Night of Terror by Desmond Bagley

from his no doubt Calvinistic ancestors. He said, almost hostilely,

“There’s nothing to be gained by running down your brother

especially

as he can’t answer back.” I said softly, “You should study

the Bible, Mr Campbell.

There are a few stories in the Book that are very illuminating.

Read about Cain and Abel, or Esau and Jacob. There’s no hard and fast

rule that brothers should like one another -and lots of villains have

innocent kinfolk.” He was acid. “Well, I suppose you knew him best.

I never had any reason to doubt him while he was in my employ.”He

caught Clare’s eye and faltered just a little. “Must admit that

personally…..

Clare’s face was calm, showing only a polite interest, but her jawline

caught my notice.

I said, “We must discuss this. We’re faced with a problem put to us by

Mark and we can only solve it by understanding him and the way he

worked. Geordie can support some of what I may have to tell you.” I

had them all riveted now. “Let me tell you something that I’ll bet you

don’t know -Mark was kicked out of the I.G.Y for falsifying figures.

That was just before he joined your company.” “I didn’t know that and

I don’t think I believe it.” “It’s true,” I said. “Professor Jarvis,

my old boss at the Institute, told me about it – and Geordie heard him

too. I think he got hold of those nodules at the time, found out their

value, and decided to keep the knowledge to himself. Then he moved in

on you – and he was using you.” Campbell was affronted. ‘llsing

me!”

“You had the money he wanted for an expedition. He couldn’t show you

the nodules because you’d want to know where he got them. And that was

by stealing them from the people who paid his salary.” Campbell began

to look baffled. “He never showed me anything. He talked a good story

though.” “That’s right. He had a lot of theory and you nearly fell

for it. If you had, he’d have wasted his time and your money

fossicking round the Pacific for six months and then his “theory” would

have led him to a spectacular find. You see, he knew where those

nodules came from. Anyway you’d be in the chips and he’d be both rich

and vindicated – the great scientist.” Campbell nodded unwillingly.

I said, “But something went wrong. You had your run-ir with

Suarez-Navarro and found yourself strapped for read) funds. You

couldn’t finance his expedition, and so he left you flat because you

were of no further use to him. Isn’t that so?” There was silence

while

Campbell digested all that.

“All right, you’ve made your point – don’t drive it into the ground.

Assuming something like that is possible – what do you suggest we do

now?” “First, another point. You wondered how Suarez-Navarro came

into the nodule hunt. I think Mark may have tried the same ploy on

them.

In fact I think he and Norgaard were waiting in Tahiti for the ship

that’s being fitted out right now, and that ties everything in squarely

together.” “All right, let’s assume that too. We’re safer the more we

can see into the forest, I suppose.” Campbell was still shaken by what

I’d said about Mark. “What do we do next?” “Well, we could find out

where Mark’s I.G.Y ship dredged and drop ours in the same places.

But I don’t think it will be any of the sites they actually surveyed or

this would have come out already – Mark wasn’t the only one doing

assays.

No, I think it was a trial site, one they weren’t serious about, and

probably didn’t even make a record of, though we could check it out.”

We all sat in gloom for a while. The faint drift of music changed

tempo and a woman began to sing with the trio, and I turned to watch

her. Her voice was nice but she was no world-beater. Her body was

better than her voice and set off admirably by a revealing gown.

For a moment, lost in something not at all of our troubled world, I

relaxed and only caught the end of a sentence directed at me by Clare

Campbell.

‘. . . to ask you a question – if I’m not distracting you, Mike?” Her

voice was calm but when I turned back I saw an ironic sparkle in her

eyes.

“Sorry, yes?” I said “You say that Mark was kicked off the ship for

falsifying figures – but which figures? Not the high-cobalt nodule

assay because, as you said, that news hasn’t broken yet. So he must

have falsified other figures which caught him out.

What were they and why did he cook them -could they matter?” That was

something I hadn’t thought of, and it was a stopper. I said, “Mark was

always a fast boy with a red herring. He cheated once in his school

exams, and this is how he did it. He was called into the headmaster’s

office just before an exam and the master happened to be out of the

room. On the desk was a pile of question papers. Mark played it

cleverly – he didn’t take

one, he took six. Then he made a copy for himself and passed the six

papers to other boys anonymously.”

Campbell said, “I don’t get it.”

“It’s simple. He told me about it afterwards – he always knew I

wouldn’t tell tales. He reckoned that if the thing blew up in his face

he’d see to it that the six papers were all found in the possession of

other boys. He’d be in the clear. It wasn’t found out and he got away

with it. Now what if he’s done something like that here?” Campbell

looked frustrated. He was supposed to be a man with acumen, after

all.

“I may be dumb, but I still don’t get it.

“Look,” I said patiently. “Mark has located a deposit of high-cobalt

nodules and he’s busy suppressing the information. He knows that if

he’s found out he’s not only in disgrace but he’s lost a potential

fortune. So – knowing Mark – I’d guess that he’d toss out a few red

herrings. He’d falsify some more figures to confuse the issue, and

he’d probably revise all estimates upwards. It would add slightly to

the risk of discovery, but if it was found out, as it evidently was,

he’d be only another glory-hunting scientist, rather too optimistic and

looking for professional praise. No one would suspect that one set of

figures was wrong for another reason. They may not t ever have caught

it.” I laughed humourlessly. “I’ll bet that all Mark’s findings were

junked, anyway. None of his colleagues would trust his figures after

that.” “Why didn’t they tell the world about it – to protect people

like Pop?” asked Clare a little bitterly.

“I think they would feel that commercial folk like your dad can take

care of themselves,” I said. “They’re mostly too gentlemanly.”

Campbell was looking at me in wonder, Geordie in silent assent of my

assessment.

“Did Mark really have a mind like that?” Campbell said.

I saw that he was hurt; his pride in his judgement of men had been

badly undermined. But then, he’d been taken in by an expert. “He had

a mind that would make a corkscrew look like a straight edge. You

don’t have to take my word for it, either. Geordie can tell you some

tales.” Geordie nodded. “Aye, the boy was a twister. He caused the

family a lot of grief.” ‘ “All right. Supposing that Mark was as

Machiavellian as you make him out to be, it’seems we’re back where we

started – all we have to go on is the diary.” “And that’s going to be

a devil of a job, sorting out his scribbles. I can make a fair stab at

the science, but the rest is a teaser.” “We’ll discuss it over

dinner,” Campbell decided, to my secret relief.

We chewed over the diary and the dinner together. The dinner was

digestible which was more than any of us could say for the diary.

Clare asked if she could have it for bedside reading. “I like that

sort of thing,” she said. “Puzzles, jigsaws.” And I also thought that

she might have felt that her own knowledge of Mark’s odd mind might be

useful.

“You’re welcome,” I told her. “I want a break from it.”I was pleased

that as the evening wore on she seemed to lose some of her reserve and

her mouth began to lose its tight-locked caution. We were at the

coffee stage when a waiter came up to the table. “Are one of you

gentlemen Mr Trevelyan?” “I am.” “There’s a lady in the foyer asking

to see you.” I looked around blankly. “I don’t know anyone in

Panama.”

Campbell looked up at the waiter. “An old lady or a young lady?” “Oh,

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