‘Good riddance, Foxy, eh? How you doing? We’re getting there.. .’
He staggered a bit going down the slight slope. He came to the bergens and the little inflatable. For a moment, he considered whether to tip Foxy into the inflatable along with the bergens. Only a moment. There were reeds off to his left and behind them the clear space used to bury the poor bastards who had come scavenging, and then – across more water – the elevated track. He could see the lights of the two jeeps. They were going slowly but making progress, and there would be a place ahead of them where they could swing to their right and either drive over mud, or trudge to get across the route Badger intended to take to the extraction point.
‘I reckon you’re better with me, Foxy. The bergens can get the ride.’
He didn’t hear agreement or criticism. It was best to have Foxy on his shoulder – if there was a crisis, anything near to catastrophe, Badger didn’t want to be crouched over the inflatable, heaving his man onto his shoulder. He cantered into the water, which splashed up round his ankles, into his boots, and up the hem of the gillie suit. The weight was fierce on his shoulder. There was a string at the front end of the inflatable and he had it in his free hand. The other steadied Foxy, was on his buttocks and had a grip there. Foxy’s head bounced on the back of Badger’s hip, and his knees were over Badger’s heart. The feet kicked his stomach with each step.
‘Not going to be fun, Foxy, the next bit – and it’d be good if you helped yourself a bit. Know what I mean?’
He went deeper into the water. The level rose. He realised that Foxy’s head, upside-down, would go under. He didn’t break his step and the mud gave him a useful grip. He twisted Foxy a bit so that his head lay on the side of the inflatable. They went further out, and he could follow the path of the two jeeps’ lights, bouncing. He thought they were now on a rough track that, maybe, hadn’t been used for many years – the longer the better – and was crumbling. They were moving slowly. If he was ahead of them, for all his burdens, when they swung and came after him, he reckoned he had a chance – slim but a chance – of reaching the extraction point. If they were in front blocking him, and the dawn light came up, he didn’t feel inclined to make any bets on himself coming through, not the chance of a cat in hell. He had seen Foxy’s body, and had heard his screams, and the two encouraged him to keep going forward. His breath sang from his mouth and each step was harder, the burden heavier.
‘Don’t get it into your head, Foxy, that I’m doing this for love of you.’
He was out of his depth. His feet flapped and had nothing to grip against. The weight of the bergens steadied the inflatable, which had to take most of his own weight, and Foxy’s. It didn’t seem possible to Badger that he should tip the bergens into the water and rid himself of them: instructors always talked about the requirement of bringing back kit and in Stores they grumbled if it wasn’t accounted for. It was an obligation to return it after an operation. Requirements and obligations were part of the bible he worked to.
The lights of the jeeps were harder to see. Important? Yes. It told him that dawn was coming, not there yet but not far away. If they blocked him when the dawn had spread its light, it had all been for nothing. He thrashed his feet, and attempted to paddle with his free hand, and they went forward. If they were blocked… Who was listening? Maybe some pigs were, an otter, the birds, but the men in the jeeps wouldn’t hear him.
Badger said sharply, ‘Not for love of you, Foxy, no. I don’t even like you. And you’re a fucking passenger hitching a ride.’
Twice they went under. Twice he choked and cleared his throat, then spat out the marsh water. But he kept the pace. Had to.
Chapter 18
A wind had risen. It came from the south, perhaps the south-west, and ruffled the water Badger waded through. It was a warm, vigorous wind. It flapped the tips of the reeds off to his left. The bed below him was uneven. Sometimes his boots found a grip and then he was able to lurch forward faster with the inflatable and the weight over his shoulder. He used the craft’s rim for buoyancy when the bed fell away under him. The wind helped to drive him on.
Little white crests were now whipped up and water splashed over the sides. He fancied that the bergens shifted because they were floating in the bilge. The wind brought the sounds closer of the two jeeps’ engines. If the wind, steadily strengthening, had been from the north, or the north-east, he might not have heard them straining in low gear on the the bund line that was little more than loose-packed sand. Had he not heard them and been able to plot their position, he might have slowed and clung to the rim of the inflatable, let his legs dangle in the water.
The engine noise drove him forward. If the jeeps could get past him, then swing to their right and come from his left, his route to the extraction point was blocked. Rest was not possible. Badger could not have said when, if ever, he had felt so tired, so hungry and thirsty. He thought once, very briefly, of pictures he had seen on television screens: refugees on the move pushing prams laden with possessions or carrying little suitcases, or the skeletal figures of men gazing at an eyewitness from the far side of a barbed-wire fence. Mostly his mind was blank, as if the screen had been switched off, and the matter of the moment was getting the next secure hold for his right boot on the mud, then following it with the left. Crisis was when the right boot, or the left, slipped and pitched him forward, Foxy’s weight dragging him down. Triumph was when the left boot, or the right, had good grip and he seemed to surge. It was like the flight of a wild animal. Maybe a deer, isolated on Bodmin moor with hounds closing, would have understood what drove Badger on.
He wasted breath on speaking aloud. ‘Don’t help me. Don’t do anything. You’re Foxy, the big man. Leave it to me. I’m the boy, there to do fetching and carrying, the one who has to graft. You’re the top beggar, Foxy, right? Please yourself. Leave it to the boy.’
It might have been clever of Badger to strip off the gillie suit and go on in his pants, socks and boots, but he could not. It was about his culture: he had to bring back two bergens, a gillie suit, headgear and Foxy. Badger no more considered ditching the suit than leaving either bergen to float on the water, or dropping Foxy in the hope of increasing the possibility of his own survival.
‘Do I like you, Foxy? No. What did I get? I had the short straw. I was in the wrong place at the wrong time, and some shitface had written the wrong stuff in my file, and the computer chucked me up. You don’t deserve me, Foxy. There are some God-awful people who do my job, guys I wouldn’t take water off or a biscuit, guys who are crap. They’re the ones who should have been here, watching over you. See if any of them would have lifted you up and kept going with you. You’re a lucky bastard – say it, Foxy, say, ‘I’m a lucky bastard.’ Better, shout it. Foxy, shout, ‘I’m a lucky bastard to have Badger with me. I didn’t hear you.’
The whipped reeds sang in his ears and he heard the splash of the small waves he breasted, the little thuds when the inflatable bounced on the crests, and – clearest – the jeep engines.
He fell.