The Green Panthers
By Tom Vater
()
About this ebook
Meet Clara Green, Emerald, Chartreuse, Olive, Hunter, Juniper and Forest. They are The Green Panthers: a privately sponsored, multi-national underground army, on a mission to hold corporate polluters to account.
During the attempted rescue of a snow leopard hunted by British tycoons in Siberia, the Green Panthers stumble onto Project SILEO, a millionaires’ plot to abandon an overpopulated, dying planet battered by climate change and pollution.
But SILEO is a lot more than it seems and the Panthers soon learn of an even greater threat to humanity. From Britain to Thailand and the privately-owned space station Stella Blue, the Panthers race against time to save the human race from a man known only as the Slow King. As riots and unrest take hold all over the world, can they stop the Slow King's apocalyptic ambitions?
An action-packed dystopian thriller, The Green Panthers explores systemic corruption, capitalism, space exploration and climate change, as well as the nature of friendship and courage in a future world where everything is for sale.
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The Green Panthers - Tom Vater
ALTAI MOUNTAINS, SIBERIA, RUSSIA
5.30AM, MAY 4TH, 2029
She needed to kill.
And soon.
The pink snow leopard was hungry. She’d been moving along the high valleys and the wide, ragged ridges of the Altai Mountains, unaware that she was passing between Russia, China, Mongolia, and Kazakhstan on her search for sustenance. Nor did she know that she was traversing the Saylyugem National Park, established to protect her and her kind. Even as she had no fixed route in mind, her mission was clear.
This morning, as the pale, grey sun crept over ridges that revealed themselves one after another with majestic coyness, she sensed something in the rarified air. It drifted in from far away, from a spot deeper in the national park and lower down too. Not an area she’d ever choose to pass through. Too warm. Too much exposure. She didn’t know this, but the principal reason why some four thousand snow leopards remained alive in Asia was their extraordinary caution. Distant sisters of the tiger, the big cats were considered part of the Panthera genus. Theirs was a solitary, remote existence. Snow leopards spent their lives keeping a low profile, rarely meeting one another, and staying as far away from humans as circumstances allowed.
But now she carried a secret. Soon she would no longer be solitary. Soon, Russia’s snow leopard population was going to expand significantly. She stuck her head into the warm wind that swept up the valley from where she’d sensed the promising scent. Too warm. Too much exposure at this time of year. But the last meal she’d had, a week earlier, a young, scrawny, injured ibex she’d chased into a ravine, was barely a memory. She sat for an hour or two, watching, listening, and sniffing for movement below. Vaguely satisfied that her senses failed to detect a threat lurking down-valley, she dropped off the ridge, through rocky boulders and fields of scree, in silence, barely visible. Had anyone been watching, she might have appeared momentarily as nothing more than a brilliant flash of the imagination. Instead, she was feeding a series of state-of-the-art camera traps that relayed her every move to the park’s headquarters and from there to two sets of plush offices in the City of London.
The world’s last pink Panthera uncia was about to become a celebrity. Of the very wrong kind.
WITNEY, OXFORD, UK
JUNE 17TH, 2029, 7PM
The lone, pale cat stared out of the screen at Clara Green. The image was almost sharp, though the snow leopard’s eyes did not recognize the technology that was to be part of its downfall. No, instead the animal looked straight at Clara.
The BBC anchor was halfway through the evening news’ final feelgood story. It wasn’t feelgood. And it wouldn’t be final. On Clara’s TV screen, Roger Pollard and Dickie Ransom, two of Britain’s wealthiest CEOs, announced that they were on their way to Siberia to shoot the world’s last pink snow leopard. Clara turned up the volume.
Dickie and I have always been about connecting people. We’re all part of this great planet of ours. We all have a right to live. Our huge donation will enable thousands of animals to live in peace. We’ll pay poachers to become guardians of our world. In exchange for the privilege to shoot one big cat, we will donate six million pounds to the Siberian wildlife fund.
Roger Pollard pushed in front of his partner in crime, filling the TV screen like a grease strain on a thousand-pound shirt. Bloated and stuck in a shiny, metallic double-breasted Dior suit, he tried to look tearful and sincere in front of the cameras. Prime Minister Lywood stood to the side in front of a phalanx of air purifiers. The PM knew what was good for him. Professionally excited rock stars, models, TV reality show winners and footballers mingled. A considerable number of riot police, shields and truncheons at the ready, had been ordered to protect the tycoons’ press conference at the Dorchester, fashionably located in Mayfair, to the east of Hyde Park. London didn’t get much more salubrious than this.
We’ll make Britain proud,
Pollard shouted before the story shifted to the tycoons’ ignoble biographies. Following years of bitter conflict, countless court cases involving industrial espionage, workers’ exploitation, cocaine parties in the Gulf of Thailand and a wife-swapping story the tabloids were still fighting over, Pollard and Ransom, the two undisputed kings and longtime competitors of Britain’s information technology industry, had come together to do their bit to save the planet.
Ransom, who was skinny as a rake and ugly as a warthog, offered his support by flashing a gaudy-ringed V sign at the cameras, I really hope the Beeb will report fairly on our bid to save the world and not cave in to the depressing views of radical animal rights anarchists. One cat for thousands of deer and otters and so forth is a great deal. Ask the scientists.
Clara had followed Ransom around Kenya four years earlier where he’d been hunting giraffes. The photos she’d captured of the rich white man in safari shorts two sizes too large, posing with a huge gun in front a felled mother and her calf, had gone around the world.
The Green Panthers had been but a figment of her imagination then.
Now the haggard little man, sensing redemption in his grasp, appeared triumphant, flinging spittle in the direction of the cameras with each hurrah.
Marvelous, a real bonus for everyone. Siberia, one of the most deprived and remote parts of our planet, will be eternally grateful to us Brits. Really, Roger and I feel like civil servants.
Pollard cut in, It’s great for both of us to step back from worrying about profits and spreadsheets and technology, and really go back to basics, to grassroots level.
He raised a champagne glass, To new concepts in conservation. Supporting Pollard and Ransom will cause your wife to have bigger breasts and increase your chances of owning a Roller Phantom, like me. Our Kickstarter campaign is up and running. Every penny you raise that we don’t have to spend will go straight to the ice-Russkies to keep their seals alive. New concepts in conservation.
Ransom butted in and pointed at the cameras, And don’t you make this out to be some greenwashing event. We’ve been putting time and effort into this to make a difference. Britain makes a difference.
Both Ransom and Pollard had been knighted for their services to king and country. Clara’s country. Great Britain, where the beaches were toxic, and the rivers were dead. Where climate change had been debated for a generation or two. Or three. What she hated as much as nature’s steady decline at home, were British subjects sullying the rest of the planet. Clara loved her country, but she loved the world even more.
The egg was well-aimed and hit Pollard on his distinguished forehead. The Beeb’s cameraman never wavered and calmly cut from the astonished expression on the tycoon’s face to the cops. They were turning towards a small group of animal rights protesters who’d set up placards on the far side of Park Lane. The celebrities started getting restless, nervously tapping at their phones, or looking for their coats. Police drones gathered in the sky above Hyde Park. The cops marched towards the protestors as a solid wall of unpleasantness, truncheons, tasers, and teargas at the ready. Tomorrow, the tabloids would love them for having crushed a rebellion.
Clara lived and breathed to put a stop to Britain’s worst environmental excesses. As a teenager she’d campaigned with Greenpeace, Sea Shepherd, and Extinction Rebellion. All were entangled in libel cases, arrest warrants, and acts of sabotage by persons unknown. For the most part, they were impotent in the face of what money was doing to the world. But not Clara’s money. She was working on what she hoped would be a more efficient way to make a difference, quietly investing the millions that had been created by a slave-trading, opium-dealing great-grandfather who’d murdered two of his wives. Her family’s riches had then been managed by two generations of inbred aristocratic imbeciles more interested in unsound sexual practices than maintaining the family estate. Green Manor, what else, sat in a hectare of forest and garden near Witney, just a few miles shy of Oxford. The Greens hadn’t managed to squander it all. Clara Green, the sole heir to the Green fortune was forty-four years old, single, and angry.
She turned the sound down, shivering despite the stifling afterglow of another scorching day – the thermometer had rocketed up to forty-three degrees at noon and still hovered above thirty. The top news had nothing to do with the rising record temperatures. US president for life Ivanka Trump was congratulating Chinese president for life Xi Jinping, who had not been seen for six years, on the eradication of the poor in the People’s Republic. Clara wondered distractedly why the US president let herself go in front of the cameras. Trump was obviously blitzed on Uber-Crack. The Trump empire, which had eclipsed the US economy, held shares in the new, hip, recreational medication, which caused euphoria and optimism in most consumers. Some users fell into rage spasms, but there were no statistics available on just how many. Uber-Crack was free to Americans under sixteen. Poland and Hungary were also distributing the drug to children. Jealous tongues wagged of unspeakable laboratories in the American Midwest and claimed that Uber-Crack was derived from the stress glands of Asian elephants. This was vehemently and regularly denied by both the US president and India’s prime minister. American kids couldn’t get enough Uber-Crack and neither, apparently, could the president. On screen, the world’s most powerful if not compassionate woman stood in the center of a crack tasting session with a group of investors from HK2, the island once known as Taiwan. Prime Minister Lywood had been more careful promoting Uber-Crack, but His Majesty was said to be a fan. The UK slums and sink estates were awash with the drug. And this was just the entertainment.
In the real world, forests burned, typhoons, hurricanes and cyclones raged, coral reefs died, volcanoes erupted, and deserts swallowed entire cities while pandemics came and went and came again, killing hundreds of thousands as countless others took to the streets and denied the dead had ever lived. Inland seas disappeared and glaciers collapsed. It was hot almost everywhere. In the cities, air pollution had reached continuously toxic levels. Super models wore diamond studded masks on the cover of Vogue. No wonder so many people were out to lunch on government subsidized narcotics. The Roaring Twenties had come roaring indeed.
Clara’s father Rufus had not persisted into the world of Uber-Crack. Nor had he been in the same business as Pollard and Ransom, though he’d been the same kind of man. Every Englishman loves a lord, but no one loved Rufus. He’d left his dentures in the kitchen, in his study, even in his basement workshop where he pretended to research WW II history, but was instead watching four dimensional hardcore and bestiality, the family tradition that would keep him from resurfacing above ground for days. Clara could barely remember his face. She remembered his dentures. Her mother Allie, bless her, had changed her name, and whisked Clara away to a windy corner of coastal Cornwall, away from the money and the manor.
Clara fell in love with the ocean. It gave her everything her father never had – curiosity, respect, and resolve. At thirteen, she’d led a rowdy campaign to save grey seals from getting caught in fishing gear, before going on to study marine biology and political science at Boston University. At thirty, she captained a Sea Shephard vessel, hunting shark poachers off Costa Rica.
She gazed absentmindedly at her most precious possession, a sketch of J.M.W. Turner’s The Shipwreck, which hung above the fireplace. She took it as an ever-present reminder that nothing except death was certain.
Clara’s father Rufus had died a year ago. Clara had inherited. Not just the Turner sketch.
Clara Green had not married and didn’t have children. She did have all the street smarts money could imagine. And now, Clara was rich beyond comprehension. Rufus’ world was hers. And she was making her moves, silently, unseen.
Well, almost unseen. Allie had entered the Green Mansion’s drawing room and stood next to her daughter, gazing at the Turner. The two women were about the same height. From the back they almost looked the same. Allie was a little heavier and her blonde hair was turning grey.
It’s time,
Clara said, happy she’d convinced her mother of the soundness of her enterprise.
Allie smiled, a little absentmindedly, Let’s blow your father’s money on something sensible, dear, like terrorism.
It’s you who taught me never to leave the room until I get what I want,
Clara responded to her mother’s gentle quip.
She unwrapped a burner phone, inserted a SIM card and typed a message. She brushed her ash blonde curls from her eyes and slipped on her reading glasses. Then she carefully added five numbers. She’d been waiting for this moment for a long time.
She pressed Send.
It was time to let the Green Panthers roam.
SPITBANK FORT, SOLENT, UK
JUNE 17 TH, 2029, 6.30PM
The Slow King leaned back on his throne, his mind lapping up the crystals that were dissolving under his tongue. Emilie and Sying stepped out onto the fort’s upper deck to marvel at the toxic purple sunset that bloomed above the coastline stretching from Gosport to West Wittering. The vista was worthy of a Turner painting. The master painter might have called it The Last Sunset. The Slow King grinned, the best jokes were always the private ones, the ones one didn’t share with anyone.
Project Sileo was underway. Three years of preparations, some in front of the world’s cameras, some deep in the shadows only the very wealthy could enter, some alone on this godforsaken, miserable bunker off the south coast of England, were paying off. He rarely felt like a king. Tonight, he did. His mind was on fire with a thousand pieces of the puzzle that he had assembled, destroyed, and rebuilt so many times. All the players were exactly where he wanted them, doing what he expected they would do. He knew the clock was ticking. He could hear it, loud and clear. But he only needed five more weeks.
He watched Emilie take a selfie, her angelic face reflecting the sky’s unhealthy colors. She looked like his mother Charlotte, who had derisively called him the Slow King for as long as he could remember. Charlotte had always emphasized the slow. How right she’d been. He had taken his time. Rome hadn’t been built in a day. Naturally, even in her death throes, Charlotte had taken more than a day to fall. Despite the physical similarity, Emilie wasn’t anything like his mother. Emilie was pure gold.
Sying turned to him then and smiled, her porcelain face aglow in the dusk. He smiled right back, but his eyes continued to follow his daughter’s graceful movements.
Seeing the two people he loved most in the world play outside in all their innocence was too much. It felt like a huge deceit, no matter that they knew everything. He closed his eyes. The dark hearts of immense crystals flashed through his mind and floated in its centre like monoliths, sucking up all the light of the world through tiny fissures. He loved that feeling. Soon he would feel like this all the time. But as he focused on his daughter and partner outside in the evening sun, he knew he wasn’t ready. He pulled himself back into the here and now. The world wouldn’t be saved by dreamers. And there was the little matter of an obscure painting, a matter of pride, just before the end. Turner flashed through the Slow King’s mind again and his eyes settled on the toxic palette of colors fusing the clouds with his desire to save the world.
Some people said the sunsets, multicolored by a permanent overload of toxic particles in the atmosphere, were better than those they’d seen in their childhoods, even as they had to wear masks to enjoy them. Emilie, refusing a mask, jumped to get a better look at the coast line. She had so much energy. She was so reckless. The possibilities made his heart race. He silently counted his heart beats, almost a hundred thumps a minute.
She would be the hardest to sacrifice.
PART 1
CHARTREUSE
ALTAI MOUNTAINS, SIBERIA, RUSSIA
JUNE 21 ST, 2029, 8.30PM
We’re in Russian airspace. We have ground visuals. Eight minutes to the LZ,
Chartreuse shouted into the Mil Mi-38 helicopter’s intercom, brushing her unruly fringe from her grey eyes. Those eyes that never quite settled on anything. Some men feared those eyes. Just as well, as Chartreuse didn’t think much of men. Most men.
In the dying evening light, forest and ice stretched into undulating arctic infinity. Chartreuse loved this kind of flying, low and dangerous. Way riskier than the runs she’d done for Greenpeace. The Green Panthers were about to prove that they were in another league altogether. The Panthers didn’t need donations. The Panthers didn’t need TV ads. The Panthers needed weapons, technology, and dedication. They had plenty. And now they had a mission.
Chartreuse, Olive, Hunter and Emerald were about to go active.
Enough of the war games, all that theorizing, I mean, we been training for this for God knows how long. We can practically kill rich pendejos with our thoughts. Let’s get into this for real, let’s make some paella down there,
copilot Olive snarled, trying to look tough, a black Kashmir wool balaclava pulled halfway down her perfectly made-up, perfectly tanned face. Her full lips had seen lipstick within the hour.
Olive, who’d entered the world in Ronda, a postcard-pretty mountaintop city in Andalusia, had feline movie star looks. She was tall, lithe, and brought around a hundred and twenty pounds of trouble to the table. Ronda, Olive would tell anyone who’d listen, was home to traditional bullfighting, a town she had emphatically disowned and whose bullfighting stadium she had repeatedly vandalized. Some said her father had been a famed matador who’d lost one of his life to a legendary bull named Ernesto. Chartreuse had to admit, Olive was pretty tough for a pretty girl. She was reliable. She would show no mercy to bad guys. And she had a fine likeness of an attacking bull tattooed on her upper chest, its name in old English letters framing her breasts – Ern and Esto.
While Chartreuse’s gaze frightened men, Olive’s languid looks melted everyone, male or female. That, Chartreuse thought with some envy, was a pity, as Olive had no real interest in women. Life wasn’t fair. That’s why Chartreuse had joined the Green Panthers.
Olive had joined the Panthers to cause mayhem and to party. Olive was the most frivolous of the Panthers, not counting Hunter when drunk.
Just wriggle your ass and it’ll all fall into place, puta,
Chartreuse reminded her.
My ass is not for you, querida, it exists entirely to slow those bastards down. They stop, they stare, they dead. Works every time. And don’t call me a whore,
Olive shot back.
Maybe dial down the riot-girl vibe a little. Pollard and Ransom will have brought some protection, their own and some local muscle. I want you to go in, film the hunt and get out. Use the drone, but don’t arm it. No shoot-outs. We want footage, not corpses. First mission, so let’s keep it civil,
Clara ordered from London.
Chartreuse killed the connection. The show was theirs.
Hunter groaned into the cans, his voice a good deal too masculine and paternalistic for her taste. Hunter, born, conditioned and disillusioned in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, had joined the military after living in the back of his car for two years, holding down two jobs, unable to make rent. He’d done two tours with US Special Forces in Iran, then decamped to the Foreign Legion and to Africa. Despite his brutish view of the world, he was as dedicated and angry as any of The Green Panthers. They’d all had enough of rich man’s shit destroying the planet.
I’m just doing this for my kids, y’all.
You don’t have any kids, Hunter.
We can talk about that later, Chartreuse, when we’re on the beach for our R&R.
She didn’t bother to answer. Hunter had a heart in there somewhere. That’s why she didn’t engage with his puerile asides.
Emerald, the fourth crew member, didn’t grace the conversation with his wisdom. The dapper Swiss never said anything much. He did know a thing or two about plants, animals, and radioactivity. Word on the street, on the Green Panthers’ street, was that he’d smuggled a grenade into one of his country’s reactors on a public visitors’ tour and then quietly blackmailed the government into passing legislation to phase out nuclear power. Or else. He hadn’t been back in Zürich in a while, and he never spoke about it.
All right, ladies and germs, there’s a communication jam going down for fourteen minutes. Whoever’s out there won’t be able to talk a while,
Forest piped in. Your comms and the drone are fine.
None of the Green Panthers racing across the tundra had met Forest. All they knew was his golden-toothed smile, contagious as anything, on a phone screen thousands of miles away. Forest sat in Parchman, a supermax prison in the Mississippi delta. He was serving twenty years for filming a chemical company poison a river in his home town. He’d been in solitary for a decade, in an eight by twelve-foot cell that flooded every time the inmate next door lost