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‘Or both,’ said the President.

Terry put his hands over his face. Terry scratched at his neck and his scalp.

‘I can’t trust him,’ said Paul. ‘I don’t even want to be in the same room as him.’

Paul stood up. Dick stood up. They all stood up –

They all walked out.

Terry Winters looked around the room again. Everything was in cardboard boxes. Boxes of files to go. Boxes of food to stay. The building ringed by miners from Durham. The doors on the eighth floor locked and guarded by the Denims and the Tweeds –

The monastery was under siege. The monks afraid. The abbot –

Terry Winters smiled at the President again. The President looked away –

‘Get out of bloody sight,’ said the President. ‘And stay there.’

Phil Taylor calls. Phil has the flu. Phil can’t make it. Fuck Phil.

The Mechanic calls Adam Young. He tells him, ‘There’s been a change of plan.’

The Mechanic picks Adam up. He drives them into Leeds. To Millgarth

It’s morning. It’s a market day

There are two of them.

They pull into the car park between Kirkgate Market and the bus station

They watch a man lock his yellow M-reg. Cortina. The man walks towards them. The man passes their car and heads up Kirkgate. He has two empty shopping bags

‘Here we go‚’ says Adam.

Drum roll –

The Mechanic gets out of the Fiesta. He walks over to the yellow Cortina. He puts the key in the door. He turns the key. The lock gives. He opens the door

‘Hello, hello, hello,’ whispers the voice behind him

The Mechanic has the.38 out. He has it in his hand. He spins round

The Mechanic pulls the trigger

He goes down. This uniformed piece of shit goes down

It’s not who the Mechanic thought it was. Fuck. Not who he thought it was at all

The Mechanic looks up. He sees Adam running

The Mechanic looks down. Fuck, he sees another copper on the deck on his radio.

The Mechanic walks over to him. He stands over him. He stares down at him

The Mechanic shoots him once and then he runs —

Runs and runs and runs —

Out onto New York Street. Down Kirkgate. Through the graveyard —

There are policemen chasing him. Members of the fucking public —

Guilty feet. Got no rhythm. Guilty feet. Got no rhythm. Guilty feet –

Back out onto Duke Street. Down Brussels Street. Up Marsh Lane

The Mechanic turns right into the Woodpecker car park

Jumps the fence onto Shannon Street.

The Mechanic stops a Transit. He shows the driver the gun. ‘Get out! Get out!’

The driver opens the door. The Mechanic pulls him out. Leaves him on the road

The Mechanic drives off

Fuck, fuck, fuck, fuck, fuck, there’s a helicopter overhead. Sirens

Up the York Road. Turns right. He takes the hard hat off the passenger seat

The Mechanic dumps the van. He walks across the York Road. Hard hat on

Up Nickleby Road. Torre Road. Nippet Lane. Beckett Street. To the hospital

The Mechanic finds another Ford. He puts the key in another lock. He turns the key. Heopens another door. Hegets in

Drum roll –

He is a dead man. Maybe not today. Maybe tomorrow

Maybe not tomorrow. Maybe next week

Maybe not next week. But the Mechanic is a dead man

He knows that now. Now it’s too late

Too late to turn back. Turn back the clock

The clock ticking. Tick-tock

It’s November 1984 and England will tear him apart

Leave him for dead. Tick-tock. Dead

Just. Like. That.

Martin

my dinner with some of lads. I have a pint in Hotel with a few of lads. I crack jokes about Gadhafi with a couple of lads. I give a lift up Hardwick Farm to this one lad. Then I go back to my blanket on bedroom floor in middle of afternoon and I lie there and I think, Fuck this for a game of soldiers. I get back up from blanket on bedroom floor. I go down stairs and out to shed. I get my barrow and get my shovel. I get my riddle and get some bags. I stick them in back of car and drive down to village. I go back on spoil and back to work. I dig and I sieve. I dig and I sieve. I watch my hands turn red and night come down — I watch pit and pit watches me — I work near kids and I work near mothers. I see folk I know and folk I don’t. I count blokes on their tod and blokes in teams. I fill one big bag and I fill another. I put first bag in barrow and push barrow to boot. I put bag in boot and push barrow back for second. I put second bag in barrow and push barrow back towards where car is — Fuck. Bloody security man is stood there, waiting for us — He says, Bloody going with that? Taking it home, I say. You’re bloody not, he says. That’s theft, that is — How’s it theft? I ask him. I dug it. It’s fucking mine — Is it fuck, he says. You want to dig coal, go back to work, you lazy bastard — I look at him. I look at bag. Took me four fucking hour, I say. That did — Fucking waste of time, then, he says. Takes this Stanley knife out of his little uniform — I’ll give you half of what I get for it, I say. I swear to you — Fuck off, he says. That hard up, I’d just fucking take it off you, wouldn’t I? You might fucking try, I tell him. But that’d be all you’d fucking do — He steps towards us. Listen twat, he says. I could have thee for theft and trespass — I look at him. I nod. You could do, I say. Aye — But I’m not fucking going to, am I? he says. Tell you why, shall I? Go on, I say. Let’s hear you, then — Because I work twelve hour a day out here for a quid-fifty an hour, that’s why — I nod again. Say nothing this time. Just listen — So tip that bag out that barrow, he says. And we’ll say no more about one in boot — Day 245. Pete opens envelope. Pete looks at paper. Pete says, Back to Brodsworth. Everybody nods again. Everybody goes out into rain again. I’m down to drive. Not many cars left. Takes mine a few turns to start. No sign of Gary or Tim this week — Except on top of spoil. Don’t blame them — Miss them, though. Their company — Least Keith’s back. Back with his new teeth — Police State took them out, he laughs. Welfare State put them back in — Fucking country, says other lad in with us. Bloody brilliant — Park down in Adwick village. March up to pit. Find rest of Thurcroft lads. Look out for bus — Push and shove. Shove and shout. Shout and hurl abuse at scabs. Do my fucking picket — Feel like a bloody robot sometimes, though. I walk back ahead of Keith. Jacket over my head. Pissing it down it is now so I start to run — Not looking where I’m going, am I? Run straight into this copper — Bang! Nearly knock him for six. He says something to us. I don’t hear what it is. I just keep going. I get back to car. I get in. I shut door. I look up. I see him coming over to car. That copper. I see his gob opening and shutting like a fucking fish, but I can’t hear him — Next news he’s got his fucking truncheon out. He shatters my bloody windscreen. His mates starting on every other car. Every other fucking car — Bang. Bang. Bang. Smash. Smash. Smash — Every fucking windscreen. Just sat here covered in glass, me — Shards in my hair. Cuts all over my face — Feels like I’ve been stung by a load of fucking bees. I don’t want to bloody cry, like — Not in front of all lads. But I don’t know what else to fucking do — Day 246. I miss her. Miss her all time — Day 247. Letter on hall floor’s not from her. Never is — It’s from him again. Personal touch this time — Dear Mr Daly, How much would you like for your soul? That’s only thing you have left, we have heard. No wife. No wage. Nothing left now. We want to help you avoid aggro and intimidation. So here is a little tear-off slip and a first-class freepost return envelope. Please enclose your fuckingsoul.Remember, nostamp needed — Bribes, blackmail and browbeating. That’s what our leader said — Good King Arthur. He was fucking right and all, our Arthur — Right as bloody usual. Love him or hate him, he’s always