Read A Line in the Sand Online
Authors: Gerald Seymour
Yesterday, your husband came to the school to collect Stephen. He was,
we now know, accompanied by an armed bodyguard. It was not his
intention that the presence of the bodyguard should be known, and
that
was an act of deceit. The bodyguard, after a grossly irresponsible incident with his pistol an incident that could have led to the gun firing in a crowded playground in the head-teacher's hearing, spoke to
the local police after she, quite rightly, had called them. I~ his explanation to the local police, he spoke of a threat to your husband that necessitates his constant protection from terrorist attack. We feel, after very careful consideration, that a threat to your husband represents, also, a threat against your husband's family-' "You're blathering, Barry. Why don't you say what you mean?"
Carstairs pushed aside his notes. There was a curl of anger at his lips.
"I was trying to do it the decent way. What Frank's done, what's in
his sordid past, I don't know and I don't care. What matters is that his family is exposed to bombs and guns, in our school. The children and staff here are all threatened by terrorists. Their safety is
paramount. Stephen, as much as his stepfather or his mother, could be
a target. If he is a target, then everyone at this school is a target.
He's out, he's no longer welcome here."
"You can't do that, not to a child."
The woman, Miss Smythe, leaned forward to intervene, and spoke with a
low, intense voice.
"We can do it, Mrs. Perry, and we are doing it. My department, after full consideration of the facts, has decided to back the governors'
recommendation. We're foursquare behind them. As soon as is
practical
181
we will communicate with you on proposals for alternative education for
t I can't say when that will be.
Stephen, bu
A thought, Mrs. Perry.
Is
e for Stephen to move away, stay with an uninvolved
it possibl
relative,
and attend school elsewhere?"
. We are together, a family."
"It is not
l have to sit at home," Carstairs said.
"Then he'l
"I'm sure Mrs. Kemp'll loan you some books but he's not coming back here."
stairs, always have been,
"You are despicable. You are, Barry Car
a
second-rate rat, always will be."
n is no longer a pupil at this school.
"As of now, Stephe
Take him
home."
"And Frank thought of you, and your stupid wife, as a friend."
"Your problems aren't ours, they don't concern us, get off back home.
And when you get home you should call for a removal van and take your problems away. You're pariahs, you're not wanted."
There was
much
so
she could have said. Meryl thought, in that moment,
that weeping and pleading would have shamed her.
ed them with
She ey
ntempt and none of them could meet her gaze.
co
Once before she had
been through the business of shame, and she would not go there again.
ng, no cringing, not then and not now.
No beggi
Nine years before,
she
gned from the haulage business where she worked the logistics
had resi
computer, four months after the Christmas party. Hadn't been drunk,
, before that party, or since.
incapable
Too drunk, too incapable,
to
know which of the men had done it. It could have been any of the
thirty-eight drivers, twelve loaders, three managers and two
directors.
She would have needed DNA testing to learn which was the father of the
embryo baby. She turned. Living with Frank, loving him, bringing up
her child together had erased the shame. She left them behind her, 182
the
silence clinging in the room, and strode down the corridor to fetch her
son from the common room.
They would be watching her from the head-teacher's office as she led the child back across the empty playground towards the car, their
faces
would be pressed against the glass. She had shown them defiance,
but
by the time she reached the car the pain and the despair hit her.
With her boy beside her, she drove into the town centre to buy the length of net from which she would make the curtains.
ation: SECRET.
Classific
April 1998.
Date: 4
ct: JULIET SEVEN
Subje
script of telephone conversation (secure using SB mobile at
Tran
Juliet
location) between GM, G Branch, and Juliet 7.
7
Hello? Mr. Perry? Good,
GM:
got you. I'm Geoff Markham, I came
down
e you with Mr. Fenton.
to se
raid I didn't make much of a contribution.
"F
This is a secure call.
What I mean is, we can talk frankly. There's a bit to talk about...
there?
Are you
I'm here. What is there to talk about?
J7:
appreciate my difficulty, the same as before.
GM: You
It's the same
difficulty as Mr. Fenton had?
J7: You've a difficulty very funny. Try your difficulty on me.
GM: The difficulty is that I cannot share sources of information
available to us.
J7: Join the queue nobody tells me anything.
GM: Let's try to keep calm. That way we make better decisions. J7: 183
decisions?
What
is not easy. Frankly, the situation around you and your
GM: This
family has deteriorated, we believe.
J7: Spell it out.
GM: That's my difficulty. As I've already explained, I cannot 17: you don't trust me. Nobody [expletivel trusts me -that's
Because
why I
intend to make my own [expletive] decisions.
GM: Please, please, listen
to me. My judgement, based on information
I
am privy to, is that you and your family should relocateJ7: Your
you can shove it up your [expletivel.
judgement
d the word 'deteriorated' - I'm not using that word lightly.
GM: I use
You should go hear me out. We can make all the arrangements within a
matter of hours.
J7: I provided information, and I am not trusted sufficiently to be t use that information was put to.
told wha
GM: That, too, is one of my difficulties. I, too, am not need-to-know on that information.
J7: Then stop playing bloody errand boy and [expletive], well, find out
Wait.
[Pause of 38 seconds] J7: Meryl's just come home. She took her son to
school, and was told at school that they're barring the boy
[expletivel
bastards. You think I'll run away because of the say-so of those
e] bastards? Think again.
[expletiv
is a situation of grave danger.
GM: It
t running, not again. This is my home.
J7: I'm no
you would reconsider when matters are less fraught.
GM: Perhaps
J7: I make my own decisions. I am staying. (Call terminated)
184
The tanker, moored at the offshore jetty, had started to unload its cargo of 287,000 tonnes of crude. The master stood with his engineer officer on the small stern deck behind the tower of the bridge and inflatable, covered by tarpaulin
accommodation block. The
sheeting,
d a schedule. It was
was stowed beside them. They discusse
important
for them to plan the length of time the tanker spent there for the crew
and the sailing time back into the English
to take shore leave,
Channel. Time was critica& The great tanker should not reach the point
in the Channel too early or too late to make the pickup. Neither
man
tertained the slightest doubt that he would be on the beach, and
en
that
an enemy of their country would, a few hours before, have been
killed. They made calculations:
justifiably
because they had been delayed in taking their place at the offshore jetty it seemed unlikely that the crew would enjoy more than a few hours of shore leave in the Swedish port.
The restaurant was on no list in good-eating guides that Harry Fenton had ever seen, but it was where the Israeli had said they should meet.
It was an unpredictable place for the Mossad station officer to have chosen, and one where it was unlikely his enemies would look for him.
nfused. You are confused because you have
"So, Harry, you are co
spoken
with your
-affairs
foreign
people who are an apparatus of appeasement.
ey're telling you that Iran is misunderstood, more sinned against
Th
be permitted to take a rightful place
than sinning, and wants only to
the affairs of that region.
in
Allow me, because you are paying for
od, to disabuse you of what you have been told and
this excellent fo
to
further your confusion. Before he was killed, Rabin tried to alert the
international community to the need to "strike at this viper and crush its skull", and he was a man criticized in his own yard as a peace monger They were strong words from a man vilified for attempting
a
the Syrian, Lebanese and Palestinian enemies. Why?"
deal with
They were in the further reaches of east London, under railway arches 185
and facing a line of boarded-up shops. It was small, dingy and,
frankly, unclean, but the Israeli said the restaurant served the best Afghan cooking in the city. He ate with enthusiasm. Fenton was less sure.
"Why? Because we, in Israel, understand the real threat. We understand it while many in Europe refuse to open their eyes.
Everywhere a bomb explodes or a bullet impacts we find the fingerprint of Iran. They pay for, equip and train the Hizbollah in the Lebanon, and Hamas for the Palestinians. The bombs on our buses, in our
vegetable markets, are placed by proxy but they are theirs. Yet what they're doing now is only a pinprick, Harry, in comparison with what they intend."
The Israeli pushed the cleaned plate away from him, wiped his mouth vigorously with the paper napkin and laid the palm of his hand over his
glass. Fenton masked the taste of the spiced baked vegetables, and sauces, with beer and was now on his third bottle.
"What they intend is to gain a triple arm of weaponry with which they may dominate the oilfields of the region. For the development of
the
nuclear site at Bushehr, and they already have small quantities of plutonium, they will beggar their own people and bankrupt the state.
They are scouring the Asian continent for the necessary chemical
agents
for an independent poison-gas manufacturing industry. What is the work
the scientific community of Iran is given? The means to deliver a warhead containing the most revolting disease known to man anthrax, foot-and-mouth, any bio-toxin, any of the peasants' Weapons of Mass Destruction.
utting these weapons and the missiles
Where are they p
to
deliver them? In tunnels.
ere they are beyond the
They bury them wh
reach of conventional attack. Only once have we been able to strike at
such targets. Do you know how we achieved that, Harry, with whose help? Were you never told, Harry? If not, it's not for me to tell you."
The meat on the plates laid in front of them was unrecognizable as part
of any animal Fenton knew. He assumed it had been a young lamb,
thought of what had happened to it was
ritually slaughtered. The
sufficient to stifle his appetite.
186
anian programme for the manufacture of Weapons of Mass
"The Ir
igence community,
Destruction gives me, and the rest of our intell
d
ba
nights. It's the big picture.
of Israel will
It's what the people
ce in the future.
fa
The Mossad and the general staff have to plan
the
ur state against nuclear devices, against nerve gases,
defence of o
against toxins, but that is in front of us.
re
The present... Igno
e
th
denials, ignore the protestations of fluent, gentle diplomats who
make
is
your foreign-affairs officials feel comfortable. The present
at
th
every attack abroad by the Iranian killer squads has the
ization
author
of the highest echelons of government. It's only the appeasers who say
otherwise. Government provides the training for the killers, the
plomatic pouches, the digital secure-phone links, the
weapon~s via di
passports, the finance. Every operation abroad is laid before the minister, the interior minister and the defence minister
foreign
sitting in the National Supreme Security Council. It is authorized, d, on one condition only.
sanctione
The condition? There should be
no
oking gun in Iran's hand... Look in your files, Harry, it is there sm
if
to see it.
you wish
Is there something wrong with your food, Harry?"
barely touched his meat, hardly eaten enough to offer a
Fenton had
pretence of politeness. He grimaced, and signalled for more beer.
have
"If you don't eat, Harry, you'll just fade away... The Germans ne deals, appeased them, looked for the easy life and the French,