Special Forces: Soldiers Vashtan/Aleksandr Voinov and Marquesate
Chapter XVII—For Queen and Country
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- October 1987, Kabul
1987 Chapter XVII—For Queen and Country August 1987, Great Britain Dan had been out of the hospital no more than a day before they called him in. He’d expected that, since he’d sent off his PVR, the request for Premature Voluntary Release, to his unit barely a week after the surgery, and they wouldn’t have wasted even a day. They’d hauled him in, to stand—or limp—his ground in front of his CO and a panel, deciding if they let him out in six weeks flat or if they made his life hell by delaying anything they could before they had to let him go after paying a fee for the privilege. Complete with pension for twelve years service, despite his twenty years in the Forces. Pension. If he survived until fifty-five. If. Good question. He felt uncomfortable in the bog standard uniform, but figured he’d be worse off in his No2s. Should be thankful. The sand coloured beret itching above his ear, and the camo set of tunic and trousers felt restricting. Perfectly ironed creases in his kit, but why the fuck would he need that? Where was the point in shiny brass buckle and smartly worn webbed belt; why the bulling of boots and the need for roll-your-fucking-sleeves-up on such and such a date and button-your- fucking-sleeves-down on another, regardless of climate or temperature. Pathetic. He’d be dead if he’d followed the rules of the drill-book. Dan could hardly remember the last time he’d been in full kit, felt as if he was wearing a uniform that was alien to him with its badges, rank-slide and flag, when there was a string of lapis lazuli prayer beads in one trouser pocket. Rank, it had never meant much, not out there in the field, let alone in the endless mountains. Rank, to him, meant nothing but a difference in wages, and wages didn’t mean much either. No chance to spend it, and the money invested in houses for rent, so Dan had the luxury of not giving a damn. He was called into the room at last, stood leaning on his crutches, saluted the CO and his cronies. Realising he had a hard time accepting authority as easily as he used to in a former life. A life, before he’d vanished into the mountains to become part of yellow-red dust and infinite skies. They asked him if it was true he wanted to resign his position and leave Her Majesty’s Armed Forces prematurely.
533 “Yes, Sir.” Dan stood at ease, legs braced, weight on the crutches. Didn’t matter he was in pain, and that they offered him a chair, he preferred to stand. The whole circus seemed more bearable that way. Felt like the protagonist in a freak show, because this place wasn’t his world anymore, he’d been on his own for too long and he’d got too close to the enemy. They questioned him akin to an interrogation, the why and wherefore, the reasons and the consequences. A whole hour of cross-examination, during which he eventually sat down. Their worries were obvious: an SAS soldier, behind enemy lines for years, in close contact with Afghan militants, training Mujahideen and working with Pakistani soldiers. Potentially dangerous to let a man like him go, but they had nothing to hold against him. SSgt McFadyen’s slate was clean. Model soldier, a chest that glittered with medals and awards that spoke of his exploits, but none could ever replace the vastness of the Afghan sky, the majesty of barren mountains and the touch of a Soviet soldier. The smell and taste of his ‘enemy’s’ body, and the way Vadim kissed him and made him human. His home. Afghanistan was his home.
“Sir, I have made my decision. It is time for me to leave the Forces.” They pleaded with him that he would throw his pension away, had to wait until he was fifty-five before he received anything, unlike if he stayed for twenty- two years, and he should know the statistics. His chances to ever reach that age were slim, he should not be such a fool, and they would find a cushy job for him for his remaining two years. Dan listened, but he had made his decision. Nothing could change his mind, nothing except… “Sir, are you willing to send me back to Kabul?” The answer was negative but Dan showed no reaction. No flinch, not a word of protest. He’d tried all of that before, when he’d received his orders: desk job, possibly training recruits, but never again posted abroad, let alone to Kabul. No active service anymore. He belonged to the scrapheap after they’d cut open his knee, drilled into cartilage and worked on the joint. The British Forces were thankful for his loyal twenty years of service and Her Majesty would send him home with a good pension in two years’ time. The British legion would even fight for him to get an additional, invalided pension, for the damage to his knees in the course of duty. 534 Fuck that. He didn’t have any other plans than going back to Afghanistan, hoping Vadim was still alive. Dan had a vague idea where to find a job, but no definite leads. He was good, damn good at what he was doing and he would figure out how to earn his keep. Bodyguard, he could do that one-handed and earn shitloads of money for easy work. Or merc, dog soldier for anyone willing to pay for his expertise, as long as it was in Afghanistan. He’d get fit, sit out the six weeks of PVR, hand in his military ID and then get his arse back to Kabul as soon as possible. He’d find Vadim. It was all that mattered.
* * *
It was less a question of luck than one of knuckling down. Dan was grazing his contacts, checking with old mates, listening to the grapevine, and looking out for opportunities for old battle horses like him. Turned out his best bet was bodyguard, or ‘close protection’ as they called it these days. Not just a way back into a job for him, but a much better paid one to boot. No endless ranks of superiors, no uniform, but neither medals. Only one boss, and the target to keep his employer alive at all costs. Sounded good to him, straightforward. As long as it took him back into Kabul. The six weeks in Blighty dragged on, but at least he didn’t have to stay in camp even though he couldn’t leave the country. The MoD might require his presence while the PVR paperwork was going through. Still a soldier, but no longer in uniform. Dan visited his brother, organised finances and paid his duties to the remaining family, all the time itching to get away as soon as possible. It all felt wrong. He didn’t belong there, was tired of deflecting questions about settling down and when he was going to be too old for this life of adventure and adrenaline, and if he were ever going to find himself a wife. No fucking way Dan could tell them he was gay, any possible connection to the Soviet army far too dangerous. Especially for Vadim. Dan asked for a temporary room in the Mess, too antsy to travel around the country, and too busy with rehab and physio, working on regaining his strength. Spent his days in the gym, tried not to overdo it, eager to burn off the excess 535 energy that was coursing through his veins. Afghanistan. Kabul. Vadim. Trapped in goddamned Britain, in a sardine-tin sized room in a concrete barracks block. The day he handed in his military ID, Dan made a tick in his mental calendar, then got himself the earliest civilian flight he could catch. His luggage the customary bergan and a couple of bags, laden down with his few worldly possessions of clothes, cash, and whatever kit he could take with him. The rest was food, drink, medication and utilities. Every damned bit of usefulness that would keep and be appreciated. It was late October when Dan finally took his seat in the plane on the last leg of his journey, after he’d left Kabul in May. Half a year. Six fucking months. Would his Russkie even be alive?
October 1987, Kabul
The sun was gleaming over Kabul when Dan stepped out of the plane, gathering his bags. A brand new thick ski jacket over his arm, late October was pleasantly cool in the day, but he’d need the warm clothing soon enough. He shouldered the heavy bergan, took hold of the two bags, squinting into the sun before dropping one of the bags to fish for his polarised shades. He’d followed a tip from a mate, found the useful gear in a tackle shop, and was the proud owner of two pairs of black-rimmed, reflecting shades that made him stand out of the crowd far more than his natural height and built ever could. Didn’t matter anymore, no need to blend in. Dan slipped the shades over his eyes, scratched the stubble on his chin and lifted his face to grin into the sun. He was a civilian. No more, no less. No soldier, no enemy, no SAS. Just a goddamned civilian. Both bags back in his hands, he made his way into the centre of Kabul in a ‘taxi’. Finding a room was the most urgent thing, but Dan still knew enough people who’d be able to find him a place that even had running water—most of the time— a bed, a chair and a table, as well as sufficient exits, shuttered windows and lockable door, to be as safe a bolt-hole as it could be. It took him no more than a couple of hours before he’d found exactly what he needed, one of the former safe
536 houses from long ago. He had a quick shave, locked his possessions away, stashed the cash on his body and rushed towards the tea house. Hoping it hadn’t been bombed to shit. The city was quiet, it was still Ramadan, and the chaikhana was there, as was the owner, who greeted him like a long lost friend, welcoming Dan back into the place with the offer to wait for baklava and sweetened tea, to be consumed after sunset, but Dan declined, wanting to know only one thing: The Russian. The Soviet soldier, the man who had been frequenting the tea house for as many years as Dan had.
A security hole, no doubt, but if the owner hadn’t talked for six years, why the hell should he now. Dan’s Pashto felt rusty at first, but he got back into the language as quickly as he’d slipped back into his skin in Kabul. He was home. For now. As fucking ridiculous as that sounded. Home. Where the heart was. The owner nodded, eager to help and knowing he would get rewarded in return, he told Dan what he knew about the Soviet’s schedule. Two Saturdays in the month the blond man could be found at a place—a hotel—in the city, nearby. Saturday. The second and the last one. The second, exactly the day that it was right now. Dan could hardly force himself to stay a second longer. He wanted to run, see, find, to be, but the owner’s last words came crashing down like a ton of bricks. The message was four months old. Four fucking months. The whole world could have gone to shit in the meantime and Dan wouldn’t even know about it. The string of lapis lazuli prayer beads flashed around his wrist when he rummaged in his shirt pockets for some dollar notes, appreciating the welcome, but he shrugged off the last of the well meaning comments. No, he had not become a Muslim, and no, he was not here to pray, but yes, he could not let go of Afghanistan. Promising he would, before Eid and the end of Ramadan, return to the tea house to take part in iftar, the breaking of the fast, with the owner and his sons. Some US dollars and a promise later, Dan more ran than walked towards the ramshackle hotel that Vadim might possibly be in. The sun was setting, but Dan didn’t feel the creeping cold. All he could think of was Vadim. He found the building, but the moment he stood in the entrance, forced to negotiate with a native who demanded to know what he wanted, he didn’t know what to ask for. Was it safe to mention Vadim? Fuck.
537
* * * Vadim knew he was drinking too much. Only ever off duty, but hardly a free hour he didn’t spend in a drunken stupor when nothing else dulled the pain. He was recovering on duty while doing his paperwork, the routine mind-numbing, painfully boring, and it left too much time to think about things, too much time for missing and longing, and consequently, he was half-drunk when working out, and stone drunk afterwards, dulling everything, pain, boredom, and longing with vodka. A superior had politely enquired whether he was having problems in his marriage, and there had been a hilarious moment when Vadim had thought about telling him, that yes, it had been forever since he’d seen his lover, but he just managed to hold back and brood instead of spilling the dirty secret. They didn’t know him like that. He partied like they did, but they could tell he had crossed the line. The Spetsnaz was losing it. Afghanistan wore even men like him down. Some, thought Vadim, likely felt relief at the fact that even he had a weakness. The hotel had become a habit. Originally, he’d planned to find a way to blow off steam, find an Afghan who’d take it up the ass from a Soviet oppressor, a male whore. He knew there had to be people like that, but he couldn’t work out how to ask for it, and when he did, he pulled back. Too dangerous. Officer, major, fuck you, Vadim, don’t. You don’t want an Afghan. He’d very briefly considered a comrade, but he had no taste for violence. That was over, something he’d done as a younger man, more reckless, with nothing to lose. He’d rent always the same room, twice a month, to sleep somewhere that was not the barracks, as if pretending he was still seeing Dan – and ‘seeing Dan’ sounded like dating, when there were no words for what they did, only that sickening feeling of loss. He’d eat, in silence, and drink, in silence, and eventually collapse on the bed, so exhausted and so drunk he didn’t even think, or miss, just endured the time as it was slowly grinding him down. Couldn’t be bothered, couldn’t care, all the carefully drilled-in paranoia about insurgents wanting to earn the money on his head. No avail, felt directionless and hopeless, and would recover enough the next day to return to the barracks. It had become a way to get out for a little, pretend there were still options. But
538 without Dan, there was nothing, just the army, and he was sick of that. Tired. So fucking tired. It was getting cold, and Vadim lay there, his great woollen coat draped across him. Not heavy enough to pretend it was an arm, or even just a hand. He lay on his stomach, feeling cold, but too drunk to move. Too drunk to miss.
* * *
Dan decided to just ask, straightforward. Figured if he had anything to lose then it was Vadim’s safety, but he couldn’t lose that, for if his Russkie was in this shambles of a hotel, then he’d already lost his sense of healthy paranoia anyway. Dan confused himself with his arguing, consequently almost staggered backwards when the answer was a simple “yes”. The Soviet soldier was here, like he had always been, without so much as a single fail, for the last five or six months. Dan took two steps at once, forgot the pain in his knee, remainders of the recent surgery, and ran upstairs to the room, as if chased by Baba Yaga herself, or a whole bunch of irate insurgents. Then stopped, stalled, careful. He knew Vadim, he’d barricade himself for safety. Knocked, called out the other’s name and hoped to hear his voice—but nothing. Dan frowned, tried the handle, cautiously staying out of the firing line, expecting at least a chair to be wedged underneath, but nothing. The door simply opened into a dingy room, as grimy as any of the ones they’d ever met in, and his eyes fell onto the bed. Right there, in front of his eyes, while the smell of cheap vodka hit his senses. A Soviet greatcoat draped across the bed and the shape of a man underneath. Tall body, still. Sleeping? Blond hair, short-shaved, as always. “Vadim?” Nothing, not a stir, no reaction. Closing the door behind him, Dan pulled the only chair close, wedged it beneath the door handle, where it should have been when he’d entered. Dan opened his mouth, wanted to say the name again, but stood without a sound. Remained at the foot of the bed, staring down at the man who seemed passed out. He couldn’t move, frozen, when an onslaught of images, thoughts and sensations battered his senses. He wanted everything. All of it at once. 539 To touch, hold, kiss, fuck, feel the skin, arms and hands and limbs, lips and words, breath and feeling. All of it. And he did nothing. Couldn’t move. Wanted too much. “Vadim!” Louder. Waiting. Name. Name and voice. Not ‘Vadim Petrovich’. Not a superior. Not an enemy. Vadim opened his eyes, bleary, feeling still dulled and uncaring, not sure what the disturbance was about. Felt how cold his face was, and his hands, also sticking out under the coat. Back in Russia? He glanced over his shoulder. Vision blurred. Dark haired man. Dan. Possible. But Dan. Back, finally, back. Vadim’s hand reached out. “Come...come here.” Dan was thawed from his frozen state by Vadim’s voice. Alive. Reaction, and the absurd thought crept into his mind that for a split second he must have been worried that the man beneath the coat was dead. It took a mere couple of steps before he sat on the bed, looked at the face, and no more than another intake of breath before he bent down, his hand in Vadim’s cold one, and his lips found the stubbly cheek before sliding down towards the mouth. Kissing and tasting. Fuck. Bliss. Letting out a strangled sound. Vadim found it hard to turn over, dizzy with alcohol, disoriented, head swimming, and he thought, fuck, what a disgrace, he’s back and I’m fucking drunk, worse than a sailor back on land the first night. He felt shame, oddly intense, stretched to get more lips, more Dan, turning around and to pull him closer. “You’re good. I knew.” Just grateful. He’d been worried Dan might not have made it, hadn’t woken up from the operation, had died in a car crash, or found somebody English over in his country to sleep with, somebody who wasn’t married, wasn’t an enemy, and wouldn’t return to Russia in what? A couple years? “Aye,” Dan murmured against Vadim’s skin and lips, “of course I am. Told you I’d be back, that I’d find you.” He could smell and taste the booze and the desperation. Sliding fully onto the bed, he burrowed under the coat to be as close as he could. Fully clothed, just like the other, but he could feel the body and the man in his arms. “I left…traces.” Vadim murmured. Sharing warmth? It wasn’t that simple anymore. He should pull himself together, and banter, but he was too drunk for
540 words, almost too dulled for thoughts. “You know your recce, and I…I know you know.” He gave a grin, felt absurdly happy in Dan’s embrace, warm body, warm, firm, alive body. He pressed his forehead against Dan’s chest, breathed in. Yes. Glanced up again, eyes blurred, and he blinked, a reflex more than pride. Dan smiled, hiding the niggling feeling of worry. The man in his arms, the drunken, dejected soldier, was not the Vadim he knew. “You look like shit, Russkie.” Murmured, before kissing those lips again. Vadim opened up to the lips, thought, fuck, he was too drunk to get aroused, well, could always get fucked, it wasn’t important, important was to have Dan back. “Charming bastard...” “I told you many times before, I resemble that remark.” Dan chuckled quietly before he fell silent, kissing, feeling those lips open up against his own and the invitation was too welcome to resist. Fuck the taste of vodka, didn’t matter, just the heat, as his tongue slipped between teeth and joined once more into the intimate dance he had rediscovered only such a short time ago. Vadim’s hand slid up Dan’s hand, over his shoulder, to his neck, not sure why, to pull Dan close or to steady himself, to feel Dan’s strength, to get more touch. Kissing, felt uncoordinated, dreamlike, easy, much easier and less self- conscious than before. Dan broke the kiss after what seemed forever, looking at Vadim while his hand roamed up and down the back, their bodies pressed together. He was hard, of course, he’d been wanking for too many months, but felt no arousal in return. “What the fuck happened to you while I was gone?” “Nothing. Just...duty. Duty and drinking.” Vadim shook his head, slowly, realised he should pretend he was alright. He was, now, nothing else mattered. He’d found a state without pain at the bottom of a bottle, and how disgraceful was that. “Sorry. Should...not. But easier this way.” “I understand.” Just that. Their lives did shit to them, turned them inside out and left them raw at the seams, unravelling. He could see the loss of focus in the pale eyes, the dizzy expression of a drunken man. Some things were easier without feeling them, and what did he know about feeling anyway. No family, no wife, no kids, no worries, except for one: if Vadim was still alive. Vadim gave a wry grin at that, his pride stirred, Spetsnaz, pride of the Soviet army, he should, really should try and give a semblance of control, of being
541 sober, of deserving that reputation. But it didn’t matter. Right now, he had to prove nothing. Dan did understand. Dan didn’t know what else to say, couldn’t offer words that would make anything better, so he just said the first thing that came to his mind. “I left the army. I’m not a soldier anymore, no enemy. Just a fucked up civilian. Fancy that, eh?” Download 4.34 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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