CHAPTER
THIRTEEN
WENDEL
Well
I guess it just goes to show even the most independent gals can get
swept off our feet. Except I was already off my feet. I was very much
down on the tarmac with an ankle which was already starting to throb
like an absolute pig.
The
ride to my flat wasn't exactly a picnic as every bump and jolt sent
an electric shock up my leg. When we arrived Wendel asked what floor
I was on.
“First.”
“No
lift?”
“No
lift.”
“So
maybe best if I carry you?”
“Probably.”
And
of course, by now I was starting to wonder about this knight in
shining black leathers who had probably saved my life. My attackers
were routine pond life, but they were hardly kids. I put them all
between eighteen and twenty. Fair enough, none of them were ready to
fight for a heavyweight title but neither were they eight stone
weaklings. And they certainly had a full quota of natural brutality.
And
yet the stranger on the bike had dropped them to the floor in a
matter of blurred seconds. Sam the journalist tried to find the right
words for an imagined piece. Casual, instinctive violence? Something
like that. I certainly had never witnessed anything like it. Wendel
was no giant. He was a regulation five ten and looked like he would
have tipped the scales at twelve stones or so. But when he picked me
up it seemed to require no effort whatsoever.
He
carried me upstairs like I was a small parcel and gently put me back
on my feet so I could unlock my front door.
Once
I had the lights on he quartered my living room with flitting eyes
and ordered me to sit down.
I
sat.
“I'll
make you some tea. Kitchen through there?”
“Yes.
Actually, I'll have coffee...."
“Tea.”
OK.
Tea. I shouted through through the door. “No sugar and just a
splash of milk.”
This
prompted a mildly dismissive chuckle.
When
the tea arrived it was laced with at least four sugars. He gave me a
brusque explanation.
“Best
thing for a shock. Drink up."
And
then he was rattling off a series of bizarre questions which I
answered as best as I could. Was there a paper recycling bin? Where
was it? Did I have a plastic bucket? OK. The washing up bowl would
do. Where did I keep flour? I sat and drank my tea and I really
should have been starting to worry. Had I jumped from the frying pan
and into the fire? Had I opened my door to some kind of nut who was
playing out some kind of weird 'Easy Rider' fantasy.
I
could hear vague splashing sounds in the kitchen. He chatted amiably
as he got on with whatever he was getting on with.
“I've
seen you on the TV. Read your stuff too. Pretty good."
“Thank
you.”
“I
was on the phone with my brother a couple of weeks ago. Just after
you were on Newsnight. He thought it was quite funny. Know what he
said?”
“No.”
“Hey,
bro. Looks like Scottish is the new black. Maybe after three hundred
and something years, the brothers are about to get a bit of respite.
He's a bit of a radical, my brother."
“I
see. Could I ask you something?”
“Of
course. Ask away.”
“What
on earth are you doing?”
He
emerged from the kitchen wiping his hands on a towel.
“Have
you got any spirits? Scotch? Gin? Anything will do.”
“I
have some whisky. It's in the cupboard over there.”
He
poured about eight measures into a mug and handed it to me.
“Down
the hatch.”
By
now my patience was starting to wear a little thin. Fair enough he
had saved my life, brought me home, carried me upstairs and forced me
to drink tea with at least four sugars. And fair enough he was the
best looking visitor I had ever had visit my flat by quite a
distance. Every time I looked at him I was reminded of the cover of
my mum's favourite Marvin Gaye CD. But a whole tumbler of scotch? Not
a chance.
“No,
I will not. Not until you tell me what on earth you are up to."
He
shrugged, poured himself a drink and sat on the chair opposite mine.
"OK. You have a broken ankle. It isn't the worst break I've ever
seen, but it needs fixing up. We could go to A&E, but I don't
think we should. The average waiting time for Hereford A&E is
over 30 hours. With everything going on in the town tonight I think
it fair to assume you'd be hanging around for the best part of two
days. It would be boring and very painful. Besides, I'm sure you will
be itching to get your adventures down on paper ready for the first
edition tomorrow. OK so far?"
“Yes.”
“As
it happens I am more than capable of sorting out your ankle. The
flour, washing up bowl and old newspapers were what I needed to mix
up some papier mache which I am going to use to make a protective
cast for your ankle. But before I do that part, I need to set the
bone back into place and it will hurt like an absolute bastard. The
good news is you are female which means you have a naturally high
pain threshold. But I can promise you the Scotch will make it a whole
lot more bearable. Is that acceptable?"
“So
you're a doctor?”
“No.”
“A
nurse?”
“No.”
“Any
chance of an answer made up of more than one word?”
“I
did work in an A&E department for six months. Does that help?"
“A
bit. Why only six months?”
A
sigh. He sat back and shook his head. “The joys of helping out a
journalist in distress. I think this the part where I ask to go off
the record. Can I do that?”
My
turn to smile. “I allow anyone who saves my life to go off the
record.”
“Good.
So I am Sergeant Wendel MacDonald of 22 Special Air Service. I am a
fully trained medic. Part of my training involved being seconded to
the A&E department in a Birmingham hospital for six months. I
treated gunshot wounds, stabbings, heart attacks, and strokes. I also
set my fair share of bones and set them into casts. However, this
will be the first time I have used papier mache. We are trained to
improvise. To use whatever is available to manage any particular
task. In this case, I have access to old newspapers, flour, a washing
up bowl and a bottle of Scotch."
“So
they taught you how to make papier mache in the SAS?”
“No.
That was Primary School.”
I
raised my glass with what I hoped was a sweet smile. “Here's to off
the record.” I knocked back the 'water of life' like a proper Scot
but it still hurt like hell when he crunched the bones back into
place.
And
then we talked as my makeshift cast slowly dried and hardened. We
talked all the way to the bottom of my whisky as the sounds of
rioting floated in on the unseasonably warm air of the night. I kept
the 'off the record' status in place in order to tease out the nuts
and bolts of his life story.
He
was two years older than me. Just past thirty. He was a London boy,
born and raised in Hackney. He had a younger brother, Leroy, and no
sisters. The rocks in his life had always been his mum and his
grandparents. His dad had departed the scene before Wendel started
primary school. As a boy, his main thing had been football. When he
was twelve he was given a place at the West Ham Academy as a 'box to
box' midfielder. He lived the dream all the way to sixteen years old.
Then they told him he didn’t have what they needed. His granddad
told him not to let the rejection get him down. There were plenty of
other clubs. Why not try Leighton Orient?
Instead, Wendel took the
news hard and started to let his life slide. The local gang was more
than happy to open their arms to him.
He
stopped going to school and drifted seamlessly into nickel and dime
crime. His career as an up and coming Hackney gang banger lasted less
than six months. One Saturday morning his grandfather more or less
dragged him out of his bed and forced him to sit in the living room
to be subjected to a brutal inquisition. Arrayed against him were
both grandparents, his mother, and his brother. The riot act was duly
read and when it was over he felt like he'd done ten rounds with
George Foreman. He was more or less ordered to sit at the kitchen
table where his grandfather stood over his shoulder and watched him
fill in every line of an online application to join the British Army.
Only when Wendel hit the 'Submit' button did the old man let out a
grunt of satisfaction.
At
his first interview they asked him which branch of the army he wanted
to join and for some reason, he said the Paras. He must have seen
something about them on tele at some stage.
From
the moment he walked into basic training he was a fish in water. His
natural athleticism and stamina carried him through everything they
threw at him. Everything was good and after a few months, he had his
wings and his red beret and a slot in 3 Para. He made sergeant after
six years and decided it was time to take the plunge and try for the
SAS. Again he took everything they threw at him and he was awarded
his sand coloured beret early in 2024.
He
drew the line at telling me about anything he had done either in the
Paras or the SAS. 'Off the record' only stretched so far. But he was
more than happy to tell me all about his times playing for the Army
football team.
By
the time dawn arrived, my eyes were too heavy to keep open. Wendel
issued his final set of instructions.
“Keep
it raised as much as you can. Walking is bathroom and back only, OK?”
“OK.”
“I'll
be round to check on you later. Mind if I take a front door key?”
Did
I manage to say yes? Or was it more of a 'Mmmmm'? Whatever. He took
the key. And I made like a good girl and kept my leg rested all day.
I put together what I thought was a pretty damned fine 1200 words for
which my editor promised front page coverage. I watched the rolling
news roll by. It seemed the whole of England was on fire. Everyone
was arguing the big 'will there be troops on the street?' question. I
hoped there bloody well wouldn't be. Well, that one troop in
particular wouldn't be ordered to the streets. A certain Wendel
MacDonald who I was very much looking forward to seeing again later
in the day.
He
came just after seven bearing trays of take away food and a bunch of
flowers. One look at his smiling face was more than enough to confirm
what I had probably known from the moment he put me on the back of
his motor bike.
I
was hook, line, and sinker smitten. We have been an item ever since.
I hope we will be an item until the day I die.
I
think a lot about the night we met. The night of the first riots. The
night I might well have been kicked to death on the warm tarmac. What
if Wendel had chosen a different route back to his flat? What if he
had made his way home half an hour earlier? Or later? What if I had
stayed in and listened to the sounds of the riot through my window?
What if?
It
was fate that put us together on that baking hot night filled with
the sounds of violence and breaking glass. But of course, lots of
relationships start out with chance encounters. I suppose such
lifesaving first meetings are pretty rare.
Hindsight
sometimes makes me think there was more than mere fate at play. And
here is where things get a little spooky. You see, there is the whole
Scottish thing. The reason why I stared death in the face was my
accent. My Scottishness. By this time there were barely any Scots to
be found in Hereford. The spread of Johnny Tranter's poison had seen
to that. And yet I was saved by a knight in shining armour who went
by the name of MacDonald. Wendel wasn't your average MacDonald from
Paisley or Arbroath. His family had acquired the name in very
different times. Hundreds of years ago, a Scottish overseer on a
Barbadian sugar plantation must have taken a fancy to one of the
slave girls and awarded their baby his surname. And now, many
centuries later, a descendent of the overseer and the slave girl
arrived from nowhere to save a young woman who was about to be
murdered for the crime of being born Scottish.
Which
is pretty amazing when you think about it. But there is more. Much
more. I have thought about this endlessly.
In
the whole world, there were probably only two people who could have
changed the course of history in the summer of 2030. One of them was
me and the other was Wendel. To manage to do what we did, we needed
to be together. A team. An item. A partnership.
If
we had never met, then we wouldn't have been there to play our part.
This
is where the sheer, million to one against chance of our first
meeting becomes even more spooky.
Fate,
right?
Bloody
hell.
CHAPTER
FOURTEEN
FINAL
STRAWS
Maybe
Wendel and I would have done what we did regardless. I like to think
we would. I guess nobody will ever know.
What
I do know is in the summer of 2029 there were two last straws which
snapped the back of any reluctance we might have shown. One straw for
me, one straw for Wendel. To be honest, my straw was relatively small
beer. Wendel's straw was absolutely brutal.
The
early heat wave riots raged for five nights. Hundreds were arrested
and the damage ran to several billion pounds worth. The first few
days of our relationship saw Wendel constantly checking his phone.
The news was filled with speculation. Would the police be capable of
restoring calm? Or would the army have to be marched out onto the
streets? In the end, the police managed to hold the line.
Just.
However,
restored calm did more or less nothing to paint England in any kind
of flattering light. The TV screens of the world had become
accustomed to a very particular view of the country as reporters gave
breathless pieces to camera in every city from Plymouth to Newcastle
upon Tyne. Cars burned and swarming, masked mobs of angry young men
threw anything they could lay their hands on at the lines of riot
police.
Slowly
but surely consequences started to unwind. A decade of Brexit had
eaten away at the City of London. One by one the major banks had
moved large chunks of their operations out to Dublin and Paris and
Frankfurt and finally Edinburgh. What was left of the City was all
about 'off shore'. It was money laundering in a pin stripe suit and
the rest of the world hated it. London continued to be the 'go to'
refuge for the dirty money of the world and the men who owned it. A
bank account showing enough zeros was enough to guarantee sanctuary
for oligarchs, arms dealers, drug cartel bosses, corrupt officials
and on the run dictators. The mansions of Kensington and Chelsea
continued to be used as bricks and mortar versions of gold bars.
Looking
after the ill-gotten gains of the world's super rich was just about
the only way post-Brexit England managed to keep its head above
water. As living standards slipped with every passing month, levels
of resentment about this grew and grew. In the riots of 2011, the mob
on the streets had focused all its attention on stealing expensive
trainers and bottles of vodka.
The
riots of 2029 were very different. This time thousands of rioters
made their way across the city from Hackney to Kensington to put
bricks through the windows of multi million pound mansions. Over a
hundred gilded properties were burnt to the ground. The resulting
insurance claims ran into the billions and one of the major players
in the market was forced into liquidation.
New
policies didn't cover riot damage. All of a sudden, a London property
wasn't such a safe haven for dodgy money. Within weeks of the riots,
it seemed like the whole of Mayfair was up for sale. Property prices
went into freefall and the pound soon followed. The exodus from the
City accelerated and by the end of the summer hundreds of thousands
of square feet of office space were to be had at bargain basement
rents.
Scotland
had plenty of problems of its own. After hundreds of years of
suffering from the consequences of emmigration, the country was now
trying to wrap its head around a vast queue which was forming at the
door. Tens of thousands of Scots living in England were voting with
their feet. EU citizens from the baked south of the continent sought
an escape from the desert heat of the long summers. And of course,
the deal with Qatar meant nearly a quarter of a million of its
citizens were eager to escape the furnace and take up their places in
the Caledonian Ark Suleiman Khalidi had created for them.
Thanks
to the Qatari sovereign wealth fund, money was no kind of problem. A
massive house building programme was underway and the world's clever
money was desperate to invest in all things Scotland. More building
meant more well-paid jobs which meant more immigrants.
The
Edinburgh Government took a hard-line approach to planning.
Permission for any kind of construction anywhere in the Central Belt
was all but impossible to secure. Instead, the new villages and towns
started to spring up in the long-empty areas of the country which had
been depopulated in the Highland and Lowland Clearances.
Many
compared what was happening in the Highlands and Islands to what had
once happened in the American West. Thankfully there were no cavalry
regiments roaming the countryside murdering locals. Many of the
dubious characters who had found safe haven in the leafier parts of
London were keen to set up shop in Edinburgh and the West End of
Glasgow. Luckily the Scottish Government was in a strong enough
position to order a draconian 'fit and proper person’ test for any
person or company attempting to buy any property valued at more than
a million pounds. No off shore entity was permitted to own any kind
of land or building.
By
the middle of the baking summer, the flow of English nationals
looking to escape the worsening situation on the streets started to
grow to unmanageable levels. New controls were put in place at the
border and tensions rose dramatically.
By
the beginning of August, Johnny Tranter's EFP was riding at nearly 25%
in the polls and every weekend saw more and more disgruntled young
people drawn to their street rallies. Tranter himself proved to be a
remarkably canny operator. His speeches never quite crossed the line
into anything illegal. He had a knack of not quite saying the words
which would lead to his being arrested. It seemed like he was never
off the TV and more and more people were keen to listen to what he
had to say.
His
message was consistent and it couldn't have been any clearer. Want to
know why your life is suddenly so shit? Scotland. Want to know why it
isn't safe on the street anymore? Scotland. Want to know why you
can't get a job? Scotland. Want to know why your house is barely
worth half what it was last year? Scotland.
Scotland,
Scotland, Scotland.
The
root of all evil. Some English people were desperate to get a permit
to make Scotland their home. Many more wanted it wiped off the face
of the map.
By
now I had more or less found my feet at the Guardian. I spent my
weekdays in my small flat in Kilburn. On Fridays, I drove back to
Hereford to spend time with Wendel. I barely got back home to
Edinburgh at all. My mum and dad still rang at least twice a week to
tell me how worried they were and to implore me to come home.
And
I continued to dig my heels in and be stubborn. Not surprisingly the
Guardian mainly deployed me to report on anti-Scottish incidents. I
received at least twenty death threats a day and the paper soon
decided I needed a minder. Wendel recommended a pal he knew from the
Regiment who had set up on his own as a provider of close security.
Alf was a Welshman of few words who could back off a crowd with a
single glare. On more than one occasion, I was glad he was there,
especially when I was dispatched to cover any kind of EFP event.
I
finally arrived in the journalism big time on the first Thursday in
August. The Prime Minister was holding a major press conference in
Downing Street and I was awarded the Guardian's allocated slot.
That
morning I woke early with a churning stomach. I showered and did my
best to power dress myself. I picked at a bowl of cereal and probably
put on far too much makeup.
Alf
gave me a once over when he arrived to pick me up.
“Well,
you're done up like a dog's dinner."
“Thanks
for that Alfie. And a very good morning to you too.”
The
next hour had something of a dream like quality. The drive to
Whitehall. The passage through endless levels of security checking.
The back door route into Number 10. Handshakes and introductions with
reporters I had kept on a pedestal for most of my adult life. A
sudden hush in the room before the Right Honourable Edward Montford
made his big entrance.
Edward
James Montford, Member of Parliament for a few thousand acres of the
South Downs. Born in 1970 with a silver spoon already spot welded
into his mouth. Born into bucketloads of old money. A vast country
house straight off a Constable painting. Eton and sporting prowess.
Then Oxford, where his Hugh Grant good looks ensured plenty of
adulation. A cricket blue and lots of pictures of him with a
succession of well-heeled debutantes on his arm. President of the
Oxford Union in full white tie and tails. Three years as a second
lieutenant in the Coldstream Guards where he picked up a mention in
dispatches in Kosovo.
After
the army, he walked a well-trodden family path into merchant banking
and pots of easy money. He married into 30,000 acres of Lincolnshire
in 2005 and became a father of three. By 2017 his bank accounts were
overflowing and he was ready for the next challenge. He was handed a
super safe leafy Parliamentary constituency in the commuter belt
which he won with predictable ease. It was basically one of those
places where they say you could pin a blue rosette on a chimpanzee
and it would still will by a landslide. Yeah? You know the kind of
place.
By
2020 he was a junior minister and he soon became a TV regular where
he defended the party line with a mix of articulate determination and
old money charm. He became a tabloid favourite.
His
stock rose very quickly. Men liked the fact he had been a soldier and
seemed like the kind of bloke you could have a pint with. Women
wanted to elope with him. One wag christened him the Tory George
Clooney.
He
held his seat easily enough in the midst of the post-Brexit Labour
landslide of 2021 and was basically a shoe in for the leadership
contest which followed. For three years, he eviscerated Jeremy Corbyn
at Prime Minister's Question Time and proved the bookies' short odds
right when he took his party back into power in the emergency
election of 2026.
And
then it all started to go wrong. The man who had found everything so
very easy was suddenly swimming against the tide. Three years was
enough to turn his salt and pepper hair completely gray. He followed
through on his promise to slash taxes and reduce the size of the
State, but the promised Singapore style boom never happened. His
efforts to strangle Scotland at birth failed miserably thanks to the
Qatar deal. He only just managed to keep a lid on the spring riots
and by August there was rumoured to be a queue of Cabinet colleagues
ready and waiting to stab him in the back.
As
he took his seat and poured out half a glass of water, I was struck
by how much thinner he was in real life. He was almost emaciated. His
once boyish face was cut with deep lines and I wondered when he last
smiled at anything.
For
ten minutes we listened to a familiar stump speech. England had faced
many challenges in the past and always found a way to come through.
This time would be no different. Time for unity and pride. Time for
the old Dunkirk spirit. Violence and lawlessness would not be
tolerated. He was ready and willing to take whatever steps were
required to restore order to the streets. Plans were in place to find
a long term solution to the water situation.....
There
was nothing new and the room knew it. The interesting part would be
when the time came for questions. How would he handle it? Over recent
weeks the old cool had largely disappeared. His performances in the
Commons had become increasingly ill tempered. Would he lose it today?
He
wrapped up and took a sip at his water. A lackey stepped forward.
“OK
guys. Questions.”
A
very predictable sea of hands. The lackey turned in my direction and
pointed to me without a second's hesitation.
“Samantha.
Why don't you kick things off.”
Arrrgggggghhhhhh!!!!!
I
have never, ever, ever been so nervous. This was ridiculous. I was
without the doubt the most junior reporter in the room and they had
chosen me to go first. Was it planned? It had to be planned.....
“Thank
you, Prime Minister." My voice was actually surprisingly strong.
"Over the last five months, 27 Scottish Nationals have been
murdered. Every day the England First Party is fanning the flames of
hatred. The Scottish people are waiting for you to give your
unequivocal condemnation to these vicious hate crimes. It has been
suggested your reluctance to offer this kind of condemnation is down
to the fact the EPF are polling at 25%. Is this so Prime Minister?"
I
sat and felt the cold eyes cut through me. His hard face twitched
with a suggestion of a smirk.
“Maybe
you haven't been listening properly, Miss Keating. I have spent the
last ten minutes condemning all aspects of the violence and
lawlessness we have seen over the last few weeks. And I am quite
happy to reiterate my promise to come down hard on those who
perpetrate this kind of violence. Very hard. But I think we need to
look a little deeper into the reasons for much of the anger we had
seen this summer. Miss Keating, our two countries have been through a
lot together over the last few hundred years. English soldiers and
Scottish soldiers stood shoulder to shoulder at Blenheim and Waterloo
and Balaclava and Passchendaele and El Alamein and Goose Green. I
myself was proud to serve with Scottish soldiers in Kosovo. For
hundreds of years, we went through thick and thin together. And let's
not beat about the bush here. There were plenty of times when things
were pretty thin up in Scotland. And whenever things were thin, the
good people of England were always there to help out. To prop up. To
lend a helping hand. Let us not forget how the Union of 1707 came
about. The Scots lost all their money on a fools’ venture in
central America and were forced to ask London to bail them out."
Another
sip of water.
“In
my book, a Union is like a marriage. Like an Infantry Platoon. There
will be good times and there will be bad times. Rich times and poor
times. Times of war and times of peace. Partners in a Union look out
for each other. They are there for each other. And for three hundred
years the people of England were always there for the people of
Scotland. We were like the rich side of a family offering some coal
and a bag of groceries and a few kind words to the poor side of the
family. And of course after the Brexit vote in 2016, things got a
little tough and then what happened? Well, we know what happened. The
good folk of Scotland couldn't jump ship fast enough. To paraphrase
the words of your beloved Robert Burns, 'Bought and sold for Qatari
gold, such a parcel of rogues in a nation.'
'So
is it so very surprising so many English people are angry at you,
Miss Keating? Is it so surprising they are angry when they open their
electricity bill and wonder how they are going to pay it? Is it so
surprising they are angry when they have to wait an extra fortnight
to see their GP because the Scottish doctors have gone home? Is it so
surprising they get angry when class sizes in the local school go to
over fifty because the Scottish teachers have gone home? No Miss
Keating, of course it isn't surprising. Of course I deplore all
violence, but I can understand the anger which causes violence. Quite
frankly, the English people feel like we have been shafted. We feel
betrayed. So, of course, we feel angry. I feel angry."
And
all the while, those cold eyes were fixed on me. When he was done, a
brief silence sat on the room for a few seconds. Everyone knew what
had just happened. I had been set up. The whole press conference was
merely a vehicle for him to use me to send his message out.
A
few days later a YouGov poll showed support for the EFP had slipped
back to under 20%. The general view was that Edward Montford had
stopped the rot. The Scottish Government was outraged and many
countries shared the outrage. But the Prime Minister clearly didn't
care what the rest of the world thought. He was only bothered about
his own back yard.
Wendel
had murder in his eyes when I got back to Hereford the following
Friday. Had he found himself alone in a room with Edward Montford,
the Prime Minister's life expectancy would have been measured in
seconds. I told him I was fine. I was a big girl. I was bloody
Scottish for goodness sake. All in a day's work for a thick skinned
hack like me. And of course my lords and masters at the Guardian were
as pleased as punch. They gave me a rise and the promise of a weekly
column. The only way I managed to calm mum and dad down was by
getting Alf to talk to them on Skype.
Being
lined up as the designated punch bag for the Prime Minister of
England and Wales basically put my career into the fast lane. It took
me to the place I had always dreamed of reaching. It was my big
break. And for that, I suppose I should be grateful. And I am.
But
something else happened on that day in August 2029. I came to hate
Edward Montford. And I have never felt more Scottish in my life. I
made a quiet vow to myself as I walked out of the Press Conference.
If the moment ever came when my country needed me, I would step up
and do whatever was required.
Thankfully
when the moment duly arrived nothing had changed.
I
stepped up.
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