The service moved on. After Psalm 91, the choir sang the Magnificat.
For he that is mighty hath magnified me,
And holy is his name.
He hath showed strength with his arm:
He hath scattered the proud in the imagination of their hearts.
At the back of the Nave, the opposite end from the organ and altar, was the West Door. Walled off from the Nave, to the right of the organ and altar, was the Lady Chapel. Two other doors, the North and South Doors, were behind the altar, the other side of the Crossing.
On the organ pipes there were painted Gothic patterns, making them look like the spines of books on a Victorian bookshelf. The ceiling was vaulted and groined, made of dark carved wood, with stone Gothic arches supporting it. The pews were also dark wood, glowing with evening sunlight that accentuated the swirl of their grain.
The five figures who, by now, had completed several circuits of the outside of the Cathedral, moved to the West, North, and South doors. At a prearranged time they entered simultaneously, leaving large packages inside each door as they closed it. They bent to make adjustments to control panels on the packages. They unslung their weapons, but kept them concealed, and waited for the next prearranged time to come round.
Those who entered by the West Door made almost no noise, despite the heavy weaponry and packages they were lugging. A couple of the congregation glanced round, but the people who had entered looked official. There was a uniformity about their clothing, and they wore identity badges.
There was a short Bible reading by Michael Taber, then the congregation stood as the choir sung the Nunc Dimittis.
Lord, now lettest thou thy servant depart in peace,
According to thy word…
The next prearranged time came round. From the North door, the South door, and the West door, the figures stepped simultaneously into the light. They took up positions at the front of the Nave, to either side of the altar, and at the rear, to either side of the West door, now showing their weapons openly, just as the choir stopped singing.
“Dean Taber, ladies and gentlemen: We have control of the Cathedral. You are hostages. We’ve rigged the entrances and exits: There are explosive devices with motion sensors at every door. In a moment my colleagues will rig more of them at every window. The Cathedral will be irreparably damaged if anyone tries to enter or leave. So will you.”
There were shouts and a few screams from some members of the congregation. Michael Taber stepped forward, arms raised, to calm them. There was something about his bearing that actually did calm them, and most of them fell silent.
Michael Taber looked like a caricature of a patrician: tall, handsome,well-groomed, with grey hair brushed back from a high forehead, and with a natural courtesy towards everyone, even intruders. “You are welcome here,” he said, “but your weapons aren’t.”
There was a brief nod from the one standing closest to him at the altar, who appeared to be their leader. His identity badge said, in large letters, Jones. He was dark-haired and heavily built, perhaps running to fat. Taber didn’t remember the events of ten years ago clearly enough, but if he had, he might have thought the man looked a bit like Parvin Marek. But Marek, if he was still alive, would have been slightly older. And Marek’s face had had a deadness about it which this man’s didn’t, somehow.
“Who are you? What do you want?”
“We’ll come to that. For now, some housekeeping matters. We know your congregation is elderly. We expect that what we’ve come here to do will take all night.” (More shouts.) “So we’ve brought chemical toilets. We’ll set them up in the
Lady Chapel, where people can use them in privacy. And one of us is a qualified doctor, and carries a field medical kit.
“As to who we are: Smith, Jones, Brown, Patel, and Khan.” Addressing the congregation, he added “See? We have name-badges. Mine says Jones. Not our real names, of course. One of us really is called Jones, but it isn’t me. And the two called Patel and Khan aren’t Asian, as you can see…”
His mouth turned down at the corners, and there were fixed frown-lines where his eyebrows met. It was the face of someone who didn’t really want to be doing this; someone who felt out of his depth. But he still brandished a gun, levelly and with precision. They all did.
He turned back to Taber. “We’re mercenaries. We were handpicked for this. Our employers wanted us for a particular reason: we all have terminal illnesses. So we’ll carry this through to the death.”
Taber was horrified, but somehow managed to conceal it. They probably didn’t expect to live beyond the morning, but until then they were invulnerable.
“Why are you doing this?” Taber asked. He thought he already knew the answer but he was playing for time, while he sought a way to establish some rapport.
“To provide for our families. We all have wives and families.Including—” pointing to Patel, “—her. She has a wife. And adopted children. And only the New Anglicans would give her and her partner a proper Church wedding.”
“We would, too,” Taber said. “Since 2035.”
“Yes,but not willingly. Your Church held out against it for years. The New Anglicans embraced it without being asked.”
Taber didn’t press the point. “So what happens next?”
“I’m going to call the authorities and describe to them what we’re going to do here. When you hear what it is, remember this: We’ll kill people if necessary, but if we get what we want there’s a high chance that your congregation will all leave here alive.”
“You’re not wearing masks. That means that you don’t expect to leave here alive.”
“Not at all,” he answered, a little too quickly. “When this is all concluded satisfactorily, we’ll surrender.”
Taber didn’t believe him. Taber wasn’t as easy to convince as his appearance might have suggested. He was a good Dean, but many other things besides. Those who knew him well, knew that he possessed a set of sharp perceptions which he usually kept sheathed like claws.
Jones flipped open his wristcom and told it a number. His call went through to Rani Desai, Director of Counter-Terrorism at the Home Office. She listened without interruption or comment, and without asking how he’d got her direct number, and promised to call back in five minutes with confirmation that she had the Home Secretary’s authority to deal with them.
By the time she did so—in four minutes, not five—more packages had been lugged in and fixed underneath the stained-glass windows of the Nave.
“I’m now authorized to negotiate with you,” Rani Desai said. “So what do we have to do to make you stop?”
Jones watched his colleagues fixing floor sensors, threading their way through the congregation and occasionally muttering, “Excuse me.” They released crawlers, self-programming sensor devices like spiders, which scuttled over the walls and ceiling, positioning themselves at optimum intervals.
“I said,” Rani Desai repeated, “what do we have to do to make you stop?”
He told her. There would be a drip-feed of demands. Ransoms, paid to charities. Relatively modest amounts: one million euros each. Jones would announce each charity, one at a time. Rani Desai would call the CEO or equivalent to get formal agreement that the money would be accepted. She would then call him personally to confirm that the Government had electronically transferred the money to the charity. The relevant bank screen, showing the transaction, would be sent to Jones’ wristcom. A maximum of one hour would be allowed for each charity. There would be eleven, announced one by one through the night by Jones.