|
August-September
1980, Kabul
The next
two days saw Dan reaping the rewards of his iron constitution,
his body fighting an infection that never fully materialised.
Remaining silent with gritted teeth, visions of death and
destruction, and pretending to be fine. He smirked and swore
with the other guys, just like he'd always done. Taking a
shit was the hardest, even the coke he had managed to get
on the black market wasn't enough to blind the agony. Biting
into his sleeve when he had to take a dump, almost choking
on the fabric, just to keep quiet in the rickety shelter that
served as the loos. Got pissed as a newt the third day when
they allowed him twelve hours off duty. Booze and mates, the
only way to exist.
He'd
handed the camera in to develop the pictures, got back images
of Russian soldiers, drunk, out for trouble, sating their
appetite for destruction. Searched amongst the nameless faces
until he found the one. Tall, blond, and a fucking bastard,
destined to die. His research was legitimate, setting resources
in motion and the bloodhounds onto the trail of the 'Soviet
Hero'. He soon got what he wanted: Name, rank, and more beyond.
Captain
Vadim Petrovich Krasnorada. Paratrooper in the 'Glorious Red
Army'.
He'd
get the man, sooner or later, to obliterate the memory of
Nothing.
*
* *
A week
passed, a body managed to heal untreated. Dan coped until
he got his next briefing. Another task, another mission. Another
fucking press conference.
He stuck
to the disguise of a messy-haired leftover-leftie hippie reporter
with suicidal tendencies of covering every war torn scrap
of shitty country. A far safer look than the close-shaved,
military appearance he could have mustered had he been in
uniform. Instead wearing a crumpled mix of army surplus kit
and civilian clobber, all sweaty and dishevelled, the standard
outfit of any war correspondent.
Dan was
late, deliberately so, had lingered outside and missed the
Big Heads' arrival. Couldn't give a monkey's arse about the
speeches, was more interested in scrap heaps and garbage,
Kabul's stinking debris surrounding the conference hotel.
He was blending into the crowd, except for his height and
built. The accent fake, doing a passable job as Canadian press
by hiding his native Scots Highland accent, smoothed down
by years in the army.
He entered
the lounge, quickly checking over the assembled press, seated
like sardines and frying in hot air. Remaining in the back,
he stood close to the doors, casting his gaze to the front.
Suddenly
freezing. Couldn't believe his eyes.
The Russian
bastard.
Dan didn't
flinch. Nothing. Just a twitch of his hand. Yet the recognition
hit him square in the chest with the full force of a punch
that wasn't pulled. Hatred surged and pooled in the pit of
his stomach, but he forced himself to stroll casually towards
the centre of the room, leaning against the wall. Watching.
*
* *
Vadim
was dressed in his uniform; ranks that were real, unit symbols
that weren't, the whole regalia of a para captain. He had
polished the star on the peaked cap, then made sure it had
exactly the correct angle. Wearing uniform was a bitch in
Kabul. He was sweating, but he was a military advisor, and
that meant keeping up appearances. Just another trick in the
book.
This
was not an invasion. It was brothers helping brothers. He
remembered the party line, remembered what they'd told the
conscripts, about building schools and getting Afghanistan
up to speed, developing it, and, of course, defending it against
the West, most of all against the Americans, who, whenever
they meddled in Asia, made things even worse. And that meant
something in this hole.
Invaders
didn't host press conferences in run-down hotels in central
Kabul. The place swarmed with soldiers on security detail,
and more officers, more senior than he was; he was mostly
here for the cameras anyway. He knew the spin doctors pissed
themselves with glee that at his presence. His job was to
look imposing and reassuring, maybe answer a question or two.
The room
had been packed since before the conference started, and the
Afghani politicians looked exceedingly uncomfortable in their
ill-fitted suits. The General was there and looked hung over,
eyes red, meaty face profoundly dispassionate. Vadim had positioned
himself near the Soviet flag, which, symbol of symbols, seemed
very red near the Afghani flag.
Cameras
flashed. It was a mob with a hundred heads, hundreds of lenses,
and he thought what fucking madness, to expose himself like
that. The usual stuff: We're friends, united in a big, happy,
socialist dream. A new order, marching towards peace. No talk
of confrontation, no talk about how they showed muscle in
the face of the West.
More
cameras flashing. Some reporters noted down everything, others,
a lot of long-haired khippies who looked worse for
wear probably because of the lack of air-conditioning here,
didn't bother writing. Those were the smart ones. They were
bored by the party line and waiting for Questions and Answers.
Such
a decidedly non-Soviet pastime.
Vadim
had been staring off into the distance, eyes unfocused, deeply
bored, yet he was not supposed to move a single muscle. He
was decoration, and decoration didn't move. The crowd was
one stirring, restless mass of shifting bodies. People heading
for the toilets and coming back, or drinking water, some were
eating, some fanned themselves. A lot of layered movements,
following no order, no necessity. People moved because they
were people. The constant, restless shifting of the herd.
The memory
of a different crowd: Thousands of people, flecks of colour
in the stadium. The sound they made. The roar that almost
made his heart stop when he had heard it the first time.
He blinked
and forced his attention back to the present. Began to look
at the crowd, singled people out, assessed them, didn't bother
to store the information. Had no value. But then. Right in
the centre at the back. A tall man.
Vadim's
eyes narrowed. Was that possible? Just as he had convinced
himself that the man had been anything but press. He had put
up too much of a fight, stayed operational all the time. Fought
too hard. His stomach muscles tensed, and he knew it was him.
It was like ice on his face. A shock. His eyes scanned the
man for weapons, no way he was a reporter.
That
very moment the man raised his eyes, made momentary contact
and smirked briefly. Even across the distance there had been
a flash of recognition.
Vadim
inhaled, kept breathing steadily. Fuck. Alive. It had been
dark, right? That man shouldn't have been able to recognise
him. He'd worn combat gear without most of the weapons, fairly
casual. He was polished now, intangible.
Forcing
himself to follow the line of questions, Vadim feigned interest
while he could feel his blood surge. The colours in the room
became brighter, much like on drugs. This was hardly the place
for it, but his instincts came back, powerfully.
The man
had looked at him. What, six yards away? Close enough to feel
him, not nearly close enough. Vadim remembered the smell of
Vanya's blood, and how hot the man's flesh was, how desperate.
Square jaw, dark eyes, tousled hair. He liked the face, good
features, cheekbones, chin, nose, all well-defined. Judging
from his built and stance, the man knew about potential, about
discipline. Knew about war and struggle.
And he
knew it had been him. How on earth did he? There were plenty
of captains. Lots of men that were even bigger. Vadim's chest
expanded, as if to take in more air as he returned that gaze.
He should have undressed him, he reflected. But he had been
too drunk. No way to take time. No way to savour the full
potential of that body. Bottom line: What a waste.
Never
mind the bastard had killed Vanya - and deprived him of his
favourite toy in the absence of real game, plus forced him
to answer questions why on earth comrade Ivan had been mugged
and killed alone in a dark alley. Resistance fighter. Low
level insurgents. Sad, sad story, but it reflected badly on
Vadim as a superior.
Q&A
time. One of Afghans allowed reporters to speak. One after
the other.
Vadim
watched the man raise his hand, just like any reporter who
wanted to ask a question.
*
* *
At last
it was Dan's turn to join the circus of lies.
He directed
his eyes once more onto the medal-gleaming piece of Russian
shit. Making certain once and for all the bastard had recognised
him. That, and more. A promise, a deadly one.
"Captain
Krasnorada", tiny pause, he had done his intelligence
homework and he cherished the power that knowledge brought,
"with all those reinforcements streaming into Afghanistan
and, specifically, Kabul, and with numbers daily rising, how
can you reassure the population that there will be discipline
amongst your men and safety for the civilians?"
He smiled,
a moment of sarcasm, shared between hunters.
The game
had just begun.
As the
man said his name, Vadim could feel tension in his shoulders.
What the
He guessed they had given out his name, as
in: Your questions will be answered by
and then a long
list of names. Spin doctors.
Concentration.
The English language had articles, he tended to forget that;
not enough practice, and the language lessons had long since
stopped. "We understand there is concern among the population."
He knew the General approved of the turn of phrase, the fact
he didn't say "I", but "we". He knew his
doctrine. "And we assure you that the soldiers are well-disciplined
and are well-aware of their mission to forge iron bonds of
eternal friendship and mutual support with the Afghan population."
There.
A complete un-answer.
Dan smirked,
this sort of answer had to be expected. "Thank you, Captain.
I am confident your reassurance extends to everyone, not just
the Afghanis."
He slouched
back against the wall, feigning renewed disinterest while
he could hardly wait for the conference to be over. He had
to shadow the bastard, needed to know everything about him.
What
he ate, where he shat, whom he fucked.
Vadim
gave a curt nod, as if it was beneath him to correct himself
and extend Socialist goodwill to the rest of the world. It
was about competition, and not about world peace. Fuck that.
At last
the reporters left him in peace. To them, he toed the party
line, and tearing into a henchman when the General was in
the room wouldn't do. There were some reporters from other
brother-states, and they asked all the right questions. They
had official approval to be here, and they made the most of
it.
Vadim's
eyes moved across the crowd, but couldn't help resting on
the relaxed tiger. The looks, the power. He wouldn't mind
a repeat performance. He wouldn't mind wrestling the man,
fighting him. With a knife, without a knife, epee, fencing,
whatever.
He waited
until the conference was over, everybody important ushered
out, the press types mingling a bit. Keeping his eyes on the
man, who did not hurry to get out of the boiling room. A quick
glance. General, senior officers - they couldn't wait to get
out of here. He made a half-assed excuse, then moved towards
the man who had stayed at the back throughout the remainder
of the conference. Careful. He had a pistol. But the main
deterrent was that there were still press people around.
Dan slowly
straightened from his slouched position when the Russian came
towards him. Raised his head until it was level, his face
showing nothing. Empty stare, only a man who had himself under
as much control as he did could be devoid of any expression
when faced with his rapist. But then Nothing had happened.
Nothing at all.
He kept
his hand close to his thigh, at the place where one of the
knives was hidden. He'd come prepared; had made a mistake
one week ago, wouldn't make another. Dan mocked in a deceptively
soft voice, "Well, well, I didn't know they trained up
Russian soldiers as circus ponies?"
"Term
is 'Soviet'", said Vadim, more in a reflex. He stepped
close enough to talk, and far away enough to see any movement
that came from the other man's centre. Shoulders moved first
in an attack, it took a master to hide it.
"Soviet,
Russkie, who the fuck cares." Dan delivered the casual
insult with a grin that never reached his eyes.
Circus
pony. Vadim lost momentum. He had felt more like a potted
plant, or a Christmas tree in that show, but he liked the
voice. Americans sounded as if they were talking around a
hot stone, every sound washed out the same, but there was
structure in this man. "You, also, seem to be man of
many talents."
Dan shrugged.
Alert to the n'th degree, but only his eyes showed it. Awake
and ruthlessly willing. "Talents? Yeah, I'm not just
a good photographer, pretty good writer, too." Playing
dumb, but with little effort. Neither of them was stupid,
hunter and prey, roles undefined. For a moment Dan's nostrils
widened, wondering if he could smell the Russian's blood,
long before he'd smashed the bastard's face in. He'd taste
it one day, had to remain patient until then, he'd get his
prize when the time was right. Shifting slightly, he bent
one leg and casually pushed the sole of his boot against the
wall. Appearing relaxed, but able to propel himself off that
wall in a split second.
Vadim
stood tall, could feel his blood pounding. The aura of danger,
of challenge, the man was giving off heat, heat of a kind
that pulled him closer, into danger. He stood his ground,
but felt how his body heated up. One thing to get hard from
a scuffle in a dark alley; one thing to do it because he was
half drunk and bored to random violence. Another to look the
man in the eye, in broad daylight, with press close enough
to enjoy an inexplicable stabbing between an American reporter
and a Soviet military advisor. No, Canadian. Not American.
Tree leaf, white, red, not the star-spangled banner.
To be
alone. To allow the fire to flare up, no holds barred. Vadim
wanted to press him against the wall, turn him around, fuck
him again. Harder. Longer. And again. Until both their bodies
couldn't take any more, and then cut his throat.
Vadim
said nothing.
Dan smiled
coldly at the tell-tale silence, a truly nasty expression
on his face. "All on your own, Captain? Don't you Russkies
always turn up with a second in command?" The serrated
blade of Dan's verbal knife sliced leisurely through the sticky
air.
Vadim
recoiled. Vanya. Fuck him. He'd lost a man on a private hunting
expedition. Vanya had born the brunt of the fire, the raging
torrent, Vanya who fought and resisted and still sucked him
like his life depended on it. Gone. Off to Russia. Vadim tensed,
just as if the attack had been real rather than words. This
was getting too close. A fascination for a strong body did
not go together with the same man having killed Vanya, and
no way to prove it. He needed a fuck. Or a fight. Both. If
only he could have both. "My second is inconvenienced."
And grinning a double grin, festering blue and green in a
hot metal tin in storage at Kabul fucking airport. He would
probably explode before touching home soil.
"Inconvenienced?"
Dan smirked, the sense of revenge was coiling in his stomach
like a lazy snake, sunning its smooth muscled length in the
glow of hatred. "I'm sorry to hear that, Captain."
Sorry?
That grin was not sorry and his dark eyes were cold. Eyes
of a professional killer.
Dan glanced
at his watch, pushed himself slowly away from the wall and
shrugged. "Look at the time, I got things waiting. Well,
I hope your 'inconvenience' won't be too much trouble."
Shouldering his bag, the Canadian flag grubby, but still prominent.
No one wanted to be an Americanski these days.
"I'm
sure we'll meet again." Dan's voice had turned even softer,
smiling sardonically. A promise, a threat? Or just a platitude.
Vadim
wanted to hit the other, wipe the grin off, then realized
that the bastard had turned the tables on him.
He didn't
step back, followed the man's motion and almost got chest
to chest with him. Smelling distance. Close enough to feel
his heat, and remember. "I do not want to keep you longer
than necessary", Vadim said in a low voice. "I am
sure your mission is important. More important than indulging
me. And yes, we will meet again. I have feeling I know exact
place." Eyes narrowed with challenge. Dangerous. Fucking
dangerous to return to the scene of crime.
Dan's
ugly smile faltered for a moment. The bastard had come physically
too close. The same scent again, the same heat. "Do you?
Really?" He got himself back under control and his dark
brows lifted. "Good for you." Yes, he knew the place,
too, and he would be there, tonight.
Dan turned
to walk away after the Soviet Captain had pulled back into
a safe distance, leaving a throwaway comment in Russian, "Until
the next time, Russkie." A dangerous game, his Russian
accented but fluent. Cat - mouse, tiger and moth. The dance
in the flame had begun.
Vadim
snarled. The man was full of surprises. Special Forces. He
had to be. Mercenary, most likely, because there were no western
troops in the country. And that made him an enemy. He would
do nothing forbidden. Meet with an enemy, trying to capture
and interrogate. He'd return sated, with knowledge. And ash
on his skin.
He left
the hotel, walked into the glare of the sun. He was sweating,
he needed to find a way to get rid of the tension. But then,
he needed the tension for tonight. He knew it was too risky,
and he should rig the whole place. Hide weapons. Prepare the
arena. Vadim couldn't wait to get out of that fucking dress
uniform. Back to basics, strength pitted against strength,
skin to skin, mad, intense, snarling rage and power. Intoxicating,
just the thought of it.
*
* *
Dan got
a lift back to his camp that didn't officially exist. How
he needed to smell that bastard's blood; hear the rattling
breath of death; feel the steel drive into muscle and flesh.
Tonight the Nothing would be wiped out forever.
He would
go back to Kabul and into a rat infested alley. Better equipped
this time and with a deadly purpose.
*
* *
Vadim
picked a fight just for the relief it brought. They knew he
was tense, and somebody said something about Vanya. Something
that implied that Vanya had been too fucking drunk to see
what was coming.
Absolutely
legit thing to say. And absolutely legit to fly off the handle
at that. Vadim dropped the long bar of the weights, just dropped
them, the cast iron hitting the concrete with a metal thud,
and Vadim was already in fighting mode, just blindly attacking
the lieutenant who thought he was tough.
Eventually,
it was a bunch of other junior officers that pulled them apart
- after the lieutenant had been losing. Up to that point,
people were too busy betting on the outcome. He snarled, then
left the other, blood and death in his gaze, but of course
not for the hapless comrade. He wanted to run down a wall,
wanted to take the energy and do something with it, something
outrageous, tiring, satisfying, something as real and cruel
and intense as he could possibly do.
Still
no showers. Hard to clean himself with a rag and a little
water, shave, too. His hands were shaking, as if he was on
withdrawal or dehydrated. He tried to find a moment's peace,
tried to jerk off, but just couldn't take the spike off. Not
enough. The physical reaction happened, sure enough, but he
was on edge, worse than getting shot full of drugs before
a competition.
The country
got to him, and the memory of the one perfect moment, equal
powers hell bent on destroying each other. He left the barracks
as soon as he could, wore his camo, and a pistol, knives.
Yes, the AK too, but didn't really expect to use it. He didn't
want to make too much noise. It was, strangely enough, also
about restraint, cleverness, about control. And that was what
was driving him insane with need.
*
* *
Dusk
was settling and the approaching night saw Dan dressed in
trademark camo trousers and army boots. Shirt and jumper thrown
over it, wrapped in a well-worn dirty parka. It got cold at
night in this hell-hole, and he had covered his head and part
of his face with a dark rag. Not only to protect from the
dust, as was the custom amongst the local men, but to disguise
his features, no matter how dark they were.
By the
time he arrived in the city night had fallen. Dan was cautiously
circling the scene of crime, before silently pulling himself
up a wall. The bird's track across the roofs, the safest option
at night.
Unaware
yet but wary of the Russian who had arrived at dusk, hiding
in an alley with camo paint smeared over the pale features
and darkened hair. Vadim was climbing up a ladder after checking
the surroundings for booby traps, while Dan was still waiting
for what felt like an eternity. An impatient man, he had learnt
patience throughout the years. Stakeouts for days and nights,
often impossible to move nor make a sound.
Dan was
checking the surrounding buildings, roofs, windows - shit
holes that contained the rotten dregs of human life in a city
of fucking dust. Finally sliding down through the roof into
the abandoned building where a scent hit his nostrils. Sweat
and blood, death and decay, bringing back memories of a physical
pain he'd never believed he would ever encounter.
The air
was dusty, laden with threats, but the dark rag around his
head made him breathe in his own sweat, not the putrid air.
Dan went to crouch motionless in a corner, hidden in darkness
and blending into the shadows.
Waiting,
focussed, all senses alert. He knew the bastard would come,
counted on it. For reasons he could not decipher, but it didn't
matter jack shit to him why the Russkie would be drawn back
and right into his extinction. All that mattered was his own
reason. Revenge. Inflicting pain and ultimately death.
Finally!
The ghostly shuffle of dry wind, but Dan's senses made out
the systematic presence of a human. A faint scuffle, even
an expert recce could not disguise the sheer bulk of a heavy
body. The Russian cunt, no doubt. His personal enemy. He would
let him come close, willing him nearer, the knife firmly in
his hand. He'd always preferred the up-close and personal
blade; bullets were for wusses.
Vadim
had moved away from the hole in the ground, crouched near
it. The darkness could hold a platoon of men. Eyes getting
used to it. He wished he was a cat, a lion, an owl, or, indeed,
a bat, one of the various unit symbols. Recce. Move silently,
see and hear everything. Even if bats were technically blind.
He could feel his throat vibrate, as he sensed like a snake.
The instructors had told him to trust his guts, see with his
mind. Sometimes, the animal part of his brain picked up things
that the human part discarded as white noise. He was wide
open, feeling out into the darkness.
The place
hadn't changed much, as the darkness seemed to become less
dense. Vanya's blood had to still be here. Over there, where
he had died. Some specks on the wall opposite. Cutting a throat
was a messy business.
Vadim
moved deeper into the room, still crouching, to be as little
of a target as possible, moving his feet carefully, not shuffling,
not grinding bits of rubble into the ground. Old trick, Vadim
reached for a piece of stone or dirt, and tossed it into the
corner, where it rolled, clattering. 'Where are you?'
Dan's
senses were so overly alert, he felt his nerves strumming
against the confines of his spine, burning lines inside the
marrow of his bones, mixing with the white noise of the blood
in his ears. There. A sound. Blood and bones, sinew and flesh;
tonight he'd cut him open.
"Welcome
home, Russkie." Dan whispered in Russian.
Vadim's
lips twisted into a smile at his native language. He had trained
this one well. He already spoke a civilized language. Something
strange and arousing about the fact that the man spoke at
all. Like speaking during sex, when every word was more intense
and went straight through the skin. He knew where the other
was now, eyes found the silhouette, broken up, of course,
and he straightened a little, as if in greeting. His body
shivered from the voice, it was like breath on his face. Or
in his neck, and he was still so far away. Hard to guess,
but he'd say about two and a half yards.
His own
voice similarly low. "Your Russian is not bad. You haven't
lived in Russia, but you had good teachers." It was the
salute just before fencing. He could be terribly old-fashioned
against an equal.
Dan chuckled
softly, an eerie sound in the darkness. Deceptively gentle
and strangely amused. Then a soft shuffle, and his body melted
in one smooth motion out of the shadow, into a square of moonlight
from a window that gaped torn and wide open like an eternally
screaming mouth.
With
all the confidence only a justifiably arrogant motherfucker
like him could muster, Dan casually pulled the rag from his
face, revealing teeth, gleaming in the dull light. A grin
like a baring of fangs. "I'm afraid they couldn't have
taught you much. Haven't you ever heard of the first
maxim? Never leave a comrade alone, dying like a bleeding
pig."
Vadim
studied the way the moonlight traced the man's cheekbone,
line of ear, the darkness of hair. Stubble. Firm, strong skin
he wanted to sink his teeth into. Wanted to draw blood. Vanya.
He missed the things he could do to him. Their silent communication.
"If he had followed orders, he would still be alive."
The absolute, shocking truth. Instructors had stressed the
point that sometimes, some people were too fucking stupid
to survive. Like people going out of their way to find danger.
It was possible. And because of that possibility, it was irresistible.
"Don't
be so sure he would still be alive, Russkie." Smooth
words, soft voice. Dark as a caress, hiding the venom of hatred.
"You
know my name." Vadim moved closer, made sure the light
didn't interfere with his vision, but also allowed the man
a closer look at him. No dress uniform this time, nothing
hid his features. "And I know what you are."
Dan did
not move nor react, only his head followed the movement, studying
the other. Almost same height, same built, same muscles. One
dark, one blond underneath the camo paint. His own body slightly
less bulky and perhaps half an inch shorter, a negligible
difference. Watching the Russian dispassionately. Just a man,
a man who had done Nothing and would die for Nothing. Yet
he could not help being struck by the eyes, glowing in impossibly
pale brightness in the darkness of the room.
He smiled,
the only movement in a statue-still body. "I know your
name, your rank, and probably your number." Dan knew
a lot more, only that afternoon some of the requested research
had come back. A sports hero, a pentathlete, well-well. His
brows raised, once again the amused chuckle, as if they were
having tea in Ascot on the lawn. Civilised conversation, not
two deadly enemies; two beasts on the prowl. "You know
what I am, Russian cunt? Go ahead. I'm all ears."
The voice.
The kind of voice Vadim could listen to, whatever it said.
Even better when it was a challenge. He had the feeling the
man was not reluctant to start, it was more like he thrived
on the same energy that coursed through himself. He knew,
he could taste the quality of time. It made him ravenous with
desire, the same dark flood he had unleashed before. But this
time, the tiger knew what he planned.
Vadim
saw how the silver light tore one side of the face out of
the darkness, the rest remained in twilight. Perfect. 'Don't
move', he thought. 'Stay there, right here'. Magnetic fields,
pulses he could feel everywhere in his body. It was an effort
to breathe. He shook his head, even at the insult. Enough
to draw knives in the barracks. It seemed like twisted tenderness
to him, especially with that voice. Like Vanya sometimes called
him bastard when he had jumped him and fucked him in the night.
'What
you are', thought Vadim. A merc. A soldier. He was the heat
Vadim wanted, needed, to burn, to turn the world into ash.
He was the glint of a blade at midnight. Vadim breathed laughter.
"You are a memory. A perfect moment."
Dan raised
one brow, higher than before. Perfect dark arch, one side
of his face illuminated by moonlight. "What?" The
Russkie was fucking insane. Then sudden anger, the smooth
amusement gone in a flash. Perfect memory? Perfect
fucking memory of fucking what? Of the Nothing that still
burnt deep inside? That perfect fucking violent memory. Dan's
eyes caught fire, even in the low quality of grey-dead light,
the burning was overwhelming. Anger, to much anger waiting
to be unleashed, but he had to remain focussed.
"You
can stuff your memory down your own throat, motherfucker."
Even when snarled, Dan's voice retained the darkness. No softness,
now, but the pulsating energy of hatred and anger. "It's
the last thing you'll take with you."
Old rule,
Vadim thought. If you fight, don't talk. The shift in the
man's voice gave away the shift in his intention. Vadim jumped
back, feeling the other's blade rip through the air and slice
across his chest, just catching the shirt. 'Good one', he
thought, that guy knew how to fight. He pulled back, one hand
sliding to the sheath against the small of his back. If he
could incapacitate him. Once more. If he could only taste
all that strength just once more. That had to be a mistake,
fighting meant being willing to kill, but a dead body could
offer only relief, never strength. Before he fucked a corpse,
he preferred his hand. Much saner option, too.
"Yes.
And I'm your memory, too", Vadim snarled, waiting for
the next attack. "You won't forget me. Never."
Dan laughed
coldly. "You're Nothing, Russkie. Nothing." He didn't
want it to be over soon, he could have killed the man before
he had ever entered the building. More deaths from his hand
than he cared to remember and none of them meant anything.
Except this one.
His eyes
taking in the movement of the Russian's hand, certain it held
a weapon. Dan guessed the movement that would follow, judged
the distance and his booted foot sped upwards, straight towards
the other's chin, before he could use the weapon for a sufficient
attack. Hell, yes, his body was a killing machine, and not
a victim of Nothing.
Committing
too much into the attack, while part of Vadim's mind was not
in it, and he pressed into it, overbalancing. He had anticipated
a lunge, and wanted to meet it half way, playing strength
against strength. The kick hit him in the face, rattled teeth,
bruised his lips and split them in several places. That man
had a talent to make him bleed. Vadim staggered back, trying
to catch his balance, and wasn't quite sure where the knife
was, but he tasted his own blood. That sobered him for a heartbeat,
just in time to hear, close, a sound that turned his blood
into acid. The whoosh of a rocket propelled grenade.
Absolutely
everything paled against this threat. "Incoming!"
Vadim shouted, and dove.
"Fuck!"
Dan almost missed the sound in his moment of triumph. His
head flew round, body ready to follow, but nearly too late,
and he was thrust backwards with the full force of the impact,
losing his balance but throwing his body weight into the movement.
The building a sudden hell of deafening sound, dirt, mud-bricks
and wattle, like projectiles of destitute.
Vadim
hit the ground, almost hit his face again, covered his head
and neck and felt the explosion wash over him. Deafened, ears
ringing, the world turned into one high-pitched sound and
clouds of acrid dust. Stuff rained down on him, that explosion
must have taken the front of the house clean off, and the
whole structure could just simply collapse right now, burying
him in a pile of stuff.
Dan was
choking, wrapped in a cloud of dried goat shit, he landed
on something hard and yet soft and yet hard and ... his head
knocked sideways, hitting a wooden beam. He was disoriented,
blinded by debris and dust, desperately trying to breathe
before knocked out for a moment, sprawled on top of this something
... something.
Vadim
thought a beam was coming down, and tensed, using every muscle
in his body as brace against the weight. His ears rang, painfully,
the dust bit into his lips, he moved only a bit to pull the
scarf before mouth and nose, still choking on the dust. Vadim
wrestled the panic, couldn't hear a thing, expected the ground
to give way, but it was impossible to say, or see, or even
guess what had brought the attack. No surprise, this was Kabul,
and there were insurgents. He only hoped it was more or less
unintentional. He coughed violently, felt close to retching.
Eyes
stinging, watering to wash the dust out, and with a groan
he could feel, but not hear, Vadim checked around with his
hands. A boot. For a moment he thought it might be his, and
that meant his boot was touching his hip.
The panic
was back. No pain. But they said it didn't hurt at first.
Fuck.
He wanted
to scream, then, breathing harshly, and choking, he forced
his mind to work. Fuck it. Panic now, and you are fucking
dead. Think of fucking Vanya.
Vadim
turned around, tried to move under the log, assess the damage
and his position, he felt like he was in water, needed to
work out where the rest of his body was, relative to the other
parts, and finally understood that he was in one piece. Fucking
piece of engineering genius. Small wonder he was shit at demolitions,
unless it involved rigging a hand grenade.
He rolled,
feeling the weight on top of him shift and could feel it had
a pulse, that it was choking, and that it was his enemy. Vadim
wiped the tears from his face with his arm, and forced himself
to breathe as little as possible, tasting nothing but blood,
dust and all the shit his body came up with to cleanse his
mouth and nose. Spit, more blood, tears.
Vadim
reached up for the other body, felt his chest heave, and despite
the situation, that weight and that closeness, fucking dangerous
as it was, he was hard, he was alive, and the guy's leg pressed
against him just right. He had hardly enough oxygen to think,
let alone straight, as if that ever had been an option, but
the lack of air made his body tingle. The enemy was so fucking
close. Maybe wounded, maybe unconscious. Clearly alive. He
took the leg and pressed it against himself, baring his teeth
at the feeling. Fuck, yes. He didn't care about control just
now, he wanted, needed to take advantage.
Vadim's
hands moved to the other's belt between their bodies, pulling
it open. Hump him, anything, just needed to purge that madness.
Starting to pull down those trousers, moving underneath to
get some friction. The very fact he was still alive and all
the stuff that was pent up inside made him insane with need.
He was aware what he did, but he didn't care.
Dan was
still caught in darkness, but started to fight for air, lungs
hurting like fuck. Dark and gone, and who was he and what
the fuck, and choking, retching, fighting. Unable to breathe,
Dan forgot about the Russkie; about explosion and insurgents;
about anything at all. Nothing mattered, except for the burning,
blinding fire of pain in his lungs. No oxygen, couldn't gasp
for air, couldn't get anything in nor out of his goddamnedmotherfucking
lungs. Couldn't orientate himself, couldn't see nor hear,
nothing but the deafening sound in his ears of explosion,
hammering heart and screaming lungs. Fuck. Fuck!
Surfacing,
he could feel manhandling, unable to fight it. That fucking
Russian bastard!
Eye to
eye and face to face, staring straight into the ice blue insanity.
The sensations of hands on his body, once more roughly handling
him. The same shit again, violent grinding and pushing against
him. That was it, enough to give a surge of strength and the
pain in his lungs exploded as he bucked upwards, throwing
himself away from the other. Dan opened his mouth and drew
in a breath, forcing in more of the fucking dust, before breaking
down on his knees, convulsing violently, throwing up shit
from his lungs and crap from his stomach. Coughing up dust
and hatred while thrashing wildly, arms flailing.
Vadim
went right after him, wanted to finish it, grab the man, have
him, take him, rip him apart, fight. Just going straight after
him, keeping close, not allowing any distance, no respite
from the intensity. No way. The other was in no state to fight,
but he would resist. Vadim grinned, still hardly breathing,
he was a swimmer, he could control breath.
Dan was
still mindlessly retching and thrashing blindly, even vomited
which should get anybody's mind off fighting. Vadim grabbed
him anyway, crashed into the ground on top of rubble, which
hurt in several places, then a completely instinctive, no
way that was planned, meditated or anything, punch hit him
right in the groin. The force enough to stop breath, stop
heart, stop all thought. Fighting what was not pain, but the
fucking sky coming down.
The punch
didn't register in Dan's oxygen starved brain, still blind,
struggling to survive, frantic gulps of dusty, at last stale
air getting back into his lungs. Finally breathing, painfully,
doubled over on his knees in the rubble.
Knees.
Rubble. No one touching him. No force keeping him down.
Dan was
still coughing, eyes watering, hardly able to see, but there,
a shape writhing in pain on the ground. Increasing sight with
every lung wrecking cough, wiping a sleeve across his eyes,
he was smearing blood, sweat, tears and dust into a camouflage
of pain, and then yes. Fucking yes!
"Fucking
bastard!" Hardly human sounds, scratching-croaking from
shit-filled lungs and tortured vocal chords, but Dan staggered
to his knees. Full-on hatred for the curled-up man on the
ground, he could hardly keep his balance, but the strength
he managed to get behind his first lunge was born out of seething
anger.
"Fuck
you! Fucking Russian cunt!" Dan kicked towards the bastard's
ribs, once, twice, harder, kicked his army boots with a ferocity
born out of greed for revenge, putting all his weight behind
the attacks.
Vadim
tensed his body, tensed what little wasn't taut, and needed
to get away from the rain of kicks, as they pierced through
his consciousness. The man could kill him right there. Getting
up was impossible, as if every tendon in Vadim's body had
shortened, halved. He sometimes fucking did this himself,
sometimes pulled a guy up by his shoulders, tripling the pain.
He saw the ripped open wall, decided he could easily make
that fall, but needed to move at least another three yards.
Dan would
have laughed if he had had the air in his lungs, watching
the motherfucker getting smashed like a beetle on its back.
This satisfaction was better than any dripping cunt he'd ever
stuffed, and more intense than any fuck.
Vadim
saw the boot coming for his face, and with more strength and
control than he thought he'd had, moved. It made him almost
scream with pain, but while he suppressed the sound, Dan was
howling in agony when the Russian's boot impacted with his
shin. "Shit!" He flew backwards, managing to curl
up just enough to prevent the worst damage when hitting the
pile of rubble opposite the torn open wall.
Dan shook
his head, fuck, it hurt, but he had to continue, had to kill,
to maim, to bring pain to that cunt, and how fucking good
it was, how all-consuming, he'd never felt anything like it.
He needed to smash that face in, so badly, he could feel the
need in his throat. It tasted of blood and sweat, of anger
and hatred. He was crawling on all fours, needed to obliterate
that fucking face, cut out the goddamned eyes, smash in those
mocking bastard lips! With a hoarse cry Dan lunged forward
again, throwing himself onto the other, managing to straddle
the bastard.
Dan's
first punch slipped its aim, hitting Vadim's jaw, but the
next ones came in rapid succession, hitting that mocking face
as often and fast and hard as he could. Intend on smashing
the nose, maiming jaw and cheeks, and tearing open those fucking
lips and blinding-bright eyes, turning them into a bleeding
pulp.
Vadim
couldn't find enough breath, his ribcage hurt, even though
that pain was nothing near the pain that was searing his groin.
The weight was too much to drag with him to the hole in the
wall, he needed to get away, absolutely needed to retreat,
because winning wasn't even a possibility any more. There
was a cold, white blue feeling. Fear. Fear so intense he hadn't
felt it in a while. Especially as a somebody caused it, not
a something. It was like drowning, drowning with his hands
tied on his back.
He defended
against the blows as good as he could, but he was too sluggish,
too damned hurt to threaten his enemy's life. Knife. Where
was the fucking knife? The enemy rolled over him like a tank,
the fear became madness, struggle again, fuck the pain. He
could hurt later. Vadim's hand found a piece of rock, nice,
sharp, pointy end, and, gripping it like a caveman that had
just invented murder, brought it down with all the force he
had left on the enemy's kneecap, twice, and hoped it was the
kneecap, rewarded by a howl of pain. Blinded by the blows
to his face, another jab at the tense thigh muscle, suddenly
free, and with an effort as if he had to lift a car, pushed
himself up, and began to crawl, belly crawl over the rubble,
towards the torn-open wall.
It looked
like a dragon had taken a bite right out of the side of the
house, and before Vadim could even consciously decide whether
he could risk the fall, not that there were any other options,
the much tortured floor gave way and he fell, hitting the
ground so hard he almost passed out.
The patter
of feet. The next thing he could see with his blood encrusted
half-blind eyes was a bunch of goat-fuckers moving up towards
him. And he knew with absolute certainty that those were not
the guys that had invited them into the country.
No pistol.
No strength.
*
* *
Dan had
forgotten everything but the utter satisfaction of smashing
in the chiselled features of this fucking face, until pain
hit like a steel rod through his kneecaps, and he screamed
like a wounded animal. Losing balance, tossed aside, he held
his knee, his thigh, curled like a maggot, barely noticed
the other crawling towards the opening. Both worms, both lost
in pain. Then nothing. Silence.
Minutes
to fight the pain that was consuming him, throbbing in legs,
joints, everywhere in his body alike. Some parts on fire,
others dull and torturous, but then voices. Steps, Sudden
kerfuffle. Shit. Insurgents? Fucking goat-fuckers? That Russian
bastard was his. His! No on else's. He'd kill him, maim him,
destroy him and he'd laugh while doing so.
Crawling
towards the open wall, Dan didn't lose balance, gripping with
torn and bloodied hands on wooden rafters that stuck out from
the tormented building like an old hag's rotten teeth in a
collapsed mouth.
"Fuck."
The Russkie wasn't going to cut it. Afghans. Four of them,
no fucking chance, the hated bastard lay helpless on the ground.
"Fuck
off!" Dan shouted, "his death is mine, fuckers!"
He let go and jumped onto the street below, hardly keeping
balance at the impact with his knackered knees.
*
* *
Fuck
no.
Amid
the curses, the rocks they picked up to pelt him with - a
fucking stoning like in the fucking Middle Ages - and all
Vadim could do was wish he had his pistol, or could properly
move. His ribs were on fire, he felt completely fucked up,
couldn't even scream, only felt blood run from his face, blood
and spit, both eyes starting to swell shut. If he didn't get
away soon, he was dead. He was already halfway there. And
one thing they had told him: Don't let the Afghans get you
alive. Stoning was apparently one of the nicer things they
did with the enemy, and even that fucking hurt.
Curses.
Son of a dog, dog, swine ...
Stones,
hitting, less painful than the blows he'd received just a
minute ago. Vadim spit out a mouthful of blood, and began
to crawl, favoured his left side, because something was seriously
wrong with the ribs on his right side, every movement, every
breath was fucking agony, and he didn't even want to check
his teeth.
As he
started to move, they began kicking him. Always count on the
enemy being cruel. Somewhere, he heard shouting, then he grabbed
one filthy skinny brown ankle, pulled the Afghan towards him
with what strength he had left, had the holdout knife out
and sliced through the man's Achilles heel. Take that, goat-fucker.
The answer
was a howl, and Vadim hoped it would attract attention from
a Soviet patrol. He would get shit from them for the rest
of his posting here, but fuck, did he want to see some MPs
or just a bunch of groundpounders, fucking conscripts would
do, as long as they were fucking armed. He kept the foot in
his grip, and stabbed it, piercing the bastard's foot with
so much force that the blade hit the dirt road underneath.
Fuck
yeah. And if he had to fight with his teeth, he would. He
fucking would.
Nobody
would take him alive.
*
* *
Dan panted,
worried, would he fall over or would his knees hold up. Thighs
in agony, kneecaps on fire, fists bleeding, he had to grab
the next best wall to steady himself for the time it took
to catch his breath. Immediately scanning the surroundings.
Fuck. It was dark, too much movement, too many men and one
body crawling on the ground, but then ...
The howl
of pain. That Russian fucker wasn't dead yet. Good.
This
time Dan hadn't come without a weapon. Not the rifle he would
have preferred right now, but a knife and a pistol was better
than nothing. He reached for the pistol in the bulky folds
of the grubby parka, aimed at the Mujahideen guerrilla closest
to the Russian bastard. He wasn't supposed to kill them, but
he'd be fucked if he let them kill his prey. That Russkie
was his and his alone.
The one
being stabbed still screaming, another one shot, letting out
the cut-short sound of a man dying, hot square where it killed
the fastest. Dan didn't bother with the one that the Russian
was dealing with, he trusted the motherfucker to know how
to kill - even when left crawling in the dirt.
Three
more, and he almost laughed when one brought an AK-47 out,
as he threw himself behind a pile of rubble. "That Russian
fucker is mine!" Crawling towards them, unseen, ignoring
pain and exhaustion, keeping up his speed, he could see the
one with the automatic close enough and smirked. The throwing
knife was in his hand, whistled through the air and embedded
itself in the Afghan's throat, before he even bothered to
think about what he was doing.
Simple
task: take out those men between him and his ultimate target.
He was damned good; he was fucking SAS.
Two left.
Thank fuck for their poor equipment and the lack of suitable
weapons.
*
* *
Vadim
was reacting with only his brain stem clear and intact, everything
else hurt too much. The adrenaline helped him deal with the
pain and stun, his whole body felt one bloody, bruised, screwed-up
mess, and he still wasn't home. The guy with the AK shot in
some other direction, had sense enough to not shoot his still
squirming friend with the unpleasant hole in his foot, who
would find it very hard to get up. Now, or even ever.
Vadim
pulled himself along the man, an obscene crawling/mounting
motion, rested on the squirming body and punched the knife
straight into the Afghan's neck, from the side, then fumbled
around for a gun, and found something even better. He pulled
it off, counted, cooked the fucking grenade, because he was
just that side of insane, because it was Russian make and
therefore the timer was everything but reliable. It was like
holding a world in his hand, death, madness, and the inevitable
hammer of a Norse god. He sweated like an animal, then tossed
it amid the enemies, and rolled off the body he was lying
on, pulling it between himself and the grenade splinters.
Another deafening sound.
Stuff
rained down around him. Just stuff. Smell of dust and raw
steak.
*
* *
The explosion
was deafening, Dan felt it was almost worse than the RPG,
thank fuck he had been behind cover. He'd laugh if his ears
weren't ringing so loudly and if he weren't covered in fucking
debris again, this time with the added pleasure of scraps
of flesh and bits of bone raining around him. That Russian
cunt was even better than he had thought. It would make his
revenge that much better.
Dan was
peering out from behind the rubble, he scanned the alley,
but none of them was alive. Except for that big pile of blond
arsehole over there, but he wasn't going to allow him to die.
Not yet. No fucking way.
He didn't
have much time, patrols would soon be there and he couldn't
get caught. No Soviet soldier would buy the pretence of a
reporter, not the way he looked; not in the middle of carnage.
Vadim
was breathing, gathering strength for the escape. Hoping the
merc would lose interest, was too wounded to give chase, and
maybe, maybe, attract some positive, helpful attention. He
could use backup, now. His eyes felt sore, were throbbing,
and he could feel the blood run out of the corner of his mouth.
He just turned the head enough so it could drip out. He didn't
have enough strength to spit.
Dan came
out from behind his cover, limped as fast as he could to the
Russian, who sensed something draw close, a motion from the
corner of his eyes. The merc was still around. Oh fuck. Vadim
had tricks up his sleeve, but he was exactly one trick short.
The merc shouldn't be able to walk, he thought, with misgivings.
He should be just as fucked up as he was.
Dan smirked
down at the bleeding mess, half-covered by the dead body of
the Mujahideen. "Good." He delivered another kick,
not giving a shit that his fucked knee was trying to kill
him. He needed one last time the satisfaction of destroying
that face, directing the force of his boot against the jaw.
"You're still alive."
The force
spun Vadim's head around, his neck protested, one of five
hundred voices in his body, riling against what had happened
and that he hadn't taken more care. The pain was blinding.
He wouldn't fucking give up. He wouldn't fucking pass out.
Stay there, he pleaded with himself. Stay focused. Couldn't
hear a thing.
Dan turned,
the sound of soldiers on patrol coming rapidly closer. Even
in Kabul it wasn't a daily occurrence that grenades were thrown
in the streets. He sneered, once more in Russian, "Until
next time, cunt." Limping as fast as he could into the
opposite direction of the patrol. Getting away, back to camp
and some medic's attention. His OC would welcome the information
about the insurgents.
Something
hoisted Vadim up, he felt hands, and then he felt a car around
him. He thought he saw Soviet uniforms, then he let his head
fall back.
*
* *
When
the adrenaline started to wear off, Dan became rapidly aware
of the real extent of the pain his body was in. Didn't matter.
He had to run, getting back to camp wasn't the easiest of
tasks, but he managed to find transport with some witless
goat herders. Whatever they really were, he looked down on
those leathery Afghanis, all goat-fuckers and dimwits to him.
He couldn't give less of a shit about any of them, but then
he didn't give a monkey's arse about the whole conflict, even
genocide. He did what he did and he was goddamned motherfucking
good at it.
To kill.
Not this
time, though. Would have been too fast and damn, that Russian
was good. Seemed the Soviet paras were at least as good as
their own, if not better. As good as the SAS, though? Shit,
that had to be seen.
He arrived
back in the 'non existent' camp before the light of dawn.
First a debriefing, then a medical check-up. He'd never get
it the other way round unless they'd declared him dead. At
least.
Dan had
already had the debriefing with his direct superior, and was
sitting in a plastic chair beside the operating table, just
in his skivvies in the medic's tent, slightly better equipped
than the rest. One arm on the table, cleaned with spirits
and numbed, while the doc was suturing a cut. He'd managed
to miss in the adrenaline rush that one of the explosions
had cut his arm far worse than he had thought. In the other
hand a bottle of whiskey, the paint-stripper kind, swigging
mouthfuls while chatting away with the medic about the joys
of rear action with a willing bird.
A sudden
presence entered the tent while he was in the middle of describing
that enormously fat arsed bitch he had fucked on his last
day in Blighty. The presence coughed and stood with his brows
raised. "Staff Sergeant McFadyen, I am duly impressed."
The upper-class voice and demeanour of one of the most senior
ranks.
Oh shit.
Holy shit, but in fact, also fucking funny. At least in Dan's
world.
"Sir!"
He couldn't stand up but saluted with the bottle in his hand,
hit his jaw instead, right at a tender spot and cursed under
his breath. He was officially off duty right now, was drowning
the aches and pain legitimately with booze, but the failure
of proper decorum could still bust his arse. Even his. As
unlikely as it was. "My apologies, Sir."
"Accepted."
There seemed to be a slight hint of amusement in the cultured
voice. "McFadyen, I need to talk to you."
Dan's
eyes narrowed, this was a novelty. Something big and something
different and something entirely suicidal. "Of course,
Sir. I should be stitched up in a few minutes."
The Colonel
nodded, "See me in the Captain's tent."
"Yes,
Sir." Dan raised his brows and shrugged his shoulders
at the doc, when the top dog had left. He didn't have a fucking
clue what that one was about, but he'd find out. Best get
another swig down his throat before it all became official
once more. He needed action, not duties.
Several
mouthfuls of cheap whiskey later, Dan's arm had been stitched
up and bandaged, struggling one-handed to get back into his
clothes. Not uniform, no need to, not here, not right now,
no matter the decorum 'Her Majesty's Men' usually preferred.
A pair of clean trousers and a polo shirt later, he turned
up in the Captain's tent, where they were already waiting
for him. A Colonel. He had been right. This was the big one.
"Please
sit down, McFadyen." The cultured voice again, and he
did as he was asked to. Not that he had an option. "You
have shown considerable skills and knowledge, and we are aware
that you are the most experienced personnel of the Special
Forces when it comes to this kind of mountain region and,
I must add, to this kind of warfare."
Dan's
brows rose but he said nothing. At last, at fucking last someone
was putting into words what he'd known long ago. Goddamned
'Friendly Brothers', yeah right. Those bastard Russians wouldn't
know what a brother was if he fucked them right up the shitter.
Good
metaphor. Not.
"I
don't want to talk around it but I'm getting straight to the
point. We want you to link up with the Afghan Mujahideen resistance
movement inside Pakistan, and then return, if need be, to
the Afghan mountains, to make an assessment of what training
and material help is needed."
Dan's
brows rose even higher. Surely, that was the greatest fucking
lie of 'straightforwardness' he had ever heard. "Sir,
with all due respect, are you saying you want me to round
up Mujahideen insurgents, train them, equip them and organise
them to fight against the Red Army? I assume the West is less
than happy with the way the Soviets are piling into Afghanistan."
A perfect
example of what no-nonsense and straight to the point really
was. The Colonel nodded slowly. To his credit he didn't allow
himself to be visibly taken aback. "Yes." At last
to the point. "These are your new orders. McFadyen, you
will be flown into Pakistan in ten days' time and in the meantime,
you will stay here. Is this understood?"
Dan realised
he had one chance, just one, to refuse the duty. It was asking
a lot, even for someone from the SAS, but he'd be shot to
hell and back if he'd rejected such a chance. "Yes, Sir.
Understood." He grinned.
Just
one spanner in the works, one thing that pissed him off -
he'd miss his chance to destroy the fucking Russian.
He'd
had part of his revenge, it would have to do.
*
* *
Vadim
woke up due to the absence of pain, then stared at the white
wall, feeling blissfully unpained. It was still all make shift,
gear hadn't all arrived yet in sufficient quantities, then
again, there was not a flood of wounded or dying.
There
were some guys parading around. Afghani politicians, he gathered
from the way they acted as if they were still the bosses in
this blighted country. Vadim got to shake a hand, mumbled
something, was patted on the shoulder. Poor man had walked
into an ambush. Let him rest up.
The gear
people didn't like the fact that he had lost the assault rifle.
He couldn't remember where it was gone, and they took it out
of his 'pay'. Which meant that back home, his family would
be in trouble.
One day,
a medical officer showed up. "You are one lucky comrade",
he said, clearly avoiding the 'bastard' or whatever he wanted
to say. "Found something in your uniform."
Vadim
glanced at him, tired against the afternoon light. "What?
A pack of weed I go to the brig for?"
The doctor
shook his head, stepped closer and dropped something onto
the bed sheet. It was a lump of reddish metal, and Vadim recognized
the shape.
"Human
molar. This is gold." The doctor grinned like Vadim had
managed to somehow rob a bank while unconscious. Teeth were
flying everywhere in an explosion. They sometimes had to be
peeled out of the living flesh. The thought that one dead
insurgent had tried to bite him and failed even in this made
Vadim laugh. "Yeah, thanks."
Fucking
gold tooth. What a twisted reward. His family would freak
if he sent them that.
A week
later, there was a blue ribbon for the Christmas tree.
'For
valour.'
|