He rose and left the table. McBride stayed on. Below the terrace the door in the main gate opened and a man walked up the steps to the flagstones. McBride knew him from the files, but pretended not to.
Adriaan van Rensberg was another man with a history. During the period when the National Party and its apartheid policies ruled South Africa, he had been an eager recruit to the Bureau of State Security, the dreaded BOSS, and had risen through the ranks due to his dedication to the extreme forms of that body’s excesses.
After the arrival of Nelson Mandela, he had joined the extreme-right AWB party led by Eugene Terre-Blanche, and when that collapsed he thought it would be wiser to flee the country. After several years hiring his services as steward and security expert to a number of European fascist factions, he had caught the eye of Zoran Zilic and landed the plum job of devising, designing, building and commanding the fortress hacienda of El Punto.
Unlike Colonel Moreno, the South African’s size was not down to fat but muscled bulk. Only the belly folding over the broad leather belt betrayed a taste for beer and plenty of it.
McBride noted that he had designed himself a uniform for the part: combat boots, jungle camouflage, leopardskin-ringed bush hat and flattering insignia.
‘Mr McBride? The American gentleman?’
‘That’s me, pal.’
‘Major van Rensberg, Head of Security. I am instructed to give you a tour of the estate. Shall we say tomorrow morning? Eight thirty?’
In the car park at the resort of La Bahia one of the policemen found the Ford. The plates were local, but forged and made up in a garage elsewhere. The manual in the glove compartment was in Dutch. As in Surinam.
Much later someone recalled seeing a backpacker with a large camouflaged Bergen haversack, trekking away from the resort on foot. He was heading east. Colonel Moreno called back his entire police force and the army to their barracks. In the morning, he said, they would climb and sweep the cordillera from the landward side; from the road to the crest.
CHAPTER TWENTY-NINE
The Tour
It was the second sunset and fall of darkness that Dexter had witnessed from his invisible lying-up position on the peak of the sierra, and it would be his last.
Still motionless, he watched the last lights snuff in the windows of the peninsula below him, then prepared to move. They rose early down there, and slept early. For him there would be, again, precious little sleep.
He feasted off the last of his field rations, packing down two days’ supply of vitamins and minerals, fibre and sugar. He was able to finish off the last of his water, giving his body a reservoir for the next twenty-four hours. The big Bergen, the scrim netting and raincape could be abandoned. What he needed he had either brought with him or stolen the previous night. They all fitted into a smaller backpack. Only the coiled rope across his shoulders would remain bulky and would have to be hidden where it would not be found.
It was past midnight when he made what remained of his encampment as invisible as possible and left it.
Using a branch to brush out the tracks left by his own feet, he worked his way slowly to his right until he was over the labourers’ village rather than the airfield. It took him half a mile and cost an hour. But he timed it right. The sickle moon rose. The sweat began to soak his clothes again.
He made his way slowly and carefully down the scarp, from handhold to handhold, stump to stump, root to root, until he needed the rope. This time he had to double it and hang the loop over a smooth root where it would not snag when he pulled from below.
He abseiled the rest, avoiding athletic leaps which might dislodge pebbles, but simply walking backwards, pace by pace, until he arrived in the cleft between the cliffs and the rear of the church. He hoped the priest was a good sleeper; he was only a few yards from his house.
He tugged gently on one strand of the double rope. The other slipped over the stump high up the face and at last cascaded down around him. He coiled it round his shoulder and left the shadows of the church.
Latrine facilities were communal and single-sex. There were no women in the labour camp. He had watched the men at their ablutions from above. The basis of the latrine was a long trench covered by boards to mask the inevitable stench, or at least the worst of it. In the boards were circular holes covered by circular lids. There was no concession to modesty. Taking a deep breath, Dexter lifted one of the lids and dropped his coiled rope into the black interior. With luck, it would simply disappear for ever, even if it were searched for, which was extremely unlikely.
The hutments in which the men lived and slept were small squares, little more than a police cell, but each worker had one to himself. They were in rows of fifty, facing another fifty and thus forming a street. Each group of one hundred ran outwards from a main highway, and that was the residential section.
The main road led to the square, flanked by the washing units, the kitchens and the thatch-topped refectory tables. Avoiding the moonlight of the main square, sticking to the shadows of the buildings, Dexter returned to the church. The lock on the main door detained him for no more than a few minutes.
There was not much to it, as churches go, but for those running the labour camp it was a wise precaution to provide a safety valve in this deeply Catholic country. Dexter wondered idly how the resident priest would square his job with his creed.
He found what he wanted at the far back, behind the altar and to one side, in the vestry. Leaving the main door unlocked, he went back to the rows of huts where the workers snored away their few hours of repose.
From above, he had memorized the location of the cabin he wanted. He had seen the man emerge for his breakfast. Fifth cabin down, left-hand side, third street off the main road after the plaza.
There was no lock; just
a simple wooden latch. Dexter stepped inside and froze motionless to accustom his eyes to the almost complete darkness after the pale moonlight outside.
The hunched figure on the bunk snored on. Three minutes later, with complete night vision, Dexter could see the low hump under the coarse blanket. He crouched to remove something from his knapsack, then went towards the bed. The sweet odour of chloroform came up to him from the soaked pad in his hand.
The peon grunted once, tried to roll from side to side for a few seconds, then lapsed into deeper sleep. Dexter kept the pad in place to ensure hours of insensibility. When he was ready, he hefted the sleeping man over his shoulder in a fireman’s lift and flitted silently back the way he had come, to the church.