3

The Commander had got one thing wrong: “Mrs Finn”, nee Corinna Sherring, was not a widow. The San Francisco fire of 1906 (which did not involve an earthquake, as any resident without earthquake insurance could tell you) destroyed so many public records of births and marriages that it became, retrospectively, where most of America’s confidence tricksters had been born or married. But what (a kindly judge asked himself) could a millionaire’s daughter gain from falsely declaring she had lost both husband and his birth certificate in the flames when no inheritance was involved? The judge’s wife might have pointed out that society – particularly in Europe – allowed widows far more licence than unmarried girls, but more likely she’d have kept such knowledge to herself. Anyway, the judge hadn’t asked her.

Corinna had not, in the eyes of society, abused her freedom. She did not steal others’ husbands, however obvious the offers from the husbands (and occasionally their wives). She had simply set out to enjoy the full life she had heard whispered about at her Swiss finishing school. And if anybody said she could only do that because her father was very rich, she readily agreed and pointed out that, since he was rich, she’d be silly to pass up the chance.

Her interest in making as well as spending money was a different matter. For as long as she could remember she’d been intrigued by what her father actually did, and when her brother Andrew showed no interest at all, he nurtured her curiosity into a fascination with the world where money was not pennies and dollars in your purse but something as invisible as the breeze, as powerful as the typhoon – and as vital as the trade winds.

Meanwhile, her mother, long deserted by her husband and now apparently by her daughter as well, took to drinking even more heavily. It was, Corinna now realised, terribly unfair that the effect was so obvious when she didn’t understand the cause. And when she understood that the cause was her father, she had to cope with hating him for that whilst loving and admiring him for the rest. She found she could manage that. But it left her very, very wary of marriage.

Perhaps she felt safe with Ranklin just because they had no future together. And she could be honest with him – even about the late, fictitious Mr Finn – because they had swapped hostages and she knew, and kept, his own more dangerous secret. With him, she didn’t have to face the forever.

She had summoned Ranklin to meet her at the end of a grey March afternoon in an upstairs room of a Bond Street gallery, one of those places dealing in beaux arts which could be anything from probably Venetian crystal to an attributed Gainsborough via a restored Hepplewhite commode. She was talking to one of the staff “experts” (salesmen), who had manoeuvred her near to a comfortable chair and obviously wanted her to sit down and give him a turn at dominating. He had Ranklin’s sympathy.

Corinna – several inches taller than Ranklin – had literally a head start when it came to dominating, and her clothes did the rest. She bought mainly from someone called Poiret in Paris, so while the rest of Bond Street tottered along in pastel hobble skirts and small feathery headgear she wore a loose kimono-like coat of purple-red and a black matador’s hat.

Most women would have become invisible inside such clothes; Corinna got away with it because of her vivid and rather actressy exaggeration of eyes, mouth and black hair. She saw Ranklin and blazed a wide grin at him. Standing too close, the “expert” recoiled from the muzzle blast.

“Hello there. You know Constantinople, don’t you?”

“I’ve been there.”

“What d’you think of this, then?”

“This” was an oil painting placed on a display easel to catch what little light came from the window over the street. Ranklin couldn’t see if it were signed by an artist he should admire, but with its minarets and Byzantine domes and small boats it was unmistakeably Constantinople.

“It is,” he pronounced, “unmistakeably Constantinople. At sunset,” he added.

“Ignorant yahoo,” Corinna said. “That could be by Van-mour, painter to the French Embassy in Constantinople in the eighteenth century. You didn’t even know embassies had artists in those days, did you?” She spoke with the confidence of very new-found knowledge.

The “expert” said hastily: “I’ll leave you to discuss it then, madam, sir.” He bowed slightly and vanished downstairs.

“I know nothing about art,” Ranklin said, “but they sell those by the yard in the souvenir shops of the European quarter. Why the interest?”

“I’ve got to go there.”

Ranklin looked at the picture again. “Well, if you add the smell of someone brewing coffee with sewer water and the sound of a street fight in Greek and French, staring at it might help. Got to? – why?”

She finally sat down. Untypically, she made quite a procedure of it, propping up her dainty umbrella and carefully placing a large piece of hand baggage that she insisted was just a “purse”. “Oh, business, more or less.”

She was keeping something back, but Ranklin knew enough just to nod. Perhaps she realised the impression she’d given, so started to drown it in explanation. “The Turks are looking for a big long-term loan – again. Their Finance Minister’s been running around Europe all winter trying to raise one. The City here won’t touch the idea, the Germans aren’t lending money to anyone at the moment, so the French are his best bet, they’ve lent so much in the past they’re riding a tiger. And their people are out there talking right now.

“We’ve got a new Ambassador in Constantinople, Henry Morgenthau. A Democrat.” She considered, then perhaps remembered the poor man might have been born that way, and went on: “He used to be a Wall Street lawyer. And the Turks apparently asked him Could America help out? It seems the answer was mostly No, but there’s one guy, Cornelius Billings from Chicago, who’s been a pretty good client of ours over the years, and he got interested and went out there in his yacht-”

“In this weather?” The Eastern Mediterranean wasn’t the Bay of Biscay, but Ranklin had imagined American millionaires as strictly summer sailors.

She got a little austere. “It isn’t a bath-tub toy. It’s over a thousand gross tons, three turbines and does sixteen-” She caught his expression of polite uninterest. “Anyhow, it’s bigger than ours. So: he went to Constantinople, he listened to them, and cabled Pop saying he was getting interested. Pop’s pretty wary of the Turkish market but doesn’t like to say No to an old client, so he’s sending me, so I can take the blame if Billings starts saying we’ve let him down. It won’t be the first time.” She sounded philosophical about it, then added: “And Billings may be right and there’s some good business to be picked up there. The Turks certainly need the money. According to Billings, the Balkan wars literally ran them out of cash so the Government can’t pay its wage bill. I mean, think of that: you do a week’s work but don’t get paid at the end of it.”

Scandalised by the thought, she stood up and strode to frown out of the window. Ranklin was less moved. He didn’t pretend to know Turkey, but he had met Eastern fatalism. And there, if you hadn’t been paid, well, “It is written.” Anyway, most of your income wouldn’t be from your salary but bribes – baksheesh. And what could you do about it? Certainly not take a stand on principle. Sometimes he thought that her world, with its vastly complex deals measured in eighths of one per cent, only worked because of its simplicity: you kept your word or you were an outcast, and probably a bankrupt. He knew about that side of it.

But he also knew a little of the world where making a promise was infringing the prerogative of God.

“And?” he prompted.

“The French are making a foreign treaty out of this loan, all sorts of concessions and rights, and it’s taking time. As Americans we aren’t interested in that, so there might be room for a simple cash-down deal to tide the Turks over. That’s what banks like us can still do. We’ll never have the capital the big joint-stock banks have nowadays. But we don’t have their dozens of directors and thousands of small depositors, either. We can travel light and fast.”

“That sounds most noble. What’s the problem?”

“Is anything likely to happen in Turkey to make them default on our loan? Another war, anything like that. Just in the next – say – six months.”

“Ah.”

“I don’t expect you to know, just find out.” Simple: the British Secret Service Bureau should dig and delve for an American private bank. But, as the Commander had guessed, this was one of the strata of their relationship.

Ranklin took it calmly. “I think a European war’ll happen because something somewhere takes us by surprise – and Turkey’s such an obvious place, with all the Great Powers wanting part of their Empire, that it won’t be the place. If that’s any help.”

“You don’t get a fire at the firemen’s ball, huh? It’s a good argument – but I’d like a little more.”

“And what do we get out of it?”

Her smile suggested she was about to make a naughty joke out of that, but then didn’t. “It’s no secret that Britain’s looking for a reliable, controllable source of oil – right?” Then she told him about Lajos Gottlich.

When the resident “expert” poked his head up to top-step level, he saw them both leaning propped against the window-sill, staring at the floor a few yards away. They made a puzzling pair. He was used to elegant women accompanied by short, fat men whose wallets were tall and handsome, but knowing who Corinna was made Ranklin a conundrum.

Corinna glanced his way, fired off a grin and called: “We’re still talking it over. Thank you.”

Roused from his thoughts, Ranklin looked at the picture of Constantinople and said carefully: “I know you have problems with men in the City who aren’t used to talking finance with a woman, but in Turkey . . . they prefer women seldom seen and never heard. Are you going all by yourself?”

“No-o. . .” She swivelled slightly to look out of the window. “No, but I’ve got a connection with the French financial delegation there. Edouard D’Erlon, of D’Erlon Freres, one of the Paris private banks. We’ve done business with them. He’s the son of the firm. He’s also a director of the Imperial Ottoman Bank. That’s the biggest bank in Turkey. Now French-controlled.”

The staccato sentences were like the vibrations of an imminent earthquake. He had barely time to brace himself before it struck.

She stood and faced him. “Pop wants me to marry him, and I think I’m going to have to.”

All Ranklin’s experience as a spy clicked into play. From his expression, she could have been telling him about this wonderful little dressmaker she’d found.

Then, from being clipped and hesitant, she suddenly became voluble. “Ethan, he’s Pop’s main New York partner, had a heart attack last month. He’s got a new young wife (so it serves the old goat right) and he’s talking of retiring to breed horses. That’s got Pop thinking of mortality and dynasty and what happens to the House of Sherring. He’s given up on hoping Andrew will join the bank, so he wants to breed an heir from me. And he reckons Edouard’s the right stallion, good banking blood on both sides, see? And later, maybe some sort of merger. That sort of thing’s coming anyway. It’s the only way the private banks can survive. The world’s getting too rich.” She smiled wanly. “Hadn’t you noticed?

“If I was a man I could walk out on Pop and with my experience any bank would take me on, maybe offer me a partnership straight off, let me owe them for it. But as a woman, people only deal with me because I’m Pop’s daughter. So I need him, I need the House of Sherring, if I’m going to stay in the game.

“So it’s the money, in a silly kind of way. I’ll always have enough for myself, unless Pop goes completely bust, but when I marry Edouard, Pop’ll settle enough on me so I can buy my own partnership, properly, carry on as I am. Better than I am. That’s the deal. It’s unfair and Pop knows it and he’s got me over a barrel.”

During all this, Ranklin had more or less got his feelings formed up and ready for inspection. He had, he told himself, always known it couldn’t last. Only he’d thought it would end tomorrow, never today. “What’s this chap Edouard like?”

“Oh, perfectly civilised, pleasant company, lousy taste in objets d’art but that’s French bankers for you, a bit younger than you, a bit taller-”

“Sounds like a bargain. We always knew we weren’t permanent. I mean – what future have you got with a captain of . . . whatever I’m a captain of, these days?”

Deceived by the quietness of their tone, the “expert” reappeared, smiling and salesmanlike. Neither of them noticed.

“You’re being noble,” Corinna said accusingly. “You’re being self-sacrificing.”

“I’m being sensible and rational.”

“God, how I hate self-sacrificing, sensible men. They’re so righteous, so unfair!”

“I’m just facing up to things,” Ranklin protested. “There really isn’t any way we could make a proper marriage-”

And that’s another thing! You never even asked me to marry you! Oh no, you were quite happy just using me whenever it took you fancy. Well, let me tell you-”

The “expert” almost fell down the stairs before a stray thunderbolt hit him.

“For God’s sake, using you? What d’you mean? As I recall-”

“I wouldn’t marry you if the alternative was the Spanish Inquisition.”

“Isn’t that just what I was saying? It would be-”

“I’m going to marry Edouard. And I had a plan, but I’m not so sure I’ll bother with it, now.”

“That’s fine. I think you should marry Edouard. It’s the sensible thing.”

“Don’t you even want to hear my plan?”

“Only if you want to tell me.” Ranklin was being so upright that you could have moored the British Empire to him.

“I don’t think I’ll do it now, but what I was going to do was, just before I marry – I can time this – you get me pregnant, so there’s a fifty-fifty chance the heir to Sherrings and maybe D’Erlons too will be our son. How about that?”

Ranklin gaped, horrified, appalled. In all his years as a soldier, then as a spy, he had learnt a lot about what men can do to each other. But women. . .

All his training fell away. “You can’t. . . I mean . . . that is unthinkable!”

She grinned, happy that at last she’d shaken him out of his reasonableness. “Nonsense, this isn’t cricket, nothing so serious. It would just be playing their game with our own twist.”

“My God, I need a drink,” Ranklin said weakly.

“Yes, you do look a bit that way. We’d better get you one.”

As they went down the stairs, Ranklin said grimly: “On the North-West Frontier, the Pathan women come out and dispatch wounded British soldiers, slowly. Kipling has a poem about it.”

“No kidding? Usually he gets his women wrong.”

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