Whirlwind (198 page)

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Authors: James Clavell

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BOOK: Whirlwind
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"andrew, this is roger newbury, how are you?"

 

 

gavallan began to sweat. "hello, roger, what's new?"

 

 

"sunset's still the deadline. the iranian insisted on coming by here to pick me up first so i'm standing by we're supposed to go together to meet the sheik at the airport. we'll arrive a few minutes early, then the three of us will go to the freight area to wait for his nibs."

 

 

"what about the reception at the japanese ambassador's?"

 

 

"we're all supposed to go after the inspection god only knows what'll happen then but... well, ours not to reason. sorry about all this but our hands are tied. see you soon. 'bye."

 

 

gavallan thanked him, put down the phone, and wiped his brow.

 

 

again the phone. kasigi? he picked it up. "hello?"

 

 

"andy? ian ian dunross."

 

 

"my god, ian." gavallan's cares dropped away. "i'm so glad to hear from you, tried to reach you a couple of times."

 

 

"yes, sorry i wasn't available. how's it going?"

 

 

gavallan told him guardedly. and about kasigi. "we've about an hour to sunset. "

 

 

"that's one reason i called. damned bad luck about dubois, fowler, and mciver, i'll keep my fingers crossed. lochart sounds as though he cracked, but then when love's involved..." gavallan heard his sigh and did not know how to interpret it. "you remember hiro toda, toda shipping?"

 

 

"of course, ian."

 

 

"hiro told me about kasigi and their problem at iran-toda. they're in a hell of a bind, so anything, anything you can do to help, please do."

 

 

"got it. i've been working on it all day. did toda tell you kasigi's idea about their ambassador?"

 

 

"yes. hiro called personally he said they're more than anxious to help but it's an iranian problem, and to be honest, they don't expect very much as the iranians would be quite within their rights." gavallan's face mirrored his dismay. "help them all you can. if iran-toda gets taken over... well, strictlybetween us..." dunross switched to shanghainese for a moment: "the underbelly of a nobly thought of company would be slashed mortally." then in english again. "forget i mentioned it."

 

 

though gavallan had forgotten most of his shanghainese he understood and his eyes almost crossed. he had had no idea that struan's was involved kasigi had never even implied it. "kasigi'll get his choppers and crew even if we miss our deadline and are impounded."

 

 

"let's hope you're not. next, did you see the papers about the hong kong stock exchange crash?"

 

 

"yes."

 

 

"it's bigger than they're reporting. someone's pulling some very rough stuff and linbar's back is to the sea. if you get the 212s out and are still in business, you'll still have to cancel the x63s."

 

 

gavallan's temperature went up a notch. "but, ian, with those i can bust imperial's hold by giving clients better service and better safety, an "

 

 

"i agree, old chum. but if we can't pay for them you can't have them. sorry, but there it is. the stock market's gone mad, worse than usual, it's bleeding over to japan and we cannot afford to have toda crash here either."

 

 

"perhaps we'll get lucky. i'm not going to lose my x63s. by the way did you hear linbar's giving profitable a seat in the inner office?"

 

 

"yes. an interesting idea." it was said flat and gavallan could read neither positive nor negative. "i heard their side of the meeting in a roundabout way. if today is a success, you're planning to be in london monday?"

 

 

"yes. i'll know better by sunset, or tomorrow sunset. if all goes well i'll drop by and see mac in bahrain, then head for london. why?"

 

 

"i may want you to cancel london and meet me in hong kong. something

 

 

very bloody curious has come up about nobunaga mori, the other witness with profitable choy when david macstruan died. nobunaga was burned to death a couple of days ago at his home at kanazawa, that's in the country just outside tokyo, in rather strange circumstances. in today's mail i got a very curious letter. can't discuss it on the phone but it's plenty bloody interesting."

 

 

gavallan held his breath. "then david... it wasn't an accident?"

 

 

"have to wait and see on that one, andy, until we meet either tokyo or london, the very soonest. by the way hiro and i had planned to stay at kanazawa the night nobunaga died but couldn't make it at the last moment."

 

 

"my god, that was lucky."

 

 

"yes. well, got to go. is there anything i can do for you?"

 

 

"nothing, unless you can give me an extension till sunday night."

 

 

"i'm still working on that, never fear. damned sorry about dubois, fowler, and mciver... that tokyo number will take messages till monday..."

 

 

they said good-bye. gavallan stared at the phone. scot came in with more news about possible pilots and planes but he hardly heard his son. was it murder after all? christ! goddamn linbar and his back to the wall and bad investments. somehow or another i've got to have the x63s, got to.

 

 

again the phone. the connection was bad and the accent of the caller heavy: "long distance collect call for effendi gavallan."

 

 

his heart surged. erikki? "this is effendi gavallan, i will accept the charge. can you speak up, please, i can hardly hear you. who is the call from?"

 

 

"one moment please..." as he waited impatiently he looked at the gate near the end of the runway that the sheik and the others would use if kasigi failed and the inspection took place. his breath almost stopped as he saw a big limousine with a shargazi flag on its fender approaching, but the car passed by in a cloud of dust and a voice on the other end of the phone he could hardly hear said, "andy, it's me, marc, marc dubois..."

 

 

"marc? marc dubois?" he stuttered and almost dropped the phone, cupped his hand over one ear to hear better. "christ almighty! marc? are you all right, where the hell are you, is fowler all right? where the hell are you?" the answer was gibberish. he had to strain to hear. "say again!"

 

 

"we're at kor al amaya..." kor al amaya was iraq's huge, half-mile long, deep-sea oil terminal platform at the far end of the gulf, off the mouth of the shatt-al-arab estuary that divided iraq and iran, about five hundred miles northwest. "can you hear me, andy? kor al amaya..."

 

 

at the kor al amaya platform: marc dubois also had one hand cupped over his ear and was trying to be guarded and not to shout down the phone. the phone was in the office of the platform manager, plenty of iraqi

 

 

and expats in the office outside able to overhear. "this line's not private... vous comprenez?"

 

 

"got it, for god's sake, what the hell happened? you were picked up?"

 

 

dubois made sure he was not being overheard and said carefully, "no, mon vieux, i was running out of fuel and, voild, the tanker oceanrider appeared out of the merde so i landed on her, perfectly, of course. we're both fine, fowler and me. pas probleme! what about everyone, rudi and sandor and pop?"

 

 

"they're all here in al shargaz, everyone, your lot, scrag's, mac, freddy, though mac's in bahrain at the moment. with you safe whirlwind's got ten out of ten erikki and azadeh are safe in tabriz though..." gavallan was going to say tom's risking his life to stay in iran. but there was nothing he or dubois could do so instead he said happily, "how wonderful you're safe, marc. are you serviceable?"

 

 

"of course, i, er, i just need fuel and instructions."

 

 

"marc, you're british registry now... hang on a sec... it's g-hkvc. dump your old numbers and put the new ones on. there's been hell to pay and our late hosts have splattered the gulf with telexes asking governments to impound us. don't go ashore anywhere."

 

 

dubois's bonhomie had left him. "golf, hotel kilo victor charlie, got it. andy, le bon dieu was with us because oceanrider's liberian registry and her skipper's british. one of the first things i asked for was a pot of paint, paint... understand?"

 

 

"got it, bloody marvelous. go on!"

 

 

"as he was inbound iraq i thought it best to keep quiet and stay with her until i talked with you and this is the first mo " through the half- opened door dubois saw the iraqi manager approaching. much more loudly now and in a slightly different voice, he said, "this assignment with oceanrider's perfect, mr. gavallan, and i'm glad to tell you the captain's very content."

 

 

"okay, marc, i'll ask the questions. when is she due to finish loading and what's her next port of call?"

 

 

"probably tomorrow." he nodded politely to the iraqi who sat behind his desk. "we should be in amsterdam as scheduled." both men were having difficulty hearing.

 

 

"do you think you could stay with her all the way? of course we'd pay freighting charges."

 

 

"i don't see why not. i think you'll find this experiment will become a permanent assignment. the captain found the convenience of being able to lie offshore and yet get into port for a quick visit worthwhile but frankly the owners made an error ordering a 212. a 206'd be much better. i think they'll want a rebate." he heard gavallan's laugh and it made him happy too. "i better get

 

 

off the phone, just wanted to report in. fowler sends his best and if possible i'll give you a call on the ship to shore as we pass by."

 

 

"with any luck we won't be here. the birdstll be freighted off tomorrow. don't worry, i'll monitor oceanrider all the way home. once you're through hormuz and clear of gulf waters, ask the captain to radio or telex contact us in aberdeen. all right? i'm assigning everyone to the north sea until we're sorted out. oh, you're sure to be out of money, just sign for everything and i'll reimburse the captain. what's his name?"

 

 

"tavistock, brian tavistock."

 

 

"got it. marc, you don't know how happy i am."

 

 

"me to. a bientot." dubois replaced the phone and thanked the manager.

 

 

"a pleasure, captain," the man said thoughtfully. "are all big tankers going to have their own chopper support?"

 

 

"i don't know, m'sieur. it would be wise for some. no?"

 

 

the manager smiled faintly, a tall middle-aged man, his accent and training american. "there's an iranian patrol boat standing off in their waters watching oceanrider. curious, huh?"

 

 

"yes."

 

 

"fortunately they stay in their waters, we stay in ours. iranians think they own the arabian gulf, along with us, the shatt, and the waters of the tigris and euphrates back to their source a thousand and almost two thousand miles."

 

 

"the euphrates is that long?" dubois asked, his caution increasing.

 

 

"yes. it's born in turkey. have you been to iraq before?"

 

 

"no, m'sieur. unfortunately. perhaps on my next trip?"

 

 

"baghdad's great, ancient, modern so's the rest of iraq, well worth a visit. we've got nine billion metric tons of proven oil reserves and twice that waiting to be discovered. we're much more valuable than iran. france should support us, not israel."

 

 

"me, m'sieur, i'm just a pilot," dubois said. "no politics for me."

 

 

"for us that's not possible. politics is life we've discovered that the hard way. even in the garden of eden... did you know people have been living around here for sixty thousand years? the garden of eden was barely a hundred miles away; just upstream the shatt where the tigris and euphrates join. our people discovered fire, invented the wheel, mathematics, writing, wine, gardening, farming... the hanging gardens of babylon were here, scheherazade spun her tales to the calif harun al-rashid, whose only equal was your charlemagne, and here were the mightiest of the ancient civilisations, babylonia and assyria. even the flood began here. we've survived sumerians, greeks, romans, arabs, turks, british, and persians," he almost spat the word out. "we'll continue to survive them."

 

 

dubois nodded warily. captain tavistock had warned him: "we're in iraq waters, the platform's iraqi territory, young fellow. the moment you leave my gangplank, you're on your own, i've no jurisdiction, understand?"

 

 

"i only want to make a phone call. i have to."

 

 

"what about using my ship to shore when we pass by al shargaz on the way back?"

 

 

"there won't be any problem," dubois had told him, perfectly confident. "why should there be? i'm french." when he had made the forced landing on the deck, he had had to tell the captain about whirlwind and the reasons for it. the old man had just grunted. "i know nothing about that, young fellow. you haven't told me. first you'd better paint out your iran numbers and put g in front of whatever you like instead i'll get my ship's painter to help. as far as i'm concerned if anyone asks me you're a one-shot experiment the owners foisted on me you came aboard in cape town and i don't like you a bit and we hardly ever talk. all right?" the captain had smiled. "happy to have you aboard i was in pt boats during the war, operating all over the channel my wife's from the he d'ouessant, near brest we used to sneak in there from time to time for wine and brandy just like my pirate ancestors used to do. scratch an englishman, find a pirate. welcome aboard."

 

 

dubois waited now and watched the iraqi manager. "perhaps i could use the phone tomorrow again, before we leave?"

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