A Man to Watch
Part Two: Sleeping with the Major
"Javi, looks like we've got a new
fish."
Javid Noor opened his eyes at Lieutenant Hoshel's
words. He saw a guard leading a man across the
prisoner compound towards a barracks hut. The man
was tall, at least six three in Noor's estimation.
He carried a bundle of blankets and sheets, with
clothes piled on the top of them.
"Walks like a soldier." Hoshel said. Noor glanced at
the younger man then back at the new prisoner.
"And sneers like an officer." Noor said, seeing the
way the new man looked at the prison guard who
pushed him on the back with his gun. He waited a
moment until the guards took the man into the hut
then he stood up from where he'd been sitting in a
shady spot against the wall of the kitchen and mess
hall building.
"Got any cigarettes, Sesi?" Hoshel handed him two.
"Thanks. Pay you back later." He dropped the
cigarettes into a pocket sewn roughly onto the front
of his shirt. "Right, I'll go grill our new fish."
He waited until the guards came back out of the
barracks and strode across there, went inside.
The new man was the only one in there. He sat on a
bare mattress on a spare cot. His face was bruised
and cut, one eye swollen, but even so Noor could see
he was handsome man. He was bare headed and Noor
recognised an expensive haircut when he saw one. The
man rose as Noor approached him, a cautious look on
his face. His stance wasn't obviously defensive, but
he was tense.
Noor smiled, held out his hand.
"Captain Javid Noor, Sixth Armoured Infantry."
The new man relaxed at least a little. He took
Noor's hand and shook it.
"Captain Idris Faraj, Royal Guard."
"Royal Guard?" Noor said, impressed. "First time
we've had one of you here." He frowned then. If the
government was arresting Royal Guard officers then
things must be getting very bad out there. He
glanced at Faraj's hand as the other captain
withdrew it. Nails manicured and buffed.
"Cigarette?" He offered Faraj, who thanked him and
took one of the two Noor took from his pocket.
"Those thieving bastards took my lighter." Faraj
said. That didn't surprise Noor. He produced a
disposable lighter and lit Faraj's cigarette,
flicked the lighter off again quickly. He held out
his cigarette.
"Could you light it from yours?" He smiled. "Not
easy to get refils around here, have to save every
drop."
Faraj hesitated a moment, not unwilling, Noor
thought, just a little shocked to think that such
economies were his lot now. Then he held out the
cigarette and touched the end of it to Noor's until
Noor got it alight.
"Thank you."
Faraj nodded, took a drag on the cigarette and made
a face.
"Not your brand?" Noor asked. Faraj looked as if he
wondered whose brand these would be, except perhaps
a masochist's.
"I prefer Dunhill."
Noor laughed. "Not likely to get any of those here
unless General Ziyahd has some hidden away." Faraj
made a face even more disgusted than the ones he's
pulled about the cigarette.
"I see you've met the General then."
"That rodent." Faraj snarled with contempt.
Noor smiled. He liked Faraj, clearly he was a right
thinking man.
"Come outside." Noor said. "Please, let me show you
around your new home."
Faraj gave him an odd look, but let Noor lead him
outside. The sun was bright, near to noon and they
both donned their head scarves as they went out.
Faraj shaded his eyes with a hand. Noor wondered how
many pairs of designer sunglasses Faraj owned. None
of them were any use to him now.
"This is home ground for you, isn't it, Captain?"
Noor asked.
"Yes, this was a Royal Guard outpost. Decommissioned
about five years ago. I was never here myself,
though Major Madari..." he stopped, bit his lip and
looked down.
"Major Madari?"
"My CO. My... my former CO I suppose I have to say.
He served here a few years ago."
Noor looked at Faraj, his eyes were still downcast,
he looked pained.
"What happened to the Major?"
"He's dead." Faraj's voice shook very slightly.
"I'm sorry. He was a friend?"
Faraj looked up again, didn't answer that. He looked
around, taking in the buildings, the wire around the
prisoner compound and the perimeter wire around the
whole base. He took in the guard towers and the
gate. And beyond that the desert stretching to the
horizon in every direction. And he took in the men,
swept his eyes over them, stopping at a group of
young men who stood around outside barracks hut two.
He can spot the soldiers, Noor realised. He's not
just a rich boy whose father bought him a commission
in the regiment with the smartest uniform. He knows
what he's doing.
Faraj turned to Noor and from the grim look on his
face Noor knew the pleasantries were over.
"How many of us are there?"
"You make us thirteen. All officers, Captains and
subalterns."
"Whose in command?"
"I am." Faraj looked at him, assessing. Noor tensed
slightly. Royal Guardsmen had a reputation for
assuming they always got to be in charge. "I've been
Captain three and a half years now. You?"
Faraj hesitated, then said, "Two years eight
months."
Noor nodded, appreciating the honesty. As long as
Faraj accepted his seniority they didn't have to
have any kind of problem. He turned and nodded at
the prisoners around them.
"Two hundred and thirty odd civilians, all political
prisoners. Professional men, academics, doctors,
lawyers. Non combatants."
Faraj frowned. "And the opposition?"
"Thirty, including the general and the medical
staff. Armed with M-16A2s and Sig Sauer 9mm pistols.
The towers have M60's."
"How long have you been here, Captain?"
"Seven months."
"And how many times have you tried to take the
camp?"
All right, the pleasantries were definitely over.
Faraj's tone was hard. Well it was nice to see the
man was confident, but he'd need to learn some
reality.
"Once." Noor's tone was just as hard, but he had to
work to keep it that way, to keep his voice from
shaking. "And when we failed the general shot ten of
the civilians dead in front of me."
Gunshots. Screams. The stink of cordite and blood
under the burning sun. He did them one at a time.
Picked them from the crowd one at a time. Innocents.
None of them even involved in the attempt. One day
I'll get my hands around his throat and avenge every
one of them.
"Captain?" Noor dragged himself back to the present,
looked at Faraj. "I'm sorry, I meant no offence."
Faraj smiled, losing some of his haughtiness. "Call
me Idris and please, tell me what I can do to help
you. So that next time we don't fail."
Noor grinned. He knew his instincts were right on
this one. "Welcome, Idris. Call me Javid."
General Ziyahd usually liked to see
the trucks come in with new arrivals. The more
prisoners he had the more money the government gave
him, to feed and clothe them. And the more he could
skim off. But he was nervous about this one. This
man had a reputation. Ziyahd made sure his uniform
was perfect, had his prisoner orderly ensure his
shoes had a mirror like shine on them. He walked
outside as the truck pulled up beside the guard
house.
Sergeant Ghaith waited there too. Although Ziyahd
had officers under his command too he didn't trust
any of them, was certain they all wanted his job.
Ghaith on the other hand could be trusted. He could
be trusted to do anything the general asked and
usually enjoy it.
"Another Royal Guardsman." Ziyahd commented.
"Haughty bastards." Ghaith snarled. "That other one,
Faraj, needs taught a lesson." He slapped his fist
into his other hand.
Ziyahd smiled. Ghaith was right. Faraj had made his
contempt for Ziyahd very clear not only on his
arrival but on every day of the three weeks that had
passed since.
"We will..." Ziyahd began, then he stopped and
stared.
The security police officers in the truck pushed a
man out. He fell to the ground and Ziyahd stared
down at him. This was Madari? The man lay on his
side, unmoving, eyes closed, dressed only in a pair
of filthy grey trousers. His limbs splayed
gracelessly on the ground, like those of a smashed
insect. His torso and arms were thin and wasted and
covered in wounds. His hands... Ziyahd had to look
away. He put a hand over his nose and mouth.
"God, he stinks." Ghaith growled. Another guard
standing behind Ghaith stepped forward and knelt
over Madari, checking him over, then he jumped up
and ran into the guard house.
"Sign." The police officer shoved a clipboard at
Ziyahd. He appeared unimpressed by the general's
rank.
"Wait, is he even alive?" Ziyahd said. "I'm not
signing for a corpse."
The police officer kicked Madari in the back and
Madari gave a loud moan. He rolled forward onto his
stomach. Even Ghaith, a man who'd happily dished out
lashes to the prisoners stifled an oath at the sight
of the man's flayed back. Part of the stench came
from clearly infected wounds.
Ziyahd averted his eyes again and signed the
transfer document. The officer threw the clipboard
back into the truck.
"He's all yours." He smirked. "What's left of him."
He climbed back into the truck shouted "Let's go,"
at the driver and the truck drove out of the gate
fast, soon vanishing in a cloud of dust. Ziyahd
looked down at his new prisoner.
"Um, get him on his feet, Sergeant."
Ghaith stared at his CO. "Have you seen his feet?"
Ziyahd glanced at them and then away again hastily.
The guard who'd run into the guardhouse earlier
re-emerged, the camp doctor, Rachad, following him.
Rachad stared at and then knelt by Madari, started
to examine him. After only a few seconds he turned a
pale face up to Ziyahd.
"We must get him to the infirmary now!"
"Sergeant." Ziyahd said. Ghaith sighed, bent down
and lifted the unconscious Madari over his broad
shoulder in a fireman's carry. He pulled a disgusted
face.
"Gonna need a real long shower after this," he
growled.
General Ziyahd had heard plenty of
screaming since he was given command of this prison,
but he's never heard anything like the sound that
woke him that night.
He woke in a cold sweat as if it was him screaming,
but the sound went on. He grabbed at the clock by
the bed with its luminous dial. One thirty. His
hammering heart began to slow down as he realised
where the screams were coming from. The infirmary.
He got up and put on his floor length silk robe and
his slippers. He paused to brush his hair and smooth
his moustache before he left his quarters, going out
through his sitting room into the guardhouse
corridor. As he approached the infirmary the
shrieking was replaced by frantic voices, some he
recognised as his doctor and medical staff, one he
didn't know, crying out "No! No!" over and over.
Ziyahd burst into the infirmary to find two medical
orderlies holding down the struggling Madari while
Doctor Rachad, also in his robe, like Ziyahd,
prepared an injection. Ziyahd stared at the horrible
scene. Madari looked insane. He fought like an
animal, scratching and biting and kicking wildly.
Two guards ran into the room behind Ziyahd, their
weapons out.
An IV drip on a stand hung above Madari and the
doctor injected the hypodermic into a connector.
Then he bent over Madari.
"Please, Major, calm yourself. You're safe." His
voice was quite gentle. "You're safe." Madari's
struggles grew weaker. Rachad carefully put a hand
on the man's face, brushed his hair off his
forehead. "Shh. You're safe."
"No more... please." Madari's voice was a cracked
whisper. His eyes were still insane. He has no idea
where he is, Ziyahd thought.
"No more." Rachad said, still stroking Madari's hair
until Madari finally relaxed into drugged sleep. The
doctor stood up and sighed.
Ziyahd frowned at Madari. He looked better than
before. He'd been cleaned up, shaved and put into a
crisp white hospital gown. But many dressings stood
out stark white against his dark skin. He was
clearly not leaving the infirmary for some time yet.
The general shivered at the memory of the horrible
shrieks that had torn them both from sleep.
"Doctor, is there likely to be a repeat of this
performance?" Ziyahd asked, coldly.
Rachad stared at him for a moment, then he turned to
his orderlies.
"Check he hasn't reopened any of his wounds." He
ordered, then turned to Ziyahd. "Can we speak in my
office, sir?"
Ziyahd followed him in and they sat down at the
desk.
"Well?" Ziyahd said. "Will there be a repeat?"
The doctor didn't answer directly, he pushed a file
across the desk at the general. "My report on his
condition. I was going to give it to you in the
morning but you might as well read it now."
Ziyahd started to read through the report.
"He's been tortured," Rachad said. Ziyahd didn't
need a doctor to tell him that. He read on. Part of
him was disgusted by the horror of what he read, but
part of him felt a sick thrill. Three weeks Madari
had been in the hands of the security police and the
- ah - consultants from the KGB. Ziyahd pictured the
torture, the unspeakable acts, and he enjoyed the
picture. His fingernails pulled out. His back flayed
with a whip or a cane, or both. Soles of his feet
beaten. Burns from cigarettes and other unidentified
weapons. Injuries from restrains. Injuries from
electrocution. And...
"Sexual injuries?" He looked at the doctor and had
to fight very hard not to jeer openly. The great
Royal Guardsman couldn't stop himself being fucked?
That was something to keep a note of.
The doctor sighed and passed a hand over his face.
"Sir, there will be a repeat of tonight, for months,
perhaps years. After this kind of trauma... well, he
will never fully recover."
"But you can give him drugs."
"I'll have to, to make him sleep. But he's as likely
to go into flashbacks during the day."
"Well give him drugs then too." He scowled at the
doctor, silencing the protest the man made. "Keep
him quiet. I can't have him disturbing me... the men
like this."
"But I can't just keep him permanently sedated, not
in the long term."
"Only as long as he's in the infirmary, doctor. Just
keep him quiet." Once he was out with the prisoners
Ziyahd didn't care whose sleep the animalistic
shrieks disturbed. Just so long as he didn't have to
hear them again.
"But he needs..."
"Goodnight, Doctor." Ziyahd stood up and swept out
of the room. He glanced at the sleeping Madari as he
passed. Why was I afraid of you? He wondered. Of
course Madari was hardly at his best just now. Once
he started to recover that might be a different
matter. The doctor's words cheered Ziyahd though.
"He will never fully recover." Ziyahd could only
hope that was true.
"Bring him in." Ziyahd ordered.
Ghaith went out of the office and returned in a
moment, leading the limping and shackled Madari, a
meaty hand gripping the Major's arm. Two more men
followed and took up guard positions. They weren't
needed, Ziyahd realised. Without them, without
Ghaith and even without the shackles Ziyahd was in
no danger from Madari.
Ziyahd hated Madari instinctively, purely by
reputation. His sort had always sneered at Ziyahd.
Madari thought he was something special, Ziyahd was
sure. Famous grandfather, too clever by half, known
to be rebellious and insubordinate. Ziyahd had
feared he would rally the other military men among
the prisoners and start an uprising.
But that was hard to reconcile with the man that
stood before him now. Madari's gaze stayed on the
ground. His hands, still bandaged, hung limp in the
shackles that Ziyahd almost regretted now. Madari
had been given prisoner's clothes and they hung
loose on his wasted body. He'd regained very little
weight since arriving a month ago now. He was
visibly trembling.
Still Ziyahd launched into the speech he always gave
new prisoner about escape attempts being futile and
answered with severe punishment. As for the other
rules he'd learn them when he broke them and... He
shook his head, stopped. Was Madari even listening?
Could he actually understand? His eyes were dulled
from the drugs the doctor had been giving him to put
him to sleep at night and keep him in a near stupor
during the day. Ziyahd shuddered briefly at the
memory of those screams of absolute terror he'd
heard that first night Madari spent in the
infirmary.
He rose and walked around his desk to stand in front
of Madari. He stretched up, annoyed that Madari was
taller, made his voice harsh as he snapped, "Are you
listening to me, Major?"
Madari's bowed head rose slowly. His eyes, deep set
and very dark were half closed and dazed. Perhaps
only the word 'major' had made any impact, stirred
something in the man's shattered mind, Ziyahd
thought.
Ziyahd raised a hand intending to wave it in front
of the glazed eyes and at once Madari cringed away
from him as if expecting to be struck. He gave a
tiny frightened whimper.
Ziyahd was actually shocked by how intense a thrill
of pleasure the flinch and especially the whimper
gave him. Madari was afraid of him? Of him? The high
and mighty Royal Guardsman was brought so low as to
be cringing before him. He grinned, wanted to laugh,
but restrained himself in front of his men. Ghaith
was sneering at Madari, probably already choosing
ways to humiliate the man.
"Well, I can see we're going to have no trouble from
you, Major." He's broken. He's truly broken. He
raised a hand again, knowing it would terrify
Madari, seeing terror in his eyes. Ziyahd didn't
strike him though, he reached up and patted Madari's
cheek, as one might do to a child or even a pet.
"Good boy."
Ghaith sniggered and at Ziyahd's nod he dragged
Madari away.
"The big problem is still the north
west tower." Noor said. "It's just impossible to get
close without..." he glanced up as the door to the
barracks opened. Faraj, sitting on the next cot
looked over too and scowled as Ghaith came in. Both
Captains tensed and stood up, ready for trouble. But
Ghaith just turned and watched two guards drag in
another man, and throw him to the floor. He landed
on hands and knees and cried out, looked around
wildly, hair spilling down into his eyes and then
scrambled towards one of the cots, grabbed at the
frame and held on, curled up, face hidden in his
arms.
"One of your boys." Ghaith said, with a smirk.
"Bring him to the infirmary once a day for
dressings." He turned and strode out with the two
other guards.
"It can't be..." Noor heard Faraj whisper. He
glanced at Faraj to see the guardsman was pale and
stunned. Noor hurried over to the new prisoner, who
was still holding onto the cot with bandaged hands.
Faraj followed him and they both knelt down.
"Major?" Faraj said, in a quiet voice. "Is that
you?"
Noor frowned. The prisoner still hadn't lifted his
head. Noor reached out and put a hand on the man's
shoulder.
"Sir?" He said. He felt the man flinch and tremble
when he was touched. A quiet sob escaped him. A
whisper, incomprehensible, except that it was a plea
of some kind.
"Major, please, look at me." Faraj said. He turned
to Noor. "I... I think it's Major Madari, my CO. My
god, I was sure he was dead, I was sure."
"What's his name?" Noor asked.
"I told you, Major Madari."
"His name." Noor said, rolling his eyes. There was a
place for formality, this wasn't it.
"Faris." Faraj said.
"Faris," Noor said, to the curled up man. "Faris, is
that you?"
"Faris," Faraj joined in. "Faris, it's me, it's
Idris. Can you hear me? Do you know me?"
Slowly the prisoner raised his head. His eyes, dark
pools, glazed and scared, looked uncomprehending at
Faraj.
"Is it him?" Noor asked quietly.
"It's him." Faraj's voice was a shocked whisper. "My
god, he's so thin." The emaciation showed in
Madari's face, hollowed out cheeks, his eyes sunken,
his nose sharp and bony. He was probably not a bad
looking man in full health, Noor thought. A lean
hawkish look that some women liked. But now he was a
skeleton.
"Id...Idris." The voice was barely there. Certainly
not the voice of an officer, trained to make itself
heard in combat and put steel into men's backbones.
This voice was a scratchy gasp.
"Idris!" Recognition showed in his face at last.
"I'm sorry, I'm sorry!" Tears sprang from Madari's
eyes, poured down his face. "I'm so sorry!" He was
trying to cry out, Noor could tell and his voice
just wasn't there. Madari pawed at Faraj's shirt,
trying to grip it, but unable to. "I'm sorry. I'm
sorry."
Noor looked at the bandages on Madari's hands and,
showing up under the thin fabric of his clothes, the
many dressings on his back. And he realised why the
major had no voice. Too much screaming.
"Keep him here." Noor said, standing up. "I'm going
to find one of the doctors."
"Sorry." Madari kept on whispering.
"I'm sorry." Faraj frowned. He lifted a hand towards
Madari, wanting to soothe him, stroke his hair
perhaps. But he put it back down. This was his CO,
Faraj couldn't pat his head as if he was Mehdi.
"What are you sorry for, sir?" Faraj asked, sitting
close to but not touching Madari. He felt awkward.
What was he supposed to do for him, say to him? He'd
never dealt with anyone in so much distress before.
The fact that it was his CO just made it more
difficult. Made it embarrassing.
"Names," Madari whispered, not looking at Faraj.
"The names the names give us the names give us the
names." The words tumbled out of him. He gave up our
names, Faraj realised. He looked down at his own
hands. Gave up my name.
"Betrayed you..." Madari whispered. Faraj looked at
him. Was it a betrayal? Clearly he had resisted, but
they had broken him in the end. He'd had no choice.
That wasn't a betrayal, was it? If Madari had truly
betrayed them then Faraj would want to put his hands
around the man's throat and kill him. But he felt no
urge to do that.
"No, sir, it wasn't your fault." He frowned, working
something out in his head. The security police had
come for Faraj three days after Madari was arrested.
Why hadn't Madari been brought to the prison at the
same time as Faraj, or soon after? Prisoners who
worked cleaning in the guard house had mentioned a
prisoner who was brought in about a month ago, being
treated in the infirmary. But even a month ago was
three weeks after Madari's arrest. What had they
been doing to him for three weeks? Faraj looked at
him, at the bandages and most horrible of all, his
eyes. He shuddered. Whatever they had been doing to
him he wasn't the man Faraj had known.
The door opened and Noor hurried in with a stout
middle aged man, a doctor named Al-Hijazi. Noor let
the man pass him and turned back to the door, spoke
to Lieutenant Hoshel.
"Guard the door. No one comes in until I say."
Hoshel saluted and Noor closed the door.
Al-Hijazi had hurried over to Madari and Faraj stood
up to let him get to the major. Madari whimpered as
the doctor checked him briefly before turning to
Faraj and Noor.
"Can we get him off the floor, please?"
They came over and gently helped him to his feet. He
moaned in pain as he stood and the doctor glanced
down at his feet, frowning.
"On this cot, lie him down," he ordered. They did as
he asked and carefully laid Madari down, cautious of
his injured back. "Give me a few moments," Al-Hijazi
said. Noor and Faraj moved back a few paces and let
the doctor work. He first looked at Madari's feet,
slipping off the sandals Madari wore, before easing
them back on gently. Checked his back, pulling up
the major's shirt to do so. Faraj gasped. Even from
this distance he could see the scars in the places
that weren't still covered in dressings. His hands
balled into fists.
The doctor checked Madari's arms and made an
expression of fury as he found needle tracks.
"He's been heavily drugged."
"Doctor, what about his hands?" Noor asked. "Are his
fingers broken?"
"They're not splinted." Al-Hijazi said. "I'm going
to take the dressing off one." He began to unwrap
the bandages. Madari whimpered and the doctor
shushed him gently. "All right, let's see what we
have..." Then he gasped and swore, which Faraj had
never heard him do. The two captains came over as
Al-Hijazi held up Madari's hand. Tears shone in the
doctor's eyes. Noor muttered an oath and turned away
from the gruesome sight of the tips of Madari's
fingers, the absent fingernails and exposed and
inflamed nail beds.
Faraj's head spun and his vision seemed to fill with
a haze of blood. Anger boiled insanely inside him.
He made a low growling noise in his throat,
involuntary, pure rage dragging the sound from him.
He turned and ran for the door, his only thought was
revenge. One of the guards, any of them. He would
make them pay, take Madari's pain out on them.
His hand was on the door handle when he was grabbed
from behind, turned and pushed against the wall.
Noor pinned him there, using his superior weight.
"Let me go!" Faraj demanded.
"To do what?" Noor asked, "grab the first guard you
find and beat the shit out of him? Kill him? They're
not the ones who hurt him, Idris."
"They work for them! They have to pay!"
"And then you'll pay, with a couple of days in the
hot box or the block house or maybe a bullet in your
fool head."
Faraj still struggled, still wanted to get away and
kill a guard anyway. Whatever they did to him it
would be worth it. Noor leaned on him harder.
"I'm not letting you go, Captain. I can do this all
day, you'll get tired first."
Faraj glowered furiously at Noor. He liked the easy
going man, they had become friends, and he respected
the natural authority Noor had with the other
officers. But right now he'd happily lay Noor out to
get past him. Noor just stared back at him, a stern
glare in eyes that usually sparkled with good
humour. Faraj held the gaze for a long time, then
finally turned away. He looked over to where the
doctor was talking softly to Madari, apparently
ignoring the soldiers.
"They tortured him..." Faraj said, quietly.
"Mutilated him."
"I know." Noor stepped back, taking his weight off
Faraj. "I know. And they will pay. But not at the
cost of your life. He needs you, Captain, he needs
your protection now."
Faraj frowned for a moment, but then he understood.
Madari was helpless, at the mercy of any man in the
prison, guards or inmates, soldier or civilian. Most
of the prisoners were educated, civilised men, but a
place like this could bring out the dark side of any
man. And the guards... They would be drawn to the
defenceless man like wasps to honey. Noor was right,
Faraj's duty was to his CO now, not to his own lust
for revenge.
Dr Al-Hijazi came up to them then, a stern and angry
look on his face.
"Captain Noor, can you please help me. I want to
talk to Dr Rachad."
Al-Hijazi was a surgeon, so hardly
counted himself as a squeamish man. When he'd worked
in emergency surgery he'd seen some gruesome sights,
casualties of road accidents, burns victims, and
yes, sometimes people who had been attacked by
others, beaten, stabbed or shot. But he'd never in
his life seen the kind of systematic brutality he
found when examining Major Madari. It staggered him
that human beings could inflict such cruelty, in
cold blood, for days and weeks to another human
being.
Other men had been brought to the prison having been
beaten and ill-used, but never anything this
serious.
Rachad came out of his office, came up to Al-Hijazi,
who stood waiting for him, a guard at his shoulder.
"You wanted to see me?" Rachad said.
"We have to talk about Major Madari." Al-Hijazi
said.
"Major Madari is my patient," Rachad said, "I didn't
ask you for a consult." He said the last part with
heavy dose of sarcasm. Al-Hijazi wasn't amused.
"I want to see his notes."
Rachad nodded at the guard who took Al-Hijazi's arm.
The doctor pulled it away.
"You will talk to me! If we don't deal with him
properly that man will be dead inside a month at his
own hand!"
Rachad held up a hand to restrain the guard. "All
right, come into the office."
They went in and sat at the desk. Rachad pushed a
thick folder of notes over to Al-Hijazi.
"You've examined him?" Rachad asked.
"Yes." Al-Hijazi started to read the file. "I see
your 'treatment' has consisted mostly of keeping him
drugged into a stupor."
Rachad bristled. "What else am I meant to do? You've
seen what's been done to him. The only way I can
keep him from screaming all night and trying to kill
himself is to keep him drugged."
"He clearly has Post Traumatic Stress Disorder."
Al-Hijazi said. "He needs psychiatric treatment."
"Well he's not going to get it, is he? Look, Doctor,
he's probably insane, he should be in a mental
hospital, but he's here and we'll just have to deal
with him as best we can."
Al-Hijazi shook his head. How exactly? He was a
surgeon not a psychiatrist, there were other doctors
in the camp but none of them were specialists
either. Rachad wasn't any better use. But Al-Hijazi
saw that Rachad was right about one thing. The only
thing keeping Madari from killing himself right now
was the drugs.
"He can't be sedated forever." Al-Hijazi looked up
from the notes. "I'd suggest that we start to move
him onto psychiatric drugs as soon as possible, once
we've had time to assess the most appropriate ones."
Right now it was impossible to assess. Talking to
Madari had proved almost pointless, the man barely
knew who he was, whether a result of the trauma or
the sedatives Al-Hijazi didn't know.
"Agreed." Rachad said. He stood up and Al-Hijazi did
the same. The two doctors shook hands. Rachad
smiled, he looked almost relieved now to have
another doctor to share the burden of Madari's care.
"Bring him here three times a day for his drugs."
"Anti-depressants?" Ziyahd frowned
looking at the budget request from the infirmary.
"You know I don't like molly-coddling these men with
'happy pills', Doctor."
Rachad frowned, forced himself to stay calm. The
other officers around the table looked at him, or
drank their coffee and ate pastries. Ziyahd always
liked to make sure his weekly staff meetings were
properly catered.
"They're for Major Madari, sir," Rachad explained,
"I've been getting him off the sedatives and onto
the antidepressants, over the last two weeks. He's
making some progress..."
"We can't afford it, he'll have to cope without
them." He put a line through the entry.
Can't afford it? Rachad thought. Can't afford to
give up money you're embezzling you mean, you little
bastard.
"Sir, I have to warn you that he's likely to end up
back in the same kind of mental state he was when he
arrived." he lowered his voice. "You remember that
first night?"
Clearly Ziyahd did, Rachad was sure he saw the
General shudder.
"But there's a difference now, Doctor." He smirked.
"I can't hear him any more." Some of the other
officers tittered dutifully as he smiled around at
them. Rachad wanted to smash all of their faces in,
starting with Ziyahd.
"General..." he had to make Ziyahd see how serious
this was, these weren't 'happy pills', they were the
only thing standing between Madari and suicide,
Rachad was certain of that. Even in a heavily doped
state while still in the infirmary he had tried to
pull out his IV tubes and whispered more than once
to Rachad the words 'kill me'. Those words made
Rachad shiver more than even the screams.
"I'm not interested, Doctor. No more drugs."
Noor groaned as he and every man in
the barracks were ripped from sleep for the third
night in a row by Madari screaming. He sat up and in
the moonlight saw the tall slender figure of Faraj
go and kneel by the major's cot, try to calm him. It
had little effect.
"Shut him up!" Someone yelled out of the darkness.
"Shut up yourself," another voice shouted.
"Everyone shut up!"
Noor groaned. Gradually Madari's screams began to
quieten, whether as a result of Faraj's comforting
him or simply the demons in his mind retreating Noor
didn't know. This couldn't go on. Madari was
suffering horribly, Noor was certain, though since
the man still barely spoke it was hard to say. While
he'd been on the drugs he'd been almost totally
passive, letting them lead him around, staying where
he was put and sleeping most of the time. Without
the drugs he was more restless, would suddenly take
off, limping but moving quite fast, yet with no aim.
He'd walk across the yard and stop outside another
hut, look at it confused then often just sit down on
the ground and stare.
And that was the easy part. Then there were the
flashbacks.
As Madari finally went silent Noor lay down again
and closed his eyes. Men muttered in the dark.
Madari's suffering wasn't the only reason this
couldn't go on.
The inevitable happened the very
next day. Noor was watching over Madari in the
barracks. Faraj slept, exhausted, Noor knew, from
tending to Madari. Madari sat up from lying on his
cot, staring into space. He looked at Noor with
recognition and said. "Captain."
"Yes, Major?" Noor replied, smiling encouraging at
him.
"I want..." Madari said, had to swallow a couple of
times before he could go on. "Some coffee. Can we
go..." he frowned puzzled looking. "...there? Where
the coffee is?"
"The mess? Of course." He helped Madari up, took his
arm and they left the barracks, walked across the
yard. There was a delightful cool breeze blowing and
Noor heard Madari sigh almost happily as it played
across their faces.
In the mess hall he sat Madari at one of the long
tables. A couple of prisoners, quite old men were
sitting at another table playing chess, but
otherwise the place was empty. Noor nodded to the
old men as he passed on his way into the kitchen. He
glanced back at Madari as he nodded and they seemed
to understand. Keep an eye on him.
Noor made the coffee as strong as he could, Faraj
told him that was how the major liked his coffee. It
was hard to tell, since getting any food or drink
into the man was difficult and he displayed little
enjoyment during the ordeal. The damage to his
throat didn't just affect his voice, it made it hard
for him to swallow anything. He still wasn't putting
on much weight since his diet was nearly all liquid.
Noor was pouring out two cups of coffee when one of
the old men came into the kitchen.
"Captain, you'd better come out here."
Noor looked at him alarmed and followed him out of
the kitchen. Four men were standing around Madari
who was staring up at them, looking terrified. They
were all young men, civilian prisoners and they
looked angry.
"Hey!" Noor hurried over, "get away from him." He
stood between Madari and the other men. He assessed
them quickly. He couldn't take the four of them at
once, but any two of them and he'd come out on top.
"We were just talking to him." One of the men said
defiantly. Noor knew him. A chemistry graduate
student before he was arrested.
"Well don't," Noor said, "he's still ill, just leave
him alone."
"Okay, okay. But look, you've got to keep him quiet
at night. We can't take that every damn night." The
others nodded. They all looked tired, Noor thought,
but he felt no pity for them. He was tired too, and
Faraj was exhausted, they weren't whining about it.
"He can't help it, you idiot. He's ill, you know
what's been done to him?"
"I don't care! Just shut him up, or something's
going to happen, people aren't going to stand for it
much longer."
"Anyone lays a finger on this man they answer to
me." Noor's scowl was fierce and it did seem to
intimidate the civilians. The four of them backed
off.
"Just, do something." The spokesman of the group
said and the four of them turned and left. Noor
sighed and sat down beside Madari. The major looked
at him, eyes wide and frightened.
"It's all right, Faris," Noor said gently, "I won't
let anyone hurt you."
"I make too much noise..."
"It's not your fault." He put his hand on Madari's
shoulder, then ran it down the man's arm. Still so
thin and wasted.
"Captain, here's your coffee." Noor looked up to see
the old prisoner who'd come into the kitchen
approaching them carrying the coffee cups.
"Oh thank you." The old man put down the cups and
retreated.
Madari tried to pick up one of the cups. His hands
only had dressings on the ends of his fingers now,
as protection as much as anything else, but they
still made his hands clumsy.
"Can I help you, Major?" Noor asked.
"No!" Madari snapped. "Sick of... fed like a baby."
Ah, a little fighting spirit, Noor thought, glad to
see it. He sat back, let Madari fumble the cup into
a reasonably secure hold, between both hands and
take a sip. He drank his own watching Madari take
slow careful sips of coffee. Then he must have taken
a little too big a sip, or the coffee grounds
irritated his throat, because he gagged and one hand
flew to his throat. He spat out coffee and the cup
fell from his other hand, hit the edge of the table
and shattered.
"Are you okay?" Noor said, alarmed, worried about
having to pound Madari on his injured back if he was
choking. But Madari nodded, not speaking, but
seeming calm.
"Water." Madari whispered. Noor ran though to the
kitchen and came back a moment later with a cup of
water. Madari managed to hold it and sip from it.
When he was sure Madari was managing that Noor bent
down and started to retrieve the pieces of broken
cup.
"Well we have to do something," Noor
said to Faraj and Dr Al-Hijazi. The three of them
stood around in the bathrooms at the end of the
barracks room. Outside men were settling down for
the night.
"It seems to help him if someone is close, even
holding him." Al-Hijazi observed. "If we pushed a
cot against his and someone slept beside him, close
enough to be woken when he started to become
agitated, then they could wake him before the
nightmare takes full hold. This has to stop. For one
thing his voice isn't going to get better if he
keeps screaming every night." He shook his head, "I
wish I had an endoscope. I'm certain he has nodules
on his vocal chords." He sighed. "On the other hand
continually interrupted sleep isn't going to do his
mental health any good."
"Right now it's not doing anybody's mental health
any good." Noor pointed out.
"I know. I'm going to talk to Dr Rachad again. It's
disgusting that they won't at least give him
sleeping drugs. The man is suffering!"
"Sounds like a good idea about the cots," Noor said,
interrupting the angry doctor. Faraj looked less
convinced. "We'd have to take it in turns, not just
us three, all of the officers who are willing, and
there's other men I think can be trusted who'll want
to help." He smiled. "We'll have a rota, I'll put it
together tomorrow." He glanced at the pale and
exhausted looking Faraj. "And I'll take the first
watch tonight." He smiled at the other two. "I think
this will work, my friends."
It did work. Al-Hijazi explained to
Madari what they proposed to do to help him and
asked if he was comfortable with that. Madari had
just nodded, Al-Hijazi hoped he actually understood.
Noor pushed the cot to the left of Madari's close up
beside the major's and lay down beside him. He gave
a reassuring smile to the nervous looking Madari.
"Just sleep, Major, it will be fine."
Noor woke when he heard Madari give a choked groan.
He remembered where he was and why and reached out
to stroke Madari's arm soothingly. He moved closer,
spoke quietly.
"Shh, Faris. Shh." In the dim light Madari's face
was twisted and frightened. "You're safe," Noor said
softly. "Wake up, Faris."
Madari's eyes opened abruptly.
"Ahmed?" He whispered, then frowned.
"No, it's me, Javid. You're safe."
Madari's eyes closed again, he turned away from Noor
and groaned. He was embarrassed, Noor realised. Well
it wasn't a very normal situation, but this wasn't a
very normal place and Madari had been through
something very far from normal
Noor moved back a little, allowing Madari his space
and dignity. He saw Madari was shaking now and the
major pulled up a blanket to cover his face, his
tears. Noor wanted to weep too, with pity. Instead
he found Madari's hand in the dark and took it. I am
here. That's all I can do for him. Be here, be
strong for him.
Noor had always been someone who'd been protective
of anyone weaker than him. Even at school, though he
was a big boy he'd never been a bully. Instead he'd
been the one the other children ran to if someone
bullied them and young Javid had gone to teach the
bully a lesson in picking on someone their own size.
Going into the army had been for him a natural
extension of that protective instinct. And when the
new government had started sending through orders
that meant hurting the very people he believed he
was meant to protect Noor had rebelled, had
disobeyed orders and been arrested first by his own
comrades in arms and then the security police had
shown up and then he was here.
And now he had someone else to protect. He waited
until Madari was asleep, then let himself drift off
too, still holding Madari's mutilated hand.
~~~~
Madari slipped his hand out of Noor's. He watched as
the Captain stirred in his sleep and then settled
again. This one is a good man, Madari thought.
Sometimes he forgot Noor's name, sometimes he forgot
his own, but he was convinced the captain was a good
man. Ahmed would have approved of him. If only
things had been different, Madari thought, we could
have been friends. If only there'd been time...
He sat up on his cot, slow and quiet, kept the groan
inside as his injured feet touched the floor. In the
dark he groped for his sandals and slipped them on.
His eyes were adapting, he could see well enough to
make out the door to the shower and lavatory area at
the end of the barracks.
He winced as he looked in that direction. He
couldn't shower properly, with the dressings that
still covered his back and his fingers. Even using
the toilet was difficult. He cringed. He felt as if
he wasn't clean, would never feel clean again. He'd
never feel like a man again. The other men meant
well, but they treated him like a child. And now
this: a man sleeping beside him to comfort him when
his dreams came. When he was a little boy and had
nightmares he would sometimes climb into his
parents' bed, sleep between them, knowing their
presence would chase away the monsters in his
dreams. He'd stopped doing that a long time ago, yet
now he was reduced to it again, it seemed. Reduced
to a child, humiliated and pitied.
And was it any wonder? He was a pathetic, broken
creature, deserving only of the pity of real men.
His body was maimed, his mind destroyed. His honour,
his pride, were mere distant memories that mocked
him. He could not live like this, preyed on by other
men and by his own dreams and memories, by his
guilt. He could not look at Idris every day and see
a man he'd betrayed. A man who might never see his
family again because of Madari's weakness.
Careful not to let the cot creak he leaned over to
where his shirt lay at the foot of the bed and slid
his hand into a pocket. His clumsy, bandaged fingers
closed around a small piece of the coffee cup he had
dropped earlier. The sharp broken edge pressed into
his skin and he smiled.
The pain would stop soon. Forever.
"Javid! Javid!"
Noor sat up, startled from sleep at the panicky
yell. He recognised the voice, Lieutenant Moshen,
one of the officers.
"Naji?" He called out. He glanced down at Madari...
who wasn't there.
Oh no.
Noor jumped up, Moshen's voice had come from the
shower block. Noor ran there, ignoring the questions
and imprecations from the other men in the barracks,
men woken again from sleep. But this time it wasn't
by a nightmare. Unless it was Noor's nightmare.
Noor skidded as he ran into the shower area, skidded
on the tiled floor, which was wet. And he saw with
sick horror that it wasn't water on the floor. In
the moonlight what was on the floor looked black,
but Noor knew it was blood. Oh no! No! Noor's
thoughts screamed. He was under my protection. I
failed, I failed.
"Here!" Moshen shouted, from one of the shower
cubicles. Noor found him leaning over Madari who was
slumped in the corner, dressed only in baggy white
trousers which were now soaked with the blood that
ran from Madari's wrists.
No! No! I failed him.
"I woke up and saw he wasn't in his bed." Moshen
said, turning a pale face to Noor. He ripped a strip
of cloth from his own shirt, started to tie it tight
around Madari's wrist. Noor stared at him and then
gasped.
"He's alive?"
"Yes, just." He bound the other wrist. Both
makeshift bandages were soaked with blood in
seconds, but Noor wanted to cheer anyway. If Madari
was still bleeding then he was still alive.
"We have to get him to the infirmary!" Noor got into
the cubicle and the two of them pulled the
unconscious man to his feet, arms over their
shoulders. "Double quick," Noor said, quickly
manoeuvring the three of them out of the cubicle and
into the barracks.
Faraj was right at the door as they went through
sideways.
"Faris!" He cried in horror. "What happened?" His
face went dark, furious, he glared at Noor. "You
were supposed to be watching him!"
"There's no time, Faraj, get out of my way!"
Guards were coming into the barracks now. The lights
came on. Noor snapped at Moshen, "Keep moving." He
trusted his fellow officers to run interference and
get the guards out of the way.
The sight of the blood apparently shocked the guards
as much as it did the prisoners, they stood aside
and Noor and Moshen dragged Madari out of the
barracks and across the yard, started to run. As
they approached the gate that led out of the
prisoner compound a searchlight hit them, followed
them. Moshen groaned.
"They'll shoot us."
"Wounded man!" Noor yelled at the guards on the gate
as they approached. "Medical emergency! Open the
gate!"
It wasn't open by the time they got there and Noor
was about ready to chew through it. Madari's blood
was soaking into his shoulder, leaking through the
bandage. Then Noor growled low in his throat as
Ghaith stepped up to the gate, looked through with
his usual sneering expression. Noor could smell
drink on him. Ghaith looked Madari up and down.
"Can't he wait for sick call in the morning?"
The other guards sniggered. Noor grabbed the wire of
the gate, snarled out words.
"Let us through, you son of a bitch, or I'll tear
this gate off and then tear your fucking head off
after."
The guards went silent, looked at Ghaith, who held
Noor's gaze for a moment. One day, Noor thought, one
day I'll rip out your heart, hold it up in front of
your eyes.
"Open the gate!"
Ghaith snorted, then said, "Okay, open it up."
They did and Noor and Moshen hurried through with
their burden.
"He'd better not bleed on the guard room floor,"
Ghaith warned as they passed him.
Noor shot him a filthy glance and wanted to tell
Ghaith how much he wished scorpions would lay their
eggs in every one of Ghaith's bodily orifices, but
he couldn't delay getting Madari to the infirmary.
He hurried on. A commotion behind him made him
glance around once to see Ghaith arguing with more
prisoners, Faraj being the most vocal among them.
Faraj was demanding to be let through. Ghaith wasn't
having it and Noor gasped as Faraj threw a punch and
the argument became a fight. He couldn't stop
though. A guard took them into the guardhouse and
Noor just prayed the fight didn't lead to anyone
getting shot.
And then they were in the infirmary and handing
Madari over to the doctor and the medical staff were
rushing around and Noor felt his legs start to shake
so that he had to back up to the wall and sit down.
After a second Moshen sat down beside him. The two
blood spattered men looked at each other. Moshen's
eyes were wide. He was young, only twenty four and,
Noor remembered, he'd never seen combat, never seen
that much blood. He put his arm around the younger
man and let Moshen lean against him, felt him
trembling. Noor closed his eyes and put his head
back against the wall. Listening to the medics work
on Madari Javid Noor prayed.
General Ziyahd had a headache. The
headache was named Madari. Once again the place had
been in an uproar overnight. Ghaith was in a foul
temper and had a black eye. He was stamping around
shouting at guards and prisoners alike. Captain
Faraj was in the hot box and could stay in there
until he shrivelled up like a date as far as Ziyahd
cared. Noor and Moshen had needed eight guards to
drag them out of the infirmary and back to their
barracks. Madari himself was the only quiet one,
doped up, in restraints and being given a blood
transfusion.
And now Doctor Rachad and Doctor Al-Hijazi were
shouting at each other in Rachad's office. Ziyahd
hated doctors, superior bastards. He approached the
office and waited for a moment listening to the two
doctors arguing.
"Not giving that man medication is professional
misconduct!" Al-Hijazi shouted at Rachad.
"I want to give him medication!" Rachad yelled back.
"I told you the situation, the general won't let me
requisition any antidepressants."
"Then do something about it! Report him, go over his
head, do something, for the sake of your patient."
Ziyahd listened hard, barely breathing, waiting for
his doctor's answer.
"I can't." Rachad said, quietly. "You don't
understand. It's different in the army than in a
hospital, it's just different."
Ziyahd smiled, pleased. Seems he still had his
officer's loyalty.
"I hate the little reptile." Rachad went on, "but
there's nothing I can do, he's my C.O."
Ziyahd scowled. Reptile? If the doctor wasn't
careful he'd find himself on the wrong side of the
wire.
The door opened suddenly and Al-Hijazi stomped out,
his face dark with fury. He almost knocked Ziyahd
over as he stormed out. He glared at the general,
then turned back to Rachad who was following him
out.
"That man's blood is on your hands. His death will
be on your heads." He stalked off. Ziyahd waved a
hand at a guard to accompany him.
Rachad was looking at Ziyahd, alarmed, presumably
wondering what he might have heard. Ziyahd didn't
berate him for the 'reptile' crack though. He
squirreled it away in his mind for later use. He
stood thoughtful for a moment, rubbing a finger
across his moustache. He had a dilemma. His
superiors wanted Madari kept alive, he'd been told
that. But they were, it seemed, quite happy for him
to be in the wretched state he was in now. If the
doctor gave him drugs he'd get better. And if he got
better then things could get very difficult around
here. Ziyahd thought he had Noor under control; just
threaten to shoot a few civilians if the Captain got
stroppy. Faraj needed breaking in, but Ghaith was
working on that. But Madari in his right mind again,
if the man's reputation was to be believed, would be
a danger Ziyahd wasn't sure he could cope with.
"All right doctor. Give him drugs. Just enough to
keep him from trying this again."
"General, I can't guarantee that."
"You'd better try doctor. You'd better try. Keep him
alive, but don't let him get any better."
Ziyahd turned away from the outrage on Rachad's face
and strode out of the infirmary.
End Part Two
|