Read 1990 Online

Authors: Wilfred Greatorex

1990 (6 page)

BOOK: 1990
3.29Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
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Frustrated, she declared, 'I'll raise this at the staff meeting.'

Skardon's voice was hard and final. 'You had better not.'

He crossed to the door to let in Jack Nichols. 'Can we take it that you have enough of your lads round that ship?'

'They're in it, on it, all over the quay and in two boats, should anyone make a dive for it,' Nichols said proudly.

'Dive! In this weather?' Skardon smirked. 'Where to?'

'How about the bottom?' Delly Lomas said, still angry. 'Maybe they'll think it the best place.'

Skardon threw her a disapproving look, then walked round his desk to Nichols.

'No slip ups,' he warned. 'I want this lot, every man-jack. Getaways. Helpers. The lot.'

He clapped Nichols firmly on the shoulder, checked his watch and strode from the room, leaving his three subordinates scowling at each other.

Despite his strategic harrying of Delly Lomas, he was relieved that Kyle's story had been killed. And the prospective arrest of a boatload of illegal emigrants would go a long way towards appeasing the Home Secretary. Besides, there had been an air of hostility and tension in the office, which was always good for the appetite. The Controller approached his lunch with a feeling of well-being.

The men had been in place since early morning: Emigration Officers ambled with apparent inattention along the quay, languidly leaned on bollards, tucked themselves away into poky side offices. A parked grey van housed a group of four, stiff-boned and aching. Two motor launches crouched behind a rusting tanker, their occupants huddled uncomfortably together.

Jack Nichols was there, too, entrenched behind a pile of crates with the practised ease developed from his days as an Immigration Officer. The one original thought in his life had been the realisation that priorities were changing. He had applied for transfer from Immigration to Emigration, where his natural discipline and a curiously successful 'nose' for fugitives had brought him regular promotion. Now he dug in doggedly to another familiar wait.

The trap was set and everyone in dockland knew it. Stevedores worked on sullenly, not speaking much, resenting the influx of the Law. Some would have passed the word to the seamen, but Nichols had been right. No-one could have reached within fifty yards of the ship without authority, and the neighbourhood was crawling with E.Os. - earwigging.

Drizzle had settled into the afternoon by the time Tasker climbed to the cabin of a crane overlooking the scene. The East End stretched beneath him, an untidy mess of 60s' tower blocks and century-old terraces, punctuated by one or two church squares of rare beauty and the occasional clump of prefabs, incredibly still inhabited. Up river, ancient, unused warehouses had crumbled into gaunt ruins on lots once pirated by developers as prime sites of London, but since taken over by the government and left to decay.

Tasker remained oblivious to it all, his powerful binoculars fixedly trained on the figure of Harper checking crew boarding the freighter below.

Had he scanned the city to the north, he could almost have focused on the freight and scrap yard where Alan Vickers was waiting, looking out of place and very unsure.

The doctor had found the instructions in his medical bag that morning. They were precise. Be at the town's largest department store by 11 a.m. Go in through the front entrance. Leave immediately by the second side exit on the left from where goods lorry number 38689XB would take him to the station in time to catch the 11.50 to London. The message concluded with the address of the yard.

He was now wondering whether he had been mad to come. What would happen? Who would appear? It could all be a Public Control Department trick...

Kyle materialised, looking business-like, and Vickers laughed aloud with relief.

'I thought you'd written me off. I thought you were on their side.'

Instantly sensing his insecurity, Kyle asked, 'You're sure you want to get out?'

'While there's a guarantee my family will follow,' he replied.

'Under this Government, Doctor Vickers, nothing's for sure,' Kyle warned.

'But the European Convention...'

'Your wife and child have the right to follow. Unless this Government back-tracks. How are they for money?'

'Enough to last them a year or so.'

'A month should see them through,' Kyle said, 'and we'll make sure they're all right.'

He was leading the way towards his car, tidily concealed in a blind alley among the metal blocks.

'Can I pay?' Vickers asked.

'No.'

'I mean, it must cost you lot something.'

Kyle gave a dismissive gesture. 'Never mind our funding, doctor.'

The engine growled roughly to life and the little vehicle slid out of hiding and buzzed into the road.

'What did your wife say?' Kyle asked.

Vickers hesitated for just too long. 'I didn't tell her.'

'Liar! You all do.'

'She's reliable,' Vickers said, hastily. 'Tears, if that's what you mean. No hysterics, though.'

'And your daughter?'

'She doesn't know. We never told her. She doesn't even suspect.'

Kyle shook his head. 'I wouldn't bank on that.'

Vickers stared out at the passing streets. They merged grey and damp into each other. This could be his last sight of England. He felt he should absorb every detail, but his mind captured nothing. Turning towards Kyle, he simulated interest. 'Don't you ever want to get away yourself?'

'Often. But where to?'

'The States.'

Kyle replied quietly, 'They don't have a Public Control Department like ours. They don't have a regime like ours. It wouldn't leave me much scope in
my
job, would it? I'd only lie around and grow fatter.'

Alan Vickers was genuinely intrigued now. 'Do you see much of your family?'

'Not much, no.' Kyle coldly shut him off.

Vickers shifted uncomfortably, thrown back on his own thoughts by the forced silence. The rain was quite heavy now. His wife would be alone, except for Mary, unable to confide in anyone, not even her own parents.

'My wife and child
will
follow inside a month?' he pressed, nervously, as though it was within Kyle's personal power to ensure it.

'Unless the Home Secretary decides to change the rules - which I'd not put past him - and fly in the face of the Human Rights Commission in Geneva.'

Vickers went white. He had not anticipated this at all. Everything had happened too quickly. There had been no time to think, to work it out. The idea that he might never see Katherine and Mary again had not sunk in. Now it sucked his thoughts into terrified confusion.

The car's radio telephone buzzed and Kyle reached for it. Marly's voice, calm and unperturbed, carried clearly. 'Turn back now... Understood?'

'Understood.' Kyle replaced the phone and looked for a point where he could turn the car. 'It's off.'

Megatons of pressure lifted, leaving Vickers feeling giddy and sick.

'Just like that?'

'Just like that.'

'But why?' Vickers stuttered, wondering if this was the luckiest or unluckiest day of his life.

'At times like this, doctor, you don't ask why, you just do a fast U-turn.'

Within minutes, Kyle had dropped his half-hearted passenger at Liverpool Street Station and accelerated away, looking grim. He called at the office and by the time he reached the car park, lines of strain were scoring his face. The car with the smoked glass windows was already there.

'Sorry I'm late,' Kyle apologised, softly. 'My secretary didn't realise just how far I had to come.'

'She told you about the freighter?' asked Faceless.

Kyle nodded, 'I'm grateful for the tip-off.'

'No business of mine, Kyle, but it did occur that you may have - er - acquaintances involved.' The voice was bland.

Kyle's expression did not change. 'No,' he said flatly.

'Good, good. Only those poor devils don't have a chance. The illegals will get the usual two years - or one on misery pills. The Department aims to be very hard in this case. Let's hope those seamen did it for gain. They'll get twelve months. If they did it for ideology, they'll be inside two years.'

Kyle flinched slightly. In order to reduce numbers in the overcrowded prisons, the government were playing with the option of a shorter sentence combined with a daily issue of a drug designed to induce extreme mental depression.

Kyle had personally taken these 'misery' pills for a week, in order to be able to write a first hand story when the scheme was originally introduced. He recalled it as the only period of real despair he had ever experienced, a time when he could easily have committed suicide and, after all that, his story had been 'spiked' by the Editor for reasons the Editor would not go into.

'Any idea who they are? The helpers?' Kyle asked quickly.

'One's a seaman named Harper and we believe two more are in it. It won't take Skardon's chaps very long to find out. They've brought a new dimension or two to interrogation.'

'When are they planning to spring the trap?'

'They're leaving it right up to sailing time. In case a few late hopefuls show up...'

Kyle's mind flashed to Dave Brett, who was due to deliver two more would-be emigrants within the next hour. Knowing it was useless to attempt any direct action, he could only hope Marly had managed to intercept them.

Faceless was still talking. '...and there's this...' The gloved hand emerged from the partly-open driver's window. '...You'll never believe it, but the Home Secretary's pressing a novel notion in Cabinet to change the King's Birthday Honours List.'

'Oh, really?' Kyle's voice sounded eagerly surprised.

'That's his paper to the Cabinet. In place of titles and seats in the Upper House, he wants to award happiness pills and rights to extra rations of meat and petrol and the purchase of luxury goods.' Old Faceless passed over a folder. 'Make sure you burn that after digesting, won't you?'

The illegals dozed in the cabin. Three days were too long to maintain a constant pitch of tension. Only Nolan, the last to arrive, remained restless, pacing about, his hands twisting together behind his back. Half an hour, and the ship would weigh anchor: an hour, and they would be safely outside British waters.

An imperious knock shook the door. The five stowaways froze. A voice ordered, 'Open up! Public Control Department.'

Months of secret mutiny, weeks of a thousand hopes shattered. They had all known it was possible, but those final days, cocooned in the warm cabin, had lulled them. The first emigrant moved meekly towards the door.

'No!' shouted Nolan.

'Don't be daft, there's no way out!'

As the West Indian snatched at him, the door came crashing in. Nolan made a wild, futile leap into the throng of Emigration Officers. Fists and boots crashed into him. His body rang with sharp, bright pains and he slumped down, only to be hauled upright against the panelling for another beating. The E.Os. were wet and cold. Most of them should have been off-duty hours before. Their thoughts were full of missed dinners and angry wives. Nolan had provided just the chance they wanted.

Skardon had made sure that the media were informed in good time. As the dejected group of illegals came down the gangplank surrounded by its escort of Emigration Officers, The TV cameras started to turn.

A deep-voiced newscaster began reporting, 'All five illegal emigrants had had appeals for exit visas turned down by the Ombudsman's Courts and all had signed Form P Seventeen promising to work in Britain for ten years after graduation or qualifying...'

Kyle watched on the newsroom set, his face mellowed and indifferent. As the captured men moved towards a prison van on the quay, the news editor peered hard at the screen. 'Two of them have been duffed up.'

'The sea was rough in the Port of London,' Kyle said icily.

Greaves gave him a sharp glance, as the TV report continued, 'Two of the men suffered minor injuries -'

'Minor! Jesus!' interjected Greaves.

'- but these were caused in a fight among themselves.'

'Half of 'em thought it was wrong to emigrate...' said Greaves, sarcastically. His chair creaked loudly as he suddenly bent towards Kyle. 'You beat me sometimes, why weren't you down there? I mean, they've been duffed up by the PCD.'

Kyle contemplated him, reproachfully. 'You don't know that, Tiny. You don't know they didn't fall during a heavy swell.'

'In the Port of London?' Greaves thumped his desk and Wilkie, who was scribbling nearby, looked over inquisitively as he yelled, 'You pull out your story about those bloody monsters who'll run the ARCs. Then you can't be bothered to go down there...' he waved a furious arm at the TV picture. 'When little blokes are being trampled on..

'Little blokes?' Kyle said. 'Running out on us to pick up big money in the States!'

The news editor's eyes widened and he breathed out, heavily. 'I don't know you sometimes.'

'I don't know why you're grumbling. I've given you a good lead story.'

'This garbage about Fancy Dan with his miner's lamp leading his favoured workers into the Promised Land of special rations and happiness pills?' He flapped Kyle's copy, contemptuously. 'Leave off!'

'It's a good lead.'

Tiny Greaves jabbed a finger at the TV screen showing the five illegals disappearing into the black Maria.

'That's the lead. Or should be.'

'But it won't be,' Kyle insisted. 'You know that. Who cares about that lot of grabbers...?' Avoiding Greaves' baffled gaze, he turned away and caught Wilkie's eye. 'Isn't that so, Wilkie?'

The young reporter looked awkward and cornered, as Kyle advanced on him, sneering, 'You should have been down at the docks, Wilkie. Then you could have written how that bloke, who looks as if he's just had two rounds with the heavyweight champ, wasn't even pushed - but tripped over an anchor.'

Unable to control his bitterness any longer, he stormed out, leaving Wilkie smarting and Greaves completely bewildered. The cameras zoomed in on Harper and another seaman being led off the quay.

Delly Lomas and Tasker watched the TV newscast in the Controller's office at the PCD HQ. As Jack Nichols finally appeared on the screen looking like a commanding general, Skardon stretched out, complacently, and switched off.

BOOK: 1990
3.29Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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