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Authors: Ken McClure

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TWENTY-SIX
 
 
Edinburgh, Tuesday 1 June 2010
 

‘I hate to tempt fate,’ said the chief executive of Edinburgh City Council, ‘but I think we should give ourselves a little pat on the back.’

The other members of the major incident team did not disagree.

‘I think we’ve been very lucky so far,’ said Alice Spiers. ‘We’ve managed to contain the outbreak, with only sixteen cases
occurring
outside the immediate vicinity of the flats. No more deaths in the past three days, and vaccination already started for the very young.’

‘The mass clinics will open on schedule next Monday,’ said the chief exec. ‘Eight halls are to be used across the city, all staffed by volunteer medical and nursing staff with the assistance of medical students. The vaccine itself should be here some time on Sunday.’

‘Civil unrest has been minimal,’ said the chief constable, joining in the self-congratulations. ‘Restriction on movements has been kept to a minimum, and I think the decision not to close all public places was the right one.’

‘Mind you, the NHS 24 phone lines have been going like a fair,’ said Lynn James, ‘but that was only to be expected. People are naturally very worried, but we’ve been able to reassure them that the authorities are on top of things.’

‘It could be the lull before the storm,’ cautioned Alice Spiers. ‘I hate to go all Scottish on you and look on the black side, but if there should be another attack …’ 

‘Then all bets are off,’ conceded the chief constable. ‘Everything could change in an instant. We could be faced with blind panic all over the country.’

‘Our hospitals and medical services could be absolutely
overwhelmed
,’ said Alice Spiers. ‘We’re only getting by at the moment because we’ve managed to largely contain the outbreak to the flats where it originated and treat affected people in their own homes. I take it the police haven’t arrested anyone for the attacks?’

‘I’m afraid not,’ said the chief constable. ‘But if the
perpetrators
were home-grown as the intelligence services believe, they may well have returned to their communities where there’s a good chance they’ll be regarded with suspicion and even informed upon.’

‘On the other hand, they could still be out there, planning phase two,’ suggested the chief exec, whose early optimism had faded away.

‘There’s also the possibility that they may have contracted cholera and be dying in some lonely barn in the middle of nowhere,’ said Alice Spiers. ‘It takes skill and training to handle dangerous bacteria. It’s the easiest thing in the world to infect yourself if you don’t know exactly what you’re doing.’

‘A happy thought,’ said the chief constable.

The chief exec smiled wryly. ‘So we hope for the best and prepare for the worst, as someone once said.’

 

 

Forty-five miles away, Anwar Khan and Muhammad Patel were preparing to ensure that the chief exec’s preparations would be justified. They had driven up from Northumberland to Waheed Malik’s newly rented premises in Glasgow three nights before to receive instructions for their second mission. The success of their first attack had done much to dispel the nerves they had both suffered from last time, although in Khan’s case these had been replaced by a different feeling of unease when he heard details of the target. It prompted him to ask questions.

‘In Edinburgh it was just a case of gaining access to water tanks in some old buildings,’ he said. ‘Pumping stations will be different. They’ll have security.’

Malik shook his head. ‘No,’ he said. ‘We have been
monitoring
the station for some time. There’s no security. The water board doesn’t do security.’

‘But surely after what we did last time …’

‘They’ve secured blocks of flats all over the country. That’s the way security works in the UK. They prevent the same thing from happening again. There has been no new security put on water board pumping stations. We’ve been watching.’

‘If you say so,’ said Khan, still sounding a bit doubtful.

‘Courage, brother. This time tomorrow you will have struck the blow which will damage morale so much that our victory will be guaranteed.’

Malik spread a plan of the pumping station on the table and went over the details again. ‘Once more I remind you, the critical thing is that you introduce the solution to the pipe after it exits the blue valve of the filtration and
chlorination
unit located here.’ Malik stabbed his finger on the map. ‘Remember its location in relation to the door you’ll enter by … here.’

‘Which will be padlocked,’ said Khan.

‘The bolt cutters will make short work of that.’

‘But are you sure about the perimeter fence?’ said Patel,
beginning
to share Khan’s anxiety. ‘No barbed wire?’

‘None,’ replied Malik. ‘Simple five-foot railings. You’ll be over in a flash.’

‘But there are houses nearby. What if someone sees us and raises the alarm?’

‘They’ll all be asleep at three o’clock in the morning and the station is located on a hill. You put the van in neutral and coast down the last two hundred metres. Then you sit and wait to make sure all is quiet.’

Khan and Patel had run out of questions; they sat in silence until Malik suggested they check they had everything they’d need in the back of the van.

‘What time did you say we should leave here?’ asked Patel.

‘Ten o’clock. We don’t want to risk disturbing the neighbours by leaving any later. Drive to the car park we decided on and wait there until it’s time. It’s only used by hill walkers so it will be empty at that time of night.’

The three men watched the TV broadcast of the
government’s
advice and information panel at seven p.m., remaining impassive as Oliver Clunes, the government’s chief medical adviser, reported to the nation that only thirty-eight new cases of cholera had occurred across the country in the past
twenty-four
hours.

‘We have also heard from the laboratories at Colindale that the bacterium is sensitive to antibiotics,’ announced Norman Travis. ‘We’re not out of the woods yet but it does look as if we could be getting the upper hand.’

Stella Mornington reported that the public had been behaving with the good common sense that the British were noted for in times of emergency, and very few arrests had been made for
non-compliance
with the emergency regulations.

Lynn Davies reminded the public about the helplines that were available, and urged everyone to find out the location of their nearest mass-vaccination clinic well before the
commencement
of the programme on the following Monday.

All four managed a smile as the programme ended, even the chief medical adviser, who made it look like an unnatural act.

‘They won’t be smiling tomorrow, my brothers,’ muttered Malik, ‘when they start drowning in rivers of their own filth. They’ll be demanding that their troops be withdrawn from the Middle East and an end put to their imperialist adventure with the American pigs.’

* * * 

 

Steven Dunbar had been watching the same broadcast at his flat in Marlborough Court. Tally phoned shortly afterwards. ‘Well, what d’you think?’

‘Things are looking better than I’d feared,’ said Steven.

‘Absolutely,’ agreed Tally. ‘I can’t believe we’re getting off so lightly – no disrespect to those who’ve died, but it could have been so much worse.’

‘We should remember that the police haven’t caught anyone yet; there could be a second wave.’

‘Please God, no,’ Tally sighed. ‘That would just be too awful … God, it just doesn’t bear thinking about.’

‘Then let’s not,’ said Steven. ‘We’ll cross those bridges when we come to them.’

‘By the way, I asked around to see if anyone had heard rumours about a new health scheme or changed pharmacy arrangements being introduced in the autumn but I drew a complete blank, I’m afraid. No one knew anything at all about it.’

‘Thanks anyway. I’ve asked Jean to check out the other health authorities on the list, but if your lot haven’t heard anything I guess the others won’t have either. Maybe the Schiller mob didn’t get that far before the bomber stepped in.’

‘Maybe the bomber was a good guy after all.’

‘I hope so.’

‘I was just thinking this morning: if things continue to get better, maybe we’ll get a chance to take that trip you suggested to Newcastle to pay our respects to the other good guys?’ said Tally.

‘That’s a real possibility. There wasn’t much to say at the COBRA meeting this morning. I think they’ll be stopping them soon.’

‘Good. Then maybe we can go on up to Scotland after Newcastle and spend some time with Jenny?’

‘That would be nice.’

Although he meant it, Steven said it on autopilot. His attention had strayed back to Tally’s reporting that no one in the Leicester health authority had heard anything about a proposed change to services coming in the autumn. The whole thing suddenly struck him as strange. If the Schiller Group were still discussing things back in February, when the outcome of the election would not be known until May, there wouldn’t have been time to introduce a new health initiative by the autumn as the
recovered
disk had outlined … but did it matter now that the world had changed? Steven smiled as he remembered Lisa pointing out that he had the kind of mind that would find something suspicious on a bus ticket. A large gin and tonic and an early night were called for.

 

 

‘Where are you going?’ asked Patel. ‘The car park is straight on here.’

‘I want to drive past the pumping station.’

‘What for? Someone could see us.’ Patel sounded agitated.

‘Relax. It’s quarter past ten. There’s plenty of traffic about and we’re in an unmarked white van. I just want to make sure about the railings.’

‘But Waheed already told you.’

‘I know he did,’ said Khan, checking his mirrors and slowing slightly as they passed the pumping station.

‘See, exactly as he said,’ said Patel. ‘Five-foot railings. Now let’s go to the car park like we agreed.’

‘All right, all right … I just needed to be sure.’

Patel shot him a sideways glance. ‘Don’t you trust Waheed?’

‘Of course,’ said Khan.

Patel, unconvinced, shot him another nervous glance but didn’t say any more. The unscheduled drive-by of the pumping station had already unsettled him more than enough.

The hill car park was as deserted as Malik had predicted, but Khan still took the precaution of driving head first into a parking place so that he and Patel were facing a clump of bushes. If he’d reversed in, any vehicle entering the car park would have caught them in the sweep of its headlights. Khan switched off the engine and they sat in silence for a few minutes, the only sound being contracting metal clicks from the van.

‘Do you think we’ll ever see our families again?’ asked Patel.

‘It’s enough that they will be proud of us,’ replied Khan.

‘Yes, but—’

‘Enough. We are soldiers on a mission. We must look forward, not back.’

‘You’re right. I wonder what the camps will be like? I’ve never been abroad … you?’

‘No.’

‘Our country … but we’ve never been there. Seems strange, don’t you think?’

‘Look—’ Khan’s angry response was cut short by a vehicle entering the car park, its headlights lighting up the shrubbery briefly, causing both men to sink down in their seats.

‘It’s slowing,’ hissed Patel.

‘It’s a car park.’

Patel sat motionless, staring straight ahead while Khan
monitored
the car’s progress in the van’s mirrors. It circled round to the opposite side of the car park, its tyres crunching on the gravel surface, and extinguished its lights as it drew to a halt.

‘As far away as possible,’ muttered Khan. ‘Guess what they’re doing.’

Patel didn’t respond. Humour was the last thing on his mind.

Conversation between the two men was uncomfortable and sporadic for the remainder of their wait, which was punctuated by the arrival of two more cars and the departure of the original one. ‘Like rabbits,’ muttered Patel when the third car drove in.

The last car left at one thirty a.m., allowing both men to get out and relieve themselves in the bushes. ‘I thought they’d never go,’ said Khan.

‘Me too,’ said Patel. It was the friendliest exchange they’d had. 

At twenty to three, Khan, after checking his watch for the umpteenth time, finally said, ‘It’s time.’ The words acted as a safety valve. Their enforced immobility, which had been acting as a magnifier of all things bad for both of them, had come to an end and they were finally on the move. The tension didn’t return until they were drifting down the hill towards the pumping station in neutral.

Khan brought the vehicle to a halt and turned off the engine. They sat for a few minutes, watching the nearby houses for any signs of life, but windows remained dark and curtains were undisturbed.

‘Ready?’

‘Ready.’ Patel reached behind him and brought the box containing the bacterial cultures into the front of the van rather than go round and open the back doors. Khan took it out his side, then Patel got out carrying the bolt cutters and both men pushed their doors gently to. They didn’t want to risk
slamming
them and waking the neighbours.

Khan climbed over the railings first, dropping lightly to the grass on the other side, and turning to receive the box which Patel handed to him. Patel dropped the bolt cutters on the other side and climbed over to kneel beside Khan while they looked back at the houses opposite. Still no signs of life. In a
spontaneous
gesture, Khan held up his hand, inviting a high-five, which Patel performed with a smile.

Then both men were suddenly blinded as half a dozen
searchlights
were turned on and harsh male voices yelled at them from all directions. ‘Armed police! Get down on the ground! Get down! Hands on your heads! Armed police!’

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