The golden rendezvous by MacLean, Alistair

pseudo-solicitous young lady asking me about cocktails only two days ago

in carracio, but the vision faded as soon as it had come; the

incongruity was too much.

“Susan!” I said urgently. “Are you “i’m not hurt.” she gave a

long, tremulous sigh that was ore shudder than sigh. “I was just too

scared to move.” he eased her grip a trifle, looked at me with green

eyes enormous in the pallor of her face, then buried her face

my shoulder. I thought she was going to choke me. It didn’t last

long, fortunately. I felt the grip slowly easing, w the beam of the

lantern shifting, and she was saying in n abnormally matter-of-fact

voice: “there they are.” I turned round and there, not ten feet away,

they were deed. Three cotlins-carreras had already removed the

cases-and securely stowed between baffle and bulkhead and added with

tarpaulins, so that they could come to no harm.

tony carreras kept on repeating, his old man didn’t miss much.

Dark, shiny coffins with black-braided ropes and brass handles. One of

them had an inlet plaque on the lid, copper r brass, I couldn’t be sure.

“That saves me some trouble.” my voice was almost back normal. I took

the hammer and chisel i’d borrowed from e bosun’s store and let them

drop. “This screw driver will all I need. We’ll find two of those with

what’s normally side them. Give me the lantern and stay there. I’ll be

as quick as I can.”

“You’ll be quicker if I hold the lantern.” her voice matched my

own in steadiness, but the pulse in her throat was going like a trip

hammer. “Hurry, please.”

I was in no way to argue. I caught the foot of the nearest coffin

and pulled it towards me so that I could have room to work. It was

jammed. I slid my hand under the end to lift it and suddenly my finger

found a hole in the bottom of the coffin. And then another. And a

third. A lead-lined coffin with holes bored in the bottom of it. That

was curious, to say the least.

when i’d moved it far enough out, I started on the screws. They

were brass and very heavy, but so was the screw driver i’d taken from

macdonald’s store. And at the back of my mind was the thought that if

the knockout drops dr. Marston had provided for the sentry were in any

way as ineffective as the anaesthetic he had given me, then the sentry

would be waking up any minute now. If he hadn’t already come to. I had

that coffin lid off in no time at all.

beneath the lid was not the satin shroud or silks I would have

expected but a filthy old blanket. In the generalissimo’s country,

perhaps, their customs with coffins were different from ours. I pulled

off the blanket and found I was right. Their customs were, on occasion,

different. The corpse, in this case, consisted of blocks of amatolach

block was clearly marked with the word, so there was no mistake about

it-a primer, a small case of detonators, and a compact square box with

wires leading from it, a timing device probably.

susan was peering over my shoulder. “What’s amatol?”

“High explosive. Enough there to blow the campari apart.” she

asked nothing else. I replaced the blanket, screwed on the lid, and

started on the next coffin. This, too, had holes in the underside,

probably to prevent the explosives sweating. I removed the lid, looked

at the contents, and replaced the lid. Number two was a duplicate of

number one. And then I started on the third one. The one with the

plaque. This would be the one. The plaque was heart-shaped and read

with impressive simplicity: “richard hoskins, senator.” just that.

Senator of what I didn’t know. But impressive. Impressive enough to

ensure its reverent transportation to the united states. I removed the

lid with care, gentleness, and as much respectful reverence as if

richard hoskins actually were inside, which I knew he wasn’t.

whatever lay inside was covered with a rug. I lifted the rug

gingerly; susan brought the lantern nearer, and there it lay, cushioned

in blankets and cotton wool. A polished cylinder, seventy-five inches

in length, eleven inches in diameter, with a whitish pyroceram nose cap.

Just lying there, there was something frightening about it, something

unutterably evil; but perhaps that was just because of what was in my

own mind.

“What is it?” susan’s voice was so low tht she bad to come closer

to repeat the words. “Oh, johnny, what in the world is it?”

“The twister.”

“The-the what?”

“The twister.”

“Oh, dear god!” she had it now. “This-this atomic device that was

stolen in south carolina. The twister.” she rose unsteadily to her

feet and backed away. “The twister!”

“It won’t bite you,” I said. I didn’t feel too sure about that

either. “The equivalent of five thousand tons of t.n.t. Guaranteed to

blast any ship on earth to smithereens, if not actually vaporise. And

that’s just what carreras intends to do.”

“I-i don’t understand.” maybe she was referring to the actual

hearing of the words-our talk was continually being punctuated by the

screeching of metal and the sounds of wood being crushed and snapped to

the meaning of what I was saying. “You when he gets the gold from the

ticonderoga and transships it to this vessel he has standing by, he’s

going to blow up the campari with-with this?”

“There is no ship standing by. There never was. When he’s loaded

the gold aboard, the kindhearted miguel carreras is going to free all

the passengers and crew of the campari and let them off in the fort

ticonderoga. As a further mark of his sentimentality and kindness he’s

going to ask that senator hoskins here and his two presumably

illustrious companions be taken back for burial in their native land.

The captain of the ticonderoga would never dream of refusing-and, if it

came to the bit, carreras would make certain that he damned well didn’t

refuse. See that?” I pointed to a panel near the tail of the twister.

“Don’t touch it!” if you can imagine anyone screaming

in a whisper, then that’s what she did. “I wouldn’t touch it for

all the money in the ticonderoga,”

I assured her fervently. “I’m even scared to look at the damned

thing. Anyway, that panel is almost certainly a timing device which

will be preset before the coffin is transshipped. We sail merrily on

our way, hell-bent for norfolk, the army, navy, air force, f.b.i., and

what have you-for carreras’ radio stooges aboard the ticonderoga will

make good and certain that the radios will be smashed and we’ll have no

means of sending a message. Half an hour, an hour after leaving the

campari-an hour, at least, I should think; even carreras wouldn’t want

to be within miles of an atomic device going up-well, it would be quite

a bang.”

“He’ll never do it-never.” the emphatic voice didn’t carry the

slightest shred of conviction. “The man must be a fiend.”

“Grade one,” I agreed. “And don’t talk rubbish about his not doing

it. Why do you think they stole the twister and made it appear as if

dr. Slingsby caroline had lit out with it? from the very beginning it

was with the one and only purpose of blowing the fort ticonderoga to

kingdom come. So that there would be no possibility of any comeback,

everything hinged on the total destruction of the ticonderoga and

everyone aboard it, including passengers and crew of the campari. Maybe

carreras’ two fake radiomen could have smuggled some explosives aboard

but it would be quite impossible to smuggle enough to ensure complete

destruction. Hundreds of tons of high explosives in the magazines of a

british battle cruiser blew up in the last war, but still there were

survivors. He couldn’t sink it by gunfire-a couple of shots from a

moderately heavy gun and the campari’s decks would be so buckled that

the guns would be useless-and even then there would be bound to be

survivors. But with the twister there will be no chances of survival.

None in the world.”

“Carreras’ men,” she said slowly, “they killed the guards

in this atomic research establishment?”

“What else? and then forced dr. Caroline to drive out through the

gates with themselves and the twister in the back. The twister was

probably en route to their island, by air, inside an hour, but someone

drove the brake wagon down to savannah before abandoning it. No doubt

to throw suspicion on the campari, which they knew was leaving savannah

that morning. I’m not sure why, but I would take long odds it was

because carreras, knowing the campari was bound for the caribbean, was

reasonably sure that she would be searched at her first port of call,

giving him the opportunity to introduce his bogus marconi man aboard.”

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