I forced myself to concentrate on O’Neill’s words as he went through the drill. In turn each of us would play bodyguard to the other, he said. At a shouted signal we would assume an armed threat had been made to our principal. We would shield them with our body while retreating towards cover and firing at the target. He made it sound so simple. First lightly grease camel before passing it through eye of needle.
We had half a dozen practice runs first, magazines out, stumbling over our own – and our partner’s – feet. Hoisting another person’s weight onto your back, one-handed, takes as much technique as brute strength. Romundstad, in the next lane along to our left, seemed to have mastered it. Beyond him, Jan was swinging Declan over her shoulder with an ease that he couldn’t match when it was his turn, much to his clear discomfort. The likes of Hofmann and Craddock simply relied on their muscles.
On the first of the real deal, Elsa grabbed me and managed to drag me away from the designated source of danger, jolting my tender ribcage with a roughness than might, or might not, have been deliberate on her part.
The second time it was my turn. Todd’s bellowed warning sounded muted under the ear defenders we were all wearing. I grabbed a big handful of the German woman’s collar, twisted my body in front of hers as I started to turn, getting my hips under hers to lift her feet off the ground like I was going for a judo throw.
I’d already drawn the SIG, acquired my target, and I squeezed the trigger with my arm still bent, feeling the gun kick in my hand. As I backed away I snapped off two more fast shots, my arm fully extended now. I knew before I’d fired them that they were good. That they would hit the target right in the centre, would be closely grouped.
And then, behind me, Elsa jerked herself half out of my grasp and went dead weight. I’d taken such a firm grip on her collar that I couldn’t immediately disentangle myself. My only option was to go with her as she went down.
We fell in a mess of arms and legs with me mainly on top, which saved me from further damage, but can’t have done Elsa much good. She gave a single low cry, little more than a loud gasp, as I landed on top of her. In trying desperately to stay light I inevitably made myself heavier. Sod’s law. I rolled away untidily onto my knees, wondering what the hell was wrong with her.
Elsa was lying on her back, pupils dilated with shock, staring up at the sky. Her hands flapped weakly against the ground a couple of times, like the last beats of a drowning fish.
I unsnapped the catch on her holster, yanked down the zip on her jacket. Underneath it she was wearing a black fleece and I opened the collar, trying to help her breathe. She didn’t speak, didn’t move her head, but her eyes flicked to mine, wide with panic and with pain. I ran both hands up her sides from waistband to armpit. My left one came away wet and sticky.
A shadow loomed over me. Todd.
“Made a mess of that one, didn’t you, Fox?” he sneered, and then he saw the blood on my hands.
“If you can stop being a smart-arse for one fucking minute, get a medic,” I snapped. “She’s been shot.”
O’Neill arrived at a run, carrying a medical pack. He moved me aside with the confident but slightly puzzled air of an actor who thought he’d already played this scene and isn’t sure if he should be improvising or sticking to the same script.
Once he knelt by Elsa’s side, though, and saw the blood now staining the ground beneath her, he faltered, hands fluttering. In the end, it was Romundstad who took the half-opened field dressing from his nerveless fingers. Me who slit Elsa’s shirt and fleece open so we could see what we were dealing with.
She’d been lucky. The bullet had struck her side, but at a shallow angle, ploughing a livid gouge along the groove between her lower ribs before exiting skin and clothing at her back. It was a flesh wound, little more. Bloody and dramatic rather than life-threatening, but it could clearly have been so much worse.
Elbowing O’Neill aside completely, Romundstad packed the dressings along the course of the wound, wrapped them tightly to staunch the flow. He seemed to be coping so well that Todd and Figgis didn’t try to take over from him.
One of them must have been in touch with the Manor as soon as the incident occurred, because Gilby appeared at this point, along with Sean, who went straight to Elsa’s side. The Major asked O’Neill for a prognosis, but grew quickly impatient with his vague replies.
Romundstad handed over responsibility for Elsa’s immediate care to Sean with obvious relief. He got as far as one of the loading benches, which he slumped onto like a man who’s just unexpectedly run the hundred-metre sprint in a world record time. As he wiped the sweat from his bushy moustache, his bloodstained fingers were shaking.
As for Elsa, Sean’s increase in pressure on the site of the wound provoked a moan of protest, but he didn’t let up. All the while he spoke to her quietly, letting his tone soothe as much as his words.
“I think we need a rapid medevac, Major,” he said quietly over his shoulder, as polite and calm as though he was suggesting a choice of wine with dinner.
Gilby nodded and pulled out his mobile phone, moving off to one side to bark orders into it in quick-fire German.
It hit me right about then, in the lull after the action, that Elsa had actually been shot. It might have been an accident, but it could just as easily have been a calculated attempt at murder.
The question was, was she the intended target, or was I?
The rest of the students milled about, abruptly lost and directionless. Eventually it was Figgis who went round collecting up the SIGs for return to the armoury. It was only at this point that he realised we were one missing. Student plus firearm, that is.
“Has anyone seen Miss King?” Figgis asked, anxious.
No one answered. I cast back. Jan had been there on the terrace, listening unashamedly to my exchange with Elsa and she’d been behind me in the queue when the SIGs were handed out.
Then I’d seen her expertly manhandling Declan in the next but one lane to mine. The next lane but one to the left, I recalled. Mind you, Romundstad had been positioned on that side of me, too, as had Hofmann.
I allowed my gaze to skim over both men. Romundstad was still looking dazed, but Hofmann’s expression was harder to read. Grim, masked. If I’d had to put an emotion on him at that moment, I would have gone for a deep and abiding anger.
The Major finished his phone call and started organising us into search parties, claiming that Jan might have wandered off suffering from shock. It was clear he didn’t believe this supposition any more than we did, but none of us felt inclined to stand around and argue the point with him.
I started off with the others, but Gilby called me back.
“You were closest to Frau Schmitt,” he said. “Perhaps you have some idea what might have happened?”
But before I could answer Figgis came running from the direction of the armoury. He wasn’t a natural athlete, his anatomy more suited to being behind the wheel of a car than on his feet. The sight of his ungainly frame at full pelt was all the more alarming because of that.
“Sir,” he said breathlessly to Gilby as he reached us, his face ashen, “I think you’d better come quickly. There’s something you need to see.”
The Major shot Figgis a daggered glance and let out his breath in an annoyed spurt. “What is it man?” he snapped.
Figgis’s long face screwed into discomfort. His eyes flipped from Gilby, to Sean, to me, and back again. He all but shuffled his feet.
“Well sir—” He stopped, but decided there was no other way of saying it, regardless of who might be listening in. “It’s the boy, sir,” he blurted then. “He’s gone.”