"What did you say—?" Hyde asked absently.
"His eldest sons are leading a returning raiding party. The old man who arrived a few moments ago was a lookout, awaiting their return through part of the Kurram Pass. But they are pinned down and waiting for darkness — there are helicopters. And many of the party are dead, from the numbers the old man was able to see."
Hyde shrugged. "You told me," he said, "it's a different world. What can I do?"
Men were already moving off, towards the perimeter of the camp and the long shadows from the mountains. The snow-clad peaks gleamed in the setting sun. A sprinkling of lights showed the position of Parachinar. Mohammed Jan had disappeared.
"Come," Miandad said. "Perhaps you will see what this war is all about. Perhaps it will be a good lesson for you. We will follow Mohammed Jan and his men. You may see what your old acquaintance has learned of guerilla war." Miandad's teeth flashed whitely, but not in a smile.
Below the aircraft, the scene was colourless; grey and white. The waters of the Gulf of Finland were wrinkled like a shabby grey cloth, ending abruptly where the snow-covered shoreline of Helsinki became a sheet of white. Narrow lines of snow-ploughed roads and railway lines had been lightly traced, but the overwhelming the impression was of an uninhabited, hostile environment. Massinger turned away from the window at the recognition that the landscape and the sea lay below him like an image of his own state of mind; empty and somehow hopeless. He could not let go, he told himself once more, though, the precisely formed words in his mind echoed hollowly in a small, piping voice. Patriotism was ridiculous in him, an expatriate Bostonian, a cool-minded academic, especially the simple, emotional kind he seemed to be experiencing. Hyde did not have it, and he wondered whether even Aubrey possessed it. Somehow, he had a capacity for patriotism, like a capacity for love, and the object of that capacity could as well have been Afghanistan or the US or, as it plainly was, Great Britain. He found that he cared, almost despite himself, that his adopted country's intelligence service was being manipulated by the Soviet Union. It was intolerable.
Or was it merely his damnable sense of right and wrong? Was that at the bottom of his heated urge to solve the mystery, clear Aubrey, defeat his enemies? It might be, and he disapproved. It was a naïve view of his character, and he desired not to be naïve.
He had spoken to Margaret again, from the airport, looking out through tall windows onto a rainswept runway, a scene reduced to monochrome like the one below him now as the aircraft dropped towards Seutula airport. He had attempted to convince her that he was safe when the very reason he could not return to her, do as she asked and give it up, was because someone wanted him safely and incuriously dead. The conversation had been painful, pointless. The chasm was still there, merely emphasised by physical distance. She had settled into a routine of hatred towards Aubrey, totally believing in his guilt; it was an orthodoxy that nothing could soften or contradict. Therefore, while he aided Aubrey he was a heretic, and damned.
Yet he knew that her belief was tearing her in two, just as he was himself being pulled apart. He could not tell her he would never be safe, never, unless he could unravel the mystery — whatever the truth concerning her father and Kenneth Aubrey.
Lastly, he had told her — trusting her with his life, as he had wanted to do, felt he needed to do — that he would be coming back, that he would telephone, that he had to see her…
The telephone receiver in their flat had gone down on those protestations, on his pleading, on his need for her. The line had crackled with static and he had listened to the emptiness for a long time before putting down his receiver.
The rain had been cold on his face as he had crossed the tarmac to the Finnair flight to Helsinki.
The wing outside his window dipped, showing him the grey buildings and the runways of Seutula. The aircraft dropped its nose, straightened, then began its final approach, Massinger settled himself to thoughts of Phillipson and the immediate future.
In the growing darkness, Hyde caught glimpses of light-coloured cloth from blouses or turbans, even of dark shadowy forms against the snow, as the Pathan raiding party moved from rock to rock, from bush to stunted tree to straggling vegetation. On the ground, it was a scene in extreme slow-motion, the elapsed time so extended it was almost stilled. Above the defile of the narrow, knife-cut valley that cut through the border north of Parachinar, Russian helicopters moved like agitated insects; flies maddened and over-exerted by poison from an aerosol spray. Two kinds of time; patience and urgency, hunters and hunted. To Hyde, using night-glasses, it seemed that many were wounded, and by Miandad's guess the party was considerably reduced from that which had entered Afghanistan three days before.
The MiL gunships drove the valley again like airborne beaters of game, moving towards the high cleft in the rocks which concealed Hyde, Miandad and, a little away from them, Mohammed Jan and three or four of his trusted lieutenants; old, grey-bearded men with long, antique rifles. The noise from the helicopters was deafening. Then they turned, whirling as easily as dancers, the downdraught plucking at Hyde's hair and shoulders as the four MiL-24s moved away. Hyde could distinguish the 57mm rocket pods beneath their stubby wings and the four-barrel machine-gun in the nose of each aircraft as they turned no more than two hundred feet above him. He shivered.
"There," Miandad shouted above the din and its ricochet from the valley walls. "There!"
Hyde lowered his night-glasses, following Miandad's extended arm, focusing the glasses beyond the retreating gunships. The faint redness in the lenses swam and cleared. The scene had little colour; a clear, bloodless monochrome. As the focus sharpened, it was as if something had entered an arena; something making everything else of less significance. A pike in a pool. A presence.
The helicopter must have been daubed some garish colour, Hyde guessed. Certainly, it was not camouflaged like the gunships that now seemed to bob and curtsey their way towards it.
"Red — blood-red," Miandad murmured.
Hyde lowered the glasses for a moment, and looked at the Pakistani colonel. Miandad nodded. Hyde felt chilled, but he could not have explained his reaction. Petrunin—?
"Him?" he asked.
Miandad nodded. "Him. You will find his style — more flamboyant?" Miandad's teeth gleamed white in the darkness of the cleft of rocks.
Hyde raised his glasses once more, again adjusting the focus slightly. The command helicopter which contained Petrunin was moving up the valley, though very slowly, as if engaged in some courtship ritual with the four MiL gunships. Its speed decreased further as it reached its four heavily-armed courtiers.
Hyde moved the glasses down, twiddling the focus. He was prompted by an inexplicable fear and urgency. Below him, in the narrow river-bed, the Pathans seemed to be moving with a similar sudden speed. Wounded men were being handled more roughly, pulled and even dragged. Small, bent figures scurried ahead of them. It was dark now, and they were no more than half a mile from Hyde's vantage-point. They had already crossed the border, even though that crossing was meaningless. Hyde returned his gaze to the black air above the valley — some stars beginning to appear, falsely bright in the night-glasses — and the five helicopters. The four gunships hovered and paid homage in a slow circling dance about the command aircraft.
Hyde heard Mohammed Jan issue orders. Men below them began to move swiftly towards the oncoming party and its wounded. Away down the valley, the noise of the helicopters was magnified by the valley walls.