Rogue’s March
To my youngest son, Hugh
I tell you, worthy little people, life’s riff-raff, forever beaten, fleeced and sweating, I warn you that when the great people of this world start loving you, it means that they are going to make sausage meat of you.
—LOUIS-FERDINAND CÉLINE
Empire is over,
Bedlam’s in charge—
Bushmen in tatters,
Consuls, and clerks;
Copy-book Bolshies,
Bagmen and narks:
Two-penny soldiers,
Playing at farce.
Muster the trumpets,
Let the drums start
Jeer in the bagpipes—
Play a rogue’s march.
—ANONYMOUS
Chapter One
A warm wind blew over the Mediterranean from the Algerian littoral, where the saffron light of late afternoon hung like dust above Mers-al-Kabir. The near waters of the port were as lifeless as brine, but beyond the breakwater the sea raced in the sunlight, drawing the eye out across its broken silver surfaces toward the horizon, where distances were suddenly lost and no ships were, only the immense empty mirror of sea and sky. At quayside a gray Soviet freighter inbound from Odessa creaked in partial shadow between two rusty coastal steamers, unloading its deck cargo of trucks, jeeps, and shop vans. The Cyrillic letters on the stern read Kirman Vishnevskiy. Four days earlier, it had sailed the Bosphorus declared for India. Now, under new orders, it was at Mers-al-Kabir. Anchored in the roads a hundred meters offshore was the East German freighter Potsdam, bound for West Africa.
On the quay stood a small olive-skinned Algerian, a clipboard under his arm, silently studying the Russian ship whose name he couldn’t pronounce. His name was Hamoud. On his shoulders were the chevrons of an Algerian customs official. His lips moved as he re-counted the vehicles but stopped again as his eyes came to rest amidships, where a series of long wooden crates were tied down, their shapes unfamiliar to him. A group of Russian seamen stood on the fantail, some with their shirts removed to catch the last rays of the sun. Their faces were shrimp-pink, but their shoulders and bellies were as colorless as plankton. One was eating an orange, gouging out great mouthfuls of fruit like a dog. Hamoud studied them disapprovingly and looked back at the strange crates, searching their flanks for letters, numbers, or symbols; but he saw nothing. As he watched, a small dusty Fiat with official license plates led a canvas-covered army truck onto the quay, lifting ribbons of dust from the worn footpaths along the tarmac. Hamoud turned as the caravan stopped near a set of stone steps that led to the sea below where a lighter waited for cargo for the East German freighter Potsdam, its clattering diesel engine pumping thick black smoke out to sea.
Three men left the Fiat, two Algerian and the third an African, a head shorter, wearing an olive twill uniform and green fabric boots with rubber soles. The uniform was new, like the cheap metal suitcase and the portable radio he lifted from the back seat. In his small size and his wrinkled new apparel, he looked to Hamoud like a child being sent off to school for the first time, pencilbox in hand. Six Algerian soldiers dropped to the roadbed, unshackled the tailgate, and began removing the wooden boxes.
“You’re late,” Hamoud said as he joined the tall Algerian near the Fiat.
“It’s that way with these Africans.” The Algerian officer wore neither rank nor insignia, but his cotton uniform was camouflaged in the brown and sand of the Algerian commandos. He was a captain, hawk-faced, with short wiry hair and a weeping black mustache. His soft brown eyes had a curious shine, as if he were just recovering from a fever. A long scar curved like a sickle up the cord of his neck and ended in a small fishtail under his left ear. He handed Hamoud the shipping manifests as he turned to look toward the East German freighter bound for West Africa. The African was also watching the ship from the top of the stone steps, his small figure dwarfed by the flooding light from the sea.
“Just him?” Hamoud asked.
“The others have influenza.”
Hamoud looked back at the African, who made no move to help the Algerian soldiers struggling with the heavy ordnance boxes.
“I fought too,” he said, “but I carried my own guns.” From the offices and warehouses other customs clerks, inspectors, and laborers were leaving for the day, moving toward the gate where the buses would carry them back to Oran. Hamoud watched them resentfully as he unfolded the invoices. His own motor scooter was broken, and he would have to return home by late bus, arriving after dark. He glanced at the African again before he studied the manifest. “Agricultural implements,” the document read. He knew it was a lie. “Machetes, hoes, mattocks, shovels, and barrows, disassembled.” All lies. The heaviest would be mortars, he guessed—mortars and base plates. All destined for “Bernard Delbeques, Frères, Pointe-Noire, Congo.” The deceit annoyed him as much as the crates’ late arrival, and he blamed the African. He looked at him again as he stood at the top of the steps, a small frightened figure looking out to sea.
Congo? Hamoud wondered, memory releasing the image of a rain forest deep in the equatorial jungle. Where had he seen it? At the cinema? In the coffeehouse magazines? Rivers and swamps, fever, rain and more rain shrouding the sky. In the warm Mediterranean sunlight his imagination faltered and he remembered only the chilling winter rains of Algiers, relieved suddenly that duty no longer obliged him to go where the guns were going, like the little African, and that there was nothing left to his life that might force him to go.
Life had sucked him dry, his wife had accused two days earlier. He had his freedom now, yes—he had earned it himself with his fellow Algerians, but now there was oppression of another kind. His useless motor scooter lay in the rubble of the rear courtyard in Oran, a piston broken. Chickens squatted on it by night, fouling the leather seat; his three daughters banged on it by day when his mother-in-law turned them out into the yard. She had broken her tooth on an almond and howled for three nights. “Can’t you take pity on her!” his wife had cried after he’d threatened to push the old woman’s bed out into the courtyard. “Has misery robbed you of all feeling? Has life sucked you dry!”
Attached to the documents on his clipboard were the secret manifests prepared by the ordnance officer at the Skida Commando School and countersigned by the ministry of interior. They wouldn’t accompany the shipping manifest. The guns were listed in a single column: ten boxes of 7.62 assault rifles, Kalashnikov, folded and fixed stock; five crates of Degtyarey light machine guns; two crates of 7.65 machine pistols; two crates of 9-mm Makarov pistols. He removed the copies and returned all but one to the Algerian captain. “Who is he?” he asked, nodding toward the African.
“A friend from the south,” the captain muttered, moving away from the stone steps. A secretive man, like most of the Algerian military who fought in the maquis and still bore the scars of French brutality, he disapproved of Hamoud’s indolent curiosity.
The African was the last to board the lighter. He passed his tin suitcase to one of the deckhands and stepped aboard uneasily, the radio cradled in his arms. The Algerian soldiers and dockworkers watched him silently. None of them could have afforded such a radio, and they looked on resentfully, as if he were a child bearing away the gifts paid for by their misery. The lines were cast off; the lighter drifted away from the stone steps and settled in the slough of the sea.
Hamoud watched from the quay as the lighter retreated in the distance toward the East German freighter. He had never been south of Djelfa, never beyond the Atlas mountains, and had never had the desire to go; but the thought of the African’s long journey had a peculiar, repellent fascination for him. He thought of the rain forest again—the leaden skies, the insect-filled hovels, and the sheets of devouring rain: lichen would multiply; ammunition would turn green, like moldy bread; flesh would rot from the bone.
He knew no more, imagination failed, remembering instead the brutal winter cold of the Italian mountains where he and other Algerian recruits had fought with a Moroccan infantry regiment. As homesick as a street orphan, he didn’t know who the Germans were; they meant less to him than the French troops, whose officers he despised. In his right knee he still carried the fragments of a French grenade from his days with the FLN fighting the French in the streets of Algiers. He had helped liberate Algeria, but he felt no kinship with the black man in the lighter. They had fought the French with primitive mousquetons purchased in Europe and brought in by night over the beaches of the Rif coast. No one had given them shortwave radios, wrinkled green uniforms, and Russian-made automatic weapons. He didn’t know the enemy the African would fight—French, British, Portuguese, or American—but it didn’t matter. They were all colonialists.
“Congo,” he muttered as the Algerian captain turned away toward the Fiat.
“Congo, then Angola,” the captain said over his shoulder.
“Angola?” Hamoud muttered dumbly as he watched the lighter draw alongside the East German freighter. He knew nothing about Congo or Angola, lying somewhere within that vast darkness to the south. But standing in the warm Mediterranean sunlight, he knew that there was nothing left to his own existence that would again make these foreign wars his own.
Four days later, on a Saturday, Hamoud was in the quiet back streets of Robertsau in Algiers. He entered an old apartment house in a cul-de-sac, climbed the narrow staircase, and waited silently for a few minutes on the third floor, looking down the stairwell to see if he had been followed. He rang the bell, and a dog growled fiercely from beyond the glass door. He rang a second time, the dog barked, and he moved away. The chain was drawn and Fachon’s ugly face appeared, damp with perspiration. He was a short, powerfully built Frenchman, as bald as a stone, with thick lips and pale blue eyes, a UN technician who worked at the port. He’d been sleeping, and the imprint of the pillow lay like a fern leaf on his cheek. He wore a pair of shorts and leather sandals; his white cotton shirt hung open across his chest, covered by a cuirass of gray hairs. He’d been up at dawn for his daily exercise—a walk along the deserted beach with his brindled German shepherd, followed by his morning swim in the chill gray Mediterranean. The dog now lay inside on the cool tiles of the areaway, the leash knotted to the handle of the inner glass door. Gouts of beach sand lay over the terrazzo floor; the brindled coat stood out in stiff spikes from the sea brine. The dog growled again, ears pricked, as Hamoud, frightened, followed Fachon across the entryway. The hallway smelled like a kennel to Hamoud, the flat beyond so tepid with its alien unknown Continental aromas that it smelled to him like sickness.
They sat on the rear balcony off the kitchen, out of the sunlight. Fachon brought a pitcher of lemonade from the refrigerator, his bald head now covered with a handkerchief knotted at the corners. The lemonade was watery and sour, but Hamoud drank it as he described the Russian ship he’d seen at Mers-al-Kabir. Fachon’s face was impassive as he told him of the deck cargo. He smoked a cigarette and then another, irritated at Hamoud’s imperfect memory, for which he was prepared to pay nothing at all. The streets were silent; the sun beat down on the roofs and balconies.
Where was the Russian ship going? Did he have a manifest? How many crates were unloaded?
Hamoud didn’t know. Fachon gave up in disgust, taking back the lemonade glasses and preparing to stand up. Only then did Hamoud take the damp papers from his waistband and hand them to Fachon, waiting hopefully as the Frenchman studied the secret gun manifest destined for Bernard Delbeques, Frères, Congo. He saw the interest stir in Fachon’s face.
“For the Congo and afterward Angola,” Hamoud added, trying to provoke additional interest from this Frenchman who had once lived in black Africa.
Fachon lifted his vulgar eyes toward Hamoud: “Guns for what?” he asked, taking the cigarette from his mouth. Hamoud’s clumsiness made his voice even harsher. “For what? The revolution? Independence? For what?”
Hamoud didn’t answer, studying the Frenchman’s eyes. He remembered then where he had seen the equatorial forests. There was a large brightly colored painting of the African jungle in Fachon’s salon. He had once lived in Cameroon. He had lived in a well-screened cottage shaded by jacaranda and flowering hibiscus at the edge of the coastal savannahs. His shadowy porch looked down laterite lanes winding between the trees toward the wide silk of parrot-green river which the afternoon sun turned to bronze when the women and young girls came to bathe. Now he kept a dog and walked the beach at dawn before the Algerian urchins and beggars came to claim it.
“Que voulez-vous?” Fachon asked, provoked to cruelty by Hamoud’s awkward silence. “Avec de la merde, on ne fait pas de la menthe. You don’t make these fine things with shit, do you?”
Hamoud nodded blankly, his olive face suddenly warm with shame. Fachon would keep the manifest and pay him for it, even if the guns were intended for African insurgents, not Russian-equipped armies; but he had intruded too far into this curious Frenchman’s personal life, that little space of privacy, like their little gardens and private clubs in whose sanctuary Hamoud would be regarded as a savage and infidel too, like that little African whom Hamoud now described for him.
He had even managed to learn his name from an Algerian officer who’d come the following day—he was Lieutenant Bernardo dos Santos of the Movimento Popular de Libertação de Angola—but Fachon thought the name unimportant. Hamoud left the flat with the slip on which he’d written the name still in his pocket.
Chapter Two
Andy Reddish was alone in his villa that Saturday evening and had just finished dressing for a diplomatic reception when the telephone interrupted him in the downstairs hall. Within the walled courtyard outside the night guard was preparing his evening mwamba on the charcoal stove under the avocado tree shading the study window. The lamps had been lit in the downstairs rooms by the houseboy before he’d pedaled his bicycle out the gate through the warm African dusk toward the sprawling native commune of Malunga on the fringes of the capital, the family laundry freshly washed and bundled on the rear seat.
He hadn’t known the houseboy had used the washing machine that afternoon. The roof reservoir had emptied before he’d finished his shower, like the hot-water tank; now he couldn’t find the key to the liquor cabinet. He could overlook the half-finished shower but he wanted a drink.
He took the call in the downstairs study, still pulling on his seersucker jacket. An American diplomat had been kidnapped in Khartoum two days earlier, and the crisis had dominated the incoming cable traffic for two days as Washington brought sleepy embassies to life across the continent with instructions for action and support. He thought the call might be from the communications watch officer at the embassy. As acting station chief in Haversham’s absence, he’d twice been summoned earlier that day.
But the call wasn’t from the embassy. The voice belonged to a frightened African who sounded vaguely familiar but who refused to identify himself.
“That’s right, this is Reddish. Who’s this?” In a sprawling African nation devastated three times by rebellion during the first years of independence, anonymous voices usually brought warnings of impending coups or foreign plots; and after four years Reddish had heard them all. Now he listened morosely as his caller told him the army had guns brought in from Congo-Brazzaville and was preparing to stir up trouble. Did he understand what that meant—for the President, for him, for the Americans?
“Yeah, I get the message, friend,” he drawled in a vulgar voice calculated to discourage whispered intimacies, whether from bored embassy wives or Third World diplomats looking for the American bagman. “Loud and clear, like the last time or whenever it was, but it’s not my problem. You’ve got the wrong number. Try the police.” He turned, pushing his arm through his jacket, looking out through the window at the night watchman’s fire under the avocado tree.
“Mais non, non,” the whispered voice came back, very shocked. “C’est M’sieur Reddish?”
“That’s right, Reddish. Like last time. So what? Who the hell’s this?”
His caller renewed his warning: the army was preparing to overthrow the President. Reddish still couldn’t place the voice. There were few in positions of power whose voice he wouldn’t have recognized. For nearly four years their history had been his history, their lives grown over his own like a kind of scrofula, a canker, separating him from his own past.
“C’est votre ami, your old friend,” the voice continued in an agonized whisper. “Vous me connaissez très bien—très, très bien.”
For an instant, the voice was fleetingly familiar, but Reddish was impatient: “You’ve got the wrong man, friend. Sorry. Why don’t you try the internal security directorate. Maybe they can help you.” He looked across the room. Atop the locked liquor cabinet, the houseboy had set out the ice bucket, soda siphon, and a single glass on the silver tray, but no bottle.
“Mais non, non,” the voice pleaded. “C’est à vous, mon ami! It’s up to you, the Americans! The paratroopers have guns, Russian guns, brought in from across the river! I tell you it’s true. The paras and their mercenaries too! The first trucks have gone out. Tomorrow they’ll send more. It’s up to you, you the Americans! Vous êtes notre espérance, notre conscience! Vous, mon ami! Il faut donner toute votre puissance au president! We want no more rebellions, no more anarchy!”
The emotion of the appeal was suddenly as familiar as the voice, and for the first time a face swam into focus—the gold-rimmed spectacles, the dark face, the damp, embarrassed toffee-colored eyes.
“Look,” Reddish said, “if you’ve got something to say to me, maybe we’d better meet someplace.”
“There’s no time. They’re watching me. They know, you see. C’est à vous, mon ami.”
Somewhere off in the background a goat cried out, two women were shouting in Lingala, but then a truck engine revved up, drowning out everything else. The connection was broken.
Reddish stood with the dead phone in his hand, remembering too late his caller’s name. He was Mr. Banda, an obscure little civil servant who worked in a dusty little office in customs clearing incoming shipments. Reddish had once done him a favor, a small thing, of little consequence at the time, but one the older man had never forgotten.
During the Simba rebellions, Banda had been assigned to a provincial town in the north, where he’d been captured, imprisoned, and sentenced to death by the rebels. The death sentence hadn’t been carried out by the time the town had been liberated by government troops. The prison had been blown to rubble by army mortars, but Banda had escaped, bloody yet alive. The army was systematically killing the wounded in the small rural hospital, and Banda had taken refuge in the deserted UN compound, where he was discovered by the team of UN doctors and nurses who reoccupied the clinic. By then his name had appeared on the army death list as a rebel collaborator.
When Reddish visited the town following the Simba retreat, a dossier had been assembled on Banda’s behalf by the sympathetic UN staff—attestations and affidavits gathered among the townspeople, all duly signed or thumbprinted, swearing to Banda’s imprisonment by the rebels. The senior UN doctor, a nervous Austrian, had tried to present the dossier to the army commander, who refused to meet with him. The doctor asked Reddish to discuss Banda’s case with the colonel. It was filthy hot that day and Reddish’s C-130 was waiting at the airfield. He looked at the dossier, all tricked up with red ribbons, green ink, and official cachets, the way the UN would do it, guessed that it wouldn’t solve Banda’s problem with a drunken, brutal army colonel who’d twice been humiliated by the rebels in battle, and he had done the simpler thing, smuggling Banda through the military roadblocks in his borrowed Landrover and flying him back to Kinshasa in the C-130 for hospitalization.
Banda was reinstated at the ministry of interior after his convalescence. Reddish saw him from time to time on the streets and had been invited to meet his family. He’d attended his daughter’s wedding. Banda, like many other minor officials, had become effusively pro-American, part of a small frightened middle class who found in American military and economic support their only escape from the bloody legacy left them by the Belgians. Maimed by the past and frightened by the future, they were patriots of the status quo, even a corrupt or oppressive one, which protected them against the mindless anarchy of the truly dispossessed and the waiting sedition of the Russians and Cubans across the river. Their fears, like those of the pro-Western regime, were those American success hadn’t solved.
Night had fallen beyond the windows. The watchman’s fire blazed brightly in the side garden. Reddish left the villa and walked out into the darkness, light with wood smoke, to stand near the iron gate listening. Trucks were being sent out now, Banda had said, but sent where? To do what? That made as little sense as the infiltration of foreign guns from across the river. What kept the paratroopers and the army loyal wasn’t lack of guns, but tribal antagonisms and fear of Western reaction if they smashed parliamentary rule and toppled a pro-Western regime.
The mercenary threat made even less sense. Less than two dozen were left in the country and all of them in prison, a handful of killers and psychopaths rotting in their felons’ rags in the maximum security dungeon at the para camp on the hilltop behind the city. He knew a few of them, foul-mouthed liars and braggarts, most of them; others pathetic in their weaknesses, like Cobby Molloy and Rudy Templer, the two Brits who once hung around the airstrip at Stanleyville before the mercenary rebellions, cadging cigarettes and whiskey from the incoming C-130 crews hauling in ammo, offering free favors from their fifteen-year-old bush bunnies in return. From time to time he still received appeals for his help, smuggled out of prison and posted to the embassy in dirty envelopes, his name misspelled.
Standing at the gate, he heard only the sound of traffic on the boulevard a few blocks away. He returned to the study and telephoned Yvon Kadima, the minister of interior, his controlled asset. There was no answer on his private line at the ministry. He called his villa, and the houseboy who answered told him Kadima was still at his office. Kadima kept a suite at the old Portuguese hotel where he entertained his métisse concubines and mistresses, but if he was there, he was probably drinking.
“Tell him Robert called,” Reddish said irritably. “Tell him he can reach me at home after ten.”
He called Bintu, the President’s chef du cabinet and another controlled asset. The switchboard operator said Bintu had gone to the coast for the weekend. He searched the drawers of the desk for the local phone directory. Banda’s name wasn’t listed. He looked instead for the spare key to the liquor cabinet, but couldn’t find that either. A man without memory is like a lizard without legs, he recalled, taking out the screwdriver. The President had told him that, at their first meeting nearly four years earlier, but it wasn’t until later that he’d finally understood what he meant. A man without memory wouldn’t survive his enemies.
He knew what Banda’s memory was. The poor little bastard was scared to death of the army.
The liquor cabinet lock was single-toothed and tightly mortised. He tried to jimmy it with the screwdriver, but the teak doors were stouter than the old metal and the tooth snapped off. Only after he brought out the whiskey bottle from the cabinet, opened it, and picked up the glass did he see the missing key, lying there on the napkin in front of the soda siphon where the houseboy had left it, concealed from the discovery of the cook. From separate Kwilu tribes, they mistrusted each other, each complaining of the other’s peculations. Tired of their accusations but unwilling to fire either, he’d taken possession of both pantry and liquor cabinet keys, but frequently misplaced them. When he did, they were always returned to him on the sly, like the key on the napkin, the truce kept alive.
But he’d broken the lock. “God damn it,” he swore softly. The cabinet had been made in Saigon, the only piece he’d brought back with him.
Reddish was of medium height, with sandy hair receding from a high sunburned forehead and a crooked nose that looked as if it had been broken a few times over the years and never reset properly. The eyes were neutral. He was in his mid-forties, a bit thick in the waist, his hair thinning on top. His suits were usually rumpled and nondescript. They were bought off the rack from a Baltimore wholesaler every three or four years during home leave and never settled into comfortably until they were out of fashion. He looked like a man already reconciled to whatever face or destiny the age of fifty would settle upon him, a man who probably drank and smoked too much, whose ambition might have slipped some since his divorce, like his hairline and tennis game; but he was an intelligence officer, not a career diplomat, and for him appearances didn’t count for much. He’d joined the overseas ranks as a case officer after five years as a weapons expert in the Agency’s technical services division, where appearances hadn’t counted for much either. To his foreign colleagues, he was simply another diplomat. He stood with three of them now near the rear wall of the Belgian Ambassador’s residence, come to say farewell to the departing Belgian counselor.
“Terrible about your chap in Khartoum,” the Pakistani Ambassador said.
“Very bad news,” agreed Abdul-Aziz, the Egyptian chargé.
“Have you any information?” inquired Federov, the Soviet Ambassador.
“No,” Reddish said, his mind elsewhere. “Nothing at all.”
“A pity,” Federov murmured.
“The PLO office in Damascus denies any knowledge,” Abdul-Aziz offered consolingly.
“It’s impossible to know which terrorists are doing what,” the Pakistani complained. “Who blew up the Portuguese oil tanks at Luanda? The MPLA claimed credit. So did GRAE.”
“Freedom fighters, not terrorists,” Abdul-Aziz disagreed.
“Terrorists,” the Pakistani insisted, smiling slyly at Federov, who said nothing. The Russian was short and paunchy, with stiff gray hair and a scholarly squint that sometimes stirred mysteriously in the gray eyes lurking behind the steel-rimmed spectacles. His peers sometimes found the squint an annoyance, a cipher they couldn’t read. Did it signal myopia, contempt, or secret amusement at possession of the facts they didn’t know? Vanity sometimes provoked the more aggressive to thrust and parry, as the Pakistani was doing now. “When they’re our chaps, they’re freedom fighters,” he said to Federov. “When they’re yours, they’re terrorists. You don’t agree it wasn’t terrorism that blew up those oil tanks?”
“I don’t know that I disagree,” Federov replied politely.
“Oh, but you must disagree,” the Pakistani chided, “otherwise what would Moscow say?” His brown eyes darted toward Reddish, inviting his complicity. “Isn’t it Moscow that supplies those MPLA chaps across the river with rockets?” Reddish said nothing, looking away. A provoked Soviet diplomat was one who’d stopped thinking, retreating clumsily into the trenches, dug in behind the official line, but it wasn’t the thunder of cold war artillery Reddish wanted to hear. Federov was only interesting when he thought quietly aloud, as he sometimes did when he and Reddish talked together, but the Pakistani’s vanity made that impossible.
Federov asked the Pakistani when his home leave commenced.
“Oh you can’t slip out of it that easily, old chap.” The Pakistani laughed.
“How is the weather now in Karachi?” Abdul-Aziz asked.
“Islamabad,” the Pakistani corrected immediately.
Federov’s reticence was characteristic. He had nothing to gain from cocktail party debates, unlike the Pakistani, who thrived on them. The latter’s principal task was to sell used and obsolete textile machinery to the Africans while keeping open the local market to cheap Pakistani textiles made on more modern Swiss machines. Apart from that, his diplomatic triumphs were merely personal, like the silver-plated cups and cigarette cases he won playing bridge at the Belgian Club, where he could be found four nights a week.
Federov’s situation was more delicate, the tactics more complex, the stakes higher. The government was hostile, the Soviet mission small, his staff curtailed, his front gates monitored, like his telephone and his small talk. If he erred, the Soviet mission would grow smaller. So in his silence Federov belonged much less to the gossip of the moment than the other diplomats; in his presence Reddish sometimes sensed a figure of more remote but no less certain future expectations, like a priest practicing among lepers.
“It will be splendid in the hills,” the Pakistani was saying, “a relief from this terrible heat, but then I’d fancy anyplace else on earth these days, wouldn’t you?”
Federov offered no comment. Reddish looked with Abdul-Aziz across the terrace toward the french doors where more guests were emerging. More than a hundred were already assembled, but Reddish saw no local military officers. Federov, his glass empty, gestured to a white-coated Congolese waiter carrying a tray of drinks, but couldn’t catch his eye. From ten feet away, Richter, the East German chargé, saw the motion, plunged after the waiter, and fetched him back.
“Please,” Federov insisted, embarrassed by Richter’s deference, offering the lowered tray to his companions, “after you.”
Richter remained with them, tall and dour, saying nothing. A minute later the Spanish Ambassador joined them too, but by mistake. He’d seen the Pakistani but not the others, whose backs were turned; now he was trapped with Federov and Richter, two men he scrupulously avoided. He’d served in an Eastern European capital, and the experience had been a humiliating one. He made the most of his current ambush, however, shaking hands all around, slavishly following protocol. He was small and dark-haired, nattily dressed in a blue blazer and ascot, as if he’d just come from his boat on the river, where he entertained the Scandinavian secretaries and the nurses from the Swedish hospital. His energies were much more muscular than inquisitive, probably the source of his embarrassment in Bucharest, Reddish sometimes thought. A hunter and horseman, he kept an Arabian stallion stabled near the coast on a Belgian-owned beef ranch. In Karachi, he’d played polo and learned to shoot from a pony. The protocol dispensed with, he disappeared immediately, pulling the Pakistani after him. Richter’s reproachful eyes, unlike Federov’s, moved with them.
“What was it we were talking about?” the Russian now asked, turning to Abdul-Aziz.
The Egyptian couldn’t remember. “The American in Khartoum?”
“Before that.”
Federov looked at Reddish.
“Tribes,” Reddish said, naming a small rebellious tribe living high in the hills near Lake Tanganyika on the remote eastern frontier. An article in the daily Le Matin a few days earlier had claimed Peking was smuggling them guns from across the lake. The story had been planted by the Republic of China’s embassy press officer, but Reddish doubted that Federov knew that. The President feared Peking as much as Moscow, and the Taiwanese Embassy did what it could to keep those fears lively.
“You’ve been there?” Federov asked.
“No, no one’s been there for years.”
“Bandits then?”
Reddish said, “The Belgians were never able to pacify them. They just left them alone, like this government.”
“And the story in Le Matin?”
“Very doubtful.”
Federov nodded, satisfied, the fact tucked away. Ethnology interested him; so did geography; he never asked the same question twice, an uncommon talent in a capital where the memory of small talk seldom survived from one cocktail party to the next. After a year in the country, he understood far more of its tribal divisions than the other diplomats Reddish knew. He’d once told Reddish that he’d taught geography and natural sciences in a small town in the Urals before joining the diplomatic cadres. His interest wasn’t merely scholarly: internal politics made little sense without some sense of the more complex tribal declensions. He’d also admitted that he read a great deal to keep himself occupied, as genuine a concession of professional failure as Federov had ever made to anyone—the hostility of the government, separation from his wife in Moscow, and the small prison his local world had become, no larger than his tiny office, the small flat in the chancellery a few steps away, and the dusty compound yard outside, where he’d planted a small garden, trying to grow tomatoes and cucumbers. At receptions such as this one, where the Eastern European diplomats greeted him like curates receiving an archbishop, his power seemed more real; but the impression was illusory, surrendered as quickly as the trailing car from the internal security directorate picked up his limousine outside the front gate and returned with him to the Soviet mission.
“Would the Tanzanians allow them to send guns?” Abdul-Aziz asked. Federov had served in Dar es Salaam before his current posting.
The eyebrows lifted. “The Chinese? No. Never.” His voice was brusque. Reddish never talked to Federov about Peking. Soviet and Chinese troops had clashed along the Ussuri River earlier in the year and along the Sinkiang frontier a month later. Moscow’s diplomatic offensive to further isolate China in Europe and the Third World was then under way, the principal priority of Soviet foreign policy.
Reddish said, “The problem is that Dar can’t control its frontiers any better than this government can.”
“True, but they can control the Chinese.”
“But you’re no longer in Dar to remind them.”
“But this government doesn’t recognize Peking either,” Federov replied with a smile. The moon broke from behind the clouds, lighting up the sloping hillside behind the terrace. “Would you say that was my doing?” he added wryly.
“Maybe it was you that planted that story in Le Matin,” Reddish suggested.
Federov laughed, his eyes lifted toward the tropical moon. He’d fared as poorly at the hands of Le Matin’s editors as Peking had. Richter said something in Russian, but Federov only shook his head. “Mr. Reddish was making a joke,” he explained in English.
“Georgy! Oh, Georgy!” Cecil, the British Ambassador, raised a gangling arm from a circle of diplomats nearby and came to fetch Federov. “Sorry, but we’ve a bit of a problem with the Bulgarian. I wonder if I might borrow your good offices.” The diplomatic corps was meeting at Monday noon, a vin d’honneur for a departing envoy, but the Bulgarian chargé, newly arrived, was reluctant to cooperate, since Sofia didn’t maintain diplomatic relations with the envoy’s nation. “I wonder if you might talk to him. I suspect he may be a bit confused.”
Left alone, Reddish moved away from the rear wall, drink in hand, searching for a familiar African face. He saw no army officers. Most of the Africans present were the young technocrats the departing Belgian had cultivated, the ex-socialists from the university who were now part of the detribalized intelligentsia, men vaguely anti-Western in everything but style and taste.
Bena Mercedes, his friend Nyembo called them—the Mercedes clan.
He made his way around the edge of the terrace, moving toward the side entrance from which he could slip away into the darkness without being noticed.
“Not leaving already, are you, Reddish,” a sly voice called to him from the dark corner near the terrace steps. “How lucky you are. That late already?” Guy Armand, the French counselor, leaned indolently against the stone wall, ankles crossed, drink against his chest. A dark-haired woman stood with him, her face partially in shadow. Reddish joined them in passing, and Armand introduced them with a casual wave of his hand. “Madame Bonnard has just arrived from Paris, visiting the Houlets. I was pointing out the celebrities while we waited for the ambassador to leave. Were you at the Houlets’ for drinks the other evening?”
“No, sorry.”
“Then you and Madame Bonnard haven’t met. I was trying to identify a few cabinet ministers for her, but none seems to have come.” Armand was tall, his pale skin as dry as parchment, the color now gone from thinning hair that had once been blond. In the lapel of his jacket was a French military rosette, like the souvenir of some lost childhood. He was a faithful disciple of de Gaulle’s stratégie tous azimuts, the enemies everywhere policy which allowed him to treat American diplomats with as much suspicion as the Russians; in his case, the practice not only promoted French grandeur but gave full rein to his talent for duplicity and conceit. “I’ve known such men,” the American Ambassador, Walter Bondurant, had once scrawled across a memo of conversation with Armand sent him by Simon Lowenthal, the embassy political counselor, “an exhausted, malicious mind, drinking its own hemlock. Please send me no more of these Cartesian epigrams.”
“We came early, God knows why,” Armand continued, looking sleepily at the Frenchwoman as if she might remember.
“The Houlets brought us,” she reminded him.
“Oh yes, so they did. In the absence of the cabinet, I suppose Mr. Reddish might pass for a celebrity. I should have mentioned that.”
“Oh? Is he?”
“Oh yes. He’s been here longer than any of us,” Armand said dryly. “The senior American diplomat north of the Zambezi, a virtual walking encyclopedia of all that’s happened here. Only he never shares it with us, you see. Quite selfish in his seniority.”
“And how long has it been,” asked Madame Bonnard. Her hair was dark and cut short. Reddish was uncomfortably aware of her perfume.
“Almost four years.”
“Four years.” Armand gave a brittle laugh, and Reddish saw her mouth stiffen, her eyes still lifted toward him. “And I believe Lowenthal told me you were leaving soon. Is that true? Lucky fellow. Where will they send you next—Africa again? You’ve earned your pardon, God knows. All of us have.”
“Is it so bad as that?” she asked, turning to confront Armand.
“Oh I’m absolutely the wrong person to ask. Reddish is leaving. Ask him. Going to an embassy of your own now, are you?” He put down his drink carelessly and opened his cigarette case. “An African embassy, no doubt. That’s the recognition we get, isn’t it? Twenty years in a brothel and they promote you by making you its mistress.” He laughed and turned away to light his cigarette. “But we must have a long talk before you go,” he resumed, suddenly serious, “just the two of us. Or maybe you’d prefer a small dinner.”
He turned to the Frenchwoman. “Diplomats tend to be much more frank with one another on the eve of their departure, much more honest. In places like this, we all tend to become very much the same, very old, very dull, very cynical. But I wouldn’t say Reddish has become the oldest of us all. No—quite the contrary. He’s managed to keep quite young, but then most bachelors do, don’t they?”
“And honest too, I suppose,” she said calmly, “or is he like you?”
“Oh no, not like me.” Armand laughed, surprised but pleased. “Not at all like me—”
“Only because you’re not a bachelor?” she said coolly, looking away across the terrace, her interest in the conversation ended.
“Armand speaks for himself,” Reddish told her. “I hope you enjoy your visit.”
“Thank you. That’s very kind.”
Reddish moved down the steps and across the lawn. On the dark road outside the gate, he heard a rumble from the east and stopped to listen. It came a second time, but he ignored it, walking on toward his car. It was the sound of a thunderstorm moving out across the savannahs.
Chapter Three
Reddish didn’t sleep well. It was a little after five o’clock on Sunday morning when his bedside phone woke him. He groped for the receiver on the bedside table and rolled to his side without turning on the light. The communications watch officer was calling from the embassy. “Sorry to get you up like this but I thought I’d better call. I’ve got something.”
Reddish sat up. “Local?”
“No, sir. Khartoum. I’ve got an instruction for you.”
“That’s all?”
“Yes, sir. That’s it.”
“Thanks. I’ll be in about eight.”
He dressed in the darkness and went downstairs to put the coffeepot on while he shaved. Nothing during the night at the embassy, he thought, standing at the bathroom mirror. Banda hadn’t telephoned again; neither Kadima nor Bintu had returned his calls. Even the villa seemed unnaturally silent. If there were those within the army plotting to bring down the government, the Americans would be the last to know, as much a target as a corrupt president or a paralyzed parliament. Isolation was the price most often paid for political success, and the embassy had been successful. In their success, they’d come to know everything about the country but the secret despairing faces of the opposition, those who mistrusted the Americans as much as Banda and others mistrusted the Russians and Cubans across the river.
He waited in the kitchen for the dawn to come. As the first gray light came into the back garden along the thorn-grown wall, he carried his coffee cup out to the rear patio. The dew was heavy in the grass and the first finches were moving in the shrubbery. He’d once been a late riser, but in recent years, living alone, he was usually up and about at this hour. Solitude didn’t explain it.
Growing up in a small town in Wisconsin, he had heard his father moving about in the morning darkness in the downstairs kitchen in the same way, before his mother was awake, and solitude hadn’t explained that either. He’d worried about his father then, afraid his parents were getting a divorce, that his father was losing his job or the house, or had cancer like the dying machinist next door. Lying in his upstairs bedroom, half awake as he speculated about what might be making his father old before his time, he would hear him lighting the wood stove, filling the coffeepot, fetching the paper in, and in the winter filling the bird feeders in the crabapple tree outside the kitchen door. On those mornings when they’d gone duck or grouse hunting together, he’d shared the chilly kitchen with him, but those mornings were different. The stars were still out, the icy air took your breath away, and even the frying bacon and the coffee bubbling on the stove had a special aroma, not to be found on any ordinary morning.
The summer before Reddish went off to college, he took a job operating a stamping machine at the same corrugated box factory where his father worked as an accountant. The noise was deafening, the work brutal. After the first hour, his mind went blank, numb with boredom as he watched the time clock, not the clock just inside the employee entrance on the loading dock, but the office clock on the rear wall of the glass-windowed enclosure where his father and two other accountants sat, summer and winter alike, bent over their desks, the light always the same. It was the sight of that silent gray figure hunched over his ledgers that finally explained for Reddish his father’s early-morning restlessness. He told himself then that he would escape the world that had trapped his father; yet now, twenty-five years later, his restlessness was the same.
He left his coffee cup in the sink and drove out the front gate. The tree-shaded villas nearby, occupied by government ministers and diplomats, were still silent at this hour. A few arriving cooks and houseboys stirred along the roadbed under the trees. He turned away from the embassy and drove out the empty boulevard toward the sprawling police camp at Bakole. He saw no signs of activity and drove into the hills past army headquarters, deserted at this hour except for a single Mercedes parked near the front steps. He followed the tarmac higher and circled the paramilitary cantonment on the adjacent hilltop where the mercenaries were imprisoned. They were still an embarrassment to the regime, a political problem for which no one had found a solution. The President, like the army, was too frightened of European reaction to hang them and too terrified of their bloody talent for retribution to pardon them; so they rotted in prison, a sure sign of everything else that was wrong with the regime.
The gates to the para camp were open, the barriers lifted, the motor pool filled with idle and disabled vehicles. The gate guards were gossiping with old women and young girls from the nearby village who brought fruit and vegetables to sell at the gate.
He drove back down the hill to the presidential compound. The ornamental gates were drawn closed, the white ducal villa beyond the slope of green lawn somnolent in the morning light. The royal peacocks hadn’t yet been released from the aviary to parade under the trees and along the walks. On the side terrace, a solitary gardener was stooping to turn on the underground sprinkler system, a gift from the same Belgian société that built the small lake and the Swiss-chalet boathouse tucked away in the corner of the grounds, invisible from the gate. The same firm had been awarded the contract for improving the municipal water system, but progress had been slow. The cités where the Africans lived still had their communal faucets, Reddish his roof tank.
A handful of ragged Africans were already gathered on the bare earth under a tulip tree, some holding ten-franc copybooks, others folded newspapers concealing their petitions. Most wanted jobs, medical treatment, or the release of imprisoned relatives. A few simply wanted money, relief from the evil eye, or to pay homage to their president. They’d spent the night there sleeping on scraps of cardboard. By eleven o’clock, when the gates opened and the President’s motorcade swept by, speeding him to mass at the old Belgian-built cathedral, they would have been dispersed, their petitions received to be burned in the incinerator at the guard barracks, the supplicants sent back down the hillside, the President spared the humiliation of their rags and tatters, the contagion of their nameless diseases. But even as the speeding Mercedes roared by them far down the hill or along the boulevard, they would turn to greet him, their spirits lifted from the roadside dust for a moment to flap their rags at the splendor such men make across the Africans’ miserable planet in whose ancient, abiding helplessness there seemed to be no such thing as moral outrage.
Reddish circled the stone kiosk near the gatehouse, ignored by the presidential guards, who wore chrome-plated helmets and carried newly arrived American M-16 rifles. He drove back toward the city. He’d once made the same reconnaissance each night, accompanying the chief of the internal security directorate on his rounds as he locked up the city each night for an uneasy President, making certain that the capital was quiet, the police on duty or safely dispersed, the mud and tin hovels of the native communes asleep with their misery, the army secure in its barracks. The midnight patrol had ended in the study of the presidential villa, where they reported to the old man and his chef du cabinet, but that was before his power had been consolidated and his own security apparatus in place.
He turned off the main boulevard to idle past the Soviet and East German embassies. They were as peaceful as the surrounding streets, their gates locked. The gray shutters were drawn; the courtyards empty. Two policemen sat on the curb opposite each gate watching the compounds. They didn’t turn as Reddish drove past.
At the grand marché the morning sun had broken through the overcast, the quick yellow light flooding the open square. African women were unloading their produce in the stalls; trucks from the interior were discharging cargo in the narrow lanes. Five sleepy soldiers in jungle-green twill, on furlough from the interior, climbed from beneath the canvas of an old Mercedes truck and straggled off stiffly, still cramped from their long journey, still carrying their weapons. A few street orphans who made the marché