Dead Centre - Andy McNab [104]
He put his hands up. ‘Yes, yes, yes.’
Erasto must have heard me. I fucking hoped so. Awaale mumbled into the phone as I got back to my feet. He brought it down from his ear, and I saw the screen light dim.
‘He’s thinking.’
I leant closer to him, keeping my voice low. ‘Well, while he’s thinking, they’ll be dying. I’m going up there now. He’s fucking playing me, isn’t he?’
The pepper-pot nodded, almost imperceptibly. ‘You were expecting that, no? This is business. I heard your call today.’
‘If you still think this is business, Awaale, you’re missing the point. There are two kinds of people up in that compound: my friends, and your enemies. He’s not going to get more money out of me, so fuck the lot of you.’
I heard a shout from where the road met the harbour wall. A male voice, and angry. An AS fighter strode towards us, yelling the same word, over and over. I didn’t know what it was, but didn’t need Awaale to translate. We were in the shit and getting a bollocking, big-time.
AK slung over his shoulder, he gesticulated furiously at us as he moved closer. We stayed on our knees, kept our heads low, acting subservient. The AS kicked sand at us. I hoped he was just asking why the fuck we weren’t at prayers.
Awaale mumbled something in a high-pitched voice. It was pathetic. He shouldn’t have done it. Luckily the AS was too busy shouting and kicking sand to be able to hear. We tumbled to our feet, but kept submissive. Awaale started to walk away, back along the beach. I followed.
I glanced back. The AS picked up a couple of rocks and came after us, still yelling abuse. He hurled one of his freshly gathered missiles towards us. It missed me but hit Awaale square between his bony shoulder-blades. It must have hurt like fuck. I heard a grunt, then felt a kick on my left thigh. His sandal made contact first with the AK under the burqa. The magazine rattled. The sound was unmistakable. And I knew he would have felt the solid wooden stock.
He unslung his own weapon and stepped back. I started to raise my AK, but I knew I was a nanosecond behind the curve.
Awaale rushed past me, hand held high in the air. He brought the rock down hard on top of the AS warrior’s head.
The AS went down. Awaale dropped to his knees in the sand and the rock rose and fell again and again and again.
Awaale’s mobile started to ring.
The screen glowed in the sand. I picked it up.
‘Erasto? It’s Nick. Si o no? Si o no?’
Awaale stood over what was left of the AS, fighting for breath. He dropped the rock, knelt briefly beside the body and wiped his bloodied hand on the dead man’s shemagh.
I passed him the mobile. There was about fifteen seconds of waffle. He pulled off the head of his pepper-pot and threw it on the ground. ‘Erasto says yes.’
He began to fish his rings out of his pockets to put them back where they belonged.
I grabbed him with my spare hand, making sure I kept the other on the weapon. ‘Mate, I’m going now. By the time Erasto’s lads get here and you’ve sorted them out, we might have run out of time. If they do make it, remember this: the crew looking after the skiffs, the fire support group, they must not fire at anything coming up or down the road that leads to the harbour wall. Do you get that?’
‘Yes, Mr Nick. I know. They know.’
‘Tell them to fire left and right, if AS are following us. They can drop anything that moves left or right of us, but not down the middle.’
‘Yes, of course. No problem. Trust me. It will be a great victory.’
‘Good. Now keep the fucking noise down, and put your mobile on vibrate. Remember the diagram in the sand. Even if I’m too late to lift them, you must still come up, you must still support me. The fire support group down by the skiffs, they will still support you. All clear?’
‘Yes, Mr Nick. I have everything under control. We’re going to kill many, many al-Shabab.’
‘First we will rescue my friends. Killing al-Shabab is a bonus. You’ll be able to tell your war stories, but only if you keep your head. This is a rescue mission. This is the reason we’re here.’
‘Yes, yes. I remember.