He nodded.
‘No other prisoners?’
A shake of the head.
‘What about the other whites?’
‘They got away. But we found where they’d been living. Over there.’ He gestured towards the bungalow.
‘How many?’
‘Seven or eight.’
‘South Africans?’
He nodded.
Suddenly, going over details of the battle, he had become reasonable again. But when I asked, ‘How many casualties on our side?’ he took offence once more.
‘What business is that of yours?’
‘I need a figure for my report.’
‘Damn your report! Anybody would think you were writing a history of Kamanga.’ His tone was humourless, bitter. I said nothing, waiting for him to continue. He glared at me a couple of times, and eventually said, ‘Four dead, and one flesh wound.’
‘Pretty good,’ I suggested. ‘What have you done with the bodies?’
‘Buried them.’
‘Already?’
‘You have to, in this heat.’
‘With the bulldozer?’
He nodded.
On our way in I’d noticed that the bulldozer was in exactly the same position as when the assault started, but I said nothing. Instead I asked, ‘When’s the plane from Mulongwe due?’
‘What’s that got to do with you?’
‘I wondered if we could put the South African woman on it, to go back? We need to get rid of her somehow.’
‘Why can’t she stay here with us? We can look after her.’
‘She’s wanting out, and her ankle needs treatment. The plane would be best.’
‘It depends on the pilot. He may not want to take her.’
‘Can’t you order him to?’
‘Hey, I said it already!’ Suddenly he was screaming again. ‘Stop telling me what to do!’
‘I asked a question, that was all. What time’s the plane?’
‘Ten in the morning.’
‘What aircraft?’
‘C-130.’
I nodded. A big plane. An idea came to me. If Joss really wanted us out, our whole team could take passage and be back in Mulongwe by evening. If necessary we could bin our vehicles and go. Get Whinger to hospital that way. But I reckoned that such a suggestion might send the Kamangan ballistic, so instead I asked, ‘Any clue about the involvement of the South Africans?’
‘That fellow wouldn’t talk. Only this.’ He riffled through the pile of paper on his desk and slid one A4-size white sheet towards me. ‘We found this in their kit.’ The sheet was blank, except for a name and address printed discreetly in grey lettering across the bottom: INTERACTION, PO BOX 1189, JOHANNESBURG, S.A.
The name gave me a jolt. I knew the firm was one of the biggest private military contractors operating in Africa; it had contacts at the highest level in many countries, and in terms of international law it often sailed dangerously close to the wind. I remembered furious rows about its activities in Sierra Leone, Angola and other places. Was it being supported by the Foreign Office in Whitehall, or was it not? The issue had never been clear. Although nominally based in South Africa, Interaction was run from an office in London by a former army officer called Mackenzie. When one of the papers reported that he’d been a member of the Regiment, he never bothered to deny it, but in fact he’d no more been in the SAS than he’d visited the moon.
Glancing sideways, I saw Phil grappling with the same thought as me, that if Muende had hired guys from Interaction to bolster the rebels, it confirmed what I already suspected: there was something bigger going on than either Joss or President Bakunda realised. And if the firm was involved, we might find ourselves up against former American SEALs or even old and bold ex-SAS, because Interaction was exactly the sort of company guys of that calibre would work for after they’d left the forces.
What I should have said was that if Alpha Commando was about to run into opposition of this calibre, they were going to need us more than ever. But because the atmosphere had become so scary, I was thinking, well, if Joss wants to fight Interaction on his own, fucking good luck to him. I’d rather not get involved against people from our own background. All I said, casually, was, ‘Oh yeah, I’ve heard of these people. They supply private armies — weapons and stuff.’
My train of thought was broken by the reappearance of Boisset, who came shuffling out from the back at quite a lively pace. In the few hours since I’d seen him his face seemed to have filled out and coloured up slightly. He looked less like a living skeleton, more likely to survive.
I tried to sound relaxed as I asked him, ‘How’s it going?’
‘Not bad. We make some progress. One big emergency generator is running, at least.’
‘Great! I wanted to ask something. Have you heard of a place called Msisi?’
‘Certainement. It is a Catholic mission, run by the Poor Clares.’
‘And where is it?’
‘Down river, about sixty kilometres.’
‘You’ve been there?’
‘Once, yes.’
‘What sort of a place?’
‘Quite small. A few buildings above the river.’
‘On a cliff?’
‘C’est ça.’
I glanced at Joss to see how he was enjoying this private conversation. In the state he was, I thought he might take offence at the fact that I was ignoring him. Luckily, he seemed bored by my questions, and had started talking to his corporal again. Better still, when one of his junior officers appeared in the open doorway and called him, he got up and walked out.
I waited till he was clear, then asked, ‘This mission, is it a hospital?’
‘A small one, yes. It is funded by the Red Cross.’
‘Which side of the river?’
‘The north side. Opposite of here.’
‘Is there any bridge, any means of crossing?’
Boisset shook his head. ‘Not for many kilometres.’
‘So how would we reach it from here?’
‘First, you cross over here to the north bank, by the pontoon. Then there is a road… there was a road, a track. You have a map?’
‘Here.’ I pulled our good map out of the thigh pocket of my DPMs and spread it on Joss’s table.
It took the Belgian a minute to find his bearings; then he pointed with a long, black fingernail, and said, ‘We are here, above the big bend in the river. Non?’
‘Looks like it.’
‘Yes. Here is Gutu. And Msisi must be here.’ Again he pointed to a spot on the river. ‘You go along the north side of the river, past the so-called Zebra Pans. Yes, here.’ He indicated two small oblongs coloured light green, in the middle of brown surroundings. ‘Areas of flood in the rains, but dry now.’
‘And the road?’
‘Only a bush track. It leads round the south side of the pans, between them and the bank of the river. Perhaps it is grown over by now. But once you have found it, you need only follow it. In the end you will see a hill, with the mission on top. White buildings, with big mahogany trees growing round them.’
‘Great,’ I said. ‘Thanks.’
‘You go to Msisi now?’
‘We may try tomorrow. One of our guys has got burnt and needs treatment.’
‘Ah yes, the Poor Clares will treat him.’
Joss had reappeared in the doorway, still talking.
‘François,’ I said, in a low voice. ‘What’s the matter with him?’
Boisset gave another shrug. ‘He is very angry.’
‘You’ve said it. But why? Is he on drugs or something? He’s behaving like a lunatic.’
‘Maybe he does not like Gutu, the mine. He prefers to be somewhere else.’
Who wouldn’t? I thought. I just had time to ask, ‘The bulldozer. Is it working?’
Boisset shook his head. ‘Mais non. Ça ne marche pas. It will not go for many days. The fuel pipes are all shot through with bullets.’