All Honourable Men

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Authors: Gavin Lyall

BOOK: All Honourable Men
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All Honourable Men

Gavin Lyall

Contents

Chapter 1

Chapter 2

Chapter 3

Chapter 4

Chapter 5

Chapter 6

Chapter 7

Chapter 8

Chapter 9

Chapter 10

Chapter 11

Chapter 12

Chapter 13

Chapter 14

Chapter 15

Chapter 16

Chapter 17

Chapter 18

Chapter 19

Chapter 20

Chapter 21

Chapter 22

Chapter 23

Chapter 24

Chapter 25

Chapter 26

Chapter 27

Chapter 28

1

On Tuesday nights the hotel had a violinist and a pianist in the parlour. This was odd because in every other way it was the sort of hotel where, if you asked for an extra blanket, you got told instead how warm a night it was. But the best musicians did not play in Gloucester Road hotels, and Lajos Göttlich had heard their small repertoire too often already, so he escaped to the dimly gas-lit lobby. To go out meant spending money, but he might manage to borrow an evening paper off the receptionist.

However, the receptionist was listening to some tale being spun by the out-of-work Irish chauffeur who had been there only a week (and had asked for “Danny Boy” on his first evening; he had got “In a Monastery Garden” for his impertinence). Lajos heard the receptionist say: “A
Rolls-Royce
?” so he paused, half-hidden behind an aspidistra plant, and listened.

“Can you drive one?” the receptionist was asking.

“I can drive anything,” the Irishman said confidently. “Anyways, I
did
drive this one. Quite a nice motor-car, I'm thinking.”

“Gosh.” The receptionist imagined himself being able to describe a Rolls-Royce as “quite nice”. “And will he buy it?”

“If he listens to me. And if he don't listen to me, why'd he hire me, then?”

“Oh, absolutely. Are you going to stay on here, now?”

“I'd not be knowing jest yet. Mind, I wouldn't be saying no if he wanted me to move into the Savoy with him, close and convenient.” The Irishman cackled. He had a lean, dark piratical look – an old face on a younger loose-limbed body – and averaging the ages Lajos had reckoned he was little over thirty. But you had to be young to understand all these new
mechanical toys that obsessed the world: motor-cars, air-ships, aeroplanes.

The Irishman – was his name Jarman? Gorman? Lajos wished he could remember – caught sight of him and waved cheerily. “And a very good evening to ye, Mr Göttlich.”

“He's found a position,” the receptionist said.

“Excellent! May I offer my congratulations?”

“Ye can do more'n that: ye can come out and have a drink wid me.”

Gorman – he was pretty sure it was Gorman – was obviously going to be so insistent that Lajos could seem reluctant. “It is rather cold, is it not?”

“ 'Tis a lovely spring evening and I'll not hear a word against it. Be getting yer coat, then.”

“If you wish.” A man who lived at the Savoy and sent a new-hired chauffeur to pick out a Rolls-Royce for him . . . Lajos would have walked naked through a snowstorm to hear more.

* * *

Mr Carstairs was not an impressive man, but Lajos had long ago learnt not to judge a man's bank balance by his physique. Shortish – shorter than himself – a bit tubby, fair-haired and with a boyish, optimistic face (the rich, Lajos had observed, did things their own way, wearing young faces on old bodies). At home in his Savoy suite, Carstairs wore just waistcoat and trousers of very dark grey, with an old-fashioned wing collar and one of the dullest neckties in London. But the gold watch-chain across his stomach could have anchored a battleship.

They introduced themselves and Carstairs waved at a silver tray. “Help yourself to some coffee, it should still be hot. If not, I can—”

“I am sure it will be fine.” The room was big and warm and, being at the back of the hotel, quiet. A small writing-table by one window was piled with company reports and suchlike; today's
Financial Times
lay on the floor.

Carstairs had been lighting a pipe. Now he asked abruptly: “How did you hear of me?”

“As I said in my letter, friends in the City mentioned that you had recently returned from South Africa—”

“Just over a week ago.”

“—and that you had been asking about investment opportunities in oil.”

“I was.” Carstairs sat back in his chair, puffed his pipe and looked critically at Lajos. But he hadn't the face for strong expressions: everything came out boyishly innocent. “And are you looking for an opportunity to make some money out of me?”

“I certainly hope not to be the loser by our acquaintance,” Lajos said, unperturbed. “And I am not here on a charitable mission. But may I start with a warning?”

Carstairs nodded.

“You are too late. You should have begun ten years ago. Better still, twenty. Now, oil has become too big a business. With the invention of the motor-car, with navies building warships that run on oil, it is now a game of nations, of empires. Even the Rothschilds, so I understand, are pulling back.”

“Hm. Are you saying there's no more oil to find?”

“No, no. Of course there is oil still to be found, but – are you a mining engineer, Mr Carstairs?”

“No, I made my little packet finding engineers who knew what they were doing and backing them – and managing them when they needed it.” He smiled. “Which was a bit more often than they expected.”

Lajos nodded approval. “That is a rarer talent than most people understand. And you like being your own boss?”

Carstairs puffed contentedly. “I'm spoiled that way.”

“Then you are looking for someone who can find, or has found, oil – and does not know what to do next?”

“Something like that.”

Lajos seemed about to go on, then paused. Finally he said: “One more warning, Mr Carstairs: oil needs both patience and reliable finance. Do you understand how much it can cost to
drill one well in the deserts of the East? At
least
£100,000.”

But Carstairs came through that test without batting an eyelid.

“And that is before you have paid all the
baksheesh
to the local sheikhs and government officials, before you must build a pipeline to get the oil out, perhaps also a refinery, charter ships . . . Shall I tell you what so often happens then, Mr Carstairs?”

“Go ahead.”

“You run out of money. Somehow, when you see a fortune within reach, the banks become reluctant. They have heard rumours, perhaps your concession is not legally so perfect, they fear a war in that area, shipping rates are going up . . . Ah, such rumours! And then, like the handsome prince in the fairy-story, there comes one of the big companies – Shell or Standard or Anglo-Persian – who saves you. That is, they buy you out for a fraction of what you have spent. And they live happily ever after.”

Carstairs took his pipe out of his mouth and squinted at Lajos. “Are you trying to scare me off?”

“No, I only want that you do not say you were not warned.”

“Then what do you advise?”


Start
by thinking you will sell out to the big companies. Go only so far, spend only so much, to prove there is oil – and then sell. As long as they know you are not hungry, that you do not
need
to sell, then they will become hungry – and a big, hungry oil company is a wonderful sight. Even better, you may have a pack of them, bidding like wolves against each other for your well.

“But they will not buy just rumours, a concession to drill. They are offered a hundred every day. So you must spend some money to prove your strike.”

Carstairs got up and walked to the window, trailing thoughtful smoke-puffs. He stared down at the wind-scuffed brown Thames and a small steam-tug, foaming at the bows yet making almost no headway against the combined ebb and current.

“That sounds like good advice. Worth something in itself.” He swung around. “So what I'm looking for is someone with a
good, likely concession to drill in – where? Mesopotamia? Persia?”

“Not Persia: Anglo-Persian is too powerful there. And Mesopotamia only if you trust the new Turkish Government . . . but I think first of the little sheikhdoms on the Persian Gulf.”

“That's still part of the Turkish Empire, isn't it?”

Lajos's Eastern European background showed in a fluid rocking movement of his hand. “It is a long way from Constantinople. And a long time since the Turks were powerful enough to beat on the gates of Vienna. Yes, I think the Gulf is the most likely place, and I have a little connection there. I must find out – discreetly of course – what is the true situation.”

* * *

The map was a beautiful map – even as reproduced by the blueprint process, which made it look slightly smudged and, of course, blue. Every sand-dune seemed to be shown by delicate hatching, and the stylised shoreline, where desert met the waters of the Persian Gulf, appeared to ripple with the gentle surf. It was a work of art.

Perhaps a mining engineer would have preferred a work of geology, but the oil concession was clearly marked as a rectangle of red ink, exact position and area noted. It even had a little oil derrick drawn in.

“Artistic licence,” Lajos explained with a smile. “However, the true licence from Sheikh Mubarak is also here – witnessed, you observe, by a British vice-consul.”

Carstairs passed the document to his solicitor Mr Jay, an aristocratic-looking young man, younger than Lajos had expected, but wearing a proper founded-1803 suit and a true legal air of sceptical puzzlement. “Signed in October 1912,” he observed. “Eighteen months ago. What progress has been made in that time, Mr Göttlich?”

“As I told Mr Carstairs, drilling equipment, the latest Parker Rotary patent machinery, has been landed in Kuwait and is
now being erected.” Lajos dealt Jay a full hand of overseas cables and copies of letters. “Drilling should, I understand, start within the month.”

Carstairs crinkled his brow in a boyish frown. “Then why should Mr Divine pick this moment to sell out?”

Lajos gave a sad, exaggerated shrug. “A complete collapse of his health, I am sorry to say. His doctors have ordered him to Switzerland. Between ourselves, gentlemen,” his voice grew confidential, “I fear his sickness has much to do with the slowness of developing this concession: it needs a younger, more energetic man to make things move along. Also one who has not lost badly on the French market. But that is rumour, please do not repeat it.”

Mr Jay coughed dryly. It wasn't the true Saharan cough of a seasoned solicitor, but it was a good junior version. “The motives for Mr Divine's selling are not legally germane. What concerns me is (a) whether Mr Divine is the true owner of the shares – which the company register appears to show him to be, and (b) whether Mr Göttlich has the right, as trustee, to sell them on his behalf. Which this document –” he routed among the piles of paperwork scattered across the hotel room's coffee-table “– appears to show that he is.”

The slight exasperation on Carstairs' face dared Lajos to get annoyed. “Why do you always say
appears?
Do you suggest because I am not an Englishman that I—”

“Calm down, Mr Göttlich,” Carstairs soothed. “I never yet met a legal gentleman who'd say it was wet if he was swimming, just it
appears
to be.”

But this only seemed to annoy Jay in turn. “Nor can I say,” he said coldly, “that there is a single grain of sand in this part of Arabia, a single drop of oil under it, nor a nut or bolt of drilling machinery preparing to seek it out. Only that it
appears
that you would have a good case against Mr Göttlich if this transpired not to be so.”

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