Breakfast In The Ruins - BestLightNovel.com
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- What about this ? Green ? Brown ?
-Blue.
Karl has reached his majority. He's twenty one. Signed on for another seven years' stint in the Mob. There's no life like it!
- You're just telling me that, says his friend anxiously. How about now?
- Well, I suppose you could say they looked a bit greenish, says Karl kindly.
- It's envy, old chap, at your lovely big bovine brown ones.
- Give us a kiss.
Twenty one and the world his oyster. Cyprus, Aden Singapore. Wherever the British Army's needed. Karl is a sergeant already. And he could do the officer exam soon. He's used to commanding, by now. Twice decorated? No sweat!
-Where?
- Don't make me laugh.
KARL WAS TWENTY-ONE. His mother was forty five. His father was forty seven. They lived in Hendon, Middles.e.x, in a semi-detached house which Karl's father, who had never been out of work in his life, had begun to buy just before the war. His father had been doing indispensable war work and so had not had to serve in the Army (he was a boiler engineer). His father had thoughtfully changed his name to Gower in 1939, partly because it sounded too German, partly because, you never knew, if the Germans won, it sounded too Jewish. Not, of course, that it was a Jewish name. Karl's dad denied any such suggestion vehemently. It was an old Austrian name, resembling a name attached to one of the most ancient n.o.ble houses in Vienna. That's what Karl's grandfather had said, anyway. Karl had been called after his granddad. Karl's father's name was English - Arnold.
Karl had been in the Army since he had joined up as a boy-entrant in 1954. He had seen a lot of service since then. But for the past two years he'd been out in Kenya, clearing up the Mau Mau business, which seemed to drag on forever. Off duty, it was a smas.h.i.+ng life. The worst of the terrorism was over and it wasn't nearly so dangerous as it had been. Karl had an Indian girl-friend in Nairobi and he got there as often as he could to f.u.c.k the s.h.i.+t out of her. She was a hot little b.i.t.c.h though he had a sneaking suspicion she'd given him his last dose of crabs. You could never tell with crabs, mind you, so he gave her the benefit of the doubt. What a m.u.f.f! What t.i.ts! It gave you a hard on just thinking about them. Lovely!
The jeep pulled up at the gates of the compound. Another day's work was beginning. Karl was part of the special Intelligence team working closely with the Kenya Police in this area, where there was still a bit of Mau Mau mischief. Privately, Karl thought it would go on forever. They didn't have a hope in h.e.l.l of governing themselves. He looked at the inmates behind the barbed wire. It made you smile to think about it. Offering it, that was different, if you had to keep them under control. Of course you can have independence - in two million b.l.o.o.d.y years! Ho, ho, ho!
He scratched his crotch with his swagger stick and grinned to himself as his driver presented their pa.s.s. The jeep b.u.mped its way over the uneven mud track into the compound.
The Kikuyu prisoners stood, or sat, or leaned around, looking with dull eyes at the jeep as it pulled up outside the main Intelligence hut. Some distance away, squatting on the ground, were about a hundred natives listening to Colonel Wibberley giving them their usual brainwas.h.i.+ng (or what would be a brainwas.h.i.+ng if they had any brains to wash, thought Karl. He knew b.l.o.o.d.y well that you released the b.u.g.g.e.rs as decontaminated only to get half of them back sooner or later with blood on their b.l.o.o.d.y hands). Oh, what a horrible lot they were, in their reach-me-down flannel shorts, their tattered s.h.i.+rts, their old tweed jackets, their bare scabby feet, some of them with silly grins all over their ugly mugs. He saluted Private Peterson who was on guard outside the hut as usual. He already felt like an officer.
"Morning, sarge," said Peterson as he pa.s.sed. b.a.s.t.a.r.d!
Corporal Anderson, all red and sweaty as usual, was on duty at the desk when Karl entered. Anderson always looked as if he'd just been caught in the act of pulling his plonker - s.h.i.+fty, seedy.
"You are an unwholesome little sod, Corporal Anderson," said Karl by way of greeting. Corporal Anderson t.i.ttered. "What's new, then? Blimey, couldn't you get a stronger bulb, I can't see for looking."
"I'll put a chit in, sarge."
"And hurry up about it. Is old Lailu ready to talk yet?"
"I haven't been in there this morning, sarge. The lieutenant ..."
"What about the bleeding lieutenant?"
"He's away, sarge. That's all."
"b.l.o.o.d.y good f.u.c.king thing, too, little s.h.i.+t-faced p.r.i.c.k, little upper-cla.s.s t.u.r.d," mumbled Karl to himself as he went through the papers on his desk. Same problem as yesterday. Find out what Lailu knew about the attack on the Kuanda farm a week ago. Lailu had been in the raid, all right, because he'd been recognized. And he'd used to work at the farm. He claimed to have been in his own village, but that was a lie. Who could prove it? And he'd been in the camp more than once. He was a known Mau Mau. And he was a killer. Or knew who the killers were, which was the same thing.
"I'll have a word with him, I think," said Karl, sipping the tea the corporal brought him. "I'll have to get unpleasant today if he don't open his f.u.c.king mouth. And I'll have him all to my f.u.c.king self, won't I, corp ?"
"Yes, sarge," said Corp, his thick lips writhing, his hot, s.h.i.+fty eyes seething, as if Karl had caught him out at some really nasty form of self-abuse.
"Ugh, you are horrible" said Karl, automatically.
"Yes, sarge."
Karl snorted with laughter. "Go and tell them to take our little black brother into the special room, will you?"
"Yes, sarge." Corporal Anderson went through the door into the back of the hut. Karl heard him talking to the guards. A bit later Anderson came back.
"He's ready, sarge."
"Thank you, corporal," said Karl in his crisp, decisive voice. He put his cigarettes and matches in the top pocket of his s.h.i.+rt, picked up his swagger stick and crossed the mud floor to the inner door. "Oh," he said, hesitating before entering, "if our good lieu tenant should come calling, let me know would you, corporal?"
"Yes, sarge. I get you."
"And don't pick your nose while I'm gone, will you, corporal?"
"No, sarge."
Karl thought about that little Indian bint in Nairobi. He'd give a lot to be taking her knickers down at this moment, of getting her legs open and f.u.c.king the a.r.s.e off of her. But duty called.
He whistled as he walked along the short, dark pa.s.sage to the special room. It was bleeding hot in here, worse than a b.l.o.o.d.y native hut. It stank of f.u.c.king Kikuyu.
He gave the guard at the door of the special room his officer's salute, with the swagger stick touching the peak of his well-set cap.
He went into the special room and turned on the light.
Lailu sat on the bench, his bony knees sticking up at a peculiar angle, his eyes wide and white. There was a lot of sweat in his thin moustache.
"h.e.l.lo, Mr. Lailu," said Karl with his cold grin, "how are you feeling this fine summer morning? A bit warm? Sorry we can't open a window for you, but you can see for yourself, there isn't one. That's probably against fire regulations. You could complain about that. Do you want to complain to me, Mr. Lailu?"
Lailu shook his black head.
"Because you've got your rights, you know. Lots and lots of rights. You've heard the lectures? Yes, of course you have, more than once, because you've been here more than once, haven't you, Mr. Lailu?"
Lailu made no response at all to this. Karl went up to him and stood very close, looking down on him. Lailu didn't look back. Karl grabbed the man's ear and twisted it so that Lailu's lips came together tightly. "Because I remember my trade-mark, you see, Mr. Lailu. That little scar, that's not a tribal scar, is it, Mr. Lailu? That little scar isn't a Mau Mau scar, is it? That is a Sergeant Gower scar, eh?"
"Yes, boss," said Lailu. "Yes, boss."
"Good."
Karl stepped back and leaned against the door of the special room. "We're going to keep everything informal, Mr. Lailu. You know your rights, don't you? "
"Yes, boss."
"Good."
Karl grinned down on Lailu again. "You were at the Kuanda farm last week, weren't you?"
"No, boss."
"Yes you were!" Karl began to breathe quickly, the swagger stick held firmly in his two hands. "Weren't you?"
"No, boss. Lailu not Mau Mau, boss. Lailu good boy, boss."
"Yes, a good little liar." The swagger stick left Karl's right hand almost without him thinking about it. It struck Lailu on the top of his head. Lailu whimpered. "Now I won't do that again, Lailu, because that's not the way I work, is it?"
"Don't know, boss."
"Is it?"
"No, boss."
"Good." Karl took out his packet of Players and selected one. He put the cigarette between his lips and he put the packet carefully back into his pocket. He took out his matches and he lit the cigarette so that it was burning just right. He put the matches back in his pocket and neatly he b.u.t.toned the pocket. He drew a deep puff on the cigarette. "Smoke, Lailu?"
Lailu trembled all over. "No, boss. Please."
"s.h.i.+t, Lailu? You look as if you feel like one. Use the pot over there. Get them manky pants down, Lailu."
"Please, boss."
Karl moved quickly. It was always best to move quickly. He grabbed the top of the Kikuyu's shorts and ripped them down to his knees, exposing the shriveled, scarred genitals.
"Oh, I have been here before, haven't I, Lailu?"
- That's better, says Karl.
- You're insatiable, says his friend admiringly. I've got to admit it, for all your faults.
- What's the time? Karl asks. - My watch has stopped.
- It must be coming up for morning, says his friend.
What Would You Do? (16) You and your sister have been captured by your enemies. They are brutal enemies.
They want information from you concerning your friends. They say they will make you responsible for your sister's safety. If you tell them all they wish to know she will go free. If you do not they will humiliate, terrorize and torture her in every way they know.
You are aware that should they catch your friends they will do the same thing to at least some of them, perhaps all of them.
Whom will you betray?