About this ebook
Sometimes the ballot-box and the bullet aren't incompatible …
Jamaica, 1980. A general election is in the offing. The left-of-centre People's National Party stands a chance of winning a third term of radical social reform. Ties with Russia and Cuba will likely be strengthened. The IMF will be shown the door. Newly hatched revolutionary movements, like the Sandinistas in Nicaragua, and the JRG in El Salvador, will take firm encouragement.
The powers that be in London or Washington are not prepared to countenance any of that. Not at all. Unfortunately, the only person available to address the situation is someone the Brits would rather not acknowledge. At just twenty-five, Ruby Parker and MI6 have a fractious shared history. She has already been written off by just about everyone in that organisation who matters.
Written as a prequel to the other books in the Tales of MI7 series, Our Woman in Jamaica can be enjoyed by old and new readers alike.
James Ward
James Ward's London-based blog, I Like Boring Things, has featured in the Independent, Observer and on the BBC website. He is co-founder of Stationery Club and the Boring Conference, featured in the Wall Street Journal and on Radio 4. Adventures in Stationery is his first book.
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Our Woman in Jamaica - James Ward
Our Woman in Jamaica
Tales of MI7, Volume 0
James Ward
Published by Cool Millennium, 2016.
This is a work of fiction. Similarities to real people, places, or events are entirely coincidental.
OUR WOMAN IN JAMAICA
First edition. October 25, 2016.
Copyright © 2016 James Ward.
ISBN: 978-1540102751
Written by James Ward.
Our Woman in Jamaica
James Ward
COOL MILLENNIUM BOOKS
Published in the United Kingdom. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, distributed or transmitted in any form or means, without written permission.
Copyright © James Ward 2015
James Ward has asserted his right to be identified as the author of this Work in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.
This is a work of fiction. All names, characters, and events are the product of the author’s imagination, or used fictitiously. All resemblance to actual events, places, events or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.
First published 2015
A CIP catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library.
Cover photo taken by the author on 20 February 2014 shows a passenger jet over Central London.
This book is sold subject to the condition that it shall not, by way of trade or otherwise, be lent, re-sold, hired out or otherwise circulated without the publisher’s prior consent in any form of trading or cover other than that in which it is published and without a similar condition including the condition being imposed on the subsequent purchaser.
To My Wife
www.talesofmi7.com
Other books in the same series:
The original Tales of MI7
Our Woman in Jamaica
The Kramski Case
The Girl from Kandahar
The Vengeance of San Gennaro
The John Mordred books
The Eastern Ukraine Question
The Social Magus
Encounter With ISIS
World War O
The New Europeans
Libya Story
Little War in London
The Square Mile Murder
The Ultimate Londoner
Death in a Half Foreign Country
The BBC Hunters
The Seductive Scent of Empire
Humankind 2.0
Ruby Parker’s Last Orders
Contents
Chapter 1: Looking For Regime Change
Chapter 2: Woman, Interrupted
Chapter 3: A Smooth Interview
Chapter 4: KINGJA Outward
Chapter 5: Plenty of Room at the Hotel Albemarle
Chapter 6: Ian Fleming’s Goldeneye (no, really!)
Chapter 7: A Guest
Chapter 8: Getting the Right Clothes: A Beginner’s Guide
Chapter 9: Party Time
Chapter 10: No Time to Stop and Grieve
Chapter 11: At the PM’s House
Chapter 12: The Name’s Vilma. Vilma Cuesta.
Chapter 13: Getting Away From Your Friend
Chapter 14: The Deserted Hotel
Chapter 15: No One Expects What Happens Now
Chapter 16: The Not Terribly Safe House
Chapter 17: On the Run
Chapter 18: Big Ol’ Centipede
Chapter 19: Walker the Talker
Chapter 20: Codebooks
Chapter 21: Chats With Weddermon and Camilla
Chapter 22: Dangerous Arrivals
Chapter 23: The Stakey Outey Chapter
Chapter 24: Fire
Chapter 25: Walker Almost Walks
Chapter 26: The House of the Hindu Artefacts
Chapter 27: Phone Calls and Cunning Plans
Chapter 28: Weddermon Drops Out
Chapter 29: The Big Shoot Out
Chapter 30: Mission Over
Chapter 31: Bristol and London
Acknowledgements and Background
Note on Language
This novel was produced in the UK and uses British-English language conventions (‘authorise’ instead of ‘authorize’, ‘the government are’ instead of ‘the government is’, etc.)
Chapter 1: Looking For Regime Change
Sunday night 5 October 1980. Sam Sharpe Square, Jamaica.
Michael Manley, the nation’s fourth prime minister, sat upright on a bench next to five steps leading up to a speaker’s platform and ran his hand mock-nervously across his face. He grinned at his wife, who sat beside him, cradling their month-old son in her arms. She smiled back and squeezed his hand. No one could have predicted a crowd this big. Only a day ago, the respected political analyst, Carl Stone, had put the opposition Jamaica Labour Party miles ahead. Suddenly, that seemed unbelievable. There must be a hundred thousand people out there in the brightly-lit square, maybe even more. They stretched up the side streets. And they didn’t sound like they’d come to heckle.
At fifty-five, Manley still looked youthful. Tall and lean with swept back greying hair, a puckish face and small dark eyes, he’d cut a dash in both previous major campaigns. Beverley, seventeen years his junior, was equally photogenic, but, more importantly, he considered, just as committed and articulate - maybe more so. Together, they might just pull this one off. Victory from the jaws of defeat. Perhaps.
The police chief – a thick set man in full uniform - came in grimly from the street and exchanged a few words with the campaign crew at the entrance. They parted for him.
Sir, you need to go up there now,
he told the Prime Minister. The square’s full to bursting point. People are going to get hurt if we let it run on any longer.
Without taking her eyes from her baby, Beverley stood up. How many people do you think there are, commissioner?
We estimate about a hundred and fifty thousand.
Manley got calmly to his feet. Time to get moving then. This was even better than his wildest dreams. A hundred and fifty thousand strong can’t be wrong. His wife looked him over solicitously and nodded her approval. He turned and mounted the steps.
Flashbulbs and a deafening cheer met his entrance. He held his arms up in acknowledgement of the acclaim, and waited for the noise to subside. He was here to announce the date of the next general election, of course, but first, the whole world had to be reminded of the People’s National Party’s achievements. The public housing programme, the literacy campaign, equal pay for women, free secondary education, free university places, the national minimum wage, workers’ bank, compulsory recognition of trade unions, maternity leave with pay, a consistent thoroughgoing support of anti-apartheid movements worldwide. Almost too much for the nearly nine years they’d been in power, but then, justice couldn’t be made to wait.
Or maybe it could. This election wasn’t going to be fought on social and political issues, everyone knew that, but on economics. On the fact that a lot of ordinary Jamaicans were regularly going hungry. The recent earthquake hadn’t helped, but the real culprit was the IMF, and if he could get people convinced of that, not even The Gleaner – Jamaica’s notoriously anti-liberal national newspaper - could stop him.
Right now, though, everything was up in the air. Even with a crowd this size. Assuming Stone was actually right and the JLP was ahead right now, there was still time for the PNP to steal a march. A week: a long time in politics; three weeks, a lifetime. The Gleaner notwithstanding.
Manley spoke for two hours. The first, he devoted to history, setting the last eight and a half years in the context of the party’s roots. At times, the crowd went completely silent, apparently brimful of anxiety. During the second hour, he focussed on the future, and at times his audience seemed to come alive again. When he announced the dates: October 14 for the nominations, and October 30 for the general election, a huge cheer went up. Music played. People danced.
He already knew – everyone did – that the next twenty-five days would be a violent, bloody affair, and that people on both sides would die for reasons that were beyond the control and even comprehension of any politician. What could he do? An election had to take place sometime. God help everyone concerned.
After the announcement, he thanked his supporters and paid the conventional tribute to his wife, who joined him on the platform holding her daughter’s hand, but without the baby. She hugged and kissed him, and stood back to applaud him. It all looked perfectly choreographed, which it wasn’t. They weren’t the kind of political couple to rehearse the banalities.
When they finally left the platform, huge swathes of the crowd were still dancing.
Unbeknown to anyone actually present that night, two further, secondary, waves of excitement occurred in different corners of the earth. Phones rang, dossiers hit desks, provisional plans of action were dusted off and despatched to department heads for discussion. The first such aftershock took place in Langley, Virginia; the second in SIS command in London. Each was no less momentous for being a thousand times colder and more calculating.
Tuesday 7 October 1980. MI6 Headquarters, Westminster Bridge Road, London.
Eight men aged between forty and sixty sat around a rectangular table in a large office overlooking the main road. Four American, four British. Each had a selection of document wallets in front of him and wore a suit that looked like it had travelled to and from work at least as long as its owner had. Two leaned back and smoked pipes. Title of meeting: What is to be done? subtitle: Jamaica. In the chair: Derek Cosby, deputy director of Caribbean operations, US Central Intelligence Agency; a small moustachioed man with grey spiky hair, a red face and pockmarks.
For those of you not yet in the know,
he said, we’re calling it ‘operation werewolf two’. Version one was during the last general election in ’76. Didn’t work. This time, we’re more confident.
Roger Parton, the head of SIS Caribbean Department, sat on Cosby’s immediate right. Forty-five years old with an aquiline nose, hooded eyes and swept back thinning hair, he looked a little like a 1940s film-star. He smiled. You’re going to have to go back a little, Derek. Treat us like we don’t know anything. Like we’re utter nincompoops. That way, we’ll all know precisely what you’re planning, and maybe we’ll be able to offer constructive advice, however modest.
Haven’t you read the briefing documents?
Cosby replied.
It’s been frantic here. Don’t forget, Jamaica’s a constitutional monarchy. We’ve got strong ties to her, and potentially a lot to lose. We’ve been concentrating on the fine detail.
Cosby shrugged. Very well, the bottom line is, come November, we don’t want Manley in office any more. The man’s an incompetent buffoon and a destabilising influence on the entire region. We can’t afford to have a basket case in our backyard. If he wins this election, there’s every reason to believe he’ll plunge Jamaica into a dictatorship.
Halfway down the table, Toby Moore raised his hand. I’m still not clear why you think that,
he said, trying to play down his Cornish accent. He’s never given any indication of an ambition to run a one-party state.
That’s not the point,
Cosby replied. I’ve no doubt the man thinks he can carry on as a perfectly respectable democrat. But he’s wrong.
Oh?
"He’s lapped up a hell of a lot of undeserved credit from the IMF, but they don’t trust him – frankly, they despise him - and he’s already broken with them. That’s what this election’s all about, Toby, or hadn’t you heard? Manley wants Jamaica to ‘go its own way’. Ordinary people are going to have to make unheard-of sacrifices if his plan’s going to work, and they’re not going to make those willingly. Now in the medium to long term, he’ll either have to accept that and resign, or face up to it and get tough. And by tough, I mean tough. No more free speech, unrestricted movement and freedom of assembly human-rightsy bullshit. The niceties of civilised society will have to go, whatever he might think now. When Crunch Time comes, the Soviets will back him, of course, as will the Cubans, and in two years’ time – believe me, we’re talking that soon - we’ll maybe have a little bit more of Moscow Centre down there. We can’t let that happen. You can’t. We can’t."
Elmer Kroll, a gruff spiky-haired American on Cosby’s left, chuckled. They sure won’t be singing ‘God Save the Queen’ then, Toby. You can bank on that.
They don’t sing it now,
Cosby shot back. Their national anthem’s ‘Jamaica, Land We Love’.
He leaned back, burst into song and conducted himself with both hands: ‘Eternal Father, bless our land, guide us with thy mighty hand’.
He lowered his hands, grinned and leaned forward. And so on. And on. You get the picture.
Everyone chortled and shook their heads as if this was just crazy, not at all the sort of thing an adult ought to be doing, but it nevertheless made Cosby a genius.
"‘God Save the Queen’ is their royal anthem, someone said above the commotion. Stephen Moore, from the English side of the table, characteristically pedantic.
Just a point of information," he added.
Right,
Cosby said, as if it was just the sort of a prissy statement you’d expect from a Limey. He cleared his throat. From what we’ve been given to understand – and you don’t even have to do espionage to verify this: it’s in their national paper
– he held up a copy of The Gleaner – "there are over five thousand Cubans already in Jamaica. Five. Thousand. Ask yourselves, gentlemen: what are those commies waiting for? They can see the future better than Mike Manley, that’s for sure. But not, thank God, better than us. We’re doing this for Manley’s sake as much as anyone’s. Yeah, the guy’s a dreamer, and a bit of a jerk, but I don’t particularly want to see him strung up from a lamppost."
And we definitely don’t want to see him stringing other people up from lampposts,
Elmer Kroll said.
So what exactly is the plan, sir?
Terence Kearns, one of the English pipe-smokers, asked softly. Could I ask you to fill us in on that, please? Unless anyone has any further questions?
It crossed a few people’s minds to ask about the threat to democracy, but only fleetingly, because it was unmanly. No one spoke.
We aim to proceed roughly as we did in Chile in the lead up to ’73,
Cosby said. Destabilisation of state security, scaremongering and general subversion. Things get out of hand, and apparently out of control, and people tend to blame the government. Things are already pretty bad over there. They’re about to get ten times worse. They’ll blame Mikey and come October thirty they’ll ditch him.
In favour of what?
an English voice said. Everyone turned to its source: a late middle-aged paunch with plastic-framed glasses. Jack Maddison, Strategic Projections. The army, I take it.
Cosby shook his head. Hey, I’m no fan of General Augusto Pinochet. As far as I’m concerned, he’s a jackboot creep of the first order. He wasn’t ever ideal for Chile. No, the great thing about Jamaica is we already have the perfect guy for the job in the wings. Leader of the opposition, no less. Sweet Massachusetts-born, Harvard-educated guy, name of Edward Seaga.
So there’s no reason Jamaica can’t continue along a democratic path,
Elmer Kroll added.
"Sheesh, Elm, it’s the only way the country’s going to keep on that road, Cosby said.
Like I told you, a third Manley term ends in total disaster. If Steady Ed gets in, we can relax for the foreseeable." He shook his head, as if a new thought had suddenly made itself known.
"Assuming he doesn’t mess it up as well. If so, then God help us all, but right now he’s our best hope."
What are the chances of him getting in anyway?
Maddison asked. I mean, without our help?
The polls all put him ahead,
Cosby said. But as usual, complacency’s a luxury we can’t afford. When Manley announced the election date, the police put the audience at one hundred and fifty thousand. All supporters of his. Our own estimate is two-thirds that, but it’s still cause enough for concern. Look, Jamaica’s a violent enough society as it is. The PNP and the JLP are at each other’s throats pretty constantly even without us. They’re more like rival gangs than respectable political parties. All we’ve got to do is give them the means and the opportunity to keep on doing what they’re already doing, and hopefully, to turn it up a notch.
By ‘doing what they’re already doing’,
Maddison said, I take it you mean, killing people.
Import a large consignment of small arms,
Cosby replied.
Hey, you got a problem with that, Jack,
one of the Americans said, with a dismissive sweep of the hand, go join the Salvation Army.
I didn’t say I had a problem with it,
Maddison replied. I was just asking. I just want to be clear.
You can’t make an omelette without cracking a few eggs,
Cosby said, with feigned patience. It’s regrettable, I know, but Bill’s right. If you can’t see that and live with it, you’re in the wrong job.
Count us in,
Roger Parton said. One hundred per cent, and I appreciate you keeping us in the loop.
The epitome of the special relationship,
Cosby replied. Only one thing I haven’t mentioned. It’s in the briefing documents, obviously,
he added in an ‘I don’t suppose you’ve a clue what the hell I’m talking about now either’ tone.
Go on,
Parton replied.
No war was ever won by backroom guys acting alone. The situation in Jamaica – Kingston in particular – is close to tipping point. I mean collapsing into complete chaos. We’re putting someone in so we can monitor the situation on the ground, make sure we don’t go too far in terms of piling up future problems for ourselves. Obviously, the plan only works to the extent that Seaga’s got something left to inherit. We’d like you to assign someone too. That way, both our agents can work together, look out for each other, keep us all happy that we’re still dancing to the same tune.
I’m sure we can spare a man,
Parton replied.
I’m talking about a black guy,
Cosby said. You’re sure you can spare one of your black guys?
None of the Americans actually laughed, though it was obvious they’d been building up to this.
Are you sure he has to be black?
Parton said.
Or she,
Cosby said sweetly.
It would certainly make sense, Roger,
Maddison put in. A black person could access all areas. A white person might ... well, experience predictable difficulties.
After all, it’s the blacks who are doing most of the shooting,
Cosby said.
Parton and Maddison exchanged glares.
Cosby got up, looking amused. Unless there are any other questions, gentlemen, I think we understand one another. Thank you again for your time. Let us know the name of your man – or, er, woman – at your earliest convenience, would you?
She’s called Ruby Parker,
Maddison said.
A brief moment of silence, as forceful as if the table had been banged by a fist. The Americans looked momentarily wrong-footed, but recovered; it was Parton who looked as if he’d received the force of the blow. He regarded Maddison as if he’d gone mad.
Absolutely spiffing,
Cosby said, faking an English accent.
Everyone chortled at the fresh witticism. Transatlantic handshakes were exchanged, a young female secretary was called to escort the guests out of the building and thence to their taxi.
When the door closed, only one of the Britons sat down again. Parton went to the window to watch the Americans’ departure. The other two men did a quick sweep of the immediate vicinity – the underside of the table and chairs - for listening devices. ‘Special relationship’ it might be, but words were fluid and, nowadays, those two could mean a lot of things. Finally, they all sat down again to a new meeting.
"Are you out of your bloody mind?" Parton asked Maddison.
"So who was your preferred ‘black guy’?" Maddison replied.
We could have pulled someone in from Africa, or anywhere in the Caribbean.
Give me a name.
"I don’t know their bloody names. I can’t even pronounce most of them. It doesn’t matter. Stop being a bloody smart arse. It doesn’t suit you."
Just some random individual, in other words. Not someone highly trained, ruthless, dedicated to her birth country, easily as intelligent as you or I, twice as ambitious.
Ten times as unpredictable.
All the indications are she’s learned her lesson. It wasn’t like she did us any damage either. Anyway, what harm can she possibly do on this occasion?
I’m seriously angry, Jack. Don’t try to reason with me.
I stopped you from looking like a fool. They know damn well we don’t have any other ‘black guys’ in MI6. We’re still living in the 19 bloody 50s.
He sighed. "And that sort of lacuna was antiquated then. Maybe treat it as a wake-up call."
Parton grimaced. "Oh, it’s that all right."
Throughout this exchange, the other two men sat in silence, looking increasingly edgy. One of them tapped his pipe out into a pouch and put it away in his jacket pocket.
Who exactly is this ‘Ruby Parker’?
he asked.
Parton and Maddison looked at him as if they’d forgotten he was there. Then they exchanged frowns. Shall you tell him, or shall I?
Whose version do you want, Harry?
Maddison asked.
Chapter 2: Woman, Interrupted
Aslim black woman in a pinafore dress sat in a restaurant on Bristol’s Gloucester Road half-facing two much older people. They had finished eating and looked to be enjoying each other’s company when the older woman made to stand up. The man and his daughter rose simultaneously, clearly to help, but the man’s offer prevailed, and the young woman found herself alone. She was about twenty-five with a small nose, intelligent-looking eyes, and smooth skin. She folded her hands in her lap and looked about herself. A waiter came and took away her plate.
From the beginning of the evening, she had noticed a man, five tables away, looking at her. About fifty-five, grey-hair, dressed in a suit, glasses, slightly overweight, he sat alone in the corner. Certain sorts of men routinely leered at her, but not usually so overtly when they were his age. He was clearly looking for an excuse to come over. Excuse me, Miss, I wonder if you’d do me the honour of accompanying me to my club/ a bar/ my flat. He didn’t look stupid, though. Surely he’d twigged that she was both out of his league and accompanying her parents.
He was drunk, that was probably it, although there was nothing to indicate the fact in front of him. Maybe he’d started before he got here. If you were, say, divorced and unhappy, then yes, you might go out half-cut. She should get her parents away from here. She couldn’t vouch for her father if she was propositioned by a drunken stranger. They did things differently in Montserrat - or that’s what he’d led her to believe. She’d never actually been there.
She turned and gave the man a hostile glare. Or tried to. What happened instead was that she saw his face properly for the first time. Her mouth instantly dried up and she looked quickly away. She experienced a rush of contradictory emotions so intent on cancelling each other out that she barely had time to recognise them. Among the most prominent were elation and disgust.
‘Maddison’ ... assuming that was his real name. Nice cop.
He wouldn’t be here if he didn’t want something. Glaring at him had been a mistake. Now he knew for certain she’d recognised him, which was probably as much as he required. He called the waiter over, paid his bill and got up. He didn’t look at her again. He passed her parents on his way out, standing aside politely to let them through. They thanked him and returned to their seats.
What’s the matter?
her mother asked anxiously. You don’t look well all of a sudden. Has something happened?
He would find her, of course he would. Sometime later tonight, wherever she went.
Just too much rich food and a long day,
she replied. I should probably be getting home to bed.
An hour later, she climbed the stairs to her poky flat in St Andrew’s. This was where she’d lived while she was doing her honours degree, and now she was doing a postgraduate course, there didn’t seem much point in moving. Particularly as she was only half alive these days. She’d thought about it a lot, those two years abroad. They’d left their mark; including, perversely, the need for danger. Too late the realisation that MI6 was probably the life for her - though on a deep level it also repulsed her. She’d read Le Carré: work for SIS and you were the servant of complete degenerates most of the time. Still, they needed her. She was black, and they genuinely didn’t know how to relate to black people. They had a head start with her, and they knew it.
The weird thing was, she actually loathed them and all they stood for. Most of them were common or garden public school racists. Nonentities, bullies, closet fascists. She had to be out of her mind to want to work alongside them.
And yet she did. Mostly. Thoroughgoing loathing and irresistible attraction: a heady mix. The sort of thing that drove people over the edge.
She didn’t have to suck up to them. Every so often, the Russians sent someone to dazzle her with an offer-you-can’t-refuse. They’d turn up in the most unlikely places: the student union, the top level of