Hungry as the Sea

Home > Literature > Hungry as the Sea > Page 27
Hungry as the Sea Page 27

by Wilbur Smith


  What did you want to speak to me about, is it Peter? No. Peter is

  doing as well as we can hope for, in the circumstances, He still resents

  Duncan - but she shrugged, and moved away. He had almost forgotten how

  narrow was her waist, he would still be able to span it with both hands.

  It's hard to explain, but it's Christy Marine, Nicholas. I desperately

  need the advise of someone I can trust., You can trust me? he asked.

  Isn't it strange? I would still trust you with my life., She came back

  to him, standing disconcertingly close, enveloping him with her scent

  and heady beauty. He sipped at the whisky to distract himself.

  Even though I have no right to ask you, Nicholas, still I know you won't

  refuse me, will you? She wove spells, he could feel the mesh falling

  like gossamer around him.

  I always was a sucker, wasn't I? Now she touched his arm. No,

  Nicholas, please don't be bitter. She held his gaze directly.

  How can I help you? Her touch on his arm disturbed him, and, sensing

  this, she increased the pressure of her fingers for a moment, then

  lifted her hand and glanced at the slim white gold Piaget on her wrist.

  Duncan will be home soon - and what I have to tell you is long and

  complicated. Can we meet in London early next week? Chantelle/he

  began.

  Nicky, please. Nicky, she was the only one who ever called him that. it

  was too familiar, too intimate.

  When? You are meeting Duncan on Tuesday morning to discuss the

  arbitration of Golden Adventurer. Yes. Will you call me at Eaton

  Square when you finish? I'll wait by the telephone. Chantelle 'Nicky,

  I have nobody else to turn to. He had never been able to refuse her -

  which was part of the reason he had lost her, he thought wryly.

  There was no engine noise, just the low rush of air past the body of the

  Mercedes.

  Damn these seats, they weren't made for lovers, Samantha said.

  We'll be home in an hour. I don't know if I can wait that long,

  Samantha whispered huskily. I want to be closer to you. And they were

  silent again, until they slowed for the weekend traffic through

  Hammersmith.

  Peter is a knockout. if only I were ten years old, I'd cash in my

  dolls. My guess is he would swop his Spitfire., How much longer?

  "Another half hour. Nicholas, I feel threatened, her voice had a sudden

  panicky edge to it. I have this terrible foreboding That's nonsense.

  It's been too good - for too long. James Teacher was the head of Salmon

  Peters and Teacher, the lawyers that Nick had retained for Ocean

  Salvage. He was a man with a formidable reputation in the City, a

  leading expert on maritime law - and a tough bargainer.

  He was florid and bald, and so short that his feet did not touch the

  floorboards of the Bentley when he sat on the back seat.

  He and Nick had discussed in detail where this preliminary meeting with

  Christy Marine should be held, and at last they had agreed to go to the

  mountain, but James Teacher had insisted on arriving in his

  chocolate-coloured Bentley, rather than a cab.

  Smoked salmon, Mr. Berg, not fish and chips - that's what we are after.

  Christy House was one of those conservative smoke stained stone

  buildings fronted on to Leadenhall Street, the centre of Britain's

  shipping industry. Almost directly opposite was Trafalgar House, and a

  hundred yard's further was Lloyd's of London. The doorman crossed the

  pavement to open Nicholas door.

  Good to see you again, Mr. Berg sir!

  Hello, Alfred. You taking good care of the shop?

  Indeed, sir. The following cab, containing James Teacher's two juniors

  and their bulky briefcases, pulled up behind the Bentley and they

  assembled on the pavement like a party of raiding Vikings before the

  gates of a medieval city. The three lawyers settled their bowler hats

  firmly and then moved forward determinedly in spearhead formation.

  In the lobby, the doorman passed them on to a senior clerk who was

  waiting by the desk.

  Good morning, Mr. Berg. You are looking very well, sir. They rode up

  at a sedate pace in the elevator with its antique steel concertina

  doors. Nicholas had never brought himself to exchange them for those

  swift modern boxes.

  And the clerk ushered them out on to the top-floor landings Will you

  follow me, please, gentlemen? There was an antechamber that opened on

  to the board room, a large room, panelled and hung with a single

  portrait of old Arthur Christy on the entrance wall - fit jaw and sharp

  black eyes under beetling white eyebrows.

  A log fire burned in the open grate, and there was sherry and Madeira in

  crystal decanters on the central table another one of the old min's

  little traditions - that both James Teacher and Nick refused curtly.

  They waited quietly, standing facing the door into the Chairman's suite.

  They waited for exactly four minutes before the door was thrown open and

  Duncan Alexander stepped through it.

  His eyes flicked across the room and settled instantly on Nick, locking

  with his, like the horns of two great bull buffalo, and the room was

  very still.

  The lawyers around Nick seemed to shrink back and the men behind Duncan

  Alexander waited, not yet following him into the antechamber, but all of

  them watched and waited avidly; this meeting would be the gossip of the

  City for weeks to come - It was a classic confrontation, and they wanted

  to miss not a moment of it.

  Duncan Alexander was a strikingly good-looking man, very tall, two

  inches taller than Nick, but slim as a dancer, and he carried his body

  with a dancer's control. His face also was narrow, with the long

  lantern jaw of a young Lincoln, already chiselled by life around the

  eyes and at the corners of the mouth.

  His hair dense and a metallic blond; though he wore it fashionably long

  over the ears, yet it was so carefully groomed that each gleaming wave

  seemed to have been sculptured.

  His skin was smooth and tanned darker than his hair, sun lamp or skiing

  at Chantelle's lodge at Gstaad perhaps, and now when he smiled his teeth

  were dazzlingly white, perfect large teeth in the wide friendly mouth -

  but the eyes did not smile though they crinkled at the corners.

  Duncan Alexander watched from behind the handsome face like a sniper in

  ambush.

  Nicholas/ he said, without moving forward or offering a hand.

  Duncan/ said Nick quietly, not answering the smile, and Duncan Alexander

  adjusted the hang of his lapel. His clothes were beautifully cut, and

  the cloth was the finest, softest wool, but there were foppish little

  touches: the hacking slits in the tails of the jacket, the

  double-flapped pockets, and the waistcoat in plum-coloured velvet, Now

  he touched the buttons with his fingertips, another little distracting

  gesture, the only evidence of any discomfort.

  Nicholas stared at him steadily, trying to measure him dispassionately,

  and now for the first time he began to see how it might have happened.

  There was a sense of excitement about the man, a wicked air of danger,

  the fascination of the
leopard - or some other powerful predator. Nick

  could understand the almost irresistible attraction he had for women,

  especially for a spoiled and bored lady, a matron of thirteen years who

  believed there was still excitement and adventure in life that she was

  missing.

  Duncan had done his cobra dance, and Chantelle had watched like a

  mesmerized bird of paradise - until she had toppled from the branch - or

  that's how Nicholas liked to think it had happened. He was wiser now,

  much wiser and more cynical.

  Before we begin! Nick knew that anger was seething to his still

  surface, must soon bubble through unless he could give it release, I

  should like five minutes in private. Of course. Duncan inclined his

  head, and there was a hurried scampering as his minions cleared the

  doorway into the Chairman's suite. Come through. Duncan stood aside,

  and Nick walked through. The offices had been completely redecorated,

  and Nick blinked with surprise, white carpets and furniture in chrome

  and perspex, stark abstract geometrical art in solid primary colours on

  the walls; the ceiling had been lowered by an egg design in chrome steel

  and free-swivelling studio spotlights gave selected light patterns on

  wall and ceiling.

  It was no improvement, Nick decided.

  I was in St Nazaire last week. Nicholas turned in the centre of the

  wide snowy floor and faced Duncan Alexander as he closed the door.

  Yes, I know. I went over Golden Dawn. Duncan Alexander snapped open a

  gold cigarette case and offered it to Nick, then when he shook his head

  in refusal, selected one himself. They were special blend, custom-made

  for him by Benson and Hedges.

  Charles Gras exceeded his authority, Duncan nodded.

  Visitors are not allowed on Golden Dawn. I am not surprised you are

  ashamed of that death-trap you are building. But you do surprise me,

  Nicholas. Duncan showed his teeth again. It was your design. 'You know

  it was not. You took the idea, and bastardized it. Duncan, you cannot

  sent! Nick sought for the word, that monster on to the open sea. Not

  with one propulsion unit, and a single screw. The risk is too

  appalling. I tell you this for no good reason, except perhaps that this

  was once your office/ Duncan made a gesture that embraced the room, and

  because it amuses me to point out to you the faults in your original

  planning. The concept was sound, but your soured the cream by adding

  those preposterous, shall we call them Bergean, touches. Five separate

  propulsion units, and a forest of boilers. It wasn't viable, Nicholas.

  It was good, the figures were right., The whole tanker market has

  changed since you left Christy Marine. I had to re-work it. You should

  have dropped the whole concept if the cost structure changed. 'Oh no,

  Nicholas, I restructured. My way, even in these hard times, I will

  recover capital in a year, and with a five.

  year life on the hull there is two hundred million dollars profit in it.

  I was going to build a ship that would last for thirty years/ Nick told

  him. Something of which we could be proud - I Pride is an expensive

  commodity. We aren't building dynasties any more, we are in the game of

  selling tanker space. Duncan's tone was patronizing, that impeccable

  accent drawn out, emphasizing the difference in their backgrounds. I'm

  aiming at a five-year life, two hundred million profit, and then we sell

  the hull to the Greeks or Japs. It's a one-time thing. You always were

  a smash-and-grab artist, Nick agreed.

  But it isn't like dealing in commodities. Ships aren't wheat and bacon,

  and the oceans aren't the orderly market floors. I disagree, I'm

  afraid. The principles are the same - one buys, one sells. Ships are

  living things, the ocean is a battleground of all the elements. 'Come,

  Nicholas, you don't really believe that romantic nonsense. Duncan drew a

  gold Hunter from his waist pocket, and snapped open the lid to read the

  dial another of his affectations which irritated Nicholas. Those are

  very expensive gentlemen waiting next door. You will be risking human

  life, the men who sail her. Seamen are well paid - You will be taking a

  monstrous risk with the life of the oceans. Wherever she goes Golden

  Dawn will be a potential - For God's sake, Nicholas, two hundred million

  dollars is worth some kind of risk. All right/ Nick nodded. Let's

  forget the environment, and the human life, and consider the important

  aspects the money. Duncan sighed, and wagged that fine head, smiling as

  at a recalcitrant child.

  I have considered the money - in detail. You will not get an Al rating

  at Lloyd's. You will not get insurance on that hull - unless you

  underwrite yourself, the same way you did with Golden Adventurer, and if

  you think that's wise, just wait until I've finished with my salvage

  claim. Duncan Alexander's smile twisted slowly, and blood darkened his

  cheeks under the snow-tan. I do not need a Lloyd's rating, though I am

  sure I could get one if I wanted it. I have arranged continental and

  oriental underwriters.

  She will be fully insured. Against pollution claims, also? If you

  burst that bag of crude on the continental shelf of America, or Europe,

  2 so they'll hit you for half a billion dollars. Nobody would

  underwrite that. Golden Dawn is registered in Venezuela, and she has no

  sister ships for the authorities to seize, like they did with the Torrey

  Canyon. To whom will they address the pollution bill? A defunct South

  American Company? No, Nicholas, Christy Marine will not be paying any

  pollution bills. I cannot believe it, even of you. Nick stared at him.

  You are cold-bloodedly talking about the possibility - no, the

  probability - of dumping a million tons of crude oil into the sea. 'Your

  moral indignation is touching. It really is. However, Nicholas, may I

  remind you that this is family and house business - and you are no

  longer either family or house. I fought you every time you cut a

  corner/ Nick reminded him. I tried to teach you that cheap is always

  expensive in the long run. You taught me? For the first time Duncan

  taunted him openly. What could you ever teach me about ships or money,

  and he rolled his tongue gloating around the next words, or women? Nick

  made the first movement of lunging at him, but he caught himself, and

  forced himself to unclench his fists at his sides. The blood sang in

  his ears.

  I'm going to fight you he said quietly. I'm going to fight you from

  here to the maritime conference, and beyond. He made the decision in

  that moment, he hadn't realized he was going to do it until then.

  A maritime conference has never taken less than five years to reach a

  decision restricting one of its members. By that time Golden Dawn will

  belong to some Japanese, Hong-Kong-based company - and Christy Marine

  will have banked two hundred million. I'll have the oil ports closed to

  you By whom? Oil-thirsty governments, with lobbies of the big oil

  companies? Duncan laughed lightly, he had replaced the urbane mask. You

  really are out of your depth again. We have bumped heads a dozen times />
  before, Nicholas - and I'm still on my feet. I'm not about to fold up

  to your fine threats now. After that, there was no hope that the

  meeting in the panelled board room would lead to conciliation. The

  atmosphere crackled and smouldered with the antagonism of the two

  leading characters, so that they seemed to be the only persons on the

  stage.

  They sat opposite each other, separated by the glossy surface of the

  rosewood table top, and their gazes seldom disengaged. They leaned

  forward in their chairs, and when they smiled at each other, it was like

  the silent snarl of two old dog wolves circling with hackles erect.

  It took an enormous effort of self-control for Nicholas to force back

  his anger far enough to be able to think clearly, and to allow his

  intuition to pick up the gut-impressions, the subtle hints of the

  thinking and planning that were taking place across the table behind

  Duncan Alexander's handsome mask of a face.

  It was half an hour before he was convinced that something other than

  personal rivalry and antagonism was motivating the man before him.

  His counter offer was too low to have any hope of being accepted, so low

  that it became clear that he did not want to settle. Duncan Alexander

  wanted to go to arbitration - and yet there was nothing he could gain by

  that. It must be obvious to everyone at the table, beyond any doubt

  whatsoever, that Nicholas claim was worth four million dollars. Nicholas

  would have settled for four, even in his anger he would have gone for

  four - risking that an arbitration board might have awarded six, and

  knowing the delay and costs of going to litigation might amount to

  another million. He would have settled.

  Duncan Alexander was offering two and a half. It was a frivolous offer.

  Duncan was going through the motions only. There was no serious attempt

  at finding a settlement.

  He didn't want to come to terms, and it seemed to Nicholas that by

  refusing to settle he was gaining nothing, and risking a great deal. He

  was a big enough boy to know that you never, but never, go to litigation

  if there is another way out. It was a rule that Nicholas had graven on

  his heart in letters of fire. Litigation makes only lawyers fat, Why

  was Duncan baulking, what was he to gain by this obstruction? Nicholas

  crushed down the temptation to stand up and walk out of the room with an

 

‹ Prev