Cooper needs a way in that Spider won’t see coming. And then I turn up, eager little lamb, and lead him straight there. Cooper uses a few of his mates from the SAS to storm the warehouse. At least one of them must have been on the take.
(Sanders? No. I dismiss the thought. Couldn’t have been.)
God knows how he spun that one, but he must have had some way to get his bosses to swallow it. He shuts the warehouse down and then hides me away in St Mark’s where I can’t be any threat to anyone.
Cooper sits opposite me, studying my face as I process everything he’s told me.
“You’re wondering who you can take revenge on now, aren’t you, Kate?” he asks. “Spider’s dead, and even though I duped you, I was not directly responsible for James’ death.”
“Indirectly, though. You planted the fucking bug.”
He shrugs. “Kate, he was dead the moment he caught Spider’s eye and you know it. The bug was an excuse on a particular day. If it hadn’t been that, it would have been something else.”
He’s right. I do know it.
I consider the man sitting before me and I’m confused. Spider was obviously a monster. Everything about him screamed danger — the way he looked at you, the way he moved, the way he spoke. He was a predator, a shark, a psychopath.
But Cooper is different. Kate never had a moment’s unease about him. He was jovial and pleasant but inspired confidence. And he still has an easy capability about him. He doesn’t seem unhinged or mad, scary or dangerous at all. He seems like a bloke. Just an ordinary bloke.
He thinks of people as goods to be traded, commodities whose profit potential can be realised — but his manner gives no hint of the pitiless void at the heart of him.
“I spent so long fantasising about what I’d do to that man, if I ever had the opportunity,” I say.
“I bet you did. But I’m not him.”
“No, you’re not. You’re the man who used me, set me up to be killed and then condemned me to a life ruled by a lie.”
“Mea culpa.”
“You’re also the man who trafficked vulnerable girls into hell.”
“That too.”
“Why?”
He shrugs. “Because I can,” he says, a parody of abashed modesty, like a cocksure young man admitting to sleeping with a friend’s girlfriend; he knows it was wrong but he actually also thinks it was kind of cool.
“But surely you must have realised it was wrong?” The words feel foolish and naïve, but I want an answer.
“The world was built on slavery, Kate. How do you think this country got built? Or America? Or Rome or the pyramids or anything lasting? What I did, what I do, is perfectly natural. The slave masters of the past were pillars of the community, members of guilds and lodges, knighted and rich, the toasts of the town. Why shouldn’t I be?”
I look at this man I once invited into my bed, and I feel sick to my stomach. Spider may have been a monster, but he wasn’t the worst of it. Not by a long shot.
“I never took advantage. It’s important you realise that,” he continues. “I busted countless drug dealers in my time. They all had one thing in common — they were users too. The ones who didn’t get caught, the smart ones, stayed clean. It was the same with me.”
“So that makes it all right then?” I am on the verge of shouting. I take a deep breath.
“I trafficked them into the country, I set them up, sourced the clients and took the money,” he says, for some reason intent on justifying himself to me. “But never, not once, did I ever take advantage of one of them. That would have left me vulnerable, you see? There was no room for emotional attachments on the job.
“I had a girlfriend. That surprises you, doesn’t it? Jenny. Nice woman, worked for HBOS. Thought I was a dull copper, which kept me safe. And her.”
It takes me a moment or two to collect my thoughts.
“All right, morality aside, how did you pull this off?” I gesture to the building around us. “How did you end up here?”
CHAPTER FIFTEEN
MY DOUBLE LIFE ran like clockwork after you helped me sort out Spider. I found a new front man, someone else within the organisation. You never met him. He became the new Spider. It became a title rather than a person, which served me well. It made it clear to the new guy that he was disposable, and it allowed me to continue to use the, shall we say brand awareness that Spider had created amongst our clients and competitors.
I considered coming down to school and finishing you off, you know.
Really. You were a loose end. I hate loose ends. But in the end I figured it was riskier to break cover than leave you to rot.
Did you enjoy being Matron? What am I saying, of course you did — the world’s ended and you’re still doing it!
I had a fifteen year plan. Worked it out while I was undercover in Sarajevo, back in the day. I won’t bore you with the details, but it worked, was working, would have worked.
Three years to go when the fucking Cull hit. Three years and then I’d have packed my bags and vanished off the face of the Earth. Nice little mansion in South America, I reckoned. Get fat, raise a few kids.
Best laid plans, eh.
They knew a lot earlier than they let on. About the blood type thing. Since I’d been in the army, my medical details were on record. I was contacted when the press were still talking about bird flu. Recalled to Hereford.
There was this soldier, Major General Kennett.
Really? What was your impression of him?
Ha! Yeah, I agree actually. Decent bloke. Capable. Prissy, though. Couldn’t make the hard decisions.
He briefed us. Not completely, obviously, but he told us we were immune and that it would get bad enough that there might be a breakdown of public order. We were going to be the last line of defence when the police and regular army were no longer able to cope.
Operation Antibody it was called.
I know. Laughable.
They knew, though; the Government. Makes me wonder how long they’d known by then. What they knew about where it came from.
I’ve searched this place and Number 10 top to bottom more than once. Nothing. No clue at all. I thought there may be some evidence at the MI5 or MI6 buildings, but all the interesting parts are still sealed up. I don’t reckon we’ll ever know how it started or where it came from.
Who cares now anyway?
Once I was drafted again, my main concern was the organisation. I kept in touch with my new Spider by phone, trying to maintain control. I got regular reports as things fell apart but eventually I lost touch with them all.
My network was gone, my resources were gone and I began to suspect that the money I had accumulated would soon be worth less than nothing. All that effort, for what?
So we were broken into teams and dispatched across the country to key installations — nuclear power plants, arms depots, local governments, that kind of thing.
I was part of the London team. We were all Regiment or ex-Regiment; the best, you know? Our job was to protect the Government.
At first it was pretty easy. The regular security teams were bloody good. We just shadowed them, learning the ropes. Then when one of them went down, one of us would step into the breach.
They’d done the same in Government, you know. Formed an inner cabinet. The handful of O-Neg MPs, some immune peers and a few other top dogs. They were running things long before the rest of the real cabinet fell ill. It was like the ones who knew they were going to survive just started ignoring the ones who were doomed, as if they were already dead.