Wyatt’s Hurricane. Desmond Bagley

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snapped his fingers and said with sudden perception, ‘You’re talking about hurricanes, aren’t you?’

      Julie said with asperity, ‘Why must they give girls’ names to hurricanes?’

      ‘They’re easy to remember,’ said Wyatt with a straight face. ‘And so hard to forget. I believe the Association of Women’s Clubs of America put in an objection to the Weather Bureau, but they were overruled. One round won in the battle of the sexes.’

      ‘I’d be interested to see your work,’ said Causton. ‘From a professional point of view, that is.’

      ‘I thought you were on holiday.’

      ‘Newspapermen are never really on holiday – and news is where you find it.’

      Wyatt discovered that he rather liked Causton. He said, ‘I don’t see why you shouldn’t come up to the Base.’

      Hansen grinned. ‘Schelling won’t object; he’s a sucker for publicity – of the right kind.’

      ‘I’d try not to write any unkind words,’ said Causton. ‘When could I come?’

      ‘What about tomorrow at eleven?’ said Wyatt. He turned to Julie. ‘Are you interested in my hurricanes? Why don’t you come too?’ He spoke impersonally.

      ‘Thank you very much,’ she said, equally impersonally.

      ‘That’s fixed, then,’ said Causton. ‘I’ll bring Miss Marlowe with me – I’m hiring a car.’ He turned to Hansen. ‘Do you have any trouble with the island government at the Base?’

      Hansen’s eyes sharpened momentarily, then he said lazily, ‘In what way?’

      ‘I gather that Americans aren’t entirely popular here. I also understand that Serrurier is a rough lad who plays rough games and he’s not too particular about the methods he uses. In fact, some of the stories I’ve heard give me the creeps – and I’m not a particularly shivery man.’

      Hansen said shortly, ‘We don’t interfere with them and they don’t interfere with us – it’s a sort of unspoken agreement. The boys on the Base are pretty firmly disciplined about it. There have been a few incidents and the Commodore cracked down hard.’

      ‘What kind of –’ Causton began, but a booming voice drowned his question. ‘Say, weren’t you the hostess on my plane to Puerto Rico?’

      Wyatt looked up, shadowed by the bull-like figure of Dawson. He glanced at Julie, whose face was transformed by a bright, professional smile. ‘That’s right, Mr Dawson.’

      ‘I didn’t expect to find you here,’ roared Dawson. He seemed incapable of speaking in a normal, quiet tone, but that could have been because he was a little drunk. ‘What say you an’ me have a drink?’ He gestured largely. ‘Let’s all have a drink.’

      Causton said quietly, ‘I’m in the chair, Mr Dawson. Will you have a drink with me?’

      Dawson bent and looked at Causton, squinting slightly. ‘Don’t I know you from somewhere?’

      ‘I believe we met – in London.’

      Dawson straightened and moved around so he could get a good view of Causton. He pondered rather stupidly for a moment, then snapped his fingers. ‘That’s right,’ he said. ‘I know you. You are one of those smart-aleck reporters who roasted me when The Fire Game was published in England. I never forget a face, you know. You were one of the guys who came an’ drank my liquor, then stuck a knife in my back.’

      ‘I don’t believe I had a drink that morning,’ observed Causton equably.

      Dawson exhaled noisily. ‘I don’t think I will have a drink with you, Mr Whatever-your-name-is. I’m particular of the company I keep.’ He swayed on his feet and his eyes flickered towards Julie. ‘Not like some people.’

      Both Wyatt and Hansen came to their feet, but Causton said sharply, ‘Sit down, you two; don’t be damn’ fools.’

      ‘Aw, to hell with it,’ mumbled Dawson, passing a big hand over his face. He blundered away, knocking over a chair and heading for the lavatories.

      ‘Not a nice man,’ said Causton wryly. ‘I’m sorry about that.’

      Wyatt picked up the fallen chair. ‘I thought you were a foreign correspondent?’

      ‘I am,’ said Causton. ‘But I was in London a couple of years ago when half the staff was down with influenza, and I helped out on local stuff for a while.’ He smiled. ‘I’m not a literary critic, so I wrote a story on the man, not the writer. Dawson didn’t like it one little bit.’

      ‘I don’t like Dawson one little bit,’ said Hansen. ‘He sure is the Ugly American.’

      ‘The funny thing about him is that he’s a good writer,’ said Causton. ‘I like his stuff, anyway; and I’m told that his critical reputation is very high. The trouble is that he thinks that the mantle of Papa Hemingway has fallen on his shoulders – but I don’t think it’s a very good fit.’

      Wyatt looked at Julie. ‘How much of a nuisance was he?’ he asked softly.

      ‘Air hostesses are taught to look after themselves,’ she said lightly, but he noticed she did not smile.

      The incident seemed to cast a pall over the evening. Julie did not want to dance any more so they left quite early. After taking Julie and Causton back to the Imperiale, Wyatt gave Hansen a lift back to the Base.

      They were held up almost immediately in the Place de la Libération Noire. A convoy of military trucks rumbled across their path followed by a battalion of marching infantry. The troops were sweating under their heavy packs and their black faces shone like shoe-leather in the street lighting.

      Hansen said, ‘The natives are restless tonight; those boys are in war trim. Something must be happening.’

      Wyatt looked around. The big square, usually crowded even at this time of night, was bare except for groups of police and the unmistakable plainclothes men of Serrurier’s security force. The cheerful babble of sound that pervaded this quarter was replaced by the tramp of marching men. All the cafés were closed and shuttered and the square looked dark and grim.

      ‘Something’s up,’ he agreed. ‘We had this before – six months ago. I never did find out why.’

      ‘Serrurier always was a nervous type,’ said Hansen. ‘Frightened of shadows. They say he hasn’t been out of the Presidential Palace for over a year.’

      ‘He’s probably having another nightmare,’ said Wyatt.

      The column of marching men came to an end and he let in the clutch and drove round the square, past the impossibly heroic bronze statue of Serrurier and on to the road that led to the Base. All the way to Cap Sarrat he thought of Julie and the way she had behaved.

      He also thought a little of Mabel.

      

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