over my shoulder, I became much more aware of the pain in my right calf. It hurt too much to raise my foot, so I kept my legs as straight as possible, pumping forward with my free arm. Rain ricocheted a good six inches off the tarmac, making a horrendous racket. I realized I"d never be able to hear a vehicle coming up behind us, so I had to keep stopping and turning round. Thunder and lightning roared and crackled behind me and I kept moving as though I was running away from it.
It took over an hour but I finally got us both into the canopy at the loop. The rain had eased off but Unibrow"s pain hadn"t, and neither had mine. The jungle was so dark now I couldn"t see my hand in front of my face, only the small luminous specks on the jungle floor, maybe phosph.o.r.escent spores or night-time beasties on the move.
For an hour or so I sat, rubbed my leg, and waited for Aaron, listening to Unibrow"s whimpers, and the sound of his legs moving about in the leaf litter.
His groans faded, and eventually disappeared. I crawled over to him on my hands and knees, feeling for his body.
Then, following his legs up to his face, all I could hear was weak, wheezy breath trying to force itself through his mucus-filled nostrils and mouth. I pulled out the Leatherman and jabbed his tongue with the blade. There was no reaction, it was just a matter of time.
Rolling him on to his back, I lay on top of him and jammed my right forearm into his throat, pushing down with all my weight, my left hand on my right wrist.
There was little resistance. His legs kicked out weakly, moving us about a bit, a hand floundered about my arm and another came up weakly to scratch at my face.
I simply moved my head out of the way and listened to the insects and his low whimpers as I cut off the blood supply to his head, and oxygen to his lungs.
FIFTEEN.
Wednesday 6 September It"s Kev, Kelly"s dad. He"s lying on the living-room floor, eyes glazed and vacant, his head battered, an aluminium baseball bat lying beside him.
There"s blood on the gla.s.s coffee table and the thick s.h.a.g-pile carpet, some even splattered on the patio windows.
I put my foot on the bottom stair. The s.h.a.g pile helps keep the noise down, but still it"s like treading on ice, testing each step gently for creaks, always placing my feet to the inside edge, slowly and precisely. Sweat pours off my face, I worry if anyone is hiding up there, ready to attack.
I get level with the landing, I point my pistol up above my head, using the wall as support, move up the stairs backwards, step by step ... The washing machine is on its final thundering spin downstairs, still the soft rock plays on the radio.
As I get nearer to Kev and Marsha"s room I can see that the door is slightly ajar, there"s a faint, metallic tang ... I can also smell s.h.i.t, I feel sick, I know I have to go in.
Marsha: she"s kneeling by the bed, her top half spreadeagled on the mattress, the bedspread covered with blood.
Forcing myself to ignore her I move to the bathroom. Aida is lying on the floor, her five-year-old head nearly severed from her shoulders; I can see the vertebrae just holding on.
Bang, I go back against the wall and slump on to the floor, blood is everywhere, I get it all over my shirt, my hands, I sit in a pool of it, soaking the seat of my trousers. There is a loud creak of wood splitting above me ... I drop my weapon, curl up and cover my head with my hands. Where"s Kelly?
Where the f.u.c.k is Kelly?