Solomons Seal

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Solomons Seal Page 16

by Hammond Innes


  ‘The Old Man was prejudiced. He thought Hans hated him. God knows he’d every reason—’

  ‘Why?’ She was leaning forward, her eyes fixed on him. ‘Why should Hans hate him?’

  ‘His father was killed during the war.’

  ‘Lots of people got killed in the war.’

  ‘He was killed in a raid on Carola Harbour. His schooners were based there, and it was the Old Man who led the raiding party.’

  She stared at him a moment, then nodded. ‘I see.’ She said it huskily, her voice barely audible. ‘So that’s why he wouldn’t talk about it.’ And she added in a whisper, ‘Now I begin to understand.’

  ‘I hope you do. Red Holland was a collaborator, but from his son’s point of view – well, if it were my father who’d been killed …’ He left it at that, leaning forward and continuing quickly, ‘So don’t go on about Hans. And stop imagining things. He’s been very helpful.’

  ‘What about the guns?’ I asked.

  He glanced at me, suddenly reminded of my presence. ‘I told you. That cargo belongs to the Buka Trading Co-operative.’ And then he had turned back to his sister, taking up where he had left off: ‘Hans helped found the Co-operative. He’s provided most of the finance and given it proper commercial direction. I admire him for that. Some return for their having saved his life during the war and looked after him until he was old enough to go to school in Australia.’

  ‘And you admire him?’

  ‘Yes. Yes, in some ways I do.’ And then, soothingly: ‘It’s just a trading organisation, Perenna. Nothing else. And it makes sense for us to have a close association with it. No white company can survive in the islands without being involved locally. Not any longer. It’s a matter of politics.’ He turned to me. ‘It’s happening all over the world. So why not in the Solomons? Don’t you agree?’

  ‘Trade is one thing,’ I said, ‘but guns—’

  ‘Governments deal in guns, don’t they? Your government, every government – they’re up to their necks in the arms trade. Just because I have to get them secretly, off an open beach, what’s the difference?’

  ‘Cargo,’ Perenna said. ‘That’s the difference. It’s Cargoism.’

  He turned on her angrily. ‘Now don’t start on that again. What happened when you were last at Madehas was quite different. I know how you feel, but this is strictly a business proposition. It’s got nothing to do with the Cargo cult.’

  ‘The Hahalis Welfare Society called it “bisnis”,’ she said wearily. And then, leaning towards him: ‘I’ve never been able to ask you this to your face, but when Tim was sent to Buka, was it to deal with a new outbreak of Cargoism?’ He didn’t say anything, the silence seeming to last a long time. ‘Well, was it? I asked you in letters, but you never replied …’ She was staring at him, and he sat there, eyes fixed dumbly on his glass. ‘I see. First Mother and me, then Tim. But now it’s “bisnis”, nothing else – and two trucks full of guns.’ She stubbed out her cigarette, getting slowly to her feet.

  I thought she had finally made up her mind and was going to tell him that if he didn’t dump them overboard, she’d notify the authorities. He seemed to think the same, for he started to tell her again that trading in arms wasn’t very different from trading in any other commodity. And then his voice trailed away as he saw her standing there with a look of contempt on her face. Then suddenly, without a word, she turned and left the cabin.

  He didn’t say anything for a while, sitting motionless, his head in his hands. At length he finished his drink and looked up at me, an effort at a wry smile as he said, ‘That’s why I didn’t want her out here. She’s very emotional and last time she was at Madehas … you know about that, do you?’ I nodded, and he went on, ‘She’s right. It was Cargoism then. And when Tim was injured, that was Cargoism, too. But this is different. The Buka Trading Co-operative is just like any other co-operative anywhere in the world, entirely commercial. Those guns are being shipped to make a profit, and they’ll be passed on to some dealer, a friend probably of one of the traders at Chinaman’s Quay in the Buka Passage. They’ll finish up somewhere in South East Asia, I imagine. It’s just a business deal.’

  ‘And Teopas?’ I asked. ‘Where does he come into it?’

  ‘He’s only looking after the Co-operative’s interest. It’s run by a man called Sapuru. Teopas comes from the same village.’ He glanced at his watch and got to his feet. ‘You shouldn’t have let Perenna persuade you to check the contents of those cases. The crew are mostly Buka men, and monkeying around with Cooperative cargo makes them suspicious. Just stick to navigation in future.’ And he left me to go on watch.

  Neither of them had offered me a drink, so I helped myself, drinking it, standing there and wondering about the Hollands, what the hell was going to happen. I had two small whiskies, then I went to my cabin, half expecting to find her there. But it was empty, and in a way I was glad. I was too damned tired. The questions could wait for the morning.

  They were talking about it when I went in to breakfast shortly after eight, Shelvankar saying, ‘How was I to know it is not what it says on the manifest?’ And Holtz shaking his head and muttering, ‘It had to be something bad, but I never thought he would be such a bloody fool … ’ He checked at the sight of me, selfconsciously burying his face in his cup.

  I sat down to an awkward silence. ‘Is Captain Holland still on watch?’ I asked, and Holtz nodded. ‘Where’s Luke then?’

  He didn’t say anything, both of them sitting very still, watching me. My breakfast arrived, and I ate in silence. ‘The forecast is good,’ Shelvankar said. Silence again, an uneasy sense of waiting.

  Then Luke appeared. ‘They don’t let me go near the trucks.’

  ‘How many of them?’ Holtz asked.

  ‘Four, five, I not sure. They say nothing to do with me. Is their Cargo.’ He hesitated, his eyes flitting nervously. Nobody said anything. Finally he turned to the door. ‘I tell Kepten. Buka men very funny about Cargo.’

  ‘What’s that mean?’ I asked Holtz.

  ‘Trouble.’ He stared at me, his eyes hostile. ‘Did you know what we were shipping off that beach?’

  ‘Not until early this morning.’

  ‘So, it is you who break open those crates.’ He seemed relieved. ‘I thought perhaps you were on board as an agent—’ He gave me a little apologetic smile. ‘My engine-room is full of rumours this morning.’

  ‘You mentioned trouble. What sort of trouble?’

  He shook his head, wiping his moustache and getting to his feet. ‘Maybe it is nothing.’ And he muttered a formal apology, escaping back to his engines.

  Shelvankar, too, got to his feet, excusing himself. ‘I must go to the radio.’

  As soon as I had finished breakfast, I went along to the wheelhouse. Holland wasn’t there, only Luke and the helmsman. At the far end of the tank deck I could see several of the crew standing by the trucks. ‘There are four now,’ Luke said. ‘All Buka men.’

  ‘Has Captain Holland been down there?’ I asked him.

  ‘Yes. He talk to them. But they don’t let him go near.’ And he added, ‘Is it true, Mr Sling’by, that you and Miss Holland find guns in those trucks?’ I nodded, and I heard his breath sucked in between his big white teeth. ‘Tha’s bad.’

  ‘Why?’

  He shrugged. ‘I don’ know. The war, I think. There was a bad war in the islands, very bad on Bougainville and Buka. The Japanese, the Americans, the Australians, they bring so much Cargo.’ He didn’t say anything more, staring morosely through the porthole, and when I asked him to explain the significance of that word ‘Cargo’, he gave a high, nervous laugh. ‘All Buka people laik Cargo. My people also. But Buka people, they laik very much because their ancestors send it to them from across the sea.’ He gave a shrug, laughing nervously again. ‘Is what they believe.’

  I went over to the chart table and stared at the pencilled cross that marked our 08.00 position. We were already more than halfway across the Solomo
n Sea. Soon the high mountains of Bougainville would show up on the radar. I turned to Luke again. He was still gazing nervously for’ard at the tank deck. ‘Have we any weapons up here or in the officers’ cabins?’

  He shook his head. ‘I not seen any.’

  And two truckfuls down there. I left him then and went to my cabin. The sun streamed in through the porthole, the small space hot and stuffy. I hesitated, but I knew rest would be impossible, so I went down the alleyway, past the empty wardroom, to what had once been the quarters for tank officers and other Service passengers. I pushed open the door. The same two-tier bunks and McAvoy lying there unshaven, his clothes piled in a heap on the upper berth, and a stale, old man’s smell pervading the cabin. His eyes were open, pale moonstones in rheumy sockets, the whites still bloodshot. ‘Come in and shut the door. That galley stinks.’

  I sat myself down on the bunk opposite. I don’t think he had been drinking, but his eyes looked vacant, staring into space, and when I asked him about the Cargo Cult, he didn’t seem to hear me. ‘You read much?’ he asked.

  ‘A little.’

  He nodded. ‘Thought mebbe you did. Myself, I never had the time. But there’s a writer man buried out here. On Upolu. I’ve climbed to the top of the hill overlooking the sea and seen his gravestone. Home is the sailor, home from sea. That’s what he wrote for them to put on it.’

  ‘Stevenson,’ I said.

  ‘Aye, that’s the man.’ He pulled himself up by his elbows till he was sitting propped up against the soiled pillow. ‘Care for a drink?’

  I shook my head. ‘I’ve only just had breakfast.’

  ‘That’s when you need it.’ He looked vaguely round the room, his eyes fastening on the locker below the porthole. ‘You’ll find a bottle and some glasses yonder. Pour me a dram, will you, and help yourself or not as you please.’ I got the bottle out, and as I poured him a drink, he went on, speaking slowly, ‘I’ve been thinking about that poet in his island grave. If they buried me at sea now … Just give it to me neat, will you? Burial at sea, I’ve never really liked the thought of that.’

  I helped myself to a drink while he rambled on about death and not giving it a thought until he was damned near sixty. ‘When you’re young, somehow it don’t seem very important. Just a fact of life. But dying …’ He was staring dully at the porthole where the sun blazed in a blue sky. ‘I was on a dhow once, in the Red Sea. We had gold on board and we were pirated. Threw the nakauda and his crew overboard to the sharks, all except me. I was just a kid bumming my way from place to place. White, not Arab, so they figured I’d do as a hostage if they got caught. Missed India by a full point, hit the Maldives instead. That was my first experience of coral, wrecked on the outer reef of Suvadiva. But it never worried me.’

  ‘What happened?’ I asked.

  ‘Got picked up by a vedi on its way back from Java to Addu Atoll.’ He shook his head slowly. ‘Death never worried me, then or later. I didn’t give it a thought until the Old Man went … ’

  Silence then, his neck showing white crease-lines, his Adam’s apple moving as he swallowed. ‘Never gave it a thought,’ he muttered again. ‘You leave it that late an’ it suddenly hits you. Wondering what it’s all about – life, death, the whole pointless bag of tricks. I lie here thinking … Then, by Christ, I need another drink.’ He held his glass out, and as I filled it, he said, ‘Wondering what to do about those Buka boys and their Cargo, are you?’

  ‘You’ve heard then?’

  He nodded. ‘Perenna. She woke me in the middle of the night to tell me.’ He leaned forward suddenly, spilling his drink. ‘Leave them be, Slingsby. That’s what I told Perenna. Now I’m telling you. It’s Cargo. You try getting it away from them, and they’ll turn nasty.’ I asked what was meant by the words ‘Cargo Cult’, and he began telling me about the missionaries and how the ships that had supplied them from Europe and America were responsible for it all. ‘It was Cargo, from out of the sea. How would the islanders know where it came from? They got the new God mixed up with their old religion of ancestor worship an’ came to believe that if it worked for the missionaries, then why shouldn’t it work for them? That’s how it started.’ He leaned forward, hunched over his knees, holding his glass carefully. ‘Missionaries! They’re half the damned trouble.’ He didn’t like missionaries. He was an atheist himself. ‘They only got themselves to blame …’ He went into a long tirade, his words confused and difficult to follow. Then suddenly he said, ‘Pako. That was the fellow’s name. He started the Cargo Cult on Buka, and it spread to Bougainville. And Muling. Muling was the original Cult wizard.’

  ‘When was that?’ I asked.

  ‘Oh, a long time ago. Before the Kaiser’s war. The Germans held Bougainville then. But the second war, that’s what really did it. First the Nips, then the Americans, finally the Australians. Can you blame them? All those ships stuffed with everything they’d ever dreamed of.’ He gave a low, cackling laugh. ‘Jesus! It’s a funny world. War material sent by God. And if you believe your ancestors make just as good gods, then why the hell shouldn’t they deliver the goods to their own descendants?’

  That was when I asked him about the welfare society Perenna had mentioned. ‘It was a co-operative, wasn’t it?’

  He didn’t say anything for a long time, sitting there, nursing his drink, staring at nothing. Then at length, he mumbled the name. ‘Hahalis Welfare Society. I saw the start of that.’ He was speaking very slowly, his voice barely audible. ‘There was a woman, in a village just north of Hahalis. I was there when those two young devils, Hagi and Teosin, abandoned their Mission schooling and came back with their heads stuffed full of the business methods they’d picked up. Communism, and baby gardens to increase the working population!’ A long pause; then he said, ‘But Cargoism was a fact of life in the islands long before the war. When I first joined the Holland Line …’ He was nodding to himself. ‘And he was in it up to his neck, of course.’

  I thought he meant Colonel Holland, but when I asked him why Colonel Holland had got himself mixed up in the Cargo Cult, he turned on me as though I had said something blasphemous. ‘No, it was the other one. Him and the Old Man, they were like as two peas. ‘Cept one of them was rotten. Aye, and something else, too—’ He frowned, groping for a word, then struck his fist against his knee. ‘Pagan. That’s what he was. Pagan bad.’ He was staring at nothing, silent, lost in the past.

  ‘Who?’ I asked him. ‘Who are you talking about?’

  ‘Red Holland, of course.’ He almost snarled the name. ‘We burned the bastard. Alive.’ His head turned, eyes staring wildly. ‘Why do you ask? He’s dead now and none of your business.’

  Shocked at the violence in him, I waited, expecting him to calm down. Instead, he suddenly screamed at me, ‘Get out!’ And then, muttering to himself: ‘They’re dead, all of them dead, the schooner captains, too. Lot of silly sheep, doing what he told them. Welcomed the Nips with open arms.’ He smiled, baring his teeth as though relishing the recollection. ‘We killed all four of them, took their ships back and sailed them for the Allies. Got a medal for that, but didn’t get my ship back. Finest little schooner I ever had, and I sank her in the Buka Passage.’ He was silent then, nursing his drink, his eyes with a glazed look. Finally he whispered, ‘Get out, d’you hear? Leave me be.’

  I left him then and went along the alleyway to the wheelhouse. Jona Holland was there talking to Shelvankar, his sister standing silent beside the helmsman. ‘Makes sense.’ He was staring down at the message in his hand. ‘He’ll take them up to Queen Carola, and we go straight to Anewa.’ He turned at the sight of me. ‘There’s a slight change of course. I’ve just heard from Hans. One of his RPLs is going to meet us off Shortland Island.’

  ‘Will Hans be on board?’ Perenna asked, her voice sounding sharp and brittle.

  He nodded. ‘Looks like it. I didn’t know he was back, but he says he sailed from Carola at first light, and he’s got Sapuru on board. He’s the head of the Co-operative
.’ He glanced at his watch. ‘Should make the rendezvous about five this afternoon, which means we’ll be shot of those guns by nightfall and can head round the south of Bougainville to deliver the Haulpaks to the copper port.’

  ‘You haven’t changed your mind, then?’

  He jerked his head round, staring at her angrily. ‘No. And if you want to know the destination of that cargo, you can ask Hans.’ He was already moving towards the door. ‘Work out that course, will you?’ he said to me and escaped into the alleyway.

  Perenna watched him go, then gave a little shrug. I thought it was a gesture of defeat, but then she turned to me. ‘What would you do? Come on, tell me. If you were captain …’ She was staring straight at me. ‘Would you hand those cases over, just like that? Well, would you?’

  ‘I can’t answer that,’ I said, turning away to the chart table.

  ‘But I want to know. I want to know if another man would behave the way Jona is behaving.’

  ‘We’re all different,’ I murmured, picking up the chart ruler. ‘We behave differently. Right now I don’t see that he’s any alternative.’

  ‘Meaning you would never have got yourself into this sort of situation.’

  I didn’t answer, bending over the chart and concentrating on the Shortland Island course, conscious all the time of her eyes still fixed on me. After a while she said, ‘Anyway, I’m glad you’re here.’ By the time I looked round she was gone.

  Shelvankar gave me the rendezvous, which was off Gomai Point to the west of Shortland, and after taking some sun sights and establishing our position, I altered course to 27°. But for that damned cargo I would have been enjoying myself, standing there on the bridge of an LCT steaming through a milky haze in the Solomon Sea to a landfall on my first Pacific island. When I relieved Luke after the midday meal, Shelvankar had the ship’s radio tuned to the Brisbane station. I don’t know what its normal range was meant to be, but that morning we were receiving it loud and clear, music mostly, interspersed with local items of news and the odd interview. It must have been about three in the afternoon. I remember the faint trace of Bougainville’s Mt Taroka had been showing on the radar for ten minutes or so, and I had just fixed our position. Then the disc jockey interrupted a Heron Island waitress playing a guitar and trying to sing like Joan Baez to announce a news flash: Queensland police had traced the driver of a stolen Jaguar found abandoned in the Glass House Mountains. He had been picked up at Toowoomba with A$500 in cash on him and an air ticket to Sydney. The Jaguar had belonged to a dealer in Sydney. The police had not released the name of the man who had stolen it, only his statement that he had driven it up to Tin Can Bay to pick up the drivers of two trucks that had been shipped out from the beach at about 2 a.m. on Sunday night. The description of the ship indicates some sort of a landing craft. Police enquiries have already established that an old wartime tank landing craft of the Holland Line cleared Sydney on Saturday morning bound for Bougainville. They have alerted the PNG authorities, and Bougainville has been requested to search the vessel on arrival. The trucks are suspected of carrying contraband, possibly stolen silver. A search is now being made for the two missing drivers.

 

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