Memories of the conversations with my cat – 94

As some may be aware, but many not, Chester, my faithful writing assistant, mice catcher, and general pain in the neck, passed away some years ago.

Recently I was running a series based on his adventures, under the title of Past Conversations with my cat.

For those who have not had the chance to read about all of his exploits I will run the series again from Episode 1

These are the memories of our time together…

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This is Chester.

We are in the middle of a philosophical debate.

No, it’s not about whether the world is flat, though sometimes I think he has that notion, as well as all humans are basically stupid.

I’ve been thinking about the pandemic and how it might meld into a plotline for a story.

Chester is not happy that I should use China as the country with global ambitions, after using the term ‘global domination’ and got a very silky retort.

He doesn’t seem to think that by causing a pandemic, making each of the G20 nations basically launch themselves into insolvency in order to maintain some semblance of economic stability, that China, who miraculously recovers, becomes the nation who saves the world?

It sounded quite good in my head.

Particularly when you see nations like the USA, the only other country that could tackle China as a ‘savior’ state, is going slowly down the gurgler.   Or so it seems, and it’s only a matter of time before something gives.

Chester and I now have mandatory viewing every morning, the Donald Trump show, where we lay bets as to whom he’s going to fire or lambast.

Chester thought the Doctor was gone for all money on Monday.

My money was on the reporter, who wouldn’t stop asking questions.

But today, it might be about Joe Biden and the Democrats, and the ramping up of the Republican’s political campaign.  Who said the COVID briefings had to be about that mundane virus?

Still, it’s back to the drawing board.  The overall plot is good, creating a virus that brings almost every nation to its knees, and one that rises out of the ashes to ‘save the world’.  It’s like you don’t need bullets and arms to fight a war, just a hell of a sneaky virus; you know, infecting people when you don’t know you’ve got it and infecting others.

Hang on, Chester’s calling.  It’s time for the Donald Trump show.

The cinema of my dreams – Was it just another surveillance job – Episode 60

This story is now on the list to be finished so over the new few weeks, expect a new episode every few days.

The reason why new episodes have been sporadic, there are also other stories to write, and I’m not very good at prioritizing.

But, here we are, a few minutes opened up and it didn’t take long to get back into the groove.

Things are about to get complicated…


Joanne let me get away far too easily. 

When I got back to my car, I ran the scanner over it.  One tracker was easily found, another that took a full half hour to find, and some very strange stares from people on the sidewalk.

I put them both on another car and then went back to the safe house.  Knowing O’Connell was just a pawn meant there wasn’t a hurry to find him.  Anna had everything she needed from him, and now he was of little use to her.  The only question was whether he was still alive.

Jennifer had taken my pyjamas and my bed in the master bedroom, so I was relegated to the spare. 

Not happy.

We needed a plan.  In all the excitement I’d forgotten O’Connell had three places, the original apartment with Herman, his mother’s house in Peaslake, and the apartment in Bromley.

I was up before Jennifer, making coffee, when she came out.

She made my pyjamas look good.  And there was the distraction factor Maury was prone to banging on about.

“How did it go at the office?”

“Turns out Anna Jakovich, the apparent seller of the USB, is a biochemist herself, one who was involved in a laboratory disaster, and discharged as part of the problem.  Make of that what you will, but it looks like her husband was just the fall guy.”

“Of course, it all makes sense then.  Gets the husband to steal the data on the pretext they’re saving the world, then kills him, and pins the blame on him if anything goes wrong. gets us to stump up several million pounds, then ditches O’Connell and runs with the money, and the USB, to bilk another unsuspecting government, like the Russians, or the Chinese.”

“Can you read minds?”

“No.  Got a call from Dobbin, though I have no idea how he found my number since it’s a burner.  Seems he finally found the file on Anna, presumably the same one you got.

“He doesn’t know you’re involved.”

“He does now.  He figured you’d seek help from your classmates that were still on the books.  There’s two of us, me and Miss Desirable, Yolanda.”

“Didn’t she leave the Severin School of wannabes before qualifying?”

“And went straight to the city office of the department and offered up all details on our once fearless leaders for a second chance.  On the books, and back in training, training we might be able to use.”

“Possibly.  The question is, of course, whether she knew what they were planning…”

“Dobbin says she was fooling about with Severin, or perhaps that was Maury…”

“Then Dobbin or Monica or both knew in advance what was going to happen and could have prevented a tragedy if that was the case.  I don’t think she quite knew everything.”

“Well, what I know now is that we’re simply pawns in a much larger game, dancing to a tune that is completely out of key.  Makes things all the more interesting, don’t you think.  By my estimation when we complete our mission, we’re likely to end up like Severin, we just have to work out which one it is before we reach our expiry date.  That coffee smells divine, by the way.  We’re not going anywhere until I’ve had a cup.”

At least she hadn’t decided to go back to her old life.  Not yet anyway.

We tackled Peaslake first.  It was a free-standing house, and we had reasonably covered access that gave us entry to the property with minimal chance of observation.

When we were close, I was nearly run off the road by a fire engine, in a hurry.  Closer still we could see a plume of smoke rising from behind the trees, and when we reached the top of the street, we could see where the fire engine was going.

O’Connell’s house was on fire.

I parled the car and we went to join the throng of nearby residents, all with nothing better to do.

“What happened?” Jennifer asked one of the residents.

“There was an explosion, a fireball, someone said they thought it was a gas tank, and then a fire started.  It was fully ablaze by the time the first fire engine arrived.”

The firefighters had most of the blaze subdued, and we could see the house was destroyed. 

Was it Anna or O’Connell, or both covering their tracks?  The house had become compromised when Jennifer and I turned up.

Five minutes later the Detective Inspector and her Sargent arrived.

“Should I be worried now you’re here,” she asked when she saw me.

“It belonged to the mother of one of our officers who is involved in the case I’m working on.”

“He has the information?”

“No, or maybe.  We don’t know.  We do know there’s a woman involved who was working with our agent.”

“Oh.  I’ve been told there are two bodies found inside, one man and one woman.  Nothing else yet, but I’m going to talk to the forensic team waiting to see if they know any more.  Don’t go anywhere, I may need to talk to you.”

“Just a question.  You didn’t let Jan out, did you?”

She looked puzzled.  “Jan?”

“The girl who shot Severin.”

“Oh, her.  MI5 came and took her away the moment my back was turned.  Why?”

“She probably did this.”

“You might have told me she was dangerous.  Who is she?”

“An MI5 assassin.”

She sighed.  “You people are a law unto yourselves.  Don’t go anywhere.  I’ll be back.”

We watched her stomp away.

“Well,” Jennifer said, “that just made our life a little more difficult.”

© Charles Heath 2020-2023

Writing a book in 365 days – 256/257

Days 256 and 257

Writing exercise

“The only thing standing between them and disaster was…”

Under the harsh studio lights, and the glare of a specially selected audience who had been firing questions at me for at least half an hour, and longer than I was told to expect, I felt a runnel of sweat run down the side of my face and into the gap between my neck and the collar of the shirt.

I was told that the audience wanted to know exactly how we had pulled off a miracle. The moderator had told the story, and a story it was, because I hardly recognised it as what had actually happened. It was not the story that had been approved. I had been given twenty minutes’ notice, the story had changed, given a script to read, and then I protested that it was nothing like what had happened.

I was told the truth was too unpalatable, and the audience would not like it.

Of course not. No one did. But someone had to cut the head off the snake, and the team I was assigned to had that job. We were one of ten. Everyone had a job to do that was vital to the end result. Ours was not that important; six of the eight members died, and the other living member declined to come on the show. I now knew why.

“Should I repeat the question?” The moderator was exuding calm, but I could see that she was getting impatient.

She had survived the purge, the person who had been the previous regime’s media spokesperson, who, not three months before, was standing up at press conferences trying to explain away the various nefarious events in what had been described as ‘simple speak’, so called because us citizens were basically ‘simple’.

I was very aware of the contribution this person had made, despite the lies and grovelling, telling everyone that she was a victim, much the same as all of us. A victim married to a high-up official in the previous regime, who lived in a mansion, ate the best food, and had holidays at the finest international resorts. We knew exactly who she was.

“Before this circus began, you asked me if I thought being a murderer was the best way to achieve a change of government.”

“I beg your pardon?”

“Emmaline Wharton. That is your real name, isn’t it?”

“No. I don’t know who this Emmaline Wharton is, but it isn’t me.”

There was a screen behind us, one that displayed the name of the show, and her most recent name, “Janice Saunders.” She had reverted to one of her pre-marriage names, considering that reminding people she was married to a tyrant wasn’t good for her new public image.

During the introduction monologue, a series of photographs showed the groups, the planning, and various shots taken during the operation in which I had participated. I had no idea until now when those photographs were shown that we had an embedded media representative along; he was certainly not introduced to us, and we would have declined because of the danger.

Uppermost in my mind was how he survived when six of us didn’t.

When I mentioned her name, the screen changed, and a photograph of the moderator, much younger but easily recognisable, was flashed on the screen. When she heard several gasps from the audience, she looked around.

“That’s…”

“Not you? Since you’ve been telling lies for nearly six years now, it’s no surprise that you can’t stop. When you specifically asked for one of the two remaining survivors of our operation to come on this show, you knew the other chap wouldn’t, which left me. I refused, but you had insisted. Why?”

I gave her my curious expression. I should have been angry, but after I thought about it, I decided it would be an interesting exercise. She had not been home with her husband when the designated team had arrived to take him into custody. There was just a single suitcase at the door, and no one else in the house, leading to the conclusion that she had been tipped off and had made her getaway earlier.

Imagine our surprise when she turned up at headquarters and proclaimed she had been working for us all the time. Yes, someone had, but we had believed that person had been found and killed a few days before the takeover. She had the credentials and materials to prove it was her, and no one, having seen the spy in their midst, only her communications, had taken her at her word.

I didn’t believe it for one moment. I knew she was the one responsible for the death of six very good people and the attempt on the other person’s life. It took me three months to convince them she was a traitor, still working for her previous masters in exile, the ones who had also been tipped off and escaped.

“Your story of bravery under extreme circumstances needs to be rejoiced.”

She said it so glibly. I was astonished by how quickly her tune had changed, from a puppet for an evil regime, to the voice of the people in the new.

“Even though it was me who killed your husband?”

Yes, there was just a flicker of recognition, that look behind those hooded eyes, of pure hatred.

“Because he was evil, yes. He forced me to say all those things, you know my story.”

“Your story is just that, Emmaline. A story. Just to be clear, my government wants to take you into custody. For some crazy reason, they believe you’ll give up the location of the fifteen members of the previous government who escaped. You and I both know that will never happen.”

On both sides of the stage, several members of the police had moved into position to prevent her escape.

“You’re wrong. I am not that person. I am the one who helped you; all of you make the change happen.”

The calm facade was starting to crumble.

“OK,” I said, “If that is the case, tell me your real name, the name of the spy within their midst.”

“No one knew my real name. It was one of the requirements I insisted on before joining your organisation. No way I could be tracked, because if you did, they would find out.”

“I know your real name. It’s not Emmaline Wharton, though that was one of about twenty you used when younger. You had a criminal record that read like a James Patterson thriller. So, once again, what is the real name of our spy?”

She was now in full-blown panic. If she did know the name, then it would be proof that she had been at the poor girl’s interrogation. We had only recently found her remains outside the prison block in an unmarked grave under freshly laid concrete, along with thirty others.

“Emily McGovern. They will find me and kill me. I need protection from them.”

I shook my head. An anonymous tip had been received a week before the takeover, that the creature sitting next to me had been the one to put a bullet in the real Emily’s head when she hadn’t given them anything about the upcoming takeover.

An eye for an eye.

A shot rang out, and I watched her die. It didn’t make me feel any better, but at last my sister, Emily, had got her justice.

©  Charles Heath  2025

Searching for locations: Washington DC, USA

Washington is a city with bright shiny buildings and endless monuments, each separated by a long walk or a taxi ride if you can find one.

We might have picked the wrong day, shortly after New Year’s Day when the crowds were missing along with everything else.  Or, conversely, it was probably the right time to go, when we didn’t have to battle the crowds.

Sunny but very cold, the walking warmed us up.

First stop was the Lincoln Memorial

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It was built to honor the 16th President of the United States, Abraham Lincoln.

It is located on the western end of the National Mall in Washington, D.C., across from the Washington Monument.

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The building is in the form of a Greek Doric temple and contains a large seated sculpture of Abraham Lincoln and inscriptions of two well-known speeches by Lincoln.

The next stop was the Washington Monument

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The Washington Monument is an obelisk on the National Mall in Washington, D.C., built to commemorate George Washington. Construction of the monument began in 1848 and not completed until 1888.  It was officially opened October 9, 1888.


We then took a taxi ride to the Jefferson Memorial

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This monument is dedicated to Thomas Jefferson (1743–1826), one of the most important of the American Founding Fathers as the main drafter and writer of the Declaration of Independence.

Construction of the building began in 1939 and was completed in 1943.

The bronze statue of Jefferson was added in 1947.

What I learned about writing: Even my Grandmother’s eerie house was fuel for the imagination

The Highway to Yesterday: When Progress Paves Over Memory

There’s a phrase we hear often: “the march of progress.” It conjures images of innovation, growth, and moving forward. And often, it’s a good thing, bringing advancements that improve our lives. But sometimes, this relentless march brings with it a different kind of change – one that paves over the past, transforming what we held dear into something unrecognizable.

I’ve been thinking a lot about this lately, prompted by a landscape that used to be… something else entirely.

I remember a time, long ago now, when ‘country’ truly meant country. Our holidays at my grandmother’s house, nestled just outside Melbourne, were expeditions into a different world. The drive itself was part of the magic. A comfortable half-hour journey, winding through stretches of open farmland, punctuated by small, charming towns – Beaconsfield, Officer, Berwick – each an oasis amidst the green. Today? That same route is a continuous sprawl of houses, a testament to metropolitan expansion, where those ‘oases’ are now just another indistinguishable part of the urban fabric.

But it was Grandma’s house that truly held the enchantment. A rambling, grand old place on extensive grounds, it was a universe waiting to be explored. Gardens, multiple garages overflowing with forgotten treasures, a huge workshop – it was a child’s paradise. One Christmas, my brother and I, armed with a sense of adventure and a few rusty tools, decided to become archaeological explorers. We unearthed a magnificent fountain, hidden beneath years of overgrowth, clearly once the centerpiece of a grand display. It felt like discovering our very own secret garden, complete with a sprawling, mysterious fernery.

Then there were the internal explorations. A whole wing of bedrooms, each a time capsule. I recall an ancient iron bedstead, so high off the ground we had to climb into it, easily a century old. And in another, the faint, lingering presence of my Uncle – a formidable, towering man whom, in our youthful imaginations, we first mistook for an ogre straight out of a Grimm’s fairy tale. The way his heavy footsteps would ‘clomp’ through the silent house after dark still sends a shiver of delicious apprehension down my spine.

But the march, as it always does, continued. And today, all of it is gone. That sprawling house, those secret gardens, the workshop, the echoes of my uncle’s footsteps – replaced. Not by new homes, not by another suburb, but by the relentless concrete and asphalt of a multi-lane highway, carving an alternate coastal route between Melbourne and Sydney. The very ground where those precious memories were made now carries the weight of countless cars, indifferent to the history beneath their tires.

All that remains are the vivid, precious memories of a time that will never return. They are treasures far more valuable than any physical object, etched permanently in the mind’s eye.

The march of progress is inevitable. It brings necessary change, growth, and sometimes, undeniable improvements. But it also exacts a cost, often unseen by those building the future. It’s a powerful reminder to cherish the present, to imbue the places we love with meaning, and to hold onto the stories that define us, because one day, they might be all that’s left.

And for me? It’s provided a rich soil, a fertile ground, for a whole new pile of stories, waiting to be told.

The first case of PI Walthenson – “A Case of Working With the Jones Brothers”

This case has everything, red herrings, jealous brothers, femme fatales, and at the heart of it all, greed.

See below for an excerpt from the book…

Coming soon!

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An excerpt from the book:

When Harry took the time to consider his position, a rather uncomfortable position at that, he concluded that he was somehow involved in another case that meant very little to him.

Not that it wasn’t important in some way he was yet to determine, it was just that his curiosity had got the better of him, and it had led to this: sitting in a chair, securely bound, waiting for someone one of his captors had called Doug.

It was not the name that worried him so much, it was the evil laugh that had come after the name was spoken.

Doug what? Doug the ‘destroyer’, Doug the ‘dangerous’, Doug the ‘deadly’; there was any number of sinister connotations, and perhaps that was the point of the laugh, to make it more frightening than it was.

But there was no doubt about one thing in his mind right then: he’d made a mistake. A very big. and costly, mistake. Just how big the cost, no doubt he would soon find out.

His mother, and his grandmother, the wisest person he had ever known, had once told him never to eavesdrop.

At the time he couldn’t help himself and instead of minding his own business, listening to a one-sided conversation which ended with a time and a place. The very nature of the person receiving the call was, at the very least, sinister, and, because of the cryptic conversation, there appeared to be, or at least to Harry, criminal activity involved.

For several days he had wrestled with the thought of whether he should go. Stay on the fringe, keep out of sight, observe and report to the police if it was a crime. Instead, he had willingly gone down the rabbit hole.

Now, sitting in an uncomfortable chair, several heat lamps hanging over his head, he was perspiring, and if perspiration could be used as a measure of fear, then Harry’s fear was at the highest level.

Another runnel of sweat rolled into his left eye, and, having his hands tied, literally, it made it impossible to clear it. The burning sensation momentarily took his mind off his predicament. He cursed and then shook his head trying to prevent a re-occurrence. It was to no avail.

Let the stinging sensation be a reminder of what was right and what was wrong.

It was obvious that it was the right place and the right time, but in considering his current perilous situation, it definitely was the wrong place to be, at the worst possible time.

It was meant to be his escape, an escape from the generations of lawyers, what were to Harry, dry, dusty men who had been in business since George Washington said to the first Walthenson to step foot on American soil, ‘Why don’t you become a lawyer?” when asked what he could do for the great man.

Or so it was handed down as lore, though Harry didn’t think Washington meant it literally, the Walthenson’s, then as now, were not shy of taking advice.

Except, of course, when it came to Harry.

He was, Harry’s father was prone to saying, the exception to every rule. Harry guessed his father was referring to the fact his son wanted to be a Private Detective rather than a dry, dusty lawyer. Just the clothes were enough to turn Harry off the profession.

So, with a little of the money Harry inherited from one of his aunts, he leased an office in Gramercy Park and had it renovated to look like the Sam Spade detective agency, you know the one, Spade and Archer, and The Maltese Falcon.

There’s a movie and a book by Dashiell Hammett if you’re interested.

So, there it was, painted on the opaque glass inset of the front door, ‘Harold Walthenson, Private Detective’.

There was enough money to hire an assistant, and it took a week before the right person came along, or, more to the point, didn’t just see his business plan as something sinister. Ellen, a tall cool woman in a long black dress, or so the words of a song in his head told him, fitted in perfectly.

She’d seen the movie, but she said with a grin, Harry was no Humphrey Bogart.

Of course not, he said, he didn’t smoke.

Three months on the job, and it had been a few calls, no ‘real’ cases, nothing but missing animals, and other miscellaneous items. What he really wanted was a missing person. Or perhaps a beguiling, sophisticated woman who was as deadly as she was charming, looking for an errant husband, perhaps one that she had already ‘dispatched’.

Or for a tall, dark and handsome foreigner who spoke in riddles and in heavily accented English, a spy, or perhaps an assassin, in town to take out the mayor. The man was such an imbecile Harry had considered doing it himself.

Now, in a back room of a disused warehouse, that wishful thinking might be just about to come to a very abrupt end, with none of the romanticized trappings of the business befalling him. No beguiling women, no sinister criminals, no stupid policemen.

Just a nasty little man whose only concern was how quickly or how slowly Harry’s end was going to be.

© Charles Heath 2019-2024

Searching for locations: New York, USA

After arriving latish from Toronto, and perhaps marginally disappointed that while in Toronto, the ice hockey didn’t go our way, we slept in.

Of course, the arrival was not without its own problems. The room we were allocated was on the 22nd floor and was quite smallish. Not a surprise, but we needed space for three, and with the fold-out bed, it was tight but livable.

Except…

We needed the internet to watch the Maple Leafs ice hockey game. We’d arrive just in time to stream it to the tv.

But…

There was no internet. It was everywhere else in the hotel except our floor.

First, I went to the front desk and they directed me to call tech support.

Second, we called tech support and they told us that the 22nd-floor router had failed and would get someone to look at it.

When?

It turns out it didn’t seem to be a priority. Maybe no one else on the floor had complained

Third, I went downstairs and discussed the lack of progress with the night duty manager, expressing disappointment with the lack of progress.

I also asked if they could not provide the full service that I would like a room rate reduction or a privilege in its place as compensation.

He said he would check it himself.

Fourth, after no further progress, we called the front desk to advise there was still no internet. This time we were asked if we wanted a room on another floor, where the internet is working. We accepted the offer.

The end result, a slightly larger, less cramped room, and the ability to watch the last third of the Maple Leaf’s game. I can’t remember if we won.

We all went to bed reasonably happy.

After all, we didn’t have to get up early to go up or down to breakfast because it was not included in the room rate, a bone of contention considering the cost.

I’ll be booking with them directly next time, at a somewhat cheaper rate, a thing I find after using a travel wholesaler to book it for me.

As always every morning while Rosemary gets ready, I go out for a walk and check out where we are.

It seems we are practically in the heart of theaterland New York. Walk one way or the other you arrive at 7th Avenue or Broadway.

Walk uptown and you reach 42nd Street and Times Square, little more than a 10-minute leisurely stroll. On the way down Broadway, you pass a number of theatres, some recognizable, some not.

Times Square is still a huge collection of giant television screens advertising everything from confectionary to TV shows on the cable networks.

A short walk along 42nd street takes you to the Avenue of the Americas and tucked away, The Rockefeller center and its winter ice rink.

A few more steps take you to 5th Avenue and the shops like Saks of Fifth Avenue, shops you could one day hope to afford to buy something.

In the opposite direction, over Broadway and crossing 8th Avenue is an entrance to Central Park. The approach is not far from what is called the Upper West Side, home to the rich and powerful.

Walk one way in the park, which we did in the afternoon, takes you towards the gift shop and back along a labyrinth of laneways to 5th Avenue. It was a cold, but pleasant, stroll looking for the rich and famous, but, discovering, they were not foolish enough to venture out into the cold.

Before going back to the room, we looked for somewhere to have dinner and ended up in Cassidy’s Irish pub. There was a dining room down the back and we were one of the first to arrive for dinner service.

The first surprise, our waitress was from New Zealand.

The second, the quality of the food.

I had a dish called Steak Lyonnaise which was, in plain words, a form of mince steak in an elongated patty. It was cooked rare as I like my steak and was perfect. It came with a baked potato.

As an entree, we had shrimp, which in our part of the world are prawns, and hot chicken wings, the sauce is hot and served on the side.

The beer wasn’t bad either. Overall given atmosphere, service, and food, it’s a nine out of ten.

It was an excellent way to end the day.

‘Sunday in New York’ – A beta reader’s view

I’m not a fan of romance novels but …

There was something about this one that resonated with me.

This is a novel about a world generally ruled by perception, and how people perceive what they see, what they are told, and what they want to believe.

I’ve been guilty of it myself as I’m sure we all have at one time or another.

For the main characters Harry and Alison there are other issues driving their relationship.

For Alison, it is a loss of self-worth through losing her job and from losing her mother and, in a sense, her sister.

For Harry, it is the fact he has a beautiful and desirable wife, and his belief she is the object of other men’s desires, and one in particular, his immediate superior.

Between observation, the less than honest motives of his friends, a lot of jumping to conclusions based on very little fact, and you have the basis of one very interesting story.

When it all comes to a head, Alison finds herself in a desperate situation, she realises only the truth will save their marriage.

But is it all the truth?

What would we do in similar circumstances?

Rarely does a book have me so enthralled that I could not put it down until I knew the result. They might be considered two people who should have known better, but as is often the case, they had to get past what they both thought was the truth.

And the moral of this story, if it could be said there is one, nothing is ever what it seems.

Available on Amazon here: amzn.to/2H7ALs8

Writing a book in 365 days – 256/257

Days 256 and 257

Writing exercise

“The only thing standing between them and disaster was…”

Under the harsh studio lights, and the glare of a specially selected audience who had been firing questions at me for at least half an hour, and longer than I was told to expect, I felt a runnel of sweat run down the side of my face and into the gap between my neck and the collar of the shirt.

I was told that the audience wanted to know exactly how we had pulled off a miracle. The moderator had told the story, and a story it was, because I hardly recognised it as what had actually happened. It was not the story that had been approved. I had been given twenty minutes’ notice, the story had changed, given a script to read, and then I protested that it was nothing like what had happened.

I was told the truth was too unpalatable, and the audience would not like it.

Of course not. No one did. But someone had to cut the head off the snake, and the team I was assigned to had that job. We were one of ten. Everyone had a job to do that was vital to the end result. Ours was not that important; six of the eight members died, and the other living member declined to come on the show. I now knew why.

“Should I repeat the question?” The moderator was exuding calm, but I could see that she was getting impatient.

She had survived the purge, the person who had been the previous regime’s media spokesperson, who, not three months before, was standing up at press conferences trying to explain away the various nefarious events in what had been described as ‘simple speak’, so called because us citizens were basically ‘simple’.

I was very aware of the contribution this person had made, despite the lies and grovelling, telling everyone that she was a victim, much the same as all of us. A victim married to a high-up official in the previous regime, who lived in a mansion, ate the best food, and had holidays at the finest international resorts. We knew exactly who she was.

“Before this circus began, you asked me if I thought being a murderer was the best way to achieve a change of government.”

“I beg your pardon?”

“Emmaline Wharton. That is your real name, isn’t it?”

“No. I don’t know who this Emmaline Wharton is, but it isn’t me.”

There was a screen behind us, one that displayed the name of the show, and her most recent name, “Janice Saunders.” She had reverted to one of her pre-marriage names, considering that reminding people she was married to a tyrant wasn’t good for her new public image.

During the introduction monologue, a series of photographs showed the groups, the planning, and various shots taken during the operation in which I had participated. I had no idea until now when those photographs were shown that we had an embedded media representative along; he was certainly not introduced to us, and we would have declined because of the danger.

Uppermost in my mind was how he survived when six of us didn’t.

When I mentioned her name, the screen changed, and a photograph of the moderator, much younger but easily recognisable, was flashed on the screen. When she heard several gasps from the audience, she looked around.

“That’s…”

“Not you? Since you’ve been telling lies for nearly six years now, it’s no surprise that you can’t stop. When you specifically asked for one of the two remaining survivors of our operation to come on this show, you knew the other chap wouldn’t, which left me. I refused, but you had insisted. Why?”

I gave her my curious expression. I should have been angry, but after I thought about it, I decided it would be an interesting exercise. She had not been home with her husband when the designated team had arrived to take him into custody. There was just a single suitcase at the door, and no one else in the house, leading to the conclusion that she had been tipped off and had made her getaway earlier.

Imagine our surprise when she turned up at headquarters and proclaimed she had been working for us all the time. Yes, someone had, but we had believed that person had been found and killed a few days before the takeover. She had the credentials and materials to prove it was her, and no one, having seen the spy in their midst, only her communications, had taken her at her word.

I didn’t believe it for one moment. I knew she was the one responsible for the death of six very good people and the attempt on the other person’s life. It took me three months to convince them she was a traitor, still working for her previous masters in exile, the ones who had also been tipped off and escaped.

“Your story of bravery under extreme circumstances needs to be rejoiced.”

She said it so glibly. I was astonished by how quickly her tune had changed, from a puppet for an evil regime, to the voice of the people in the new.

“Even though it was me who killed your husband?”

Yes, there was just a flicker of recognition, that look behind those hooded eyes, of pure hatred.

“Because he was evil, yes. He forced me to say all those things, you know my story.”

“Your story is just that, Emmaline. A story. Just to be clear, my government wants to take you into custody. For some crazy reason, they believe you’ll give up the location of the fifteen members of the previous government who escaped. You and I both know that will never happen.”

On both sides of the stage, several members of the police had moved into position to prevent her escape.

“You’re wrong. I am not that person. I am the one who helped you; all of you make the change happen.”

The calm facade was starting to crumble.

“OK,” I said, “If that is the case, tell me your real name, the name of the spy within their midst.”

“No one knew my real name. It was one of the requirements I insisted on before joining your organisation. No way I could be tracked, because if you did, they would find out.”

“I know your real name. It’s not Emmaline Wharton, though that was one of about twenty you used when younger. You had a criminal record that read like a James Patterson thriller. So, once again, what is the real name of our spy?”

She was now in full-blown panic. If she did know the name, then it would be proof that she had been at the poor girl’s interrogation. We had only recently found her remains outside the prison block in an unmarked grave under freshly laid concrete, along with thirty others.

“Emily McGovern. They will find me and kill me. I need protection from them.”

I shook my head. An anonymous tip had been received a week before the takeover, that the creature sitting next to me had been the one to put a bullet in the real Emily’s head when she hadn’t given them anything about the upcoming takeover.

An eye for an eye.

A shot rang out, and I watched her die. It didn’t make me feel any better, but at last my sister, Emily, had got her justice.

©  Charles Heath  2025

An excerpt from “Echoes from the Past”

Available on Amazon Kindle here:  https://amzn.to/2CYKxu4

With my attention elsewhere, I walked into a man who was hurrying in the opposite direction.  He was a big man with a scar running down the left side of his face from eye socket to mouth, and who was also wearing a black shirt with a red tie.

That was all I remembered as my heart almost stopped.

He apologized as he stepped to one side, the same way I stepped, as I also muttered an apology.

I kept my eyes down.  He was not the sort of man I wanted to recognize later in a lineup.  I stepped to the other side and so did he.  It was one of those situations.  Finally getting out of sync, he kept going in his direction, and I towards the bus, which was now pulling away from the curb.

Getting my breath back, I just stood riveted to the spot watching it join the traffic.  I looked back over my shoulder, but the man I’d run into had gone.  I shrugged and looked at my watch.  It would be a few minutes before the next bus arrived.

Wait, or walk?  I could also go by subway, but it was a long walk to the station.  What the hell, I needed the exercise.

At the first intersection, the ‘Walk’ sign had just flashed to ‘Don’t Walk’.  I thought I’d save a few minutes by not waiting for the next green light.  As I stepped onto the road, I heard the screeching of tires.

A yellow car stopped inches from me.

It was a high powered sports car, perhaps a Lamborghini.  I knew what they looked like because Marcus Bartleby owned one, as did every other junior executive in the city with a rich father.

Everyone stopped to look at me, then the car.  It was that sort of car.  I could see the driver through the windscreen shaking his fist, and I could see he was yelling too, but I couldn’t hear him.  I stepped back onto the sidewalk, and he drove on.  The moment had passed and everyone went back to their business.

My heart rate hadn’t come down from the last encounter.   Now it was approaching cardiac arrest, so I took a few minutes and several sets of lights to regain composure.

At the next intersection, I waited for the green light, and then a few seconds more, just to be sure.  I was no longer in a hurry.

At the next, I heard what sounded like a gunshot.  A few people looked around, worried expressions on their faces, but when it happened again, I saw it was an old car backfiring.  I also saw another yellow car, much the same as the one before, stopped on the side of the road.  I thought nothing of it, other than it was the second yellow car I’d seen.

At the next intersection, I realized I was subconsciously heading towards Harry’s new bar.   It was somewhere on 6th Avenue, so I continued walking in what I thought was the right direction.

I don’t know why I looked behind me at the next intersection, but I did.  There was another yellow car on the side of the road, not far from me.  It, too, looked the same as the original Lamborghini, and I was starting to think it was not a coincidence.

Moments after crossing the road, I heard the roar of a sports car engine and saw the yellow car accelerate past me.  As it passed by, I saw there were two people in it, and the blurry image of the passenger; a large man with a red tie.

Now my imagination was playing tricks.

It could not be the same man.  He was going in a different direction.

In the few minutes I’d been standing on the pavement, it had started to snow; early for this time of year, and marking the start of what could be a long cold winter.  I shuddered, and it was not necessarily because of the temperature.

I looked up and saw a neon light advertising a bar, coincidentally the one Harry had ‘found’ and, looking once in the direction of the departing yellow car, I decided to go in.  I would have a few drinks and then leave by the back door if it had one.

Just in case.

© Charles Heath 2015-2020

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