The golden rendezvous by MacLean, Alistair

a bush hat, had opened the boot of his car, pulled out a collapsible

hand-propelled wheel chair, and, with the smooth efficiency of

experience, had it assembled in ten seconds flat, while the other

chauffeur, with the aid of a tall, thin nurse clad in over-all white

from her smartly starched cap to the skirt that reached close down to

her ankles, tenderly lifted a bent old man from the back seat of the

second packard and set him gently in the wheel chair. The old boy-even

at that distance I could see the face creased and trenched with the

lines of age, the snowy whiteness of the still plentiful hairdid his

best to help them, but his best wasn’t very much. Captain Bullen looked

at me. I looked at captain Bullen. There didn’t seem to be any reason

to say anything. Nobody in a crew likes having permanent invalids

aboard ship: they cause trouble to the ship’s doctor who has to look

after their health, to the cabin stewards who have to clean their

quarters, to the dining-room stewards who have to feed them, and to

those members of the deck crew detailed for the duty of moving them

around. And when the invalids are elderly and very infirmand if this

one wasn’t I sadly Missed my guess-there was always the chance of a

death at sea, the one thing sailors hate above all else. It was also

very bad for the passenger trade. But as long as the illness was of

neither a contagious nor infectious nature and that a certificate could

be produced from the invalid’s own doctor to the effect that the invalid

was fit for the proposed voyage, there was nothing that could be done

about it. “Well,” captain Bullen said heavily, “i suppose i’d better go

and welcome our latest guests aboard. Finish it off as quickly as

possible, Mister.”

“I’ll do that, sir.” Bullen nodded and left. I watched the two

chauffeurs slide a couple of poles under the seat of the invalid chair,

straighten and carry the chair easily up the sparred foot planks of the

gangway. They were followed by the tall angular nurse and she in turn

by another nurse, dressed exactly like the First, but shorter and

stockier. The old boy was bringing his own medical corps along with

him, which meant that he had more money than was good for him or was a

hypochondriac or very far through indeed or a combination of any or all

of those; on the credit side was the fact that both had that indefinable

competent no-nonsense look of the professional nurse which would make

the lot of our ship’s surgeon, old Dr. marston, who sometimes had to

work a whole hour in one day, all that much easier. But I was more

interested in the last two people to climb out of the packards. The

First was a man of about my own age and size, but the resemblance

stopped there. He looked like a cross between ramon novarro and rudolph

valentino, only handsomer. Tall, broad-shouldered, with deeply tanned,

perfectly sculpted latin features, he had the classical long, thin

moustache, strong, even teeth with that in-built neon phosphorescence

that seems to shine in any light from high noon till dark, and a darkly

gleaming froth of tight black curls on his head; he would have been a

lost man if you’d let him loose on the campus of any girls’ university.

For all that, he looked as far from being a sissy as any man i’d ever

met: he had the strong chin, the balanced carriage, the light, springy

boxer’s step of a man well aware that he can get through this world

without any help from a nursemaid. If nothing else, I thought sourly,

he would at least take Miss Beresford out of my hair. The other man was

a slightly smaller edition of the First, same features, same teeth, same

moustache and hair, only those were greying. He would be about

fifty-five. He had about him that indefinable look of authority and

assurance which can come from power, money, or a carefully cultivated

phoneyness. This, I guessed, would be the sefior miguel carreras who

inspired such fear in our local carracio agent. I wondered why. Ten

minutes later the last of our cargo was aboard and all that remained

were the three boxed coffins on the back of the old truck. I was

watching the bo’sun readying a sling round the First of those when a

well-detested voice said behind me: “this is Mr. carreras, sir. Captain

Bullen sent me.” I turned round and gave fourth officer dexter the look

I specially reserved for fourth officer dexter. Dexter was the

exception to the rule that the fleet commodore always got the best

available in the company as far as officers and men were concerned, but

that was hardly the old man’s fault: there were some men that even a

fleet commodore has to accept and dexter was one of them. A personable

enough youngster of twenty-one, with fair hair, slightly prominent blue

eyes, an excruciatingly genuine public-school accent, and limited

intelligence, dexter was the son-and, unfortunately, heir of lord

dexter, chairman and managing director of the blue mail. Lord dexter,

who had inherited about ten millions at the age of fifteen and,

understandably enough, had never looked back, had the quaint idea that

his own son should start from the bottom up and had sent him to sea as a

cadet some five years previously. Dexter took a poor view of this

arrangement: every man in the ship, from Bullen downwards, took a poor

view both of the arrangement and dexter, but there was nothing we could

do about it. “How do you do, sir?” I accepted carreras’ outstretched

hand and took a good look at him. The steady dark eyes, the courteous

smile couldn’t obscure the fact that there were many more lines about

his eyes and mouth at two feet than at fifty; but it also couldn’t

obscure the compensatory fact that the air of authority and command was

now redoubled in force, and I put out of my mind any idea that this air

originated in phoneyness; it was the genuine article, and that was that.

“Mr. Carter? my pleasure.” the hand was firm, the bow more than a

perfunctory nod, the cultured english the product of some stateside ivy

league college. “I have some interest in the cargo being loaded, and if

you would permit “but certainly, senor carreras.” Carter, that

rough-hewn anglo-saxon diamond, not to be outdone in latin courtesy. I

waved towards the hatch. “If you would be so kind as to keep to the

starboard-the right hand of the hatch “‘starboard’ will do, Mr. Carter.”

he smiled. “I have commanded vessels of my own. It was not a life that

ever appealed to me.” he stood there for a moment, watching macdonald

tightening the sling, while I turned to dexter, who had made no move to

go. Dexter was seldom in a hurry to do anything; he had a remarkably

thick skin. “What are you on now, fourth?” I enquired. “Assisting

Mr.” that meant he was unemployed. Cummings, the purser, was an

extraordinarily competent officer who never required help. He had only

one fault, brought on by years of dealing with passengers-he was far too

polite. Especially with dexter. I said, “those charts we picked up in

Kingston. You might get on with the corrections, will you?” which

meant that he would probably land us on a reef off the great bahamas in

a couple of days’ time. “But Mr. cummings is expecting “the charts,

dexter.” he looked at me for a long moment, his face slowly darkening,

then spun on his heel and left. I let him go three paces, then said,

not loudly, “dexter.” he stopped, then turned slowly. “The charts,

dexter,” I repeated. He stood there for maybe five seconds, eyes locked

on mine, then broke his gaze. “Aye, aye, sir.” the accent on the “sir”

was faint but unmistakable. He turned again and walked away, and now

the flush was round to the back of his neck, his back ramrod stiff.

Little I cared; by the time he sat in the chairman’s seat i’d have long

since quit. I watched him go, then turned to see carreras looking at me

with a slow, still speculation in the steady eyes. He was putting chief

officer Carter in the balance and weighing him, but whatever figures he

came up with he kept to himself, for he turned away without any haste

and made his way to the starboard side of number four hold. As he

turned, I noticed for the First time the very thin ribbon of black silk

stitched across the left lapel of his grey tropical suit. It didn’t

seem to go any too well with the white rose he wore in his buttonhole,

but maybe the two of them together were recognised as a sign of mourning

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