Saturday, August 30, 2014

ATTENTION READERS! AUTHOR'S NOTE for A GREEN ISLAND IN A BLACK SEA (Amazon's Kindle Library, 2013)

 FROM THE AUTHOR

AUTHOR’S EDITORIAL

NOVEL: A GREEN ISLAND IN A BLACK SEA

James R. Fisher, Jr., Ph.D.

“A Novel of the future in the mirror of the past!”

© September 11, 2014

South Africa in 1968 brought together an American outsider to the confines of an outsider nation, the Afrikaner government and its draconian practices of apartheid. 

Young Seamus “Dirk” Devlin rose from the American working class to executive status with the collapse of social and economic stratification after World War Two.

The Devlin family entered this shadow world without protocol or preparation.  Europe was distracted by clashes of students with politicians while the United States struggled with the Civil Rights Movement and the assassinations of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., and Senator Robert Kennedy.

Many pundits have claimed 1968 marked the end of the American Century 32 years early.  Meanwhile, the United States, more than a score of years after a victorious World War Two, entered its hegemony without protocol or preparation.

Dirk Devlin, like many Americans of his generation, was forced into a leadership role by emerging circumstances.  He wasn’t primed for this assignment to form a new company in a culture of clashing values and repressive governance.  Nor was the United States of America prepared for its new role in the world order.

A GREEN ISLAND IN A BLACK SEA is a psycho-sexual drama centered on Dirk Devlin and his American family played out against the milieu of crumbling British colonial entitlement, Afrikaner intransigence, and a world-weary morality in the mind of the times on the African continent in 1968.

It is the story of a man swept up in the dawn of a new era where he feels betrayed by everything he once held sacred, but no longer finds supportive, captive to free floating anxiety with no anchors in sight.  It is a novel that asks the question: has anything changed?  



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Posted By Blogger to The Peripatetic Philosopher at 8/30/2014 12:52:00 PM

Thursday, August 28, 2014

WHO PUT YOU in the CAGE? Now available in Amazon's Kindle Library, August 28, 2014


WHO PUT YOU IN THE CAGE?

James Raymond Fisher, Jr., Ph.D.


REFERENCE:

Following in a description of this book that appears in the Amazon Kindle Library:



Potential is what you have.  Intelligence is what you use.  The purpose of life is what you do.  Denial of potential, the failure to use your intelligence, while being a slave to rather than in charge of your life puts you in a cage of your own construction.  

The cage is put together by brick by emotional brick through an obsession to belong, the need to pursue someone else’s agenda, dependence on recreational drugs or other stimulants, inability to say “no” when it serves your best interests, and a desire to have friends rather than to be a friend to yourself.  

It is a cage of no escape as long as you are obsessed with these dependencies for it is a life that does not belong to you, and is, therefore, not worth living.  

WHO PUT YOU IN THIS CAGE deals with one of the most pervasive social sicknesses of our times, the divided-self

Wednesday, August 27, 2014

NOVELIST FISHER'S FACES in A GREEN ISLAND IN A BLACK SEA (Amazon's Kindle Library, 2013) PART FIVE

NOVELIST FISHER’S FACES in A GREEN ISLAND IN A BLACK SEA (Amazon’s Kindle Library, 2013)

PART FIVE

James R. Fisher, Jr., Ph.D.
© August 27, 2014

Asabi Isheola

Asabi had been employed at Rose Garden Manor since 1965, although now only 19.  She was lithe of frame, diminutive in height, standing five feet tall, and shaped like a diva.  

She had black satin hair that she wore so short that it seems painted on her skull, her skin the color of Tabasco sauce, her oval face softly angular and shaped like a diamond with arched eyebrows, deep dark eyes and pouting lips that gave her a siren’s demeanor, her nose thin and shapely suggesting a perpendicular divide to her sculptured lips, complemented by small even white teeth, and a delicate chin that suggested vulnerability that hid her cunning.  

She caused pain to admirers with her petite body, small breasts, wasp like waist, accentuated with her cat like walk.

She wore her maid’s uniform as short as was decent, and glued to her body to show off her tiny waist, high set rump, and defined calves.  She weighed just shy of eighty-five pounds but had the comely command of a three-hundred pound giant, and knew it. 

Her bedroom eyes were deep and dark like mountain nights in her native Transkei.  Deeply religious, a convert to Christianity, she was a resident staff member of the Devlin household.

Born in the Transkei, she was forced to move to SOWETO with her mother and five other siblings when her father was sent to prison for murdering a man who had stolen from him.  

In SOWETO, the family lived in a thatched Quonset hut with dirt floors, and an attached aluminum room, which was used as the bedroom for them all.  Her mother cooked on a hibachi and made her living weaving baskets, and selling them in the “Farmer’s Market,” in Johannesburg.
 
Asabi was the eldest with two brothers and three sisters.  She never finished high school but found employment without difficulty with her good looks, easy smile and graceful manner.  

She dropped out of high school when the school principal, a Swahili, attempted to rape her when she was fifteen.  She never told her parents for fear her father would kill the man when he got out of prison.  Her mother didn’t protest her dropping out, as she needed the financial support now as she was the lone provider of the family.

Danger clung to Asabi like ink to a blotter.  Not only Bantu men but white men as well felt her taunting magnetism on the street, the train or the bus, wherever she was.  

She delighted looking at herself naked in the mirror with her shining ebony skin, perfect contours, touching her tiny breasts, and squeezing the nipples until they turned a deep pink contrasting with her dark body.  She would sit on the bed with a mirror in her one hand and spread the lips of her great divine, and admire the beautiful flower that held the mystery of life.

She knew she was pretty, but hated her mother for always reminding her what a curse it was.  "Why a curse, mommy," she would ask, "why can’t you be happy for the way I look?  I love the way I look.  I love the way men stare at me as I walk by, why not?  What harm is there to being pretty?"

She looked at her eyes closely in the mirror.  They were dark brown pools of wanting as she thought of Josiah, who always ignored her.  He looked the other way as she would sashay by him in the garden.  He was afraid of white authority, that must be the reason, afraid to look at her with the same desire as other men. 

She wondered.  Would the police send him to prison if it caught us making love in his little house?  He has his own place, and I could sneak out in the dead of night, and who would know?  Was making love on a white man’s property as grave a crime as being political like Nelson Mandela?  Was that why Josiah won’t’ look at me with desire?

Bahari

There were young men Asabi saw in the Rosebank marketplace who worked nearby, and they all had that hungry look when she passed, why not Josiah?

There was Bahari who worked at the Gaddison estate down the road.  One day she decided to pass by when he was working in the garden.  

Sure enough, he rushed out and presented her with a bouquet of quickly cut flowers.  It made her laugh they were so mangled.  He told her he had his own place in the attic loft, and invited her to see it sometime, all the time panting and perspiring.  

She wasn’t sure if it was ardor or his being out of breath from running to catch up with her.  She was tempted to see his loft, but said only, “Not today,” with a smile like Christmas.  Hear that, Josiah, does that make you jealous?

Thereafter, she purposely passed the Gaddison’s on her way to the market, swinging her hips, and lifting her chest out like a red robin, her head held high to draw his attention to her resemblance of Queen Nefertiti, singing to herself like a chirping robin.  She wanted the poor boy to feel as miserable as she did.

Bahari wasn’t her first choice, as he was still a boy, and not yet a man like Josiah.  She could imagine him going back to his loft and stroking himself wishing she were there.  

At times, when she was putting laundry on the clothesline, she could see him looking down at her from his loft, which was above the third level of the Gaddison’s mansion.  She suspected she must look like a tiny speck of beauty beyond his reached surrounded in white linen blowing gently in the breeze.

This went on for several months until one day she was on her way to the market when it suddenly started to rain as she passed the Gaddison’s.  Bahari rushed out of the tool shed with an umbrella, put it over her head, and said, “Hello.”

With his face nearly pressed against hers, holding the umbrella, she was disappointed to discover he was even younger than she first thought.  Short and stocky, only about three inches taller than she was, or a foot shorter than Josiah, he wouldn’t come up to Josiah’s shoulder.  

Perhaps to erase that comparison, he boldly put his arm through hers, as they walked, with him carrying the umbrella over her head.  “Don’t, Bahari,” she protested weakly feigning to disengage his arm from hers.

Startled, “You know my name?”

“So?  I suppose you know my name as well.  So what?”

“Yes, it is Asabi, which means in Transkei one of the select at birth.”

“I’m not impressed.  Everyone knows that.”  She still allowed him to walk arm-in-arm with her.

“But I call you Binta, which means…”

“I know what it means, one who goes with God.  Why would you choose such a name?”

“Because you are divine, like an angel, and God must love you very much to make you so beautiful.”

“Are you religious?”  She felt her heart palpitate.

Bahari squirmed.  “I believe God is in all things, but I don’t go to church.”

Remarkable, the boy is honest.  “Are you a Christian?”

“No, but I know you are.”

“You know that, how?” she asked impressed that he didn’t lie about being religious or Christian.  She looked at him.  He had possibilities.

“It would have been wrong to lie,” he said deciding to take the risk.  “Besides, I hear you are clever.”

She smiled and felt terribly warm.  “Where did you hear that?”  She wondered if Josiah had told him, then decided that was highly unlikely.

“It came from Gabriel.  He sees me looking at you when you’re hanging out the laundry, watching you as you talk to Josiah in the garden, going to the market.  He warned me not to sneak around, that you were too clever for me, that I best keep my heart in my pants, and look for a less clever girl.”

“Gabriel said that?”  She couldn’t believe it.  He never spoke to her except to give her orders, never noticed her unless she failed to complete her work.  Recalling that, she said defiantly, “Gabriel's just an old goat.  Pay him no mind.”

“No, Miss Asabi, people respect Gabriel.  Gabriel was the chief of his village in Botswana, and is known as a wise man.”

Asabi had heard the same stories, and didn’t believe them.  “Whatever,” she said.  

Nearly to the market, the rain now only a sprinkle, she removed Bahari’s arm from hers and out from under the umbrella.  

“Thank you for walking with me,” she said giving him a captivating smile, “my little protector.”  She patted him on the shoulder like an adult would a child.

Bahari bristled at this treatment, and found it difficult to control his anger.  

“I’m not little where God makes men big.  God was good to Bahari.  God made Bahari powerful as God has made the most powerful men.”  

He said this with prideful anger and burning sincerity, as if he were presenting his credentials for an important job.

“I’m sure you’re not,” she added sotto voce, "not little," feeling very warm again.  'Big as the most powerful of men.'  She had been told you couldn’t judge the size of a man’s instrument by his physical size, but among the most powerful of men?  

Could Bahari be boasting or could it be true?  Bahari’s emphatic assertion felt like a stone in her shoe as she went about her errands. 

She found herself hoping Bahari was waiting for her when she completed her shopping, but he wasn’t.


Asabi and the policeman

Asabi thought of the policeman, who often came by and looked at her with lust in his eyes.  He would pull her aside and talk to her with his face nearly touching hers as he did.  It made her uncomfortable but excited as well.  

She wondered not if it would happen, but when it would happen, when the distance between them would vanish and they would be in forbidden territory like that Afrikaner policeman in “Too Late the Phalarope,” a novel she found in master Devlin’s library and had read in one night.

It excited her to see the policeman glaring at Josiah as she would touch the gardener’s arm, and laugh as she looked at the policeman as he entered the terrace.  

Clearly, the policeman saw Josiah as competition even if he wasn’t.  She always knew when he was to arrive, and used that moment to brush by Josiah, laugh and sound as if in intimate conversation.  It was delicious fun.
 
Sometimes to add spice to the intrigue she would follow the gardener into the cover of his large plants just as the policeman walked on to the estate.  Why not?  He always arrived as if by stealth, parking his vehicle some distance away.    

Asabi would come out of the garden, alone, but with a huge satisfying smile on her face.  What must the policeman think they were doing?  If he wanted to treat his visits as assignations, why couldn't she join in the fun?

The policeman was handsome enough but looked cruel with a permanent smirk on his face, his eyes covered in those aviator sunglasses.  Master Devlin didn’t look cruel, but in charge the way Josiah did.  She trembled, frightened by the comparison, then put it out of her mind.

Her mother, still a handsome woman at forty-two, once told her that white men carried the curse of the devil in their loins.  “Let them be, Asabi, never meet their eyes.  They are only interested in your destruction, or the destruction of those you love.”

Her father was a vain man who liked to gossip like an old woman.  She could see that in Bahari.  She had heard her father tell her mother of white people having sex parties where men had sex with other men’s wives, and then went home with their own wives. 

Her mother ignored her father's chatter silently thatching another hat.  Asabi wondered why her father bothered about such things, even if they were true, things that he could not change.
 
Did men like to gossip more about sex than to have sex?  She knew her mother preferred the doing to the talking by the look of her. 

Asabi didn’t want to be a mother at the moment, but she felt she was like her mother in that she would prefer the doing to the talking.  She wanted Bahari’s trunk in her box but nowhere else.  With that, she laid her head on her pillow, and had a dreamless sleep. 


*     *     *

Tuesday, August 26, 2014

NOVELIST FISHER'S FACES in A GREEN ISLAND IN A BLACK SEA (Amazon's Kindle Library, 2013) PART FOUR

NOVELIST FISHER’S FACES in A GREEN ISLAND IN A BLACK SEA (Amazon’s Kindle Library, 2013)

PART FOUR

James R. Fisher, Jr., Ph.D.
© August 26, 2014

Nina in the dark

Devlin could hardly see her in the darkness but he could smell her like animals smell each other.  It was the aroma of sex and love making with the pungent fishy odor and stinging sensation of ammonia.  

Nature was, indeed, in the room.  He touched her profile like a blind man and ran his hand over the contours of her face.  If he were blind, he would know she was beautiful for the hand sees and the touch discerns.  

Her hair was wet and felt like strings of satin.  Her ears close to her head felt satin like, too, shaped like tiny symmetrical seashells.  Her eyes, as only a blind man could imagine, were luminescent orbs that sparkled in the night like black diamonds.  Her nose, his touch told him, was long, straight, thin, with a slight aristocratic curve at its peak with the smoothness of porcelain China.  Her lips had the feel of fullness and delicate design.  To the touch, they seemed serene and soft as velvet but pouting to suggest a strong will.  

The topographical examination concluded, Devlin listened to Nina’s quiet breathing in sleep.  She took his hand, awakened to his touch, and kissed his clammy palm. “We have little choice,” she said in a whisper.

He kissed her open hand with many kisses, exploring its palm, knuckles, fingers, then settled his lips on her pulsing veins, “About what?” he asked.

“About everything.  Everything is out of control, you say that yourself.  Control is a perversion of nature, and you are one of its acolytes.  Admit it.  Society is the face of taboo.  Illiterate Bantus are converted to Christianity, and what does that get them?  It gets them SOWETO!”  She paused, wiped her eyes with his wet palm.  “SOWETO is the face of apartheid not intended, the face of South Africa today.”


Sarah’s ordeal

Sarah got up to get a glass of water, couldn’t go into Gabriel’s precious kitchen but had to get it in the bathroom.  She never knew when he would be up.  

It was past 2 a.m.  She went into the study to find Dirk stretched out on the sofa, book in his lap, the fireplace filled with cold damp ashes, with him in his damn suit as par for the course.  

Despite herself, she went to the hall closet, bringing back a blanket and pulling it up to the big bastard’s neck.

A chill was in the air along with the putrid smell of moist ashes and spent logs in the fireplace.  It matched the chilly toxicity of her rage.  

She knew she couldn’t sleep now.  Look at him, a smile on his face, the book open on his lap to a highlighted caption.  She wished she were a reader and could escape into books as he did.  It was his fantasy land.

By nature a fastidious person, she picked the book off his lap, and looked at the title, “Inside Apartheid,” placing it back on the bookshelf.  God, what a boring title!  It was beyond her how he could read that stuff.

He’s one of Catholicism’s walking wounded, an expatriate angry with God, reciting boring “Ulysses” and “Finnegans Wake” to her as if biblical text.  Ugh!  

She couldn’t get past the third page in “Ulysses,” but did read the raunchy parts where Molly Bloom watched the swimmers in the quarry, naked young boys with their lovely cocks dangling delightfully.

Well, Sarah, you’ve got him where you wanted him, so how does it feel now?  

She started to cry.  The crying turned into sobs, then uncontrollable wailing to the empty darkness.  Dirk stirred in his sleep but didn’t wake.  She looked at him.  She could kill him now in his sleep and he would go peacefully at the ripe old age of nearly 31.  

Would she want that even if she could get away with it?  Good question.  The thought frightened her as sometimes she wished him dead.  She wondered if other wives had such terrible thoughts when their high achieving husbands paid them no mind.


Josiah, the gardener, and the policeman

Josiah was pruning an ungodly plant as Devlin approached.  

Devlin bit his lip from asking about it.  He would be given a botany lesson of some length.  He was not in a mood for that, hoping to keep his throbbing head free of minutiae today.  He came to the wrong place.

Josiah looked at him as he approached without smiling.

"My man, why the long face?” Devlin asked with false bluster thinking Josiah looked like how he felt.

“There was a white police officer here again yesterday questioning me, the third time this month.”  

He noted the puzzled expression on Devlin’s face.  “He’s sweet on Asabi,” as if that explained everything. 

Asabi was the pretty young Bantu maid of the Devlin’s.  “The police officer is jealous of her giving attention to anyone.”

Devlin knew that meant Josiah, “So?”  As soon as he said it, he wished he hadn’t.  It was the headache speaking.

“She doesn’t seem to care for him, but is interested in what she can get out of him.”  Devlin raised a questioning eyebrow.  “The policeman discovered her green card was delinquent, which is serious.  Now, he controls her.”

Devlin waited, “And?”

“He told her if she was nice to him he would let it go.  She could go to jail, master Devlin.”  He stopped pruning the plant, stood up and looked Devlin hard in the eye.  “She can be quite reckless.”

”And you’re telling me this . . .why?”

Josiah turned away, squirmed, took out a cloth and cleaned his trough to Devlin’s back, then dropped down, and resumed his pruning.

Devlin dropped down, too.  “You resent this, am I right?”  

The gardener looked at the roots of the plant as if a metaphysical mystery, dug deep around it viciously, and said nothing.  

“Oh, I see.  You’re sweet on Asabi.”  It was the wrong thing to say.

Josiah rose abruptly from the ground to his full height with defiance in his eyes.  “Josiah has no such interest.  Quite the opposite.  That child is always pestering Josiah.  She gets in the way of Josiah’s work.  Josiah doesn’t know what to do about it!"  Then forgetting himself, wiping his brow with the dirty rag, leaving a clump of mud on his face.  "Now this!”

“Now what?" Devlin asked confused.  "Do you fear the police officer?  Has he threatened you?  What?”  Then Devlin added, "Is there something you want me to do?"

A broad seemingly painful grimace creased the gardener’s handsome face.  He took off his large brim hat, remembered his red handkerchief in his bib overalls, wiped his brow and face, and said, "Terror is a heavy shadow a policeman carries with his badge.  It keeps Josiah alert.  Do you understand master Devlin?”

“Josiah, how many times have I told you I am not your master?  I am your friend.”

“That is not possible, but I understand.  We are in prison here, master, sire, and the policeman guards that prison.  Asabi has forgotten that.  Now, she puts others in danger.”

“Meaning you?”

“Meaning anyone who fails to understand.”

“Surely, if you discouraged her advances that should put you out of danger.”

“Sire, do you know the wrath of a woman?  It is in your Shakespeare.  She lies to the policeman about me, tells him the opposite of how I behave towards her.”  Josiah paused to see if Devlin understood.  

“Sire, have you not been jealous?  Have you not been its victim?”

Oh, brother, how well he knew this animus.  But he said only, “Yes, I suppose I have, but no, I’ve not known anyone insanely jealous to the point of putting me in physical danger.”

“But you admit such jealousy exists?”  Devlin nodded.  “I’ve watched the policeman look at Asabi when she looks at me.  It is like tiny moths gnawing at his jacket, consuming it and then him.  I sense danger, sire, it is that danger that I am telling you now.”

To lessen the pathos of the moment, Devlin asked, “Describe the policeman.  Have I seen him?”

“He does not come around when you or the madam are at home.  You met him when you first came to Rose Garden Manor.  He verified your papers and residence status.”

“Oh!”  Devlin sighed, “That one.”  He remembered the incident and the man whom he took an immediate dislike to, and he suppose, visa-versa.  He was an arrogant bastard, if he remembered him correctly, so full of himself.  Devlin had to smile in reflection.  He probably saw me in similar terms.

Josiah continued. “He appears out of nowhere when Asabi comes into the garden.  She tries to get my attention.” 

And a lot more, it seemed to Devlin.  “Compare him to me.”

“He is not as tall, heavier, some might say, fleshy, about your age with red hair, wears aviator sunglasses with a pink tint, hiding a mean smile, always in civilian clothes.”

“Josiah, if you were in the States, I’d hire you.  That is quite a description!  Yes, I remember him now.  Recently, I came home early and he was just leaving, slipped away in the shadows, but I saw him.  Yes, sneaky devil I should wonder.  

"Perhaps he’ll show up today not realizing I am here, thinking Sarah is out as well.”

This didn’t track with Josiah.  “My daughter, Ruthie, mentioned her mother was going to be out with friends today.  If that is the case, Asabi would know that, thinking I would be gone as well.”

Josiah clearly didn’t relish that prospect.  

“You don’t like him, do you?”

“I don’t like or dislike him.  I fear him.”

“Because you think he is jealous of your relationship with Asabi?”

“I have no relationship with Asabi.  Because Asabi is living dangerously.”

“Has he ever threatened you?”

“Describe what you mean by that.”

“I mean has he threatened to hurt you.”

“No, he has walked into my garden and over my new plants just planted destroying them, then turned back, smiled and walked away."

“That is not only terrible; it is juvenile!  Anything else?”

“Called me a kaffir and told me to watch my step.”

“Kaffir?”

“That is like calling your American Negro a nigger.  I told him I had nothing to do with Asabi.  He said, ‘who said anything about that kaffir?’  I knew he was baiting me to see if I would tell Asabi what he had said, but I didn’t.  I told him I just wanted to be left alone to do my work.”

“What did he say to that?”

“He got angry.  He picked up a lump of dirt, and crushed it in his fist, and said, 'do you think I’d care about a kaffir girl?'  He then took my spade, drove it hard into the soft ground and said it was dangerous to imply that of a white man.  With that, he threw the spade into a newly pruned flower bed, and added, ‘do we understand each other?’”

“My God, Josiah, I’m sorry.  I can imagine how you felt.”

“No you cannot know, sire.  Asabi could if she were a little older but now she feels safe.  I stood there as he trampled on my flowers as he left, charging through my garden, helpless to do anything about it.  

"My eyes felt like clay marbles, my lungs like heavy mud, my arms and legs as if buried in cement.  He destroyed my garden because he could.  

"There was nothing I could do about it, nothing, sire, nothing at all.”  He stared coldly at the ground, angry and defeated.

Devlin pondered the situation.  He believed Josiah.  How could anyone trained to serve and protect act so cowardly?  “Has he left you alone since then?”

“No, sire.  The other day he came into the garden and sneaked up on me, and then yelled in my ear.  'What makes you such a high and mighty kaffir that you have your own house?'

“I explained to him that it was because I worked long hours, often late into the night during the different seasons to protect the plants.  I told him that the gardener always has had a house on the manor for that reason.  He tried to stop me talking putting his hand hard against my chest, but I could not stop.  I told him the manor’s garden was a community treasure ever since the Mayor of Johannesburg resided here.”

“What did he say to that?”

“He turned his back on me, and walked away.  I could tell he was looking for Asabi, but I knew she was hiding behind the curtains in the house.  He looked around, took off his sunglasses, and then came back my way, stopped, and stared at me, then left. 

“I could see his pupils were dilated and his eyes were green.  He was angry.  I don’t know if he was angry with Asabi or me, or with us both.

“I only know that later I found a Bantu male doll on my doorstep with pins stuck through the doll’s heart.  I can’t prove it was the policeman, but it happened that same day.  My terror felt like a serpent was coiled around my heard squeezing my life away.”

Josiah had never been so animatedly talkative.  Devlin felt powerless.  “A voodoo doll?  That’s cruel, but, Josiah, you don’t believe in that stuff, do you?”

“No, but the policeman must think all Bantu are voodoo worshipers.”

“Come on, Josiah, you can’t think the policeman believes that!”

“But I do.  Whites think we’re all the same.  Afrikaners read about religious practices in Haiti and think that applies to all dark skinned people, why not?”

“Even so, Josiah that is clearly bizarre behavior.  It seems too subtle for the policeman you have described.  Could it be someone more cunning?”

“I don’t know.  It could be Bahari, Asabi’s friend down the road on another estate, a boy who is sweet on Asabi.”

“Are you suggesting Asabi collects admirers?”

“Asabi lives dangerously and I think she is without morals.”

“Josiah that is a serious accusation.”

“I know.”

“Do you have any evidence?”

“I see things hear things mind my own business sometimes people forget I am always in the garden.”

“When we started this conversation, I asked you what you wanted me to do.  I ask it again now.  Should I confront this police officer, this boy, what’s his name again?”

“Bahari.  No.  It would be of no use.  The policeman is part of the government.  You have no power.  You are a guest of this country.  Stay clear of the government, and you will be fine.  

"Bahari is reckless like Asabi.  They are young and don’t sense the danger.  Bahari is no concern of yours.  I only wanted you to listen to me.  There is terror in my heart, sire.  I needed to talk to someone, someone I could trust, someone who would not judge me.  I knew you would listen, listen in a way to ease my pain.”

Devlin ignored the compliment.  “Tell me, Josiah, do you think you are in immediate danger, I mean, life threatening danger?”

“But of course.”  He said this without another word, returning to his garden, ignoring Devlin as he stood there for several moments like a statue.  It was clear the conversation was over.


*      *      *

Monday, August 25, 2014

NOVELIST FISHER'S FACES in A GREEN ISLAND IN A BLACK SEA (Amazon's Kindle Library, 2013) PART THREE

NOVELIST FISHER’S FACES in A GREEN ISLAND IN A BLACK SEA (Amazon Kindle Library, 2013)

PART THREE

James R. Fisher, Jr., Ph.D.
© August 25, 2014


Rung Vijoen, Chief Chemist, ADM, Subsidiary of Polychem International, Ltd., Johannesburg, South Africa

In Devlin’s many conversations with Rung, not once did the Afrikaner refer to the Bantu in derogatory terms.  

Nor did he see Bantu as a race apart with no redeeming values.  He spoke of Afrikaner history as a struggle against the British and sometimes the Bantu to establish a nation state.  

Nor did he think of the Bantu, the Coloreds or the Indians as godless.  He did have trouble understanding why people were critical of Afrikaners when they had given the Bantu tribes homelands, and therein was his blind spot.

“I will concede apartheid has not worked as plan,” the Afrikaner admitted, but I will not concede it was wrong.”

“It may be a valiant attempt, Rung, but you must admit it has been a valiant failure.”

“That may be how you see it, but don’t you think that is a bit hypocritical, given your history of slavery?  We don’t consider the Bantu slaves.”


With Rung at the Coke Refractory in Sasolburg, South Africa

Sasol was a separation and distilling operation and petrochemical works.  It looked from afar to be similar to an American oil refinery and petrochemical plant.  

As they got closer to the operation, Devlin could see the immense black angular coal shoots, bulky black towers, combustion boilers and gigantic coal feeders lifting the coal on traction sleds from huge mountains of coal turning the coal into coke and then refracting the coke into oil, and other organic compounds, which made the operation quite distinct from an American oil refinery.

The plant workers addressed Rung with affection, kibitzing with him but always in Afrikaans, ignoring Devlin as if he were not there.  Sly looks his way suggested to him that he was the brunt of the humor.

“Where you from?” a squat plant worker with a blacken face said in broken English.  It reminded Devlin of the actor who played Al Jolson in the movie, singing “Mammy.”  

He held back a smile knowing it would be misinterpreted, but the man did look like a white man playing a Negro in a play.

Devlin assumed it was a loaded question, so answered, “Kentucky,” as that was his address in the states.

The six men in the group chatted in Afrikaans with “Kentucky” interjected in the conversation.  

“They don’t know American geography,” said Rung, "and want to know if that is a southern state.  I know that is not quite true, that it is a border state, but it did fight for the South in the Civil War.”

“That is also not quite true, Rung, as it was a divided state, but in the camp of the North, with brothers fighting against each other, but I see your point.”

“Thanks.  They dislike Americans in general and the North in particular, seeing the South was bullied and exploited by the North the same way they were by the British.”

Devlin looked at the group, and at Rung, all seemed to be young and in good health, fit but damaged, Rung the least of the lot.  For the first time he saw the faces of a divided nation, programmed to distrust if not hate people of difference.  

The Sasol foreman confirmed this suspicion.  He said something to Rung as if in anger.  It made the men laugh, slapping their legs.  It was clear the American was not going to get the red carpet treatment or a cook's tour of the facilities.  

Since that proved true, he was sure he read the foreman's tirade correctly. 

Devlin had failed the dress code and manner test, he in his Hickey Freeman three-piece ensemble, lily white hands and Florsheim shoes.  I am considered the enemy here when I am as much an outsider as they are.  Go figure!   


Devlin and Rung in intimate conversation after their day of visiting coke refractories and paper mills

“My wife is dying to see you in regular clothes.  She says you wear a different suit to the office every day.  She claims you must have at least thirty suits and says she wouldn’t be surprised to see your face one day on the cover of the ‘Gentleman’s Quarterly’.”

The day had been informative but wrenching.  He knew his temper only too well.  Don’t blow it, Devlin, he told himself, but he had to say something.

“I’m from a farm state, Iowa, but not a farmer, from an industrial town on the Mississippi River, where I worked my way through university spending summers working in a factory as a laborer.  

"I come from working class parents.  I am no different than any of these people I’ve met today, a working stiff with my share of demons and biases.  

"I hide mine behind my uniform, yes, I buy expensive clothes, yes I take great care of my appearance, and yes I am every bit as much the outsider looking in as these people are who snegger at me contemptuously as if I were the enemy.  

"Like you, I studied hard to get here; like you, I identify with people who haven’t been as fortunate as either of us.

"I make no apologies for who and what I am.  If I offend or give a false impression, so be it, there you have it!”

"Wow!"  Rung threw up his hands.  “That is the first time in the many months you’ve been here that you’ve come across sincere.  

"We Afrikaners can relate to that.  These people you met have the same issues of identity and security.  I do as well.  They know humiliation.  God, do they!  You act as if you are above all that, impervious to that.”

“Rung, that is my job.  My role is to form this new company successfully, not to make friends, to lead.  Dale Carnegie insists in his book ‘How to Win Friends and Influence People” that leadership is all about friendship.  It is not.

"Leadership is about command integrating people to purposefulness."

Then more reflectively, added, "You could use this harangue against me, but I know you won’t.”

“Why are you so sure?”

“Because you understand.  You would want me to be no other way.”

He smiled.  “I told them you were the fairest person Afrikaners and Bantus have ever known in ADM.  They didn’t buy it, but I felt good saying it because it is true.”


The three technical directors were now acting as a team in the formation of the new company, but known as “The Three Turks” for obvious reasons

They filled Devlin’s doorway in a collective aggressive stance.  “Good morning, gentlemen,” Devlin said cheerfully, “I have something to share with you.”

This immediately through them in confusion, and off their rehearsed confrontation about the field test kits, which were a subject of debate amongst them.  

They looked at each other as if all the oxygen had been sucked out of their lungs.  

Devlin waxed innocent.  “What?”

“We thought this was our meeting.  We need to discuss field operations,” the ACS technical director Jan Hofmeyer stated emphatically, emphasizing his point stretching his arms tightly across his chest.  “We have a problem with the test kits.”

Devlin registered mock surprise.  “This is news to me.  Whom did you discuss this problem with, Nina?”

“No, Frieda, last week,” Hofmeyer continued. 

“We thought you pushed it ahead to today,” chimed in ADM’s technical director.

Devlin studied them, you thought, you didn’t confirm, you didn’t talk to my secretary, you didn’t make it your business to consult me, you assumed, wonderful, but only said smiling, 

“I had no knowledge of this problem.”  Then looking at them to see if they believed him, deciding clearly they didn’t, he continued.

“Something has come up that I wanted to share with you,” pausing, “since you are our technical team.”  

They looked at each other suspicious of what was to follow.  “There has been a fire at the Durban plan.”  Their ears perked up.  "We were already six weeks behind in back orders.  This problem could be huge economically."  

Devlin studied their faces, and could see this information was having the desired effect.  

“As you can imagine, this takes precedence over everything else.”  Then more conciliatory, “Set up a meeting with Nina for later and we’ll discuss this test kit problem.”  

He wanted to say, come to me don’t go behind my back, but instead said warmly, “How much time do you gentlemen think you will need?”

They looked at each other.  “At least an hour,” suggested Dan Firth of BAF.  “Two, at least two,” demanded Hofmeyer. 

“Then two you shall have,” Devlin said graciously, “anything else?”

Without answering they got up and swaggered out.  It was clear they liked being given a heads up on Durban, but didn’t want to show too much appreciation.  Oddly, none of them had been to the Durban plant, including ADM’s own technical director.

They left with rubber legs still chomping at the bit about the test kit.  Expected power has as much currency as perks, if not more.  

He did wonder what all the fuss was about as ADM had full access to Polychem’s test kit, which was the best in the industry.  What more did they want?


Tom Cooke, plant manager, Durban plant

The plant manager wasn’t happy about the merger.  That was clear.  For good reason, Devlin thought, he was old school like Frieda and took it as a threat, which it clearly was in his demonstrable incompetence.

Cooke didn’t return Devlin's calls, avoided him when he visited the plant, didn’t use Helen Dunn in public relations, was rumored to have a problem with Coloreds and Afrikaners, as well as a drinking problem.  This was confirmed with two driving under the influence charges in his file. 

“Thomas Cooke here,” said the gruff voice thinking it was a call from Michael Matthews, Martin Matthews’ brother, who was the regional director, and had no control over Cooke.

“Devlin here,” he answered in mocking voice with a smile crossing his lips, “I understand you have a spot of difficulty.”

“More than a spot.  Number one and two production lines are down, had a fire in them, didn’t anyone tell you?”  

There was hesitation on the line.  Devlin sensed he was fortifying himself with a drag on a cigarette and a belt from a flask.  "Devlin, you there?"

“What are you doing about it, Mr. Cooke?”

“What the hell is that supposed to mean?  I’m dealing with it, what do you think?”  

That confirmed to Devlin’s satisfaction he was on the sauce. Never had he sworn at Devlin before!

“I’d like to see the situation myself.”

“Not necessary.”

“I think it is.  You see, Mr. Cooke, I’m now at Durban International Airport, waiting for Michael Matthews to pick me up.”

“You’re where?”

“Here in Durban.  It’s my job, Mr. Cooke.  It is the reason I’m in your country.”

That bloody fucking Matthews warned me he’d come down, but didn’t let me know when.  Now he’s here, bloody hell.

“Did you hear me, Mr. Cooke, I’ll be at your plant momentarily.”

I heard you you bloody bastard, he said to himself, I’d like to drive your bloody teeth down your bloody throat.

Devlin took the silence to mean the conversation was over, hung up, and said into the silent receiver, “See you soon!”

“Wait!”  Cooke yelled into the click.  The bloody bastard hung up on me!  What in Christ’s name do I do now?

Annelie Van den Berg

Once at the plant, Cooke's secretary said he had "stepped out" to attend a scheduled meeting.

Devlin took this in stride, asking Michael Matthews if there was anyone in Durban ADM operations he could talk to about the situation.

He mentioned an Afrikaner chemical engineer, Annelie Van den Berg.

Annelie was a tall plain big boned young woman with a prominent forehead and unruly red hair.  She had full lips, a jutting chin, and piercing gray eyes.  The eyes followed Devlin’s every word as if they were floating soap bubbles destined to soon expire.

He felt simpatico with her, even more so than with Rung Vijoen, as she was an engineer and not a chemist.  He knew he wouldn’t have to be delicate with her about what was at issue.  

“What do you think we should do first?” she asked the American after he told her he had engaged a local engineering and construction firm to assist in bringing operations back on line.

“You tell me.”

She gave him a surprised if cautious look struggling to interpret his words.  "Me?"

"Yes, you!  You're going to head up this thing, if it is all right with you."

Convinced that he was sincere, she took out a red notebook from her briefcase, and flipped through its pages showing photographs and schematics of operating systems where she had previously identified chronic systemic problems.

Using the top of a fifty-five gallon drum as a desktop, she arranged these data into referencing previous concerns: heating cycles, humidifying rates, drying ranges, flow rates, viscosity fluctuations, and volume and yield irregularities.  

She also had indexed equilibria data of chemical systems, efficiency indices, and production rates of various lines before the fire.

She used her slide rule to calculate the heat reaction cresting before the fire from the heats of formation and heats of combustion, while showing variances that had caused earlier meltdowns in production and flagged this eventual problem.

She indicated with a big red “X” on diagrams of outdated control panels, malfunctioning pressure gauges, data recorders, and useless graph recorders, or substandard quality control practices across the board.

She had color coded the age of equipment, history of its repair and maintenance, and routine of inspections, or the lack thereof.  She had photographs of storage tanks, blenders, heat exchange units, and production boilers that had failed, along with dates when taken off line and restored to service.  It was scary stuff.

If Thomas Cooke had an ax to grind, it was clearly a different one than this young lady’s.  

She had a passion for quality and clearly felt left out of the equation.  Devlin had seen this in Suriname with the superintendent of an ALCOA aluminum refinery, who finally got attention when he showed up for Polychem.  Was this déjà vu all over again?

“The fire had many sources,” she concluded, “and it could happen again.”  This was said in a matter of fact tone. "We're always putting out fires here."

Amazed at her candor with the American, she added, “I have designed a parallel system to bypass plants one and two, now out of service, to bring the line back into production at least at a 25 percent capacity.”

“Has it been used before?”

“No.”

“Have you shown this to Mr. Cooke?”

“No, I’m not in his inner circle.”

“Well, you’re in mine.  I like your plan.  Would it upset you if it is Johannesburg’s in the short term to get through this mess?”

“Not at all,” she beamed.

“We’ll see you get full credit when this is behind us,” Devlin said, looking to Michael Matthews for confirmation.  He nodded.  

Devlin felt empathy for the young chemical engineer, to have all this to offer and to be put out to pasture. Well, now Cooke was out to pasture.

Annelie had a triple whammy against her with plant manager Cooke: she was a woman, an Afrikaner, and an educated problem solver. 

“Your title will be group leader, but you will be running the plant and implementing the work of the engineering and construction firm we have hired to work with you.”

“What about Mr. Cooke?”

“The regional managers will deal with him.  You worry about doing the job, sending your reports directly to me, and I’ll share them with the managing director.”  

When Devlin apprised Thomas Cooke of how the crisis was being handled, the plant manager fumed and stammered, but did nothing.  Devlin didn't expect him to thank him for taking his bacon out of the fire.

When Devlin was back in Johannesburg, Nina informed him that Cooke had gone over Martin Matthews head, and cabled Chicago citing his displeasure with the American.  Michael Matthews played ignorant of knowing anything about this.
 
Devlin could feel the cutting force of Armageddon in the wind.  Instead of being upset, it made him feel engaged.  He was in the eye of the hurricane, and experienced its total stillness.  It was where he belonged.  

Annelie Van den Berg was the reason why.  She was finally spreading her wings.  Everything was being reduced to a binary system.  God must be a chemical engineer.


*     *     *  

Sunday, August 24, 2014

NOVELIST FISHER'S FACES in A GREEN ISLAND IN A BLACK SEA (Amazon's Kindle Library, 2013) PART TWO

NOVELIST FISHER’S FACES in
A GREEN ISLAND IN A BLACK SEA (Amazon’s Kindle, 2013)
PART TWO

James R. Fisher, Jr., Ph.D.
© August 22, 2014

Devlin’s Irish immigrant grandparents

Maria Elizabeth Coyne, 28, and Fletcher Francis O’Farrell, 29, both single, came to the United States on January 3, 1903 from the fishing village of Ballhaonon in Dingle Bay on the western coast of Ireland outside the six counties of Northern Ireland. 

They were passengers on board The Emerald Sea, and became acquainted while making the seventeen-day Atlantic Sea crossing.  Totally on a whim, they decided while being processed on Ellis Island in New York City to face the new world together.

Maria had been a seamstress making fine garments for the affluent ladies of Donegal; Fletcher had worked on the railroad; both their parents were dead, having died of old age a little early from the hardships of the fisherman’s life, not from the infamous potato famine of mid-nineteenth century Ireland.

With no special skills, they conceded to a common destiny, as it was not exceptional for people of their class to be single at an advanced age, or if married to represent a pragmatic solution to a shared plight.

Fletcher Francis O’Farrell

Fletcher was big boned and tall with chiseled features on a ruddy complexion, a pug nose as if he once had been a boxer, carrying 224 pounds on his six-two frame giving him the appearance of a much thinner man.  He had hands the size of catcher mitts, wore a size thirteen shoe and a 16 ½ inch collar and 38 inch sleeve length with an extra-long 46 size jacket and pants 34x36.  He was considered a big man for his time, and especially so for an Irishman.

His disposition was quiet and unassuming, a listener more than a talker, again atypical for an Irishman of his class.  His overt zeal was to come to America and have a family; his covert passion was for his Roman Catholic faith.  Privacy defined him.  He never swore, never raised his voice, not even when he was disturbed, but would simply retire into himself.  

He was an Irishman who had no trouble with prohibition as he didn’t drink, not even wine.  He feared if he drank and ever got drunk his demons would come out and cause him certain trouble and that of any man who got in his way.  His only vice was cigarettes, which was a costly habit smoking sometimes three packs of American Camel cigarettes a day.

Maria Elizabeth Coyne

Maria was a slip of a woman, only four-ten and less than 100 pounds.  It was strange to see her with Fletcher for while he looked like a tower of granite she resembled a delicate bird of plaster Paris ready to crumble into dust.  Appearances can be deceiving.  

It was Maria who was strong, determined, resolute and unyielding, ready to take on the world on her terms with no apologies, whereas it was Fletcher who was tentative and circumspect.  She was hardened with resolve to accept life’s ups and downs, as she had had much experience with them, being disposed to embrace rather than retreat from them.  

Moreover, as Fletcher was given to melancholy and depression, she found them luxuries she could not afford.  He liked order that always seemed beyond his grasp while she considered herself like a pig in shit in chaos choosing to make the most of it.

Despite these differences, perhaps because of them, they were finding inchoate happiness in the warmth of each other’s personalities. 

She, like Fletcher, was a practicing Catholic, but not with the same blind fervor.  Nor was she so set on principles or the disciplinarian ways that seemed to rule him.  

She was for fun and sensed that Fletcher wouldn’t recognize it if it fell into his lap.  It was clear he was hard on himself, which she imagined could find him unduly strict, but she was sure you’d never doubt where he stood or on what basis.  He was boring but she could use a little of that in her life. 

The way she pranced about and the vigor with which she did so might suggest she was a woman of the world.  Maria had never been with a man and Fletcher had never been with a woman.  They were in virgin territory in more ways than one.  

They would marry and have one daughter, Cecilia Marie Farrell, born on “All Saints Day,” December 2, 1920, at a time when her mother had given up the idea of children at the age of forty-five.  When Cecilia was twelve, at the age of 57, Maria would die leaving Fletcher to raise his daughter.

Cecilia Marie Farrell

Thanks to his frugality, Fletcher was able to send Cecilia to St. Mary’s Academy in Davenport, Iowa, the most prestigious private Catholic girls’ high school on Iowa’s east coast, which was only 38 miles from Crescent City.  

Neither Fletcher nor Maria had gone beyond grammar school in Ireland.

In a daring outing, Cecilia’s senior year, along with two girlfriends, two weeks before graduation, they crashed a speakeasy in Chicago.  There she met Duncan Devlin, a hard drinking, fast talking, funny, fun loving, good looking, sharp dressing dandy, who swept her off her feet.  

She stayed in Chicago with him over the weekend, while her girlfriends went back to Crescent City for the weekend.

Duncan Devlin

Cecilia returned to Crescent City with Duncan while he boarded with his Aunt Annie O’Dea, and Cecilia went home as if coming from the academy.  

Once home, she played the devoted daughter while her father prepared to go on the road, inviting Duncan to her bed once he was on the road. 

It was considered decadent to behave as lovers, but they threw caution to the wind, Cecilia however tossing Duncan out of bed before morning light, as neighbors never knew.  Cecilia found this deception delicious and much fun, while Duncan had never known a girl of her class, deciding to enjoy her until she tired of him.

At Thanksgiving 1937, she told Duncan she was four months pregnant, and that she had to tell her father.  He was delighted with the idea of being a father as he had had a bad case of the mumps when he was thirteen, and thought himself sterile.  Meeting Cecilia’s father was quite another matter.

Fletcher Francis Farrell

When told of her condition, Fletcher’s immediate reaction was joy and sadness, joy at being a grandfather, and sadness with being saddled to a shanty Irishman.  

“I thought I was rid of these cock ups when I left Ireland,” he said in defeat.  “Here I find one on my doorstep.”  Then turning towards his daughter whom he worshiped, “One thing I know for sure he’s not for you.  He'll be gone before you know it.  He’d be dangerous if he had half a brain.”

Fletcher was confident his intelligent daughter, and excellent student, would see Duncan Devlin for what he was.  He didn’t know Devlin at all, and had no idea that he had grown up in Crescent City, lived with his maternal grandmother, gone to school at St. Patrick’s, a drop out in the seventh grade, having lost his mother when he was born in Cook County Hospital in Chicago, with his father taking off never to be seen again.

Parentless though he be, even if Fletcher knew this, he would still see him as another Irish American wastrel that gave the Irish a bad name.  What most people thought of the Irish made him sad.  He did everything to change that opinion, then it all goes up in smoke with the arrival of Duncan Devlin.  Mother of God, he moaned, what am I to do?

Duncan Devlin

Duncan loved Chicago, the city of his birth, and hated Crescent City with a passion.  Life was great, uncomplicated until Cecilia came into the club, looked at him on the other side of the room, smoking a cigarette coquettishly, and winked at him.  

She was blond and beautiful, petite and bouncy with hair the color of Iowa corn, and eyes as blue as a summer’s sky.  He rushed across the room, then hesitated for some reason, deciding to let her control the moment.  She did.  

She introduced herself and her girlfriends, and said, “My girlfriends think you’re cute.  I haven’t decided,” and then giggled like a child.  He grew weak in the knees and knew he was out of his depth, his league, but clearly she was inviting him to join it.

Was Cecilia’s father right, was he a shiftless dandy?  Hell yes, why not?  You live only once.  He made no attempt to charm her father, as she ruled the roost.  

All he had to do to keep her interested was to stay dangerously unpredictable, and that had never been a problem.  He was everything her father wasn’t and it was clear she worshiped him.  That made his head hurt.  He hoped he was around when the baby was born.

Alexander Carter in Johannesburg, South Africa

Known as “Alex,” was from Pretoria and in Johannesburg for a day of shopping.  She completed the day by visiting her best friend, Heather Matthews.  

In the warmth of the Matthews’ sitting room with matching glasses of absinthe in hand, Alex indulged her favorite sport, gossip.

The lady from Pretoria had no children, was recently divorced with a multimillion Rand settlement from her lawyer husband with men, as always, on her mind.  She presently had time on her hands, no steady boyfriend, and was poised to catch up on the chinwag on Heather’s Americans.

The twenty-eight year old former model had flaxen hair curled around her sharp-features and seashell ears, and had an exaggerated bust line that was loosely contained in an open pink shirt with a lavishly wrought platinum necklace complemented by a knee length black skirt that showed off her legs in black lace stockings in a filigree pattern.   

The ensemble was completed with her feet encased in stylish high heel black shoes with platinum buckles.  Her lips were painted chalk white, while her dark blue eyes were framed in blue eye shadow and enhanced with dark blue eyelashes, giving her a haunting come hither look.

Heather forgave Alex these rococo excesses as her girlfriend was always on the make.

Sir Williams Trenchard in Johannesburg, South Africa

The South African home of Sir William of the English Lord was located in Regency Park in northeastern Johannesburg.  

The occasion was the celebration of his and Lady Anne’s launching of their new play, “John Donne Resurrected,” which was to appear on the London stage in November.  

The Devlin’s and Matthews’ were invited to this dinner, along with diplomats, bankers, investors, academics, the British South African aristocracy and captains of South Africa industry.  There were no Afrikaners.

Sir Williams resembled, to Devlin’s mind, a Bengal tiger with features on a grand scale in a medium sized frame.  

He had a handsome face with the stiffness of military command that Devlin sensed was once his charge in India.  

His eyes were laser beams of passion that seemed to take in everything and were tinged with green, and sparkled with radiance as he greeted each of his chosen dinner guests. 

A Swahili, Devlin’s size, was the greeter, announcing them as they handed him their invitation:

 “Mr. Seamus Devlin and his wife Sarah, Mr. Martin Matthews and his wife, Heather.  

Devlin knew Sarah was eating this up like a thousand calorie dessert, while Heather seemed to be taking it all in stride.

Dabney Marshall at Sir Williams

Devlin noticed lights flooding down the curving staircase as he climbed to the dining room, being silhouetted by a figure in evening attire that was slowly descending to meet them.  

He was a tall, loose-limb young man not much older than Devlin with dark tousled unkempt hair, bruised cheekbones, bloodshot eyes, ruddy cheeks, and a well lived in face with contours of edgy wrinkles.  Too much sun, too many cigarettes, or too much booze, Devlin reflected.  

He was smoking a cigarette now and made no attempt to remove it from his wide full-lipped face as he smoke like an American gangster from films.

“I’m Dabney Marshall," he proclaimed, "got here early to avoid the rush, only other American, I take it.”   Devlin looked at him startled, wondering what that was supposed to mean. 

Then noting Devlin’s mystifying look added, “I’m with ITI, Lucky Williams boss.”  Em, Lucky had mentioned the Devlin's to his boss.  Pity Lucky, Devlin thought, working for this man..

Norton William James at Sir Williams

Across the room, Devlin was mesmerized by a man entering the formal dining room.  He was darkly handsome, bearded, but not severely so, in full evening attire, tie-pin and watch chain glistening, the thumb of one white kid-glove hand resting on his cummerbund, while the other swung a cane in slow hypnotic silent arcs beside him.  

Devlin was frozen at attention to his every move as a private smile sliced across the man’s patrician lips, as he acknowledged Devlin to his embarrassment.  

It was as if the embodiment of Empire was personified and on display in all its decadence.  

The man stopped, looked Devlin in the eye, bowed, and tipped his cane.  Devlin felt like a peeping tom discovered as a voyeur. 

Shortly thereafter, Devlin felt a disturbing shock as he felt a hand resting gently on his shoulder.  

“I’m Norton James of ICI’s London’s digs, and you are, I take it, the young American who is going to make us all very rich.”

“Pardon?” Devlin shuddered as he rose to shake the man’s hand, only to feel the man's hand again on his shoulder gently having him remain seated.  He took little comfort in this Brit looming over him.

“They tell me it is you who is putting this clambake together, our horribly incompetent affiliate, the Stone Age specialty chemical division of African Explosives, and your pristine exquisite subsidiary.  I don’t even know your name, but the description of you is so accurate that I knew who you were as soon as I saw you.”

He took out a cigarette from a silver case and offered one to Devlin.  He shook his head.  Then the man smiled blandly, as he lit his cigarette with his Ronson lighter.  “Some of your admirers call you ‘angel face.’  I see what they mean.”

Devlin ignored this assessment, but instead introduced himself, offering his hand, “I’m Dirk Devlin, everyone calls me Devlin.”

James reached down, removing his glove, and took his hand, and held it.  “How odd, don’t you think, to go by your surname?”  

Devlin made an attempt to remove this strange man's hand, when James touched his cane to his chest.  

“I’ve a terrible confession to make.  You’ll think me so terribly uncouth.  I know your name, knew you preferred Devlin, and right now you must think me horribly wicked.  Can you forgive me?”

When Devlin failed to respond, James raised his cane hand to his bearded chin, and appraised Devlin.  

“My informants missed you completely.  They missed your adamant spirit, your no nonsense approach.  They also missed that steel in your eyes."
 
James took an elegant drag on his cigarette, and blew the smoke away from Devlin.  

“I can see how that could happen.  You’re neither into small talk nor of looking people in the eye.  You don’t go for all that folderol, do you?  

"Some might take that as weakness, but you don’t care how they take it or what they think.  See how busy my agents have been?  

"Now be honest, aren’t you a bit squeamish about all this clandestine attention?”

Devlin did not answer.  How could he?  The man was like a book speaking to him from this house’s august library.

“Yes,” James continued, tapping another cigarette out of his silver case, and depositing the butt in a small silver container, which disappeared into his coat pocket.  Devlin noticed the initials on the cigarette case, N.W.J.  

Reading Devlin’s expression, he said, “It was a gift from my mother.  She is a history don at Oxford in Cambridge, and an authority on William the Conqueror, need I say more?”  He waited.  

Devlin finally moved to speak but James resumed filling the void.  

“I suppose she hoped I might conquer something before bloody old England expired.” 

The man’s public school voice was akin to Martin’s, making him aware of how crude American English sounded against this elocution.  

Close up James appeared more a contemporary of HB than of him and Martin, but James wore his confidence on his sleeve, HB in his head.  Yet, he felt naked before the man.

Reading Devlin’s unease, James added, “Sorry, old sport, to upset you with this intelligence report.”  

What gives him that idea, or that sense of power over him, Devlin thought, masking his anger, as always, in silence.

“In any case, you’ll be happy to know I’m not MI-5.”  He registered a dramatic pause, hoping to render a chuckle from Devlin, when none came, he resumed haughtily, 

“I said we had not met before, which of course is true, but my man Cavendish has met you, described you to the pence, but missed your steel.  I suspect he will pay for that slight.”

“You’re over BAF?”  Devlin waxed innocent, deciding two could play this game.

“That’s right, out ICI’s London digs as I said.  I’m Cavendish’s minder.  I feel for him in this assignment now that I’ve met you.  

"He’s ambitious to the tens, but doesn’t care much for homework.”  He paused to take another puff on his cigarette, then added, “I suspect you are all about homework, am I right?”

“If you mean doing the job I’m paid to do, the answer is yes.”

He laughed.  “I don’t suspect Cavendish will be a member of your inner sanctum.”  

He extinguished his cigarette, and repeated the ritual of stamping out the butt, and depositing it in the silver container, and then resumed his soliloquy.  “Don’t you agree?”

Devlin answered in silence.  Silence was his secret weapon, and he had come to use it with the skill of a surgeon.  

Norton James seemed oblivious to the fact that he failed to respond to a single one of his questions.  James was pomp and circumstance without the music shrouded in atavism and anachronism.  Devlin hoped he couldn't read this in his silence.    

“Pity,” James continued.  “We Brits are an obvious ruin willingly being exploited by our American cousins without rancor or fanfare.  My Cavendish is into resurrecting British honor and glory without seeing the lay of the land I should wonder.”
 
To Devlin’s relief, Sir Williams tapped a glass to get their attention, inviting everyone to go to their designated places for dinner.  With that James waved his cane in departure.  “I enjoyed our seminar, and plan on taking your advice.”

“But Norton I didn’t give you any advice.”

“Sure you did.  Your silence spoke volumes.”


*     *     *