THE
MERGER
Nik
Morton
James
Grenfell turned an incredulous face to his secretary as he lowered his wiry
frame into the swivel chair. ‘You mean Bert Haynes got the job, Ann?’
She
nodded, tentatively placing the day’s mail before him. ‘Yes, sir. It was
announced while you were attending the Trade Fair.’
A
coldness seemed to seep into every fibre of his body. He’d thought he was the
obvious choice for their Swiss branch’s new manager.
As
the hard facts of Haynes’ good fortune sank home he found himself berating Ann
repeatedly, grudging every second working for the firm that had treacherously
spurned him.
Instead
of detailing Ann to take his dictation down to the typing pool, he carried the
material himself. He had to get away from the stifling confines of his office.
After
eleven years – not good enough! It burned him up inside. Loyalty seemed to mean
nothing nowadays. Barging into the typing pool, he halted in his tracks. ‘Do
you reckon this merger’ll affect us, Deidre?’
‘The
job’ll be the same.’
Tensely
gripping his letters, he turned on his heels and hurried back down the
corridor.
So
they’re planning a merger. And he’d never been informed. They didn’t trust him
any more!
As
he stormed blindly into his office, an idea slowly materialised and moulded
itself. Trusted or not, he still had access to the latest and most up-to-date
trade secrets. He smiled sanguinely.
At
the moment Ann dashed out for her tea-break, he telephoned Sebastian Lecroix in
Paris.
‘Surprised
to hear from me, eh?’ He chuckled archly. ‘Yes, I know this is quite irregular,
calling our biggest rival’s head of personnel.’ He cleared his throat
nervously. ‘I have a proposition…’
***
‘What’s
this?’ Cornish queried, his stout arms akimbo. He looked every inch a managing
director, with his mottled cheeks, glistening blue eyes and contented paunch. ‘Working
late again, James?’
Casting
startled grey eyes upward, James stammered, ‘Yes… just… checking the system.’
Before
him lay a mountain of duplicated files and photocopied material amassed during
his overtime. He broke out into a cold sweat, fearing Cornish would notice
them.
‘Every
night this week you’ve been working late, James. Don’t overdo it, now.’ Cornish
beamed unctuously. ‘You’re too valuable to us, to go collapsing with over-work,
eh?’ He chuckled and slipped out of the door.
James’
trembling fingers gathered the various dockets together. God, he’d never make a
crook! Still, he now had a comprehensive breakdown of the whole business,
inside and out.
***
‘Good
morning, sir!’
He
returned Ann’s greeting cheerfully enough and dumped his heavy suitcase beside
her desk. ‘I’ll be going to Paris this evening, Ann. The Lacelles contract,’ he
lied, patting the case.
‘It’s
ready?’
‘Finally,
yes.’ He wavered a moment. ‘Oh, I’ve reserved a berth on the ferry.’
For
the remainder of the morning he couldn’t concentrate on any work. ‘Why bother?’
he mused. He’d soon be handing over his valuable secrets. Should net a few
thousand – and a good job. A position of trust. That’s all he wanted.
‘I’m
off to dinner now, Mr Grenfell,’ Ann informed him over the intercom.
‘Right-ho,
Ann.’ Time to act! Calmly bringing the suitcase into his office, he smiled to
himself. Everything running smoothly.
Heaving
the case on to his desk he opened it and emptied the load of books. Swiftly
unlocking the safe, he dumped the duplicate files and accounts inside the case
and returned it to Ann’s office.
‘This
calls for a drink.’ He sighed with heartfelt relief.
His
heart was beating apprehensively as he walked through the building. Carrying
the suitcase, he felt conspicuous. And yet nobody seemed to pay him undue
attention. He was actually getting away with it!
Nearly
out in the clear, he realised excitedly, his pace quickening as he caught sight
of the double doors and the waiting taxi outside.
‘James!’
Heart
pounding expectantly, he faltered on the threshold. Should he hurry on, pretend
he hadn’t heard? Too late! He winced as Cornish grabbed his free arm.
‘Your
secretary tells me you’re off to Paris.’
Pivoting round to face him, James replied equably, ‘Yes, a contract from Lacelles.’
Then,
a tincture of bravado crept into his manner. Forcing a lean smile, he joked, ‘I’ll
have to speak to Ann, I think. Can’t have her discussing my business, you know.’
Cornish’s laugh rumbled from his barrel of a chest. ‘Not her fault, James.’ He jovially placed aa heavy fat hand on James’ shoulder. ‘I told her I had to see you urgently.’
His
mouth dropped open. ‘Urgent?’ Forebodings filled him. Glancing at his watch, he
mumbled, ‘I’ll be late.’
‘A moment, James.’
Cold fear struck him to the core.
‘Since you’re away tonight, I thought I’d tell you.’ His chubby cheeks glistened as a massive smile creased his face. ‘We’re planning a merger with our rivals and their personnel chap, Lecroix, has insisted you lead the new amalgamated team.’
James was stunned. Head swimming, he queried in a subdued tone, ‘When did you speak to Lecroix?’
Cornish dimpled his shining brow in thought. ‘About two weeks ago. He’s due over here this evening to negotiate the merger’s final draft.’ He grinned. ‘He’ll be sorry you’re not here, James.’
‘So
will I,’ James said feelingly, and added flatly, ‘Well, must go.’
Certainly, Lecroix had wanted him. Insisted, even. But that was before he’d phoned with his clever proposition.
Dusk was settling across the Channel when he strolled to the ferry’s guardrails and ditched the incriminating suitcase over the side. As it swiftly sank in the phosphorescent wake an emptiness pervaded him. Getting rid of the material was pointless.
Already, Lecroix would be telling Cornish about his proposed betrayal.
***
Previously
published in Parade, February 1972,
under my penname Platen Syder.
Copyright Nik
Morton, 2014.
Naturally,
looking back over this now, some 42 years later, I would like to think it could
be improved. A certain magazine style was considered necessary to tell a tale
in 1,000 words, so genre fiction short-hand prevailed in the writing. Still, I
feel it holds up as a story.
If
you enjoyed this moral tale, then you might like my collection Spanish Eye, published by Crooked Cat
Publishing, featuring Leon Cazador, private eye in 22 cases.
US: http://amazon.com/dp/B00GXK5C6S
Canada: http://amazon.ca/dp/B00GXK5C6S
UK: http://amazon.co.uk/dp/B00GXK5C6S
France: http://amazon.fr/dp/B00GXK5C6S
Germany: http://amazon.de/dp/B00GXK5C6S
Austria: http://amazon.at/dp/B00GXK5C6S
Italy: http://amazon.it/dp/B00GXK5C6S
Spain: http://amazon.es/dp/B00GXK5C6S
Japan: http://amazon.jp/dp/B00GXK5C6S
Canada: http://amazon.ca/dp/B00GXK5C6S
UK: http://amazon.co.uk/dp/B00GXK5C6S
France: http://amazon.fr/dp/B00GXK5C6S
Germany: http://amazon.de/dp/B00GXK5C6S
Austria: http://amazon.at/dp/B00GXK5C6S
Italy: http://amazon.it/dp/B00GXK5C6S
Spain: http://amazon.es/dp/B00GXK5C6S
Japan: http://amazon.jp/dp/B00GXK5C6S
2 comments:
Worked for me - for that period. Today's stealthy steps would require the finesse of a 'Ballroom Dancing' competitor to Cover Your Assets.
The human element and response hasn't changed, though.
Thanks for the feedback, Jack. Yes, I'm sure these days betrayal of business secrets is more convoluted, if no less moral. :)
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