Buzz: A Thriller

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Buzz: A Thriller Page 2

by Anders de la Motte


  He reached for the handle of the rear door of the car to let the minister for international development out, but Rebecca beat him to it.

  “Don’t touch that door!” she snarled as she slapped the door window with the palm of her right hand.

  The embassy counselor kept hold of the handle, and for a few seconds they stood there exchanging hostile glances. Then Gladh let go, straightened up, and, insulted, adjusted the knot of his tie.

  “How long are you thinking of making us stand out here in the heat, Normén?” he whined, slightly too loudly, so that the minister would hear him through the tinted glass. “Can’t you see that these people are getting more agitated the longer we hesitate? They’re waiting for us—for the minister, don’t you understand that?”

  Oh yes, she understood all right, but there was something about the whole situation that didn’t feel right.

  When they reconnoitered the site the day before they had been able to drive right up to the office of the refugee camp where the meeting was to take place. But today the road was suddenly blocked off some way from the building, even though she could see plenty of vehicles there already.

  Walking the minister two hundred meters through the crowd with six nervous government soldiers as their escort didn’t feel like a particularly good idea.

  Anyway, why so few?

  The previous day the place had been crawling with soldiers, armored vehicles, and even a helicopter hovering above. The refugees had mostly stayed inside their flimsy little tents, hardly daring to come out.

  But today the situation was suddenly the complete reverse.

  “Come on, let’s go! All is good, all is good . . .” the officer called, waving eagerly at them to go over to him, while a couple of his soldiers made a feeble attempt to hold back the more eager members of the crowd pushing against the cordon. But still Rebecca hesitated.

  ♦ ♦ ♦

  The sound of the mob was getting louder, yet she still imagined she could hear the metallic sound of the soldiers’ safety catches.

  Almost like a second hand counting down.

  Click . . .

  Click . . .

  Click . . .

  Unconsciously she moved her right hand to the pistol in the holster on her belt.

  “We need to move now,” Gladh whined, and she noted the sudden fear in his voice.

  Göransson and Malmén exchanged glances across the roof of the car.

  “How do you want to do this, Normén?”

  Her deputy was right. She had to make a decision.

  Dangerous?

  Not dangerous?

  Make a decision, Normén!

  Obviously she ought to open the door and let the minister out. But she still couldn’t shake the feeling that something wasn’t right—something more than just an agitated crowd, a blocked road, and an embassy counselor who needed the toilet.

  The rubber handle of her pistol felt clammy against the palm of her hand.

  Click . . .

  Click . . .

  Then suddenly she saw him. A man in the crowd to her right. He was dressed the same as all the screaming black people around him. A long white shirt, dark Middle Eastern trousers, and a length of cloth covering his head. But there was still something about him that made him stand out.

  To start with, he was calm. He wasn’t shouting, he wasn’t waving his fists or trying to get her attention.

  Instead he was moving steadily forward, cruising calmly between his agitated brothers in misfortune as he got closer and closer.

  The man was holding something in his hand and it took her several seconds to see what it was.

  A plastic bag, and, to judge by its uniformly bright-yellow color, it was still too new to have been bleached by the sun and creased like everything else in the camp.

  What was something as new and clean as that doing in the midst of all this overwhelming misery?

  She shaded her eyes with her left hand and tried to focus her gaze. The bag kept moving in and out of her field of vision, hidden by the crowd only to reappear shortly afterward in a small gap. Bright yellow, smooth, and definitely out of place.

  For a moment she thought she could just make out a dark object at the bottom of it.

  And suddenly her decision was made.

  “Get back in!” she roared, glancing quickly at her two colleagues to make sure they’d understood her order.

  “Get in at once, we’re aborting!” she yelled at Malmén, who didn’t seem to have heard her over the noise of the crowd.

  At first her deputy didn’t react, then he nodded curtly and signaled with his hand to the driver of the third car to reverse and clear their path.

  “What the hell are you doing, Normén?!” the embassy counselor shrieked, grabbing her right arm.

  She shook him off easily.

  “Inside the car, Gladh, unless you want to get left behind!” she snarled as she gestured to her driver to get ready to leave.

  Gladh carried on shouting in her ear but she wasn’t listening.

  The man with the plastic bag had vanished, but she was sure he was somewhere inside the crowd—and that he was still heading toward them.

  The Land Cruiser behind them reversed a few meters, and without taking her eyes off the crowd she banged on the roof of the car to signal to Modin to follow suit.

  Slowly their car began rolling backward over the uneven road surface.

  The passenger door was still wide open, waiting for her to jump in.

  At the same moment as the cortège began its retreat the noise of the crowd rose to a furious roar and the feeble cordon holding it back gave way.

  The soldier closest to them didn’t even have time to raise his gun before he was swallowed up by the mob.

  In just a couple of seconds their car was surrounded. Hands banging on the hood and windshield—tugging at her clothes, trying to pull her away from the open door.

  She stumbled and for one panic-stricken moment thought she was about to fall.

  Her pulse was racing as she struggled to pull herself free, but she was being attacked from all sides.

  Hands were roaming over her belt, toward the pistol in her firmly clenched right hand. She drove her left hand into someone’s face, kneed another man in the crotch, and rammed her head back toward a voice that was yelling in her ear, but her attackers were too numerous and she was likely to fall at any moment, and then everything would be over.

  Suddenly the car jolted and the heavy door swung back, clearing enough of her attackers out of the way for Rebecca to be able to pull her right arm free and draw her pistol.

  Barrel in the air, squeeze the trigger!

  The weapon jerked in her hand—once, then several more times, and suddenly the roar switched from fury to fear and panic. Then she was free. The people closest to her tried to flee and collided with others, who were still pushing forward. Screams blended into the sound of bodies thudding together. She heard shots from directly in front of her. Short salvos of automatic rifle fire, probably aimed directly into the crowd. A bullet buzzed past her head, like an angry bee, but she hardly noticed it. Modin revved the engine and the spinning wheels threw up clouds of dust that quickly filled the whole of her field of vision with red fog.

  The car began to pick up speed. She stumbled but eventually managed to grab hold of the swinging door. Her fingers were still clutching her trigger, the barrel pointing up at the sky.

  The man came straight out of the cloud of dust. Right in front of the hood, maybe six, eight meters away. He leaped nimbly over the prostrate bodies and zigzagged through the fleeing crowd, heading straight for the car. He had one hand halfway out of the plastic bag. The object was clearly visible now.

  Rebecca lowered the arm holding her pistol, trying to aim at his legs, but it was impossible to hold the gun still. The car was speeding up, throwing up yet more red dust, then hit the front of the vehicle reversing behind them. The sudden stop sent the car door swinging back to hit Rebecca on the c
hin, and once again she almost fell. For a few seconds all she could see were stars and red fog.

  When her vision cleared the revolver was pointing straight at her.

  ♦ ♦ ♦

  She was riding him like a bucking bronco.

  Her perfect silicone breasts were bouncing in sync as she ground her hairless crotch against his pelvic bone. She had one hand on the frame of the bed and the other wound in a tight grip of his long hair, so hard that he could hear the roots groan as she pulled him to her. The heels of her shoes were digging painful grooves in the outside of his thighs.

  But he really didn’t give a shit, because the businesswoman was giving him the ride of his life.

  He certainly wasn’t an inexperienced pilot in the bedroom—quite the contrary! In fact he had always regarded himself as something of a Top Gun in that area.

  But by God, could she fuck!

  This year’s Gonzo at the Adult Awards, with a double nomination for female performer of the year. The experience was so intense that he had to keep reminding himself to breathe.

  His groin began to twitch—the tension transmitted itself to the rest of his body as he tried in vain to think about something that would put him off. But it was impossible.

  “I’m coming,” he gurgled in warning, but she made no attempt to get off. Instead she let go of the headboard, moved her hand down her back toward his groin, and, just as he started to come, she dug her nails into his scrotum. He thought he was dying! His orgasm was so intense that he arched his back as far as it would go, and, to judge by her screams, she was using his movements to her own advantage.

  It took him several minutes to come to his senses again, during which time she had rolled off him and lit a cigarette.

  “Isn’t this a nonsmoking room?” was the first thing he managed to say when he regained the power of speech.

  “Who are you—the smoking police?” She grinned, blowing a long plume of smoke toward the ceiling.

  Quite. Who the hell cared? What a total dweeb he could be sometimes!

  “What . . . what’s your name?” he stammered, in the absence of anything better to say.

  “Anna—Anna Argos.”

  She put the cigarette out in one of the glasses on the bedside table, then slid down the bed.

  “Erm . . . nice to meet you, Anna.”

  But she didn’t answer. Her mouth was already fully occupied trying to wake the dead.

  ♦ ♦ ♦

  The gun was pointing straight at her, but Rebecca still couldn’t move.

  Her arms were hanging over the car door while her feet dragged on the ground rushing past below her. She was still clutching the pistol in her right hand, but because the whole of her body weight was resting on her lower arms, she couldn’t move it more than a centimeter or so. She tried to get a foothold, so she could redistribute her weight and free up her pistol arm.

  But the running man had already raised his own gun and she realized she didn’t have time. The dust was flying up from the car wheels, swirling around her and narrowing her field of vision to a red tunnel, until all she could see was the barrel of the shiny revolver at the far end. She waited for the shot.

  But it didn’t come.

  The car suddenly lurched hard to the right, and the force of the swerve was so great that it threw her halfway inside the vehicle. She got a grip on the seat, managed to brace one leg against the door pillar, and pulled herself in. The car continued to spin, the door slammed shut behind her, and suddenly they had performed a 180-degree turn and were heading forward again, back down the road they had arrived on.

  The dust from the Land Cruiser’s wheels billowed around them and Modin had to switch on the windshield wipers to see anything.

  Rebecca spun around to try to get a glimpse of the man with the revolver through the rear window. She rested her arm on the back of the seat, ready to fire. Her eye was glued to the view along the barrel of the gun, her finger on the trigger . . .

  But all she could see behind them was a swirling cloud of red dust that seemed to cover the whole world.

  The refugee camp, the mob, the man with the revolver—everything just vanished. After only a couple of seconds it was as if they had never existed at all . . .

  Modin was shouting something, and far away she heard the radio crackle, but her pulse was pounding so hard against her eardrums that she couldn’t make out any of the words.

  Everything around her seemed to be happening in slow motion. She could make out the tiniest details: the smell of the leather seats, the figures huddled on the backseat, Modin’s jerky movements as she fought to keep the car on the road.

  Her hands were clutching the pistol so tightly that her fingers were beginning to cramp.

  The dust was still being whirled up by the airflow behind the car, forming long, hypnotic spirals that captured her attention and made it impossible to look away.

  Then Modin must have hit a pothole, because for a few moments it felt as if they were flying, floating free, almost like in a dream.

  A couple of milliseconds of weightlessness—then the car hit the ground again. Rebecca crashed down against one of the seats, the dreamlike sensation vanished, and she was thrown back into reality again.

  “Answer the radio!” Modin was shouting, and at the same moment Rebecca realized that her earpiece had fallen out and was dangling on her right shoulder. She quickly poked it back into her ear, lowered her gun, and sank back onto the passenger seat.

  “Is everyone okay, Normén, over?”

  Malmén’s voice sounded worried.

  She twisted around to glance at her fellow passengers.

  The minister and Gladh were each huddled on either side of the backseat.

  “Are you okay back there?”

  No answer, but two chalk-white faces peered slowly up at her.

  “Are you okay, Ann-Christin?”

  Rebecca leaned back at an angle and prodded one of the minister’s knees, which was at least enough to prompt a glassy nod in response.

  “The minister’s okay. We’re returning to the villa,” she said as calmly as she could into the microphone, but the radio somehow seemed to reinforce the tremble in her voice.

  “Understood,” Malmén replied curtly.

  Rebecca suddenly realized she was still clutching her pistol with her right hand.

  She loosened her grip, put the gun back in its holster, then slowly pulled the seat belt on.

  Her pulse had begun to slow down, the adrenaline kick slowly faded away, and she could feel a vague sense of nausea rising in its place.

  “That was damned close . . .”

  Without taking her eyes from the road, Modin nodded in response.

  “I thought I’d had it for a moment there, I don’t know why he didn’t shoot.”

  Modin gave her a quick sideways glance.

  “He probably didn’t have time to get his rifle out before they were on top of him.”

  It took a couple of seconds before Rebecca understood.

  “No, no, not the soldier—I mean the man with the revolver, of course.”

  “Who?” Modin said, shooting her a questioning look.

  Before she had time to answer, Gladh leaned forward and spoke into her left ear.

  “What the hell do you think you’re playing at, Normén?” he hissed.

  2

  FLASHBACK

  “HELLO?”

  “Good evening, my friend. It is already evening with you, isn’t it . . . ? Is this a bad time to call?”

  “No, no, not at all, I’ve been waiting for you to get in touch. I’m in position—is everything . . . ready?”

  “Everything’s ready.”

  “What about . . . ?”

  “Like I said—everything’s ready. The only question is: Are you? The task is risky, so I can understand that you might be feeling doubtful . . . But the fact is that we can’t do this without your help.”

  “I’m ready—no problem!”

  �
�Excellent!”

  “So when do we get going?”

  “Soon, my friend—very soon . . .”

  ♦ ♦ ♦

  “Darfur?”

  “Hmm . . .”

  “How long?”

  “About a week for recon, four days with the minister, then a couple of days to finish off. Two weeks in total, I’d guess, depending a bit on whether I come home in the government plane or have to take a regular flight.”

  He nodded, then looked down at the morning paper open in front of him.

  “It’s my job, Micke. You know that.”

  “I know,” he muttered without looking up. “But that doesn’t mean I have to cheer every time you head off for some new dangerous location, especially when there are other options. So what’s it going to be next time, Baghdad?”

  More like Kabul, she almost said, but stopped herself before the words formed. She was planning to hold back that particular little surprise until she was sure it was her team that would be going.

  “Look,” she said, then waited until he looked up. “I am actually capable of taking care of myself, and besides, I like my job. We’ve already been through the whole idea of me doing something else, so how about showing a bit of support instead of this grouchy routine every morning?”

  She held his gaze for a couple of seconds until, as usual, he backed down.

  “Sure, sorry, I didn’t mean to sound like an old woman . . .”

  He folded the newspaper and put his hand over hers.

  “Sorry, Becca, of course you need to go. Okay? The last thing you need is problems at home before a trip like this. I’ve just been having trouble sleeping, lots to do at work, you know . . .”

  He looked at her with his puppy-dog eyes and she smiled back dutifully.

  “Sure,” she muttered. “No problem.”

  His abrupt change of attitude ought to have cheered her up, but instead she mostly just felt disappointed.

  Micke was a wonderful guy who never caused any trouble, and who always backed down if they had different opinions. Good job, good general knowledge, sense of humor, all that . . . The dream prince really, especially in comparison with her previous experiences.

  But still she found herself regretting not throwing the Afghanistan trip in his face while she had the chance. Pouring a bit of gasoline on the flames just to see what would happen. But good girls didn’t do that sort of thing . . .

 

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