‘Big deal. I don’t want an apology, son. I want control.’
‘They’ll never agree.’
‘Fine.’ Winter drained the second bottle. ‘Mine’s a Stella.’
Suttle didn’t move. On screen Piquionne had just missed another sitter. Pompey supporters had their heads in their hands. At this rate they’d be looking at extra time.
‘Bazza wants to meet this Irenka,’ Winter said. ‘You think she’s up for that?’
‘I’m sure she is. Why the interest?’
‘Because he thinks the way I do. It’s too neat, too convenient. He wants to check her out for himself.’
‘Fine.’ Suttle shrugged. ‘I’m sure she’ll be delighted.’
‘But can she pull it off? Can she do it?’
‘Of course she can.’
‘What makes you say that?’
‘Because Covert Ops are choosy when it comes to u/c.’
‘Is she Hantspol? Met? Somewhere else?’
‘I haven’t a clue. And that’s the truth.’
‘You want to find out?’
‘I can try.’
‘Yes please, son.’ Winter waved his empty bottle again.
Suttle fetched another. They watched the remainder of the second half in companionable silence. With the score still 0–0 at full time, the players gathered around their respective managers. Harry Redknapp was taking it easy, the occasional word in a Spurs ear, a pat on the shoulder, a shared joke with a couple of the big defenders. Avram Grant, on the other hand, had gathered his players around him, serious, intense, making point after point with little trademark jabs of his right hand.
‘What’s he saying?’ Winter was intrigued.
‘He’s telling them they don’t get paid for extra time. The administrator’s been on to him. Nothing left in the kitty.’
Winter laughed. Then he told Suttle exactly what he wanted out of Gehenna. The fact that Suttle knew Misty and Trude made it a whole lot easier.
‘I want them both taken care of,’ he said.
‘I’m not with you.’
‘You give me a whack of money. Resettlement’s no problem. Neither is ID. I can sort both. But I need the pair of them with me, and that’s going to cost. If there’s any equity left in Misty’s place it’ll end up seized. When that happens she’ll have nowhere to live. And neither will Trude. So …’ he raised an eyebrow ‘… you think that might be a runner?’
‘It’s possible. I can at least try. You got anywhere nice in mind?’
‘Of course I have.’
‘Like to share it?’
‘No.’ Winter shook his head.
Extra time was under way. Twelve minutes later Piquionne at last came good. A beautifully flighted ball from the right wing beat the Spurs central defender. Flat on his arse, he watched Piquionne score with a simple tap-in.
Suttle was on his feet, punching the air. From next door, through the thin walls, came the thunder of feet on bare floorboards and wild cheering. Across the road a woman in a dressing gown had appeared at her front door, waving a Pompey scarf. Even Winter looked impressed. Gehenna, for the next fifteen minutes, was history.
Spurs brought on a replacement striker. Gareth Bale was slicing through the Pompey defence, putting in quality cross after quality cross. At the other end Utaka led a break, two against one, with Dindane in support. But his pass was useless, and Dindane’s botched return went straight to a Spurs defender. Finally, minutes later, Dindane atoned by tempting Palacios into conceding a penalty. Prince Boateng stepped up to the plate and slotted it. Two–nil. Game over.
Suttle grabbed his phone and got through to Lizzie. Her mum had insisted on watching the game and had just broken out the sherry. Suttle could hear his daughter in the background. He got Lizzie to put the phone to her mouth. Over the roar of the crowd on the telly Grace was gurgling with contentment.
Suttle made kissy-kissy noises and pocketed his mobile. Winter was still watching the celebrations. The Pompey players had run to the blue end to salute their travelling support, and the crowd had gone wild. After a while Winter reached for the remote again and lowered the sound. A line in the match commentary had amused him.
‘This guy Prince Boateng. The one who took the penalty. He’s ex-Spurs, right?’
‘Right.’
‘Scored against his own club, yes?’
‘Yes.’
‘Put the game beyond reach?’
‘Absolutely.’
‘Excellent.’ Winter emptied the bottle and got to his feet. ‘Bit of a lesson there, eh?’
Suttle studied him a moment, working it out.
‘That sounds like a threat,’ he said at last.
‘Threat?’ Winter was looking pained. ‘Why don’t you talk to your bosses? He’s there for the taking, son, if we play this my way.’
Chapter twenty-four
PORTSMOUTH: FRIDAY, 30 APRIL 2010
Weeks two and three of the campaign weren’t kind to Bazza Mackenzie.
On the Monday after the triumph at Wembley his suggestion of a Pompey First photo call with the all-conquering FA Cup team was ignored by the management at Fratton Park.
On the Tuesday a bid to upstage the launch of the Tory manifesto spectacularly misfired when Pompey First’s hired launch sprang a leak in Portsmouth Harbour and nearly sank. Bazza, rescued by a tender from HMS Iron Duke, kept hammering away at his script but to no avail. When he accused the Tories of preparing to torpedo the aircraft carrier programme – thus shafting hundreds of Pompey dockyard workers – the Portsmouth North candidate, who happened to be a Royal Navy reservist, simply queried his entitlement to voice any kind of view on maritime affairs. This is a guy, she said, who has difficulty staying afloat on a sunny day with no one trying to kill him. Would you seriously entrust the nation’s defence to Pompey First?
On the Thursday, after a merciful lull, things went from bad to worse. Secretary of State for Industry Lord Mandelson was extensively photographed waltzing with a woman in pink in the Blackpool Tower ballroom. The news coverage caused a flurry of excitement across the nation, and it was Gill Reynolds’ idea to stage Pompey First’s very own photo shoot at Hilsea Lido’s Blue Lagoon. That afternoon they were staging a Festival of Jive. Reynolds, who happened to be a talented jiver, offered to partner Bazza and guaranteed coverage in the News. The candidate himself was less than keen, but a couple of TV crews also turned up and he did his best. The black eye had gone by now but even Reynolds’ twirls couldn’t mask Bazza’s clumsiness. The results, beamed into thousands of homes across the city, proved beyond doubt that Bazza Mackenzie had two left feet, and although he won a sizeable sympathy vote for his gameness, it did nothing for either his self-esteem or his marriage.
That evening, after watching Meridian Tonight, Marie threw him out and had the locks changed. She’d never much liked politics and she’d certainly had enough of this kind of public humiliation. Bazza, who viewed this development in his private life as a temporary blip, moved into one of the nicer bedrooms on the Trafalgar’s second floor, often with Gill Reynolds in attendance. That night, pissed, he tried – and failed – to shag her. This was a situation he’d never encountered before. She was as dexterous and inventive as ever, but nothing she did for him seemed to work. Early next morning, to his growing alarm, he drew another blank. She gave him a massage. She ran a bath. She tried to cup him between her breasts and told him he was the best fuck she’d ever had. He didn’t believe her. And nothing happened.
By now Bazza suspected she was getting a better offer from Andy Makins. Pompey First’s IT wizard was out of hospital now, and it was no secret that Gill Reynolds was popping round to his flat most afternoons to make sure he was OK. Makins, to Bazza’s disgust, wasn’t keen on hurrying back to front-line electoral duties, a situation Leo Kinder put down to post-traumatic stress disorder. PTSD, according to Kinder, could incapacitate someone as sensitive as Makins for months.
Bazza, who had no time for fancy excuses like these,
issued Makins with an ultimatum. Either he resume work for Pompey First or he was off the payroll. Makins, to his credit, did his best, but by midway through week three it was obvious that his heart wasn’t in it. The ceaseless flow of ideas had dried up. He stopped monitoring the various Internet forums he’d fathered. Messages from Bazza demanding a response went unanswered. From the room he was using as an office, Makins seemed to spend half the day checking the street outside for possible threats. And when the time came to go home, he either blagged a lift from Gill Reynolds or insisted on a taxi.
From Bazza’s point of view this was a sinister development. He’d never trusted anyone else with a woman he happened to be shagging. Gill Reynolds managed to coax a performance or two, but Bazza was increasingly haunted by what she’d once told him about Andy Makins. The guy had the knack. The guy knew what a woman really needed. The guy took her places she’d never been before. Again and again and again. Bazza was honest enough to know that he simply wasn’t in this league. He could make a woman laugh. He could spend money on her. He could make her feel like the princess of her dreams. But when it came to bed, he rarely wasted the kind of time and attentiveness she seemed to crave. The sex was OK. It did the business. But he was uncomfortably aware that it didn’t hold a candle to what she’d come to expect from Mr Makins.
And so, as the campaign gathered pace, Bazza began to flag. The Future-Proofing Conference, so carefully prepared, was a huge disappointment. Half the speakers didn’t turn up and neither did the media. In the days that followed, Mackenzie seemed to lose it. His speeches lacked that buccaneering spark that had lit a bonfire under the Pompey hustings. Crowds once numbered in hundreds began to thin. He started muddling important statistics, handing his opponents a series of open goals. Postings on various group sites registered disappointment, then hostility, then derision. Even Leo Kinder, who Bazza had always regarded as rock-solid, began to show signs of losing his nerve.
Then, with election day barely a week away, Pompey First hit the buffers. Since the incident under the pier there’d been no sign of the kids Bazza had insulted in his haste to grab the law-and-order vote. Glaziers had restored the hotel restaurant to its former glory. Bazza had waived the bill run up by the party of diners who’d been on the receiving end of the third rock. And when the News phoned the following day, enquiring about an incident at the Royal Trafalgar, he’d told them they were imagining things. Life was sweet. Business was good. Find yourself a headline somewhere else. This smokescreen of denials seemed to work, and within days the only real casualty of the incident was Andy Makins.
But the kids hadn’t gone away. Towards the end of the month Bazza arrived in the Guildhall Square to make a speech about political funding. How the Tories were simply frontmen for big business. How the Labour lot were putty in the hands of the trade unions. How the only candidates worth voting for were the guys with clean hands and a clear conscience. Like Bazza Mackenzie. He’d touched on elements of this issue before, but Leo Kinder had worked deep into the night and produced something really punchy he thought might reboot the Pompey First campaign. He’d also been on his knees to various media contacts and managed to secure a decent turnout. TV was there, and radio, and a couple of print journalists.
Their very presence attracted the beginnings of a respectable crowd, and Bazza was deep into his speech, giving it plenty of welly, before he noticed the kids at the back. He’d last glimpsed these faces in the half-darkness under the pier. A lot of them were carrying posters. The posters were crude – hand-scrawled black capital letters – but they all spelled the same message: Pompey Last.
Bazza did his best to ignore them. He talked about the fat cats in the city. He had a rant about dinosaur trade union leaders. He even made a half-decent joke about political cross-dressing, accusing Lord Mandelson of cosying up to Russian oligarchs. All this was good political knockabout, exactly as Kinder had intended, and Bazza knew the crowd was on his side, but the moment the kids arrived he felt the momentum slipping away. They were chanting – they’d obviously been rehearsing – ‘Loser … loser … loser …’
Bazza started to shout. Then he lost his thread. The chanting got louder. Finally he’d had enough. Appealing directly to the nearest camera, he pointed out the faces at the back of the crowd. ‘That’s the scrote vote,’ he yelled. ‘Take a good look, because that’s the future of this fucking country.’
The quote, discreetly bleeped, made the national news. Within hours it was on the front page of the London Evening Standard. The Pompey News devoted two inside pages to the story: instant rebuttal from the kids themselves, from angry parents, from shocked teachers, from despairing social workers. Who was Bazza Mackenzie to condemn an entire generation? Who, indeed?
And it got worse. Over the next two days, no matter how carefully Bazza and Kinder tried to outfox them, the scrote vote was always waiting at the next campaign stop. More posters. More chants. Increasingly desperate, Kinder began to reschedule, insisting on indoor venues and putting 6.57 security on the door. The tactic was a disaster. Intimidated by a bunch of middle-aged thugs, the audiences got smaller and smaller while the scrote vote picketed the road outside, drawing the kind of crowds Pompey First could only dream of. But these people had come for a ruck. They were the kind of gawkers who slow down on motorways when they see a tangle of wreckage and a couple of winking blue lights. Pompey First, it was widely agreed, had become a car crash.
Winter consented to attend a Gehenna meet at the end of that last full week of campaigning. He drove to the safe house in Winchester and found himself confronted by the entire management team: half a dozen faces around the table, all of them eager to find out what was really happening at the heart of the Pompey First electoral machine.
‘It’s all turned to rat shit,’ Winter was smiling. ‘As I told you it would.’
Willard, who’d been fed the media coverage by Parsons, wanted to know about the kids with the placards, the Pompey Last lot. How come they’d turned out to be so politically savvy? And how come they were always one step ahead?
Winter was happy to explain. He described the night the kids had turned up outside the hotel and what happened afterwards. Makins, he said, had been hospitalised for a couple of days. Returning to his Southsea flat, he’d found a note pushed under his door. Liam and Billy were the kids who’d put the boot in under the pier. And now they wanted a little chat.
‘How did they know where to find him?’ This from Parsons.
‘I told them.’
‘You traced these kids?’
‘Of course I did. We had the news footage from the law-and-order thing. I printed out some faces. Showed them around.’ He smiled. ‘The way you do.’
Willard wanted to know what happened next.
‘Liam and Billy went round to see Makins. Makins was bricking himself, but all they wanted was advice.’
‘What kind of advice?’
‘Political advice. It turned out they were really pissed off by what Mackenzie had said. They thought it was unfair for starters. Makins explained Bazza had never really meant it – it was just stuff for the cameras – but that just made it worse. These kids hate people taking advantage. And that’s exactly what Mackenzie had done. Big time.’
Makins, he explained, had promised to help them.
‘Why?’ Willard again.
‘Partly because he didn’t want to end up in hospital again and partly because he’s had it with Mackenzie. He thinks the bloke’s off his head, and from where I’m sitting he’s dead right.’
‘So what happened?’
‘He told the kids to wait, to hang on. He knew Mackenzie would never last the course. Then he came up with the Pompey Last line and the “Loser” chant. That’s what really did it for the kids in the first place, being labelled losers. They really hate that. Loser’s the worst. So turning it on Mackenzie when his campaign’s going tits up was really sweet. You know what they think of Makins now? They love him to death. And you know why? Becaus
e Bazza reacted just the way Makins knew he would. He can’t handle stuff like that. He needs to be in control. Otherwise he starts foaming at the mouth.’
Heads nodded round the table. Winter had always promised that the campaign would take Mackenzie to a very bad place, and that’s exactly what had happened.
‘But how come the kids always know where he’s off to next?’ Suttle asked.
‘Big mystery. Mackenzie’s starting to think it might be a woman called Gill Reynolds. She’s a reporter on the News. He’s briefing her every night for some kind of special she’s doing afterwards. This is a woman who can’t wait to be famous. Bazza is her best shot. Another possibility is Andy Makins. He’s got access to the intranet we use, chiefly because he set the thing up. He knows these kids. He knows where to find them. Plus he’s happy to shaft Mackenzie.’
‘Is that wise?’
‘Probably not. But he was shagging Reynolds before Bazza helped himself.’
Winter looked briefly troubled. Mackenzie had tasked him to stop the leaks and bring him a name. Suttle wanted to know if that was a problem.
‘Of course it is.’
‘Why?’
‘Because the leaks are down to me. I bung the kids a schedule every night. They’ve no idea where it comes from but it’s always kosher stuff. They turn up next day and Bazza goes ape, blames everyone, Reynolds, Makins, even Kinder. No wonder the fucking thing is falling apart.’
A ripple of laughter ran round the table. This was textbook Winter, a masterclass in manipulation. Even Willard looked impressed.
‘So what happens next?’ he said. ‘What’s your recommendation?’
Winter held his gaze. He didn’t much like the word recommendation, but he decided for the time being to live with it. Willard had a great deal of face to save, but in truth Gehenna was now in Winter’s hands. He was the spider in the middle of the web. His strategy. His call.
‘Jimmy?’ Winter had turned to Suttle. ‘You’ve talked to Mr Willard?’
‘About?’
‘Me? Misty? Trude?’
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