Boy soldier bs-1
Page 5
'No need to stand, chaps. Not any more.'
Kev was almost standing to attention. 'Old habits, sir.'
'Sir' was tall, grey-haired and distinguished-looking, and he had such a presence that, without knowing why, Danny found himself standing as well.
'Just wanted to let you chaps know that my wife and I are leaving now – long drive back.'
'Good of you both to come, sir,' said Kev.
'Not at all, least we could do.' He noticed Danny. 'Hello, who's this? A new recruit?'
'Friend of a friend, sir,' answered Kev before Danny could speak.
Sir smiled at Danny. 'Don't let this lot of reprobates lead you astray. Goodbye to you all then.'
The veterans chorused their 'Bye, sir's and retook their seats.
Big Kev finished his pint and Danny took a swig of his Coke. 'Who was that?'
'Old CO. Colonel. A good bloke.'
Danny couldn't stop himself from replying, 'Like my granddad?'
Kev didn't answer. He was a man of few words, and most of those he seemed to want to keep to himself. But everyone else had plenty to say. The room was getting noisier by the minute; the old and bold were enjoying sharing stories and memories of their glory days.
Danny almost had to shout. 'I know what he did. In Colombia.'
'Do you?' said Kev, so softly that Danny struggled to hear. 'Well, maybe you do and maybe you don't.'
Kev was giving nothing away and Danny's temper was building. 'Look, I've got to find him.'
One of the men on the far side of the table heard Danny. 'Find who? Who's he on about, Kev?'
The noise in the bar was so loud now that Danny did have to shout. 'My granddad.'
An outburst of raucous laughter from the group at the next table gave the veteran no chance of hearing. He shouted back, 'Who?'
What happened next was one of those freak moments: it probably wouldn't have happened again if it had been rehearsed a hundred times. But just as Danny cupped his hands to his mouth and shouted there was a total drop in the level of chatter and laughter.
The two words boomed out: 'Fergus Watts!'
A great swathe of the room went completely silent and all eyes turned towards Danny. He turned to Kev. 'What? What did I do?'
The answer was softly spoken. 'Not a very popular name in the Regiment these days, son.'
Gradually the conversation and laughter resumed but two tables away one man kept his eyes firmly fixed on Danny. 'Fergus Watts,' he whispered. 'Now there's a name I haven't heard in a long time.'
Maybe it was the intensity of his stare that made Danny turn and look, maybe it was just chance. Whatever the reason, their eyes met. The staring man gave Danny an exaggerated smile, raised his glass and silently mouthed, 'Cheers.'
It was unsettling, spooky, and Danny looked away as Big Kev stood up and called over to one of his friends, 'I need a gypsy's. Get a round in, will you, Tone, and one for the lad?' He glanced at Danny. 'Unless it's time for you to go?'
Danny wasn't going to be pushed out. 'I'm not in any rush.'
Kev shrugged and moved off and Tone collected the glasses and headed for the bar.
Danny sat back in his chair and gazed around at the old and bold. They were a tough-looking bunch, but in some ways they were as different as they were similar.
He had half expected them all to be like Kev Newman: big, brawny, muscular; but physically they came in a variety of shapes and sizes. They had one thing in common though, they all looked hard. More than that, they looked hardened, as though what they had seen and done had given them a different attitude to life from ordinary people.
Danny couldn't figure out what it was that made them want to join the SAS. The regular army was different; he still desperately wanted that for himself. The army meant a career, a lifestyle, worldwide travel. There was the possibility of danger, but not on an almost daily basis, and maybe never at the same level as in the SAS.
But the SAS was like saying, 'Put me in danger. I want to risk my life every time I go on an operation. I want to go into the most dangerous places and face up to guerrillas and terrorists and whatever they can throw at me.'
As the noise got louder and the booze flowed faster, Danny decided that maybe there wasn't any special quality that marked out an SAS man, just a special kind of madness.
His eyes rested on the door leading out to the lobby. Danny stared. Through the glass section at the top of the door he could see Big Kev. He hadn't gone to the toilets at all. He was talking on a mobile.
That was when Danny realized. Big Kev did know where his granddad was. And the phone call he was making – it was to Fergus Watts. Danny knew that for sure, but even as he thought of running out to the lobby to confront Kev, the big man came pushing his way through towards the table.
He slipped his mobile phone into a pocket of his jacket, which was hanging over the back of his chair, and glanced towards the crowded bar. 'What's wrong with that Tone? He hasn't even ordered the drinks yet.'
Tone was standing near to the bar, empty glasses in hands, talking to two other veterans.
'If you want something doing, do it yourself,' growled Big Kev and stomped off towards the bar.
It took no more than three seconds. A glance around to check that no one was watching and Kev's mobile was out of the jacket pocket and in Danny's hands. He didn't hang around but slid the mobile into one of his own pockets and headed off towards the toilets. He had to find the last number called on the mobile.
The toilets were empty but Danny went into a cubicle and locked the door. Finding the last number dialled was simple, even though Kev's mobile was ancient, a total brick.
But Danny had no way of keeping or storing the number. His own mobile had run out of credit and he hadn't bothered bringing it. He didn't even have a pen on him. 'Think, Danny,' he whispered. 'Think.'
At the bar, Big Kev had taken over the drinks order and was being served. The last pint was pulled and placed on a tray full of glasses. It was an expensive round and Kev handed over two twenty-pound notes. He had a lot on his mind and was deep in thought as he pocketed the change and picked up the tray.
As Danny emerged from the toilets he saw Kev turn from the bar and start to make his way back to the table. Danny had to get there first; he had to get the mobile back into Kev's jacket.
Kev was closer to the table but he also had a tray full of easily spilled drinks to manoeuvre. He reached his friend Tone, who was still with the two veterans.
'Please stop and talk to them,' whispered Danny, looking at Kev and trying to appear as normal as possible. He couldn't rush – someone would want to know why.
But Kev didn't stop, he obviously needed his pint. He moved steadily towards the table: he was going to get there first. Then he heard the shout: 'Kev? Kev?'
Kev turned back as Harry the barman approached. 'You gave me two twenties, didn't you?'
The big man nodded. 'Yeah.'
'Sorry, mate, I gave you change for thirty. We're so busy behind there I don't know my arse from my elbow.'
Kev grinned. 'Leave it on the tray, Harry.'
By the time Kev placed the tray on the table, the mobile was back in his jacket pocket and Danny was sitting in his chair trying to look a lot more relaxed than he felt. 'Think I will make a move after all.'
'What about your drink? Took me long enough to get it.'
'No, I'd better get off.' He stood up and was more prepared for the crushing effect of Kev's handshake this time, but he still winced as the big man gripped his hand.
'I'm sorry about your granddad, Danny. If you want my opinion the best thing you can do is forget all about him.'
Danny nodded. 'Yeah, maybe you're right. Thanks anyway.'
On the way out Danny stopped at the bar and borrowed a pencil from Harry. He went back to the toilets and into the cubicle he'd used before. The telephone number was still there, scrawled in soap on the cubicle wall. Danny copied the number onto a scrap of paper and wiped the wall clean.
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He was feeling pleased with himself as he left the bar and headed for the lobby. He'd done it: he had the number and got one over on Big Kev. He'd got away with it. Then he felt the tap on his shoulder. 'Hang on.'
Big Kev wasn't so easily fooled after all. Danny had been rumbled. Slowly, he turned round. But it wasn't Big Kev; it was the staring man, smiling that same exaggerated smile. 'Name's Eddie Moyes. I thought we might have a little chat.'
10
Danny made his phone call to Elena from a public phone box. The conversation was brief, and fifteen minutes later he was in an Internet cafe. He bought himself a Coke and chose a computer with a view out onto the street. When he went online and logged on to MSN, Elena was waiting for him. She regularly changed her screen name and since her GCSE results had started calling herself 'A star'. Modest as always. Danny stuck to Danny. A star says: (4:34:09 pm) so wots all the mystery, yor call spooked me Danny says: (4:34:18 pm) think im being followed A star says: (4:34:26 pm) o yeah right Danny says: (4:34:47 pm) im serious. a motorbike, u know i always spot bikes. Saw it twice yesday amp; more today. same bike same rider A star says: (4:35:01 pm) y should any1 want 2 follow u Danny says: (4:35:13 pm) dunno… really freakin me tho
Danny glanced out through the window. He was sure he'd seen the black TDM at least three times that day, the last time soon after he left the Victory Club. A star says: (4:35:28 pm) danny calm down yr making me nervos. tell me what happened @ club Danny says: (4:35:43 pm) saw big kev. got a mobile number, sure its my gdads A star says: (4:35:51 pm) wot big kev gave u the number Danny says: (4:36:06 pm) not exactly. kev called him, i got number from his mob A star says: (4:36:15 pm) r u gonna call Danny says: (4:36:27 pm) dunno. not sure wot 2 do A star says: (4:36:40 pm) don't call. might scare hm off. give me number Danny says: (4:36:48 pm) y A star says: (4:37:13 pm) mayb i can trace where kev made call 2, I mean the location, where yor gdad woz wen he took call Danny says: (4:37:24 pm) like how A star says: (4:37:36 pm) police do it. if plod can A star can. gimme number
Danny fished out the scrap of paper and sent the mobile number over to Elena. A star says: (4:37:56 pm) wot u do while i go 4 this Danny says: (4:38:28 pm) this bloke at club, said he might be able help find fergus. names eddie moyes, said id meet 2morrow but dunno if I trust him, gonna check something A star says: (4:38:43 pm) u r getting para!!!!!! Danny says: (4:38:54 pm) maybe but dnt trust any1 but u A star says: (4:39:06 pm) w8 there amp; dnt panic!!!!
They both stayed logged on to MSN but set their status to 'away'.
Danny still felt edgy. At any moment he expected to hear the growl of the TDM as it passed the window or see a man in black bikers' leathers walk through the door. The cafe wasn't busy – just a youngish businessman checking or sending e-mails and a couple of Australian girls online to friends back home. Their online conversations must have been interesting: the two girls kept shrieking with laughter and then whispering to each other. Elena was always up to speed with the latest developments in online technology. She knew all about companies providing GSM location services. It was a relatively simple operation. They just traced which mobile mast the phone was connected to, and from that could locate the phone to within a hundred metres. The police had been operating the system for years and had used the location of tracked mobiles as evidence in court cases.
Now the system was available to the public, and Elena was ready to give it a shot. There were plenty of online companies offering the service. She logged on to one and read the welcome-page boast that from now on parents could keep track of their kids and companies could always know exactly what their employees were up to.
Elena went to the main page and got the bad news: to use the system, subscribers needed not only the phone number but also the phone user's four-figure PIN number. 'Should have realized they wouldn't make it easy,' she said to herself.
She decided to take a chance. She paid her?4.99 fee online using her cash card and got four attempts at the correct PIN number.
'Maybe he's stupid,' said Elena as she tried the obvious combinations: 1234, 4321, 1111, 2222.
But Fergus Watts obviously wasn't stupid. For another?20 she could try twenty more times.
Danny was going back over the website pages about his grandfather.
Ever since Eddie Moyes had introduced himself at the Victory Club, Danny had felt sure he had heard or seen the name somewhere before. And very recently.
Moyes certainly didn't look ex-SAS. He was overweight and well out of condition. But that didn't necessarily mean he wasn't a former soldier, and at the back of Danny's mind there was something telling him he'd seen the name in at least one of the stories about his grandfather.
And there was something else about Eddie Moyes that didn't feel right. At the Victory Club Danny had told him he was the grandson of Fergus Watts and that he was searching for his grandfather.
'Really?' Moyes answered with barely concealed excitement. 'I think I can help you. Look, why don't we get out of here and find somewhere we can speak in private? I know a nice little pub just down the road.'
Danny almost said yes, but something told him to back off. While everyone else at the Victory had recoiled in horror at the name Fergus Watts, this bloke was almost falling over himself to help. It didn't add up, specially as Danny had already convinced himself he was being followed.
He stalled Moyes by saying he had to get away but that they could meet the following morning at a cafe near Foxcroft. Moyes didn't press him to stay, just smiled, and agreed to everything he said. That worried Danny too.
'Maybe Elena's right,' he whispered, as he trawled through the pages. 'Maybe I am getting paranoid.'
He sat at the computer and went through page after page of newspaper stories, but the name Moyes didn't feature in any of them.
He was just about ready to give up when he came to a headline he'd read before:
SAS TRAITOR MASTERMINDS
MASS PRISON BREAKOUT
But this time it wasn't the headline that drew Danny's attention, it was the by-line underneath: By our correspondent Eddie Moyes
Danny smiled. 'He doesn't want to help me, he wants to find Fergus for himself. Well, nice try, Eddie Moyes, but you're not getting to him through me. No way.'
A soft ping on the computer informed Danny that Elena was back on MSN. A star says: (5:06:01 pm) this could take 4ever and seriously damage my fundz Danny says: (5:06:19 pm) wots happening A star says: (5:06:29 pm) on site bt need pin no, 4 figures. dyu no his bthday, might b start or end of it. i dunno, im just guessing now
Elena was right, it could take for ever. The chance of randomly hitting the right combination was about as likely as winning the lottery. But then Danny had an idea. He took out the old photograph and turned it over. Danny says: (5:07:12 pm) try 8654 A star says: (5:07:21 pm) y Danny says: (5:07:29 pm) just try
Elena went back to the site and punched in the four numbers. The web page changed immediately and told her that it was locating a number. In less than a minute a map came onto the screen with a circle around an area in Essex. Elena could zoom in on the map and in seconds she was writing down the details. She went back to Danny. A star says: (5:08:08 pm)
GOT IT
They logged off quickly. Danny wanted to get back to Foxcroft to share the information and decide what to do next.
He was feeling better as he left the Internet cafe. He'd sussed out Eddie Moyes and there was no sign of the TDM. Maybe no one was following him at all. Maybe it was just his imagination. He turned to the right and walked towards the bus stop.
'Stand by, stand by. That's Bravo One foxtrot, he's gone right from Internet cafe. Fran's foxtrot.'
11
'I don't understand. He's in the same place as before but it's in the middle of nowhere. It's just a road. No buildings. Nothing.'
Danny and Elena had skipped breakfast and had logged on to the phone search company again. It clearly showed that Fergus – and Danny was convinced that it was Fergus – was in the same spot as
on the previous day with his phone switched on. But the onscreen map showed no houses or larger factory buildings, not even a roadside filling station. Just road.
Elena was sitting at her laptop, frowning at the screen. 'Maybe he parks his car in the same place every day and waits for his calls. But why?'
The question went unanswered. Danny leaned against the door frame in the open doorway of Elena's room. They were bending the Foxcroft rules again. He wasn't supposed to be in the room. And he wasn't, not actually in it.
Elena turned from the computer. 'So what next?'
Danny had already made up his mind. 'I'm going there. Today. I can get a train from Liverpool Street, and then a bus, and then walk or hitch if I have to.'
'To a bit of road? It might be a total waste of time.'
'I'm going, Elena, and I'll find him.'
'I'll come with you.'
Danny shook his head. 'No way. But I do need your help.'
Elena logged off from the website, shut down her computer and they went down to the quiet room. It wasn't very quiet. Lucy, the Jamaican woman who helped Jane with the cleaning, was doing her best Kylie Minogue impression as she danced round with the hoover.
She spotted them in the doorway and broke off from singing just long enough to shout, 'Five minutes, darlings, that's all I need. Then it's all yours.'
Without waiting for an answer, Lucy went back to her version of 'Can't Get You Out of My Head'. When Lucy liked a song, she liked it, it didn't matter how old it was, and the Kylie classic was an all-time favourite. Danny and Elena didn't hang around for the chorus – it wasn't easy listening. They went out into the garden and sat side by side on a bench.
Danny had made his plans. 'You stay here, check the site again during the day and let me know if he takes any more calls.'
'But what about that reporter bloke? You're meant to be meeting him.'
Danny smiled. 'That's what he thinks. But Mr Eddie Moyes is in for a long wait.'