by Crossfire
Table of Contents
Title Page
Copyright Page
Dedication
Chapter 1 - FOUR MONTHS LATER
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
EPILOGUE
BY DICK FRANCIS AND FELIX FRANCIS
Even Money
Silks
Dead Heat
BY DICK FRANCIS
Under Orders
Shattered
Second Wind
Field of Thirteen
10 Lb. Penalty
To the Hilt
Come to Grief
Wild Horses
Decider
Driving Force
Comeback
Longshot
Straight
The Edge
Hot Money
Bolt
A Jockey’s Life
Break In
Proof
The Danger
Banker
Twice Shy
Reflex
Whip Hand
Trial Run
Risk
In the Frame
High Stakes
Knockdown
Slay Ride
Smokescreen
Bonecrack
Rat Race
Enquiry
Forfeit
Blood Sport
Flying Finish
Odds Against
For Kicks
Nerve
Dead Cert
The Sport of Queens
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Copyright © 2010 by Dick Francis Corporation
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Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Francis, Dick.
Crossfire / Dick Francis and Felix Francis. p. cm.
eISBN : 978-1-101-44244-9
1. Soldiers—Great Britain—Fiction. 2. Amputees—Fiction. 3. Homecoming—Fiction. 4. Race horses—Training—Fiction. 5. Extortion—Fiction. 6. Tax evasion—Fiction.
I. Francis, Felix. II. Title.
PR6056.R27C
823’.914—dc22
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the authors’ imaginations or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, businesses, companies, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.
While the authors have made every effort to provide accurate telephone numbers and Internet addresses at the time of publication, neither the publisher nor the author assumes any responsibility for errors, or for changes that occur after publication. Further, the publisher does not have any control over and does not assume any responsibility for author or third-party websites or their content.
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Dedicated to the men and women of the
British forces who have lost
limbs in Afghanistan.
For them the battle is never over.
And to the memory of
DICK FRANCIS
The greatest father and friend a man could ever have
With loving thanks to
William Francis,
Lieutenant in the Army Air Corps,
graduated from
the Royal Military Academy, Sandhurst, August 2009,
seconded to the Grenadier Guards
at Nad-e-Ali, Helmand Province, Afghanistan,
September to December 2009
PROLOGUE
HELMAND PROVINCE, AFGHANISTAN
OCTOBER 2009
Medic! Medic!”
I could see that my platoon sergeant was shouting, but strangely, the sound of his voice seemed muffled, as if I was in a neighboring room rather than out here in the open.
I was lying on the dusty ground with my back up against a low bank so that I was actually half sitting. Sergeant O’Leary was kneeling beside me on my left.
“Medic!” he shouted again urgently, over his shoulder.
He turned his head and looked me in the eyes.
“Are you all right, sir?” he asked.
“What happened?” I said, my own voice sounding loud in my head.
“A bloody IED,” he said. He turned away, looked behind him, and shouted again. “Where’s that fucking medic?”
An IED. I knew that I should have known what IED meant, but my brain seemed to be working in slow motion. I finally remembered. IED—improvised explosive device—a roadside bomb.
The sergeant was talking loudly into his personal radio.
“Alpha-four,” he said in a rush. “This is Charlie-six-three. IED, IED. One CAT A, several CAT C. Request IRT immediate backup and casevac. Over.”
I couldn’t hear any response, if there was one. I seemed to have lost my radio headset, along with my helmet.
“CAT A,” he’d said. CAT A was armyspeak for a seriously injured soldier requiring immediate medical help to prevent loss of life. CAT Cs were walking wounded.
The sergeant turned back to me.
“You still all right, sir?” he asked, the stress apparent on his face.
“Yes,” I said, but in truth, I didn’t really feel that great. I was cold yet sweaty. “How are the men?” I asked him.
“Don’t worry about the men, sir,” he said. “I’ll look after the men.”
“How many are injured?” I asked.
“A few. Minor, mostly,” he said. “Just some cuts and a touch of deafness from the blast.” I knew what he meant. The sergeant turned away and shouted at the desert-camouflaged figure nearest to him. “Johnson, go and fetch the bloody medic kit from Cummings. Fucking little rat’s too shit-scared to move.”
He turned back to me once more.
“Won’t be long now, sir.”
“You said on the radio there’s a CAT A. Who is it?”
He looked into my face.
“You, sir,” he said.
“Me?”
“The CAT A is you, sir,
” he said again. “Your fucking foot’s been blown off.”
1
FOUR MONTHS LATER
I realized as soon as I walked out of the hospital that I had nowhere to go.
I stood holding my bag at the side of the road, watching a line of passengers board a red London bus.
Should I join them, I wondered. But where were they going? Simply being discharged from National Health Service care had been my overriding aim for weeks, without any thought or reason as to what was to come next. I was like a man released from prison who stands outside the gates gulping down great breaths of fresh, free air without a care for the future. Freedom was what mattered, not the nature of it.
And I had been incarcerated in my own prison, a hospital prison.
I suppose, looking back, I had to admit that it passed quite quickly. But at the time, every hour, even every minute, had dragged interminably. Progress, seen day by day, had been painfully slow, with painful being the appropriate word. However, I was now able to walk reasonably well on an artificial foot and, whereas I wouldn’t be playing football again for a while, if ever, I could climb up and down stairs unaided and was mostly self-sufficient. I might even have been able to run a few strides to catch that bus, if only I had wanted to go wherever it was bound.
I looked around me. No one had turned up to collect me, nor had I expected them to. None of my family actually knew I was being discharged on that particular Saturday morning and, quite likely, they would not have turned up even if they had.
I had always preferred to do things for myself, and they knew it.
As far as my family was concerned, I was a loner, and happier for it, perhaps the more so after having to rely for months on others for help with my personal, and private, bodily functions.
I wasn’t sure who had been the more shocked, my mother or me, when a nurse had asked, during one of her rare visits, if she could help me get dressed. My mother had last seen me naked when I was about seven, and she was more than a little flustered at the prospect of doing so again twenty-five years later. She’d suddenly remembered that she was late for an appointment elsewhere, and had rushed away. The memory of her discomfort had kept me smiling for most of the rest of that day, and I hadn’t smiled much recently.
In truth, 25198241 Captain Thomas Vincent Forsyth had not been the most patient of patients.
The army had been my life since the night I had left home after another particularly unpleasant, but not uncommon, argument with my stepfather. I had slept uncomfortably on the steps of the army recruiting office in Oxford and, when the office opened at nine a.m. the following morning, I had walked in and signed on for Queen and Country as a private soldier in the Grenadier Guards.
Guardsman Forsyth had taken to service life like the proverbial duck to water and had risen through the ranks, first to corporal, then to officer cadet, at the Royal Military Academy, Sandhurst, followed by a commission back in my old regiment. The army had been much more to me than just a job. It had been my wife, my friend and my family; it had been all I had known for fifteen years, and I loved it. But now it appeared that my army career might be over, blown apart forever by an Afghan IED.
Consequently, I had not been a happy bunny during the previous four months, and it showed.
In fact, I was an angry young man.
I turned left out of the hospital gates and began walking. Perhaps, thought, I would see where I had got to by the time I became too tired to continue.
“Tom,” shouted a female voice. “Tom.”
I stopped and turned around.
Vicki, one of the physiotherapists from the rehabilitation center, was in her car, turning out of the hospital parking lot. She had the passenger window down.
“Do you need a lift?” she asked.
“Where are you going?” I said.
“I was going to Hammersmith,” she said. “But I can take you somewhere else if you like.”
“Hammersmith would be fine.”
I threw my bag onto the backseat and climbed in beside her.
“So they’ve let you out, then?” she said while turning in to the line of traffic on Roehampton Lane.
“Glad to see the back of me, I expect,” I said.
Vicki tactfully didn’t say anything. So it was true.
“It’s been a very difficult time for you,” she said eventually. “It can’t have been easy.”
I sat in silence. What was she after? An apology? Of course it hadn’t been easy.
Losing my foot had, in retrospect, been the most straightforward part. The doctors, first at Camp Bastion in Afghanistan and then at Selly Oak Hospital in Birmingham, had managed to save the rest of my right leg so that it now finished some seven inches below my knee.
My stump, as all the medical staff insisted on calling it, had healed well, and I had quickly become proficient at putting on and taking off my new prosthetic leg, a wonder of steel, leather and plastic that had turned me from a cripple into a normal-looking human being, at least on the outside.
But there had been other physical injuries too. The roadside bomb had burst my eardrums and had driven Afghan desert dust deep into my torn and bruised lungs, to say nothing of the blast damage and lacerations to the rest of my body. Pulmonary infection and then double pneumonia had almost finished off what the explosion failed to do.
The numbing shock that had initially suppressed any feeling of hurt had soon been replaced by a creeping agony in which every part of me seemed to be on fire. It was just as well that I remembered only a smattering of the full casualty-evacuation procedure. Heavy doses of morphine did more than inhibit the pain receptors in the brain—they slowed its very activity down to bare essentials, such as maintaining breathing and the pumping of the heart.
The human body, however, is a wondrous creation and has an amazing ability to mend itself. My ears recovered, the lacerations healed, and my white blood cells slowly won the war against my chest infection, with a little help and reinforcement from some high-powered intravenous antibiotics.
If only the body could grow a new foot.
The mental injuries, however, were proving less easy to spot and far more difficult to repair.
“Where in Hammersmith do you want?” Vicki asked, bringing me back to reality from my daydreaming.
“Anywhere will do,” I said.
“But do you live in Hammersmith?”
“No,” I said.
“So where do you live?”
Now that was a good question. I suppose that I was technically, and manifestly, homeless.
For the past fifteen years I had lived in army accommodations of one form or another: barracks, Sandhurst, officers’ messes, tents and bivouacs, even in the backs of trucks or the cramped insides of Warrior armored cars. I had slept in, under and on top of Land Rovers, and more often than I cared to remember, I had slept where I sat or lay on the ground, half an ear open for the call of a sentry or the sound of an approaching enemy.
However, the army had now sent me “home” for six months.
The major from the Ministry of Defense, the Wounded Personnel Liaison Officer, had been fair but firm during his recent visit. “Six months leave on full pay,” he’d said.“To recover. To sort yourself out. Then we’ll see.”
“I don’t need six months,” I’d insisted. “I’ll be ready to go back in half that time.”
“ ‘ Back’?” he’d asked.
“To my regiment.”
“We’ll see,” he had repeated.
“What do you mean ‘We’ll see’?” I had demanded.
“I’m not sure that going back to your regiment will be possible,” he’d said.
“Where, then?” I’d asked, but I’d read the answer in his face before he said it.
“You might be more suited to a civilian job. You wouldn’t be passed fit for combat. Not without a foot.”
The major and I had been sitting in the reception area of the Douglas Bader Rehabilitation Center in the Queen Mary
’s Hospital in Roehampton, London.
Part of Headley Court, the military’s own state-of-the-art rehab center in Surrey, had been temporarily closed for refurbishment, and the remaining wards had been overwhelmed by the numbers of wounded with missing limbs. Hence I had been sent to Queen Mary’s and the National Health Service.
It was testament to the remarkable abilities of the military Incident Response Teams, and to their amazingly well-equipped casevac helicopters, that so many soldiers with battlefield injuries which would in the past have invariably proved fatal were now routinely dealt with and survived. Double and even triple traumatic amputees often lived, when only recently they would have surely bled to death before medical help could arrive.
But not for the first time I’d wondered if it would have been better if I had died. Losing a foot had sometimes seemed to me a worse outcome than losing my life. But I had looked up at the painting on the wall of Douglas Bader, the Second World War pilot, after whom the rehabilitation center was named, and it had given me strength.
“Douglas Bader was passed fit for combat,” I’d said.
The major had looked up at me. “Eh?”
“Douglas Bader was passed fit to fight, and he’d lost both his feet.”
“Things were different then,” the major from the MOD had replied somewhat flippantly.
Were they? I wondered.
Bader had been declared fit and had taken to the air in his Spitfire to fight the enemy simply due to his own perseverance. True, the country had been in desperate need of pilots, but he could have easily sat out the war in relative safety if he had wanted to. It had been the weight of his personal determination that had eventually overcome the official reluctance to allow him to fly.
I would take my lead from him.
We’ll see, indeed.
I’d show them.
“Will the tube station do?” Vicki said.
“Sorry?” I said.
“The tube station,” she repeated. “Is that OK?”