CHAPTER THIRTY-THREE
5:50 P.M.:
“Hello, Ian,” Penelope said. “You’re home early! How was your day?”
“Fine, fine,” Dunross said absently. Apart from all the disasters, just before he left the office he had had a call from Brian Kwok saying, among other things, that AMG was probably murdered and warned him to take serious precautions.
“Oh, it was one of those, was it?” she said at once. “How about a drink? Yes. How about champagne?”
“Good idea.” Then he noticed her smile and smiled back and felt much better. “Penn, you’re a mind reader!” He tossed his briefcase onto a sideboard and followed her into one of the sitting rooms of the Great House. The champagne was already in an ice bucket, opened, with two glasses partially filled and another waiting for him in the ice.
“Kathy’s upstairs. She’s reading Glenna a bedtime story,” Penelope said, pouring for him. “She … she’s just told me about … about the, about the disease.”
“Oh.” He accepted the glass. “Thanks. How’s Andrew taking it? He didn’t mention anything today.”
“She’s going to tell him tonight. The champagne was to give her some courage.” Penelope looked up at him, anguished. “She’s going to be all right, isn’t she, Ian?”
“I think so. I had a long talk with Doc Tooley. He was encouraging, gave me the names of the top three experts in England and another three in America. I’ve cabled for appointments with the three in England and Doc Ferguson’s air-mailing them case histories—they’ll be there when you arrive.”
She sipped her wine. A light breeze made the sultry day much better. The French doors were open to the garden. It was near six o’clock. “Do you think we should go at once? Will a few days make any difference?”
“I don’t think so.”
“But we should go?”
“If it were you, Penn, we’d’ve been on the first plane the very first moment.”
“Yes. If I’d told you.”
“You would have told me.”
“Yes. I suppose I would. I’ve made reservations for tomorrow. Kathy thought it a good idea too. The BOAC flight.”
He was startled. “Claudia never mentioned it.”
She smiled. “I made them myself. I’m really quite capable. I’ve reservations for Glenna, me and Kathy. We could take the case histories with us. I thought Kathy should go without any of her children. They’ll be perfectly all right with the amahs.”
“Yes, that’s much the best. Doc Tooley was adamant about her taking it easy. That’s the main thing he said, lots of rest.” Dunross smiled at her. “Thanks, Penn.”
She was staring at the beads of condensation on the outside of the bottle and the ice bucket. “Bloody awful, isn’t it?”
“Worse, Penn. There’s no cure. He thinks … he thinks the medication will arrest it.” He finished his glass and poured for both of them. “Any messages?”
“Oh, sorry! Yes, they’re on the sideboard. There was a long-distance call from Marseilles a moment ago.”
“Susanne?”
“No. A Mr. Deland.”
“He’s our agent there.”
“Yes.” Dunross skimmed the messages. Johnjohn at the bank, Holdbrook, Phillip Chen, and the inevitable catchall “please call Claudia.” He sighed. It was only half an hour since he left the office and he was going to call her anyway. No rest for the wicked, he thought, and smiled to himself.
He had enjoyed besting Gornt at the exchange. That he did not have the money at the moment to pay did not worry him. There’s five days of grace, he thought. Everything’s covered—with joss. Ah yes, joss!
Since his stockbroker had called him in panic at a few minutes past ten about the rumors sweeping the exchange and how their stock was shifting, he had been bolstering his defenses against the sudden, unexpected attack. With Phillip Chen, Holdbrook, Gavallan and deVille he had marshaled all the major stockholders they could reach and told them that the rumors Struan’s couldn’t meet their obligations were nonsense and suggested they refuse to lend Gornt any big blocks of Struan stock but to keep him dangling, letting him have a few shares here and there. He told the selected few in the strictest confidence that the Par-Con deal was signed, sealed and about to be chopped, and that this was a marvelous opportunity to smash Rothwell-Gornt once and for all.
“If Gornt sells short, let him. We pretend to be vulnerable but support the stock. Then Friday we announce, our stock’ll soar and he’ll lose his shirt, tie and trousers,” he had told them all. “We get back our airline along with his, and with his ships and ours together, we’ll dominate all air and surface inbound and outbound trade in Asia.”
If we could really smash Gornt, he thought fervently, we’d be safe for generations. And we could, given joss, Par-Con and more joss. Christ, but it’s going to be very dicey!
He had exuded confidence all day, not feeling confident at all. Many of his big stockholders had called nervously but he had quieted them. Both Tightfist Tung and Four Finger Wu owned major blocks of stock through devious nominees. He had phoned both this afternoon to get their agreement not to loan or sell their major holdings for the next week or so. Both had agreed but it had not been easy with either of them.
All in all, Dunross thought, I’ve fought off the initial onslaught. Tomorrow will tell the real story—or Friday: is Bartlett enemy, friend or Judas?
He felt his anger rising but he pushed it back. Be calm, he told himself, think calmly. I will but it’s bloody curious that everything Bartlett said the night of the party—all those very secret things he had so readily and suddenly produced to shatter my defenses—miraculously went through the market today like a typhoon. Who’s the spy? Who gave him the info? Is he the Sevrin spy too? Well, never mind for the moment, everything’s covered. I think.
Dunross went to the phone and asked the operator to get Mr. Deland, person to person, and to call him back.
“Would Susanne be there yet?” Penelope asked.
“I think so. If her plane’s on time. It’s about eleven, Marseilles time, so it shouldn’t be an emergency. Bloody shame about Borge! I liked him.”
“What’s Avril going to do?”
“She’s going to be all right. Avril’s going to come home to bring up the child and soon she’ll meet a Prince Charming, a new one, and her son’ll join Struan’s and meanwhile she’ll be protected and cherished.”
“Do you believe that, Ian—about the Prince Charming?”
“Yes,” he said firmly. “I believe everything will be all right. It’s going to be all right, Penn, for her, for Kathy, for … for everyone.”
“You can’t carry everyone, Ian.”
“I know. But no one, no one in the family will ever need for anything while I’m alive and that’s going to be forever.”
His wife looked at him and remembered the first time she had seen him, a godlike youth sitting in his shattered fighter that should have crashed but somehow miraculously hadn’t. Ian, just sitting there, then getting out, holding the terror down, she seeing in his eyes for the first time what death was like but him dominating it and coming back and just accepting the cup of tea saying, “Oh, jolly good, thanks. You’re new, aren’t you?” in his lovely patrician accent that was so far from her own background.
Such a long time ago, a thousand years ago, another lifetime, she thought. Such wonderful ghastly terrible beautiful agonizing days: will he die today or come back today? Will I die today, in the morning bombing or in the evening one? Where’s Dad and Mum and is the phone just bombed out of service as usual or has the rotten little terraced house in Streatham vanished along with all the other thousands like it?
One day it had and then she had no past. Just Ian and his arms and strength and confidence, and she terrified that he would go like all the others. That was the worst part, she told herself. The waiting and anticipating and knowing how mortal the Few were and we all are. My God how quickly we had to grow up!
“I hope it is forever, darling,” she said in her cool, flat voice, wanting to hide the immensity of her love. “Yes. I want you to be immortal!”
He grinned at her, loving her. “I’m immortal, Penn, never mind. After I’m dead I’ll still be watching over you and Glenna and Duncan and Adryon and all the rest.”
She watched him. “Like Dirk Struan does?”
“No,” he said serious now. “He’s a presence I’ll never match. He’s perpetual—I’m temporary.” His eyes were watching hers. “You’re rather serious tonight, aren’t you?”
“You’re rather serious tonight, aren’t you?”
They laughed.
She said, “I was just thinking how transient life is, how violent, unexpected, how cruel. First John Chen and now Borge, Kathy…” A little shiver went through her, ever petrified she would lose him. “Who’s next?”
“Any one of us. Meanwhile be Chinese. Remember under heaven all crows are black. Life is good. Gods make mistakes and go to sleep so we do the best we can and never trust a quai loh!”
She laughed, at peace again. “There are times, Ian Struan Dunross, when I quite like you. Do you th—” The phone rang and she stopped and thought, God curse that bloody phone. If I was omnipotent I’d outlaw all phones after 6:00 P.M. but then poor Ian’d go mad, and the bloody Noble House’d crumble and that’s poor Ian’s life. I’m second, so are the children and that’s as it should be. Isn’t it?
“Oh hello, Lando,” Dunross was saying, “what’s new?”
“Hope I’m not disturbing you, tai-pan.”
“Not at all,” he replied, all his energy concentrated. “I’ve just got in. What can I do for you?”
“Sorry, but I’m withdrawing the 15 million support I promised for tomorrow. Temporarily. The market makes me nervous.”
“Nothing to worry about,” Dunross said, his stomach churning. “Gornt’s up to his tricks. That’s all.”
“I’m really very worried. It’s not just Gornt. It’s the Ho-Pak and the way the whole market’s reacting,” Mata said. “With the bank run seeping over to the Ching Prosperity and even the Vic … all the signs are very bad so I want to wait and see.”
“Tomorrow’s the day, Lando. Tomorrow. I was counting on you.”
“Have you tripled our next gold consignment as I asked?”
“Yes, I did that personally. I’ve Zurich’s telexed confirms in the usual code.”
“Excellent, excellent!”
“I’ll need your letter of credit tomorrow.”
“Of course. If you’ll send a messenger to my home now I’ll give you my check for the full amount.”
“Personal check?” Dunross held on to his astonishment. “On which bank, Lando?”
“The Victoria.”
“Christ, that’s a lot of money to remove just now.”
“I’m not removing it, I’m just paying for some gold. I’d rather have some of my funds in gold outside Hong Kong for the next week or so, and this’s an ideal moment to do it. You can get them to telex it first thing tomorrow. First thing. Yes. I’m not withdrawing funds, Ian, just paying for gold. If I were you I’d try to get liquid too.”
Again his stomach fell over. “What have you heard?” he asked, his voice controlled.
“You know me, I’m just more cautious than you, tai-pan. The cost of my money comes very high.”
“No more than mine.”
“Yes. We’ll consult tomorrow, then we’ll see. But don’t count on our 15 million. Sorry.”
“You’ve heard something. I know you too well. What is it? Chi pao pu chu huo.” Literally, Paper cannot wrap up a fire, meaning a secret cannot be kept forever.
There was a long pause, then Mata said in a lower voice, “Confidentially, Ian, old Tightfist’s selling heavily. He’s getting ready to unload all his holdings. That old devil may be dying but his nose is as sensitive to the loss of a brass cash as ever and I’ve never known him to be wrong.”
“All his holdings?” Dunross asked sharply. “When did you talk to him?”
“We’ve been in contact all day. Why?”
“I reached him after lunch and he promised he wouldn’t sell or loan any Struan’s. Has he changed his mind?”
“No. I’m sure he hasn’t. He can’t. He hasn’t any Struan stock.”
“He has 400,000 shares!”
“He did have, tai-pan, though actually the number was nearer 600,000—Sir Luis had very few shares of his own, he’s one of Tightfist’s many nominees. He’s unloaded all 600,000 shares. Today.”
Dunross bit back an obscenity. “Oh?”
“Listen, my young friend, this is all in the strictest confidence but you should be prepared: Tightfist ordered Sir Luis to sell or loan all his Noble House stock the moment the rumors started this morning. 100,000 was spread throughout the brokers and sold immediately, the remainder.… the half million shares you bought from Gornt were Tightfist’s. The moment it was evident there was a major assault on the House and Gornt was selling short, Tightfist told Sir Luis to go ahead and loan it all, except for a token 1,000 shares, which he’s kept. For face. Yours. When the exchange closed, Tightfist was very pleased. On the day he’s almost 2 million ahead.”
Dunross was standing rock still. He heard that his voice was matter-of-fact and level and controlled and that pleased him, but he was in shock. If Tightfist had sold, the Chins would sell and a dozen other friends would follow his lead and that meant chaos. “The old bugger!” he said, bearing him no grudge. It was his own fault, he had not reached Tightfist in time. “Lando, what about your 300,000 shares—plus?”
He heard the Portuguese hesitate and his stomach twisted again. “I’ve still got them. I bought at 16 when you first went public so I’m not worried yet. Perhaps Alastair Struan was right when he advised against going public—the Noble House’s only vulnerable because of that.”
“Our growth rate’s five times Gornt’s and without going public we could never have weathered the disasters I inherited. We’re supported by the Victoria. We’ve still got our bank stock and a majority vote on the board so they have to support us. We’re really very strong and once this temporary situation’s over we’ll be the biggest conglomerate in Asia.”
“Perhaps. But perhaps you’d have been wiser to accept our proposal instead of leaving yourself constantly open to the risk of takeovers or market disasters.”
“I couldn’t then. I can’t now. Nothing’s changed.” Dunross smiled grimly. Lando Mata, Tightfist Tung and Gambler Chin collectively had offered him 20 percent of their gold and gambling syndicate revenue for 50 percent of Struan’s—if he kept it as a wholly private-owned company.
“Come, tai-pan, be sensible! Tightfist and I will give you 100 million cash today for 50 percent ownership. U.S. dollars. Your position as tai-pan will not be touched, you will head the new syndicate and manage our gold and gambling monopolies, secretly or openly—with 10 percent of all profit as a personal fee.”
“Who appoints the next tai-pan?”
“You do—in consultation.”
“There, you see! It’s impossible. A 50 percent control gives you power over Struan’s and that I’m not allowed to give. That would negate Dirk’s legacy, make my oath invalid and give away absolute control. Sorry, it’s not possible.”
“Because of an oath to an unknown, unknowable god in which you don’t believe—on behalf of a murdering pirate who’s been dead over a hundred years?”
“For whatever reason the answer is, thank you, no.”
“You could easily lose the whole company.”
“No. Between the Struans and the Dunrosses we have 60 percent voting control and I alone vote all the stock. What I’d lose is everything material we own, and cease to be the Noble House, and that by the Lord God, is not going to happen either.”
There was a long silence. Then Mata said, his voice friendly as always, “Our offer is good for two weeks. If joss is against you and you fail, the offer to head the new syndicate stands. I shall sell or lend my stock at 21.”
“Below 20—not at 21.”
“It will go that low?”
“No. Just a habit I have. 20 is better than 21.”
“Yes. Good. Then let us see what tomorrow brings. I wish you good joss. Good night, tai-pan.”
Dunross put down the phone and sipped the last of his champagne. He was up the creek without a paddle. That old bugger Tightfist, he thought again, admiring his cleverness—to agree so reluctantly not to sell or barter any Struan shares, knowing that only 1,000 remained, knowing the revenue from almost 600,000 was already safe—that old bastard’s a great negotiator. It’s so very clever of both Lando and Tightfist to make the new offer now. 100 million! Jesus Christ, that’d stop Gornt farting in church! I could use that to smash him to pieces, and in short order take over Asian Properties and put Dunstan into an early retirement. Then I could pass the House over to Jacques or Andrew in great shape and …
And then what? What would I do then? Retire to the moors and shoot grouse? Throw vast parties in London? Or go into Parliament and sleep in the Back Bench while the bloody Socialists give the country to the Communists? Christ, I’d be bored to bloody death! I’d …
“What?” He was startled. “Oh sorry, Penn, what did you say?”
“I just said that all sounded like bad news!”
“Yes. Yes it was.” Then Dunross grinned and all his anxiety dropped away. “It’s joss! I’m tai-pan,” he said happily. “You’ve got to expect it.” He picked up the bottle. It was empty. “I think we deserve another … No, pet, I’ll get it.” He went to the concealed refrigerator that was set into a vast old Chinese scarlet, lacquered sideboard.
“How do you cope, Ian?” she asked. “I mean, it always seems to be something bad, ever since you took over—and there’s always some disaster, every phone call, you work all the time, never take a holiday … ever since we came back to Hong Kong. First your father and then Alastair and then … Isn’t it ever going to stop pouring cats and dogs?”
“Of course not—that’s the job.”
“Is it worth it?”
He concentrated on the cork, knowing there was no future in this conversation. “Of course.”
To you it is, Ian, she thought. But not to me. After a moment she said, “Then it’s all right for me to go?”
“Yes, yes of course. I’ll watch Adryon and don’t worry about Duncan. You just have a great time and hurry back.”
“Are you going to do the hill climb Sunday?”
“Yes. Then I’m going to Taipei, back Tuesday. I’m taking Bartlett.”
She thought about Taipei and wondered if there was a girl there, a special girl, a Chinese girl, half her age, with lovely soft skin and warmth, not much warmer than herself or softer or trimmer but half her age, with a ready smile, without the years of survival bowing her—the rotten growing-up years, the good and terrible war years, and childbearing years and child-rearing years and the exhausting reality of marriage, even to a good man.
I wonder I wonder I wonder. If I was a man … there’re so many beauties here, so anxious to please, so readily available. If you believe a tenth of what the others say.
She watched him pour the fine wine, the bubbles and froth good, his face strong and craggy and greatly pleasing, and she wondered, Does any woman possess any man for more than a few years?
“What?” he asked.
“Nothing,” she said, loving him. She touched his glass. “Be careful on the hill climb.”
“Of course.”
“How do you cope with being tai-pan, Ian?”
“How do you cope with running a home, bringing up the kids, getting up at all hours, year after year, keeping the peace, and all the other things you’ve had to do? I couldn’t do that. Never could. I’d’ve given up the ghost long ago. It’s part training and part what you’re born to do.”
“A woman’s place is in the home?”
“I don’t know about others, Penn, but so long as you’re in my home all’s good in my world.” He popped the cork neatly.
“Thank you, dear,” she said and smiled. Then she frowned. “But I’m afraid I don’t have much option and never had. Of course it’s different now and the next generation’s lucky, they’re going to change things, turn things around and give men their comeuppance once and for all.”
“Oh?” he said, most of his mind back on Lando Mata and tomorrow and how to get the 100 million without conceding control.
“Oh yes. The girls of the next generation aren’t going to put up with the boring ‘a woman’s place is by the sink.’ God how I hate housework, how every woman hates housework. Our daughters are going to change all that! Adryon for one. My God I’d hate to be her husband.”
“Every generation thinks they’re going to change the world,” Dunross said, pouring. “This’s great champagne. Remember how we did? Remember how we used to bitch, still do, about our parents’ attitudes?”
“True. But our daughters have the pill and that’s a whole new kettle of fish an—”
“Eh?” Dunross stared at her, shocked. “You mean Adryon’s on the pill? Jesus Christ how long … do you mean sh—”
“Calm down, Ian, and listen. That little pill’s unlocked womanhood from fear forever—men too, in a way. I think very few people realize what an enormous social revolution it’s going to create. Now women can all make love without fear of having a child, they can use their bodies as men use their bodies, for gratification, for pleasure, and without shame.” She looked at him keenly. “As to Adryon, she’s had access to the pill since she was seventeen.”
“What?”
“Of course. Would you prefer her to have a child?”
“Jesus Christ, Penn, of course not,” Dunross spluttered, “but Jesus Christ who? You … you mean she’s having an affair, had affairs or….”
“I sent her to Dr. Tooley. I thought it best she should see him.”
“You what?”
“Yes. When she was seventeen, she asked me what to do, said most of her friends were on the pill. As there are various types I wanted her to have expert advice. Dr. Too—What are you so red about, Ian? Adryon’s nineteen now, twenty next month, it’s all very ordinary.”
“It isn’t by God. It just isn’t!”
“Och laddie but it is,” she said, aping the broad Scots accent of Granny Dunross whom he had adored, “and my whole point is that the lassies of today know what they’re aboot and dinna ye dare mention it to Adryon that I’ve told ye or I’ll take my stick to your britches!”
He stared at her.
“Health!” Smugly she raised her glass. “Did you see the Guardian Extra this afternoon?”
“Don’t change the subject, Penn. Don’t you think I should talk to her?”
“Absolutely not. No. It’s a … it’s a very private matter. It’s really her body and her life and whatever you say, Ian, she has the right to do with her life what she pleases and really nothing you say will make any difference. It’ll all be very embarrassing for both of you. There’s face involved,” she added and was pleased with her cleverness. “Oh of course Adryon’ll listen and take your views to heart but you really must be adult and modern for your own sake, as well as hers.”
Suddenly an uncontrollable wave of heat went through his face.
“What is it?” she asked.
“I was thinking about … I was just thinking.”
“About who was, is or could be her lover?”
“Yes.”
Penelope Dunross sighed. “For your own sanity, Ian, don’t! She’s very sensible, over nineteen … well, quite sensible. Come to think of it I haven’t seen her all day. The little rotter rushed out with my new scarf before I could catch her. You remember the blouse I lent her? I found it scrumpled up on her bathroom floor! I shall be very glad to see her off on her own and in her own apartment.”
“She’s too young for God’s sake!”
“I don’t agree, dear. As I was saying, there’s really nothing you can do about progress, and the pill is a marvelous fantastic unbelievable leap forward. You really must be more sensible. Please?”
“It’s … Christ, it’s a bit sudden, that’s all.”
She laughed outright. “If we were talking about Glenna I could unders—Oh for God’s sake, Ian, I’m only joking! It never really occurred to me that you wouldn’t have presumed Adryon was a very healthy, well-adjusted though foul-tempered, infuriating, very frustrated young lady, most of whose frustrations spring from trying to please us with our old-fashioned ideas.”
“You’re right.” He tried to sound convincing but he wasn’t and he said sourly, “You’re right even so … you’re right.”
“Laddie, dinna ye think ye’d better visit our Shrieking Tree?” she asked with a smile. It was an ancient clan custom in the old country that somewhere near the dwelling of the oldest woman of the laird’s family would be the Shrieking Tree. When Ian was young, Granny Dunross was the oldest, and her cottage was in a glade in the hills behind Kilmarnock in Ayrshire where the Struan lands were. The tree was a great oak. It was the tree that you went out to when the deevil—as old Granny Dunross called it—when the deevil was with you, and alone, you shrieked whatever curses you liked. “… and then, lassie,” the lovely old woman had told her the first night, “… and then, lassie, there would be peace in the home and never a body has need to really curse a husband or wife or lover or child. Aye, just a wee tree and the tree can bear all the curse words that the deevil himself invented….”
Penelope was remembering how old Granny Dunross had taken her into her heart and into the clan from the first moment. That was just after she and Ian were married and visiting for the second time, Ian on sick leave, still on crutches, his legs badly burned but healing, the rest of him untouched in the flaming crash-landing but for his mad, all-consuming anger at being grounded forever, she so pleased secretly, thanking God for the reprieve.
“But whisht, lassie,” Granny Dunross had added with a chuckle that night when the winter winds were whining off the moors, sleet outside, and they all warm and toasty in front of the great fire, safe from the bombing, well fed and never a care except that Ian should get well quickly, “… there was a time when this Dunross was six and, och aye, he had a terrible temper even then and his father Colin was off in those heathen foreign parts as always, so this Dunross would come to Ayr on holiday from boarding school. Aye, and sometimes he would come to see me and I’d tell him tales o’ the clan and his grandfather and great-grandfather but this time nothing would take away the deevil that possessed him. It was a night like this and I sent him out, the poor wee bairn, aye I sent him out to the Shrieking Tree….” The old woman had chuckled and chuckled and sipped whiskey and continued, “Aye and the young deevil went out, cock of the walk, the gale under his kilt, and he cursed the tree. Och aye, surely the wee beasties in the forest fled before his wrath and then he came back. ‘Have you given it a good drubbing,’ I asked him. ‘Aye,’ he said in his wee voice. ‘Aye, Grandma, I gave it a good drubbing, the very best ever.’
“‘Good,’ I said. ‘And now you’re at peace!’
“‘Well, not really, Grandmother, but I am tired.’ And then, lassie, at that moment, there was an almighty crash and the whole house shook and I thought it was the end of the world but the wee little bairn ran out to see what had happened and a lightning bolt had blasted the Shrieking Tree to pieces. ‘Och aye, Granny,’ he said in his piping little voice when he came back, his eyes wide, ‘that really was the very best I ever did. Can I do it again!’”
Ian had laughed. “That’s all a story, I don’t remember that at all. You’re making it up, Granny!”
“Whisht on you! You were five or six and the next day we went into the glade and picked the new tree, the one you’ll see tomorrow, lassie, and blessed it in the clan’s name and I told young Ian to be a mite more careful next time!”
They had laughed together and then, later that night, she had woken up to find Ian gone and his crutches gone. She had watched and waited. When he came back he was soaked but tired and at peace. She pretended sleep until he was in bed again. Then she turned to him and gave him all the warmth she had.
“Remember, lassie,” Granny Dunross had said to her privately the day they left, “if ye want to keep your marriage sweet, make sure this Dunross always has a Shrieking Tree nearby. Dinna be afeared. Pick one, always pick one wherever you go. This Dunross needs a Shrieking Tree close by though he’ll never admit it and will never use it but rarely. He’s like the Dirk. He’s too strong….”
So wherever they had gone they had had one. Penelope had insisted. Once, in Chungking, where Dunross had been sent to be an Allied liaison officer after he was well again, she had made a bamboo their Shrieking Tree. Here in Hong Kong it was a huge jacaranda that dominated the whole garden. “Don’t you think you should pay her a wee visit?” The tree was always a her for him and a him for her. Everyone should have a Shrieking Tree, Penelope thought. Everyone.
“Thanks,” he said. “I’m okay now.”
“How did Granny Dunross have so much wisdom and stay so marvelous after so much tragedy in her life?”
“I don’t know. Perhaps they built them stronger in those days.”
“I miss her.” Granny Dunross was eighty-five when she died. She was Agnes Struan when she married her cousin Dirk Dunross—Dirk McCloud Dunross, whom his mother Winifred, Dirk Struan’s only daughter, had named after her father in remembrance. Dirk Dunross had been fourth tai-pan and he had been lost at sea in Sunset Cloud driving her homeward. He was only forty-two when he was lost, she thirty-one. She never married again. They had had three sons and one daughter. Two of her sons were killed in World War I, the eldest at Gallipoli at twenty-one, the other gassed at Ypres in Flanders, nineteen. Her daughter Anne had married Gaston deVille, Jacques’s father. Anne had died in the London bombing where all the deVilles had fled except Jacques who had stayed in France and fought the Nazis with the Maquis. Colin, the last of her sons, Ian’s father, also had three sons and a daughter, Kathren. Two sons also were killed in World War II. Kathren’s first husband, Ian’s squadron leader, was killed in the Battle of Britain. “So many deaths, violent deaths,” Penelope said sadly. “To see them all born and all die … terrible. Poor Granny! Yet when she died she seemed to go so peacefully with that lovely smile of hers.”
“Perhaps it was joss. But the others, that was joss too. They only did what they had to, Penn. After all, our family history’s ordinary in that. We’re British. War’s been a way of life for centuries. Look at your family—one of your uncles was lost at sea in the navy in the Great War, another in the last at El Alamein, your parents killed in the blitz … all very ordinary.” His voice hardened. “It’s not easy to explain to any outsider, is it?”
“No. We all had to grow up so quickly, didn’t we, Ian?” He nodded and after a moment she said, “You’d better dress for dinner, dear, you’ll be late.”
“Come on, Penn, for God’s sake, you take an hour longer than me. We’ll put in a quick appearance and leave directly after chow. Wh—” The phone rang and he picked it up. “Yes? Oh hello, Mr. Deland.”
“Good evening, tai-pan. I wish to report about Mme. deVille’s daughter and son-in-law, M. Escary.”
“Yes, please go ahead.”
“I am sad to have the dishonor of bringing such bad tidings. The accident was a, how do you say, sideswipe on the upper Corniche just outside Eze. The driver of the other car was drunk. It was at two in the morning about, and when the police arrived, M. Escary was already dead and his wife unconscious. The doctor says she will mend, very well, but he is afraid that her, her internal organs, her childbearing organs may have permanent hurt. She may require an operation. He—”
“Does she know this?”
“No, m’sieu, not yet, but Mme. deVille was told, the doctor told her. I met her as you ordered and have taken care of everything. I have asked for a specialist in these things from Paris to consult with the Nice Hospital and he arrives this afternoon.”
“Is there any other damage?”
“Externally, non. A broken wrist, a few cuts, nothing. But … the poor lady is distraught. It was glad … I was glad that her mother came, that helped, has helped. She stays at the Métropole in a suite and I met her airplane. Of course I will be in the constant touch.”
“Who was driving?”
“Mme. Escary.”
“And the other driver?”
There was a hesitation. “His name is Charles Sessonne. He’s a baker in Eze and he was coming home after cards and an evening with some friends. The police have … Mme. Escary swears his car was on the wrong side of the road. He cannot remember. Of course he is very sorry and the police have charged him with drunk driving an—”
“Is this the first time?”
“Non. Non, once before he was stopped and fined.”
“What’ll happen under French law?”
“There will be a court and then … I do not know, m’sieu. There were no other witnesses. Perhaps a fine, perhaps jail; I do not know. Perhaps he will remember he was on the right side, who knows? I’m sorry.”
Dunross thought a moment. “Where does this man live?”
“Rue de Verte 14, Eze.”
Dunross remembered the village well, not far from Monte Carlo, high above, and the whole of the Côte d’Azur below and you could see beyond Monte Carlo into Italy, and beyond Cap Ferrat to Nice. “Thank you, Mr. Deland. I’ve telexed you 10,000 U.S. for Mme. deVille’s expenses and anything else. Whatever’s necessary please do it. Call me at once if there’s anything … yes and ask the specialist to call me immediately after he’s examined Mme. Escary. Have you talked with Mr. Jacques deVille?”
“No, tai-pan. You did not instruct this. Should I phone?”
“No. I’ll call him. Thank you again.” Dunross hung up and told Penelope everything, except about the internal injuries.
“How awful! How … how senseless!”
Dunross was looking out at the sunset. It was at his suggestion the young couple had gone to Nice and Monte Carlo where he and Penelope had had so much fun, and marvelous food, marvelous wine and a little gambling. Joss, he thought, then added, Christ all bloody mighty!
He dialed Jacques deVille’s house but he was not there. He left a message for him to return the call. “I’ll see him at the dinner tonight,” he said, the champagne now tasteless. “Well, we’d better get changed.”
“I’m not going, dear.”
“I’ve lots to do to get ready for tomorrow. You can make an excuse for me—of course you have to go. I’ll be ever so busy. There’s Glenna’s school things—and Duncan gets back on Monday and his school things have to be sorted. You’ll have to put him on the aircraft, make sure he has his passport … You can easily make an excuse for me tonight as I’m leaving.”
He smiled faintly. “Of course, Penn, but what’s the real reason?”
“It’s going to be a big do. Robin’s bound to be there.”
“They’re not back till tomorrow!”
“No, it was in the Guardian’s Extra. They arrived this afternoon. The whole delegation. They’re sure to be invited.” The banquet was being given by a multimillionaire property developer, Sir Shi-teh T’Chung, partially to celebrate the knighthood he had received in the last Honors List, but mostly to launch his latest charity drive for the new wing of the new Elizabeth Hospital. “I’ve really no wish to go, and so long as you’re there, everything’ll be all right. I really want an early night too. Please.”
“All right. I’ll deal with these calls, then I’ll be off. I’ll see you though before I go.” Dunross walked upstairs and went into his study. Lim was waiting there, on guard. He wore a white tunic and black pants and soft shoes. “Evening, Lim,” Dunross said in Cantonese.
“Good evening, tai-pan.” Quietly the old man motioned him to the window. Dunross could see two men, Chinese, loitering across the street outside the high wall that surrounded the Great House, near the tall, open iron gates. “They’ve been there some time, tai-pan.”
Dunross watched them a moment, disquieted. His own guard had just been dismissed and Brian Kwok, who was also a guest at Sir Shi-teh’s tonight, would come by shortly and go with him, acting as a substitute. “If they don’t go away by dusk call Superintendent Crosse’s office.” He wrote the number down, then added in Cantonese, his voice abruptly hard, “While I think of it, Lim, if I want any foreign devil car interfered with, I will order it.” He saw the old eyes staring back at him impassively. Lim Chu had been with the family since he was seven, like his father before him, and his father, the first of his line who, in the very old days, before Hong Kong had existed, had been Number One Boy and looked after the Struan mansion in Macao.
“I don’t understand, tai-pan.”
“You cannot wrap fire in paper. The police are clever and old Black Beard’s a great supporter of police. Experts can examine brakes and deduce all sorts of information.”
“I know nothing of police.” The old man shrugged then beamed. “Tai-pan, I do not climb trees to find a fish. Nor do you. May I mention that in the night I could not sleep and I came here. There was a shadow on the veranda balcony. The moment I opened the study door the shadow slid down the drainpipe and vanished into the shrubs.” The old man took out a torn piece of cloth. “This was on the drainpipe.” The cloth was nondescript.
Dunross studied it, perturbed. He glanced at Dirk Struan’s oil painting over the fireplace. It was perfectly in position. He moved it away and saw that the hair he had delicately balanced on a hinge of the safe was untouched. Satisfied, he replaced the picture, then checked the locks on the French windows. The two men were still loitering. For the first time Dunross was very glad that he had an SI guard.