Porter finished eating his cereal, then suddenly stopped. He could hear something.
Out in the scrubland.
He was sure of it.
He moved swiftly towards the window.
Scanning the land outside, he couldn’t see anything. A couple of trucks rolled by in the distance, but none of them seemed to be stopping. There were no cars parked anywhere in view apart from the Polo outside. But still he felt certain he’d heard something.
A voice.
An English voice.
‘Got any binoculars?’ he said to Hassad.
After rooting around in the munitions store, Hassad returned with a cheap pair of field glasses.
‘You think there’s someone out there?’
‘I’m sure of it.’
He scanned the landscape once more. At first glance, all he could see was scrubland. Acres and acres of dust stretched into the distance. No, he told himself. There is something there. I am sure of it.
A man.
He flicked the field glasses a fraction of a millimetre to the left, twisting the lens to increase the magnification.
A man was lying flat on his belly. He was covered head to toe in dusty-coloured uniform, effectively camouflaging him. To the naked eye, he was just a ridge of dirt in the ground. Porter locked the binoculars tight onto him. The man was fifty metres away, between the road and the house. Although he was flat on the ground, he was advancing steadily towards them. He passed the glasses across to Hassad. ‘We’re under attack,’ he said.
‘How many?’
‘I can only see one guy,’ said Porter. ‘But there will be more of them. We can be sure of it.’
Somewhere behind him he heard a crash. He ran to the back of the house. A fragmentation grenade had been lobbed through the window. Glass was shattered across the floor. The grenade was lying in the hallway: there was no time to get rid of it before it blew. Porter clamped his mouth shut, and ran towards Katie. He hauled her over his back, ran towards the front door and flung it open. Looking around desperately, his eyes were searching for some cover. Without it, they were about to get cut down like dogs. There was a small wall close to where they had parked the Polo, only four feet high but just tall enough to provide some shelter. ‘Get the fuck out of there,’ he shouted at Hassad.
He dived towards the wall, flinging himself and Katie to the ground. Behind him, he could hear the grenade blowing inside the building, throwing a cloud of dust and smoke into the air. In the same moment, Hassad emerged coughing and spluttering from the house. He must have taken a lungful of fumes when the grenade blew, Porter guessed. Let’s just hope it’s not enough to put him out of action.
There could be a dozen of the bastards out there.
Are they Hezbollah? Porter asked himself. Maybe Hassad only brought me here so he could finish us both off.
Katie was muttering something, but there was no time to listen to her now. He unhooked the AK-47 from his back, and checked there was still some ammo left in the clip.
Hassad was running towards them, covering the ten metres from the house to the wall. He hurled himself down next to the others, and promptly threw up on the dusty ground. ‘Puke it up, man,’ Porter snapped. ‘It’s the only way to get the bloody smoke out of your lungs.’
Another explosion rocked through the house. Porter turned round. They must have put at least two, maybe three grenades into the place, igniting the munitions dump. A huge fireball rocked up into the sky, followed by a heavy cloud of thick black smoke. Porter tried to ignore it. A diversion, he told himself. The bastards are trying to move us out of here. Then they can gun us down.
Porter found a gap in the wall. Carefully, he slipped the AK-47 through it, so that only his hand was exposed, and even that was mostly protected by the muzzle of the assault rifle. He squeezed hard on the trigger, unleashing a barrage of fire into the space directly in front of them.
He heard a man scream, then another one.
The bastards were charging me, he noted with grim satisfaction.
But who the hell are they? And how did they know we were here?
‘Lay down some fucking fire,’ he shouted at Hassad.
He pulled the AK-47 back from the wall, discarding the empty clip. Glass and plaster had blown out of the house, covering the area with debris. He could feel the dirt clinging to his face. A hole had been blown in the roof, and waves of intense heat were billowing out of the burning building.
‘Fucking fire,’ he screamed.
Hassad spat the last of the vomit heaving out of his chest onto the ground. He lifted his head to the edge of the wall, his finger poised on the trigger of his gun.
‘Keep your fucking head down,’ shouted Porter, jamming a fresh clip into his own rifle. ‘They’re coming straight at us.’
Both guns were lodged over the wall, and Porter and Hassad fired in unison, unleashing a lethal barrage of bullets. Porter heard another scream, and the sound of a man roaring with pain. Suddenly there was a thump as something collided with the wall. He felt his heart skip a beat. In the next instant, a man had landed on the ground, just five feet from where Porter was positioned. He was about six foot tall, with a stocky build, and jet-black hair. His skin was tanned and lined, but he didn’t look more than thirty. He didn’t look like an Arab either, Porter noted. He crashed straight into Hassad, knocking him to the ground. Blood was pouring from his shoulder where he must have taken a bullet while charging the wall. His gun had fallen to the ground, but a hunting knife was gripped in the palm of his right hand, and was pointing straight at Hassad’s throat. Porter aimed the AK-47 at him, and tried to line up a shot. It was too difficult. As the two men struggled, they turned into a blur. Shoot and the chances were he’d kill Hassad as well. Glancing at the wall, he could see that there were no more men jumping over. He threw the gun aside, and jumped across to where the two men were wrestling. Hassad was lying on the ground. His right hand was sticking up, gripping his assailant’s arm, trying to stop him plunging the knife straight into him. Porter rammed a fist straight into the man’s ribcage. It was as hard as rock. The man barely flinched. He spat down into Hassad’s face. ‘Die, you bastard,’ he said.
Porter punched again. This time the blow connected, and he could feel a rib cracking under the force of the blow. The man groaned. He spat a mouthful of his blood down onto Hassad’s chest. Porter clenched his fist, drew his arm back, and smashed it into exactly the same spot. He could feel the man’s ribcage splintering: one, maybe even two bones cracked open as the blow hit home. He screamed in pain, rolling off Hassad onto the dusty ground. In the same moment, the knife in his hand lashed out. Porter leapt backwards, narrowly avoiding the blade slicing open his stomach. He stamped hard, bringing his new trainer down on the man’s hand. The knife fell away. Porter ground his foot down, making sure the fingers were driven down into the dirt. With the other foot, he kicked hard into the man’s stomach. The wind emptied out of him, and more blood dribbled out of his lips.
Hassad had already picked himself up from the ground. He had grabbed hold of the knife and was holding it tight into the man’s throat. ‘Who the fuck are you?’ Porter growled.
The man remained mutely silent.
Porter paused. Glancing again over the short wall, he could see three bodies. All of them looked dead, killed as they tried to run into the wall. At his side, the safe house was still burning, throwing off an intense heat. It looked like there had been a total of four men making the assault, and they had now dealt with all of them. He looked back at the man. ‘I said, who the fuck are you?’