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by Stan Mason




  Title Page

  OFFSPRING

  By

  Stan Mason

  Publisher Information

  Offspring

  Published in 2014 by Andrews UK Limited

  www.andrewsuk.com

  This book is sold subject to the condition that it shall not, by way of trade or otherwise, be lent, resold, hired out or otherwise circulated without the publisher’s prior written consent in any form of binding or cover other than that in which it is published, and without a similar condition being imposed on the subsequent purchaser.

  Copyright © 2014 Stan Mason

  The right of Stan Mason to be identified as author of this book has been asserted in accordance with section 77 and 78 of the Copyrights Designs and Patents Act 1988.

  Chapter One

  The sad news heralded a bad day! The office was filled with gloom; everyone was depressed. The death of a reporter was always felt deeply by all those who worked on the newspaper... from messenger boy to the chief editor. Death was not new to any of us. We wrote about it every day. But such matters related to other people... the general public... not to the writers who communicated the news. Certainly not to the main three reporters... Petrie, Barnaby and Savage. They called us the “hot-shots”, reporters with a high-reputation who had been writing for the newspaper for many years. Now we were down to two; and even less than that, because Barnaby had been injured in a road accident and had broken his leg.

  Petrie and I joined the newspaper at the same time many years earlier. We were not only colleagues but good friends. In time, he became a war correspondent while I took on a multitude of indifferent activities. Now he was dead. When I read the initial report sent through on the facsimile machine, all the anguish inside me frothed over. I was angry... furious... filled with despair. ‘Bastards!’ I shouted across the office. ‘Shot him in the back! Shot my best friend in the back! God, you knock your guts out trying to make a living by reporting the news and some trigger-happy fool ends it in one second with a single shot from a Kalashnikov rifle. No time to pray. No time to say goodbye to the wife and kids. No time for messages to relatives or friends... nothing! What a waste of a life!

  “I’m going places, Bellamy!” he once told me. “I’m going places. Just you wait and see! Hang on to my shirt and you’ll be in for a great ride!” Well he went places all right, ending up in a ditch in some God-forsaken country with a bullet in his back. How could anyone in the world shoot an innocent man in cold blood? Surely they must have seen he had a pen in his hand and not a gun! But then he was shot in the back. The cowards! He wasn’t wearing a uniform. Jesus! Couldn’t they see he wasn’t wearing a uniform! Were they blind? We all know that ugly things happen in the heat of war which are best left unsaid and forgotten... but to shoot an unarmed man in the back when he’s not wearing a uniform is way out of line! I hope they rot in hell!’

  The occasion was so sad that even Ted Flanders, my bad-tempered, miserable, ulcer-ridden editor whose sole aim was to expose current situations operating against the public interest to sell more newspapers, wasn’t around to shout at the staff. Nonetheless, he managed to sneak in to leave a memo on my desk... to cover a story. I fumed even more when I read it. It had been given initially to Barnaby. However, a relayed message explained that the luckless reporter had been struck down by a taxi, an act which removed him from all worthwhile activity, causing him to lay prostrate in a hospital bed suffering a broken leg and internal injuries. Despite his brilliance in the newspaper field, Barnaby had been proved to be a reprehensible liar many times in the past in order to avoid seedy assignments. A man with a silver tongue, he had the ability to draw on the most remarkable tales which poured smoothly from his misbegotten lips. On this occasion I gave him the benefit of the doubt because if he turned up on the following week fully fit I would surely break one of his legs myself! Whenever Flanders sought a replacement for him, it always fell to me to cover for him. In the heat of the moment, I offered no token of sympathy to my colleague... albeit he was probably painfully hospitalised. For the time being, my mind was wounded and bruised by the news of the sudden death of my dear friend and colleague, Jeff Petrie. He would be hard to replace on the newspaper; there was no one with whom to compare him in real life!

  Flanders used Barnaby and myself as his trouble-shooting squad. It was the equivalent role of a commando in the army, or a professional in the S.A.S. There were times when it became really rough out in the field. The editor had developed this idea on his own and often boasted about its value, efficiency and success to the Chief Editor. His argument stressed that sales of the newspaper had risen fairly steeply in the past ten years, and there was no reason to challenge him on the issue. However, neither Barnaby nor I ever felt it was anything special... other than for the editor to gain himself another promotion point with his superior. We were chosen to undertake the most hazardous and difficult tasks to entertain millions of readers who would probably use yesterday’s paper to light the fire, empty the ashes in the hearth, wrap refuse in it, eat chips from it, or use it for some other mundane purpose. News items were quickly expendable.

  Barnaby never seemed to care if an assignment was tough or perilous. He seemed to thrive when danger lurked in the wings. I was far more concerned about my own welfare... being a coward at heart... but then every job had its risks. There was no rhyme or reason to dwell on the possibility or probability of personal danger. Personally, I had no pretensions of longevity. A long life meant little to me. I wanted only to live for today and relax in comfort by myself whenever the opportunity arose.

  It was an hour later when Ted Flanders returned to his office. He stared at me through the window and then buzzed me on the telephone.

  ‘Why am I not blessed with good reporters?’ he demanded, although I knew he never meant it. ‘I gave you an assignment early this morning and you’re still sitting at your desk. What the hell do you think you’re doing?’

  ‘I’m writing an obituary to Jeff Petrie, if you must know!’ I wasn’t going to take any guff from him this morning. ‘Anyway, it’s not an assignment as such. Your memo doesn’t make sense. Maybe you should go back to night-school to learn English!’

  He was shocked at my brazen attitude. Normally, we tolerated each other without being rude. Today it was different.

  ‘You’re upset. Well that’s understandable. Look... come into my office and have a drink. We’ll run through it together.’

  I pressed the cross-bar on the telephone gently a couple of times to cause a clicking sound without cutting him off. ‘I didn’t quite get that, Ted!’ I complained falsely. ‘Couldn’t hear you.’

  The editor replaced the receiver and emerged from his office with an old-fashioned expression on his face. ‘All right,’ he said tiredly as he approached my desk. ‘Don’t push me too hard, Jimmy.!’ He put out his arms which he rested on the desk and leaned across towards me. ‘This assignment’s a piece of cake. I’m just testing it out for a story’.

  My ears perked up suspiciously at the ostensible simplicity of the task. ‘Details, Ted. Details!’ I tried to stifle a yawn as he droned on.

  ‘A certain amount of turbulence in Eastern Europe. That’s the trouble.’

  ‘Are we talking about the weather, German reunification, or what? You’re not making sense.’

  ‘It seems that a group of young people have conceived an idea that sounds sinister. We ought to take a look. If it’s correct, there could be major problems. I want this paper to be the first one to publish the story. It all started here!’

  I yawned loudly, unable to repress my feelings any longer. ‘Is this going to be one of those kite-flying assignments where you end up s
creaming how expensive I am and what a waste of money it was to the paper?’

  He seemed to be staring into the distance, not having heard my tirade.. ‘The information concerns some people who organised themselves into a group a while ago, waiting for the agreement on German unification. Now the time is ripe.’

  ‘Ripe for what, Ted? Unification took place a long time ago.‘ It occurred to me that perhaps Flanders had been overworking and needed a vacation. The continued pressure of editing a major newspaper had caused him to become jaded. He needed a rest!

  ‘I’ll tell you what they’re ripe for!’ he rattled sharply. ‘The group’s been growing secretly over the past thirty years and now has a core membership exceeding a hundred thousand people. You may also be interested to know it has links with twenty other countries in Europe and that each one has about the same number of recruits. If you take account of all that, we may be talking of two million people ready to form the United States of Europe. And many of them are fairly young. Am I getting through to you?’

  ‘How come they’re young people?’

  ‘Because most of them are. That’s what I hear.’

  ‘But the European Community is in full flood. Why would anyone want to form a separate group covering the same countries?’

  ‘That’s one of the questions I want answered. So get the cobwebs out of your mind and come back to civilisation. Petrie’s gone. No amount of remorse will bring him back. The public want to read the next edition of the paper. We can’t stand on ceremony.’

  I ignored his comments as so much rhetoric. His words swiftly reinforced the myth that he had no heart at all. The paper was his life... his only interest... nothing else mattered.

  ‘Does this organisation have a Head Office? If so, where is it located? Who’s in charge? Where can I get hold of them?’ From habit, the questions began tripping off my tongue as my brain raced to learn more.

  ‘Who knows who the Fuehrer is these days?’

  In that single word... the term Fuehrer... Flanders caused the whole of modern history to erupt in my mind like an active volcano. I was too young to have been through the previous holocaust, but the evidence was there to witness in pictures, films and documents which had etched themselves on my mind. Could it be that those who had forgotten the warnings of their parents and grandparents were going to make the same mistake again?

  ‘Are you still there, Jimmy? Is the light still on in there?’ he continued sarcastically as I drifted back through the past.

  I tried to marshal my thoughts with regard to the concept. My mind was relaxed, having shifted into low gear over the past week mulling over trivialities. It felt as if it needed a winch to haul it back to the real world. ‘Is your source reliable?’ I managed to say after a short while.

  ‘I think so. He’s never let me down before. If you can find a good story in it, I’ll owe you a favour. That’s a promise.’

  I laughed loudly as he stood erect. ‘When did you ever do me a favour, Ted? When you’re in trouble, I’m the only person you can really fall back on. How bad is Barnaby anyway?’

  He paused for a moment, pulling on his jaw thoughtfully. ‘You weren’t in the centre of London last evening driving a taxi, were you?’

  ‘What’s that supposed to mean?’ I demanded. Clearly, he was intimating nonsensically that I might have created the accident which put the reporter in hospital.

  ‘Never mind!’ he snapped. ‘Just don’t stretch this one out like elastic. I don’t want to have to explain a high cost to our illustrious Chief Editor.’ He turned on his heel and went back to his office.

  When it came to greetings and farewells, Flanders was not the best conversationalist in the world. Too many years of service in the newspaper profession had taken the varnish off his etiquette. At least for once he refrained from using indecent and blasphemous language.

  I was too tense... too upset by Jeff Petrie’s death to work that day. I couldn’t even finish his obituary and had to pass it on to a colleague for completion. I drove into the Surrey countryside and sat on a park bench. In solitude, I reflected the indifference and intolerance of human-beings towards each other in war, and the futility of chasing ambition which often failed without warning so that ideals collapsed like a pack of cards. The sun was dipping over the horizon and I felt quite miserable. There were bad guys everywhere these days, and I often wondered what went wrong... and where would it all end. The strange view filled my mind that the planet on which we live is purgatory itself... that we passed through a life and ended here waiting to be transferred to Heaven or some other place. Alternatively, we may have arrived in Hell itself. Whenever I read the items in the daily newspaper, I considered the latter concept the most likely!

  ***

  I left to start the assignment early next morning. For the time being, Petrie was out of my mind. A thick cumulus of cloud hid the sky and it began to drizzle. As the traffic grew thicker, my patience began to wear thin. When I came close to the capital I started to recall the irritation and frustration experienced throughout the rest of the year. London was an awful place in which to work, with its never-ending stream of cars, the icy-cold unfriendliness of the people, a consistent buzz of background noise from the traffic, and air pollution which seemed prevalent everywhere. The traffic congestion ensured I would be late which was a bad beginning to the day. Long lines of vehicles were slouched in traffic lanes without budging for long periods, purring softly in their static positions. The rest of the journey was bound to continue in the same vein. I edged my car on to the kerb and climbed out, placing a piece of cardboard under the windscreen wipers to declare it was out of action. My eyes scanned the mass of vehicles in despair until I saw a vacant taxi. Cab-drivers in London knew every inch of the capital. If I was going to get to my destination quickly, a taxi would be the only realistic method. My mind was so preoccupied that I failed to notice a tall man climb from a large black limousine nearby. He moved towards me swiftly to grip me fiercely by the arm.

  ‘This way, Mr. Savage!’ he ordered briefly, pulling me towards the limousine.

  I stared at him in astonishment. I had been standing on a major highway leading into London when a man I had never seen before took a tight grip on my arm and called me by my name. Curtly, he invited me to travel in his car and projected me in that direction. ‘Who are you?’ I managed to blurt out as a spark of fear welled-up inside me.

  He opened the rear door of the car. ‘Get in!’ he ordered. He loosened his grip and pushed me hard so that I fell on to the back seat. The door was closed firmly behind me. He settled into the front seat and turned to look at me. ‘You’re in no danger, Mr. Savage. Your presence is required urgently, that’s all.’ He opened a window and place a siren on the roof which started to wail like a screaming banshee. The vehicles in front edged sideways to the kerb to give way, and the limousine sped forward.

  ‘Who wants to see me so urgently... and why?’ I asked, as the car forged through the thoroughfare of scattered traffic.

  ‘You’ll find out soon enough, ‘ he replied flatly.

  I weighed up all the pros and cons. I wasn’t being held prisoner... well not yet, at least. Nor was there a gun pointing at my head. ‘This is all rather bizarre, isn’t it?’ I pressed, not expecting an answer. ‘All this cloak-and-dagger stuff!’ The tall man ignored the question. ‘You know my name so you obviously know I’m a reporter with The Daily Post. Why couldn’t you have telephoned me at the office?’

  ‘I obey orders. The three wise monkeys, Mr. Savage. I don’t see anything, hear anything, or say anything. It makes life much simpler.’

  There was a long silence and then I decided to see what would happen if I tried to escape. I placed my hand on the door handle, ostensibly with the intention of diving into the road, even though the car was travelling at a reasonable speed, but it was locked and didn’t give an inch. ‘Do
n’t mess about!’ scolded the driver, witnessing my abortive attempt to liberate myself. ‘It’ll all be revealed to you. If you’ll only be patient.’

  The car turned into Westminster Square and headed towards the car park of the House of Commons. The expression on my face showed my surprise as my eyes ran over the building. I could hardly resist the obvious statement. ‘This is the House of Commons!’

  The driver failed to respond as he stopped the vehicle and waved a hand to usher me out. I stepped out of the car anticipating a rush of people ready to descend upon me without warning, but, to my relief, nothing happened. I followed him into the building and we walked down a long corridor. He stopped outside a heavily-panelled door and paused for a moment. Then he rapped on it loudly with his gloved hand before turning the handle and squeezing his head inside, taking great care to shield the identity of those in the room from my curious eyes. Shortly, after a muffled discussion, the driver pushed open the door and motioned me to enter. I obeyed hesitantly and had hardly crossed the threshold when the door slammed shut behind me.

  There were five people in the room seated around a large polished table, and they stared in my direction. By the way they looked at me, I felt like something that the cat had dragged in! A tall, thin man, dressed smartly in a starched white shirt, a black jacket and pin-striped trousers got to his feet as I entered.

  ‘Good morning, Mr. Savage!’ he greeted amiably, taking my hand which he pumped up and down. ‘My name’s Maitland, Personal Assistant to the Prime Minister.’ He pointed to the others at the table. ‘May I introduce Miss Grayson, Technical Adviser on Defence matters, Lieutenant-Colonel Topham, also Defence, Sir Peter Cavenham, Home Office, and Mr. Jacobs, State Security. Please take a seat!’

  Maitland turned on his heel and left the room by means of a side door which he closed behind him. I stared at the faces of the others with a high degree of suspicion. After all, I had been abducted and was being held prisoner in the House of Commons. It sounded fastidious and, if I ever divulged what had happened, no one would believe me... certainly not Ted Flanders my editor! There was one other matter which set off a red warning light in my head. How did I know these people were genuine... that they were the people Maitland purported them to be? I had never heard of any of them before! For a short while I stood perfectly still, and then decided that attack was the best form of defence. ‘Perhaps one of you would be kind enough to explain why I’ve been abducted by such an eminent group of people.’

 

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