Sunday, March 11, 2012

Flash Fiction: THE LEGEND

THE LEGEND


Plenty of time to think so thought back on it all.

The sequence:

The phone rings. I pick it up.

‘Howya Mick, are you going?’

I recognised the voice immediately and in the background the rhythm of O’Súilleabháin’s Heartwork. “Not sure. You?” I asked, waiting for his lead as usual.

“Why the hell not? They are offering special rates in the Carlton. They want me to give a bit of a speech. It would be a bit of craic and I get to annoy them all over again.”

“Yeah,” I said already sweating. Hannibal, Roger de Flor, Baibars, Collins, Patton, Moshe Dayan… instinctive, combustible, flawed, magnificent die-hard generals and then Jack Ffrench, a Tribesman, simply known in army-speak as The Legend. Retired but not forgotten. “Will I book?” I asked.

“Good Man. See you Saturday week. Will you drive?”

‘Do’nt I always?” I said but the line was already dead.

The dinner in the Officers mess was better than expected. All the stops pulled out. Veterans of all past peacekeeping missions attended. Presidential messages on satellite link and from current overseas deployments.

Tables of eight: ours included two serving female officers in full military dress. Both blonde, hair pulled back in tight bobs. The girl seated to the right of Jack with his encouragement drank too much too soon. “What are you doing now?” she asked. “What I’ve always done,” he said brusquely and then lost interest in whatever else it was she was trying to say. The officer opposite sipped and I caught her staring at him, biding her time: stalking The Legend. No surprise then when she offered at the end to drive us to the hotel. Out of uniform her hair flowed freely. She smelt of Chanel.

We had drinks in the lobby lounge. I made my excuses and headed for my room. Not much later could hear the giggles on the corridor outside. Then the pounding of the communal wall for what seemed like hours. Heard her leaving as the sun rose.

After waking went to breakfast: double helpings of Clonakilty. No sign of Jack. Went to his room. Door slightly ajar. Went in. Sprawled across the bed, ice-blue, wide-eyed, possibly a smile, and fully erect. Closed the eyes and covered The Legend, tried to pat it down.

Later still: full military honours, pomp and ceremony, reminisces and tears. At the graveside: shots in the air on the command of the blond stalker.

“Viagra mortis,” the forensic examiner said off-the-record.

Exist-meister,” I thought.

Friday, March 09, 2012

SAECULUM ( A Novel: Part 26) – MATUTINUM IV




SOL OCCAXUS (Sunset) Monday, 19 September, 2011

CREPUSCULUM (Evening Twilight)

I. Friday, 23 September, 2011
II. Thursday, 29 September, 2011
III. Thursday, 29 September, 2011
IV. Sunday, 16 October, 2011

VESPER (Evening Dusk)

I. Sunday, 23 October, 2011
II. Sunday, 30 October, 2011
III. Wednesday, 9 November, 2011
IV. Monday, 14 November, 2011
V. Monday, 14 November, 2011

CONCUBIUM (First Sleep – Coitus – Rest)

I. Thursday, 17 November 2011
II. Sunday, 20 November, 2011
III. Friday, 25 November, 2011
IV. Thursday, 1 December, 2011
V. Thursday, 1 December, 2011
VI. Thursday, 8 December, 2011
VII. Sunday, 11 December, 2011

INTEMPESTIUM (Midnight)

I. Sunday, 1 January, 2012
II. Thursday, 5 January, 2012
III. Saturday, 7 January, 2012
IV. Monday, 16 January, 2012
V. Sunday, 29 January, 2012
VI. Sunday, 29 January, 2012
VII. Friday, 3 February, 2012
VIII. Friday, 3 February, 2012

GALLICINIUM (Cock Crow)

I. Sunday, 12 February, 2012
II. Saturday, 18 February, 2012
III. Wednesday, 22 February, 2012

MATUTINUM (Dawn Goddess)

I. Monday, 27 February, 2012
II. Sunday, 4 March, 2012
III. Sunday, 4 March, 2012
IV. Friday, 9 March, 2012
V.
VI.
VII.
VIII.
IX.
X.
XI.
XII.
XIII.
XIV.

DILUCULUM (Dawn Twilight)
I.
II.
III.
IV.

SOLI ORTUS (Sunrise)

MATUTINUM
DAWN GODDESS

IV

Charles Alexander warmly greeted the new arrivals to the house once the front door was closed, kissing the Afghan in an Arab fashion before shaking Sancho’s hand. Isabella said nothing and pulled away to one side. Sancho seemed upset at her coolness. “What’s wrong, Isabella?” he asked.
“You did it, Sancho. Didn’t you?” Isabella accused, as she glared at him.
The erstwhile waiter looked down at the small case he carried and then at Isabella. “Yes, my sister. It was my duty. I do not fail,” he growled, his eyes defiant and scathing of her question.
“You bastard. Alonzo was no threat to us,” Isabella spat out as she moved forward to slap Sancho’s face.
“Enough!” Alexander instructed as he grabbed her wrist and pulled it down. “The decision to kill Aldahrze was mine. He was a threat. It is done, Isabella.” Alexander tried to place his hand around her waist but she recoiled away. He ignored her and walked down a short flight of stairs to a closed door. He stopped, looked back at her and without smiling said, “We have much to do. Come on.”
“Ok,” Isabella reluctantly agreed as she continued to glare at Sancho.
Alexander pushed open the door and the others followed him into a large lounge area. The room was spacious with three walls formed by sliding glass panels. A light breeze wafted through the room but it was not enough to ruffle the heavy drapes that screened out the valley beyond. To one side was a small counter bar with bottles of every hue neatly stacked and behind the bar a tall shaven-headed girl waited. She smiled as Alexander walked in and shifted a shoulder-strapped Uzi from her side to the small of her back. There was little furniture in the room apart from a low glass-topped table that displayed a collection of coins within its double layers. Surrounding the table were a series of white leather covered sofa chairs with Moroccan pillows. In the furthest chair a flustered, bald and heavyset man was perched on the edge. Behind him, Zoë hovered. She looked to the ceiling, and as Alexander approached, shook her head slightly.
“Alexander. I’m tired of all this. I want to leave. Now!” The heavy Israeli tried to be as forceful as he could but did not convince. Large sweat stains spread out from his armpits.
“I will tell you when you can leave, you obnoxious pervert,” Alexander rasped, as he disdainfully pointed to chairs for his other guests to take.
“That’s it. I am leaving,” Hertzog said and made an effort to get off the chair. He was half-erect when Zoë slammed the palm of her hand into the base of his neck causing him to drop back to the seat like a stone.
“That’s better, you Judas goat,” Alexander gloated. “Now, tell me what I need to know about the cocaine virus that Mara has developed. I need the genetic sequence and I do not have much time.”
“I’m a horticulturist. I run the trials not the development. I do not –” His words were cut off by another blow from Zoë. Before he could recover from this she began pressing her two thumbs into his eye-sockets.
“Hertzog. I advise you to tell me everything you know, right now! I do not have any time for games and Zoë there, has even less tolerance. Have you got access to the genetic sequence information?” Alexander demanded.
“No. I don’t. Ahhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh………” Hertzog screamed, as Zoë dug deep with her thumb and half-gouged his left eyeball from its socket. Clear fluid squirted across the room. “I don’t. I don’t! Please stop,” he screamed again.
“Then you should not have pretended that you had. 40 pieces of silver is a real bad bargain. Take him away.”
The tall shaven-headed girl moved from behind the bar and along with Zoë pulled the still screaming Israeli to his feet. When he resisted, she drove the butt of her gun deep into his groin. He collapsed and it was only with great effort that she and Zoë managed to drag him out of the room. Alexander watched the scene, silently. Both al-Sa’igh and Sancho shook their heads, admiringly.
“I think he might have given us more information if we had given him more time,” Isabella said coolly.
Alexander smiled at her. “No Solis. I’ve had him checked him out. Our friend, Hertzog has an ego and a free-spending teenage mistress. He thought he could pull a deal on us. He knows nothing of the virus structure and the samples he brought will have to be analysed. That much was worth it, I suppose.”
“Why torture him? Was that necessary?” Isabella stood up and walked towards the bar. She glared at Sancho who had put a finger to his lips in warning.
“It’s irrelevant, Isabella. He is a dead man and death will be a release. The torture will have convinced him of that. Hertzog will die with a sense of escape, a sense of freedom. In comparison to the perils of living he is moving to paradise. What more could one do for another human being?”
Isabella shuddered slightly at the adamant and brutal sincerity of Alexander’s logic. The death of any one man or woman did not bother her if it was necessary. She often had to be the instrument of that death but took no pleasure in it. Alexander, on the other hand, seemed to relish it and, as if reading her thoughts, smiled knowingly at her again before turning to walk towards a Hockney painting that dominated one wall of the room. The frame of the picture swung back on its hinges to reveal a wall safe. Alexander dialled in a combination and after releasing the door bolt leant into the safe. He retrieved a small but thick case made of fireproof titanium. Almost reverentially he carried this with some effort across to the low table. Taking a seat opposite al-Sa’igh and Sancho he let it down carefully and opened its lid. Both men simultaneously let out a gasp as they looked at the contents. Carved into a solid gold base were seven wide grooves. At the head of each of the grooves was a small circular well. Two of these wells were filled with hardened wax and the three men could easily make out the impressions made by the small button-shaped seals of bright blue lapis lazuli, which rested in the corresponding grooves. Alexander touched each of them in turn. “The seals of Abrape and Nergimmel. Two of the seven Voices! They are now to be joined in their place of repose by others. Sancho please!”
Sancho retrieved the small case he had brought. Opening it he removed a bulky silk-wrapped bundle and handed it to Alexander. They all watched as he laid this down on the table and opened out the material carefully. At last the hourglass was uncovered and as it rolled slightly on its axis they could see in its lid, the timekeeper’s seal: Ayatau.
“I will get a jeweller to retrieve the stone later,” Alexander said sounding disappointed. “Al-Sa’igh and Isabella. Show me yours please.”
The leader of the Kabul goldsmiths Al-Sa’igh retrieved, from a deep pocket in his jacket, the ornate dagger with the Voice Syrbeth embedded in its hilt while Isabella lifted Nefradaleth from around her neck. They then, almost reverentially, laid these down on the table close to the hourglass. Alexander waited for a moment but then pulled a stick of golden beeswax from a grove in the lid. Lighting a match he dripped the melting liquid into the wells until they filled. “I’ll wait until they harden somewhat and will then take an impression.”
“Why the impressions, Charles?” Isabella asked.
“It is the combination of the ideograms of each of the seals that controls the power of the Voices, not the actual stones. Once I . . . once we have all seven then the formula of the original Covenant will be revealed. Older than the Ark, this Covenant creates its own power, its own Destiny. That Destiny is the greater journey that you and I are embarked upon. I need the message not the messengers. Previous gatherers failed to understand this. Only two more and the Gathering is complete. Saclaresh in a very strange coincidental way, Isabella informs me, is to become Michael Mara’s responsibility, and the Hidden Voice, whose name I know not but whose whereabouts is irrelevant. ”
“What do you mean ‘irrelevant’, Charles?” Isabella watched as Alexander took an impression of Nefradaleth and replaced the seal and the wax well in their grooves. She already regretted the ease in which she had allowed him the opportunity to take the impression and was annoyed at herself for not anticipating his intentions. She had always believed that it was the stone that was the talisman, that it had the philosopher’s power, but now realized, with sudden blinding clarity, that Alexander was right. The ideology was the important legacy not the stones.
Alexander must have read her thoughts and he glared over at her. “With five Voices gathered, and the sixth close by, the last, the Hidden one can no longer remain hidden. By tradition it is obliged to reveal itself and when that happens I will be waiting. I just need to get Mara and Saclaresh. Where is he, I wonder?”

Sunday, March 04, 2012

SAECULUM ( A Novel: Part 25) – MATUTINUM II & III



SOL OCCAXUS (Sunset) Monday, 19 September, 2011

CREPUSCULUM (Evening Twilight)

I. Friday, 23 September, 2011
II. Thursday, 29 September, 2011
III. Thursday, 29 September, 2011
IV. Sunday, 16 October, 2011

VESPER (Evening Dusk)

I. Sunday, 23 October, 2011
II. Sunday, 30 October, 2011
III. Wednesday, 9 November, 2011
IV. Monday, 14 November, 2011
V. Monday, 14 November, 2011

CONCUBIUM (First Sleep – Coitus – Rest)

I. Thursday, 17 November 2011
II. Sunday, 20 November, 2011
III. Friday, 25 November, 2011
IV. Thursday, 1 December, 2011
V. Thursday, 1 December, 2011
VI. Thursday, 8 December, 2011
VII. Sunday, 11 December, 2011

INTEMPESTIUM (Midnight)

I. Sunday, 1 January, 2012
II. Thursday, 5 January, 2012
III. Saturday, 7 January, 2012
IV. Monday, 16 January, 2012
V. Sunday, 29 January, 2012
VI. Sunday, 29 January, 2012
VII. Friday, 3 February, 2012
VIII. Friday, 3 February, 2012

GALLICINIUM (Cock Crow)

I. Sunday, 12 February, 2012
II. Saturday, 18 February, 2012
III. Wednesday, 22 February, 2012

MATUTINUM (Dawn Goddess)

I. Monday, 27 February, 2012
II. Sunday, 4 March, 2012
III. Sunday, 4 March, 2012
IV.
V.
VI.
VII.
VIII.
IX.
X.
XI.
XII.
XIII.
XIV.

DILUCULUM (Dawn Twilight)
I.
II.
III.
IV.

SOLI ORTUS (Sunrise)
MATUTINUM

DAWN GODDESS

II

Rod Mallory wandered out onto the balcony of the converted wine tower that was rented out as a summer villa. In a small pool, set into the rocks on a level below the balcony, one of the team members had been taking a leisurely swim and on seeing the tall Australian, waved up at him. Mallory ignored the salute to look out beyond the pool and over the gentle slopes to the Bay of Propriano beyond. To the west, the sun was setting and, he realised, it would soon be dark. He turned as he heard footsteps behind him. A small lithe dark-skinned man dressed in a singlet and shorts and with the conditioned physique, he noted in admiration, of the champion boxer he had once been, walked towards him.
The man stopped for a moment and stared up at the sky behind the tower. He carried an opened bottle of wine and two glasses. “There are some bad storm-clouds to the northeast Rod. It is going to be a rough night. Good for our purposes though.” Luis Gonzaga grinned as he placed the bottle and glasses on the table and pulled out a chair.
Mallory nodded his head, a concurring smile creasing his face. “Yes.”
Gonzaga took his seat and after pouring a glass of wine for them both leaned back in the chair with his legs resting on the table. He looked at the Australian. “Tell me, Rod, how did your discussions in Miami go. I wonder if the Medellin boys have any idea of – ”
Shhhhhh,” Rod Mallory whispered urgently as he held up a finger to his lips and pointed to the balcony rail.
Gonzaga brought his legs down and quietly stood up and moved to the fence-like wooden balcony to look down towards the pool below him. Seeing the floating swimmer he then shouted at him in an irritated voice, “Jorge, get inside. We will be having a full briefing in ten minutes. I want a full radio and weapons check done by then.”
“Sure, Luis.”
Mallory heard the sullen reply and watched as Gonzaga waited for the pool area to be cleared. The two men then drew their chairs close and sipped at the poured wine. “Apart from you Luis, there is nobody else here that I trust. Jorge, for instance, is one of Domingo’s men and that bastard is only waiting for an opportunity to cut my throat. We need to be very careful if we are to shed our Columbian friends,” Mallory continued to whisper.
“What do you intend to do, Rod?” Gonzaga asked, concern etched in his voice.
“I’ve arranged a surprise for the golden boy.”
“I meant about now, here in Corsica.”
“Oh! As we’ve discussed, Luis. I’ll go, as invited, to Alexander’s villa tonight and will act as our point man. If the opportunity presents, we’ll try and take him out. Alive! All the men must understand this. We need to get as much information as possible before he is disposed of. If there is no opportunity it will still provide good intelligence and we can make our plans accordingly.”
“And the American, Mara?”
“He’ll surface again. The authorities will have found his wife’s body by now. I’ve somebody waiting for Mara to arrive in La Paz. I would not like to see his face when the circumstances are explained. The poor bastard.” Mallory looked at his watch.
“You like him then?” Gonzalez asked, a little puzzled.
“Yes, in a way. But that’s not the point, is it, Luis? If the rumours are accurate, Mara potentially holds the key to my . . . to our control of the cocaine industry. I believe in luck, Luis and this has fallen into our laps. With the woman gone, it will not be difficult to be rid of Mara once we have the virus. Hoxygene, lock stock and barrel, will be mine and I can launder our profits to my heart’s content.”
“What about the FARC rebels.”
“Fuck the FARC . . . and the cartels. We’ll soon see the Columbians grovel.”
“Yes. I will enjoy that pleasure.” Gonzalez smiled, a Mexican gold-capped toothed smile.
“Right Luis, enough verbals mate! Let’s go inside and get on with the briefing. We need to be very clear on our tactics. Some of these drongos we are stuck with are as thick as shit and we need to tune their wires carefully.”




III

It was pitch dark as the convoy of cars turned off the small secondary road and drove up a narrow path carved into the side of the hill. To the west, an occasional flash of lightning could still be seen arcing earthwards from the sky, causing the orange-coloured stone outcrops of the mountain ridges to appear and disappear like spectral beacons. After negotiating a final series of rising hairpin turns and putting up with the constant clatter from the showers of small stones sent flying by spinning tyres of the car ahead, the convoy stopped. Michael saw that they were in the paved courtyard of a stone-built villa, the type of villa usually owned but rarely used by a mainlander. He watched as the occupants of the other cars got out and, after some stretching, entered through the open door of the villa. He also got out but remained in the courtyard looking up at the sky. The night-air was laden with the threat of further thunderstorms. Bob Arnold joined him. “What happens now, Bob?” he asked.
“We have Alexander’s villa, on the other side of the small valley, under direct observation. We’re anxious to know what’s going on,” Arnold replied as he looked furtively around the courtyard. “Come inside Mikey.”
The two men then entered the house and crossed a polished marble-floored hallway to a large lounge. The room was untidy and cluttered, the floor crisscrossed by cables of every colour. The lighting was subdued and the curtains closed. Two agents with large earmuffs were attached to a bank of electronic equipment that reminded Michael of an airport control tower. One of them looked up as Arnold approached. “Everything is working, General.”
“Good.” Arnold looked around at the cables and monitors. The room was stuffy with the heat they generated. “What’s in place?”
“Two radar mikes set up below the pool, locked onto the balcony and lounge of Alexander’s villa. Interpretation difficult at present as they are playing some heavy-duty opera shit. CIA satellite photo updates every fifteen minutes. Infra-red heat detection video unit mounted in bedroom upstairs. Voice analysis and language interpretation links to Langley open and operational. Vibration and movement detectors in place on the villa driveway. A two agent team is, at this moment, secure within fifty yards of villa.”
“Any hint of counter-detection audio surveillance?”
“No scanning direction mikes obvious, sir, but the house security does have ground-zero vibration and audio sensors in place. High quality, but perimeter yardage varies. Our field team found a ‘quiet’ corner close to the house.”
“Great.” Arnold patted the man on his shoulder. “Who’s in charge?”
“Hank Sommers. He’s upstairs in the bedroom.”
“Thanks.” Arnold turned and climbed the stairs that brought them to the first floor. Michael followed. At the end of a corridor two heavy black curtains had been set up in sequence about six feet apart. Pushing through the first Arnold waited for Michael to join him before going through the second set.
“What’s this for, Bob?” Michael asked in the pitch darkness.
“We want no light entering that might give away our presence. Hank Sommers? Hank are you there?” he called out.
“General,” a voice answered quietly from the gloom.
Gradually, Arnold and Michael’s vision adjusted to the little light there was to pick out Hank Sommers standing behind a forest of camera tripods. They moved cautiously to join him. The bedroom had a large balcony window overlooking a valley and by following the direction of the mounted camera lenses, Michael saw that the target of their observation was another villa on the far side of the valley, about four hundred yards away. Curtains were drawn but as most of the rooms had lights on he could see shadowy figures passing behind them. Loud music from the villa blared out across the valley.
“What’s the update, Hank?”
“Alexander and a woman, voice identified by the data banks at Langley as Solis, arrived about fifteen minutes ago. Their backs were to us, no pictures unfortunately to visually confirm. The Israeli, Hertzog, has been there since mid afternoon. He came with another woman, young, spiky redhead, no identity as yet. There is a long balcony shot of her downstairs. In the house we estimate three maybe four other persons. Perimeter security is surprisingly lax. Three single rotating patrols, linked by walkie-talkie to the others on the inside. Strangely, they all appear to be women.”
“Jesus! Talking of women, what’s with the goddam music. I hate opera. The singer sounds as if she’s been strangled,” Bob Arnold mumbled under his breath.
“You’re not far off the mark,” Michael whispered in a distracted way.
“Say what,” Hank Sommers asked as he and Arnold turned to look at him.
“Its Brünnhilde at Siefried’s pyre in the last act of Götterdämmerung. A favourite piece of my father,” Michael said quietly. “ ‘Summon Loge to Valhalla! For the gods’ destruction soon shall be here.’ ”
“Gotter what?”
Götterdämmerung – The Twilight of the Gods. Richard Wagner’s opera based on the Teutonic mythology of ragna rök, the final destiny, the utter destruction of Valhalla and the old order of Gods, allowing a new cycle to begin. New Gods and new men emerging from the Twilight,” Michael explained.
“Jesus. This Alexander guy is doing the full trip. I wonder what other surprises he –”
“Sorry General. We’ve got company,” Hank Sommers interrupted.
There was a sudden burst of radio clatter in the room behind them as two other shadows entered. Michael felt the tension rise as he watched Karl and Dave move towards the cameras. In the distance the lights of a car drew closer to Alexander’s villa. “What’s up?” he asked.
“Car coming. Two occupants. Two…” Hank Sommers pressed his hand hard against his earpiece. “Repeat! Right. Two men.”
Everybody in the darkened room peered out across the valley towards the villa. The car drew up into a forecourt that was situated in a hollow that was linked by a set of steps to the villa entrance. Automatic sensors lit up the forecourt and steps in bright light. “Hopefully somebody will come to the door.” Sommers said quietly.
“At least they’ve turned off that blasted music,” Arnold added.
The car doors opened and the two men got out. Michael could see on a nearby monitor that their backs were to the cameras. The front door of the villa opened. Two figures stepped out and into the bright light of the forecourt.
“Shit. Zoom in on them first.” Sommers tapped Dave on the shoulder.
The monitor image shifted, focused and then froze. “Alexander and the woman Sanjil,” Dave said.
“Also known as Solis,” Sommers added.
Michael’s heart missed a beat and his mouth went dry. He had hoped they’d been mistaken but knew they had not been. It was Isabella. Alexander had placed his arm around her waist as they waited for the two new arrivals to walk up the steps towards them. It was only as the two men neared the top that Alexander released his hold when one of the visitors hesitated. Alexander looked anxious.
“Focus back on the visitors,” Sommers ordered.
“They’ve suddenly stopped. One of them is saying something. Do you copy, Base?” Dave whispered into his mike and waited for a reply. “Arabic. Good. One of them has left something in the car. He’s turning back.”
The tall angular figure turned and descended the steps again. The monitor image froze again. Michael almost shouted, “That’s Sancho, the waiter!
“The man in the airport. He is retrieving something from the car,” Karl confirmed.
“Zoom in on the other. Quick he is looking back down,” Sommers spoke urgently. “Shit. Did we get it?”
“Just,” Karl reassured and they all waited to see if the image was adequate. Michael didn’t recognize the dark skinned man with piercing eyes.
“Jesus.” It was Dave who spoke first. “I’m sure that’s Hasan al-Sa‘igh, the anti-Taliban leader of the Badhriya in Afghanistan. Alexander’s opium supplier no doubt.” He then spoke urgently once again into his lapel mike, “Base. Patch this through to Langley for confirmation.”
Michael knew it to be true. It had to be. Alonzo had warned him. What had the waiter Sancho got to do with it all? He wondered and then he knew. He sighed, “The Gathering!
“What did you say, Michael?” Bob Arnold asked without turning to look back at him.
“Emm . . . I said it’s some gathering.”
“Yes. And all of them desperate to get their hands on your cocaine leaf virus.”
“And me too, it seems!”
Arnold said nothing but watched as all four figures entered into the house. After a minute or so the forecourt lights went out.
“General Arnold.” Hank Sommers spoke.
“Yes.”
“They need you urgently downstairs.”
“Fine Hank. Thanks. Michael, stay here awhile! I’ll be back in a few minutes.”

Thursday, March 01, 2012

LIGHTNESS OF BEING




A 91 year-old woman promises to abstain from ‘wild sex’ in order to fully recuperate from a recent operation; a detailed discussion with a patient of the risks of an operation and whether at the end of that discussion there is any real comprehension of what an adverse outcome risk of 1/500 or 1/1000 really means; or whether the calculated probability of 1/625 of Asteroid 2011 AG5 hitting the earth in 2040 is of more relevance; or whether the reports of thirteen Syrian anti-government fighters being killed smuggling an injured photo-journalist out of Homs are true; a journalist injured in the same attack that killed the Sunday Times' Marie Colvin, whose chairman James Murdoch has resigned because of the News Corp’s sordid and illegal electronic intrusion into the lives of the living and the dead; or a woman who is both a patient and a friend whose teenage daughter is now physically abusing her; or a 14 year old-girl who is alleging a rape against an individual involved in a family feud; or correcting the structural anomalies of someone born with two uteruses and vaginas; or reading a medical journal article warning that some of the operations I undertake could be construed in an adversarial context as Female Genital Mutilation and run foul of the proposed FGM legislation in Ireland; or someone breaking down in tears when asked about an unexplained stillbirth that happened 30 years ago... and more, much more and all in the last 48 hours.

On reflection days like these always makes me question the nature of knowledge and the notion of truth.

Recently I was trying to get to grips with Plato’s Theaetetus (written circa 390 BCE ) dialogue on the nature of knowledge and came across the famous lines where Plato had Socrates quote Protogoras' contention that,

“man is the measure of all things, of the existence of the things that are and the non-existence of the things that are not.”

In other words where perception is everything and often taken to be the first denial of a ‘divine’ construct in the affairs of man, removing that uncertainty.

Almost 2400 years later, Donald Rumsfeld in a US State Department briefing on February 12, 2002, was determined to re-introduce that uncertainty when he said,

“Reports that say that something hasn't happened are always interesting to me, because as we know, there are known knowns; there are things we know we know. We also know there are known unknowns; that is to say we know there are some things we do not know.

But there are also unknown unknowns -- the ones we don't know we don't know.”

Uncertainty is a vacuum, a space devoid of truth and sometimes when faced with a stream of consciousness, both your own and of others, that vacuum, that space devoid of truth, of knowledge leaves you foundering. Philosophers exhaust their capabilities trying to understand and explain that uncertainty, the void between the object and the subject. To perceive almost immediately suggests a distance; that a focusing mechanism must be brought into play before knowledge or truth is evident.

And yet sometimes that revelation is no distance at all. Yesterday towards the end of my clinic there were two patients where appropriate and sustained medical intervention (by colleagues in a number of specialties) had transformed their lives of chronic disability and despair to one of hope and engagement.

My perception of both these women: their skin younger, their eyes sparkling, their voices gay was of a profound sense of a “Lightness of Being.”

And that’s the truth!



Monday, February 27, 2012

SAECULUM ( A Novel: Part 24) – MATUTINUM I



SOL OCCAXUS (Sunset) Monday, 19 September, 2011

CREPUSCULUM (Evening Twilight)

I. Friday, 23 September, 2011
II. Thursday, 29 September, 2011
III. Thursday, 29 September, 2011
IV. Sunday, 16 October, 2011

VESPER (Evening Dusk)

I. Sunday, 23 October, 2011
II. Sunday, 30 October, 2011
III. Wednesday, 9 November, 2011
IV. Monday, 14 November, 2011
V. Monday, 14 November, 2011

CONCUBIUM (First Sleep – Coitus – Rest)

I. Thursday, 17 November 2011
II. Sunday, 20 November, 2011
III. Friday, 25 November, 2011
IV. Thursday, 1 December, 2011
V. Thursday, 1 December, 2011
VI. Thursday, 8 December, 2011
VII. Sunday, 11 December, 2011

INTEMPESTIUM (Midnight)

I. Sunday, 1 January, 2012
II. Thursday, 5 January, 2012
III. Saturday, 7 January, 2012
IV. Monday, 16 January, 2012
V. Sunday, 29 January, 2012
VI. Sunday, 29 January, 2012
VII. Friday, 3 February, 2012
VIII. Friday, 3 February, 2012

GALLICINIUM (Cock Crow)

I. Sunday, 12 February, 2012
II. Saturday, 18 February, 2012
III. Wednesday, 22 February, 2012

MATUTINUM (Dawn Goddess)

I. Monday, 27 February, 2012
II.
III.
IV.
V.
VI.
VII.
VIII.
IX.
X.
XI.
XII.
XIII.
XIV.

DILUCULUM (Dawn Twilight)
I.
II.
III.
IV.

SOLI ORTUS (Sunrise)


MATUTINUM
DAWN GODDESS

I

It seemed to Michael Mara, as he looked downwards through a cloudless sky to the green-blue Mediterranean far below, that they had hardly reached a cruising altitude when the pilot announced their descent. Dave, Karl and the other Secret Service agents who had travelled grumbled in their wakening. Once the plane had lifted off they had instantly availed of the radio-free cocooned environment to snatch some much-needed sleep. Michael could not rest. His thoughts were concentrated on trying to figure out what had happened to him at Isabella’s apartment. What had she and Zoë done? And if they had, why? He had no real recollection of any sequence of events. His mouth was dry and his stomach, empty save for some concentrated coffee, knotted further as the plane came into land. There was a very high crosswind, which pushed downwards on the port-side wing, causing the jet to tilt at a lateral angle. The pilot made a late and expert correction to the tilt but the contact with the airport apron was bone-shaking. Michael breathed out, finally, when the jet shuddered to a crawl and began taxing to a private part of the complex.
“Jesus, Jake. This is not a fucking helicopter,” Karl shouted through the open cockpit door at the pilot.
“Sorry about that, gents,” the pilot apologised.
Karl shook his own head as he turned to Michael. “Most of these cute flyboys earn their wings these days on Gameboy’s or Play-Stations. They never see the friggen sky! Jesus help us!”
“What now, Karl?” Michael asked as he smiled in a conspiratorial fashion.
“General Arnold is going to meet us here and we will have a debriefing. He would like to know more of what happened to you over the past few days.”
“So would I,” Michael said. He looked out the window and could see a small group of non-uniformed people waiting beside two large cars for the engines to shut down. “But I remember very little.”
“That’s what concerns us, buddy!”
“What do you mean, Karl?”
“Let me try and put a hypothetical scenario together for you. You said you went to a broad’s apartment, right?”
“Yes.”
“And the next thing you remember, nearly two days later, is another broad dropping you off at the café.”
“Yes.”
“All of that suggests to me that you might have been slipped a Mickey Finn that first evening in the apartment. After that it would have been easy to drug you up with whatever they wanted to use.”
“Why?”
“Information extraction, usually.”
“Jesus!” Michael said as he realised what might have happened to him.
There was silence for a few moments. Karl had a puzzled frown on his face when he, eventually, spoke again. “There is one untypical feature about it all however.”
“Which is?” Michael asked. Everything about what had happened to him in the past week was untypical.
“If someone goes to that much trouble to kidnap and drug, normally they would kill the mark when they have obtained the information. I just wonder why they let you live? It doesn’t fit the usual pattern,” he said coldly as if Michael was a case study.
“I’m not half as disappointed about that fact as you sound, Karl.”
“Don’t get upset, Michael. It’s just his way. Karl is an avid fan of pattern analysis. In fact we think he’ll make a damn good knitter one day. Won’t you, Karl?” Dave interrupted. He laughed as he stood up, straightened his narrow tie and slipped on his still sharply creased jacket.
“Shut the fuck up, Dave.” Karl was touchy and as the younger agent backed off a little he turned back to look at Michael Mara. The plane had finally stopped moving. “We would like to take a blood sample for analysis,” Karl added.
“To see the combination of drugs used.” Dave explained.
Michael remembered the hashish. “No . . . It’s not necessary. What might have been used, and why?”
“Ketamine and perhaps a benzodiazepine like Rohypnol or Valium for neuroleptanalgesia. Perhaps pentothal as well for control of consciousness. There are many combinations that can be used,” the gruff lead agent detailed as he and Dave watched their charge carefully.
“I don’t believe it,” Michael protested as he stood up and retrieved his knapsack. No wonder he had felt groggy, he thought.
“Happens all the time Doc. Industrial espionage is a dirty game. Sometimes in the trade, once we figure out what drugs were used, we try to reproduce the episode to determine what information might have been given by the mark.”
“No fucking thanks,” Michael hastily replied as he moved up the aisle towards the front of the aircraft. The cabin door was open and he could feel the heat rise from the asphalt below.
At the bottom of the steps, General Bob Arnold waited. “Hello, Michael. Whassup!” he asked nonchantly.
“Just playing your game, General. Just playing your game,” Michael replied with sarcastic humour. “What about you Bob?”
“Surprisingly good, given the circumstances.” Arnold was agitated. “I am sorry about all this, but it was necessary.”
An image of Alonzo Aldahrze flashed in Michael’s consciousness, sitting in his chair, his still warm, blue-blotched face staring at him. “I understand. What now Bob?”
“We’ve received reliable information that an important meeting is taking place tomorrow and that one or other of the parties involved in trying to get their hands on the your cocaine Stealth Virus will be there. I’ll explain a bit more on our way to an observation house set up on the other side of the island.”

Arnold held the door of the car open for Michael and he sat in behind the driver. He watched as Karl and Dave descended the steps and quickly got into another vehicle. The two cars then set off at a leisurely pace across the apron and exited onto the normal airport access road through a guarded gate. The route out of the Airport took them past the door of the arrivals terminal. It was busy with traffic, meeting an incoming flight. Near the head of the taxi rank the congestion cleared and the car accelerated. Michael suddenly thought he recognized somebody standing in the rank. “Pull over driver,” he shouted.
“What’s up, Michael?” Arnold asked.
“Pull over and I’ll tell you.”
Arnold instructed the driver to comply and they pulled into the kerbside about thirty yards beyond the end of the rank. Michael Mara looked through the heavily tinted unidirectional glass of the rear window.
“What is it, Michael?” Arnold asked again, impatient.
“I’m not absolutely sure but I think I recognise that man.” Michael pointed towards the rank.
“Which one?”
“The tall fellow near the front with the small silver-coloured photographer’s camera case.”
“Yes. He looks nervous. On alert as it were.”
“Exactly. Like a meerkat sentinel,” Michael said.
“What?” Arnold looked at him in a confused way.
“It doesn’t matter Bob. That guy’s name is Sancho and he’s a waiter in Granada. What’s he doing here? It’s a very strange coincidence.”
“Why? Where did you see him before?”
“At the restaurant where I first met Isabella. She said that his mother was her landlady.” Michael felt a strange weariness and a desperate longing to meet Isabella again.
“Who is this Isabella?”
“The girl, whose apartment I went to . . . Whose friend brought me back to the café where your agents picked me up. I met her by chance last Saturday and that man in the rank served us at the table. It was Isabella who told me about Alonzo Aldahrze. She’s the . . .” He stopped short having suddenly realized that he could not reveal any more to Arnold. This was his secret.
“Excuse me for a moment, Michael.” Arnold touched the driver on the shoulder and after the central locking mechanism had been released opened his door, got out, and walked up to where the car that carried Karl and Dave had pulled in ahead of them. The driver of Michael’s car kept the engine running and adjusted the rear view mirror to be able to keep him in view. His eyes then darted from Michael to the car ahead.
“Everything ok?” Michael asked as Arnold sat back in.
“Sure. No problem.” Arnold touched the driver’s shoulder again and the car accelerated from the kerb he leant forward to retrieve his briefcase from the floor. After keying in the combination he laid it across his lap, opened back the top panel and retrieved a brown cardboard-backed envelope, which he then handed to Michael.
“What’s this?” Michael asked.
“Photographs. Please look at them, ” Arnold instructed.
Michael opened the envelope and extracted a number of good quality paper prints. The plain back was uppermost and it was only when he turned it over that a medium range but well defined picture of Isabella stared back at me. He blushed instantly and looked at Arnold who said nothing. Shuffling this first photograph to the back of the pile the next was a picture of a couple in deep conversation. It was Isabella and . . . Moshe Hertzog, his Israeli collaborator in the cocaine virus work. “Christ!” he said aloud.
“Is that the woman you know as Isabella?”
“Yes,” he nodded.
“Look at the date.”
The digital date print was on the bottom right hand corner. It was from a week previously when Isabella had told Michael she was in Chicago. “Where was this taken?” Michael asked, hoping against hope.
“Tel Aviv.”
All of the other photographs, apart from the last, were of that same meeting. The last had today’s date and was a long distance but obvious picture of Isabella standing against a boat’s railings. Tp Michael she looked beautiful with the wind in her hair and the sun on her face. He held the photograph up and looked at it for a long time. “And this?”
“Earlier today at the port in Calvi.”
Isabella is in Corsica?” Michael almost choked.
“Yes.” Arnold’s face was impassive, cold.
Michael placed the photograph in his inside jacket pocket and returned the others to the envelope and handed it to Arnold. “What’s going on, Bob?”
“Isabella Sanjil has been under observation since that meeting with Hertzog. Up to now, we still have very little information on her but we do know, from a partially intercepted phone-call, that her code name is Solis. It is she who is the conduit to Alexander in Alpanna and that is why she is here in Corsica. Alexander has a summer villa here.”
“Then my meeting her was not accidental. I was set up. A stooge!” Michael Mara’s voice had dropped to a whisper.
“Probably, Michael. I am sorry but industrial espionage is very sophisticated. You weren’t to know.”
“Shit. Shit . . .shit . . . shit.” Mara slammed the door with his fist. The driver’s eyes locked onto him in the mirror, and his his right hand moved towards the unoccupied passenger seat where a muzzled machine pistol lay waiting.
“Take it easy, Michael,” Arnold mollified. “This is why we had to get you out of Granada in such a hurry. I’m not sure why your friend Aldahrze was killed, but many of the people that Alexander has dealings with are not to be messed with.”
“What do you mean?”
“It appears that in addition to his pharmaceutical company, Alexander has an interesting sideline in sponsoring international terrorism and that drug money from the Afghan opium trade funds it. CIA and Interpol have linked his name to some of the most radical autonomy-seeking groups in the world. No definite proof, mind you, but the whispers are out there. We think that Corsica is the centre of that operation.”
“Why am I here?”
“Two reasons. One was your immediate safety and the second, was your relationship with this Isabella Sanjil.”
Michael looked out the window. The road rose through a valley that would take them, according to the signposts, to Corte. Ahead of them he noticed, all along the mountain-top horizon, dark storm clouds were gathering to blacken the sky. The occasional forked flash of lightning silhouetted peaks and high passes. “What do you mean by that Bob?”
“If the woman, Sanjil obtained all the information she wanted from you over the last few days, then you normally would have been expendable. The fact that you are still here suggests that you either managed to conceal the information she was looking for or that she likes you. Either way it is an opportunity for us to get at Alexander through her.”
“Using me as bait, I suppose!” Michael pretended to be angry. He thought of the Voices. Maybe Isabella’s loyalties were divided, he wondered. He hoped.
“In a very protected way . . . yes. If you do not believe that, Michael, or you want out of the Alexander operation, say so now. There’ll be no option for changing your mind later. Do you understand?”
“Yes.” Michael Mara thought about what Arnold had told him for a few moments. There was something he had to do first. “Bob,” he asked in a quiet voice.
“Yes, Michael.”
“I need to contact my wife, Caroline. I’ll give you an answer after I speak to her.”
“Sure. Work away.”
“I can’t. Karl took my cell phone earlier. I need it back.”
“Oh! Sure.” Arnold tapped on the driver’s shoulder. “Stop the car.”

It was about twenty minutes before they got underway again. Arnold returned Michael’s phone and he and the driver left him alone as he tried contacting Caroline both at home and on her mobile. He had no success on either and Rod was also unavailable. He wound down the window and called out to Bob.
“What’s up, Michael?”
“I cannot get hold of Caroline.”
“Did you leave a message?”
“Yes, but I need you to do a favour for me.”
“Sure. What?”
“Caroline was with a State Department mission to La Paz in Mexico. Could you use your lines of communication to track her down?”
“No problem.” Arnold got out of the car again and Michael could see him speaking to Karl. When he returned he said reassuringly, “That’s all underway. We should have word when we get to the villa. Let’s go driver.”
“Thanks, Bob. It’s important.”
“I know, Michael.” Arnold pulled out a packet of cigarettes and offered him one. After lighting up they sat back saying nothing for some time. It was Arnold who finally broke the silence again, “May I ask you something?”
“Go ahead, Bob.”
“Does Isabella Sanjil turn you on that much?” Arnold had a look of genuine concern on his face.
“No . . . Well, yes she does. Are you worried it might compromise your mission?”
“Frankly. Yes. There is a lot of shit happening that I can’t figure. That worries me.”
“I’ve decided to go all the way with you, Bob, whatever the consequences.”
“Why, Michael?”
“Alexander is after my company, after me personally and is almost certainly responsible for Alonzo Aldahrze’s death. I need to be involved to see that he is stopped and also for another reason.”
“What’s that, Michael? What does Aldahrze have to do with all this? What was his connection to Alexander?”
“Charles Alexander is the gatherer . . . I have to stop him.”
“The what, Michael?”
“It doesn’t matter Bob. Can this car go any faster?”