One-On-One , livre ebook

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2013

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In her trademark series, One-On-One, Christine Gardner, freelance journalist and television presenter, puts powerful people into the limelight. Her latest subject is Salleh Abdullah, once known as Trevor Cartwright, a British expatriate mathematician and convert to Islam. He has amassed a fortune and now international notoriety via his deft trading on financial markets using methods that thus far have defied all analysis. In just two years his fortune in equities has grown so great that his holdings in multinational companies are causing concern. To date, he has resisted all contact with the media, but Christine and he share a past, a past that both of them keenly recall. Cartwright finds her request to record episodes of One-On-One impossible to refuse. This will be Salleh Abdullah's first media exposure. But who is Christine working for? Is she freelance? Or does she appear in someone else's script? Perhaps her husband, Anthony Green, who watches his wife's encounter with Salleh Abdullah from his office desk, can answer. Set on a private island in the South China Sea where Cartwright regularly retires to work, One-On-One follows the progress of Christine Gardiner's project as allegiances begin to shift.
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Date de parution

17 décembre 2013

EAN13

9781783334667

Langue

English

Title Page
ONE-ON-ONE
by
Philip Spires



Publisher Information
One-on-One
Published in 2013 by
Andrews UK Limited
www.andrewsuk.com
This book is sold subject to the condition that it shall not, by way of trade or otherwise, be lent, resold, hired out or otherwise circulated without the publisher’s prior written consent in any form of binding or cover other than that in which it is published, and without a similar condition being imposed on the subsequent purchaser.
The characters and situations in this book are entirely imaginary and bear no relation to any real person or actual happening.
Copyright © Philip Spires
The right of Philip Spires to be identified as author of this book has been asserted in accordance with section 77 and 78 of the Copyrights Designs and Patents Act 1988.



Preface
The Green papers that follow represent the sum total of Anthony Green’s participation in One-On-One. He spent the time that elapsed after the last direct contact with the subject reworking and annotating these documents.
What is presented here is a paper copy of his notes. He had clearly prepared this material ready to be forwarded alongside his other material. We cannot know, of course, whether this text represents his final version.
Interspersed with Green’s records are the verbatim texts of the recorded interviews with the subject, placed at the points that are closest to when they were recorded. These cannot be completed until your feedback is received.
We have, of course, already decided our plan of action. The logistical details were agreed and matters are already resolved. Political aspects are still to be finalised, however, so your observations and comments will be crucial. These papers are thus central to our concerns, as are your reading of them.



The Green papers
When I saw Christine get into Cartwright’s boat that first morning, I knew there would be casualties. She did not just tumble, she literally collapsed head first into the well of the hull, her leg left hanging over the side where the fabric of her trousers had caught on a cleat. That Cartwright laughed was only to be expected; that he did nothing to help we might have anticipated; that he laughed loud and hard and set off at higher than normal speed to exacerbate her discomfort came as a mild surprise. The fact that she also laughed after an initial screamed curse will surely surprise us all. It was almost as if, from the very first moment, Christine had changed from the seasoned professional we all knew into an adolescent along for the ride. Perhaps eventually it made things clear, but at the time it was hard to read, and happened too fast to allow a considered reaction. It was only when I later reviewed the scene that I realised how completely things had gone wrong. Cartwright had surely approached the whole encounter with a plan and inevitably it was a plan to proffer cooperation, but with the overall intention to disrupt, frustrate, undermine and eventually triumph. His apparently callous reaction to Christine’s collapse into the boat was merely a diversion that worked. It was immediately apparent that he was someone who could act quickly, could think on his feet - or on his foot, if that is the more appropriate wording in the circumstances.
To that point, Christine’s assignment had progressed entirely to plan. She had arrived on the offshore island after spending two days with our people in base, where she was able to brief our contact who, of course, had no prior need to know anything about her task. At the time we all judged his surprise as genuine. Cartwright, after all, had received some official support over the years, albeit minimal, since he retained dual nationality. He made few demands, but those he did make were sometimes significant - his own change of name, his children’s nationality, for example. But, according to the person who was most likely to have known more about him, Cartwright’s significance appeared to remain unknown until Christine briefed him on her objectives. He certainly seemed surprised, but then he may have been a good actor. Frankly it is inconceivable, given Cartwright’s recent rise to prominence, that our contact at base was unaware of why we would be interested in him. The operative in question has been in his current post for more than three years, some time before Cartwright began to achieve success in his venture and a year and a half before his activities were drawn to more general attention. We have, of course, taken the trouble to interview the current incumbent’s predecessor, and she too appeared to have no knowledge whatsoever of Cartwright’s interests, despite having had extensive social and professional contact with him before he officially retired from the university. Her ignorance of his current status is understandable since, as far as we are aware, Cartwright did not begin to apply his ideas until after his own retirement, which happened after the previous incumbent left her post.
After her two days of rest at base, Christine took the eight o’clock boat across to the island and then a taxi to the hotel on the north coast, where she had negotiated her rendezvous with Cartwright. She had only light luggage of her own, merely a carry-on bag with a few clothes and her laptop, but she did also have that heavy metal box for the cameras and their charger, but it was not this that caused the fall.
The hotel has its own small jetty, but it’s designed to be used by the hotel’s own craft that does tourist trips out to the reef. There are no proper landing stages apart from the one designed for that particular boat, since they hardly wanted to encourage or attract general traffic. Cartwright moored his own boat just off the beach, so that the heavy camera case could be easily lowered down directly to him from the jetty’s walkway, thus avoiding the risk of a carry over water to the boat. Christine, however, did not feel confident with the half metre drop onto a rocking boat, so she elected to board from the beach. Cartwright ran the bow aground in the shallows, as close to the beach end of the jetty as he could, meaning that Christine had to lunge forward with one reaching step from the very end of the jetty to plant her right foot on the bow platform and rely on a pull from Cartwright’s helping hand to get her on board. He, however, also had to keep hold of the tiller, meaning he was over-reaching. It worked fine, except that the fabric of Christine’s left trouser leg caught on the bow cleat, and over she went in a screaming bundle. Cartwright’s surprising, even baffling response was to smile, leave her there and gear up his outboard to pull them off the sand. He reversed and then set off at full pelt, the bow of his light water taxi standing up as he bounced the little craft over the waves. All I could see at this stage, of course, was the bottom of the boat which, presumably, was also Christine’s point of view at the time. I could hear how she cried out, however. At first I thought they were screams for help, but I was wrong.
It galled me, I admit. I could cope with Cartwright’s crass behaviour, which frankly I had expected. I could cope with Christine’s obvious discomfort, for it soon became obvious that she was in no pain, despite being almost upside down with her face pushed against one of the cross-plank seats. My problem arose when she too started laughing, almost enjoying the relief of not having to keep up appearances for once. And then, when my wife of thirty years turned on her side, undid her belt, buttons and zip and struggled to slide out of her trousers to a seated position, still laughing, I sensed, just minutes into the encounter with Cartwright, that she had already become a stranger to me. At the time, quite understandably, perhaps, I assumed that she was doing her best to rescue the situation. The ultimate professional was the label that my rationality sought to attach, as she sat there in her knickers, belly-laughing like an idiot, her trousers with the now detached prosthesis still in situ hanging like a bagged amputation from the cleat into the boat, agitated and apparently alive on the jolts of the waves. In thirty years of marriage, I had never once seen her even expose her false leg in public, let alone take it off. And now she was presenting the stump of her left leg proudly, almost erect to the wind, like maleness both rampant and misplaced.
“Morning, Tom,” she had said plainly as he approached the jetty, her feet and heeled shoes sinking deep into the soft white sand. She stumbled a little under the weight of the camera box.
Cartwright had not replied. He remained silent and seated at the stern of the boat, his right arm resting on the outboard’s tiller as the engine idled. His shorts and shirt looked dirty, but later I concluded they were just heavily worn. Throughout, I never saw him wear anything other than these two garments, but they were washed several times a day, I later learned, via his habit of dropping fully clad - if that might be the relevant expression in the circumstances - into the sea to cool off. He did this regularly, at least two or three times a day.
Now I could accept his need to steady the boat while Christine struggled to lower the weight of the camera box from the jetty. And I was appreciative of his manoeuvre designed to assist Christine’s boarding, but I almost screamed at the monitor when his response to Christine’s potentially catastrophic fall came in the form of laughter.
“I can’t get down from here,” Christine had said, as she rose from an attempted crouch she had adopted to lower the box, which even then did fall the last foot or so into the boat. “There’s nothing to hold on to...”
“Go back to the beach, where the jetty meets the sand. Take your shoes off,” Cartwright re

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