He saw Foxy on the quay and the guns pointing down at him. There were torches and a flashlight on Foxy, and the picture in the view-finder of the image-intensifier was pale green, washed out at the fringes and burned through on the focus point. Badger watched.
What could he have done? Could he have intervened? Might he have saved Foxy? He slapped it from his mind. Badger thought it indulgence to consider what he might, could, should have done. He had done nothing. It would have been dishonest to claim he’d liked Foxy, been fond of him, even that he’d acquired a degree of respect for him. He was not dishonest, never had been. To a fault, Badger spoke it like it was. He couldn’t have said it was anything other than gut-wrenching to see, through the lens’s soft focus, the man he’d shared the hide with – had slept alongside, had eaten, defecated and urinated next to, and from whom he’d been given the big confession of life with a woman who shagged around.
On the quay they were searching Foxy, had the suit pulled up, his legs, arms and chest exposed. Then hands seemed to go down into Foxy’s underpants and scrabble there for anything hidden. The boots came at him to pitch him over, and they did his backside, searched in there. He couldn’t have done anything because he had seen little of Foxy being taken – he’d been on the far edge of the clear ground, away from the hide, and had the bergens beside the small craft, with the air cylinder used to inflate it. He’d reckoned that he’d pull and Foxy would ride. He hadn’t seen the light come on, and had become aware of the crisis only after the shots were fired. Then he had scrambled, leopard crawl, and seen the scale of it. There had been a light on the boat and more lights along the raised bund line out to the right. They would have had automatic weapons, assault rifles, with an accurate killing range of four hundred yards, and he’d had a Glock with an effective hit chance of thirty yards. He had seen, with the image- intensifier, Foxy ditch the microphone and the cable.
Badger thought they were like kids up early on Christmas morning. The goon strutted around his prisoner, and the older woman had come out of the house.
He went to work. The cable came easily. He drew it out of the hide and pulled it up from the slight trench in which it was buried. The main length came sparkling from the lagoon water and made a little wave, which was sufficient to draw in the bird’s carcass. It was dead and he didn’t know how it had died.
The old woman came close to Foxy, who was near naked now, on his back and exposed. She gave a keening cry and lashed out with a foot. Badger saw Foxy’s head jolt. She managed one more kick before she was pulled off him. Two guards escorted her back to the house. He felt sick. He went on with the work. He coiled the cable, walked across the open space and down a shallow slope, hidden from the lagoon, and stowed it in the bergen that was in the inflatable. From the other, Badger took out his own Glock and the spare magazines, the gas and flash grenades. He didn’t know what he would do with them. If Foxy had had a Glock, grenades and the gas it was unlikely he’d have made it back from the mud spit.
When there was no more to be done, he sat down. With the image-intensifier, he had a poor view of the quay, the buildings along it, the lights and the cluster of men standing over the stretched-out shape. He reflected on the scale of the catastrophe. A word kept coming into his mind: deniable. He saw a bruised face, bloodied, one or both eyes closed, the broken look of a man without hope, and a voice in monotone denounced a mission of espionage. Hardly, not at all, deniable. Time to tell the news.
He had the communications, made the link, said it like it was. Didn’t expect a coherent answer from Alpha Juliet and didn’t get one. Silence hung. After a few seconds he thought the connection had already been open too long.
Her voice, strained: what did he intend to do?
Badger said, ‘Hang around, while I have darkness cover. See what happens, what shows. Not come out till I have to.’
They would be on stand-by for an extraction, but on their side of the border. The shit was in the fan, she told him grimly – unnecessarily.
‘Plenty of it,’ Badger said, and cut the link.
They read their stuff.
When the door of the ready-room opened, the co-pilot, Tristram, did not look up from the Old Testament. Dwayne allowed his puzzle book to drop into his lap and chewed his pencil stub. The side gunner, Federico, was deep in Aerospace amp; Engineering magazine, but shifted his feet without taking his eyes off the pages to allow the pilot to go to the door where a communications technician handed him the scrambled receiver-transmitter.
When he came back in, no more than a minute later, Federico again swung his legs to give the pilot, Eddie, space to pass. Dwayne and Tristram did not look up but waited.
The pilot said, ‘We can go at any time from now. If we go it’ll be into a hostile environment and close up against the border. There are two guys up there and right now it’s a bad time for them. It’ll be us that goes in for extraction – if that’s the call – and the others do top cover. It won’t be a night for sleeping.’
The pilot, his side-kick and the gunners looked up from their reading matter and sat taller in their chairs. They peered through the open window and could see the helicopters, floodlit, on the apron, fuelled and armed.
The old woman, the mother of the Engineer’s wife, had shown them the way. When Foxy was dragged off the quayside, kicks were aimed at him. He was cursed and spat at.
All his senses reacted. He could feel pain from the kicks and the wetness of spit. He could smell the sweat on their bodies and the food they had eaten on their breath, and he could hear them. Not easy to understand because they used the vernacular of country people from the south, and he thought they’d have been recruited from farms and villages, not a major town. He was dragged. They had stripped the gillie suit off him and he was left with his underpants, socks and his one boot. The rope was still below his armpits and across his chest, burning the skin. He was on his back and more of the flesh was stripped raw on his buttocks and the back of his thighs. He reckoned the heel without the boot bled from the sharp stones embedded in the ground. They thought he was a spy. They didn’t know if he was alone. Some said he was because no attempt had been made to rescue him or to shoot at them as the boat had closed on him – they argued about it. He could measure the excitement of those who had taken him. Was he American, British, or a pale-skinned Iraqi – a Sunni bastard from Baghdad or a Kurd from the north? That was also an area of debate. The goon, Mansoor, strutted beside him. Foxy was bumped along the dirt track away from the house and he saw the old crow woman, in her black, framed in the window, watching. His eyes met hers and he read hatred. He felt a growing numbness to the pain.
It wouldn’t last. He had seen men who had been taken.
The rope was tight on his chest and seared him. He had seen men taken in the Province, had stayed on in the hide and used his encrypted communications to guide in the arrest team. He had had image-intensifiers if it was dark and early on a winter’s morning, or binoculars if it was summer and already dawn. All of those taken had been experienced men, well practised in the techniques of resistance. All would have regained composure within a half- minute of the door being flattened, the kids starting to bawl, the dog kicked into the kitchen by troops and the woman scratching at the faces under the helmets. All – by the time they were brought out of the door into the fresh air, frosted or already warm – were calm and their composure came from the knowledge that they might endure a kicking or a slapping, but not much worse, then go into the cages at the Maze and mark time until freedom came. He had not seen one Provo plead and weep – they’d had no cause to: they were not about to be killed or to undergo severe torture. They might have done at the start, in the old days when the war was coming up to speed and when ‘robust methods’ had brought PIRA to its knees, but a halt had been called long before Foxy’s time. And he had watched once from a distant ditch, in the Somerset hills west of Taunton, the Quantocks, when an animal-rights activist had been taken from a cottage at dawn: he had burned a laboratory to the ground and driven the scientists working there close to suicide, but he had seemed to think little of going into custody. He had not been about to go through any hoop, and had known it.
It would be the goon’s finest hour. What every security man dreamed of.
Foxy’s head bobbed, rolled, and the back of his skull found stones to bounce off; some of the chips were razor-edged and slashed him. He could be thankful that the pain, for now, was numbed. He had done time with the interrogation unit at the Basra base. He had seen Iraqis brought in from the cells of the Joint Forward Intelligence Team – a separate camp within a camp, not answerable to local commanders: those men had known fear, and had cowered. They had had the scars to show what had been done to them. Foxy had sat at bare tables alongside the men and women who organised the inflicting of pain. He had been opposite prisoners who shivered and mumbled answers that he had had to strain to hear, then dutifully translated. It could, of course, be justified. The men under interrogation knew the inner secrets of the enemy’s principal campaign weapon: the improvised explosive device. They might know who made them, who trafficked them, who laid them, and their answers could – a big word,