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Flyaway / Windfall Page 15


  Paul understood. It wasn’t what Byrne said, it was the way he said it that drove it home into Paul’s skull.

  As we drove away Byrne said, ‘And Hamiada will see that he stays put.’ There was a touch of amusement in his voice.

  I said, ‘What was that you said about a tree?’

  ‘The Tree of Ténéré?’ He pointed east. ‘It’s out there. Only tree I’ve ever heard of being put on the maps. It’s on your map—take a look.’

  So I did, and there it was—L’Arbre du Ténéré, about a hundred and sixty miles north-east of Agadez in the Erg du Ténéré, an area marked yellow on the map—the colour of sand. ‘Why should a tree be marked?’

  ‘There’s not another tree in any direction for about fifty kilometres,’ said Byrne. ‘It’s the most isolated tree in the world. Even so, a fool French truck driver ran into it back in 1960. It’s old—been there for hundreds of years. There’s a well there, but the water’s not too good.’

  So the map indicated—eau trés mauvaise à 40 m.

  It was a little over a hundred miles to Agadez over roughish country. Even though we were able to pick up speed over the last forty miles of reasonable track it took us five hours, averaging twenty miles an hour for the whole trip.

  Agadez seemed a prosperous little town by Saharan standards. It even had a mosque, something I had not seen in Tam. We parked the truck outside the Hotel de l’Aīr and went inside to have a beer, then Byrne went to the bank to have his leaflets printed. Before he left he said, ‘You might like to do some shopping; it’s better here than in Tam. Got any money?’

  It occurred to me that Byrne was laying out considerable sums during our travels and he would need recompense. I dug out my wallet and checked it. I had the equivalent of about a hundred pounds in Algerian currency, another four hundred in travellers’ cheques and a small case stuffed with credit cards.

  Byrne looked at my offerings and said, ‘None of that is much use here. You give anyone a strange piece of paper or a bit of plastic and he’ll laugh at you.’ He produced a small wad of local currency. ‘Here. Don’t worry, I’ll bill you when you leave, and you can settle it with Hesther in Algiers.’

  And I had to make do with that.

  I walked along the dusty street and found that American influence had even penetrated as far as Agadez—there was a supermarket! Not that an American would have recognized it as such but it was passable, although the stock of European-style clothing was limited. I bought a pair of Levi’s and a couple of shirts and stocked up with two cartons of English cigarettes. Then I blinked at an array of Scotch whisky, not so much in astonishment that it was there at all but at the price, which was two-thirds the London price. I bought two bottles.

  I took my booty and stowed it in the Toyota, then had another beer in the hotel while waiting for Byrne. When he came back we took the Toyota to a filling station to refuel and there, standing next to the pumps, was a giraffe.

  I stared at it incredulously. ‘For God’s sake! What the hell…’

  The giraffe bent its neck and looked down at us with mild eyes. ‘What’s the matter?’ asked Byrne. ‘Haven’t you seen a giraffe before?’

  ‘Not at a filling station.’

  Byrne didn’t seem in the least surprised. ‘I’ll be a little while here. This is where we start the distribution of our message.’

  I nodded wordlessly and watched the giraffe amble away up the main street of Agadez. As Byrne opened the door I said, ‘Hang on. Satisfy my curiosity.’

  ‘What about?’

  I pointed. ‘That bloody giraffe.’

  ‘Oh, that. It’s from the zoo. They let it out every morning, and it goes back every night to feed.’

  ‘Oh!’ Well, it was an explanation.

  We arrived back at Byrne’s place in the Aīr the next day, having camped on the way. I was getting to like those nightly camps. The peace was incredible and there was nothing more arduous to think about than the best place to make the fire and the best place to sleep after testing the wind direction. It was a long way from the busy—and now meaningless—activities of Stafford Security Consultants Ltd.

  At that particular camp I offered Byrne a scotch, but he shook his head. ‘I don’t touch the hard stuff, just have the occasional beer.’

  I said, ‘I can’t get over the fact that it’s cheaper than in England.’

  ‘No tax on it,’ he said. ‘In England you need a lot of money to build essentials like Concorde airplanes so your taxes are high.’ His tone was sardonic. ‘Out here who needs it?’ He picked up the bottle. ‘This stuff is brought up from Nigeria, mostly for the tourist trade. Same with the cigarettes. Might even have come up on the back of a camel.’

  The whisky tasted good, but after the first I found I didn’t want another. I said, ‘The most incredible thing today was that bloody giraffe.’

  ‘Civilized people hereabouts,’ said Byrne. ‘Don’t like to keep things in cages. Same with camels.’

  ‘What do you mean?’

  ‘Well, a Tuareg-trained camel is worth more than one trained by an Arab, all other things being equal. A Targui is kinder about it and the camel responds. Real nice people.’

  Looking up at the stars that night I thought a lot about that.

  After that nothing very much happened except that I got a new suit of clothes and learned how to ride a camel, and the two were connected. Byrne was going out to inspect his herd, and when I arrived for my camel-riding lesson in jeans he shook his head solemnly. ‘I don’t think so,’ he said. ‘I really don’t think so.’

  And so I dressed like a Targui—loose, baggy trousers in black cotton cloth fitting tight around the ankles, a white gandoura, the Tuareg gown, and another blue gandoura on top of that. There was a djellaba too, to be worn in cold weather or at night. Literally topping it off was the chech, twenty feet of black cotton, about eighteen inches wide, which Byrne painstakingly showed me how to arrange.

  When I was dressed in all my finery I felt a bit of a fool and very self-conscious, but that wore off quickly because no one else took any notice except Billson and I didn’t give a damn for his opinion. He wouldn’t change his clothing nor ride a camel; I think he had slightly Empire notions about ‘going native’.

  A camel, I found, is not steered from the mouth like a horse. Once in the saddle, the Tuareg saddle with its armchair back and high cross-shaped pommel, you put your bare feet on the animal’s neck and guide it by rubbing one side or the other. Being on a camel when it rises to its feet is the nearest thing to being in an earthquake and quite alarming until one gets used to it.

  Byrne, Hamiada and I set out with two pack camels for the grazing grounds near Telouess and were going to be away for over a week, Byrne commenting that he could not reasonably expect any reaction from his leaflet campaign for at least a fortnight. He had arranged with the owner of the filling station for the distribution of the leaflets in packets of 500 to the twenty most important oases south of the Atlas mountains.

  ‘And it’ll take that time to bring Paul up to the mark,’ he said. ‘Because one thing is certain—if we find that airplane it’s going to be in some of the lousiest country you’ve ever seen, else the French would have found it years ago.’

  What Billson did while we were away I don’t know. I never found out and I didn’t ask.

  Looking back, I think those days spent wandering in the Aīr was the most idyllic time of my life. The pace was slow, geared to the stride of a camel, and the land was wide and empty. One fell into an easy rhythm, governed not by the needs of other men but by the passage of the sun across the sky, the empty belly, the natural requirements of the beast one was riding.

  We found Byrne’s herd and he looked at the animals and found their condition good. They were looked after by a family of Tuareg headed by a man called Radbane. ‘These people are of the Kel Ilbakan,’ said Byrne. ‘A vassal tribe from south of Agadez. They graze their stock here in the winter and help me with mine.’

  We
accepted Radbane’s hospitality and stayed at his camp for two days, and then struck west, skirting the base of a mountain called Bagzans. We were striking camp on the ninth day out of Timia when Hamiada gave a shout and pointed. We had visitors; three camels were approaching, two with riders. As they came closer Byrne said, ‘That’s Billson.’

  He frowned, and I knew why. It would need something urgent to get Billson up on to a camel.

  They came up to the camp and I noted that Billson’s camel was on a leading rein held by the Targui who accompanied him. The camels sank to their knees and Billson rocked violently in the saddle. He slid to the ground painfully, still incongruously dressed in his city suit, now worn and weary. His face was grey with fatigue and he was obviously saddle-sore. I had been, too, but it had worn off.

  I said, ‘Come over here, Paul, and sit down.’ Byrne and Hamiada were talking to the Targui. I dug into my saddlebag and brought out the bottle of whisky which was still half full. I poured some into one of the small brass cups we used for mint tea and gave it to Paul. It was something he appreciated and, for once, he said, ‘Thanks.’

  ‘What are you doing out here?’ I asked.

  ‘I saw him,’ he said.

  ‘Who did you see?’

  ‘The man who shot me. He was in Timia asking questions, and then came on to Byrne’s place.’ He paused. ‘In the Range-Rover.’

  ‘And you saw him? To recognize him?’

  Paul nodded. ‘I was bored—I had no one to talk to—so I went down among the Tuareg. There’s a man who can speak a little French, about as much as me, but we can get on. I was outside his hut when I saw the Range-Rover coming so I ducked inside. The walls are only of reeds, there are plenty of cracks to look through. Yes, I saw him—and I knew him.’

  ‘Was he alone?’

  ‘No; he had the other man with him.’

  ‘Then what happened?’ I looked up. Byrne had come over and was listening.

  ‘He started to talk to the people, asking questions.’

  ‘In Tamachek?’ asked Byrne abruptly.

  ‘No, in French. He didn’t get very far until he spoke to the man I’d been with.’

  ‘That would be old Bukrum,’ said Byrne. ‘He was in the Camel Corps when the French were here. Go on.’

  ‘They just talked to the old man for a bit, then they went away. Bukrum said they asked him if there were any Europeans about. They described me—my clothes.’ His fingers plucked at his jacket. ‘Bukrum told them nothing.’

  Byrne smiled grimly. ‘He was told to say nothing—they all were. Can you describe these men?’

  ‘The man who asked the questions—the one who shot me—he was nearly six feet but not big, if you see what I mean. He was thin. Fair hair, very sunburned. The other was shorter but broader. Dark hair, sallow complexion.’

  ‘Both in European clothes?’

  ‘Yes.’ Paul eased his legs painfully. ‘Bukrum and I had a talk. He said he’d better send me to you because the men might come back. He said you’d be where wheels wouldn’t go.’

  I looked at the jumble of rocks about the slopes of Bagzans. Bukrum had been right. I said, ‘I’ve asked this question before but I’ll ask it again. Can you think of any reason—any conceivable reason—why two men should be looking for you in the Sahara in order to kill you?’

  ‘I don’t know!’ said Paul in a shout. ‘For Christ’s sake, I don’t know!’

  I looked at Byrne and shrugged. Byrne said, ‘Hamiada and I will go to Timia and nose around. We’ll make better time on our own.’ He pointed to the Targui who was talking to Hamiada. ‘His name is Azelouane; he’s Bukrum’s son. He’ll take you to a place in the hills behind Timia and you stay there until I send for you. There’s water there, so you’ll be all right.’ He looked at the three camels which Azelouane had brought. ‘You stay here today; those beasts need resting. Move off at first light tomorrow.’

  Within ten minutes he and Hamiada were mounted and on their way.

  It took us two days to get to the place in the hills behind Timia so, with the day’s enforced rest, that was three days. There was a pool of water which Azelouane called a guelta. He, too, had a small smattering of French so we could talk in a minimal way with the help of a lot of hand language. We were there for three more days before Byrne came.

  During this time Billson was morose. He was a very frightened man and showed it. Having a hole put in you with intent to kill tends to take the pith out of a man, but Paul had not really been scared until now. Probably he had reasoned that it was a case of mistaken identity and it was over, his attacker having given him up for dead after burning the Land-Rover. The knowledge that he was still being pursued really shook him and ate at his guts. He kept muttering, ‘Why me? Why me?’ He found no answer and neither did I. He also got rid of the rest of my whisky in short order.

  Byrne arrived late at night, riding tall on Yendjelan and coming out of the darkness like a ghost. Yendjelan sank to her knees, protesting noisily as all camels do, and he slid from the saddle. Azelouane unsaddled her while I brewed up some hot tea for Byrne. It was a cold night.

  He sat by the fire, still huddled in his djellaba with the hood over his head, and said, ‘You making out all right?’

  ‘Not bad.’ I pointed to where Billson was asleep. ‘He’s not doing too well, though.’

  ‘He’s scared,’ said Byrne matter-of-factly.

  ‘Find anything?’

  ‘Yeah. Two guys—one called Kissack, a Britisher; the other called Bailly. He’s French, I think. They’re scouring the Aīr looking for Billson.’ He paused. ‘Looking for me, too. They don’t know about you.’

  ‘How do they know about you?’

  ‘My name had to go on that leaflet,’ he said. ‘That’s how I figured it. No point in issuing a reward unless you give the name and place of the guy offering it.’

  ‘Where are they now?’

  ‘Gone to Agadez to fill up with gas. I think they’ll be back.’

  I thought about it, then said slowly, ‘That tells us something. They’re not just looking for Billson; they’re after anybody who is looking for that bloody plane. Billson’s name wasn’t on the leaflet, was it?’

  ‘No,’ said Byrne shortly.

  ‘That does it,’ I said. ‘It must be the plane.’ I put my hand on his arm. ‘Luke, you’d better watch it. They put a bullet into Billson on sight. They could do the same to you.’ I realized that I had addressed him by his given name for the first time.

  He nodded. ‘That’s what I thought.’

  ‘Christ, I’m sorry to have got you into this.’

  ‘Make never no mind,’ he said. ‘I’m not going to stick my head up as a target. And you didn’t get me into this. I did.’

  I said, ‘So it’s Peter Billson’s plane. But why? Why should somebody want to stop us finding it?’

  ‘Don’t know.’ Byrne fumbled under his djellaba and his hand came out holding a piece of paper. ‘First results have started to come in. Maybe we should have just offered one camel; they’re reporting every goddamned crashed airplane in the desert. Fifteen claimants so far. Five are duplications—reporting the same plane—so that cuts it down to ten. Six of those I know about myself, including that French plane in Koudia I told you of. That leaves four. Three of those are improbable because they’re in areas where any crash should have been seen. That leaves one possible.’

  ‘Where is it?’

  ‘Up on the Tassili n’ Ajjer. Trouble is it’s way off Peter Billson’s great circle course.’

  ‘How far off?’

  ‘About fifteen degrees on the compass. I know I argued that Billson must have been off course—that’s why the search didn’t find him. But fifteen degrees is too much.’ He accepted a cup of tea.

  ‘So what do we do now?’

  ‘Sit tight and wait for more returns to come in.’ He sipped the tea and added as an afterthought, ‘And keep out of Kissack’s way.’

  ‘Couldn’t we do something abo
ut him?’

  ‘Like what?’

  ‘Well, couldn’t Paul go to the police in Agadez and lay a charge of attempted murder?’

  Byrne snorted. ‘The first thing they’d ask is why he didn’t tell the Algerian authorities. Anyway, the cops here wouldn’t be too interested in a crime that happened in Algeria.’ He was probably right; I doubted if there’d be any Interpol co-operation in the Sahara. He said, ‘I’m tired,’ and rolled over and went to sleep in his sudden way.

  I beat my brains out wondering why Kissack and Bailly should want to kill anyone searching for an aircraft that had crashed over forty years before. Presently I stopped thinking. I wasn’t aware of it. I was asleep, too.

  Byrne had brought us some provisions. Millet to be pounded in a mortar and boiled to a thin gruel before having crushed dates added, and flour and salt to make flapjacks. Azelouane went off somewhere and returned with a goat kid which he killed by slitting its throat, so we had fresh meat.

  And so we sat tight in the hills, half a day’s journey from Timia.

  Three days later Byrne went back, leaving early in the morning and returning the same night. He reported that Kissack was still active. ‘He’s really scraping the bottom of the barrel,’ he said. ‘Tassil Oued, Grup-Grup, El Maki—all the little places. But Timia seems to attract him. He knows I live near there. He was in Timia again at midday today.’

  ‘Hell!’ I said. ‘Be careful.’

  He laughed. ‘I was standing six feet from him and I was just another Targui. How was he to know different unless someone told him, and my people wouldn’t give him a drink of water in the Tanezrouft.’ There was a tinge of pride in the way he said ‘my people’.

  I thought that the Tuareg veil certainly did have its advantages, as did the fact that all the Tuareg dress alike in blue and white.

  He said, ‘There’s another batch of sightings from hopefuls who’d like to win ten camels each. Twenty-two. Most of them duplicating the first lot.’

  ‘Any possibles?’