I wondered whether she was remembering the same things. ‘Who the fuck said it wasn’t?’ she said, and ran her fingers through her hair, dragging a slice of it down over her face to shut me out.
I laughed.
‘Ricky,’ shouted Cyrus, leaning over the banister from the first floor.
‘What?’ I said.
‘Up here. Cisco wants you.’
The hostages were spread out on the rug now, heads in laps, back against back. Discipline had relaxed enough for some of them to stretch their legs out over the edge of the rug. Three or four of them were singing ‘ SwanneeRiver’ in a quiet, half-hearted way.
‘What?’ I said.
Francisco gestured towards Beamon, who held out the phone to me. I frowned and waved it away, as if it was probably my wife and I’d be home in half-an-hour anyway. But Beamon kept holding out the receiver.
‘They know you’re an American,’ he said.
I shrugged a so what.
‘Talk to them, Ricky,’ said Francisco. ‘Why not?’
So I shrugged again, sulkily, Jesus, what a waste of time, and ambled up to the desk. Beamon glared up at me as I took the phone.
‘A goddamn American,’ he whispered.
‘Kiss my ass,’ I said, and put the receiver to my ear. ‘Yeah?’ There was a click, and a buzz, and another click.
‘Lang,’ said a voice. Here we go, I thought. ‘Yeah,’ said Ricky. ‘How you doing?’
It was the voice of Russell P Barnes, arsehole of this parish, and even through the fizzing interference, his voice was backslappingly confident.
‘The fuck do you want?’ said Ricky. ‘Wave, Thomas,’ said Barnes.
I signalled to Francisco for the binoculars, and he handed them across the desk to me. I moved to the window.
‘You want to look to your left,’ said Barnes. I didn’t, actually.
On the corner of the block, in a corral of jeeps and army trucks, stood a clutch of men. Some in uniform, some not.
I lifted the binoculars, and saw trees and houses leaping about in the magnified scale, and then Barnes shot across the lens. I went back, and steadied, and there he was, a phone at his ear, and binoculars at his eyes. He did actually wave.
I checked the rest of the group, but couldn’t see any striped grey trousers.
‘Just sayin ’ hello, Tom,’ said Barnes. ‘Sure,’ said Ricky.
The line crackled away as we waited for each other. I knew I could wait longer than him.
‘So, Tom,’ said Barnes, eventually, ‘when can we expect you out of there?’
I looked away from the binoculars, and glanced at Francisco, and at Beamon, and at the hostages. I looked at them, and thought of the others.
‘We ain’t comin ’ out,’ said Ricky, and Francisco nodded slowly. I looked through the binoculars and saw Barnes laugh. I didn’t hear it, because he held the receiver away from his face, but I saw him throw back his head and bare his teeth. Then he turned to the group of men round him and said something, and some of them laughed too.
‘Sure, Tom. When you…’
‘I mean it,’ said Ricky, and Barnes kept on smiling. ‘Whoever you are, nothing you try is going to work.’ Barnes shook his head, enjoying my performance.
‘You may be a clever guy,’ I said, and saw him nod. ‘You may be an educated man. Maybe you’re even a college graduate.’
The laugh faded a little from Barnes’ face. That was nice. ‘But nothing you try is going to work.’ He dropped the binoculars and stared. Not because he wanted to see me, but because he wanted me to see him. His face was like stone. ‘Believe me, Mr Graduate,’ I said.
He stayed stock-still, his eyes lasering across the two hundred yards between us. And then I saw him shout something, and he put the receiver back to his ear.
‘Listen, you piece of shit, I don’t care whether you come out of there or not. And if you do come out, I don’t care whether it’s walking, or in a big rubber bag, or in a lot of little rubber bags. But I got to warn you Lang…’ He pressed the phone tighter to his mouth, and I could hear spittle in his voice. ‘You better not mess with progress. Do you understand me? Progress is something you’ve just got to let happen.’
‘Sure,’ said Ricky. ‘Sure,’ said Barnes.
I saw him look off to the side and nod.
‘Take a look to the right, Lang. Blue Toyota.’
I did as I was told, and a windscreen skidded through the image in the binoculars. I steadied on it.
Naimh Murdahand Sarah Woolf, side-by-side in the front of theToyota, drinking something hot from plastic beakers.
Waiting for the Cup Final kick-off. Sarah was looking down at something, or at nothing, and Murdah was examining himself in the rear-view mirror. He didn’t seem to mind what he saw.
‘Progress, Lang,’ said the voice of Barnes. ‘Progress is good for everybody.’
He paused and I slid the binoculars left again, just in time to see him smile.
‘Look,’ I said, putting some worry into my voice, ‘just let me talk to her, will you?’
Out of the corner of my eye, I saw Francisco straighten in his chair. I had to deal with him, keep him straight, so I held the phone away from my face and threw an embarrassed grin over my shoulder.
‘It’s my mom,’ I said. ‘Worried about me.’ We both laughed a little at that.
I squinted through the binoculars again, and saw that Barnes was now standing by theToyota. Inside the car, Sarah had the phone to her mouth, and Murdah had turned sideways in his seat to watch her.
‘Thomas?’ she said. Her voice sounded low and raw. ‘Hi,’ I said.
There was a pause, while we exchanged one or two interesting thoughts across the fizzing line, and then she said, ‘I’m waiting for you.’
That’s what I wanted to hear.
Murdahsaid something I didn’t catch, and then Barnes reached in through the window and took the phone from Sarah. ‘No time for all this, Tom. You can talk all you want, once you’re out of there.’ He smiled. ‘So, any thoughts you’d like to share at this time, Thomas? A word, maybe? Little word, like yes or no?’
I stood there, watching Barnes watching me, and I waited as long as I dared. I wanted him to feel the size of my decision. Sarah was waiting for me.
Please, God, this had better work. ‘Yes,’ I said.
Twenty-five
Do be careful with this stuff,
because it’s extremely sticky.
VALERIE SINGLETON
I persuaded Francisco to hold off with the statement for a while.
He wanted to get it out straight away, but I said a few more hours of uncertainty wouldn’t do us any harm. Once they knew who we were, and could put a name to us, the story would cool a little. Even if there were fireworks afterwards, the mystery would have gone.
Just a few more hours, I said.
And so we waited through the night, taking our turns in the different positions.
The roof was the least popular, because it was cold and lonely, and nobody took that for more than an hour. Otherwise, we ate, and chatted, and didn’t chat, and thought about our lives and how they’d brought us to this. Whether we were captors or captives.
They didn’t send us any more food that night, but Hugo found some frozen hamburger buns in the canteen, and we laid them out on Beamon’s desk to thaw and prodded them whenever we couldn’t think of anything else to do.