Lovaas thrust back his chair and got to his feet. He was red with anger. 'I am not to stay here to be insult,' he cried, losing his English in his excitement. 'You are a guest here. If you were not you would get hurt for that. Now I go back to my ship. But be careful, Mr Gansert. Be careful. This is dangerous talk.' He turned to Mrs Kielland and said, 'Taak for maten.' Then, with a quick glance at me, he left the room.
I had overplayed my hand. I should have kept quiet. But I'd wanted to get his mind away from Sunde and those two diving boats. I glanced round the silent table. Kielland was watching me. His eyes had lost their good-humoured twinkle. 'Will you please tell me what happened on board Hval Ti?' he asked.
I told him. And when I had finished, he said, 'You were interested in this man Schreuder for the same reason that Jorgensen was interested, eh?'
I nodded.
He didn't say anything, but sat slumped in his chair as though lost in thought. 'Will there be an inquiry into the man's death?' I asked him.
He looked up. 'No,' he said. 'No. I do not think so.'
'But surely-' I began.
He held up his hand. 'You forget,' he said, 'Herr Jorgensen is a very powerful man. We are like you people. We are hardworking, honest and law-abiding. But when a thing is a matter of high politics and big business — then-' He hesitated. 'Then it is best left in the hands of those who understand it. Come. We will go and have a little drink with our coffee, and we will forget all about this, eh?'
We had our coffee and drinks in the Kiellands' sitting-room.
Sunde sat himself next to Mr Kielland. I had no opportunity of getting him alone, and after our coffee, Kielland insisted on taking the four of us round the station. He took us through the boiler-rooms where the steam for the oil vats was generated and on into a roofed-in space piled high with the rotten-smelling remains of whalebone. There were great sections of backbone steamed out so that they were like huge loaves of aerated bread, as light as a feather. This refuse scraped from the bottom of the oil vats was being crushed and packed in sacks as guano for agriculture. Then we went down into the main part of the factory where the vats stood like huge blast furnaces, six a side in two long lines. We walked down the narrow space between them. The heat was terrific. On each side of us a scalding hot gutter carried a thin, yellow stream of whale oil to big, open tanks. 'From these tanks it goes to be cooled,' Kielland said. 'Then it is packed in oil drums. It goes all over the world — for soap, candles, cosmetics, margarine.'