âNo screaming, young lady,' Riordan said quickly and quietly. âThis is a gun. Drive on Cartwrightâand don't blame your friend, lady. If he hadn't stoppedâ¦' He explained briefly, then went on thoughtfully: âDarling this, darling that, darling the next thing. She really does appear to be your friend, Cartwright.'
âDamn you to hell, Riordan,' I said savagely. âShe's my fiancée and now you'veâ¦'
âYour fiancée, eh? Well, well, well.' His voice changed. âHow do I know she's your fiancée?'
âWhat the devil does it matterâ¦?'
âIt matters a lot. I never trust anybody or anything. Engaged? Ring?'
âYes.'
âWhat's it like?'
âEmerald, four diamonds.'
Riordan stretched his hand. âShow me.'
Wordlessly, Mary struggled to get it off her finger. God, I thought, she was behaving magnificently. She passed the ring back to Riordan, who struck a match, glanced at it and handed it back.
âWell, well,' he said softly. âLove's young dream. The perfect set-up, eh, Sellers. Who's going to question love's young dream?'
There was a police block at the entrance to Lipscombe. Again there were red swinging lamps with, in the background, a truck across the street as a roadblock. On either side of the road I could see two policemen, strangers to me, mounted on their red-painted 100mph Thunderbird Twin Triumphs. They had that indefinable look of all motor cycle policemenâmedium height, lean, very tough, very competent. But it was Sergeant Wynne who approached me. With the possible exception of Ainsworth, the young Vicar, Wynne was my best friend in Lipscombe.
âEvening, Pete,' he smiled. His torch reached across my seat, lit up Mary's face. âOh, hullo.'
âEvening, George,' I interrupted. âWhat's all the cloak-and-dagger stuff for?' I nodded at the policemen on their motor cycles, the truck across the road, felt the hairs on the back of my neck stand on end as I felt the pressure of Riordan's silencer against the base of my spine. âLooking for our wandering boys, Riordan and Sellers?'
âWe are indeed,' Wynne said grimly. âSuppose you've seen nothing, Pete.'
âSorry,' I shrugged. âAll quiet between here and Tarnmouth. I don't envy you your job on a night like this.'
âMe neither,' Wynne said feelingly. âWish I was up looking for a double-twenty in the “Horse and
Plough”.' We were both members of the local darts team. âSee you up there tonight, perhaps, Pete?'
âPerhaps, perhaps not.' I shrugged and grinned, knowing that Riordan was watching every slightest change of my expression in the driving mirror. âThere's a dance on in Tarnmouth. May be the small hours before weâ¦' I broke off, put my arm round Mary's shoulders and squeezed: she nestled her dark head against my shoulder. âWell, you know how it is, George.'
âYes.' He took out his handkerchief, wiped some rain off his face and grinned back at me. âMarried myself, but I know how it is. Be seeing you, Pete.'
âBe seeing you.' I waited till the truck had backed out of the way, let in the clutch and moved off. Riordan stirred in the darkness.
âNot bad, Cartwright, not bad at all.' His tone changed, became soft and menacing. âWhy did you mention Tarnmouth, damn you?'
âDon't be such a bloody fool,' I said wearily. âThe only road out of Lipscombe leads there.'
We drove there in complete silence. I drove there in low gear most of the way, only once changing into top. It made for rather a noisy journey, but the low gear suited the road, the noise suited me. Every yard of the four miles I feared Riordan would order me to stop the Land Rover and take over himself: and then for Mary and myself there would only be the long sleep in the
nearest ditch or behind the nearest convenient hedgerow. But the order to stop came only when we moved on to the Tarnmouth jetty.
âFar enough,' Riordan said harshly. He was almost there now, and the strain was beginning to tell, even on him. âKill the motor.'
I put my foot on the clutch, slipped the gear lever silently into first, switched off the ignition key, placed my right hand across the telltale red ignition light, switched the ignition on again and waited. The handbrake was off.
âDon't move, either of you,' Riordan warned. He was quite safe: the edge of the jetty was only 15ft away and deep water beyond. We couldn't escape that way.
I stared in the rear mirror, saw the pale gleam of light as they lifted the screens above the tailgate, heard the metallic scuffle of a boot against the tailgate, and pressed the self-starter at the same instant.
Everything happened in a moment of time. The Land Rover jerked forward violently for a couple of feet before the engine stalled, Riordan and Sellers, swearing viciously, fell heavily to the ground behind, and the darkness and silence of the night was abruptly broken as two powerful headlights behind blazed into life at the same instant as clutches were let in and the twin cylinder engines of the powerful motor bikes caught with a throaty roar.
Riordan and Sellers had no chance. They were still struggling to their feet, blinded by the lights, when the motor bikes hit them: and before they could get up again four powerful policemen, piling out of the car immediately behind, had fallen on them with batons swinging.
âBeautifully, done, Pete, beautifully done indeed.' It was Sergeant Wynne talking, affecting not to notice the almost uncontrollable trembling of my arms and legs. âWe'll have that game of darts tonight yetâafter a few pints. Tell me all.'
I told him, and at the end he turned to smile down coldly at a dazed and handcuffed Riordan.
âMr Cartwright here had a unique opportunity of studying that young lady's engagement ring. He must have watched another ring being slipped on beside it, for practice like, at least 20 times before her wedding: and Mr Cartwright was the best man. It was hardly likely,' Wynne finished drily, âthat the Vicar's wife was going to go out all night dancing with another man only 48 hours after her wedding.'
Some time in 1954 the
Glasgow Herald
ran a short story competition. I had no writing aspirationsâI won't say literary aspirations, for there are a considerable number of people who stoutly maintain that I never had and still don't have any literary aspirationsâand no hope.
However the hundred pounds first prize was a very considerable lure for a person who had no money at all. I went ahead and entered anyway, with a West Highland sea story carrying the title
The âDileas'.
I won and was approached by Ian Chapman, the present chairman of Collins, the publishers, who asked me if I would write a novel. To everybody's surprise, Collins remain my publishers still. After twenty-seven years.
During those twenty-seven years I have written twenty-seven books, fourteen screenplays, and numerous magazine and newspaper articles. It has been, and remains, a fair enough way of earning
a living. I have been called a success, but âsuccess', in its most common usage, is a relative term which has to be applied with great caution, especially in writing.
Quantification is far from being all. Some of the most âsuccessful' books, magazines, and newspapers in publishing history have beggared description when one tries to describe the depths to which they have descended. Enlightenment may not be my forte but, then, neither is depravity.
It is difficult to say what effect one's books have had, what degree of success or failure they have achieved. Consider, for instance, the reactions of those who had the debatable privilege of being on the
Glasgow Herald'
s editorial board at the time when those short stories of long ago were under consideration.
Some may feel, or have felt, a mild degree of satisfaction that they had the foresight or acumen to pick on someone who was not to prove a total dud: all too many writers produce one story and then are heard of no more. Others on the board may have felt a profound indifference. Still others, gnashing their figurative teeth, may have rued the day they launched on his way, a writer whose style, they felt or feel, in no way matched the high standard set itself by Scotland's premier newspaper. I shall never know.
The effect on the reading public is equally hard to gauge. I did write a couple of books which I
thought might be judged as being meaningful or significant but from readers' reactions I was left in no doubt that the only person who shared this opinion was myself. I should have listened to Sam Goldwyn's dictum that messages are for Western Union.
I have since then concentrated on what I regarded as pure entertainment although I have discovered a considerable gulf may lie between what I regard as entertainment and others' ideas on the subject.
I receive a fairly large mail and most of it is more than kindly in tone. I am aware that this does not necessarily reflect an overall consensus of approval: I am essentially a non-controversial writer and people who habitually sign themselves âIndignant' or âDisgusted' of Walthamstow or wherever, don't read my books in the first place, or if they do, don't find the contents worthy of disparaging comment.
The effects of writing on myself, of course, I know fairly well although I'm aware that, even here, there may be room for blind misap-praisal. The main benefits of being a full-time writer are that they confer on one a marked degree of independence and freedom, but that freedom must never be misinterpreted as irresponsibility.
I don't have to start work at nine a.m., and I don't: I usually start between six and seven in
the morning. But then, though I often work a seven-day week, I don't work a fifty-two week year.
Being in a position where there is not one person, anywhere, who can tell you what to doâand that's the position I'm inâis quite splendid. But no one is wholly independent. I have a responsibility towards my publishers.
Publishing houses are not, as has been claimed, a refuge for rogues, thieves, and intellectual criminals who depend for their existence on their expertise in battening on the skills and talents of the miserably rewarded few who can do what the publishers are totally incapable ofâstring together a few words in a meaningful fashion. Some publishing houses are run by people who are recognisably human. Mine is notably one of those.
I feel some responsibility, though not much, to book editors. Collins New English Dictionary defines an editor as one who revises, cuts, alters, and omits in preparation for publication. I feel moderately competent to attend to the revising, cutting, etc., before it reaches the editor. But they can be of help, to some more than others.
I feel no responsibility whatsoever towards book critics. The first criticism I ever read was of my first book,
H.M.S. âUlysses.'
It got two whole pages to itself in a now defunct Scottish newspaper, with a drawing of the dust jacket wreathed
in flames and the headline âBurn this book.' I had paid the Royal Navy the greatest compliment of which I could conceive: this dolt thought it was an act of denigration.
That was the first so-called literary review I ever read: it was also the last. I'm afraid I class fiction book reviewers along with the pundits who run what it pleases them to term âwriting schools'. One must admire their courage in feeling free to advise, lecture, preach, and criticise something which they themselves are quite incapable of doing.
My greatest responsibility and debt are to those who buy my books, making it possible for me to lead the life I do. Moreover, while deriving a perfectly justifiable satisfaction in pointing out my frequent errors of fact, they never tell me how to write. I am grateful.
One great benefit arising from this freedom is the freedom to travel. I do not travel to broaden the mind or for the purposes of research. True, I have been to and written about the Arctic, the Aegean, Indonesia, Alaska, California, Yugoslavia, Holland, Brazil, and diverse other places, but I never thought of writing about these locales until I had been there: on the obverse side of the coin I have been to such disparate countries as Mexico and China, Peru and Kashmir and very much doubt whether I shall ever write about them.
About future writing I really don't know. From time to time, Mr Chapman has suggested, a trifle wistfully I always think, that some day I might get around to writing a good book. Well, it's not impossible for no doubt to the despair of all those book reviewers I never read, I wouldn't like to retire quite yet.
Alistair MacLean, the son of a Scots minister, was born in 1922 and brought up in the Scottish Highlands. In 1941 at the age of eighteen he joined the Royal Navy; two-and-a-half years spent aboard a cruiser was later to give him the background for HMS
Ulysses,
his first novel, the outstanding documentary novel on the war at sea. After the war, he gained an English Honours degree at Glasgow University, and became a school master. In 1983 he was awarded a D.Litt from the same university.
He is now recognized as one of the outstanding popular writers of the 20th century. By the early 1970s he was one of the top 10 bestselling authors in the world, and the biggest-selling Briton. He wrote twenty-nine worldwide bestsellers that have sold more than 30 million copies, and many of which have been filmed, including
The Guns of Navarone, Where Eagles Dare, Fear is the Key
and
Ice Station Zebra.
Alistair MacLean died in 1987 at his home in Switzerland.
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HMS Ulysses
The Guns of Navarone
South by Java Head
The Last Frontier
Night Without End
Fear is the Key
The Dark Crusader
The Satan Bug
The Golden Rendezvous
Ice Station Zebra
When Eight Bells Toll
Where Eagles Dare
Force 10 from Navarone
Puppet on a Chain
Caravan to Vaccarès
Bear Island
The Way to Dusty Death
Breakheart Pass
Circus
The Golden Gate
Seawitch
Goodbye California
Athabasca
River of Death
Partisans
Floodgate
San Andreas
The Lonely Sea (stories)
Santorini