The truck ahead seemed to be a five ton six-wheeler and she assumed this one was the same, though she hadn’t got too good a look at either of them. The back section of the lead truck was canvas over some kind of high frame. It was tightly secured at the sides. It looked to have been laced up tight at the back, but it had been opened sometime recently and it flapped open a little now. The canvas had been pulled almost closed, even if the laces were hanging untidily free, so there was no way of working out what the load was, short of simple guesswork. And she really didn’t have enough data even to bother with that.
This truck contained more clues, though Anastasia was careful to hide the fact that she was taking such a detailed look around. The huge soldier beside her was a smoker — as was his driver. The atmosphere in the cab told her that much at once. Though neither man seemed to be smoking at the moment. And, now she thought of it, there was a smell beneath the tobacco reek that she had recognized. A whiff of cordite? Probably coming from her own AK, she decided at last — she had fired it to light the fire Esan had set and again to attract their attention. The soldier was also either still nervous or was unwilling to reveal his identity, because he kept his body armour on in spite of the fact that the truck seemed to have no air con and it was soon swelteringly hot. But his combat uniform and the UN trappings — badges, helmet and armour — all looked authentic. As did the big M16 he kept cradled between his knees beside the relatively puny AK.
The grim soldier’s profile was chiselled and lean, especially in the reflected brightness of the headlights and the uplighting from the illuminated dash. He had high cheekbones and a hook of a nose. His chin was square and dark-stubbled. His mouth looked cruel to her — certainly it was thin-lipped and turned down. His eyes were narrow and it was impossible to tell their colour. His body seemed muscular beneath the armour. His shoulder was as solid as teak and his forearm was forested with hair like the gorilla’s tattooed on her back. A gorilla which also nursed a gun. He smelt of sweat and metal. Gunmetal, she thought. When he moved his arm, there was a long dark stain reaching down from his armpit. But she was slick with sweat too — even though she was only wearing a bra. And, she reckoned, she probably smelt worse herself — especially as she still had a pocket full of oysters.
Anastasia looked across at Ado, who was crushed against the driver on the far side of the unconscious Celine, and the instant she looked away from the soldier she seemed to feel his eyes on her. Their eyes met, and Ado’s were suddenly those of a woman rather than those of a child. She had grown up a lot in the last day or so, what with one thing and another. Anastasia hoped she would get the chance to grow up some more.
The driver’s face was that of a prizefighter who has lost too many bouts. It was almost formless. The blue beret pulled down to the brow could not disguise the lack of forehead. The brows themselves seemed to be deepened with scar tissue and overhung cavernous eye sockets, with tiny eyes lost in pools of shadow. Shadows deepened by the uplighting from the dashboard. Fat cheeks and bulbous cheekbones. Flat nose, squashed slightly out of line. Swollen mouth overhanging a receding chin. Barrel chest falling to fat, solid-looking paunch. It strained the material of his uniform, making the openings between the buttons gape. What looked like a frayed-edged hole on the far side of the massive chest. The whole thing stained, like the soldier’s beside her, with great dark gouts of perspiration. Arms even hairier than the other man’s, muscles and sinews moving smoothly beneath the forested skin as he shifted what looked like a ten-gear gearbox. Sleeves so tight that they were beginning to come apart at the seams. It suddenly struck her that here indeed was what Simian Artillery had all been about. This really was an ape with a gun.
The trucks ground on, never seeming to exceed forty kph. Up a gathering slope, which was almost exciting, in that it broke the threatening monotony of the ride. Over a crest which suddenly really was exciting, for the jungle fell back from the roadway to reveal that the down-slope led into the great natural bowl that contained the huge ruin of Citematadi. Anastasia had never seen it from this angle and she blinked, hardly able to believe what her eyes were showing her. It could not be real, she thought. It looked more like the set from some post-apocalyptic sci-fi film.
Under a bright, fat moon, the whole lifeless metropolis lay stark and mouldering beneath her, like a rotting corpse sculpted in silver and ebony. The skeletal outline of it reaching in great square city blocks back towards the rim of the circular ridge. Like a war-zone in the middle of an air raid caught mid-blitz. On her left, the strange-shaped ruins of buildings that had once soared five or six storeys high now sagged, bursting with huge black explosions of bougainvillea and rhododendron frozen like bomb blasts fixed for ever in a monochrome snapshot. On her right, the great municipal buildings stood gutted, as though their violent destruction had also entered a state of suspended animation, with trees erupting stilly from within them, with creepers, lianas and ivies stopped dead in the act of tearing their crumbling walls asunder. And, further to the right again, beyond the bright line of an embankment topped by the highway they were following, the broad quicksilver stream of the river itself was shattered into writhing motion by the cataract that hurled itself over and between the great stone and concrete boulders which were all that remained of the bridge.
The soldier with the M16 spoke at last. ‘Home sweet home,’ he said.
She knew then; knew with a certainty that reached deep inside her — as deep as her clenching womb which twisted in a contraction almost reminiscent of childbirth. What UN soldier would claim such a place as his home? Suddenly her mind was ice cold, running through the information she and Celine had gathered from their radio, satellite TV and Internet access about the current UN contingents in and near the borders of Benin la Bas; adding it to what she had observed here in the cab. There were currently French, Greek, Dutch and African Union troops, including Nigerians and a few from Burundi and Uganda, all in the West Africa area, doing everything from peacekeeping in Congo-Brazzaville and the CDR to chasing the Army of Christ the Infant, The Lord’s Resistance Army and Boko Haram out of Uganda and Nigeria and through the jungles further north and west.
The South Africans were all over in Somalia and Sudan, trying to hold things together there. Almost against her better judgement, she looked back at the soldier sitting next to her. The metallic smell was, if anything, stronger. The humid heat in the cab had certainly intensified, and all the odours had strengthened with it. It must be touching forty-five degrees Celsius in here, she thought. But the dark patch she had assumed to be sweat beneath his armpit had not grown any larger. And she realized it wasn’t sweat. She glanced across at the driver, at the frayed material round what suddenly looked like a bullet hole; at the great dark gouts that weren’t sweat after all. It was blood, she was certain. And not the soldier’s blood. Someone else’s blood. Blood that belonged to the original owner of the uniform.
The lead truck suddenly turned off the road and the second one followed it. They were rolling off the causeway and on to the beginning of the bridge whose central spans lay at the bottom of the river. For a wild moment Anastasia wondered whether they were just going to drive off the edge and plunge into the roiling river below. But no. The truck turned left almost immediately and followed a track down the face of a steep embankment towards a wide flat bank side area below. They would clearly be arriving at their destination any moment now. Anastasia almost screamed, ‘Stop! I still haven’t worked out what the hell I’m going to do!’ But she suddenly found the atmosphere was too thick to breathe properly. And if she couldn’t breathe, she certainly couldn’t speak. She would have given anything for a comfort break, overwhelmed by the need to pee. She knew it was only panic. She had panicked plenty of times before. She planned to panic plenty more times in the future, too, come to that. On the assumption that she had a future. Once again she found herself wishing she’d had the good sense to blow her brains out beneath Father Antoine’s chapel the night before last. Dear God in heaven, was it only the night before last?