Bekker let the mortars go on firing far longer than was necessary. Forty rounds of high explosive reduced the small copse of trees to a smoking wasteland of torn vegetation and mangled flesh.
THE OOST COTTAGE, IN THE HEX RIVER MOUNTAINS
Riaan Oost could hear the explosions echoing in the distance as he tossed a single suitcase into the back of his pickup truck. The sounds confirmed what logic had already told him. Kotane and his men wouldn’t be returning.
It was past time to leave.
Long past time, in fact. The ANC’s Cape Town safe house was a three-hour drive away under normal conditions. And conditions were unlikely to be normal. Oost roughly wiped the sweat from his palms onto his jeans and turned toward the front door of his cottage.
“Marta! Come on! We’ve got to go!”
His wife appeared in the doorway, staggering under the weight of a box piled high with photo albums and other mementos of their married life.
Oost swore under his breath. She had no business bringing those. Things such as those were sure to arouse suspicion if they were stopped at a security checkpoint before reaching Cape Town.
He stepped in front of her, blocking her path to the truck.
She looked up guiltily.
“I know, Riaan, I know. But I couldn’t bear to leave them behind.” She sniffed, fighting back tears.
Oost felt his anger fade in the face of her sadness.
“I am sorry. ” His voice was gentle.
“But you’ve got to leave them here. It’s too risky.”
He reached out and took the box out of her unresisting hands.
In silence, she watched him carry her small treasures back into the cottage.
Neither could bear to look back as they drove away from the vineyard they’d labored in for six years.
Oost was careful to drive slowly and precisely down the winding, dirt road, anxious to avoid any obvious sign of panic. With luck, they’d be on the main highway and hidden among other travelers before the security forces noted their absence.
He glanced off to the side at a marker post as they came round a sharp bend in the road. Only two more kilometers to the highway and comparative safety! He felt himself begin to relax.
” Riaan!
Startled by his wife’s cry, Oost looked up and slammed on his brakes.
The pickup slid to a stop just yards from two camouflaged armored cars and a row of armed troops blocking the road. My God, he thought wildly, the
Afrikaners are already here.
Beside him, Marta moaned in fear.
One of the soldiers, an officer, motioned them forward. Oost swallowed convulsively and pulled the pickup closer to the roadblock. It must be routine. Please let it be nothing more than a routine checkpoint, he prayed.
The officer signaled him to stop when they were within twenty feet of the armored cars. Two machine guns swung to cover them, aimed straight at the truck’s windshield. Oost glanced quickly to either side. The soldiers surrounding them had their rifles unslung and ready for action. He felt sick. The government knows, he thought. They have to know. But how? Could one of Kotane’s men already have broken under interrogation? It seemed possible.
The sound of a car door slamming shut roused him. For the first time he noticed the long, black limousine parked just beyond the armored cars. It was the kind of car favored by high-ranking security officers. Its occupant, a tall, fair-haired white man in a dark suit and plain tie, strode arrogantly past the soldiers and stopped, his hands on his hips, a few feet away from the pickup truck.
Oost looked at the man’s eyes and shivered. They were a dead man’s eyes, lifeless and uncaring.
“Going somewhere, Meneer Oost?” The security agent’s dry, emotionless voice matched his eyes.
“A curious time to take a trip, isn’t it?”
Oost could hear Marta sobbing softly beside him, but he lacked the strength to comfort her. Prison, interrogation, torture, trial, and execution. The road ahead held nothing good.
“Get out of the car, please. Both of you.” Still that same dry, sterile voice.
“Now.”
Oost exchanged a single, hopeless glance with his wife and obeyed. Still crying, she followed suit. The hard-faced man motioned them toward the waiting limousine.
The soldiers parted to let them pass, watching wordlessly as Oost and
Marta stumbled along in shock with the security officer close behind.
The man didn’t speak again until they were near the long, black car.
“It’s a pity you’re both trying to escape from my custody, meneer. But your actions give me no choice.”
Oost heard cloth rustling and the sound of something rubbing against leather. For an instant he stopped, completely confused. What did the man mean? Then, in the split second he had left to understand, he felt oddly grateful.
The men waiting at the roadblock started as two pistol shots cracked in the still air, echoing off the rocky hills to either side of the road.
Birds, frightened by the sudden noise, fled their perches and took to the air, a lazy, swirling, circling cloud-black specks against a deep blue sky.