Ivory Nation by Andy Maslen (free children's ebooks online txt) ๐
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- Author: Andy Maslen
Read book online ยซIvory Nation by Andy Maslen (free children's ebooks online txt) ๐ยป. Author - Andy Maslen
A battered, steel-cased Timex watch with a red, white and blue woven nylon strap; the property, according to its engraved back, of Moses Haunda.
The bullet-starred back-half of a human skull that would have to be sent to a DNA lab to establish its identity.
An elephant-hair bracelet consisting of several wiry black strands with a copper ring adjuster that Eustace recognised as belonging to Virtue.
A pitted and gouged femur, the ball-joint cracked off.
A second set of ID discs that had belonged to Private Stewart โStewieโ Pearce-Edwards.
Several small scraps of camouflage fabric, on one of which remained the corner of a name tape bearing the letters RTER. Acheson made this deduction for himself: Private Robert Carter.
And a handful of small pieces of bone that might have been human, or animal, all of which, along with the skull and the femur, would be analysed for DNA.
Once Acheson was sure they had enough evidence to take away from the site of the massacre, he called a halt to proceedings and gathered the men around him in a wide semi-circle.
โI want to thank you for coming here and helping to retrieve the remains of your brothers in arms, and the brave Botswana Defence Force men whom they were training,โ he said, looking at Eustace as he mentioned the manโs slaughtered colleagues. Eustace nodded back. โThey were doing good here, combatting an illegal trade conducted by ruthless criminals. We will hold the parasโ funerals in England and although I am sure you men,โ he nodded at the SAS contingent, โneed to be going, I will stay for the funerals here.โ
Eustace touched the colonel on the arm.
โExcuse me, Colonel. Please may I say some words?โ
โOf course, please go ahead,โ Acheson replied.
Eustace smiled and half-turned so he was facing the semi-circle of tired men, their faces coated in a greasy mixture of sweat and red dust.
โMoses and Virtue were my friends. We went to school together,โ he began. โRob and Stewie and Stevo came to help us, thanks to the kindness and friendship of Colonel Acheson. They were my friends too, and friends to Botswana and our elephants. Please, I would like us to pray for them.โ
In front of him, the troopers and soldiers bowed their heads and clasped their hands in varying attitudes of prayer. Acheson followed suit, listening as the Botswananโs mellifluous voice soothed his burning soul, just for a minute or two.
โHeavenly Father. Please, we beg you, shepherd into Heaven the souls of our dear friends Moses Haunda, Virtue Jonathan, Stevo Wallingham, Rob Carter and Stewie Pearce-Edwards,โ he intoned. โLet them always have clear water to drink, sweet honey and tender meat to eat, and the sun on their backs. Send them our love and our gratitude for laying down their lives. Tell them we will find their killers and avenge their deaths with great wrath. Amen.โ
The chorus of amens floated upwards into the African sky. Acheson added a silent prayer of his own: โLet me be successful in finding those bastards, Lord. Amen.โ
6
LONDON
Smiling beneath the skilfully applied makeup, and sweating lightly under the TV lights, Joe Tammerlane waited to be introduced by Becca Price, Wake Up, Britain!โs glamorous host.
Beneath his immaculately tailored suit, he could feel his heart thrumming with anticipation. Not anxiety, instead a heightened sense of reality. He looked at her while tuning out her excitable gabble and smiling that famous smile. He could see the downy hairs on her upper lip. The weave of the multicoloured threads in her skirt. A tremulous flutter of the skin on the side of her neck where the veins ran.
He sensed his moment was approaching. The moment when everything would change. He tuned back in.
โOur next guest is a man who, until recently, was mainly of interest to the political commentators,โ she was saying. โThen, on that tragic day last week, when the nation was celebrating the latest royal wedding, he tackled the terrorist who killed poor Princess Alexandra. Ladies and gentlemen, please welcome Joe Tammerlane.โ
The studio audience burst into what sounded to Tammerlane like genuinely spontaneous applause. A couple of the men whistled loudly, and he could see one older woman dabbing her eyes with a tissue.
He lowered the volume on his smile and composed his features into a suitably sober expression, part-acknowledgement of his unbidden heroism, part-sadness that he hadnโt been able to act in time to save the princess.
Becca turned to him. He caught the hiss as her nylon-clad legs rubbed together.
โJoe Tammerlane. You killed the man who had just assassinated Princess Alexandra and might well have gone on to murder Thad Carty. How did you do it?โ
โCan I just say, Becca, before I answer your question, that as leader of Freedom and Fairness, I want your viewers to know that I stand with them in mourning this beautiful young woman.โ
Becca nodded her head, furrowing her brow.
โOf course. I think we all do.โ
โI know I have been vilified by parts of the mainstream media for my views on the monarchy, but at the end of the day, what we saw was the senseless murder of a young woman on her wedding day.โ
โAnd how did you stop her killer?โ she prompted.
โActually, purely by accident. I was supposed to be in the congregation as a party leader, but my train was delayed. I hoped I could reach the castle quicker by using the back roads and thatโs how I happened to be running past the old fire station.โ
โAnd you saw the shooter?โ
โI did. I donโt know why, but I looked up as I ran past and I saw what I instantly recognised as a gun barrel sticking out of the top floor.โ
โMost people would call the police. What made you decide to tackle him yourself?โ
He ran a hand over his hair and shrugged.
โHonestly? I donโt know. I guess sometimes you just act without weighing up the risks
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