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A Man of a Few More Words - by Swan Morrison

Guantánamo Bay

Chalet 27
Guantánamo Bay Resort
Guantánamo Province
Cuba

10th May 2009

Dear Mick,

I hope your new job is going well.

As you know, our whole family was delighted when you got that high profile post to monitor the behaviour standards of politically influential people in the UK. We realised at the time that you’d need to be seen as beyond reproach. However, some of us were very surprised and worried when we learned that all your close relatives would also be positively vetted to check that none of us might potentially cause media embarrassment.

Our worst fears seemed confirmed when Aunt Mary; brother-in-law George; sister Audrey and I were arrested by Special Branch, driven to Brize Norton and bundled onto an American Air Force plane.

One of our guards then let slip that we were heading for internment at Guantánamo Bay.

Aunt Mary was stoical. She reasoned that it would be damaging for you if the press learned of her thirty years as a hooker. Also she was relieved to get away from all those people hounding her for the thousands she owed in gambling debts.

George was less resigned. Although he’d spent years in prison for burglary, he’d heard that everyone got regular electric shocks to their private parts in Guantánamo and was worried how that would affect his prostate problem.

Audrey tried to be encouraging, pointing out that mains voltage in Cuba was only 110 volts as compared to 240 volts in the UK, but I knew she was anxious too. Due to the speed at which we’d left the UK, she’d made no arrangements to look after the cannabis factory in her cellar.

Initially, I wondered why they’d arrested me. OK, I drink too much, and you’ve fairly described me as a con artist and serial adulterer, but that didn’t make me any different from the MPs and senior public figures you’d be investigating.

Aunt Mary thought that was probably the point. She said they’d created your job to stop people who should be setting a public example from behaving with less honesty, integrity and morality than the lowest of us plebs. The public were sick of those at the top thinking they’d got a divine right to get away with bloody anything and treat the rest of us with contempt.

It was then that an officer came to talk to us. He explained what we’d already guessed that we were being kept out of the way so we couldn’t be an embarrassment until you moved on from your job. It appeared, however, that they’d closed Guantánamo Bay as a detention and interrogation camp and reopened it specifically as a secret internment resort for politically embarrassing relatives of honest and decent British and American public figures.

It’s now like an all-expenses-paid holiday camp. They’ve replaced water boarding with water skiing, and the only torture is watching American TV – and that’s optional.

As I sit here watching the sun set over the Caribbean, sipping a Cuban rum cocktail and smoking an Havana cigar, I can reassure you that I'm very pleased with the way things have turned out. Aunt Mary, George and Audrey also send their best wishes and say there’s no need for you to rush to change jobs.

Your favourite brother,

Arthur.