CHAPTER
SIXTEEN
YOU
HAVE ARRIVED AT YOUR DESTINATION
More
accurately, we have arrived at our destination. Me, the writer. You,
the reader. It's time to switch off the ignition and wind down the
windows. Take in the view. Feel the air on the face. Light up a
cigarette if that is your thing. Maybe get out of the car and stretch
the legs.
2030.
A
set of four numbers to go along with other similar sets of four
numbers.
1314.
1513. 1650. 1745.
Bannockburn,
Flodden, Dunbar, Culloden.
A
stream, a field, a town, a moor.
Places
of slaughter. Places where history was turned. Places where the
English and the Scots ran out of patience with each other. Places
where hundreds and sometimes thousands of men ended the day with
lifeless eyes staring up into the Scottish sky.
When
I was a teenager, I remember hearing a political talking head on the
car radio. It must have been a couple of weeks after the English
voted for Brexit. The political chaos of the days following the vote
was unprecedented at the time, though it seems like pretty small beer
now. The guy on the radio said that from this point onwards no matter
what the political question in a pub quiz might be, the answer will
always be the same: 2016
And
at that point, the guy didn't even know the people of America were
lining themselves up to vote Donald Trump into the White House.
I
am pretty sure in decades to come historians will link the two dates
together. They will conclude the tumultuous events of the summer of
2030 would never have happened without 2016 happening first.
Maybe.
Probably. I don't care much to be honest.
2030
happened.
The
set of four numbers duly took their place alongside all the other
sets of four numbers.
Well,
dear reader. The time has come for you and me to part company. From
this point onwards there will be no more of the chit chat. I have
done my best to present you with the line-up of characters who played
lead roles in the epic drama of 2030.
The
makers of history. Some were large figures on the world stage. Others
were people barely anyone had ever heard of.
We
all had our own reasons. Our own histories. Our own back stories. We
all played our part.
We
were there.
And
after 2030 nothing would ever be the same again. I guess that is what
history is all about, right?
PART
THREE
THE
DRUMS OF WAR
CHAPTER
SEVENTEEN
SHIPBUILDING
Angus
Campbell drained the last of his coffee and forced himself to focus
on the agenda for the Cabinet Meeting which was due in less than
ninety minutes. Christ, he was tired. He was tired all the way to the
marrow of his bones. His schedule was becoming overwhelming.
When
he had first assumed the role of First Minister he had wound his
alarm back half an hour from his accustomed 6.30. After a month it
had retreated a further half hour. Now it was five o'clock and every
time the bleeping dragged him from sleep he felt like screaming.
He
tried to recall when he had last slept for more than five hours and
couldn't. There must have been a good reason for his decision to put
his name forward to take on the role of Scotland's leader. And no
doubt the reason must have looked pretty good at the time. Now? Now,
not so much so. Now he hankered for the relative simplicity of his
old life when all he had to do was sell solar panels and make a few
quid.
Come
on Angus you miserable old bastard. Shape up and stop the self-pity.
More coffee. Stretch the legs a bit. Check the view from the big
window. At least you’re knackered as a result of trying to keep up
with riding the crest of a wave. Better than being in Edward
Montford's shoes.
He
grinned out of the window. Oh yeah. A million times than being in
that toffee nosed prick's shoes.
A
tap on the office door pulled him out of his reverie.
His
secretary, Margaret.
“It's
Mr Khalidi.”
“Oh
right. Great. That's fine. Thank you, Margaret."
By
2030 the two men who had laid the first bricks of the Scotland/Qatar
partnership had become firm friends.
“Suleiman.
Salam Alaikum my friend.”
“Alaikum
Salam.”
“Here.
Grab a pew. Coffee or are you going to give the chance Margaret to
show off her mint tea skills?"
“Why
not mint tea?" Suleiman switched on his brightest smile to the
waiting secretary. "When I drink your mint tea Margaret I am
transported back to the deserts of Arabia."
“Get
away with you Mr Khalidi.”
They
took a few minutes of small talk before getting down to the nuts and
bolts.
“So
how was Spain?”
Khalidi
grinned like a double glazing salesman who had just closed a deal for
six windows and a patio door. Without discount.
“Actually,
Spain couldn't have gone any better.”
He
went on to explain the draft agreements he had in place to supply
Bilbao, Valencia, and Barcelona with a combined total of 25 tankers a
month of water. Marseilles had become the first customer for Scottish
water in 2027 and other cities soon followed. First, it was Nice,
Toulon, and Cannes. Genoa came next. Then Lisbon and Porto. And now
the cities of Spain were joining the club.
“What
is the new total?”
“86
tankers a month.”
“That
must be pretty close to capacity.”
“It
is capacity.”
They
moved along to the frantic reconstruction of the Girvan shipyards.
Everyone was going at a hundred miles an hour but it would still be
many years before the Clyde yards would be able to sail their first
tanker.
“Are
there any more second hand ships to be had?”
“Not
really. There are tankers out there of course but the owners are
being greedy. They think we will pay any price.”
“Which
we won't of course.”
“Of
course.”
Suleiman
ran through a number of reports. It seemed like every week saw the
opening of another hydroelectric plant in the Highlands. New towns
and villages were coming to life in areas which had been empty since
the Clearances. Scotland was home to the largest construction boom
outside of India and China. It was both exhilarating and terrifying.
The sums of cash involved made Angus almost physically sick at times
but the economists who advised him laughed off his concerns. The
money, it seemed, wasn't even close to being any kind of object. And
fair enough, every time the Scottish Government released a new bond
issue the money markets snapped up every penny's worth in a matter of
seconds.
“I
can't help but feel this is all too good to be true. My innate
Scottish pessimism I guess. I keep looking for the catch.”
“Well
here's something which might qualify.”
Angus
sat back and wrapped his hands around the back of his head.
“Go
on.”
“I
have had a back channel contact from London.”
“For
Christ's sake, what do they want now?”
“Water.”
Angus
sat forward. “Water? You're bloody kidding me.”
Suleiman
shrugged. “Not at all. They are looking for ten tankers a month
into Tilbury.”
“There's
no bloody chance. Not until we get a few more ships. Even five a
month would be a stretch.”
“Four
actually.”
“And
you told them that?”
“I
did. They didn't seem to want to listen.”
Angus
jumped up to his feet and started pacing. “Oh they didn't, did
they? For fuck's sake Suleiman. So come on. What are they expecting
us to do?”
“Reduce
our contracts with France.”
“WHAT!!
Are they fucking kidding?”
“It
certainly didn't seem that way to me.”
“So
who was it? The back channel boys?”
“Whitehall
Mandarins. You know the type. All grooming and expensive cologne. I
could tell one of them was itching to call me a jumped up wog.”
“Arrogant
bastards. Sod it. I'm going to get that bastard Montford on the phone
right now, so I am.”
“And
what will you tell him?”
“I'll
tell him to get caught up with his fucking electric bill and then we
might just consider it. That's what I'm going to tell him. I mean for
Christ's sake Suleiman they're five months in arrears.”
“Six
months. And if they are not in a position to bring their electricity
payments up to date?"
“Then
fuck them, that's what. They've used my country like a convenient
piggy bank for seven hundred years. Well not anymore. Those days are
bloody gone. If Edward Montford wants water he can get a spade and
dig himself a fucking well."
Angus
stared furiously at the phone in front of him and his hand started to
make a move towards it.
Suleiman's
voice dripped calm. “Are you quite sure this is a good idea?”
“No.
Of course, it isn't a good idea. But that arrogant bastard is
seriously starting to get under my skin. They kill our people on the
streets, give a mealy mouthed apology and then they expect us to keep
their lights on and their toilets flushing without paying their
bills. "
“The
old habits of Empire die hard.”
“It
seems so." Angus jumped up again and stood by the window with
his hands plunged deep into his pockets. "OK. You're right of
course. No doubt you have some wisdom ready."
The
Qatari smiled. “I hope so. I think we should give them four ships a
month. Just because England is proving to be the neighbour from hell
doesn't mean we have to stoop to their level. Michelle Obama came up
with a line which has always stayed with me. 'If they go low, we go
high.”
Angus
laughed. “Maybe I should go and spend a few days in one of your
Bedouin tents. A bit of quality desert time might just teach me to
think more diplomatically.” He sat back down and some of the
tension seemed to ease a little. “What are you hearing about things
in London?”
“Nothing
good. A lot of people are getting very worried about the story your
daughter's friend is working on."
“The
alleged death squads?”
“Indeed.
It looks like the truth is going to be somewhere beyond ugly. They
are bracing themselves."
“How
bad could things get?”
“Pretty
desperate actually. There are rumours. People are saying France might
ask the UN to impose sanctions.”
“Jesus.
I had no idea it was that serious.”
They
were silent for a moment whilst the First Minister tried to get his
head around just how bad things were getting for his country's
ex-partner.
“As
a Qatari, much of this situation feels very familiar. We always had
Saudi Arabia on one side and Iran on the other. Two countries many,
many times larger and more powerful than we ever were. We were much
richer than they were in comparative terms, but that didn't really
count for anything. They were like a pair of frustrated bears driven
mad with fleas. They were always itching to find an excuse to reach
out and rip our heads from our shoulders. So we learned how to play
nice: to keep them distracted with jars of honey and pots of flea
powder. So if Edward Montford needs some water, the best thing to do
is to let him have some water. And if Edward Montford is struggling
to keep up with his electric bills, then we will give him a little
more time. Things are going well for us. Better than we could ever
have dreamed of. What is the greatest threat to our continuing
prosperity?"
“Even
more chaos in England.”
“And
why is that First Minister?”
“The
potential for a huge refugee crisis at the border. A collapse in
Anglo-Scottish trade. It's a long list..... Fair enough. As per
usual, I am thankful for your words of wisdom. You'll do the deal?"
“Of
course.”
“Good
man.”
CHAPTER
EIGHTEEN
HOLBROOKE
April
2030 started with eight straight days of rain. And it wasn't just any
old rain. It was pure pissing it down all day rain. And never in the
history of the British Isles had a prolonged period of spring rain
been celebrated with such nail biting enthusiasm. News items focussed
on empty looking reservoirs which maybe were not quite as empty as
they had been. Climate experts refused to jump down from the fence
and say the rain might just be a sign of something better. In pubs
and offices and shop counters, everyone was talking about the rain
and hoping against hope it would last all the way to October.
The
whole thing completely washed over me if you'll excuse the unintended
pun. I was locked down in the office and I even lived up to the
ultimate journalistic cliché: I asked my editor for permission to
put a camp bed in my tiny office and he said it was OK.
All
my reporting life I had yearned for a story like the one which was
completely dominating my eighteen hour days. The story of the alleged
Hackney Death squads had everything. It was dark, harrowing, and it
had the ability to change everything. Even in the chaotic, turbulent
early months of 2030, no government could survive being caught in the
act of ordering kill squads to murder English citizens in the
nation's capital.
I
had always anticipated working on this kind of story would have all
the thrill and adrenaline of a big dipper ride. How wrong I had been.
Maybe if things had been different, it might have been the case. If I
had been dispassionate. An outsider looking in. Patiently picking at
the threads and gathering my evidence. But I didn't feel like an
outsider. I had only met Leroy once, but once was more than enough.
He was so very different from Wendel but they shared the same courage
and utter sense of right and wrong. I guess in hindsight I spotted
the martyr in Leroy the very first time I laid eyes on him outside
the Guardian offices. The diffident stance. The bookish glasses. The
canvas shoulder bag. The nervous smile. The careful handshake. The
thoughtful silence.
I
could see the huge toll Leroy's disappearance and subsequent loss had
taken on Wendel. On the surface, nothing had changed but there was a
new look in his eyes. A mix of pain and rage. He refused point blank
to talk about his feelings. Instead, he grilled me about all aspects
of the investigation and did all he could to think of new dark
corners I could delve into.
At
first everything was about the victims. As the word of our genuine
determination to look under the rocks spread through Hackney, the
families started to come forward. I met mothers and fathers and
brothers and sisters and grandmothers and grandfathers. We met in
cafes and parks and pubs. Their stories were different, but in a way
they were always the same. An abduction. Weeks and weeks of frantic
searching. Begging the police to investigate. Waiting for hours on
end to get five minutes with their MP. Firing out an endless stream
of 'Have you seen?' pages into the vastness of Facebook. But the end
result was always the same.
Nothing.
A wall of silence. A giant brick wall.
By
March we had a growing collection of evidence of how so many had
disappeared. We had over a hundred affidavits sworn in the company of
the paper's in-house solicitor. We had some grainy footage of a van
pulling up outside a low rise block and five masked figures jumping
down from the back and returning a few minutes later dragging a
writhing figure. Next, we received actual footage from inside a flat.
It was jumpy, noisy, chaotic and absolutely terrifying. Screaming and
shouting. Furniture tipped over and four masked men who seemed too
large for the small room. Angry voices which a language expert
identified as Latvian. A young man yanked out through the front door
with undistilled terror in his eyes. A final brutal warning backed up
with a pointed weapon.
By
the third week of March we had a hundred cases under our belts. We
had a clear handle on the tactics the snatch squads had used. We had
reasonable proof of at least eight different nationalities under the
masks.
One
fact overwhelmed all others. Of the ninety two men and eight women
who had been taken from Hackney, not a single one had ever been seen
or heard from again. They had disappeared. Vanished. Become
statistics nobody was willing to put on any kind of public list. The
police always shrugged and said the disappeared ones were no doubt on
the run. Hiding out in another city. Maybe even in another country.
After all, they had been a part of a terrorist group. What was so
surprising?
Oh
yes. That particular part of the narrative had by now hardened. The
narrative was parroted by policemen and politicians alike and they
stuck to it ferociously. The Peoples' Republic of Hackney had in fact
been a vast terrorist cell. It was something akin to the 'so called
Islamic State of Syria and the Levant' which had scared the pants off
the western world a few years earlier. The men and women of the so
called Peoples' Council were much like the men and women who had
ordered murder and mayhem from their seats on the IRA Army Council
back in the 1970's and 80's. The so called Peoples' Republic had
presented a clear and present terrorist threat to the whole of the
nation. Only the dedication and professionalism of the police and the
security services had driven this particular pack of rabid dogs from
the door. The tabloid press was more than happy to take this
narrative and run with it with everything they had. The people of
Hackney learned how it felt to be cast as designated bogeymen and
bogeywomen. Hackney became the latest version of the useful baddy
state. Hackney became the new Cuba. The new Libya. Iran. North Korea.
Nobody
was in the mood to give a damn about the alleged disappearance of
over a hundred English citizens. Desperate times had required harsh
measures. The threat had been neutralised. The good guys had
prevailed and the bad guys had been put back in the box.
In
mid-March I was introduced to a young hacker who was, without doubt,
the most paranoid individual I have ever met. I had some time-stamped
video footage of a man being thrown into the back of a van. And my
footage showed the number plate surprisingly clearly. Could he hack
into whichever system collected number plate recognition data? He
could. For a price. I was pleasantly astonished when my editor agreed
to pay up without batting an eyelid.
The
hacker came good after two days and managed to track the van across
London and all the way to an industrial estate on the outskirts of
Colchester. A stand-alone one storey warehouse. Nondescript. Mildly
decrepit looking and rather unloved. The only part of the compound
which looked remotely new and cared for was the ten foot high razor
wire fence which was wrapped around the perimeter. Alf and I arrived
on the first day of the Spring rains to find a 'To Let' sign on the
padlocked gates and nothing but shrugs from everyone we talked to.
The letting agency was grumpy with us. No, they couldn't reveal
details of any of their tenants. Not in a million years. And there
was something more behind the aggressive order to leave the office.
There was genuine fear.
Could
the hacker find a way into the records of the Estate Agents? He
could. For a price. Nice work if you can get it.
And
suddenly there it was. A name. Something to get a hold of.
Holbrooke
Securities.
Now
the investigation was racing along two different roads. A further fat
envelope of cash to the hacker gave us the footage from a CCTV camera
sited two streets away from the locked warehouse. Alf's eagle eyes
had noticed what was a freakish piece of good luck. The camera was
keeping an eye on a small row of tawdry looking shops. A betting
shop. A bit of everything mix of groceries and booze. A charity shop.
A launderette. A Chicken and Kebab place.
At
the end of the row, there was an alley which provided a cut through
to the next street. On the far side of the next street, there was a
building site which a developer had earmarked for six new houses
before the crash in prices. So instead of six new houses, there was a
patch of overgrown waste ground and a clear view all the way from the
CCTV camera to the chained front gate of the warehouse compound.
We
soon had three weeks’ worth of footage which showed the comings and
goings of ten different vans. Our first van was filmed coming and
going on eight different occasions. We had nothing else. No pictures
of figures being yanked from the vans and dragged inside. But it was
another brick in the wall we were trying to build.
The
second strand of the investigation involved engaging the services of
a renowned firm of forensic accountants. They were digital
bloodhounds and we allowed them to inhale the scent of Holbrooke
Securities and then we let them loose.
Two
days later they returned with an air of resignation. They walked us
through their journey from a bank in Jersey to a bank in Macau to a
bank in Delaware all the way to their final destination which was a
bank in the British Virgin Isles.
All
they had was a list of three nominee directors. Were they worth
looking into? Not remotely. They were complete nobodies who were paid
a few pounds to masquerade as directors for literally hundreds of
shell companies. Could our intrepid hacker find a way through the off
shore firewalls of the bank? He just laughed. Be serious guys.
Outside
the windows of the office, the sky crackled with thunder and the
rains of April started in earnest.
There
were six of us around the table in the conference room. Nobody was in
the mood to speak. We were all sleep-deprived and strung out. For
weeks we had chased the elusive Holbrooke Securities and it had
seemed like we were about to land our prey.
Instead,
we had reached a brick wall.
Our
editor slowly packed up his brief case. "OK. Enough for tonight.
Get yourselves home. Get a proper night's sleep. We'll reconvene at
ten and do some brain storming. There has to be a way. Keep the
faith."
We
slept and showered and breakfasted and commuted. And we brainstormed.
And we kept the faith. And none of it did any good whatsoever.
We
remained parked up on the wrong side of an offshore brick wall.
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