Walker had quickly seen the way the wind was blowing and tried to tell Spencer that resignation was the only honorable way out. But to no avail. Instead, recalling Churchill’s victory in a confidence debate in the House of Commons in 1942, after the disasters of the fall of Singapore and Tobruk, Spencer had called for a confidence debate, too. Despite an impassioned plea for national unity at this moment of historic crisis, it had, predictably, been a disaster, with one hitherto loyal backbencher after another lining up to condemn the Prime Minister’s leadership and call for his resignation.
Back in “The Den” in Number 10 Downing Street, after the overwhelming vote of no confidence, Walker had rehearsed the traumatized Spencer in the resignation speech he had quickly scribbled for him, before leading the now wet-eyed Prime Minister to face the array of media microphones and TV cameras outside the front door of Number 10. Here, in full view of the world, first pink-faced and finally blubbering like a chastened schoolboy discovered doing something unspeakable, Spencer’s glittering political career had ended in tongue-tied humiliation.
Walker, however, was not one to look back, for this was also an opportunity to further his own interests. He had always maintained close links with the Chancellor of the Exchequer, Oliver Little; tough, ruthless, sardonic, but also a masterly political operator, who had been extending his tentacles of influence across Whitehall to take advantage of the day when the Prime Minister eventually stepped down. That day had now come earlier than anticipated. Nevertheless, Walker was quick to see the opportunity to consolidate his own influence by supporting Little’s leadership aspirations.
All it had taken was the merest of hints to the editor of the
“What the hell do you mean there’s nothing that we can do to respond?” The Prime Minister was clearly furious; his jaw stuck out obstinately, as his eyes bore into the wilting Defense Secretary. “Do you mean to tell me that your recommendation to me after the Russians have sunk
“Well, Prime Minister…” Everage said ingratiatingly in his Estuary accent. Walker was reminded of Dickens’s
There was a knock on the door and Walker went over and half-opened it, irritation at the interruption turning to approval when he saw who it was.
“Sorry to interrupt, Prime Minister,” said Walker, noting the relief on Everage’s face at being let off the hook. “It’s the new Chief of the Defense Staff. The police refused to let him in without an escort. He insists on seeing you.”
“Show him in,” the Prime Minister ordered.
Walker fully opened and then stepped away from the door to allow General Jock Kydd—despite accepting a knighthood from the Queen, he had made it known that he was never to be referred to as “Sir”—to enter.
A sudden surge of physical energy, like an electric current, filled the room as Kydd stepped forward and looked around, as if checking where any potential threat could come from. Broad-shouldered, slightly hunched, he rocked gently from foot to foot, fists clenched at his sides, like a boxer sizing up his opponent.
Looking at him, Walker couldn’t help thinking that the new CDS looked more like a bodyguard in a movie about the Kray brothers than the new, professional head of Britain’s Armed Forces. He took in the shaven head, ill-fitting, black off-the-peg suit, white shirt with chest hair poking up above the fastened collar, stringy blue tie, and black, steel-toecapped, “executive super safety” shoes, bought from the Bodyguard Workwear online shop.
On taking over as Prime Minister, Little had immediately appointed Kydd, whom he had first come across in Afghanistan where he had set up a program to bring former Taliban into the political process, as his new CDS. Despite his eccentric manner, Little recognized Kydd’s qualities and the importance of his evident credibility with the Americans. A phone call to Kydd had brought him out of very recent retirement.