The Adventurers (41 page)

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Authors: Robbins Harold

BOOK: The Adventurers
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"It wasn't Guiterrez."

"It was Guiterrez." Fat Cat's voice came from the doorway. "We were stupid, the old one was right. He's now the head of el Presidente\ secret police."

Dax stared at him. There were footsteps on the stairs in the hall and he turned to see Amparo descending. Her face was white and drawn. She moved silently down the steps. For a moment Dax caught a glimpse of Jose's face behind her, then it disappeared.

"They set up an ambush as the bandoleros were coming out of the town on their way back to the mountains."

Dax's eyes turned from Fat Cat to Amparo. "You knew about this!"

Amparo didn't answer. She moved around Dax and looked down at the old man. There was no expression in her eyes. "Is he dead?"

Dax looked down. The old man's jaw hung open; his eyes stared up sightlessly. "He's dead."

A scream came from the staircase and Dax whirled as the boy launched himself at Amparo, the flat edge of his knife extended. Automatically Dux shoved her to one side & tumbled over a chair as he intercepted the boy. Dax went down to one knee under the impact but the knife clattered to the floor. He kicked it out of reach.

The boy was still on his hands and knees. He stared up at Dax. his eyes streaked with tears. "You lied! You knew all the time!"

"I did not," Dax said, moving forward to help the boy to his feet. "Believe me, I did not!"

"Don't touch me!" Jose sobbed, and shook him off. "Liar! Traitor!" He turned and ran to the door. "Someday I will kill you for this!" He disappeared into the night and a moment later there was the sound of a horse racing off in the darkness.

Fat Cat started after him. "He'll go back to the mountains!"

"Let him go!" Dax said, then turned back to Amparo, still sprawled out on the floor. He bent over her. "Let me help you up."

"Don't move me!" she said, suddenly savage. "Can't you see I'm bleeding?"

He looked down at her, his eyes widening. The lower half of her nightgown and robe was already stained.

"What is it?"

She glared at him, a curious mixture of anger and sorrow in her eyes. "You poor damn fool! Can't you see? I'm losing my baby!"

He straightened up, a sick feeling inside him. What a fool he must have seemed to them all. With all his knowledge, with all his experience, with all he had learned about the world outside, he must have seemed a child in their hands. There was not one of them who hadn't lied to him, who hadn't used him. Even Amparo.

 

There was the clatter of many horses outside, then heavy boots on the galena. He turned as the soldiers thronged through the doorway. They filled the hallway with their red and blue uniforms.

A moment later, Guiterrez pushed his way through them, the silver braid shining on his uniform. His beady dark eyes swept past Dax, taking in the body of el Condor and the sight of Amparo watching them from the floor. He didn't have to be told the bandolero was dead. His lips moved tightly as he looked at Dax. "Where is the boy?"

"He's gone."

Guiterrez stared at him. "I don't believe you." Then his eyes fell on Fat Cat. "Arrest that man!"

Dax's voice held the soldiers motionless. "No!"

A light began to dance in Guiterrez' eyes. "El Presidente will not be pleased, senor. That man tried to help the bandolero escape."

"I don't give a damn what el Presidente likes!"

A faint cold smile came to Guiterrez' lips. "Your own words betray your treason." He pulled his revolver from its holster and pointed it at Dax. "Arrest them both!"

The soldiers pushed forward to get to Dax but before they could reach him. he scooped up the knife that the boy had dropped on the floor.

Guiterrez leaped backward against the wall. He glared into Dax's eyes. "I've waited a long time for this," he said softly, a tight smile coming to his lips as he raised the revolver.

"So have I!"

Dax's arm moved with the blur of light, and the smile on Guiterrez' face changed to an expression of surprise as the hilt of the knife appeared suddenly in the center of his throat. The revolver fell from his fingers as he raised his hands frantically to grab at the knife. But they never made it; he began falling almost before they were halfway there.

Dax felt the soldiers seize him and roughly pull him back. He twisted, trying to pull himself free, but they held him tightly.

"Let him go!" El Presidente's voice rang out sharply from the doorway.

He strode past them without a second glance at the men lying on the floor. He knelt down to his daughter. A whisper passed between them too quickly for Dax to hear. Then el Presidente slowly got to his feet, turning back to him.

"You have done well, my son," he said, his pale-gray eyes expressionless. "I, myself, was coming to kill Guiterrez for violating the amnesty!"

 

CHAPTER 10

 

The New York offices of the Hadley Shipping Company were located on the edge of the financial district overlooking Battery Park. They were in an old building, on the nineteenth floor, the penthouse of which had been converted into the personal offices of Mr. Hadley. It was a large five-room suite consisting of an office facing west, surrounded by glass, which gave a clear view in all directions. To the south lay the Statue of Liberty and harbor, to the north and east the towering spires of the Empire State Building, the Rockefeller Center complex, and the needle of the newly completed Chrysler Building. The other rooms were a board room, which also served as a private dining room, a completely equipped kitchen, a large bedroom and a bath.

Marcel turned from the window as Hadley came into the office.

"I'm sorry to have kept you waiting," the older man apologized. "The directors' meeting took rather longer than I had expected."

"That's all right, Mr. Hadley. It gave me a chance to admire the view."

"It is nice," Hadley replied without feeling, as he went behind the desk and sat down.

The way he said it made Marcel wonder if the old man had ever really looked out of the windows. He went over to a chair opposite the desk and sat down.

Hadley didn't waste a minute. "My information from Europe is that war is a matter of months, possibly even weeks, away."

Marcel nodded. There was nothing, as yet, for him to say.

"American representation in Europe will become difficult," Hadley continued. "Especially since the President is avowedly prejudiced toward Britain and France. He has promised them every assistance short of war. It will make it equally difficult in America for certain European interests."

Marcel nodded again. He had a feeling he knew what was coming.

"How many ships have we still committed to the sugar trade?" Hadley asked abruptly.

Marcel thought for a moment. There were nine of them at sea but four were carrying cargoes destined for his own personal warehouses in Brooklyn. "Five. And they will all be in New York by the end of the month."

"Good. As soon as they're unloaded, every ship we have must be sent to Corteguay. If war breaks out, any shipping from here bound for Europe will become fair game for German submarines." He picked up a paper from his desk and looked at it. "Have you had any recent word about Dax?"

"El Presidente informs me that he is still in Spain. The agreements with Franco are almost complete."

"We must get word to him that the agreements are to be concluded as soon as possible. I've decided that he should be our representative in Europe when war comes."

Marcel looked at him. "How do you know Dax will do it? After all, he is not working for us."

A look of annoyance crossed Hadley's face. "I know that; that's what makes it practical. Dax represents a completely neutral country. He will have the freedom of Europe no matter how the war goes."

 

Marcel was silent. He was beginning to understand Americans. Now he knew how the great fortunes were built. War or no, the business of making money brooked no interference. "Have you spoken to el Presidente about it?"

"Not yet. I'm leaving that to you. After all, he's your partner, not mine."

It was still early when Marcel left Hadley's office. He checked his watch. There was still time to go out to Brooklyn before his luncheon appointment at one o'clock. He stood on the sidewalk and flagged a taxi. "Bush Terminal in Brooklyn."

Idly he looked out the window as the taxi made its way toward the Brooklyn Bridge. How different the Americans were than the Europeans. They were complacent, safe behind their oceans. If war came it could not touch them.

It would merely be something to read about in the newspapers, to listen to on their radio between "Amos 'n' Andy" and the "Fleischmann Variety Hour," or to watch in a news-reel before the latest Clark Gable movie came on. The threats, rantings and ravings of Hitler could never really reach them. Europe was on the other side of the world.

The humid heat of early August poured in through the cab windows. Even the breeze brought no relief from the pounding heat of the pavements. Slowly the taxi fought its way through the traffic in downtown Brooklyn after coming off the bridge. Up Flatbush Avenue, past Fulton Street with its crowds of shoppers and elevated trains, and then turning into Fourth Avenue toward Bay Ridge. It didn't cool off until they were near the bay.

Marcel told the cabdriver to wait. The cabby mumbled something about losing money while waiting, but Marcel ignored him. A man was seated inside behind an old desk reading a newspaper. He looked up as Marcel came in, and put down the paper. "Good morning, Mr. Campion."

"Good morning, Frank. Everything all right?"

"Right as rain, Mr. Campion," the watchman replied, getting to his feet. He was used to these visits by now. Marcel had a habit of appearing at odd times. There was no telling when, sometimes even in the middle of the night. As usual he followed Marcel through the door into the warehouse proper.

Marcel stood just outside the doorway and looked across the warehouse. The building covered a complete city block and row after row of burlap bags filled with sugar reached almost to the fire-sprinkler line under the high-girdered roof.

Marcel felt satisfaction surge through him. More than a year had passed since he first thought of the idea. By the third of September, when the four ships he expected tied up at the dock outside the warehouses, it would all be over. The last warehouse would be filled and then all he would have to do was wait. The coming war in Europe would take care of everything.

He remembered when he had been a small boy during the last war. There were two things his family could never get enough of—sugar and soap. He remembered once hearing his father complain that he had had to pay twenty francs for a few hundred grams of coarse brown sugar. They had hoarded it and used it carefully for more than a week. That was where the idea originated.

Sugar. Everything in America was sweet. Soda pop, chocolates, buns and cakes, even their bread. Everyone consumed sugar in copious quantities, everyone took sugar for granted. There had always been enough of it. War or no war, they would still expect it. And they would willingly pay for it.

 

Now there were four buildings like this one, all filled with sugar. He was perhaps the only man who could have done it. He controlled the ships. It was he who could supply falsified bills of lading that diverted the attention of the customs officials who screened every ship that entered the harbor.

But it took money. A great deal of money. More than Marcel had. It was almost as if the sugar producers were aware of what he was up to. He had to pay a bonus of twenty cents on every hundred-pound bag to ensure that they would sell only to him. Additional money went to key officers on his ships who were aware of the real nature of the cargoes. Even the leasing of the warehouses through a blind cost him thousands of dollars over the market.

Quickly the figures flashed through Marcel's mind. There was almost eight million dollars tied up in this project, most of it borrowed. He had never had that much money, and if it hadn't been for Amos Abidijan he never would have had.

Marcel was under no illusions as to why Abidijan had lent him the money. It wasn't because he had been willing to put up his share of the ships as collateral; Abidijan had more ships than he needed. It wasn't even that Abidijan was participating in the profits that might accrue from the project. Abidijan couldn't care less; he hadn't even asked what Marcel wanted the money for. Amos was interested in only one thing. Marrying off his eldest daughter.

In all there were five of them, and until the eldest was married none of the others could marry. It was beginning to seem as if they would never marry, because no one appeared anxious for Anna's hand, despite the dowry that was certain to come with it. It was genuinely unfortunate that of all the daughters Anna most favored her father. She was short and dark, with the slightest hint of a mustache over her upper lip, which no amount of electrolysis had been able to eliminate satisfactorily. And no couturier, no matter how expensive, could hide the square peasant lines of her body.

It seemed as if she had collected all the bad points in the family; the other girls were slim and taller, almost average American in complexion and appearance. Only poor Anna looked and acted like her father. Deciding that men were not for her, she became interested in her father's business and began to work in his office. It was there that Marcel had met her.

He had come in to see her father by appointment but had had to wait. The receptionist had ushered him into Abidijan's outer office, which had been empty. He had just sat down when Anna came in.

"I'm sorry, Mr. Campion," she said, in her husky, almost manlike voice, "my father will be a little late."

By the time the English "my father" had reached Marcel's brain and had been translated into mon pere, she had already gone behind her desk. Marcel got to his feet. This was a time for true Gallic courtesy.

But to poor inexperienced Anna, who was not used to any attention from the opposite sex, mere Gallic courtesy seemed like romance and before Marcel knew it he was involved. Lunch, then dinners, finally evenings at Amos' home. And ending with weekends at their country place. It was almost two years now, and it had become more or less accepted that they were going together, though Marcel had never said a word to her.

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