Gang of One: One Man's Incredible Battle to Find His Missing (31 page)

Read Gang of One: One Man's Incredible Battle to Find His Missing Online

Authors: Gary Mulgrew

Tags: #General, #Biography & Autobiography, #Personal Memoirs, #Business

BOOK: Gang of One: One Man's Incredible Battle to Find His Missing
2.85Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

‘£100,000,’ I repeated numbly, my head spinning at the thought of being Asil Nadir’s neighbour.

‘A one-off deal for you, Gal; you’ll just cover our costs. I’m doing this because I think you’re getting fucked by the Yanks and our own fuckin’ government, and I don’t like it.’

‘Look, Harry,’ I said, placing my hand on his arm and moving a little away to break the spell. ‘I appreciate what you’re saying and I appreciate the offer. But I’m going to fight them and I am going to win the extradition. If need be, I’ll win easily in a court in Britain,’ I asserted, still at that stage believing it.

‘You’re not listening to me, my son. You’re never going to trial in the UK; they know you wouldn’t be found guilty, otherwise they’d have done you ‘ere in the first place. They’ll get you to the US then you will never make it to a trial. No one does.’ That wasn’t technically true, but I got his point.

‘Cyprus,’ he said again.

‘OK, OK,’ I said, suddenly feeling tired and overwhelmed and anxious to start the long journey out of London.

Harry re-asserted his grip on me one last time, his eyes searching into mine. ‘Just promise me you’ll fink about it. Fink about it. OK?’ and with that he patted me on the shoulder, gave me a nod and turned away.

The evening after my last chat with Angel, I lay back on my bunk in Big Spring and wondered why I never did ‘fink’ about Harry’s offer. I suppose I was fighting to regain my life, not run away from it. Besides, at that stage, maybe only a gangster could see what I could not – that I was screwed.

Someone came to collect me from my bunk around 10.30 p.m. The lights were already down; respectful of the rules of the Range, the messenger boy nudged me gently and asked me in a soft voice to come with him. I recognised him as one of Angel’s guys. They had a whole chest-bumping, fist-clenching thing that they did and I’d often seen Angel chest-bumping and fist-clenching with this guy in the past. He was young, short, quiet, sharply cut and all business. I’d barely jumped down and he had already headed off. The door had been reopened after the count. It probably wouldn’t finally close until around 11 p.m., but there were already significantly fewer people moving around; lots of inmates preferring the tranquillity of sleep to the perils of a few more hours awake in Big Spring.

I followed my escort through the main thoroughfare and up the stairs to the first floor of Sunset. Without checking I was still behind him, he moved swiftly through the first Range, Range 7. It was longer than our room, with even more people – maybe around 120 inmates. There were a few people moving around in the subdued light, but not many. It made me think of how submarine quarters would be at night-time.

We moved through another large, rectangular room almost 200 feet long, then continued to the end of it and on through a long corridor with a further warren of rooms either side of the corridor that acted as satellites of Range 8. I’d never been here before, and these sub-rooms were much smaller, housing no more than twenty or thirty inmates each, perhaps offering more discrete accommodation for the high-status prisoner. Some of the rooms looked as if they used to be offices or large storage cupboards, but all were jam-packed with this backwash of humanity. In the subdued light I could see no more than brief silhouettes, but the place reeked of despair and depravity. This was the net effect of America’s choice to continue to imprison a large section of its underclass – now totalling 2.3 million men and women – or ten times the per capita rate of any other Western country. In a nation where a local mayor of a small town, a congressman or a senator could never be elected if they suggested any kind of softening on crime, this was the living, writhing result. My love affair with America had been easy when I was riding high as a smartarsed banker, but the entrails of this country were so much harder to admire.

The continued cutbacks in funding, and the insistence that philosophically prisons were about punishment – that rehabilitation wasn’t a cure – meant that conditions would only get worse here, and the strain on space would grow ever greater. It also meant the gangs could not only flourish, but begin to occupy the ‘policing’ vacuum left by the over-stretched cops.

There were no closed doors to any of these rooms, but the narrow corridors connecting them twisted and turned in various directions, giving each off-shoot some sense of isolation and privacy. I couldn’t imagine the cops would venture down here very often, and by the time they did whatever ‘stuff’ was taking place would surely be over. One more turn took me to a very congested corridor, outside what seemed to be the final room in this network. There were Native Indians, African-Americans, Mexicans, Salvadorians, Nicaraguans and Colombians all milling around or kicking back outside – a multitude of guards, it seemed. Among them I saw SlumDawg and at that moment I knew I’d reached the shot-callers. As I slowed down and started to ease past them, my messenger stopped at the door to the room and turned to face me, flicking his head to motion me to enter. The last person I had to squeeze by was SlumDawg – unpleasant both because of our proximity and the fact that he reeked of alcohol.

The room itself couldn’t house more than ten or twelve inmates – and must at some stage have been a storage closet instead of a place where men spent their lives.

‘Hey Scotland, how are you doing? Come on in,’ Angel called out, jovially fist-bumping me and offering no further introductions as I squeezed my way in. There were probably eight or nine other guys in the room, some sitting, some standing, some looking at me, some not. It was hard to get a handle on them since none of them introduced themselves or offered their fists for a bump. No one seemed interested in the pleasantries. There was a seat between them, right in the middle, which Angel motioned for me to take. I hesitated; I would be right in the middle of a tightly congested room with people in the front, around and behind me, many of them standing up as I was sitting down. That intimidated me. I moved forwards, but then foolishly hesitated again.

‘Go on, Scotland,’ Angel said, his sardonic smile taunting me as he motioned me towards the chair. Getting a grip of myself and allowing my fears no airtime, I moved smoothly through the faceless gathering and sat down. I was trying to attach shot-caller to gang, but that was difficult since four were Hispanics and looked more like bingo callers than shot-callers. I smiled at the tubby little round one right in front of me. He didn’t smile back. He had a tattoo of a hand with two fingers held up in a V-sign on his shaven head which I knew was the West Texas Syndicate insignia. He had some papers in front of him which, having finished staring at me, he began to read again.

No one spoke for a moment, and I realised they were waiting for TexMex to finish whatever he was reading. A second look confirmed it was my papers, even though they had already been returned to me – which meant, incredibly, that the gangs had access to a photocopier. Was there a Gang Admin Centre somewhere in this warren? I realised I had seen TexMex a few times before. I had noticed him talking to the guards and once in the guards’ office in the ground floor of Sunrise. It had stuck in my mind because you seldom saw anyone converse much with the guards and it was unusual to be so openly chatty.

Angel smiled, as did the man I took to head the Native Indians, before my eyes settled on a white, hairy, crazed-looking guy – who I guessed was the AB shot-caller. He was big, very big, like an overfed biker, and unusually healthy looking for a member of the Master Race. I averted my eyes from his quickly, way too quickly I realised, in a movement that could easily be construed as showing fear. I tried not to lose my composure, but now I felt awkward about where to look. Just swallowing seemed to take on a magnified significance, as I become painstakingly aware of my every movement, my every breath. Feeling I was crumbling under their gaze, I tried to re-assert control over myself and to at least raise my gaze again to this assortment of hardened criminals. Doubts started creeping through my mind: what was I doing here? I was a fraud. I was afraid. What did they want from me? My neck felt stiff, as if my head weighed a hundredweight – had anyone noticed?

I battled for control of my fears and forced myself to look at the AB leader again, who was now leaning over talking to one of the other shot-callers. No one seemed to have noticed my mini-crisis and I began to relax a tiny bit more as I started to assess the AB shot-caller in detail. He was a big guy alright, and my eyes were drawn to what seemed like the same tattoo across his chest that I had seen on my first day in Big Spring when the ABs were on their recruitment drive. Another Bob hater, I thought, mystified by their bizarre relationship with Bob, until the big man turned towards me and the full stupidity of my mistake was exposed to me. The tattoo didn’t say ‘Bob Hates Me’ but ‘God Hates Me’. I replayed the bemused look of SlumDawg and his sidekick as I’d told them to take their gifts and ‘give them to Bob’, mistaking the key word thanks to the neckline of his low-slung vest. What an idiot I was, I told myself, feeling more confidence drain from me; an idiot abroad. Why hadn’t I just kept my mouth shut?

‘This ees strange,’ said TexMex eventually raising his head, and looking at the other shot-callers. ‘All that money and so short?’ He meant the length of my sentence – or rather, he meant that I must have squealed in order to get one so short.


No estoy un rata,
’ I said slowly, my Scottish accent rolling over the word ‘
rata
’. Perhaps it was the fact that I’d used Spanish, perhaps it was the sincerity behind my words, but it seemed to have the desired impact. Angel spoke quickly to TexMex and the other Hispanics in Spanish – too quickly for me to understand, but he was stopped abruptly as the AB shot-caller suddenly bellowed, ‘Eng-glish!’ adding, ‘Come on, Angel, you know the rules about this shit.’

Angel smiled and grimaced at the same time, in a way only he could.

‘Okay,’ Angel began. ‘We only speak English in this meeting. You know the deal, Scotland. You’ve caused too many waves since you got here and we need to sort out who you are going to run with and whose protection you fall under.’

‘Yeah, protection at a price,’ I thought, as his words confirmed all my fears as to the purpose of the meeting.

‘Well, he ain’t running with us!’ began TexMex. ‘Don’t care how good his Spanish is, he no is one of us.’

‘And he sure don’t look like one of us,’ rumbled the African-American shot-caller, a scholarly looking elder with glasses and a full beard.

As one, like the crowd at a tennis match, everyone looked at the Aryan Brotherhood representative. He didn’t look all that keen on me either, but I wasn’t going to give him the chance to speak.

‘I want to walk alone,’ I said, to a general intake of breath. ‘I’m Scottish. I’m not from here, and I don’t want to get involved in anyone else’s shit.’

‘You know you can’t do that, Scotland,’ a sympathetic Angel said, to general nodding. ‘I understand how you feel, but you stand out too much and you keep interfering. Everyone who shows has to run with someone.’

‘OK then,’ I said, suddenly having a brainwave – or possibly just signing my own death warrant, ‘then I will run with a gang . . . Mine,’ I said more quietly as my resolve faltered.

I paused then said ‘
Los Escosais
’ with renewed authority. ‘The Scottish.’

This elicited almost immediate laughter and a bigger than ever grin from Angel. The talkative black shot-caller slapped me on the back as he laughed. ‘A Scottish Gang, that’s a new one, Scotland! Who’s gonna be your shot-caller?’

‘I’ll be the shot-caller,’ I responded calmly and seriously. ‘If anyone wants to fuck with me, then they’ve got to clear it with me first!’

More chuckles. The tension seemed to have vanished from the stifling little room. Only the fat biker was looking brooding. ‘You can’t be serious,’ said a smiling Angel, through twinkling eyes.

But I was – and the more I thought about the idea, the more I realised it could be my safe passage. ‘Look, I’m not here for long, I will keep myself to myself and I will still technically be in a gang . . .’ I prompted, searching desperately for a sign of acquiescence in one of their faces. I didn’t see any – only, as the laughs faded, increasing scepticism.

‘Come on,’ I implored. ‘This is the best solution.’

The breakthrough came from TexMex. The slightest tilt of his head, the smallest incline of an eyebrow. I seized on it.


Por favor?
’ I said, more quietly, looking straight at him as if no one else was in the room. ‘
No quiero ser con los hombres blancos
’ (‘I don’t want to be with the whites’) TexMex nodded.

‘What did he fucking say!?’ growled my biker friend, leaning aggressively towards me and pushing my shoulder. ‘What did you fucking say? What did he fucking say?’ he demanded again.

‘Get your hands away from him,’ interjected Angel with a steely calmness. ‘You know the rules about touching people in here.’
In here
, I thought. No telling what revenge the Brotherhood might exact somewhere else.

TexMex raised the palm of his hand to him for quiet and it had the desired effect. He seemed the least likely to be in charge, short and chubby with a round bald head and no neck. He looked like a snowman with skin, but since Mexicans dominated the Yard through sheer scale of numbers, he clearly held sway here. ‘A gang of one?’ he queried in perfect English, clearly still thinking it through. Angel grinned some more at this comment, giving me encouragement.

‘We’re OK with it,’ said the Native Indian leader suddenly.

‘It’s cool with the brothers, too.’

‘Aw, this is bullshit!’ shouted the AB. ‘Total bullshit!’ He stood up and, ignoring me, stalked out of the room.

‘Oh, just ignore him,’ said Angel, slapping my thigh as he sat down in the fat Aryan Biker’s recently vacated seat.

‘Looks like we’ve got ourselves a new Scottish shot-caller!’ He smiled, although I sensed none of the others quite shared his enthusiasm.

‘Just remember, Escosais,’ said TexMex solemnly. ‘You walk alone now; you stay out of our issues, our problems. You do your own time. Any interference and there will be no protection for you. You understand?’

Other books

Curveball by Martha Ackmann
Suicide Note by Teresa Mummert
Untouchable by Chris Ryan
Solving For Nic by Lexxi Callahan