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Authors: Dorothy Dunnett

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BOOK: Roman Nights
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There was only one with the cockpit canvas stripped off and she was a gas: a big, snow-white ketch with two tall pitch-pine masts, glittering with naval brass and expensive teak and fine paintwork. A man in a peaked cap standing under the waterproof awning nipped up to the aft deck as the Fiat drew up and hopping ashore, sprinted up to us with a broad grin on his face. He was a short, powerful man with large ears and the gold lettering around his capband said
Dolly.
His name, it turned out, was Lenny Milligan, and his accent, greeting us all, was ripe Cockney. He helped haul out the luggage, and we walked towards the lushest seagoing pad in the harbour.

I don’t know why it surprised me. Next to
Who’s Who.
Maurice kept an up-to-date Lloyd’s Register in his library. We all knew the
Dolly
was a gaff-rigged auxiliary ketch of 59 tons with a 60 BHP auxiliary engine. What’s more, the owner’s name in the list bore an asterisk, which meant that Johnson Johnson held a Board of Trade Master’s Certificate.

I was glad of it. The Tyrrhenian Sea in November is no place to be without the Board of Trade Master’s Certificate, and perhaps even with it.

Below decks, Johnson’s yacht was deep-carpeted and warm and candidly comfortable. In the desperate silence of ignorance, Jacko traversed with me the cushioned saloon whose panelled walls contained all the civilized comforts. Johnson had a television set and a stereo record player and a radio and a fridge and a full-scale bar within which Lenny, in a white jacket, was already making himself busy. We passed through a door at the forward end and into a passage which contained the door of the galley on its right and that of a single-berth cabin on its left.

‘Mine,’ said Johnson, indicating the last. He opened a third door facing us at the end of the short passage and ushered Jacko gently in. ‘The forward stateroom. You’ll share this with Innes. Lenny sleeps in the fo’c’sle beyond it, but he won’t disturb you if he can help it. He comes and goes by a hatch to the deck.’

There were two single bunks in the stateroom and the covers and curtains and cushions were Swiss and patterned in pure fadeless dyes of bright colour. What Johnson didn’t put on his person, he put, it seemed, on to his ship and his palette. I said, ‘I can’t wait to see where the Professor will doss.’

Jacko was trying the bed. Johnson led the way back to the saloon. He said, ‘She’s not a very large yacht, remember.’

I stopped where I was, which was in front of a bookcase. I said, ‘You wouldn’t dare.’

‘I don’t know what you mean,’ said Johnson, his bifocals perfectly limpid. ‘Very few boats have double beds. Double feather beds with monogrammed sheets and four pillows.’

I sat down. Jacko, emerging behind me, said, ‘Oh, my Gawd,’ and started to cackle. The cackle became a shriek. ‘You can put each other’s rollers in, Ruthie.’

I said, ‘I am not sharing a bed with Professor Hathaway.’

‘No, you’re not,’ said Johnson comfortably. ‘Although it was an enticing vision of splendour, I must confess. You are, however, sharing a stateroom. Come and see.’

I glared at him, smacked Jacko’s head, and tramped out of the saloon and up into the cockpit. There, he opened a door leading aft.

He had given us his own master stateroom. It didn’t contain a double bed, but it did have every other amenity known to man, including two quilted bunks and a bathroom. I wondered who occupied the other bed when he had the boat to himself. He brought in my case and said, ‘She’s a nice old stick. I hope you won’t find it too awful.’

I said, ‘Who was Dolly?’

Jacko was unpacking. Behind me, Lenny was laying glasses out on a tray. Johnson put his hands in his pockets and leaned against the stateroom door and just grinned. ‘A one-eyed coloured Gay Power bus driver in Peckham,’ he said sweetly. ‘Why do
you
come to the clinic?’

‘Sorry,’ I said.

‘Granted,’ he said.

Then we all went into the saloon and drank gin until the Maserati arrived. We’d got the Professor but we hadn’t, thank God, brought the telescope.

After lunch, the Director left to make her statutory call on Bob and Eddie in the training post, taking the three of us with her. The trip to the hills was uneventful, if you discount a series of the mid-brown torrents which poured down the mountain on top of us, and the hideous discomfort of the student establishment, which had been shipped out piecemeal from England and erected by none other than Bob and Eddie, who would never add a touch of distinction to your rock garden.

They were birds of passage, in any case, creating a centre for others to live in. Professor Hathaway complimented them on their log book, and they became even more cheerful when they heard that they were to drive down to
Dolly
for dinner. Jacko, Innes and I hung about adding the light relief till it was over. Then we all piled into two cars and slid down the hill to the harbour.

Lenny did the dinner. We had baby clam soup poured over toast squares, and breaded veal escalopes with frail bones like thrushes and fried slices of salty, crumbled artichokes, frilly green inside their brown coatings. And sweet pastry rings made with brandy, and served red hot and with a sifting of sugar and cinnamon. And coffee.

I ate my way through it all, and Johnson filled my glass from a tinselled Murano glass wine jar and I didn’t stop him. I had a liqueur called centerbe, and maybe another one.

So did Bob and Eddie, who were wearing collars and ties in honour of Professor Hathaway, and red satiny faces in tribute to Johnson’s centerbe. Eddie, enunciating like an elocution teacher, said ‘You’ll never guess who we met the day Charles came to Naples. Sophia Ow.’

The Ow was because Bob had kicked him. It was no news that they had had a drink with Charles during his visit to Naples. Anyone who knew me in England also knew Charles. Eddie had been loud in his indignation over the jailing and I had explained how it was all a mistake because of Charles’s flatmate. They told me a few stories about Sassy that had been going round the network that not even I knew.

But I didn’t know about Sophia. Sophia Lindrop was a sharp little blonde who had been educated at Roedean and Zermatt and three foreign universities, including Hamburg. She was in the same circuit as Charles. She was engaged to Charles when I first met him.

There was no point in embarrassing anybody, so when Bob launched into a desperate account of some Italian pop concert, I let him get on with it. I didn’t have any more centerbe. In fact, to be candid, I excused myself pretty soon and got rid of the centerbe I’d had already, as well as the clams and most of the veal cutlets. It was a terrible waste.

I was standing up on deck after, feeling low and looking at the lights over the water when the saloon door opened and shut on the chatter and Johnson vaulted up and strolled over beside me. He had left his pipe behind. He was altogether too damned perceptive. After a moment he said, ‘A little fair girl, isn’t she? Lenny saw them together, as it happens. Not, I should have thought, very disturbing competition.’

It was none of his bloody business. I wasn’t going to go through life spending every second day crying on Johnson. I didn’t answer. He waited and then put his arms on the rail and said thoughtfully, ‘So. Disturbing competition. Perhaps even the someone else he was engaged to, who was so furious.’

I had forgotten I had ever told him that. I talk too much. I blew my nose and glared at Vesuvius. Johnson said, ‘I wonder just how much she dislikes you. Enough, would you say, to have your cabin searched?’

I ran away from him. I got down to the loo just in time to part company with the rest of the veal cutlets. I heard the saloon door open and shut, and then open and shut once again. When I came to the door of the stateroom Johnson was standing there, with a bottle of mineral water in one hand and a glass in the other. He said, ‘I think this might help. May I come in?’

He came in anyway and I backed and sat on the bed. When you came to look at it, the cabin was perfectly neat. I took the glass and held it chattering against the neck of the bottle as he poured. I said, ‘You said our things had been searched.’

He put down the bottle. ‘The whole ship had been searched. I called in the carabinieri but there was no trace of the intruders. It had been done very neatly. And nothing that we know of had been taken.’

There was the least firmness in the words
that we know of.
I said, ‘I burned the negatives from the meat safe. I told you.’

‘I know you did,’ Johnson said. ‘But the character who pinched the dud film from Maurice’s vase doesn’t know it. He’s developed that roll, and
he
thinks the blank pictures were planted. Now he means to find out which of us has the real film.’

There was a long silence. I found I was still holding the glass of mineral water. I drank it off and put it beside a guidebook lying beside the Profs bed. It said, ‘stromboli –
an unimaginable and stupendous reality in a painting of both exultant and terrifying eurhythmy. The Exhaust Pipe of the Tyrrhenian Sea.’
I said, ‘So now he knows we haven’t got it. Maybe he’ll try Di and Maurice and Timothy. And when he finds they haven’t got it either, he’ll give up. After a while, even couture pictures, surely, lose their value.’

My hands were cold and I gripped them together. ‘Look. It’s Charles’s film he seems to be hunting, and I’ve seen it. Girls and fashion shots. No desperate international espionage, only skirt lengths.’

‘You’d be surprised,’ Johnson said, ‘what you can get into a skirt length. That’s why I wish you’d kept Charles’s pictures. There are some ingenious men about in this business. Men who’d print a formula on a model’s hatband and persuade an innocent photographer, say, to take a shot of her. Charles himself may not have known what was in his roll of pictures.’

There was another silence. Then I said, ‘In that case, you think the hunt for the film will continue?’

‘My dear, I hope so,’ said Johnson patiently. ‘Because, don’t you see, we must try and catch him? The man who is hunting that film is the man who can vindicate Digham.’

I said, ‘Of course,’ but I found it hard to be cheered by the prospect. Then he asked about Sophia Lindrop, and I told him.

We went back to the saloon after that, and in due course saw off Bob and Eddie, who had some trouble getting from deck to jetty. The night with the Prof in the stateroom went off rather better than I had feared. She retired just after we speeded our dinner guests, and when I eventually got to the cabin, primed with two pale blue liqueurs and a lot of juvenile exhortations from Jacko, I found her already in bed, buttoned up to the chin in Viyella pyjamas and deep in her paperback guidebook with the chapter headed vulcano: Rich of Fenomena. The stateroom was foggy with Manikins.

She continued to smoke and flip the pages while I undressed. I was in my nightdress and sitting down oiling off eyeliner when she laid the book down and said, ‘You don’t quite fit your clothes, do you? What is it? Nibbling for comfort? Too many patisseries at Donay’s and Aragno’s?’

I was so taken aback I looked at her in the mirror with my mouth open and the smudgy black pad in my hand. It was perfectly true. In the first six months of living with Charles I had been about fourteen pounds underweight: edgy but interesting. In the last few weeks, on the other hand, I had found it hard to avoid those small night-time visits to Innes’s grandmother’s cookies. I wasn’t fat. I wasn’t feeble-minded enough to be pregnant. But the hook and eye above the zip didn’t get done up so often anymore.

Lilian Hathaway said, ‘I’ve got some sewing of my own to look after. If you leave your things out, I’ll fix them once we are sailing.’

It had never occurred to me that the professors of this world would ever know what to do with a needle unless it was oscillating. I looked at her and said defensively, ‘It’s all right, you know. I can manage.’

Professor Hathaway stubbed out her cigar, switched off her bed light and plumping her pillow prepared to lay herself down for some slumber. ‘I am not proposing,’ said the Director of the Trust with some resignation, ‘to psychoanalyse you. I think, however, you should adhere to some sort of diet. Otherwise we should both have our work wasted, shouldn’t we?’

I said something. Her eyes were closed already. The pebble glasses lay at her bedside, long-legged and lifeless as locusts. She went to sleep right away, with a quiet, bubbling snore which you could almost call comforting.

 

 

TWELVE

The next morning I dashed out to a newsstand while Lenny was cooking breakfast. The papers were full of:

 

ARRESTATO A ROMA: FIGLIO DI MARCHESE INGLESE

 

His madre, I noticed, had flown in, and good luck to her. I bought a diet sheet and went back and helped Lenny fry eggs while we discussed it. Breakfast for lunedi, we worked out between us, was going to be latte gr. 200 and un uovo sodo o alia coque.

I thought, as we prepared to set sail for Ischia, that milk and one boiled egg was my bloody level exactly.

The Island of Ischia lies eighteen miles out of the Bay of Naples and it takes an hour and a half of Mercedes-Benz chugging to get there. No one tried to put up
Dolly’
s
sails, although both Johnson and Lenny wore navy sweaters and baggy blue trousers and moved about gently like hospital orderlies in trim canvas sandshoes.

There was a lot of movement, which is the correct seagoing term for a lousy pitching, and Jacko stayed below admiring the cabin ceiling.

Professor Hathaway, wearing an anorak over elderly trousers, was on deck, to no one’s surprise, with her fingers in the guidebook where it said:

 

In this natural aquarium of warm sea everything from bream to swordfish can be knifed or shot.

 

Beside her, his face full of natural colour, was Innes. I must say I had never realized before what an effect antiquarian interests can have on the stomach.

The seabed under the Bay of Naples is a slagheap of extinct volcanoes, not excluding Ischia which is still gushing with curative springs and where you can cook an uovo sodo, if you have to, on one of the beaches. The harbour of Ischia Porto turned out to be the perfectly circular crater of an extinct volcano with a ferryboat in it, and three hovercraft and a few yachts and two grey naval frigates with red life belts and a lot of Italian sailors who hung over the rail whistling until they saw Professor Hathaway.

BOOK: Roman Nights
12.19Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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