The Spoilers / Juggernaut
Page 45
‘I’ll be needed at the hospital.’
‘I’m sure you will. But Sister Mary is there with the others and you’re the only one here. And the rate your Doctor Kat works, there’ll probably be a first load of patients arriving within the hour. The lads will work under your direction, yours and Ben’s that is. They’ve got awnings to rig up, bedding to get cut, all sorts of stuff. And you have to choose a spot for your operating theatre.’
‘I’ve done that already.’ But she wasn’t stubborn when faced with plain good sense, and agreed readily enough to stay and get on with her end of the job, for which I was grateful. If it came to the crunch I didn’t think I would ever win out against her.
We all worked hard and the rig was transformed. Sadiq’s men rounded up some of the local women who knew how to thatch with palm leaf fronds and set them to work, silently at first and then as the strangeness and the fear began to wear off, singing in ululating chorus. As it took shape the rig began to look pretty strange wearing a selection of thatched umbrellas. I was amused to think what Kemp would have to say: he had gone off to check the road leading northwards out of town.
Awnings were being made for the tops of each of the trucks as well, and reeds from the river were beginning to pile up to make bedding for each of the patients as we found places for them. All four tractors were similarly bedecked. Even the tank McGrath had salvaged was to carry its share of patients, perched in the turret. The gun had been ditched once it was clear that there was no ammunition for it. I doubt if you could see anything in the world more incongruous than a thatched tank.
Sadiq had unearthed a couple of old trucks which Ben Hammond pronounced as serviceable and we thatched one of those. The other already had a canvas awning. There were few other vehicles in Kodowa that had escaped either the strafing or the fires.
There was moderately good news about fuel. Outside the town we found a full 4000-gallon tanker. It must have been abandoned by its driver at the onset of the air attack. Both it and our own tanker escaped thatching because I jibbed at carrying bedridden patients on top of potential bombs. The water tanker wasn’t thatched either, being the wrong shape for carrying people.
Sister Ursula was endlessly busy. She supervised the cutting of bedding, to make sure that none was wet and that the worst of the insect life was shaken out of it, checked through our food supplies and made a complete inventory, rounded up towels and sheets from everybody, and selected a place on the rig for Dr Kat’s mobile surgery, the top of the foremost tractor cab, as being the only really flat surface and the one least likely to get smothered in the dust we would stir up in our progress. It was, she pointed out, very exposed but in our supplies we had a couple of pup tents and one of these, after some tailoring, made a fairly passable enclosed space. The other formed a screen for the patients’ toilet, a galvanized iron bucket.
It was all quite astonishing.
The Sister then proceeded to go through the camp like a one-woman locust swarm, sweeping up everything she thought might be of any use. Every pair of scissors she could find she confiscated; she almost denuded the commissary wagon of knives; and she kept young Bing on the run, setting him to boil water to sterilize the things she found.
Once done, they were wrapped in sheets of polythene. Everything as sterile as she could make it. And then they were stored in a corner of our freezer, to slow down bacterial activity. She confiscated packets of paperclips and went through Kemp’s Land Rover, removing clips from every piece of paper in sight, garnering sticky tape, elastic bands and string. Our several first aid boxes all went into her hoard.
Military trucks began arriving from the hospital carrying, not people yet, but goods; food, medications, bandaging, implements, dishes and hardware of all sorts. Among other things was a contraption on a trolley that Sister Ursula dismissed with annoyance.
‘That thing doesn’t work. Hasn’t for a long time. It’s a waste of space.’
‘What is it, Sister?’ It was Ben Hammond who asked, and who seemed to be in constant attendance, not in Mick McGrath’s proprietorial fashion but as head gofer to a factory foreman. Her demands fascinated and challenged him.
‘It is, or was, a portable anaesthetic machine.’
‘If it were fixed, would it be of use?’ She nodded and he fixed it. He was a damned good mechanic.
The Sister found a place for Max Otterman and he was gently lifted onto his pile of bedding; Wyvern Transport Hospital’s first inmate. He’d been showing some signs of recovering consciousness in the past few hours but the portents were not good; he looked and sounded awful.
I kept busy and tried not to think about him, putting him in the same mental folder in which lurked other worries: the state of the nation, the progress of war, the possibility of aircraft bombing us as we sat helpless. Our fuel or water might run out, there could be sickness or mechanical breakdowns. There was no communication with the world apart from the unreliable and sporadic messages received on the Captain’s radio. I kept going, knowing that when I stopped the problems would close in.
It was a long, complex and exhausting day. There was little talking as evening fell and we ate thoughtfully and turned in. I lay fighting off despair, and even coined a phrase for it: Mannix’ Depression. But I couldn’t raise a laugh at my own joke. The odds against us seemed to be stacked far too high.
TWELVE
There was another change of plan that afternoon. We were to move the rig to the hospital rather than risk moving the patients before it was necessary. At daybreak we got going, the oddly transformed convoy passing slowly through the town that wasn’t a town any more, to Katabisirua’s headquarters beyond. The command car bumped over rubble as we passed the remains of the shattered tanks which we had laboured to shift and crunched through cinders and debris in what had been the main street of Kodowa. The place still stank of death and burning.
We passed a truncated and blackened telegraph pole from which a body dangled. Sadiq said laconically, ‘A looter, sir.’
‘Have you had many?’
‘A few. He was one of the first. He discourages the others, as they say.’
Every now and then Sadiq’s obviously broader than average education showed through. For a locally trained lower echelon officer of a somewhat backward country he was surprisingly well-read in military matters. It seemed a pity that he had been given so little room to do his own thinking, but was still tied by the bonds of discipline.
I saw a sign on a blackened but still standing shop front and a soldier who stood in front of the door, cradling a gun. ‘Will you stop a minute, Captain? May I go in there?’
‘It is off limits, Mister Mannix.’ Again the flash of an unexpected phrase.
‘Yes, and we both know why.’
I got out of the car without waiting for any more objections and gestured to the soldier to let me by. Sadiq entered the ruined premises behind me. I picked my way through a jumble of fallen stock, farm implements, clothing, magazines, household stuff, all the usual clutter of an upcountry store, to a locked glass-fronted cupboard towards the back. The glass was shattered now, and the doors buckled with heat. I took a hunting knife from a display rack, inserted the point just below the lock, and pushed smartly sideways. There was a dry snap and the doors sagged open. There wasn’t much of a choice, just six shotguns; four of them double-barrelled which the British still favour, and two pump action. Four were fire-damaged.
I picked up a Mossberg Model 500, twelve-gauge with six shot capacity, and laid it on the counter. Then I started to attack the warped drawers below the gun rack, praying that I’d find what I wanted, and did so; two packs of double-o buckshot, magnum size. Each shell carried nine lead pellets, a third of an inch in diameter, and capable of dropping a 200-pound deer. And a deer is harder to kill than a man.
I dumped the shells next to the gun, added a can of gun oil, then as an afterthought searched for a scabbard for the hunting knife and put that with the rest. Sadiq watched without comment. Then I t
ore a piece of paper from a singed pad on the counter, scribbled a note, and dropped it into the open till. I slammed the till drawer shut and walked out of the store with my collection.
‘Are you going to hang me for a looter, Captain? That was an IOU I put in the cash till. The owner can claim from British Electric.’
‘If he is still alive,’ said Sadiq dryly.
He watched as I ripped open a packet of shells and started to load the gun. ‘Are you expecting trouble at the hospital, Mister Mannix?’
‘You’re a soldier. You ought to know that an unloaded gun is just a piece of junk iron. Let’s say I may be expecting trouble, period. And you may not be around to get me out of it.’
‘Please do not wave it about, then. I will not ask you for a licence; I am not a policeman. I authorize you to hold it. I would feel the same, myself.’
He surprised me by his acquiescence. I had expected him to make it hard for me, but I was determined to go no further without any sort of personal weapon. I made sure the safety catch was on and then laid the gun down by the side of my seat. ‘You have some pretty fine weapons yourself,’ I said. ‘One of my men was casting an envious eye on your Uzi. Keep a close check on all your guns, Captain; I don’t want any of them to go missing.’ It was Mick McGrath I was thinking of. Something had made me think quite a while back that I’d always be happier if he remained unarmed.
‘I will take care. Take your own precautions, please,’ Sadiq said, and we drove on to catch up with the rest of the convoy.
I suppose you could call the setup at Katabisirua’s a field hospital. Everyone seemed to have been moved out of the buildings into a field, and nurses scurried about their business. To me it just looked like a lot of people dying in the open air. Last time I’d only seen the offices, and all this was pretty horrifying.
After a while I began to see order in the apparent chaos. Way over at one end were a lot of people, sitting or walking about, some supported by friends. Scattered cooking fires sent plumes of smoke into the air. In the field were rows of makeshift beds with friends or families in attendance. Hastily erected frond screens hid what I assumed to be the worst cases, or perhaps they were latrines. In the middle of the field were tables around which moved nurses in rumpled uniforms. A stretcher was being lifted onto a table presided over by Dr Katabisirua. At another Sister Mary, frail and leaning on a stick, was directing a nurse in a bandaging operation. I couldn’t see Sister Ursula anywhere.
Away from this area were two newly filled in trenches and a third trench standing open. Slowly I walked across to look at it. It had been half filled with loose earth and stones and scattered with lime. A single naked foot protruded and I choked on the acridity of the chloride of lime which did not quite hide the stench of decay.
I turned away with sweat banding my forehead, and it had nothing to do with the morning sun.
Sadiq’s car had gone but a man was standing waiting for me. He was white, smallish and very weathered, wearing shorts and a torn bush jacket; his left arm was in a sling and his face was covered with abrasions.
‘Mannix?’ he said huskily.
‘That’s right.’
‘You might remember me if I were cleaner. I’m Dan Atheridge. We met in the Luard Club not long ago.’
I did remember him but not as he was right now. Then he had been a brisk, chirpy little man, dapper and immaculate, with snapping blue eyes that gave a friendly gleam in a walnut face. Now the skin was pasty under the surface tan and the eyes had become old and faded. He went on, ‘Perhaps I’d have been better off if I’d stayed there…and perhaps not. What exactly is going on here? I understand you’re moving everybody out. That right?’
I said, ‘I could say I was glad to see you, but they’re not quite the right words under the circumstances.’
He moved his arm and winced. ‘Got a broken flipper—hurts like hell. But I survived.’ He nodded towards the open grave. ‘Better off than those poor buggers.’
‘How come you’re here?’
‘I run beef on the high ground up past Kanja. I brought a truck down here for servicing three days ago. I was standing on what was the hotel balcony watching the troops go by when all hell let loose. I say, are you really going to evacuate the hospital up to Kanja?’
‘We’re going to try.’
‘Can I come along? My home’s up that way. My wife will be worrying.’
I tried to imagine what it would be like to be a woman on a remote farm in the Nyalan uplands with a war breaking out and a husband vanished into a bombed out town, and failed. Then I had another, more practical thought. He’d know the Kanja route backwards.
‘You’d be more than welcome. We can find you a meal, perhaps—and a warm beer.’
‘Great!’ His warm smile lit the weary eyes.
‘Mister Mannix!’
I turned to see Dr Kat approaching. ‘Damned good chap, that,’ Atheridge muttered.
The doctor looked wearier than ever; his eyes were sunken deep into his head and his cheeks were hollow. I judged he was driving himself too hard and made a mental note to see if Sister Ursula could get him to slow down. Come to that, she probably needed slowing down herself.
‘We lost fifteen in the night,’ Dr Kat said. ‘The worst cases, of course.’
‘Triage?’ Atheridge murmured.
I knew about that. Triage was a grisly business used in many armies, but perfected by the French at Dien Bien Phu. The idea was that the wounded were sorted into three categories; lightly wounded, medium but salvageable, and hopeless. The lightly wounded were the first to get treatment so they could be pushed back into action quickly. And it saved on badly needed medical supplies. But it also meant that a lot of others died who might have been saved; a coldly logical, strictly military solution to a medical problem.
‘Nothing of the sort,’ snapped Katabisirua. ‘They had the best attention but they still died. This is not an army. Even you, Mister Atheridge, waited your turn.’
‘I’m sorry. You’re quite right, of course.’
Dr Kat turned to me. ‘I see you have prepared the convoy for us, Mister Mannix.’ We glanced over to the distant, thatch-draped rig. ‘I have seen what you have done and am most grateful.’
‘Have you seen your new operating theatre? You’d be amazed at how much Sister Ursula has achieved.’
‘I would not be amazed in the least. I know her.’
I asked, ‘What is your worst problem right now, Doctor?’
‘All those who had extensive burns or severe wounds are already dead or will die soon—later today, I should think. Now the death rate will fall rapidly. But it will rise again in two days?’
‘Why?’
‘Sepsis. I would give a fortune for ten gallons of oldfashioned carbolic. We have no disinfectants left, and we are running out of sterile bandaging. Operating on a patient in these conditions is like signing his death warrant. I cannot heal with my knife in times like this.’
I felt helpless; I had absolutely no medical knowledge and sympathy seemed a pretty useless commodity. I offered the only thing I had. ‘We’ll get you all to Kanja as quickly as possible, Doctor. We can start in the evening, when it’s cooler, and travel through the night. Mister Atheridge will be invaluable, knowing the road so well.’
The doctor nodded and went back to work.
I’d never make a doctor, not even a bad one, because I guess I’m too squeamish. Medical friends have told me it’s something you get used to, but I doubt if I ever could. I’m tough enough at boardroom and even field politics, but blood and guts is another matter. What we loaded onto the rig weren’t people but cocooned bundles of pain. The burn cases were the worst.
It was a long and bitter job but we did it, and when we had got everyone aboard somewhere or other, and as comfortable as possible, I went in search of Katabisirua. I found him with Sister Ursula, and as I approached she was saying in a stern voice, ‘Now don’t argue, Doctor Kat. I said I’ll stay. It’s all arranged.’ Sh
e turned to me and said in no less stern a tone, ‘Try and get him to have some rest, Mister Mannix. And you too. All of you.’ She marched off across the field without waiting for an answer, heading for one of Sadiq’s trucks which stood isolated from the rest in the comparative shade of a couple of palms. Two soldiers leaned casually against it and close by three white bundles lay on the ground. A couple of Nyalans squatted over them, waving palm fronds to keep off the flies.
I said, ‘What’s all this about?’
‘Those are the last of the bad burn cases, three of them. Two men and a woman. They can’t be moved. Sister Ursula will stay with them and comfort them in their dying. When they are dead the soldiers will bury them. Then they’ll bring her to join us. I cannot persuade her otherwise.’
I looked at the stiff-backed figure walking away. ‘She’s quite a lady.’
‘Yes. Very stubborn.’
Coming from him that was ridiculous, almost enough to make me smile but not quite. I said, ‘We’re all set to move. I’m about to check with Basil Kemp. Are you ready to board, Doctor?’
‘Yes, I suppose so.’ We both glanced briefly round at the desolation, the bloodstained earth, the abandoned beds and fireplaces, the debris and impedimenta of human living strewn all about. There had been no time to tidy up, and no reason either. The vultures could have it all.
I went in search of Basil Kemp. He had been very quiet all day, looking punch-drunk like a concussed boxer after a losing fight. He did his job all right but he did it almost as though by memory. Ben Hammond was forming a perfect backup for him, covering up whatever weaknesses he sensed in his boss, though he was doubtless motivated more by his faith in Geoff Wingstead.
‘Doctor Kat’s coming on board,’ I told him. ‘That’s the last of it. We’re ready to roll any time you say.’
He had planned to push on well into and maybe right through the night. He had not had time to reconnoitre the road very far ahead, but he had the previous surveys to go by, and there were no very sharp bends or steep gradients in the next twenty miles or so. Up as far as the next river course there were no foreseeable problems. That river lay between us and Kanja which was a pity, but all things being equal we shouldn’t have too much trouble. All things weren’t equal, of course; somewhere a war was probably still being fought, but in the total absence of any news on that score the only rational thing to do was to ignore it. We’d heard no further aircraft activity and the airport itself, a mile or so outside the town, was reported by Sadiq to be completely deserted.