The Devil on Chardonnay (13 page)

“Pam, you’re a socialist.  You should love that,” Donn said with a laugh. 

Boyd was in awe of her passion.  When Pam got started, it was something to behold.

“The merchant bankers helped the strong devour the weak. Then they licked the plate,” she said in disgust.  But, she couldn’t stop. 

“They financed Bismarck when he jumped into World War I to expand Germany’s borders.  They were at the table, urging appeasement with Hitler, when Chamberlain gave away Czechoslovakia.  Jews, gypsies, blacks and liberals of all types fled Hitler, and the bankers bought their property for a fraction of its value.  After the war, it was the merchant bankers who handled the aid payments from America to rebuild Europe, taking their cut as always.  The Glass-Steagall Act was enacted to ensure the U.S. never has permanent insiders, upper class bankers, like the Meillands.”

“Isn’t the president of Citicorp like a Meilland?  Boyd asked, remembering Pamela’s rage at Ferguson when she had first met him.  Elitism seemed to spark a special hatred.

“No.  He’s appointed by a board of directors, and they are elected by shareholders.  When they feel inclined, they replace him,” she exclaimed, as if the replacement would be accomplished with a beheading.  “And his son does not step into the job.” 

She sulked now, point made.

“There’s some gossip,” Cooper Jordan said cheerfully.

“There always is,” Pamela responded, rancor dissipating. 

“It seems Mademoiselle Meilland has been involved in a series of intrigues of the heart.”

His smooth, deep voice drew out the vowels, the result added emphasis to each part of the sentence. 

“A count and his wife, the countess, had an actual duel with pistols in the casino at Monte Carlo.  The rumor was that they were both in love with Mademoiselle Meilland.”

They all laughed.

“Who won the duel?”  Boyd asked.

“They were both terrible shots.”  Jordan responded slowly, as if savoring each syllable.  “A croupier lost part of an ear.  Several cut glass mirrors were broken, and a chandelier was destroyed.  The royals were unscathed physically, though they must have suffered whispers and snickers for some time afterward.”

“What’s she doing here?”  the secretary asked.

“She’s come to buy Sand Island, and she’s been invited to a party in her honor at the yacht club tonight.  It should be quite the affair. You should come.  The elusive Lymon Byxbe should be there,” Jordan said, turning to face Boyd with a wry tilt of his head.

“Lymon Byxbe?”  Boyd asked.

“Lymon is the chief researcher and majority shareholder of BioVet Tech.”

*****

A soaking rain was falling as Boyd arrived at the Yacht Club, parking two blocks away and sprinting past the lines of cars trying to get the ladies close to the door to save their hastily coifed hair.  Inside, chaos reigned.  The 119-foot yacht was a splinter compared with the USS Yorktown, a World War II aircraft carrier permanently anchored in the Cooper River on the other side of the Battery, yet here were scores of people gussied up for a party called in just the past 24 hours to celebrate its arrival. 

“Oh, Boyd, thank God you’re here!” Amalie Jordan exclaimed, grabbing his arm as he entered.  “Cooper is back in the kitchen arguing over shrimp and liquor, and the club president is late as always.  Chardonnay has radioed a request for the covered launch to pick up Mademoiselle Meilland, and I’ve no one to send with the driver.  Would you be a dear and take some umbrellas and go along, to help her?”

“I can handle that,” Boyd responded.

Amalie thrust two umbrellas into his hand and indicated a young black man dressed in rain gear waiting by the door.  He followed the man out into the rain, through the yacht basin with a hundred or more closed up sailboats and fishing boats, out to the dock where the motor launch was tied. 

Chardonnay loomed much larger than he’d expected when he had watched her approach that sunny morning.  Now in the rainy, early evening gloom, her bowsprit pointed upriver like the tusk of some ancient sea creature.  Lighted by floodlights on deck, the two masts brushed the clouds.

The launch maneuvered toward steps lowered from the deck a few feet above them.  Boyd felt inadequate holding two flimsy umbrellas with swells raising and lowering his launch three feet at a time and rain falling straight down so hard the noise drowned out all sound but the gurgle of the launch in neutral. 

“Permission to come aboard!”  Boyd called out, remembering something about the proper way to board a naval vessel in port.

His voice was lost in the rain.  He looked to the launch driver who stared blankly back.  Repeating his request, louder, he closed one of the umbrellas and stepped onto the bottom step.  The flimsy stairs, little more than a ladder, swayed with his weight and he was afraid they would break.  As he looked down into the dark, oily water below, a shadow passed.

The light gray parasol had tassels hanging from the sides and flowers embroidered on the top.  It appeared all the smaller because it was held in the grip of a massive hand, protruding over the stairs and attached to an equally impressive arm.  Boyd heard a female voice speaking rapidly in French and then, quickly, pink high-heel shoes were on the steps above him, leading to fine shapely legs that disappeared beneath a short white skirt.  Tearing his eyes from their natural tendency to follow the legs into the dark, Boyd looked up, above the skirt, to see a straight back with squared shoulders and blond hair done tightly in a braid.  The rain brought down her scent, and Boyd was smitten before he even saw the face of Michelle Meilland. 

He stepped back into the boat and held up his larger umbrella for her.  She backed quickly down the stairs, trying to keep her head in the small sheltered space created by the parasol held by the large man still on the deck above her.  Reaching the last step she turned to face Boyd and hesitated just a moment before leaving the parasol and ducking under his umbrella.

“Thank you.  You are Monsieur Jordan?” She asked breathlessly, straightening her clothing as she stepped under the cover of the launch and finally standing to look up only slightly into Boyd’s wide-eyed, speechless face.

“Uh. No.  I’m Boyd Chailland.  Cooper Jordan is back at the club, arguing over shrimp.”

“A crisis already.  I hope it’s not on my account.”

“Well, no.  Cooper wanted to meet you.  I mean, we all wanted to meet you.”  This was going badly, he thought.

“I’m Michelle Meilland, Mr. Chailland.  Are you French?  You have a French name.”

“A long time ago.  Will there be anyone else?”  He asked, looking back up the steps.

“Yes.”  She looked back up the steps.  “Wolf.  We are waiting.”

Bareheaded and nearly soaked, Wolf descended the stairs quickly.  His tanned calves seemed to squeeze into shoes too small to support a man so large.  He turned on the last step and glided into the shelter of the launch, his wet shirt stretched over pectorals.  His tiny puckered nipples seemed afterthoughts, hiding from the cold rain under a bulging mass of muscle.  He offered his meaty hand.

“I’m Wolf Goebel.”

“Boyd Chailland.”  Boyd took the hand, not afraid of a strong grip.

When he looked into Goebel's eyes for the first time, Boyd was surprised.  Square Nordic face, blond hair and blue eyes, thick neck and squared trapezii, Wolf outweighed Boyd by 30 pounds, though he lacked an inch or two in reaching Boyd’s height.  Instantly, he knew Wolf to be one of those he’d expected to meet on this mission.  The surprise was in how quickly he knew it:  Wolf had killed.

Wolf knew just as quickly.  The smile seemed genuine, but he was wary.  He kept himself between Boyd and the woman.  The launch started, and they swung out into the channel and back toward the Yacht Club.

Keeping the two large umbrellas overlapped, Boyd and Wolf kept Michelle Meilland dry, getting soaked themselves as they hurried up the wooden dock to the brief awning at the back door of the Yacht Club.  The door swung open as they arrived, and Donn and Cooper Jordan rushed out, eager to help, now that the job was done.  Shaking off the water, Boyd and Wolf stepped under the awning; their combined bulk shadowed the others from the mercury vapor light overhead.  Brief introductions, and then the door was opened again and they entered.  The room, noisy with the conversations of a hundred people, became silent in an instant.

Cooper Jordan maneuvered himself to be on Mme. Meilland’s left, and he took her arm as if he had assisted her across the quarter mile of rain-swept sea to this spot.  His baritone voice, seemingly out of place in such a frail, mousey little man, boomed out a formal introduction in French.

“Please, I am Mikki.  Please call me Mikki.  Michelle is so formal.  My grandfather calls me Michelle, my friends know only Mikki.”

She pronounced Mikki with equal emphasis on each syllable, which gives more weight to the second than is usual in South Carolina pronunciation, which would draw out the first and clip off the second.

Boyd chuckled to hear dozens quietly repeating, “Mikki,” with the emphasis on the second sound.  Every eye was locked on her as she wiped her face and then ankles with the proffered towel.  Boyd and Wolf dripped unnoticed.

Her pink shoes accented faint pink edging on the cuffs, collar and lapels of the white linen suit.  The simplicity of expensive linen carefully padded in the shoulders and snug around the buttocks, then fuller just slightly as the skirt ended midthigh, assured even the casual observer that this costume was made for, indeed was crafted on, this woman and no other.

As she held out her hand to the first of a forming line of well-wishers, her diamond earrings captured the light in a dozen twinkling ways.  They were simple, yet none who met her failed to look at them for a moment at least.

“Mme. Meilland, I understand you have met professor Lymon Byxbe, our esteemed scientist and industrialist.”  Cooper Jordan had placed Byxbe at the head of Charleston society for the introductions. 

Both men beamed under the charismatic charm of Mme. Meilland.  Boyd craned to see.  Byxbe was bald, thin, middle-age.  He fit Jacques’ description of Mosby.

CHAPTER TWENTY FOUR

Oyay Ajak

 

Davann Goodman leaned on his cane for balance as he stood at the foot of the bed mating vigorously with the African girl he’d met at the Mombasa Yacht Club.  His war injuries impaired ambulation but not copulation, and he was pursuing that with a single-minded enthusiasm.  The rounded perfection of Mariam Ajak’s freely offered posterior had driven Davann to carelessness, and he hadn’t noticed when the door downstairs squeaked open or the passage of several large bodies up the stairs.

   Completing the act, Davann dropped his cane to the floor and collapsed on the bed with Mariam.  She covered herself, then rose and walked to the toilet and closed the door.  Several minutes passed and Davann went to sleep. 

“Sir!”  A deep melodious voice broke the silence.

Davann woke to see three large black men at the foot of his bed.  In an instant, he was the Marine again, mind racing.  He hadn’t seen any guns, good, as his was in his pants behind the intruders.  He rolled to the side of the bed and pulled the survival knife he always kept strapped to his ankle, an ace in the hole when everything else fails.  The window, and a three story drop to the street, was behind him. He calculated his chances.

“Sir, I am Oyay Ajak, Mariam’s uncle.  We mean you no harm.  Greetings.” 

The man was huge; tall, wide, thick, with shining black skin and wire-rim glasses.  He wore a khaki bush jacket, and the two men with him, equally large and younger, wore work pants and T-shirts.

Davann cowered between the bed and the wall, backing further into the corner.  There was no way he could jump up on the bed and leap out of the window, that fused hip just wasn’t the tool for that trick.  Still, no guns.  What was that about greetings?

“Davann!  Uncle Oyay is my father’s brother, and your friend.”  Standing in the door to the toilet, dressed, Mariam spoke perfect English.  He’d been surprised at first, thinking all these Africans spoke Swahili or Arabic or some strange dialect he’d never master.  But, English is the official language in South Sudan, and Mariam, from Juba, had studied it since grade school.

Did they do shotgun weddings in Sudan?  Davann relaxed a little.  At least it wasn’t a kidnapping, a common tool of Arabs for vengeance or ransom.   These were not Arabs. 

“Sir, I apologize for entering your home this way, but you’re being watched.  It was the only way to speak to you alone.” 

The man had a civilized look to him, much more so than his two companions who looked like laborers from the street.

Davann had had his share of girlfriends and had been on friendly terms with a few brothers, and an uncle or two.  His homeys didn’t talk much about marriage; this would be quite the twist.  Then he noticed that he was naked and everyone else in the room was dressed. The two muscle guys seemed to have a slight smirk.  He grabbed the sheet.

“You won’t need this,” Mariam said as she removed his M9 from his trousers and laid it on the table, and then brought the trousers across the room.  She knelt in front of him and held them for him to step into.  He leaned against the wall while he zipped up and fastened his belt.  She retrieved his cane. 

“I must get a message to your president.”  Oyay Ajak said, seated at Davann’s kitchen table sipping tea hurriedly prepared by Mariam.  His two bodyguards slumped in chairs, also drinking tea.  Davann had coffee. 

“Why tell me?”

“You are CIA.”

“Me? No.”

“Yes.  We’ve watched you.  You fly American agents with equipment.  You smuggle people in and out of Kenya.  You have contacts with others in Zanzibar and Ethiopia.”

“It’s just contract work.  They pay, we fly.”

“How about Colonel Smith and Captain Chailland. You flew them with their equipment into the Congo Basin and were gone for two months.  That was no ordinary contract flight.”

“We didn’t fly them into the Congo Basin.  We flew them …” 

Davann paused.  This was well into classified activities, and the whole Indian Ocean trip was best left out of this talk. 

Other books

Fridays at Enrico's by Don Carpenter
The Gift of the Dragon by Michael Murray
Cod by Mark Kurlansky
Katherine by Anchee Min
Good Morning, Midnight by Reginald Hill
Little Lord Fauntleroy by Burnett, Frances Hodgson;
The Unlikely Wife by Cassandra Austin
The Summer of Our Discontent by Robin Alexander
Giants and Ogres by Smoot, Madeline