The golden rendezvous by MacLean, Alistair

in the world, a crazy suicidal maniac, but even so, I couldn’t let him

be gunned down where he stood. I don’t know where my first bullet went,

but the second must have struck the machine gun. I saw it jerk

violently as if struck aside by a giant hand, and then came a continuous

cacophonous drum fire of deafening sound as a third man squeezed the

trigger of his machine gun and kept on squeezing it. Something with the

power and weight of a plunging pile driver smashed into my left thigh,

hurling me back against the bar. My head struck the heavy brass rail at

the foot of the counter and the sound of the drum fire died away.

the stink of drifting cordite and the silence of the grave. Even

before consciousness came fully back to me, even before I opened my

eyes, I was aware of those, of the cordite and the unearthly stillness.

I opened my eyes slowly, pushed myself shakily up till I was sitting

with my back more or less straight against the bar, and shook my head to

try to clear it. I had, understandably enough, forgotten about my stiff

neck; the sharp stab of pain did more to clear my head than anything

else could have done.

the first thing I was aware of was the passengers. They were all

stretched out on the carpet, lying very still. For one heart-stopping

moment I thought they were all dead or dying, mown down in swathes by

that stuttering machine gun, then I saw mr. greenstreet, miss

harrbride’s husband, move his head slightly and look round the drawing

room with a cautious and terrified eye. One eye was all I could see.

At any other time it would have been very, very funny, but I never felt

less like laughing. The passengers, perhaps through wisdom, but more

probably through the reflex reaction of instinctive self-preservation,

must have flung themselves to the deck the moment the machine gun had

opened up and were only now daring to lift their heads. I concluded

that I couldn’t have been unconscious for more than a few seconds.

I moved my eyes to the right. Carreras and son were standing just

where they had been, and tony carreras had a gun in his hand now. My

gun. Beyond them a huddled group lay sprawling or sitting about the

floor. Cerdan, the “nurse” i’d shot, and three others.

tommy wilson, the laughing, lovable, happy-go-lucky tommy wilson,

was dead. He wouldn’t have to worry about his mathematics any more.

it didn’t need old doc marston and his shortsighted peering to tell

me that wilson was dead. He was lying on his back, and it looked to me

as if half his chest had been shot away; he must have taken the main

brunt of that concentrated burst of machine-gun fire. And tommy hadn’t

even lifted his gun.

archie macdonald was stretched out on his side, close to wilson.

He seemed to me to be very still, far, far too still. I couldn’t see

the front of his body for he was turned away from me; for all I knew

magnum slugs had torn the life out of him as they had out of tommy

wilson. But I could see blood all over his face and neck, slowly

soaking into the carpet.

captain bullen was the one who was sitting. He wasn’t dead anyway,

but I wouldn’t have bet a brass farthing on his chances of staying

alive. He was fully conscious, his mouth warped and dragged into an

unnatural smile, his face white and twisted with pain. From shoulder

almost to the waist his right side was soaked in blood, so soaked that I

couldn’t see where the bullets had gone home, but I could see bright red

bubbles flecking the twisted lips, which meant that he had been shot

through the lung.

I looked at the three of them again. Bullen, macdonald, wilson.

Three better men it would have been hard to find, three better shipmates

impossible to find. They had wanted none of this, none of this blood

and agony and death; all they had wanted was the chance to do their jobs

in peace and quiet and as best they could. Hard-working, companionable,

and infinitely decent men, they had sought no violence, thought no

violence, so now they lay there dead and dying, macdonald and bullen

with their wives and families, tommy wilson with his fiancee in england

and a girl in every port in america and the caribbean. I looked at them

and I felt no sadness or sorrow or anger or shock; I just felt cold and

detached and strangely uninvolved in it all. I looked from them to the

carreras family and cerdan and I made myself a promise, and it was well

for me that neither carreras heard my promise or knew of its irrevocable

finality, for they were clever, calculating men and they would have shot

me dead as I lay there.

I wasn’t feeling any pain at all, but I remembered about the pile

driver that had hurled me back against the bar. I looked down at my

left leg, and from mid-thigh to well below the knee the trousers were so

saturated with blood that there was no trace of white left. The carpet

all round my leg was soaked with it. That carpet, I remembered vaguely,

had cost over $10,000, and it was certainly taking a terrible beating

that night. Lord dexter would have been furious. I looked at my leg

again and fingered the soggy material. Three distinct tears, which

meant that I had been shot three times. I supposed the pain would come

later. A great deal of blood, far too much blood: I wondered if an

artery had been torn.

“Ladies and gentlemen.” it was carreras speaking, and although his

hand must have been giving him hell there was no sign of it in his face.

The fury, the malevolence I had so recently seen, was only a memory: he

was back on balance again, urbane, commanding, in complete control of

the situation.

“I regret all this, regret it extremely.” he waved his left hand

in the direction of bullen and wilson, macdonald and myself. “All so

unnecessary, so terribly unnecessary, brought upon captain bullen and

his men by captain bullen’s reckless folly.” most of the passengers

were on their feet now, and I could see susan beresford standing beside

her father, staring down at me as if she weren’t seeing too well, eyes

abnormally large in the pale face. “I regret, too, the distress you

have been caused, and to you, mr. and mrs. Beresford, I tend my

apologies for the ruin of your night’s entertainment. Your kindness has

been ill-rewarded.”

“For god’s sake cut out the fancy speeches,” I interrupted. My

voice didn’t sound like mine at all, a harsh, strained croak, a bullfrog

with laryngitis. “Get the doctor for captain bullen. He’s been shot

through the lung.”

he looked at me speculatively, then at bullen, then back at me. “A

certain indestructible quality about you, mr. carter,”

he said thoughtfully. He bent over and peered at my blood stained

leg. “Shot three times, your leg must be pretty badly smashed, yet you

can observe so tiny a detail as a fleck of blood on captain bullen’s

mouth. You are incapacitated, and I am glad. Had your captain,

officers, and crew been composed exclusively of men like yourself, I

would never have come within a thousand miles of the campari. As for

the doctor, he will be here soon. He is tending a man on the bridge.”

“Jamieson? our third officer?”

“Mr. jamieson is beyond all help,” he said curtly. “Like captain

bullen, he fancied himself as a man cast in a heroic mould; like captain

bullen, he has paid the price for his stupidity. The man at the wheel

was struck in the arm by a stray bullet.” he turned to face the

passengers. “You need have no further worry about your personal safety.

The campari is now completely in my hands and will remain so. However,

you form no part of my plans and will be transferred in two or three

days to another vessel. Meanwhile you will all eat, live, and sleep in

this room: I cannot spare individual guards for each stateroom.

Mattresses and blankets will be brought to you. If you co-operate, you

can exist in reasonable comforts; you certainly have no more to fear.”

“What is the meaning of this damnable outrage, carreras?” there

was a shake in beresford’s voice. “Those desperadoes, those killers,

what of them? who are they? where in the name of god did they come

from? what do you intend to do? you’re mad, man, completely mad.

Surely you know you can’t expect to get off with this?”

“You may use that thought for consolation. Ah, doctor, there you

are.” he held out his right hand, swathed in its bloodstained

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