The Minder - Always available in a crisis.
Editor: Renee assisted me by checking spelling and grammar mistakes and providing storyline assistance. All other errors are mine.
Disclaimer: All characters involved in sexual situations are 18 or older. Copyright and a work of fiction.
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Prologue:
The Egliston family:
William Egliston, aged twenty-eight, was the accountant and manager of the Bombay office of the East India Company in the late 1840s. He could see the ending of the East India Company and a change of ownership. Thus, he busied himself over the next five years, making important industry contacts to fill the gap in commerce between the UK and throughout India, East Indies and Eastern Asia.
Under the Egliston label, imported goods of leaf tea, cotton, linen and precious metals and wooden craft items arrived at London docks, where his brother Henry, aged 30, leased warehouses to store these goods. Henry had established himself as an importer/exporter of fine goods, with his business contacts in the various haberdashery stores, such as Harrods, a linen and draper merchant. Harrods was a forerunner of department stores like Selfridges.
In return, many goods were exported back to Bombay, metal tools of all sorts, and from Birmingham Small Arms, petrol-driven water pumps, and rifles. Royal Enfield motorcycles were very popular. After the theft of a shipment of Lee-Enfield rifles, the family employed a former Scotland Yard detective, who started Egliston's private security police, to secure their merchandise. The Egliston family were good at producing sons to carry on the family name.
Present day:
Sir William Egliston, aged fifty-five, is the fifth generation and CEO of the Egliston Trading Company, a 148-year-old import/export business established in 1869. His son Michael and grandson stand to inherit and carry on the family business.
Sir William lives in a country manor on an estate in Chelmsford. He's been widowed for some ten years and now lives alone with his aged housekeeper and her husband, the butler and one-time chauffeur, whose failing eyesight prevents him from driving. So now Sir William catches the Chelmsford to Liverpool Street train near Whitechapel, close to his town flat.
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The Brown family:
Captain Ignatius Brown, eldest of the Brown family, earned his fortune during the slave trade until 1833 when it was abolished in England. His two younger brothers ran the legitimate business, purchasing public houses (pubs) spread throughout England on the profits of the slave trade. Loss of that income forced Ignatius and his brothers to change to the very profitable, high risk illegal arms trade. They were selling to terrorists, dictators, and anyone who could afford to buy.
The pubs were used to cover their arms shipments on land and then to a seaport where Ignatius shipped legitimate goods by sea. They hijacked train carriage shipments directly from BSA, Royal Small Arms Factory, and the newer Lee-Enfield rifles from Enfield warehouses. In addition, they stole any Arms shipments bound for India from the Egliston Trading Company warehouses.
In 1914, a wealthy Russian black marketeer, Alexi Semenov, who had many dealings with the Browns, seeing the beginning of the Russian Revolution, moved his wife and daughter to England. He contacted the Brown family, and they created a union with the oldest surviving Brown son, Lucian, marrying Anna Semenov and starting a new family, Semenov-Brown. However, Lucian and Anna produced four daughters and only one son, Alexi.
Present day:
Over the past one hundred years, the Semenov-Brown family business has increased their pubs to fifteen. The last male family member, Boris Semenov-Brown, now aged forty-one, needs a son and heir. His wife has produced four daughters. None are interested in making money for the family business, only spending it. All his illegitimate children are daughters as well. Boris lives in a palatial suite above the Blaggard Arms Pub in Charing Cross, central London.
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Location: England, London, today.
Our Minder is one of one hundred male and female officers. Jason is a twenty-nine-year-old British ex-SAS injured on duty in the Northern Mali conflict. He has an older sister by six years, married with two children. Their parents were killed in a car accident when Jason was fourteen. His sister was just married then, so he went and lived with her and her husband in Scotland until he was eighteen, then he signed up for military service. Later, he was selected for service in the SAS and now works for a special division of MI5 as a Minder.
The Minder service was started in early 2017 in honour of Helen Joanne Cox a British politician who served as Member of Parliament (MP) for Batley, and was murdered in an act of terrorism the year before. The British security services now offered all sitting members of parliament their services as Minders when they attended public political functions.
Minders are supplied with a specially built hackney carriage or black London Cab with bullet-resistant glass, a thicker metal car body and reinforced under-car steel.
The Minder drives their package to political events and acts as a bodyguard. In addition, every six months, they attend weekend combat and intelligence courses where they are retrained for potential terrorist situations.
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Jason
Here I sit on another tedious job minding a politician and his over-dressed wife at a political dinner with speeches. Thankfully, I can sit this one out in the cab because there is plenty of security inside. However, I'm expected to watch keenly for unexpected situations around the building. So, we minders take turns walking around the block every ten minutes to ensure the area is clear of anyone suspicious sitting in cars or vans, a bit like me.
It is not all nighttime work. There is always a daytime political rally with the local member of parliament meeting the public in a park or bowling green. I must be at his side on these occasions to intercept hostile terrorists intent on harming the MP.
I enjoy the occasional job of being Sir William's Minder. He prefers to dine alone. Rather than me sitting at the bar, he invites me to his table to chat while I have a coffee.
This evening, after a busy day of political events around London. Sir William is dining with another party member at an exclusive restaurant. I take up my position at the bar, monitoring all the dining patrons. The other Minder is in his cab outside, keeping watch.
They finish dinner, and Sir William's guest leaves. I wait until Sir William indicates for me to join him. He suddenly becomes distracted by a new pair of patrons entering. Sir William gives me a slight nod of his head toward the new customers. Becoming alert, I take more notice of my surroundings. Sir William asks for coffee, and I do the same. Something is developing here that I'm unaware of, so I sit unobtrusively at the bar, now alert for danger.
When they enter, Sir William recognises Boris Semenov-Brown, accompanied by a beautiful young lady. Brown is a business adversary, and a long-standing feud exists between their families. They sit three tables away.