Islay. The Jeannie Rose vanished without trace. No member of either crew was ever found. Then again on the 17th of May. This time a well-known racing yacht, the Cap Gris Nez, an English built and owned craft, despite her name, highly experienced skipper, navigator and crew, all of them long-time and often successful competitors in R.O.R.C. races. That class. Left Londonderry for the north of Scotland in fine weather. Disappeared. She was found almost a month later - or what was left of her — washed up on the Isle of Skye.'

'And the crew?'

'Need you ask? Never found. Then the last case, a few weeks ago - August 8th. Husband, wife, two teenage children, son and daughter. Converted lifeboat, the Kingfisher. By all accounts a pretty competent sailor, been at it for years. But he'd never done any night navigation, so he set out one calm evening to do a night cruise. Vanished. Boat and crew.'

'Where did he set out from?'

'Torbay.'

That one word made his afternoon. It made mine, too. I said: 'And do you still think the Nantesville is hell and gone to Iceland or some remote fjord in northern Norway?'

'I never thought anything of the kind.' Uncle's human relationship barometer had suddenly swung back from friendly to normal, normal lying somewhere between cool and glacial. 'The significance of the dates will not have escaped you?'

'No, Annabelle, the significance has not escaped me.' The Buckie fishing-boat, the Evening Star, had been found washed up on Islay three days after the S.S. Holmivood had vanished off the south coast of Ireland. The Jeanme Rose had vanished exactly three days after the M.V. Antara had as mysteriously disappeared in the St. George's Channel. The Cap Gris Nez, the R.O.R.C. racer that had finally landed up on the rocksof the island of Skye had vanished the same day as the M.V. Headley Pioneer had disappeared somewhere, it was thought, off Northern Ireland. And the converted lifeboat, Kingfisher, had disappeared, never to be seen again, just two days after the S.S. Hurricane Spray had left the Clyde, also never to be seen again. Coincidence was coincidence and I classed those who denied its existence with intellectual giants like the twentieth-century South African president who stoutly maintained that the world was flat and that an incautious step would take you over the edge with results as permanent as they would be disastrous: but this was plain ridiculous. The odds against such a perfect matching of dates could be calculated only in astronomical terms: while the complete disappearance of the crews of four small boats that had come to grief in so very limited an area was the final nail in the coffin of coincidence. I said as much to Uncle.

'Let us not waste time by dwelling upon the obvious, Caroline,' Uncle said coldly, which was pretty ungracious of him as the idea had never even entered his head until I had put it there four hours previously. 'The point is - what is to be done? Islay to Skye is a pretty big area. Where does this get us?'

'How much weight can you bring to bear to secure the cooperation'of the television and radio networks?'

There was a pause, then: 'What do you have in mind, Caroline?' Uncle at his most forbidding.

'An insertion of an item in their news bulletins.'

'Well.' An even longer pause. 'It was done daily during the war, of course. I believe it's been done once or twice since. Can't compel them, of course - they're a stuffy lot, both the B.B.C. and the I.T.A.' His tone left little doubt as to his opinion of those diehard reactionaries who brooked no interference, an odd reaction from one who was himself a past-master of brookmanship of this nature. 'If they can be persuaded that it's completely apolitical and in the national interest there's a chance. What do you want?'

'An item that a distress signal has been received from a sinking yacht somewhere south of Skye, Exact position unknown. Signals ceased, the worst feared, an air-sea search to be mounted at first light to-morrow. That's all,'

'I may manage it. Your reason, Caroline?'

'I want to look around. I want an excuse to move around without raising eyebrows.'

'You're going to volunteer the Firecrest for this search and then poke around where you shouldn't?'

'We have our faults, Annabelle, Harriet and I, but we're not crazy. I wouldn't take this tub across the Serpentine without a favourable weather forecast. It's blowing a Force 7 outside. And a boat search would take a lifetime too long in those parts. What I had in mind was this. At the very eastern rip of Torbay Island, about five miles from the villages there's a small deserted sandy cove, semicircular and well protected by steep bluffs and pine trees. Will you please arrange to have a long-range helicopter there exactly at dawn.'

'And now it's your turn to think I am crazy,' Uncle Arthur said coldly. That remark about the sea-keeping qualities of big own brain-child, the Firecrest, would have rankled badly. 'I'm supposed to snap my fingers and hey presto I a helicopter will be there at dawn.'

'That's fourteen hours from now, Annabelle. At five o'clock this morning you were prepared to snap your fingers and have a helicopter here by noon. Seven hours. Exactly half the time. But that was for something important like getting me down to London to give me the bawling out of a lifetime before firing me.'

'Call me at midnight, Caroline. I hope to God you know what you are doing.'

I said: 'Yes, sir,' and hung up. I didn't mean, Yes, sir, I knew what I was doing, I meant, Yes, sir, I hoped to God I knew what I was doing.

If the carpet in the Shangri-la saloon had cost a penny under five thousand pounds, then old Skouras must have picked it up second-hand somewhere. Twenty by thirty, bron2e and russet and gold, but mainly gold, it flowed across the deck like a field of ripe corn, an illusion heightened both by its depth and the impediment it offered to progress. You had to wade through the damn' thing. I'd never seen an item of furnishing like it in my life except for the curtains that covered two-thirds of the bulkhead space. The curtains made the carpet look rather shoddy. Persian or Afghanistan, with a heavy gleaming weave that gave a shimmering shot-silk effect with every little movement of the Shangri-la, they stretched all the way from deckhead to deck. What little of the bulkheads that could be seen were sheathed in a satiny tropical hardwood, the same wood as was used for the magnificent bar that tookup most of the after bulkhead of the saloon. The opulently upholstered settees and armchairs and bar-stools, dark green leather with gold piping, would have cost another fortune, even the trade-in value of the beaten copper tables scattered carelessly about the carpet would have fed a family of five for a year. At the Savoy Grill.

Вы читаете When Eight Bells Toll
Добавить отзыв
ВСЕ ОТЗЫВЫ О КНИГЕ В ИЗБРАННОЕ

0

Вы можете отметить интересные вам фрагменты текста, которые будут доступны по уникальной ссылке в адресной строке браузера.

Отметить Добавить цитату
×