Tuesday, 11 June 2019

BRUTES AND ANGELS


 This novel, of modern torture and free-spirits, is being shelved. There is masses of appalling material from around the globe, from every regime. But, it is too depressing to continue to write it. Maybe I will return to it if the world falls even further into the hell of primitive lunacy. In the meantime, check your nation's cells. 
Noel Hodson - Author. June 2019.

Chapter One


'Ubada b. as-Samit reported: Allah's Messenger (may peace be upon him) as saying: Receive (teaching) from me, receive (teaching) from me. Allah has ordained a way for those (women). When an unmarried male commits adultery with an unmarried female (they should receive) one hundred lashes and banishment for one year. And in case of married male committing adultery with a married female, they shall receive one hundred lashes and be stoned to death.

The Sultan of Brunei

March 2019 - Anyone found guilty of the offenses will be stoned to death, according to a new penal code based on Sharia law, an Islamic legal system that outlines strict corporal punishments. The strict new laws were announced by the Sultan of Brunei, Hassanal Bolkiah


As two burly guards lifted her horizontally from the prison truck, it was obvious that she was a svelte young thing; her slight slender form still alluring despite being in deep-shock and wrapped and tied tightly in plain jute cloth, and despite the rough sack over her head.
The Sultan, Hassanal Bolkiah, GCB GCMG, had very much enjoyed watching the two-hour, one-hundred strokes caning administered through her thin shift, conducted in private in the sound-proofed torture cells beneath his palace. There were times for cruel public punishments to satisfy God and the Faithful, and times for privately indulging his sexual sadism.
She had wept, shrieked, yelled and moaned and writhed most satisfactorily, sensually, throughout the entirely legal and religiously correct procedure. The Sultan, seated just two metres from her, had reacted to each stroke with a minute thrill and a jerk of erotic pleasure, which, as the cane whipped down, first bruising then, as lash piled on lash and criss-crossed, cutting her delicate skin, built-up in him a crescendo of stern, forbidding, perverse, self-controlled orgasm – invisible under his stiff uniform.
The executioner, the once human being who administered the cane, was a young father, and a husband, and a religious man. He put his own women folk and children out of his mind and started to beat her fiercely, with regulation timing, fuelled by righteous wrath; as his lifetime of religious instruction had taught him. She was a heretic, a sinner, a blasphemous harlot. He was doing God’s work to purify her soul and to discourage all other would-be sexual, sensual sinners. His strong arm was empowered and authorised by the presence of his prince, The Sultan; and by the Grand Imam, the highest cleric in the land; and, of course, by the Sharia Court. Justice was being served. 
Apart from her screams and the thud of the cane the cell was silent. Though no words were spoken, millions of tiny, subtle facial and body signals passed between the small elite audience and the executioner. In these waves of extreme communications, he was bonded to the others – and to his victim – by a shared knowledge beyond words. He could feel the Sultan’s sadistic pleasurable jerks and urges. He could feel the Imam’s pitiless insistence on punishment according to the old translations, of supposedly holy books, passed from country to country. He could feel his own righteous anger waning and his paternal instincts for the victim, hardly more than an innocent teenager, growing. He could feel the lash on her barely clothed skin, and he knew where and when the cane crossed other marks – where the skin would be broken and wounded. He tried to avoid those wounds. He knew, with the last remnants of his spiritual goodness, the last of his own divine spark, he knew when her divinity, her life force, left her body to its inevitable fate, beyond hope of rescue, and rose above them; above pain. But he was not a man of courage. He was a man who obeyed orders. He was a man who greatly feared being punished. And so he conspired with the sadistic majority in the cell and continued to deliver the other eighty strokes, as his victim became silent and motionless.





The stoning pit had been dug the proscribed fifty metres outside the palace walls. The guards carried her in a horizontal position, writhing in pain and terror, under their arms, and lowered her with surprising care and gentleness into the narrow hole. The guards also had mothers, wives, daughters and sons. They had not read the God-like judgement of the holy-men of the Sharia Court, they had heard it from superiors along with orders to cart the girl from the torture-cell to the pit. In the 21st century, exposed to global telecommunications and glimpses into other societies, albeit heretical societies, the guards were distressed and puzzled by the girl’s plight and savage torture. Was this, they wondered, what their God decreed? Were their superiors properly translating the ancient texts? Should the texts be updated? They had not trained to bully helpless girls; they had trained to fight other soldiers with modern weapons and risk their lives for their country. The guards teetered on the edge of sedition and rebellion; their moral senses wrestling with their insane orders.
Her feet touched the base. The narrowness of the pit kept her upright – otherwise she would have collapsed – her shoulders neck and head showed above the rim. At a whispered order and a brusque gesture with his prayer-book from the glittering-eyed elderly presiding Grand Imam, the guards rapidly shovelled the excavated dirt and rocks back in to the hole, until only the sackcloth hooded head, neck and shivering shoulders could be seen.
The Sultan and his entourage had not retained the slightest vestige of the life-spirit they were born of. Instead they chose to progressively calcify into spiritually dead, concretised brutes focused solely on primitive power and pleasure. Otherwise, they would perhaps have sensed, with justifiable fear and awe, that the girl’s astral body, her soul, floated freely a few metres above the ground, observing her grossly abused, dying tortured form, and above the tense silent audience; now observing with detached, inviolable calm intelligence.
As the diminutive Sultan and his thugs had in the dungeons visited their lustful mindless violence on her body, in extremis she had found and released the third-observer from within her. After just twenty lashes, driven by shock and awful pain, she experienced what modern society calls a Near Death Experience. Ancient humans have accepted this miracle, this escape route from cruel barbarity or pain, for tens of thousands of years. Her spirit floated above her beaten, bloodied body. All bodily sensation ceased. All pain ceased. Her body was barely breathing. She was now, after one-hundred strokes very nearly dead from the savage caning. She was abandoning this present incarnation for a higher ethereal-plane, where the spirit exists, a realm of calm, intelligence, love and understanding rarely glimpsed by Earth-bound beings.
Divorced from her dying corporeal form, her essential-self felt no more pain, no animal emotions, fear or resentment. She watched from above, from a higher dimension, as the officials performed their primate legal and religious rituals that attempted but failed to excuse their cruel sub-human actions. She could see their life-forces, their spark of divinity and life, unaware of her existence, as their dark twisted souls locked into their bodies; and all but severed them from the life-giving universal energy. They had fallen into sin – the most profound isolation. “Forgive them Father, for they know not what they do.”
Her tormentors sensed none of this transformation; the butterfly emerging from its chrysalis. They had lost their capacity to truly feel or truly see or truly know of the divine essence that animates all organisation in the material world.  And thus they dehumanised and diminished themselves as their hearts and minds turned to what they feared most, and so inflicted on others – pain, powerlessness and death.
A metre-high pyramid of small and large stones had been constructed ten metres to the left of the pit. Twelve men, magistrates, holy-men, medics and princes sat on chairs in a semi-circle to the right, eight metres from the condemned sinner. Three metres beyond the officials was a circle of guards. Behind the guards were the ordinary citizens, all males, summoned to witness the Will of God and of The Prophets being fulfilled to the letter of the law, as required by their holy books.
All mobile-phones, cameras and communication devices had been confiscated – a total news blackout; on pain of death.  
Under the sack, her eyes full of dust, the girl’s mouth was tightly gagged. She might groan but not scream out. This modern execution, following ancient protocols, had to be very carefully stage managed. Savage enough to satisfy the truly insane, the Imams and the most vengeful of imaginary Gods, but just on the borders of “plausible deniability” - emulations of civilised excuses for the world’s media. The sadistic Sultan could still don his royal-military uniform decked with ribbons and medals, and fly to debates at the UN and travel to shop at Harrods at Christmas with his smiling family – pretending to be a human-being.
News of this terrible event would inevitably leak. The responses, carefully worded, diplomatic Press Releases had already been drafted, re-written and honed to broadcast the Regime’s Strength, Humanity, Evolution from their ancestral head-hunters, Commitment to The Written Word of God, Assurances of a Quick Caring Execution, International Legal Compliance, Compassion for The Families, Observance of Alliances, and, not least, Continuing Oil flow and Economic Stability.
Now came the best part. The little Sultan was particularly good at hurling rocks and took pride in his accuracy and muscle power. Five men from the audience were “volunteered” to step forward to the pyramid of stones with the prince. As a man without sin or blemish he was wholly entitled to cast the first stone.  And, if he chose, he could also cast the second and third stone.

Absolute, unearthly silence cocooned the scene. A buzzard screeched once, wheeling high in the molten grey sky above. The Sultan bent and selected a sharp-edged flint. Not too heavy, that might despatch the convicted harlot in an instant, not too light, that might not reflect the prince’s energetic manliness, vigour and precision. Without hesitation he flung the rock very hard at the girl’s head. Her body twisted and groaned in pain as the stone hit her cheek and cracked the bone. The other five executioners held back in fearful, mute, tacit appreciation of the prince’s skill.
He selected another, slightly smaller flint; took aim and winged it at the girl’s head. A primitive instinct in her mortally wounded shell triggered a ducking action. The stone missed. The prince reddened and picked up a large rock and hurled it with all his strength. That hit its mark square on. Oh well done your royal highness, your arm is surely guided by God!
The skull cracking could be clearly heard several metres back as the rock smashed her head above the right ear. Their insane, vicious God beamed with delight. The crowd made as if to applaud but, in their terror and confusion at this 21st century barbarism, no sound was made – other than an embarrassed shuffle and sharp intake of breath. The Grand Imam muttered appreciative praise to his various assorted gods and prophets. The girl’s shrouded head was now hanging at an angle on her slim neck and not moving. Her shoulders shuddered with a single final heavy breath.
In pitching the heavy, killer stone, the Sultan wrenched his shoulder. It hurt. He had pulled a muscle or perhaps had torn a ligament. He allowed no emotion to show. But the damn bitch had hurt him. His temper flared. She might be done for, finished, beyond pain – but if the lover, the fornicating male, the other sinner, the heretic was still alive, still in the palace dungeons, the Sultan could inflict extra torments on his person. He retained enough vestiges of spiritual awareness to know without articulating the thought that the couple would still be linked at some higher level. He could take revenge on the boy – and the girl would feel it too. He would hurt the boy. Vengeance would be satisfied.
The Sultan had had enough, his honour and erotic-sadism satisfied. He waved impatiently at the “volunteers” to finish the job. They dutifully approached and lifted rocks from the pyramid and – some without looking at the victim – they rapidly showered the inert head and shoulders, smashing the frail creature until she had disappeared under the rocks.
A doctor stepped forward, stethoscope and medical bag at the ready. The fusillade stopped abruptly. The doctor shifted a few stones and examined the bloodied head. The Sultan walked away. The doctor announced that the girl was dead. God, Justice and The Government had been properly served.
As guards cleared his path back to the palace, the Sultan tried to call to mind what precise crime or sin the prisoner had committed to earn such dreadful punishment. But he couldn’t remember. Did she have a name? He couldn’t recall her name. He was a busy man with four-hundred-and-fifty thousand Subjects to command and with World Leaders to meet. It was enough that his recently reconstituted, the wholly legal, deeply religious and undoubtedly wise Sharia Courts had found her guilty and imprisoned her in his dungeons – at his majesty’s pleasure.
The girl had a name, she was named Qistina. She had been married at fourteen to a fifty-three-year old man of business. He was not particularly abusive; in his culture some would think him a generous man. But nor was he particularly attractive to women or to any of his eight wives, a compliant herd of wives, each younger than the last, whose names were listed in his passport. Without societal question or doubt, he had imposed his unlovely and unpleasant person on Qistina, whenever he fancied. She had been trained from birth to accept such assaults and insults from any “husband” the tribal family had made a contract with; forging a union that the demented, misogynistic interpretations of their holy books ordained.
At eighteen she fell in love with a handsome twenty-year-old man. They were discovered. The community’s ferocious gods spoke to the tribal leaders, who interpreted the gods’ words to suit their own perversions and head-hunting instincts – and forced the facts of the case to fit medieval texts scratched (by God of course) on goatskins in a far-off country in 584 AD. The Sharia Court found them guilty – and handed them over to the Sultan’s and the clergy’s psychopathic torturers.  
Qistina had quickly escaped her abused body, keeping just enough connection to hold onto life – in the hope, however bleak, of survival and revival. Her lifeforce, her spiritual essence and identity now soared back to join the infinite universal energy, beyond the limitations of time and place and incarnate suffering.
The wretched damned spirits of her tormentors fell further down, away from the light, into the lifeless cold bowels of eternal darkness. They had made their choices.




Chapter Two


President Donald Trump

During a campaign event 17th Feb 2016 at the Sun City retirement community, Trump emphasized his intention to reinstate waterboarding and techniques that are "so much worse" and "much stronger."
"Don't tell me it doesn't work -- torture works," Trump said. "Okay, folks? Torture -- you know, half these guys [say]: 'Torture doesn't work.' Believe me, it works. Okay?"

Donald wore his protective long navy-blue overcoat to witness the Water-Boarding sessions. Sessions which he had ordered to be restored as part of the CIA Interrogation Procedures. Like an infant or a schizophrenic, he needed layers of clothing to feel secure when facing possible psychic-pain – or God forbid – physical-pain. The overcoat, frequently renewed, was his armour and his safety blanket. He was careful to never be seen to suck a corner of the collar – however much he felt he needed to.
 Having promised the Great American People that he would abolish the previous Presidents’ soft-liberal, socialist measures against torture: ‘Because,’ as Mr Trump avowed ‘believe me, torture works,’ he was conducting hands-on research. He would not shy away from the reality of what he was determined to bring back into US law and military practice. As he told his staffers ‘When the going gets tough. The tough get going.‘
Born and bred in the Bronx, then Ivy League educated, Donald needed to show that he was not a coward – as was claimed by critics of his fleet-footed escapes from military service.  He would show the world that despite the, never proven, disabling bony spurs on his feet, which prevented him from being a soldier, sailor, airman or medic in Vietnam, he was as tough and mean as the most seasoned New York gangsters.
“Visit on your enemies fifteen times the harm they have done, or might have done to you,” he recalled his Uncle Roy Cohn, the New York Mafia’s main defence lawyer, advising him. Advice that had served him well, very well, all his adult life. Hit them hard – and keep hitting them until they stay down and won’t ever try again!  Roy Cohn had taught him.

Trump         Cohn

Mostly he’d hit them with law suits, not baseball bats, and the tactic had worked time after time. So much so that his ruined opponents, including several thousand suppliers who had had the temerity to demand payment, never came back for more. Few could fight a celebrity New Yorker who, from the age of twenty-two, had inherited an income from rents, equivalent in 2017 to $200 million a year.  No loser could outspend him in tortuous legal proceedings. And …if they didn’t lie down and stay down… then Uncle Cohn had big ugly friends who would pay them a visit at their home.
Roy was not his real uncle, there wasn’t a blood relationship, but the man had been a family adviser since Donald was a youngster, and he took a special interest in Donald’s business education.
Donald, President Donald, was now in North America, but just where in North America cannot ever be revealed. Suffice to say he was being chaperoned to a top-secret location by the most secret of military secret agents. It was winter – and, if security allowed, we might here describe the geography and the weather conditions. But national security does not allow. Any description might give clues to would-be terrorists, creating a threat to the President, potentially creating a Clear and Present Danger. 
It was remote; the nearest small town ten miles away. It was flat; with a long, cleverly camouflaged airstrip. It had one squat ugly single-storey building about the size of a family house. It was surrounded by razor-wire. Inside the razor-wire, it had another razor-wire fence enclosing five dusty, flat acres – then the anonymous building. The entire compound, apart from the gates, was protected by a haw-haw; on a slight rise the ditch was almost invisible from twenty yards back but dug deep and wide enough to stop tanks and most other vehicles; the back wall was like a cliff face, cast in reinforced concrete.  The ditch was mined. The only way in and out was over the bridge at the gates.
From his presidential Marine-One helicopter, Donald was shepherded to a military Jeep, which took him to the boundary of the inner razor-wire compound. The first gate, also fitted with fearsome razors and electrified, was manned by four large fighting fit, blank faced Marines who surrounded the Jeep and peered hard at the President and his entourage, demanding identity papers. Even from Donald.
Donald didn’t know whether to be insulted, and rise to his full presidential height, or to be reassured by the tight security. I could be a lookalike he told himself. So, as he was handed back his Level-One-Security card, he saluted the guard, wishing he had changed into his Commander of the Armed Forces combat uniform – instead of his Bronx-gangster overcoat. The guard didn’t react or respond other than with a dead-eyed gaze that sent a chill through Donald’s bladder. This fully armed Marine would kill him at a word from his superior officer.
The first gate lifted – and they drove in a few yards up to the second gate as the first gate dropped closed behind them. The second gate, ten feet high, was crash proof – heavily anchored at steel gateposts and built of foot-thick steel bars. Steel tips poked a couple of inches above ground, angled at the incoming vehicle, apparently randomly placed but in fact they were carefully located explosive lances, primed for firing, propelled by compressed gas, designed to instantly stop and disable any vehicle trying to ram the gate – be it a tank, steam roller or massive earth-digger. You shall not pass!
The gate shielded a sentry post, low, concrete and many feet thick. An observation slit fitted with bomb-proof glass stared at them – as cold and menacing as had been the Marine’s eyes. As the huge gate began to open, back from the left-hand pivot, Donald’s intuitive instincts started to kick-in.
He had survived and, in his terms, triumphed, in New York, in America and across the world due to his intuition and paranoia. Primed by Uncle Cohn, he had an acute sense of danger and threat coming from people and objects. He had no need for the slow processes of intellectual analyses. Thinking slowed down the reflexes. If, for example, he fell off Trump Tower, it would be lightning fast instinctive reflexes that would clamp his hand onto a window-sill or flagpole – to save his skin – not reaching for the instruction manual on “What to do should you find yourself falling from a skyscraper”. WHAM! BANG!  DEAD! He relied on reflexes not words.
His reflexes and instincts were now screaming at him to Get the Hell Out of Here. He deeply regretted his decision to personally observe the tortures he wanted to inflict on The Enemies of America. He had been driven mostly by his own macabre, unconscious fear of being caught, imprisoned and tortured. A deep frightened curiosity of how the helpless victims endured their pain and torment. He had watched, in his many hours of White House TV cruising, hundreds of hours of films of heroes (and latterly a few heroines) being captured by evil regimes, horribly tortured, yet escaping or rescued and, within a few more minutes of film, seen to be restored to full health – and returning to defeat the forces of darkness, often single-handed. He liked to believe such Hollywood fairy stories.
As the second gate closed behind him – there was no way back or out - he could sense, how he did not pause to consider, the spreading terror of the prisoner being prepared for enhanced interrogation, deep below the shoddy unmarked building in front of them. Donald was sure it was a man, a male, and he was right. His instincts were reading the vibes, the clues, the signs aright – a trembling, helpless prisoner, a man aged thirty-three  – part starved and sleep deprived for five days (a wholly legal softening-up torture condoned by The Senate)  was being stripped and then part dragged, frog-marched from his cell, along a concrete hallway to an interrogation cell – especially sound-proofed, totally silenced, unless the inquisitors chose to broadcast his screams to other prisoners in the block.
Donald’s horrible premonitions – and the victim’s terrible fears – sent waves through the aether – cascading across the universe.



In her ethereal form, in her astral body, now only faintly communicating with and watching over her spent shell, as it was washed and wrapped for burial by her earthly family, Qistina’s soul in an instant crossed twelve-thousand earthly miles to bring comfort and guidance. She could be in two places at once. She could be in many places at once. She was no longer necessarily a female; that was a characteristic of being embodied in her past primate form. Her soul had shed all such identification and all the emotions that stemmed from incarnation. But love and empathy and wisdom transcended the fall into earthly life. Qistina would and could accompany the prisoner – Trump’s prisoner, who would be especially tortured at the request of The President – so Donald could brag about his courage – Donald’s courage – afterwards. It would impress and excite his core supporters. Qistina could see Donald’s lightless black soul, his inner self, his fluctuating life-force, flickering like a dying-candle-flame in a cold draught. And she knew that he could not see her. His life-sharpened intuition could vaguely sense her presence – but what he felt only puzzled him.
If, IF, God help the man, Mr President reached inside his own soul, followed his intuition into his depths – connected with the terrified naked human being held between two burly guards in the interrogation cell – felt for the prisoner; and  -Praise the Lord – used his Presidential powers to stop the torture; to have the man treated in hospital, to restore the man’s body, soul and freedom; what joy it would add to the universe. To send him home – wherever home may be – and restore him to his wife and children and parents and friends. To commit an act of kindness. Then Donald’s raddled soul would glow with new life. He would feel new life. He would, to his great surprise, connect with millions of welcoming souls – happy for him. If only!
Or would Mr President, like The Sultan, choose to continue down the road to damnation, isolation and ultimately to the worst sort of hell?

Qistina’s spirit watched and waited.

The prisoner, Akram Ayash, was an educated man; a gentleman. A Muslim who had attended Chicago University to study Civil-Engineering, then returned home and joined some of the political street protests in his turbulent Middle-East country – which was first an Ally of The United States of America, then as the weather changed, became an Enemy, then was briefly re-classified as a source of Terrorism.  It was now once again seen as an ally – with robust oil revenues.
Filmed from spy-planes, satellites and drones, Akram, a tall elegant man in western clothes, had been noticed among the crowds, arrested by US Special Forces who thought they should hold on to him; shuttled between prisoner of war camps where, hoping for release or better treatment, he told them he was an engineer and graduate of Chicago University - which was enough to mark him out as a possible bomb-maker - and so flown to a camp that had no name, for interrogation; and from there, bound and blindfolded, put on a long military special-rendition flight to this isolated cell-block in the middle of an anonymous county, in an anonymous State, in an unnamed country – for legally sanctioned “enhanced interrogation”.
And, though Akram would never be allowed to know it, he was to be interrogated in the presence of, ‘At the Pleasure of,’ President Donald Trump; a president who had torn migrant infants from mothers at the Mexican border and locked them in cages; and who repeatedly broadcast that ‘Torture works.’ Would this president be merciful to Akram?
Stripped of clothes, stripped of identity, stripped of ego, part-starved, sleep-deprived, grossly humiliated, unwashed, badly bruised, dizzy, wounded and deeply-confused – the prisoner was frog-marched into the torture cell. It was winter. The oblong cell was very cold. There was a small metal chair embedded in the stone floor with ankle and wrist cuffs. There was a low metal desk set at thigh height. A sallow faced man with dead eyes, in winter-uniform, sat behind the desk tapping a riding crop on the surface. Standing behind the dead-eyed man was a woman, also in military uniform, aged about thirty. She hauled on a chain restraining a mad-looking dog which snarled and lunged at the prisoner. 
The heavyweight escort guards stepped back into the shadows by the door, leaving the prisoner unrestrained, standing before the desk, trembling with cold and fear. He covered his testicles with his hands, blue with cold, and pressed his knees together. The woman deliberately looked over the desk – and smirked at his attempts to protect his dignity and shrivelled manhood. She let the dog, straining at its chain, get within a few inches of the prisoner’s hands. He took a step back. Immediately the guards jumped forwards, slapped his head hard – and pushed him forwards, yelling at him to stand to attention – Don’t Move!
Donald, in his long overcoat, was offered a chair but preferred to stand at the small observation window. The window was unbreakable, one-way viewing and one-way sound.  The colonel in charge of the unit stood at his left-shoulder. A cluster of five high-ranking defence chiefs pressed in a respectful semi-circle behind. Donald wished they would move further back to give him more breathing space and at enough distance to enable him to hide his physical reactions. This wasn’t at all nice. Not how he’d imagined it. Too close for comfort. But - he was the strongman, the leader, the tough-guy who believed in torture. He had to act the part. He tried to assemble his false-tan flabby features into a harsh (but just) mask; that would get the job done – whatever the price.
The viewing room, with a table for recording equipment, was too cramped to let the party spread-out.
‘What do we want from this guy?’ demanded the great-leader.
‘Mr President, Sir,’ snapped the colonel ‘We have intel that this Arab has IED bomb-making skills that we want confirmed. And, Sir, there is a high probability that he knows one or more terrorist cells. We want names and places. Sir.’
‘IEDs?’
‘Improvised Explosive Devices, Sir. Used to destroy our patrolling road vehicles. And employed by suicide bombers to kill our boys, Sir.’
Donald tensed his muscles and set his TV-Soap hard-man facial expression, making himself a little more erect; remembering to play the tough (but fair) Leader of The Armed Forces, of the greatest military power on earth.  He envisaged the media photos and videos of his heroic features. ‘We’ve gotta protect our boys, Colonel!’
‘Yes Sir.’
‘No one; no other President, I can truly tell you, will protect our boys like me. Our boys, let me tell you, will never have had more protection and support than I’ll give them. The truth is that I’m the toughest President this country, this Great Country, has ever had. Compared to me, they’ve all been Losers. That’s why I’m bringing back Water-Boarding and all the other things. Obama wouldn’t protect our boys. But I intend to.   …That’s why I’m here today.’
‘Yes Sir!’
‘Let’s get that information out of this enemy, this dangerous terrorist, Colonel.’
‘Yes Sir!’
The colonel pressed a button on the desk giving the torture team the go-ahead.
A small green light glowed by the door. The inquisitor at the desk cast his dead-eyed look at the light and nodded at the two guards. They knew the routine and stepped up, grabbed Akram by his shivering arms, pulled him back to the chair, forcefully seated him on the metal slats, and snapped closed the ankle and wrist cuffs, spreading his arms and legs backwards – for maximum exposure and minimum protection.  The inquisitor came around the desk and stood over his victim. A guard stood immediately behind the prisoner.  First, they would apply the FACIAL SLAP - AS APPROVED BY THE US DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE.
The colonel, performing his duties in the presence of The President, had not left much to chance. His crack team had been softening up this skinny office worker engineer for several days – without leaving many marks of the punishments. They were skilled torturers who could inflict great pain and fool all but the most experienced forensic medical examiners. The female soldier came close and peered at his genitals, grinning and letting the dog’s teeth get within a few inches of his penis.
The inquisitor had a soft, almost whispering voice. ‘All I want you to say, Akram, is that you have been trained in designing and making IEDs. Is that true, Akram?’
Akram was shamed, terrified, baffled, dazed, confused and bewildered. He stared back at his interrogator, finding no reply. Is what true? He wondered, trying to unpick the question. He could understand the separate words and phrases but not string the whole sentence together. He couldn’t comprehend how it related to him. His head strained forwards and his mouth gaped in great puzzlement. The guard immediately behind him swung an arm and delivered an open-handed slap on his ear and cheek; the hand knocked Akram’s head aside then swung back to slash backhanded across his other ear. Akram jerked against his chains. The dog lunged at him, snarling.
Facial Slap was approved and permitted by The Senate, by the Senators, by the Supreme Court and by Congress. It was a perfectly legal technique for Enhanced Interrogation. 
Akram’s ears and cheeks were blue with cold. Slapping drew blood back into his restricted veins. His ears hurt like hell for many seconds after the blows.
‘Answer the god-damned question!’ bellowed the guard an inch from his stinging ear.
The inquisitor leaned forwards, speaking directly into the prisoner’s face, as softly as before ‘My question is, Akram, in case you didn’t hear me. Have you been trained to make Improvised Explosive Devices – IEDs – home made bombs? Have you made IEDs?’
The guard flexed his arm. Akram ducked in fright, looking up and sideways to send a pleading glance at the soldier. But the guard shifted out of view; denying any chance of pity.
‘No. No. I don’t make bombs,’ sobbed Akram. ‘I am not a soldier. I am a man of peace. A man of peace.’
‘We have intel, Akram. Intel about you. From people very close to you; that you are an engineer. And you can make bombs,’ insisted the interrogator. ‘Do you know how to make bombs?’
Akram had no coherent answer. He wanted to ask who his accusers were; people close to him? Family? Friends? Work colleagues? But he couldn’t frame the questions.  He again gaped silently at the inquisitor.
The guard from behind slapped his face and ears, harder, with his forehand and backhand blows. ‘Answer the question!’ he bellowed again.
‘Yeah!’ called out The President, secured behind his sound-proof one-way window ‘Answer the question. Or we’ll slug you again!’
The torturers, the experts at interrogation, noted Akram was reeling from the face-slaps. He was hurt, dizzy and disoriented. They knew this was his fourth day of persecution and beatings and they had enough experience to know that the man, nearly unconscious, aware of nothing but his pain and terror, was in no state to understand or answer. He needed at least ten minutes to settle, to draw in his last reserves of strength and dignity, to realise what was in the room around him – and to frame a reply. Even a simple yes or no was beyond him at this moment.
But the colonel knew that The President, pressing against the mirrored observation window, expected more. He wanted results. He did not tolerate “Losers”. The colonel pressed the green button three times.  The interrogator saw the three flashes and nodded three times at the face-slapping guard. The guard, a battle scarred Marine, hesitated, as he felt the rules of interrogation were being breached. He was tough enough to beat information from any villainous enemy of America, without guilt or reflection. He’d done so many times. But this torture team had tormented this prisoner for nearly a week – questioning, punishing, bullying, rewarding (strictly within the rules) and, without discussion they knew that they all knew that this office desk worker – albeit educated and qualified – was, as he claimed – a man of peace.
Akram was tall and thin; half the marine’s weight and had never trained for fighting or dealing with pain. He wasn’t a strong man; and the marine knew this. They had pushed him faster and harder than any other prisoner, unaware that he was being “softened up” for a presidential visit. The marine knew that Akram was on the edge of survival – and he didn’t want to murder a weakling chained to a chair. It was not what the soldier had joined the Marines for. He stepped back. The other guard, reading his body language, also stepped back. The dog handler retreated behind the desk and chair. The interrogator went back to his chair and spread his hands on the desk - and stared at the mirror for new orders.
‘Has he answered? I didn’t hear him answer. I don’t think he said anything. We gotta get the truth out of him. I don’t have all day, colonel. My time is precious,’ pouted Donald.
The colonel instantly weighed up the situation. He knew what his team was doing – and if he was in charge he would have stopped. Akram was in peril for his life. Something – heart, liver, kidneys, nervous-system, intestines – was likely to give up the ghost. And that wasn’t what The President was here to see – or what the colonel wanted to happen.
‘Regulations, Mr President. Face-Slaps per session are rationed by the rules. We are switching tactics and going for Water-Boarding. You will be able to see it first hand, Sir.’
This excited Donald. He wasn’t sure about the nakedness, or the dog, but had started to enjoy the face-slaps. Those he could imagine Uncle Roy imposing on an enemy – on one of his many enemies. Punish your enemy with fifteen times the hurt he’s given you, Uncle Roy had told him dozens of times. And Donald knew that it worked. When the marine slapped Akram, Donald had reflexively twitched his hand and arm as if he was attacking the stubborn foreign terrorist.  He, Donald, could do that. And he wouldn’t stop until the man talked. On the second slapping, Donald had squirmed inside – very much as the Sultan had squirmed at Qistina’s caning. It induced an internal sensuous response. This was real hands-on warrior stuff; at which Donald might excel.
Now waterboarding. This was also the real thing. He’d seen several short video clips – all obscured by bad lighting, bad camera work, people moving around – ambiguous commentaries. Just a mess as the terrorists spluttered and coughed and were hauled back up to gulp in air. But this would be right in front of him. This disgusting naked man displaying his genitals, this Loser – An Enemy of The United States – would be a little more than arms-length from him. It was what he had come to see.
As the team started to re-arrange the cell to make space for the water-board kit, Akram fainted, his head slumped sideways. His astral-body emerged and rose to the ceiling, observing the torturers below and the President and his entourage next door. Qistina joined him. She, or was she now an “It” – was wholly separated from her earthly form. She had left the building; but Akram was both in astral form and attached to his frail, still breathing shell – though he and it could feel no pain or heightened emotions. The presence of Qistina delighted him and he could sense an infinity of others in this realm. The torture cell, the torture team, the President, and his own assaulted body were supremely unimportant in this fabulous universe. Unimportant but intriguing. It was still possible that Akram’s body would recover sufficiently for him to re-enter and restore consciousness. Was that to be his fate; his path through this life?
Qistina and Akram kept vigil over his body, still manifesting a divine spark of life – and dispassionately recorded the troubled, wavering souls of the torturers and of the president’s increasingly disturbed team, cocooned behind the safety-glass.
“The Board” was erected behind Akram’s naked body, still chained to the metal chair. It was like a modern hospital-stretcher on jointed legs, fitted like the chair with manacles for wrists and ankles and with additional three-inch wide canvass straps and buckles. The guards swiftly, expertly, transferred Akram’s flaccid body onto the board and secured the restraints. They fixed the board on a slope so that his head leaned backwards and down. Then they stepped back. Donald, less than six feet away had a ringside seat of Akram’s naked prone body, with its disgusting little penis, wizened by the cold.  He, Donald, Mr President, shivered at the sight. Another odd thrill ran through his loins. He could intuit, he could empathise with this prisoner’s involuntary exhibitionism. It reminded him of a dream he’d had as a teenager. He liked it. He stared wide eyed in rapt silence.
The colonel was alarmed, shocked almost, by the president’s intensity and focus. This wasn’t right. The high-ranking military officers, the president’s entourage and advisers were all men who had served in battle. They didn’t like Donald’s obvious fascination at the helpless prisoner. Unlike the Sultan who had enjoyed Qistina’s flogging and stoning, Donald had neither the wit nor the self-discipline to disguise his tense sensuous excitement. He glanced around the small room; his expression inviting the officers to share his glee. They didn’t. So, Donald rearranged his features to a TV acceptable mask. Stern but Just. Judge Dredd, as he’d seen it acted in the movies. 
The interrogator stepped up to the board and poured a little water on Akram’s face, slapping him lightly. Both the interrogator and the colonel were fully aware of the prisoner’s fragility. He was still unconscious, breathing shallowly – and as pale as – well – as pale as death. Akram stirred, pulling against the restraints, arching his back a little. The torture team paused and watched closely. The interrogator not so much slapped as patted his face, pouring a little more water. Akram opened his eyes, blinked hard to slough off the liquid, coughed and tried to sit up. His eyes widened in terror as he took in the scene. He had been here before – and he groaned, he growled with animal fear. He twisted his head violently from side to side – resisting and denying what was about to come.
Donald was pressed against the window, compelled by his fear and sadism to get as close as he could; to see it all.
Through the telecoms, the colonel spoke privately with the interrogator. ‘How’s the prisoner doing? What’s he got left? Take his pulse. Do you want a medic? This guy has got to stay alive. We have important visitors here.’
The interrogator stepped up and examined Akram; holding his limp wrist. He put an ear close to Akram’s mouth to assess his breathing. ‘An adrenalin shot will pep him up, Sir. I got one in the desk. But it can mask serious conditions. It’s risky; Sir.’
Pity for the victims had long past been eradicated from the interrogator’s psyche. To perform his duties, he had become cruel. His name was Bernard; married, with two young children. He was not unkind to his family. Their house was in a small, isolated, government estate of homes, five miles from the military complex. Ten years of questioning and torturing men and women had almost killed his soul. The divine spark, his life-force was little more than a shrivelled cinder, slightly warm and nearly extinguished. Bernard had lost all his capacity to enjoy any of the pleasures of the world. His feelings and emotions were dead and cold.
The astral energies of Akram and Qistina knew and lamented that Bernard was so near to damnation that his soul was as black as his heart. And yet – as he took Akram’s faltering pulse, their divinity seeped from the higher-dimension into the damned man’s soul. He was not quite beyond hope of redemption. Bernard felt their presence. The hair on his neck prickled. He swung around in alarm. There was nothing to see – but he felt …something. He hesitated on the edge of the event horizon of despair. Christian texts defined despair as The Unforgivable Sin, because it denies God’s infinite capacity for love and forgiveness. Bernard felt, not a wave but a hint of compassion for the wretched man he was tormenting. He became aware of their mutual humanity. His hard grip on the man’s wrist softened. He lifted a fraction above bleak despair.
‘Give the prisoner the adrenaline,’ decided the colonel. ‘Do it now!’
As Bernard hesitated, another guard entered the cell, hustled Bernard to his desk and, hidden from all eyes, pressed a paper-note into his hand. Expressionless, Bernard opened the desk-drawer, flattened the note into the drawer and read: The President (POTUS) is in the Observation Room. The interrogator glanced at the mirrored window, as expressionless as before, and took out a sealed plastic case holding a hypodermic. He moved back to the stretcher unwrapping the hypodermic – and plunged it into Akram’s thigh.
Akram’s astral energy instantly flowed back into his physical body which jerked against the cuffs and straps. His eyes opened wide. He was alert. He gulped in air.
‘The prisoner is ready for water-boarding,’ announced the interrogator. He bent close to Akram’s face and spoke softly.
‘The question is the same, Akram. Are you trained to make IEDs? Have you ever made IEDs? We have intel that you are a bomb-maker. How many have you made?’
Akram shook his head vigorously. ‘No! No! Not I. Not ever.’
A guard stepped up, tilted the stretcher back, wrapped a heavy towel across Akram’s face – and lifted a narrow rubber hose over the towel. Water flowed. The towel became sodden. Akram could not breathe. He gasped and gaped. He struggled wildly. Water filled his nose and mouth. He was drowning. He was dying. The interrogator looked up at the clock over the observation window and counted the minutes. It took a drowning swimmer about five minutes to pass-out and another three minutes to die. Five minutes was an eternity without air. Akram was in poor condition. He fainted after three and a half minutes. And lay still.
Donald pressed harder against the glass, agog with excitement. He could see every detail. The disgusting naked terrorist, straining against the manacles. The saturated towel, denying air. The desperate twisting and turning; to no avail. Until the prisoner finally heaved and succumbed – and lay still. 
‘Is he dead?’ snarled Donald at the colonel. ‘Have you overdone it? …We don’t’ want him dead, do we? We want answers!’
‘Sir!’ yelled the colonel and he swiftly moved from the observation window through the door and appeared in the torture cell. He confronted the interrogator. ‘Get him up – man. Check him!’ Bernard plucked the towel from Akram’s face as the guards tilted the board up. He lifted the victim’s head and shook it side to side. Akram spluttered and heaved in a huge breath, spitting water. He opened his eyes to see the torturer and the colonel, inches from him, glaring hard at this uncooperative, troublesome prisoner – who might stubbornly, wilfully and deliberately die on them. They knew better than to show the slightest hint of compassion. This man had to believe they would kill him unless he obeyed them. ‘He’s OK,’ murmured Bernard; then even more quietly, for the colonel’s ears only, ‘He’s OK for five douches – I reckon.’
The colonel nodded and turned to leave, but his way was obstructed by the large person of The President of The United States, POTUS, who had followed him into the torture cell. The guards and the dog handler jumped to attention and saluted – shocked. Bernard turned his slow dead eyes on Donald. The colonel bristled.  Donald waited his customary five-seconds to let his TV and global celebrity power overwhelm them. Then he brushed the colonel aside and moved to Akram’s stretcher. He peered at this wretched “loser” with undisguised contempt and hostility.
‘Do you know who I am?’
Akram, still gulping air, now wide eyed, gazed up at the tall blond man in his long blue overcoat – and slowly nodded. Akram was blue with cold.
‘Yeah! Sure you do. I’m the most powerful man in the world.’ Donald paused for effect. ‘And I want your answers – you horrible, vile terrorist. I want your answers - so as to save the lives of our brave boys. Thousands of our brave boys in the field of battle!’ Donald lifted his head and his voice to tell it to the whole world. ‘I’m not a soft liberal leader – like presidents before me. Understand?’
Akram and Donald both nodded.
‘I’ve come to get intel from our enemies. And I am not leaving without answers. Do you get it?’
Donald leaned over the water-board and placed his fists on each side of Akram’s head, lowering his face close to Akram’s.  ‘And I don’t have much time! Do you get that?’
Akram nodded again.
‘Gimme a baton – or a pistol,’ ordered Donald. Nobody moved. Donald, taller than the others swept his small, red rimmed eyes over the torture team. The colonel put a deferential arm over Donald’s shoulder and turned him away from Akram. He whispered ‘Sir. The regulations forbid use of batons or fists.’
‘What then?’
‘Open hand slaps, Sir! Like the guards did. Back or forehand.’
Donald scowled his disapproval. ‘Like the guards huh? Just slaps?’
‘Yes sir. …Or the water, Sir.  Hard slaps are very painful.’
‘We’ve gotta get this terrorist to talk, colonel. That’s what I’m here for. I’m a President who won’t ask our boys to do anything that I wouldn’t do myself. That’s why I’m here. I make Executive Orders about interrogations; that Obama rescinded. I’m giving you back the tools you need, colonel, to save our boy’s lives. If we make these Muslims talk – I’ll save thousands of lives. Thousands.’
‘Yes Sir.’
They turned back to look down at the naked, prone, helpless prisoner. Donald resumed command and leaned over Akram. ‘OK mister. Now you are gonna talk – and talk now! I’m in a hurry! Where do you make the bombs? Tell me where the hell you make the bombs. Answer Me! You will answer Me. I’m The Goddamned President!’ Donald’s voice grew louder as he worked himself up into a state of violence. Akram looked up. Eyes staring. Bewildered. Suddenly, to his own surprise, Donald swung his meaty arm and slapped Akram backhand and hard across his cheek and nose.
Donald found the contact both repellent and addictive. He could not remember when, if ever, he had violently assaulted another person. His blow had been so quick, angry and instinctive that he barely registered the feel of another man’s flesh. But as a germophobe, he loathed the intimate contact. Akram recoiled; his head knocked sideways. He twisted back, his eyes filled with terror and tears. What Donald found addictive was that look. This man, this enemy, was totally in his power. Donald could make him do anything he wanted; and could deliver whatever punishment. Like the buttoned up little Sultan, something sensual stirred inside Donald Trump. This was new. This was raw power. This was imposing Respect.  This person was his.
He slapped him again – and Akram cried out.
‘Tell me – damn you. This isn’t going to stop until you talk!’ And he slugged Akram with his open palm. It felt good. He was punishing an enemy of the United States of America – with full legal authority. He raised his arm for another blow. The colonel moved to intercept it. But – Akram’s nose suddenly spouted blood. Donald leapt back in revulsion.
‘Mister President, Sir. We don’t want the prisoner to pass-out. Sir. He’s no use to us unconscious, Sir.’ Then sycophantically the colonel added, ‘Your blows are very strong, Sir. We will have to apply first-aid and take a break – Sir!’
Donald was breathing hard – like a prize fighter after making a furious attack. Before he could gather himself, the colonel acted. ‘Get him up, men. And stop the nose-bleed. And, clean him up!’
The marines stepped in and applied wet flannels to the prisoner’s face. They tilted the board upright and set about wiping away the blood and dabbing the swellings. They were strangely careful and tender; healing not hurting. Qistina hovered above. Perhaps she was communicating with their souls and influencing their reactions. Even Bernard, the cruel inquisitor, felt a rare, fleeting moment of compassion.
Donald was champing at the bit. Eager to beat the information from Akram. This had become personal. Winning president against enemy Loser. 
….to be continued….









Chapter Three


His killers were waiting when Jamal Khashoggi walked into the Saudi consulate in Istanbul two weeks ago. They severed his fingers during an interrogation and later beheaded and dismembered him, according to details from audio recordings published in the Turkish news media on Wednesday.
Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, was waiting for Mr Khashoggi inside the Saudi consulate
President Donald Trump revealed on Sunday that he did not want to listen to them himself. "It was very violent, very vicious and terrible," he said. Over the weekend, the US president called reports that Prince Mohammed ordered the killing "premature." He said that it was "possible" and that it was also possible that people will never know the truth.

END















No comments:

Post a Comment