Saturday, March 27, 2010

WARNING: LAST CHAPTER: Start from Chapter One in 2009

EPILOGUE


Caravan in a field

Tuesday, August 14

I woke as I did every night – about eight times – each and every time due to the heat. At forty two Celsius, today had been the hottest day yet, but temperatures had hovered in the high thirties for weeks, rarely dropping below high twenties overnight. If it rained, you could throw hideous humidity into the equation as well.

But it hadn’t rained. Not much. Not nearly enough. Instead the sun had risen around six, blow torched my caravan for about thirteen solid hours with hardly a cloud intervening, then buggered off again about seven. I wasn’t equipped for this. Neither was my elderly caravan. But then they probably didn’t have heat like this in 1965.

The caravan, a squat, off-white bubble on wheels, had ridiculous red racing stripes along its sides and, peculiarly, only one brake light in the centre of its rear. It had wooden sides and heat-seeking aluminium panelling everywhere else. It was equipped with a gas refrigerator and two-burner gas stove, both of which could spontaneously combust at any moment. Its gravity-fed water tank fed an endless supply of hot, dirty and completely undrinkable water. The cupboards were doorless shelves stacked with plastic plates, cups and glasses full of insects. The squab bed was a generous two inches of sweat-soaked foam with a lifetime guarantee of fitful, aching sleep. It had been providing this for four decades. Amazingly, it was still doing so.

As were the mattresses in the five equally ancient bubble caravans parked in a neat row alongside mine, all of them nasty little hothouses, all of them receiving scant shade despite the presence of a goodly line of leafy trees. All of them occupied by people equally uncomplaining and, from what I had seen, just as happy as me. Because that was how the hierarchy worked around here: casuals and part timers in the bubble caravans; fulltime unskilled staff in the small air conditioned prefab building adjoining the main block; and fulltime veterinary surgeons, keepers and managers in the comfortable, yet far from opulent array of units and cottages dotted along the outer perimeter fence of the seventeen acre Agra Bear Rescue Facility. I was a volunteer; a casual, unskilled, unpaid worker here to just ‘muck in’ and do what I could.

My 1965 caravan, the vets, keepers, managers and – at time of writing – one-hundred-and eighty-nine rescued sloth bears were located in Sur Sarowar, about sixteen miles from Agra, an ancient, pleasant enough city in Uttar Pradesh, Northern India. We were also just a few short miles from one of the world’s most famous buildings, the Taj Mahal – resting place of Shah Jahan’s favourite wife, Mumtaz Mahal, whoever he was and she was. To these sensibilities, quite a large and expensive building for a corpse to rattle around in while most of India’s ‘living’ citizens slummed in corrugated coffins. Shah Jahan was clearly an all too willing subscriber to the psalm of the sanctimonious – Money and religion equals ignorance and neglect.

The Agra Bear Rescue Facility – built for about the cost of Mumtaz Mahal’s burial dress – comprised two small quarantine pens, a larger socialisation enclosure and a very large forest enclosure. Among other things there was a cub weaning area, two large pools for the bears to cool off in and an excellent clinical laboratory equipped to cope with even the most diseased and downtrodden bear.

Today we were gearing up for the arrival of Misky, a three year old female sloth bear who had spent all but the first few months of her life dancing for money along the hot, polluted highway between Agra and the Taj Mahal. From all accounts, she was a mess with all sorts of infections, infestations and mental problems and she had one eye missing, gouged out by her Kalander keeper as part of her training. Sanctuary vets were readying to receive her. Meanwhile I was just running about planting trees, tidying up the enclosures, feeding some of the resident bears, hiding food to stimulate them and maybe draw some of the coyer ones out of their shells.

I had been told I would be involved with Misky’s arrival in some way, my first experience of a new bear arriving in the sanctuary. On the one hand, I was excited. On the other, I was anxious. I had been around rehabilitated dancing bears for two weeks now, bears that had been here six months or more. I had seen them frolicking in the pools, climbing trees and play fighting when they weren’t chilling out in their air-conditioned dens. I’d helped keepers feed them an endlessly interesting menu of rotis, fruit, honey, cooked soybean, boiled eggs, watermelon, mangos, pineapples, wheat porridge, gallons of milk and anything else their fractured hearts desired. I had seen partially or fully recovered bears revelling in a new life. What I had not yet seen was the raw material; the disfigured, diseased and tormented dancing bear straight off the streets of Agra.

*****

Alan Thompson, Agra Bear Rescue Facility general manager, a gruff, coarse Aussie workaholic perpetually clad in B-odorous khaki, was pacing. He was agitated. His new bear was imminent and the quarantine enclosure wasn’t ready.

‘Bailey!’ he bellowed as I rushed past with a sapling and a shovel. ‘Clean out one of the quarantine enclosures quick smart, mate! I’ve got a bloody bear arriving any minute and nowhere to put it! Give the pen a bloody good clean and put some fresh straw down. And we’ll need some warm milk in there as well. I’d get somebody to give you a hand if I could fuckin’ find anyone!’ He glared angrily around the compound. ‘Jesus! It’s like a fuckin’ ghost town round here! Where is everyone? Where’s that bloody fiancé of yours? Gabriel! Gabri-ellll!’

*****

Austin Hogg died in the early hours of Thursday, February 23rd from a massive heart attack, five months to the day after the Windy Dale terror campaign began. He had simply lost the will to live. Not that he seemed to have one in the first place. A sad man merely got sadder. From all accounts, the final indignity came when he was barred from his beloved Pig in Muck, at which point he went entirely mute. His last words, muttered some three weeks before his death were ‘Frim clogs te clogs i’ three generations,’ Yorkshirespeak for ‘Rags to riches to rags again in three generations.’

His funeral – which I attended in a discreet, distant, suited-gent-in-dark-glasses-lurking-in-trees sort of way – was on a bright, clear and bitterly cold Tuesday in late January. It was held at a small stone church bearing five hundred years of decay and mildew and six months of untended grass and weeds. It was, as you would expect, a simple affair, if simple is the right word for folk around there.

Of course, all the usual suspects were there: Mariabella, Melissa, Attie, the Devil Monkey Baby (growing bigger and uglier by the day), the wet feather and any number of locals who had also barred him from their lives of late. All hypocrites, all with champagne on ice for when the sombre, reverent part of the celebrations were out of the way. Simon was there as well.

As was Marcus Friend. He was with a small group of protesters waving ‘THE KING IS DEAD. LONG LIVE THE CHICKENS!’ placards, who were kept at a respectful distance by a small contingent of edgy police. Marcus Friend’s loud hallow had been confiscated the moment the service began and he hollered ‘We are gathered here today to bury a monster!’ All recorded by regional television news crews from the BBC, ITV and Sky News who had skulked about the lane with a bored ‘I’m bigger than this’ aloofness.

By the time Gabriel arrived alone in a small blue hatchback and joined the service beside her mother, her father was already being lowered into the ground. I imagined her saying something like ‘Sorry. I got lost,’ or ‘Sorry, I almost couldn’t be bothered,’ but I don’t know – I couldn’t hear or lip read from my angled position across the road in the trees. I had, however, seen her close enough to weep when she’d got out of her car, stern and cursing, all in black. She looked gorgeous.

Austin Hogg was laid to rest at the bottom of a hole. The wet feather stepped up, paused in prayer, then threw something in after him. Something that momentarily glinted in the sun and probably wasn’t supposed to break. A glass pint from the Pig in Muck Inn.

I saw bible readings: Simon, Attie (go figure) and Melissa (no figure). And then it was done. Men with shovels moved in with the grace of road workers and the ‘mourners’ moved off up the broken, weed-ridden path.

Gabriel said goodbye to her family outside rusted wrought iron gates, reserving the only hug for Simon, then marched head down for her car, a car she had only been out of for ten minutes, yet more than enough time for me to slip through the trees and be stationed within covert whispering distance. I waited until she was at the car door, a sombre little person in dark glasses returning to whatever it was she was returning to.

‘Gabriel! Gabriel!’

She heard me, then saw me.

And nothing changed. Not a hint of recognition. Not a twitch of an eyebrow. Not a flicker of a smile. She just walked into the trees, put her head on my chest, her arms around my waist, and hugged me.

Two weeks later, Austin Hogg’s Last Will and Testament was read before Family Hogg by, as Gabriel put it, ‘a suit of mothballs in Hustwickgate’. I didn’t attend. Gabriel did. As, of course, did Mariabella, Simon, Melissa and Attie. A ‘salivating’ set of hopefuls they were too according to Gabriel (with the exception of Simon, of course). Not quite as salivating as they would have been had Windy Dale Eggs still been North Yorkshire’s second largest battery hen egg producer. They’d have had to wear bibs.

This was the bit that made it all worthwhile. This was when all that hypocritical pandering to the old man’s needs bore fruit. How exactly would Austin Hogg’s depleted estate be divided up?

Answer? It wouldn’t be divided up at all.

Mariabella Hogg didn’t get a bean. Gabriel’s words: ‘I’ve never seen Mum lost for words. She sat there going “Ach! Ach!!” like she had fur balls, then screamed “But he loved me!’ At which point Attie leant round and said “Apparently not.” I pissed myself and I have never ever pissed myself with anything Attie said.’

Melissa and Attie Joubert didn’t get a bean. Gabriel’s words: ‘They were gutted. You could see them doing the maths in their glazed eyes when mum went out of the equation. I still hate my father, but, God bless him, he finally got something right.’

Simon didn’t get a bean. Gabriel’s words: ‘Dad got that horribly wrong. It was such a Dad thing to do. Nasty to the bitter end. Simon was Dad’s only ally. His drinking buddy. You know what Simon did? He told Dad he’d stolen Danby. He couldn’t live with the guilt. And now he’s got to live without the money he deserves. I think Simon was going to get the whole estate, or at least half of it. You know, it’s so unfair. Simon broke his back to please Dad without a single thank you. I did nothing but complain, cry, scream and ultimately leave, yet I was still the apple of his eye.’

Gabriel didn’t get a bean. Her words: ‘I was pleased. I didn’t deserve it. What Dad did to me didn’t kill me. What I did to Dad with that video was beyond stupid. Forget the little girl lost shit. I was old enough to know better. But I planted the seed, didn’t I? I took months, maybe years off Dad’s life and made him die a broken man when he could have died a proud man. But he got the last laugh. He knew we were living together. Mum told me. Attie the Slug did his dirty work for him. The night of the barbecue? Dad got Attie to check our wardrobe when he went to the loo. Mum thinks I was cut from the will right there.’

So who got Austin Hogg’s estate? Gabriel’s words: ‘There was no one left. We’d all sat there hearing Dad’s words read out to us: “To my drunken leech of a wife, Mariabella, I bequeath nothing. To my useless daughter, Melissa and her loathsome husband, Attie, I bequeath nothing. To my traitorous son, Simon, I bequeath nothing.”’

‘Then the bombshell – “I hereby bequeath my entire estate to the only person who didn’t treat me like a silly old fool and the only person I love unconditionally to the grave…My grandson, Jacques.”’

Jacques Joubert. The Devil Monkey Baby.

‘It was like someone had sucked all the air out of the room. Melissa and Attie, they were gasping like fish in the bottom of a boat. Mum was suicidal and Simon was just sitting there stunned. But you could see Attie and Melissa were groping for air and thinking “It’s coming to us after all! We’re getting everything!”

‘I could live another thousand years and not see anything as fantastically, wonderfully Dad as what happened next…There was a clause. After the bit that said I bequeath my entire estate to my grandson, Jacques, there was a short clause, which said something like…”Every cent of my estate is to go into a trust fund and be paid out in full in the name of Jacques Klippie Joubert on the occasion of his forty-fifth birthday.”

*****

Misky was a mess when she was lifted off the back of a flatbed truck in a purpose-built crate. I will live a long time before I see a more tragic sight…

Like most bears poached from the forests of Uttar Pradesh, Uttaranchai, Madhya Pradesh and Orissa for the now illegal dancing bear trade, Misky was a sloth bear. As was the norm, she was stolen from her mother’s den as a cub (her mother was either out foraging or shot) and sold to Kalander gypsies, the nomadic Muslim tribe who had danced bears across India for centuries. Barely months old, she was held down while a red hot poker was forced into the flesh of her muzzle and out through her nostril. A crude iron needle and jute rope was then shoved through the hole and knotted at one end to stop it slipping out. This rope would be the ‘magic’ key that made Misky dance. All her teeth were then smashed out with a hammer and her claws torn out with pliers – all without anaesthetic. To teach her to stand upright she was forced onto hot coals. The dancing? That was easy. One good yank on that rope rubbing against raw flesh would be enough to make anyone dance; what tourists saw as a cute gyrating bear was an animal wincing and flinching away from the pain. To us, incomprehensively cruel; to the Kalander gypsies, like pulling the wings off a fly.

Misky had been voluntarily turned over to the sanctuary by her Kalander owner, Azad, keen as he was to claim the fifty thousand rupees incentive offered by the Kalander Rehabilitation Programme. This sneaky piece of positive activism (note well, Marcus) was designed to give Kalanders a leg up into an alternative trade – to buy a rickshaw taxi, plant crops, set up a shop – thus breaking the vicious cycle which would normally see him straight off to the traders for a new bear. I had to admit it was better than beating Indians to death with sticks.

Misky was crying pathetically in her crate. And rocking. Driven insane through years of neglect, beatings and the ever-present pain from the filthy rope through her nose. The wounds on her muzzle were horrific, a large jagged hole raw, inflamed and oozing pus. Maggots crawled from the open wound. She cowered, rocked and wailed in her crate and there wasn’t a dry eye amongst us, hardened veterinarians and keepers weeping openly at her plight. I was sobbing. Gabriel was bawling. Even Alan Thompson who had seen it all was wiping away tears.

Then, in the context of her suffering, a wonderful moment as vets cut away her nose ropes and muzzle and she was free for the first time in her miserable life. We watched as she was led into her quarantine enclosure. There she would be monitored almost constantly for three months, treated for parasites, diseases and infections, and pumped full of health tonics before being released into a socialisation pen amongst other like-minded bears. Then, when she was ready, it would be on into the forests of the sanctuary proper.

It would be a long, difficult haul for her. She would have to learn to trust, an emotion she had been deprived of from a very young age. She would have to adapt to a strange new world without pain, a world full of oddly gentle people showering her with love and kisses, not punches and lashes. But, as evidenced by the other bears here, she would make it at least part way back to being the bear she could have been before the Kalanders stole her innocence.

*****

‘Creative Solutions, Gabriel speaking…Hi Ian. I’ll put you through to Charlie.’

Gabriel and I were at the Agra Bear Sanctuary for three weeks, without doubt the most emotional and rewarding three weeks of our lives. No question we will be back. For now we settle back into routine in a hot and surprisingly sunny North Yorkshire summer, a routine neither of us can complain about.

For Gabriel this routine is two fold. One fold is Creative Solutions relief receptionist between twelve and one, a role she detests but tolerates in the interests of role two. Role two, a role she is already showing immense promise in, is trainee account executive, her unlikely mentor, Charlie Chabot. Then again, I have changed my opinion on Charlie’s worthiness quite considerably. He is surely the world’s most apologetic man, his methods far from text book, his manner most-unadvertising – translation: transparent, respectable and selfless. I don’t think Gabriel could have a better tutor.

For me, routine is now heading the creative department in a pseudo creative director’s role, although my business cards still say senior copywriter – the grander title rather incompatible with my ‘follower’ mentality. Fergus Blaine has not been replaced. Instead I float between several graphic artists slash trainee art directors in the studio, which has its frustrations but also yields moments of blinding freshness.

As for Creative Solutions itself: we are attempting to diversify into the mainstream, a slow process thus far producing a Hustwickgate gym and a small bakery chain. Most gratifying however is the charity work; regular dollops of magnificent munificence on the part of our leader – currently just free campaigns for local animal refuges and the like, but early days.

Last I heard, Dave Land had found a new tenant for Hartley Castle House; I can only hope a tenant more receptive to the alarming comings and goings of animals than I was. Gabriel, Kurt, Courtney and I are now happily ensconced in a cosy two bedroom cottage with a decent kitchen, good sized lounge and ensuite main, not to mention a sixty acre yard made up of formal walled gardens, award-winning rose gardens, a spectacular herbaceous border-lined grand walk shooting long and straight from the Manor steps like a mini le Champ de Mars parklands, and picture perfect, white fenced fields dotted with oak trees and obscenely healthy looking sheep and cattle. A yard we share with an excellent bloke who had gladly babysat our dogs while we were in India; the sole resident of Killing Hall.

Last I heard Stacey Dobbyn, former hotel room cleaner and ex-lover of England midfielder Andrew Sandham had been found hanging upside down from a St. Pancras skip bin on the eve of the Chelsea versus FC Barcelona football match at Stamford Road.

As a target, she was an interesting choice. The obvious tack would have been Sandham’s family – Amanda George and their two toddlers, April Showers and Misty Rain. Or their dogs, Slim and Shady. Such was the security net around these prized possessions, it would have taken an armour-plated Hummer to get anywhere near them with a letter full of Anthrax. Same, of course, for Sandham himself.

Who else could Marcus Friend have targeted? It had to be someone Sandham held dear. His manager? A loyal fan? An up and coming prodigy? No. Marcus Friend set his sights on someone far closer to Sandham’s heart than that. Someone who would rock him to the core were she to come to any harm: the woman who cleaned the loos. And much though I hate to admit it and much though I am quick to vilify the action, it was a clever choice. Stacey Dobbyn now had celebrity status. Stacey Dobbyn now had money, fame and others cleaning her loo. But she did not have a security entourage as such, unless you called a seriously dwindling paparazzi interest an entourage; and she certainly couldn’t rely on them in a crisis.

So in the small hours of a Sunday night, while she was watching a rerun of the X Factor alone in bed, Stacey Dobbyn was abducted by masked men, gagged, bound to a meat hook and hung upside down from a St. Pancras back alley skip bin with a toy kangaroo shoved up her jumper. Until morning, rats were the only things any the wiser.

The timing of her abduction was interesting too, coming as it did on the eve of the Chelsea versus FC Barcelona match, a match Sandham played and reportedly played badly. For the record Chelsea won a dour, disappointing match by a single own goal. Sandham immediately went to ground and was quoted as being ‘extremely upset.’ It wasn’t made clear whether this was due to the result of the game or the knowledge his ex-squeeze had been hung upside down from a skip bin. Equally interesting, when an official two pronged Sandham statement was ultimately released to the media, neither of these prongs made even passing reference to football boots. He expressed ‘deep sorrow’ that ‘a former employee’ had been ‘attacked by violent terrorists’. That was prong one. In prong two he expressed his ‘sincere hope these callous, dangerous people’ were brought to justice as soon as possible. No prong three apropos the offending boots and his resultant attitude towards them now other than animals were suffering through his greed.

Frankly I was appalled by both of them – Friend for his abhorrent, fly-driven action, Sandham for his reticent money-driven reaction. I didn’t approve of the weaponry Marcus Friend threw on his bandwagon. Likewise I didn’t approve of the insult Sandham threw on his feet. In the end it came down to intelligence and my intelligence said ‘Stay out of it, monkey. We’re not in a great position to intervene.’

Last I heard the ALF’s Windy Dale Eggs file had been closed the same day Windy Dale Eggs closed. I’m told there were wild celebrations. But, knowing Marcus Friend, another file would have quickly opened. I held out

little hope for Marcus. One day he was sure to plonk a fat foot over the fine line separating him from his freedom. Only time would tell if he remained passionately attached to his snuff video. Only time would tell if we were ever irrevocably linked with the demise of Windy Dale Eggs and, I suppose, indirectly, Austin Hogg. I have a strange empathy for Marcus now, born in the main out of a mutual love for animals, but also due to a conspicuous overlapping of feelings on more controversial matters of creed and greed, feelings we, from time to time, vent down a fibre optic cable.

I also sympathise with him in a peculiar, patronising way. Pillion Passengers on the Storm is probably not where he’d imagined himself to be in middle age. But then, squatting in an English country estate probably wasn’t where I’d imagined I’d be at my age either. At least I know what I’m doing now. Marcus Friend clearly doesn’t. His modus operandi is both flawed and unpopular. I can relate to his fly theory. Sadly, so long as animal activists like him fail to find more positive offensives such as those employed to dismantle a centuries old Kalander tradition, they themselves will remain as endearing as flies in the eyes of the general community. It seems inevitable that we will hear of Marcus Friend again. Via the front pages of every major daily is my bet.

Last I heard our Asok Marauder ad received a ‘highly commended’ from Sepalika, this being the euphemistic equivalent of ‘Nice try.’ I was disappointed for Fergus Blaine. But not that disappointed. As it happens, JAS 360 didn’t win the account anyway. As is often the case in the strangely conscienceless world of advertising, the account stayed where it was – with the incumbent – the five agencies who had thrown the sort of money most charities can only dream of into winning the business, left to wonder why they bothered.

As for Fergus Blaine, he called me to say goodbye. He was off to try his luck in, of all places, New Zealand. I never found out where he lived. I never found out who he was. I told him to keep in touch. He told me he would, ‘he truly would.’

Enough said.

Last I heard, the widowed Mariabella Hogg, in a last desperate attempt to salvage something from her sham of a marriage, had hired a ten ton lorry at very short notice, ordering driver and lugger to pack anything she pointed at in Chicken Colditz HQ. This being every item of furniture and every ornament she could either use or pawn once she got back to Oxford – none of which she now had any title to. Accounts vary as to who ratted on her – either Attie or Melissa or Attie and Melissa. Suffice it to say lorry and stolen goods didn’t even get out the compound gates.

While the trial and sentencing for this rather complicated, paper work-intensive offence are still pending, Mariabella has already been through the courts for the much more straightforward offence of assaulting an attending police officer whilst sconed off her brain. She duly attended court similarly affected and, once sworn affidavits confirmed her religious fervour for the top shelf, she was frogmarched into enforced rehab. I have no doubt Mariabella considers her life to be over. I also have no doubt she will soon discover, through twelve suddenly procured hours of additional daily sobriety, that it may well have just begun.

Last I heard the essentially broke and broken Attie and Melissa Joubert and their small pot of unattainable gold – the Devil Monkey Baby – had moved to Perth, an appropriately clichéd thing for an English family to do. I assume their other option had been the equally sunny, beach-wrapped Durban back in Attie’s beloved South Africa. Not much difference between Perth and Durban as it happens, aside from the apartheid. In Australia. Sadly Attie Joubert was going to feel right at home oppressing Aborigines.

Last I heard Simon Hogg, now fatherless and, effectively, motherless, had packed all his paltry possessions into a suitcase, walked out the door of Chicken Colditz HQ for the last time and moved into a single room with a single bed, a single desk lamp, a set of drawers, a freestanding wardrobe and not much else.

Last I heard, literally two weeks ago, Gabriel needed to ‘p-put a sock in her mouth’ because our (we thought) considerate love making through the wall was disturbing his sleep.

It had been an easy and quite convenient decision for Charlie to sack his incumbent care-taker/groundsman/stock keeper/dog looker-after and replace him with Simon Hogg: ‘He was,’ Charlie had said, ‘an oddly creepy old perv with a nasty habit of being at windows looking in when you looked out. I expect he’s gone to Bangkok.’

Simon, for a man with so much blood on his hands, had traversed the great divide between tormentor and tender with consummate ease and considerable boyish glee. He admitted to me once that he always named as many of the birds in the cages as he could so he could pray for them individually at night. Now he didn’t need to pray for any animal, just look after forty or so until the day they died, a day they would choose themselves. I learnt about Charlie’s sheep and cattle the morning of the York pub visit, sheep and cattle in the fields of Killing Hall for two reasons: they made excellent lawn mowers and because they looked nice when Charlie opened his bedroom curtains in the morning. And, of course, because, like me, Charlie had a soft spot for animals, these the lucky few who had found their way onto Charlie’s estate.

Among other things it was Simon’s job to maintain their heated shelter, and maintain the lawns the animals couldn’t get at, and maintain the roses, walled gardens, fences, outbuildings, and God knows what else. He was a busy man, but a happy man. He was thriving on it and he particularly thrived on the animals – thirty-two sheep and lambs he had named and insisted he could tell apart, though I insisted he was lying; a dozen cattle he had also named and insisted he could tell apart. This time I had to agree with him. I could tell them apart too. Particularly the ones I had named myself, the ones I looked for every morning when I parted the bedroom curtains; the woolly polar bear impersonators, Ping Ping and Yang Yang.

I suppose, in effect, Gabriel and I had adopted Simon, although Gabriel was still his baby half-sister and, at pretty much the same age, I was more like a brother. It was also fair to say Charlie Chabot was stepping swiftly and quite seamlessly into the breach as the surrogate father, the sort of father Simon never had. It would be a long, difficult haul for him. He would have to learn to trust, an emotion he had been deprived of from a very young age. He would have to adapt to a strange new world without pain, a world full of oddly gentle people showering him with love and kisses, not booze and tongue lashes. But, as evidenced by recent experience, he would make it at least part way back to being the man he could have been before Family Hogg stole his innocence.

Last I heard – literally in this morning’s Times newspaper – Andrew Sandham announced the cessation of his Asok Marauder contract, effective immediately. His official statement read, in part: ‘My decision is not due to the fear and intimidation by animal rights groups. If anything, the callous attack on a former employee delayed my decision and I was determined not to let them get their way. In the end, my decision was for humane reasons as I could not condone the slaughter of kangaroos to make football boots.’

It is yet to be seen how this fabulous decision will impact on Asok and their attitude to kangaroo skin boots. It is also yet to be seen how it will impact on the Australian government and their determination to eradicate a national treasure: After all, only months before the Sandham decision, they raised the kangaroo kill quota from seven to eight million.

Last I heard the very last dancing bear had been removed from the shadows of the Taj Mahal, a massive victory for the rescue operation. However, at time of writing there were still upwards of six hundred bears just like Misky dancing in the streets of India. As they say, from little things, big things grow and we will certainly do Agra again, short sharp bursts where our services can be best utilised. Already the experience has awoken in us the desire to continue to make a difference.

Lastly, last I heard Gabriel and I were still not married, were in fact no closer to doing so, the giddy heights of Paris a distant, fond memory growing fonder by the day, though priorities have changed rather drastically, as have budgets – equally drastically. And while a pool of refunded Hartley Castle House rent money now sits in an account accruing interest, we have accrued interest in undoing old knots rather than tying new ones. That money gets us back to India.

Despite Gabriel’s emailed proclamations to the contrary, there had been no new boyfriend. There had however been a determination to storm about metaphorically slamming doors. I am pleased to report that Gabriel has now resolved to seek anger management counselling in return for the surgical removal of my second face. Neither of these great leaps forward is yet to proceed past a mere resolution – I am loathe to force the issue as it only makes her angry.

That said I like the idea of one face facing all, a united front so to speak. I like the idea. I am apprehensive about the practicalities. Just as Gabriel’s rages have been a form of safety net for her – an offensive defence mechanism to counter the lack of a rational argument – a full compliment of double standards has afforded me certain freedoms as well. To suddenly lose half these standards does seem scarily restrictive. Like a gun in a bedside table you have no intention to use, it’s just nice to know they’re there.

Yet while two heads are better than one, two faces are apparently not. So when Gabriel is ready to be consistently civil, I will officially shed the charlatan and stride boldly into my new world of flagrant transparency, toting ideals, emotions and status about in a dirty great parcel of cling film, baring my soul as proudly as a nudist bares their genitals. I will be me and me alone. A scary notion leaving me open to both ridicule and rejection. Yet the only way I can find my true worth.

Chapter Fifty Six

56


The JAS 360

Friday, February 10

Yorkshire turned on a spotless winter’s day for the drive down to Leeds, a seamless, spirit-lifting sky suspended high over the land. Even the traffic was in light mood, our journey south on the A1, fast and uncluttered, Fergus Blaine beside me in the Volvo rehearsing our presentation, nerves healthily jangled, double act rote-learned down to the word. It felt slick, professional. And Blaine’s idea wasn’t too awful either. We were as ready as we could be. Now we just had to hope we were better than everyone else.

‘Okay, Bailey,’ Blaine said as automatic doors opened to JAS 360’s white tiled interior. ‘This is it.’ He held out his hand and I shook it. We exchanged a moment. ‘Good luck,’ he said.

‘Good luck to you too, Fergus,’ I said. And we went in.

*****

The meeting was going well. Four teams had already presented. Badly, I thought – their efforts greeted with a smatter of polite applause and underwhelmed looks from Sepalika. In a democratic gesture, each of the nine teams had drawn a number from a hat from one to nine to decide the presentation order. We were Team Seven.

Team Five presented. Very well. Team Six presented. Even better – clearly a senior team, heavyweights of the JAS 360 world. No doubt responsible for a goodly number of the plaques and trophies adorning the walls and shelves of the boardroom, no doubt accustomed to success and expecting to find more here. Team Five’s presentation had been bad enough – or good enough depending on your stance. But Team Six was a disaster. Clearly, they were now frontrunners.

Sepalika stood. ‘Well done, Angela and Damien. Again, we’ll save any comments til the end.’

‘No, we bloody won’t,’ said John King draped over his leather chair like a bearded bean bag. ‘That was fucking magnificent!’

‘Up next we have our freelance team, Bailey Harland and Fergus Blaine.’

We went to stand.

‘Whose idea was it to bring in freelancers?’ John King again.

‘Mine,’ said Sepalika. ‘These boys have done some excellent work. Eyes to the future, John.’

‘Eyes to the fucking bottom line, Seppie. We’ve got creatives coming out our fucking ears! All of them working on this job, I might add, at the expense of our existing clients who are all wondering if we give a fuck anymore. I tell you what. If we don’t win this bloody business…’ He left this ominously open, sat back shaking his head.

‘Can the boys present now, John? Is that all right with you?’

‘Yeah. Whatever. How much are we paying you two?’

I looked to Sepalika who gave a tight smile. ‘The going freelance rate?’

‘Well, present and go…Bloody freelancers.’

And so the scene was set for our presentation. We moved to the head of the table like convicts to the stocks.

‘Swerve it like Sandham,’ said Fergus Blaine facing his largely hostile audience and reiterating the unique selling proposition, perhaps unnecessarily, already off script and clearly nervous. He was back in his Mendicant Makeover linens for the first time since we last visited JAS 360, uncomfortable enough without the bearded bean bag bagging his every move. His hands were shaking in his lap and mine weren’t much better (for entirely different reasons) as I stood to his left and waited to reveal the first frame of Fergus’s masterfully, laboriously sketched and coloured TVC story board.

‘It doesn’t get any more single-minded than that,’ said Fergus referring to the aforementioned unnecessarily mentioned unique selling proposition and saying this to people utterly qualified to make this assumption for themselves. ‘It’s a lovely succinct message opening endless creative opportunities.’

‘Just one will do, Fang,’ said the heckling bean bag at the other end of the long table.

‘Well, as it happens, one is exactly what you’ll get, John.’ Don’t veer from the script, Fergus. ‘And I don’t mean to sound overconfident, but we truly believe this idea hits the nail on the head.’

John King shot amused looks around the room and chortled ‘Do you now, Fang? I hope your ads are better than your fucking dental hygiene!’

I winced by the storyboard and wanted to strangle John King. I’d seen so many advertising men like him, CEO figureheads, pencil heads, eggheads and dunderheads who had bludgeoned their way to the top through their own form of ‘charismatic’ terrorism, then led like Third World dictators wining and dining clients with brazen familiarity, only appearing amongst the workers when pissed, cantankerous and flirtatious. The bigger the agency, the worse they got. It seemed impossible to be a highly successful agency without having a wanker at the head. I pined for the bumbling, blissfully unassuming ways of Charlie Chabot.

Fergus Blaine meanwhile was in an early presentation crisis. ‘I don’t mean to be funny, John,’ he said, voice shaky. ‘But if we ordered pizzas, do you think you could shut up and give us a chance?’

I heard a whoop at the table and saw hands clapping above a head. It was Sepalika. Blaine had scored an unexpected point with the person who mattered most and it buoyed him immensely. The bearded bean bag John King settled back like he had a puncture. ‘Fire away, Fang,’ he said with intended menace.

‘Thank you.’ Blaine peered around at me. ‘Ahm, we have some indicative music if Bailey wants to…’

Bailey did want to. I pushed play on the JAS 360 stereo and indicative music poured forth. The indicative music was on a CD, my only real contribution to the presentation – a looped version of all the instrumental and semi-instrumental bits from John Lydon’s Sun (Leftfield Mix) – an indicatively European club mix with an indicatively head nodding beat and much less indicative sprightly piano accordion riff to juxtapose the grimy New York locale of Blaine’s ad with an intrinsically English feel. As indicative music, it was only really indicative of my suspect attitude.

This track was now playing at a level Blaine could comfortably talk over while I manned the storyboard, ready to reveal each frame one by one according to rehearsed cues: not too hard for even a mug with a suspect attitude – I simply revealed the next frame when Fergus said ‘Cut to…’

He readied himself, one hand on a scrawny hip, the other clutching a script, nodded at me and I revealed the first frame.

He began: ‘The scene is a concrete outdoor basketball court somewhere on the bad side of the Bronx, New York City. There’s thick gauge chicken wire all round the court, steam rising from drains, old beaten up cars, dirt and stray dogs. Three huge Afro American guys are playing half court basketball ala the movie ‘White Men can’t jump’, two against one. In other words, they need another player.’

‘Cut to one of them seeing a white guy sitting on the bleaches watching. Cut to them talking to the white guy. It’s Andrew Sandham. They’re clearly asking if he can play basketball and he just shrugs. Cut to him pulling a football out of his bag with an ‘I dare you’ raised eyebrow. Cut to the three black guys looking down at him with Bronx-style ‘Are you serious, mutha fucka?’ faces. Cut to them playing frenetic two on two football on the concrete basketball court with an improvised goal spray painted on the chicken wire. Cut to Sandham getting fouled. Cut to him hands on hips, head tilted – he’s readying for an angled free kick and he’s unhappy with the wall. Cut to the wall – two black guys with their hands over their privates. Cut to him gesticulating for them to move back. Cut to them moving back. Cut to him gesticulating for them to move left. Cut to them moving left. Cut to him gesticulating widely, left, right, back, left again, right again – all the usual gesticulations you’d see him use in a match as he tries to get the wall just the way he wants it. Cut to him giving the thumbs up. Cut to behind him as we reveal the ball placed for the free kick, Sandham about to take the free kick. And, in front of him, we can now see the wall…’

Heart in mouth, I revealed the frame – the punch line of Blaine’s ad.

‘The wall is a twenty foot long, twelve foot high, five deep wall of people Sandham has called in off the streets of the Bronx, all of them with hands over their privates, even the ones sitting and standing on shoulders. That’s the wall he wanted. That’s the challenge he wanted in his magic boots. We cut to Sandham as he moves in, strikes…Cut to logo and side profile of the boot and slogan: Asok Marauder. Swerve it like Sandham. We briefly cut back as people are climbing down off the human wall looking bemused and in the foreground Sandham is running around with his arms wide, his shirt pulled over his head.

‘The end,’ said Blaine taking a bow to polite applause, applause which petered out into one booming repetitive clap…

We turned to John King who was slapping his great fat palms together. ‘Bravo, Fu and Fang. Like it!’

Fergus sat as fast he could. I stayed standing.

‘Mister Fergus Blaine!’ I said arm outstretched his way. Blaine looked down the table at me bemused. ‘Yeah, thanks John,’ I said. ‘It’s a nice ad, isn’t it?’ I stuck my hands in my pockets and slowly paced around the table, eyes to the floor, heads turning as I went. ‘I’m going to come clean. I had absolutely nothing to do with that ad. It was Fergus’s idea through and through. So if there’s to be any credit, please direct it at him.’

I stopped opposite him, eyeballed him. Blaine looked aghast. Sepalika looked concerned. Everyone else just looked as ad people looked in such situations – wide-eyed, expectant and praying for a car wreck.

I continued on my circuit. ‘So feeling like a spare prick at a wedding, I decided I’d better throw an idea of my own into the mix.’ I turned at the head of the table. ‘I’ll quickly show it to you now. And, if you don’t mind, I’ve brought someone along to help me.’

Murmurs around the room as I went to the boardroom door, opened it and peered out into reception. I nodded at a figure on a couch and they made for the door. Leaving the door open, I went to the head of the table. All eyes were on the door. ‘I’d like you all to meet a dear friend of mine. Mister Charlie Chabot.’

‘Jesus Christ!’ blurted Blaine as his old boss took a few tentative steps into the room.

‘Hello. Hello,’ said Charlie, nodding about like a priest at a children’s picnic. He was carrying my Sony Vaio laptop – open and running, paused at the start of a DVD. He placed the laptop at the end of the long table.

John King aimed a finger at Charlie, amused eyes on Sepalika. ‘Who the fuck is this?’

‘Ahm. Sorry. Yes,’ said Charlie. ‘A brief introduction. My name is Charlie Chabot, that’s C-H-A-B-O-T. Managing director of Creative Solutions, York, specialising in real estate, but branching out into what you might call the mainstream as we speak. So there we are.’ He rung his hands and smiled reverentially around blank and bemused faces.

‘Ahm,’ I said, ‘No background required – this will be fairly self-explanatory. But to ensure you really get the idea, we’ve created a sixty second animatic. I hope you like it. All cued up, Charlie?’

‘Sorry!’ He dived for the laptop. ‘Indeed it is!’

‘Fire away.’

We both slunk back against the wall as the animatic began.

And I have to say the studio at Creative Solutions had done a pretty decent job of it. The audio was actual football commentary from Arsenal versus FC Barcelona, the video cut directly from Killing for Kicks – roos being felled; joeys torn from pouches; a little boy stomping on a joey, thrashing another against the side of a truck, raising the dead baby triumphantly above his head; the shocking juxtaposed with the frenetic. You’ll get a feel for where the main images go, as loose links are provided by the commentary.

Melancholy violin underscored riotous crowd noise as famous English commentator Martin Tyler began: ‘Sandham gets past Giggs…past Dixon, who comes back at him…It’s a wonderful run by Sandham! Sensational shot by Andrew Sandham in the second period of extra time! He’s cut them to ribbons and the team with ten men go back in front, two one!’ A new voice now, the fever-pitched tones of eternally co-commentating Scotsman, Andy Gray over the same melancholy violin: ‘Well, words fail me, words fail me! Stunned Arsenal fans!…Joyous Barcelona fans! He just bobbed and weaved and when he needed a finish, my God did he give us one! Beating three, four, five…Wonderful, wonderful! Fit to win any football match!’ The screen faded black. A caption dissolved up: ASOK MARAUDER. MADE FROM KANGAROOS. WORN BY WOMBATS.

‘Thanks for watching,’ I said stepping forward to stunned silence. ‘I hope you will seriously consider this ad in the final analysis, the beauty of it being, of course, that it can go straight to air. Thank you, Fergus. Your idea’s excellent and I hope your lack of a writer doesn’t hinder your chances of employment here. Thanks Sepalika. I’ve appreciated the chance to do something really worthy for a great agency. And John? If there is any moral fibre buried beneath all that lard, you’ll seriously rethink your association with Asok.’ I flicked a beer coaster across the desk with Marcus Friend’s handwriting on it. ‘Here’s a web address for anyone who gives a shit. Thanks, you’ve been a wonderful audience. Charlie? Get me out of this cess pit.’
And with that I marched out of life as it was forever.

Chapter Fifty Five

55


The adman’s exit exam

As creatively and convincingly as you can, explain why it is wrong to be a hypocrite.

‘Gabby tells me you’re a bit of a one for the animals, Bailey,’ said the voice in my head. ‘Do you even love animals or is it just something you use to pull girls? Don’t you dare get down on bended knee! You’re lying to yourself! You’re lying to me! And, worse, you’re lying to the chickens! It is my destiny, dear people. Hi, Bailey! It’s Fergus! Shit! That is a proper police car, monkey! Tell me about Sunny Queen Eggs, monkey. Get out! Get out! Before I call the police! They’ll be round these parts every Sunday til February now. I’m Charlie Chabot! Do you think we’re bad people? You are a couple of opportunist leeches no more worthy than them. If you’re calling to congratulate Gabriel and I on our engagement, there is no engagement. How could you think it was okay to pretend to be rich?!! Daftness never built owt worth leaving oop. That’s a shiny wheelbarrow you’ve got there. Hi, Bailey! It’s Fergus! You say you can’t handle seeing animal cruelty. But you’ve seen this and you’re still functioning. They’re in there all the time. The images. The misery. How can I get it through to you that an inbuilt talent for hypocrisy is a crucial prerequisite of my job! Tell me about Sunny Queen Eggs, monkey. That’s all he does all day, all day he slits the tummies. A little sandy haired, smiley boy. They’re in there all the time. The images. The misery. There are other more creative uses for this camera. Can you loosen my ankles a bit? Hi, Bailey! It’s Fergus! Tell me about Sunny Queen Eggs, monkey. I don’t feel anythink (sic) at all. That’s my job. We don’t hunt. We just shoot them. I’m…going to… you know, b-butcher them for our own use. I sent them this morning. I admit it! That’s me! I’d advertise cigarettes if there was a quid in it! It never goes away. It messes with your mind, torments you constantly. The only thing bigger than Andrew Sandham, the footballer…is Andrew Sandham the celebrity. The small joeys are killed by the Code of Practice, which is a sharp blow to the back of the head. That cat is his fly. Tell me about Sunny Queen Eggs, monkey. Tell me about Sunny Queen Eggs, monkey. Tell me about Sunny Queen Eggs, Monkey. It messes with your mind, torments you constantly. It messes with your mind, torments you constantly. It messes with your mind, torments you constantly. The only way to get any peace is to fight. I have to fight.’

It is my destiny, dear people.

Now, equally creatively and convincingly, explain why it is right to be a hypocrite.

Because…because…because…

Chapter Fifty Four

54


Andrew Sandham: Football legend or urban legend?

BBC talk show host, Jonathan Ross once described football as a simple game played by simple men. I have to agree. All the smart ones played rugby. All the really smart ones played cricket. Sure, rugby had its share of coke snorting Dallaglios, handbag-wielding Umagas and celebrity-dating Hensons, and cricket had Shane Warne. But for sheer repetitive public stupidity right across the board, football was your game. An excellent case in point was Andrew Sandham. England’s richest sportsman by the length of a stretch limo, Andrew Sandham earned fifteen million pounds a year playing for FC Barcelona and God knows how much more through product endorsements, the most lucrative of these being, of course, Asok Marauders and their over promise catchcry ‘Swerve it like Sandham!’

Sandham famously married socialite Celebrity Big Brother winner, Amanda George, a former stripper from Bournemouth. George, blessed with no celebrity status at all, had been planted in the house amongst all the ‘real celebrities’ as a bit of fun and was expected to be outed within days. So it surprised everyone when she went on to not only win, but become instantly more famous than all those with a supposed talent. Her most endearing features were her inherent outspoken stupidity and her love of makeup and Ug boots, attributes which made her ideal as a footballer’s wife. No one expected that footballer to be Andrew Sandham. While not blessed with any brains himself, he could certainly afford someone smart and a full time interpreter. But no, he married someone stupid and got fulltime nannies so Amanda George couldn’t get near enough to their kids to accidentally stand on them while drunk.

Then came the alleged affairs – Geri Halliwell and Emma Bunton – both denied and never properly confirmed by the paparazzi. Then came the first confirmed affair: a hotel room cleaner named Stacey Dobbyn. Admittedly a very pretty and extremely young hotel room cleaner named Stacey Dobbyn, but a nobody who cleaned loos nevertheless. No paparazzi required – she sold her story to the News of the World for the equivalent of five years cleaning. Sandham was duly vilified for not sleazing with someone famous, while the hotel room cleaner named Stacey Dobbyn snuck quietly into the night and wasn’t sighted again until I’m a Celebrity. Get me out of here!

There were other much publicised, yet unsubstantiated flings: a dog walker named Nancy and two student stripogrammers named Brit and Heidi. Throughout the ensuing tabloid massacre, Amanda George stood by her husband as steadily as she could hammered in high heels.

All of this scandal took up more real estate in the tabloids than a hundred housing estates. A Google search of Andrew Sandham brought up five lists of lurid gossip sites before a single mention of football. More importantly for this observer, it would be page nineteen before I found a single mention of his cursed boots and their scandalous origins. Either the public didn’t care or the message wasn’t getting through, delivered as it was exclusively by fanatical librarians nobody took a blind bit of notice of. I had to wonder what would happen now that the equally fanatical, but considerably more unhinged Marcus Friend was on the case.

Nevertheless I had no desire to witness the cold, calculated dismantling of Andrew Sandham’s will no matter how errant he had been putting his name to the stupid boots in the first place and no matter how much I wanted the cull to cease. Intimidation didn’t change attitudes, it merely altered behaviour. What really mattered more long term? What really brought about lasting change?

Speaking of lasting change, I was party to a fair bit of it myself, most in the form of recent or impending messy ends: The end of Gabriel and I; the end of a short, sharp relationship with Hartley Castle House and its working farm; and, it would seem from latest media reports, the imminent end of Chicken Colditz and Windy Dale Eggs.

This from Saturday’s Times: ‘The small North Yorkshire hamlet of Skipton-le-Beans continues to lick its wounds and look over its shoulder as a terror campaign by animal activists enters its fourth month. In a war of threats, arson attacks and vandalism reminiscent of the tragic Newchurch guinea pig farm saga, activists attempting to force the closure of local businessman, Austin Hogg’s battery hen farm, Windy Dale Eggs, have targeted anyone alleged to have dealings with the Hoggs, including the local pub, bank, and even a sports club where Austin Hogg’s son played rugby. The Hogg’s own house has also been attacked. Spokesperson for Windy Dale Eggs, Mariabella Hogg, said the family were already at their wits end. ‘We saw what went on at Newchurch and how long it went on for. They’re not going to leave us alone, are they? We may as well give them what they want, pack it in now and save ourselves years of heartache. Our farm’s worthless. We’re worthless.’

It was a long quote, but I’m sure she said considerably more that was unprintable. Interestingly, no mention of any apparent inebriation. The article went on in some detail about the letters, the attacks and the aftermath. A gent named Ian Blackmore – who must have been the wet feather – spoke on behalf of the Pig in Muck Inn. He was quoted as saying ‘We are still in shock. But we must move on. It pains us greatly, but for the safety of all our customers, the Hoggs have agreed not to frequent our establishment.’

It was strange witnessing the Hogg’s demise in print from across the moors having had such a vested interest in their success and Austin Hogg’s heart failure such a short time ago. Leaping on the bandwagon of Gabriel’s hatred. Leaping even more enthusiastically on the mountain of cash we only had to keep our mouths shut to inherit. Sitting a safe distance from all that with nothing left to gain or lose, I was left with just the emotional gains and losses to assess in an objective, unfettered light. And I have to say we were all as bad as each other. Mariabella was still there for one reason. Attie and Melissa Joubert were still there for one reason. And, it would seem, we were all going to get pretty much what we deserved.

Not very much.

The only certainty in any of this was that Austin Hogg was going to die. Current events may even have advanced that eventuality. And there would still be money, once the bulldozers moved in and knocked down everything but the big, old white house, the former Chicken Colditz HQ and left ten acres of boggy dale land. Blessed as I was with such a long history of the North Yorkshire property market, Windy Dale Eggs seemed about as valuable as a spent hen. Yet properly killed, gutted and cleaned it might still fetch a few hundred thousand pounds. A far cry from what might have been.

What was done was done. Now, with nothing left of my England odyssey – no fiancé, no wedding, no big wad of cash – nothing but me, my dogs and a couple of new friends, it was time to bury what was left of the charade once and for all.

It was time for me to take my leave.

Chapter Fifty Three

53


How to cook a cat

Fergus Blaine sat on the ‘guest’ stool at the Court Room bar. Gabriel’s elderly ex-boyfriend sat on Gabriel’s old stool. I sat on my usual bench in the judge’s stand battling the irony. Three bottles of Yorkshire’s finest Black Sheep Riggwelter ale sat empty on the bar beside tall, full glasses. Two dogs slept just as soundly as they always had by a slowly building fire, just as they had when Gabriel had held sway on the high stool; just as they did now she was gone. Nothing against Kurt and Courtney – dogs didn’t move on any faster than people did, they were just better at bottling their emotions.

And right now I’d have paid top dollar to bottle Marcus Friend’s entire repertoire of emotions and stick them somewhere Fergus Blaine’s prying mind couldn’t touch them. The harsh reality was this: I was harbouring a terrorist and an ocean-going stool pigeon had just dropped anchor in our cove. I didn’t know how to deal with this other than to ply Fergus Blaine with full strength beer masquerading as shandy in the hope he fell off his stool before Friend said anything damning. Blaine, it had emerged during his brief, unfortunate stay at Hartley Castle House, was not a big drinker – two shandies and he was an embarrassment; three and he passed out.

‘What’s this?’ said Blaine fingering the glass of dark fluid before him on the bar.

‘Shandy,’ I said. It was, in fact, Black Sheep Riggwelter, 5.7% alcohol by volume, watered down with Absolut vodka.

‘It’s a bit dark for shandy.’

‘It’s dark beer, Fergus. Lemonade can’t touch it. Trust me on this one.’

And so we proceeded into the night, our dysfunctional little threesome becoming more dysfunctional by the blurted Blaine utterance: Upon discovering that his new friend was a singer, songwriter: ‘Really, Marcus? That surprises me, considering your age and everything, and I don’t mean that in a nasty way, just I’ve never heard of you and I follow the local music scene pretty closely. I mean, you’re hardly Mick Jagger, been there, done that, made millions, are you? Even if you are about the same age. I reckon you must be just starting out in music. Not that I’m suggesting a midlife crisis or anything. Good for you giving it a go. You might as well. You’re pretty much unemployable at your age. Those tattoos won’t help either. You know what? I really hope it works out for you, I truly do.’

Scattergun critique complete, Blaine sucked furiously at his ‘shandy’.

Marcus Friend was too stunned to say anything.

Fergus Blaine, on discovering (with a little help from me) that his new friend had, in fact, done nothing before music, was, in fact, a serial failure as a singer, songwriter, a no hit wonder who had recently resorted to covering Doors songs: ‘I don’t mean to be funny, but don’t you feel a bit of a fraud playing other people’s songs?’

Friend opened his mouth.

‘Why The Doors? Aren’t they a bit seventies? And don’t you think you’re a bit fat to be Jim Morrison? You know what? Pillion Passengers on the Storm doesn’t do it for me either. Isn’t it a bit gimmicky? A bit childish?’

‘The name is a play on the greatest Doors song ever written,’ said Friend, surprisingly obviously, surprisingly flaccidly, unsurprisingly over-

wrought.

‘I realise that, Marcus. I think everyone else realises it too. It’s just a bit try hard, a bit Douglas Adams. The movie, not the book. Which actually wasn’t Douglas Adams fault, because he’s dead at the moment. So’s Jim Morrison. Not that I’m trying to draw any parallels. Does anyone advise you on this stuff? Baring in mind we’re probably talking very limited budgets and poor crowds, you probably do it all yourself. It must be so hard, so humiliating. I’d change that name if I were you.’


Fergus Blaine on discovering that Gabriel was also Marcus’s ex-squeeze: ‘Really? Why should that impress me, Marcus? And I don’t mean that in a patronising way; I just don’t share this attraction for midgets.’

I laughed. ‘Say what you mean, Fergus!’

‘I did, Bailey. Speaking of midgets, where is she?’

I cleared my throat. ‘She, ah, left me.’

‘I’m sorry to hear that, Bailey. Sexual issues?’

‘Fuck off!’

‘It usually is.’ He grimaced, discoloured, mismatch teeth like a cattle train derailing in his mouth. ‘Not wanting to alarm you, Bailey, this must be a trying time for you. But you’ll struggle to meet someone else at your age.’

I scoffed. ‘I’m thirty-five! Marcus is the one with the bloody age problem!’

‘What is this fixation with age?’ Marcus Friend rediscovered his voice. ‘Master Blaine. Among your peculiar cache of attributes, do you have the capacity to shut up?’

Blaine gawped at him.

‘Good! Now may I please direct the conversation back to where we were an hour ago!’

‘Fergus wasn’t here an hour ago, Marcus,’ I said.

‘I can only reminisce,’ Friend said with a melodramatic sigh. ‘Fergus?’ He waited until Blaine turned squinted eyes his way. ‘If it’s all right with you, I wish to resume a debate rudely interrupted, the subject matter of which was flies.’

‘Oh God,’ said Blaine. ‘Don’t start me on flies!’

‘I wouldn’t dream of it,’ Friend said flatly.

The paperback he had extracted in the Great Hall an hour ago reappeared from a coat pocket. He suddenly sat higher on his stool, higher in general demeanour, pet subject, perhaps his only subject, at the ready, perhaps, as he saw it, on the verge of restoring the balance.

‘I quote,’ he said, ‘from a book I happen to have brought with me entitled Animal Ethics by Robert Garner, Reader in Politics at the University of Leicester. This short, sharp extract describes a charming little scene filmed in the kitchen of a Chinese restaurant. It reads…While the cat claws and screeches, the cook hits her several times with an iron bar. Clawing and screeching more now, she is abruptly submerged in a tub of scalding water for about ten seconds. Once removed, and while still alive, the cook skins her from head to tail in one swift pull. He then throws the traumatized animal into a large stove vat where we watch her gulp slowly, her eyes glazed, until she drowns. The whole episode takes several minutes. When the meal is served, the diners eat heartily, offering thanks and praise to the cook.’

He flopped the book face down in his lap with a loud slap, looked up for a reaction. I gave one amid waves of revulsion: ‘That would have to be the most shocking thing I’ve ever heard.’

‘That,’ said Friend, ‘is what we in the west might call won ton cruelty. Hideous. Quite literally beyond the realms of western sensibilities.’ He raised a finger. ‘Careful though. That Asian chef? Try telling him he shouldn’t cook live cats. Or cook cats at all! That cat is his fly.’

‘His what?’ said Blaine, slit eyed, jaw slack.

‘Drink your shandy, Fergus,’ I said. And he drank.

‘You know,’ said Blaine coming up for air, the shrill cries of cooking cats still ringing in my ears, ‘they do the same thing with lobsters in some countries.’

‘Lobsters? Really?’ Friend said sarcastically with a tired gaze my way.

Blaine nodded as vigorously as his deteriorating coordination would allow. ‘Terrible,’ he said. ‘I tried it once and it cost twenty quid! I mean it was a real treat choosing your own live lobster from an aquarium and every-thing. That’s how they did it, live lobsters from an aquarium, boiled alive and brought to your table fresh as you like. And I was just thinking, wouldn’t it be nice if you could choose your own cat. Not from an aquarium, be-cause cats can’t swim. But they might have a pit of kitty litter next to the buffet full of Siamese and whatever other cat brands there are. And tabbies if you couldn’t afford a pure bred and kittens for entrees and the kiddies menu. I think that would be really nice, don’t you?’ He squinted drunkenly from me to Friend and back again. ‘What?’

Marcus Friend spoke in measured, if tremulous tones. ‘Mister Blaine. With any due respect, you are exactly the sort of person that makes people like me necessary.’

‘You what?’ said Blaine.

‘Ahm! Nothing, Fergus.’ I glared at Friend, who offered a bemused shrug. ‘Marcus was just leaving. Weren’t you, Marcus?’

‘No? But I think he might be.’

At which point, a barely conscious Fergus Blaine fell off his stool.

‘You spiked his drinks?’ Friend said incredulously as we carried Fergus Blaine to the Jury Room.

‘His one drink,’ I said. ‘It was just a nip of vodka.’ A nip to a normal man. Clearly the bite of a rabid dog to Fergus Blaine.

We dumped him on the floor, stuffed a jacket under his head.

‘I honestly think he means well, you know,’ I said standing over his foetal, dribbling form. Friend just grunted. ‘I want to believe he means well anyway. All that before? I honestly don’t think he intended any harm by it. He was trying to help. He just can’t articulate like a human being. He says what he thinks…As it occurs to him…Sometimes even before it occurs to him. Believe me, there’s the basis of a good person in there just crying out for etiquette lessons.’

*****

‘Bailey, do you think I’m stupid?’ Friend said once we were settled back at the bar, our own consumption turning opposite minds introspective.

‘I don’t just think it…’

‘Bailey, dear.’ He sighed effeminately, all slumped shoulders and neck. ‘How do you think I’ve stayed out of prison ‘til this ripe old age, sweets? Mmmm? I play in a band. All those band members, not to mention roadies. Yes we do have roadies. Two of them.’ He rolled his eyes, smacked his lips. ‘We’re big…All of those people are dear, dear friends. None of them,’ he paused for effect, ‘have the slightest inkling of what I do. One of them I’ve known since he was twelve.’

‘Fine. I stand by what I said. You were baiting me through Fergus Blaine.’

‘I was not baiting you through Fergus Blaine! The man was non compos!’

‘He was clearly conscious!’

‘He was clearly leaning!’

‘His eyes were open!’

‘His eyes were focussed on another planet! Bailey, listen! I am an activist! My entire reason for being revolves around animals! Saving animals! Liberating animals by whatever means! Changing attitudes by whatever means! I spend nine tenths of every day breaking the law! Do you honestly think I spend the other tenth telling people about my day?’

‘You told Gabriel.’

His entire demeanour sagged at the mere mention. ‘Yes, I told Gabriel. Gabby. I told her a lot of things.’ He fixed me with a demonic grin, perhaps expecting a reaction. When none came, he broke eye contact and stared wide eyed at the fire. The demonic smile faded as fast as the glaze came. He turned his head even further away, swallowed hard. ‘She was a good girl, you know.’

My turn to stare at the fire and swallow hard. ‘She’s still alive as far as I’m aware.’

‘Not as far as you or I are concerned.’

‘Sorry, but I still hold a bit of a candle, Marcus. You’re welcome to the burny end, but…’

He chuckled. ‘You’re of the half glass full mentality, aren’t you, Bailey?’

I thought about this, shrugged. ‘I hope so.’

He nodded sagely. ‘I wish I shared your outlook.’

I nodded less than sagely back. ‘Help yourself.’

So there we were. Blackmailer and blackmailee, jilted adversaries both, sharing a beer in the court room of a broken down castle on the North York Moors. I resented Marcus Friend on every rational level I could muster. He was as detestable as Charlton Heston, as dangerous as George W. Bush and as passionately misguided as Osama Bin Laden. Yet, we were kindred spirits in our mutual quests for a better, more animal friendly world. A quest I was only now taking past the hypothetical. A quest Marcus Friend had long since taken into the hysterical. Most of me was appalled at the lengths Friend would go to save an animal or bird. The rest of me was ashamed at the lengths he had gone already, before I’d even raised a fully functional finger in anger.

‘There are hundreds of cowboys and their sons running roughshod over the Australian outback every night,’ he said accepting yet another beer with a polite dip of his head. ‘Killing under the cover of darkness. Killing with the total approval of their government. Killing under a code of practice no one in that government has the slightest interest in ensuring they keep. But then we are talking about a government who wilfully left a boatload of illegal immigrants to drown. This is not a nice government, Bailey. They don’t care how kangaroos find their way onto tables and feet so long as they do. They are politicians and a politician pulled a Parker pen from a coat pocket and signed a document endorsing the forcible removal of a suckling joey from a shot mother, the administering of a solid blow to that joey’s head. I’d like to know who that politician was, wouldn’t you?’

I scoffed. ‘Yes, Marcus. But shaming him out of office would be preferable to hanging his kids from a tree.’

‘Or her.’

‘What?’

‘Or her. Women are just as capable of grotesque behaviour as men.’

We shared a slow, knowing nod.

‘These are the people who hosted the 2000 Olympics, Bailey! Who present their country to the world as a sunny, happy place full of beautiful beaches and bronzed life savers and jovial country folk with mile long driveways! What they fail to reveal with such sunny pride are the fathers and sons who perpetuate the cruellest, most unpoliced and, not a word of a lie, largest massacre of wild animals anywhere on the planet!’

I didn’t question him on his facts. I now knew them to be true. Africa, Asia, the Americas, Europe, none of them shot a single species of their own wild animals at the rate of six million a year. Not even the two hundred million war crazy citizens of the US of A under the enthusiastic tutelage of Charlton Heston and the National Rifle Association could pop animals as fast as the twenty million sunny citizens of Australia.

‘I’d gladly grab that little, sandy haired Satan by the Asok trainers and swing him at a wall if I thought it would help,’ Friend continued, eyes darkening. ‘Sadly, that child is no more to blame for his beliefs than an Asian chef. I doubt his father is to blame either. Or even his father.’

‘We dwelled on this moment. ‘So,’ said Friend. ‘How to stop this ugly trade, my oddly hirsute friend. Attack random farmers? Mmm, useful, but awfully fiddly. Target the largest market for those random farmers and the Australian government, that market being Asok? More than useful. Less fiddly. Target the one man who means everything to that brand, and without whom that brand would surely perish? Perfecto!’

I gasped. ‘Andrew Sandham?’

He grinned demonically, nodded.

‘You’re not going to target Andrew Sandham.’

‘Through a telescopic sight, my friend. Alas, those charged with ending this slaughter have been sadly ineffective, their softly softly tactics falling on deaf ears. Need I tell you moderate action brings moderate results. Time,’ he said toasting me with his bottle, ‘for the extremists to have a go.’

‘No, Marcus.’

‘Yes, Marcus. If memory serves me correct, one is a little hamstrung by his own desire to stay out of prison.’

‘What are you going to do?’ I felt like a twitchy western reporter in an Afghanistan mountain cave.

‘Absolutely no idea. And I wouldn’t be telling you if I did. I suggest you keep an eye on the papers, my dear Bailey. And not the middle pages where most of our work tends to get buried. This, whatever it may be, will be front page news. I guarantee that. Because, in this country, the only thing bigger than Andrew Sandham, the footballer, is Andrew Sandham, the celebrity.’

Chapter Fifty Two

52


Lord of the flies

The Animal Liberation Front’s answer to Osama Bin Laden swaggered out of the shadows with the cocky air of a pre-bath Jim Morrison about to flash his penis to a stadium crowd.

‘What are you doing here, Marcus?’ I said with audible unease, as he rounded the table counter-clockwise, black mane merging into black duffle coat like an unruly hood around his pasty, puffy face.

‘Oh?’ he said with an affected air, running a finger provocatively (camply) along the table as he walked and I hoped he got a splinter. ‘I had some business in the area.’ His mouth pursed into an effeminate smirk Eddie Izzard would have been proud of. ‘Thought I’d pop by.’

‘Yes,’ I said matching each of his forward steps with a backward one, keeping the table between us. ‘I admired your handiwork in this morning’s paper. You must be very proud considering you could have killed someone.’

‘We didn’t kill someone though, did we?’ he said from three o’clock to my nine o’clock. ‘We are not in the business of killing.’

‘Oh, it’s a business now, is it? I thought mindless violence was just a hobby.’

He chuckled at about five to twelve. Then, momentarily framed by gathering gloom through the Great Arch, amused stalker and wary prey at opposite ends of the long wooden table, he stopped, gazed out and said: ‘May I ask if you had anything to do with the rather entertaining little intervention just witnessed?’

‘I made a phone call, yes.’ This said with little pride and, dare I say it, more than a little guilt.

‘And?’ He smiled across at me. ‘Describe the feeling, articulate the euphoria having now masterminded your debut militant act!’

‘There is no euphoria,’ I said flatly.

‘Oh?’ He seemed disappointed. ‘You may well have saved an animal’s life.’

‘Maybe,’ I said. Fact was I’d merely facilitated a stay of execution. Fact was I’d played God and all I’d created was an unholy mess; a plethora of disgruntled locals who would now view Hartley Castle House and its occupants with grave suspicion. Fact was my debut militant act would be my swansong militant act. A fact I had not the slightest inclination to impart to Marcus Friend; the unhinged, unsettling and, currently, rather menacing Marcus Friend.

‘Someone could have got hurt. Or worse, killed,’ was all I said.

He scoffed at this. ‘One of us, maybe.’ He said ‘us’ as though activists were one big, happy family. ‘They were the ones with guns, my dear Bailey. We are not violent as a rule. We do not kill as a fact. Ours is the business of casualty-free coercion.’ He resumed the stalk. ‘Were you to take a blind bit of interest in our history,’ he said placing hands in coat pockets as he walked, ‘you would find this to be a well documented and, as far as our detractors are concerned, reluctantly acknowledged fact.’

At nine o’clock he suddenly turned and went the other way, as did I, pace for pace, counter-clockwise to his clockwise, our little game of slow motion cat and mouse already decidedly unsettling for me, clearly a source of barely suppressed amusement for him. ‘We are terrorists in the misty eyes of the law, lumped in with the rest of the Ts for ease of filing – Al Qaeda, HAMAS, the Army for the Liberation of Rwanda, the somewhat redundant IRA…et cetera, et cetera. We so called militant animal rights groups – the ALF, ELF, SHAC, et cetera, et cetera – are all tarred with the same sweeping brush. It seems not to matter a jot that the aforementioned groups of self-confessed terrorists have murdered upwards of six hundred thousand innocent people between them, while we supposed terrorists are yet to murder a single guilty one.’ He stopped again at twelve o’clock and gazed out through the blackening arch. ‘Sadly, to those who stoke the fires of propaganda and keep the masses burning with indignation, anyone who uses intimidation as a tool is now a suicide bomber to be rooted out and shot.’

‘You made your bed, Marcus,’ I said from six o’clock, the option of running for the house now waning the more we circuited the table without the introduction of weapons.

‘Yes, I made my bed and you made yours.’ He began to walk the other way again, counter-clockwise, as did I, clockwise.

‘I know which I’d rather sleep in,’ I said.

He offered a pained smile. ‘Do all admen deal in such trite clichés? Am I now to say that my bed is only messy to those who iron their sheets?’

I thought about this. ‘Lost me I’m afraid.’

‘Only the anally retentive pigeon hole, my blinkered little adversary. Are you by nature an anally retentive person, Bailey?’

I told him nature had rendered me fairly regular and he found this mildly droll. Amidst the murk on the lane below, cars tooted and arms were extended out windows as the seven available members of the Pickering and District Hunt Saboteurs Association rather surprisingly took their leave without so much as a post-sabotage beer. Perhaps they’d had one down there. Pity, I could have used them to thrash one more wily old fox out of my undergrowth.

Marcus Friend watched in silence from eleven o’clock as red taillights disappeared into the blackness of the woods below, as did I from the considerably less satisfactory vantage point of three o’clock. Panorama now largely reduced to a milky grey void, he dithered, then, either satisfied his little power trip dosey do had run its course, or just plain bored, he sat nonchalantly where Attie Joubert had sat the night of the winter barbecue and grinned.

I sat opposite with an exaggerated sigh. ‘Why are you here, Marcus?’

‘I told you,’ he said eyes up and around the walls of the Great Hall, before settling on one of the sombrero-capped heaters, which received the sort of once over normally reserved for tall, sexy woman ‘Thought I’d pop by and see how your delightful fiancé was.’

I considered lying. I considered telling him to mind his own business. I considered many and varied forms of abuse. ‘You’ll be pleased to know she left me,’ was what I actually said. ‘Unless you already know.’

He seemed genuinely surprised and not necessarily pleased. ‘Me? No. I didn’t. As for whether this news fills me with morbid delight?’ He stared into space a moment; snapped to. ‘No. Nothing’s leaping out. I’ll have to let it sink in a while. Does this however mean I’m back in the equation?’

‘Apparently not. She hates you, Marcus.’

‘Awfully strong word, hate. One prefers “despise”. One sees a hint of hope in despise. Still. You? Coping all right in your newfound land of pain, longing and regret?’

I twitched a smile. ‘As it happens, yes. I’m fine.’

‘Good. Mind if I ask why she left?’

‘Yes.’

‘As you will. Asok?’

‘Asok’s fine.’

‘Did you watch the video?’ He sat forward.

‘I watched the video.’

‘And?’

‘I won’t be sharing my opinion.’

Friend sat back again with a great exhalation of air. ‘Bailey, tell me something.’ He picked intently at fluff on a coat sleeve, a patently pretentious gesture of indifference considering the failing light. ‘Do you kill flies?’

‘What sort of question is that?’

‘A straightforward one. Do you kill flies?’

‘Of course. Do you?’

‘This isn’t about me. Do you swat them? Spray them with insecticide?’

‘Spray them.’

‘Do you feel for those flies as they writhe on your window sill?’

‘Oh God. This isn’t your new crusade, is it?’

‘Again, this isn’t about me, but no, for the record, as regards flies I share your attitude and weaponry. Nerve gas, as I understand it. Do you believe flies feel pain?’

‘I have no idea. When they’re spinning on their backs, they don’t look happy.’

He laughed. ‘Indeed.’

‘What’s your point?’

‘My point is about belief systems and your interpretation of the worth of flies. If I was to ensconce myself outside your house chanting “Flies have feelings too!” at all hours of the day and night; if I was to torment you on a daily basis as you came and went, extol to you in enraged tones the virtues of flies and minute details as to the suffering of a Morteined fly, thrust graphic placards in your face depicting advanced states of fly anguish…how long do you think it would take you to stop killing flies?’

‘I wouldn’t. I’d consider you insane.’

‘Precisely. That is your belief system towards flies. Beliefs and behaviour inherent across many generations; your family, their family and their family before that. Hundreds of years of deeply entrenched reactionary behaviour towards flies; indeed, a culturally decent, laudable attitude any western housewife would share. It would indeed be impossible for me to stop you killing flies by merely trying to educate you, would it not?’

I nodded.

‘On the other hand, if I threatened you, your livelihood, your home, your community, the safety of your family, your dogs and your friends? If all you loved and needed to perpetuate your tawdry lifestyle depended on your decision to stop killing flies?’

‘I’d stop killing flies. Point taken. That doesn’t make it right.’

‘No. But, if no one actually got hurt, who’s the winner?’

‘The flies.’

‘The flies! Exactly! Hundreds of years of ingrained attitudes and response mechanisms towards flies good old fashioned re-education couldn’t hope to change in a million years, changed,’ – he clicked his fingers – ‘just like that, in a few short weeks of intimidation.’

I nodded a slow, thoughtful nod accompanied by what I hoped was a sardonic grin. ‘Well, I have to say Marcus, for a man who despises religion, you do a pretty decent sermon.’

He bowed reverentially from his seated position. ‘Well, thank you, my dear Bailey.’

‘But you can’t steamroll change like that.’

‘We can, and we do. As proof, animals otherwise doomed are alive today.’

‘Apparently so. But do you and your little band of Dad’s Army terrorists actually change anything? I don’t think so. Not long term. Case in point, you may well have run a battery hen farm out of business and ruined a few lives; you may even have ruined mine if that makes you feel better. But what’s really been achieved here, Marcus? Are there any less caged hen eggs on supermarket shelves? Are there any less people buying them?’

‘I’d like to think so.’

‘You’d like to think so.’

‘I think you’re underestimating the power of the media, my dear Bailey. Strange, given your occupation and predilection for bamboozling an unsuspecting public.’

‘I’m not in denial, Marcus.’

‘Yes, you are.’

‘No, I’m not. I admit I’m a fucking charlatan! I live a blissful life of culturally acceptable hyperbole and lies! The public know that. I know that. I could hide in a cloud of oblivion like you do imagining that relationship was symbiotic, but it’s not! I’m a parasite in the eyes of the public! And so are you! Difference is you think you’re doing us all a favour! You can’t even admit you’re nothing but a two bit terrorist!’

‘We can’t pick and choose our correspondents like you can, Bailey. We can’t manufacture our messages to the masses.’

‘You fucking can and you do! You send very clear messages, you anarchic bastard! And all you achieve is fear and the occasional begrudging truce devoid of any understanding as to the why! Well done, you! It’s like…’ I searched the castle walls for an appropriate analogy. ‘…It’s like a teacher telling school kids not to smoke behind the bike shed because they’ll get caned! Don’t smoke because you’ll get caned won’t stop a kid smoking til he’s sixty! Don’t smoke because you’ll get cancer and die will! Don’t kill flies or we’ll murder your children? I mean, spot the glaring double standards! And I’d like to see you police that one. What are you going to do? Rifle through my vacuum cleaner bag once a week?’

‘It’s an analogy, Bailey.’

‘Well, it’s a fucking stupid analogy, Marcus! And it still represents what you stand for! I’m sorry. I’m all for your underlying principle – to make the world a better place for animals – I love that and support you whole-heartedly in your quest. But there’s ways and means! Intimidation? Vandalism? Arson? Fire bombs? I mean you’re sending pretty mixed messages here. It’s not okay for people to mistreat animals, but it’s fine for you to mistreat them if they do!’

‘I don’t ask you to agree with our methods,’ he said aloofly. ‘Merely to understand them.’

‘Well, I don’t. And I think there’s a bit of a timing issue as well.’

‘How so?’

‘Oh, let’s see. Nine eleven? The London bombings? The reality that anyone, anywhere could be about to sit down next to you on a train, plane or in a café and blow themselves up? The reality that no one is really safe anymore? I just don’t think we can see the funny side of threats anymore, Marcus. If you’d sent those letters out ten years ago, fantastic! You’d have made people’s days! Their own personal episode of Murder She Wrote right there in their village! They’d have fucking loved it! Oohing and ahing on the village green, playing Sherlock Holmes in the Pig in Muck. It would have been the best thing that had happened to them in years! It’s just not like that now. There’s no thrill in threats anymore, and if you threaten people in any organised fashion under any recognised banner, you can be as incapable as you like of carrying those threats through, but people are going to believe you can. That’s the world we live in now.’

He reached into a duffle coat pocket, withdrew a paperback book and peered around at the gloomy Great Hall. ‘Is there any light out here? I have a little bedtime reading to share. It might just change your attitude.’

Fully aware any bedtime reading Marcus Friend was likely to share would scar a small child for life, I offered an apologetic shrug. ‘I seriously doubt it.’

Astute madman that he was, he took this in with a slow nod. ‘May I at least try?’

‘You may. But I think it’s more important I try and change you.’ I stood. ‘Come on. It’s fucking freezing out here.’

As we made our way across the forecourt, two things happened in quick succession. First, we heard a small, souped up car approach down the top road at speed. Then we were lit up like possums in the headlights of the small, souped up car as it careered down the Hartley Castle House driveway at similar speed. It skidded to a halt in a shower of mud and gravel and out stepped Fergus Blaine. I groaned.

‘Hi Bailey. Not interrupting anything, am I?’

I sighed. ‘Just the pursuit of a peaceful, melancholic life. How can I help you, Fergus?’

The arrival of Fergus Blaine for the second time that day was an additional irritation I could have done without. I desperately wanted to be alone with my post-fox-hunt-sabotage thoughts, assimilating them, dissecting them, assessing their fit in the new Harland psyche. I also craved more maudlin musings over Gabriel. Yet here I was the unwitting host of two maniacs from opposite ends of the lunatic ladder. Blaine, it transpired, had been thinking about his idea and wanted to make one or two amendments, amendments he didn’t feel could be sufficiently conveyed down a phone line; amendments that, once seen, clearly could have been conveyed down a phone line; amendments I sadly surmised which said more about his sorry search for companionship than his quest for perfection.

Fergus Blaine’s beady eyes darted to the long haired, black duffle-coated man lurking in the shadows. ‘Who’s that?’

‘That is Marcus Friend.’

‘Marcus who?’

‘Friend.’

Blaine snorted. ‘Hello, Marcus Friend.’ He extended a scrawny hand. ‘Fergus Foe.’

‘How clever,’ said Friend accepting the scrawny hand, neither he nor me as yet aware just how apt Blaine’s trite attempt at humour would turn out to be.

Chapter Fifty One

51


The headless horsemen of Cragmoor

Saturday, February 4

The day started badly enough: At seven o’clock, BBC Radio One News reported ‘an overnight raid on the tiny North Yorkshire village of Skipton-le-Beans by hooded activists, this time targeting residents.’ No one was injured, but nine of the eighteen houses around the village green were superficially scorched by homemade fire bombs, an ominous ultimatum ‘FINAL WARNING. ABANDON THE HOGGS NOW!’ spray painted on the road.

No sooner had I absorbed the shock from this than Fergus Blaine turned up. He’d tried to call me. Ten times. He’d left messages for me. Ten times. He’d thought I was dead. Two times. He’d had, as he put it: ‘a truly special idea for the Asok Marauder TVC’ (translated – television commercial). An idea he was convinced was going to land us both dream jobs in our mutual dream agency. He wanted to show me his idea. He wanted me to approve of it, buy into it, tweak the copy, take ownership of it, treat it like my own.

‘No one needs to know it was my idea, Bailey. We’re a team! And you know what teams do, Bailey? They play doubles. You hit a few, I hit a few. It doesn’t matter who’s hit this one. You’ll be serving next!’

It was a pitiful analogy. An inopportune one as well, recovering as I was from a very recent and very nasty brush with mixed doubles. To shut him up and get him out of the house, I listened to his idea, agreed to his idea, photocopied his idea on the Court Room printer, promised to tweak the wording of his idea; be there with him at JAS 360 Monday week to present his idea. We high fived. He left. I washed my hands and hung my head in the sink.

*****

The road into Cragmoor was barely two cars wide at the best of times. This morning, when I made a belated trip for morning papers (surely containing more detailed accounts of the newly embattled Skipton-le-Beans) and milk, it was barely one lane wide. At least the last mile into Cragmoor was. As I dove into the final copse-filled gully before the steep, winding climb out the other side into ‘the heart of town’, I came upon a most un-Cragmoorlike queue of cars, maybe fifty of them, all in a snaking line hugging the cliff edge, some full of people, some spilling people out into the road, people standing around, skipping to the verge when non-queuing cars threaded their way through.

I went past, slowly, peering at faces, peering in car windows, wondering what so many cars and so many people could possibly be waiting outside Cragmoor for. Unless the Cragmoor Grocers, Sweet Merchants, Post Office and Tea Rooms was having a 'very special' special on fudge.

Then I reached the end of the snaking line of cars and came upon the snaking line of empty horse boxes. Loads of them attached to empty Volvo XC90s, Range Rover Discoverys, Land Rovers and tractors, all parked on the left verge leading to the very edge of Cragmoor, even more clogging small flat fields below.

A more enlightened country soul would have had enough clues right there. I was not an enlightened country soul. I was not destined to be a country soul at all if the enlightenment thus far and its detrimental effects on my sleep patterns and sex life were anything to go by. I assumed there must have been a race course or polo field nearby, this despite quite considerable topographical hints to the contrary. I drove slowly up the hill towards Cragmoor none the wiser.

The next thing I saw was what I expected to see – the low slung, thatched roof of the Fox & Hound rising from the crest like a long black cloud on the horizon. As the tallest structure at this end of Cragmoor – not to mention the only structure – the Fox & Hound stood out like the Taj Mahal. I saw it first. But only by a nose.

As I neared the crest, the Fox and Hound’s white walls beginning to rise beneath its thatched roof, I could now make out the vague shape of an entirely new structure. A structure that hadn’t been there yesterday, yet a structure as tall as the Fox & Hound and slap bang in the middle of the road. A strange multi-spired structure, black at its many peaks, red as far down as I could see. Then my eyes began to play tricks on me. The structure in the middle of the road appeared to be moving, evolving, black peaks and red core merging and separating like a budget kaleidoscope. Crest conquered, I saw the horses at its foundation.

I drove slowly in.

A cluster of red-coated hunt masters, huntsmen and Whips of Penny’s ugly Tickle Toby tales sat in a haughty huddle astride massive black and brown horses, beautiful creatures all – beauties beneath their beasts. A dozen of them. All men. All clean cut, immaculately presented and sporting prim smiles of pompous superiority atop their steads. Aristocratic savages all. Heartless, headless horsemen toting whips and fine whisky.

Fifty hounds (each five times the size of a fox) moved as a tail high, excited pack around the horse’s hooves. Behind this at least forty more horses and riders, all in black blazers (for the men) or dark blue (for the women) and hard black hats designed to cushion the blow were they to be hit by a low flying activist at high speed. Some young, fresh faced and flat stomached, some old and filling out their blazers as if mutilated fox carcasses were already stashed within. Hundreds of onlookers, young and old loitered like groupies up and down Cragmoor’s normally deserted ‘High Street’ as cheery staffers from the Fox & Hound bustled about among the horses and hounds with silver trays of shorts for the riders (port and whisky, according to my Tickle Toby adviser) and snacks (sausage rolls, sausages and fruit cake). Plying and feeding, feeding and plying in a short, sharp frenzy of intoxication and padding.

Pulling over outside the Cragmoor Grocers, Sweet Merchants, Post Office and Tea Rooms, I sat and watched, Kurt and Courtney bouncing about and whining at the enormous alien creatures outside their window. I saw ten minutes of this pre-hunt ritual. Penny had told me it only ever lasted fifteen. The hunt gathered at precisely 11:45am. The hunt set out at precisely noon. Fifteen minutes of binge drinking and eating on horseback before they departed for six hours of country-style terrorism, hip flasks at the ready.

Speaking of Penny, suddenly there she was as plain as day, my eyes having scanned past her a dozen times. Aside from fogged up car windows, all those identical hats, blazers and tight cream pants had a tendency to obscure identities, hide hair, and clone riders into smartly dressed carbon copies of fat and thin.

As it was, Penny was literally five yards away through my driver’s side window. I only saw her because she was glaring down at me. I only recognised her (without the hair and sparsely clad body) because of her pug puppy face, orange and elongated.

Our moment of recognition was less like two friends exchanging a breezy ‘Hi’, more like opposing fighter pilots locking on. Up there looking down on me from atop a mighty stead – eyes burning, mouth zipped tight – she exuded an air of anticipated confrontation. Down here looking up at her from within a misty Volvo, I exuded an air of confrontation as well, an air of confrontation I was having extreme difficulty conveying as I couldn’t for the life of me find the right ignition position to lower the driver’s side window. I found it, fumbled with the window button and sneered up at her as the window lowered.

‘Well, well – wait on.’ The window went straight back up again, almost decapitating me. I fumbled with the button until the window went down and stayed down. I leant out, craned my neck skywards. ‘I can never remember if it’s a short press or a long press to lower it automatically,’ I said peering up at her mounted person.

‘Why are you here, Bailey?’

I looked around, peered up. ‘I live here.’

‘Bailey. You’re not planning anything stupid, are you?’

‘No, most of my stupidity tends to be fairly unplanned, actually, Penny. I assume you’re referring to your hunt, and as I literally only found out about it five minutes ago and have therefore planned nothing, the chances of stupidity would have to be quite high.’ I smiled sweetly up at her. ‘Gabriel left me, Penny. I’m not a well man.’

‘Yes, I know,’ she said looking down on me in more ways than one.

I sneered up at her. ‘Penny, a couple of things for you to consider as you embark on this hunt. One. Without Gabriel, I have a free licence. Two. Ow!’ My neck spasmed from all the upward peering. I grabbed it and hauled my head in, Penny seizing upon my seizure as an opportunity to trot off with a condescending smirk back over her shoulder.

I leant out the window clutching my neck. ‘Don’t you underestimate me, Penny! I’m, ow! Not well!’

*****

Kurt, Courtney and I watched the hunt leave Cragmoor to the hissing accompaniment of a windscreen demister on high. Red coated hunt masters, huntsmen and whips led them out at a trot, followed by a broad swathe of black and blue blazered backs, horse and dogs’ bottoms and swishing tails. Children on bicycles then rode after the riders. Cars and quad bikes set off after them, a slow steady stream behind the hunt, like mourners behind a hearse, fifty cars at least, in it, as Penny put it, ‘for the spectacle.’

And, I can’t deny, it was a spectacle. As mesmerisingly, rivetingly wrong as watching a convoy of tanks rumble into battle.

Then, just as suddenly as I’d happened upon this altogether foreign, yet captivating scene, it was gone. And I was left to ponder. An ineffective ‘anti’ in a now empty Cragmoor as the same people who had run about with silver trays now ran about with industrial strength pooper scoopers cleaning the horse and dog shit off the road.

Selfishly I was pleased the hunt was headed out of the moors rather than in towards Hartley Castle House. Then again, I had no idea what ground a hunt covered in an afternoon’s port and whisky-fuelled blood lust. I assumed it was plenty.

I got out of the car, stood around a while, and ultimately approached a young fat girl scraping up horse manure with a shovel. ‘Where are they going?’ I asked her.

‘Oop there,’ she said pointing oop there. I looked around for someone older, wiser and less weighed down in an XL coat of stupidity, but they’d all scurried inside the Fox & Hound or off to their cars to follow the massacre.

‘Are they going to continue to go oop there or are they going to coom back through ere?’

‘Noa,’ she said, then flung her eyes over the Fox & Hound. ‘They’re oop there t’High Sober Farm, then back through ere.’

‘How far will they get?’

She scratched at a particularly hard to shift piece of steaming shit. ‘How should I know?’

‘Will they get as far as Hartley Castle Farm?’

She managed a scoop, frown, leer and speech all at the same time. ‘Aye! They’ll be oop there before dark!’

I ran to the Volvo.

*****

Dave Land opened his front door.

‘Dave, hi. Sorry to bother you on a Saturday afternoon. But I need you to stop the hunt.’

‘Which hunt?’

‘The fox hunt. They’re coming through here tonight!’

‘Yes, Bailey. Because I told them to! I have a fox problem.”

‘Do it as a favour. You killed my bullocks.’

‘I’d love to, but I can’t. Those foxes will be killing new born lambs come spring. You ask yourself what’s more important.’

‘Well Dave, I’ve been checking the small print of my lease as related to my expansive views. I got three days of fog which I didn’t complain about. I’ve had guys slaughtering pheasants for weeks, sheep full of footrot and lampers blasting rabbits until all hours of the night, which, again, I haven’t complained about. I am complaining about the hunt! If I’d rented an apartment overlooking a bullring, fine! If clause five, part fifteen of our lease had said occasional expansive views of horsemen and hounds running down small animals, I might have questioned that expansive view!’

‘Good day, Bailey.’

He closed the door politely in my face.

‘Have they paid you like the pheasant shooters, Dave?’ I yelled at the door.

The door didn’t reopen and I had to assume they had.

*****

I heard them before I saw them – distant whistling and shouting and the low hum of cars and quad bikes. Then they came in droves along the low road, an endless trotting posse of horses, horsemen, horsewomen and dogs; behind them the hunt followers, a rabid, mechanised mob of villagers storming Frankenstein’s castle.

High on the hill above them I was ready. More ready than I could have believed possible in the few hours at my disposal: Three chilled cans of Carlsberg were lined up on the Great Hall table. Tobacco, papers, filters, rolling machine, lighter and ashtray all sat at the ready beside them. A high back wooden chair sat angled beneath the Great Arch and I sat in that. I rolled a cigarette, lit it, cracked a can, sipped it and sat forward, looking down as the hunt reached the valley gate leading onto Dave Land’s farm. I waited, watched, smoked, sipped and jigged my legs. I imagined Penny somewhere down there in the valley amongst the pack, eyes surreptitiously raised to the grey hilltop visage of Hartley Castle House for signs of trouble. She expected trouble. I was an ‘anti’ and she was on my land. Dave Land’s land, but my land as long as I paid the rent. As long as he didn’t kick me out. As long as I didn’t run stark bollocking mad at a huge posse of fox hunters brandishing a barbi-mate.

I gasped and peered right as what Penny probably hadn’t expected now swept in across the valley like the Charge of the Light Brigade, light unfortunately being the operative word. Yet to the converging mass of the hunt, this was something far more threatening than the charge of an ill-advised 1854 infantry. This was the charge of the seven available members of the Pickering and District Hunt Saboteurs Association.

The seven available members of the Pickering and District Hunt Saboteurs Association had come at extremely short notice and with great speed. They had literally dropped everything and driven an hour to get here. While the Cragmoor Hunt was officially outside their boundaries, it had clearly slipped under the radar of the local Hunt Saboteurs Association (as many hunts did these days – only the huntsmen and paid members knew where any hunt would be until the night before). They had nevertheless leapt into action the moment I ratted. And been a frenzy of practiced activity ever since. They had also been incredibly easy to find.

In the minutes after Dave Land shut me out of his house, I’d been in a state. I had to do something to disrupt the hunt – righteousness was in my blood now and, with nothing left to lose, it was in my actions as well. I was all set to stock up on eggs, tomatoes and other such weapons of mass disruption when Kurt and Courtney wandered into my plans. I did have something to lose. Them. They who sometimes went unnoticed through sheer innocence and reliability. They who were the only consistently loyal aspects of my life. They who would not understand were I to have myself incarcerated, thus depriving them of a dad.

Accepting this furry clause in my contract, I raced to the Court Room computer in search of a more legal means of obstruction. I typed ‘disrupting fox hunts’ into Google’s UK search engine. 0.00013 seconds later, there it was.

The seven available members of the Pickering and District Hunt Saboteurs Association had arrived in three vehicles and immediately set about beating hedgerows and woodlands with sticks in a fast moving line, shouting and thrashing; this to chase off any foxes. They sprayed a mixture of crushed garlic, citronella and water randomly about the woods and fields; this to mask scents. No sooner had they completed these tasks than the hunt swept inexorably down the road.

It was like watching a defiant Asian man confront the entire Chinese Army. From the west, the hunt funnelled into and gushed out the other side of the gate leading onto Hartley Castle Farm. From the east, the seven available members of the Pickering and District Hunt Saboteurs Association ran at them in a seven strong line spanning the width of the field. A line not helped in its quest for Braveheart-charging scariness by a preponderance of plump young mothers and balding accountants, none of whom looking particularly scary running. Fortunately, their plan did not revolve around brawn.

As the dogs ran ahead, they ran ahead shouting ‘On, on, on, on!’ They blew hunting horns – identical horns to the huntsmen’s – in fast calls designed to hunt the hounds on, run them past them and get themselves between the hounds and the riders. As the hounds ran past, the saboteurs converged, forming a human gate. They blew slow horn calls, the same calls huntsmen used to make the dogs stop.

The dogs stopped. Whips were cracked in the air to control them and the standoff began.

Two red coated hunt masters trotted forward atop their mighty steads. Angry words were exchanged between huntsmen, young mothers and balding accountants, none of which I could hear. Arms were thrown about. Fingers were raised in the air. People got out of their cars and lined the drystone walls like spectators at a school rugby match. Children sat on the walls beside bristling fathers, uncles and nephews. The seven members of the Hunt Saboteurs Association were heavily outnumbered. I sensed I was about to witness a quite different sort of carnage. I sensed I was about to witness a war.

It was over as quickly as it began. Turning their horses, the hunt masters pointed threatening fingers and whips at the line of saboteurs. They moved back to the waiting posse. A brief conversation ensued before the dogs were called back. The posse then funnelled slowly back through the gate. Spectators behind the wall hurled abuse, but nothing else. Everyone was angry, yet everyone seemed to just…know. It was as if they were operating under some tacit country code of practice and today was a victory for the Antis.

There was always next week.

The hunt, the cars, the quad bikes, the bicycles, they all dispersed back up the road to Cragmoor as a convoy of cars towing horse boxes began to appear down it. The foxes of Hartley Castle Farm had survived to flee another day.

‘Nice work!’ someone called from behind me in the Great Hall.

Had there been a roof, my head would have hit it. I jumped, whirled, tipped my chair, fell, stood and stared, all in one elegant motion. An indiscernible black duffle-coated figure stood in shadows against the back wall patting the heads of two dogs who, interestingly, had not barked, not a peep out of either them to announce the indiscernible figure’s arrival; the indiscernible figure then moving forward from the shadows and in doing so going some way to explaining why. This particular indiscernible figure, now discernible, had an even more discernible love of animals, a love clearly discernible even to the animals themselves. A love some would say bordered on the insane.