She was trying hard not to cry. She said, âI suppose you think you've been very clever.'
âNo.'
âYou exposed him all right. You've demonstrated your point. What do I do now?'
âCome on board for one night. You've got a separate cabin. We can put you off in Genoa tomorrow.'
âI suppose you hope I'll change my mind?'
âYes. I hope. It's not a very big hope, but it's better than despair. You see, I love you.'
âWould you promise never to gamble again?'
âYes.'
âWould you throw away that damned system?'
âYes.'
There was a song when I was young â âand then my heart stood still'. That was what I felt when she began to make conditions. âHave you told him,' she asked, âabout the shares?'
âNo.'
âI can't go on that boat with him not knowing. It would be too mean.'
âI promise I'll clear it up â before sleep.'
She had her head lowered, so that I couldn't see her face, and she sat very silent. I had used all my arguments: there was nothing more for me to say either. The night was full of nothing but chinking cups and running water. At last she said, âWhat are we waiting for?'
We picked up all the bags and then we walked across to the Casino. She hadn't wanted to come, but I said, âI promised to bring you.' I left her in the hall and went through to the kitchen â he wasn't there. Then I went to the bar, and then on to the
Salle Privée
. There he was, playing for the first time with a 500-franc minimum. A. N. Other was at the same table â the five-thousand squares littered the table around him. He sat in his chair with his fingers moving like mice. I leant over his shoulder and gave him
his
news, but he made no sign of interest, for the ball was bouncing now around the wheel. It came to rest in zero as I reached Philippe and the bank raked in their winnings.
I said to Philippe, âCary's here. I kept my promise.'
âTell her not to come in. I am winning â except the last round. I do not want to be disturbed.'
âShe won't disturb you ever again.'
âI have won 10,000.'
âBut it's loser takes all,' I said. âLose these for me. It's all I've got left.'
I didn't wait for him to protest â and I don't think he would have protested.
2
T
HE
Gom that night was a perfect host. He showed himself so ignorant of our trouble that we began to forget it ourselves. There were cocktails before dinner and champagne at dinner and I could see that Cary was getting a little uncertain in her choice of words. She went to bed early because she wanted to leave me alone with the Gom. We both came out on to the deck to say good night to her. A small breeze went by, tasting of the sea, and the clouds hid moon and stars and made the riding lights on the yachts shine the brighter.
The Gom said, âTomorrow night you shall persuade me that Racine is the greater poet, but tonight let me think of Baudelaire.' He leant on the rail and recited in a low voice, and I wondered to whom it was in the past that the old wise man with limitless ambitions was speaking.
âVois sur ces canaux
Dormir ces vaisseaux
Dont l'humeur est vagabonde;
C'est pour assouvir
Ton moindre désir
Qu'ils viennent du bout du monde.'
He turned and said. âI am speaking that to you, my dear, from him,' and he put his arm around her shoulder, and then gave her a push towards the companion-way. She gave a sound like a small animal in pain and was gone.
âWhat was the matter?' the Gom asked.
âShe was remembering something.' I knew what it was she was remembering, but I didn't tell him.
We went back into the saloon and the Gom poured out our drinks. He said, âI'm glad the trick worked.'
âShe may still decide to get off at Genoa.'
âShe won't. In any case we'll leave out Genoa.' He added thoughtfully, âIt's not the first time I've kidnapped a woman.'
He gave me my glass. âI shan't keep you up drinking tonight, but I wanted to tell you something. I'm getting a new assistant accountant.'
âYou mean â you are giving me notice?'
âYes.'
Unpredictable, the old bastard, I thought â to tell me this now, as his guest. Could it be that in my absence he had met and spoken with the Other? He said, âYou'll need a bigger income now you are married. I'm putting Arnold in charge of General Enterprises. You are to be chief accountant in his place. Drink your whisky and go to bed. They are getting up the anchor now.'
When I went down I wondered whether Cary's cabin would be locked, but it wasn't. She sat on one bunk with her knees drawn up to her chin staring through the porthole. The engines had started and we were moving out. The lights of the port wheeled around the wall. She said, âHave you told him?'
âNo.'
âYou promised,' she said. âI can't go sailing down Italy in this boat with him not knowing. He's been so terribly kind . . .'
âI owe him everything,' I said. âIt was he who told me how to act to get you back. The trick was his. I could think of nothing. I was in despair.'
âThen you must tell him. Now. At once.'
âThere's nothing to tell. You don't think after he'd done that for me, I'd cheat him with Blixon?'
âBut the shares?'
âWhen I went to find Philippe, I took back the money I'd left for the Other. The option's forfeited. The Other's fifteen million richer â and Philippe has our last five million if he hasn't lost it. We are back where we were.' The words were the wrong ones. I said, âIf only we could be.'
âWe never can be.'
âNever?'
âI love you so much more. Because I've been terribly mean to you and nearly lost you.'
We said very little for a long time: there was no room for anything but our bodies in the cramped berth, but some time towards morning, when the circle of the porthole was grey, I woke her and told her what the Gom had said to me. âWe shan't be rich,' I added quickly for fear of losing her again, âbut we can afford Bournemouth next year . . .'
âNo,' she said sleepily. âLet's go to Le Touquet. They have a Casino there. But don't let's have a system.'
There was a promise I'd forgotten. I got up and took the great system out of my jacket-pocket and tore it in little pieces and threw them through the porthole â the white scraps blew back in our wake.
The sleepy voice said, âDarling, it's terribly cold. It's snowing.'
âI'll close the porthole.'
âNo. Just come back.'
Footnotes
*
At the period of this story the franc stood at about 1,200 francs to the pound.