John D MacDonald

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by A Man of Affairs


  I had told them about the sudden death of Mike Dean.

  I had expected Guy Brainerd to be utterly crushed. But in a most curious way it seemed to hearten him. His big jaw become more firm. "In effect, Glidden, it solves a problem for me. Elda and I talked it over this afternoon. Even though the annual fee he has been paying Brainerd Associates is handsome, there comes a time when a man must weigh profit against . . . his personal pride in himself and his work. I had about made up my mind to cancel the Dean contract."

  "And I told Guy," Elda said, "that a man of his standing should not have to endure rudeness."

  Bridget made an almost inaudible and entirely disrespectful sound. Elda Garry stared at her furiously.

  "After all Guy has done for you, you should be ashamed of yourself, Miss Hallowell."

  "But think of what I did for both of you!" Bridget said and winked broadly at her. The lady editor turned red in the face and stabbed her fork into a piece of the overdone and cooling roast.

  Bonny frowned into space and said in her deeply husky and blurred voice, "Figure he’s going to walk in any minute. Never thought they could kill Mike, He was all man. Mean as a damn snake, but all man. You gotta give him that."

  "I give him nothing, nothing at all," Bundy said shrilly.

  Bonny turned her head slowly and looked at Bundy with a certain almost regal dignity. "You know, sometimes, Bundy, you’re a nasty little jerk."

  "So okay! But what did he ever do for us?"

  "He was a great guy." She crossed herself quickly and then began to cry and, a few moments later, left the table, stumbling over the sill as she went out onto the veranda.

  Bundy stood up and patted his mouth with his napkin. "You got to excuse her," he said. "It’s just temperament. You know, she’s sentimental like. All great artists are that way. You gotta know how to handle them."

  He trotted after her.

  "That dreary little type is almost touching," Elda said. "he seems so terribly devoted."

  "Oh, he’s terribly devoted," Bridget said, smiling at Elda. "Bonny’s last two agents dropped her because they couldn’t see any future in handling her. So now she’s with poor little Bundy and she’s the only client he’s got who ever made more than two hundred a week, and he’s got one chance of making a dollar out of her, so he’s extremely touching and devoted. I think it’s so charming the way you can sentimentalize everything, honey."

  Elda dropped all her Manhattan mannerisms and bawled, in pure Iowa, "Get off my back!"

  Guy said heavily, "I hardly think this is the proper time for quarreling, ladies. Remember, we’re all in the same boat. To put it bluntly, if Mr. Glidden is correct, we’re being held here against our will by unscrupulous, and if I may use an old-fashioned word, wicked people. And we will be here for several more days, it would seem. I have important matters in New York that I should attend to. I think we should give our attention to seeing if we can think of some way out of our . . . dilemma."

  "If you want to do any planning," I said, "don’t do it aloud either here or in any of the bedrooms. The whole joint is wired, and apparently Bowman is the one who has been doing the most listening."

  I saw Elda and Guy give each other a look in which horror and shame were commingled. His bald head turned as dark and moist as a pickled beet. And she turned so pale she looked greenish, She swallowed with an effort.

  "Are you absolutely positive?" Guy asked me.

  "Almost completely certain.".

  He banged his fork down. "Had I known that Mike Dean would lend himself to any such . . ?

  "Chicanery?" Bridget said helpfully.

  "Chicanery, I would never have accepted a public relations contract. There is one thing I have always said. I must be able to believe in the man, the idea or the product that I am . . ."

  "Standing behind of?" Bridget suggested,

  He gave her an annoyed glance. "Yes. Yes, of course. I do not care to deceive the public. But, obviously, Mike Dean was deceiving me. I valued him as a friend. I was not aware of his . . ."

  "Multifarious deceptions?" Bridget said in a honeyed voice.

  Guy jumped up, glared down at her, and walked away.

  "Why do you insist on being so unpleasant to him?" Elda asked.

  Bridget muffled a yawn. "Oh, I donno, kid. Maybe it’s because I recently found out he’s the most incurable stuffed shirt in all the wide world."

  "He’s a wonderful and charming man!" Elda said hotly.

  "Defend him, kiddo. Stand up for him. I just can’t . . ."

  And every light went out. Elda gasped. Bridget found my hand and squeezed and said, hollowly, "And she knew that there in the darkness, perhaps inches from her dainty ankle, the dread mamba lay coiled to strike."

  "Stop it! Please!" Elda said. "Oh, Guy! Guy!"

  "Coming, darling," he said, and I heard him blunder into a chair and curse under his breath. He felt of my shoulder and said he was sorry and worked his way around the table.

  Booty came into the room carrying two candles. "Generator broke," she said, and put one candle on the table and went away with the other, her shadow vast and wavery.

  It was a half hour before the lights came on again. By then it was after ten. A wind had arisen, again out of the northeast. When Guy and Elda said good night, Bridget and I went down onto the dock. Out at the end it was clear of mosquitoes.

  "To think I thought I was in love with a type like Guy," she said

  "Instead of a type like me."

  "Don’t get fatuous, Glidden. Get practical. Get us off the island. Get us off now. I’ve got a crazy idea. I’ve got the idea somebody is going to kill somebody. I don’t want it to be you."

  "We can untie a skiff and paddle with our hands and, hell, Grand Bahama is only thirty something miles over that-a-way some place."

  "One of those skiffs has oarlocks, Sam."

  "The hell you say. Which one?"

  "The smallest But there aren’t any oars."

  I climbed down into the smallest to check, and found out she was right. I went back to her. Something was niggling at the back of my mind. A pair of green oars. But where? I told her to stay right there. I went into the dock house. My lighter flame flickered The oars stood in a corner. I left them there.

  I went back to her. "Oars," I said. "But it’s thirty miles!"

  "More than thirty miles, and the wind will be some help if it holds in that direction, and you are a great big boy now, and besides, I can spell you. So go get . . ."

  I clapped my hand lightly over her mouth, and turned her head so that she too could see the figure standing quietly in the faint moonlight at the end of the dock.

  So we talked maybe too gaily of other things until it went away. Whoever it was, mosquitoes didn’t seem to bother it.

  "We can figure on three miles an hour and be conservative," I said

  "Call it eleven hours, then," she said

  "And take into account getting lost and getting swamped and getting blisters and so on and so on."

  "But, brother, wouldn’t it scare hell out of them!"

  "Are you trying to shame me into it?"

  "You’re going to try if Sam, aren’t you? I know you are. I can tell from your voice."

  "Okay, okay. Shall we go pack?"

  She hugged my arm. "I’m a silly and temperamental and emotional woman. And I want to leave right now. I don’t want to go near that house."

  It was a crazy gesture, but she had an infectious and persuasive way about her. And there was something too real about her fear.

  With utmost caution I got the oars and made certain they fitted the oarlocks. She got into the stern. I untied the line. The oarlocks squeaked and I dipped the pins in the water and they stopped. I took long, strong strokes, and tried to be as silent as I could be. There were two lights on in the house. She was silhouetted against them. The house dwindled, but with an uncomfortable slowness.

  We left the bay and turned southwest toward the point. She kept turning and look
ing back. After a time we could no longer see any lights, but we still whispered.

  After I had rounded the point and the wind was behind us, I rested on the oars while I checked the constellations in the night sky and, using the island as a reference point, I set a clumsy course to follow.

  "Want me to row now?" she whispered.

  "We can use a normal tone of voice now, Murph."

  "Stick with Bridget, huh? Do I row?"

  "When I get tired. Off we go. It’s about eleven." I made the oars bend and made water gurgle against the bow. The oar handles overlapped in an annoying way, and every once in a while I would bang my knuckles. After a time I found a comfortable rhythm. Bridget sang about bell bottom trousers, her voice a clear and true contralto in the night. She knew all the words. Then we made up some more words. We were enormously gay. It was a lark.

  Until the moon went under; soon after the stars were gone, and the wind freshened, and the first wave broke over the stern and she had to begin to bail with her cupped hands because there wasn’t anything else. Then it was not at all gay. We were tiny people in a tiny boat on a turbulent and immeasurable sea, under the dark vault of an alien and endless night. What had been partially a lark became a damn fool venture, serious and deadly.

  We had to talk loudly to hear each other over the sound of the wind and the cresting water.

  "Are you staying ahead of it?" I asked her.

  "I . . . I think so. I can’t see very well. And I keep getting slivers."

  By looking astern I could see the white froth of a breaking wave in barely enough time, each time, to avoid the worst of it by giving a hard pull at the oars.

  "What did you say?" I asked her.

  "I said I keep wondering what I’m doing here."

  A good question. What the hell were we doing out in a fourteen-foot flat-bottomed skiff in the middle of the night with no idea of direction? I was thoroughly scared, with good reason. I hoped she wouldn’t crack up. I suspected she wouldn’t.

  "This is what they call the cruel sea," she said And I knew then she would not break.

  I pulled until my shoulders ached and my arms were leaden. Then came a hard rain, hissing across the sea, sounding like a train bearing down on us. The hard rain flattened the sea, and gave her a chance to get ahead of the incoming water. In the flashes of oddly blue lightning I could see her clearly, blond hair pasted to the shape of her skull.

  But after the rain the wind became stronger and the waves broke more often, and I knew we couldn’t survive long in a following sea. As soon as I sensed that we were in a period of relatively quiet water, I turned the boat as quickly as I could. We took some over the side, but not seriously. I held it with the bow into the wind. I could not have rowed much longer. My palms were greasy with blood. Salt water had gotten into the broken blisters. The motion of the skiff was more violent, but we were not shipping water. Bridget worked with stubborn and desperate energy and finally stopped.

  "The pumps are staying ahead of the battle damage, Captain, sir."

  "Good work! Co below and get yourself some hot chow."

  "Aye aye, sir. Any idea of where we are?"

  "Not the slightest. We should be on course."

  "If the wind hasn’t shifted."

  "If the wind hasn’t shifted. Right."

  It took a long time before I was breathing more easily, and a longer time for the pain in my side to go away. The fragile moon reappeared between clouds, We were in a silvery wilderness, lifting high on the polished gunmetal waves, dipping heavily into the troughs. Every now and again a wave would break near by, with a hissing, sighing sound, and the foam would be swept off into the darkness astern. The moon disappeared, and when it came out again briefly, I saw that Bridget was leaning over the transom, being ill.

  "Are you all right?"

  "I haven’t got my sea legs yet, Captain, sir."

  "You’re relieved. Go to your stateroom."

  Without warning another sheet of the hard warm rain swept across us. It rained so hard that it seemed to make it impossible to think clearly or breathe properly. When it ended, Bridget was bailing again, throwing a pathetically small amount of water over the side each time she made the scooping motion with her cupped hands.

  And the first wave broke over the bow. I cursed my stupidity and, as soon as I had a chance, I kicked one shoe off and tossed it to her to use for bailing. I got around onto another seat so that I would push with the oars rather than pull, and so I could see the water ahead of the bow.

  I do not know when I decided that it was most probable that we would not live through the night. I know it was some hours later. The wind was increasing steadily. It was only by the greatest of luck and a new skill, painfully acquired, that I kept the breaking waves from swamping us. But I was becoming far too weary. My reflexes were slowing. I knew how it would happen. Two or three waves would fill us and I would be unable to prevent the unwieldy boat from turning parallel with the waves, and then one would roll us. We would cling to the boat until we could cling no longer. And very soon after that we would drown. And I did not care to drown. There was too much ahead. And she was curiously included in all of it

  I saw one coming and I could not move in time. It half filled the skiff. Another one right now would do it. But, as though by a miracle, the water seemed more calm. The wind had not lessened. But the water was not cresting and breaking. I could not understand it. And then I heard a surf roar that seemed far away. And I understood the calmer water. The wind had drifted us by an island or a reef and we were partially in the lee of the obstruction. I turned around and nearly lost an oar in my haste. I pulled toward the sound. The water became more calm. And the wind seemed to decrease. Soon it was as calm as in the bay at Dubloon Cay,

  "What’s happened?" Bridget demanded. Her voice sounded unnaturally loud

  I rowed until I felt an oar scrape bottom, and then with two final rocking, straining strokes, I drove the skiff aground and slumped over the oars, the breath tearing in my throat, my heart beating like a thick and hasty drum. My hands felt as if I would never be able to straighten my fingers.

  "Sam!" she cried. I lifted my head. The moon had come out again, and the sky was much more clear. We were twenty feet from a crescent of white beach jeweled by moonlight. The dark brush began beyond the sand. The island seemed small and narrow. If the wind had not changed, we were on the south-west side of the island.

  I wedged my foot into the sodden shoe and stepped over the side of the boat The earth was wonderfully solid and safe and stable. I held her hand while she stepped out and, still hand in hand, we walked to the beach.

  After two steps on the sand, she broke into forty pieces. She sagged against my chest, gulping and sobbing and whinnying. It was reaction, I knew, and it made her gallantry during the black hours more touching, and more commendable. These, I knew, are the rare spirits of the world, the ones who stand up to anything that can be thrown at them, and save the quakes until the danger is over.

  Just as she began to pull herself together, we were assailed by ten billion hungry bugs. They had jaws and stingers and blood thirst. We did some wild, flap-armed dancing, and we went out into the shallow water but they followed along, a keening savage cloud around us.

  "Windward side!" I yelled at her.

  We ripped and flapped and danced our way through the tugging fingers of the brush and came out on the far side not over fifty yards away. Fifteen feet beyond the brush the wind was so strong we could lean against it, and we were magically free of sharp assault.

  In the moonlight I saw, fifty yards to my left, a half acre jumble of the familiar black rock of the islands. We walked through the wind and through little gusts of salt spray to find shelter among the rocks. Though it was a warm night, I realized I was shivering. Part of it was the wind against the soaked clothing, and part of it was exhaustion.

  Bridget, with the prehistoric instincts of the Neanderthal cave wife, found a sandy hollow in the lee of a five-foot sh
elf of rock. It was about eight feet long and four feet wide. The moon was in such a position that we were in the moon shadow of the big rock. I heard her teeth chittering. We were in our special place of warmth and protection. The wind whined, but could not touch us.

  "Get out of those wet clothes and into . . ."

  "If," she said, "you should say dry martini, I might hit you with that rock. That big one. The clothes are coming off ."

  We undressed. She insisted on being the little homemaker. She stood up and spread the damp clothes out on the lower shelf of rock to the left of me. She piled small stones on them so they wouldn’t blow away. She worked with her back to me. Her legs, halfway up the thighs, were in the black pool of shadow. Her hair was platinum. Her tan back was a tawny ivory. Her buttocks were purest marble. She was the loveliest vision I had ever seen. I owned the island and the sky and the hemisphere. Then she came down out of the wind and stretched out be side me. The sand and the rocks were still warm from the sun of the day that had ended so long ago. I reached for her, and pulled her close, and kissed the side of her nose, and found a pillow for myself on that precious softness that is equally distant from point of breast, point of shoulder and point of small determined chin.

 

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