the old panelled boardroom had been retained, and that Lionel had hung some remarkable pictures there. In fact he had said that Nick should call in one day and see the Kandinsky…
Sam took him through and down into a chlorine-smelling basement where the gym and lap-pool were. 'It's such a godsend, this place,' he said. Nick thought it was very small, and hardly compared with the Y; he saw that he came to a gym as a gay place, but that this one wasn't gay. An old man in a white jacket handed out towels and looked seasoned to the obscenities of the bankers. Nick did a perfunctory circuit, really just to oblige Sam, who was pedalling on a bike and filling in the
Nick had seen their lunch taking place in a murmurous old City dining room with oak partitions and tailcoated waiters. The restaurant Sam took him to was so bright, noisy and enormous that he had to shout out the details of his ?5,000. When Sam understood he flinched backwards for a second to show he'd thought it was going to be something important. 'Well, what fun,' he said.
It was nearly all men in the restaurant. Nick was glad he'd worn his best suit and almost wished he'd worn a tie. There were sharp-eyed older men, looking faintly harassed by the speed and noise, their dignity threatened by the ferocious youngsters who already had their hands on a new kind of success. Some of the young men were beautiful and exciting; a sort of ruthless sex-drive was the way Nick imagined their sense of their own power. Others were the uglies and misfits from the school playground who'd made money their best friend. It wasn't so much a public-school thing. As everyone had to shout there seemed to be one great rough syllable in the air, a sort of 'wow' or 'yow.' Sam was somewhat aloof from them but he didn't disown them. He said, 'I saw a marvellous
'Ah yes… well, you know my feelings about Strauss,' said Nick.
Sam looked at him disappointedly. 'Oh, Strauss is good,' he said. 'He's very good on women.'
'That wouldn't in itself put me off!' said Nick.
Sam chuckled at the point, but went on, 'The orchestral music's all about men and the operas are all about women. The only interesting male parts he wrote are both trouser-roles, Octavian, of course, and the Composer in
'Yes, quite,' said Nick, slightly pressured. 'He's not universal. He's not like Wagner, who understood everything.'
'He's not like Wagner at all,' said Sam. 'But he's still rather a genius.' They didn't get round to Nick's money till the end of lunch. 'It's just a little inheritance,' said Nick. 'I thought it might be fun to see what could be made of it.'
'Mm,' said Sam. 'Well, property's the thing now.'
'I wouldn't get much for five thousand,' said Nick.
Sam gave a single laugh. 'I'd buy shares in Eastaugh. They're developing half the City. Share price like the north wall of the Eiger.'
'Going up fast, you mean.'
'Or there's Fedray, of course.'
'What, Gerald's company?'
'Amazing performance last quarter, actually.'
Nick felt stirred but on balance uneasy at this idea. 'How does one go about it?' he said, with a gasp at his own silliness, but a certain recklessness too, after four glasses of Chablis. 'I wondered if you'd look after it for me.'
Sam put his napkin on the table and gestured to the waiter. 'OK!' he said brightly, to show it was a game, a bit of silliness of his own. 'We'll go for maximum profits. We'll see how far we can go.'
Nick fumbled earnestly for his wallet but Sam put the lunch on expenses. 'Important investor from out of town,' he said. He had Kesslers' own platinum MasterCard. Nick watched the procedure with a bead of anticipation in his eye. Outside on the pavement, Sam said, 'All right, my dear, send me a cheque. I'm going this way,' as if Nick had made it clear he was going the other. Then they shook hands, and as they did so Sam said, 'Shall we say three per cent commission,' so that they seemed to have solemnized the arrangement. Nick flushed and grinned because he'd never thought of that: he minded terribly. It was only later that it came to seem a good, optimistic thing, with the proper stamp of business to it.
Wani was still 'building up his team' at Ogee, and Nick was silently amazed by both his confidence and his lack of urgency. A woman called Melanie, dressed for a Dallas cocktail party, came in to do the typing, and artfully protracted her few bits of filing and phoning through the afternoon. Whenever her mother rang her she said things were 'hectic.' Wani had a wonderful Talkman, which was a portable phone he could take with him in the car or even into a restaurant, and Melanie was encouraged to call him on it if he was in a meeting and give him some figures. Then there were the boys, Howard and Simon, not actually a couple, but always referred to together, and acting together in the comfortable way of schoolboy best chums. Howard was very tall and square-jawed and Simon was short and owlish and pretended not to mind being fat. If anyone took them for lovers Simon shrieked with laughter and Howard explained tactfully that they were merely good friends. Nick liked nattering with them when he dropped into the office, and enjoyed their glancing hints that they both rather fancied him. 'Well, I swim and I work out a couple of times a week,' Nick would say, leaning back in his chair with the glow of shame that for him was still the cost of bragging; and Simon would say, 'Oh, I suppose I ought to try that.' They all carried on as if they'd never noticed Wani's beauty, and as if they took him entirely seriously. If his picture appeared in the social pages of
Nick was confident that none of them knew he was sleeping with the boss, and with ten or more years of practice he could head off almost any train of talk that might end in a thought-provoking blush. Part of him longed for the scandalous acclaim, but Wani exacted total secrecy, and Nick enjoyed keeping secrets. He worked up his earlier adventures as a cover, and told Howard and Simon a different version of the Ricky incident, replacing Wani with a Frenchman he'd met at the Pond the previous summer.
'So was he handsome, this Ricky?' said Simon.
Handsomeness was neither here nor there with Ricky, it was his look of stupid certainty, the steady heat of him, the way you started in deep, as though the first kiss was an old kiss interrupted and picked up again at full intensity-Nick said, 'Oh, magnificent. Dark eyes, round face, nice big nose-'
'Mmm,' said Simon.
'Perhaps a trifle too punctually, though not yet quite lamentably, bald.'
There was a moment's thought before Simon said, 'That's one of your things, isn't it?'
'What…?' said Nick, with a vaguely wounded look.
'A trifle too… how did it go?'
'I can't remember what I said… 'a trifle too punctually, though not yet quite lamentably, bald'?'
Howard sat back, with the nod of someone submitting to an easy old trick, and said, 'So did he have a beard?'
'Far from it,' said Nick. 'No, no-he spoke, as to cheek and chin, of the joy of the matutinal steel.'
They all laughed contentedly. It was one of Nick's routines to slip these plums of periphrasis from Henry James's late works into unsuitable parts of his conversation, and the boys marvelled at them and tried feebly to remember them-really they just wanted Nick to say them, in his brisk but weighty way.
'So what's that from, then?'
'The baldness? It's from
'It sounds like Henry James called everyone beautiful and marvellous,' said Sam, a little sourly, 'from what you say.'
'Oh, beautiful, magnificent…