Red Joker Read online




  Contents

  Dedication5

  Acknowledgement6

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 29

  Chapter 313

  Chapter 4 19

  Chapter 528

  Chapter 632

  Chapter 736

  Chapter 8 41

  Chapter 946

  Chapter 1050

  Chapter 1153

  Chapter 1256

  Chapter 1360

  Chapter 14 64

  Chapter 1567

  Chapter 1670

  Chapter 1773

  Chapter 1876

  Chapter 1978

  Chapter 2081

  Chapter 2185

  Chapter 2288

  Chapter 2392

  JOINT RESOLUTION BY95

  THE UNITED STATES CONGRESS

  About the author97

  PUBLISHING INFORMATION98

  For my sons Tom and William

  Acknowledgement

  To Dr Vassily Solodovnikov, Soviet Ambassador to Zambia, alive and well in Lusaka.

  1

  ‘What time d’you have?’

  ‘For what?’

  ‘For what what? For Christ’s sake, Faraday, I asked you for the time.’

  It wasn’t Faraday’s fault. Arthur had recently attended a News Editors’ Symposium in Manhattan and had returned full of American vernacular.

  ‘It would help,’ Arthur said, looking at his wristwatch as the second hand swept twenty minutes past four, ‘if we had an Editor upstairs who was prepared to attempt a simple Yes or No decision.’

  ‘It’s a long way to go, Arthur, and there’s the awful expense.’

  Arthur stiffened. He looked up from his desk, peering.

  ‘You’re an accountant, Faraday. You pose as a journalist but you’re really a bloody accountant. Half the bastards employed here are.’

  He waved his arm across the desk in the direction of the newsroom. Faraday knew the sign. Whenever Arthur was obliged to sit and wait for an Editor’s decision he went into a state and became increasingly aggravated as waiting time extended.

  Arthur was not a desk man, that is, not a man who found it easy to sit behind one. Which was unfortunate, because as more and more of the important everyday editorial decisions were taken from him the longer he sat at his desk wondering why. It was a devolution of responsibility that had been forced on him by younger, brighter men with university degrees and an ability to produce what occasionally passed for original thought.

  And so, too often now, Arthur sat alone in the small room marked ‘Associate Editor’ watching through his open door the bustle and industry of the newsroom and wondering why, contrary to his expectations, he had become less and less in charge of affairs.

  ‘And I’ll tell you something else, Mr bloody Faraday,’ he continued, the aggravation recharging itself. ‘Men who spend their working days counting money are men who have no gut feeling for news. No Nuff! They wouldn’t know a story from my bloody backside.’

  He jumped up suddenly from behind his desk, knocked a half full plastic cup of cold mauve tea into an open drawer marked ‘Private’ and slammed his office door shut. Then, with his right fist clenched, he turned and punched a 1967 Daily Telegraph map of the world hanging on the wall. He winced, whispered something Faraday couldn’t quite make out and carefully tucked the limp hand into his trouser pocket.

  ‘Not from my bloody arse they wouldn’t.’ He began opening and closing his wounded hand.

  Faraday, not knowing whether he should stay or wait outside, pretended not to see or hear and watched the pool of tea slowly meander its way across the desktop.

  Arthur’s room was full of nostalgic junk: mementos of Yesteryear scoops, beats and similar things that had made his beginner days in Television News exciting and pioneering. A Jewish infantryman’s helmet from the Yom Kippur war complete with the hole through which the Syrian bullet had passed; a transistor radio made in the shape of a hand grenade and sold in the streets of civil war Beirut by the ever-enterprising Japanese; and the Tricolour taken by the British army on the day they finally flushed out the Provisionals in Crossmaglen, County Armagh.

  ‘News, my lad, is not arithmetic, despite what you and all those bloody smart-alecs out there think.

  ‘The Editors of my day,’ he said, ‘could sniff out a story before it even happened. We used a word then you’ll never have heard of - HUNCH! It’s gone from the dictionary, but that’s what men had then. Great men too. Masters of their trade. Champions. They would have a headline even before the story hit the telex. Just by hunch.’

  The doubt persisted. ‘But how,’ said Faraday, ‘could they have written a headline for a story they hadn’t even got? I don’t see that’s possible.’

  ‘ ’Course you don’t, you’re not a newsman you’re an accountant, your head’s full of equations. You forget you’re in the business of words. Real newsmen feel it in their gut, not in their bloody head. That’s where a hunch comes from . . . from here.’ He patted his stomach, where Faraday thought there seemed ample enough space for hunches and all kinds of things.

  ‘Your lot haven’t got hunches,’ Arthur said, ‘and no university bloody Honours crap will give it them.’

  Arthur looked again at his painful hand and began turning it over looking for a bruise. For some odd reason Faraday felt sad, and suddenly he thought Arthur sounded sad, too.

  ‘We’ve no Champions left,’ Arthur said quietly. ‘None. I wish we had. We would have had a decision from upstairs hours ago.’

  ‘But the story’s only just broken,’ said Faraday.

  ‘Exactly.’

  Arthur was at the wall map again, measuring distances from London. With his unbruised left hand outstretched, he eased the open palm across Europe, skimming the Alps, across the Mediterranean, North Africa, down over Addis Ababa, thumb to little finger like a crawling crab, on into the Indian Ocean.

  ‘Five and a half, my friend,’ he said and stood up.

  ‘What?’ asked Faraday.

  ‘Palms, Faraday, palms. Flattened out like this the span of my hand equals exactly 1,000 miles.’ Arthur still refused to speak in kilometres. He looked at Faraday. ‘Yours are probably around 850. Makes the addition a bit more difficult. A thousand mile span is much handier. I’m glad to have it.’

  He went through his hand crawl again.

  ‘London,’ he said, ‘out to here, to the tip of Madagascar, is just over five and a half thousand palm-miles.’

  ‘I suppose,’ said Faraday, ‘it might just as well be eighty thousand, considering.’ He lifted Arthur’s little finger off the map so that he could see the line of latitude.

  ‘The flight leaves in two hours,’ he said, ‘and there isn’t another connection out of Nairobi till Thursday.’

  Arthur walked backwards to his desk, staring at the wall map. Then, in a well co-ordinated movement born of much practice, he punched his left hand with his damaged right fist, and with the left still swinging slammed the open drawer marked ‘Private’ shut. Tea began to dribble through the cracks in the drawer on to his Terylene and worsted drip- dry but he didn’t notice.

  ‘Hell!’ he said. ‘Why couldn’t it have happened last week? Northgate was in Dar es Salaam doing a piece on the World Health Organization Bilharzia Conference. Could have popped across the Indian Ocean and saved money and worry.’

  ‘I thought he suffered from hydrophobia,’ said Faraday.

  ‘Hydrophobia?’

  ‘A fear of wate
r.’

  ‘The only fear of water that blighter has is when it’s just about to fall into his whisky. It’s always the same with these . . . people.’ Arthur was about to say ‘blacks’ but presumed it to be a proscribed noun among the young and held it back. He considered himself a sensitive man. ‘And why now?’ he asked. ‘Right in the middle of the Labour Party Conference. Programme’s full of Blackpool! ’

  ‘Arthur . . . the Editor! ’ It was the Pretty Thing on the Foreign Desk, shouting above the babble of the newsroom as scriptwriters, producers, out-putters, in-putters, directors, teleprompters and a familiar face embarked upon the final phase of hysteria in the minutes leading up to the early evening news bulletin.

  Arthur stood up, to attention it seemed to Faraday, and picked up his extension receiver. Faraday watched his profile, lips tight, jaw muscles tensing and flexing involuntarily, his eyes now slits, staring across the street to the garment factory opposite, seeing nothing.

  Faraday heard the Editor’s voice fast and excited in Arthur’s earpiece. Arthur breathed deep, braced his shoulders as if he were preparing for bad news - or, to be more exact, unfortunate news: bad news is invariably good news to a newsman - and his forehead began to shine with sweat. In an absent-minded way, he leant forward and repeated his palming exercise across the wall map, occasionally moving his face to within a few inches of it and examining it so intensely that Faraday wondered if he’d lost a thumbprint. Still the high-pitched voice ripped from the telephone. Then, as was another of Arthur’s habits at times of stress, he shifted the telephone from his right hand to his left and hit the wall map hard again. He caught his breath in pain. Faraday, standing on tiptoe, though he didn’t know why, realized a decision had been made.

  Arthur sucked his sore knuckles, turned to Faraday and winked. He was about to smile, but remembered Faraday’s status and checked himself.

  Faraday heard the Editor’s voice. ‘In spite of the cost, Arthur, I’ll go along with you. We’ll send.’

  But that wasn’t on. Not with Arthur. A decision by the Editor was unilateral, there was nothing shared about it. It wasn’t ‘we’ who were sending. ‘He’, the Editor, was sending.

  And so, as always in these things, Faraday knew the talk would continue as the principle of collective responsibility was argued by the Editor at one end of the telephone and stubbornly qualified by Arthur at the other.

  Faraday backed slowly out of Arthur’s door, towards the Foreign Desk and the Pretty Thing. He began fingering the pile of newspapers by the telex machine, flicking the pages, hardly reading, vaguely aware of more floods in India and some sporting tragedy that had occurred in a goalless draw at Nottingham Forest.

  He wasn’t used to the suspense of waiting. This was after all his first opportunity of a big foreign story, and what did the older ones say? You’re not on a story until you’re having your first gin and tonic thirty thousand feet up.

  He couldn’t believe his luck. The usual men, the big names who could fly to the far side of the globe without noticing, were away or sick or on holiday. Now, after his long, waiting, confusing apprenticeship on the Home Desk, there was the chance to join that tight, jealous band of Foreign Correspondents.

  He’d been to Antwerp, of course, and twice to Dublin. Once he’d almost made it to West Germany, had actually been in the tube to London Airport, when the programme’s European Correspondent had emerged from someone’s bedroom in Bonn just in time to make his regular doomwatch via Eurovision on the late night news.

  But this was a story to Africa and beyond. This was to the Indian Ocean.

  He felt the strain of anticipation, his mouth dry. He pulled his passport from his breast pocket, thin and virgin, shining dark blue with its fresh gold crest and lettering, untouched beyond Europe. How he envied the Globe-Trotters with their special hundred-page edition, tattered and travel-worn, crammed with exotic visas in Arabic, Indian . . . thick with beautiful Entries and Exits from Peking, Phnom Penh, Laos and Sri Lanka, full of names that no longer existed on the map, like East Pakistan, Biafra, Rhodesia, Cambodia, Lourenço Marques, Basutoland, Saigon, Nyasaland, Ceylon.

  Faraday was beginning to feel quite sick with anxiety, afraid the swing doors of the newsroom would suddenly be kicked open by one of half a dozen reporters smelling of afternoon brandy, ready to grab the prize.

  The Pretty Thing on the Foreign Desk looked at him but without sympathy. She spent her boring days sending others to the exotic places she quietly dreamt of as she sat behind her typewriter. Bermuda and Rio, Cape Town and Bangkok, the Caribbean and places in the sun. Her bed-sit walls in West Acton were covered in British Airways and Air France wallpaper posters. She felt no generosity towards Faraday. If they didn’t send him it was one less to feel jealous about.

  ‘Okay . . . get the bugger off.’ Arthur was shouting from his door.

  The Pretty Thing looked away, bit her lip and then remembered she had to buy onions and minced meat for the twosome dinner party she was giving for her landlord’s sister. The Home Desk Editor sitting opposite, whose habit it was to chew HB pencils so that the drooping corners of his mouth were always black, leant backwards in his chair and drew a line through Faraday’s name on the weekly duty ‘Home’ roster.

  Faraday felt dizzy. He smoothed out the newspaper on top of the pile he had been fidgeting with and there on the front page of the Evening Standard was a photograph, a map and a banner headline: ‘INDIAN OCEAN ISLAND COUP: NEW PRESIDENT DECLARES MARXIST REVOLUTION’.

  2

  Union was a very small island, easily overlooked. Even on a large-scale map it was frequently mistaken for a fly dropping, a speck in the Indian Ocean lying midway between Malagasy and Mozambique 300 miles off the East African shore. Some pilots had been known to overshoot it, others never to find it during days of persistent cloud cover. It had been written, by sailors of earlier generations, that the island itself sailed, that it moved like an iceberg with the wind and currents, moving backwards and forwards along the stretch of water known on the charts as the Mozambique Channel. In countless ships’ logs, captains would record sighting Union, sail towards it, only to lose it in low cloud and sea mist. And then their bosuns would begin to doubt their eyesight and compass when, as the mists cleared, they found they had passed the island by.

  It was, as one captain with a touch of the romantic had written, ‘as if the island does not want to be landed on, not to be lived on, at least not by anything as vulgar as Man’.

  French rule was formally established in 1790 when a brigantine, La Belle Marie, owned by a Bordeaux merchant trading company, en route for Madras, lost its way in the sea mists and pierced its hull on the coral reefs that surrounded the island like a horseshoe.

  But, in character with the island, even the sinking was done gently, giving the sailors time to disembark, the ship coming slowly to rest in thirty feet of the clearest water. And just as slowly, in the weeks that followed the wrecking. La Belle Marie’s distraught captain and his eighteen crew dived in and out of the submerged hold and cabins until, with the help of anxious natives, all items of potential value and obvious utility had been brought up and dried, cleaned and stored.

  Exactly four weeks after his fondness for Cognac had ended his sea career. Captain Henri Lucien Chaudenson (retired) hoisted the fleur-de-lis on a twelve-foot bamboo cane, declared the island the property of Mother France and Louis, named it Union for obvious reasons and became, on his own appointment, its first Governor. He also decided in the same ceremony, saving time and emotions, to name the twenty or so straw huts they’d erected. Petit Royan, after his own birthplace, Royan, a small fishing town at the mouth of the Garoche River on the Bordeaux coast.

  It was a sad occasion. The mention of France, his own Royan never to be seen again, his wife and three children always to be missed, the saddest prospect of twenty years or more of life to go with their love and memories forever scraping at
his soul. He began crying and one by one, as is the way with the French, his men around him added their tears to his, dampening the sand they stood on in such a way it became almost a baptism.

  Then, wiping their eyes, men again, they raised their heads to their flag as a young castrato galleyhand sang and in chorus they saluted their King Louis. As it happened, during the voyage, Louis’s court had been disbanded and many of his supporters dismembered. But on that soft summer evening they knew nothing of the guillotine or the barricades or Madame Defarge or of the howling mobs who were forever to make the French regret the loss of their throne and begrudge the English their ability and cheek in resurrecting theirs.

  The spectacle of the white men singing, crying and standing perfectly still beneath the coloured cloth stuck on bamboo fascinated the natives who, quite unafraid of the paraphernalia, joined in.

  They were, as Governor Chaudenson wrote in his diary, handsome people. The men were tall, strong and naked except for soft leather pouches that held their genitals safe like a truss. He wrote of women with plaited hair like straw- dolls who, in extraordinary fashion, carried their babies on their backs with them everywhere, strapped tightly round with a strip of cloth to keep them secure:

  I am told that for some years after their birth, the children are carried this way, never, as it were, leaving their mother’s skin. It is as if they are still in the womb, feeling their mother’s pulse. This may help explain why in all the weeks we have been here, I have yet to hear a child cry or a mother’s harsh words.

  He wrote also of the daughters and sisters, the girls who wore nothing except a small piece of animal skin over their Venus Mound: ‘. . . but of much softer skin, sometimes the fur of a rabbit or wild cat.’

  Chaudenson, who never before had had the time or the reason to study young black females, remarked on the beauty of their skin:

  . . . quite black, without shine and unlike those I have seen sold by Arabs; unmarked and without blemish. They have sturdy bodies, and long, well-shaped legs with rounded calves - again something unusual among the female Negro. Their stomachs are flat, their behinds are small and firm like a boy’s, and they have a proportion of hip and breast that is delightful to observe. The nipples of those without child are the size of walnuts, their lips are large and their teeth whiter and sturdier than anything I have ever seen.