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Episode on the Riviera
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A Sophisticated Novel
Episode
On The Riviera
Mack Reynolds
a division of F+W Media, Inc.
Contents
Cover
Title Page
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Also Available
Copyright
Chapter One
Friday, August 5th
Steven Philip Cogswell awakened and grunted discomfort. He opened one eye experimentally, then closed it again. On the pillow next to his was a blonde head. He forced himself to think back.
The party last night at the contessa’s. But a blonde? What blonde? As he recalled, he’d started the evening with a petite brunette up from Cannes. He tried to remember the blondes who had been present. Maggie Fontaine, Betty Smith-Browne, and that German baroness or whatever she was. But none of them had been this blonde.
He opened his eyes again, both of them this time. Holy smokes, it was Conny’s girl friend! The Greek was going to be sore as a slipped disc. Steve looked at her distastefully, which was characteristic enough. He couldn’t bear the sight of a girl the morning afterward. What had ever gotten into him!
Constantine Kamiros was a long-time friend and he’d been hot after this wench. It was a dirty trick to pull on the Greek, especially since Steve Cogswell couldn’t have cared less. A blonde was just one more blonde on the Côte d’Azur in season.
There was probably no stretch of shoreline in the world with more feminine pulchritude per square foot than that lying between Marseille at one end and Menton, on the Italian border, at the other.
On top of everything else, the girl was one of Steve’s clients, one of the Far Away Holiday tourists down from London on the luxury package holiday. This was her second week on the Riviera. Conny had talked her into extending her stay. Talked her was a gentle way of putting it. The Greek gambler and shipping magnate had been lavishing presents on the girl as though he meant to marry her.
Steve pursed his lips unhappily, trying to remember what had happened. As was usual at one of Carla Rossi’s parties, he’d gotten well stoned. It came back to him now.
He’d been drinking French Seventy-fives. What was the formula? One jigger of dry gin, one-third jigger of lemon juice, one teaspoon of powdered sugar; pour into a tall glass one-half full of cracked ice and fill with chilled Champagne. They were bad enough but he hadn’t the good sense to stick to them. Dave Shepherd, that fluttery limp-wrist had come up with a bottle of absinthe he’d smuggled in from his last trip to Tangiers and they’d all had to try it. The illegal green liqueur, complete with its wormwood base, had tasted like ordinary Pernod — but it hadn’t the same effect.
What was the wise crack Dave had made? Absinthe makes the heart grow fonder. Well, he was right. The stuff was an aphrodisiac if there ever was one.
Steve looked at the girl again. Her back was to him, her hair spilled disorderly over the whiteness of the pillow, one arm outside the sheet and the greater part of one rounded breast proudly exposing itself. She was obviously nude beneath the bedclothes. The Greek had good taste, Steve Cogswell decided sourly. The girl was lushly beautiful.
It was still early. Steve could tell that from the light that streamed in the window of his house trailer — caravans, they called them over here. He shifted quietly, not wanting to wake her. Just as sure as certainty, if she awoke she’d expect a repetition of last night’s erotic activity, and, frankly, Steve Cogswell wasn’t up to it.
He was no more up to love-making in the morning than he was up to early morning drinking. He couldn’t stand the sight of the stuff, and he meant that both ways. He could have spurned a composite of Cleopatra and Helen of Troy — the morning after.
Why not face it? he told himself glumly. It wasn’t just the fact that it was morning. He couldn’t stand the sight of a women — any woman — once he’d bedded her. The very thought of a repeat performance, the following day or the following week, was all the same. He simply couldn’t bear the sight of them.
He wondered if his smoking a cigarette would awaken her. He just couldn’t lie here motionless. In half an hour he’d have an excuse for deserting her; he’d have to round up his tourists and get them ready for the return flight to London.
His cigarettes were in the little stand at the head of the bed. There were two packs, one of Camels, one of the local Gauloise. He loathed the French brand, but his supply of American cigarettes was running distressingly low.
He’d have to talk one of the sailors over at Villefranche, the Sixth Fleet base, out of another carton, which was highly illegal, of course. But American cigarettes in France, if bought at a regular tobacconist’s, cost a fortune.
He decided that the first cigarette of the day deserved to be a good one and, moving as little as possible, shook a Camel from its pack. There was a box of matches next to the cigarettes. He struck one, swore bitterly under his breath. What was there about France that she couldn’t produce decent matches? Instead of wood for the match-sticks they used paper wrapped with wax. He struck another and made it this time.
Steve drew the first breath of life-giving smoke into his lungs, let it drift slowly through his nostrils. He looked from the side of his eyes at the girl. She had shifted slightly, was more nearly on her back. Her left breast was completely exposed now, its tip so red that Steve wondered whether or not she had put a cosmetic on it.
He couldn’t care less. Just the sight of her next to him was all but nauseating. He wondered if it were always going to be this way. Put all your charm, all your energy and persuasiveness into convincing the girl that she was what you’d been looking for all your days. That nothing was more important than that they fulfill destiny by uniting in that most intimate relationship possible between two persons. Finally overwhelm all her defenses — not that most of them on the Riviera erected much in the way of defenses — and take her to bed.
And then kick her out in the morning.
Of course, it hadn’t always been so. How long was it now? About five years. He wasn’t a tourist representative then, living in a trailer parked upon an estate on the outskirts of Beaulieu, living a hedonistic bachelor’s existence and probably undermining his health with too little exercise, too much drink, too much smoking and too many overly willing women. He was, face it, little more than an international bum now.
Then he’d been Mr. Steven Philip Cogswell, partner in the firm of Gunther & Cogswell, Efficiency Consultants.
• • •
Steve Cogswell had known Martin Gunther for the greater part of their lives. The Gunther family had moved to El Monte, in southern California, when the boys were in the third and fifth grades respectively. A difference of two years is a considerable one at the age of eight and ten and Steve’s first memories of Mart were those of an older kid who wasn’t above imposing his will on his physical juniors.
However, by the time they were both attending the high school in Alhambra they’d managed to become buddies and there had been such shared experiences as the time they’d hitchhiked down to Tia Juana, in Mexico, without their parents’ knowledge.
The two had considered themselves best friends by the time Mart Gunther went off to Columbia, back East, to study journalism. They’d corresponded off and on and then resumed the acquaintanceship when Steve took up studies for time-and-motion engineering at M.I.T.
It had been during a chance meeting, when both were working on assignments in Kingston, in upstate New York, that they’d hit upon the idea for their firm. Over beer in the Hofbrau Ba
r, they had given each other a rundown on their dissatisfaction with their present positions.
Steve was convinced that working for someone else was a mug’s game if you had it on the ball to make a go of it by yourself. Mart was of the opinion that in a world that was becoming increasingly automated and efficient the newspaper field was falling behind and using methods more suited to the period preceding the First World War than that following the Second.
The idea must have hit them both at the same time. They stared at each other. Mart flicked a finger to the bartender for two more steins of beer, and they settled down to plan the firm of Gunther & Cogswell, Efficiency Consultants, specializing in the modernization of newspapers and publishing houses.
They’d had about five thousand dollars apiece to invest and it hadn’t been enough, actually. Either that or the breaks hadn’t come as quickly as they’d expected. In spite of the fact that they’d knocked themselves out trying to prove themselves, their jobs were far between.
What they needed was the one good chance. Just one fair-sized daily that would allow them to prove the value of installing the latest of printing equipment, redesigning the layout of pressroom floors, of bringing IBM machines into the accounting department — of all the hundred and one things they’d worked out in detail to cut both labor and equipment to a hone of efficiency.
The money melted away into office expenditures and into lengthy trips, usually undertaken by Steve, to interview this publisher, that editor, this manager of a newspaper chain. It melted away, and Steve watched it go and became increasingly tense, increasingly desperate, as he tried to prove himself.
He knew the idea was good; he was convinced of the validity of the basis of their firm. Already the journalistic field was feeling the pressure of radio and TV competition to the point where, unless changes were made, the newspaper would rapidly become a vestige of yesteryear.
There’d been just the three of them. Martin Gunther, Steven Cogswell and Mary Ballentine, the office girl. Four, counting Fay, who by this time was Steve’s wife. Mart remained a bachelor.
Yes, you couldn’t miss counting Fay. Fay Hanlon from Boston. Fay of the long legs, the striking body, the soft mouth, the arrogant breasts, the easy grace and practiced grooming, the air of the New England aristocrat, the Massachusetts accent so similar to the British. Yes, Fay the Boston aristocrat who had actually been born in the Chelsea section of town, the daughter of an Irish ward heeler. What Fay had, Fay had fought hard to get; every carefully pronounced word, every gesture of the gentlewoman, had been learned, not born into Fay.
But it took knowing her well, oh, so well, before you found that out.
You met Fay in the company of Boston’s better people. You were charmed by her interests which so coincided with your own, by her keen perceptions, by her earnest beliefs in the things that counted.
You wondered how so attractive a girl could bother to be intellectually aware as well. Not, of course, that you ever forget her body, her heavy lips, her smoldering eyes — even while discussing politics and religion, art and ambition, and the true meaning of it all.
Steve remembered it so clearly.
He had taken his courage in hand and blurted, “Look, Miss Hanlon, I know I’m a bit out of line. We’ve only known each other a couple of hours but, well …”
Her eyes were wide; puzzled, but friendly. “Yes, Mr. Cogswell?”
Steve said, “Well, I’d like to see more of you.”
She gestured vaguely, still puzzled, toward their host and hostess. “Why, I’m sure that through such mutual friends as the Morgans we’ll cross paths from time to time.”
“Well, look … I’m largely a stranger in town. I was — well, actually thinking of a date. Perhaps take in the Pop Opera some evening and then …”
Fay Hanlon seemed embarrassed by his impetuosity. “I don’t know what to say, really. We’re hardly acquainted, you know.”
“Yes, but …” Steve had pursued eagerly.
And then, after the third date, he recalled how he had kissed her good night in front of the ultra-respectable woman’s club in which she lived. Her lips had been soft, as they must be soft with such fullness, and her eyes, which smoldered so easily, had registered surprise, almost shock.
She had looked up at him for a moment, then down. She said, demurely, “But, Mr. Cogswell … Steven …”
He was taken aback by his own boldness. “I suppose I shouldn’t have done that. I couldn’t help myself, Fay.”
She touched her lips with the tips of her fingers, then giggled, uncharacteristically. “You know, Steven, I don’t believe I have been kissed since we played spin-the-bottle during a party in my grammar school days. My parents were furious when they found out.” She turned quickly and sped into the building, calling a cheery good night.
Steve had stood looking after her, long after the door had closed.
Then, several months later, an evening had exploded into sex. There had been a rented convertible and Fay had gone much further than ever before. This was not the stolen kiss, this was not a brief moment of gentle, awkward caresses. This was Fay, a woman with a woman’s needs, her dress hiked up to her hips, her voice moaning as he stroked her soft flesh.
Getting to the motel on the outskirts of Lynn and registering there, was all a blur. The only thing that registered on his mind was Fay.
He had never undressed a girl before. Nor undressed before one. His experience with sex had been minimal. Steve Cogswell had kept himself busy with schooling and then work. But she helped him, her eyes closed tightly and her voice incoherent.
“Steven, darling Steven. Please don’t hurt me. You won’t hurt me, will you, Steven?”
He had hoarsely tried to reassure her, even as his passion grew and he knew he was beyond the point where he could spare her. Then she was nude, all nude, and he, too, and for a moment he looked down on Fay. The breasts, the gently rounded belly, the cunning navel, the swell and glory of curved hips, the soft inner thighs, the long perfect legs.
Her eyes were closed, but she whispered, “I love you, Steven. It’s only because I love you.”
“I know,” he said as gently as he could make it, and lowered himself upon her as her arms went around him hugging him close to her aching nakedness.
He was awakened in the morning by the sounds of her blubbering.
Fay crying? Fay the self-possessed? Fay the collected? Fay the perfect lady?
“Darling, what’s the matter?” he had asked, bewildered.
Her eyes were tightly closed, her hands over her face, and it was difficult to make out the words that came through. “You’ll never want to marry me now that I’m ruined … now that I’m not a virgin any more. You’ll never respect me. Nobody will ever respect me…. I only allowed you, because I loved you…. I …”
Yes, Steve remembered it so clearly.
You looked at her in surprise, since you had never expected to see the self-possessed Fay in tears, not to speak of that cultured voice incoherent with shame and weeping. You told her about your love and respect, indeed your worship of her, and how the sooner you were married the better.
So you were wed. Steven Philip Cogswell, up-and-coming young efficiency engineer, with a good job with a good firm, a conscientious man well worth watching; and Fay Hanlon, of the Boston Hanlons, you know, an obvious aristocrat of the old school, undoubtedly of one of the very best families.
Fay hadn’t much liked the idea of Gunther & Cogswell. She had fitted into the suburban life she and Steve had lived while he was still with the engineering company and with a steady and adequate income. The salary hadn’t stretched quite so well as Steve had expected it to and Fay was continually suggesting he ask for raises. Still, she had been reasonably satisfied and Steve, of course, was head over heels in love with her.
A few illusions had dropped away with time. Fay wasn’t quite the intellectual he had thought, nor were her interests so much in common with his own as he had believed. But she was s
till Fay and far and away the most attractive woman in the set in which they moved. Besides, she was all a man could handle in bed; all and a bit more when you were worn out from a frustrating day bumping your head up against a brick wall consisting of old-fashioned editors, outworn union featherbedding regulations, and stubborn publishers.
Gradually there had built up too many of those scenes where she’d find him, papers strewn over the desk in his study, immersed in his latest projected layout for a potential customer.
“You’re not even dressed yet?” she’d say tightly.
“Dressed?” He’d look up at her vacantly. “Gosh, you look beautiful, honeybun.”
Her foot would begin to tap. “The Hansens are throwing a party tonight. You promised …”
“Good grief, I forgot.” His eyes would go desperate. “Look, Fay. I’ve simply got to have this ready tomorrow. As it is, I’ll be up until two or three o’clock. Why don’t you just go and make my apologies?”
Or, even worse, the times when he’d come stumbling home, eyes glazed with fatigue, to find Fay waiting for him, already in negligee. Fay had a way of letting something that had happened during the day stimulate her — some TV show she’d watched, perhaps a movie with a favorite sex-symbol male star. At times like this her needs were all-demanding, and increasingly often at times like this, it was impossible for Steve to give her fulfillment.
Then it had all fallen apart one day. All at once.
In memory, it was very clear.
Steve Cogswell had returned in the late afternoon from an unhappy interview with Mike Farnsworth, editor-in-chief of the Hammett chain of weeklies which spread over New England. The Hammett chain consisted of a score of small-town papers, but they sold ad space to the national advertisers as a bloc and thus were able to guarantee a total circulation of several hundred thousand.
Steve had tried to convince Farnsworth that the chain ought to carry this co-operation one step further. That the whole chain ought to be printed in one centrally located, ultra-modern shop, thus saving duplication of body type and ad setting, and all using the same cartoon strips, advice-to-the-lovelorn columns and such. Only the front page, the editorial page and local news would differ in each paper. It was a complicated scheme. Steve had worked it out in detail — but Mike Farnsworth hadn’t bought it.