were professionals and they’d organised themselves more quickly than he’d had a chance to. It was true that he’d recruited his core group during this sweep of Europe – like Henrik the German with a passion for fine cigars, silver-haired Dutchman Reinhart, an expert marksman, the Lithuanian Rudakas, the broad Italian Savero, and Javier, originally of Mexican descent but now operating out of Spain, who in spite of his belly was a mean fighter. All were former mercenaries, their allegiance given to power and riches, rather than any flag. But together they hardly constituted the army De Falaise had envisaged. And though they’d been lucky in acquiring some weapons and transportation, the group finding bikes easier to manoeuvre in the heat of guerrilla warfare, they’d also been thrashed any number of times and been forced to retreat, losing many good foot soldiers in the process.
All of which meant that by the time De Falaise and his officers entered France, they were in no mood for the resistance they met there either. On the one hand, it made him proud that his people hadn’t just rolled over and given in. But on the other, it meant that De Falaise would be denied the role of Governor here as well.
“Merde,” he’d muttered to himself as they were driven out of Paris by the most powerful gang in charge there. “It was such a good plan, too.”
But there was still hope. Whispers reached them that across the sea, the once ‘Great’ Britain was but a shadow of its former self. And something about that definitely appealed to De Falaise, as it probably would have done to his old history teacher. Just like in 1066, when William the Conqueror’s Norman army had landed at Pevensey beach and then defeated Harold at Hastings, De Falaise would claim the place as his own. William had quashed all the rebellions after he was crowned King, so why shouldn’t he do the same? It was also the chance to put right a few wrongs. The outrages of the Hundred Years’ War, for example, when repeated attempts to take over France had failed – and then, of course, there was Napoleon’s defeat at Waterloo. That still stung. The one-time Emperor’s downfall after that had been swift and marked a turning point in the war between Britain and France that straddled the eighteenth and nineteenth Centuries. A war which, at its heart, went back much further.
De Falaise had to know for sure, however, what condition the island was in. Which was why they’d made the effort of staking out the Channel Tunnel. Sooner or later, he realised, someone was bound to come through it from the other side, and then... well, they’d get first hand information about the situation.
“Everything’s gone to shit. It’s chaos... Fucking chaos. Why do you think we came through the tunnel? It’s like being back in the dark ages.”
How appropriate , thought De Falaise.
So they’d made the trek to Britain, penetrating the island at Folkestone and working their way up to the Nation’s capital. What they’d found en route backed up everything the tortured Englishman had told them. Small groups of thugs roaming the streets, with no imagination, no sense of the ‘bigger picture.’ Here and there certain areas were ‘ruled’ by tin-pot dictators, but their troops were few in number and there was no sense of working together for a common goal; at least not on the scale De Falaise was aiming for. In London itself, they found the same thing – nebulous gangs with no one person in charge of all of them. When he came along, all of that soon changed. He’d offered them a simple choice: life, under his leadership and protection, or death – which could either be swift or not, depending on what mood his men were in. Tanek did like to keep his hand in, to practise his skills. Back in the early days, De Falaise had once seen him keep someone alive for a week in constant agony. There was a talent to that, an art.
But this hadn’t been their only reason to
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