Название: Roots of Outrage
Автор: John Davis Gordon
Издательство: HarperCollins
Жанр: Приключения: прочее
isbn: 9780008119294
isbn:
Colonel Krombrink said quietly: ‘And point number seven: you’re the lover of the notorious Patti Gandhi.’ He raised his eyebrows again. ‘Who is well known to us as an ANC operative.’
Mahoney’s mouth was dry. He smashed his hand down on the desk again and cried: ‘You’re lying! You didn’t find explosives in my car! I’ve never touched explosives in my life!’
The colonel smirked: ‘The gallows, Mr Mahoney …
‘You bastards put the explosives in my car!’
The colonel had not moved. ‘Why would we want to hang an innocent man? That doesn’t suppress terrorism, does it?’ He sighed, then sat up. ‘Mr Mahoney, either you put those explosives in your car on one of your trips with Miss Gandhi, or she did.’ He added: ‘With or without your knowledge.’
Mahoney stared. And, Jesus Christ, the bastard was trying to make him pin the explosives on her, to hang her! He rasped: ‘Patti wouldn’t have anything to do with explosives!’
‘Then you put them in your car?’
‘No! You did!’
‘Why should we waste our time framing people when we’ve got our hands full catching real terrorists – like Miss Gandhi?’
‘To blackmail me into giving information about her! And she’s not a fucking terrorist!’
Krombrink smirked. ‘There’re easier ways of getting information without resorting to the dangerous crime of blackmail. Mr Mahoney, your car was never searched at the borders, was it?’ He tapped the file. ‘They keep records at the borders of cars searched.’
‘No! And if they had they’d have found nothing!’
‘But,’ Krombrink said significantly, ‘they usually search an Indian’s car. Because you know what bladdy crooks they are.’
‘And they never found anything in her car either! Or you’d have hanged her long ago!’
‘Right,’ the colonel said. ‘They only ever found merchandise samples.’ He spread his hands. ‘If we were going to frame somebody, surely we would frame Miss Gandhi, who we know is ANC.’
Mahoney stared, Ms mind fumbling, an awful thought dawning on him that perhaps the bastard was telling the truth. He looked so convincing.
The colonel said: ‘So, who put the explosives in your car? Miss Gandhi, who knew she was likely to be searched on the border? Or you? Or both?’
Mahoney rasped desperately: ‘Neither of us!’
The colonel sat back. Then he said thoughtfully: ‘When you went on these lovers’ jaunts, were both your cars parked in the same place?’
Lovers’ jaunts. ‘Yes.’
‘But Miss Gandhi wasn’t in your company the whole time?’
‘You’re suggesting that she sneaked out and put the explosives in my car? Bullshit. You put them in my car!’
‘But she had the opportunity to instruct her ANC friends to hide explosives in your car while your back was turned?’
Mahoney glared at him. The man was offering him an escape route. And, oh God, the cleverness of the swine, planting the doubt in his mind! All he wanted was to get out of there and find out the truth. Yes, he was prepared to make bargains. But play it cool … ‘I don’t believe she did it.’
‘You don’t believe she would expose you to the death penalty?’
The words struck dread in his breast. No, he did not believe Patti would do that, but they had planted the doubt and, oh God, he would do anything to get out of there, out of South Africa. ‘That’s right, I don’t.’
‘So you did it?’ He suddenly became angry: ‘Got, man, admit it!’
It shocked him all over again – the suspicion was suddenly back on him. ‘I deny it! You planted that stuff on me!’
The colonel sneered. ‘Why d’you think she wouldn’t do that? Because she loves you? And, are you in love with her?’
Relief that the suspicion was shifting back to her. What did they want to hear? Yes, so he wouldn’t betray her and hang himself. No, so he would betray her? He tried to think fast. ‘I don’t know now.’ Doubt was what the bastard wanted to hear.
Krombrink took a breath of satisfaction. And proceeded to poison the hook. ‘Do you know what Miss Gandhi does on the nights you don’t visit her for the purpose of contravening the Immorality Act?’ He studied a typewritten page.
Mahoney’s heart gave a pump of black jealousy. Oh, that poisonous doubt again. ‘She has numerous business meetings.’
The colonel nodded over his file, reading. ‘Ja, some business meetings also … and other types of meetings?’
Mahoney wanted to snatch the page from him. He said grimly: ‘Friends.’
Colonel Krombrink did not look up, running his finger down the page. ‘Friends, ja … boyfriends?’
Oh Jesus … ‘I don’t know. You tell me.’
‘Would you be angry if you found out she was sleeping around?’
‘Yes.’ That’s what the bastard wanted to hear. And he was jealous already.
‘And you would be disgusted if in addition she placed those explosives in your car so you unwittingly took the risk of smuggling them across the border on her behalf?’ He added: ‘Exposing you to the gallows.’
Mahoney closed his eyes. He almost believed the bastard now. ‘Yes.’
‘Yes.’ The colonel nodded. ‘And what would you do about it?’
Thank God the man was at last getting to the point of this torture. ‘I’m not sure, I’ve never been in this position.’
The colonel leant forward and said softly: ‘Mr Mahoney, that girl is sleeping with two men apart from you.’
It was a shock, even though he had known it was coming, even though he didn’t believe it. He stared; the colonel went on: ‘And one of them, Mr Mahoney, is a kaffir, hey.’
Mahoney blinked. It was intended as a sickening blow, and it was. He had to bite his tongue to remind himself it was lies. The colonel looked at him:
‘The kaffir is called Amos. The other is a white called Michael. Both are ANC. Communists. And terrorists. Mr Mahoney, the explosives in your car ended up on Lilliesleaf Farm. And we’re sure that these two men used them. To blow up Johannesburg station. And other jobs.’ He paused. ‘The men who’re screwing Miss Gandhi, for whom you now stand in risk of the gallows.’
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