The golden rendezvous by MacLean, Alistair

take-over. Where would he have hidden it where a steward wouldn’t

stumble across it?

that ruled out all the furniture fittings, all the places i’d

wasted time in searching. It also ruled out bed, blankets, mattresses

but not the carpet! the ideal hiding place for a sheet of paper.

I almost threw myself at the carpet rn his sleeping cabin. The

carpets in the campari’s accommodation were secured by press-button

studs for ease of quick removal. I caught the corner of the carpet by

the door, ripped free a dozen studs, and there it was right away, six

inches in from the edge. A large sheet of canvas paper, folded in four,

with “t.e.s. Fort ticonderoga. Most secret” printed in one corner.

Five minutes to go.

I stared at the paper until I had memorised its exact position

relative to the carpet, picked it up, and smoothed it out. Diagrams of

the ticonderoga with complete stowage plans of the cargo. But all I was

interested in was the deck cargo. The plan showed crates stacked on

both fore and aft decks, and twenty of those on the foredeck were marked

with a heavy red cross. Red for gold.

in a small careful hand carreras had written on the side: “all deck

cargo crates identical in size. Gold in waterproof, with welded steel

boxes to float free in event of damage or sinking. Each crate equipped

with yellow water stain.” I supposed this was some chemical which, when

it came into contact with salt water, would stain the sea for a wide

area around. I read on: “gold crates indistinguishable from general

cargo. All crates stamped ‘harms worth & holden electrical engineering

company.’ stated contents generators and turbines. Forward-deck cargo

consigned to nashville, tennessee, exclusively turbines; afterdeck cargo

consigued to oak ridge, tennessee, exclusively generators. So marked.

Forward twenty crates on forward deck gold.”

I didn’t hurry. Time was desperately short, but I didn’t hurry. I

studied the plan, which corresponded exactly to carreras’ observations,

and I studied the observations themselves until I knew I would never

forget a word of them. I folded and replaced the plan exactly as I had

found it, pressed the carpet snap studs back into place, went swiftly

through the cabins on a last check to ensure that I had left no trace of

my passing: there were none that I could see. I locked the door and

left.

the cold, driving rain was falling more heavily than ever now,

slanting in across the port side, drumming metallically against the

bulkheads, rebounding ankle-high off the polished wooden decks. On the

likely enough theory that carreras’ patrolling men would keep to the

sheltered starboard side of the accommodation, I kept to the opposite

side as I hurried aft: in my stockinged soles and wearing that black

suit and mask no one could have heard or seen me at a distance of more

than a few feet. No one heard or saw me; I heard or saw no one. I made

no attempt to look, listen, or exercise any caution at all. I reached

number four hold within two minutes of leaving carreras’ cabin.

I needn’t have hurried. Carreras had made no attempt to replace

the tarpaulin he’d had to pull back in order to remove the battens, and

I could see straight down into the bottom of the hold. Four men down

there, two holding powerful electric lanterns, carreras with a gun

hanging by his side, the lanky stooped form of dr. Slingsby caroline,

still wearing that ridiculous white wig askew on his head, bent over the

twister. I couldn’t see what he was doing.

it was like a nineteenth-century print of grave robbers at work.

The tomb like depths of the hold, the coffins, the lanterns, the feeling

of apprehension and hurry and absorbed concentration that lent an evilly

conspiratorial air as the elements were there. And especially the

element of tension, an electric tension you could almost feel pulsating

through the darkness of the night. But a tension that came not from the

fear of discovery but from the possibility that at any second something

might go finally and cataclysmically wrong. If it took ten minutes to

arm the twister, and obviously it took even longer than that, then it

must be a very tricky and complicated procedure altogether. Dr.

Caroline’s mind, it was a fair guess, would be in no fit state to cope

with tricky and complicated procedures: he’d be nervous, probably badly

scared; his hands would be unsteady; he was working, probably with

inadequate tools, on an unstable platform by the light of unsteady

torches, and even though he might not be desperate enough or fool enough

to jinx it deliberately, there seemed to me, as there obviously seemed

to the men down in the hold, that there was an excellent chance that his

hand would slip. Instinctively I moved back a couple of feet until the

opening of the hatch came between me and the scene below. I couldn’t

see the twister any more, that made me quite safe if it blew up.

I rose to my feet and made a couple of cautious circuits of e

hatch, the first close in, the second further out. But Carreras had no

prowlers there: apart from the guards on e gun, the afterdeck appeared

to be completely deserted. Returned to the port forward corner of the

hatch and settled own to wait.

I hoped I wouldn’t have to wait too long. The sea water ad been

cold; the heavy rain was cold; the wind was cold; was soaked to the skin

and was recurringly and increasingly object to violent bouts of

shivering, shivering I could do nothing to control. The fever ran

fiercely in my blood. Maybe e thought of dr. Caroline’s hand slipping

had something do with the shivering: whatever the reason, i’d be lucky

get off with no more than pneumonia.

another five minutes, and I took a second cautious peek own into

the hold. Still at it. I rose, stretched, and began to pace softly up

and down to ward off the stiffness and cramp that was settling down on

my body, especially on the legs. Things went the way I hoped I couldn’t

afford to have stiffness anywhere.

if things went the way I hoped. I peered down a third me into the

hold and this time stayed in that stooped position, unmoving. Dr.

Caroline had finished. Under the watchful eye and gun of the radio

operator, he was screwing the brass plaqued lid back on the coffin while

carreras and the other an had the lid already off the next coffin and

were bent over it, presumably fusing the conventional explosive inside;

probably it was intended as a stand-by in case of the malfunction of the

twister or, even more probably, in the event the failure of the

twister’s timing mechanism, it was designed to set it off by sympathetic

detonation. I didn’t know, I couldn’t guess. And for the moment I was

not in the slightest worried. The crucial moment had come. The crucial

moment for dr. Caroline. I knew as he was bound to know-that they

couldn’t afford to let him live. He’d done all they required of him.

He was of no further use to them. He could die any moment now. If they

chose to put a gun to his head and murder him where he stood, there was

nothing in the world I could do about it, nothing I would even try to do

about it. I would just have to stand there silently, without movement

or protest, and watch him die. For if I let dr. Caroline die without

making any move to save him, then only he would die; but if I tried to

save him and falled and with only a knife and marlinespike against two

submachine guns and pistols the chances of failure were 100 per

cent-then not only caroline but every member of the passengers and crew

of the campari would die also. The greatest good of the greatest

number… Would they shoot him where he stood or would they do it on

the upper deck?

logic said they would do it on the upper deck. Carreras would be

using the campari for a few days yet; he wouldn’t be wanting a dead man

lying in the hold, and there would be no point in shooting him down

there and then carrying him up above when he could make the climb under

his own steam and be disposed of on the upper deck. If I were carreras,

that is what I would have figured.

and that was how he did figure. Caroline tightened the last screw,

laid down the screw driver, and straightened. I caught a glimpse of his

face, white, strained, one eye twitching uncontrollably. The radio

operator said, “senor carreras?”

carreras straightened, turned, looked at him, then at caroline, and

nodded.

“Take him to his cabin, carlos. Report here afterwards.” I moved

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