A Man to Watch
Part Four: Metamorphosis
Note:
The events of
Settlement take
place within this Part. I have added certain scenes
from Settlement within the narrative, so you can
follow the events without re-reading Settlement in
full and so that this Part has a coherent story.
Those scenes are marked and in a different colour
from the rest of the text. I didn't want to rewrite
the whole of Settlement, but I did end up rewriting
one scene from it in a different viewpoint.
Disclaimer: I don't own the A-Team, I don't make any
money from this.
March 1987
"New prisoners." Ishaq hurried over to where Madari
sat in the mess hall with Noor and Faraj, drinking
coffee. They looked at him surprised. There'd been
no new prisoners for months now. The prison camp was
full. Ishaq went on, his voice full of amazement.
"Westerners."
They hurried outside and joined Jahni and another
officer, Captain Fahad at the wire.
"Five men. They've taken them into the blockhouse."
Jahni said, turning as the senior officers
approached.
"You're sure they're westerners?" Madari asked,
watching guards and unfamiliar soldiers milling
around. He shaded his eyes against the low, late
afternoon sun.
"We couldn't see them too closely, but one of them
had blond hair." Fahad said.
"I think they're Americans." Jahni said. He shrugged
at their questioning looks. "Their clothes. And…" He
shrugged again. "I don't know, they just looked
American."
"What the hell are Americans doing here?" Noor
wondered, frowning.
"We don't know for sure they're Americans." Faraj
said, glancing at Jahni, smiling at him. "Unless
they were dressed as Superman, perhaps, Kahil?"
"Superman isn't American, he's an alien." Jahni
pointed out. "Anyway, I prefer Batman."
"So, Kahil," Noor said, winking at Faraj, "do you
read anything besides comic books?"
Madari tuned out their banter. Westerners? Who were
they, what had they done to be brought here? He
glanced around. The prisoners in the yard were
already talking and looking over at the blockhouse.
The new arrivals had been seen only for seconds and
yet the camp already buzzed with excitement about
them. Madari could understand why. Until new
arrivals had stopped turning up all new prisoners
had been pressed by every man that met them on what
was happening outside. Westerners could tell them
even more.
"Javid," Madari said, interrupting the younger men's
speculations and chatter. "See if any of your people
can get anything out of the guards about who these
men are."
"Right, sir." Noor said. Madari had put him in
charge of extracting information from the guards.
Noor had recruited other men, all as naturally
good-natured as him, to make friends with individual
guards and report back any useful snippets of
information they could glean. One common thing they
all reported back; the guards were mostly not much
happier with their lot than the prisoners.
Noor went off to instruct his "agents" as he liked
to call them. Madari left Fahad to keep watch on the
block house and walked back to the mess hall. Jahni
and Faraj followed him, falling into step on either
side of him. He glanced at them, Faraj on his left,
Jahni on his right, but didn't speak. Walking with
his hands behind his back he turned to stare
straight ahead, out across the desert, under the sky
that was darkening to an inky blue now. The stars
were coming out.
Madari didn't know who the westerners were or what
they wanted. He knew only one thing. That he was
afraid. Things were quite settled here. He was
ashamed of that. Ashamed of letting it be so
settled, but he was too afraid to try to change it.
Now it was being changed. A forced change from
outside. Who knows where it would lead. Back to a
cold underground room having his body and mind and
soul torn apart?
Madari was afraid.
Two days later, in the afternoon Dr
Al-Hijazi approached Madari, who was reading in the
rec room. Noor was sitting at a table nearby, chin
on his hands, looking unusually glum. He had been
miserable all day and resisted everyone's attempts
to cheer him up.
"Major."
Madari looked up at the doctor, and reflected for a
moment how the man was a shadow of what he'd been a
year ago because of the weight he'd lost.
"Doctor." He stood up from the couch, gestured to
it. "Please sit."
"Thank you. Major." The two men sat. "I thought
you'd like to know, I've just been treating two of
the westerners. Salim Al-Fulani brought me to them."
"Fulani?"
"Young lad." Noor said. He came over from the table,
to stand beside the couch. "Engineer. Arrived not
long after Kahil did. Polite boy, clever." Madari
nodded a quick thanks to him, recalling the young
man now. Noor's ability to remember every man in the
camp still amazed him.
"That's right." Al-Hijazi said. "Two of them,
they're Americans by the way, were released from the
blockhouse."
Madari already knew this much, his officers had
reported back.
"Were they badly hurt?"
"Both were beaten up, one of them had been flogged."
Noor cursed in disgust and Madari closed his eyes
briefly before pulling himself together.
"Did they say who they are? What they're doing
here?"
"No. They called each other 'BA' and 'Face'." He
said the last word in English.
"Face?" Madari repeated.
"I think it must be a nickname, Salim said the man
told him his name is Templeton Peck. They talked
about another man, named Hannibal."
"Hannibal?" Madari's eyes widened. "Like Hannibal
Barca?"
The doctor looked puzzled. "I don't…"
"The man who took elephants over the Alps to beat
the Romans." Noor supplied. He smiled at Madari, who
smiled back. There was so much time in this place,
sometimes all you could do was lie on your cot and
smoke and talk. And anyone talking to Madari for
long enough would eventually learn plenty about
military history.
"Right." The doctor said, still not much wiser.
"They both had quite a lot of old scars, including
what I'm certain were bullet wounds. Oh and they
said they'd been photographed holding a newspaper
while they were in the blockhouse."
Madari and Noor exchanged a glance. That sounded
important.
"All right, thank you, doctor." Madari and the
doctor rose. Madari saw the doctor start to extend
his hand before an embarrassed look crossed his face
and he put his hand down. Madari outwardly ignored
that. Inwardly he cringed. His hands were able to
stand handshakes now, but he still kept them out of
sight and didn't shake anyone's hand. Ridiculous, he
thought. I let the doctor examine my hands, yet I'm
afraid of him seeing them if I shake his hand.
The doctor instead bowed his head and left.
"Newspaper." Noor said. "That means the government
wants someone to know they are still alive. And old
bullet wounds and other scars? Military men?
Mercenaries perhaps?"
"Hannibal." Madari said, a musing tone in his voice,
"Templeton Peck. BA." He frowned.
"Americans have such funny names." Noor gave a small
smile.
"Yes, but I…" he frowned again. "There's something
familiar about them." He shrugged. It would come to
him.
"Do you want to go and talk to the two that have
been released?"
"No." Madari said it a little too fast. There was
that fear again. Now it was a knot in his stomach.
"No. Let them… um, let them make the first move."
Noor nodded. "Okay." He didn't seem to care much one
way or the other.
"What's wrong, Javid," Madari asked in a low voice,
hating to see the usually cheerful man so gloomy.
Noor looked at him, then looked away.
"It's my wife's birthday today." He said quietly.
"I see." Madari said. He put one hand on Noor's
shoulder and squeezed it. Sometimes he forgot what
the men here who had families outside must be going
through. And that made him remember that Faraj was
missing not only his wife but also precious months
of his son's life.
Madari had no close family left. He missed his
friends, especially Rahama, he missed Youssef, who
he'd known all his life. But aside from them
everyone he cared about was here, everyone he… he
stopped himself as he always did before his mind
said the word he didn't have the courage to admit.
"You'll see her again," Madari tried to reassure
Noor. Inside he sneered at himself. If he does it
will be no thanks to me.
Madari saw two of the Americans for
the first time at breakfast the next morning. The
blonde haired one was Peck, according to Dr
Al-Hijazi. The other, a hugely muscular black man,
was 'BA'. 'BA Baracus' Madari had been told later in
the evening and his mind had snapped into place.
He knew who these men were, he'd read about them in
the newspapers. And an American officer he'd met
years ago at a conference and had corresponded with
sometimes, had mentioned them too.
They were the A-Team. And that they were here was
extraordinary, it was impossible.
Because they were dead.
For dead men they were pretty
lively. Not long after breakfast Jahni looked into
the rec room to find Madari reading.
"Two more of them were let out a few minutes ago."
Madari replaced his book on the shelf and followed
Jahni outside.
"Are we going to go and say hello?" Jahni asked as
they emerged. He seemed keen to meet them. He'd told
Madari several times that he would love to visit
America one day. Madari had once visited New York
for a week, when he was a young man and Jahni got
him to recount pretty much every moment of every day
of that week. Madari had gladly done so, letting his
mind take him back to the streets of Manhattan, the
amazing buildings, the astonishment he'd felt in
Central Park, that such a place existed in the heart
of a city. Madari smiled, remembering Jahni's face,
eyes wide, as he listened to Madari's account.
"Sir?" Jahni said, bringing him back to reality.
Madari realised he had stopped on the step out of
the rec room door. He sighed. Jahni bringing him
back to reality was usually welcome, but this time
he'd have liked to stay in the memories for a while.
"Yes, perhaps we should go and speak to them." He
took another step down, then stopped again, put a
hand on Jahni's arm and said, "wait."
The four Americans came out of the barracks, Salim
Al-Fulani with them and went up to a guard. Madari
watched as a tall, well built man, with white hair
started talking to the guard. Smith, that had to be
Colonel Hannibal Smith. Madari tried to remember if
he'd seen a picture in the newspaper report he'd
read of the three American soldiers on trial for
killing their commanding officer. He didn't think
so. But that had to be him.
Smith was too far away to hear, but Madari noticed
that Fulani seemed to be translating for him to the
guard.
"None of them speaks Arabic," Madari said. Jahni
glanced back at him.
"There's another one of them still in the
blockhouse." Jahni reminded Madari. Madari nodded.
Then his eyes widened.
Things were heating up, the guard was pointing his
rifle at Smith now, who stood his ground despite the
weapon pointing at him. Madari heard Jahni let go a
held breath as the guard seemed to back down,
lowering his gun. Smith spoke again and suddenly the
guard lashed out, hitting Smith in the stomach with
the gun butt, doubling him up. Madari and Jahni
winced at the blow. Fulani stumbled back, looking
scared. The rest of the Americans rushed forward to
help their commander, and the guard opened up with
his machine gun.
A heavy weight cannoned into Madari and suddenly he
was hitting the floor on his back, just inside the
rec room door. The air was forced out of his lungs
as Jahni landed on top of him, arms around him.
Just as quickly Jahni rolled off, hooked the door
with his foot and kicked it closed. Then he knelt
over Madari pale and wide eyed.
"I-I'm sorry, sir. Did I hurt you? I just heard the
gunfire and…"
Madari groaned and gasped for breath, coughed. Other
men that had been in the rec room and had ducked to
the floor at the sound of the gunfire stared at the
two of them. Madari managed to lean up on one elbow,
rubbing his stomach.
"Did he shoot any of them?" Madari gasped out.
"What?" Jahni looked quite unnerved, and Madari
didn't think it was the gunfire, but rather his own
reaction to it that had shaken him so much.
He protected me, Madari thought, his first instinct
was to protect me.
"The Americans, are they shot?" He could hear a lot
of yelling going on outside now, but no more
gunshots.
Jahni crouched by the door, partly opened it. He was
still, Madari noticed, keeping his own body
positioned carefully between Madari and the now open
door. Madari got impatient then, needed to see what
was going on. He got to his feet, though still short
of breath and opened the door fully, pulling it out
of Jahni's hand. His newly acquired bodyguard stood
up, but couldn't stop Madari going outside.
Smith was being dragged to the hot box by a couple
of guards. Other guards were restraining the rest of
his men and the other prisoners who'd crowded
around. The guards tossed Smith inside and shut the
door. Then they went back over to Smith's group and
grabbed Fulani. A tall man in a blue cap hung onto
Fulani's arm for a moment, until he was persuaded to
let go by having his arm struck with a rifle butt.
Fulani was dragged to the hot box too, twisting in
the guard's grip, resisting ineffectively. He was
shoved inside and a second later Smith's voice, in
English boomed out.
“Hey, he was just translating he didn’t do anything
wrong!”
A guard banged on the top of the box, answered him
in Arabic.
"Shut up, Yankee dog."
The yard slowly calmed down and in a moment Noor
wandered up to Madari and Jahni.
"How long was he out of the blockhouse before they
threw him in the hotbox?" Noor asked, though he
already knew the answer.
"About ten minutes." Jahni said.
"Oh yeah," Noor said, with an evil grin, "these guys
are going to liven things up around here."
Jahni was on the steps on a
barracks, not his own, when Smith and Fulani were
taken out of the hotbox.
Strictly speaking Jahni was meant to be keeping an
eye on the comings and goings of the Americans, who
were in the barracks. But his mind wasn't on the
job. He kept going over and over in his mind the
moment the gunshots had started. What had made him
do that? Most of the men had ducked or dropped to
the ground. But his first thought had been to turn
and throw Madari back into the room. No, not even a
thought, he couldn't remember making the decision.
It just happened.
Well it was his duty of course, as a junior officer
to protect a more senior officer. That's what had
motivated him. Protect the commander. He smiled.
Clearly his training had seeped even deeper into his
mind than he realised. Become instinct.
"Move!" A guard shoved Jahni aside when he stood up
as they approached. They dragged Smith and Fulani,
barely conscious, into the barracks, then came out
again. Jahni watched them go and sat down again. The
door was left open. He could hear their voices, only
occasionally make out their words though. A fifth
man, the others called him Frankie, had been
released from the blockhouse a couple of hours ago.
At one point Jahni heard Smith say loudly.
"Frankie, look at me!"
Jahni had to resist the urge in his spine to snap to
attention at the tone of command in the voice. He
glanced back and saw that as well as taking care of
Smith two of the Americans, the big man, BA and the
tall man he'd learnt was named Murdock, were tending
to Fulani on a cot. Jahni smiled in approval. He
liked these men, they didn't just take care of their
own, they helped those who had helped them. He had a
good feeling about them.
Turning away again he waited, hearing the drone of
their voices, barely letting the sound penetrate his
drowsy mind. It was very hot and he been awake half
the night, talking to Madari. Madari had suffered a
nightmare so horrible that it produced a physical
reaction. He'd staggered to the toilets and vomited.
Jahni had insisted on staying with him after that.
Madari had been turning him away for months now if
Jahni got too close, but last night he had opened up
again and in a shaking voice, like a man confessing
to a horrible sin he had whispered.
"They made me eat pork."
He related how his interrogators had starved him for
days and then started cooking bacon over a camping
stove outside his cell. How the smell of it both
disgusted and enticed him. How he'd resisted for as
long as he could, but finally given in and eaten the
meat offered to him, his mind screaming for food,
all taboos destroyed in mindless hunger.
Jahni held him, felt him trembling. Jahni was filled
from the soles of his feet to the ends of his hair
with hatred for the men who had played such sadistic
mind games on Madari, trying to destroy him. Jahni's
voice choked and he could only whisper that god
would forgive Madari. That he was only trying to
stay alive.
"It was a test," Madari said. "I failed. I should
have let myself starve before giving in to them." He
paused, then finally spoke again. "I wish they had
killed me. I wish I had the courage to do it myself,
but I am afraid to go to hell." And he didn't say
anything else. Apparently exhausted he had fallen
asleep and they had stayed there until dawn prayers.
Jahni almost fell asleep on the barracks steps,
catching his head nodding. He rubbed his eyes and
stood up and stretched. Coffee required. The
American's voices were silent now and he glanced
inside to see they were all lying on cots.
Jahni went inside the room. All of the men were
asleep. They looked battered and worn out. Murdock
lay on a cot that was pushed close to Fulani's. His
hand rested protectively on Fulani's shoulder.
Sleeping with the engineer, Jahni thought, smiling.
Silently he turned and went back outside, closed the
door. He called out to a friend who was passing, one
of Noor's friendly agents.
"Hey, Nizir, would you fetch me some coffee,
please?"
"What's in it for me?" Nizir asked, grinning.
"You already owe me ten cigarettes."
"You don't smoke."
"No, but I trade." Jahni settled himself on the
barracks step again. No one was getting in to
disturb the Americans without his say so. "Fetch me
a coffee and the debt is cancelled. Don't forget the
sugar."
"Sugar ran out two days ago." Nizir said and hurried
off to the mess hall.
Smith had set two of his men to make
friends with people, Madari realised the next day.
He watched Peck and Murdock "working the yard",
chatting to many of the men, sometimes individually,
sometimes in groups. They were gathering
intelligence.
Baracus was walking around with young Fulani, the
two of them doing a lot of pointing things out and
having hushed conversations. They stood for a long
time in a spot that gave them a good view of the
vehicles. Baracus is assessing the hardware.
Smith himself was sitting with the Latino looking
man, Santana, apparently relaxing, yet taking
everything in. He's watching the guards, Madari
thought, tracking their routine.
All of this activity had one clear purpose.
These men did not intend to stay.
He went into the rec room and sat on a couch. All
right. So they didn't intend to stay. They intended
to escape. Of course, they were soldiers. But would
they ask for help?
He remembered the letters from the American officer
he'd corresponded with. He said the case against the
men stunk to high heaven of conspiracy, of making
these men scapegoats. He wrote about how, while on
the run, they had hired out to help people, and
according to reports they often took no fee.
Sometimes they just acted out of a sense of justice,
tried to put a bad situation right.
Well this was a bad situation for sure. What if the
Americans wanted to do more than escape? What if
they saw only one means of escape? What if they were
making friends for reasons other than intelligence
gathering? What if they were gathering allies?
And if we join forces? If we try to take the camp?
And if it all goes wrong? Madari shuddered, put his
hands over his face, felt the sweat break out across
his forehead. His breath was coming in gasps and his
heart was racing. Panic filled his mind. Can't risk
it. Can't. Won't. Won't go back to that place. The
dark place. Not just the dark cell, the dark place
in his mind. The darkest part that he couldn't visit
even in his dreams. The darkness that descended like
a curtain after he heard the word "pliers". He could
never go back there and stay sane.
He heard the door open and quickly took his hands
away from his face, tried to get himself under
control. But his throat tightened as he saw Jahni
and Noor lead in Peck and Murdock. The two Americans
wore friendly smiles as the four men approached.
Peck's smile was especially brilliant, despite his
rather battered face.
Madari stood up to meet them. He kept his trembling
hands behind his back.
"Major," Noor said, "allow me to introduce Captain
Murdock and Lieutenant Peck."
"Captain," Madari said formally, "Lieutenant." He
saw Jahni look at him sharply, knew his voice was
faint and guessed he was pale. He could feel the
cold sweat still on his face. "I, ah, I apologise
for not shaking your hands, gentlemen."
Murdock waved a hand. "That's okay, Captain Noor
explained that. It's nice to meet you, Major."
"I hope your injuries aren't too bad." Madari
thought he was going to fall down. His knees were
shaking. They were looking for allies, he was
certain of that now.
"Poor BA got the worst of it," Peck said.
"He'd have got worse if Ghaith was still around,"
Jahni remarked. He gave a small smile. Madari knew
he felt a sense of victory about the fact that two
weeks after the officers had stopped him killing
Jahni, the vicious sergeant had vanished from the
camp and according to information from the guards
had requested a transfer. Presumably to somewhere
the men had not learnt not to be afraid of him.
"Ghaith?" Peck asked.
"Sadistic bastard." Jahni said. "Liked to punish us.
The major saw him off though." He smiled at Madari
who frowned at him.
"That's not quite…" he stopped, as Jahni's face
fell. No don't hurt Kahil just because right now
you're so sick with fear you want to hide in a
corner.
"Why don't you come and meet our CO?" Murdock
suggested.
"No." Just too quickly, making Jahni look at him
worried, "Not at the moment, I'm sorry. I have to go
to the infirmary. Good day to you." Desperate for
air now he strode quickly to the door and into the
fresh air, breathed deeply. Still shaky he hurried
to the gate and asked to be taken to the doctor. He
had to escape, even for an hour. One of his
fingernails was especially painful today, perhaps
becoming infected. An hour in the infirmary while
Rachad checked them all would be just what Madari
needed right now. He glanced across at Smith
standing by the wire with the man Santana.
He had to escape from Smith.
He kept on escaping from him until
breakfast the next day. Then he came into the mess
hall to find Jahni, Noor and Faraj were sitting with
the Americans. Jahni and Noor were laughing and
joking with Peck, Murdock and Santana. Faraj was
more aloof, but talked politely to them. Other
officers sat at the same long table and joined in
the conversation.
Jahni waved to Madari, who nodded and went to get
himself coffee and food. He'd put some bread on a
small tray and turned to the coffee urn to find
Smith standing there, pouring several cups.
"I've always thought you Arabs make the best
coffee." Smith said. He held two cups by their
handles in each hand.
"It -" Madari said. The trembling in his knees
started again. "The coffee here isn't very good."
"Strong though." Smith smiled.
"Yes."
"Hannibal Smith."
"I know. I mean yes, good to meet you, colonel."
"You're Major Madari."
"Yes."
What the hell is wrong with me? Madari wondered.
Smith was friendly enough. His smile was sincere.
Yet Madari felt as physically intimidated by him as
he'd once been by Ghaith.
"Well come and join us when you've got your coffee,"
Smith said, with another smile. He left and Madari
leaned on the table, his heart pounding.
"Major, are you getting coffee?" He looked up to see
Fulani, wearing a kitchen apron. "I have to refill
the urn."
"Yes, wait a moment." Madari poured himself a cup of
the horrible coffee. "Mr Fulani, Salim isn't it?"
"Yes, sir."
"Salim, you've become friends with the Americans
since they arrived."
"I've tried to help them, sir. None of them speaks
Arabic, I've been translating for them."
"Very commendable."
"Just trying to be hospitable."
"Of course. So, tell me, Salim, have they told you
when are they planning to make their escape
attempt?"
(scene inserted from Settlement)
"…Hannibal of Arabia…"
Hannibal heard Murdock's voice, smiled. The moment
Murdock had seen Hannibal in the white headdress
he'd fashioned for himself the pilot had started to
call him that. It drove BA crazy of course. He
looked up from the table to where Face and Murdock
were sitting cross-legged on the floor, pulling on
the ropes for the fans that cooled the recreation
area.
"Murdock." Face said warningly, "Watch it, you might
offend people." There were a few other prisoners in
the room. No one seemed to be taking much notice of
the three westerners.
"You know," Murdock said, "I was talking to Hakim,
who works in the kitchen…"
"The lawyer?" Face asked.
"That's him, he told me his grandfather fought with
Lawrence of Arabia."
Face rolled his eyes.
"Murdock, half the guys in here have grandfathers
who say they rode with, fought with or were close
personal friends of Lawrence of Arabia."
Hannibal tuned out their banter, was glad to see
Murdock staying calm. Face had volunteered himself
and Murdock for a shift on the fans not just to
ingratiate them with the other prisoners, but also
because a nicely dull and repetitive task like that
would be useful to soothe Murdock. The Captain's
behaviour had started to become noticeably erratic,
obvious not just to the team, but to other inmates
and the guards. It was also a useful job if you
wanted to keep an eye on the comings and goings, see
who was talking to whom. The man pulling the fan
rope seemed to become part of the furniture and no
one took any notice of him.
Hannibal bent over the paper he was drawing on,
frowned. He looked up again though as he heard Face
give a sharp cough and followed the lieutenant's
glance to the doorway. An inmate had come in that
Hannibal recognised as Major Madari, the senior
military officer among the prisoners. They had
spoken only briefly so far and the major was not
very welcoming even of Face's efforts to make
friends. The major, his military bearing
unmistakable, strode across the room and began to
browse the small selection of books on a shelf.
Hannibal bent over his paper again, but after a
while he felt someone's eyes on him and looked up to
see Madari looking at him. His nearly black eyes
were quite piercing in his hawkish face. Hannibal
nodded to him, a greeting, a small invitation. Even
so he was quite surprised when Madari walked over,
stood beside him, hands clasped behind his back.
"Major." Hannibal said, standing up and offering his
hand. Madari hesitated. Though they had spoken a
couple of times now the major had not shaken
Hannibal's hand. The other prisoners shook
Hannibal's hand every time they met him, and each
other, he knew that was their custom, but Madari
always seemed to keep his hands behind his back.
Hannibal had watched him with the other military
officers and though they shook hands with each other
in greeting none of them seemed to expect Madari to
do so. Hannibal had an inkling of why. Salim had
told him that when Madari was brought here after his
arrest he spent a month in the infirmary recovering
from the injuries sustained in his interrogation.
When he was released into the inmate compound the
doctors here were shocked by the nature of his
injuries. Try to get a look at his hands. Salim had
said mysteriously.
"Colonel Smith." Madari said, and his formality
finally overwhelmed his reluctance. He took
Hannibal's hand and shook it. Hannibal tried not to
stare, but a quick glance at the major's hand
confirmed what he'd suspected. Where Madari's
fingernails should have been there were ugly masses
of scar tissue and partially regrown nails, red and
inflamed. He was probably in continual pain,
Hannibal realised, allowing Madari to pull his hand
away quickly and put it behind his back again.
"Major, I'm told you served here when this was a
military base."
"I did."
"Under General Ziyahd?"
Madari snorted contemptuously at that. "Hardly! He
wasn't a general then, just a major, and a
bureaucrat."
"Got promoted when the new regime came in, huh?"
Madari didn't answer. "Or bought promotion, am I
right? Greased the right palms, said the right
things to the right people and got a shiny new
uniform with too much gold braid on it?"
"The man is a fool. That's why they put him in
charge here. They can't give him a real military
command."
"I know the sort." Hannibal said, trying for the
'fellow soldier' approach. He considered Madari's
bitter tone; he looked at the man's face. He was
about forty years old. The other military officers
among the inmates that Hannibal and the rest of the
team had talked to gave nothing but glowing reports
of Madari's intelligence and military acumen. They
all admired him. So why wasn't he a colonel? Perhaps
speaking out inconveniently wasn't something he had
only started doing after the regime change.
"It's always the way. The ones who say the right
things get promoted while better men who have the
guts to speak the truth get passed over." That hit a
nerve. He saw Madari's carefully controlled face
twitch just a little.
"Sit down, Major." Hannibal said, nodding at a
chair. Again the hesitation, then Madari pulled out
the chair and sat down. He kept his hands below the
tabletop. Hannibal sat back down. Murdock appeared
at Madari's side, carrying two small cups.
"I thought you might like some coffee, Colonel,
Major." He put down the cups and left again quickly.
Nice, Hannibal thought; glad to know that Face and
Murdock were paying attention. Now he and the major
were drinking coffee together, like friends. He took
a sip of the strong coffee. It had a spicy taste,
and he saw surprise on Madari's face, as he tasted
his cup.
"Hayl!" Madari said, then, "Cardamom you call it. I
haven't had hayl in coffee since I came here, Ziyahd
keeps it for himself and his cronies." Hannibal
nodded his head towards Face.
"I have a very good supply officer." Madari looked
at Face who was paying no apparent attention to
them, seemingly entirely focussed on playing a word
game with Murdock. The major turned back to
Hannibal.
"Your men, they are very good. Special Forces, I
understand."
"Green berets." Hannibal said.
"But not Santana. He is a civilian."
"Yes. It's a long story."
"We have nothing but time here, Colonel Smith."
"We haven't," Hannibal said. "We've been told there
are people on their way to question us further about
our mission. I'm not sure what's taking them so long
to get here. We're only two days from the capital.
They could arrive any time."
"They could be coming from abroad." Madari said,
between sips of his coffee, not looking at Hannibal.
"When I was… questioned some of the men involved
were not from here." Hannibal noticed his hand
holding the coffee cup was trembling very slightly.
"They were eastern Europeans I think." Hannibal
nodded. Their briefing had told them the government
had ties to the Soviet Union, that the Russians were
lending their expertise in a number of specialist
areas.
"Okay, that makes sense." He pushed the paper he'd
been working on towards Madari, who glanced at it.
"A map of the camp." Madari observed.
"I wondered if you could help me with it, you must
know the layout of this place inside out. I've got
most of it figured out, but I don't know the layout
of most of the interior of the guardhouse. Can you
help me?" Well that was it, he'd laid it on the
line. It would be obvious to Madari what Hannibal
was making the map for. Asking him "can you help
me?" was clearly a loaded question. Help me with the
map. Help me with the plan. Help me carry it out.
"I can tell you the layout of the guardhouse."
Madari said. A loaded answer to Hannibal's loaded
question. All right, still some work to do.
"And can you tell me what that thing is under the
tarp – tarpaulin - beside the interrogation
blockhouse?" Madari actually smiled; the first time
Hannibal had seen him do so.
"Hasn't anyone told you?" Hannibal shook his head.
"It's a missile launcher, Colonel, anti-aircraft
defence." Hannibal tried to control his delight at
that news, scribbled the word 'gun' on the paper.
Madari went into details about the weapon. The best
detail of all being that there were still plenty of
shells for it stored in the armoury. He became quite
enthused and after a while Hannibal had to cut him
short.
"About the guard house..." Madari calmed himself,
pulled the map over. He picked up the pencil
Hannibal had been using and began to draw on the
paper.
"I'm particularly interested in the location of
radio room." Hannibal said leaning over him. Madari
nodded, impatiently, and looking at the plan
Hannibal saw that this was the first room Madari had
marked. He sat back with a smile. The plan was
coming together.
Madari stepped out of the rec room
into the sunshine feeling dazed. What the hell had
he just agreed to? Well he'd agreed to a meeting,
but really he'd agreed to help the Americans not
merely to escape, but to take the camp in order to
do so. Despite his terror of the consequences should
it go wrong, he'd let Smith and then Peck and
Murdock talk at him, asking him first for
information, then for advice and eventually for a
meeting, a meeting to make a plan.
They were good. They were damn good. Smith was as
sharp a military mind as, well maybe even as Ahmed
had been. Peck… Peck seemed to have the ability to
talk without pausing for breath and smile at you at
the same time until you were ready to give him
anything he asked for.
Remarkable.
Jahni approached with a nervous look on his face.
"Are you okay, sir, you look a bit dizzy."
"Fine." Madari said, though he indeed felt dizzy.
"I, um, I'll need you to take word around to the
other officers. We're having a meeting tonight, with
the Americans, barracks three, twenty one hundred
hours."
Jahni stared at him, wide eyed. "Sir, does that
mean…" he glanced around and lowered his voice,
leaned in closer. "Are they making an escape
attempt? Are we helping them?"
"Not just an escape, Lieutenant. They intend to take
the camp."
Jahni gasped, his hand flew to his mouth.
"Don't get carried away, it's only a meeting, it
doesn't mean it's definitely going to happen."
"It could though. The five of them added to the rest
of us, that could mean… we could do it! You said
that, remember, a couple of months ago, it was at
lunch and you said 'if we had five more trained
men'."
Madari frowned. Sometimes Jahni remembered too much.
"Lieutenant, come here." Madari took his arm, moved
them both out of the light and into the shadows
between the rec room and mess hall. They stood near
the wall, close so they couldn't be overheard.
Madari put a hand on Jahni's shoulder.
"Kahil, I know you like these men, but you must
remember they did not come here to rescue us. That
is not their mission. If they want to take the camp
it is because they think that is the best chance
they have of escaping. The good of their own unit is
what motivates them, don't forget that."
Jahni looked at the ground, disappointment on his
face.
"I understand, sir."
"I'm not saying they are not fine men, or that they
are not sincere, I think they are. But they have
their own agenda. Don't let their charm blind you to
that."
Jahni didn't answer. Madari squeezed his shoulder.
"I know you want to get out of here and go home,
Kahil, I know that. But please don't build up false
hope about that."
Jahni looked up at him, his eyes dark pools in the
shadows.
"Get out?" He said quietly. "Leave? Is that what you
would do, if we took over the camp? If we threw
Ziyahd out of his office?"
"You wouldn't leave?" Madari asked.
"Not if you didn't." Jahni's voice was barely above
a whisper now, Madari had to lean close to hear him.
"But what use would it be to stay?" Madari asked,
frowning, not understanding. "What would we do?"
Jahni smiled. A slow, hungry smile. He licked his
lips.
"Fight."
(scene inserted from Settlement)
There were two guards on the door of prisoner
barracks number three that night. Not prison guards,
they were two of Madari's men, apparently lounging
casually. Any inmates that tried to enter were told
to come back later. No one argued.
Inside the barracks the A-Team, Major Madari, the
rest of the military officers and a small number of
the civilian prisoners were gathered at the far end
of the room. Hannibal had the floor, was explaining
the plan to the men.
"The first thing we have to do is get control of the
guard towers. I'd suggest the best time for that is
right after the shift change after sunset prayers."
Several of the men nodded in agreement.
"No," Madari said. Hannibal looked at him, knew he'd
face challenges from the major every step of the
way. He had only agreed to this meeting very
reluctantly.
Hannibal raised an eyebrow, "No?"
"Do it before the shift change. Straight after
Maghrib, sunset prayers, you take out the man at the
end of his shift. He won't be suspicious if he hears
or sees someone climbing the ladder, he'll think
it's his relief. Then you're in place waiting for
the man coming on duty and that's eight men taken
out before anyone even knows anything has started."
"Nice, though the timing would be tight." Hannibal
said. "Now the north west tower is going to be the
hardest to get to without being seen…"
The meeting went on, Hannibal outlining plans. There
was plenty of enthusiastic feedback of ideas and
information from the younger Arab officers. But they
still deferred to Madari and any time he raised an
objection they all agreed with it and waited for
Hannibal to answer it. Still things were going well
until…
"…okay, so we get BA to the motor pool, with Salim."
"No!" This time the major was so emphatic that
people stared at him. Hannibal felt his hackles rise
at once. This wasn't an objection to a minor point.
This was a full on challenge. Madari had stepped
towards Hannibal and Hannibal straightened up to
meet him, was profoundly glad the man wasn't taller
than him.
"Major?"
"No civilians." Madari said in a barely controlled
voice. "I won't allow it." Hannibal looked around at
the small number of civilians there.
"Why do you think they are here? They want to take
part."
"You may be happy to take civilians into combat,
Colonel Smith," Madari said, glancing at Frankie,
"but these men are my responsibility, I will not let
you get them killed." There was a small gasp from
behind Hannibal, but he didn't react to it. He
sensed a shifting of postures as his men and
Madari's men poised themselves to back up their
respective leaders. Uncertainty radiated from the
civilian group.
Hannibal kept his voice quiet and level as he
responded, hoping to defuse this quickly.
"I'm not going to put any civilians in danger."
Madari dismissed this with a snort. "This whole plan
puts them in danger. What do we do when you have
gone, Colonel? Have you thought about that? Do we
hand the camp back to Ziyahd and let him shoot a few
men as punishment?" Ah, so that's what this was
about, Hannibal thought.
"What happens when we are gone is up to you, Major,
the camp will be yours. The camp, the gun." He tried
to make the word "gun" sound almost seductive.
"And what use are those once the food and water
deliveries stop?" Madari demanded.
"There are local tribes in this area, you know what
the government is doing to them. They'll be happy to
join you and bring you supplies." Hannibal kept his
tone level, reasonable, but it was a strain.
"The government is wiping out the tribes! Soon there
will be none left!" He was shouting now, and in his
eyes there was something Hannibal hadn't expected to
see and it shocked him. Madari was afraid.
"Then the sooner we get on with this the better."
Hannibal held the major's gaze as they glared at
each other. The tension in the room was almost
unbearable and the sudden sound of a whistle from
the doorway shook them like a pistol shot. At the
signal most of the men scattered, some to cots in
the room, some out of the door. A few moments later
a guard came to the door and shouted an instruction.
"Head count." Murdock said. "Dunno why they keep
doing that," he muttered, "surely they know by now
everybody only has one."
Madari only looked away from staring
Smith down when Jahni put a hand on his shoulder and
spoke softly.
"We'd better go outside, sir."
Madari looked away from Smith, letting himself
breath again. Outside, yes, head count. He headed
for the door, but stopped and looked back. Smith had
seen it, he was sure, he could probably smell it,
Madari felt sure he reeked of fear. The civilians
issue was an excuse. The issue of what happens
afterwards was an excuse.
"I am not a fool, Smith, I know all you care about
is your own men. Don't expect me to believe anything
else."
Another excuse. Perhaps convincing, he saw Jahni
nod. But an excuse all the same.
He walked outside and into the ranks of men lined up
for the headcount, in the back row. The searchlights
from the towers were trained on them as dusk
deepened quickly into night. His officers stood
around him, in groups of five. Five. Five more men.
Where had he come up with that number at that months
ago lunch conversation? It was another excuse.
Seventeen men was more than enough to take this camp
from a donkey like Ziyahd. But good men needed a
good leader. A leader with a spine. A leader with
courage.
And in that meeting he'd seen that Smith was exactly
that. No wonder I'm so afraid of him, he thought. He
is everything I wanted to be and can never be again.
He could lead my men and take this camp.
And then he would leave and the men would turn to me
and look for leadership, and what would I have to
give them? Jahni said we should fight. That we could
stay here at the camp, try to persuade all the young
men to stay and train them to be a guerrilla unit.
But how can I ask the men to stay and be led by me
when I still scream in the night and humiliate
myself in the day. Please, if I can be spared one
thing, don't let me have a flashback in front of
Smith, don't let him see me like that.
A guard went past, counting off the groups of five.
Something touched the back of Madari's right hand.
He glanced over to see Jahni beside him. The back of
Jahni's hand had brushed Madari's, accidentally or
deliberately it was impossible to say. Madari wanted
to take Jahni's hand, desperately needed the warmth
of that contact. Jahni smiled at him and as if he
knew what Madari was thinking he slipped his hand
into Madari's. Always gentle, always so careful of
the ravaged fingernails. He moved a little closer.
"Do you think they'll get the count right first
time?" Jahni asked, his tone casual.
"I'll bet you five cigarettes they've forgotten
about the men in the infirmary." Noor said from in
front them. "Every time they forget."
"I'll take that bet." Jahni said. Madari smiled at
their talk. Casual. Camp business, conversations the
men here had every day as they walked the yard, or
were counted. It was… peaceful, reassuring. Why did
it have to change?
(scene inserted from Settlement)
"Oh, that's gotta to be a
foul!" Hannibal shouted. He didn't know much about
soccer, a game of which was in progress between two
teams of inmates in the yard, but was pretty sure
throwing elbows like that wasn't allowed. Murdock
probably didn't know much about soccer either but it
hadn't stopped him volunteering himself and Frankie
to play. Frankie had been less enthusiastic and
catching Lieutenant Jahni's elbow in the face had
probably just dampened his enthusiasm even more. The
teams argued for a while, with plenty of shouting
and pointing, before Frankie's team was awarded a
free kick and the game went on.
Hannibal grinned, leaning back against the doorjamb
of the prisoner barracks. A few feet away Madari
stood by the wall, his hands behind his back. He
watched the game with barely concealed irritation.
"The men need to be fresh," he said. "Not running
about in the burning sun."
"They'll be fine", Hannibal said. "Get their blood
up, ready to go." He could see Face and BA also
apparently watching the game, on the other side of
the yard. But he knew they were actually watching
the guards coming and going, checking for any change
in routine. He saw Salim go up to them. They shook
hands and Hannibal knew from Salim's reaction that
Face had passed something to him when shaking his
hand. As Face spoke to him Salim looked across at
Hannibal and began to hurry over to him. Dammit,
kid, could you be any more obvious? Madari must have
caught the exchange too, he muttered under his
breath in Arabic, sounding annoyed.
"Colonel Smith," Salim said, coming up to him, "Mr
Peck gave me this for you." Under the cover of
shaking hands (what a wonderfully useful custom this
continual handshaking was, Hannibal thought) he gave
Hannibal a flat, round tin, which Hannibal looked at
briefly before dropping into his pocket. Boot
polish, black. Briefly wondered if Face had
scrounged it or lifted it.
"Thanks, Salim."
"Is it for tonight? For camouflage?" Hannibal
nodded.
"And I have this for you." Salim took a small bar of
chocolate out of his pocket. "It's not a cigar, but
I thought you might like it." Hannibal knew enough
about Arab manners now not to refuse a gift.
"Thanks, kid, very generous."
"Colonel," Salim said, dropping his voice a little.
"I cannot believe that by tomorrow morning we will
all be free, thanks to you." Madari snapped
something at him in Arabic and Salim looked
chastened.
"Just stay cool about it," Hannibal said. "You're
clear about what you have to do?"
"Yes, yes, help keep the prisoners calm, make sure
everyone stays in the barracks until you come to let
us out." He cast a resentful glance at Madari, whose
insistence had led to this compromise. That the
civilians involved in the plan stay in the barracks
and keep order until after the camp was secured. "I
could do more, I could…" Madari didn't speak this
time but his glare shut the young engineer up very
quickly. Salim shook Hannibal's hand again, then
touched the fingers of his right hand to his
forehead and bowed his head a little, before walking
off. Hannibal heard Madari click his tongue in
annoyance.
"Kid's just excited about tonight, lighten up on
him," Hannibal said to the major.
"He has a bad case of hero worship." Madari said.
Hannibal feared this was true. He unwrapped the
candy bar, offered Madari a piece. The major
declined the offer, turned to look at the game
again, then frowned, looking off further into the
distance. Hannibal followed his gaze. A column of
dust was rising, out on the desert road leading to
the camp. Vehicles were approaching.
"Any deliveries due today?" Hannibal asked. Madari
tilted his head back, said, "No." Hannibal bit into
the chocolate, chewed it thoughtfully.
Face and BA were arguing lazily about the game, but
they had seen the column of dust too. In a few
minutes they saw three Land Rovers drive in through
the main gate and park up in front of the
guardhouse. Several men emerged from them, three
soldiers, who had been driving, two Arab men in
suits and head dresses and four Westerners, in
suits, bare-headed. The drivers started unloading
boxes from the vehicles and taking them to the
concrete blockhouse that the team had been
imprisoned in when they first arrived. Face and BA
looked at each other, Face's eyes were wide
"BA, do you think…?"
"Yeah, it's gotta be." They saw General Ziyahd come
out of the guardhouse, accompanied by several of his
senior officers and greet the new arrivals, then
they all went inside. Face and BA made their way
with forced nonchalance to where Hannibal was
sitting on the steps of barracks number three. He
looked at them questioningly.
"They're here." Face said.
Incongruously a cheer burst from the spectators of
the soccer game as Murdock somehow managed to score
a goal, mostly by accident. As his team-mates
congratulated him Murdock glanced over to see if his
colonel was watching. He saw BA and Face talking to
Hannibal, saw the alarm on their faces. He
extricated himself, grabbed Frankie and hurried over
as two other players took their places.
"What's wrong?" Murdock asked, "What happened?"
"The specialists have arrived." Face said. He turned
to Hannibal. "What do we do now, Colonel?" If
Hannibal had a dollar for every time he'd heard that
question, or variations on it he'd be rich. He
looked around at the men waiting for his orders, and
then turned to Madari.
"It's up to you, Major, you'll have to start the
party without us." He felt his stomach tighten as he
saw that look he'd seen the other night in the
major's eyes again. Fear. If Madari had lost his
nerve, if he didn't dare to start the takeover
without Hannibal pushing him, then they were dead.
"I… I don't have enough men… without your unit…"
Madari blustered. A few of his officers were
wandering over now, sensing the tension coming from
the group. Hannibal couldn't let them see Madari
vacillating like this, couldn't let them see the
uncertainty. The officers were brave and they were
ready to fight, but if they lost confidence in their
leader they would be useless. It was time to pull
rank. He grabbed the major's arm and dragged him
inside the barracks. There were a couple of inmates
in there. Hannibal wasn't sure if they could
understand him when he snapped, "Get out!" But they
got the message and left quickly, closing the door
behind them. Meanwhile Madari pulled away from
Hannibal, swung around to confront him, but Hannibal
spoke first.
"They're going to torture us, Major. And we have
information, names, government officials, senior
military men with rebel sympathies. When we give up
those names your dissident movement is dead!"
Madari stared at him, asked, as if astonished, "You
will give in to them? You will give them what they
want? You will break?"
Hannibal stared at him in return. My god, why
doesn't he understand this? He's a professional
soldier, has no one ever explained this to him? Or
is he an idealist? Does he really believe a man
should be able to resist torture if he tries hard
enough?
"Everybody gives in, Major, it's just a matter of
time." Horrible memories from Vietnam clamoured for
his attention. He pushed them away. "Under torture,
by experts, everybody breaks. It's not a question of
how brave you are, how strong you are, there are
simply limits to what the body and mind can take.
There's no shame in that." That's what the major
feared, Hannibal saw it now. Not just the pain and
trauma of the torture, but the guilt and shame of
breaking. The loss of his honour.
"You have training, to resist." Madari's tone was
accusing.
"All that gives you is time, three days maybe."
Madari eyes widened at that. He'd broken on the
third day, Hannibal knew at once.
"Everybody breaks." Hannibal said again, emphasising
it. "Everybody." Madari looked back at him, as
Hannibal held his gaze. Needed to convince him this
was true, free him of the crippling guilt.
"Colonel," Face's voice came quietly from the
doorway. "They're coming." By the time Hannibal
looked back from Face Madari had started to move
towards the door. Hannibal followed him, praying he
had convinced the man.
The colonel and the major went back out into the
sunlight. A squad of guards was heading towards the
barracks. The A-Team were all standing by the
doorway and several of the military officers were
nearby. The two groups looked questioningly at their
respective leaders, poised to move on their signal.
But Hannibal and Madari both shook their heads at
the same moment. To go now was unthinkable. In
daylight, without taking the guard towers, with all
these civilians milling about, the carnage would be
appalling.
The guards came through the gate into the prisoner
compound. The soccer game stopped as the guards
walked through the players, headed directly for the
A-Team. The players stared at them.
"Oh god." Hannibal heard Frankie say, his voice
shaking. He saw Murdock clasp the younger man's
shoulder supportively, lean close to speak to him,
his voice too soft for Hannibal to hear. Hannibal
felt in his pocket and took out the tin of boot
polish they'd been planning on using for camouflage.
"Faris," he said, using Madari's given name for the
first time. He knew it was rude to do so, Madari
hadn't invited him to use it, but Salim had told him
what it was. Besides, compared to the other men he'd
met here Madari was a pretty rude guy himself. As
Madari turned to him Hannibal, repeating his earlier
words, said, "It's up to you," held out the small
tin to him. Madari hesitated then reached out and
let Hannibal drop the tin into his hand, quickly
moved it to his pocket.
As the A-Team were led away, out of the prisoner
compound towards the block-house Hannibal looked
back over his shoulder, the inmates were standing in
groups, watching silently. Salim had come out of the
dining hall and seeing what was going on had dashed
over to stand by the fence, his hands clutching the
wire, eyes wide with shock and despair. Major Faris
Al Madari stood a few yards behind him. Faris. Salim
had said it meant 'knight'. They could do with a
knight about now, shining armour optional.
Why did things have to change?
Because if they didn't five men were going to be
tortured. Madari watched the guards lead the A-Team
away to the blockhouse. Smith's words still rang in
his ears.
"Everybody breaks." And it was clear, from the pain
on his face, in his eyes, that he spoke from
experience. "Everybody." The words "even me" were
not spoken, but were there somewhere.
Smith had been tortured and been broken. In Vietnam,
presumably. Yet he was so strong now. How? How had
he found the man he used to be? I need to talk to
him, Madari thought. I need him to tell me how he
got back. How he got strong again.
His thoughts were interrupted by a commotion around
the gate. Salim Fulani was arguing with the guards
and a crowd of prisoners was starting to build up.
The men who had been playing football were there. A
lot of shouting and gesturing was going on.
Madari frowned. He could feel the explosive
atmosphere wash over him like a wave. He realised
several of his officers were in the arguing crowd,
including Jahni.
"Faraj," he snapped at the Captain who stood nearby,
looking tense, biting his thumbnail. "We can't have
this." He nodded at the crowd.
"No, sir." Faraj looked at him. "Sir, about the
Americans, we can't just -"
"Later! Come on!" He took off for the crowd around
the gate. This needed to end before it got out of
hand.
Too late. Someone threw a punch, and someone else
threw another and suddenly the prisoners were
heaving at the gate, trying to tear it off. The
guards yelled, their dogs barked and someone pulled
the alarm.
The siren wailed out across the camp and the desert.
The camp exploded.
Madari was walking down a dusty
road. He was walking home from school. His Taqiyah,
a small white cap, was stuffed in his satchel with
his books, because he liked to feel the sun on his
head.
He was twelve years old and he was nervous. His pace
quickened as he walked past the house by the
orchard. The house with the dog. He was afraid of
the dog that guarded the fig trees. It hated him.
Admittedly he and two of his friends had once given
it a good reason to; climbing into the orchard and
making a creditable attempt to break the world fig
eating record. That had been two years ago, but this
animal knew how to hold a grudge. Whenever he passed
by it came racing out, snarling and barking, and he
broke into a run.
Then suddenly it was one specific day. A day Ahmed
came out to the school to meet him. Madari walked
holding his grandfather's hand and chattered
excitedly, asking a million questions about the
mission Ahmed had just returned from.
He forgot about the dog. But it didn't forget about
him. Out it came, ravening like the Hound of the
Baskervilles. Ahmed reacted so fast it took Madari's
breath away. He swung Madari around, placing himself
between the boy and the dog and shouted, "Go back!"
The dog skidded to a halt, cowered before the tall
soldier.
"Go back!" Ahmed ordered it again. And it obeyed.
Its tail went down. It turned and slunk away.
"Has that animal been bothering you, Ris?"
"Sometimes."
"You must learn to use your voice." They walked on.
"An officer must be able to control his men easily
using his voice." He smiled. "Works on dogs too. You
shouldn't be afraid."
"I'm not afraid anymore, grandfather."
Madari looked back at the dog. The dog was gone and
Sergeant Ghaith stood there instead.
Madari frowned and turned back to Ahmed. Who was no
longer there. Jahni now walked in his place, holding
Madari's hand. He carried a rifle in his other hand.
"The voice is important." Jahni said.
"Yes." Madari was still a child, Jahni now taller
than him instead of the other way around. "Yes." His
voice was still high, a boy's voice, not a man's.
"The voice is important." Another man walked on his
other side, held his left hand. Smith. Smith's hand
was large and rough, like Ahmed's but something warm
and sticky covered it. Madari held up his hand,
still small, still a child's hand. Still perfect,
not disfigured. The fingers glistened black. He
looked at Smith, whose hands had blood pouring from
where the fingernails should be. The blood was black
like ink, it made a trail along the ground.
"Everybody breaks." Smith said.
And Madari was back in the camp. He was fully grown
again. The camp was deserted. Not a prisoner or a
guard in sight. Madari walked to his barracks and
went inside. Not totally deserted. Someone lay on
Madari's cot. He walked closer, to find it was
Jahni. Jahni slept, one white cotton sheet over him,
his body outlined, clearly naked, underneath it.
"Kahil?"
Jahni woke and smiled, slow, sensual, the same smile
he gave before he said "fight." He held out his
hand.
Madari woke with a small gasp. He blinked and looked
around. Jahni was nearby, but fully clothed, sitting
on a cot, playing cards with Noor. The two men
looked at Madari, smiled.
"Good afternoon." Noor said, "you missed lunch, but
we didn't want to wake you."
Madari got his bearings. He was lying on his side on
his cot, one blanket covering him. He'd not slept
all night. After the guards regained control and
locked the camp down, confining everyone to
barracks, Madari had sat up on his cot all night
staring into the darkness. He knew it couldn't be
real, but in his mind he could hear the Americans
screaming.
After breakfast he'd fallen asleep finally, fully
dressed. His rest was fitful in the light, with
people walking around. Dreams haunted him. Not
nightmares for a change, just strange dreams. That
last the strangest of all. Ahmed, Jahni, Smith.
Perhaps the strangest thing is that the three of
them seemed to go together. All so strong. Then he
shouldn't have been there himself. He didn't belong
with strong men. Perhaps that's why he'd been a
child in the dream. Someone who needed protection.
But then he'd been a man again when he was suddenly
back here, when he came in here to find Jahni naked
in his bed. In this bed. Waiting for him…
A shiver went through him suddenly, a shock of
realisation.
He had an erection.
Mixed emotions assailed him. I'm aroused from
dreaming of a man in my bed. I'm aroused. I
function. The first time since my arrest. Dreaming
of Kahil naked in my bed aroused me, that's sinful.
Oh that was only a foolish dream, forget it. I'm
hard, it still works. My god, I'm a man again.
He laughed out loud, making the others look at him
oddly. Then he flushed. Could anyone see? He made
sure the blanket was bunched up so that no evidence
was visible.
He lay there, enjoying the warm breeze on his skin.
He imagined the heat of the sun on his head,
remembered how he would touch his hair to feel how
hot it was. And his grandmother would scold him and
say if he ran around in the sun with no cap on he'd
end up as crazy as Ahmed. And Ahmed would scowl and
say "curb your tongue, woman." Which hadn't the
slightest effect on her.
Slowly the arousal ebbed and the erection went away.
The delirium of the moment faded with it and other
images from the dream came into his mind. Smith, his
hands pouring with blood. Smith being broken again.
Can I really say I am a man if I let that happen? I
fear being tortured again, but does that mean I can
sacrifice those five men to suffer in my place? But
if we fail we might die, Jahni might die. And I…
I what? If I'm a man I should be able to admit what
I feel for him. Yet to have such feelings surely
means I'm not a man, doesn't it? He sat up on the
cot, looked at Jahni, who was laughing at something
Noor had said. His thick hair fell forward over his
eyes and he brushed it away.
You are beautiful, and strong and your voice saves
me from losing my mind. I depend on you utterly. I
love you. I can never tell you that. But I love you
and I am still a man.
He stood up. He knew now what he was most afraid of.
Not that they would fail, but that they would
succeed. He was afraid of who he would have to
become then. Not simply as strong as before, but
stronger. What he would have to do if he commanded
these men not as prisoners, but as soldiers. What he
would have to risk.
Failure would almost be a relief. But they were not
going to fail.
Jahni and Noor were looking up at him, curious as he
stood there, quiet, his arms by his side, hands
relaxed.
"Captain, Lieutenant. Gather the officers."
(scenes inserted from Settlement)
"With throats unslaked, with
black lips baked… black lips baked… damn, what was
it?" Hannibal had moved on to poetry, and the
longest thing he'd ever learnt. Half of it seemed to
be gone now. And then it was all gone, because the
door was opening and he could hear a babble of
voices outside. They're coming for me. It's time.
Well, I got through it before, I can do it again.
The hood was untied and pulled off. He closed his
eyes as light from the doorway blinded him after so
many hours in the dark, briefly seeing shadowy
figures surrounding him.
"Get those manacles off him." At the sound of the
voice his eyes sprang back open and he stared at the
man in the doorway.
"Madari!" He gasped out, then, because he couldn't
stop himself, "What the hell took you so damn long?"
Madari didn't answer that, moved back out into the
corridor, barking orders at his men. Hannibal was
released from his shackles and the two officers
helped him out of the cell. Face and BA were being
brought out too. Both looked about as bad as
Hannibal felt, but neither appeared seriously hurt.
The three of them were given water, which they drank
greedily. Then despite the pain Hannibal pulled
himself up straight, away from the support of the
officer on either side of him.
"The others?" He asked, his voice still croaky.
Captain Noor, a machine gun looking small in his
large hands, said, "In here, sir." He took Hannibal,
Face and BA through to a large room. The smell of it
hit them all as they went in, making their stomachs
roil. Blood and vomit and burnt flesh. Frankie and
Murdock were tied onto straight-backed wooden
chairs, both slumped in their bonds, a man tending
to each of them. At the far end of the room two
officers were holding the four Russians, and their
Arab colleagues at gunpoint and looking as if they
were itching for an excuse to fire. Murdock wasn't
obviously hurt, but Frankie's hands were covered in
blood. Face and BA hurried to their friends, to
check their injuries, to offer comfort.
"I think they've used drugs on them," one of
Madari's men said, standing up from Murdock's side,
talking to Hannibal, "they're barely conscious."
"Frankie has…" Face's voice cracked a little. "…they
pushed needles under his fingernails, and his arms
have been burnt." Hannibal felt the anger start to
rise, hot and red inside him.
"Somebody give me a weapon," Hannibal said, enjoying
the fear in the eyes of the torturers as Captain
Noor quickly handed his gun to Hannibal. But he
pushed away the anger, stored it up for later,
needed a cool head now. "Get Murdock and Frankie out
of here, leave these…people locked in here for now."
He left the torture chamber and found Madari outside
in the corridor. Knew the major wouldn't go into
that room. Hannibal focussed his mind; there was
still a long night ahead.
"Report, Major. First off, what time is it?"
"About one in the morning. We have all the guard
towers and the dog patrols and I have men going for
the armoury now."
"I thought the attack was meant to start at sunset.
The shift change on the guard towers?"
"There was a change to the shift patterns. They
changed shifts at midnight instead."
No time to ask why Hannibal ploughed on. "Okay,
after the armoury is secured we get the guard's
barracks, then the guardhouse itself. Any alarms
yet?"
"No. They don't know…" He stopped as Murdock and
Frankie were carried out of the room, and laid down
on blankets in the corridor.
"Colonel…I'm…" Madari said quietly, then pulling
himself together, "we'll get them to the infirmary
as soon as we take the guardhouse."
The blockhouse guards were locked into their own
cells. The team and the officers moved out, leaving
two men behind to guard Frankie and Murdock. A squad
of men, led by Captain Faraj had taken the armoury
from the two men guarding it and they regrouped
inside, began distributing weapons. Hannibal noticed
how, with a gun in his hand, Madari lost all his
previous self-consciousness about his mutilated
fingernails.
"Major," Hannibal asked, "any casualties?"
"Minor injuries only so far." At Hannibal's glance
he added, "Apart from your men. I am sorry about
that."
"Why didn't you attack last night? Hannibal asked,
icy calm to keep any note of accusation out of his
voice.
"It was impossible, they had every guard in the camp
watching us last night."
"Did they suspect something was going on?"
"Something was going on. After you were taken away
there was some unrest among the prisoners.
Especially when they saw the foreigners going to
interrogate you."
"There was a riot?" Hannibal was impressed. The
charm offensive by Face and Murdock had apparently
been even more successful than he'd realised.
"Not quite, but it was enough to make Ziyahd
nervous. That's why the shifts were rearranged
today, most of the guards were up all last night."
"Really? Nice. Okay," he turned to his very small,
but currently very well equipped, army. "Everybody
armed to the teeth, I see. Let's get this show on
the road."
The klaxon
screamed into the night as the prison guard pulled
the alarm lever, just before BA punched him into
temporary oblivion.
Damn, thought Hannibal, and we were doing so well.
They had taken the guards barracks with the minimum
of fuss, most of the men were asleep. But making
their way to the guard house they were spotted and
the man who'd seen them was just a little too quick
to get to the alarm. Shooting him would have had the
same effect as the alarm so Hannibal had pushed
aside the pistol Madari was raising and urged the
squad into a run instead. They still had the element
of surprise. Hearing the alarm the guards were
probably expecting more prisoner unrest, not that
they were about to be hit by a heavily armed unit of
trained soldiers. And if he'd counted right there
were only six men in there, including the general.
As they burst through the door, bristling with
weapons, the first man who saw them instantly
dropped his gun and threw his hands in the air. One
down.
"Major, find the General, Face, with me, the rest of
you mop up the rest of the guards. And somebody kill
that alarm!"
Madari snapped for Captains Faraj
and Ishaq to follow him and they raced off in the
direction of Ziyahd's quarters. At the door of the
office they stood to each side, Madari signalled a
count down with his fingers, three, two, one.
Faraj kicked the door in, ducked back as gunshots
blasted out, then a cry of alarm and the sound of
something heavy hitting wood.
"Go!" Madari snapped at his men and the three of
them piled into the room. Ziyahd stood behind his
desk, his uniform jacket on over his pyjamas, a
panicked look on his face. His pistol lay on the
desk.
"Hands on your head!" Madari ordered him.
He didn't have to repeat it. Ziyahd raised his
hands. Faraj quickly ran around the desk. He pushed
the pistol beyond Ziyahd's reach and Ishaq grabbed
it, checked the chamber and ejected the clip, before
putting it in his pocket.
"Empty." He reported to Madari.
"Sit." Faraj pushed Ziyahd into the chair, kept him
covered. "Do not move."
Madari smiled, enjoying the efficiency of his men.
The alarm cut off.
"Keep him there, Faraj. General, you are relieved of
your command. Do as you are ordered and you won't be
hurt."
"You…" Ziyahd glanced at the furious looking Faraj
still covering him. "You guarantee my safety?"
"Worm." Ishaq snarled. "We should kill him now."
"You won't be hurt, if you do as I tell you. I give
you my word."
"Sir!" Faraj protested, but Madari raised a hand to
cut him off. He noticed one of his nail beds was
bleeding, he must have scraped it somehow, hadn't
even felt it. He winced as the pain got his
attention finally.
Madari understood Faraj's objection, Ziyahd didn't
deserve to have his safety guaranteed, but there
were rules for dealing with prisoners, even ones who
didn't deserve it. Rules were rules and principle
was principle.
Faraj stilled his protest, kept Ziyahd in his seat.
Madari reported over the radio, to Noor, that Ziyahd
was secured and that they would hold this position.
After that he went through to the general's living
quarters, reached via another door in the office. A
comfortable sitting room, with a stereo, a
television and a VCR. He went on through to the
bedroom. Like the sitting room it was carpeted.
Madari had to resist the urge to slip off his
sandals and let his toes sink into the shag pile.
The large bed had crisp white sheets, which were now
badly disarranged, the general presumably dragged
hastily from sleep by the scream of the alarm. Last
of all he checked the small but well appointed
bathroom. All clear. He went back to the office.
"Right, General, the first thing I want you to do,
is open your safe."
Again he didn't have to repeat the order. Ziyahd
looked alarmed, but let Faraj drag him over to the
small wall safe, entered the combination and sat
back down as Madari and Ishaq emptied the contents
onto the desk. A plastic tub, with a faded label
promising ice cream, was surprisingly heavy. Ishaq,
not expecting the weight dropped it and when it hit
the floor the lid popped off, spilling the contents.
Chains, rings and bracelets fell to the floor, gold
and diamonds shining.
"Bloody hell!" Faraj gasped, in English, making
Madari smile. Faraj had been educated at Eton and
Cambridge. Now and again that showed through. Ishaq
bent down and began to retrieve the gold.
Another box held more jewellery, watches, lighters.
Madari put it on the desk.
"Quite a haul, General," he said, mockingly.
"Thieving dog." Faraj growled in contempt. Madari
rummaged through the booty, hoping to find the
lighter Faraj had had stolen from him, knew his wife
had given it to him. But there was no sign. This was
probably mostly recent stolen goods, ones the
general hadn't had time to sell yet.
Ishaq straightened up, dumped the box of heavy gold
jewellery on the table with a muttered curse.
"Whose is this anyway?" He asked grouchily.
"The Americans," Ziyahd said.
"Not a people known for understatement." Madari
observed. "Faraj keep him covered. Ishaq, let us see
what else we can find in here." He smiled evilly at
Ziyahd, "perhaps we can find the account books. The
real account books." Ziyahd now looked very alarmed
indeed.
The two men began to systematically search the
office.
(scenes inserted from Settlement)
Hannibal sat on the steps of
the main entrance to the guardhouse, sipping a tin
mug of coffee. The Arabs normally served coffee in
tiny cups, but Hannibal felt the need for a large
amount of very strong coffee. Two nights without
sleep was telling on him. He'd gone longer in the
past, but he'd been younger then too. Against the
lightening, near-dawn sky he could see the menacing
shape of the anti-aircraft gun. Men climbed over it,
working under Face and Madari's supervision. He
could hear BA's voice as he ordered around another
team of men checking over the trucks and jeeps,
tweaking every part to perfect efficiency. BA did
not intend for them to break down in the middle of
the desert half way to Jordan. Hannibal's
walkie-talkie crackled as the officers talked to
each other. Most of it was in Arabic, but sometimes
he heard Face or BA.
"Mornin', Colonel." Hannibal almost spilled his
coffee as Murdock's voice sounded right behind him.
He must be tired; he hadn't heard anyone approaching
him. Murdock moved past him and outside.
"What are you doing up, Captain?"
"Oh, I feel fine now. After all the drugs they've
tried on me at the VA that stuff the Russians gave
me was like taking NyQuil." Hannibal looked at him
narrowly, but he seemed lucid.
"Frankie?" He asked. Murdock looked serious.
"He's still out. He got the worst of it, they were…"
he took a breath, shaking off the memories. "They
were hurting him to pressure me. It was pretty bad,
Colonel." He wrapped his arms around himself,
shivered.
"Okay," Hannibal said, after a moments pause. "Go
get yourself a weapon and a radio." Murdock ran off
to the armoury. Hannibal noticed that the inmates
were coming out of their barracks now. Some of them
stood by the fence staring at him. He raised his mug
in a salute and grinned, then went back to drinking
his coffee. Two Arab officers were in the prisoner
compound, talking to the inmates, explaining the new
situation.
"Hey, Colonel, just like old times, huh?" Murdock
was back, carrying an M-16. He nodded at the rifle.
"Old friends from 'nam. And here I was expecting to
find crates of Kalashnikovs, labelled 'from your
good friends in the Soviet Union.'"
"We can't expect them to make it too easy for us."
Hannibal said.
"I used a Kalashnikov once," Murdock went on. "The
instruction manual was weird though."
"Oh yeah?" Hannibal had heard this gag before, was
only half listening to the Captain. He was watching
the prisoner compound. An inmate approached the gate
pushed it open in an experimental way, as if he
couldn't quite believe it wasn't locked any more.
"Yeah, it said 'for best results draw the enemy into
your own territory and wait for him to freeze to
death.'"
"Funny, Murdock. Hey, kid, whaddya say?" He called
out to the man making his way tentatively out of the
gate. It was Salim. He ran over to Hannibal and
Murdock.
"Colonel Smith, you did it!" He grabbed Hannibal's
hand in both of his own as Hannibal rose, shook it
enthusiastically, did the same to Murdock. "We're
free!"
"There's still work to do, Salim, do you want to
help Sergeant Baracus with the vehicles?"
"Of course, I'll be…"
Machine gun fire cut across the camp, throwing up
sand as it gouged the ground. Men scattered,
yelling. Hannibal, pure instinct driving him, threw
himself backwards into the doorway with Salim in his
arms. Murdock lunged in beside them, the three men
landing in a heap. Hannibal pushed away from the
other two at once, scrambled on his knees to his
dropped radio.
"It's the south west tower!" He yelled into the
walkie-talkie, which was babbling with voices, Face
and BA's the only ones in English. "South west
tower! I saw the muzzle flashes!" Then he stared at
the radio in his hand and snapped urgently, "Shut
up! Everybody quiet! Radio silence, now! Major,
order your men to radio silence!" One by one the
voices stopped. Hannibal breathed a little easier.
This would be hard enough without giving away their
plans to the men shooting at them, who were
doubtless listening in, and, he realised with a
sinking heart, could have been listening in for some
time. He became aware of a voice that wasn't on the
radio. It was Murdock's behind him, speaking very
quietly.
"Oh no, oh no." Hannibal turned, his gut a knot of
fear. Murdock was sitting with Salim clutched
awkwardly to his chest. The back of Salim's shirt
was soaked with blood. Hannibal sprang over to them,
took Salim from Murdock's arms into his own.
"Get a medic!" Hannibal ordered.
"Hannibal…" Murdock said softly, sadly.
"Do it, Captain!" Hannibal yelled. Murdock scrambled
to his feet and ran.
"They were shooting at me." Hannibal said, half to
himself, half to Salim, "dammit, they were shooting
at me!" Salim couldn't hear him. His eyes were open,
but they no longer saw anything. Gently Hannibal
closed them, held the young man close.
Murdock returned with two doctors within minutes and
they took Salim… Salim's body… from Hannibal.
Hannibal stood up and watched them check the
engineer. Then one looked up at him, shook his head.
But Hannibal didn't need the confirmation. He
already knew that Salim was dead.
Another burst of gunfire erupted, met this time by
answering bursts from the other guard towers.
Hannibal looked around as Face and Madari appeared
from the interior of the guardhouse. They must have
worked their way around under the cover of the other
buildings and got in through a window.
"Hannibal," Face gasped, wide eyed, seeing the blood
staining the colonel's clothes. "Are you okay?" Not
trusting his voice yet Hannibal nodded towards the
group on the floor. Madari was already staring down
at them. "Oh god," Face whispered.
Hannibal straightened himself up, again storing away
the anger and pain. He turned to Madari as the
medics picked up the body and carried it away.
"Did you get anything useful before we went to radio
silence?"
"My man in the south east tower reported that a body
was pushed out of the hatch of the south west tower.
Just before they started shooting."
"Who was your man in the south west tower?"
"Lieutenant Hoshel." Madari's face twisted with
anger, but it was directed at himself. "I should
have reinforced the towers. I should have sent
another man up each of them."
Hannibal shook his head. "That would have left us
too thinly spread on the ground. How long can they
hold out up there?"
"They keep plenty of ammunition and food and water
rations for several days."
"Long enough to wait for reinforcements to arrive.
Meanwhile they take pot shots at anyone who moves."
Another burst of machine gun fire interrupted them.
Strange metal spanging noises were heard and over
their radios BA's voice yelled.
"Hannibal! They're shooting up ma trucks!" At
another time Hannibal might have smiled at the
outraged, possessive tone in BA's voice, but he was
a long way from smiling now.
"Maintain radio silence, Sergeant," he snapped.
"If they hit a gas tank we could lose all the
vehicles." Face said.
This had to end fast. Hannibal couldn't let them
keep everyone pinned down like this indefinitely.
And they couldn't lose those trucks. It was getting
light and there was a lot of open ground with no
cover between here and the south west tower. Even if
they could get to it, no one could climb the ladder
without being fired on through the hatch. Taking
them out with a sniper rifle from another tower was
near impossible. The towers had shutters all around
them to keep out sand storms and defend against
enemy fire, and all the shutters on the southwest
tower were down now. Flaps in the shutters permitted
the occupants to poke weapons through and keep
anyone from approaching. Steel was plated over the
interiors of the shutters. They were small
fortresses in themselves, well equipped for a siege.
There was only one option Hannibal could see. Hated
it, but had to take it. He looked at the expectant
faces around him, said, "Follow me."
They re-traced the route Face and Madari had just
taken to get into the guardhouse. Out of a back
window, round the back of the armoury and the
blockhouse, along the side of the blockhouse by the
eastern perimeter wire of the camp. The men who had
been working on the anti-aircraft gun were
sheltering there.
"Is it ready?" Hannibal asked Face.
"It should be, but we never got a chance to test
it."
"Shells?" Face pointed at a wooden box beside the
gun. "Okay, Madari, I need you with me. Face,
Murdock give us covering fire. Go!"
As Face and Murdock broke cover and fired their
weapons the men in the other friendly towers got the
message too and fired on the south west tower,
keeping its distinctly unfriendly occupants from
shooting at Hannibal and Madari as they ran for the
gun. Hannibal grabbed a shell and climbed into the
firing seat, loaded the shell and swung the barrel
around to bear on the tower.
"Major," he shouted at Madari, who was on the
ground, behind the gun, sheltered from the machine
gun fire. "Tell them they have twenty seconds to
throw out their weapons. They won't be harmed if
they surrender."
"They killed Al Fulani and Lieutenant Hoshel,"
Madari reminded him.
"I know. Twenty seconds. Tell them." He heard Madari
on the radio, speaking in Arabic. When he stopped
talking Hannibal started counting. He heard a reply
coming over the radio, recognised the defiant tone
in the voice if not the words, swallowed the sick
feeling rising inside him. Don't be damn fools,
don't make me do this. Madari went on talking to
them, his voice steady, calm, reasonable. Hannibal
hoped he was trying to persuade them to do the
sensible thing. The defiant answers came back
interrupting him. They don't believe us, Hannibal
realised, they think we'll kill them anyway. They
just want to take out as many of us as they can
before we can get them.
Sixteen. Sweat broke out across Hannibal's back and
arms. He had to wipe his palms on his shirt as they
became wet.
Seventeen. More machine gun fire burst from the
tower. Hannibal and Madari instinctively ducked.
Eighteen - But it wasn't directed at them. Instead
it smashed into the front walls of the prisoner's
barracks, wood splintering, glass shattering and
flying lethally from the windows. Hannibal heard
screams from inside. And all that pain and anger
he'd stored up today was finally unleashed. He took
the last two seconds of their warning…
Nineteen - to sight the gun and…
Twenty – trigger it.
The shell smashed into the tower and at such a short
range the effect was devastating, ripping it apart
in a huge fireball. Charred debris raining down all
over the camp and the surrounding desert. As the
thunderous noise of the explosion died away the only
sound was the barking and howling of the dogs in
their kennels. Black smoke rose high into the sky as
dawn broke.
The sun was
high now, heading towards noon. Hannibal, sitting in
General Ziyahd's chair, jerked awake, catching hold
of the side of the desk that he had put his head
down on. Only for a moment. A moment was long enough
for the dream to come. For Salim to die in his arms
over again. He stood and walked to the window,
trying to shake off the memory and the fatigue. The
blackened supports that were all that remained of
the south west guard tower poked up obscenely into
the blue sky and Hannibal had to turn away as the
memory of the burned bodies they had pulled from the
wreckage hit him. The sight and worse, that smell…
So long since he's seen that, since he'd caused
that.
No, no time for those feelings now, they were
burning daylight here. He picked up his
walkie-talkie from the desk.
"Major, meet me at the blockhouse. Murdock, you
too." He left the office and headed to the
interrogation block, passing BA and his repair team
fixing the damage to the trucks and jeeps. Stopped
off to talk to him.
"How you doing, BA?"
"Fine. I'll have them ready to go by nightfall.
We've had to replace some parts, but they kept a
good supply of spares here. We're in good shape."
"How are you holding up?" This was in fact what he'd
been asking first, but typically BA had focussed on
the work instead.
"A little tired, but I'll be okay." The sergeant
didn't like to admit any kind of weakness. 'A little
tired' was probably his way of saying 'totally
exhausted'.
"We'll try to get some rest before we leave,"
Hannibal reassured BA and left him to it. He headed
on the blockhouse, where Madari and Murdock were
waiting.
"Major," Hannibal said. "What are your plans for
Ziyahd and his men?"
"When the trucks return we'll take them out on the
desert road, a very long way from here and drop them
off." When Hannibal looked at him quizzically he
added, "I'll leave them water and a radio, so they
can call for help, get picked up." He scowled and
demanded. "Did you think I was planning to have them
all shot, Colonel?"
"Of course not." Hannibal snapped. Irritation rose
in him, but he bit it back. God they were all so
tired and the shock of the deaths wasn't helping.
Everybody was on a knife-edge. He pinched the bridge
of his nose. His head was starting to throb. He
stopped that quickly when he saw Murdock looking at
him in concern. Madari also made a visible effort to
control his temper.
"I give you my word they won't be harmed." Hannibal
believed him. He wasn't the massacre sort.
"The Russians." Hannibal said, "I want to take them
with us to Jordan and then on the States, hand them
over to our..." he grimaced at having to say the
word, "boss." Madari frowned.
"I just gave you my word. You don't trust me?"
"I trust you, but our mission here was to prove
Soviet involvement with your government. Four KGB
men should be more than enough proof." Madari looked
thoughtful for a while, considering the damage it
would cause the regime to be associated with known
persecutors of Muslims.
"Very well, consider them your prisoners," he said
eventually.
"Thank you, Major." Hannibal turned to Murdock.
"Captain, I need you to point out which of the
Russians was in charge." Murdock nodded. They went
into the blockhouse. As they approached the cells
Hannibal asked Murdock, "Those Arabs that came with
the Russians, what was their role? Observers?
Supervising?"
"More like…" Murdock searched for the right word,
"Students. They were being trained by the Russians."
"I see," Hannibal said, grimly. Captain Noor was in
charge of the blockhouse and its prisoners. He
acknowledged their entrance with a salute.
"Have they been fed?" Madari asked him, in English
for Hannibal's benefit.
"Yes, sir, an hour ago."
"Where are the foreigners?"
"Same, er, cell they were in before." Noor said,
using the word 'cell' after a tiny pause and a
glance at Murdock. Knowing what had gone on in there
'cell' was a barely adequate word. "The general is
in there too, there's been a lot of shouting going
on."
"Ziyahd throwing his weight around?" Hannibal asked.
"No, sir. It's not the general doing the shouting.
It's the others shouting at the general." He
smirked. "They used the word 'incompetent' a lot."
"Alright, open the door, please, Captain." Hannibal
said. Noor called a couple more officers over to
ensure there was plenty of cover and opened the door
into the large cell.
That smell. When Noor opened the
door, into the room Madari had not dared go into
last night, the smell filled his mind. The smell of
dried blood, of vomit and urine and sweat. The smell
of pain.
He backed up until his back hit the wall and then
had to get further away, moved off up the corridor,
deeper into the blockhouse, away from Smith and
Murdock. He felt ashamed of his weakness. Hiding in
the dark from a smell, his back turned to the
Americans, not wanting them to see him trembling.
Voices babbled in Arabic and Russian, angry, making
demands. Then Smith's voice.
"Which one, Murdock?" He was looking for the man in
charge.
Murdock didn't speak, must have pointed. There was
some minor scuffling and Smith's voice again.
"You can go if you want."
Madari glanced back over his shoulder. Smith was
talking to Murdock, but the battered man just looked
defiant and stayed where he was. Another one
stronger than me, Madari thought.
"I know you speak English. Are you KGB?"
"I do not have to answer your questions, Smith."
That voice. Madari spun around and stared. That
voice, that face. Him, him him!
He almost blacked out. His knees shook and his head
swam. The dark water was trying to pull him down
again. Not the water, something in the water, a hand
snatching at him, at his ankle, dragging him down
until ink blackness filled his brain and his lungs.
The demon. Kill it. Kill it.
He drew and cocked his handgun and took off the
safety. He could have pointed the gun and fired
right there, but he couldn't risk hitting Smith, who
had Sevchenko pushed against the wall now. Instead
he strode over and shoved Smith aside, grabbed
Sevchenko around the throat and lifted his gun until
the muzzle touched the Russian's temple.
He saw Sevchenko's face change, not to his demon
face, but to one of utter terror. He knows he's a
second away from hell. I never saw him look afraid.
Is he really just a man? Is he actually afraid of
me? Does he even know me, or am I just a face in a
crowd? One more of a line of faces crying begging
screaming.
Words penetrated his mind.
"Major! You gave your word! No more blood!"
"Blood..." Madari said, a whisper. His brain was
full of blood, his eyes, his hands, blood red, blood
black, a sea of it drowning him again, pulling him
down. Now he could see the demon again.
Send it back to hell. His finger started to squeeze
the trigger.
"Major! Let that man go!"
Ahmed? Who else had such a voice? Such authority? To
make Madari stop without even knowing he had. No,
Ahmed was gone, a hole in Madari's heart that the
old man had torn the day he died was an ever painful
reminder of that fact.
Smith. It was Smith. The voice brought him back,
back to the present. He turned his head to meet
Smith's stern glare. Anger made him spit his next
words.
"Can you tell me that this creature deserves
anything but death?"
"What he deserves and what it's your place to give
him are two different things."
"My place? My place?" He was outraged, how dare
Smith tell him what it was his place to do. Smith
wasn't the one who had suffered at this demon's
hands. His own screams echoed in his head, a chorus
of them, as if every scream was being replayed at
him at the same time. His voice cracked and shook as
he went on. "You don't know. You don't know what
they did." Barely more than a whisper.
"I know exactly what they did." Smith said, his
voice softer, gentler, yet still firm. "I know." He
laid his hand on Madari's right arm, the one that
held the gun at Sevchenko's head. Madari wished he
could stop shaking, hated that Smith could feel
that, could feel his weakness. But Smith spoke not
with contempt or even pity, but with understanding,
kindness.
"Faris, you're a soldier, not a murderer. Don't do
this."
Another demon had broken Smith, a long time ago. Had
he spared its life? Is that why he asked Madari to
do the same now? Or had he killed it and now knew
that killing it didn't help?
Madari turned back to look at Sevchenko. The Russian
had stopped wriggling about, just stared back at
Madari, waiting to die. Would the pain stop if he
blew this man's brains all over the wall? Of course
not. The pain would never stop. He knew that now. He
saw that same pain in the eyes of Smith and Murdock
and Peck and Baracus. Deep, old, but still there.
And yet they were strong, They carried that pain
inside and stayed strong. Pain did not have to be
weakness. Then he too could be strong. The blood of
this creature was not worth soiling his hands with,
was not worth losing his honour again, not worth
breaking his word to the man who had given him his
honour back.
He stopped trembling. With a steady hand he engaged
the pistol's safety catch. Then he opened his left
hand and let Sevchenko go, letting him drop to the
floor like a sack of garbage. As Sevchenko
grovelled, coughing, Smith moved his hand away from
Madari's arm and Madari holstered his gun. He felt
dazed now, as his emotions ebbed, felt dizzy and
sick.
"Why don't you go get some fresh air?" Madari looked
at Smith, his mind taking a long time to process and
understand the English words. Finally they sank in.
He didn't speak, wasn't sure he could now, not in
English anyway.
Air, yes, air and light. Make it as different from
back then as he could, drag himself back using his
senses. He nodded. As he walked out, past the other
men he only started to notice again now, he heard
Noor give orders. Someone started following him, but
they stayed back, gave him space. Madari emerged
into the sunlight, the warmth like stepping into the
Turkish bath after the chill of the blockhouse.
He paused a moment then took a deep breath and
walked towards the anti aircraft gun.
Control came back slowly. Control of
his mind, the images and sounds and smells of his
interrogation slowly faded until he was totally in
the present again. The concrete his back rested
against was the mounting for the gun, not the wall
of his cell.
The gun. Should he have allowed Smith to destroy the
tower or should he have done it himself? It was his
officer they murdered. A lump rose in his throat as
he thought of Hoshel, young and bright, his life
just snuffed out. But Smith had felt Salim die in
his arms, he had as much right to revenge as Madari.
Another young life taken away. A good man who
shouldn't have been here in the first place.
He wanted to weep for them, but couldn't allow
himself that. He had to be strong now. Smith would
be gone soon, and then the men would look to him for
leadership. Was Jahni the only one who wanted to
fight? No, he wasn't.
I want to fight.
If he really was a man again then the time had come
to take on the responsibilities he used to carry. He
was an officer of the Royal Guard, his duty was
still to the king, to fight the usurpers who had
exiled him and restore him to his throne. Even if
no-one else but Jahni would fight with Madari he
knew he must stand.
He opened his eyes, had to squint, the sun was
almost overhead now. He rose and stood, resting his
hand on the concrete emplacement, and looked at the
gun, its black barrel still pointed at where the
guard tower had been. Wisps of smoke still rose from
the wreckage.
Almost noon and men were heading to the rec hall.
Going to pray. I should pray, he thought, should
give thanks for my freedom, for the return of my
honour, and I should pray for those who died here
today.
And pray for the strength I am going to need.
(scene inserted from Settlement)
Hannibal left the infirmary
taking Face and Murdock with him. It was well after
noon now and most of the men were heading to the
dining hall to eat. Hannibal, Face and Murdock
joined them, arranged for food to be sent to the
infirmary. BA allowed himself and his team to take a
break and he came to sit with the rest of his unit.
As they were eating Madari came in and seeing the
Americans he came over. He stood with hands behind
his back, said, "Gentlemen." They nodded at him and
he turned to Hannibal.
"Colonel, I must apologise for my behaviour
earlier."
"No apologies necessary, Major." Hannibal said.
"It was inexcusable." Hannibal supposed that to a
man like this it really was.
"It was understandable. Now why don't you get
something to eat? I think the men have been raiding
General Ziyahd's personal larder, the quality of the
food has risen quite a bit since yesterday."
"What was all that about?" Face asked, as the major
left.
"He had a touching reunion with the KGB man who
tortured him." Hannibal said.
"Really? So, do we only have three prisoners to take
home to Stockwell now?" Face's question was
flippant, but he sounded as if he wouldn't be too
surprised if the answer to it was 'yes'.
"Hannibal stopped him from killing the guy." Murdock
said. "Which I suppose was the right thing to do."
He didn't sound entirely convinced, went on. "Do you
think Madari will be okay, Colonel? I mean we're
leaving him in charge of this place and, well you
can take it from me as an expert on this stuff, he's
got… problems."
"Fool's got a point," BA said. "He ain't had no help
either, been dealin' with it on his own."
"He has help," Hannibal said, shaking his head. "He
has good men following him, you've seen how loyal
they are, that helps a lot, and you can take that
from me as an expert." He smiled as he echoed
Murdock's words. "He'll be okay, I'm sure of it."
The team accepted his assurance. Hannibal was the
one who had come to know the major best. They
continued their meal, were discussing the plans for
the journey, when their radios burst into life with
an excited voice in Arabic, quickly joined by more.
The tone was alarmed and Hannibal looked at once to
Madari, who was hurrying over, listening to his
radio and giving orders. The civilians looked at the
soldiers, confused and uneasy.
"What is it?" Hannibal asked as the major reached
them.
"Incoming aircraft."
They rushed outside, Hannibal sent Murdock off to
climb a tower, grab a pair of binoculars and see if
he could identify what was about to hit them. The
radio operator must have got an SOS out before we
got to him, Hannibal thought. It might not be a raid
yet, could just be reconnaissance, but he couldn't
take the chance.
"Face, get the wounded out of the infirmary and into
the block house." The blockhouse was reinforced
concrete, the best shelter in the camp. Face sped
off taking two of the Arab officers with him.
Hannibal, BA and Madari headed for the anti-aircraft
gun. One of Madari's officers was already manning
it, loading a shell expertly as they arrived.
Hannibal contemplated taking his place, but the man
looked as if he knew what he was doing and while
hitting a big, stationery target like the guard
tower had been easy enough Hannibal wasn't certain
enough of his artillery skills to be sure he'd
manage to hit a fast moving, airborne target.
The aircraft were easily visible to the naked eye
now, black shapes approaching from the north. North?
Hannibal frowned, Madari was looking puzzled too,
north didn't make sense, the nearest air base was
south west of here. At least, the nearest Qumari air
base...
Then Murdock's voice came over the radio, almost
babbling, "Colonel! Colonel! It's okay! Stand down!
Stand down!"
"Murdock, what do you see?" Hannibal asked.
"They're ours, Hannibal! They're ours!"
Apart from the A-Team the Americans
kept their distance when the prisoners buried the
dead. Santana was still in the infirmary, but the
other four followed with everyone else as the four
bodies were carried carefully to the graves and
lowered in. The prayers were led by an elderly
prisoner, an Imam. Madari saw Peck cross himself and
cover his face with a hand as he watched them lower
Hoshel and then Fulani into the graves. Murdock
linked his arm with Peck's, pain clear on his face.
Smith stared straight ahead, not even seeming to be
in the same place as anyone else here, as the
prayers in a language he didn't understand, were
said for a man he had held at the moment of death
and for two men he had killed.
Friends of Hoshel and Fulani among the prisoners
openly wept. Jahni's eyes shone but he blinked away
tears as he looked at Madari and saw he was not
weeping.
Then it was time for the worst part, the part Madari
hated most at every funeral he had attended. Men
moved forward with shovels towards the mounds of
sandy earth by each grave. He remembered his
father's funeral, his small hands held by his mother
and grandmother, remembered the women sobbing. And
he remembered Ahmed stepping up to take a shovel.
Ahmed filling in the grave and covering the body of
his son, his only child. Other officers there had
looked shocked. An officer of the Royal Guard did
not dig.
"Give me one of those." Smith's voice was quiet, but
all the men were silent, but for a few muffled sobs.
Madari looked up to see him take a shovel from one
of the prisoners and begin to fill in Fulani's
grave. And his men followed his example. Each of
them took a shovel and each of them took a grave and
started to fill it with earth. No distinction was
made between the dead prisoners and the dead guards.
That moment was the closest Madari came to breaking
down. Praise god that such men came here, praise god
that I had the honour to meet them and fight
shoulder to shoulder with them. They had one last
task to perform together.
Madari stepped forward and took a shovel, movement
at his right side and Jahni was doing the same. Noor
followed, then Faraj, looking awkward with the
shovel in his hands. Officers of the Royal Guard did
not dig. Men as rich as Faraj did not dig. So he
held a shovel for the first time, but Madari knew
that a man like Faraj understood what was happening
here.
Madari stepped up to Fulani's grave, nodded to Smith
and began to shovel earth onto the body. Noor joined
Peck at Hoshel's, Jahni and Murdock and Faraj and
Baracus filled in the graves of the dead guards.
When the graves were filled the eight men, exhausted
and sweating laid down the shovels and stood back.
Peck crossed himself again and looked up. The crowd
of prisoners still stood silent, watching them
Madari gave them a moment. He glanced over at the
American helicopters, and then at the trucks back
inside the wire. Plenty of room to take men out of
here. To take him if he wanted. Claiming asylum in
another country would not be hard, just show them
his hands, the scars on his back. But that would not
be doing his duty.
He cleared his throat and spoke, riveting the
attention of all the men on him at once.
"I am staying here, to fight, to help restore the
king. I want to make this camp a base for resistance
fighting. If enough of you stay, agree to let me
train you to fight, we can hold this camp, we can
fight." He looked around at their faces. "It will be
hard, I cannot lie to you about that. But we took
the camp," he looked at the A-Team. "Thanks to
Colonel Smith and his unit, and I do not intend to
give it up." He paused and saw the men looking at
each other, muttering. "Anyone who wants to stay
please tell Lieutenant Jahni. Lieutenant, make a
list and report back."
Jahni nodded and then he saluted. Madari returned
the salute and turned to walk back into camp as the
crowd broke up. The man in command of the
helicopters at once approached Smith. A lot of men
started to surround Jahni and Madari smiled as he
heard Jahni appealing to someone to find him a piece
of paper.
(scene inserted from Settlement)
In the face of Hannibal's persuasion Harris had
eventually shrugged and said, "Oh hell, whatever you
want, Colonel, we'll let the politicians sort it out
at the other end. But you and your team are going on
the helicopters."
"Fair enough." There was a knock at the door. Madari
came in, snapped off an impressive salute and stood
at attention. Hannibal returned the salute, said
"Report, Major." The Arab officers had become extra
disciplined since the American soldiers had shown
up. Hannibal felt certain that if Madari were
wearing the right kind of shoes for it he'd have
clicked his heels at this point.
"Trucks ready for boarding, sir." He was starting to
look nearly as tired as Hannibal felt. They were all
running on adrenaline and caffeine now.
"Thank you, Major, at ease."
Harris stood up. "I'd better go see to loading the
choppers." When Hannibal didn't move to follow him
he added, "Ten minutes, Colonel."
"Sit down, Major," Hannibal said as Harris left.
Madari did so and Hannibal held out the box of
cigars, was quite surprised when Madari took one. He
bent forward over the desk as Hannibal lit it for
him and when he sat down he actually relaxed in the
chair, leaning back. He blew out smoke and gave a
sigh of pleasure.
"It's been a long time," he said, looking at the
cigar and smiling. Hannibal indicated the brandy
bottle.
"I don't suppose you…"
"No, thank you."
"Thought not. Coffee's hot though." He got up and
poured the major a small cup and one for himself and
set them on the desk. They sat in companionable
silence for a moment, enjoying the cigars. After a
few minutes Hannibal spoke.
"What's the final figures on who's going where?"
"One hundred seventeen men are going with you to
Jordan, not counting my officers, who will return
with the trucks and supplies. Ninety-four will try
to return to their homes here in Qumar, though
they'll have to stay in hiding. All of my officers
and the remainder of the civilians are staying here.
Mostly younger men. They want to fight."
"So it looks like you'll have to get used to
fighting with civilians." Hannibal said. Madari gave
a short bark of a laugh.
"Believe me, Colonel, a few weeks under my training
and they won't be civilians any more." He appeared
to be looking forward to it, smiling again as he
took a drag on the cigar. Hannibal grinned at that
thought and at seeing Madari finally unbend a
little. They heard the sound of the trucks starting
up. It was time to go. Both men stood. Madari gave
another salute, held it. Hannibal did the same.
"It has been my honour to serve with you, Colonel
Smith."
"The honour is mine, Major Madari," Hannibal said
formally. Then they dropped the salutes and Madari
held out his hand. Hannibal shook it.
"I expect to be hearing from you, or at least about
you, very soon, Major."
"You will. Good luck, Colonel." He put his right
hand on his chest and bowed his head a little, then
straightened and they headed out of Ziyahd's… no,
Hannibal corrected himself, out of Madari's office.
It had taken a
good twenty minutes to get everybody loaded onto the
trucks and helicopters. There were many farewells as
the former prisoners took their leave of each other,
with salutes and handshakes and embracing.
Lieutenant Jahni shook Face's hand for at least five
minutes at Hannibal's reckoning, talking all the
while, only stopping when Captain Noor said
something to him in Arabic that Hannibal guessed
would translate loosely as 'knock it off'. Hannibal
watched each of his team salute Madari before
shaking his hand and climbing aboard the helicopter.
Frankie couldn't shake hands, but Hannibal saw the
major clasp Frankie's shoulder and lean close to
speak to him quietly, saw Frankie nod and look over
at Hannibal. Then, accompanied by one of the
doctors, he got on the chopper. The four Russians
were loaded onto a second helicopter, their hands
cuffed in front of them.
BA had finally agreed to a sedative; since the
alternative was getting cuffed and staying awake for
the ride. As Hannibal climbed aboard it was being
administered and the sergeant was quickly
unconscious. Hannibal sat beside his men as the door
was closed and the rotor blades started to turn.
Captain Harris came to sit down opposite his
so-called prisoners after giving his pilots their
orders.
"Okay, Colonel, we're following the trucks and I
have men down there with them in your jeeps, so… oh
good grief." Hannibal, Face and Murdock were all as
fast asleep as the sedated BA. Harris shook his head
and put on his seat belt as the helicopter left the
ground.
After the helicopters and trucks
left Madari went back to Ziyahd's office, no, not
Ziyahd's office, he realised, not any more. My
office.
When Jahni came in a few minutes later he quite
startled Madari, who sat behind the desk, trying to
read the papers that now covered it.
"Oh, Lieutenant." Madari smiled. "I am trying to
make sense of these inventories, but I can't make
head or tail of them."
"Straight down to work, sir?" Jahni asked, looking
dubious.
"There's no time to waste. And I need to know what
supplies we have."
"Sir, you've had no sleep for two nights." Jahni
reminded him. "You should get some rest."
"Yes, I suppose you are right." He looked at the
paper Jahni held. "Is that the final list?"
"Yes." He handed it to Madari. Jahni's own name was
at the top. Madari scanned the list but the names
blurred. He pinched the bridge of his nose, put the
paper down and rubbed his eyes.
"Sir, you have to rest."
He looked up into Jahni's concerned face.
"Yes." His brain felt like it was full of cotton
wool. Even coffee had no effect. He stood up, tried
to walk around the desk, but misjudged where the
corner was, bumped against it and stumbled. Jahni
was there in an instant, catching his arm.
"I've got you, sir. Come through here."
He let Jahni lead him into Ziyahd's quarters, on
through to the bedroom. Jahni pulled the sheets off
the bed and grabbed a counterpane that had fallen to
the floor. He laid that on top of the mattress.
"Lie down." He pushed Madari to sit down on the bed.
"Take off your shoes."
"I can't sleep here!" Madari protested. The bed was
soft and luxurious, he couldn't sleep in here while
the rest of his men slept on cots.
"Just for tonight." Jahni slipped off Madari's
sandals and pushed him gently until he lay down. He
found another blanket and covered Madari with it.
Now he was lying down, Madari found himself near to
unconsciousness. He imagined the blanket being like
the weight of the earth pressing down on a dead man
in a grave.
But I'm not dead any more. I was, for a year. But
now I'm alive. The sound of helicopters echoed
distantly in his mind, he saw the choppers lifting
off, taking away the man who had destroyed his
honour and the man who had given it back to him,
given so much back to him.
"Smith." He muttered.
"Sir?" Jahni bent over to hear him. Madari's vision
was dark and blurred. Jahni was only a vague
shape bending over him.
"Kahil?" He'd almost forgotten Jahni was there. Was
he going to stay? Was he going to 'sleep with the
Major'? It was time to stop that. Suddenly that was
very dangerous indeed. "Smith." Madari murmured
again. "Gave me my balls back."
Jahni went silent. He's never heard me say something
vulgar, Madari realised, I shocked him.
"That's good, sir." Jahni said, softly. His hand
touched Madari's face, brushed the cheek and touched
the forehead, almost as if he were checking for a
fever. "Sleep now, Faris." The voice. The voice was
so important. He needed to hear that voice. And he
could let Jahni help him now. The men who would
target Jahni to hurt Madari were prisoners
themselves now, would soon be gone.
"Sleep." Jahni said again, in his comforting voice,
in the voice that had no right to come from a tough
young soldier. Hypnotic. Magical. I can rest. I am
safe. With him at my side I am safe.
Madari slept. End Part Four
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