The Border Reiver (13 page)

Read The Border Reiver Online

Authors: Nick Christofides

Baines sat stone-faced, his eyes focussed on Lucas Start.

“Look, Ben,” Start continued, “I realised a long time ago, although you were our leader and a good man,” - Baines nearly choked on the condescension - “your abilities are floored. When it comes to the tough decisions of security and control, you are allowing the population too much freedom, too much time to think for themselves and take advantage of the chaos.

“But the most important gulf that has opened up between you and us,” Start looked around the room, as did Baines, to a gang of shifting eyes looking everywhere but into his eyes. “None of us believe in your airy-fairy ideals of equality for all. Why should we organise the country, set up the systems which will govern us in the future and carry that responsibility for the population? Yet, we only receive a fraction more in recompense than a builder or factory worker, it’s ridiculous.”

Baines sat in silence but as it dragged he uttered with disgust,

“So, this is about money, greed.”

“No, I like to call it ‘quality of life and power’.”

“So, what now, what do you want me to do?”

Start’s face softened, the bully had broken through the wall and he felt subjugation was close; he was high on the thrill of the coup.

“You don’t need to do anything, Ben. We want nothing to change on the face of it. But I will be giving the orders. I want to move out of the shadows with my activities.”

“What activities?” Baines asked simply.

“Re-education of the population, military expansion and land reform.”

“No wonder you have been so worried about people like this Bell character. It is a sorry day for England that we are now a dictatorship, so far from the progressive government I intended. What are you going to do if I go public, if I say no and oppose this?”

“Just try it and see, Ben. I have some powerful allies now. I don't want to see you fall, Ben - after all none of us would be here if it weren't for you. But your good work has dealt me cards that I am not prepared to give up. The games have changed as it were. It seems my partners in the south see our little country as quite an important partner in the future. A small but important South American ally neighbouring an ever more powerful Scandinavian Arc. And the overwhelming numbers and size of their armed forces give me the security to thrive in this nest of vipers…a beautiful partnership, I think.”

“I take the increase in violence is due to your militias.”

“Probably, but we are now in control of all land in England and Wales except the border country, Cornwall and the Welsh West. We have conscripted tens of thousands of men into the army in the past weeks and we have amassed a war chest from our ever generous population. This has all been done thanks to my militias.”

“I hope you are right, Lucas; this is an educated country, people will not settle for oppression.”

“That’s where you come in, Ben. The acceptable face of the regime. The charm to spin my tough love to the masses; after all, we know what’s best for the country and the population.” Start turned to the room and asked their colleagues to leave. “I need to speak to Ben alone now.”

As the room fell silent and the two men stood facing each other, Baines spoke,

“You realise what you’re doing here, Lucas. Seventy million people will want to see you dead. This country is too established, too educated and too close to the Scandinavian Arc to get away with this. We’ll have civil war. Weapons and troops will flood in from Scotland and Ireland. Are you confident in your partnership with the South Americans? My view has always been that their interests lie to their west - India and China is where they concentrate. Don’t be left to the wolves by an ally who reneges at the crucial hour.”

“I’ll take my chances,” replied Start, but a pensive look into the middle distance betrayed the flicker of acceptance that what Baines was saying made sense. Baines took the opportunity to push.

“Your arrogance betrays your intellect as well, Lucas. Do you really think that we created this revolution, that we cultivated the popular opinion that swept us to power? We only jumped on the back of a population unhappy with the status quo - I developed our policies around what the masses were asking for. That same population will fight you when they realise what you are doing.”

“It’s done, Ben; I have chosen my direction and I will do whatever is necessary to retain power. You can stay with me or not, but I can’t have you opposing me.” His stare came to rest on Ben with an ominous focus as though he were reading Baines’ mind. Baines thought quickly buying time.

“I’ll have to think about it,” he said rather hesitantly.

“Of course,” Start said suddenly with a flash of his hand. He took a few steps across the room looking down at the floor, then he turned quickly and his stare landed. “But don’t disappear, I don’t need anyone else on my wanted list,” he uttered with a menacing grin.

Baines returned to his office across a silent open plan space where no one made eye contact and the atmosphere was frigid. He was humiliated and let down, but he was a natural politician and no thug. He knew there were many influential people out there in this country and across the world who would be opposed to Start. He needed to think about his next step, bide his time.

His office was dark, only his table lamp lit a small funnel of light through the air and upon his desk. He picked up the receiver on the telephone between thumb and forefinger and waited as a siren wailed passed his window. He moved papers on his desk into a pile and he looked at the small brass race horse that adorned his office. A present from his father.

As the din receded, he dialled the first number in his mind, but this time there was no gruff monotone voice at the other end, it went straight to answer-phone.

“Tom, it’s Ben, call me.”

He poked his finger into the receiver and he took a moment to think. Then, with a single nod, he came to a decision and began to dial a number with purpose. He got halfway through dialling when he suddenly slammed the phone down. He looked out of his office door, his eyes darted around the shadows, and a hundred thoughts rushed through his head; he grabbed his diary and he left the room as quickly as he could.

He could see Lucas Start through the glass wall of the boardroom; he was on the phone, alone, barking orders. He moved as invisibly as he could through the shadows of the office, out into the main hall and he took the rear stairs down into the empty street behind their party headquarters.

Rain was falling in thick lumps of water, a typical London drenching. It didn’t bother Baines, he pulled his collars up high and trained his eyes on the pavement; he didn’t want to be recognised. The streets were all but empty in the downpour. He walked for about thirty minutes calculating his next move like a chess master trying to understand the consequences of whatever options were available to him. One thing Baines knew how to do was survive; he had built his party from a marginal anarchist group to legitimate political movement. He had brought anarchism into the mainstream, stamping out the propaganda that the name signified and giving the average man a voice. He would be damned if Start leveraged his dreams away without a fight. But he also knew that only fools rush in. He had time to plan, to build.

By the time he decided on an imminent plan he found himself at Marble Arch, at the end of Oxford Street; he remembered the throngs of shoppers and tourists trudging the pavements of this famous street. There were a few people shopping but no tourists now and the whole place looked so sad in the dull grey. He walked to the nearest pay phone and wedged his files on the tiny table, holding them in place with his stomach. He took out his wallet and found a scrap of paper he had tucked deep down inside it over a year previously. He never thought he would be calling the number, but now in the driving rain he tapped it into the public telephone keypad.

“Yes,” came the answer after three rings.

“It’s Baines.”

“Well, bugger me, I hope to God you’re calling on a secure line or you’re a dead man!” The voice was like gravel - it belonged to Trevor Eastman, a ghost, the King’s personal head of security - one of the cogs that make the world go round.

“I’m on a payphone.”

“Well, what do you want? I thought Bolsheviks and Royals didn’t mix.”

“If I thought you were that dumb I wouldn’t have called. I want to meet,” replied Baines.

“Ok, are you in Central London?”

“Yes.”

“There’s a bench next to the boats on the Serpentine. Thirty minutes.”

The line clicked off and went dead.

Baines replaced the receiver and turned onto the road. The rain clouds had broken, some rays of sunshine were breaking through. His heart pounded as he once again shrugged his collars up high and trained his eyes on the pavement, trying to remain invisible to people on the street.

Marble Arch was a ghostly semblance of the frantic activity of previous decades. Like a black and white still from history, only a handful of vehicles passed the white marble triumphal arch. Baines skipped across the road threading between the traffic and crossed the flagstone pavement once busy with tourists, now empty. He made quick time through the open acres of Hyde Park, where parakeets lined the branches huddled from the recent rain.

Baines found the bench he had been directed to. As he sat down and looked over the Serpentine, the pedalos and rowing boats were tied up and all but forgotten, dirty and unloved. There were two characters strapping on skates where, in years gone by, hundreds gathered to skate, watch and socialise. As he mulled over the idea that this depressing outlook was in some way his making rather than that of the bad weather that day, he was joined on the bench.

The man who sat down, dressed in a tailored suit with overcoat unbuttoned, didn’t look across at Baines. He was well over six feet tall, well-built, with a handsome, clean-shaven face. His hair was dark and parted at the side. He was immaculately presented: cuffs which stood proud from his jacket no more than an inch, shoes polished, worn but perfectly kept, a Windsor knot in his tie seamless to cut away collars. Baines had never met him, but he knew this was the King’s man. There was a brief moment before the stranger turned and spoke,

“This is a little risky isn’t? Not everyone loves you, Mr Baines. What if you were recognised?”

“Don’t you worry about me, Trevor; I’ve avoided being recognised when necessary for years, and I have my own security.”

Eastman looked around, clocking the huge figure standing amongst the trees about forty yards behind them.

“Aha, I see Pierre is still with you.”

“He is, I don’t need anyone else…”

“I reckon you haven’t got anyone else or you wouldn’t have come running to me!” he exclaimed with no half measure of glee.

“I want to know whether we can work together.”

Eastman turned to him with an incredulous look. “What the fuck do you mean, Baines?”

Before Baines had time to answer, Eastman held up his hand,

“No, no, don’t answer that - I’ll tell you where you stand: your lot were democratically elected. The King is a figure head. He has no way of stepping in on parliament anymore. He might be able to appeal to the population, but considering your voters’ political leanings, I doubt he will hold much sway. Furthermore, you brought down a system which worked very nicely for this country for centuries. Everything you represent is abhorrent. So, the answer to your question is nowhere. Our working together is a last resort.”

“Look I’ve got no time for big bruising voices, a danger far greater than my movement is upon the country. I need help, but if you have no interest…”

“I didn’t say that, Baines. We can use you, but remember that the best you’ll get is the wilderness after this dark patch in our history is resolved.”

“Now we’re getting somewhere,” Ben replied, with an exasperated tone. “We both want to finish Start so a little cooperation would be mutually beneficial,” he added.

“We want rid of all of you, Baines.”

“Yes, yes I know,” Ben replied with some tedium in his voice. “What are the options going forward?”

“The choices are simple, we can take him out of the equation by force or by public opinion...the latter, however will be long and bloody. Force is the line we are currently exploring. You do realise that civil war is looking more and more likely. In itself, this is palatable, but the fact is that should our country end up at war with itself then the likely outcome is an independent Wales and at least Northumberland and Cumbria annexed by Scotland. That is unimaginable, a result that we must not allow, cannot even contemplate as satisfactory.” He took a deep breath and continued, “Even contentment in the cities is waning because crime is so rife, Baines. And the principal protagonists are your militias; it's as though the country is being governed by a gang.”

“And if we choose to speed things up with force?”

“That's where you could be more useful. The security around Start is so tight, he doesn't venture out of his inner circle and he is never seen in public so having you on the inside obviously has its benefits.” Eastman looked across the lake. “Maybe this will change now that you have been pushed out.”

“No, he wants me to remain as the figurehead of the regime so I will remain in the limelight.”

Other books

A Dark Heart by Margaret Foxe
When I Left Home by Guy, Buddy
The Defiant Lady Pencavel by Lewis, Diane Scott
Trouble with Kings by Smith, Sherwood
Remember Mia by Alexandra Burt