After the war they set up a small chain of High Street chemists' shops,
with the object of guaranteeing their markets. The trouble was, they
knew all about chemistry and nothing about retailing, and the shops ate
up most of the profits made by the factory.
"I was working for a stockbroker at the time, and I'd made a little
money playing the market. I went to my boss and offered him a half-share
in the profits if he would finance the deal. We bought the company, and
immediately sold the factory to ICI for almost as much as we paid for
the shares.
Then we closed the shops and sold them one by one-they were all in prime
sites."
"I'll never understand this sort of thing," Peters said. "If the factory
and the shops were worth so much, why were the shares cheap?"?"
"Because the enterprise was losing money. They hadn't paid a dividend
for years. The management didn't have the guts to cash in their chips,
so to speak. We did. Everything in business is courage." He started to
eat his sandwich.
"It's fascinating," Peters said. He looked at his watch. "I must go."
"&g day?" Laski said lightly.
"Today's one of the days--and that always means headaches."
"Did you solve that problem?"
"Which?"
"Routes." Laski lowered his voice a fraction.
"Your security people wanted you to send the convoy a different way each
time."
"No." Peters was embarrassed: it had been indiscreet of him to tell
Laski about that dilemma.
"There is really only one sensible way to get there.
However ..." He stood up.
Laski smiled and kept his voice casual. "So today's big shipment goes by
the old direct route." Peters put a finger to his lips. "Security," he
said.
"Sure."
Peters picked up his raincoat. "Goodbye."
"I'll see you tomorrow," Laski said, smiling broadly.
ARTHUR COLE climbed the steps from the station, his breath rattling
unhealthily in his chest. A gust of warm air came up from the bowels of
the Underground, wrapped itself snugly around him, and blew away. He
shivered slightly as he emerged into the street.
The sunshine took him by surprise--it had hardly been dawn when he
boarded the train. The air was chilled and sweet. Later it would become
poisonous enough to knock out a policeman on point duty. Cole remembered
the first time that had happened: the story had been an Evening Post
exclusive.
He walked slowly until his breathing eased.
Twenty-five years in newspapers have ruined my health, he thought. In
truth, any industry would have done the same, for he was prone to worry
and to drink, and his chest was weak; but it comforted him to blame his
profession.
Anyway, he had given up smoking. He had been a nonsmoker for--he looked
at his watch-one hundred and twenty-eight minutes, unless he counted the
night, in which case it was eight hours. He had already passed several
moments of risk: immediately after the alarm clock went off at
four-thirty (he usually smoked one on the we); driving away from his
house, at the moment when he got into top gear and turned on the radio
ready for the five o'clock news; accelerating down the first fast
stretch of the A1Z as his large Ford hit its stride; and waiting on a
cold, open-air Tube station in East London for the earliest train of the
day.
The BBC's five o'clock bulletin had not cheered him. It had had all his
attention as he drove, for the route was so familiar that he negotiated
the bends and roundabouts automatically, from memory. The lead story
came from Westminster: the latest industrial relations bill had been
passed by Parliament, but the majority had been narrow.
Cole had caught the story the previous night on television. That meant
the morning papers would certainly have it, which in turn meant that the
Post could do nothing with it unless there were developments later in
the day.
There was a story about the Retail Price Index.
The source would be official government statistics, which would have
been embargoed until midnight: again, the mornings would have it.
It was no surprise to learn that the car workers' strike was still on it
would hardly have been settled overnight.
Test cricket in Australia solved the sports editor's problem, but the
score was not sufficiently sensational for the front page.
Cole began to worry.
He entered the Evening Post building and took the elevator. The newsroom
occupied the entire first floor. It was a huge, I-shaped open-plan
office. Cole entered at the foot of the I. To his left were the
typewriters and telephones of the copy takers, who would type out
stories dictated over the phone; to the right, the filing cabinets and
bookshelves of specialist writers--political, industrial, crime,
defense, and more. Cole walked up the stem of the I, through rows of
desks belonging to ordinary common-or-garden reporters, to the long news
desk which divided the room in two. Behind it was the U-shaped
sub-editors' table, and beyond that, in the crosspiece of the I, was the
sports department semi-independent kingdom, with its own editor,
reporters, and subs.
Cole occasionally showed curious relatives around the place: he always
told them: "It's supposed to work like a production line. Usually it's
more like a bun fight." It was an exaggeration, but it always got a
laugh.
The room was brightly lit, and empty. As deputy news editor, Cole had a
section of the news desk to himself. He opened a drawer and took out a
coin, then walked to the vending machine in Sport and punched buttons
for instant tea with milk and sugar. A teleprinter chattered to life,
breaking the silence.
As Cole walked back to his desk with his paper cup, the far door bumped
open. A short, gray-haired figure came in, wearing a bulky parka and
cycle clips. Cole waved and called: "Morning, George."
"Hello, Arthur. Cold enough for you?" George began to take off his coat.
The body inside it was small and thin. Despite his age, George's title
was Head Lad: he was chief of the office's team of messengers. He lived
in Potters Bar and cycled to work. Arthur thought that an astonishing
feat.
Arthur put down his tea, shrugged out of his raincoat, turned on the
radio, and sat down. The radio began to murmur. He sipped tea and gazed
straight ahead. The newsroom was scruffy--chairs were scattered
randomly, newspapers and sheets of copy paper littered the desks, and
redecoration had been postponed in last year's economy drive but the
scene was too familiar to register. Cole's mind was on the first
edition, which would be on the streets in three hours.
Today's paper would have sixteen pages. Fourteen of the first edition's
pages already existed as semi cylindrical metal plates on the press
downstairs. They contained advertising, features, television programs,
and news written in such a way that its age would--it was hoped--be
overlooked by the reader. That left the back page for the sports editor
and the front page for Arthur Cole.
Parliament, a strike, and inflation--they were all yesterday stories.
There was not much he could do with them. Any of them could be dressed
up with a today intro, like
"Cabinet Ministers today held an inquest on the Government's narrow
escape ..." There was one of those for every situation. Yesterday's
disaster became today's news story with "Dawn today revealed the full
horror ..." Yesterday's murder benefitted from "Detectives today
searched London for the man who ..." Arthur's problem had given birth to
scores of cliches. In a civilized society, he thought, when there was no
news there would be no newspapers. It was an old thought, and he brushed
it out of his mind impatiently.
Everyone accepted that the first edition was rubbish three days out of
six. But that gave no comfort, because it was the reason Arthur Cole had
the job of producing that edition. He had been deputy news editor for
five years. Twice during that period the news editor's chair had fallen
vacant, and both times a younger man than Cole had been promoted.
Someone had decided that the number two job was the limit of his
capabilities. He disagreed.
The only way he could demonstrate his talent was by turning out an
excellent first edition. Unfortunately, how good the edition was
depended largely upon luck. Cole's strategy was to aim for a paper which
was consistently slightly better than the opposition's first edition. He
thought he was succeeding: whether anyone upstairs had noticed, he had
no idea; and he would not let himself worry about it.
George came up behind him and dumped a pile of newspapers on his desk.
"Young Stephen's reported sick again," he grumbled.
Arthur smiled. "What is it, hangover or a runny nose?"
"Remember what they used to tell us? "If you can walk, you can work."
Not this lot."
Arthur nodded.
"Am I right?" George said.
"You're right." The two of them had been lads together on the Post.
Arthur had got his NUJ card after the war. George, who had not been
called up, had remained a messenger.
George said. "We were keen. We wanted to work."
Arthur picked up the top newspaper from the pile. This was not the first
time George had complained about his staff, nor the first time Arthur
had commiserated with him. But Arthur knew what was wrong with the Lads
of today. Thirty years ago, a smart Lad could become a reporter;
nowadays, that road was closed. The new system had a double impact:
bright youngsters stayed at school instead of becoming messengers; and
those who did become messengers knew they had no prospect, so they did
as little work as they could get away with. But Arthur could not say
this to George, because it would call attention to the fact that Arthur
had done so much better than his old colleague So he agreed that the
youth of today were rotten.
George seemed disposed to persist with his grouse. Arthur cut him off by
saying: "Anything on the overnight wire?"
"I'll get it. Only I've got to do all the papers myself--"
"I'd better see the wire copy first." Arthur turned away. He hated to
pull rank. He had never learned to do it naturally, perhaps because he
took no pleasure in it. He looked at the Morning Star: they had led with
the industry bill.
It was unlikely that there would be any national news on the teletype
yet; it was too early. But foreign news came in sporadically during the
night, and more often than not it included one story which could be the
splash, in a pinch. Most nights there was a major fire, a multiple
murder, a riot, or a coup somewhere in the world. The Post was a London
paper and did not like to lead with foreign news unless it was
sensational; but it might be better than "Cabinet Ministers today held
an inquest..
George dumped a sheet of paper several feet long on his desk. Not
cutting the sheet into individual stories was his way of showing
displeasure. He probably wanted Arthur to complain, so that he could
point out how much work there was for him to do with the early Lad off
sick. Arthur fumbled in his desk for scissors, and began to read.
He went through a political story from Washington, a Test Match report,
and a Middle East roundup. He was halfway through a minor Hollywood
divorce when the phone rang. He picked it up and said: "Newsdesk."
"I've got an item for your gossip column." It was a man's voice, with a
broad Cockney accent.
Cole was instantly skeptical. This was not the voice of a man who would
have inside information on the love lives of the aristocracy. He said:
"Good. Would you like to tell me your name?"
"Never mind about that. Do you know who Tim Fitzpeterson is?"
"of course."
"Well, he's making a fool of himself with a redhead. She must be twenty
years younger than him. Do you want his phone number?"
"Please." Cole wrote it down. He was interested now. If a Minister's
marriage had broken up, it would make a good story, not just a gossip
item. "Who's the girl?" he said.
"Calls herself an actress. Truth is, she's a brass Just give him a ring
right away, and ask him about Dizi Disney." The line went dead.
Cole frowned. This was a little odd: most tipsters wanted money, for