THE CREW
Dougie Brimson
APPEARANCES CAN BE DECEPTIVE - as Paul Jarvis of the National Football Intelligence Unit is only too well aware. He knows that Billy Evans is no ordinary East End lad made good. He's also a thug, a villain and a cop killer. Jarvis just hasn't been able to prove it- Yet.
So when Jarvis discovers that Evans is putting together a hooligan ‘Super Crew’ to follow England to Italy, he feels sure he can finally put Evans behind bars - if only someone can infiltrate the Crew and get him the proof he needs.
But nothing is ever that simple. The Crew believe Evans is just out for a full-on riot. Jarvis thinks he‘s trafficking drugs. But Billy Evans is always one step ahead. He has another plan. And it will be catastrophic for everyone concerned.
EXCEPT HIM.
Reviews of The Crew:
‘A winning goal For Dougie Brimson’ Lynda La Plante
‘Punchy dialogue between overworked detectives and cool, calculating gangsters which finishes with a big, technicolour scrap.’ Sunday Times
‘More twists than a Roger Milla goal celebration … a classic tale.’ Total Football
Reviews of Dougie Brimson's previous bestselling books:
‘Probably the best book ever written on football violence’ Daily Mail
‘Offers a grim insight into the mind of the football thug’ Daily Mirror
‘Brimson knows what it's all about’ The Times
Dougie Brimson
Born in Hertfordshire in 1959, Dougie Brimson joined the Royal Air Force where he trained as a mechanical engineer. After serving for over eighteen years he left the forces in 1994 to forge a career as a writer.
Now the author of 13 books, his often controversial opinions on the culture of football have frequently attracted condemnation from the games authorities yet he has become firmly established as one of the world's leading authorities on the subject of football hooliganism and is regarded by many as the father of the literary genre known as ‘Hoolie-lit’.
An accomplished screenwriter, he co-wrote the multi-award winning ‘Green Street’ starring Elijah Wood and is currently working on the screenplay for ‘The Top Boys’ which is due for release mid-2012.
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www.dougiebrimson.com
PRELUDE
Saturday, 16 November 1996
18.25
Paul Jarvis lay on the floor of Euston underground station, clenched into a ball in a vain attempt to protect himself while he waited for rescue or unconsciousness. Whichever came sooner. As he waited, he tried to remember everything that others had told him in the past; never expose your face and protect your head at all costs. Everything else will heal in the end but not that. The blows were coming less frequently now. Sporadic but no less violent. But the noise was still ferocious. Screams and shouts mixed with fear and aggression.
Opening one eye, he turned his head to try to see what was happening around him. Feet were rushing past and, every so often, someone would either stop and aim a kick in his direction or simply run over him, stamping on him as they passed. He shut his eye again and relaxed. The noise was receding. Was that because the trouble had moved on or was it because his brain was switching itself off? Putting him to sleep for a while to escape the nightmare.
Suddenly, he felt a hand grab his hair and pull his head away from the safety of his arms. He tried to resist but had no strength for any kind of fight and so he opened one eye to see who it was. He could just about make out a snarling face but couldn't focus properly. It seemed to be twisted with hate and was shouting something at him. What was it? Something about West Ham. West Ham cunt. Yeah, that was it. He almost laughed at the irony of it all. ‘He thinks I'm West Ham, but I'm not. What kind of tosser makes that sort of mistake?’ he thought. The blurred face pulled away and he waited for the blow but it never came. Just a sudden shove back to the floor and a crack as his head hit the hard concrete floor. If anything else came he didn't feel it. Unconsciousness had arrived at last.
Suddenly, he was awake. Something was touching his face and he winced. But this was different. No aggression this time, just compassion. He opened his eyes and turned his head. A young woman in a police uniform was kneeling down beside him. She was crying. Jesus, was he hurt that bad? He tried to speak but no words came out. Just a groan of agony. ‘It's OK,’ she said. ‘They've gone and an ambulance is on the way.’ He tried to move, in an effort to sit up, but she held him down.
‘Stay where you are, you may have broken something. Best wait for the ambulance.’
She reached behind his head and gently lifted it, sliding her coat underneath for him to rest on. He relaxed into it and looked at her. Her eyes were red, full of tears and so he looked away. Across the concourse something caught his eye and he tried to focus on what it was. A group of men in black uniforms were standing around something on the floor. They were just looking down, heads bowed. What was it? A pile of clothes or was it a man? Christ, it was. ‘He looks in a right state,’ he thought. ‘Why weren't they helping him?’ One of the men began taking off his coat, but the hand touched the side of his head again and gently turned it away.
‘You mustn't look,’ the policewoman said, tears still streaming down her face. ‘Just you relax. The ambulance will be here in a second.’
He closed his eyes again and tried to relax but the pain was beginning to take hold now. A dull ache eating its way up through his body. He opened his eyes again as two men in green overalls knelt down beside him. The policewoman was speaking to them, telling them who he was and what had happened to him. He tried to speak but nothing came out. Just a gasp as the medics put a mask over his face and lifted him onto a stretcher. And then they were moving, past the coat and up into the fresh air. Away from the battle ground and the dead policeman.
* * *
Billy Evans sat in his car and stared out of the windscreen at the front of his house. It was late, but he knew that once he left the confines of his Mercedes and went indoors, the most satisfying day of his life so far would end. He wasn't ready for that. Not just yet. Reaching across to the passenger seat, he pulled a cigarette from a half empty packet and lit it with his Zippo lighter. The first lung-full relaxed him a little and he allowed a smile to spread across his face as he thought about the older lads in the firm. He couldn't begin to imagine how they must be feeling tonight. Gutted was probably an understatement, but that's what happens when you fuck up. And boy, had they fucked up. Just six short months ago, they had called the firm together and announced that the Cockney Suicide Squad, one of the most notorious fighting firms in football, were not taking part in any organised trouble during Euro 96.
He had stood up and asked if this was a joke. The greatest tournament in England for over thirty years, with the Jocks walking into their backyard and they weren't going to do anything about it? It had to be a joke. But they had shouted him down. The top boys from all the London firms had met and decided that while it was OK to fight together abroad, it wasn't on at home and especially not in London. Those particular rivalries were just too deep to be put aside and so it was best to keep the firms out of it. Then he had stood up again and told them that they were wrong. This was the chance to show everyone what they could really do and if they didn't take it, they were making a major mistake. But still they had shied away. The decision had been taken and that was that. And so he had stormed out. Furious at the lost opportunity. For a while he had toyed with the idea of putting together a new firm and taking them. He certainly had enough support among the other lads but, in the end, had decided against it. He was a part of the CSS and he had to obey the rules. It was tradition.
But then he had been proved right and in the worst possible way. Not only had the northern firms come down to the capital and taken the bat
tle to the Scots in Trafalgar Square, but Chelsea, Spurs and Arsenal had shown. Not at the front, where the provincial firms from clubs like Sunderland, Stoke, Plymouth and Leicester had done the business, but lurking in the backstreets of the West End. Picking off little mobs and doing just enough to let everyone know they were there. And then the rumours had started. The CSS had let the side down, they had lost their bottle and they were living on past glories.
At first, they had ignored it, but then, just three weeks ago, they had travelled to Sheffield and listened to the Wednesday fans singing about how they had done their fighting for them and stood as mobs of northern bastards taunted them with cries of ‘Are you Orient in disguise?’. That had been it. No firm worth its salt could put up with stuff like that and so he had gone to the top boys and put forward the plan to hit Millwall at Euston. At first, even after what had happened in the summer, they had taken the piss but he'd forced it through. Convinced them that if they were ever to repair the damage done to their reputation and re-establish themselves, they had to stage a big hit. Who better than the Scum from across the river? Their biggest rivals and one of only three or four other firms in the country who could hold a candle to them in terms of status.
In the end, they had gone for it and what a success it had been. His plan had worked to perfection. Seventy lads, split down the middle. Half sent to Warren Street station and then on foot to Euston. The others, spread around the various walkways of Euston underground. Hiding among the shoppers until his spotters told him a mob of Millwall lads had arrived. As soon as the Scum were below ground, he had formed his lads up and that was it. By the time Millwall had realised what was happening, it was too late. Fair play, they had stood for a time but then the second group had come pouring down the escalators and hit them from the rear. The classic pincer movement.
Thankfully, casualties among the CSS had been light, but the Millwall firm had taken a real hammering. He had seen one lad at the top of some escalators who looked like he'd been stabbed but that was too bad. If you run with a firm, you take a risk every time you turn a corner. He took a final drag on his cigarette, dumped the stub in the ashtray and shut his eyes. He could have happily fallen asleep but his head was buzzing. Reminding him of small details and conversations that had taken place that day. So he opened his eyes and lit another cigarette.
A light went on in his house and he smiled again. Wondering if it was Samantha or one of his boys. What would she say if she knew what he had achieved that very afternoon? Would she be proud, shocked, maybe even disgusted? Maybe she knew already but didn't care. He drew on his cigarette and let out a sigh. All he knew was that today had changed everything. Today, in just five short minutes, he had not only started a war with Millwall, he had put the CSS firmly back on the map. As if that wasn't enough, by the time they had made it back to the East End, his lifelong ambition had been realised. The old guard had stepped aside and he had been installed as top boy. Years of fighting, planning and hoping had finally paid off. He had thanked them all, bought them a pint and that was it. No arguments, no violence, just a grudging acceptance that a new era was about to begin and a new regime was in place.
And now the real work could start. There were scores to be settled and reputations to rebuild, but beside that, he had other plans for the CSS. Big plans, and not all of them involved football either. Having an active firm at your beck and call was a valuable commodity and he hadn't built up his business from scratch without seeing an opportunity when it presented itself. This was another one. Perhaps the biggest he had ever seen.
His mobile rang and he looked at it for a second before answering.
‘Hi Billy, where are you?’
He smiled to himself. The spell was broken, his day was over. ‘Hello sweetheart. I've just pulled up outside. Put the kettle on, I'll just be a second.’
Part One
Chapter 1
Saturday, 4 September 1999
11.15
Gary Fitchett closed his eyes and slowly exhaled. Letting the cigarette smoke drift out through his nostrils. ‘Fuck me! That's better.’ He opened his eyes and glanced around before stepping out into the Saturday morning mayhem of Camden High Street. The relief at escaping the confines of the underground was almost tangible. He hated it down there. It was the one thing that genuinely scared him. A legacy of a school trip to Wales when he'd been messing about in some pot-holes and become separated from his mates. Not for long - a matter of minutes - but it had been enough. A quick look at his watch told him it was almost eleven thirty. Time to look for a pub where he could get a decent pint. A fairly tall order given that in his opinion every landlord in London was a thieving bastard and what they laughingly sold as bitter was invariably watered down and tasted like piss.
A woman bumped into him and, without thinking, he apologised and then increased his pace to fit in with the speed of the shoppers. ‘What the fuck am I apologising for?’ he murmured, and slowed down again. Forcing the other pedestrians to slow down to his pace or move around him. He hated London, it was a shit hole. The place was filthy and the people were worse. Rude ignorant bastards. He'd only been here half an hour and he already felt dirty. No, not dirty, contaminated. He'd be glad to get back to Birmingham tonight. At least the sun was shining. He didn't even want to think about how bad this place would look in November.
‘Whose fucking idea was it to come here?’ he said out loud.
‘Yours actually,’ came the instant reply. ‘You said, and I quote, everyone will expect us to go to the West End so if we go to Camden, we'll be out of the way for a while and can have a few beers before the game, end of quote.’
He stopped and turned round.
‘And I must say Fitch,’ the voice continued, ‘it was a fucking top idea. I mean, instead of eyeing up all the tourists, we get to see all these fucking weirdos and faggots instead.’
Fitchett smiled. ‘You're such a twat Baz. If I'd known you were going on the pull, I'd have taken you down to Soho where all the real ponces hang out.’
They both laughed and Fitchett turned and began walking again. He liked Baz; he was one of those blokes who always had something funny to say. You need lads like that sometimes.
They-had a decent turn-out today, forty-three lads. The usual twenty-two hard-core of course, lads who he knew well and trusted, and another twenty-one besides. The cling- ons. Good scrappers, but not yet accepted into the fold. Maybe today would be the day for some of them. The day they'd make the grade. That was the thing about football, you just never knew when and where it would happen. To be honest, that was why he had decided to bring them to Camden today. There were no Premiership games on because England were playing on Wednesday and usually, if you were in London, that meant trouble. If their clubs weren't playing, then their lads certainly wouldn't be on a day off or out shopping. They'd be looking elsewhere, and with the Blues in town, that meant they'd be prime targets for a hit. After all, Fitch might not support a Premiership club, but he led a Premiership mob and they had certainly had their run-ins with the big clubs over the years. Only last season they'd been involved in a pitched battle with some Arsenal fans outside a pub in the West End and had really turned them over. Well, if Arsenal wanted another go, Fitch and his lads were ready, but the Gooners would have to find them first. They were the rules of the game and he wasn't about to make their job any easier.
‘Something's not right here; it's not fucking right at all.’ Fitchett stopped and turned round.
‘What is it Al?’ he asked.
‘See that kid over there, I've seen him about four or five times since we left Euston. He was on the tube with us. He's fucking scouting, I'm sure of it.’
Fitchett looked across the road and just caught sight of a young lad dressed in a beige Adidas sports top as he vanished into a McDonald's opposite. If Alex said something was wrong then it always paid to listen. He'd saved them from walking into trouble so many times it was ridiculous.
‘Anyone else?’
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He looked around at the others but everyone- within hearing distance just shrugged their shoulders. He already knew that none of them had seen anyone. After all, he hadn't and he'd been looking for it. That's why Alex was so handy and that's why Fitchett always kept him at his side. He had a sixth sense about trouble and that was as valuable as another twenty lads. Fitchett quickly looked up and down the road but all he could see were cars and shoppers. No mob, not even any obvious football fans. Shit, that was one of the reasons they'd come into Camden rather than the usual West End. All they wanted was a few beers away from any other mobs and the watchful eyes of the Old Bill. Then a short trip down to Loftus Road to give Rangers a spanking.
He glanced across the road at the front of the McDonald's. If the kid was scouting, then that meant someone was looking for them and he would be on the phone right now, calling up the troops. More likely, if he had a mobile then they would already be on the way. But who? It could be anyone. Chelsea, Arsenal or Spurs. The one thing he was sure of though, it wouldn't be West Ham or the South London vermin. Not this far up North. And it certainly wouldn't be Rangers. Even the thought of them having a pop made Fitchett laugh.
‘Right, if we're walking into anything then we'd better find out who or what the fuck it is.’ He looked at Pillow, a tall gangly black man who'd gained his nickname years ago when he'd brought a blow-up doll with him on a trip to Everton. His excuse, that he needed something to rest his head on if he fell asleep, had settled into legend when he was seen on Match of the Day that night with this plastic woman sitting on his shoulders. He might look a bit daft, but Fitchett knew that it was all a front. Underneath, he was a clever bastard and was one of the most trusted men in the mob. Fitchett nodded to him and, without question, Pillow leapt over the steel barrier segregating them from the traffic and ran out into the road. The screaming of tyres punctuated with the blasting of horns and shouts from irate cabbies had everyone within a hundred yards turning round to see what was happening. ‘Fuck me, talk about letting everyone know where you are.’