Elephants can't hide forever (22 page)

BOOK: Elephants can't hide forever
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Chapter 31
No 2 Visiting Booth HMP Parkhurst

As soon as Cathy entered the Visitor’s centre, she had a feeling of deep unease. She hated this place, but never showed it to Mouse; it was after all her job to keep his
dwindling spirits up, so when Mouse appeared she was all smiles. She sat in front of the glass window, and they both picked up the phone, the only way they could speak through the plate glass.

“Hello darling, how are you faring?” she asked.

Mouse forced a smile. Cathy could see something was troubling him deeply.

“I’m just fine,” Mouse lied, “tell me about our friend, and make it good news please.” he almost implored.

Although they were free to speak privately, Cathy went into a whisper, telling Mouse the good news that their captive was co-operating, and how he had a very plausible method to get them out.
She also talked of the other option and laughed it off as total madness, just really to affirm to Mouse that even in his desperation to get out, she wasn’t having anything so desperate and
was prepared to wait the extra time for a safer but more realistic option.

Mouse looked long and hard at his wife, his eyes unusually rheumy and dull. Eventually he spoke:

“Cathy, I wasn’t going to tell you, but now I have no choice. I’ve been having tests recently on what I thought was a persistent sore throat, anyhow yesterday the Governor
called me up to his office.” Cathy was beginning to feel her stomach knot up, Mouse continued:

“There’s no easy way to say this, I’ve got cancer of the throat and it could be terminal.”

Cathy started to shake uncontrollably before dropping the phone in a flood of tears. How could this be, Mouse was such a strong man, he just wasn’t the type to get a cold let alone the big
C. Eventually Cathy composed herself enough to listen to what Mouse had to say, although right now she felt she was in the middle of a nightmare.

“Now listen Cathy, no one knows if this will kill me or when, but what I do know is I’m not going to get the help I need in this shithole and I’m not going to die in here. The
Governor said he had spoken with the medics and I may have two years, maybe more, whatever the case, the sooner I get out of here the better my chances, so if I’m going to croak then lets
make the most of what time I’ve got left.” Cathy was devastated and couldn’t speak. Mouse told her to leave and come back the following week when it had sunk in. She could only
nod her agreement, and with that she unsteadily made her way out.

Cathy stood just outside the main prison entrance on the Clissold road. Still in a trance, but slowly regaining her thought process, she pulled out her mobile and dialled the GPS phone sitting
on the kitchen table back at the house.

“Hello Cathy” Dave Penny answered.

“Put him on,” Cathy ordered in a shaky voice. Mike took the phone.

“Its plan B, and it had better fucking work or you and your girl are both dead,” Cathy barked and with that she broke down sobbing.

Chapter 32
A Pub Just off Tottenham Court Road

Mike Tobin had been shocked at how distressed Cathy had been when she returned home that night from the Prison two weeks ago. She had eventually opened up after a couple of
very large brandies and told the men of the Mouse’s condition. As tough as the men were, they were genuinely sympathetic to the plight Cathy was in. Mike tried reassuring her that the
hospital job would be a piece of cake but it fell on deaf ears. Mike, of course, was very pleased with the outcome, although as a decent man he would not have wished it this way.

And so it was that Mike found himself sitting in The Dog and Gun, a plush pub a stones throw from the Hospital for Tropical Diseases, waiting to re-acquaint himself with Professor Don Gooch,
who, despite his grandiose title, was still a young man in his mid thirties. Don had always loved working with the action men of the SAS, and secretly wished he had had the guts to enlist instead
of following the academic route of Medicine. Mike remembered the continual questioning he and his mates would receive from Don when they were working at Porton Down, in fact the SAS troop, totally
contrary to Army rules, as Don was classified as a civilian, once took him back to the barracks at Hereford and let him train in the infamous Killing House using live ammunition. It remained the
highlight of Don’s life, and Mike was hoping that episode would hold him in good stead for what he was about to ask.

Dave Penny sat in the corner of the pub. As much as Mike had tried to persuade Cathy to trust him alone, she had, wisely, refused and insisted Penny travel everywhere with him on the mainland.
However, she had agreed that for the purpose of the operation Mike could speak alone with Gooch, as long as Penny was always in eye line.

Mike had worked out his angle of approach to the Professor, and was turning it over in his mind for the umpteenth time, when the man himself walked in. Mike, spotted him first and strode over to
him, embracing him in a man hug as affectionate as if he were a long lost brother.

“Prof, you look great, you must have discovered a drug to keep you young” Mike quipped.

“You haven’t seen the portrait in the attic,” the Professor smartly replied, but this went right over Mikes head, Oscar Wilde was not his thing. Both men grabbed a pint and
retired to the booth, where they could not be heard.

“Well Mike, as much as I’m privileged you’ve taken the time to look me up, I’m sure you’ve got an ulterior motive. Are you still in the unit?” Don asked.

Mike put his finger to his lips, more for effect than anything and lied, “Sure am, Prof, and yes, as good at it is to see you, we have a really tough challenge, ordered directly from the
Home Office. In fact, and this is top secret, the Home Secretary is making noises about shutting the unit down, saying we’re too archaic, and too expensive, so we’ve been given a
mission to prove we can still operate in the most stretching circumstances.”

“And you need my help?” Don asked, hoping the answer would be affirmative.

“Don, to a man the squad agreed that for what we’ve got in mind you are the only man we could and would trust. What’s more, pull this off and the Boss says you can go up to
Hereford and spend a week out on the Beacons in one of our hide and seek programmes.” Mike was finding this lying a bit too easy.

The Professor stuck his chest out a few inches. Training with the SAS would be so cool, and give him street cred for a very long time.

“What can I do?” he asked.

This was the question Mike had been playing him into. Mike explained how the squad had been tasked with breaking out three members of their team who had been, placed, and now incarcerated, in
one of Her Majesty’s Prisons. The mission had been made harder by the fact the prison was Parkhurst on the Isle of Wight. Mike said that actually one of the squad who was in the stir the Prof
might remember: Jock Wallace. Yes, the Prof remembered Jock from the Killing House; he had almost blown his head off in the dark, live ammo as well. Mike of course was banking on this.

“Mike,” said Don “It sounds tremendous fun and so exciting, but just how can I help?” He was genuinely perplexed.

“Let me enlighten you dear boy,” Mike said in his most endearing tone. “We need to get these lads into the hospital across the road, we need them all there together on the same
day, so we need to fake an illness that looks so serious the Prison medics freak out, and ship them out for fear of infecting other inmates. So we need to infect our boys with some kind of virus
that does that, then when we get them over the road, we give them a vaccine and whisk them back to Hereford, and the boss calls the Home Secretary with the good news there out, and that’s
where you come in, you up for it, so the question is, is there something available that you know of and can obtain that we can give them?” The sixty four thousand dollar question was out.

Professor Don Gooch, thought for a moment then looked sternly at Mike and uttered one word,

“Ebola”

Mike, for once rendered speechless, eventually found some words.

“Fair enough, you don’t want to fuck about then.”

Don looked at Mike, after several seconds both men broke into spontaneous and uncontrolled laughter.

The reason both men found the word Ebola so funny was not that it was humorous, far from it; to those in the know Ebola is probably the single most dangerous virus known to man since the Bubonic
plague, and the eminent Professor was coolly suggesting they let it loose in one of Her Majesty’s Penal Establishments. He truly was SAS material.

The Ebola virus was first discovered as recently as 1976, although it had undoubtedly been rampant on the African continent long before. It was named after a river in the Democratic Republic of
Congo, where the first outbreak occurred. The World Health Organisation quickly categorised it as a Class A Pathogen, and soon after it became listed as a biological agent, capable of use in
bioterrorism- no surprise as it is notoriously deadly with an up to ninety percent fatality rate. It was widely believed by the Intelligence services at Langley and Washington that the developments
of these super killers were the main reason 9/11 was so successful for Al Qaeda. It was felt that the security services of the major world powers had all but abandoned the threat of an airborne or
even nuclear strike, and such like, as these biological weapons were far easier to deliver and far more deadly, so they had taken their eye off the ball, just not expecting such an antiquated
attack from the skies.

Don Gooch, however, was no fool, he understood Ebola well, and the symptoms were visually horrific. Red streaming eyes, a violent rash, high fever and external bleeding from the nose and ears-
just what the SAS trooper in front of him required. Don also knew that whilst the virus was deadly, it was not airborne, and to catch it contact had to made either via blood, faeces, saliva or, as
he was proposing, direct exposure. In other words, whilst he could instantly infect the three troopers, there would be little chance of this spreading to any other prisoner; it was controllable in
his naive opinion.

The last piece of this bizarre jigsaw was that as far as the public at large were aware, there was no known vaccine, and that was why it had such a fearsome reputation. However, this was not
true; a vaccine had been developed during the Porton Down years, but the Government had decided, in the interest of national security, to keep it under wraps, allowing several thousand Africans to
suffer death rather than announcing it had a cure. The vaccine was a hundred percent safe, and the guinea pigs that it had been tested on had all returned to normal health relatively quickly, and
that was why Professor Don Gooch was more than happy to assist his Army colleagues in this little scam; after all the disbandment of the SAS would ultimately be a bad move for the country. And, Don
thought, if he could help in securing the future of the Special Forces Unit then ultimately he was helping the security of the Country. His conscience would be clear and in his own mind he was
taking the moral high ground. Don Gooch had unrestricted access to both the virus and vaccine, within his workplace- perfect.

Don had explained all this to Mike, and Mike quickly realised that not only was the Professor up for this he was positively relishing the chance. Every officer in the British Army is taught that
in warfare, whether open or clandestine, the theatre of battle can change; plans go astray, a sudden sandstorm, cloud cover, the introduction of nukes, a million unseen and unplanned occurrences,
and this is when battles are won or lost. The commander who can change with the changes and turn them into opportunities will, almost always, be the victor, and Mike had recognised his chance.

“So, Don,” he said, scratching his nose, “This seems almost too easy. We get one of the lads inside to identify a bent screw, there must be a few judging by the amount of drugs
floating about in there, tell them we need some drugs smuggled in to our men, bung the screw a good drink, the boys take the goods, and hopefully go down with the virus all at about the same
time?”

“Basically Mike that’s it,” Don replied, “However, to guarantee the lads start showing the symptoms pretty much on the same day, they would have to inject the dosages
rather than swallow them. The incubation period is between two and twenty days which would be no good, so by intravenous injection as the virus would get straight into the blood stream they would
all be a right state in forty eight hours. I’m sure your boys know how to administer drugs intravenously.”

Mike was gradually building up to the big question.

“So Don, the lads get shipped out to St Mary’s Hospital right opposite the Nick as soon as the prison medics realise they’ve got a big problem, once there we intend to grab
them and make a run to the ferry. I don’t suppose there’s any chance somehow you could be around to identify the symptoms, and then call for an immediate transfer to your place, which
would be me and a couple of the lads arriving in an ambulance. That would give us some breathing space and legitimise us getting straight on the ferry, and by the time people realised the scam we
would be back in Hereford and the boss would have called in to the Home Office that the mission was a success.”

Professor Don Gooch was capable of achieving almost anything in the medical world, but spotting a scam in the real world was way beyond him, and his trust in Mike Tobin and the SAS was
absolute.

“That can be arranged, I can always find a reason to visit our NHS hospitals,” he answered, not for a nano second realising Mike Tobin had become a rogue elephant.

This was better than Mike could have dreamed of, and option two had suddenly become less risky than option one.

The rest of the evening was spent discussing the finer details- how long would it take Don to get hold of the virus? Don had unrestricted access to the secure room, would tomorrow be alright?
The virus would be measured out in a dose relative to each of the three men’s approximate body mass, to heighten the chances of the symptoms showing simultaneously. How long would the
Professor need to set up a meeting or such like down at St Mary’s? No problem, he would be known by reputation by the hospital authorities and welcomed without any prior notification.
Wouldn’t it seem suspicious after the break out that an eminent Professor from the Hospital of Tropical Medicine had arrived at St Mary’s Hospital just as the first case of Ebola in
Northern Europe was materialising? Yes, of course, but not in the first few hours; by which time the troopers would be back in Hereford and the Home Office would have alerted the hospital and
prison services that it was all a covert operation ordered by the Home Secretary, no less.

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