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Benny whistled. 'Consider it done,' he said.

'And once you've completed the order, I want you to buy back the same number of shares during the next twenty-one days, but not until you think they've bottomed out.'

'Understood. Just one question, major. Should Benny be placing a little flutter on this particular horse?'

'That's up to you, but don't get greedy, because there's going to be a lot more where this came from.'

The major put down the phone, walked out of his club on Pall Mall and took a taxi to the Savoy. He joined his fellow directors in the hotel's conference room just a few minutes before the chairman rose to deliver his annual address to the shareholders of the Barrington Shipping Company.

19

THE CONSTITUTIONAL HALL on Davis Street was packed. Several party members had to stand in the aisle or at the back of the room. One or two were even perched on windowsills in the hope of getting a better view of proceedings.

Both of the candidates on the shortlist, Neville Simpson and Gregory Dunnett, had delivered powerful speeches, but Fisher felt that at that moment Simpson had the edge over his preferred candidate. Simpson, a London barrister, was a few years older than Dunnett, had a fine war record and had already contested an election against Aneurin Bevan in Ebbw Vale, where he'd increased the Tory share of the vote. But Mitchell had been able to supply Fisher with enough information to embarrass the man.

Simpson and Dunnett were seated on either side of the chairman on the stage, while the committee were in the front row. The news that Sir Giles Barrington had survived a vote of no confidence at a closed meeting of the local Labour Party earlier in the week had pleased Fisher, although he didn't admit his reason to anyone, other than Virginia. He planned to humiliate Barrington publicly, in the glare of a general election campaign, rather than in a dimly lit Labour Party committee room. But his plan couldn't work unless Dunnett became the Tory candidate, and that was still in the balance.

The chairman rose from his seat and smiled benignly down on the assembled gathering. He gave his trademark cough before addressing the faithful.

'Before I call for questions, I should like you to know that this will be my last meeting as chairman. I feel the association should go into the general election with both a new candidate and a new chairman, preferably someone a lot younger than me.' He paused for a moment, to see if anyone would try to talk him out of it, but as no one did, he reluctantly continued.

'We now enter the final stage of the meeting before we select the man who will fight our cause at the next election. Members will have the opportunity to put their questions directly to the two prospective candidates.'

A tall man leapt up at the back of the hall and began to speak even before Bill Hawkins had called on anyone.

'Mr Chairman, can I ask both candidates, if they were to win the seat, would they live in the constituency?'

Simpson was the first to respond. 'I would certainly buy a house in the constituency,' he said, 'but I would expect to live in the House of Commons.'

This comment received laughter and a smattering of applause.

'I took the liberty of visiting an estate agent last week,' countered Dunnett, 'not in the anticipation, but in the hope, that you will select me.'

The applause suggested to Fisher that the gathering was fairly evenly divided.

The chairman pointed to a woman in the third row, who never failed to ask a question whenever the association met, so he decided to get her out of the way early.

'As one of you is a successful barrister, and the other an insurance broker, will you have enough time to devote to this key marginal seat in the run-up to the election?'

'If I am selected, I won't be returning to London tonight,' said Dunnett. 'I will devote every hour I'm awake to winning this seat and making sure we remove Giles Barrington once and for all.'

This time the applause was prolonged, and Fisher relaxed for the first time.

'It's not how many hours you spend,' said Simpson, 'but how you spend them that matters. I've already fought a general election against a doughty opponent, so I know what to expect. It is important that you select someone who can learn quickly, and can use that knowledge to defeat Giles Barrington and win this seat for the Conservative Party.'

Fisher was beginning to feel that Dunnett might need a helping hand if Simpson was to be derailed. The chairman gestured to a well-known local businessman.

'Who do you consider would be the right person to succeed Winston Churchill as leader of our party?'

'I didn't realize there was a vacancy,' said Simpson, which was greeted by laughter and further applause, before he added in a more serious tone, 'We would be foolish to think of replacing the greatest prime minister of this century without a damn good reason for doing so.'

The applause was deafening, and it was some time before Dunnett could make himself heard.

'I believe Mr Churchill has made it clear that when the time comes, his preferred choice to succeed him would be Sir Anthony Eden, our distinguished and much admired foreign secretary. If that's good enough for Mr Churchill, it's good enough for me.'

The applause was not quite as deafening.

Over the next thirty minutes, as questions continued to come thick and fast, Fisher felt that Simpson was consolidating his position as favourite. However, Fisher was confident that the last three questions would assist his candidate, not least because he'd planted two of them, and had arranged with the chairman that he would ask the final question himself.

Bill Hawkins looked at his watch.

'I think there's just enough time left for three more questions.' He pointed to a man at the back, who had been constantly trying to catch his eye. Fisher smiled.

'Would the two candidates care to give their views on the proposed new divorce laws?'

There was an audible gasp, followed by an expectant hush, as few people in the room doubted that this question was aimed at Sir Giles Barrington rather than either of the two candidates on the stage.

'I intensely dislike our antiquated divorce laws, which clearly need reforming,' said the barrister. 'I only hope the subject doesn't dominate the election campaign in this constituency, because I would prefer to beat Barrington on merit, and not to have to rely on rumour and innuendo.'

Fisher didn't find it difficult to understand why Central Office considered Simpson to be a future cabinet minister, but he also knew that this wasn't the answer the local members wanted to hear.

Dunnett quickly gauged the reaction of the audience, and said, 'While I agree with much of what Mr Simpson has just said, I feel the voters of Bristol Docklands have the right to know the truth about Barrington's domestic arrangements before they go to the ballot box, and not after.'

The first round of applause was clearly in favour of Dunnett.

The chairman pointed to Peter Maynard, who was seated in the middle of the front row.

'We in this constituency are looking for more than a Member of Parliament,' said Maynard, reading from a prepared script. 'Rather, we are looking for a partnership, a team. Can both candidates assure us that we will regularly see their wives in the constituency supporting them during the run-up to the general election, because we never see Lady Barrington from one year to the next.'

The first questioner to receive a round of applause.