establishments without roots or responsibility.’
‘Do you think I’ve got 50,000 employees,’ Gareth snapped, ‘without any kind of responsibility? Sure, I did my stint on the factory floor, so I happen to know men work, not just for a pay packet, but because they’re proud of what they produce, and because the people they work for care about them. You lot think as long as you give the staff a gold watch after fifty years’ hard grind, and a booze-up at Christmas, and then forget about them, it’s enough. In my companies,’ he went on, the Welsh accent becoming more pronounced, ‘we tell everyone what’s going on. We have a policy of employee participation. We even have someone from the shop floor in on board meetings. A blueprint of the company’s future is regularly circulated to all staff. It brings them in, makes them feel they belong. Every worker can ask the management a question and feel sure of getting an answer.’
He was stunning. There is nothing more seductive than seeing the person one loves excelling in a completely unexpected field. I wanted to throw bouquets and shout ‘Bravo’.
Tommy Lloyd’s lips, however, were curling scornfully.
‘Good of you to give us your advice, Mr Llewellyn,’ he said. ‘That kind of Utopian concept may work in the building industry, but I don’t get the impression you know much about engineering. We’ve been running our own show very successfully, you know, for fifty years.’
‘That’s the trouble. Seaford-Brennen’s was a first-class family firm, but you’ve been living on your reputation for the last twenty years.’
‘We’ve got the finest, most advanced research department in the country,’ said Tommy Lloyd, stung, but still smiling.
‘That’s the trouble again,’ said Gareth. ‘Lots of research, and none of it applied. Two months ago I came back from a world trip. The Brush Group and British Electrical were everywhere, you were nowhere. I’m sorry, but it’s the truth.’
Tommy Lloyd picked up a cigar and started paring off the end.
Gareth turned to Kenny Morgan who handed him a couple of sheets of paper.
‘Kenny’s been looking into your books,’ said Gareth.
‘He’s no right to,’ said Tommy Lloyd, turning purple.
‘He calculates you won’t even make a profit next year, certainly not ?8 million as you forecast. That’s a lot of bread.’
‘I consider that a gross breach of security,’ said Tommy Lloyd, addressing Ricky directly.
Ricky ignored him and continued looking at Gareth, who went on softly:
‘And if anything, Kenny’s estimate is still too high. All I’m saying is you need help in running your business, and I intend to make it what it’s never been — efficient. You’ve got to face up to international competition: Americans, Germans, Japs, Russians. Last year I saw some industrial complexes in Siberia running at a fraction of our costs. If we’re going to beat the Russians at their own game, there’s no room for companies with a purely domestic market.
‘And your domestic figures aren’t very pretty, either,’ he added. ‘You all know they’ve sagged from 15.2 per cent of the home market four years ago to 4 per cent today.’
He paused, stretching his fingers out on the table, and examining them for a minute.
‘Now, what is the solution?’ he said, looking round the table.
Xander drew the bar across a pair of rugger posts.
‘I think we’d all better start practising the goose step,’ he said.
There was an awful silence. All eyes turned once more on Xander, but this time more with irritation than embarrassment. A muscle was going in Gareth’s cheek.
‘When I need a funny man,’ he said sharply, ‘I’ll hire Morecambe and Wise. Do you personally have the answer to the problem?’
Xander leaned back for a minute to admire his artwork.
‘Well, not right here in my pocket,’ he said, and hiccoughed gently.
‘Well shut up then,’ snapped Gareth.
He got out a packet of cigarettes. Several lighters were raised, but he used his own, inhaling deeply, then said briskly:
‘To get you out of the wood, Ricky and I suggest the following measures. To start with Seaford International is going to write off their ?15 million loan as a loss, and give you a further ?10 million over the next four years for a new model programme, and for modernizing the factories. Secondly, the existing products need more stringent tests. Practically everything you’ve produced recently has been blighted by poor reliability. Thirdly, I intend to re-jig the production operation. It’s got to be speeded up. Waiting lists are so long, buyers have been forced to go elsewhere. I’d like to have the new engines rolling off the assembly by January at the latest. And you’re not producing enough either, so instead of laying off men at Glasgow and Bradford, we’re going to initiate a second shift system. There are enough men up there who need work. Then it’s up to you to sell them. That’s your baby, Tommy.’
Tommy Lloyd turned puce at the casual use of his Christian name.
‘We’ve got to completely re-think the export market too,’ Gareth went on. ‘The appetite in the Middle East and in Africa for your sort of stuff, particularly power stations, should produce thumping big orders.’
‘You talk as though we’ve been sitting round since the war doing F. . all,’ said Tommy Lloyd stiffly. ‘Anyone can put up proposals.’
‘Exactly,’ said Gareth. ‘So let’s get the ball rolling early tomorrow. Over the next fortnight Kenny and I plan to have talks with all of you individually. I won’t be here all the time, but Kenny’s going to put in a four-day week for the moment. Kenny,’ he added, turning and looking at his manager’s battered lugubrious face, ‘I can assure you, is much tougher than he looks.’
A tremor of sycophantic laughter went through the room.
Gareth stood for a minute, looking cool, almost indifferent, but his left hand was squeezing the back of a chair so hard I could see the whiteness of his knuckles.
‘I’m looking forward to working with you,’ he said softly, ‘but I’d like to add that I find it impossible to breathe or conduct business in a taut, patched-up regime; so you’re either for me, or against me.’
And except for Xander, who was gazing blankly into space, and Tommy Lloyd, who was still looking livid, everyone seemed to be eating out of his hand. For a minute he glared at them grimly, then suddenly he smiled for the first time, the harsh, heavy features suddenly illuminated. The contrast was extraordinary; you could feel the tension going out of the room, as though you’d loosened your fingers on the neck of a balloon.
‘I’m sorry I’ve been so blunt, but these things had to be said. You’re in a hell of a mess, but frankly, I wouldn’t have taken you on if I didn’t think you could get yourselves out of it.’
When he sat down there was even a murmur of approval.
Ricky rose to his feet, oozing satisfaction like an over-ripe plum.
‘Thank you, Gareth. I’m sure you can count on 100 per cent support. Now gentlemen, I believe that will be all today.’
There was a shuffling of feet. Everyone started to file out looking shell-shocked.
‘I’ll leave you then,’ said Ricky. ‘Again, many congratulations. We’ll talk later today.’
I was dying to tell Gareth how great he’d been. But Annabel Smith was already doing it, speaking in an undertone, smiling warmly into his eyes, the predatory, self-possessed bitch.
Oh please at least let him say goodbye to me, I prayed, as I started towards the door.
Gareth turned. ‘I want a word with you, Alexander, and you, Octavia,’ he said shortly.
‘Oh dear,’ sighed Xander, ‘I was afraid you might. Are we going to get a thousand lines, or is birching the only answer?’
Chapter Fifteen