MacLean, Alistair – Fear is the Key

“Like it, Royale?” I said hoarsely. “Can’t you fed your throat, your lungs starting to hurt? I can feel mine — and I can see your face starting to turn blue. Not much, yet, just starting under the eyes. The eyes and the nose, they always show up first.” I thrust my hand into my display pocket, brought out a little rectangle of polished chrome. “A mirror,, Royale. Don’t you want to look in it? Don’t you want to see—–?”

“Damn you to hell, Talbot!” He knocked the mirror flying out of my hand, his voice was half-way between a sob and a scream. “I don’t want to die! I don’t want to die!”

“But your victims did, didn’t they, Royale?” I could no longer speak intelligibly, it took me four or five breaths to pant out that one sentence. “They all had their minds bent on suicide and you just helped them out of the depths of the kindness of your heart. Isn’t that it, Royale?”

“You’re going to die, Talbot.” His voice was a frenzied croak, the shaking gun was lined up on my heart. “It’s coming to you now.”

“I’m laughing. I’m laughing out loud. I’ve got a cyanide tablet between my teeth.” My chest was hurting, the inside of the observation chamber was beginning to swim before my eyes. I knew I couldn’t last out much longer. “Go ahead,” I gasped. “Go ahead and pull the trigger.”

He looked at me with crazy unfocused eyes that had hardly any contact left with reality and fumbled the little black gun back into its holster. The beating he’d taken over his head was now beginning to take its toll, he was in even worse state than I was. He began to sway in his seat, and suddenly fell forward on to his hands and knees, shaking his head from side to side as if to clear away a fog. I leaned across him, barely conscious myself, closed my fingers over the control knob of the cartoon dioxide absorption unit and turned it from minimum all the way up to maximum. It would take two minutes, perhaps three, before there would be any noticeable improvement, maybe the best part of ten minutes before the atmosphere inside that chamber was anything like back to normal. Right then, it made no difference at all. I bent over Royale.

“You’re dying, Royale,” I gasped out. “How does it feel to die, Royale? Tell me, please, how does it fed? How does it feel to be buried in a tomb five hundred feet beneath the surface of the sea? How does it feel to know that you’ll never breathe that wonderful, clean, fresh air of the world above again? How does it feel to know that you’ll never see the sun again? How does it feel to die? Tell me, Royale, how does it feel?” I bent still closer to him. “Tell me, Royale, how would you like to live?”

He didn’t get it, he was that far gone.

“How would you like to live, Royale?” I almost had to shout the words.

“I want to live.” His voice was a harsh moan of pain, his clenched right fist was beating weakly on the deck of the chamber. “Oh, God, I want to live.”

“Maybe I can give you life yet. Maybe. You’re down on your hands and knees, aren’t you, Royale? You’re begging for your life, aren’t you, Royale? I’ve sworn I’d see the day when you were on your hands and knees begging for your life and now you’re doing just that, aren’t you, Royale?”

“Damn you, Talbot!” His voice was a hoarse, despairing, agonised shout, he was swaying on his hands and knees now, his head turning from side to side, his eyes screwed shut. Down there on the floor the air must have been foul and contaminated to a degree, almost completely without oxygen, and his face was really beginning to show the first tinges of blue. He was breathing with the rapidity of a panting dog, each brief indrawn breath a whoop of agony. “Get me out of here! For God’s sake get me out of here.”

“You’re not dead yet, Royale,” I said in his ear. “Maybe you will see the sun again. But maybe you won’t. I lied to Vyland, Royale. The master switch for the ballast release is still in position — I just altered a couple of wires, that’s all. It would take you hours to find out which two. I could fix it in thirty seconds.”

He stopped swaying his head, looked up at me with a blue-tinged sweat-sheened face, with bloodshot fear-darkened eyes that carried far back in them the faintest flicker of hope. “Get me out of here, Talbot,” he whispered. He didn’t know whether there was any hope or whether this was just a further refinement of torture.

“I could do it, Royale, couldn’t I? See, I’ve got the screwdriver right here.” I showed it to him, smiled down without any compassion. “But I’ve still got this cyanide tablet in my mouth, Royale.” I showed him the button, gripped between my teeth.

“Don’t!” A hoarse cry. “Don’t bite on that! You’re mad, Talbot, mad. God, you’re not human.” Coming from Royale, that was good.

“Who killed Jablonsky?” I asked quietly. It was becoming easier to breathe now, but not down where Royale was.

“I did. I killed him,” Royale moaned.

“How?”

“I shot him. Through the head. He was asleep.”

“And then?”

“We buried him in the kitchen garden.” Royale was still moaning and swaying, but he was putting everything he could muster into his reeling thoughts to try to express them coherently: his nerve, for the moment, was gone beyond recall, he was talking for his life and he knew it.

“Who’s behind Vyland?”

“Nobody.”

“Who’s behind Vyland?” I repeated implacably.

“Nobody.” His voice was almost a scream he was so desperate to convince me. “There were two men, a Cuban minister in the government, and Houras, a permanent civil servant in Colombia. But not now.”

“What happened to them?”

“They were — they were eliminated,” Royale said wearily. “I did it.”

“Who else did you eliminate since you’ve been working for Vyland?”

“Nobody.”

I showed him the button between my teeth and he shuddered.

“The pilot. The pilot flying the fighter that shot down this plane. He — he knew too much.”

“That’s why we could never find that pilot,” I nodded. “My God, you’re a sweet bunch. But you made a mistake, Royale, didn’t you? You shot him too soon. Before he’d told you exactly where the DC had crashed. . . . Vyland give you orders for all this?”

He nodded.

“Did you hear my question?” I demanded.

“Vyland gave me orders for all of that.”

There was a brief silence. I stared out the window, saw some strange shark-like creature swim into sight, stare incuriously at both bathyscaphe and plane, then vanish into the stygian blackness beyond with a lazy flick of its tail. I turned and tapped Royale on the shoulder.

“Vyland,” I said. “Try to bring him round.”

While Royale stooped over his employer I reached above him for the oxygen regenerating switch. I didn’t want the air getting too fresh too soon.

After maybe a minute or so Royale managed to bring Vyland to. Vyland’s breathing was very distressed, he was pretty far gone in the first stages of anoxia, but for all that he still had some breath left, for when he opened his eyes, stared wildly around and saw me with the button still between my teeth he started screaming, time and again, a horrible nerve-drilling sound in that tiny confined metal space. I reached forward to smack his face to jolt him out of his panic-stricken hysteria, but Royale got there first. Royale had had his tiny fleeting glimpse of hope and he meant to play that hope to the end of the way. He lifted his hand and he wasn’t any too gentle with Vyland,

“Stop it!” Royale shook him violently. “Stop it, stop it, stop it! Talbot says he can fix this machine. Do you hear me? Talbot says he can fix it!”

Slowly the screaming died away and Vyland stared at Royale with eyes where the first faint flicker of comprehension was beginning to edge in on the fear and the madness.

“What did you say?” he whimpered hoarsely. “What was that, Royale?”

“Talbot says he can fix this machine,” Royale repeated urgently. “He says he lied to us, he says that switch he left up top wasn’t important. He can fix it. He can fix it!”

“You — you can fix it, Talbot?” Vyland’s eyes widened until I could see a ring of white aE round the irises, his shaking voice was a prayer, the whole curve of his body a gesture of supplication. He wasn’t even daring to hope yet, his mind had gone too deeply into the shadow of the valley of death even to glimpse the light above: or rather he didn’t dare to look, in case there was no light there. “You can get us out of this? Now — even now you—–“

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