Night of Terror by Desmond Bagley

man was briefly discussed.

There was a surprise witness, at least to me – old Jarvis appeared to

give expert testimony. He told the coroner what manganese nodules were

and even produced one to show what the things looked like. The coroner

prodded him a bit about their value and Jarvis responded in his

downright, damn-your-eyes way. But that was just for the record.

Then suddenly it was over. The coroner took little time to decide that

death was due to justifiable manslaughter. He wound everything up with

a pontifical speech to the effect that while an Englishman’s home may

be his castle, no man had the right to take the law into his own hands

and that if a little more care had been taken, in his opinion, a death

could have been averted. However what was done was done, and Mr

Michael Trevelyan was free to leave the court without a stain on his

character.

We all stood up when he swept out and there was a general drift to the

doors. An official elbowed his way up to me and gave me a note.

It was brief and to the point. “See you at the Dorchester.

Campbell.”

I passed it to Geordie as he reached me to slap me heavily on the

back.

“I hope this means what I think it means,” I said.

“I’ve got a lot to tell you.” We drifted out with the crowd and were

eventually deposited on the pavement. A lot of people I didn’t know

congratulated me on killing a man and getting away with it, some

reporters had a lot of questions to ask, and at last I caught sight of

the man I was looking for. I ran to catch up with him, Geordie

behind

me. It was Professor Jarvis.

He saw me coming, waved his stick and waited for me to join him.

“Well, that went off all right, my boy,” he said.

“You did your bit – thank you.” “Damned fools,” he grumbled.

“Everyone knows that those nodules are basically worthless – not an

economic proposition at all.” “I wondered if you had a moment to talk

to me here, rather than at the Institute,” I asked him. There seemed

to be no difficulty and we sat down on the low stone wall outside the

courthouse, enjoying the thin watery sunshine.

“I have nothing to tell you, young man,” the Professor said.

“I made a few enquiries about that chap, Norgaard, but there’s nothing

doing. The feller seems to have disappeared off the face of the

earth.” “When was the last you heard of him?” “About six, seven

months ago – when he was with your brother. They were fossicking about

in the islands round Tahiti.” “When did Norgaard start working with

Mark?” I asked.

“Now let me see. It must have been nearly two years ago, after Mark

left that Canadian firm he was working for. Yes, that was it after he

had to leave the I.G.Y project he went to Canada and was with that chap

Campbell for over two years, then he left to join up with

Norgaard. What they were doing I don’t know;. they didn’t publish

anything.” His grasp of events was remarkable, I thought, and then

seized on something he had said. “What do you mean -had to leave the

I.G.Y?” Jarvis actually looked embarrassed. “Oh, I shouldn’t have

said that,” he mumbled.

“I’d like to know. It can’t hurt Mark now.” “It’s bad form. De

mortuis – and all that, don’t you know.” “Out with it,” I said.

“After all, it’s all in the family.” Jarvis regarded the tip of his

highly polished shoe. “Well, I never did get to the bottom of it – it

was hushed up, you know – but apparently Mark fudged some of his

results.”

“Faked his figures?” “That’s right. It was found out by sheer

chance.

Of course he had to leave. But we – the I.G.Y agreed not to make any

more of it, so he was able to get the job in Canada, after he

resigned.” “So that’s why he left before it was over. I wondered

about that. What was he working on at the time?” Jarvis shrugged. “I

don’t recall, but it certainly had to do with the underwater surveys.

Manganese nodules, perhaps?” Not too shrewd a guess, all things

considered; but I didn’t like it. He went on, “I never did like your

brother. I never trusted him and the fact that he cooked his books

didn’t surprise me a bit.” I said, “That’s all right lots of people

didn’t like Mark. I wasn’t too keen on him myself. And it wasn’t the

first time he riggeo his results. He did the same at school.” And at

university. Not to mention his personal LIFE.

Jarvis nodded. “I’m not surprised at that either. Still, my boy, I

don’t mistrust the whole Trevelyan family. You’re worth ten of your

brother, Mike.” “Thanks, Prof’ I said warmly.

“Forget all this and enjoy your leave now. The South Atlantic is

waiting for you ‘when you return.” He turned and strode away, jauntily

waving his stick. I looked after him with affection; I thought he

would be genuinely sorry to lose me if the deal with

Campbell came off and I went to the South Pacific instead of the

South

Atlantic.

He would once more angrily bewail the economic facts of life which drew

researchers into industry and he would write a few acid letters to the

journals.

I turned to Geordie. “What do you make of that?” “Norgaard vanished

just about the same time that Mark kicked the bucket. I wonder if.

.

..” “I know what you’re thinking, Geordie. Is Norgaard still alive?

I do hope to God Campbell comes through – I want to do some field work

in the islands.” “You had something to tell me,”he reminded me. But I

had decided to save it up.

“I’ll tell you and Campbell together. Come with me to see him.”

Campbell was less crusty than at our first meeting. “Well,” he said,

as we entered his suite, “I see you’re not entirely a hardened

criminal, Trevelyan.” “Not a stain on my character. The coroner said

so.” I introduced Geordie and the two big men sized one the another up

with interest. “Mr Wilkins is willing to contribute a ship – and

skipper her, too.” Campbell said, “I see someone has faith in your

crazy story. I suppose that getting hurt added to your conviction.”

“What about you?” I asked.

He ignored this and asked what we would drink. “We must celebrate a

successful evasion of the penalty of the law,” he said, almost

jovially. He ordered and we got down to business. I decided to keep

the Kane episode to be revealed at the proper moment and first hear

what Campbell had to say.

“knew my hunch about your South Americans would work out,” he said.

“I’ve got a pretty good intelligence system – you have to in my line of

work – and I find that Suarez-Navarro are fitting out a research ship

in Darwin right at this moment. It’s new business and new territory

for them, so my guess is that they are heading your way.”

I looked at him blankly. That didn’t mean a thing to me.

I think he enjoyed my lack of comprehension because he left me dangling

for a while before elucidating. “Suarez/Navarro is a South American

mining house, active in several countries,” he said – “I’ve tangled

with them before – they’re a crowd of unscrupulous bastards.

Now, why would a mining house be fitting out an oceanographical

research ship?” “Nodules,”said Geordie succinctly.

“How unscrupulous are they?” I asked. “Would they stoop to

burglary?”

I didn’t mention murder Campbell folded his hands together.

“I’ll tell you the story and let you judge for yourself. Once I had a

pretty good set-up in South America, never mind just where. The mines

were producing well and I ploughed a lot back in the interests of good

labour relations. I had a couple of schools, a hospital and all the

civilized trimmings. Those Indian miners never had it so good, and

they responded well.

“Suarez-Navarro cast an eye on the operation and liked the look of

it.

They went about things in their own smelly way, though. They had a

trouble-shooter, a guy called Ernesto Ramirez, whom they used for that

type of operation. He pitched up, got at the government, greased a few

palms, supported the Army, and then suddenly there was a new government

which promptly expropriated the mines in the interests of the national

economy – or that’s what they said.

Anyway, I never got a cent out of it. They just took the lot and

Ramirez vanished back into the hole they dug him out of.

“The next thing that happened was that the government wanted somebody

to run the mines, so Suarez-Navarro offered to take on the job out of

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