MacLean, Alistair – Fear is the Key

After that I unscrewed the cover of the largest of the circuit boxes, removed almost twenty coloured wires from their sockets and let them hang down in the wildest confusion and disorder. I attached a lead from the megger to one of those wires, opened the covers of another two circuits and fuse-boxes and emptied most of my tools on to the small work-bench beneath. The impression of honest toil was highly convincing.

So small was the floor area of that steel cabin that there was no room for me to stretch out my length on the narrow mesh duckboard but I didn’t care. I hadn’t slept at all the previous night, I’d been through a great deal in the past twelve hours and I felt very tired indeed. I’d sleep all right.

I slept. My last impression before drifting off was that the wind and the seas must be really acting up. At depths of a hundred feet or over, wave-motion is rarely or never felt: but the rocking of that bathyscaphe was unmistakable, though very gentle indeed. It rocked me to sleep.

My watch said half past two when I awoke. For me, this was most unusual: I’d normally the ability to set a mental alarm-clock and wake up almost to the pre-selected moment. This time I’d slipped, but I was hardly surprised. My head ached fiercely, the air in that tiny cabin was foul. It was my own fault, I’d been careless. I reached for the switch controlling carbon dioxide absorption and turned it up to maximum. After five minutes, when my head began to clear, I switched on the microphone and asked for someone to loosen the hatch-cover set into the floor of the leg. The man they called Cibatti came down and let me out and three minutes later I was up again in that little steel room.

“Late, aren’t you?” Vyland snapped. He and Royale — the helicopter must have made the double trip safely — were the only people there, apart from Cibatti who had just closed the trunking door behind me.

“You want the damn’ thing to go sometime, don’t you?” I said irritably. “I’m not in this for the fun of the thing, Vyland.”

“That’s so.” The top executive criminal, he wasn’t going to antagonise anyone unnecessarily. He peered closely at me. “Anything the matter with you?”

“Working for four hours on end in a cramped coffin is the matter with me,” I said sourly. “That and the fact that the air purifier was maladjusted. But it’s O.K. now.”

“Progress?”

“Damn’ little.” I lifted my hand as the eyebrow went up and the face began to darken in a scowl. “It’s not for want of trying. I’ve tested every single contact and circuit in the scaphe and it’s only in the past twenty minutes that I began to find out what’s the matter with it.”

“Well, what was the matter with it?”

“Your late engineer friend Bryson was the matter with it, that’s what.” I looked at him speculatively. “Had you intended taking Bryson with you when you were going to recover this stuff? Or were you going to go it alone?”

“Just Royale and myself. We thought — ”

“Yes, I know. Not much point in taking him along with you. A dead man can’t accomplish much. Either you dropped a hint that he wouldn’t be coming along and he knew why he wouldn’t be coming along so he’d fixed it so that he’d get a nice little posthumous revenge, or he hated you so much that if he had to go along he was determined that he was going to take you with him. Out of this world, I mean. Your friend had made a very clever little fix indeed, only he hadn’t quite time to finish it before the bends knocked him off — which is why the engines are still out of commission. He’d fixed it so that the bathyscaphe would have operated perfectly; would have gone backwards and forwards, up and down, anything you liked — until you had taken it down to a depth of just over three hundred feet. Then he had fixed that certain hydro-static cut-outs would come into operation. A beautiful job.” I wasn’t gambling much, I knew their ignorance of those matters was profound.

“And then what?” Vyland asked tightly.

“Then nothing. The bathyscaphe would never have been able to get above three hundred feet again. When either the batteries had been exhausted or the oxygen regenerating unit had failed, as it would have to in a few hours — well, you’d have died of suffocation.” I looked at him consideringly. “After, that is, you had screamed your way into madness.”

On a previous occasion I had thought I had seen Vyland losing some colour from his rather ruddy cheeks, but on this occasion there was no doubt: he turned white and to conceal his agitation fumbled a pack of cigarettes out of his pocket and lit a cigarette with hands whose tremor he could not conceal. Royale, sitting on the table, just smiled his little secret smile and went on unconcernedly swinging his foot. That didn’t make Royale any braver than Vyland, maybe it only meant he was less imaginative. The last thing a professional killer could ever afford was imagination; he had to live with himself and the ghosts of all his victims. I looked at Royale again. I swore to myself that one day I would see that face the mask and mirror of fear, as Royale himself had seen so many other faces the masks and mirrors of fear in that last second of awareness and knowingness before he pulled the trigger of his deadly little gun.

“Neat, eh?” Vyland said harshly. He had regained a measure of composure.

“It wasn’t bad,” I admitted. “At least I sympathise with his outlook, the object he had in mind.”

“Funny. Very funny indeed.” There were times when Vyland forgot that the well-bred business tycoon never snarls. He looked at me with sudden speculation in his eyes. “You wouldn’t be thinking along the same lines yourself, Talbot? Of pulling a fast one like Bryson tried to pull?”

“It’s an attractive idea,” I grinned at him, “but you insult my intelligence. In the first place, had I had any ideas along those lines do you think I would have given you any hint of them? Besides, I intend to go along with you on this little trip. At least, hope to.”

“You do, eh?” Vyland was back on balance, his shrewd quick self again. “Getting suspiciously co-operative all of a sudden, aren’t you, Talbot?”

“You can’t win,” I sighed. “If I said I didn’t want to go, you’d think that a damn’ sight more suspicious. Be your age, Vyland. Things aren’t as they were a few hours ago. Remember the general’s speech about ensuring my continued well-being? He meant it all right, he meant every word of it. Try seeing me off and he’ll see you off. And you’re too much of a business man to make a bad deal like that. Royale here is going to be deprived of the pleasure of killing me.”

“Killing gives me no pleasure,” Royale put in softly. It was a simple statement of fact and I stared at him, temporarily off-balance by the preposterousness of it.

“Did I hear what I thought I heard?” I asked slowly.

“Ever hear of a ditch-digger digging ditches for pleasure, Talbot?”

“I think I see your point.” I stared at him for a long moment, he was even more inhuman than I had ever imagined. “Anyway, Vyland, now that I’m going to live I have a different outlook on things. The sooner this business is over, the sooner I’ll be away from you and your cosy little pals. And then, I think, I could put the touch on the general for a few thousand. T hardly think he would like it known that he had been aiding and abetting criminal activities on a grand scale.”

“You mean — you mean you’d put the black on the man who saved your life?” Apparently some things were still capable of astonishing Vyland. “God, you’re as bad as any of us. Worse.”

“I never said I wasn’t,” I said indifferently. “These are hard times, Vyland. A man must live. And I’m in a hurry. That’s why I suggest I come along. Oh, I admit a child could steer and lower and raise the bathyscaphe once he’d read the instructions, but salvage is no job for amateurs. Believe me, Vyland, I know, and it’s not. You’re amateurs. I’m an expert. It’s the one thing I’m really good at. So I come, eh?”

Vyland looked at me long and consideringly, then he said softly: “I just wouldn’t dream of going along without you, Talbot.”

He turned, opened the door and gestured to me to precede him. He and Royale came out behind me and as we walked along the passage we could hear Cibatti slamming home a heavy bolt and turning a key in the lock. Which made it as safe as the Bank of England, except for one thing: in the Bank of England a code knock does not automatically open the door to the vaults. But it opened doors here, and I had remembered it: and even had I forgotten it, it would have come back there and then for Vyland was using it again on a door about fifteen yards along the passage.

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