“I lifted this earlier,” she said waving a key in the air and then using it to open the door. We entered a small, bare room. All the furniture had been removed, leaving it a cold concrete box. There was no light and the smell was awful. The light that seeped in from the corridor revealed a small figure curled up asleep in the corner, and a bucket in the opposite corner. It was just like the cell where I’d found Dad in Basra. Blythe’s bag of tricks was small but effective.
I crouched down and shook the boy’s shoulder. He was awake instantly. I don’t know what I’d been expecting to find. The Rowles I knew was quiet and brooding, utterly self contained and unemotional. He was so ruthless, so terrifying, that I’d forgotten one simple fact: he was an eleven-year-old boy.
His right eye was horribly bruised, swollen shut. His front teeth were gone, as were his fingernails, and his bare arms were covered in tiny cigarette burns. His one good eye wasn’t the cold orb I remembered; instead it was full of fear. Rowles scrambled away from me, trying to hide himself in the corner, burying his head in his arms and keening like a kicked dog.
“My God,” breathed Sue.
“Rowles,” I said firmly. “Rowles, it’s me. It’s Lee. We’ve come to get you out of here.”
The ruined child couldn’t hear me above his petrified whining. I reached out and put my hand on his shoulder, but he flinched away.
“Rowles,” I said, louder this time. “Listen, it’s Lee. From school. I’ve come to take you home.”
Still no response. I cursed under my breath. We didn’t have time for this. I reached forward and grabbed his head, holding his face up and forcing him to look at me.
“Rowles. Come on. We’ve got to go home.”
His eye focused on me then and widened in surprise. “Home?” he whispered. “Home?”
“Yes, home. Can you stand?” His chin wobbled convulsively as he tried to nod. “Good lad. This is Sue, she’s a nurse, she’s going to help you.”
“Hello sweetheart,” said Sue. “You take my hands now.” Rowles did so, his animal panic replaced by mute acquiescence. I went back to the door and scanned the corridor. Still quiet. I began to think that maybe we’d get away with this.
I turned back to see Rowles standing up. Sue had wrapped her arms around him and he was huddling into her for warmth, snuffling.
“Rowles, this is important. What happened to Caroline? Is she here?” I asked.
“Doctor,” he muttered. “The doctor took her.”
“So she’s not on the base?” He shook his head.
“This can wait,” Sue said sternly.
I nodded. “Okay, let’s go.”
I led the way back through the silent tunnels. We had to move more slowly, as Rowles was weak and disorientated, but we encountered nobody until we arrived back at the door where Jack and Tariq were waiting for us.
“Any joy?” I asked.
Jack shook his head. “I found and primed them but I couldn’t find the remote units anywhere. Sorry.”
“It was always a long shot,” I said. “Let’s not worry about it now. We’ve got what we came for. Let’s get the fuck out of here.”
And we did. We didn’t meet any guards at all on our way back to the Stryker. I leaned against the cold metal hull of the vehicle and breathed a huge sigh of relief. We’d made it.
I climbed on to the vehicle and opened the hatch, turned to the others, smiled and said, “Let’s go home.”
And that’s when I noticed we were missing someone.
“I WON’T LEAVE him,” I insisted.
“Tariq chose to go back, Lee,” said Jack. “He may be planning to detonate. We need to get out of here.”
I shook my head. “No. He’s gone to get Blythe, and he’ll want to do it personally. If I go quickly, I might be able to catch him up. Get everyone inside and batten the hatch. Sue, have you got your radio?” She handed it to me without a word. “I’ll call if I can but if I’m not back in an hour, you go without me. Understand?” Sue nodded. I looked across at Rowles. He had stopped whining and was sitting on the bench holding a handgun, staring at it intently, almost caressing it. I fancied I could see a flash of the boy I knew.
“You get him back safe to Fairlawne,” I said.
“Lee, it’s suicide!” said Jack.
“Just give me the door code,” I snapped back. Shaking his head, Jack used a biro to write it on my palm.
Then I grabbed the nightsight and climbed out of the Stryker, back into the darkness.
Why did I go back for Tariq? He’d made the choice to go after Blythe without consulting me. He almost certainly hadn’t told me because he didn’t want me risking my life too. So we’d not managed to wipe out the Yanks, like we’d hoped, but we’d accomplished our primary mission — rescuing Rowles — and escaped. Going back in was foolhardy and, yes, suicidal. So why did I go after him? I’ve thought about it a lot and the only answer that I can give is that I wouldn’t have been able to face my dad if I hadn’t.
I snaked under the fence and ran for cover. My best chance of making it to the main building alive was to use the tunnels again. Jack’s door code let me in, and I descended once more into the cool, silent passageways. I retraced my earlier steps to the cell where Rowles had been kept and beyond. Eventually I reached a staircase. This was it, the door by the main building. I looked up and saw that the door had been blown clean off. Now there was just a waist-high wooden barrier. I couldn’t see or hear anything at the top, but I knew there would be at least one guard. I drew my knife and steadied my breathing. Time to fight.
I crept up the stairs as softly as I could, ready to throw the knife into the chest of anyone who stepped on to the doorway. But nobody did. When I reached the top I risked a furtive glance outside, left and right. The two guards were already dead, lying in pools of blood by the sides of the doorway. Tariq had been here.
I looked to my left and saw a large brick building with imposing steps at the front leading to double doors. This must be the HQ. My nightsights picked out a tiny movement and I realised the front door was just closing. I should have checked the area, but I didn’t want to wait. I took a deep breath and sprinted for the door, expecting a hue and cry at any second. None came, and I vaulted up the steps and through the door as fast as I could, wondering how long my luck could possibly hold.
Not, as it turned out, that long.
A long, carpeted corridor stretched out ahead of me. In the middle of it, Tariq was struggling with an American soldier, trying to get him in a neck lock as the man writhed and tried to shout for aid. Tariq had his forearm jammed into the man’s mouth, and was trying not to scream as the soldier bit down. I hurried to his aid, and slid my knife in between the American’s ribs, up into his heart. He stiffened and then relaxed into Tariq’s arms. We dragged the corpse into a broom cupboard and stashed it.
“We have to go. Now,” I whispered urgently, grabbing Tariq’s bitten arm.
Tariq shook me off and kept going. “You heard what Sue said, Blythe sleeps in this building. I’m not leaving him alive, Lee.”
He began climbing the stairs and I ran after him, grabbing him again.
“Tariq, this is madness. You’ve seen what he’s like. If we go now, we might just make it.”
The Iraqi shook his head. “No more running. This ends now. You shouldn’t have come after me.” He put his hand on my shoulder. “Go, Lee. This is my fight.”
This was a different Tariq to the man I’d come to know. The light-hearted geek was gone, replaced by cold fury and suicidal vengeance. Suddenly he made sense. This was a man who would lead a resistance movement, who’d stand his ground no matter what, who’d stage mock executions to terrify enemy combatants into talking. I realised that I hardly knew Tariq at all. The celebrity blogger was the person he had been; this ruthless warrior, the side of himself that he kept carefully hidden, was the person The Cull had fashioned him into.