Frederick Wells looked up from the Christmas breakfast table, astonished. He was not at all sure he had heard the maid’s words accurately through the shouts of the children.
“Be quiet!” he ordered; the table was silent, “What did you say?”
“The White House is on the telephone, sir,” replied the maid.
The squeals that accompanied the statement served only to remind Wells that he had married too late in life. At least, too late to have young children. If the truth were known, he did not really like children; they were fundamentally uninteresting.
He rose from the table, his eyes briefly locking with his wife’s. She seemed to be reading his thoughts.
Why in heaven’s name would the White House be calling? Short of blatantly insulting the President and his corps of incompetents, Frederick Wells had made his position clear. He did not approve of the man in the White House.
Was it possible the President was using the pretext of Christmas greetings to offer olive branches to his enemies? The man had an embarrassment of embarrassments.
Wells closed the door of his study and walked to his desk, his eyes falling on the row of Yuan and Ming vases locked behind the glass in the case. They were exquisite; he never tired of looking at them. They reminded him that there was peace and beauty in the midst of ugliness.
He picked up the phone.
“Mr. Frederick Wells?”
Sixty seconds later his personal world had collapsed. The writer had done it! How was immaterial, the fact was everything!
Inver Brass could protect itself. Instant dissolution, nonexistent records.… If need be, a second justifiable assassination, removing Peter Chancellor from this world.
But what about him? Banner had all the weapons save one. And that remaining weapon was exposure. Exposure of a name over which he had absolutely no control. To Wells, exposure was tantamount to destruction.
A lifetime wasted!
Still he could fight. This time on a country road west of Baltimore. An accommodation had to be reached. For everyone’s good.
His eyes fell once again on the Chinese vases behind the glass. They did nothing for him.
Carlos Montelán sat back in the church pew and watched with a certain detached hostility as the priest went through the incantations of the Christmas mass. He would not kneel; there were limits to the hypocrisy he indulged in for his wife and family.
Boston was not Madrid, but the memories were too sharp still. The Spanish church had been a sworn companion of the political winds, concentrating on its own survival without compassion for its brutalized flocks.
Montelán felt the vibration an instant before he heard the hum. The worshippers in the immediate vicinity were startled; several turned toward him, their faces angry. The Lord’s house was being intruded upon by an alien caller, but the recipient of the call was a great man, an advisor to Presidents. The Lord’s house was not immune to the emergencies of this man’s world.
Carlos thrust his hand inside his jacket, shutting off the sound. His wife and children turned; he nodded to them, got out of the pew, and walked up the marble aisle past flickering candles. He went outside, found a telephone booth, and called his service.
The White House was trying to find him, but he was not to return the call. It had to be made on a special telephone. He was to leave a number where he could be reached.
The conspiracies of idiotas! thought Montelán. He gave the number of the telephone booth.
The telephone rang, its strident bell echoing harshly within the booth. Swiftly Carlos removed the instrument and brought it to his face.
The words had the effect of sharp knives entering his stomach; the pain was ice cold. The writer had found him out! Everything he had done, everything he had agreed to, was exploded in the accusations of Peter Chancellor.
The agreement, his pact, had been necessary! It was the final preservation of Inver Brass’s integrity! There could be no other way!
The writer had to be made to understand! Yes, of course, he’d meet with him. A golf course, east of Annapolis, the tenth green? Yes, he’d find it The hour did not matter; he would be there shortly past midnight.
His hand trembling, Montelán hung up the phone. For several moments he stood in the cold, staring at the instrument. He wondered briefly whether he should pick it up again and call Jacob Dreyfus.
No, he could not do that. Christopher was a very old man. A coronary was not out of the question.
Daniel Sutherland drank his sherry and listened to his son, Aaron, hold forth with his two sisters and their husbands. The couples had flown in from Cleveland for Christmas; the children were in the sun-room with their grandmother and Aaron’s wife, wrapping presents. Aaron, as usual, held his audience mesmerized.
The judge watched his son with profoundly mixed emotions. Love was paramount, of course, but close to it was disapproval. The newspapers called Aaron a firebrand, the brilliant attorney of the legitimate black left. Still, Daniel wished he weren’t so fiery, so sure that only he had the answers to the problems of race.
There was such hatred in his son’s eyes, and hatred was not the way; there was no essential strength in it. One day his son would learn that. And one day he would also learn that his ill-conceived loathing of all whites was not only fruitless but often misplaced.
His name said something about that. It had been given him by the dearest friend Daniel had ever had. Jacob Dreyfus.
His name must be Aaron, Jacob had said. The older brother of Moses, the first priest of the Hebrews. It is a beautiful name, Daniel. And he is a beautiful son.
The telephone rang.
Aaron’s wife, Abby, came through the door. As always Daniel looked at her lovingly, and not without a certain awe. Alberta Wright Sutherland was, perhaps, the finest black actress in the country. Tall, erect, with a magnificent presence that could, when necessary, subdue her own husband. Her audience, unfortunately, was limited by her taste. She would not accept roles that exploited either her sex or her race.
“I’ll try to deliver the line with a straight face, all right?” she said.
“The White House is on the telephone.”
“It’s bewildering, to say the least,” said Daniel, getting out of the chair. “I’ll take it in the dining room.”
It was bewildering. His last four appellate decisions had infuriated the administration, its disapproval expressed in print.
“This is Judge Sutherland.”
“You’re also Venice,” said the flat, hard voice on the phone.
The writer had done it! The commitment of a lifetime was suddenly, awesomely, suspended. If it was destroyed, there was nothing, for nothing was worth the loss. The deceivers would inherit the earth.
Daniel listened carefully, weighing each word the writer spoke, each inflection.
There might be a way. It was a desperate strategy, one he was not sure he could survive, much less execute. But it had to be attempted.
Deception.
“Tomorrow morning, Mr. Chancellor. At sunrise. The inlet east of Deal Island, the trawler moorings. I’ll find it I’ll find you.”
Sutherland’s eyes were focused absently over the telephone, through the hallway arch into the distant living room. His daughter-in-law came into view. She stood erect and proud.
She had been a superb Medea, Daniel recalled. He remembered her final words in the last act, a cry to the heavens.
Here are my babes, bloodied and slain for the love of a god named Jason!
Sutherland wondered why those words came back to him. Then he knew.
They had been in the corner of his mind only seconds ago.