Night of Terror by Desmond Bagley

I glanced through it all. “This is going to be a long job,” I said.

“I’m not going to be able to make any snap judgements here and now;

I’ll look at this lot this afternoon, in the hotel room. Right now I

want to go back to Esmerelda and sort out procedures with Geordie, pack

my gear and go and take a shower and a clean-up.” If he was

disappointed he didn’t show it -clearly whit I said made sense.

And so it was not until I was lying, damp an half-naked in the

blessedly cool hotel room a couple of hours later that I finally opened

the envelope.

The translation of the cipher was pretty well complete except for a few

gaps here and there, but it didn’t improve matters as much as I’d

hoped. The thing was disappointingly written in a kind of telegraphese

which didn’t make for easy reading. It was a true diary and evidently

covered the last few months of Mark’s life, from about the time he left

the I.G.Y, although there were few dates and no place names written in

clear at all.

I wondered if he’d always kept such a diary, and decided that he must

have done so diary-keeping is a habit as hard to break as to develop.

As to where the earlier volumes had got to, there was no guessing, nor

did I think they would have helped me much anyway. This was the vital

period.

It was, on the whole, an ordinary enough diary; there were references

to shore leave, films seen, people mentioned by initials only in the

irritating way that people have when confiding to themselves, and all

the other trivia of a man’s life, all in brusque lack of detail. Mark

had kept a brief record of his amours which wasn’t pleasant to read,

but otherwise it was fairly uninteresting on the surface.

Then there were the entries made at sea. Here the diary turned

professional with notes of observations, odd equations roughly jotted,

analyses of bottom material, mostly sea ooze and Occasionally there

were analyses of nodules – nothing very startling, just run of the sea

stuff.

I waded on feeling that I might be wasting my time, but towards the end

I was pulled up with a start. I had run my eye down the typewritten

sheet and was aware that I was at last looking at something

remarkable.

It was an analysis of a nodule, though it didn’t specifically say so,

and the figures were startling.

Translated from symbols, they read: “Manganese – 28%; iron – 32%;

cobalt – 8%; copper – 4%; nickel – 6%; other 22%. Wow!”

“Wow,”indeed.

There followed analyses of four more nodules, all equally rich.

I did some calculating and found the average cobalt in the five nodules

to be a fraction under nine percent. The copper and nickel weren’t to

be laughed away either. I didn’t yet know much about the economics of

recovery but it was evident that this might be a paying proposition

even with relatively primitive methods of dredging, depending on the

depth of water. And I had reason to believe that this was not too

great to be worked in. With more sophisticated equipment it would be

better than owning a gold mine. ?

But there was always the snag – nowhere in the diary did Mark say where

these riches were to be found. In the whole notebook there was not one

place name mentioned. So we NNIL_ weren’t really any better off than

we were before, except that scattered through the typewritten pages was

the phrase, “Picture Here’, with a number attached, and at the end was

a sheaf of reproductions and a brief account by the cipher expert of

these doodled drawings.

It is possible and indeed probable that these drawings are of the

nature of pictograms or rebuses. A study of the pictograms leads me to

believe that they must indicate place names, and of the drawings, I

believe I have successfully identified 24.

To illustrate: the rough sketch of the gas mantle with the word GRATIS

beneath may well refer to the Australian town of Fremantle; the bearded

man with the sword and the baby is probably Solomon, referring to the

biblical story, and may indicate the Solomon Islands; the bearded man

looking at a monkey may be a reference to Darwin in the Australian

territory; the straight line neatly bisected may refer to either the

Equator or Midway Island.

The fact that all these names occur in the same quarter of the globe is

a further indication that one may be on the right track in such

surmising. Other names tentatively identified are also to be found in

the same geographical area.

Tracings of the drawings, together with possible identifications are

attached. Of the eight drawings unidentified all I can say is that to

solve these one would need to have a more precise knowledge of these

geographical areas, together with the need to know a great deal more

about the ‘artist’, since it is obvious that an idiosyncratic mode of

thought is here employed, involving a person’s training, experience and

interior feelings; in fact, a total life.

I looked up the analyses of the two non-standard nodules again.

Coming immediately after them were two of the drawings, numbers 28 and

29. I checked them against the tracings. One was of a busty wench

wearing a Phyrgian cap with underneath it the words, “The Fair

Goddess’. The other was a rather bedraggled-looking American eagle

with the inscription, “The Disappearing Trick’. Neither was

identified.

I leaned back and thought about it all. I knew that Mark’s ship had

been based on Australia during the I.G.Y – hence, possibly, the

Australian references. Mark had probably been in the Solomons and

might well have gone as far as Midway he would certainly have crossed

the Equator anyway. Did he go as far as Easter Island? I checked the

tracings and found it a rabbit apparently trying to hatch an egg, the

traditional fertility symbols of Easter. That was one the expert had

spotted too.

it was a hell of a big area in which to find The Fair Goddess or The

Disappearing Trick.

I thought about Mark and his ‘idiosyncratic mode of thought’. The

expert had been dead right there; Mark’s mode of thought had been so

damned idiosyncratic that there had been times when I thought it wasn’t

human. He had a strangely twisted, involute mind which delighted in

complexity and deception, never taking a straight course but always

heading ultimately for one goal – the eventual well-being of Mark

Trevelyan.

All my life I had watched him cheat and scheme his way towards the

things he wanted, never realizing that if he’d gone about his business

in a straightforward way it would have been more efficient. He had a

first-class brain, but he was lazy and always looking for short cuts

but you don’t find many short cuts in science and thus he tended to lag

behind in his work.

I think he was envious of me for some odd reason of his own. I was two

years older than he and when we were children he nearly beat himself to

death trying to keep up, physically and mentally. The psycho boys have

a term for it in their tasteless jargon -‘sibling rivalry’ – but with

Mark it took an unhealthy turn. He seemed to see his whole life in

terms of competition with me, even inventing apparent parental

favouritism towards me where I could see none. The only reason that I

know for his having elected to study oceanography was because I had

done so and not, like me, out of any burning interest in the subject.

He once said that he would be famous when I had been forgotten.

It was ironic in a way that he should have said that, because he had

the makings of a first rate scientist with a theoretical bent and if

he’d lived I’m sure he could have surprised us all provided he wasn’t

looking for a short cut at the time.

For years I’d avoided him, physically and professionally, but now I had

to match my mind against his. I had to ferret out the meanings of his

cryptic scrawls and it wasn’t going to be easy. Mark had almost

certainly been up to something fishy no high-cobalt results had come

out of the I.G.Y investigations, and Mark had such results. I thought

about what Jarvis had said about Mark faking figures during that

period, and about Mark trying to persuade Campbell into an expedition

to look for nodules. It was beginning to add up.

I was interrupted by Geordie, banging at my bedroom door.

“Aren’t you ready yet?” he demanded. “We’ve got a dinner date with

the boss.” “My God, the time’s slipped away.” “Found anything?” I

looked up wryly. “Yes, I’ve found something but I’m damned if I know

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