The golden rendezvous by MacLean, Alistair

jangling their moneybags and bemoaning their hard lot from hors

d’oeuvres right through to coffee, you must be out of your mind. We’ll

have it in my cabin.” and so we had it in his cabin. It was the usual

Campari meal, something for even the most blase epicure to dream about,

and captain Bullen, for once and understandably, made an exception to

his rule that neither he nor his officers should drink with lunch. By

the time the meal was over he was feeling almost human again and once

went so far as to call me “Johnny-me-boy.” it wouldn’t last. But it

was all pleasant enough, and it was with reluctance that I finally quit

the air-conditioned coolness of the captain’s day cabin for the blazing

sunshine outside to relieve the second officer. He smiled widely as I

approached number four hold. Tommy wilson was always smiling. He was a

dark, wiry welshman of middle height, with an infectious grin and an

immense zest for life, no matter what came his way. Nothing was too

much trouble for tommy and nothing ever got him down. Nothing, that is,

except mathematics: his weakness in that department had already cost him

his master’s ticket. But he was that rare combination of an outstanding

seaman and a tremendous social asset on a passenger ship, and it was for

these reasons that captain Bullen had insisted on having him aboard.

“How’s it going?” I asked. “You can see for yourself.” he waved a

complacent hand towards the pile of stacked crates on the quayside, now

diminished by a good third since I had seen it last. “Speed allied with

efficiency. When wilson is on the job let no man ever “the bo’sun’s

name is macdonald, not wilson,” I said. “So it is.” he laughed,

glanced down to where the bo’sun, a big, tough, infinitely competent

hebridean islander was haranguing the bearded stevedores, and shook his

head admiringly. “I wish I could understand what he’s saying.”

“Translation would be superfluous,” I said, drily. “I’ll take

over. Old man wants you to go ashore.”

“Ashore?” his face lit up; in two short years the second’s

shore-going exploits had already passed into the realms of legend. “Let

no man ever say that wilson ignored duty’s call. Twenty minutes for a

shower, shave and shake out the number ones “the agent’s offices are

just beyond the dock gates,” I interrupted. “You can go as you are.

Find out what’s happened to our latest passengers. Captain’s beginning

to worry about them; if they’re not here by five o’clock he’s sailing

without them. Way he’s feeling now, he’d just as soon do that. If the

agent doesn’t know, tell him to find out. Fast.” wilson left. The sun

started westering, but the heat stayed as it was. Thanks to macdonald’s

competence and uninhibited command of the spanish language, the cargo on

the quayside steadily and rapidly diminished. Wilson returned to report

no sign of our passengers. Their baggage had arrived two days

previously and, although only for five people, was enough, wilson said,

to fill a couple of railroad trucks. About the passengers, the agent

had been very nervous indeed. They were very important people, senor,

very, very important. One of them was the most important man in the

whole province of camafuegos. A jeep had already been dispatched

westwards along the coast road to look for them. It sometimes happened,

the senor understood, that a car spring would go or a shock absorber

snap. When wilson had innocently inquired if this was because the

revolutionary government had no money left to pay for the filling in of

the enormous potholes in the roads, the agent had become even more

nervous and said indignantly that it was entirely the fault of the

inferior metal those perfidious Americanos used in the construction of

their vehicles. Wilson said he had left with the impression that

detroit had a special assembly line exclusively devoted to turning out

deliberately inferior cars destined solely for this particular corner of

the caribbean. Wilson went away. The cargo continued to move steadily

into number four hold. About four o’clock in the afternoon I heard the

sound of the clashing of gears and the asthmatic wheezing of what

sounded like a very elderly engine indeed. This, I thought, would be

the passengers at last, but no; what clanked into view round the corner

of the dock gate was a dilapidated truck with hardly a shred of paint

left on the body work, white canvas showing on the tyres, and the engine

hood removed to reveal what looked, from my elevation, like a solid

block of rust. One of the special detroit jobs probably. On its

cracked and splintered platform it carried three medium-sized crates,

freshly boxed and metal-banded. Wrapped in a blue haze from the

staccato backfiring of its exhaust, vibrating like a broken tuning fork

and rattling in every bolt in its superannuated chassis, the truck

trundled heavily across the cobbles and pulled up not five paces from

where macdonald was standing. A little man in white ducks and peaked

cap jumped out through the space where the door ought to have been,

stood still for a couple of seconds until he got the hang of terra firma

again, and then scuttled off in the direction of our gangway. I

recognised him as our carracio agent, the one with the low opinion of

detroit, and wondered what fresh trouble he was bringing with him. I

found out in three minutes flat when captain Bullen appeared on deck, an

anxious-looking agent scurrying along behind him. The captain’s blue

eyes were snapping; the red complexion was overlaid with puce, but he

had the safety valve screwed right down. “Coffins, Mister,” he said

tightly. “Coffins, no less.” I suppose there is a quick and clever

answer to a conversational gambit like that, but I couldn’t find it, so

I said politely, “coffins, sir?”

“Coffins, Mister. Not empty, either. For shipment to New York.”

he flourished some papers. “Authorizations, shipping notes, everything

in order. Including a sealed request signed by no less than the

ambassador. Three of them. Two British, one American subject. Killed

in the hunger riots.”

“The crew won’t like it, sir,” I said. “Especially the goanese

stewards. You know their superstitions and how “it will be all right,

senor,” the little man in white broke in hurriedly. Wilson had been

right about the nervousness, but there was more to it than that; there

was a strange overlay of anxiety that came close to despair. “We have

arranged “shut up!” captain Bullen said shortly. “No need for the crew

to know, Mister. Or the passengers.” you could see they were just a

careless afterthought. “Coffins are boxed that’s them on the truck

there.”

“Yes, sir. Killed in the riots. Last week.” I paused and went on

delicately: “in this heat “lead-lined, he says. So they can go in the

hold. Some separate corner, Mister. One of the – um-deceased is a

relative of one of the passengers boarding here. Wouldn’t do to stack

the coffins among the dynamos, I suppose.” he sighed heavily. “On top

of everything else, we’re now in the funeral-undertaking business.

Life, First, can hold no more.”

“You are accepting this-ah-cargo, sir?”

“But of course, but of course,” the little man interrupted again.

“One of them is a cousin of senor carreras, who sails with you. Sefior

miguel carreras. Sefior carreras, he is what you say, heartbroken.

Senor carreras is the most important man “be quiet,” captain Bullen said

wearily. He made a gesture with the papers. “Yes, i’m accepting. Note

from the ambassador. More pressure. I’ve had enough of cables flying

across the atlantic. Too much grief. Just an old beaten man, First,

just an old beaten man. He stood there for a moment, hands outspread on

the guardrail, doing his best to look like an old beaten man and making

a singularly unsuccessful job of it, then straightened abruptly as a

procession of vehicles turned in through the dock gates and made for the

Campari. “A pound to a penny, Mister, here comes still more grief.”

“Praise be to god,” the little agent murmured. The tone, no less

than the words, was a prayer of thanksgiving. “Senor carreras himself!

your passengers at last, captain.”

“That’s what I said,” Bullen growled. “More grief.” the little

man looked at him in puzzlement, as well as might anyone who didn’t

understand Bullen’s attitude towards the passengers, then turned and

hurried off towards the gangway. My attention was diverted for a few

moments by another crate swinging aboard, then I heard captain Bullen

saying softly and feelingly, “like I said, Mister, more grief.” the

procession, two big, chauffeur-driven prewar packards, one towed by a

jeep, had just pulled up by the gangway and the passengers were climbing

out. Those who could, that was-or very obviously there was one who

could not. One of the chauffeurs, dressed in green tropical drills and

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