happened?' he demanded.

'What kept you?'

'General China is here. He made me go with him.'

'What did he want? What happened?'

'Nothing, not important. I'll tell you about it later. How is Job?'

'I've got a full liter of plasma into him,' Sean replied. He had suspended the drip set from a branch above them. 'His pulse is better.

Job is as tough as an old buffalo bull. Help me dress the wound.

'Is he consciousT'

'He comes and goes,' Sean warned her.

Beneath the field dressing was such a terrible injury that neither of them could bring themselves to discuss it, especially as Job might be able to hear and understand them.

Sean smothered the entire area with iodine paste, then bound it up again with pressure pads and clean white bandages from the medical pack. The blood and iodine soaked through the white even as he worked.

Between them they had to roll Job on to his side to pass the bandages over his back. Claudia held the half-severed arm in place, bending the elbow across his chest, and Sean strapped it securely.

By the time they finished, Job's entire upper body was swathed in a cocoon of expertly applied bandage from which only his left arm protruded.

'His pulse is going again.' Sean looked up from his wrist. 'I'm going to give him another liter of plasma.'

There was a scattered outbreak of machine-gun and mortar fire from the forest beyond the hill laager, and Claudia looked up apprehensively. 'What's that?'

'Frelimo counterattack.' Sean was still busy with the drip set.

'But China has three companies in there, and Frelimo are going to be less than enthusiastic now that they have lost their air support. China's lads should be able to hold them off with no trouble.'

'Sean, where did China come from? I tho 'Yes, Sean cut in. 'I also thought he was back on the river. The crafty bastard was right on our heels, ready to rush in and grab the spoils.' He finished adjusting the plasma flow in the drip set and squatted down beside Claudia, studying her face.

'AB right,' he said. 'Tell me what happened.'

'Nothing.' She smiled brightly.

'Don't bullshit me, beautiful,' Sean said gently, and put an arm around her. Despite herself she choked on a sob.

'China,' she whispered. 'Right on top of what happened to Job. He made me translate for the Russian pilot. Oh, God, I hate him. He's an animal. He made me watch-' She broke off.

'Rough stuff?' Sean asked, and she nodded.

'He killed one of the Russians, in the foulest possible way.' 'He's a lovely lad, our China, but try and put it out of your mind. We've got enough troubles of our own. Let the Russkies worry about theirs.'

'He forced the Russian pilot to agree to fly the helicopter. Sean stood up, lifting her to her feet beside him. Don think of China and the Russian anymore. All we have to worry about is getting out of here.' He broke off as he saw Sergeant Alphonso and a half-dozen of his Shanganes trotting down the hill toward them. All of them were laden with loot.

'Nkosi!' Alphonso's broad, handsome face was wreathed in a beatific grin. 'What a fight, what a victory!'

'You fought like an impi of lions,' Sean agreed. 'The battle is won, but now you must help us to get away to the border. Captain Job is badly hurt.'

Alphonso's smile faded; despite their natural tribal emnity, both men had developed a grudging respect for each other. 'How bad?'

He came to stand beside Sean and looked down at Job.

'There was a fiberglass stretcher in the first aid post,' Claudia said.

'We can carry Job on that.'

'It is two days' march to the border,' Alphonso murmured dubiously. 'Through Frelimo territory.'

'Frelimo are running like dogs with a hot coal under their tails.'

Sean's tone was hard. 'Send two of your men to fetch the stretcher.'

'General China calls for you. He is leaving in the Russian hen shaw He wants to speak to you before he goes,' Alphonso said.

'AB right, but I wantiat stretcher here when I get back,' Sean warned him. He glowed at his wristwatch. 'We will march for the border in one hour from now.'

'Nkosi!' Alphonso agreed cheerfully. 'We will be ready.'

Sean turned back to Claudia. 'I'm going to see China. I'm going to try to talk him into flying Job out in the helicopter, but I don't think my chances are particularly rosy. Please stay with Job and keep an eye on his pulse rate. I've found a disposable syringe of adrenaline in the medic pack. Use it only as a last resort.'

'Please don't be long,' she whispered. 'I'm only brave when you're here.'

'Matatu will stay with you.'

Sean climbed the hill swiftly, passing the first string of Renamo porters. Obviously China was taking everything he could carry, including boxes of helicopter spares and hundreds of jerry cans of avgas. The lines of porters were heading back into the wilderness toward the river, and Sean paid them scant attention. He had played his role. He was eager to get out, reach the border, get Job to where he could receive professional medical attention and get Claudia to safety. However, over all his urgency lay the nagging uncertainty: Was China really going to stand by his word and let them go? Was he not being just a trifle optimistic?

'We'll. see,' he told himself grimly, and shouted at one of the Renamo officers who was supervising the loading of the porters.

'Where is General China?'

He found him with his staff and the captured Russians in the laager's command bunker. China looked up from the map he was consulting and smiled affably as Sean entered. 'Colonel Courtney, my felicitations. You were magnificent. A famous victory.'

'And now you owe me a favor.'

'You and your party wish to leave,' China agreed. 'AD debts between us have been paid in full. You are free to go.'

'No,' Sean shook his head. 'By my calculation you still owe me one. Captain Job has been badly wounded. Ms condition is crit iI want him flown out to Zimbabwe in the captured Hind.'

cal.

'You jest, of course.' China laughed lightly. 'I cannot risk sending such a valuable asset on a nonproductive mission. No, Colonel, all debts are paid. Please don't persist in extravagant demands. With my defective hearing, it only annoys me, and I may be tempted to review my generous offer to allow you and yours to depart unhindered.' He smiled and held out his hand. 'Come now, Colonel. Let us part as friends. You have the services of Sergeant Alphonso and his men. You are a man of infinite resourcefulness. I am sure you will contrive to get yourself and all your party to safety without any further assistance from me.'

Sean ignored the outstretched hand. China glanced at it and then lowered it to his side. 'So we part, Colonel. Me to my little war and, who knows, perhaps one day a country of my very own.

You to the tender embraces of your very rich, very beautiful young American.' His smile had a sly, foxy slant to it. 'I wish YOU JOY, and I am sure you do the same for me.' He turned back to his map, leaving Sean for an instant nonplussed and taken off balance. It was incomplete, it couldn't end like this. Sean wondered if there was more to come, but General China began dictating orders to one of his officers in Portuguese, leaving Sean standing uncertainly at the door of the bunker.

Sean waited a few moments longer, then turned abruptly and ducked out through the entrance. Only after he was gone did China lift his head and smile after him, a gloating little smile which, if Sean had seen it, would have answered his question.

Alphonso's men had worked quickly. The fiberglass stretcher was one of those lightweight body-molded types used by mountain rescue teams. Nonetheless it would require four men to carry it over rough ground, and they had a long, hard path to the border.

'Less than a hundred kilometers and not that hard,' Sean reassured himself. 'Two days, if we push it.'

Claudia greeted him with relief. 'Job seems stronger. He was conscious, asking for you. He said something about a hill. Hill Thirty-one?'

Sean flickered a smile. 'That's where we met. He's wandering a little. Help me to get him onto the stretcher.'

Between them they lifted Job gently and settled him onto the stretcher. Sean rigged the drip set on a wire frame above his head and tucked looted gray woolen blankets around him.

'Matatu,' he said as he stood up. 'Take us home.' And he gestured to the first team of stretcher bearers to take their positions.

It was less than two hours since sunrise, but they seemed to have lived an entire lifetime in that short period, Sean thought as he glanced back at the hilltop laager. Streamers of smoke drifted from its crest, and the last column of General China's porters was disappearing into the forest below it, all heavily laden with booty.

The distant sounds of battle had finally dwindled into silence.

The halfhearted Frefirno counterattack had long since

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