|
‘A head spinning ‘Day of the Jackal’ for
the Twenty First century. The pages almost turn themselves’ Roland McMillan is ninety five years old and his doctors
see little chance of him making it to ninety six. In 1926 he fled
the desperate misery of his life in the mining town of Kirkonnel
and emigrated to America. Over seventy nine years he has built up
a colossal
family fortune. Now it is time to tidy up his affairs
McMillan's greatest treasure is his gallery of paintings which
is reputed to be the most valuable and extensive private collection
in the world. He has always known that one day he will bequeath
it to the nation. The question he needs to resolve is which nation
- Should it be Scotland, the land that bore him? Or should it be
America, the land that made him?
His solution is an old fashioned one. The fate of the McMillan
collection is to be decided by a game of golf played by modern day
gladiators. America's number one golfer will challenge Scotland's
number one over Turnberry's majestic Ailsa course for the greatest
prize in the history of sport.
George Albright the Third is one of the greatest sportsmen America
has ever produced. A world figure. A sporting icon. The undisputed
Number One in the world with a fortune fit for a king to his name.
Archie Banks is an unknown. A hard smoking, hard drinking nobody
from the notorious Sunnybank estate in Dumfries who is only his
country's number one as a result of a fluky streak of results.
The twenty first century version of David and Goliath catches the
imagination of the world and sends the lives of both players into
chaos. It is an event that everyone wants a piece of. Even the American
President will be there to watch.
As the eyes of the world are fixed on the event, unwanted guests
plan a dramatic intervention. When the news of the President's intentions
reaches Al Quaida, they put in place a plan to assassinate their
Target One.
What starts as a great sporting event becomes a gnawing race against
time. As the clock ticks down, the fate of the President is decided
on a stormy weekend amidst the wild rocks and dunes of the Scottish
coast. |