Read The Gulf Conspiracy Online
Authors: Ken McClure
Tags: #Physicians, #Dunbar; Steven (Fictitious Character), #Medical, #Political, #Fiction, #Thrillers, #Persian Gulf War; 1991, #Persian Gulf Syndrome
Steven walked in through the gate and showed Warner his ID.
Warner grunted and said, ‘James Gardiner warned me you might come calling. I can’t tell you any more than he did. What happened all these years ago was an accident; nothing more nothing less. There wasn’t anything that any of us could have done about it and that’s an end to it.’
‘
Not quite,’ said Steven as Warner resumed his pruning. ‘A great many men were left incapacitated because of that so-called accident.’
‘
I think that’s a moot point, if you don’t mind my saying so,’ said Warner.
‘
Oh, I know there were a whole lot of other contributing factors which served to muddy the water and gave you all something to hide behind,’ said Steven. ‘But the Porton agent still played a leading role. I think you know that.’
‘
As I say, that’s a moot point and to be regretted if it should be true,’ said Warner.
‘
Of course, these men needn’t have suffered at all if the whole truth had come out at the time,’ said Steven.
‘
I don’t think I know what you mean,’ said Warner, pretending that the piece of berberis he was cutting at the time had suddenly become extremely interesting. He examined it closely.
‘
From the very outset there was a known cure for the agent,’ said Steven. ‘If it had been made available as soon as it became clear there was a health problem, Gulf War Syndrome would never have become an issue.’
Warner stopped pruning and looked slightly stunned. ‘What the devil are you talking about?’ he said. ‘How could there be a cure? It was just a prototype of something they had just started work on.’
‘
The first thing Crowe and his team did once they had decided on the bug they were going to base their agent on was to come up with an antibiotic to cure it,’ said Steven. ‘Even the earliest prototypes would have been treatable with it.’
‘
Look here, science is all a bloody mystery to me,’ said Warner. ‘If what you say is true and they had a way of undoing the effects of the accident why wouldn’t they have done so? You’re not making any sense.’
‘
Because they intended continuing development of the agent,’ said Steven, watching Warner closely. ‘The cure had to remain a secret otherwise it would have rendered the agent useless as a weapon.’
‘
But all development work stopped after the accident,’ said Warner.
‘
I think not,’ said Steven.
‘
You mean, Crowe?’
‘
I’ve good reason to believe that he continued development work on it and succeeded in constructing a biological weapon that satisfied the original design criteria.’
‘
Good Lord,’ said Warner, clearly taken aback. ‘Looking back, I never did like the fella, always something about him. So what’s he going to do with it now that he’s got it?’
‘
I was rather hoping you were going to tell me that,’ said Steven.
Warner looked astonished. ‘You thought that I . . .’
‘
And James Gardiner and the other members of your group . . .’
‘
Now hold on! James warned me about this nonsense. Just because we love our country and hate seeing it fall into the hands of the kind of below-stairs trash that seem to be into everything these days doesn’t make us a bunch of terrorists. Everything we did, we did within the law.’
‘
How about developing the agent in the first place?’ said Steven.
‘
That had Government sanction,’ said Warner.
‘
Did it?’ said Steven.
‘
James assures me that it did,’ said Warner.
‘
Crowe was a member of your group.’
Warner gave a deep sigh. After a pause he said, ‘James insisted that our group should include like minded people from all walks of life. He thought that Crowe fitted the bill at the time.’
‘
And Mowbray?’
‘
And Mowbray,’ said Warner, looking down at the ground.
‘
You needed someone like him?’
Warner nodded. ‘An insider in Intelligence? Of course we did. Cold fish but . . . horses for courses, as they say.’
‘
What about Everley?’
Warner gave a snort of derision. ‘Man’s a buffoon,’ he said. ‘A self-opinionated clown.’
‘
But a rich one,’ said Steven.
‘
We needed his cash,’ agreed Warner.
‘
How big is the organisation?’ asked Steven, hoping that this key question would just slip into the run of things but Warner saw it immediately. ‘Just the four of us,’ he said, returning to his pruning.
‘
It’s not the group I’m asking about,’ said Steven. ‘I need to know about the organisation it was fronting. I think that Crowe and Mowbray may have been using it for their own ends.’
‘
I really don’t know what you’re talking about,’ said Warner.
‘
You said you loved your country?’ said Steven. ‘Do you really want to see it influenced by the likes of Crowe and Mowbray?’
Warner stopped pruning again and turned to face Steven. ‘You’re serious, aren’t you?’ he said.
‘
Never more so,’ said Steven.
‘
I’ll have to talk to James.’
Steven drove back to London having been assured by Warner that he would call him after he had spoken to James Gardiner later in the day. In the event it was Gardiner himself who called just after six in the evening.
‘
I think we should meet.’
‘
Just tell me where and when,’ said Steven.
‘
My wife and I are in the process of moving house but I’m keeping on the small flat I have in town. Come there at 8?’
Steven wrote down the address and said he’d be there.
Gardiner’s small flat turned out to be twice the size of his own, furnished minimally but expensively and with a location that afforded fine views of the river from a terrace that bordered both south and west aspects. On a balmy evening the doors leading to the terrace were wide open.
‘
Drink?’ asked Gardiner.
‘
Thanks. Gin and tonic,’ said Steven, moving outside to admire the view while Gardiner fixed the drinks. Gardiner joined him on the terrace and handed him his drink.
‘
So you’re tired of London?’ said Steven.
‘
And therefore, by implication, tired of life,’ said Gardiner. ‘No, I don’t think so. Alice and I are moving up to our place in Scotland to begin a new one away from . . . other people.’
‘
Sartre was right?’
‘
With the greatest of respect to M. Sartre, Hell is not other people; it’s other people being in charge.’
‘
I think that’s called democracy,’ said Steven.
‘
A much overrated concept,’ said Gardiner.
‘
You don’t believe in the will of the people?’ said Steven.
‘
The so-called will of the people is all too often a celebration of ignorance and mediocrity,’ said Gardiner. ‘If we were to decide democratically on one single newspaper for the entire country we’d end up with the
Sun
, simply because it sells more copies than any other so therefore would get more votes and be elected our national paper. Need I say more?’
‘
Democracy may have its shortcomings but it’s still better than any other system,’ said Steven.
‘
I know,’ said Gardiner, looking out over the river. ‘Maybe that’s what I find so bloody depressing. Warner tells me you think Crowe and Mowbray have been pursuing their own agenda?’
Steven told Gardiner what he knew.
‘
So why don’t you arrest them?’
‘
We did but they’ve been released. There’s no proof,’ said Steven.
‘
You could be wrong, of course?’
‘
Everything points to Crowe having continued work on the agent,’ said Steven. ‘The fact that they’ve killed three people in the last few months to keep it a secret says that they intend using it.’
‘
What exactly is it you want from me?’ asked Gardiner.
‘
I need details of the infrastructure of your organisation,’ said Steven. ‘I think Crowe and Mowbray may be using it.’
‘
You want names and addresses?’ said Gardiner doubtfully.
‘
If they intend using the agent I have to understand the size and nature of the organisation they have available to them,’ said Steven.
‘
Perhaps I could just tell you without having to divulge personal details?’ said Gardiner.
Steven gave him a look that Gardiner had no trouble in interpreting. ‘I suppose not,’ he said. ‘But before I even considered such a thing I would need certain assurances from you.’
‘
These people have nothing to fear if they have done nothing wrong,’ said Steven. ‘You have my word.’
‘
The rule of law is fundamental to all of us,’ said Gardiner.
‘
Things might be different now,’ said Steven.
‘
These people are not just mindless automatons,’ said Gardiner. ‘They’re people who care what happens to Britain. They can think for themselves.’
‘
You’d be amazed at what some otherwise intelligent people are capable of doing when asked if they believe the request has official backing,’ said Steven.
‘
I need some kind of firm assurance,’ said Gardiner.
‘
That’s not within my power,’ said Steven.
‘
Then no deal,’ said Gardiner.
Steven looked towards the setting sun and took a moment to consider his position. He could simply refuse to compromise and issue a series of official threats to Gardiner but he knew well enough that that would get him precisely nowhere. On the other hand he could take a chance and get what he wanted but at some risk to himself in career terms.
‘
All right,’ he said. ‘You have my word that I will destroy any information given to me immediately after I’ve taken what I need from it.’
Gardiner turned on his heel and went indoors. He returned with a computer disk, which he handed to Steven. ‘The database,’ he said.
Steven slipped the disk into his laptop as soon as he got home before pouring himself a drink and settling down to analyse it. The list comprised some four thousand names entered in database form. It contained details of names, addresses, ages and occupations. It only took Steven a few moments to realise that he had no real idea of what he was looking for. If he had been hoping to see clear evidence of an organised conspiracy he was sadly disappointed. These people were scattered all over the country and in just about every occupation under the sun – well, maybe every middle class occupation under the sun, he corrected. He took a sip of his drink and pondered his next move. The database came with useful analytical tools so he requested average age and came up with the figure 45.
‘
Shit,’ he whispered under his breath. ‘These people weren’t revolutionaries. They were representative of the middle class, middle aged, middle income voters of bungalow-land. How could such people be organised to promote social change after an attack using Crowe’s agent? There was just no cohesive factor.
Steven felt a mixture of disappointment and embarrassment. He couldn’t imagine Crowe and Mowbray having formed some other secret organisation capable of supporting such a big venture so that must mean he was wrong about their intention to use the agent. They must have made it to sell.
Despite the fact that it was Sunday and it had gone ten o’ clock he called the duty officer at Sci-Med and asked him to arrange for a full financial scrutiny of both Crowe and Mowbray’s personal accounts. ‘I don’t care who you have to wake,’ he added.
‘
What period?’ asked the duty man.
‘
Let’s begin with the last two years.’
Steven returned to the names on the database. Just out of interest he asked the search engine for ‘Civil Servants’. A list of almost three hundred names appeared on the screen. Next he asked for ‘Doctors’ and was rewarded with thirty-three names but this gave him an idea. He narrowed the search and asked for ‘Pathologists’: this reduced the list to three. One of them was Dr Melvyn Street, a forensic pathologist attached to Perthshire Police.
‘
Well, well, well,’ murmured Steven. ‘Now I understand why you didn’t see the marks on Martin Hendry’s wrists, Doctor.’
It was 1am and Steven tired of searching for patterns in the database. He turned off the computer and switched on the television, flicking through the cable channels for 24 hour news programmes. His attention was taken by the mention of Rupert Everley’s name in an item presented as ‘Tory squabble in Scotland’. The leader of the Scottish Conservatives, David McLetchie, had been engaged in a furious row with property developer and prominent Tory supporter in England, Rupert Everley. McLetchie had been annoyed at Everley’s recent tour of Scottish Conservative Party organisations, and had accused Everley of talking ‘puerile rubbish’ and of attempting to undermine his authority and ingratiate himself with the party faithful through large cash donations. Everley had retaliated by accusing McLetchie of being short-sighted and resistant to change. There was a short film clip of Everley looking earnestly sincere, saying that the time was right for Scottish Conservatives to make a comeback but only if they brought in ‘fresh minds with fresh ideas to turn things around’.