SIX

The Scarlet Flower

In the days which followed the news from up-river wasn't good. Several rubber tappers were killed and a party of diamond prospectors, five in all, died to the last man in an ambush not ten miles above the mission.

Alberto and his men, operating out of Santa Helena, didn't seem to be accomplishing much, which wasn't really surprising. If they kept to the tracks the Huna ambushed them and if they tried to hack a way through the jungle, their progress was about one mile a day to nowhere.

In a week, he'd lost seven men. Two dead, three wounded and two injured, one by what was supposed to be an accidental cut on the leg with a machete which sounded more as if it had been self-inflicted to me. I saw the man involved when Hannah, who was flying him out to Manaus, dropped in at Landro to refuel and I can only say that considering his undoubted pain, he seemed remarkably cheerful.

Hannah was making a daily trip to Santa Helena under the circumstances which left me with the Landro-Manaus mail run in the Bristol. The general attitude in Manaus was interesting. Events up-river might have been taking place on another planet as far as they were concerned, and even in Landro no one seemed particularly excited.

Two things changed that. The first was the arrival of Avila and his bunch — or what was left of them — one evening just before dark. They all seemed to have sustained minor wounds of one sort or another and had lost two men in an ambush on a tributary of the Mortes on the side of the river where the Huna weren't supposed to be.

Even then, people didn't get too worked up. After all, Indians had been killing the odd white up-country for years. It was only when the boat drifted in with the two dead on board that the harsh reality was really brought home.

It was a nasty business. Mannie found them early on Sunday morning when he was taking a walk before breakfast and sent one of the labourers for me. By the time I got there people were already hurrying along to the jetty in twos and threes.

The canoe had grounded on the sandbank above the jetty, pushed by the current. The occupants, as was discovered later from their papers, were rubber tappers and were feathered with more arrows than I would have believed possible.

They had been dead for at least three days and were in the condition you would have expected considering the climate, flies buzzing around in clouds and the usual smell. There was one rather nasty extra. The man in the stern had fallen backwards, one arm trailing in the water and the piranha had taken the flesh from his bones up to the elbow.

No one was particularly cheerful after that and they clustered in small groups, talking in low voices until Figueiredo arrived and took charge of things. He stood there leaning on his stick, face sombre, the sweat soaking through shirt and linen jacket and watched as half a dozen labourers with handkerchiefs around their faces got the bodies out.

The Huna bows were six feet in length, taller than the men who used them and so powerful that an arrow taken in the chest frequently penetrated the entire body, the head protruding from the back. They were usually tipped with piranha teeth or razor-sharp bamboo.

A labourer pulled one out of one of the corpses and handed it to Figueiredo. He examined it briefly then snapped it in his two hands and threw the pieces away angrily.

‘Animals!’ he said. ‘They'll be coming out of the jungle next.’

Which started the crowd off nicely. They wanted blood, that much was evident. The Huna were vermin and there was only one way to handle vermin. Extermination. The voices buzzed around me. I listened for a while, then turned, sick to the stomach, and walked away.

* * *

I was helping myself to a large Scotch from Hannah's private stock when Mannie came in. That bad?’ he said calmly.

‘Everywhere you go, the same story,’ I said. ‘It's always the Indians’ fault — never the whites.’

He lit one of those foul-smelling Brazilian cigars he favoured and sat on the veranda rail. ‘You feel pretty strongly about all this. Most people would think that strange in someone who was at Forte Tomas. Who came as close to being butchered by Indians as a man can get.’

‘If you reduce men to symbols, then killing them is easy,’ I said. ‘An abstraction. Kill a Huna and you're not killing an individual — you're killing an Indian. Does that make any kind of sense to you?’

He was obviously deeply moved and at a distance of years knowing in detail what was even then happening to his people, I suppose the plain truth was that I was hitting close to home.

He said, ‘A profound discovery to make so early in life. May I ask how?’

There was no reason not to speak of it although the tightness was there in the chest the moment I began, the constricted breathing. An unutterable feeling of having lost something worth having.

‘It's simple,’ I said. ‘In my first month on the Xingu I met the best man I'm ever likely to see if I live to be a hundred. If he'd been a Catholic, they'd have tossed a coin to decide between burning or canonising him.’

‘Who was he?’

‘A Viennese named Karl Buber. He came out here as a young Lutheran pastor to join a mission on the Xingu. He threw it all up in disgust when he discovered the unpalatable fact that the Indians were suffering as much at the hands of the missionaries as of anyone else.’

‘What did he do?’

‘Set up his own place up-river from Forte Tomas. Dedicated his life to working amongst the Civa and they could teach the Huna a thing or two, believe me. He even married one. I used to fly him stuff up from Belem without the company knowing. He was the best friend the Civa ever had.’

‘And they killed him?’

I nodded. ‘His wife told him her father was desperately wounded and in urgent need of medical attention after the Forte Tomas attack. When Buber got there, they clubbed him to death.’

Mannie frowned slightly as if not quite understanding. ‘You mean his own wife betrayed him?’

‘She did it for the tribe,’ I said. ‘They admired Buber for his courage and wisdom. They killed him as Father Conté was killed at Santa Helena, that their chiefs might have his brains and heart.’

There was genuine horror on his face now. ‘And you can still think kindly of such people?’

‘Karl Buber would have. If he were here now, he'd tell you that the Indian is as much a product of his environment as a jaguar. That he only survives in that green hell out there across the river by being willing to kill instinctually, without a moment's thought, several times a day. Killing is part of his nature.’

‘Which includes killing his friends?’

‘He doesn't have any. He has his blood ties — family and tribe. Anyone else is outside and on borrowed time. Ripe for the block sooner or later as Buber discovered.’

I poured another whisky. Mannie said, ‘And what is your personal solution to the problem?’

‘There isn't one,’ I said. ‘There's too much here worth the having. Diamonds in the rivers, every kind of mineral ever heard of and probably a few we haven't. Now what man worth his salt would let a bunch of Stone-Age savages stand between him and a slice of that kind of cake?’

He smiled sadly and put a hand on my shoulder. ‘A dirty world, my friend.’

‘And I've had too much to drink considering the time of day.’

‘Exactly. Go have a shower and I'll make some coffee.’

I did as he suggested, sluicing myself in lukewarm water for ten minutes or so. As I was dressing, there was a knock at the door and Figueiredo stuck his head in.

‘A bad business.’ He sank into the nearest chair, mopping his face with a handkerchief. ‘I've just been on the radio to Santa Helena, giving Alberto the good news.’

The military had installed a much more powerful radio transmitter and receiving unit than his in the hangar and had left a young corporal to man it.

‘Hannah stayed up there overnight,’ I said as I pulled on my flying jacket. ‘Any word from him?’

Figueiredo nodded. ‘He wants you to join him as soon as possible.’

‘At Santa Helena?’ I shook my head. ‘You must have got it wrong. I've got the mail run to make to Manaus.’

‘Cancelled. You're needed on military business which takes precedence.’

‘Well, that's intriguing,’ I said. ‘Any idea what it's all about?’

He shook his head. ‘Not my business to know. Where military affairs are concerned, I have no jurisdiction at all and what's more, I like it that way.’

Mannie kicked open the door and came in with coffee in two tin cups. ‘You've heard?’ I said.

He nodded. ‘I'd better get across to the hangar and get the Bristol ready to move.’

I stood at the window beside Figueiredo, sipping my coffee, gazing down towards the jetty. A cart came towards us, pulled by a couple of half-starved oxen, a collection of moving bones held together by a bag of skin. The driver kept them going by sticking a six-inch nail on the end of a pole beneath their tails at frequent intervals.

As the cart went by, the smell told us what was inside. Figueiredo turned, an expression of acute distaste on his face. He opened his mouth to speak and the rain came down in a sudden rush, rattling on the corrugated-iron roof, drowning all sound.

We stood there together and watched the cart disappear into the gloom.

* * *

It was still raining when I took off, not that I was going to let that put me off. The massacre of Santa Helena had been worse, but the two poor wretches in the canoe had brought a whiff of the open grave with them, a touch of unease, a feeling that something waited out there in the trees across the river. Landro was definitely a place to put behind you on such a morning.

I followed the river all the way and seeing no reason to push hard, especially once I ran out of the rain, took a good hour over getting there, giving myself time to enjoy the flight.

I went in low over Santa Helena itself, just to see how things stood. The mission launch was just leaving the jetty and moving down-river, but the old forty-foot military gunboat was still there. A couple of soldiers moved out of the hospital and waved and Hannah came out of the priest's house. I circled again, then cut across the river and dropped into the airstrip.

There was a permanent guard of ten men with two heavy machine-guns. The sergeant in charge detailed one man to take me up to Santa Helena in a dinghy powered by an outboard motor.

Hannah was waiting at the end of the jetty, smoking a cigarette. ‘You took your own sweet time about getting here,’ he commented sourly.

‘Nobody told me there was any rush,’ I said as I scrambled up on to the jetty. ‘What's it all about anyway?’

‘We're going to drop a few Christmas presents into your friends the Huna,’ he said.

He had a couple of large sacks with him which he handed to the soldier in the boat. He went down the ladder and cast off. ‘I'll send him back for you. I've got things to do. You'll find Alberto at the priest's house. He'll fill you in.’

He sat down in the prow, lighting another of his interminable cigarettes and shoved his hands into the pockets of his leather coat, looking about as fed-up as it was possible to be.

I was completely mystified by the whole affair and keen for an early explanation, so I turned away and hurried along the jetty. There was a sentry at the land end who looked bored and unhappy, sweat soaking through his drill tunic. There were two more beside a machine-gun in the church porch.

I found Alberto in the priests's house. He was lying on a narrow bed, minus his breeches, his right leg supported across a pillow while his medical corporal swabbed away at a couple of leg ulcers with cotton wool and iodine. Alberto, who looked anything but happy, was obtaining what solace he could from the glass in his left hand and the bottle of brandy in his right.

‘Ah, Senhor Mallory,’ he said. ‘I would not wish these things on my worst enemy. Like acid, they eat right through to the bone.’

‘Better than having them on your privates.’

He smiled grimly. ‘A sobering thought. Has Captain Hannah explained things to you?’

‘He said something unintelligible about Christmas presents for the Huna, then took off across river. What's it all about?’

‘It's simple enough. I've managed to lay hands on a half-breed who's been living with them. He's fixed the position of their main village for me on the map. About forty miles into the bush from here.’

‘You're going to attack?’

He groaned aloud and moved restlessly under the corporal's hand, sweat beading his forehead. ‘An impossibility. It would take us at least three weeks to force a way through even if my man agreed to lead us which he would certainly refuse to do under those circumstances. It would be suicide. They'd pick us off one by one.’

‘What about reinforcements?’

‘There aren't any. They're having trouble with the Civa along the Xingu again and the Jicaro are making things more than difficult along their stretch of the Negro. My orders are to come to some sort of terms with the Huna, then to abandon Santa Helena. I've just sent the mission launch down to Landro with everything on board worth saving.’

‘And why am I here?’

‘I want you to fly to this Huna village with Hannah. Drop in a couple of sackfuls of trade goods of various kinds, as a gesture of goodwill. Then I'll send in this man who's been living with them to try and arrange a meeting for me.’

He reached for a clean glass as the sergeant started to bandage his leg, half-filled it with brandy and passed it across to me. I didn't really want it, but took it out of politeness.

He said, ‘I've been making inquiries about you, Mallory. You were friendly with that madman Buber when you were on the Xingu. Probably know more about Indians than I do. What kind of chance do you think my plan has of working?’

‘Not a hope,’ I said. ‘If you want the truth, that is.’

‘I agree entirely.’ He toasted me then emptied his glass. ‘But at least I'll have made the kind of positive step to do something that even Headquarters won't be able to quarrel with.’

I tried the brandy which tasted as if someone had made it in the bath. I placed the glass down carefully. ‘I'll be off then. Presumably Hannah is straining at the leash.’

‘He isn't too pleased, I can tell you that.’ Alberto reached across and picked up my glass. ‘Safe journey.’

I left him there and went out into bright sunlight again. The heat was terrific, dust rising from the dry earth with each step, and the jungle was already beginning to creep in at the back of the hospital, lianas trailing in across the roof from the trees. It didn't take long. People came and went, but the forest endured, covering the scars they left as if they had never existed.

The dinghy was waiting and had me back across at the landing strip in a quarter of an hour. I found Hannah lying in the shade of the Hayley's port wing, studying a map. He was as bad-tempered and morose as ever.

‘Well, what do you think?’ he demanded impatiently.

‘A waste of time.’

‘Exactly what I told him, but he will have it.’ He got to his feet. ‘Have a look at that. I've marked a course although the bloody place probably won't exist when we get there.’

‘You want me to fly her?’

‘That's what I pay you for, isn't it?’

He turned and climbed up into the cabin. Strange, in view of what happened afterwards, but I think it was at that precise moment in time that I started to actively dislike him.

* * *

I flew at a thousand feet and conditions were excellent, the sun so bright that I had to wear dark glasses. Hannah was directly behind me in the front passenger seat beside the rear door. He didn't say a word, simply sat there scanning the jungle below with a pair of binoculars.

Not that it was really necessary. No more than fifteen minutes after leaving the airstrip we passed over a large clearing and I went down to five hundred and circled it a couple of times.

‘Wild banana plantation,’ Hannah said. ‘We're dead on course. Must be.’

Most forest Indians engaged in a crude form of husbandry when clearings such as the one below allowed it and it was an infallible sign that we were close to a large village.

I flew on, staying at five hundred feet and almost immediately felt Hannah's hand on my shoulder. ‘We're here.’

The clearing seemed to flower out of the jungle beneath my port wing. It was larger than I had expected, fifty yards in diameter at least, the thatched long huts arranged in a neat circle around a central space with some sort of tribal totem in the centre.

There must have been two hundred people down there, perhaps three, scurrying from the huts like brown ants, faces turned up as I went in across the clearing at three hundred feet. No one ran for the forest for they were familiar enough with aeroplanes, I suppose, to realise we couldn't land. Many of the warriors actually loosed off arrows at us.

‘Stupid bastards. Would you look at that now?’ Hannah laughed harshly. ‘Okay, kid, let's get it over with. Take her in at a hundred feet, slow as you like.’

I banked to starboard, throttled back and went down across the trees. Hannah had the door open, I was aware of the wind and then the village was directly in front, faces upturned, arrows arching up towards us impotently.

I eased back the stick to climb, glancing over my shoulder in time to see a ball of fire explode in the centre of the crowd closely followed by another.

I saw worse things in the war that was to come, far worse, and yet it haunts me still.

I should have known, I suppose, expected it at least, yet it's easy to be wise after the event. He was laughing like a madman as I took the Hayley round again and went in through the smoke.

There were bodies everywhere, dozens of them, a large central crater and the thatched roofs of several of the long-huts had caught fire.

I glanced over my shoulder. Hannah was leaning out of the open door and laughed out loud again. ‘How do you like that, you bastards?’ he yelled.

I struck out wildly at him backwards with one hand. The Hayley lurched to one side, faltered, then the nose went down. We grabbed at the stick together, pulling her out with no more than three hundred feet in it and it took the two of us to do it.

I levelled off and started to climb. He took his hands off mine and dropped back into his seat. Neither of us said a word and as I turned back across the clearing for the last time, flames blossomed into a scarlet flower in the clear air.

* * *

I was numb, I suppose, from the horror of it all for the next coherent thing I remember is coming in to land at the airstrip at Santa Helena. I wasn't aware of anything very much except the Bristol at the south end. I went in that way which gave me the whole of the strip to play with and rolled to a halt about forty yards from the trees.

I sat there in the silence after cutting the engine, my hands shaking, mouth dry, teeth clenched together in a kind of rictus, aware that Hannah had opened the rear door and had got out. When I opened mine, he was standing below lighting a cigarette in cupped hands.

He looked up and grinned. ‘It's always rough the first time, kid.’

The grin was a mistake. I jumped straight at him and put my fist into it at the same time. We milled around there on the floor for a while, my hands at his throat and in spite of his enormous strength, I didn't do too badly, mainly because surprise was on my side. I was aware of voices shouting, men running and then several different hands grabbed me at once and dragged me off him.

They clammed me hard up against the side of the Hayley, a sergeant holding the barrel of a revolver under my chin and then Colonel Alberto arrived. He waved the man with the revolver away and looked me straight in the eye.

‘It would pain me to have to arrest you, Senhor Mallory, but I will do so if necessary. You will please remember that military law only applies in this area. I am in sole command.’

‘God damn you!’ I said. ‘Don't you realise what this swine's just done? He's killed at least fifty people and I helped him do it.’

Alberto turned to Hannah and produced a cigarette case from his tunic pocket which he offered to him. ‘It worked then?’

‘Like a charm,’ Hannah told him, and took a cigarette.

Alberto actually offered me one. I took it mechanically. ‘You know?’

‘I was in a difficult situation, Senhor Mallory. I needed both of you to do the thing successfully and it did not seem likely, in view of the sentiments you expressed at our last meeting, that you would give your services willingly.’

‘You've made me an accessory to murder.’

He shook his head and answered gravely, ‘A military operation from start to finish and fully authorised by my superiors.’

‘You lied to me,’ I said. ‘About wanting to talk with the Huna.’

‘Not at all. Only now, having shown that we mean business, that we can hit them hard when we want to, I can talk from a position of strength. You and Captain Hannah may very well prove to have been instrumental in bringing an end to this whole sorry business.’

‘By butchering poor, bloody savages with high explosives dropped from the air.’

They stood around me in a semi-circle, the soldiers, few of them understanding for we spoke in English.

Hannah was quieter now, his face white and strained. ‘For God's sake, Mallory, what about the nuns? Look what they did to Father Conté. They ate his heart, Mallory. They cut out his heart and ate it.’

My voice seemed to come from outside me and I was someone else inside my head, listening to me talking. I said patiently, genuinely wanting him to understand, or so it seemed to me, ‘And what good does it do to act just as barbarically in return?’

It was Alberto who answered. ‘You have a strange morality, Senhor Mallory. For the Huna to rape and butcher the nuns, to roast men over a fire is acceptable. For my men to die in ambush out there in the forest is all part of some game for which you apparently can accept rules.’

‘Now you're twisting it. Making it something else.’

‘I don't think so. You would allow us to shoot them in a skirmish in the bush, but to kill them with dynamite from the air is different….’

I couldn't think of anything to say for by then, reaction had set in and I was hopelessly confused.

‘A bullet in the belly, an arrow in the back, a stick of dynamite from the air.’ He shook his head. ‘There are no rules, Senhor Mallory. This is a dirty business. War has always been thus and this is war, believe me…’

I turned and walked away from them towards the Bristol. When I reached it, I leaned on the lower port wing for a while, then I took my flying helmet and goggles from one pocket of my leather jacket and put them on.

When I turned, I found Hannah standing watching me. I said, ‘I'm getting out as soon as I get back. You can find someone else.’

He said tonelessly, ‘We've got a contract, kid, with your signature on the bottom under mine and legally enforceable.’

I didn't say anything, simply climbed in and went through the fifteen checks, then I wound the starting magneto. Hannah pulled the propeller over, the engine clattered into life and I started to move forward so quickly that he had to duck under the lower port wing.

His face was very white, I remember that and his mouth opening and closing as he shouted to me, but his words were drowned by the roar of the Falcon engine and I didn't wait to hear, didn't care if I never clapped eyes on him again.

* * *

I was not really aware of having been asleep, only of being shaken roughly awake. I lay there staring up through the mosquito net at the pressure lamp on its hook in the ceiling, moths clustering thickly around it. The hand shook me again, I turned and found Mannie at my side.

‘What time is it?’ I asked him.

‘Just after midnight.’ He was wearing his yellow oilskin coat and sou'wester and they ran with moisture. ‘You'll have to help me with Sam, Neil.’

It took a moment for it to sink in. I said, ‘You've got to be joking,’ and turned over.

He had me half-up by the front of the cotton shirt I was wearing with a grip of surprising strength. ‘When I left he was just finishing his second bottle of brandy and calling for number three. He'll kill himself unless we help him.’

‘And you really expect me to give a damn after what he did to me today?’

‘Now that's interesting. You said what he did to you, not what he did to those poor bloody savages out there in the bush. Which is most important?’

It almost made my hair stand up on my head in horror at what he was suggesting. I said, ‘For God's sake, Mannie.’

‘All right, you want him to die, then?’

I got out of bed and started to dress. I'd gone through the whole sorry story with Mannie as soon as I'd got back. Had to get it off my chest before I went mad. What I was looking for, I think, was the reassurance which would come from finding someone else who was just as horrified as I was myself.

His attitude hadn't been entirely satisfactory and he'd seemed to see rather more in Colonel Alberto's argument than I was prepared to accept myself. The strange thing was that he seemed worried about Hannah who had avoided me completely since he'd flown in.

I'd washed my hands of both of them, had helped myself to far more of Hannah's Scotch than was good for me and my head ached from it all as I went up the main street through the rain at Mannie's side.

I could hear music from the hotel as we approached and light filtered out through the shutters in golden bars. There was the sound of a glass breaking and someone called out.

We paused on the veranda and I said, ‘If he decides to go berserk, he could probably break the two of us in his bare hands. I hope you realise that.’

‘You're the devil himself for looking on the black side of things.’ He smiled and put a hand on my arm for a moment. ‘Now let's have him out of here while there's still hope.’

There were two or three people at the far end of the room, Figueiredo behind the bar and Hannah propped up against it in front of him. An old phonograph was playing Valse Triste, Figueiredo's wife standing beside it.

‘More, more!’ Hannah shouted, pounding on the bar with the flat of his hand as the music started to run down.

She wound the handle vigorously and Hannah reached for the half-empty bottle of brandy and tried to fill the tumbler at his elbow, sending a couple of dirty glasses crashing to the floor at the same moment.

He failed to notice our approach until Mannie reached over and firmly took the bottle from his hand. ‘Enough is enough, Sam. Now I think we go home.’

‘Good old Mannie.’ Hannah patted him on the cheek then turned to empty his glass and saw me. God, he was drunk, his face swollen with the stuff, the hands shaking and the look in his eyes…

He took me by the front of the coat and said wildly, ‘You think I wanted to do that back there? You think it was easy?’

The man was in hell or so it seemed to me then. Certainly enough to make me feel sorry for him. I pulled free and said gently, ‘Let's get you to bed then, Sam.’

Behind me the door opened, there was a burst of careless laughter, then silence. Hannah's eyes widened and hot rage flared. He brushed me aside and plunged forward and I turned in time to see him give Avila his fist full in the mouth.

‘I'll teach you, you bastard,’ he yelled and pushed Avila back across a table with one hand while he pounded away at him with the other.

Avila's friends were already running into darkness which left Mannie and me. God knows, it took everything we had for I think it was himself Hannah was trying to beat to death there across the table and his strength was incredible.

As we got him out through the door, he turned and grabbed at me again. ‘You won't leave me, kid, will you? We've got a contract. You gave me your word. It means everything — everything I've got in the world.’

I didn't need the look on Mannie's face, but it helped. I said soothingly, ‘How can I leave, Sam? I've got the mail run to Manaus at nine a.m.’

He broke down completely at that, great sobs racking his body as we took him down the steps between us into the rain and started home.

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