His eyes flickered back into life, he bowed his head in apology. 'We have always shared, Elizabeth. Everything. The triumphs and the wounds. But now I'm afraid to.'
'Sharing a fear is to cut it in two.'
'I haven't wanted to burden you.'
'Am I so weak or loose-tongued you feel you have to protect me?'
'I wish to protect you’ he chastised gently, 'because I value you beyond all others. And my fears seem so infantile and superstitious. Yet so very real.'
She squeezed his arm more tightly. The atmosphere was stifling, the storm was about to break.
'I told you about Cyprus. Of sacrifice, many years ago’ he continued. 'It took place not three miles from where the convoy is being held, near the village of Spilia. And it was marked by a symbol, a sign. A flaming pine. Like a torch which has flickered through my dreams in all the years since.'
'Sometimes it's not healthy to dwell on dreams.'
'I saw the tree again. The other day beside the Lodge. Burning once more.'
'A symbol of future triumph,' she offered.
'Perhaps a life come full circle.'
'Then a completeness. A whole. Signifying strength.'
'A life which has come full circle can never go round again, Elizabeth.'
Mortality. With that she could find no argument. Yet the words had helped, he appeared more at ease now, the burden shared, his inner doubts confronted and out in the open. Better to see them. A mile away a trident's fork of lightning struck the BT Tower and a final, massive drum roll of thunder vibrated across the rooftops.
'What will you do, Francis?'
'Do what I have always done, the only thing I know how to do. Fight. And hope my gods win.'
He turned to embrace her and the rains came. The gods' battle was done. They were ready to dispose of him.
It was almost two a.m. when Maria heard the knock on her motel door. She hadn't been able to sleep, exhilarated by the success of the day's march and tormented by thoughts of what might happen to Tom in the morning. The knocking grew persistent. She threw the covers aside and was halfway across the room before she hesitated. Who was it? What could be so urgent and why the hell hadn't they telephoned? Anyway, she was wearing nothing but one of Tom's shirts.
'Who's there?' she enquired cautiously.
From out in the corridor a woman's voice replied; it carried no hint of threat. Maria opened the door but kept it on the chain.
'I've brought a message for Tom,' the woman announced, addressing the eye and loose strand of hair which appeared around the door.
Tom. The password to Maria's new life. Resolved, she slipped the chain and slowly opened the door. It was Claire. Maria didn't fully recognize her, but Claire had already recognized the shirt - so it was true, they were lovers. The legs were great, long and finely toned. Tom always had appreciated good legs. 'I think I'd better come in. Both you and I are a little too exposed here in the corridor.'
The shirt, the legs and the attractive face with its long and darkly rumpled hair made way.
'Hello, I'm Claire Carlsen,' she said, extending her hand. 'Francis Urquhart's PPS.'
Instantly Maria took a step back and her look of sleepy half recognition turned to sharp disfavour. 'Get out. I have nothing to say to you.'
'But I have something to say to you.' Claire held her ground. 'Something for Tom.'
'Francis Urquhart wouldn't lift a finger to help Tom.'
'You're absolutely right. But I would.'
'You?' She made no attempt to disguise her ill-feeling. 'Why?'
How could she explain, to Maria of all people? 'Perhaps because in helping him I may be able to help myself.'
Maria studied the other woman. The blonde features were so different from her own. The salon-chic hair, the Italian shoulder bag, the considered, discreetly expensive style. Everything Maria was not. She had many reasons for distrusting this other woman, but there were also the raw eyes which said Claire hadn't slept, not since she'd heard of Tom's arrest and understood why Corder had been so keen to ensure that the driver was well out of trouble's reach. Trouble Corder knew to expect. Trouble which he must have planned. And behind Corder stood only one master.
'I don't believe I want to help anyone associated with Francis Urquhart,' Maria said firmly.
'We are all associated with Francis Urquhart, whether we like it or not. Tom above all.'
Maria stood in the middle of the bedroom, her arms folded across the shirt, aggression squeezed aside by her concerns for Tom and, perhaps, feminine intuition about this woman.
'You would betray Urquhart?'
'I prefer to think of it as being true to myself. I don't think I have been at times in these past weeks. I want to make up for it.'
'How?'
'By warning Tom. His arrest was no accident.
There were politics behind it. Downing Street politics.'
'Where's your proof?'
'I have none. It's no more than a suspicion.' 'Not much to go on.'
'Enough for me to take the very considerable risk of driving through the night to come here.' 'Risk?'
'If Francis found out, there wouldn't be much point in going back.'
'This could simply be a ruse, a distraction of some sort. Another trick.'
'Please. Let Tom decide that. Tell him I think it was Urquhart.'
Maria made no reply.
'One other thing,' Claire continued. 'Urquhart knows you are lovers. He'll certainly use it against you if he needs to.'
'Don't try to threaten me.' There was anger now.
'I'm trying to save you.'
'He can't prove a thing!'
'My advice to you is to stay out of his bed until the election is over. And stay out of his shirts.'
Maria started, looked down at her nightwear and then back at Claire, her intuition suddenly wide awake. 'He said there had been someone who'd hurt him. Someone in politics, very different from me.' She studied the tired eyes closely, trying to find the woman within. 'Someone who would know his shirts.'
'Someone who still cares for him very much.'
'We have more in common than I thought,' Maria acknowledged grimly. 'He still thinks about you.'
'And I still think about him, as you see.'
'But more about yourself.' Maria's tone carried accusation.
'Perhaps. And particularly about my family.' She hadn't intended all this self-exposure and sharing of secrets, she wasn't sure it had helped. 'What are you going to do?'
'What are you going to do?'
'I'm not sure.'
'Funny thing is,' Maria replied, showing her the door, 'neither am I.'
A photograph of a grizzled old Cypriot dominated the front page of the Independent. He was seated on a splay-footed dining chair, old military beret pulled askew over his brow, a gap-tooth smile splitting his walnut face. A battered musket of pre-1914 vintage was propped against one knee and a lissom sixteen-year-old schoolgirl seated on the other. By such an army were the British being humbled, 'held to ransom by a combination of hockey stick and blunderbuss,' as the Independent claimed.
The Sun was less tactful, 'fu! say cypos' ran its headline. Of the carnival atmosphere amongst the Greeks there was much coverage; of the growing fear and suffering amongst the British troops very little.
The message of the media was unanimous. Francis Urquhart: from triumph to turkey. Two days is a long time in Fleet Street.
'So what is the military solution, Air Marshal Rae?'
A smell of furniture polish lingered throughout the Cabinet Room; it takes more than war to disrupt a Whitehall cleaning schedule. Over the satellite link to COBRA came the sound of an apologetic cough. 'That's difficult, Prime Minister.'
'Difficult?' Urquhart snapped. 'You're telling me you can't handle this?'
Across the Cabinet table, Youngblood began to colour. Out of sight, the climate was changing in Cyprus, too. The Air Vice-Marshal was a man minted at Harrow and moulded by his passion for the brutality of croquet; an u
nsuitable case for bullying. Rae blew his nose stubbornly, a noise which across the link sounded like a bull preparing to resist the matador's goad.
'Difficult, Sir, because as you will remember this was an expedition which I recommended against.'
'Schoolgirls!'
'Precisely. And I cannot envisage a military solution which would not risk endangering the lives of either those schoolgirls or my men, or both.'
'Are you telling me you can find no solution?'
'Not a military one. A political solution, perhaps.'
'You're suggesting I negotiate with a bunch of pirates?'
'They're not exactly that, Prime Minister. Which is part of the trouble. They have no clear leadership, no individual with whom to negotiate. These are simply ordinary Cypriots united around a common purpose. To get us out.'
'What about President Nicolaou?'
'Seems they want him out, too. It's difficult to find much enthusiasm for politicians in this part of the world right now. Sir.'
Urquhart ignored what he was sure was the intentional irony. He needed Rae. 'I have worked hard to bring peace to the island. If they throw out Nicolaou, they throw out the peace deal with him.'
They've never had peace, not in a thousand years. They're the sort who use sticks of dynamite even to go fishing. They'd manage to live without the treaty.'
'Then if they want a fight, Air Marshal, I suggest we'd better give them one.'
'How does the defendant plead? Guilty, or not guilty?'
Layers of dust and silence hung across the veneered courtroom, which was packed. Thousands more had congregated outside. The march had not happened today, they were needed here. Sunlight streamed in through the high windows, surrounding the dock in a surrealistic halo of fire as though Channel 4 were filming a contemporary adaptation of Joan of Arc. Did the defendant have anything to say before he was burnt?
'Not guilty!'
Others apart from Francis Urquhart seemed prepared for a fight.
'If you can't get to the convoy, Air Marshal, then get the convoy to you. Drive it out. Smash the blockade. Call their bluff.' Red-hot coals seemed to roll around Urquhart's tongue.
'You're willing to risk all those lives on a hunch they might be bluffing?'
'Strafe the ridge. Keep their heads low. Blow them off if necessary.' He spat the coals out one by one.
'At last count there were also half a dozen television crews on that ridge, Prime Minister.'
'You'd be surprised how fast a journalist can run.'
'And what about the schoolgirls?'
'Tear gas. Scatter them.' Out of Rae's sight, Urquhart was waving his hands around as if he were already getting on with the job.
'Schoolgirls can't run as fast as a speeding four-ton truck.'
'Are you contradicting me, Air Marshal?' 'Stating fact.'
'Enough objections. Take the simple route.' 'The simple-minded route.'
The exchange which had thumped and pounded like hot blood through an artery had suddenly faltered, its wrists cut.
'Did I hear you correctly, Rae?'
'This is not a game, Prime Minister. Lives are at stake.'
'The future of an entire country is at stake.'
'Forgive me, Prime Minister, if I find it more difficult than you to equate my own personal interest with that of the nation.'
'Do I detect even at this great distance the stench of insubordination?'
'You might say that.'
'Rae, I am giving you a direct order. Run that convoy out of there.'
There was a slight pause, as though the digitalized satellite system was having trouble encoding the words. When they came, however, they sounded throughout the Cabinet Room with the utmost clarity.
'No, Sir.'
'How many others were arrested for participating in the Peace March on Sunday, Chief Inspector Harding?' Makepeace was conducting his own defence. 'None, Sir.'
'And why was I singled out for your attentions?' 'Because we believed you to be the organizer of the march, Mr Makepeace.'
'You were right, Chief Inspector. I was. The defendant admits it. I was, am, and shall be organizer of this march.'
In the public gallery a portly matron with bright red cheeks and hair pulled back in a straw bun was about to start applauding, but Maria stayed her hand and advised silence. The Chairman of the Bench scribbled a note.
'So this other march, Chief Inspector, the skinheads. This progress of pimples about which you had such concern for public order. How many were arrested from their number?'
Although the policeman knew the answer, he consulted his notebook nevertheless. It added an air of authority, and gave him time to think.
'Fifteen, Sir.'
The Chairman scribbled again. Clearly this had been a serious disturbance. 'For what offences, Chief Inspector?' 'Offences, Sir?'
'Yes. Isn't it customary to arrest someone on the pretext of having committed an offence?'
Laughter rippled through the public gallery and the Chairman frowned until it had dissipated.
Harding consulted his notebook again. 'Variously for being drunk and disorderly, behaviour likely to cause a breach of the peace, four on narcotics charges and one case of indecent exposure.'
'Obviously a troublesome bunch. No wonder you were concerned.'
The policeman didn't respond; Makepeace was being altogether too helpful for his liking.
'I understand the semi-final of the football cup was recently played in Birmingham. Can you remember how many people were arrested then?'
'Not off the top of my head, no, Sir.'
'I'll tell you.' Makepeace consulted a press clipping. 'Eighty-three. There were several hundred police on duty that day, you knew there was going to be trouble.'
'Always is on a big match day.'
'Then why didn't you cancel the match? Order it to be abandoned? Like my march?'
'Not the same thing, is it?'
'No, Chief Inspector. Not The Same Thing At All. Nor was the concert last weekend held at the National Exhibition Centre. You arrested over a hundred then. So the disturbances which arose out of those trying to break up my march were really small beer. Scarcely Bovril, you might say.'
Harding said nothing.
'Well, I might say that. I don't suppose you could possibly comment.'
Even the Chairman let slip a fleeting smile.
'Then let me return to matters you can comment about, Chief Inspector. Indeed, matters you must comment about. These skinheads, neo-nazis, troublemakers, call them what you will: arrested for drink, drugs, obscenity, you say?'
Harding nodded.
'Not for offences under the Public Order Act?'
'I don't understand the point. . .'
'It's a very simple point, Chief Inspector. Can you confirm that I was the only person to be arrested for marching? All the others were arrested for offences which would have required your intervention whether they were marching, knitting scarves or performing handstands in Centennial Square?'
Harding seemed about to nod in agreement, but the head refused to fall.
'Come on, Chief Inspector. Do I have to squeeze it out of you like toothpaste? Is it or is it not true that of the several thousand people present on Sunday I was the only one you arrested for the offence of marching?'
'That is technically correct. Sir.'
'Excellent. So, we have confirmed that my march was entirely peaceful, that even the activities of the skinheads made it a relatively quiet day for the Birmingham constabulary, and I was the only one you chose to .. .' - he paused for a little dramatic emphasis - 'arrest as a menace to public order.' He smiled at Harding to indicate there was no ill will. 'Whose public order, Chief Inspector?'
'I beg your pardon?'
'Whose public order? Someone obviously decided that my activities would, if continued, represent a threat. But that was a judgement rather than a fact. Was that your judgement? Did you arrest me on your own initiative?'
'Why, no, Si
r. Only after the most careful consideration. ..'
'Whose consideration? Who was it? On whose authority were you acting?'
Harding had known this might be coming, they had to show the police action was not hasty but considered, right to the very top. Even so his knuckles were beginning to glow white on the edge of the witness box. 'I was acting on the orders of the Chief Constable.'
'And I wonder where he was getting his orders from?'
'How do you mean?'
Makepeace looked up to the gallery to catch the eye of Maria. He smiled. She nodded, understanding as always. He'd use Claire's information; what had he got to lose?
The Final Cut Page 36