Toon repositioned the SAW to give coverage of the convoy. He could see the distant figures of Lucy and Huang walking between the wrecked cars. Jabril and Amanda climbed the tower steps and stood beside him.
‘You’re damn sure none of your buddies are lying in wait?’
‘How could anyone survive out here?’ said Jabril.
‘You said the ruins were haunted. Some of your men saw ghosts. Phantoms moving along the battlements at night.’
‘Youngsters. Superstitious farm boys. They joined the army because it was a better life than herding goats. This battalion were supposedly elite Republican Guard but plenty of them could barely read and write. Some wore bone amulets to ward off the jinn that haunt the wilderness.’
‘You believe any of that shit?’
Jabril shrugged.
‘Can’t help feeling we’re not alone in this valley,’ said Amanda. ‘Lucy is right. There are eyes on us all the time.’
‘Look around,’ said Jabril. ‘This is the deadest place on earth.’
Lucy knelt next to a Chrysler and examined bodywork. A door panel. She pushed her forefinger into a bullet hole.
‘Big-arse holes. Fifty cal. Uniform direction of fire. Punctures on the left side of the vehicles, ragged exits on the right. Nice spray. Methodical. Each vehicle hosed down. I’m guessing the shooters took out trucks front and back. After that, everyone was trapped, boxed in. Easy meat. Soldiers took cover behind the cars but got cut to shit anyway. Fuel fires. Explosions. I reckon if we explored that valley wall we would find a couple of gun positions. A shitload of brass.’
‘But why throw phosphorus grenades?’ asked Huang. ‘They killed everyone. The convoy was on fire. Why toss thermite? Lot of time and trouble. What did they want to burn?’
‘Perhaps they wanted to cover their tracks. Wipe out forensics.’
‘Maybe.’
Lucy kicked a pile of rags. Shreds of olive green camo clothing. Army boots baked crisp by the desert sun.
Jumbled bone. A skull rolled loose.
‘Check it out.’
An empty can of gasoline. A Zippo held in a skeletal hand.
‘Fucker burned himself alive. Maybe Jabril was telling the truth. Fear. Paranoia. Maybe they drove each other crazy.’
‘It’s getting dark,’ said Amanda. ‘Let’s find the truck.’
They reached the rear of the convoy.
An armoured truck. It was boxed by automobiles.
She pressed the transmit button on her chest rig.
‘Jabril? You there?’
‘
‘I think I’ve found the gold.’
‘
Lucy jumped on the hood. She crouched. She spat on her hand, reached down behind heavy ram bars and rubbed the grille badge clean.
FORD
It was a bank vault on wheels. A three-seat cab up front and a hardened steel cargo compartment. Two rear axles. The vault door was secured by combination locks.
‘Looks like she got shot up pretty good. How much do you reckon this thing weighs?’
‘
‘Toon. Got your binoculars?’
‘
‘Reckon we can cut this fucker open?’
‘
Toon stood at the guard tower parapet. He surveyed the convoy.
Lucy’s voice:
‘
‘Two seconds, boss.’
He trained his binoculars on a troop bus.
‘Thought I saw something.’
‘
‘Movement. Thought I saw movement. Corner of my eye. A flicker. Down there, among the cars. Can’t pin it down.’
Toon rubbed his eyes. He scanned burned-out trucks, a couple of wrecked 4x4s.
‘Sorry, boss. Trick of the light.’
‘
A furtive shadow. Something shifting in the burned-out bus.
‘Shit. We got mail,’ shouted Toon.
He cranked the charging handle of the SAW and let rip. Muzzle roar. The weapon kicked. Recoil made his flesh shiver. Smoking cartridge cases cascaded onto the flagstones, clink and chime. Bullets slammed into the troop transport at two hundred rounds per minute. The vehicle trembled and sparked as bullets pierced the body panels.
‘