Andy McNab - Deep Black
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- Название:Deep Black
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- Год:неизвестен
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Deep Black: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация
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I started to put on my kit, now just damp rather than completely soaking, over the clothes we'd been given. I'd decided to take everything except the sacks and my PVC special. Who knew how this eat-and-talk fest would end?
Nuhanovic said nothing as Jerry followed my example, just watched in mild amusement. We finished with our parkas, zipped up as tight as they would go. As we followed him back down the stairs, he explained the layout of the place as if we'd just arrived for a dinner party. 'It was built by a very wealthy Turkish trader in your sixteenth century. It hasn't changed that much.'
I couldn't see anyone under the veranda as we headed across the visitors' courtyard to a doorway where the two buildings met, but I knew they were out there somewhere in the darkness.
Inside, his oil lamp bathed the wide stone passageway with light, and his voice echoed as he carried on his pre-dinner-party waffle. 'The story is that the trader's wife was so beautiful he didn't want anyone to see her, so he built this house in the middle of nowhere. He was a jealous man, you see. But it still wasn't enough, so he also planted the forest to prevent even the house being seen.'
'That why you live here?'
He looked at me with that strange half-smile. 'I live for my work, Nick. I am not blessed with a beautiful wife…'
The door at the end of the passageway opened on to the family courtyard. The building facing us was flanked left and right by the exterior walls. Set in the centre of the one to the right were the coach doors. We followed him over the cobblestones, past another set of heavy doors. Ahead of us, a light glowed behind a window.
'But I am a nomad, Nick. I do not live anywhere. I move from place to place. Concealment is my greatest weapon, just as it is for the aggressors who avoid justice for their war crimes. It seems I have something in common with my old enemy, no?'
My eyes were fixed on the glow from the window. We stepped up on to the wooden veranda and he opened the door; this time he motioned for us to leave our boots outside. The threshold was two feet high. 'Mind your toes.' He lowered the lamp a little. 'These are designed to keep little children in the rooms, but they claim a lot of flesh from adult feet.'
We were in a large square room. Fragrant perfume wafted from a pair of oil lamps in each of the far corners. Here, too, low seating ran the entire length of two walls. A fire raged in the centre of the third.
Waiting for us in the centre of the rug-covered floor were three large cushions set round a big brass tray, on which were a coffee pot, glasses, and a medium-sized brown-paper bag.
93
We all took our coats off and hung them on the wall hooks to the left of the door. He was dressed in a simple black dishdash, black trousers and socks. My socks had dried like cardboard; it wouldn't be long before they warmed up and started stinking the place out.
This room was also very plain, decorated only with some framed verses from the Qurran. The light from the two oil lamps was enough to show that although Nuhanovic's skin wasn't translucent like Benzil's it was almost unnaturally clear and wrinkle-free.
The top panel of the door to our left was a decorative carved grille. We could hear the clanking of pans and the good-humoured murmur of people at work coming from the other side of it; even better, we could smell food.
Nuhanovic held out a bony hand to Jerry. 'Welcome.'
Then he took another step forward and shook my hand too. His grip wasn't firm, but it was quite obvious that, like Benzil, his strength was in his head; he didn't need it anywhere else. In this light, and up close, his dark brown eyes were even more piercing. They didn't roam, they looked where they wanted to look and stayed there until they'd seen enough.
'Nick, Jerry, please…' He gestured towards the cushions. 'Welcome.' He had his own teeth, but no teeth were that naturally white.
Jerry and I sat cross-legged with our backs to the door. He took the cushion opposite, the paper bag to his left, the coffee to his right, and started pouring the heavily perfumed brew, holding the spout right near the glass then lifting it away steeply. It was like watching some kind of ceremonial ritual.
I accepted a glass. His hands were still as perfectly manicured as they were in the 'Chetnik Mama' picture.
The coffee tasted just the way it smelt, so I added a couple more lumps of crystallized brown sugar.
Nuhanovic passed a glass to Jerry and once again glanced sympathetically at his damaged face. 'This has been an eventful time for you both. My people will discover what has happened to Ramzi and Benzil. I'm sure Nasir has taken care of everything; he normally does.'
He fixed us each in turn with his steady gaze, his eyes giving nothing away. 'But please explain to me again, in greater detail, the events that have beset you.'
For the next ten minutes his gaze only shifted once from my face, to pour more coffee for himself and Jerry. I gave him the edited version of why we'd gone to Baghdad, how we'd come to meet Benzil, seen Goatee, and what had subsequently led us here – Jerry for his picture, me because Nuhanovic found it interesting that I was at the cement factory.
He shook his head gently and listened while pouring again for Jerry. I left my glass a third full. Once you've emptied it, the host's duty is to offer a refill, and I'd had enough. I'd managed to avoid the perfumed shit for the whole of this job, and I wasn't about to get hit by it now.
I didn't want to waste any more time talking about things that didn't matter. I didn't know how much of it we had. 'Our passports, phone, money… Will we get them back?' I smiled. 'One of the curses of the West. We feel naked without them.'
He replaced his glass delicately on the tray in front of him, and dropped his hands on to his knees. 'Of course. When you leave. And of course you are free to go whenever you wish. I'm sure Ramzi explained that we do nothing here that might help our enemies to trace us. We use no electronics, no TV, no phones, no satellite technology. No devices of the kind that might bring a bomb down on my head.' He paused, and seemed to be reserving his little half-smile for me personally. 'You understand my concern, Nick, I am certain.'
I returned his smile as he picked up his glass.
'My people are not pleased that I wanted to meet with you. They think you could be here to kill me.' He took an appreciative sip and studied us both. 'I've told them that if that is God's will, then so be it. But the fact is, I wish to talk with you.'
He put his glass down, but his eyes never left mine. Was it true? Was I here to kill him? If I looked away, I knew his suspicions would be confirmed. 'But let us eat and talk a while. I'm sure you're hungry, after your long and eventful journey.'
His head tilted gently to one side. 'And you, Jerry… Why is it that you wish to take my picture?'
Jerry looked straight at him as well. 'To help me, and to help you. To help me win a Pulitzer, and help you get on the front cover of Time magazine. I thought maybe you'd like that.' He sounded as if he was talking to royalty.
Nuhanovic arched an eyebrow. 'In what way?'
Jerry smiled wearily. 'I haven't got my camera any more, so it's academic.'
The side door opened and two men came in carrying a selection of bowls, which they laid out on the tray between us. I caught a glimpse of two others standing outside with AKs, paying a lot more attention to us than to what was happening in the kitchen. No way were we going to be able to hit-and-run this man.
The bowls contained hot rice, raisins, meat, chopped onions, and enough pitta bread for an invading army. Forks were offered, but we refused politely.
As the door closed again, Nuhanovic gestured for us to eat. I ripped off a piece of pitta with my right hand and used it as a scoop to get among the meat juices. No doubt the two AK boys were now standing with their faces against the grille, just in case I tried to jam it down his throat and choke him with it.
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