Part 15 (1/2)
His voice is deep. You open the door. You carry my friend out.
A quick glance at Roberto, Cathy, and Mark convinces her that they too have worked out why, every now and then, the Nubians advance toward the truck and take aim with their guns. The trigger is any move by the hostage taker on the pa.s.senger seat. He needs to shove the dead man out of the cab so he can drive the truck away. Every time he tries to do so the Nubians walk forward until he gives up. The man towering over Iben wants her to do something that none of the Luos dares to.
With the panga against her neck, Iben glances down at the ground, the dried crust of mud mixed with excrement and garbage. Could she run more than sixty feet between the truck and the line of Nubians to hide among them? If the hostage takers shoot her dead, retribution will be immediate, so they have nothing to gain by killing her. But then, theres no telling how rationally they think.
Without a word she stands, her eyes fixed on her comrades. Cathy begins to cry.
The Nubians cheer when they see Iben climbing down from the tailgate of the truck. Some of them step forward. One man must be confused, because he drops his large black spear. But still no one dares to move into no-mans-land. Instead most of them jostle to get back into their former positions behind the front line.
In the dust on the road that could have led to freedom, Iben looks around with fresh eyes. Can she avoid carrying out the order for just a little longer?
She wonders if she should shout Here I come so that the hostage taker in the cab doesnt shoot her from sheer surprise when he sees her coming up from behind. On the other hand, it would give the Nubians more time to react, and they might well decide its worth shooting one hostage to stop the other three from being driven away.
She looks at the tall man on the tailgate and speaks to him quietly. Tell him Im coming. I mustnt frighten him.
The two Luos talk for a moment. None of the Nubians reacts. It seems that Iben was right in thinking that none of them understands Dhuluo.
The conflict between Nubians and Luos in the slum began when a Luo family refused to pay rent to a Nubian landlord. The landlord summoned a group of men from his tribe to meet him at the familys shack. They wounded six tenants and killed two more. The group went on to challenge other tenants and attacked anyone who couldnt pay. After slaughtering and dismembering another ten victims, well over a thousand men from each tribe clashed in the slums, stealing, raping, and killing within each others territories. The police separated the two armies using tear gas and rubber bullets, but were also accused of having taken the opportunity to rape and steal themselves.
The original reason for the refusal to pay rent in the slum was that Kenyas president, Daniel arap Moi, had informed the Luos that the rent demands were extortionate, since the state, not the Nubians, owned the land in the Kibera area. It was the British colonial administration that had given the Nubians their management rights.
Iben hesitates. Will the boy on the back of the truck really shoot her if she doesnt move the dead driver?
Theres a childishness about him that sets him apart from the other, harder-faced boys here, some of whom are just eight years old.
She tries to see what the two Nubians with machine guns are up to. One of them is out of sight behind the truck. The other is right there, wearing a white s.h.i.+rt, dark green trousers, and a baseball cap. She cant make out his face, his willingness to kill, at this distance.
Smells. Dust. Sunlight.
The Nubian with the gun. The boy on the truck with the gun. The horde of onlookers. A fly, insisting on crawling into her ear.
On the tailgate the hostage takers wave their weapons and shout.
At home in the quiet Copenhagen office, Ibens place opposite Malene stands empty. She has a vision of the pale winter afternoon light falling over her bare desk with its waiting keyboard and curling Post-it notes. The fading light of the office seems to merge with the emptiness of her remembered life.
She grabs the door handle on the drivers side and hears the crowd stir, then shout. Their language is just as incomprehensible to her as Dhuluo. The dead driver has been propped up against the door, and when she opens it the body falls out of the car sideways. Iben has to jump away to avoid being knocked over.
Until today, the only corpse she has ever seen was her fathers. It was nine years ago, and the staff at Roskilde District Hospital had washed the body, closed its eyes, and placed it in a small private room with net-curtained windows.
The dead driver is suspended, with his feet jammed under the pedals. His chest and head have swung out and down, hitting the ground just in front of Iben. A swarm of flies rises from his chest, where his blood-soaked s.h.i.+rt and trousers have already stiffened in the heat.
His face is twisted, his mouth open and his skin gray from blood loss.
Iben backs away into the cloud of dust. It is as if she is no longer herself.
She hasnt thought about how the terrified man on the pa.s.senger seat might react. It turns out he has an automatic handgun.
Like everyone here he is used to the flies, but there are so many and they swarm around him for a different reason: he was sprayed with his friends blood inside the hot cab. His arms holding the gun are tired now after battling with the large, insistent insects.
He swings the gun around to point it at Iben. His voice is hoa.r.s.e. You shall you shall sit.
Iben feels nauseous. She stares at the ridges on the road. A few seconds is it minutes? pa.s.s and still she feels as if she is someone else.
She sits down on the drivers seat. The man cannot risk keeping his gun trained on her all the time and has turned to face the wall of Nubians in front of them.
The police will come, Iben says. The police will be here soon.
You drive!
But she does not start driving. She knows that turning the ignition key will mean the end for both of them.
Drive!
Suddenly he leaps up. He must have thought that someone was sneaking up to the door on his side. Someone who would cut his throat, as they did to his friend. He throws the door open and sticks his gun out.
His back is turned. He has given her a fraction of a second. Iben springs out and runs away at an angle to the truck. To aim at her, he has to move over to her seat.
Her feet are pounding, raising clouds of dust. Now, soon, the rattle of the machine gun. The blood, the thump as she hits the ground. But its all strangely quiet. Iben runs and runs.
At last she reaches the human wall. The people part and close around her like dark water. She runs on, falling into the crowd. Then, though her legs keep kicking out, she can move no further. The dark ma.s.s that has saved her now holds her. She recognizes some of the men and women she has met at football matches or training days or reconciliation meetings. They will starve and die if their rent income from the Luos is reduced further, just as the Luos may die if the rents are not lowered.
Her body melts under her, but many hands hold her upright. They give her water, pour it into her mouth and over her head and body. She drinks from their plastic buckets and calabashes, knowing that it will give her diarrhea for a week at least. It doesnt matter.
That ever-alert part of her mind wonders if she shouldnt move into the densest part of the crowd to observe her colleagues in relative safety. But its impossible: all her strength has gone; she is soaked to the skin and still terrified that the armed men in the truck will catch sight of her. Instead she ends up sitting on the ground, leaning against a hard cow-dung wall and holding on to a toothless elderly woman whom she doesnt recognize, but who behaves as if they were old friends.
Iben has been working in Kenya for an international organization called Stop Ethnic Cleansing, which tries to remain neutral in the tribal conflicts. In the Nairobi slums, humanitarian organizations tend to be nervous about the Kenyan governments Luo-friendly policies, and this sometimes makes SEC look pro-Nubian and hence, presumably, anti-Luo.
The Nubian crowd is not likely to have gathered here simply to save the lives of four strangers, but they would like the kidnapping to fail. They need to ensure that SEC doesnt withdraw from its reconciliation work in the slums because it fears for the lives of its aid workers. The people have come to fight for their own lives.
Ibens feet stamp in the dust, as if still wanting to run. She hears her own noisy breathing. Her mind is in a whirl, a.n.a.lyzing everything that led up to this.
It was Robertos secretary who had received the invitation for SEC staff to meet an important tribal leader. When the boy in the Hong Kong T-s.h.i.+rt came along as a guide to show them the way, Robertos secretary had a.s.sured them that this was perfectly in order. Had she known about the plan to ambush them and take them hostage all along?
Iben recalls the expression on the secretarys face (caring), and the tone of her voice (cheerful). No reason to point the finger at her. Except she knew what she was doing. Of course. She is a Luo, and since everyone around her believes in tribal allegiances, so must she. She is bound to ask herself if other people will support her family and their way of life. Or are they out to destroy them? Any talk about impartiality would sound like treachery.
The sound of a car siren causes a scare. At last, the police are coming.
Iben climbs up the wall she has been leaning against, finding footholds on protruding bits of the framework of branches. It is so low that there is only one and a half feet to climb, but in the shade of the overhanging tin roof her white face is less obvious.
An open truck full of policemen pulls up. Another truckload stops on the other side of the crowd. The hostages and their guards remain as they were when she ran off. All sit and stand in exactly the same positions. Even with the police here, the prisoners look cowed.
The howl of the sirens is piercing, but Iben feels relieved until she realizes whats going on, that is. The police are attacking the crowd with long white truncheons. Several of the beaten Nubians are too badly injured to get up again.
Iben wants to rush to the officer in charge and cry out, No! Dont! They want to set us free. Youve got it wrong! Dont hit them. She wants to stop the beatings before someone is crippled for life.