The golden rendezvous by MacLean, Alistair

under your hand.”

“Take your word for it any time.” I hefted the knife, saw susan

staring at it, her eyes wide.

“You you would use that thing?”

“Stay behind if you like. The torch, dr. Marston.” I pocketed

the flash, kept the knife in my hand, and passed through the surgery

door. I didn’t let it swing behind me; I knew susan would be there.

the sentry, sitting wedged into a corner of the passage, was

asleep. His automatic carbine was across his knees. It was an awful

temptation, but I let it go. A sleeping sentry would call for a few

curses and kicks, but a sleeping sentry without his gun would start an

all-out search of the ship.

it took me two minutes to climb up two companionways to the level

of “a” deck. Nice wide, flat companionways, but it took me two minutes.

My left leg was very stiff, very weak, and didn’t react at all to

autosuggestion when I kept telling myself it was getting less painful by

the minute. Besides, the campari was pitching so violently now that it

would have been a full-time job for a fit person to climb upwards

without being flung off.

pitching. The campari was pitching, but with a now even more

exaggerated corkscrew motion, great sheets of flying water breaking over

the bows and being hurled back against the superstructure. At some

hundreds of miles from the centre of a hurricane-and I didn’t need any

barometers or weather forecasts to tell me what was in the calling it is

the outspreading swell that indicates the direction of the centre of a

hurricane; but closer in, and we were getting far too close for comfort,

it is the wind direction that locates the centre. We were heading

roughly twenty degrees east of north and the wind blowing from dead

ahead. That meant the hurricane was roughly to the east of us, with a

little southing, still keeping pace with us, travelling roughly

northwest, a more northerly course than was usual, and the campari and

the hurricane were on more of a collision course than ever. The

strength of the wind I estimated at force eight or nine on the old

beaufort scale: that made the centre of the storm less than a hundred

miles away. If carreras kept on his present course at his present

speed, everybody’s troubles, his as well as ours, would soon be over.

at the top of the second companionway I stood still for a few

moments to steady myself, took susan’s arm for support, then lurched aft

in the direction of the drawing room, twenty feet away. I’d hardly

started lurching when I stopped. Something was wrong.

even in my fuzzy state it didn’t take long to find out what was

wrong. On a normal night at sea the campari was like an illuminated

christmas tree; tonight every deck light was off. Another example of

carreras taking no chances, although this was an unnecessary and

exaggerated example. Sure, he didn’t want anyone to see him, but in a

black gale like this no one could have seen him anyway, even had any

vessel been heading on the same course, which was hardly possible,

unless its master had taken leave of his senses. But it suited me well

enough. We staggered on, making no attempt to be silent. With the

shriek of the wind, the thunderous drumming of the torrential rain, and

the repeated pistol-shot explosions as the earing campari’s bows kept

smashing into the heavy rolling ombers ahead no one could have heard us

a couple of feet way.

the smashed windows of the drawing room had been roughly boarded

up. Careful not to cut a jugular or put an eye out on one of the jagged

splinters of glass, I pressed my face close to the boards and peered

through one of the cracks. The curtains were drawn inside, but with the

gale whistling through the gaps between the boards, they were blowing

and flapping wildly most of the time. One minute there and i’d seen all

I wanted to see and it didn’t help me at ail. The passengers were all

herded together at one end of the room, most of them huddled down on

close-packed mattresses, a few sitting with their backs to the bulkhead.

A more miserably seasick collection of millionaires I had never seen in

my life: their complexions ranged from a faintly greenish shade to a

dead-white pallor. They were suffering all right. In one corner I saw

some stewards, cooks, and engineer officers, including mcllroy, with

cummings beside him; seaman’s branch apart, it looked as if every

off-duty man was imprisoned there with the passengers. Carreras was

economising on his guards: I could see only two of them, hard-faced,

unshaven characters with a tommy gun apiece. For a moment I had the

crazy idea of bursting in the door and rushing them, but only for a

moment. Armed with only a clasp knife, and with a top speed of about

that of a fairly active tortoise, I wouldn’t have got a yard.

two minutes later we were outside the wireless office. No one had

challenged us; no one had seen us; the decks were entirely deserted. It

was a night for deserted decks.

the wireless office was in darkness. I pressed one ear to the

metal of the door, closed a had over the other ear to shut out the

clamour of the storm, and listened as hard as I could. Nothing. I

placed a gentle hand on the knob, turned, and pushed. The door didn’t

budge a fraction of an inch. I eased my hand off that doorknob with all

the wary caution and thistledown delicacy of a man withdrawing the

koh-inoor from a basket of sleeping cobras.

“What’s the matter?” susan asked. “Is

that was as far as she got before my hand closed over her mouth,

not gently. We were fifteen feet away from that door before I took my

hand away.

“What is it? what is it?” her low whisper had a shake in

it; she didn’t know whether to be scared or angry or both. “The

door was locked.”

“Why shouldn’t it be? why should they keep watch “the door is

locked by a padlock. From the outside. We put a new one there

yesterday morning. It’s no longer there. Somebody has shut the catch

on the inside.” I didn’t know how much of this she was getting: the

roar of the sea, the drum fire of the rain, the wind rushing in from the

darkness of the north and playing its high-pitched threnody in the

rigging seemed to drown and snatch away the words even as I spoke them.

I pulled her into what pitiful shelter was offered by a ventilator, and

her next words showed that she had indeed heard and understood most of

what I had said.

“They have left a sentry? just in case anyone tried to break in?

how could anyone break in? we’re all under guard and lock and key.”

“It’s as carreras junior says-his old man never takes a chance.” I

hesitated then, because I didn’t know what else to say. I went on:

“i’ve no right to do this. But I must. I’m desperate. I want you to

be a stalking -hors help get that character out of there.”

“What do you want me to do?”

“Good girl.” I squeezed her arm. “Knock at the door. Pull that

hood off and show yourself at the window. He’ll almost certainly switch

on a light or flash a torch, and when he sees it’s a girl-well, he’ll be

astonished but not scared. He’ll want to investigate.”

“And then you-you “that’s it.”

“With only a clasp knife.” the tremor in her voice was

unmistakable. “You’re very sure of yourself.”

“I’m not sure at all. But if we don’t make a move until we’re

certain of success we might as well jump over the side now. Ready?”

“What are you going to do? once you get inside?” she was scared

and stalling. Not that I was happy myself.

“Send an sos on the distress frequency. Warn every vessel within

listening range that the campari has been seized by force and is

intending to intercept a bullion-carrying vessel at such and such a

spot. Within a few hours everyone in north america will know the

situation. That’ll get action all right.”

“Yes.” a long pause. “That’ll get action. The first action it

will get is that carreras will discover that his guard is missing -and

where had you thought of hiding him?”

“In the atlantic.”

she shivered briefly, then said obliquely, “i think perhaps

carreras knows you better than I do… The guard’s missing. They’ll

know it must be one of the crew responsible. They’ll soon find out that

the only guard keeping an eye on the crew who wasn’t awake all the time

is the boy outside the sick bay.” she was silent for a moment, then

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