The Dark Of The Sun [047-066-4.8]
By: Wilbur Smith
Category: Fiction Thriller
Synopsis:
The bend in the road rushed towards them, just a few more seconds. Then
with a succession of jarring crashes that shook the whole body of the
car a burst of fire hit them from behind. The windscreen starred into a
sheet of opaque diamond lacework, the dashboard clock exploded powdering
Shermaine's hair with particles of glass, two bullets tore "through the
seat ripping out the stuffing like the entrails of a wounded animal.
"Bruce Curry is the leader of a mercenary band with the dubious support
of three white officers. His mission is to relieve a mining
town cut off by the fighting and to retrieve a priceless consignment of
diamonds. Ranged against his ill-disciplined unit are bandits,
guerrillas and hostile tribes that infest the land. But there is
another, even deadlier enemy, - one of his own men ...
"I don't like the idea," announced Wally Hendry, and belched. He moved
his tongue round his mouth getting the taste of it before he went on. "I
think the whole idea stinks like a ten-day corpse." He lay sprawled on
one of the beds with a glass balanced on his naked chest
and he was sweating heavily in the Congo heat.
"Unfortunately your opinion doesn't alter the fact that we are going."
Bruce Curry went on laying out his shaving tackle without looking up.
"You shoulda told them to keep it, told them we were staying here in
Elisabethville, - why didn't you tell them that, hey?" o Hendry picked
up his glass and swallowed the contents.
"Because they pay me not to argue." Bruce spoke without interest and
looked at himself in the fly-spotted mirror above the washbasin.
The face that looked back was sundarkened with a cap of close-cropped
black hair; soft hair that would be unruly and inclined to curl if it
were longer.
Black eyebrows slanting upwards at the corners, green eyes with a heavy
fringe of lashes and a mouth which could smile as readily as it
could sulk. Bruce regarded his good looks without pleasure. It was a
long time since he had felt that emotion, a long time since his mouth
had either smiled or sulked. He did not feel the old tolerant affection
for his nose, the large slightly hooked nose that rescued his face from
prettiness and gave him the air of a genteel pirate.
"Jesus!" growled Wally Hendry from the bed. "I've had just about a
gutsful of this nigger army. I don't mind fighting but I don't fancy
going hundreds of miles out into the bush to play nursemaid to a bunch
of bloody refugees."
"It's a hell of a life," agreed Bruce absently and spread shaving-soap
on his face. The lather was very white against his tan. Under a skin
that glowed so healthily that it appeared to have been freshly oiled,
the muscles of his
shoulders and chest changed shape as he moved. He was in good
condition, fitter than he had been for many years, but this fact gave
him no more pleasure than had his face.
"Get me another drink, Andre." Wally Hendry thrust his empty glass into
the hand of the man who sat on the edge of the bed.
The Belgian stood up and went across to the table obediently.
"More whisky and less beer in this one," Wally instructed, turned once
more to Bruce and belched again. "That's what I think of the
idea." As Andre poured Scotch whisky into the glass and filled it with
beer Wally hitched around the pistol in its webbing holster until it
hung between his legs.
"When are we leaving?" he asked.
"There'll be an engine and five coaches at the goods yard first thing
tomorrow morning. We'll load up and get going as soon as possible."
Bruce started to shave, drawing the razor down from temple to chin and
leaving the skin smooth and brown behind it.
"After three months of" fighting a bunch of greasy little Gurkhas
I was looking forward to a bit of fun. - I haven't even had a pretty in
all that time - now the second day after the ceasefire and they ship us
out again."
"C'est laguerre," muttered Bruce, his face twisted in the
act of shaving.
"What's that mean?" demanded Wally suspiciously.
"That's war," Bruce translated.
"Talk English, Bucko." It was the measure of Wally Hendry that after six
months
in the Belgian Congo he could neither speak nor understand a
single word of French.
There was silence again, broken only by the scraping of Bruce's razor
and the small metallic sound as the fourth man in the hotel room
stripped and cleaned his FN rifle.
"Have a drink, Haig," Wally invited him.
"No, thanks." Michael Haig glanced up, not trying to conceal his
distaste as he looked at Wally.
"You're another snotty bastard - don't want to drink with me, hey?
Even the high-class Captain Curry is drinking with me. What makes you so
goddam special?"
"You know that I don't drink." Haig turned his attention back to his
weapon, handling it with easy familiarity. For
all of them the ugly automatic rifles had become an extension of their
own bodies. Even while shaving Bruce had only to drop his hand to reach
the rifle propped against the wall, and the two men on the bed had
theirs on the floor beside them.
"You don't drink!" chuckled Wally. "Then how did you get that
complexion, Bucko? How come your nose looked like a ripe plum?" Haig's
mouth tightened and the hands on his rifle stilled.
"Cut it out, Wally," said Bruce without heat.
"Haig don't drink," crowed Wally, and dug the little Belgian in the ribs
with his thumb, "get that, Andre! He's a tee-bloody-total!
My old man was a tee total also; sometimes for two, three months at a
time he was tee total, and then he'd come home one night and sock the old
lady in the clock so you could hear her teeth rattle from across the
street." His laughter choked him and he had to wait for it to clear
before he went on.
"My bet is that you're that kind of tee total, Haig. One drink and you
wake up ten days later; that's it, isn't it?
One drink and - pow! - the old girl gets it in the chops and the kids
don't eat for a couple of weeks." Haig laid the rifle down carefully on
the bed and looked at Wally with his jaws clenched, but
Wally had not noticed.
He went on happily.
"Andre, take the whisky bottle and hold it under Old Teetotal
Haig's nose. Let's watch him slobber at the mouth and his eyes stand out
like a pair of dog's balls." Haig stood up. Twice the age of Wally - a
man in his middle fifties, with grey in his hair and the refinement of
his features not completely obliterated by the marks that life had left
upon them. He had arms like a boxer and a powerful set to his shoulders.
"It's about time YOU learned a few manners, Hendry. Get on your feet."
"You wanta dance or something? I don't waltz, - ask
Andre. He'll dance with you - won't you, Andre?" Haig was balanced on
the balls of his feet, his hands closed and raised slightly. Bruce
Curry placed his razor on the shelf above the basin, and moved quietly
round the table with soap still on his face to take up a position from
which he could intervene. There he waited, watching the two men.
"Get up, you filthy gutter-snipe."
"Hey, Andre, get that. He talks pretty, hey? He talks real pretty
"I'm going to smash that ugly face of yours right into the middle of the
place where your brain should have been."
"Jokes! This boy is a natural comic." Wally laughed, but there was
something wrong with . the sound of it. Bruce knew then that Wally was
not going to fight. Big arms and swollen chest covered
with ginger hair, belly flat and hard, looking, thick-necked below the
wide flat-featured face with its little Mongolian eyes; but Wally wasn't
going to fight.
Bruce was puzzled: he remembered the night at the road bridge and he
knew that Hendry was no coward, and yet now he was not going to take up
Haig's challenge.
Mike Haig moved towards the bed.
"Leave him, Mike." Andre spoke for the first time, his voice soft as a
girl's. "He was only joking. He didn't mean it
"Hendry, don't think I'm too much of a gentleman to hit you because
you're on your back. Don't make that mistake."
"Big deal," muttered Wally. "This boy's not only a comic, he's a bloody
hero also." Haig stood over him and lifted his right hand with the fist,
bunched like a hammer, aimed at Wally's face.
"Haig!" Bruce hadn't raised his voice but its tone checked the older
man.
"That's enough, said Bruce.
"But this filthy little-"
"Yes, I know," said Bruce. "Leave him!"
With his fist still up Mike Haig hesitated, and there was no movement in
the room. Above them the corrugated iron roof popped loudly as it
expanded in the heat of the Congo midday, and the only other sound was
Haig's breathing. He was panting and his face was congested with blood.
"Please, Mike," whispered Andre. "He didn't mean it." Slowly
Haig's anger changed to disgust and he dropped his hand, turned away and
picked up his rifle from the other bed.
"I can't stand the smell in this room another minute. I'll wait for you
in the truck downstairs, Bruce."
"I won't be long," agreed Bruce as Mike went to the door.
"Don't push your luck, Haig," Wally called after him.
"Next time you won't get off so easily." In the doorway Mike Haig swung
quickly, but, with a hand on his shoulder, Bruce turned him
again.
"Forget it, Mike," he said, and closed the door after him.
"He's just bloody lucky that he's an old man," growled Wally.
"Otherwise I'd have fixed him good." "Sure," said Bruce. "It was decent
of you to let him go." The soap had dried on his face and he wet his
brush to lather again.
"Yeah, I couldn't hit an old bloke like that, could I?" "No." Bruce
smiled a little. "But don't worry, you frightened the hell out of him.
He won't try it again."
"He'd better notv warned Hendry. "Next time
I'll kill the old bugger." No, you wont, thought Bruce, you'll back down
again as you have just done, as you've done a dozen times before.
Mike and I are the only ones who can make you do it; in the same way as
an animal will growl at its trainer but cringe away when he cracks the
whip. He began shaving again.
The heat in the room was unpleasant to breathe; it drew the perspiration
out of them and the smell of their bodies blended sourly with stale
cigarette smoke and liquor fumes.
"Where are you and Mike going?" Andre ended the long silence.
"We're going to see if we can draw the supplies for this trip. If we
have any luck we'll take them down to the goods yard and have Ruffy put
an armed guard on them overnight," Bruce answered him, leaning over the
basin and splashing water up into his face.
"How long will we be away?" Bruce shrugged. "A week - ten days'.
He sat on his bed and pulled on one of his jungle boots. "That is, if we
don't have any trouble." "Trouble, Bruce?" asked Andre.
"From Msapa Junction we'll have to go two hundred miles through country
crawling with Baluba."
"But we'll be in a train," protested
Andre. "They've only got bows and arrows, they can't touch us."
"Andre, there are seven rivers to cross - one big one and bridges are
easily destroyed. Rails can be torn up." Bruce began to lace the boot.
"I don't think it's going to be a Sunday school picnic."
"Christ. I
think the whole thing stinks," repeated Wally moodily." Why are we going
anyway?"
"Because, Bruce began patiently, "for the last three months the entire
population of Port Reprieve has been cut off from the rest of the world.
There are women and children with them. They are fast running out of
food and the other necessities of life." Bruce paused to light a
cigarette, and then went on talking as he exhaled.
"All around them the Baluba tribe is in open revolt, burning, raping and
killing indiscriminately. As yet they haven't attacked the town but it
won't be very long until they do.
Added to which there are rumours that rebel groups of Central
Congolese troops and of our own forces have formed themselves into bands
of heavily-armed shufta. They also are running amok through the northern
part of the territory.
Nobody knows for certain what is happening out there, but whatever it is
you can be sure it's not very pretty. We are going to fetch those people
in to safety."
"Why don't the U.N. people send out a plane?" asked Andre.
"No landing field."
"Helicopters?"
"Out of range."
"For my money the bastards can stay there," grunted Wally. "If the
Balubas fancy a
little man steak, who are we to do them out of a meal? Every man's
entitled to eat and as long as it's not me they're eating, more power to
their teeth, say?" He placed his foot against Andre's back and
straightened his leg suddenly, throwing the Belgian off the bed on to
his knees.
"Go and get me a pretty."
"There aren't any, Wally. I'll get you another drink." Andre scrambled
to his feet and reached for Wally's empty glass, but Wally's hand
dropped on to his wrist.
"I said pretty, Andre, not drink."
"I don't know where to find them, Wally." Andre's voice was desperate.
"I don't know what to say
to them even."
"You're being stupid, Bucko. I might have to break your arm." Wally
twisted the wrist slowly. "You know as well as I that the bar downstairs
is full of them. You know that, don't you?"
"But what do I say to them?" Andre's face was contorted with the pain of
his twisted wrist.
"Oh, for Christ's sake, you stupid bloody frog-eater - just go down and
flash a banknote. You don't have to say a dicky bird."
"You're hurting me, Wally."
"No? You're kidding!" Wally smiled at him, twisting harder, his slitty
eyes smoky from the liquor, and Bruce could see he was enjoying it. "Are
you going, BUcko? Make up your mind -
get me a pretty or get yourself a broken arm
"All right, if that's what you want. I'll go. Please leave me, I'll go,"
mumbled Andre.
"That's what I want." Wally released him, and he straightened up