Authors: Andy McNab,Kym Jordan
Dave said: ‘Jen, I do love you.’
‘What?’
‘Nothing.’
‘What did you say?’
She had heard. She just needed to hear it again.
‘Jen, I love you. I don’t give other men my minutes. The reason I don’t phone you more often is that I try not to think about you because when I do I want you and miss you. OK? Do you
know
that too?’
She started to cry.
‘How are you feeling?’
‘A bit uptight.’ She sniffed.
‘You don’t say!’
‘Like when air support comes along and drops a bomb on something but it doesn’t actually go off? But you’re all sitting in your trucks thinking it might any minute?’
‘Oh, like that. Yeah, that’s uptight. How’s the baby?’
‘Kicking a lot. And I’m enormous and no one can believe I’ve still got so long to go.’
‘So did Agnieszka come round just so Luke could smash our photos?’
‘She came round to make sure I hadn’t seen her with some bloke at the superstore. But I had.’
‘What bloke?’
‘I don’t know who he is. She was having a coffee with him and she didn’t want me to see.’
‘You’re not saying she’s messing about with someone?’
‘I don’t know. I might just be thinking that sort of thing because I’m uptight.’
‘Is Agnieszka the type to mess about?’
‘Not really. But then everyone’s the type when they’re lost and lonely.’
‘Except you.’
‘No one’s going to try messing around with a woman whose belly’s bigger than a house. So you’re safe for the time being.’
‘Stay pregnant until I get home.’
‘No thanks. I’d explode.’
‘Jamie’s devoted to Agnieszka,’ Dave said quietly.
‘Yeah, he rings her all the time.’
‘Hasn’t stopped her cheating on him, though.’
‘She might not be. Except that . . .’ Her voice trailed away.
‘What? Except what? The line went dead.’
‘That wasn’t the line, it was me. I’m probably wrong. But when
I was driving back from nursery with Vicky, I thought I saw him.’
‘Who?’
‘The bloke who was in the café with her.’
‘Well, where was he this time?’
‘In a car. So I might be wrong. An old red Volvo. But it was driving towards her house. And now it’s parked outside.’
Dave groaned.
‘I hope you haven’t told anyone.’
‘Not about the car. I did mention seeing her in the café . . .’
‘Oh-oh.’
Jenny sank down into one of the kitchen chairs. Her legs ached. She had been focusing so hard on the call that she had been standing up throughout and now a great tiredness washed over her.
‘I’ve only told Adi.’
‘OK. Adi’s watertight. What about Leanne?’
‘I didn’t tell her because she can’t think about anything except Steve. If they’d just let her talk to him . . . she’s really falling to pieces and if she could hear him it would make a big difference.’
‘I used to think Leanne was unbreakable,’ he said.
He wasn’t wrong. Leanne Buckle didn’t put up with any nonsense from Steve or anyone. If you were angry about something you’d go and see Leanne and she’d feel angry for you. When Jenny had been pregnant with Vicky and Dave had been away, Leanne had taken up Jenny’s fight with a shop over a faulty TV set and won it. This new, lost tearful Leanne scared Jenny a bit; she was so different from the old Leanne.
‘Even the strongest woman would have trouble coping right now. She just sits by the phone waiting to hear if Steve’s going to live or die. She’s scared to go out in case there’s news.’
‘We can’t afford for Leanne or you or anyone back home to fall to pieces,’ said Dave. ‘You’re part of the army. More than you know. If you fall, we fall.’
‘I don’t want to be part of the army,’ said Jenny. ‘I don’t want you to be either.’
‘What?’
‘I hate it. I want you to leave.’
‘No.’
‘It’s driving me crazy, not knowing if you’re safe. Not hearing from you.’
‘Jen . . . I’ll try to phone more often, all right?’
‘It’s not about phoning. It’s about leaving. I’m serious, Dave. I think you should come out of the army and live in the real world with me and Vicky and the baby.’
‘This isn’t the time to discuss it.’
‘When is the time?’
‘When I get back. When you’re not pregnant and uptight.’
She took a deep breath.
‘I’m serious and I’m not going to shut up, Dave. I want to talk about it.’
‘OK, we will, only not now because there are too many people around.’
She didn’t want to argue with him.
‘Promise? Because I won’t let it go.’
‘Promise. And, listen, Jen, don’t fall apart like Leanne.’
She gathered her strength. ‘I’m not falling anywhere. Except asleep sometimes.’
She thought she could hear him smiling at the other end. But his voice was serious. ‘Don’t say anything to anyone about Agnieszka messing about. This is important. I don’t want Jamie hearing any rumours. So whatever you’re thinking, make sure you keep it to yourself.’
‘And what about you men? Aren’t there women at the base? Suppose rumours reach us about you?’
‘There are two women. One’s Royal Military Police so we don’t talk to her. The other’s Intelligence Corps so she doesn’t talk to us.’
‘I heard about another.’
‘There aren’t any more.’
‘Her name’s Emily.’
Dave laughed out loud.
‘How did you hear about Emily?’
‘People talk. There are wives who don’t like the sound of her.’
‘Well, the only lad ever to clap eyes on Emily is Billy Finn. And he’s keeping her all to himself.’Chapter Seventeen
MARTYN ROBERTSON WANDERED OVER TO THE 1 SECTION LADS IN THE
cookhouse and introduced himself.
‘Thanks for covering us at the
shura.
’ He held out his hand and shook each of theirs solemnly, then sat down with them.
‘We were doing our job,’ Dave said. ‘No thanks necessary.’
‘Well, I felt safe with you. Which one was in the room with us? You?’ The American looked at Jamie.
‘Yeah,’ Jamie said.
‘And what did you think of that meeting?’
Jamie’d mostly been alert to the body language, but he’d found himself listening anyway and having a few private thoughts of his own. He’d noticed the way the boss kept staring at that pretty, Intelligence Corps woman. And he’d decided that the tribesman’s son with the blue eyes was probably a nasty dude beneath all those warm words.
‘Nothing, sir, it’s not my job to think anything.’
‘Don’t sir me, call me Marty!’
It was impossible to know how old he was. As old as the hills, thought Dave. The man’s face was gnarled, its skin cracked and lined; it reminded him of the mountains around here.
‘Where you from in America, then?’ Finn asked. ‘I’m always meaning to go there.’
Dave raised his eyebrows but said nothing.
‘Texas. I was brought up living, breathing and thinking oil,’ said Marty. When he smiled his face broke into canyons.
‘Where are you boys from?’
‘London,’ Dave said.
But probably not the London you know. Not your London of hotels and bridges and tourist restaurants.
‘Gloucestershire,’ said Jamie. ‘I grew up living, breathing and thinking cheese.’
Martyn tried to repeat Gloucestershire without much success.
‘So you Brits got your Worcestershire Sauce and your Gloucestershire cheese,’ he said affectionately, mispronouncing both counties. ‘And how about you, young man?’
‘How about what?’ Finn said.
‘Where’re you from?’
Finn shrugged. His deep brown eyes were always searching, always alert, like a bird’s. ‘Everywhere,’ he said at last.
‘Oh, c’mon, you must have been born somewhere?’
‘In a caravan. Going nowhere.’
‘You were born in a trailer?’
‘I’m trailer park trash.’ Finn flashed a dazzling smile. ‘I mean, without the park bit. ’Cos we never park anywhere for long.’
‘Your family was always on the move?’
‘Yup. I’m what’s called a pikey back home.’
Finn rolled up his sleeve to reveal a tattoo.
Pikey. Just nick it.
Martyn looked confused.
Dave explained. ‘
Nike. Just do it.
It’s an ad that appealed to Lance Corporal Finn’s subtle sense of humour.’
‘One of the things pikeys like to do is bet,’ Finn said. ‘Are you a betting man by any chance, Marty?’
Dave and Jamie groaned.
‘Ignore him,’ Dave advised the American but Martyn was nodding enthusiastically.
‘What’s your name?’ he asked Finn.
‘He’s called Finn,’ Jamie said.
‘As in Huckleberry?’
‘No,’ Jamie said. ‘As in shark.’
‘Well, Huckleberry Finn,’ Marty said, ‘as a matter of fact I’ve had a bit of success in casinos. My idea of a good vacation is Vegas and a lot of blackjack.’
‘Great! Show me how to play and we’ll have a game some time!’
‘Oh no you won’t,’ Dave said. ‘Finny, you’ve been banned from betting in this FOB.’
Finn looked ready to protest but Martyn had turned to Mal.
‘Where you from? I took a peek when you were guarding those prisoners and thought you looked just like one of them.’
‘No relation, honest,’ Mal said. ‘My tribe’s in Manchester.’
‘Your parents are from Yemen, aren’t they, Mal?’ Dave said.
‘It wasn’t called Yemen when they lived there. I forget what it was called.’
‘Could you find it on a map?’ Martyn asked.
‘You must be joking. But I couldn’t find Manchester, either.’
‘I guess you’re Moslem, though?’ Martyn persisted.
Mal shrugged awkwardly. ‘I’m not anything really.’
‘A babe magnet,’ Finn reminded him.
Mal smiled. ‘Oh, yeah. Babes. That’s my religion.’
‘But you must have—’
Jamie glanced over Martyn’s shoulder. ‘Who’s that?’
They all turned.
Dave said: ‘That’s someone who just went out to the High Street to pick up a bit of shopping . . .’
‘. . . and woke up in an FOB in Afghanistan,’ Jamie finished.
A substantial woman with a Sainsbury’s shopping bag was standing at the food counter. She was obviously just on her way back from the supermarket because the contents of the bag bulged a bit. A head scarf was knotted severely under her chin, wisps of white hair visible beneath it. She wore a grey suit with knee-length skirt stretched tightly over her ample frame. Her shoes were solid.