American library books » Other » The Final Flight by James Blatch (fastest ebook reader .TXT) 📕

Read book online «The Final Flight by James Blatch (fastest ebook reader .TXT) 📕».   Author   -   James Blatch



1 ... 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 ... 123
Go to page:
Kilton return inside as the faces at the window withdrew.

Susie walked through the empty passenger terminal building at Southampton. She called her desk officer from a public telephone just inside the main doors.

“We have what I believe is grounds to intervene in the Milford case.”

“I see,” Roger replied. Two words that dripped with scepticism. “Just to be clear, you did not intervene as discussed?”

“May carried out the task of his own volition. As I said, he was going whether we liked it or not.”

“You better talk to them upstairs.” The line went quiet.

Susie pulled her notepad from her purse.

The line stayed quiet.

At her level, tasks involved staying unseen and making reports, yet here she was, running an entire operation.

And now what? What happens next?

“Miss Attenborough?”

“Yes.”

“I’m putting you through to Mr Collingwood.”

The department head. A man she’d been introduced to on her first day and had not seen since.

“Miss Attenborough. How was your day trip?”

“Hello, sir. I’m sorry I ended up doing a little more than we planned, but I really had no choice. Rob May was determined.”

“I see.”

“But we have made a significant discovery. We have the knowledge required to challenge the conventional wisdom that seems to surround Guiding Light.”

There was a pause. “Go on.”

“The system is flawed. It’s a small, often inconsequential error from the laser rangefinder to the autopilot. But with the number of flights planned both here and in the United States, it will claim aircrew lives.”

“Quite a bold statement. May I ask how you know this?”

“Before he died, Christopher Milford managed to smuggle a good number of tapes from West Porton to the maths department at Oxford University. That’s how they found and quantified the flaw.”

“And that’s where Professor Leonard Belkin comes in?”

“Yes, he allowed use of the mainframe computer. But he wasn’t aware of the details. He was able to extrapolate the numbers, though. He carried out important work, albeit unknowingly.”

“That’s as may be, but even before we present it, this theory has been thoroughly dismissed by those with access to the actual project recordings. TFU are content to continue with Guiding Light and that’s been backed at the highest level in government.”

“I know, but I believe a cover-up is in place, led by Mark Kilton. It possibly involves DF Blackton as well.”

“It sounds elaborate.”

“Sir, I’ve seen the results in black-and-white.” She pulled a piece of paper from her pocket. “8.75 crew members a year would die. That’s just from a 0.014% rate of error from the laser beam.”

“Fine. So we ask West Porton to examine these tapes that Milford, as you say, smuggled away. I think that’s the best we can hope for. With the extra scrutiny they won’t be able to disguise the results.”

Susie sighed.

“We don’t have the tapes, sir.”

“Where are they?”

“Incinerated.”

“I see. So you have no evidence for these rather extreme allegations which have already been batted away by TFU?”

“You have to understand the position Milford was in, sir. Mark Kilton’s all powerful. Milford was scared of him. That’s why the evidence was destroyed. But even without the tapes, we know enough. We need to take action.”

“I’m not sure I see that, Miss Attenborough. Not without evidence. What action do you suppose we should take? Give me your precise recommendations.”

She took a deep breath.

“Kilton operates with an autonomy that does not fit with the armed forces hierarchy. I believe he has lines of authority to government which allow him to bypass the usual checks and balances. Ultimately, he’s used this to press into service a potentially dangerous aircraft system.”

“I understand the case you have made, Miss Attenborough, but I asked you for your recommended actions.”

“Guiding Light needs to be halted and independently investigated.”

“And who do you suggest does that?”

“I’m not sure. The existing trials units at Boscombe Down?”

Collingwood spoke calmly, with a sing-song, matter-of-fact voice. “That would undermine TFU and the point of its existence. It would also expose a Top Secret project to an intolerable number of witnesses, which would be in breach of the United Kingdom’s undertaking to the United States. And I don’t need to remind you that a great deal of investment is at stake.”

“Then we concentrate on Kilton—”

“Have him arrested?”

“Yes.”

“On what charge?”

Susie had a sinking feeling. She could imagine Roger laughing in the background.

“Falsifying aircraft trial results. And I believe that would just be the start. We should also look carefully at the crash that killed Milford.”

“An inquiry is already taking place into that. Its conclusion is likely to rule out Guiding Light as a culprit.”

“That’s a cover.”

He sighed. “You understand the problem I have, Miss Attenborough. Your word against an independent Board of Inquiry and a decorated senior officer in Mark Kilton. What we need is hard evidence. Irrefutable. Something the director would have no choice about. I’m afraid we are a long way from that point.”

“What about the statistics I gave you? Derived from actual flying data, straight from the aircraft.”

“I am trying to help, Miss Attenborough, but your evidence is the word of a septuagenarian who tells us the tapes and papers were burned. Remind me again why the only hard evidence was destroyed?”

“This was just the first sample. Milford intended to continue gathering data, but he was killed.”

There was a silence at the other end of the line and Susie realised she had just undermined her already weak case.

“Just a first sample, from which conclusions were extrapolated, and on that basis you would like Her Majesty’s government to halt a billion dollar export deal?”

She should have had this conversation a week ago.

“Miss Attenborough, you have worked hard and with diligence, but not for the first time in the career that lays ahead of you, I am sure, you have come up against the rather cruel realities of our service. We can act only when the evidence is overwhelmingly criminal, or there is evidence the national security is in immediate danger. I’m afraid, that contrary to your expectations, neither of those tests have been met. We have no direct evidence of cover-up,

1 ... 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 ... 123
Go to page:

Free e-book: «The Final Flight by James Blatch (fastest ebook reader .TXT) 📕»   -   read online now on website american library books (americanlibrarybooks.com)

Comments (0)

There are no comments yet. You can be the first!
Add a comment