A Sailor's Honour

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by Chris Marnewick


  ‘Where did you hear that crap?’ Kupenga asked. ‘You have to leave these matters to the machinery of the law.’

  ‘You see,’ De Villiers said, ‘I have this very clever brother-in-law. And he says the law is not enough. You have to give it a push every now and then.’

  ‘Crap,’ Kupenga said. ‘You fucking South Africans have your own weird ideas about justice. We should never have allowed you into the country.’

  ‘Well,’ said De Villiers, ‘you answer me this: what did the machinery of the law achieve here? Did they have any leads? Did they phone you with the address? In fact, did they achieve anything?’ He answered his own question. ‘The machinery of the law is a toothless dog when you have to deal with evil men. It achieves nothing, my friend. Nothing at all.’

  ‘You’re drunk,’ Kupenga guessed correctly.

  ‘I always speak the truth,’ De Villiers slurred.

  ‘Yeah, right,’ Kupenga said. ‘Not even when you’re drunk.’

  De Villiers slept all the way to Singapore. The luxuries of first-class travel were wasted on him.

  His dreams were confusing ones of ships in the Kalahari and a bushman on a fishing vessel. He tossed and turned, but in the luxury of a first-class seat, his nearest neighbour had no reason to complain. The stewardess watched with detached bemusement at first, but relented when he started talking in his sleep and tucked him in with a mohair blanket wrapped tightly around him.

  The foreign transfers showed in the accounts when the offices opened the next morning. De Villiers was already in the air on the second long-haul, somewhere over Australia, halfway between Singapore and Auckland. $11,245,307.55 was received in the conscience account of the South African Revenue Services and $5 million in the account of the Nelson Mandela Children’s Fund. The depositor was reflected as St Catherine. In Mauritius, the bank balance in the account of James Mazibuko doubled overnight.

  The main newspapers carried the story on their front pages and the arrests were shown on national television. In time it made the international news.

  LARGE ARMS CACHE FOUND: ARRESTS MADE

  In a special operation conducted by the Scorpions in collaboration with the National Prosecuting Authority, several arrests were made on a game farm in Limpopo yesterday after a large arms cache was found. Acting on an anonymous tip-off, search teams found dozens of automatic weapons and numerous cases of ammunition as well as an array of other weapons including rocket launchers, anti-aircraft rockets and landmines. In a separate bunker, sophisticated explosives and detonating devices were found. These were displayed to the media. (See photo)

  The main suspects are alleged to have been trained in the SADF before 1994 and were planning a major operation somewhere within the borders of South Africa. They will appear in court in Phalaborwa soon. It is expected that they will apply for bail.

  Farm workers have told the media that they never suspected that anything untoward was taking place on the farm, although some have mentioned regular meetings of khaki-uniformed men.

  They also confirmed that an old man in a wheelchair who used to address the meetings was not among those arrested. The man’s personal aide is also missing.

  The police have refused to give their names.

  Unconfirmed rumours suggest that the police are looking for two further suspects. It is believed that one was a general in the old SADF and the other a senior officer. Their whereabouts are unknown, but it is believed that they may be overseas.

  A source in the investigation team who declined to be named claimed that the missing men were at the helm of the Chemical and Biological Warfare Unit during the apartheid years.

  The investigating officer, Inspector Alois Mncwabe, refused to be drawn on the issue and declined to confirm or deny the existence of the men mentioned by the farm workers. He referred all further enquiries to the deputy director of the National Prosecuting Authority, Advocate AA Nyembezi. Mr Nyembezi refused to elaborate, but said some unconfirmed information was still being followed up. A source at Interpol has given this newspaper the names of the men still being sought and confirmed that an international arrest warrant has been issued for them.

  Whilst this paper is not at liberty to disclose their names at this stage, it can confirm that they were members of the Civil Cooperation Bureau, which was engaged in a campaign of dirty tricks before the 1994 transition to democracy.

  A spokesman for the workers expressed concern about salaries now that the farm operations have been closed down by the authorities.

  EPILOGUE

  Durban

  Wednesday, 7 July 2010

  Hop. Skip. Jump.

  Hop. Skip. Jump.

  Zoë de Villiers held onto the hands of the adults on either side of her and skipped to the dictates of the lines on the pavement of the street outside the Moses Mabhida Stadium. Walter Gilbert Road had been converted to a pedestrian mall and the brick paving made a perfect hop-skip-and-jump grid for a little girl with a good imagination.

  ‘Come on, Zoë,’ her mother admonished her. ‘Don’t hang onto Auntie Liesl’s arm like that. You’ll hurt her.’

  ‘Don’t worry about me, Emma,’ Liesl Weber said. ‘I can’t wait to have a grandchild.’

  Behind the women, Pierre de Villiers and Johann Weber had stopped to take photographs.

  ‘This is one hell of a stadium,’ Pierre de Villiers said. ‘When I was here a year ago, it was all cranes and cement trucks and security checkpoints and men in hard hats. Now look at it.’ He swung his camera in an arc from left to right to take a sequence of photographs that could be laid together to create a single landscape. The stadium was too big to fit into his camera’s viewfinder.

  They had decided to come to the stadium early to be sure of finding parking and having the opportunity to experience the vibe of the World Cup semifinal. Contrary to their expectations, the traffic between the Webers’ Durban North home and the stadium had been smooth and the drive without incident. The car was parked in a side street above Umgeni Road under the watchful eyes of a car guard who spoke English with a French accent. From the time they had alighted from the car, the stadium had dominated the view. It stood like a giant illuminated vanilla cheesecake in a sea of dark chocolate.

  There were flags and vuvuzelas everywhere and the noise was earsplitting. German and Spanish mementos were on sale everywhere. One man offered earplugs and was doing a brisk trade.

  The Webers were of German ancestry and were naturally aligned to the German team. De Villiers, on the other hand, was of French extraction, and tended to side with the Latin nations, although most of them had been a grave disappointment thus far in the competition. The African sides had not performed well either, but De Villiers no longer felt African. He was pleased to note that New Zealand was the only side in the competition not to have lost a game. But even that was little consolation; they had already returned home.

  Zoë bumped into her father as she waved a German flag. De Villiers studied a brochure that accompanied the batch of items handed to all spectators at the gate. There was a photograph of the stadium on the cover far better than any De Villiers could take with his camera.

  The arch is one of the most spectacular aspects of the multi-billion-rand stadium construction. The first sections of the free-span arch arrived from Hamburg, Germany, little over a year earlier.

  The mood of the place was almost eerie. It was well past the hour when Durbanites would usually lock themselves behind their doors and security systems, yet here they mingled in large numbers in the artificial light of a thousand street lights.

  The stadium dominated everything. Like the believers descending upon the mountain in Close Encounters of the Third Kind, everyone appeared to react to its irresistible pull. The Weber party slowly made their way towards the southern side and around to an entrance near their seats in the middle, expensive section, almost on the centre line.

  ‘Hello, Judge,’ someone said behind them.

  De Villiers watched as Johan
n Weber turned and spoke to the man in the row behind them.

  ‘So you’re a judge now?’ De Villiers asked when Weber sat down again.

  Johann Weber shrugged. ‘It’s just an acting appointment. It’s dirty work, but someone’s got to do it.’

  On the field, the dirty work was being done by the midfielders. Both teams played like men afraid of losing and, consequently, too afraid to venture forward. The ball was passed from man to man in the midfield, from side to side in that section of the field directly under De Villiers’s eyes.

  Johann Weber tried to explain the rules and tactics to his wife, who showed interest only in Zoë’s antics. Bored, De Villiers studied the arch from below. In the light, he could see the steel cables stretch from the roof to the arch and he wondered how the cables were attached to the reinforced concrete of the arch.

  At half time Zoë sang and sashayed with the street children on the big screen until a cacophony of vuvuzelas made it impossible to hear the words of the official song of the competition.

  When the teams came out for the second half, one player got up and brought the game to life. Xabi Alonso dazzled the German defenders and the crowd with deft touches and turns and crisp passes. It was inevitable that the Germans would concede a corner too many, and when Carles Puyol dashed forward unmarked to rise above the defenders and head the ball past the wrong-footed goalkeeper, the game was effectively over.

  In the stands, sixty-two thousand spectators watched the game with varying degrees of appreciation. Around them the hundred-and-two outer columns stood proud, buried deep in the African soil. A steel cable was tied to the top of each column by a special mechanism. Each cable led to the arch where a similar mechanism tied it to the arch. The steel cables were made of local materials and supported the diaphanous Teflon roof membrane through which the light below reached up into the sky.

  Above the heads of the crowd, the arch held everything together in a whole which was greater than the sum of its individual parts.

  It was a good night.

  During the long flight back to New Zealand, Zoë sang in tune but the words were scrambled.

  Wakey wakey! Good soldier

  Wakey wakey! You’re a good soldier

  Not anymore, De Villiers thought. He shook his head. Not anymore.

  ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

  Operation Weissdorn and Robey Leibbrandt’s part in it is fully chronicled in For Volk and Führer by Hans Strydom, published in 1982 by Jonathan Ball Publishers. I cheated a little with the facts. Leibbrandt came here on a yacht, as Strydom wrote, not by U-boat, although that was the rumour the Third Force spread at the time.

  Hitler did give an order that his submarine crews were to destroy enemy lifeboats and crews after his U-boats had sunk their vessels. Except for one isolated incident, which took place before his order, no submarine crew ever carried out Hitler’s order. Grand-Admiral Karl Dönitz was nevertheless convicted at the conclusion of the main Nuremberg War Crimes Trial of crimes against the peace (for training the German Navy) and of war crimes (for not countermanding Hitler’s order). He was sentenced to ten years imprisonment.

  U-Boats to the Rescue: The Laconia Incident by Léonce Peillard, translated by Oliver Coburn and published by Jonathan Cape in 1963, gives a studied account of the sinking of the passenger ship Laconia and the valiant efforts of the crews of several U-boats to save the survivors, even when bombed by an American Liberator aircraft while they were towing strings of lifeboats with survivors.

  Kapitänleutnant Karl-Heinz Weber is a fictitious character. U-boat 891 was never commissioned and never participated in the rescue, but otherwise the facts of the Laconia incident have been stated as accurately as my research allowed.

  As for the existence and activities of the Third Force, they are fig-ments of my imagination. As with the Laconia affair, I should like to think that there would be a fair measure of correspondence with the truth that lies below the surface of the recorded history of this country. The evil that was perpetrated by the various actors in the liberation struggle – on both sides – is beyond anything an author’s imagination could produce. The assassination of Verwoerd, the suppression of a medical paper suggesting that a deadly virus was entering the country via its transport routes, the Alicia Mae affair: all of these may well have one leg standing firmly on the truth, but I have used those events in a strictly fictitious setting.

  The places are real; the people who dwell there are not.

  There is a swastika in the sandstone of the Soutpansberg near the remains of the hut where Robey Leibbrandt hid from the police all those years ago.

  As for the Alicia Mae: I believe there is no record of her anywhere.

  But there was a lion called Bosveld, and he was the biggest lion ever held in captivity.

  Everyone knows that, don’t they?

  Also from Umuzi

  Shepherds & Butchers

  Chris Marnewick

  ‘Possibly the most gripping, most gruelling novel I’ve read’

  VIVIEN HORLER,

  CAPE ARGUS

  Leon Labuschagne’s livelihood depends on death. At nineteen, he is a Death Row warder at Maximum Security Prison in Pretoria: a shepherd who cares for the condemned – and a butcher who escorts them to the gallows. In the summer of 1987, after thirty-two men were hanged in two weeks (all real cases), Leon loses control, with tragic results. And now he’s the one facing the death penalty (fiction).

  Only the most precarious line of legal argument stands between Leon and the gallows. Chasing a defence, his advocate trawls the deepest recesses of life in the Pot – the twilight world of Death Row – in order to determine the effect of multiple executions on his young client.

  In 1987, 164 people were executed at Maximum Security. Two years later, the last man went to the gallows, after more than four thousand hangings in Pretoria in that century. Shepherds & Butchers portrays legal execution in unprecedented detail, revealing its devastating impact on all those involved. At the same time, it exposes the callous violence on the other side of the noose, where murderers reign. Chris Marnewick’s first novel is a gripping courtroom drama steeped in the factual.

  www.randomstruik.co.za

  ISBN: 978-1-4152-0044-5 (print)

  ISBN: 978-1-4152-0327-9 (e-PUB)

  ISBN: 978-1-4152-0328-6 (PDF)

  Novel | May 2008

  Fiction; 231 x 152 mm;

  Trade paperback; 416 pages;

  Recommended retail price R 180

  The Soldier who Said No

  Chris Marnewick

  ‘The Soldier who said No is a slick thriller’

  MARGARET VON

  KLEMPERER,

  THE WITNESS

  New Zealand was supposed to be where Pierre de Villiers would escape his past. A misadventure in Angola had cost him his faith in the military, and almost his life and sanity. Another event cost him his family.

  But no. After a bizarre attempt on the NZ Prime Minister’s life De Villiers recognises the arrow used: it is of Bushman origin. And suddenly he, now a policeman in Auckland, is a suspect.

  He must go back to South Africa for answers, and to face his demons. Can he unscramble his memory? Will he find the men who devastated his life? And will the illness mounting in his groin be cured?

  The Soldier Who Said No is about a man cast adrift in a sea of impossible choices. It is a gripping thriller set in a complex world of racism in unexpected places, and old injustices festering on both sides of a vast ocean.

  www.randomstruik.co.za

  ISBN: 978-1-4152-0108-4 (print)

  ISBN: 978-1-4152-0333-0 (e-PUB)

  ISBN: 978-1-4152-0334-7 (PDF)

  Novel | May 2010

  Thriller; 222 x 146 mm;

  Trade paperback; 320 pages;

  Recommended retail price R 180

 

 

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