The Crocodile Hunter by Gerald Seymour (best summer reads of all time txt) ๐
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- Author: Gerald Seymour
Read book online ยซThe Crocodile Hunter by Gerald Seymour (best summer reads of all time txt) ๐ยป. Author - Gerald Seymour
The bus was almost empty; he did not have to talk. He had used most of the ยฃ5 on his fare. The cathedral tower was in the distance as they skirted the housing estates on the edge of the city.
He would see his mum, then would move on. He would be in the city in a few hours, had a schedule worked out in his mind, then would move on. He stepped off the bus and kept his head down. It was his own ground, his own territory.
Jonas fidgeted, rapped a pencil on his work surface, was annoyed with himself for displaying his stress.
Tristram said, โTheyโre just two coppers โ ordinary, conscientious plods โ and this is their valued judgement.โ
Izzy said, โThey were there within a few minutes, no one else had done much of a debrief before they pitched up. The boat people are Iranian and Christian, two adult males, two females and two children โ donโt have the family alignment yet. They were in Bordeaux, in a cafรฉ, and a guy who was sheltering there and had no money was going to be slung out by the manager. The family felt some sympathy and it was a deal of convenience. The guy โborrowsโ a vehicle, drives them to Dunkirk. They had a smuggler contact there.โ
โHad a price agreed, complete rip-off. There was a powerful wind over there last evening. Only an idiot would take to the water.โ
โThe guy takes over negotiation, will pay one tenth of the price. Does some โpersuadingโ on the goons, a weapon at the top goonโs throat, and they take the dinghy, an inflatable, and launch.โ
As he listened, Jonas Merrick played games in his mind: worked up a profile of a man who would go to sea in those conditions, would ally himself to a helpless gaggle of unfortunates who could offer him nothing other than a way of crossing the Channel in secrecy.
Tristram said, โThe Iranians called him an angel. He went into the water โ mid-channel โ when a kid was washed overboard. He brought the kid back . . . If this had happened off the coast here on a Bank Holiday Monday then people would be talking about medals. Theyโre sick, all heaving their guts up.โ
Izzy said, โVomiting everywhere, and baling for their lives, and terrified, and theyโre hit by the bow wave of a monster container ship and theyโre damn near dodging other craft. He starts to sing.โ
A frown settled on Jonasโs forehead. Slight, but pursued by a twitch of his eyebrows โ as if greater concentration was being brought to bear on what they said. He stared into the middle distance and his eyes took in the crocodileโs head and the smooth waters of a lagoon. He was hearing little that was new and had not figured in the report directed to him by Lily down in the bowels of the building; he needed flesh on bones, meat on them.
โThey all join in. Hymns. In English.โ
Tristram said, โSo, the plods wanted to know who he was โ what he called himself and everything they knew about him.โ
Izzy said, โWho is this guy belting out Ancient and Modern into the elements? They seemed to realise theyโd spilled too much, had nothing more out of them.โ
โLike a tap turned off. Like they protected him. Couldnโt get another syllable out of them . . . The โangelโ stayed anonymous.โ
He told them to go down there. Immediately. Felt a cold on his neck and did not know whether he would be lucky, every time lucky. Snapped at them to go, go fast.
Chapter 6
He spoke to himself, and to the crocodile pinned to the wall. Quietly but not in as measured a tone as he would have wished.
โNot a quitter. Not if he went through that storm.โ
He glanced down occasionally but not from necessity. He knew the names on the list, and was familiar with their backgrounds and motivations. All of them represented a high degree of risk.
โIf he were a quitter he would have taken a look at that storm, turned over in his sleeping-bag and closed his eyes. Waited for another day, or night.โ
There were three cards that he kept flicking back to, where his eyes would linger momentarily then go back to the beast with the scaled skin and the awkward and uneven teeth.
โHeโs not coming back because heโs missing home, because they donโt serve cod and chips in any cafรฉ along the Euphrates. Heโs coming back to hit and to hurt.โ
Jonas usually liked it least when the work space beyond his partition walls buzzed with voices and the squealing of chairs being shunted around, and the odd claps of laughter or peals of humour, and liked it even less when voices were raised in dispute: then, he would permit a slow snarl to drag across his face and he would believe they were beneath his attention . . . Not that morning, quiet bounced off his walls.
โHe comes back to hit and to hurt. It dominates him, consumes him. No other explanation. Forget anything about him softening, wanting to put it all
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