Read Sun Dance Online

Authors: Iain R. Thomson

Sun Dance (29 page)

“Thank you, sir,” Anderson showed no emotion. “Now gentlemen, may I have a show of hands. Those in favour of the motion?” Fellows lifted a shaky hand, followed by the banker. Eleven hands, one after another, rose shoulder level. Only Sir Joshua remained head down, hands on the table. Anderson visibly shook and hesitating slightly, “If you please, those against the motion of no confidence in my Chairmanship?” Hands slipped out of sight except for that of a smiling Sir Joshua. Carefully avoiding eye contact with the Chairman, the Scientific Advisor lifted his hand and looked round the table from face to face.

“Gentlemen the motion is carried,” Anderson bowed his head, inwardly aghast; his lone supporter, Sir Josuha Goldberg. Hardly credible, the move so well co-ordinated. Had there been a plot to oust him? Who would do it? The question now immaterial, he needed to find out urgently. His personal position would require considerable help, perhaps his friend Goldberg might know?

Anderson stood silently, letting his eye fall on each member in turn, haughtily, disdainfully; they would not forget. He saw them clearly, despicable, cringing objects, slyness dressed in a city suits. “In relinquishing the chair of a company which my grandfather father founded, I thank you for the support given to me and our organisation over many years and I wish success to an incoming Chairman. The meeting is the hands of your Vice Chairman. Good afternoon gentlemen.”

The ex-Chairman, ignoring his papers, walked quietly to his private office without a sideways look and closed the door. Elbows on the arms of his swivel, he pursed his fingers before his mouth and thought.

A stunned Vice Chairman stood behind the newly vacated seat, “Board members, I, er, I feel, I believe, indeed I’m sure, we must act promptly. Any delay, any, er any hint of, I shall be blunt, the news of this change at the top of Nuen and headline news it will be, must be of a smooth transition of leadership, progressive bolstering of the company’s position, otherwise gentlemen, well, today’s share price affects us all, a further panic dumping of our shares on Wall Street, I mean…” his voice trailed off.

Pulling himself together he conferred in whispers with the company secretary. Member leaned towards member. Much subdued murmuring, some already standing aside, speaking urgently into mobile phones. Were they buying or selling? A rap on the table and the Vice Chairman brought members to their seats. “It falls to me to call for nominations to the Chairmanship of Nuen.” A stir of anticipation…

Nick Fellows, adjusting his half spectacles, read from a note, “It gives me the greatest honour to put forward the name of Sir Joshua Goldberg. New to us though he is, his scientific background is of paramount importance in our present difficulties, his connections, rather I should say, his understanding of the financial world, make him our obvious choice.”

Many, “Here, here’s” and no further nominations sealed the take over. Sir Joshua padded round to the top seat, squeezing his friend Nicky fondly on the shoulder as he walked past.

The faint glow from a safety light illuminated the ex-Chairman’s face, family portraits and historic shots of the Carnegie smelter hung side by side with those of Nuen’s nuclear plants. Rags to riches, at least an Anderson had made it to the fourth generation. Rags again? Only one person came in to see him after their meeting ended, his personal banker. “You know Andrew your drawings in the past two years have been exceptional and if you don’t mind my saying so, especially those of Mrs. Anderson. I have to be plain, Andrew, unless you provide more security against these borrowings, well, shall I say the bank will be forced to take a final view. I’m sure you understand what I mean.” Anderson dismissed the banker with a nod and sat on in the gathering gloom.

A photo of his wife smiled up at him from the desk top. For a long time he looked at her. Intimate memories crowded in. Twenty-two years, but no children; she didn’t want a family but the home building, the holidays, just together, and then increasingly, the social whirl. His thoughts of her gradually soured, emotions dug into feelings which hurt. Slowly, he turned the photo face down. Without switching on the light he crossed to the door. It shut behind him with a click.

The steam which lies on a November river, hung in a gritty rime about the front portico of the Nuen Building. Normally his limousine and chauffeur waited, no matter the hour. The door porter stepped forward with a smart salute but said nothing. “Where’s my car, tonight, Jones?” “It went away about three hours ago, Sir.” “Went away?” The man coughed awkwardly. “Yes, sir.” “Well?” “Yes, sir, Sir Joshua Goldberg got in and I think, Mr. Fellows.” Now he knew.

The gravelled carriageway to their mansion wound between oak and beech. A blaze of house lights flickered through bare branches. Anderson stepped out of a taxi. Another taxi sat ticking over. Spotlights on the lawn played over the white façade of their spacious mock colonial home. Through the open door he could see his wife, even from a distance, in a blaze of jewels. He leant a shoulder against a marble pillar and waited. Violent shouting reached him from the top step, “I’ve been ready for twenty minutes.” She looked down, eyes aflame, her voice snarling, “You’re so Goddamn selfish, Andrew. This is another of your mean, pinch penny tricks and look at you, scruffy, filthy. It’ll be another twenty minutes before you’re changed. You horrid, uncaring wretch; you knew, you knew it. I’ve looked forward to this party for weeks.”

Moving closer to her, out of earshot of the taxi driver, he cut her short, “Honey, I ain’t going to no party tonight. And two things for your information, sweetheart, I’ve just been voted out of the Nuen Chair and the bank are threatening to pull the plug. Bankruptcy, yeah, bankrupt. That might change your little story. So see me baby, I ain’t in no party mood right now.”

She took a step back. Red dots of fury appeared on white cheeks, “Not in party mood! Not going,” she dropped her voice to a sneer. “Don’t come crying to me with your miserable problems. You’re pathetic, I don’t need this shit,” and bursting into a crescendo of sobbing and screaming, “You can’t do this to me. Beast, you beast! I hate you, hate you! I’m going, you hear me, I’m going now and you can please your lousy self.”

Taxi lights flickered along the lines of black sentinel trunks, lit their gaunt leafless arms. For a moment its back window framed her head. He stood listening. The engine roared out onto the freeway and he went inside, to the phone,

“You’ve reached Pan Am, Sir. How can I help you?”

CHAPTER TWENTY-SIX
Waves of Thought

We are but what the heavens made us,

And in the arc of curving space,

Every particle therein,

Is our kith and kin.

No more now than a piece of flesh, awaiting decay, tossing wave to wave on the Sound. A would be murderer’s body, a corpse slowly bloating by the salt water of its drowning, caught and twirled by the current; gulp after gulp, I’d watched his repeated sputtering and vomiting until the sea filled his lungs. I’d heard the screaming, the pleading of a man with faith in nothing. I’d seen the bulging eyes, the abject terror of a man afraid to die.

Waves sluiced over the ledge of his drowning, the worn rock shelf now almost out of sight. Wind over the rising tide sent white tops scurrying across the narrow waters. A nor-east wind, whetted to sharpness by the grey November sea. I looked down on the shelf. Two lives had found it their deathbed, known the enormity of approaching death, a sudden death and yet still there would be space in those seconds of falling to compress life into final thoughts. The shelf of death, young adventurous Hilda and a man with a revolver. Would it claim a third?

Twenty feet, above me, I glimpsed the turf edge of the cliff. The ledge which had saved me appeared to widen as it turned out of my view. There were no hand holds. A rock fall would have sheered them off. I began to quiver, jaw trembling. Fright and cold. I clenched my teeth. Get out of this cutting wind. Torn fingers, still bleeding slightly, were numbing. Soon they would be useless, render any climbing impossible. I looked down, nearly two hundred feet. Dive out? Hope to miss the shelf. Hit it. Death! Miss it, and drown?

Slippery, oozing bird droppings but no option, I had to move. Move and fall? I spoke inwardly, trying to gain control. Don’t hug the rock, your feet will shoot out. I balanced backwards, a little off the face. One foot, steady, next foot, hold, examine every tiny scratch, it might give a finger hold. The ledge kept turning, widening; I worked round, just inches at a move. Wind not so harsh now, instead the acrid stench of bird droppings. More shelter, my knees were juddering. I rested.

The sea beneath, boiling off the shelf, poured in a black curve hitting jagged fangs of rock, bursting into white salvos, falling back to seething froth. I edged another few yards. The rock face began to lean out towards me, an overhang. I stopped. Ahead I could hear the wind gusting, sometimes a whistle, eerie, calling a human tone, whining above the boom of each surge below.

A last yard- the ledge ended. I looked into a great crevice, splitting the cliff top to bottom. A rock chimney, an organ pipe to wind and sea, a great mound of boulders at its base, daylight at its top. The overhang, too great, it leant out above my ledge. No way to pass round it and try to climb the chimney. Shaking with despair after the risk of moving along the ledge was I beaten?

Legs getting weak, I had to try and sit. I moved back a few yards until at least out of the wind. Gingerly, slithering my hands down the rock, I sat. Feet over the edge, truly dangerous. I knew that much. Now I faced the sea. Faint pale light crossed rolling wave backs. The November sun deep in a hollow of hodden clouds sank green and sickly. A trail of gulls, flying close to the surface, followed deepening wave troughs. Their wailing carried to me, not the raucous screams of anger but in long single notes of desolation, the cries of worsening weather.

The wind in the chimney rose and fell with an incessant chant. Without option, I listened. Its moaning dirge would swell to a rush of exhaling breath, and fade again to a soughing whisper. Dire thoughts forced themselves upon me. I fought to banish them with thoughts of Eilidh, a longing for what might have been. Alone on the island, she had become an inseparable part of my life. Now hanging on to that very life, my passion for her became unbearable. I saw her eyes, spoke her name aloud, over and over again, choking with ineffable sadness in its saying, “Oh, Eilidh,”

Even with my back against a cliff, out of anguish a poem wrote itself in my mind. I encompassed the universe in a poem. The fear of death faded, there is no death, only loss of a loved one and a reunion in the strength of shared hope. I spoke to Eilidh, “We shall meet again.”

The cold, the wind, the isolation. I looked fixedly down at the sea. Swaying far below, its hypnotic motion was becoming compelling, begging a choice.

By my own hand, or move and just one slip?

I was being drawn inexorably to a final decision.

“Is that you, Eilidh? Hang on a moment,” Ella brushed flour off her hands and picked up the phone again, “Yes, Eilidh I’m hearing you. Are you alright?” Without answering the question, “Ella, is Eachan there?” and before Ella could reply, “Ella, something has happened to Hector, something terrible, I don’t know what it is. He needs help, help at once. Is he still on Sandray?”

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