Both police corruption and undercover policing
are subjects that I’m very interested in. As a former current affairs
journalist with Channel 4 Dispatches I didn’t work on any programmes which
touched on these subjects myself, but I have had the great honour over the
years to get to know several journalists who have, not least Michael Gillard
and Laurie Flynn who wrote the masterpiece that was Untouchables, a book that
blew the lid on corruption in the Met in the 1990’s. So, when I saw that
Fahrenheit Press, one of the finest small independent publishers in operation
today, were bringing out a novel written by a former Met undercover officer, I
was more than intrigued. When I read the book’s blurb and saw that it also
addressed issues of corruption, I knew I had to get myself a copy.
Rubicon’s protagonist is Sam Batford, a
veteran undercover officer with Met. He’s been seconded to the National Crime
Agency (NCA), onto a team run by DCI Klara Winter, which is targeting an upper
echelon crime figure called Vincenzo Guardino. Guardian is bringing in a large
shipment of cocaine and Mac-10 machine pistols and Klara is determined to bring
him to justice. She is not happy with Sam Batford’s deployment, suspicious of
the Met’s motives - are they trying to claim the glory of Guardino’s demise for
themselves? - and wary that he might not be answerable to her but to his
masters in Scotland Yard.
A lot of other reviewers writing about this book
have focused on Batford’s corruption, portraying the novel as quite a
straightforward contrast between his moral duplicity and Klara Winter’s
rectitude. For me Rubicon was more nuanced than that. While I started off
believing Batford to be corrupt, as the narrative span out I quickly found
myself in a hall of mirrors unsure just how much of his actions had been
sanctioned by his superiors and why. Even at the close of the narrative, while
I had concluded that he was corrupt, was he so out of greed or due to fear that
he would be hung out to dry, that he needed a nest egg so to speak? Rubicon is
written in contrasting styles - first person for Batford and third person for
Klara, whose narrative thread is also told through the official reports she
logs. Batford’s strand is by far the strongest, Klara being a more straight
forward character, but this works for the majority of the novel is told through
Batford.
As with any novel written by an author who’s
“been there and bought the T-Shirt”, there’s a fair amount of authenticity
here. There’s good detail on surveillance - for example, the unmarked cars that
one sees racing up the motorway with the light’s blaring from their grills?
Quite possibly a surveillance vehicle leapfrogging from one mainline train
station to the next. But the best detail is broader brush. Rubicon is set
in the near future, “at a time of austerity and police cuts” as the blurb says,
and the narrative addresses how this has impacted the work of undercover
officers - how they have less support, less back up. Reading the novel, one has
a sense of the author’s anger, that he’s experienced this himself in his own
deployments or knows of people who have. Equally the relationship between the
police and the NCA is telling. A few years back I read an interesting biography
- The Interceptor by Cameron Addicott. Addicott was a former Customs
investigator who had been hired by the Serious Organised Crime Agency (SOCA),
the NCA’s predecessor. In The Interceptor, Addicott detailed his growing
disillusionment with SOCA, which eventually led him to resign in disgust. While
that was a biography and Rubicon is a novel, I sense a similar theme here and
wonder whether Ian Patrick hasn’t had bad experiences of the NCA when working
as an undercover for the Met. Certainly, the NCA don’t come out of Rubicon very
well.
All in all, Rubicon is a fantastic novel and one
that I would recommend to anyone looking for a good crime thriller.
This is a 5
star read.
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