The golden rendezvous by MacLean, Alistair

passengers, as far as I could judge, and at least half of the campari’s

crew were already standing on the afterdeck of the ticonderoga, making

no move, except to brace themselves against the rolling of the ship;

their stillness was encouraged by a couple of hard-faced characters in

green jungle uniform, each with a machine pistol cocked. A third gunman

covered two ticonderoga seamen who were stationed at lowered guardrails

to catch and steady men as they stepped or jumped from the afterdeck of

the campari to that of the ticonderoga as the two ships rolled together.

Two more supervised ticonderoga crew members fitting slings to the

crates still to be transferred. From where I lay I could see four other

armed men-there were probably many more patrolling the decks of the

ticonderoga and four others on the afterdeck of the campari. Despite

the fact that most of them were dressed in a quasi uniform of jungle

green, they didn’t look like soldiers to me: they just looked like what

they were, hardened criminals with guns in their hands, cold eyed men

with their history written in their faces by the lines of brutality and

depravity. Although he was maybe a bit short on the side of aesthetic

appreciation, there was no doubt but that carreras picked his killers

well.

the sky was low with grey tattered cloud stretching away to the

grey indistinctness of a tumbled horizon; the wind, westerly now, was

still strong, but the rain had almost stopped, no more than a cold

drizzle, felt rather than seen. Visibility was poor, but it would be

good enough to let carreras see that there were no other ships in the

vicinity, and the radarscope, of course, would be working all the time.

But apparently the visibility hadn’t been good enough to let carreras

see three ropes still attached to the base of the guardrail stanchion on

the port side. From where I lay I could see them clearly. To me they

looked about the size of the cables supporting the brooklyn bridge. I

hastily averted my eyes.

but carreras, I could now see, had no time to look round him

anyway. He himself had taken charge of the transshipment of the crates,

hurrying on both his own men and the crew of the ticonderoga, shouting

at them, encouraging them, driving them on with an unflagging,

unrelenting energy and urgency which seemed strangely at variance with

his normally calm, dispassionate bearing. He would, of course, be

understandably anxious to have the transfer completed before any curious

third ship might heave in sight over the horizon, but even so… And

then I knew what accounted for all the nearly desperate haste: I looked

at my watch.

it was already ten minutes past six. Ten past six! from what i’d

gathered of carreras’ proposed schedule for the transfer and from the

lack of light in the sky i’d have put the time at no more than half-past

five. I checked again, but no mistake. Six-ten. Carreras would want

to be over the horizon when the twister went up he would be safe enough

from blast and radioactive fallout, but heaven alone knew what kind of

tidal wave would be pushed up by the explosion of such an underwater

nuclear device-and the twister was due to go up in fifty minutes. His

haste was understandable. I wondered what had held him up. Perhaps the

late arrival of the ticonderoga or the lapse of a longer period of time

than he had expected in luring it alongside. Not that it mattered now.

a signal from carreras and it was time for the stretcher cases to

be transferred. I was the first to go. I didn’t much fancy the

prospect of the brief trip; i’d just be a reddish stain spread over a

couple of hundred square feet of metal if one of the bearers slipped as

the two big ships rolled together, but the nimble-footed seamen probably

had the same thought in mind for themselves, for they made no mistake a

minute later and both other stretchers had been brought across.

we were set down near the forward break of the afterdeck, beside

our passengers and crew. In a group slightly to one side, with a guard

all to themselves, stood a few officers and maybe a dozen men of the

ticonderoga’s crew. One of them, a tall, lean, angry-eyed man in his

early fifties with the four gold rings of a captain on his sleeves and

carrying a telegraph form in his hand, was talking to mcllroy, our chief

engineer, and cummings. Mcllroy, ignoring the sudden lift of the

guard’s gun, brought him across to where we’d been set down.

“Thank god you all survived,” mcllroy said quietly. “Last time I

saw you three I wouldn’t have given a bent penny for any of your

chances. This is captain brace of the ticonderoga. Captain brace,

captain bullen, chief officer carter.”

“Glad to make your acquaintance, sir,” bullen whispered huskily.

“But not in these damnable circumstances.” no question about it, the

old man was on the way to recovery. “We’ll leave mr. carter out of it,

mr. mcllroy. I intend to prefer charges against him for giving undue

and unwarranted aid to that damned monster carreras.” considering i’d

saved his life by refusing to let doc marston operate on him, I did

think he might have shown a little more gratitude.

“Johnny carter?” mcllroy looked his open disbelief. “It’s

impossible!”

“You’ll have your proof,” bullen said grimly. He looked up at

captain brace. “Knowing that you knew what cargo you were carrying, I

should have expected you to make a run for it when intercepted, naval

guns or no naval guns. But you didn’t, did you? you answered an sos,

isn’t that it? distress rockets, claims that plates had been sprung in

the hurricane, sinking, come and take us off? right, captain?”

“I could have outrun or out manuvered him,” brace said tightly.

Then, in sudden curiosity, “how did you know that?”

“Because I heard our first mate here advising him that it was the

best way to do it. Part of your answer already, eh, mcLlroy?” he

looked at me without admiration, then back at mcllroy. “Have a couple

of men move me nearer that bulkhead. I don’t feel too comfortable

here.”

I gave him an injured glance but it bounced right off him. His

stretcher was shifted and I was left more or less alone in front of the

group. I lay there for about three minutes, watching the cargo

transfer. A crate a minute, and this despite the fact that the manilla

holding the after ends of the two vessels together snapped and had to be

replaced. Ten minutes at the most and he should be all through.

a hand touched my shoulder and I looked round. Julius beresford

was squatting by my side.

“Never thought i’d see you again, mr. carter,” he said candidly.

“How do you feel?”

“Better than I look,” I said untruthfully. “And why left all alone

here?” he asked curiously. “This,” I explained, “is what is known as

being sent to coventry. Captain bullen is convinced that I gave

unwarranted help or aid, or some such legal phrase, to carreras. He’s

not pleased with me.”

“Rubbish!” he snorted. “He heard me doing it.”

“Don’t care what he heard,” beresford said flatly. “Whatever he

heard, he didn’t hear what he thought he did. I make as many mistakes

as the next man, maybe more than most, but I never make a mistake about

men…. Which reminds me, my boy, which reminds me. I can’t tell you

how pleased I am-and how delighted. Hardly the time and place for it,

but nevertheless my very heartiest congratulations. My wife feels

exactly the same way about it, I assure you.”

it was taking me all my time to pay attention to him. One of the

crates was swinging dangerously in its slings, and if one of those

crates dropped, fell on the deck, and burst open to reveal its contents,

I didn’t see that there was going to be much future for any of us. It

wasn’t a thought I liked to dwell on; it would be better to turn my mind

to something else, like concentrating on what julius beresford was

saying.

“I beg your pardon,” I said.

“The job at my scottish oil port.” he was half impatient, half

smiling. “You know. Delighted that you are going to accept. But not

half as delighted as we are about you and susan. All her life she’s

been pursued, as you can guess, by hordes of gold-digging dead beats,

but I always told her that when the day came that she met a man who

didn’t give a damn for her money, even though he was a hobo, I wouldn’t

stand in her way. Well, she’s found him. And you’re no hobo.’

“The oil port? susan and me?” I blinked at him. “Look, sir

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