CHAPTER
TWENTY ONE
A
FRESH PAIR OF EYES
As
the Turkish and Israeli armoured columns rolled serenely to their
destinations without encountering any kind of opposition, my
investigation into Holbrooke was still staring at a brick wall. We
had by now accepted there was no chance of dragging any information
out of the British Virgin Isles. We still had a steady stream of
Hackney families making contact to tell the stories of how their
loved ones had vanished into thin air. The problem was we didn't need
any more evidence of what was actually done. We had that part of the
story nailed to the wall. What we needed now was clear proof of who
had ordered it to happen. And who had paid Holbrooke Securities to
make it happen.
After
three weeks of fruitlessly smacking my head against the brick wall, I
decided it was time to take a break and spend the weekend up in
Edinburgh. I tried to persuade Wendel to come along, but he was too
busy beasting a new batch of wannabees up and down the Brecon
Beacons.
I
took the plane and never before had Scotland felt so utterly
different to England. I left a London which felt beaten down and
simmering with discontent. Roads which had once been constantly
gridlocked were now home to free flowing traffic. Half of the shops
on Oxford Street were boarded up and a multitude of street beggars
had replaced the teeming crowds of visiting Asian tourists. The queue
of taxis waiting for arrivals was barely twenty cabs long.
Edinburgh,
on the other hand, had a frantic feel about it. My dad was waiting
for me at in the Arrivals Terminal. We hugged and I could see he was
sweating profusely.
“Had
to bloody run all the way from the car park. Everyone keeps saying
the congestion can't get any worse and guess what? It just keeps on
getting worse. Good trip?"
“Fine.
London was the complete opposite. It is turning into a ghost town.”
“I
heard as much. Come on. We're this way.”
The
journey from the airport to Morningside took over two hours, but that
was OK. It gave us time to catch up. Of course dad's main concern was
how many death threats I was receiving. I told him they were no
better but no worse. For the umpteenth time, I told him not to worry.
And for the umpteenth time, I knew my words were somewhat hollow. I
sensed his frustration.
“OK.
I'll only say it once and your mother has promised not to say it
all.”
“Come
home, right?”
“Of
course come home. I simply cannot understand why on earth you are so
determined to stay down there. Surely there has never been a better
time to be a reporter in Scotland. Everything is running at a million
miles an hour. Really, Sam, it is absolutely exhilarating. And I know
for a fact you have job offers on the table from every one of the
main papers. What on earth is stopping you?"
“Two
things, Dad. A really, really big thing and a big thing. You already
know the really, really big thing.”
Dad
nodded. “Wendel.”
“Of
course Wendel. And you get that, right?”
A
long, resigned sigh. "Yes. Of course, I get it. And for what it
is worth both me and your mother like him a lot. I mean, a man who
saves my daughter's life, what is there not to like?"
“How
is his mum doing?”
A
chuckle. "Oh, she's in the pink. She invites us round all the
time to eat. You can probably see the evidence on my waistline. Do
you think Wendel will be willing to give up his army career and come
to Scotland."
“I
think so. But I don't go on and on at him. It wouldn't be fair.”
“No.
I don't suppose it would. You said there was something else? I
presume this is your investigation into the death squads?”
“It
is. I can't leave it, dad. And it isn't just me being a horrid
ambitious hack. Fair enough, it is the kind of story which only comes
along once in a lifetime. If we can nail it down, Edward Montford
will go down with it. Believe me, it is huge. That hideous man might
well end up on trial in The Hague."
Another
chuckle. “I think Mr Montford chose the wrong Scot to pick a fight
with when he had a go at you in the Press Conference.”
I
smiled. Fair enough. No point arguing the toss on that one. I had
plenty of skin in this particular game.
“But
there's much more, dad. I know it sounds corny, but there has to be
some justice. I have met so many of the families who have lost their
loved ones. Mums and dads and grandparents and aunts and uncles. I
have given them tissues to wipe away the tears. I have held their
hands. I have looked all the way into their eyes. And every time, I
have promised them I would do everything in my power to find them
some justice. You cannot expect me to break my word. You didn't bring
me up that way. Right?”
He
stared forlornly out into the long line of queued cars. "No. We
didn't. And I know this is your Woodward and Bernstein moment. Of
course I do. And we are both as proud of you as any parents can be.
We just worry. We worry all the bloody time. Anyway. Enough of this.
How is it going? Your big investigation?"
“Bloody
awful to be honest. We have hit a wall and the wall is about a mile
high."
Dad
waved a hand at the seized traffic. "Well, we're going nowhere
fast. This mess is going to take at least an hour to get through. Why
don't you run me through the investigation? You know. Maybe a fresh
pair of eyes might help. Legal eyes sometimes see things in a
different way to journalist eyes."
So
I walked him through. I laid out the evidence we had gathered piece
by piece until I reached the infamous brick wall in the BVI. When I
was done, he was quiet for a while. He drummed his fingers on the
steering wheel.
“OK.
Let me check a few things.”
“Fire
away.”
“Once
you identified Holbrooke Securities as being the people behind the
abductions, all of your efforts have been focussed on finding out who
they are.”
“Yes.”
“And
if you can pin down who they are and what they are, then you will try
to prise the truth out of them. Who engaged their services? How much
was the contract worth? What precise instructions were they given?
Who signed off?”
“Yes.”
“However
in a way, all this will do is provide evidence to prove what you
already know. I presume you are certain these abductions were
sanctioned by the Westminster Government?”
“Yes.”
“OK.
So try this on for size. You don't know much about Holbrooke
Securities, but you do know this. They proved themselves to be
extremely effective. They went into what was pretty well a war zone
and within a month the streets of Hackney were quiet. They took on
the task with a cold brutality. Every abduction was planned down to
the last detail. To the best of our knowledge they didn't lose a
single person.”
“It
seems like you are impressed.”
“In
a way, I am. Don't get me wrong. I find everything about them
despicable. But there is no point in our not acknowledging their
efficiency. Look, I'll show you where I am going with this. Let's
assume you find a way in. Let's assume you start to identify some of
the key players. What then? Do you really think any of these men will
tell you anything? Not a chance. Not in a million years. I know these
kind of guys. I have prosecuted them for years. Gangbangers. Omerta.
Their beloved code. These Holbrooke Securities guys will be ten times
worse. Military gangbangers."
“So
you're saying it's pointless trying to find out who Holbrooke really
are?”
“Not
entirely. Maybe if you can find out where they operate from, your
hacker might be able to drag some evidence out of their systems. But
I doubt it. I assume they will have the best cyber security money can
buy. You couldn't use it anyway. Think about it. Imagine the front
page. Here is all the proof we illegally hacked from a company called
Holbrooke Securities. Your lawyers wouldn't sign off on it in a
hundred years."
“No.
I don't suppose they would. Christ. So you think we should give up on
trying to find out who the hell Holbrooke are?”
“Yes.
I think you're flogging a dead horse."
“So
if not Holbrooke, then where on earth do we go?”
Dad
grinned. “You go old school. Follow the money.”
“That
is what we are trying to do. We need to get into Holbrooke to find
the money and where it came from.”
“No
you don't. Come on Sam, you are all thinking far too conventionally.
You need to think laterally.”
I
think I probably rolled my eyes. “Go on.”
“I
will. Here's your starting point. You feel quite certain the
Government engaged the services of Holbrooke Securities to go into
Hackney and break the People's Republic?”
“We
do.”
“You
are also certain Holbrooke Securities didn't do what they did as an
act of patriotic fervour. They did it for money, yes?”
“Yes.”
“Money
from the Government, yes?”
“Yes.”
“What
you have been trying to do is find the place where the money arrived
and that place is locked in a concrete bunker in the Britsih Virgin
Isles.”
“Yes.”
“So
it seems to me you need to follow the money in a different way. If
the Westminster Government has been paying very large sums of money
to Holbrooke Securities, it must have come from somewhere. It will be
well hidden, you can be sure of that. But at the end of the day the
public pound is actually quite hard to hide. The money will have been
paid out from some obscure department. But there will be some kind of
record. And the people in charge of these records will not be
gangsters. They will be civil servants. And maybe they will already
be feeling uneasy about what has happened."
And
there it was. The light bulb moment. "Oh my God. How could I
have been so bloody blind? We don't try to dig into Holbrooke to try
and find who paid them and how much. We need to dig into the
government and find out who paid Holbrooke. And how much. And who
signed off. So bloody simple when you think about it."
Dad
grinned like a cat sizing up a bucket of cream. The traffic, at last,
started to unwind itself. Already I couldn't wait to catch the plane
back. I managed to switch my return ticket to early Sunday morning
and by eleven o'clock I was banging away at the door of our favourite
hacker's flat. After a couple of minutes, he emerged looking bleary
eyed and pissed off. I appeased him with a cappuccino and a six pack
of still warm donuts.
All
residual grumpiness evaporated once I ran my dad's lateral thinking
by him and within minutes his grubby fingers were flying.
Three
days later he summoned me. If anything, he looked even worse. His eyes
were as red as a Cambodian sunset and without putting too fine a
point on it, he stank. His flat was a fetid mix of endless rollies
and discarded takeaway cartons. With a triumphant bite of cold pizza
he ushered me to his workspace.
And
there it was.
The
Department of Environment. And very quickly it became blindingly
obvious this was the perfect place to hide huge sums of cash in plain
sight. The Government had been shelling out lorry loads of cash to
clean up the decommissioned reprocessing plant at Sellafield for well
over ten years. Initially, the clean-up bill had been estimated at an
eye watering £8 billion. Soon this initially frightening figure
seemed like mere chicken feed. By 2022 the sum had risen to £61
billion. By 2028 it went through the £100 billion ceiling. Every
time the figure was yet again adjusted upwards, there would be a
fierce political storm as all the parties blamed each other. Only the
Greens enjoyed the luxury of an absolute 'we told you so.' But in the
end, everyone knew only too well there was absolutely no choice in
the matter. The bills had to be paid if the whole of Western Cumbria
wasn't to be turned into a radioactive 'no go' area.
The
Hinkley Point bills were not quite in the same league as the
Sellafield bills, but they weren't so very far behind. A horrible
number of billions had been squandered as successive Governments
tried to find a way to bring the nuclear plant to life. Hinkley Point
spent years being the great white hope. And when the dream finally
crashed to the canvas, a bitter Edward Montford was forced to go cap
in hand to Edinburgh to keep the lights on.
My
hacker had unearthed well buried contracts and invoices which had
first come to life in the summer of 2029 just as the People's
Republic of Hackney was dominating the news. There were a total of
seventy two contracts for Sellafield and thirty three for Hinkley
Point. The wording which described the contracted services was a
selection of initials, acronyms and bureaucratic double speak.
Basically, the contracts were for site security. It would have been
easy enough to have wrapped the whole thing up in one simple
document. Instead, they chose to create a hundred and five documents
every one of which ran to over fifty pages of small print legalese.
However,
all of the documents had two things in common. Every contract ran for
three years until the summer of 2032. And every contract engaged the
services of Holbrooke Securities. The monthly amounts paid out to
meet the terms of each of the contracts were not huge. Only when all
the amounts were added up did the real figure start to emerge. £12.3
million a month. £12.3 million a month for 36 months.
Holy
mother of Jesus bloody Christ.
On
a bike.
£442.8
million.
Nearly
half a billion pounds worth of tax payer's cash had been paid out to
cover the cost of Edward Montford deploying private sector death
squads onto the streets of London.
I
wanted to punch the air. I wanted to dance a jig in the midst of all
those festering takeaway wrappers. I wanted to run away to the
mountains of New Zealand and hide. Adrenaline coursed through me. I
felt exhilaration and blind terror in equal measure. This was shaping
up to become one of the greatest stories any English newspaper had
ever run. Maybe the greatest.
The
next two weeks were a frenzy. Wendel gave me the contact details of a
couple of Regiment guys who had set up on their own. Among their list
of advertised services was covert surveillance. We shook on a deal
and sent them off to do some covert surveillance on Sellafield and
Hinkley Point. They watched and logged what they saw for ten days and
came back with a comprehensive report.
A
Portacabin in Sellafield and a Portacabin in Hinkley Point. Two guys
at each site. Twelve hour shifts which basically involved sitting in
the portacabin playing on an Xbox or watching movies. No patrols. No
drive rounds. No nothing. Just two portacabins with a small sign on
the door. 'Holbrooke Securities.'
The
Government didn't seem to be getting much for an outlay of £12.3
million a month. Two Portacabins. Four guys.
Whilst
Wendel's guys hid in bushes and took photos, my hacker continued to
earn his corn. The next target was the personnel department of the D
of E. Who was in finance? Who was in remittances? Soon one name
started to jump from the page.
Eleanor
Carter.
We
mined the history of her social media and the deeper we went, the
better she looked. 56 years old. Single. A civil servant since
graduating from the University of East Anglia in 1995. She became a
single mum at the age of thirty and Facebook suggested she had made a
decent fist of raising her only son, Liam. Days out at the seaside. A
holiday in Spain. A holiday in Tunisia. Occasional tickets to watch
Arsenal.
In
2016 the look and feel of her Facebook changed. All of a sudden she
was keen to tell the world she was 'With Jeremy'. All of a sudden
there were endless pictures of Eleanor and Liam flying the flag at
Corbyn rallies. There was even an image of mother and son beaming
through a selfie with the great man himself.
Her
enthusiasm didn't survive the chaos of Labour rule and by 2026 she
was posting photos of her three pet cats and little else. Now it was
Liam's Facebook page which was the main point of interest. Listening
to all those fired up Jeremy speeches had obviously had a lasting
effect. At University he spent lots of time attending rallies and not
so much time studying. He dropped out after two years and drifted
from one minimum wage job to another. And he became a very angry
young man indeed.
He
was drawn to the People's Republic like a moth to a candle. For a
while, his posts burned with the thrill of revolution. And then
everything changed. Photos from a hospital ward. A selfie of a
wrecked face. Bitter words described how he and three others had been
ambushed by thirty EFP stormtroopers. A ruptured spleen. six cracked
ribs. No sight in his right eye.
Eleanor's
postings were more careful. She tried to show pictures where her son
was looking like he was on the road to recovery. The mood of her page
was one of sadness rather than rage. Her beloved son had been broken.
The dreams Jeremy had sold her had been broken. Everything seemed
broken. Only her three cats seemed to offer much in the way of
solace.
I
knocked her door a little after seven on an airless Thursday evening.
She peeped out with apprehension all over her tired face. I managed
to convince her I was genuinely harmless. When all was said and done,
she had been a Guardian reader all her adult life. And she knew who I
was. She had seen me on the TV. She had watched Edward Montford take
a piece out of me.
She
let me in. The flat smelt of burning incense and quiet music
complemented the low lighting. Her three cats were sprawled out on
the furniture. There were African carvings and old posters from back
in the day demanding freedom for the Palestinians.
“Can
I get you anything? I like mint tea. It is quite cooling.You know.
After a long hot day. The tube. All of that.”
“That
would be lovely. Thank you, Eleanor."
I
watched her as she did the honours. Baggy cotton pants. A loose T
shirt and stick thin arms. She was careworn. Old beyond her years.
Her loneliness seemed to fill every corner of the room.
Her
shyness was painful. “So. Sam. How can I help you?”
Show
time. "I think you need to brace yourself, Eleanor. What I am
about to tell you is truly shocking. And what I am going to ask you
to do is very frightening. All I ask is for you to hear me out. I
promise not to put any pressure on. I think you will know what is the
right thing to do. And I very much hope you will make the choice to
do exactly that: the right thing. Is that OK, Eleanor?"
“Good
gracious. Well, yes. Yes, I suppose it is.”
I
took papers from my case. They were already in the right order. And I
took her through the whole thing. The vans. The men in masks. The
foreign voices. Then CCTV all the way to the compound on the
outskirts of Colchester. The tearful mothers and fathers and
grandparents and uncles and aunts. Photos of the disappeared. Photos
from doomed mantelpieces. School photos. Football team photos. Party
photos. Graduation photos. Paddling pool photos. Smiling photos.
Victim photos.
And
then it was all about Holbrooke Securities. Two portacabins. Four guys.
Sellafield and Hinkley Point. And £12.3 million each and every month
all the way to the summer of 2032.
£442.8
million.
A vast ocean of off the books money. Dark money. Dirty
money. Blood money.
And
now I could see a desperate recognition in her eyes. She was familiar
with the name. Before my visit, the name Holbrooke Securities had
meant nothing. It was just one name among many. Why would it stand
out? And £12.3 million a month was little more than loose change.
She had questioned nothing. Why should she have?
“What
are you asking me to do?”
The
moment. The moment where things could go one way or the other. "We
have seen all the invoices, Eleanor. Each and every one. But we are
not supposed to have seen them. We hacked the system. Which means we
cannot use any of this. We need to be able to see the invoices in a
legal way.
Every
vestige of colour drained from her face. "Oh my god, you want me
to leak them."
“We
do. I do. All the families do.”
She
fiddled with the papers in front of her. I was desperate to say
something but managed not to. Eventually, she looked up.
“You
know about Liam, don't you?”
“We
do.”
“And
what happened to my son is why you think I will do this? Because my
son could easily have been one of the disappeared?”
“Yes.
That is what we think.”
She
held my gaze and gave a small nod.
“I
think you are right." And now she smiled. "I seems like it
is time for me to put my money where my mouth is. After all those
rallies and protests, the time seems to have finally arrived for me
to step up. Well, fine. I'll step up. Give me the details and you
will have your invoices tomorrow."
Heroes
and heroines come in all shapes and sizes. This heroine came in
cotton pants and a baggy T shirt.
And
she was the bravest woman I have ever met.
We
had her leaked e-mails in our possession by one o'clock the next
afternoon. A meeting with the lawyers was held at three. They made
encouraging noises, but they needed time. How much time? Two weeks to
be on the safe side. My editor was perfectly happy with the
timescale. Two weeks would be perfect. We would get everything
written and ready to be rolled out over four days. He was confident
it would be the greatest story in the long history of the paper.
We
had finally crashed through the wall. Now it would all be about the
fun part.
TO READ ALL PREVIOUS CHAPTERS PLEASE FOLLOW THE LINK BELOW.
I
HAVE WRITTEN THIS STORY TO RAISE FUNDS FOR THE FOODBANK I MANAGE IN
DUMFRIES, SOUTH WEST SCOTLAND. OVER THE COMING WINTER OVER 3000
PEOPLE WILL COME THROUGH OUR DOORS AND RIGHT NOW WE DO NOT HAVE
ENOUGH CASH TO HELP THEM ALL OUT. MAYBE YOU MIGHT BE WILLING TO HELP
US OUT BY BUNGING A COUPLE OF QUID ONTO OUR JUSTGIVING PAGE? I HOPE
SO. JUST FOLLOW THE LINK BELOW. I HOPE YOU ENJOY THE REST OF THE BOOK
AND IF DO, PLEASE SHARE IT. MARK.
Hi, this is real testimony of a spell doctor who helped me bring back my fiance, who left i and the kids for 9 month. I had lost all hope about my fiance coming back home again. if you’re going through a tough time in your marriage or relationship, or want back your Ex. contact him on: aluya.48hoursspelltemple@gmail.com or whatsapp +2348110493039 you can contact him on his web https://draluya48hoursspelltemple.webs.com/
ReplyDelete