Saturday, 7 May 2011
He Won The Battles But Lost The War
He was spoken of as charismatic and a gentleman by those who knew him in Santander, which is across the Bay of Biscay from Pedrena, the town of his birth. Along with others from this golf-crazed area of Scotland, I have participated in the 'Seve Pilgrimage' to North Spain. Mention Seve to anyone and their eyes light up with adoration and fierce pride.
To high achievers in any sport battling the odds is their motivation. So it was for Seve Ballesteros and he won many battles; the British Open three times and the Masters twice.
However, sadly, he lost the war to cancer today at the young age of 54. RIP.
Labels:
Seve Ballesteros
Scotland's New Political Scene - Around The Blogs
What a bonny political map isn't it? You may like a look at some bloggers (and others) thoughts on the changes in the Scottish political scene.
There will be other bloggers who have posted on the subject and I apologise if I've omitted them. If they would leave their URL in the comments I would be grateful.
Scottish election results: an SNP stunner
What next... for the SNP?
No to AV... Yes to a whole new constitutional conflict
Hootsmon Headlines
Now The Hard Work Really Begins
Scotland: voting to escape austerity, not the United Kingdom?
Annie votes to give up the national teat.
Alex Salmond
New Markets and ARB Alert: Scottish independence referendum
"Say not the struggle naught availeth..."
Scotland comes of age!
What have we learned from the past 24 hours?
Heartbreak #sp11
SNP Headed For Overall Majority
Labels:
Alex Salmond,
Scotland,
Scottish elections,
SNP
Friday, 6 May 2011
Some Bandwagon!
Though A Staunch Unionist.........
Oldrightie has a significant respect for any political movement that flies in the face of the left and Labour. If the price for tribal breakup is the wipe out of Labour and socialism North of the Border, count me in. If such a movement were to take hold in the South with UKIP becoming the ESP, my gratitude, to The Scottish tribes, would be one of immense pleasure to offer. Just bear in mind, however, history has never been kind to any loser in a civil war. We only need to look to The Middle East today to realise that fact. So forgive me for a modicum of anxiety and very well done Alex and The SNP. It will be very interesting to see how the future unfolds. Sadly, there are warning signs and this philosophy rules in the corridors of power. "However, such anti-democratic nationalism has already failed to bring peace to Europe." and the theme is heavily espoused in this paper, here. A meme that by itself is provocative and in my mind insulting to the human need to belong and identify with like minded and family orientated, natural instincts.
Labels:
Scottish independence
Political History Is Made
What can I say other than breathtaking, marvellous, wonderful, superb, braw. Congratulations to the SNP. A very well deserved victory.
I'd like to offer my thanks to those lovely folk who joined me through the night in the live chat. We saw history being made and you all were great company. Do hope you can catch up on your sleep.
Thanks too to ASE for all his help, without which I wouldn't have survived.
Now it's back to business for our Parliament. There's so much to do.
Labels:
Alex Salmond,
Scottish elections,
SNP
Thursday, 5 May 2011
Scottish Election Results - Live Chat
Welcome to the Scottish election results live chat. If you would like to follow the English, Welsh and N Ireland election results please see the previous post. Some may like to have both windows open then the whole of the UK is covered.
A tip: Cover It Live has a typewriter sound effect when anyone posts a comment. I find it irritating but it can be turned off by clicking on the sound icon in the row of icons shown above the text box.
QT plus English, Welsh and N Irish Local Election Results
To save you having to go between blogs ASE has provided the live chat for Question Time and the English, Welsh and Irish local election results - for those who have an interest in elections outside Scotland.
I will be publishing the live chat post for the Scottish election results shortly.
See you anytime after 10.30pm.
Labels:
QT
Our Scotland
I'm a little late with this but better late than never. My thanks to @citizensmart on Twitter.
Labels:
Scottish elections,
Scottish independence
Africa's Got Talent -The Water Man
A light-hearted start to the day. If the pollsters are right it could be a long one - with a happy ending.
Labels:
Africa's Got Talent,
The Water Man
Wednesday, 4 May 2011
I Could Be Persuaded (Nearly)
Click to enlarge
Those concerned with this pathetic AV referendum ( only the second in 36 years) have been woeful in substantiating their position. Guido's point, I'm sure is felt by many.
However, in politics a small chip off a block can eventually result in a chunk and if saying yes to AV means that politics in the UK, (because the Scots already use AV), would make at least one politician work for their living then I'm for it. The unfortunate part of all this is that I've never met those mentioned on the lists. The same here in Scotland. Although I have a keen interest in politics I have no idea who represents me on list votes. Let me say I have yet to meet anyone who does - apart from those who are members of political parties.
But here is Barbazenzero's distinctive argument in case you haven't read the comments.
Make up your own mind.
AV is a tiny step forward but it is slightly less awful than FPTP. What's more to the point is that Clegg will get his well-deserved kicking in the constituency and list votes.
OTOH, a YES vote on AV would deliver two well-deserved kicks at the two main front men of the No2AV campaign: Cameron and the politician who did more than anyone to put him there, by scuppering the possibility of a rainbow alliance, John Reid.
What I don't understand is why so many in Scotland seem determined to spoil their AV ballots by leaving them blank and writing INDEPENDENCE on them. It may just hurt the L-Ds a little more than they're already due to be hurt on Thursday, but it will bring comfort to Reid and Cameron. OTOH, voting YES and writing INDEPENDENCE on the ballot will hurt both of them, since the vote will still be valid provided it doesn't identify you personally.
With the turnout in England likely to be very low, it might even be enough to grant overall victory for YES despite England voting NO. Alternatively Scotland may vote YES but be overwhelmed by English NOes. But either way would emphasise the fault lines in UK politics.
The only thing not to like is if Scotland votes NO thanks to the spoilt ballots. With the FM on record as saying he will vote YES and the SNP - whilst justifiably deploring the date of the referendum - formally recommending a YES vote, I cannot for the life of me understand why some SNP supporters want to throw away this opportunity.
And as ROGER MEXICO aptly put it on UKPR: everyone also misses the real point about AV (and for that matter STV). You can put the person you most hate, loath and despise at number 10 or whatever. Then you work your way up, numbering down, through the repulsive; the unpleasant; the mildly nauseous; the merely incompetent; the unknowns; the known unknowns; the OK in a really bad year; the people you could just about send out for chips; the sort of literate; the sort of numerate; the occasionally coherent. Then, if there’s anyone better than all that left, you give them number 1.
AV may not help smaller parties or bring proportionality, but it does allow the voter to express his or her true choice while still making the vote count. First preferences by party will also be counted and published, which may well help those smaller parties next time.
I thank you Barba because there's still time for me to think again yet I know spoiling the paper with writing independence over it will do nothing. If people want to write independence on the referendum paper please write it outside the boxes then your vote will count. Otherwise you spoil your paper and nobody will take a blind bit of notice.
Labels:
AV referendum,
Scottish elections
Scottish Election Results - Live Blog
Once the polls have closed the speculation will being in earnest for a few hours until the results begin to flood in. If you would rather chat with fellow speculators instead of shouting at your television, do come and join in here from 10.30pm tomorrow evening.
The AV referendum result will not be until Friday but it will most probably come into the conversation.
For those who prefer to follow the English local elections ASE is running his usual Thursday live chat but it will be extended.
Thanks to Max for the lovely logo.
Labels:
Scottish elections
Tuesday, 3 May 2011
The Last Lap
Only two more days of campaigning and then Scotland goes to the polls to elect the next Scottish government. Part of the process is ensuring parties manage to usher their supporters to the local polling stations and to ensure, as much as is possible, they put their marks in the correct boxes. I've had a pamphlet showing me a paper and where I ought to put my crosses if I want to vote SNP. Good idea, especially when there are two papers if the AV referendum one is ignored.
It's been a long haul for the SNP, particularly since the campaigning seemed to start last year when they weren't many people's cup of tea, but they've fought against the negativity, lies and criticism with a professionalism few, other than their supporters, thought they possessed.
The latest poll has been analysed by the Peat Worrier with the Burd insisting it's going down to the wire.
After Sunday's rather feeble BBC leaders' debate in Perth - described to me by a gentleman sitting on my left as "a' gravy and nae meat" - it is very disappointing that the electorate know little more than they did at the beginning of the process, but that's modern politics.
Labour's new mantra about independence does them no favours. Scotland knows that the SNP cannot proclaim independence without the support of the majority of the country and even then it will require a certain amount of goodwill from Westminster to begin the journey. Alex Salmond is correct when he says the Scotland Bill is a priority.
Baring any serious incidents in the next 48 hours, it seems probable that the SNP will be returned for a further term. Considering their opposition during the process it's little wonder.
As for the AV referendum, this is the Rich and Mark have it perfected.
Labels:
Scottish elections,
SNP
Monday, 2 May 2011
The Smoking Buddhist
My sympathy goes to the 23 year old Buddhist monk Sonan Tshering, who is facing three years in prison after becoming the first casualty of a stringent anti-smoking law in the tiny Himalayan kingdom of Bhutan - a country which claims to be Shangri-La and considers gross national happiness before gross domestic product - vows to become the first smoke-free nation.
Mr Tshering has been convicted of consuming and smuggling contraband tobacco under a law that came into force in January. In 2005 the sale of tobacco was banned in Bhutan because it was considered bad for one's karma, but it failed to make much of an impact because of the thriving smuggling operation from neighbouring India.
The new law permits the police to enter homes, threaten jail for shopkeepers selling tobacco and smokers who fail to provide customs receipts for imported cigarettes. Smoking in private is not illegal but the sale of cigarettes is banned, although smokers can legally import 200 cigarettes of 150grams of other tobacco products a month. They must provide a customs receipt when challenged by police.
The young monk bought the 72 packets of chewing tobacco from the Indian border town of Jaigoan and it was for personal use. He said he was unaware of the new law and had no tax receipt from the customs department.
Illegal cigarette sales have almost stopped in small shops as shopkeepers say it's difficult to hide tobacco from sniffer dogs.
The leader of the political opposition said the sentence was "very, very harsh. It's not in line with the character of Bhutan which is based on tolerance, compassion and justice". This politician certainly lives in Shangri-La. In the early 90s, many thousands of ethnic Nepalese who lived in Bhutan were stripped of their citizenship and forced into exile, apparently in a bid to ensure a homogenous culture. Up to 100,000 Nepalese had to live in camps in Nepal and an international attempt to resettle them in third countries is ongoing.
I'm surprised the monks haven't introduced a little tobacco growing/processing system within their hallowed walls. Religious institutions are historically renowned for bridging such gaps.
source
Labels:
Bhutan,
passive smoking,
Religion,
smoking
Lies, Incompetence, Hypocrisy?
A guest post from John Souter to whom I offer my sincere thanks for his contributions.
Lies Incompetence Hypocrisy?
Real poverty is in the process of being dramatically increased by the measures now being implemented through welfare reforms.
Reforms that were initiated by Labour not, I hasten to add, as a result of the financial meltdown of 2007/8 but were introduced by stealth as the Social Security Act 2006 and passed by Parliament in 2007.
These affected housing benefit conditions and cleared the way for the implementation of the local housing allowance (LHA) along with the introduction of job seeker allowances and all the other euphemisms engineered to cut the responsibilities of the State to minimise the costs associated with the effects that same State failed to address; which was, and still is, its failure to create a thriving and progressive real economy.
So these measures were all in the Labour pipeline even before the idiocy of the financial gurus went into meltdown and the present incumbents in Westminster, while they may have added to them, are probably silently grateful to Labour for doing all the spade work necessary for the acts and regulations to be implemented and for them to get the kudos.
The result will be an increase in poverty levels through all the phases of life the poor are exposed too, but with an emphasis on the very young and the retired old and where many of the ‘customers’ of welfare will see their benefits cut; adding 10 - 50% on their outgoings to meet rent and council tax bills.
Reforms that were initiated by Labour not, I hasten to add, as a result of the financial meltdown of 2007/8 but were introduced by stealth as the Social Security Act 2006 and passed by Parliament in 2007.
These affected housing benefit conditions and cleared the way for the implementation of the local housing allowance (LHA) along with the introduction of job seeker allowances and all the other euphemisms engineered to cut the responsibilities of the State to minimise the costs associated with the effects that same State failed to address; which was, and still is, its failure to create a thriving and progressive real economy.
So these measures were all in the Labour pipeline even before the idiocy of the financial gurus went into meltdown and the present incumbents in Westminster, while they may have added to them, are probably silently grateful to Labour for doing all the spade work necessary for the acts and regulations to be implemented and for them to get the kudos.
The result will be an increase in poverty levels through all the phases of life the poor are exposed too, but with an emphasis on the very young and the retired old and where many of the ‘customers’ of welfare will see their benefits cut; adding 10 - 50% on their outgoings to meet rent and council tax bills.
Which begs the question: what exactly are the responsibilities and expected competence of the representatives we supposedly send to Westminster to oversee our interests and well being?
I ask because the stealth adopted to introduce these measures are very similar to the methods used by Brown when he removed the 10% bracket on income tax; and the method used by Osborne to cut the Winter Fuel Allowance in the 2011 budget. Namely tagged on as an aside and blinded by the main points and message they wanted publicised: and, while by now we generally are aware of the shallow capacity of the media to report on anything in a meaningful way beyond bias and rhetorical handouts, our representatives should be capable of reading, analysing and evaluating the salient points of any proposed Bill that’s placed before them before its passed into legislation.
Given their recent record, the examples mentioned, and the paucity of any discussion or exposure of the 2006 Act in the hustings and debates for the elections on May 5th I very much doubt if the majority of candidates – old or new – are aware of its ramifications and that the few who are, are desperate to keep it closed tight in the obfuscators box.
This is a Labour decision, in the control of Westminster which, because it’s not a devolved issue, will (Have) been implemented throughout the UK as of the 5th April 2011.
A dividend of Union created by Labour, implemented and refined by the coalition and sneaked on to the statutes under the blitzkrieg of financial idiocy being transfused with massive bailouts followed by the extortionate bill of their intensive care being met from the rumbling belly’s and empty purses of the poor.
They have a name for it – they call it Austerity – and they who shout for it are not the ones who have to live with it. But they do want you to believe your welfare, your NHS; your life is safe in their cold incompetent grasping hands.
John Souter 1/5/11
Labels:
austerity,
poverty,
welfare reforms
Sunday, 1 May 2011
The Journeyman - Chapter 8
CHAPTER 8.
Ruth Dellows awarded her last thirty hours the dubious distinction of being the most terrifying of her life.
When he’d crashed in on her, she’d thought it was bound to be rape. Maybe rape and something else but it would feature and might prove to be her salvation. The something else terrified her. Sex was nothing. She’d learnt to use her body expending the predatory male to suit her own satisfaction. Enjoyed the sport of turning the tables on the macho studs until they were as useless as a soft turd in a crossbow. And she could love. Four years with Sean had promised all before the pace of life he demanded had reneged in one flawed genetic stroke. She could flirt, tease, delight, enjoy even accept she’d been used by men, but never before had she been possessed.
This had defied experience and his quiet indifference had sunk her into a depth of submission she hadn’t thought possible. Far deeper then the day her and her father's boss had ripped innocence from her. Her first job, set up by her father and only subject to her getting through the interview with Attridge, which, in spite of her nervousness, proved to be no obstacle. In the early weeks she’d been too engrossed learning the office procedures to form opinions on the people round her. Once settled she tried to deny the opinion honesty was forcing on her. She’d regarded her dad as a quiet retiring man but the way he fawned to Attridge and the contempt he got in return disturbed her. She’d assumed she loved him until the exact moment she didn’t.
He’d stood and dithered for a seconds while Attridge's lips were sucking at her neck his hands worming into her knickers while hers were frantically trying to push and punch him off. Her plea of Daaaa…d was suffocated by the bleat of his ‘Excuse me’, and the click of the door shutting closed him out of her life. Attridge had been too busy to notice and if he’d ever wondered why she’d suddenly submitted he’d never asked. Finished he went to the office toilet returning with a wet towel.
‘Here clean yourself up. An’ stop the blubbering ye sound like your old man. It’s never been the end of the world, so learn to enjoy it. And tidy this place up.’ He’d watched as she tried to sort herself out and began to tidy the soiled desk and the scattered papers before realising she was confirming what he regarded as a family trait. Sweeping the lot back on the floor, she collected her coat and walked out.
Her mother believed the blinding headache excuse and her need to be left alone. Pandering to schoolgirl wisdom she’d practically simmered in the bath before crawling light headed into bed. She hadn’t cried, self- pity wasn’t an option when the act had practically been sanctioned. Later he’d crept in calling her his Ruthie. Asking what she’d told her mother and holding out his arms for the cuddle of absolution. Satisfaction was the venom of her palm swiping the glasses from his face and leaving a trail of snot clinging from nose to ear.
Her change of attitude had repercussion on her feelings for her mother. She didn’t hate her, just loathed the mousy nonentity she’d allowed herself to become. ‘I’m leaving home. I’m getting a flat and I’m out of here.’ If the clothes weren’t too different it was a vastly different Ruth that walked into Attridge office at ten the following morning. For a few minutes he refused to take her seriously until her mention of soiled knickers and bloodied debris had been topped by the availability of a witness. He even admitted he didn’t think she’d have the spunk but eventually accepted that as a secretary/mistress she warranted a considerable increase in salary and a flat would be more convenient.
Attridge was crass. A brute force easily used and quickly spent. It hadn’t taken her long to better herself and she’d enjoyed sticking the hairpin harshly down his erection when he’d been expecting something far more sinuous and yielding. It was Ruth’s way of closing their contract having secured her next one. It had amused her then and since, but not now as she tried for sense from the sounds that confused and tormented her.
When the doorbell rang she prayed whoever rung it would persist until the bloke was forced to answer. But only the one ring then silence. Then the rattle of keys in the lock, the door opening and the murmur of voices enticed her lips to open and her throat to release the scream and to hell with the quiet or dead. The crack of the shots forced her to choke the scream and the dull thud below confirmed it never left her lips. Movement then whispers near silent - hope of it being over shattered by one more shot that left her quivering in terror.
The sound of movement, the squeak of a lock being turned, familiarity teasing her with the knowledge it wasn’t any of the doors to the outside. More silence. Then voices, almost conversational, their cadence rising and falling her ears straining for recognition. This went on for so long she’d almost convinced herself they were Liam and Butler. Then one voice, indecipherable, but with a tone of conclusion. She’d wait, didn’t want Butler seeing her, when two more shots shattered hope. She never heard the front door clicking shut. The silence was terrifying; all her faith pinned on her promise of silence. As time crawled, her nerves tingled with terror. The normal clicks and creaks of the house became him climbing the stairs. A bird whacking against a window pain in the morning dawn had her screaming and clutching the bed frame as though it was a conduit to sanity. Every noise became a torment every thought was of a mutilated body crawling up the stairs for her help, or a creeping assassin bringing her death.
She didn’t know when the doorbell broke through her misery. The opening door and the accompanying chirp of, ‘Coo.ee Ruth,’ were drowned by her scream for help and Mary’s of hysterical shock. Time made it understandable, but at the time she could have throttled the stupid mare. Blubbering incoherently to returning churchgoers, Mary kept pointing towards the house and eventually managed to form, ‘Police. Ambulance.’ Hearing the commotion of people Ruth’s second scream brought a neighbour and his son to her. After a couple of futile attempts to prise the bars out the man thoughtlessly hurried out for tools leaving the boy gawping at her.
‘Get something to cover me.’ Flushed with shame he leapt over the duvet to the bathroom found her robe and fumbled it over her. She didn’t feel safe until the dying whine of the siren was followed by an authoritative voice telling everybody to step outside and to stay in the drive until they’d given statements. When the boy went to the landing and shouted, ‘There’s someone up here.’ She’d screamed.
‘Tell them I’m alive you stupid bugger.’
He didn’t need to. The policeman quickly took in her situation and having tried and failed to open the cuffs with his own key took the boy with him and fetched the cutters. The brass bars gave easily but the tempered chain of the cuffs required her to lie on the floor while he pressed all his weight on the cutter. Panting with exertion he turned his back while she put her robe properly on.
Ruth asked, ‘Do you mind leaving while I use the toilet.’
The policeman nodded, ‘I’ll have to ask you not to touch anything and not to shower.’
Ruth was too desperate to give his instructions any thought, ’Officer the last time I peed was about three yesterday. Five minutes ago it wasn’t pressing now it is. Please I just want some privacy and to wash my face.’
‘Sorry Ma’am; sometimes the rules are the only answers we have in situations like this. I’ll go and arrange to get a key for the bracelets.
Her face dry, she rubbed some cream into her reddened wrists. She wouldn’t go downstairs, not while the bodies were there and they’d probably want to know why Quinn and Butler were here. The explanation of mistress would probably surface as a business meeting to their respective wives. Sod it not her problem, she’d tell it as it happened what they made of it was up to them. A nervous tapping on the door startled her.
‘Are you all right Ruth? I was so shocked, it’s horrible.’
‘Oh shut up Mary. Make yourself useful; go and see if the police will let you make me a coffee and bring a large brandy with it. And Mary,’ she bit her lip before asking.’ What’s it like down there?’
It was beyond Mary’s chattering repertoire. ‘Oh it’s terrible. Two of them, I can’t look, just sidle past. At least they’re covered up now.’
The police only half relented. When Mary came back the brandy was cooking from the kitchen as was the tumbler and the coffee instant. All of it tasted like nectar. Ruth was still enjoying the calming effect of the brandy when Chief Inspector Burroughs knocked and quietly asked if she felt up to talking. He was accompanied by her doctor, who lived just up the road, and a woman of such gargantuan proportions she overwhelmed the men standing in front of her. Her doctor did this introduction.
‘Ruth, this is Doctor Jordan.’ The woman nodded but said nothing while her doctor gave her a cursory examination. ‘We’ll you seem all right girl. Do you want me to give you something in case there’s delayed shock?’ Thanking him and saying she felt all right now it was over he smiled and stepping back left the stage to Burroughs. He sort of coughed and didn’t quite look at her.
‘Mrs Dellows, I do realise you must want to get out of here. But you’ll appreciate there’s a lot of questions need to be cleared up. First though it’s important Doctor Jordan gives you a more thorough examination. It may give us the evidence that allows a conviction.’ His old face flushed slightly. Ruth still didn’t comprehend.
‘Let’s get on with it then. Quicker I’m away from here the better.’ At that the men left.
Without a word Jordan dumped her bag on the bed, sorted out a neat line of instruments then went to the bathroom and scrubbed her hands. Pulling on a pair of latex gloves she broke her silence.
‘Right m’dear on the bed, I’m sure you’ve had an internal before, just need a couple of swabs.’
‘What the hell.’ Ruth’s expletive beat by milliseconds the understanding.
‘Semen samples, one good one and it’ll convict the bugger.’
Ruth pushed her way off the bed. ‘You’re wasting your time. He never touched me, at least not in that way.’
Jordan raised an eyebrow, ‘You’re not saying that out of embarrassment are you deary? Doesn’t matter to us if he went at you from the other.’
Ruth had a niggling doubt that Jordan was more than a mite disappointed, ‘I’m not a school kid or suburban house frau caught with her knickers down and screaming rape. It’s the truth, he didn’t touch me sexually.’ As she said it she wondered if she’d let Jordan examine her if he had, probably not.
‘Okay dokay m’dear, have it your own way.’ Repacking her bag she shouted, ‘You can come in.’ in a voice that hours before Ruth would have envied. When Burroughs cautiously opened the door she barged past him.
‘I’m not needed. Say’s she hasn’t been touched.’ Not an ounce of belief in her voice.
Burroughs managed to flush again, ‘I’m terribly sorry Mrs Dellows. We assumed from the report of how you were found. We obviously jumped to the wrong conclusion. I’m very sorry.’
Ruth decided she liked Burroughs. He was the rare breed who put service before authority. She wouldn’t give him a hard time, ‘I understand, but if you don’t mind could we get on with whatever it is you need. I’d like to bathe, dress and get the hell out of here.’
If Burroughs was polite he wasn’t soft. She’d two hours of persistent grilling before he’d finished, as he said, for the time being. He’d asked where Mr Dellows was and noted the date of Sean’s death. He knew who Butler was and from her learnt the other was Quinn and of their relationship. He’d expressed his regrets and noted her indifference. Constantly he went back to the warrant card. Asking her to think very hard on any detail she could remember. Eventually he’d to accept her statement that she’d hardly looked at it other than to check it was a warrant card. It was true, normal, and he knew it.
‘Was the picture on it the same man who attacked you?’
Ruth shook her head, ‘I can’t say. Apart from that first few seconds he wore a mask.’
Eventually Burroughs asked her to read and sign the statement the WPC had meticulously recorded. Telling her, ‘Don’t hesitate to contact me if there’s anything comes to mind.’ Nodding, Ruth got on with reading the account of her ordeal. It reduced everything to a bland series of events that wouldn’t have frightened a convent girl. This was the grey plateau of officialdom. Borrowing Burroughs pen she signed it and told him she’d be staying at the Riddle Hotel. Mary’s, or any other friends for that matter would be a hell of who’s, why’s and what’s. At the hotel she’d be left in peace.
She quite enjoyed the drive in the Mercedes even though she’d wrecked her clubs reversing over them. It was in her name and he was hardly in a position to refuse her now. Perks of the job she thought deciding to sell the Renault, the house she’d decide later. Settled in the room and with a salad and wine organised, she rang an outside number.
‘You all right?’
‘No thanks to you. Why the hell didn’t you warn me; at least I’d have been prepared. He frightened the life out of me.’
Her contact chuckled, ‘we couldn’t. It was nothing to do with us.’
‘What!’ she felt the chill begin to creep back into her spine. ‘Who the hell was it then?’
‘We can’t be sure until you tell us what you know of him.’
Ruth gave a sigh, the paternalism in his voice both annoying and calming her. ‘It’s difficult to say. You don’t bother with details when you’re terrified.’
‘Actually you do. So try.’
‘Well he wasn’t more than a couple of inches taller than me and he’d padded himself out. I got the impression when he first grabbed me that he wasn’t young, in fact he felt old. You know, when I grabbed his arm it had a loose fleshy feel. Not fat, flabby. He’d quite small hands and, difficult this, but in some way I thought he was ill. The one time he was near my face his breath had a sickly sweet smell to it. Other than that he never touched me. In a odd sort of way he was considerate but I knew he would have got rid of me if I’d caused trouble for him.’
‘Did he smoke?’
‘Never saw him. Wait a minute I did smell them on him and the police told me they’d taken my box for examination. So he probably did.’
The quietness from her contact made her think he was waiting for more detail. ‘I can’t think of anything else I can tell you about him.’
‘It seems you were never in danger my dear. An old friend has had his revenge and probably saved us a deal of trouble. You enjoy your rest. Keep in touch and send the bills as you normally do between assignments. Goodbye.’
The hotelier turned off the tape, lifted his glass and toasted Docherty. He’d done a good days work rubbing the scum from the earth.
The previous Friday morning had underlined Frank’s intuition as being right. His mood only slightly marred by his impatience at having to wait till Monday for Jim to turn up and a nagging query as to why, after all this time, he should be tempted to move without him.
When Monday passed he vowed patience for another day but no longer. Telling his secretary to mark him missing for the rest of Tuesday he drove to the Riddle and catching Paul’s eye got a slight nod in response and a wave in the general direction of his flat. It seemed he was personally waiting on a bit of a looker who was having a late lunch. He’d just poured himself a drink when Paul joined him.
‘Didn’t mean to cramp the patter.’
‘Not a problem Frank, she’s staying for a couple of weeks. Plenty time. Now what can I do for you?’
‘I’ve a possible development I need to talk over with someone and since the happening on Sunday I don’t know who.’
Turning from pouring his own drink Paul asked, ‘No word from Docherty then?’
Frank shook his head, ‘He was adamant he’d be back this week but when I think about it he said after the weekend.’
‘He wasn’t specific?’
‘No; just after the weekend, but he seemed to be saying it was for good.’
Paul began to pinch the bridge of his nose, ‘ Strange. Does Docherty know of this development?
‘It was him who sent me. He also told me to say nothing until I’d talked it over with him. Times getting tight I’ve.’ Paul’s raised hand stopped him.
‘Don’t tell me anymore. Like you it would make my life easier if we knew where he was and could talk to him. Anyway, good luck to him. It looks as though he’s gone back to an earth even fewer people know about. I take it you need some help with this problem?’
‘It’s not a problem, more an interesting proposal.’
Glancing at his watch Paul downed his drink, ‘I've got to do my hospitality bit for about twenty minutes. Can you hang on here and we’ll discuss the best way to handle it when I get back.’
Frank was helping himself to a second drink when Paul came back.
‘Ok. This proposal of yours I’m going to tape it so I don’t miss out on the detail.’
Waiting for the tape to be set up had Frank ill at ease. Telling Paul and trying to vindicate his gut feelings to him were one thing, taping it was another. But he was determined to get it properly considered and whoever made the decision should know how strongly he felt about it. It tied in with Jim’s long held belief that eventually economics would give them a united Ireland and not to give it a try would be a sin of omission. Without allowing his mind to rehearse he ignored the machine and addressed his facts and thoughts to Paul. Then on finishing was surprised when he got no derision.
‘Do you think this bloke can pull something like that off?’
Frank shrugged. 'Don’t suppose we’ll know until he’s tried.' But he’s had the guts to face us and not back off. He’s a bit like a ram to the slaughter, if you know what I mean. But if it worked it could start a trend that’ll give Westminster Delhi belly and we’d have a lot of control for little exposure.’
Paul nodded and turned off the tape. He just did so when he switched it on again. ‘One question I almost forgot. Have you any idea where Pat Urquhart is?’
‘No, but I’d to give a message to the bloke on Thursday night. That Pat would deliver the item to him at five on Saturday morning. That’s about all I’ve heard of Pat for some time.’
Paul turned this information over in his mind, ‘If the bloke rings on Thursday ask him if Pat turned up.’
On the way home Frank decided he’d every reason to feel pleased. Tonight he’d take Sarah to the best restaurant in Dublin and let her wonder why. On the way home he decided to check the shuttered house and wondered if Jim intended using it. Opening the door he sensed something was wrong. A feeling that had him head back to his car and collect the black thorn from its boot. Clutching the stick he eased back into the hall. Bastard druggies probably stoned, already he was blaming himself for not checking sooner. One thing for certain they’d be gone before Jim got here. Doubt crept in when he went into the kitchen. Nothing gleamed because of the film of untouched dust. The bathroom was the same, only when he opened the door to the bedroom did he feel his heart slump to the pit of his stomach.
The sight of his friend contorted in a swaddled heap, four empty bottles lined neatly, contrasting with the wall collaged by bloody shards of bone and brain sent him spinning from the sight. He’d thrown up in the sink before he realised he’d to turn the water on at the mains to clean it and splash his face. The mundane logic bringing sharply into recall the real meaning behind Jim’s words and the reason for them. His job now was to get Jim buried in the right place. It was a lot to ask when you just wanted to grieve, but it had to be done.
They had a miserable hour straightening the twisted body as best they could and wrapping it in the sheets Sarah had brought. Frank felt as though he was invading Jim’s privacy when he searched his pockets until finding the recorder and Pat’s warrant card he was glad he did. Listening to the tape he didn’t recognise the voice but as it progressed he knew he had more to do than simply cover up a suicide, he’d to prevent Jim being branded as a murderer. .
The need to clear up Jim’s effects forced Frank to change his plans for Thursday night. Telling Sarah of the call he was expecting he gave her the number of Jim’s flat and for the caller to ring him there. If Sarah wondered what he was up to, she never asked, which made Frank wonder how much she already knew or guessed.
Packing Jim’s belongings at the flat didn’t take long. Apart from the bulky package addressed to Fernyhough, little had been added to the cases he’d delivered to a lay-by at the beginning of an epoch. Curiosity tempted him to open the package and perhaps add to the information he’d gathered from the tape. Gripping the package he tore it open, then concentrated on the letter written in a familiar hand. He got to the second page before replacing the notes with his feelings split between relief, anger but mostly shame. Shame by letting fear get the better of him. If there had been any possible backlash on him or the men, Jim would have warned him. It certainly explained why Quinn, a publicity manipulator in life, was scheduled for a discreet internment. Bastard. He made no attempt to disguise the broken seal. Tomorrow he’d take the package to the solicitor and tell him he’d opened it. All he could do now was drive at continuing what Jim had started. To have taken the interest he had when the Quinn/Butler thing was so close to a conclusion indicated the importance he’d placed on it. The burr from the ancient black phone interrupted his thoughts.
‘Hello, is that Dublin?’ The thinned voice repeated the flats number.
‘Yes.’ Frank was hesitant to a voice that had a different resonance. The hope he hadn’t used the operator flashed through Frank’s brain.
‘Have you an answer for me on my haulage problem?’
The voice, recognisable now, had Frank smiling as he remembered his warning. ‘Not absolutely, but it’s very likely. We’ve been tied up these last few days. The man who made the delivery to you on Saturday, do you know where he is?’
Brian’s hesitation confirmed it for Frank, ‘Why? Does it matter?’
‘It could be beneficial.’ Frank waited for five seconds but there was no bite. ‘I’ll be able to confirm next Tuesday at the same time. If you’ve got a number I’ll contact you.’
More hesitation, Frank could almost hear the guy think. ‘I’ll give you this one, it’s a pay booth but some of them don’t take incoming calls. Ring me back to try it.’
Doing as he was told Frank was answered on the first ring, ‘Right that seems to be fine, ten on Tuesday then, and if you see Pat in the meantime, tell him Ann’s husband is to be buried tomorrow next to the rest of his family. If he wants to attend there’s a seat booked for him on the six o’clock flight from Manchester.’
‘If I see him I’ll tell him,’ Frank smiled, it was good to know Pat was still out there.
It didn’t take long. As the sun-drenched morning sucked the dew off the grass a gravedigger was replacing its carpet over a very private burial. In due course the headstone would match a death certificate and record the death of a loving husband and father as, Friday the 11th of May 1984. The day before Quinn and Butler had visited Dellows.
Chapter 1, chapter 2, chapter 3, chapter 4, chapter 5, chapter 6, chapter 7
Labels:
Eoin Taylor
BBC's Leaders Debate
I have a ticket for the BBC's Leader Debate taking place in Perth concert hall today. Bums have to be on seats by 4.30pm or latercomers will be left out in the desert heat (it's 22 in my garden at present).
The programme will be broadcast on BBC1 Scotland at 10.25pm. Such a shame it's not going UK wide. The BBC still refuses to acknowledge there are people outside Scotland who are interested in Scotland's politics.
Of course BBC Scotland can be found on Sky for those who subscribe to it or online.
Labels:
Scottish elections
Labour Labours On In Scotland
The following is an email I received from one of my readers. He's not the first to complain about the nonsensical policies Labour promise in their manifesto and I suspect this form of electoral material is partly to blame for turning people to the much more realistic SNP. Last week many journalists in the Scottish MSM gave advice to Labour on improving their campaign strategy.
My advice is they should have another relaunch on Monday.
Just got a pile of waste paper in the mail box. And Labour's attempt to con me has quotes from Iain Gray, who is seemingly claiming to be Scottish Labour Leader. Now if I understand it right, there is no Scottish Labour party to lead, he is only Labour leader in Holyrood, a different thing altogether.
However, I digress.
The quotes: "...Now the Tories are back, we need a strong Government in Scotland fighting for working people . My first priority is to make sure you and your family aren't left to pay the price of Tory cuts". Iain Gray. Scottish Labour's leader.
Why do we need the cuts? Because of labour stupidity.
Why do we need the cuts? Because of labour stupidity.
Also, "Scottish Labour will not introduce tuition fees... will guarantee apprenticeships for qualified youngsters. Within 100 days, labour in government will be creating 10,000 jobs for unemployed youngsters".
All this to re-elect one Dr Richard Simpson for Labour. I'd be more likely to vote for Homer Simpson and that wouldn't happen either.
I dont know what the writer of the pamphlet was smoking when he wrote it, but if the dreams are that good, where can we get some ?
I was tempted to go into battle with an email for a few seconds, then thought what's the point, it's like trying to teach a pig to sing; it just wastes your time and annoys the pig.
This morning sees the Scotland on Sunday come out in support of Alex Salmond and the SNP. Who says a leopard never changes its spots?
This morning sees the Scotland on Sunday come out in support of Alex Salmond and the SNP. Who says a leopard never changes its spots?
Labels:
Holyrood,
Scottish elections,
Scottish labour,
SNP
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