The Exit Club: Book 2: Bad Boys

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The Exit Club: Book 2: Bad Boys Page 17

by Shaun Clarke


  When a female guerrilla suddenly appeared in front of Marty, swinging a parang that was, he noticed, still dripping blood, he ducked and weaved, backing away, instinctively trying not to fire at her. Then, while ducking, he caught a nightmarish glimpse of a man’s head resting upright on the ground, the eyes still flicking frantically from left to right, fresh blood gushing out around its neck – the severed head of Rob Roy Burns.

  Rage abruptly flared through Marty, obliterating all reason, making him stand upright to fire his SLR at close range into the woman’s frail body– repeated bursts of semi-automatic fire that nearly cut her in two. She screamed and staggered backwards, dropping the parang, the fell to her knees, appeared to be bowing respectfully, then coughed blood and fell face down in the mud.

  Marty didn’t bother checking that she was dead. He just stepped up to her and kept firing his SLR until someone, Bulldog, grabbed his arm and jerked him back, bawling, ‘Stop it, Butler! It’s all over! We’ve done it! The rest of the CT are surrendering! Go back and check on your friend!’

  Jerked back to reality, though still feeling demented, Marty glanced in disbelief at the dead bodies, male and female, Chinese and SAS, that were littering the muddy ground. Then he saw the last of the guerrillas raising their hands in surrender as smoke swirled across the jungle clearing and SF men closed in on them from all sides. Not wanting to see more, with only one thought in his mind, he turned away and hurried back up the hill, then back through the ulu, not stopping until he reached the place where he and the others had left Tone, stretched out on his belly, sobbing, with the Browning High Power handgun beside him.

  Marty stopped when he reached that spot, then he turned cold all over.

  Tone was still there, face down on the ground, exactly as Marty had left him, but he had placed the Nine-Milly to his temple and blown his own brains out. He had chosen the ‘Exit Club’. Suicide.

  Marty knelt on the grass, held his dead friend in his arms, and closed his eyes to stop himself from crying as grief overwhelmed him. He remained that way, devastated and disbelieving, until Lieutenant Kearney and Bulldog Bellamy arrived to offer what comfort they could. They were with him when Tone was carried away and they stayed with him a long time.

  Marty wanted to cry, but no tears fell as he marched out of the swamp.

  Bad boys don’t cry, he thought.

  To be continued…

  Also available in the ‘Exit Club’ series as Kindle ebooks:

  Book One: The Originals Book Three: The Professionals Book Four: Conspirators Book Five: Old Comrades

  GLOSSARY

  agal small Arab cap or band for holding a head-dress in place

  ARU Air Reconnaissance Unit

  ASU active service unit

  atap a kind of jungle palm

  BBE Bizondere Bystand Eenheid

  beasting psychological trick of pleasantness followed by abuse, used by Directing Staff (DS)

  during exercises

  Bofors gun light anti-aircraft gun

  Casevac

  CCO changkol

  Chappal

  COBR

  COMMCEN COPS

  CQB

  CT

  CT

  DPG

  DPM DS DZ

  E and E casualty evacuation (a casevac helicopter)

  Clandestine Communist

  organization

  a kind of hoe

  Indian sandal

  Cabinet Office Briefing Room communications centre

  close-observation platoons

  close-quarter battle

  communist terrorist (note: two CTs, see next)

  counter-terrorist

  Diplomatic Protection Group

  disruptive-pattern material

  directing staff (in exercises)

  drop zone, a landing zone for parachutists

  escape and evasion

  exfiltration

  Fincos FOB

  Fred (a Fred) Futah

  GEO

  gharries Ghibili GIGN

  GPMG surreptitious withdrawal of troops, spies etc., esp. from danger field intelligence NCOs

  forward operating base

  a tout for MI5

  long-sleeved Arab robe

  Spain’s Grupo Especial

  de Operaciones

  horse-drawn carriages

  a hot, dust-carrying wind

  Groupment d’Intervention de la Gendarmerie

  general-purpose machine gun

  green slime nickname for members of the SAS Intelligence Corps

  GSG-9 German border police antiterrorist unit

  HALO high-altitude, low-opening, said of a certain kind of dangerous parachute jump

  Int and Sy Group Intelligence and Security Group

  jarit

  Ju Stukas

  Keeni-Meeni

  kijang

  Kremlin, the kukri

  kunjia LMG LRDG a meal of raw pork, rice and salt, left to putrefy buried in the ground in a bamboo shoot, favoured by

  the Dyaks of Borneo

  German fighter planes

  Swahili term used to describe the

  movement of a snake in the grass, adopted by soldiers as a

  description of

  undercover work

  a barking deer found in the jungle nickname for the intelligence

  section of Regimental HQ

  a machete

  Omani knife

  light machine gun

  Long Range Desert Group

  LUPS

  LZ

  maroon machine

  Milos

  MIOs MPI

  MSR

  NITAT

  NOCS OP padi

  parang

  PC

  PIRA

  PNGs QRF R and I

  RAOC

  Rattan

  REME

  RTU RV

  samsu

  SARBE SAS

  SBS

  seladang

  laying-up positions, dug out of the desert floor or earth, usually for sleeping in

  landing zone

  Parachute Regiment troops in Northern Ireland

  military intelligence liaison officers

  military intelligence officers mean point of impact, a term used by marksmen

  main supply route

  Northern Ireland Training

  Advisory Team

  Italian Nucleo Operativo

  Centrale di Sicurezza

  observation post

  Malayan paddy-field

  large, heavy Malayan knife also used as a weapon

  patrol commander

  Provisional IRA

  passive night-vision goggles quick-reaction force

  resistance to interrogation

  Royal Army Ordnance Corps Malaysian climbing palm Royal Electrical and

  Mechanical Engineers

  return to (original) unit, a form of punishment for

  misdemeanour

  rendezvous point

  a strong spirit made from rice surface-to-air rescue beacon Special Air Service

  Special Boat Section

  wild ox or bison of Malaya Senussi

  SF

  shemagh souk

  Tab

  TAOR Tapai

  ulu yomping Muslim fraternity founded in 1837

  security forces

  a type of shawl worn around the head by Arabs

  Arab market-place

  route march

  tactical area of responsibility a rice wine favoured by

  the Dyaks of Borneo

  Malayan jungle as known by the natives

  a colloquial word for marching

  Other Kindle e-books by Shaun Clarke Underworld Red Hand

  The Opium Road Dragon Light

 

 

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