Hungry as the Sea

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Hungry as the Sea Page 37

by Wilbur Smith

sustain his resentment, could not bring himself to dwell on her betrayal

  in this environment, so the laughter was easy and the warmth

  un-contrived.

  When they went through to the small informal dining-room, they sat at

  the table as they had done so often before; they seemed to be

  transported back in time to those happy almost forgotten years.

  There were moments which might have jarred, but Chantelle's instinct was

  so certain that she could skirt delicately around these.

  She treated Nicholas as an honoured guest, not as the master of the

  house; instead she made Peter the host. Peter darling, will you carve

  for us? and the boy's pride and importance was almost overwhelming,

  although the bird looked as though it had been caught in a

  combine-harvester by the time he had finished with it.

  Chantelle served food and wine, a chicken stuffed in Creole style and a

  petit Chablis, that had no special associations from the past; and the

  choice of music was Peter's.

  Music to develop ulcers by/ as Nicholas remarked aside, to Chantelle.

  Peter fought a valiant rearguard action to delay the passage of time,

  but finally resigned himself when Nicholas told him, I'll come and see

  you up to bed. He waited while Peter cleaned his teeth with an

  impressive vigour that might have continued beyond midnight if Nicholas

  had not protested mildly. When at last he was installed between the

  sheets, Nicholas stooped over him and the boy wrapped both arms around

  his neck with a quiet desperation.

  I'm so happy/he whispered against Nicholas neck and when they kissed he

  crushed Nicholas lips painfully with his mouth , Wouldn't it be fabulous

  if we could be like this always? he asked.

  "If you didn't have to go away again, Dad? Chantelle had changed the

  wild music to the muted haunting melodies of Liszt, and as he came back

  into the room she was pouring cognac into a thin crystal balloon.

  Did he settle down? she asked, and then answered herself immediately.

  He's exhausted, although he doesn't know it.

  She brought him the cognac and then turned away and went out through the

  doors on to the terrace. He followed her out, and they stood at the

  stone balustrade side by side.

  The air was clear but chill.

  It's beautiful/ she said. The moon paved a wide silver path across the

  surface of the sea. I always thought that the highway to my dreams.,

  Duncan, he said. Let's talk about Duncan Alexander/ and she shivered

  slightly, folding her arms across her breasts and grasping her own naked

  shoulders, What do you want to know? in what terms did you give him

  control of your shares? As an agent, my personal agent.

  With full discretion? She nodded, and he asked next, Did you have an

  escape clause? In what circumstances can you reclaim control?

  The dissolution of marriage,, she said, and then shook her head.

  "But I think I knew that no court would uphold the agreement if I wanted

  to change it. It's too Victorian.

  Anytime I want to I could simply apply to have the appointment of Duncan

  as my agent set aside. Yes, I think you're right/Nicholas agreed. But

  it might take a year or more, unless you could prove malafides, unless

  you could prove he deliberately betrayed the trust of agency. Can I

  prove that, Nicky? She turned to him now, lifting her face to him. Has

  he betrayed that trust? I don't know yet, Nicholas told her cautiously,

  and she cut in.

  I've made a terrible fool of myself, haven't I? He kept silent, and she

  went on tremulously, I know there is no way I can apologize to you for

  what I did. There is no way that I can make it up to you, but believe

  me, Nicholas please believe me when I tell you, I have never regretted

  anything so much in all my life. It's past, Chantelle. It's over.

  There is no profit in looking back. I don't think there is another man

  in the world who would do what you are doing now, who would repay deceit

  and betrayal with help and comfort. I just wanted to say that. She was

  standing very close to him now, and in the cool night he could feel the

  warmth of her flesh across the inches that separated them, and her

  perfume had a subtlety altered fragrance on that creamy skin. She

  always wore perfume so well, the same way she wore her clothes.

  It's getting cold/ he said brusquely, took her elbow and steered her

  back into the light, out of that dangerous intimacy. We still have a

  great deal to discuss. He paced the thick forest-green carpet, quickly

  establishing a beat as regular as that of a sentry, ten paces from the

  glass doors, passing in front of where she sat in the centre of the wide

  velvet couch, turning just before he reached the headless marble statue

  of a Greek athlete from antiquity that guarded the double oaken doors

  into the lobby, and then back in front of her again. As he paced, he

  told her in carefully prepared sequence all that he had learned from

  Lazarus.

  She sat like a bird on the point of flight, turning her head to watch

  him, those huge dark eyes seeming to swell larger as she listened.

  It was not necessary to explain it to her in layman's language, she was

  Arthur Christy's daughter, she understood when he told her how he

  suspected that Duncan Alexander had been forced to self -insure the hull

  of Golden Dawn and how he had used Christy stock to buy re-insurance,

  stock that he had probably already pledged to finance construction of

  the vessel.

  Nicholas reconstructed the whole inverted pyramid of Duncan Alexander's

  machinations for her to examine, and almost immediately she saw how

  vulnerable, how unstable it was.

  Are you certain of all this? she whispered, and her face was drained of

  all its lustrous rose tints.

  He shook his head. I've reconstructed the Tyrannosaurus from a jawbone/

  he admitted frankly. The shape of it might be a little different, but

  one thing I am certain of is that it's a big and dangerous beast. Duncan

  could destroy Christy Marine/ she whispered again. Completely! She

  looked around slowly, at the house - at the room and its treasures, the

  symbols of her life - He has risked everything that's mine, and Peter's.

  Nicholas did not reply, but he stopped in front of her and watched her

  carefully as she absorbed the enormity of it all.

  He saw outrage turn slowly to confusion, to fear and finally to terror.

  He had never seen her even afraid before - but now, faced with the

  prospect of being stripped naked of the armour which had always

  protected her, she was like a lost animal, he could even see that

  flutter of her heart under the pale swelling flesh of her bosom, and she

  shivered again.

  Could he lose everything, Nicholas? He couldn't, could he? She wanted

  assurance, but he could not give it to her, all he could give her was

  pity. Pity was the one emotion, probably the only one, she had never

  aroused in him, not once in all the years he had known her.

  What can I do, Nicholas? she pleaded. Please help me.

  Oh God, what must I do? You can stop Duncan launching Golden Dawn -

  until the hull and propulsion has b
een modified, until it has been

  properly surveyed and underwritten - and until you have taken full

  control of Christy Marine out of his hands again. And his voice was

  gentle, filled with his compassion as he told her.

  That's enough for one day, Chantelle. If we go on now, we will be

  chasing our tails. Tonight you know what could happen, tomorrow we will

  discuss how we can prevent it. Have you a Valium? She shook her head.

  I've never used drugs to hide from things, he knew, that she had never

  lacked true courage. How much longer can you stay?

  I have a seat on the eleven o'clock plane. I have tonight we'll have

  time be back in London by tomorrow morning. The guest suite opened on

  to the second-floor balcony which ran along the entire front of the

  building overlooking the sea and the private harbour. The five main

  bedrooms all opened on to this balcony, an arrangement from fifty years

  previously when internal security against kidnapping and forcible entry

  had been of no importance Nicholas determined to speak to Chantelle

  about that in the morning. Peter was an obvious target for extortion,

  and he felt the goose bumps of horror rise on his arms as he imagined

  his son in the hands of those degenerate monsters who were everywhere

  allowed to strike and destroy with impunity. There was a price to pay

  these days for being rich and successful. The smell of it attracted the

  hyenas and vultures. Peter must be better protected, he decided.

  In the sitting-room, there was a well-stocked liquor cabinet concealed

  behind mirrors, nothing so obvious and resoundingly middle-class as a

  private bar. The daily papers, in English, French and German were set

  out on the television table, France Soir, The Times, Allgemeine Zeitung,

  with even an airmail version of the New York Times.

  Nicholas flipped open The Times and glanced quickly at the closing

  prices. Christy Marine common stock was at 532P, up on yesterday's

  prices. The market had not sniffed corruption - yet.

  He pulled off his silk roll-neck, and even though he had bathed three

  hours previously, the tension had left his skin feeling itchy and

  unclean. The bathroom had been lavishly redecorated in green onyx

  panels and the fittings were eighteen-carat gold, in the shape of

  dolphins. Steaming water gushed from their gaping mouths at a touch.

  It could have been vulgar, but Chantelle's unerring touch steered it

  into Persian opulence instead.

  He showered, turning the setting high so that the stinging needles of

  water scalded away his fatigue and the feeling of being unclean.

  There were half a dozen thick white terry toweling robes in the

  glass-fronted warming cupboard, and he selected one and went through

  into the bedroom, belting it around his naked waist. In his briefcase

  there was a draft of the agreement of sale of Ocean Salvage and Towage

  to the Sheikhs. James Teacher and his gang of bright young lawyers had

  read it, and made a thick sheaf of notes. Nicholas must study these

  before tomorrow evening when he met them in London.

  He took the papers from his case and carried them through into the

  sitting-room, glancing at the top page before dropping them carelessly

  on to the low coffee table while he went to pour himself a small whisky,

  heavily diluted, He brought the drink back with him and sprawled into

  the deep leather armchair, picked up the papers and began to work.

  He became aware of her perfume first, and felt his blood quicken

  uncontrollably at the fragrance, and the papers rustled in his hand.

  Slowly he lifted his head. She had come in utter silence on small bare

  feet. She had removed all her jewellery and had let down her hair

  brushing it out on to her shoulders. It made her seem younger, more

  vulnerable, and the gown she wore was cuffed and collared in fine soft

  lace.

  She moved slowly towards his chair, timorous and for once uncertain, the

  eyes huge and dark and haunted, and when he rose from the armchair, she

  stopped and one hand went to her throat.

  Nicholas/ she whispered, I'm so afraid, and so alone. She moved a step

  closer, and saw his eyes shift, his lips harden, and she stopped

  instantly.

  Please/ she pleaded softly, don't send me away, Nicky.

  Not tonight, not yet. I'm afraid to be alone - please. He knew then

  that this had been going to happen, he had hidden the certainty of it

  from himself all that evening, but now it was upon him, and he could do

  nothing to avoid it. it was as though he had lost the will to resist,

  he stood mesmerized, his resolve softening and melting like wax in the

  candle flame of her beauty, of the passions which she commanded so

  skilfully, and his thoughts lost coherence, began to tumble and swirl

  like storm surf breaking on rock.

  She recognized the exact instant when it happened to him, and she came

  forward silently, with small gliding footsteps, not making the mistake

  of speaking again and pressed her face to his bare chest framed in the

  collar of his robe. The thick curling hair was springing over hard flat

  muscle, and she flared her nostrils at the clean virile animal smell of

  his skin.

  He was still resisting, standing stiffly with his hands hanging at his

  sides. Oh, she knew him so well. The terrible conflict he must suffer

  before he could be made to act against that iron code of his own. Oh,

  she knew him, knew that he was as sexual and physical and animal as she

  was herself, that he was the only man who had ever been able to match

  her appetites. She knew the defences he had erected about himself, the

  fortressing of his passions, the controls and repressions, but she knew

  so well how to subvert these elaborate defences, she knew exactly what

  to do and what to say, how to move and touch. As she began now, she

  found the deliberate act of breaking down his resistance excited her so

  swiftly that it was pain almost, agony almost, and required all her own

  control not to advance too swiftly for him, to control the shaking of

  her legs and the pumping of her lungs, to play still the hurt and

  bewildered and frightened child, using his kindness, the sense of

  chivalry which would not allow him to send her away, in such obvious

  distress.

  Oh God, how her body churned, her stomach cramped with the strength of

  her wanting, her breasts felt swollen and so - sensitive that the

  contact of silk and lace was almost too painfully abrasive to bear.

  Oh, Nicky, please - Just for a moment. just once, hold me.

  Please, I cannot go on alone. just for a moment, please.

  She felt him lift his hands, felt the fingers on her shoulders, and the

  terrible pain of wanting was too much to bear, she could not control it

  - she cried out, it was a soft little whimper, but the force of it shook

  her body, and immediately she felt his reaction, Her timing had been

  immaculate, her natural womanly cunning had guided her.

  His fingers on her shoulders had been gentle and kindly, but now they

  hooked cruelly into her flesh.

  His back arched involuntarily, his breath drummed from his chest under

 
her ear, a single agonized exhalation like that of a boxer taking a

  heavy body punch. She felt his every muscle come taught, and she knew

  again the frightening power, the delirious giddy power she could still

  wield.

  Then, at last, joyously, almost fearfully, she experienced the great

  lordly lift and thrust of his loins - as though the whole world had

  moved and shifted about her.

  She cried out again, fiercely, for now she could slip the hounds she had

  held so short upon the leash, she could let denied, them run and hunt

  again. They had been too long but now there was no longer need for care

  and restraint.

  She knew exactly how to hunt him beyond the frontiers of reason, to

  course him like a flying stag, and his fingers tangled frantically in

  the foaming lace at her throat as he tried to free her tight swollen

  breasts. She cried out a third time, and with a single movement jerked

  open the fastening at his waist, exposing the full hard lean length of

  his body, and her hands were as frantic as his.

  ,oh, sweet God, you're so hard and strong - oh sweet God, I've missed

  you so. There was time later for all the refinements and nuances of

  love, but now her need was too cruel and demanding to be denied another

  moment. it had to happen this instant before she died of the lack.

  Nicholas rose slowly towards the surface of sleep, aware of a brooding

  sense of regret. just before he reached consciousness, a dream image

  formed in his sleep-starved brain, he relived a moment from the distant

  past. A fragment of time, recaptured so vividly as to seem whole and

  perfect.

  Long ago he had picked a deep-sea trumpet shell at five fathoms from the

  oceanic wall of the coral reef beyond the Anse Baudoin lagoon of Praslin

  Island, it was the size of a ripe coconut and once again he found

  himself holding the shell in both cupped hands gazing into the narrow

  oval opening, around which the weed-furred and barnacle-encrusted

  exterior changed dramatically, flaring into the pouting lips and

  exposing the inner mother-of-pearl surfaces that were slippery to the

  touch, a glossy satin sheen, pale translucent pink, folded and

  convoluted upon them selves, shading darker into fleshy crimsons and

  wine purples as the passage narrowed and sank away into the mysterious

  lustrous depths of the shell.

  Then abruptly, the dream image changed in his mind.

 

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