After pulling on my helmet and
clipping the safety strap fastener in place I kicked the machine into life and
headed off through the dim empty streets. Heading out of the town I passed familiar
dwelling houses, across the bridge and into the ominous forest. One last bend and I would be on to the three kilometre
straight stretching out into the inky blackness. In the far distance I could see the welcoming
twinkle of lights from my village and thanked God that the power was on.
Winding on the power I was now travelling
at around 80 kilometres an hour, fast enough for this road through the gloom,
as anything is liable to appear in front of you - ranging from a full grown
teak to a one-ton water buffalo, and every woodland inhabitant in between. As the light from my headlamp sliced its way
through the night air I was fast approaching somewhere near the mid section
between the bend and my village.
In an instant I felt a searing
pain rip through my neck and right arm. The
bike wobbled and lurched as I tried to keep upright. The suddenness and the shock of what has just
happened had thrown me out of control momentarily and something was hanging loose
and flapping against my throat. My brain
was turning somersaults. In what seemed
like milliseconds I was asking myself,
"What happened?"
I had seen nothing on the road
just before the incident and whatever it was that had struck was high up, but
there was no overhanging branches, nothing. What hit me seemed to be invisible.
Then the moment of realization
dawned on me.
"Good God", I exclaimed
to myself, "I have just been attacked."
There was no other explanation for
it, but why and with what? Anger and
adrenalin welled up inside me and I brought the bike to a skidding halt about
half a kilometre further on up the road. I stood hurling abuses in the foulest of
language back in the direction of the strike.
"Jesus, what am I doing?"
I thought, "This is no joke! Get
out of here fast".
In seconds the bike was pushing
hard up the road crashing through the gears while swerving from side to side
and never stopping until the front wheel hmet the entrance to my house.
Shaking with both fear and fury I
opened the door and got my bike inside. I must have stood motionless for about five minutes
just gathering my thoughts and when I finally emerged from the trance I was
again reminded of the aching pain in my neck and forearm. I reached up to open my safety strap nursing
my right arm as I did so. Then I realized
it was already undone. After lifting the
helmet off I noticed straight away that the fastener was smashed to pieces and
looking in the mirror seen that my throat had a number of scratches running
from left right - but not deep enough to draw too much blood. However it was black and blue from just
under my chin to where the neck joins the chest and running for about two
inches either side of my Adam’s apple. Opening my coat proved a little bit difficult
but when I exposed my forearm it was the same colour as my neck and covered an
area from about the elbow to the wrist.
I mulled over the incident in my
mind, trying to work out what had happened. The only conclusion I could come to was that somebody wanted me out of
the way. If I was not going to go under
my own steam then they were prepared to help me make a decision and were
certainly prepared to use force to do it. Timing my movements would have been very easy
as I went to town and came home again more or less at the same time almost
every night. Thinking about it there had
to be two people involved as I knew I had been struck by two projectiles which struck
me simultaneously. Furthermore I doubted
if one person would have lain in wait for me in that place. But did
the "bullets" hit me or did I hit them? From my deduction of the scenario it would
seem that I was indeed a very fortunate nightrider because the assailants must
have been split seconds too early. The
evidence from my point of view showed the main strike to be right on the front
of the forearm while the other had hit precisely on the side of the safety
strap fastener, and had torn most of it away.
Everything was now beginning to
make some sense, right from the meeting with the foreign correspondent, the confirmation
of rumours, the strangers around my house, the chance visit to the restaurant
and the meeting with the westerner while the gathering of military minds was in
progress. I and the other European, who
lived in the town but whom I had not seen for months, were (possibly) the only
Caucasians left living close to the border.
I made the decision to leave but
not straight away. Having had very
little sleep I went back to where I guessed the assault had taken place. There was no evidence of anything except for
the fact that it was the only place that you could park a vehicle or a
motorcycle hidden from view. I deduced
this because a small track from the forest joined the road at that exact
location.
I went to the monastery early the
next morning and informed the head brother about the incident. He suggested that I go to the police. I had other ideas and that certainly was not
one I would entertain. Walking into the
lion’s den was not part of my plan in making a hasty retreat to the relative
safety of friends. I decided to stay at
my girlfriend's house in town and leave early the next morning. I reasoned that it would be better to be close
to people as it offered a certain amount of protection. Being on my own may have created other clear
cut opportunities to my adversaries. The
300 kilometre ride through the mountains looked a better option than hanging
around enticing fate to beckon some grim reaper.
Cerebral medication would taste a
lot better if I could sleep soundly in my bed at night.