The trap is sprung... The Scarperers, a brilliantly organised gang for getting long-term prisoners out of gaol, have sprung Slade, notorious Russian double agent. Slade's trail leads British agent Owen Stannard to Malta, where he finds his quarry... and the mastermind behind the Scarperers: suave, cultured -- and a killer. Desmond Bagley The Freedom Trap (1971) CHAPTER ONE Mackintosh's office was, unexpectedly, in the City. I had difficulty in finding it because it was in that warren of streets between Holborn and Fleet Street which is a maze to one accustomed to the grid-iron pattern of Johannesburg. I found it -at last in a dingy building; a well-worn brass plate announcing innocuously that this Dickensian structure held the registered office of Anglo-Scottish Holdings, Ltd. I smiled as I touched the polished plate, leaving a smudged fingerprint. It seemed that Mackintosh knew his business; this plate, apparently polished by generations of office boys, was a sign of careful planning that augured well for the future -the professional touch. I'm a professional and I don't like working with amateurs -- they're unpredictable, careless and too dangerous for my taste. I had wondered about Mackintosh because England is the spiritual home of amateurism, but Mackintosh was a Scot and I suppose that makes a difference. There was no lift, of course, so I trudged up four flights of stairs -- poor lighting and marmalade coloured walls badly in need of a repaint -- and found the Anglo-Scottish office at the end of a dark corridor. It was all so normal that I wondered if I had the right address but I stepped forward to the desk and said, 'Rearden -- to see Mr Mackintosh.' The red-headed girl behind the desk favoured me with a warm smile and put down the tea-cup she was holding. 'He's expecting you,' she said. 'I'll see if he's free.' She went into the inner office, closing the door carefully behind her. She had good legs. I looked at the scratched and battered filing cabinets and wondered what was in them and found I could not possibly guess. Perhaps they were stuffed full of Angles and Scots. There were two eighteenth-century prints on the wall-Windsor Castle and the Thames at Richmond. There was a Victorian steel engraving of Princes Street, Edinburgh. All very Anglic and Scottish. I admired Mackintosh more and more -- this was going to be a good careful job; but I did wonder how he'd done it -- did he call in an interior decorator or did he have a pal who was a set dresser in a film studio? The girl came back. 'Mr Mackintosh will see you now -- you can go right through,' I liked her smile so I returned it and walked past her into Mackintosh's sanctum. He hadn't changed. I hadn't expected him to change -- not in two months -- but sometimes a man looks different on his home ground where he has a sense of security, a sense of knowing what's what. I was pleased Mackintosh hadn't changed in that way because it meant he would be sure of himself anywhere and at any time. I like people I can depend on. He was a sand-coloured man with light gingery hair and invisible eyebrows and eyelashes which gave his face a naked look. If he didn't shave for a week probably no one would notice. He was slight in build and I wondered how he would use himself in a rough-house; flyweights usually invent nasty tricks to make up for lack of brawn. But then Mackintosh would never get into a brawl in the first place; there are all sorts of different ways of using your brains. 'Be pat his bands flat on the desk. 'So you are,' he paused, holding his breath, and then spoke my name in a gasp, 'Rearden. And how was the flight, Mr Rearden?' 'Not bad.' "That's fine. Sit down, Mr Rearden. Would you like some tea?' He smiled slightly. 'People who work in offices like this drink tea all the time." 'All right,' I said, and sat down. He went to the door. 'Could you rustle up another pot of tea, Mrs Smith?' The door clicked gently as he closed it and I cocked my head in that direction. 'Does she know?' 'Of course,' he said calmly. 'I couldn't do without Mrs Smith. She's a very capable secretary, too.' 'Smith?' I asked ironically. 'Oh, it's her real name. Not too incredible -- there are plenty of Smiths. She'll be joining us in a moment so I suggest we delay any serious discussion.' He peered at me. "That's a rather lightweight suit for our English weather. You mustn't catch pneumonia.' I grinned at him. 'Perhaps you'll recommend a tailor.' 'Indeed I will; you must go to my man. He's a bit expensive but I think we can manage that.' He opened a drawer and took out a fat bundle of currency. 'You'll need something for expenses.' I watched unbelievingly as he began to count out the fivers. He parted with thirty of them, then paused. 'We'd better make it two hundred,' he decided, added another ten notes, then pushed the wad across to me. 'You don't mind cash. I trust? In my business cheques are rather looked down upon.' I stuffed the money into my wallet before he changed his mind. 'Isn't this a little unusual? I didn't expect you to be so free and easy.' 'I daresay the expense account will stand it,' he said tolerantly. 'You are going to earn it, you know.' He offered a cigarette. 'And how was Johannesburg when you left?' 'Still the same in a changing sort of way,' I said. 'Since you were there they've built another hundred-and-sixty-foot office block in the city.' 'In two months? Not bad!' 'They put it up in twelve days,' I said drily. 'Go-ahead chaps, you South Africans. Ah, here's the tea.' Mrs Smith put the tea tray on to the desk and drew up a chair. I looked at her with interest because anyone Mackintosh trusted was sure to be out of the ordinary. Not that she looked it, but perhaps that was because she was disguised as a secretary in a regulation twin-set -- just another office girl with a nice smile. Yet in other circumstances I thought I could get on very well with Mrs Smith-in the absence of Mr Smith, of course. Mackintosh waved his hand. "Will you be Mother, Mrs Smith?' She busied herself with the cups, and Mackintosh said, 'There's no real need for further introductions, is there? You won't be around long enough for anything but the job. Rearden. I think we can get down to cases now.' I winked at Mrs Smith. 'A pity.' She looked at me unsmilingly. 'Sugar?' was all she asked. He tented his fingers. 'Did you know that London is the world centre of the diamond business?' 'No, I didn't. I thought it was Amsterdam.' 'That's where the cutting is done. London is where diamonds are bought and sold in all stages of manufacture from uncut stones to finished pieces of jewellery.' He smiled 'Last week I was in a place where packets of diamonds are sold like packets of butter in a grocer's shop.' I accepted a cup of tea from Mrs Smith. 'I bet they have bags of security.' 'Indeed they have,' said Mackintosh. He held his arms wide like a fisherman describing the one that got away. 'The safe doors are that thick and the place is wired up with so many electronic gimmicks that if you blink an eyelash in the wrong place at the wrong time half the metropolitan police begin to move in.' I sipped the tea, then put down the cup. 'I'm not a safe cracker,' I said. 'And I wouldn't know where to begin -- you need a peterman for that. Besides, it would have to be a team job.' 'Rest easy,' said Mackintosh. 'It was the South African angle that set me thinking about diamonds. Diamonds have all the virtues; they're relatively anonymous, portable and easily sold. Just the thing a South African would go for, don't you think? Do you know anything about the IDB racket?' I shook my head. 'Not my line of country -- so far.' 'It doesn't matter; perhaps it's for the better. You're a clever thief, Rearden; that's why you've stayed out of trouble. How many times have you been inside?' 1 grinned at him. 'Once -- for eighteen months. That was a long time ago.' 'Indeed it was. You change your methods and your aims, don't you? You don't leave any recurring statistics for a computer to sort out -- no definite modus operand! to trip over. As I say -- you're a clever thief. I think that what I have in mind will be just up your street. Mrs Smith thinks so, too.' 'Let's hear about it,' I said cautiously. 'The British GPO is a marvellous institution,' said Mackintosh inconsequentially. 'Some say ours is the best postal system in the world; some think otherwise if you judge by the readers' letters in the Daily Telegraph, but grousing is an Englishman's privilege. Insurance companies, however, regard the GPO very highly. Tell me, what is the most outstanding property of the diamond?' 'It sparkles.' 'An uncut diamond doesn't,' he pointed out. 'An uncut stone looks like a bit of sea-washed bottle glass. Think again.' 'It's hard,' I said. 'lust about the hardest thing there is.' Mackintosh clicked his tongue in annoyance. 'He's not thinking, is he. Mrs Smith? Tell him.' 'The size -- or the lack of it,' she said quietly. Mackintosh pushed his hand under my nose and curled his fingers into a fist. 'You can hold a fortune in your hand and no one would know it was there. You could put diamonds worth a hundred thousand pounds into this matchbox -- then what would you have?' 'You tell me.' 'You'd have a parcel, Rearden; a package. Something that can be wrapped up in brown paper with enough room to write an address and accept a postage stamp. Something that can be popped into a letter-box.' I stared at him. 'They send diamonds through the post I' 'Why not? The postal system is highly efficient and very rarely is anything lost. Insurance companies are willing to bet large sums of money on the efficiency of the GPO and those boys know what they're doing. It's a matter of statistics, you know.' . He toyed with the matchbox. 'At one time there was a courier system and that had a lot of disadvantages. A courier would personally carry a parcel of diamonds and deliver it to its destination by hand. That fell through for a number of reasons; the couriers got to be known by the wide boys, which was very sad because a number of them were severely assaulted. Another thing was that human beings are but human, after all, and a courier could be corrupted. The supply of trustworthy men isn't bottomless and the whole courier system was not secure. Far from it. 'But consider the present system,' he said enthusiastically. 'Once a parcel is swallowed into the maw of the Post Office not even God can extract it until it reaches its destination. And why? Because nobody knows precisely where the hell it is. It's just one of millions of parcels circulating through the system and to find it would not be like finding a needle in a haystack -- it would be like searching a haystack for a particular wisp of hay. Do you follow me?' I nodded. 'It sounds logical.' 'Oh, it is,' said Mackintosh. 'Mrs Smith did all the necessary research. She's a very clever girl.' He flapped his hand languidly. 'Carry on, Mrs Smith.' She said coolly, 'Once the insurance company actuaries analysed the GPO statistics regarding losses, they saw they were on to a good thing providing certain precautions were taken. To begin with, the stones are sent in all sizes and shapes of parcel from matchbox size to crates as big as a tea chest. The parcels are labelled in a multitude of different ways, very often with the trade label of a well-known firm -- anything to confuse the issue, you see. The most important thing is the anonymity of the destination. There are a number of accommodation addresses having nothing to do with the diamond industry to which the stones are sent, and the same address is never used twice running.' 'Very interesting,' I said. 'Now how do we crack it?' Mackintosh leaned back in his chair and put his fingertips together. Take a postman walking up a street -- a familiar sight. He carries a hundred thousand pounds' worth of diamonds but -- and this is the interesting point -- he doesn't know it and neither does anyone else. Even the recipient who is eagerly awaiting those diamonds doesn't guarantee delivery at any specific time, regardless of what they might say about first-class post in their specious advertising. The parcels are sent by ordinary post; no special delivery nonsense which would be too easy to crack open.' I said slowly, 'It seems to me that you're painting yourself into a corner, but I suppose you have something up your sleeve. All right -- I'll buy it.' 'Have you ever done any photography?' I resisted the impulse to explode. This man had more ways of talking around a subject than anyone I had ever known. He had been the same in Johannesburg -- never talking in a straight line for more than two minutes. 'I've clicked a shutter once or twice,' I said tightly. 'Black-and-white or colour?' 'Both.' Mackintosh looked pleased. When you take colour photographs -- transparencies -- and send them away for processing, what do you get back?' I looked appealingly at Mrs Smith and sighed. 'Small pieces of film with pictures on them.' I paused and added, 'They're framed in cardboard mounts.' 'What else do you get?' 'Nothing.' He wagged his finger. 'Oh yes, you do. You get the distinctive yellow box the things are packed in. Yes, yellow -- I suppose it could be described as Kodak yellow. If a man is carrying one of those boxes in his hand you can spot it across a street and you say to yourself, "That man is carrying a box of Kodachrome transparencies."' I felt a thrill of tension. Mackintosh was coming to the meat of it. 'All right.' he said abruptly 'I'll lay it out for you. I know when a parcel of diamonds is being sent. I know to where it is being sent -1 have the accommodation address. Most important of all, I know the packaging and it's unmistakable. All you have to do is to wait near the address and the postman will come up to you with the damn thing in his hand. And that little yellow box will contain one hundred and twenty thousand quid in unset stones which you will take from him.' 'How did you find out all this?' I asked curiously. 'I didn't,' he said. 'Mrs Smith did. The whole thing is her idea. She came up with the concept and did all the research. Exactly how she did the research is no concern of yours.' I looked at her with renewed interest and discovered that her eyes were green. There was a twinkle in them and her lips were curved in a humorous quirk which smoothed out as she said soberly, 'There must be as little violence as possible, Mr Rearden.' 'Yes,' agreed Mackintosh. 'As little violence as possible commensurate with making a getaway. I don't believe in violence; it's bad for business. You'd better bear that in mind.' I said, 'The postman won't hand it to me. I'll have to, take it by force.' Mackintosh showed his teeth in a savage grin. 'So it will be robbery with violence if you get nabbed. Her Majesty's judges are hard about that kind of thing, especially considering the amount involved. You'll be lucky to get away with ten years.' 'Yes,' I said thoughtfully, and returned his grin with interest. 'Still, we won't make it too easy for the police. The drill is this; I'll be nearby and you'll keep on going. The stones will be out of the country within three hours of the snatch. Mrs Smith, will you attend to the matter of the bank?' She opened a folder and produced a form which she pushed across the desk. 'Fill that in.' It was a request to open an account at the Zuricher Ausfuhren Handelsbank. Mrs Smith said, 'British politicians may not like the gnomes of Zurich but they come in handy when needed. Your number is very complicated -- write it out fully in words in this box.' Her fingers rested on the form so I scribbled the number in the place she indicated. She said, 'That number written on the right cheque form in place of a signature will release to you any amount of money up to forty thousand pounds sterling, or its equivalent in any currency you wish.' Mackintosh sniggered. 'Of course, you'll have to get the diamonds first.' I stared at them, 'You're taking two-thirds.' 'I did plan it,' Mrs Smith said coolly. Mackintosh grinned like a hungry shark. 'She has expensive tastes.' 'Of that I have no doubt.' I said. 'Would your tastes run to a good lunch? You'll have to suggest a restaurant, though; I'm a new boy in London.' She was about to answer when Mackintosh said sharply, 'You're not here to play footsie with my staff, Rearden. It wouldn't be wise for you to be seen with either of us. Perhaps when it's all over we can have dinner together -- the three of us.' 'Thanks,' I said bleakly. He scribbled on a piece of paper. 'I suggest that after lunch you ... er ... "case the joint" -- I believe that is the correct expression. Here is the address of the drop.' He pushed the paper across the desk, and scribbled again. 'And this is the address of my tailor. Don't get them mixed up, there's a good chap. That would be disastrous.' II I lunched at the Cock in Fleet Street and then set out to look up the address Mackintosh had given me. Of course I walked in the wrong direction -- London is the devil of a place to get around in if you don't know it. I didn't want to take a taxi because I always play things very cautiously, perhaps even too cautiously. But that's why I'm a success. Anyway, I found myself walking up a street called Ludgate Hill before I found I'd gone wrong and, in making my way into Holborn, I passed the Central Criminal Court. I knew it was the Central Criminal Court, because it says so and that surprised me because I always thought it was called the Old Bailey. I recognized it because of the golden figure of Justice on the roof. Even a South African would recognize that -- we see Edgar Lustgarten movies, too. It was all very interesting but I wasn't there as a tourist so I passed up the opportunity of going inside to see if there was a case going on. Instead I pressed on to Leather Lane behind Gamage's and found a street market with people selling all kinds of junk from barrows. I didn't much like the look of that-it's difficult to get away fast in a thick crowd. I'd have to make damned sure there was no hue and cry, which meant slugging the postman pretty hard. I began to feel sorry for him. Before checking on the address I cruised around the vicinity, identifying all the possible exits from the area. To my surprise I found that Hatton Garden runs parallel with Leather Lane and I knew that the diamond merchants hung out there. On second thoughts it wasn't too surprising; the diamond boys wouldn't want their accommodation address to be too far from the ultimate destination. I looked at the stolid, blank buildings and wondered in which of them were the strongrooms Mackintosh had described. I spent half an hour pacing out those streets and noting the various types of shop. Shops are very useful to duck into when you want to get off the streets quickly. I decided that Gamage's might be a good place to get lost in and spent another quarter-hour familiarizing myself with the place. That wouldn't be enough but at this stage it wasn't a good thing to decide definitely on firm plans. That's the trouble with a lot of people who slip up on jobs like this; they make detailed plans too early in the game, imagining they're Master Minds, and the whole operation gets hardening of the arteries and becomes stiff and inflexible. I went back to Leather Lane and found the address Mackintosh had given me. It was on the second floor, so I went up to the third in the creaking lift and walked down one flight of stairs. The Betsy-Lou Dress Manufacturing Co, Ltd, was open for business but I didn't trouble to introduce myself. Instead I checked the approaches and found them reasonably good, although I would have to observe the postman in action before I could make up my mind about the best way of doing the job. I didn't hang about too long, just enough to take rough bearings, and within ten minutes I was back in Carnage's and in a telephone booth. Mrs Smith must have been literally hanging on to the telephone awaiting my call because the bell rang only once before she answered, 'Anglo-Scottish .Holdings.' 'Rearden,' I said. 'I'll put you through to Mr Mackintosh.' 'Wait a minute,' I said. 'What kind of a Smith are you?' "What do you mean?' 'Don't you have a first name?' There was a pause before she said, 'Perhaps you'd better call me Lucy.' 'Ouch! I don't believe it.' 'You'd better believe it.' 'Is there a Mr Smith?' Frost formed on the earpiece of my telephone as she said icily, 'That's no business of yours. I'll put you through to Mr Mackintosh.' There was a click and the line went dead temporarily and I thought I wasn't much of a success as a great lover. It wasn't surprising really; I couldn't see Lucy Smith -- if that was her name-wanting to enter into any kind of close relationship with me until the job was over. I felt depressed. Mackintosh's voice crackled in my ear. 'Hello, dear boy.' 'I'm ready to talk about it some more.' 'Are you? Well, come and see me tomorrow at the same time.' 'All right,' I said. 'Oh, by the way, have you been to the tailor yet?' 'No.' 'You'd better hurry,' he said. 'There'll be the measurements and at least three fittings. You'll just about have time to get it all in before you get slapped in the nick.' 'Very funny,' I said, and slammed down the phone. It was all right for Mackintosh to make snide comments; he wasn't going to do the hard work. I wondered what else he did in that shabby office apart from arranging diamond robberies. I took a taxi into the West End and found Austin Reed's, where I bought a very nice reversible weather coat and one of those caps as worn by the English country gent, the kind in which the cloth crown is sewn on to the peak. They wanted to wrap the cap but I rolled it up and put it into the pocket of the coat which I carried out over my I didn't go near Mackintosh's tailor. Ill 'So you think it's practicable," said Mackintosh. I nodded. 'I'll want to know a bit more, but it looks all right so far.' 'What do you want to know?' 'Number one -- when is the job to be?' Mackintosh grinned. 'The day after tomorrow,' he said airily. 'Christ!' I said. 'That's not allowing much time.' He chuckled. 'It'll be all over in less than a week after you've set foot in England.' He winked at Mrs Smith. 'It's not everyone who can make forty thousand quid for a week's not very hard work.' 'I can see at least one other from here,' I said sarcastically. 'I don't see that you're working your fingers to the bone.' He was undisturbed. 'Organization -- that's my forte.' 'It means I've got to spend the rest of today and all tomorrow studying the habits of the British postman,' I said. 'How many deliveries a day?' Mackintosh cocked his eye at Mrs Smith, who said, Two.' 'Have you any snoopers you can recruit? I don't want to spend too much time around Leather Lane myself. I might get picked up for loitering and that would certainly queer the pitch.' 'It's all been done,' said Mrs Smith. 'I have the timetable here.' While I was studying it, she unrolled a plan on to the desk. This is a plan of the entire second floor. We're lucky on this one. In some buildings there's a row of letter-boxes in the entrance hall, but not here. The postman delivers to every office.' Mackintosh put down his finger with a stabbing motion. 'You'll tackle the postman just about here. He'll have the letters for that damnably named clothing company in his hand ready for delivery and you ought to see whether he's carrying the package or not. If he isn't you pass it up and wait for the next delivery.' 'That's what's worrying me,' I said. "The waiting bit. If I'm not careful I'll stick out like a sore thumb.' 'Oh, didn't I tell you -- I've rented an office on the same floor,' said Mackintosh blandly. 'Mrs Smith went shopping and all home comforts are installed; an electric kettle, tea, coffee, sugar and milk, and a basket of goodies from Fortnum's. You'll live like a king. I hope you like caviare.' I blew out my breath sharply. 'Don't bother to consult me about anything,' I said sarcastically, but Mackintosh merely smiled and tossed a key-ring on the desk. I picked it up. 'What name am I trading under?' 'Kiddykar Toys, Limited,' said Mrs Smith. 'It's a genuine company.' Mackintosh laughed. 'I set it up myself -- cost all of twenty-five quid.' We spent the rest of the morning scheming and I didn't find any snags worth losing any sleep over. I found myself liking Lucy Smith more and more; she had a brain as sharp as a razor and nothing escaped her attention, and yet she contrived to retain her femininity and avoid bossiness, something that seems difficult for brainy women. When we had just about got everything wrapped up, I said, 'Come now; Lucy isn't your real name. What is?' She looked at me with clear eyes. 'I don't think it really matters,' she said evenly. I sighed. 'No," I admitted. 'Perhaps not.' Mackintosh regarded us with interest, then said abruptly, 'I said there was to be no lally-gagging around with the staff, Rearden; you just stick to doing your job.' He looked at his watch. 'You'd better leave now.' So I left the gloom of his nineteenth-century office and lunched again at the Cock, and the afternoon was spent in the registered office of Kiddykar Toys, Ltd, two doors away from the Betsy-Lou Dress Manufacturing Co, Ltd. Everything was there that Mackintosh had promised, so I made myself a pot of coffee and was pleased to see that Mrs Smith had supplied the real stuff and not the instant powdered muck. There was a good view of the street and, when I checked on the timetable of the postman, I was able to identify his route. Even without the telephone call Mackintosh was to make I ought to get at least fifteen minutes' notice of his arrival. That point settled, I made a couple of expeditions from the office, pacing the corridor and timing myself. There really was no point in doing it without knowledge of the postman's speed but it was good practice. I timed myself from the office to Carriage's, walking at a fair clip but not so fast as to attract attention. An hour in Carnage's was enough to work out a good confusing route and then work was over for the day and I went back to my hotel. The next day was pretty much the same except I had the postman to practice on. The first delivery I watched from the office with the door opened a crack and a stopwatch in my hand. That might seem a bit silly; after all, all I had to do was to cosh a man. But there was a hell of a lot at stake so I went through the whole routine. On the second delivery of the day I did a dummy run on the postman. Sure enough, it was as Mackintosh had predicted; as he approached Betsy-Lou's door the letters for delivery were firmly clutched in hand and any box of Kodachromes should be clearly visible! I hoped Mackintosh was right about the diamonds; we'd look mighty foolish if we ended up with a photographic record of Betsy-Lou's weekend in Brighton. Before I left I telephoned Mackintosh and he answered the telephone himself. I said, 'I'm as ready as I'll ever be.' 'Good!' He paused. 'You won't see me again -- apart from the hand-over of the merchandise tomorrow. Make a neat job of that, for God's sake!' 'What's the matter?' I asked. 'Got the wind up?' He didn't answer that one. Instead, he said, 'You'll find a present awaiting you at your hotel. Handle with care.' Another pause. 'Good luck.' I said, 'Give my sincere regards to Mrs Smith.' He coughed. 'It wouldn't do, you know.' 'Perhaps not; but I like to make my own decisions.' 'Maybe so -- but she'll be in Switzerland tomorrow. I'll pass on your message when I next see her.' He rang off. I went back to the hotel, picked up a small package at the desk, and unwrapped it in my room. Nestling in a small box was a cosh, lead-centred and rubber-padded with a non-skid grip and a neat strap to go round the wrist. A very effective anaesthetic instrument, if a bit more dangerous than most. Also in the box was a scrap of paper with a single line of typescript: HARD ENOUGH AND NO HARDER. I went to bed early that night. There was work to do next day. IV Next morning I went into the City like any other business gent, although I didn't go so far as to wear a bowler and carry the staff of office -- the rolled umbrella. I was earlier than most because the first postal delivery of the day was before office hours. I arrived at Kiddykar Toys with half an hour in hand and immediately put on the kettle for coffee before inspecting the view from the window. The stallholders of Leather Lane were getting ready for the day's sales and there was no sign of Mackintosh. I wasn't worried; he'd be around somewhere in the neighbourhood keeping an eye open for the postman. I had just finished the first cup of coffee when the phone rang. Mackintosh said briefly, 'He's coming.' There was a click as he hung up. In the interests of his leg muscles the postman had put in a bit of time and motion study on this building. It was his habit to take the lift to the top floor and deliver the letters from the top down on the theory that walking downstairs is easier than climbing them. I put on my coat and hat and opened the door a couple of inches, listening for the whine of the lift. It was ten minutes before I heard it go up, and then I stepped out into the corridor, carefully drawing the office door closed but not quite shut so that the least push would swing it open. It was very quiet in the building at that hour and, as I heard the postman clattering down the stairs to the second floor, I retreated down the flight of stairs to the first floor. He hit the second floor and turned away from Betsy-Lou's door to deliver the post to other offices. That was his usual routine and so I wasn't worried. Then I heard him coming back a few steps at a time, the intervals punctuated by the metallic bangs of swinging letterbox flaps. lust at the right time I came up the stairs and headed for the Kiddykar office which brought me facing him. I stared at his hands but there was no little yellow box to be seen. 'Morning,' he said. 'Lovely day, isn't it?' He went past at a quick pace and I fumbled my way into the office, faking the opening of the door with a key. As I closed it behind me I found that I was sweating slightly; not much but enough to show that I was under tension. It was ridiculous, I suppose -I had only to take a little box away from an unsuspecting man, which should have been the easiest thing in the world and no occasion for nerves. It was the contents of that box which set up the tension. A hundred and twenty thousand quid is a hell of a lot of money to be at stake. It's rather like the man who can walk along a kerbstone unconcernedly and never put a foot wrong, yet let him try the same thing with a two-hundred-foot drop on one side and he'll break into a muck sweat. I walked over to the window and opened the casement, not so much to get fresh air as to signal to Mackintosh that the first delivery was a bust. I looked down into Leather Lane and saw him in his appointed place. He was standing before a fruit and vegetable stall prodding tomatoes with a nervous forefinger. He nicked his eyes up at the window then swung around and walked away. I lit a cigarette and settled down with the morning papers. There was quite a while to wait before the second post. Two hours later the telephone rang again. 'Better luck this time,' said Mackintosh, and hung up. I went through the same routine as before- there was no harm in it as this would be a different postman. I waited on the landing' just below the second floor and listened intently. It would be more difficult now that the building was inhabited and a lot depended on whether I could catch the postman alone in the corridor. If I could then it was easy, but if there was anyone else present I would have to grab the box and run for it. Steady footsteps warned me that he was coming and I< trotted up the stairs at the critical moment. I swung my head back and forwards like someone about to cross a street, and found that all was clear -- no one in the corridor except for me and the postman. Then I looked at his hands. He was carrying a bundle of letters and right on top of the bundle was a little yellow box. I stepped right in front of him as he drew abreast of the Kiddykar office. 'Have you anything for me?' I asked. 'I'm in there.' I pointed to the door behind him. He turned his head to look at the name on the door and I hit him behind the ear with the cosh, hoping to God he hadn't an unusually thin skull. He grunted and his knees buckled. I caught him before he fell and pushed him at the door of the office which swung open under his weight, and he fell over the threshold spilling letters before him. The Kodachrome box fell to the floor with a little thump. I stepped over him and hauled him inside, pushing the door closed with my foot. Then I grabbed the yellow box and dropped it into the innocuous brown box that Mackintosh had had specially tailored to fit it. I had to pass it on to him in the street and we wanted no flash of that conspicuous yellow to be seen. In less than sixty seconds from the time I greeted the postman I was outside the office and locking the door on him. As • I did so someone passed behind me in the corridor and opened the door of the Betsy-Lou office. I turned .and went downstairs, not moving too fast but not dawdling. I reckoned the postman wouldn't come round for two or three minutes, and then he still had to get out of the office. I came out on to the street and saw Mackintosh staring at me. He averted his eyes and half-turned away and I strode across the street among the stalls in his direction. It was easy enough, in the throng, to bump him with my shoulder, and with a muffled 'Sorry!' I passed the packet to him and continued in the direction of Holborn. I hadn't gone far when I heard the smash of glass behind me and a confused shouting. That postman had been smart; he had wasted no time on the door but had broken the window as a means of drawing attention to himself. Also he hadn't been unconscious for as long as I had hoped -1 hadn't hit him nearly hard enough. But I was safe -- far enough away not to be spotted by him and moving farther all the time. It would take at least five minutes to sort out the confusion and by that time I intended to get thoroughly lost -- and I hoped Mackintosh was doing the same. He was the hot one now -- he had the diamonds. I ducked into the rear entrance of Carnage's and made my way through the store at an easier pace, looking, I hoped, like a man who knows where he's going. I found the men's room and locked myself into a cubicle. My coat came off and was reversed -- that so carefully chosen coat with the nicely contrasting colours. The natty cap came from my pocket and die hat I was wearing was regretfully screwed into a shape-less bundle. It wouldn't do it much good to be jammed into my pocket but I didn't want to leave it lying around. Clothes make the man and a new man left that men's room. I wandered casually about the store, drifting towards the front entrance, and on the way I bought myself a new tie just to have a legitimate reason for being in Gamage's, but that precaution was unnecessary. I emerged on to the pavement of Holborn and set off to walk west. No taxis for me because taxi-drivers would be questioned about pick-ups in the area at that time. Half an hour later I was in a pub just off Oxford Street near the Marble Arch and sinking a thankful pint of beer. It had been a good smooth job but it wasn't over yet, not by a hell of a long way. I wondered if I could trust Mackintosh to do his half of the job properly. That evening, as I was preparing to go out on the town, there came a firm knock at the door of my room. I opened it and was confronted by two very large men dressed very conservatively and in the best of taste. The one on the right said, 'Are you Joseph Aloysius Rearden?" I didn't have to bend my brain too far to realize that these two were' coppers. I gave a twisted grin. 'I'd rather forget the Aloysius.' 'We are police officers." He flipped a wallet in front of me negligently. 'We hope you can assist us in our enquiries.' 'Hey!' I said. 'Is that a warrant card? I've never seen one of those before.' Reluctantly he flipped open the wallet again and let me read the card. He was Detective-Inspector John M. Brunskill and indubitably the genuine article. I babbled a bit. 'You see these things happening at the bioscope; I never thought it would happen to me.' 'Bioscope?' he said dubiously. The films -- we call a cinema a bioscope in South Africa. That's where I'm from, you know. I don't know how I can help you in any enquiries, Inspector. I'm a stranger to London in fact, I'm a stranger to England. I've been here only a week less than that, really.' 'We know all that, Mr Rearden,' said Brunskill gently. So they'd checked on me already. These boys moved fast -the British police are wonderful. 'May we come in, Mr Rearden? I think you will be able to help us.' I stood on one side and waved them into the room. 'Come in and take a seat. There's only one chair so one of you will have to sit on the bed. And take your coats off.' "That won't be necessary,' said Brunskill. 'We won't be staying long. This is Detective-Sergeant Jervis.' Jervis looked an even harder nut than Brunskill. Brunskill was polished and had the suavity that maturity brings, while Jervis still had his sharp corners and was all young, rock-hard cop. But Brunskill would be the more dangerous -- he'd be tricky. I said, 'Well, what can I do for you?' 'We are making enquiries about the theft of a package from a postman in Leather Lane this morning,' said Brunskill. 'What can you tell us about it, Mr Rearden?' 'Where's Leather Lane?' I asked. 'I'm a stranger here." Brunskill looked at Jervis and Jervis looked at Brunskill and then they both looked at me. 'Come, Mr Rearden,' said Brunskill. 'You can do better than that.' 'You've got a record,' said Jervis suddenly. This was the shot across the bows. I said bitterly, 'And you Johns will never let me forget it. Yes, I've got a record; I did eighteen months in Pretoria Central -- eighteen months of stone cold jug-and that was a long time ago. I've been straight ever since.' 'Until perhaps this morning,' suggested Brunskill. I looked him straight in the eye. 'Don't pull the old flannel on me. You tell me what I'm supposed to have done, and I'll tell you if I did it -- straight out.' 'Very good of you,' murmured Brunskill. 'Don't you think so, Sergeant?' Jervis made a nasty noise at the back of his throat. Then he said, 'Mind if we search your room, Rearden?' 'It's Mr Rearden to sergeants,' I said. 'Your boss has better manners than you. And I most certainly do object to you searching my room -- unless you have a warrant.' 'Oh, we have that,' said Brunskill calmly. 'Go ahead, Sergeant.' He took a document from his pocket and slapped it into my hand. 'I think you'll find that in order, Mr Rearden.' I didn't even bother to look at it, but just tossed it on to the dressing-table and watched Jervis do an efficient overhaul of the room. He found nothing -- there wasn't anything for him to find. As last he gave up, looked at Brunskill and shook his head. Brunskill turned to me. 'I must ask you to come to the police station with me.' I was silent and let the pause lengthen for a long time before I said, 'Well, go ahead and ask.' 'We've got ourselves a joker here, sir,' said Jervis. He looked at me with dislike. 'If you do ask I won't come,' I said. 'You'll have to arrest me to get me anywhere near the nick.' Brunskill sighed. 'Very well, Mr Rearden; I arrest you on suspicion of being involved in an assault on a postman on premises in Leather Lane at about nine-thirty this morning. Does that satisfy you?' 'It'll do to be going on with,' I said. 'Let's go.' 'Oh, I almost forgot,' he said. 'Anything you say will be noted and may be used in evidence.' 'I know the form,' I said. 'I know it only too well." 'I'm sure you do,' he said softly. I expected them to take me to Scotland Yard but I found myself in quite a small police station. Where it was I don't know -1 don't know London at all well. They put me into a small room unfurnished except for a deal table and two bentwood chairs. It had the same institutional smell of all police stations anywhere in the world. I sat in a chair and smoked one cigarette after another, watched by a uniformed copper who stood with his back to the door, looking undressed without his helmet. It was nearly an hour and a half before they got around to doing anything and it was tough boy Jervis who started the attack. He came into the room and waved abruptly at the uniformed John who did a disappearing act, then he sat down at the other side of the table and looked at me for a long time without speaking: I ignored him -1 didn't even look at him and it was he who broke first. 'You've been here before, haven't you, Rearden?' 'I've never been here before in my life.' 'You know what I mean. You've sat on hard wooden chairs with a policeman the other side of the table many, many times. You know the drill too well-you're a professional. With another man I might pussyfoot around -- use a bit of psychology, maybe -- but that wouldn't work with you, would it? So I'm not going to do it. There'll be no tact, no psychology with you. I'm going to crack you like a nut, Rearden.' 'You'd better remember Judges' Rules.' He gave a sharp bark of laughter. 'See what I mean? An honest man wouldn't know Judges' Rules from Parkinson's Law. But you know, don't you? You're a wrong 'un; you're bent.' 'When you're finished with the insults I'll go,' I said. 'You'll go when I say you can,' he said sharply. I grinned at him. 'You'd better check with Brunskill first, sonny.' 'Where are the diamonds?' 'What diamonds?' 'That postman is in a bad way. You hit him a bit too hard, Rearden. The chances are he'll cash in his chips -- and where will that put you?' He leaned forward. 'You'll be inside for so long that you'll trip over your beard.' I must say he was trying hard but he was a bad liar. No dying postman could have busted that window in the Kiddykar office. I just looked him in the eye and kept my mouth shut. 'If those diamonds aren't found it'll go hard for you,' said Jervis. 'Maybe if the diamonds turn up the judge will be a bit easier on you.' 'What diamonds?' I asked. And so it went on for a good half-hour until he got tired and went away and the uniformed man came back and took up his old stance in front of the door. I turned and looked at him. 'Don't you get corns? Isn't this job bad for your feet?' He looked at me with a bland face and expressionless eyes and said exactly nothing. Presently a bigger gun was brought to bear. Brunskill came in carrying a thick folder bulging with papers which he put on the table. 'I'm sorry to have kept you waiting, Mr Rearden,' he said. 'I wouldn't like to bet on it,' I said. He gave me a pitying, though understanding, smile. 'We all have our jobs to do, and some are nastier than others. You mustn't blame me for doing mine.' He opened the folder. 'You have quite a record, Mr Rearden. Interpol have a fat dossier on you.' 'I've been convicted once,' I said. 'Anything else is not official and you can't use it. What anyone might have to say about me isn't proof of a damned thing.' I grinned and, pointing at the folder, quoted: '"What the policeman said isn't evidence."' 'Just so,' said Brunskill. 'But it's interesting all the same.' He mused over the papers for a long time, then said, without looking up, 'Why are you flying to Switzerland tomorrow?' 'I'm a tourist,' I said. 'I've never been there before,' 'It's your first time in England, too, isn't it?' 'You know it is. Look here, I want an attorney.' He looked up. 'I would suggest a solicitor. Have you anyone in mind?' From my wallet I took the scrap of paper with the telephone number on it which Mackintosh had given me with this eventuality in mind. That'll find him,' I said. Branskill's eyebrows lifted when he read it. 'I know this number very well -- he's just the man to tackle your type of case. For a man who's been in England less than a week you know your way around the fringes.' He put the paper on one side. 'I'll let him know you're here.' My throat was dry from smoking too many cigarettes. 'Another thing,' I said. 'I could do with a cup' of tea." 'I'm afraid we can't run to tea,' said Brunskill regretfully. "Would a glass of water be all right?' 'It'll do.' He went to the door, gave instructions, and then came back. "You people seem to think that we spend all our time in police stations drinking tea -- running a continuous cafeteria for old lags. I can't think where you get it from unless it's from television.' 'Not me,' I said. 'We have no TV in South Africa.' 'Indeed!' said Brunskill. 'How curious. Now, about those diamonds. I think that . . .' 'What diamonds?'I broke in. And so it went on. He shook me more than Jervis because he was trickier. He wasn't stupid enough to lie about something I knew to be true, as Jervis had done, and was better at the wearing down process, being as persistent as a buzzing fly. The water came -- a carafe and a tumbler. I filled the tumbler and drank thirstily, then refilled it and drank again. Brunskill watched me and said at last, 'Had enough?' I nodded, so he reached out and took the tumbler delicately in his fingertips and carried it out. When he came back he looked at me sorrowfully. 'I didn't think you'd fall for that chestnut. You know we can't fingerprint you until you're booked. Why did you let us have them?' 'I was tired,' I said. 'Too bad,' he said sympathetically. 'Now, to get back to those diamonds . . .' Presently Jervis came into the room and beckoned to Brunskill and they stood by the door and talked in low voices. Brunskill turned around. 'Now, look here, Rearden; we've nailed you. We have enough evidence now to send you up for ten years. If you help us to get back those stones it might help you when the judge sentences you.' 'What diamonds?' I asked tiredly. His mouth shut with a snap. 'All right,' he said curtly. 'Come this way.' I followed, the meat in a sandwich between Brunskill and Jervis. They escorted me to a large room occupied by a dozen men lined along one wall. Jervis said, 'No need to explain what this is, Rearden; but I will because the law says I must. It's a line-up -- an identification parade. There are three people coming in to see you. You can insert yourself anywhere in that line, and you can change your position in the intervals if you like. Got it?' I nodded and walked over to the wall, putting myself third in line. There was a pause in the action and then the first witness came in -- a little old lady, someone's darling mother. She went along the line and then came straight back to me and pointed at my chest. 'That's the one.' I'd never seen her before. They took her out, but I didn't bother to change position. There wasn't any point, really; they had me nailed just as Brunskill had said. The next one was a young man of about eighteen. He didn't have to go all the way along the line. He stopped in front of me. That's 'im,' he said.' 'E did it.' The third witness didn't have any trouble either. He took one look at me and yelled, 'This is the boyo. I hope you get life, mate.' He went away rubbing his head. It was the postman -- not nearly as dead as Jervis would have me believe. Then is was over and Jervis and Brunskill took me back. I said to Jervis, 'You'd make a good miracle-worker; you brought that postman back to life pretty smartly.' He gave me a sharpish look and a slow smile spread over his face. 'And how did you know that was the postman?' I shrugged. My goose was cooked whichever way I looked at it. I said to Brunskill, 'Who is the bastard of a nark that shopped me?' His face closed up. 'Let's call it "information received", Rearden. You'll be charged tomorrow morning and you'll go before a magistrate immediately. I'll see that your solicitor i» in attendance.' Thanks,' I said. 'What's his name?' 'By God!' he said. 'But you're a cool one. Your solicitor is a Mr Maskell.' "Thanks again,' I said. Brunskill whistled up a station sergeant who put me in a cell for the night. I had a bite to eat and then stretched out and went to sleep almost immediately. It had been a tiring day. CHAPTER TWO Maskell was a short, stout man with shrewd brown eyes and an immense air of dignity. He was introduced to me just before the charge was laid and did not seem at all perturbed at the prospect of acting for a criminal. The law is a strange profession in which ordinary morality goes by the board; a well liked and generally respected barrister will fight like a tiger for his client, who may well be a murderer or a rapist, and will receive well-merited congratulations on an acquittal. Then he will go home and write a letter to the editor of The Times fulminating about the rise in crime. A schizophrenic profession. I said as much to Maskell once when I knew him better. He said gently, 'Mr Rearden, to me you are neither guilty nor innocent -- the people who decide that are the twelve men in the box. I am here to find out the facts in a case and to present them to a barrister who will conduct the argument -- and I do it for money.' We were in court at the time and he waved his hand largely. 'Who says crime doesn't pay?' he asked cynically. 'Taking all in all, from the court ushers to his Lordship up there, there are at least fifty people directly involved in this case, and they're all making a living out of it. Some, such as myself and his Lordship, make a better living than others. We do very well out of people like you, Mr Rearden.' But at this time I didn't know Maskell at all. It was a hurried introduction, and he said hastily, 'We will talk in more detail later. First we must find what this is all about.' So I was taken and charged. I won't go into all the legal language but what it all boiled down to was robbery with violence -- an assault on the person of John Edward Harte, an employee of the GPO, and the theft of diamonds, the property of Lewis and van Veldenkamp, Ltd, valued at £173,000. I nearly burst out laughing at that. It had been a bigger haul than Mackintosh had expected, unless Mr Lewis and Meneer van Veldenkamp were trying to sting their insurance company. But I kept a straight face and when it was over I turned to Maskell and asked, 'What now?' 'I'll see you in the Magistrates' Court in about an hour. That it will be a mere formality.' He rubbed his chin. 'There's a lot of money involved here. Have the police recovered the diamonds?' You'd better ask them. I know nothing about any diamonds.' 'Indeed! I must tell you that if the diamonds are still -- shall we say at large"? -- then it will be very difficult for me to get you out on bail. But I will try.' The proceedings in the Magistrates' Court were brief, lasting for about three minutes. They would have been even briefer but Brunskill got on his hind legs and argued against the granting of bail. "The diamonds have not yet been re-covered, your Honour, and if the prisoner is released on bail I fear they never will be. Further, if the prisoner had not been apprehended last night he would have been in Switzerland this morning.' The magistrate flapped his hand. 'You think the prisoner will jump bail?' 'I do,' said Brunskill firmly. "And there is one thing more, the prisoner is in the dock on a charge of violence and he has a police record in which violence figures largely. I fear the intimidation of witnesses.' He nearly overreached himself. 'You think he will leave the country and intimidate witnesses?' asked the magistrate with polite incredulity. 'I doubt if his violent arm would reach so far. However, on the balance of evidence and especially in respect of the missing property I am inclined to agree with you. Bail is denied.' Brunskill sat down and Maskell shrugged and stuffed some papers back into his briefcase. And so I was remanded for trial at the Central Criminal Court. I was going to see the inside of the Old Bailey, after all. Maskell had a few words with me before I was taken away. 'Now I can find out the strength of the police case against you. I'll have a word with the prosecution and then you and I can sit down together and discuss this whole thing. If you want anything ask that I be informed, but I shall probably see you tomorrow, anyway." A prisoner on remand is theoretically an innocent man. Practically, he is regarded neutrally as neither guilty nor innocent. The food was good, the bed soft and there were no irksome restrictions -- except one. I couldn't get out of the nick. Still, you can't have everything. Maskell came to see me the following afternoon and we sat in one of the interviewing rooms. He regarded me thoughtfully, then said, 'The case against you is very strong, Mr Rearden; very strong, indeed. Unless you can prove conclusively and without equivocation that you could not have committed this crime, then I fear you will be convicted.' I was about to speak, but he raised his hand. 'But we can go into that later. First things first. Now, have you any money?' 'About a hundred and fifty pounds. But I -haven't paid my hotel bill -1 wasn't given the chance. I don't want hotel bilking to be added to the charge sheet, so it'll be nearer a hundred pounds I have to play around with.' Maskell nodded. 'As you may know, my own fee has been taken care of. But I am not the man who will fight your case in court; that will be done by a barrister, and barristers come even more expensive than I do, especially barristers of the calibre needed to win this case. A hundred pounds would come nowhere near the amount necessary.' I shrugged. 'I'm sorry; it's all I've got.' That wasn't exactly true but I could see that even the best barrister in the business couldn't get me out of this one and there wasn't any point in throwing my money away. 'I see. Well, there is provision for a case like yours. A barrister will be appointed by the Court to act for you. The trouble is that he will be not of your choice; yet I am not without influence and I will see if I have any strings to pull that will get us the best man.' He took a folder from his briefcase and opened it. 'I want you to tell me exactly what you did on the morning in question.' He paused. 'I already know you did not have breakfast at your hotel.' 'I didn't sleep well that night,' I said. 'So I got up early and took a walk.' Maskell sighed. 'And where did you walk to, Mr Rearden?' I thought it out. 'I went into Hyde Park and walked up as far as the Round Pond. There's a famous building up there -- Kensington Palace -- but it was closed. It was very early in the morning.' 'I shouldn't imagine there would be many people in Hyde Park or Kensington Gardens so early. Did you speak to any-one-make enquiries -at Kensington Palace? Did you ask the time of opening, for instance?' 'There wasn't anyone around to ask.' 'Very well; what did you do then?' 'I walked back through the park to Hyde Park Corner and over into Green Park. Then up Bond Street into Oxford Street. I was doing a bit of window shopping, you see.' 'And what time would this be?' 'Oh, I don't know. Say, about nine-fifteen. I was dawdling a bit. I had a look at a place called Burlington Arcade, then I went on up Bond Street looking at the shops, as I said. It's marvellous -- nothing like it in South Africa.' 'And you didn't speak to anyone at all?' 'If I'd known I needed an alibi I would have,' I said bitterly. 'Just so,' said Maskell. 'So you arrived at Oxford Street -what did you do then?' 'Well, I hadn't had breakfast and I felt a bit peckish so I found a pub and had some sandwiches and a pint. I was chatting to the barman, an Irishman. He ought to remember me.' 'And what time was this?' 'It must have been after ten o'clock because the pub was open. Say, half past ten.' 'That alibi comes a little late,' said Maskell. 'It's not relevant.' He consulted a sheet of paper from the folder. 'I must tell you that the police version differs from yours substantially -- and they have a great deal of evidence to show.' He looked me in the eye. 'Do I have to point out the dangers of lying to your lawyer?' 'I'm not lying,' I said indignantly. He spoke gravely. 'Mr Rearden, let me say that you are in deep trouble. I gather you want to enter a plea of not guilty at your trial, but I must warn you that, on the evidence now extant, you are likely to lose the case. Public concern about crimes of violence of this nature has been increasing and this concern is reflected by the heavy sentences imposed by the courts.' He paused to collect his thoughts and then went on in measured tones. 'Now, as your solicitor I cannot prejudge this case, but I would like to say this: If the diamonds were to be returned, and if you entered a plea of guilty, then the court would be inclined to leniency and, in my opinion, your sentence would be not more than five years and possibly as little as three years. With a remittance of sentence for good behaviour you could be out of prison in as little as two years. 'On the other hand, if the diamonds are not returned and if you enter a plea of not guilty then your sentence is going to be very heavy -- assuming you are convicted, an assumption which on the evidence I have is very likely. If I may use slang I would say that his Lordship is going to throw the book at you; he'll lock you up and throw away the key. I doubt if you would get away with much under fourteen years, and I assure you that I have great experience in these forecasts and I do not speak lightly.' He cleared his throat. 'Now, what do you say, Mr Rearden? What shall we do about this?' 'The only diamonds I saw that morning were in the shop windows of Bond Street,' I said distinctly. He looked at me in silence for a long time then shook his head. 'Very well,' he said quietly. 'I will go about my business -- and yours -- but with no great hope of success. I ought to warn you that the police have such evidence that will be very difficult for defence counsel to refute.' 'I'm innocent,' I said obstinately. He said no more but collected his papers and left the room without a backward glance. II So there I was in the dock of the Central Criminal Court -the Old Bailey. There was much pomp and circumstance, robes and wigs, deferences and courtesies -- and me popping up from the bowels of the earth into the dock like the demon king in a pantomime, the centre of attraction. Of course, I had competition from the Judge. It seems that when a man gets to sit on the Bench he feels that he's entitled to be a licensed jester and he loves nothing more than to have the audience rolling in the aisles at his witticisms. I've seen worse music hall turns than a Criminal Court judge. Still, it does lighten the atmosphere -- a court would be a pretty grim place without the comic bits -- and the Chief Comic isn't prejudiced; he aims his barbs at prosecution and defence alike. I found chat I quite enjoyed it and laughed as much as anyone else. Maskell was there, of course, but in a minor role; defence counsel was a man called Rollins. Maskell had tried again, just before the trial, to get me to alter my plea of not guilty. He said, 'Mr Rearden, I want you to consider once more the consequences of losing this case. You will not only receive a long sentence but there are certain other implications. Long-term prisoners are invariably regarded as high risk prisoners, especially those who are regarded as having financial backing. In the absence of diamonds to the value of £173,000 you would undoubtedly come into that category. A high risk prisoner is treated very differently from the ordinary prisoner and I understand that the circumstances can be rather unpleasant. I would think of that if I were you.' I didn't have to think of it. I hadn't a hope in hell of getting the diamonds back and that was the crux of the matter. Even if I pleaded guilty I'd get a stiff sentence in the absence of the diamonds. The only thing to do was to put on a brave face and make the best of it. this house, Owen Stannard.' After tea we washed up and Maeve said, 'I'm an old woman and I'm wanting my bed. Make yourselves easy, the pair of you.' 'I'd like to use the telephone,' said Alison. 'It's there when you want it. Put your sixpences in the box -I'm saving up for my old age.' Maeve shouted with laughter. 'It'll be more than sixpences, Aunt Maeve,' said Alison. 'I'll be telephoning to England and more than once.' 'Rest easy, girl. If you talk to Alec, ask him why he never comes to Ireland these days.' 'He's a busy man, Aunt Maeve.' 'Aye,' said Maeve. 'And when men like Alec Mackintosh get busy it's time for normal folk to find a deep hole. But give him my love, and tell him he doesn't deserve it.' She went off and I said, 'She's quite a character.' 'I could tell you stories about Maeve O'Sullivan that would make your hair curl,' said Alison. 'She was very active during the Troubles.' She picked up the telephone. 'Let's hear what the Harbourmaster has to say.' The Harbourmaster was most obliging. Yes, Artina was expected. Mr Wheeler had arranged for refuelling. No, he didn't really know when she would arrive but if previous visits by Mr Wheeler were anything to go by then Artina would be staying in Cork for a couple of days. As Alison put down the telephone I said, 'Now I have to think of a way of getting aboard. I wish I knew more about Wheeler's craft.' 'Give me a few hours and I'll have all you need to know,' said Alison. 'The telephone is a wonderful invention. But first I must ring the hospital.' It was a time for rejoicing because Alec Mackintosh was fighting his way through to life again. Alison was radiant. 'He's better! The doctor said he was better! His condition has improved and they think there's a chance now." 'Is he conscious? Is he able to speak?' 'No, he's still unconscious.' I thought back. If Mackintosh had been unconscious all this time it would be quite a while before the doctors let him speak to anyone, even if he was able and willing. I'd have given a lot to be able to hear what he'd said to Wheeler the day before the hit-and-run. 'I'm glad he's better,' I said sincerely. Alison picked up the telephone again, suddenly all businesslike. 'And now to work.' I left her to it, only answering her questions from time to time. I was busily engaged in developing my hypothesis which was beginning to blossom into a very strange shape indeed. If I was right then Wheeler was a most odd fish and a very dangerous man -- more dangerous to state security, even, than Slade. I was deep in thought when Alison said, 'I've done all I can now; the rest will have to wait for morning.' She flipped open the notebook which was full of shorthand notes, page after page. 'What do you want first -- Wheeler or the yacht?' 'Let's have the yacht." She leafed through the pages. 'Here we are. Name -- Artina: designed by Parker, built by Clelands on the Tyneside; she was two years old when Wheeler bought her. She's a standard design known as a Parker-Clelands which is important for reasons I'll come to later. Overall length -- 111 feet, beam -- 22 feet, cruising speed-12 knots, speed flat out-13 knots. She has two Rolls-Royce diesel engines of 350 horse-power each. Is this the sort of stuff you want?' 'Just right.' I could begin to build up a picture. 'What's her range?" 'I haven't got that yet, but it's coming. A crew of seven -skipper, engineer, cook, steward and three seamen. Accommodation for a maximum of eight passengers." 'How is the accommodation arranged?' 'That will be coming tomorrow. The plans of her sister ship were published a few years ago. They're being photographed and sent by wire to the Cork Examiner where we can pick them up tomorrow, together with some photographs of the ship.' I regarded Alison with admiration. 'Wow! Now that's something I wouldn't have thought of doing.' "The newspaper is a very efficient information gatherer and transmitter. I told you I could pull strings.' 'What about Wheeler?' There's a detailed account coming to the Examiner on the telex, but this is the meat of it. He fought the Italians when they moved into Albania before the war.' She looked up. 'He'd be about 14 years old then. He fled with his family into Jugoslavia and again fought against the Italians and the Germans during the war both in Jugoslavia and Albania towards the end of the war. He left Albania in 1946 when he was somewhere in his early twenties and settled in England. Was naturalized in 1950. Started to deal in property just about that time and that was the beginning of his fortune.' 'What kind of property?' 'Offices. That was about the time they first began to put up the big office blocks.' She wrinkled her brow. 'I talked to a financial editor; he said there was something funny about the first deals Wheeler made.' That's interesting,' I said. Tell me more.' 'According to this editor it wasn't easy to see how Wheeler had made a profit. He evidently had made a profit because he suddenly had the money to go bigger and better, and he never looked back right from the early days.' 'I wonder how he paid his taxes,' I said. 'It's a pity we can't subpoena his tax inspector. I'm beginning to see the light. Tell me, when he was fighting in the war -- did he fight for the Cetniks or the Partisans? The Nationalists or the Communists?' 'I don't have that here,' said Alison. 'It will be coming by telex, if it's known at all.' 'When did he enter politics?' She consulted her notes. 'He fought a by-election in 1962 and lost. He fought in the general election of 1964 and got in by a fair margin.' 'And I suppose he lashed out generously for party funds,' I said. 'He'd do that, of course. Any known connections at present with Albania.' 'Nothing known.' 'Russia? Any communist country?' Alison shook her head. 'He's a dinkum capitalist, mate. I don't see it, Owen. He's always popping off with anti-communist speeches in the House.' 'He's also against prisoners escaping from gaol, if you remember. What about this prison reform bit?' 'He used to be a prison visitor, but I suppose he's got too big for that now. He's generous in his subscription to various prison reform societies, and he's a member of a House Committee studying prison reform.' 'My God, that would come in useful,' I said. 'Did he visit prisons in that capacity?' 'I suppose he might.' She put down the notebook. 'Owen, you're building up quite a structure on a weak foundation.' 'I know.' I stood up and paced the room restlessly. 'But I'll add another layer on my hypothesis. I once talked to a multimillionaire, one of the South African variety; he told me that the first quarter-million is the hardest. It took him fifteen years to make £250,000, three years to bring it up to the round million, and in the next six years he reached the five million mark. The mathematicians would say he was riding an exponential curve.' Alison was getting a little impatient. 'So what?5 The first quarter-million is hardest because our potential millionaire has to make all his own decisions and has to do his own research, but once he has money he can afford to hire regiments of accountants and platoons of lawyers and that makes decision making a lot easier. It's the starting of the process that's the snag. Go back to your financial editor -- the one who smelled something funny in Wheeler's first deals.' Alison picked up her notes again. 'I haven't anything more than I've already told you.' 'Let's take our man X,' I said. 'He's not a Russian -- let's call him an Albanian -- but he still favours the Russians. He comes to England in 1946 and is naturalized in 1950. About that time he starts dealing in property and makes money at it, but at least one man can't see how he did it. Let's assume the money was fed to him from outside -- perhaps as much as half a million. X is a sharp boy -- as sharp as any other potential millionaire -- and money makes money. So he begins to roll in the time-honoured capitalistic way. I swung around. 'In 1964 he entered politics and got himself a seat in the Commons where he's now an enthusiastic and keen back-bencher. He's forty-six years old and still has another twenty-five years of political life in him.' I stared at Alison. 'What would happen if he were to attain high position in the Government? Say, Chancellor or Minister of Defence -- or even Prime Minister -- in 1984, which seems to me to be an appropriate date? The boys in the Kremlin would be laughing their heads off!' CHAPTER EIGHT I slept badly that night. In the dark hours my hypothesis began to seem damned silly and more and more unlikely. A millionaire and an MP could not possibly be associated with the Russians -- it was a contradiction in terms. Certainly Alison found she could not accept it. And yet Wheeler was associated with the Scarperers, unless the whole series of assumed links was pure coincidence -- and that possibility could not be eliminated. I had seen too many cases of apparent cause and effect which turned out to be coincidence. I turned over restlessly in bed. Yet assume it was so -- that Wheeler actually was controlling the Scarperers. Why would he do it? Certainly not to make money; he had plenty of that. The answer came out again that it was political, which again led to Wheeler as a Member of Parliament and the dangers inherent in that situation. I fell asleep and had dire dreams full of looming menace. At breakfast I was still tired and a shade bad-tempered. My temper worsened rapidly when' Alison made the first phone call of the day and was told by the Harbourmaster that Artina had arrived during the night, refuelled quickly, and left for Gibraltar in the early hours. 'We've lost the bastard again,' I said. 'We know where he is,' said Alison consolingly. 'And we know where he'll be in four days." There are too many things wrong with that,' I said glumly. 'Just because he has clearance for Gibraltar doesn't mean he's going there, for one thing. For another, what's to prevent him from transferring Slade to a Russian trawler heading the other way through the Baltic? He could do it easily once he's over the horizon. And we don't even know if Slade is aboard Artina. We're just guessing.' After breakfast Alison went out to collect the stuff from the Examiner. I didn't go with her; I wasn't going anywhere near a newspaper office -- those reporters had filled up their columns with too much about Rearden and too many photographs. A sharp-eyed reporter was the last person I wanted to encounter. So I stayed in the house while Maeve tactfully busied herself with the housework and left me alone to brood. Alison was away for an hour and a half, and she brought back a large envelope. 'Photographs and telex sheets,' she said, as she plopped the envelope in front of me. I looked at the photographs first. There were three of Wheeler, one an official photograph for publicity use and the others news shots of him caught with his mouth open as the news photographers like to catch politicians. In one of them he looked like a predatory shark and I'd bet some editor had chortled over that one. He was a big man, broad-shouldered and tall, with fair hair. The photographs were black-and-white so it was difficult to judge, but I'd say his hair was ash-blond. His nose was prominent and had a twist in it as though it had been thumped' at some time or other, and the cartoonists would have no trouble taking the mickey if he ever attained a position of eminence. I put the photographs of Wheeler aside -- I would recognize him if I saw him. The other photographs were of the Artina, and one was a reproduction of the plans of her sister ship. 'Sean O'Donovan bad exaggerated -- she was not nearly as big as the royal yacht, but she was a fair size for all that, and it would take a millionaire to buy her and to ran her. There was an owner's double cabin forward of the engine room and aft were three double cabins for six guests. The crew lived forward, excepting the skipper who had the master's cabin just behind the wheelhouse. I studied that plan until I had memorized every passage and door. If I had to board her I would want to know my way around and to know the best places to hide. I checked off the aft peak and the room which held the air conditioning equipment as likely places for a stowaway. Alison was immersed in reading the telex sheets. 'Any joy there?' She looked up. 'There's not much more than I told you last night. It's expanded a bit, that's all. Wheeler fought for the Partisans in Jugoslavia.' The communists,' I said. 'Another strand in the web.' I began to read and found that Alison was right; there wasn't much more solid information. The picture was of a bright young man who became a tycoon by the usual clapperclawing methods and who now had a solid base in society built up by saying the right things at the right times and by contributing largely to the right causes. The picture of a successful man now looking for new worlds to conquer -- hence the politics. 'He's not married,' I said. 'He must be the most eligible bachelor in England.' Alison smiled wryly. 'I've heard a couple of rumours. He runs a mistress who is changed regularly, and the story goes that he's bisexual. But no one in his right mind would put that on the telex -- that would be publishing a libel.' 'If Wheeler knew what was in my mind libel would be the least of his worries,' I said. Alison shrugged unenthusiastically. 'What do we do?" 'We go to Gibraltar,' I said. 'Will your plane take us there?' 'Of course.' 'Then let's chase the wild goose. There's nothing else to do.' II We had time to spare and in plenty. An inspection of the plans of Artina's sister ship and a reading of the description that went with it made it quite certain that she. was no high speed craft and she certainly couldn't get to Gibraltar in less than four days. We decided to play it safe and to be in Gibraltar in three days so we would be there when she came in. That gave Alison time to fly back to London to see how Mackintosh was managing to survive and to dig up more dirt on Wheeler. We decided it would be most unwise for me to go back to London. Ducking in and out of Cork airport was one thing -- Gatwick or Heathrow was quite another. Every time I smuggled myself incognito through the airport barriers I took an added risk. So I spent two days cooped up in a suburban house in Cork with no one to speak to but an old Irishwoman. I must say that Maeve was most tactful; she didn't push and she didn't question, and she respected my silences. Once she said, 'Och, I know how it is with you, Owen. I went through it myself in 1918. It's a terrible thing to have the hand of every man against you, and you hiding like an animal. But you'll rest easy in this house.' I I said, 'So you had your excitement in the Troubles.' 'I had,' she said. 'And I didn't like it much. But there are always troubles -- if not here then somewhere else -- and there'll always be men running and men chasing.' She gave me a sidelong glance. 'Especially men like Alec Mackintosh and whoever concerns himself with that man." I smiled. 'Don't you approve of him?' She lifted her chin. 'Who am I to approve or disapprove? I know nothing of his business other than that it is hard and dangerous. More dangerous for the men he orders than for him, I'm thinking.' I thought of Mackintosh lying in hospital. That was enough to disprove that particular statement. I said, 'What about the women he commands?' Maeve looked at me sharply. 'You'll be thinking of Alison,' she said flatly. 'Now that's a bad thing. He wanted a son and he got Alison, so he did the best with what he had and made her to his pattern; and it's a strong pattern and a hard pattern, enough to make a girl break under the burden of it.' 'He's a hard man,' I said. "What about Alison's mother? Didn't she have a say in the matter?' Maeve's tone was a little scornful, but the scorn was intermingled with pity. 'That poor woman! She married the wrong man. She didn't understand a man the like of Alec Mackintosh. The marriage never went well and she left Alec before Alison was born and came to live here in Ireland. She died in Waterford when Alison was ten.' 'And that's when Mackintosh took over Alison's education.' 'It is so,' said Maeve. I said, 'What about Smith?' 'Has Alison not told you about him?' 'No,' I said. Then I'll not be telling,' said Maeve decidedly. 'I've gossiped enough already. When -- and if -- Alison wants you to know, then she'll tell you herself.' She turned away, and then paused, looking over her shoulder at me. 'I'm thinking you're a hard man yourself, Owen Stannard. I doubt if you'll be the one for Alison.' And I was left to make of that what I could. Alison rang up late the first night. 'I flew out to sea when I left,' she said. 'Artina was on course for Gibraltar.' 'You didn't make the inspection too obvious, I hope.' 'I overtook her flying at five thousand feet and climbing. I didn't turn until I was out of sight.' 'How is Mackintosh?' I still called him that, even to her. 'He's better, but still unconscious. I was allowed to see him for two minutes." That wasn't too good. I could have done with Mackintosh being awake and talkative; he wasn't alive enough yet for my liking. Which brought me to another and delicate subject. 'You might be under observation in London.' 'No one followed me. I didn't see anyone I know, either, except one man." 'Who was that?" 'The Prime Minister sent his secretary to the hospital. I saw him there. He said the PM is worried.' I thought of Wheeler and the man who had been taken out of prison to be killed, and then I thought of Mackintosh lying helpless in a hospital bed. 'You'd better do something,' I said. 'Ring the secretary chap and ask him to spread the word around that Mackintosh is dying -- that he's cashing in his chips.' She caught on. 'You think they might attack Father in hospital?' 'They might if they think he's going to recover. Ask the PM's secretary to drop the unobtrusive word, especially to any of Wheeler's known associates in the House. If Wheeler rings London to have a chat with one of his mates the news might get through -- and that could save your father's life.' 'I'll do that,' she said. 'Anything on Wheeler?' 'Not yet; not what we want, anyway. He lives a blameless public life." 'It's not his public life we're interested in,' I said. 'But do your best.' Alison came back two days later, arriving in a taxi in mid-afternoon. She looked tired as though she had not had much sleep, and Maeve clucked at the sight of her but relaxed as Alison said, 'Too much damned night-clubbing.' Maeve went away and I raised my eyebrows. 'Been living it up?' She shrugged. 'I had to talk to people and the kind of people I had to talk to are in the night club set.' She sighed. 'But it was a waste of time.' 'No further dirt?' 'Nothing of consequence, except maybe one thing. I checked the servant situation.' 'The what situation!' She smiled tiredly. 'I checked on Wheeler's servants. The days of glory are past and servants are hard to come by, but Wheeler does all right even though he needs a large staff.' She took her notebook from her pocket. 'All his staff are British and have British passports excepting the chauffeur who is an Irish national. Do you find that interesting?' 'His contact with Ireland," I said. 'It's very interesting.' 'It gets better,' she said. 'As I said, the rest of his servants are British, but every last one of them is naturalized and they've all had their names changed by deed poll. And what do you think was their country of origin?' I grinned. 'Albania.' 'You've just won a cigar. But there's an exception here too. One of them didn't take a British name because it would be peculiar if he did. Wheeler has taken a fancy to Chinese cooking and has a Chinese cook on the premises. His name is Chang Pi-wu.' 'I see what you mean,' I said. 'It would seem bloody funny if he changed his name to McTavish. Where does he hail from?' 'Hong Kong.' A Hong Kong Chinese! It didn't mean much. I suppose it was quite reasonable that if a multi-millionaire had a taste for Chinese food then he'd have a Chinese cook; millionaires think differently from the common ruck of folk and that would be part of the small change of his life. But I felt a tickle at the back of my mind. I said carefully, 'It may be that Wheeler is doing the charitable bit. Maybe all these British Albanians are his cousins and his cousins' cousins, nieces and nephews he's supporting in a tactful sort of way.' Alison looked up at the ceiling. The problem with servants is keeping them. They want four nights a week off, television in their rooms and a lie-in every morning, otherwise they become mobile and leave. The turnover is high, and Wheeler's turnover in servants is just as high as anyone else's.' 'Is it, by God?' I leaned forward and peered at Alison closely. 'You've got something, damn it! Spit it out.' She grinned cheerfully and opened her notebook. 'He has thirteen British Albanians working for him -- gardeners, butler, housekeeper, maids and so on. Not one had been with him longer than three years. The last one to arrive pitched up last month. They come and go just like ordinary servants.' 'And they take holidays in Albania,' I said. 'He's got a courier service.' 'Not only that,' said Alison. 'But someone is supplying him with a regular intake.' She consulted her notebook again. 'I did a check with the local branch of the Ministry of Social Security in Herefordshire; in the last ten years he's had fifty of them through his hands. I can't prove they were all Albanians because they had British names, but I'll take a bet they were.' 'Jesus!' I said. 'Hasn't anyone tumbled to it? What the hell is the Special Branch doing?' Alison spread her hands. "They're all British. If it's come to anyone's attention -- which I doubt -- then he's doing the charitable bit, as you said -- rescuing his compatriots from the communist oppressors.' 'Fifty!' I said. 'Where do they all go when he's done with them?' 'I don't know about the fifty -- I've only had time to check on two. Both are now in the service of other MPs.' I began to laugh because I couldn't help it. 'The cheek of it,' I said. "The brazen nerve! Don't you see what he's doing? He's getting these fellows in, giving them a crash course on British mores and customs as well as the finer points of being a gentleman's gentleman, and then planting them as spies. Can't you imagine him talking to one of his mates in the Commons? "Having servant trouble, dear boy? It just happens that one of mine is leaving. Oh, no trouble like that -- he just wants to live in Town. Perhaps I can persuade . . ." It beats anything I've ever heard.' 'It certainly shows he has present connections with Albania,' said Alison. 'I wasn't convinced before -- it seemed too ridiculous. But I am now.' I said, 'Do you remember the Cicero case during the war. The valet of the British Ambassador to Turkey was a German spy. Wheeler has been in the money for twenty years-he could have planted a hundred Ciceros. And not only at the political end. I wonder how many of our industrial chieftains have Wheeler-trained servants in their households?' 'All with English names and all speaking impeccable English,' said Alison. 'Wheeler would see to that.' She ticked off the steps on her fingers. 'They come to England and while they're waiting for naturalization they learn the language thoroughly and study the British in their native habitat. When they're British they go to Wheeler for a final gloss and then he plants them.' She shook her head doubtfully. 'It's a very long-term project.' 'Wheeler himself is a long-term project. I don't see him packing his bags and returning to his native land. Look at Slade, for God's sake! He was worming his way in for twenty-eight years! These people take the long view.' I paused. 'When do we leave for Gibraltar?' Tomorrow morning.' 'Good,' I said. 'I want to catch up with this incredible bastard.' III I went into Cork airport the hard way, as usual. I was beginning to forget what it was like to use the front door. Maeve O'Sullivan had been uncharacteristically emotional when we left. 'Come back soon, girl,' she said to Alison. 'It's an old woman I am, and there's no telling,' There were tears in her eyes but she rubbed them away as she turned to me. 'And you, Owen Stannard; take care of yourself and Alec Mackintosh's daughter.' I grinned. 'She's been taking care of me so far.' Then you're not the man I thought you were to let her,' replied Maeve with asperity. 'But go carefully, and watch for the garda.' So we went carefully and it was with relief that I watched the city of Cork pass under the wings of the Apache as we circled to find our course south. Alison snapped switches and set dials, then took her hands from the control column. It will be nearly six hours," she said. 'Depending on the wind and the join.' "You're not expecting bad weather?' She smiled. 'It was just a manner of speaking. As a matter of fact, the weather report is good. The wind is northerly at 24,000 feet.' 'Will we be flying that high? I didn't think these things did that.' 'The engines are supercharged, so it's more economical to fly high. But this cabin isn't pressurized, so we'll have to go on oxygen soon -- as soon as we reach 10,000 feet. You'll find the mask by your side." The last time I had seen the Apache it had been a six-seater but in Alison's absence in London the two rearmost seats had been removed and had been replaced by a big plastic box. I jerked my thumb over my shoulder, and said, 'What's that?' 'An extra fuel tank -- another seventy gallons of spirit. It increases the range to 2,000 miles at the most economical flying speed. I thought we might need it.' The capable Alison Smith thought of everything. I remembered what Maeve had said: Made to a hard pattern, enough to break a girl under the burden of it. I studied Alison; her face was calm as she checked the instruments and then tested the oxygen flow, and there were no lines of stress to substantiate Maeve's remark. Alison glanced sideways and caught me looking at her. 'What's the matter?' 'A cat may look at a king,' I said. 'So a dog may look at a queen. I was just thinking that you're lovely, that's all.' She grinned and jerked her thumb backwards. 'The Blarney Stone is back there, and I know for a fact you never went near it. You must have Irish in your ancestry.' 'And Welsh," I said. 'Hence the Owen. It's the Celt coming out in me.' 'Put on your mask,' she said. Then you'll look as beautiful as me.' It was a long and boring flight. Although the masks had built-in microphones we didn't do much talking, and presently I put down the back of the seat to a reclining position. We flew south at 200 miles an hour-fifteen times faster than Wheeler in Artina -- and I slept. Or, rather, I dozed. I woke up from time to time and found Alison alert, scanning the sky or checking the instruments or making a fine adjustment. I would touch her shoulder and she would turn with a smile in her eyes and then resume her work. After nearly four hours had passed she nudged me and pointed ahead. 'The Spanish coast.' There was a haze of heat below and a crinkled sea, and ahead the white line of surf. 'We won't overfly Spain,' she said. 'Not if we're landing at Gibraltar. It's politically inadvisable. We'll fly down the Portuguese coast.' She took out a map on a board and worked out the new course, handling the protractor with smoothly efficient movements, then switched off the auto-pilot and swung the aircraft around gently. That's Cape Ortegal,' she said. 'When we sight Finisterre I'll alter course again.' 'When did you learn to fly?' I asked. 'When I was sixteen.' 'And to shoot a pistol?' She paused before answering. 'When I was fourteen -- pistol and rifle and shotgun. Why?' "Just wondering.' Mackintosh believed hi teaching them young. I found it hard to imagine a little girl of fourteen looking past the sights of a rifle. I bet she knew the Morse code, too, and all the flag semaphore signals, to say nothing of programming a computer and lighting a fire without matches. 'Were you a Girl Guide?' She shook her head. 'I was too busy.' Too busy to be a Girl Guide! She'd have her head down at her books studying languages when she wasn't practising in the air or banging away on the target range. I wouldn't have put it past Mackintosh to make certain that she was at home in a submarine. What a hell of a life! 'Did you have any friends in those days?' I asked. 'Girls of your own age?' 'Not many.' She twisted in her seat. 'What are you getting at, Owen?' I shrugged. 'Just the idle thoughts of an idle man.' 'Has Maeve O'Sullivan been filling you up with horror stories? Is that it? I might have known." 'She didn't say a word out of place,' I said. 'But you can't help a man thinking.' 'Then you'd do better to keep your thoughts to yourself.' She turned back to the controls and lapsed into silence, and I thought it would be as well if I kept my big mouth shut, too. As we turned the corner and flew up the Strait of Gibraltar Alison took the controls and we began to descend. At 10,000 feet she took off her oxygen mask and I was glad to do the same. And then, in the distance, I saw the Rock for the first time, rising sheer from the blue water. We circled and I saw the artificial harbour and the airstrip jutting into Algeciras Bay like the deck of an aircraft carrier. Apparently, to Alison who was busy on the radio, it was all old hat. We landed from the east and our small aircraft did not need all that enormous runway. We rolled to a halt and then taxied to the airport buildings. I looked at the military aircraft parked all around, and said grimly, This is one airport which will have good security.' How was I going to smuggle myself through this one? 'I have something for you,' said Alison, and took a folder from the map pocket from which she extracted a passport. I flicked it open and saw my own face staring up from the page. It was a diplomatic passport. She said, 'It will get us through customs in a hurry, but it won't save you if you are recognized as Rearden.' 'It's good enough.' Even if I was recognized as Rearden the sight of that diplomatic passport would be enough to give my challenger cause to wonder if he could possibly be right. I said, 'My God, you must have pull.' 'Just enough,' she said calmly. The passport officer smiled as he took the passport, and the civilian with the hard face who was standing next to him ceased to study me and relaxed. We went right through within three minutes of entering the hall. Alison said, 'We're staying at the Rock Hotel; whistle up a taxi, will you?' If Wheeler's trained Albanians made the perfect servants then Alison Smith was a God-given secretary. I hadn't thought for one moment of where we were going to lay our heads that night, but she had. Alec Mackintosh was a lucky man -- but, perhaps, it wasn't luck. He'd trained her, hadn't he? We had adjoining rooms at the Rock Hotel and agreed to meet in the bar after cleaning up. I was down first. Alison Smith was no different in that respect than any other woman, I was glad to observe; the female takes fifty per cent longer to drink than the male. It is only fifty per cent even though it seems twice as long. I had sunk my first cold beer by the time she joined me. I ordered her a dry Martini and another beer for myself. She said, 'What will you do when Wheeler arrives?' 'I have to find if Slade is aboard Artina and that will mean a bit of pirate work.' I grinned. 'I promise not to have a knife in my teeth when I go over the bulwarks." 'And if he is on board?' 'I do my best to bring him off." 'And if you can't?' I shrugged. 'I have orders covering that eventuality.' She nodded coolly, and I wondered briefly if Mackintosh had ever given his own daughter similar instructions. She said, 'Wheeler being what he is and who he is will probably anchor off the Royal Gibraltar Yacht Club. I wouldn't be surprised if he's a member -- he comes here often enough.' 'Where is it?' 'About half a mile from here.' 'We'd better take a look at it.' We finished our drinks and strolled into the sunshine. The yacht basin was full of craft, sail and power, big and small. I stood looking at the boats and then turned. 'There's a convenient terrace over there where they serve cooling drinks. That will be a nice place to wait.' 'I'm just going to make a telephone call,' said Alison, and slipped away. I looked at the yachts and the sea and tried to figure how I could get aboard Artina but without much success because I didn't know where she would be lying. Alison came back. 'Wheeler is expected at eleven tomorrow morning. He radioed through.' 'That's nice,' I said, and turned my face up to the sun. 'What do we do until then?' She said unexpectedly, 'What about a swim?' 'I forgot to pack trunks; I didn't expect a semi-tropical holiday.' 'There are shops,' she said gently. So we went shopping and I bought trunks and a towel, and a pair of German duty-free binoculars, smooth, sleek and powerful. We went across the peninsula and swam at Catalan Bay which was very nice. That night we went night-clubbing, which was even nicer. Mrs Smith seemed to be human and made of the same mortal clay as the rest of us. IV At ten o'clock next morning we were sitting on the terrace overlooking the yacht basin and imbibing something long, cold and not too alcoholic. We both wore sun-glasses, not as much to shade our eyes as to join the anonymous throng just as the film stars do. The binoculars were to hand and all that was lacking was Artina and Wheeler, and, possibly, Slade." We didn't talk much because there wasn't anything to talk about; we couldn't plot and plan in the absence of Artina. And Alison had loosened the strings of her personality the previous night as near as she had ever got to letting her hair down, and possibly she was regretting it. Not that she had let me get too close; I had made the expected pass and she evaded it with practised ease. But now she had returned to her habitual wariness -- we were working and personal relationships didn't matter. I soaked up the sun. It was the thing I had missed in England, especially in prison, and now I let it penetrate to warm my bones. Tune went on and presently Alison picked up the binoculars and focused them on a boat making its way to harbour between the North Mole and the Detached Mole. 'I think this is Artina.' I had a glass to my lips when she said it, and I swallowed the wrong way and came up for air spluttering and choking. Alison looked at me with alarm. 'What's the matter?' 'The impudence of it!' I gasped with laughter. 'Artina is an anagram of Tirana -- and that's the capital of Albania. The bastard's laughing at us all. It just clicked when you said it.' Alison smiled and proffered the binoculars. I looked at the boat coming in with the dying bow wave at her forefoot and compared what I saw with the drawings and photographs of her sister ship. 'She could be Artina,' I said. 'We'll know for sure within the next five minutes." The big motor yacht came closer and I saw the man standing at the stern -- big and with blond hair. 'Artina it is -- and Wheeler.' I swept the glasses over her length. 'No sign of Slade, but that's to be expected. He wouldn't parade himself.' She anchored off-shore and lay quietly in the water and I checked every man who walked on deck, identifying five for certain without Wheeler. There was a crew of seven apart from an unknown number of guests, but the men I saw didn't seem to be guests. Two were on the foredeck by a winch and another was watching the anchor chain. Two more were lowering a boat into the water. I said, 'Count the number of men who come ashore. That might be useful to know.' The two men by the winch moved amidships and unshipped the folding companionway and rigged it at the side of the yacht. One of them went down the steps and tethered the boat. Presently Wheeler appeared with a man in a peaked cap and they both descended the companionway into the waiting boat. The engine started and it took off in a wide curve and then straightened, heading for the yacht club. Alison said, 'Wheeler and the skipper, I think. The man at the wheel is a crewman.' They stepped ashore at the club and then the tender took off again and returned to Artina where the crewman tethered it to the bottom of the companionway and climbed up on board again. Alison nudged me. 'Look!' I turned my head in the direction her finger indicated. A big work boat was ploughing across the water towards Artina. 'So!' 'It's a fueller," she said. 'Artina is taking on diesel fuel and water already. It seems that Wheeler isn't going to waste much time here.' 'Damn!' I said. 'I was hoping he'd stay the night. I'd much rather go aboard in darkness.' 'He doesn't seem to have any guests,' she said. 'And he's in a hurry. From our point of view those are encouraging signs. Slade might very well be on board.' 'And a fat lot of use that is if I can't go aboard to find him. How long do you think refuelling will take?' 'An hour, maybe.' Time enough to hire a boat,' I said. 'Let's go.' We bickered with a Gibraltan longshoreman for the hire of a motor launch and got away with him charging not more than twice the normal rate, and then launched out into the harbour. The fueller and Artina were now close-coupled on the port side, with hoses linking them. Another crew member in a peak cap was supervising -- that could be the engineer. I throttled down as we approached and we drifted by about fifty yards from the starboard side. Someone came into view, looked at us incuriously and then lifted his head to look up at the Rock. He was Chinese. I said, 'That, presumably, is Chang Pi-wu. Wheeler must like Chinese cooking if he takes his Chinese chef to sea. I hope the crew like Chinese food.' 'Maybe they have their own cook.' 'Maybe.' I studied the Chinese covertly. Many occidentals claim that all Chinese look alike. They're wrong -- the Chinese physiognomy is as varied as any other and I knew I'd recognize this man if I saw him again. But I'd had practice; I'd lived in the East. We drifted to the stern of Artina. The ports of the rearmost guest cabin were curtained in broad daylight, and I had a good idea of where Slade was lying low. It was exasperating to be so close and not be able to get at him. Even as I opened the throttle and headed back to the shore I saw a crewman drop into the boat moored at the bottom of Artina's companionway and take off. He was faster than we were and as we handed our launch to the owner I looked out and saw him returning with Wheeler and the skipper. They climbed aboard and the companionway was unshipped and stowed. An hour later I was burning with a sense of futility as Artina moved off and headed out to sea. 'Where the hell is she going now?' I demanded. 'If he's going east into the Mediterranean to the Greek islands he'll refuel at Malta,' said Alison. 'It would be the logical thing to do. Let's go and find out where he's cleared for.' So we did, and Alison was right -- not that it made me feel any better. 'Another four days?' I asked despondently. 'Another four days,'- she agreed. 'But we might have better luck at Valletta.' 'I'd like that yacht to have an accident,' I said. 'Just enough to delay her for one night. You don't happen to have any Limpet mines about you?' 'Sorry.' I stared moodily at the white speck disappearing into the distance. 'That Chinese worries me,' I said. 'He ought to worry Slade even more.' 'Why ever should he?' 'Communist Albania has ceased to hew to the Moscow line Enver Hoxha, the Albanian party boss, has read the Little Red Book and thinks the thoughts of Mao. I wonder if Slade knows he's in the hands of an Albanian?' Alison wore a half-smile. 'I was wondering when you'd get there,' she said. 'I got there a long time ago -- probably before you did. It would be very nice for the Chinese if they could get hold of Slade -- a top British intelligence man and a top Russian intelligence man in the same package. They'd squeeze him dry in a month and they wouldn't care how they did it.' I shrugged. 'And the damned fool thinks he's going home to Moscow.' CHAPTER NINE Limpet mines we didn't have but, in the event, I got hold of something just as good and a lot simpler. That was in the Grand Harbour of Valletta and four days later. In the meantime we paid the bill at the Rock Hotel and flew to Malta where that diplomatic passport got me through the barriers at Luqa Airport just as easily as it had done at Gibraltar. With nearly four days to wait we suddenly found ourselves in holiday mood. The sky was blue, the sun was hot and the sea inviting, and there were cafes with seafood and cool wine for the days, and moderately good restaurants with dance floors for the nights. Alison unbent more than she had ever done. I found there was something I could do better than she, which did my mauled ego a bit of good. We hired scuba equipment and went diving in the clear water of the Mediterranean and I found I could out-perform her at that. Probably it was because I had lived in Australia and South Africa where the ambient waters are warmer and skin-diving is a luxury and not a penance as it is in England. We swam and lazed the days away and danced the nights away for three days and three nights until, on the morrow, Wheeler was due to arrive. It was nearly midnight when I brought up the subject of Mr Smith. Alison took no umbrage this time but, perhaps, it was because I had been plying her with the demon alcohol. Had it been the opposition tipping the bottle she would have been wary but the hand that filled her glass was the hand of a friend and she was taken unaware. Sneaky! She held up the wine glass and smiled at me through liquid amber. 'What do you want to know about him?" 'Is he still around?' She put down the glass and a little wine spilled. 'No,' she said. 'He's not around any more.' She seemed sad. I lit a cigarette and said through the smoke, 'Divorce?' She shook her head violently and her long hair flowed in heavy waves. 'Nothing like that. Give me a cigarette.' I lit her cigarette and she said, 'I married a man called John Smith. There are people called John Smith, you know. Was he an intelligence agent? No. Was he even a policeman? No. He was an accountant and a very nice man -- and Alec was horrified. It seemed I hadn't been designed to marry an accountant.' Her voice was bitter. •Go on,' I said gently. 'But I married him, anyway; and we were very happy.' 'Had you been with your father before then?' 'With Alec? Where else? But I didn't stay on -- I couldn't, could I? John and I lived in a house near Maidenhead -- in the Stockbroker Belt -- and we were very happy. I was happy just being married to John, and happy being a housewife and doing all the things which housewives do, and not having to think about things I didn't want to think about. Alec was disappointed, of course; he'd lost his robot secretary.' I thought of John Smith, the accountant; the nine-to-fiver who had married Alison Mackintosh. I wondered how he had regarded the situation -- if he ever knew about it. I couldn't see Alison cuddling up on his knee, and saying, 'Darling, you're married to a girl who can shoot a man in the kneecap in impossible light, who can drive a car and fly a plane and kill a man with one karate chop. Don't you think we're going to have a delightful .married life? Look how handy it will be when we're bringing up the children.' I said, 'And then?' 'And then -- nothing. Just a stupid, silly motorway accident on the M4.' Her face was still and unsmiling and she spoke through stiff lips. 'I thought I'd die, too; I really did. I loved John, you see.' 'I'm sorry,' I said inadequately. She shrugged and held out her glass for more wine. 'Wanting to die didn't help, of course. I brooded and moped for a while, then I went back to Alec. There wasn't anything else to do." She sipped the wine and looked at me. 'Was there, Owen?' I said very carefully and non-committally, 'Perhaps not.' She gave me a wry look, and said, 'You're pussyfooting, Owen. You don't want to hurt my feelings by saying what you think. Well, that's commendable, I suppose.' 'I'm not one to make casual judgments.' 'Without knowing the facts -- is that it? I'll give you some. Alec and my mother never got on very well. I suppose they were basically incompatible, but he was away so often, and she didn't understand his work.' 'Was he in the same work as now?' 'Always, Owen; always. So there was a legal separation just before I was born, and I was born in Waterford where I lived until I was ten when my mother died.' 'Were you happy in Waterford?' Alison became pensive. 'I don't really know. I can't seem to remember much about those days; there has been so much overlaid on top since.' She stubbed out her cigarette. 'I don't know if anyone would ever call Alec an ideal father. Unorthodox, maybe, but not ideal. I was a bit of a tomboy -never one for frilly frocks and playing with dolls -- and I suppose he took advantage.' I said slowly, 'You're a woman now.' 'I sometimes wonder about that.' She plucked at the tablecloth with tapering fingers. 'So Alec trained me to be -- I didn't know what. It was fun at the time. I learned to ride a horse, to ski on snow and water, to shoot, to fly -- I'm qualified on jets, did you know that?' I shook my head. 'It was damned good fun, every bit of it -- even grinding at the languages and mathematics -- until he took me into the office and I learned what it was all for. Then it wasn't fun any more. 'Did he send you out on field jobs?' 'I've been on three,' she said evenly. 'All very successful -and most of the time I was sick to my stomach. But that wasn't the worst of it. The worst was being in the office and sending others out into the field, and watching what happened to them. I planned too many operations, Owen. I planned yours.' 'I know,' I said. 'Mackintosh .. . Alec told me.' 'I became the one person whom he could trust absolutely,' she said. 'A very valuable consideration in the profession.' I took her hand. 'Alison,' I said. 'What do you really think of Alec?' 'I love him,' she said. 'And I hate him. It's as simple as that.' Her fingers tightened on mine. 'Let's dance, Owen.' There was a hint of desperation in her voice. 'Let's dance.' So we went on to the dimly lit floor and danced to the sort of music that's usually played in the early hours of the morning, She came very close and rested her head on my shoulder so that her lips were by my ear. 'Do you know what I am, Owen?' 'You're a lovely woman, Alison.' 'No, I'm a Venus Fly Trap. Vegetables -- like women-are supposed to be placid; they're not supposed to be equipped with snapped jaws and sharp teeth. Have you ever watched a fly alight on a Venus Fly Trap? The poor beastie thinks it's just another vegetable plant until the jaws snap closed. Most unnatural, don't you think?' I tightened my arm about her. Take it easy.' She danced two more steps and then a deep shudder went through her body. 'Oh, God!' she said. 'Let's go back to the hotel.' I paid the bill and joined her at the door of the restaurant and we walked the two hundred yards to our hotel. We were both silent as we went up in the lift and along the corridor, but she held my hand tightly as we came to the door of her room. She was trembling a little as she held out her key. She made love like a maniac, like a savage, and I had the deep scratches on my back to prove it next morning. It seemed as though all the pent-up frustrations of a warped life were loosed on that night-time bed. But when it was over she was relaxed and calm, and we talked for a long time -- maybe two hours. What we talked about I'll never remember; just inconsequentialities too meaningless to take note of -- she had had time for few trivialities in her serious life. The second time was better and she was all woman and, when it was over, she fell asleep. I had sense enough to go to my own room before she woke; I thought she would not be too pleased with herself in the sober light of day. II Wheeler was due that morning and we had plans to make. When she came down to breakfast I was on my first cup of coffee and rose from the table to greet her. She was a little self-conscious as she came up and tended to avoid my eye. I sat down, and said, 'What do we use instead of a limpet?' When I leaned against the back of the chair I felt the pain as the pressure impinged on the scratches she had inflicted. Hastily I leaned forward again and took a piece of toast. I looked up and saw she had snapped back into professionalism as she took in what I said; personal relationships were one thing and the job was quite another. 'I'll check with the Port Captain when Artina is due.' 'We don't want to have a repetition of Gibraltar,' I said. 'One jump from here and Wheeler and Slade will be in Albania -- home and dry. What do we do if Artina arrives in daylight and leaves in daylight?' 'I don't know,' she said. 'There's one thing certain,' I said. 'I can't invade her in the middle of the Grand Harbour in daylight and take Slade off. So what remains?' I answered the question myself. 'We have to make sure she stays all night.' 'But how?' 'I've thought of a way. We'll go shopping after breakfast. Can I butter some toast for you?' So the pair of us ate a hearty breakfast and sallied forth into the hot streets of Valletta, a heat seemingly intensified by the warm golden limestone of the buildings. The Port Captain expected Artina at midday and that was sad news. Sadder still was the information that the fuelling ship had been booked in advance and was to go alongside as soon as Artina anchored. We went away, and I said, That does it. Let's do my bit of shopping.' We found a ship's chandlery and went inside to find all the usual expensive bits and pieces that go towards the upkeep of a yacht. I found what I was looking for -- some light, tough nylon line with a high breaking strain. I bought two hundred feet of it and had it coiled and parcelled. Alison said, 'I suppose you know what you're doing.' 'It was the scuba gear we've been using that gave me the idea.' I pointed towards the harbour. 'How would you get to the middle of there without being seen?' She nodded. 'Underwater. That's all very well, but doesn't help you to get aboard.' 'It will -- eventually. You're included in this operation. Come and gel the gear. We want to be back on the spot when Artina arrives.' We went to the place we had hired the scuba gear and I made absolutely certain we were issued with full bottles. Then, after a brief test in the swimming pool of the hotel, we went back to the harbour. At the swimming pool Alison suddenly drew in her breath and I turned to find that she was blushing deeply. She was looking at my back. I chuckled. "They ought to issue a bottle of Dettol with you,' I said. 'You're quite a woman.' Unaccountably she became angry. 'Stannard, you're a ... a ... 'Buck up,' I said sharply. 'We have a job to do.' That brought her back fast and the awkward moment was over. We went down to the harbour and settled down to wait for Artina. Alison said, 'What's the plan?' 'If you've read my record you'll know I was in Indonesia," I said. 'One of the diciest moments I ever had out there was when I was in a small launch being chased by a fast patrol boat which was popping off with a 20mm cannon. There was a mangrove swamp nearby so I nipped in there for shelter -- that was a big mistake. There was too much seaweed and it got wrapped around the propeller shaft and the launch came to a dead stop. That seaweed was nearly the end of me.' 'What happened then?' 'That doesn't matter.' I nodded towards the harbour. 'Artina is a lot bigger than the launch I had, but this nylon line is a hell of a lot stronger than strands of seaweed. When she comes in we're going to swim out and wrap the lot around both propeller shafts. It might immobilize her and it might not, but I'm betting it will. And the beauty of it is that even when they find it there'll be no suggestion of foul play. It's something that could happen to any boat. Anyway, they'll have a devil of a job freeing it once the engines have tightened it up, and I'm hoping it will take all night.' 'It could work,' agreed Alison, and then continued evenly, •I'll do something for those scratches. This water is dirty and they might become infected.' I looked at her and she met my eye without a tremor. 'Good enough,' I said, and took great pains not to laugh. She went away briefly and returned with a bottle of some -- thing -- or -- other which she applied to my back. Then we sat and waited patiently for Artina to show up. It was a long hot day. Artina was late and I began to wonder if she hadn't by-passed Malta and headed straight for Albania. She came in at two-thirty and dropped anchor well off-shore Again she lowered a boat but this time only the skipper came ashore. Wheeler wasn't to be seen. I stubbed out my cigarette. 'This is it,' I said, and tightened the straps of the scuba gear. 'Can you swim as far as that?' Alison splashed water into her mask. 'Easily.' 'Just stick dose to me.' I pointed. 'We're not going to swim right for it. We'll pass by about twenty yards from the stern and then come in from the other side. The fueller might be there -- I hope it is -- so keep your head down.' I had the skein of nylon rope strapped to my thigh; I tested to see if it was secure and then slipped into the water. I doubt if skin-divers are encouraged in the Grand Harbour, not that they would want to make a habit of swimming there -- the water is none too clean and decapitation by the churning propellers of passing traffic a constant hazard. I had chosen a quiet spot where we could go into the water unobserved. We went deep right from the start, going down to about twenty-five feet before heading on course. I knew my speed and I had estimated the distance so I kept a steady count of the seconds and minutes. The problem in this sort of exercise was to keep swimming in a straight line. Occasionally I looked back and saw Alison swimming strongly in echelon, behind and to the left. When I estimated we had arrived at the point I had chosen I waved Alison to a halt and we swam lazily in circles while I looked about. There was an oncoming rumble and a shadow overhead as a vessel passed, her propellers flailing the water and causing eddies which jerked us about. The propellers stopped and presently there was an audible clang transmitted through the water. That would be the fueller coupling to Artina. I waved to Alison and we went on in the new direction. As we went on towards the two boats I hoped that no one was looking over the side to see the line of bubbles breaking on the surface. But we were coming in at the side of the fueller and all the action would be where they were coupling up the fuel and water lines. If anyone had time to look over the side then that fueller was over-manned. The light diminished as we swam underneath the two boats and I paused again before heading aft and rising to trail my fingers along Artina's keel. We came to the stern and I stopped with my left hand on one blade of the port phosphor-bronze propeller, hoping that no damned fool in the engine room would punch the wrong button and start the engine. If those three blades started to move I'd be chopped into bloody mincemeat. Alison swam up on the starboard side as I fumbled with the strap holding the rope to my thigh. I got it free and began to uncoil it with care. The propeller was about four feet in diameter, and the shaft was supported by struts before it entered the stern gland in he hull. I slipped the end of the rope in between the strut and the hull and coiled it around the shaft and then passed a loop around the shaft in between the propeller and the strut. When I tugged gently it held firm, so that was a start. That rope was the damnedest stuff. At times it was like wrestling with a sea serpent -- the coils floated around in the water dangerously, threatening to strangle us or bind our legs, and Alison and I must have closely resembled that remarkable piece of antique statuary, the Laocoon. But we finally did it. We entangled those two propellers in such a cat's cradle that when the engines started and the ropes began to tighten all hell would break loose. Most probably everything would grind to a sudden halt, but a shaft could bend and, at worst, one of the engines might slam a piston through the cylinder casing. It was a good job. We slipped away and swam back to shore, emerging from the water quite a distance from where we had gone in. My sense of direction had become warped, but then it always does underwater. An unshaven character leaning on the rail of a tramp steamer looked at us with some astonishment as we climbed up to the quay, but I ignored him and Alison and I walked away, our back packs bumping heavily. We went back to our original position and I lit a cigarette and looked across at Artina. The fueller had finished and was just casting off, and the skipper was returning in the tender. It seemed as though they intended a faster turnaround than Gibraltar. I wondered where the skipper had cleared for -- it wouldn't be Durazzo, the port for Tirana, although I'd be willing to bet that was where he intended to go. The skipper climbed aboard and the companionway was unshipped immediately. There was a lot of movement on deck and even as the tender was hoisted clear of the water some one was at the winch on the foredeck ready to lift anchor. Alison said, 'They're very much in a hurry.' 'It seems so.' 'I wonder why.' 'I don't know -- but I expect they'll be very annoyed within the next few minutes.' The anchor came up and Artina moved off slowly. I hadn't expected her to move at all and it cam& as a shock. Apparently 700 horse-power was more than a match for a few coils of nylon line. Alison drew in her breath. 'It isn't working!' Artina turned and headed for the open sea, picking up speed so that a bow wave showed white. I lowered the binoculars, and said, 'It was a good try.' I felt gloomy. Albania was only 450 miles away and Artina could be there in less than two days. The only way I could think of stopping her was by a kamekazi attack in the Apache. Alison was still watching through her monocular. 'Wait!' she said urgently. 'Look now!' Artina had swerved suddenly and unnaturally as though someone had spun the wheel fast, and she was now heading straight for the shore. She slowed and water boiled at her stern as the engines were put into reverse. Then the bubble of white water stopped and she drifted helplessly, right into the path of a big Italian cruise liner which was leaving harbour. There was a deep booom as the liner peremptorily demanded right of way but Artina did not react. The liner altered course fractionally at the last moment and her sheer side might have scraped Artina's paintwork. From the bridge of the liner an officer in whites was looking down and I guessed that a string of choice Italian imprecations was being directed down at the hapless skipper of Artina. The liner went on her way and Artina bobbed inertly in the waves raised by her wake. Presently a little tug put out and went to her aid and she was towed back to where she had come from and dropped anchor again. I grinned at Alison. 'For a moment there I thought. . . . Well, it's done and she'll be staying the night. When they find out what's happened they'll be cursing the idiot who carelessly dropped a line in the water.' 'There's no chance they'll guess it was done deliberately?' 'I shouldn't think so.' I looked over the water at Artina. The skipper was at the stern looking down. 'They'll soon find out what it is, and they'll send down a diver to cut it free. It'll take a hell of a lot longer for him to free it than it did for us to tangle it -- those engines will have tightened the tangle considerably.' I laughed. 'It'll be like trying to unscramble an omelette.' Alison picked up her gear. 'And what now?' 'Now we wait for nightfall. I'm going to board her.' Ill We went into Marsamxett Harbour from Ta'Xbiex to where Artina was anchored in Lazzaretto Creek. A tug had moved her during the afternoon and put her with the rest of the yachts. We went out in a fibreglass object that resembled a bathtub more than a boat, but Alison seemed to find no difficulty in handling it and she used the oars as though she'd been trained as stroke for Oxford. More of Mackintosh's training coming to the surface. It was a moonless night but the sky was clear so that it was not absolutely pitch-black. Ahead loomed Manoel Island and beyond a light flashed at Dragutt Point. To our left Valletta rose, cliff like and impregnable, festooned with lights. There were no lights on Artina, though, apart from the obligatory riding lights; since it was 2.30 a.m. this was not surprising. I hoped everyone on board was in the habit of sleeping soundly. Alison stopped sculling as we approached and we drifted silently to Artina's stern. The rope ladder which the diver had been using was not there but I hadn't been counting on it even though it was nine feet from the water to the stern rail. What I wanted was a grapnel, but those are hard to come by at a moment's notice, so I had improvised. A shark hook is shaped like a grapnel, being three big fish-hooks welded together. I had wrapped it in many layers of insulating tape, not only to prevent myself from being nastily hooked but also for the sake of silence. I looked up and saw the ensign-staff silhouetted against the sky and used that to mark the position of the rail. Holding a coil of the rope I threw up my grapnel so it went over the rail. There was a soft thud as it landed on the deck and, as I drew the line back, I hoped it would hold. It did; it caught on the rail and a steady pull told me it would be not unreasonable to climb the rope. I bent down and whispered, 'Well, this is it. I may come back with Slade or I may not. I may come over the side in a bloody hurry so stick around to fish me out of the drink.' I paused. "If I don't come back then you're on your own and the best of British luck to you.' I swarmed up the rope and managed to hook my arm round the ensign-staff, taking the strain off the shark hook. The pistol thrust into the waist of my trousers didn't help much; as I twisted like a contortionist to get a foot on deck the muzzle dug into my groin agonizingly and I was thankful that I'd made sure there wasn't a bullet in front of the firing pin. I made it at last and in silence. At least nobody took a shot at me as I looked back at the water. Alison was nowhere to be seen and there was just a suspicious looking ripple where no ripple should have been. I stayed there quietly for a moment and strained my ears listening to the loud silence. If there was a man on watch he was being quiet in his watching. I hazarded a guess that anyone on watch would stay up forward, perhaps in the wheelhouse or comfortably in the dining saloon. To get to the stern cabins I didn't have to go forward; the entrance to the cabin deck was by a staircase in the deck lounge, and the door to the lounge was just in front of me if the ship plans I had studied were correct. I took out a pen-light and risked a flash. It was lucky I did so because the deck immediately in front of me was cluttered with diver's gear -1 could have made a Godawful clatter if 1 hadn't seen that. I managed to navigate the booby traps safely until I got to the deck lounge door and was thankful to find it unlocked; which was just as expected because who locks doors on a ship? The lounge was in darkness but I saw light gleaming through a glass-panelled door on the starboard side. There was just enough light spilling through to illumine the hazards of furniture so I stepped over to look through the door and I froze as I saw movement at the end of a long passage. A man came out of the dining saloon and turned into the galley and out of sight. I opened the door gently and listened; there was the slam of something heavy followed by the clink of crockery. The man on watch was enlivening the night hours by raiding the refrigerator, which suited me very well. I crossed the lounge again and went below to the cabin deck. There were three cabins down there, all for guests. Wheeler's master cabin was 'midships, the other side of the engine room, so I didn't have to worry about him. The problem that faced me was if he had any guests, apart from Slade, occupying any of the three guest cabins. The cabin that had been curtained in broad daylight at Gibraltar was the big stern cabin, and that was my first objective. This time the door was locked, and this raised my hopes because Slade would certainly be kept under lock and key. I inspected the lock with a guarded flash of the light. It wasn't much of a problem; no one installs Chubb triple-throw locks on a cabin door and I could have opened one of those if I had to -- it would have taken longer, that's all. As it was I was inside the cabin inside two minutes and with the door locked again behind me. I heard the heavy breathing of a sleeping man and flicked my light towards the port side, hoping to God it was Slade. If it wasn't I was well and truly up that gum tree I had shown Mackintosh. I needn't have worried because it was Slade all right and I cheered internally at the sight of that heavy face with the slightly yellowish skin. I took the gun from my waist and pushed a bullet up the spout. At the metallic sound Slade stirred and moaned slightly in his sleep. I stepped forward and, keeping the light on him, I pressed gently with my finger at the corner of his jaw just below the ear. It's the best way to awaken a man quietly. He moaned again and his eyelids flickered open, and he screwed up his eyes at the sudden flood of light. I moved the pen-light so that it illumined the gun I held. 'If you shout it'll be the last sound you make on earth,' I said quietly. He shuddered violently and his adam's apple bobbed convulsively as he swallowed. At last he managed to whisper, 'Who the hell are you?' 'Your old pal, Rearden,' I said. 'I've come to take you home.' It took some time to sink in, and then he said, 'You're mad.' 'Probably,' I admitted. 'Anyone who wants to save your life must be mad.' He was getting over the shock. The blood was returning to his face and the self-possession to his soul -- if he had one. 'How did you get here?' he demanded. I let the light wander to the nearest port. It wasn't curtained, after all; plates of sheet metal had been roughly welded over the oval scuttles so that it was absolutely impossible for Slade to see outside -- more security expertise on the part of the Scarperers. I grinned at Slade, and asked softly, 'Where is here?' 'Why -- on board this ship,' he said, but his voice was uncertain. 'I've been following you.' I watched with interest as his eyes shifted sideways to look at a bell-push by the side of his berth, and I hefted the gun so that it came into prominence again. 'I wouldn't,' I warned. 'Not if you value your health.' 'Who are you?' he whispered. 'I suppose you could say that I'm in the same business as yourself, but in the other corner. I'm in counter-espionage.' The breath came from him in a long, wavering sigh. 'The executioner,' he said flatly. He nodded towards the gun. 'You won't get away with it. You have no silencer. Kill me with that thing and you're dead, too.' 'I'm expendable,' I said lightly,.and hoped I wouldn't have to make that statement stick. 'Use your brains, Slade. I could have slid into this cabin and cut your throat in your sleep. It would have been messy, but silent. A better way would have been to stick a steel knitting needle through the nape of your neck and into the medulla oblongata -- there's not much blood. The fact that we're talking now means I want to take you out alive.' He frowned slightly and I could almost see the wheels spinning as he thought it out. I said, 'But don't have any misconceptions. I either take you out alive or you stay here dead. It's your choice.' He had recovered enough to smile slightly. 'You're taking a big chance. You can't keep me under the gun all the time. I could win yet.' 'You won't want to,' I said. 'Not when you've heard what I have to say. My guess is that you were taken from that room we shared, given a shot of dope, and woke up in this cabin where you've been ever since. Where do you think you are?' That set the wheels going round again, but to no effect. At last he said, 'There's been no temperature change, so I couldn't have been taken very much north or south.' 'This hooker has a very efficient air-conditioning plant,' I said. 'You wouldn't know the difference. Do you like Chinese food?' The switch confused him. 'What the hell! I can take it or leave it.' 'Have you had any lately?' He was bemused. 'Why, yes -- only yesterday I. ..' I cut in. 'The ship has a Chinese cook. Do you know whose ship it is?' He shook his head in silence, and I said, 'It belongs to a man called Wheeler, a British MP. I take it you haven't seen him.' 'No, I haven't,' said Slade. 'I'd have recognized him. I met him a couple of times in ... in the old days. What the devil is all this about?' 'Do you still think you are going to Moscow?' 'I see no reason to doubt it,' he said stiffly. 'Wheeler was born an Albanian,' I said. 'And his Chinese cook does more than rustle up sweet and sour pork. They're not your brand of communist, Slade. Right now you're in Malta and the next scheduled stop is Durazzo in Albania; from there I guess you'll be shipped by cargo plane straight to Peking. You'd better acquire a real taste for Chinese cooking -- always assuming they give you any food at all.' He stared at me. 'You're crazy.' i 'What's so crazy about the Chinese wanting to get hold of you? What you have locked up inside that skull of yours would interest them very much -- the secrets of two top intelligence services. And they'd get it out of you, Slade -even if they had to do it by acupuncture. The Chinese invented the term "brainwashing".' 'But Wheeler?' 'What's so odd about Wheeler? You got away with it for over a quarter of a century -- why shouldn't someone else be as smart as you? Or smarter? Wheeler hasn't been caught -yet.' He fell silent and I let him think it out. Yet I hadn't much time to waste so I prodded him again. 'It seems to me that your choice is simple. You come with me willingly or I kill you right now. I think I'd be doing you a favour if I killed you because I'd hate to see you after you'd been in the hands of the Chinese for a month. I think you'd better come with me and retire to a nice, safe, top-security wing in one of Her Majesty's nicks. At least you won't be having your brains pulled out through your ears.' He shook his head stubbornly. 'I don't know if I believe you.' 'For God's sake! If Wheeler wanted you to go to Moscow then why didn't he transfer you to one of those ubiquitous Russian trawlers? In the Atlantic they're as thick as fleas on a mangy dog. Why bring you to the Mediterranean?' Slade looked at me cunningly. 'I've only your word for that, too.' I sighed, and lifted the gun. 'You don't have much of a choice, do you?' I was getting mad at him. 'If ever I saw a man looking a gift horse in the mouth it's you. I haven't followed you from Ireland to .. .' He cut in. 'Ireland?' That's where we were held together." 'Lynch is Irish,' he said thoughtfully. 'Seaman Lynch? He works for Wheeler -- he's an IRA thug with a dislike of the English.' 'He looks after me here,' said Slade. 'He's my guard.' He looked up and I saw that the strain of uncertainty was beginning to tell. 'Where are we now -- exactly?' 'Anchored in Marsamxett Harbour.' He made up his mind. 'All right, but if I get on deck and I don't recognize it then you might be in big trouble. You'll be wanting silence and I might take my chances on the gun in the darkness. Remember that.' 'How long is it since you've been in Malta?' 'Five years.' I smiled humourlessly, 'Then I hope to God you have a good memory.' Slade threw back the bedclothes and then paused, looking at me questioningly. There had been a creak which was not one of the usual shipboard noises. I listened and it came again. Slade whipped the covers back over his chest. 'Someone's coming,' he whispered. I held up the gun before his eyes. 'Remember this!-' I backed off and opened the door of the lavatory and even as I did so I heard a key snap metallically at the cabin door. I closed the lavatory door gently and used my pen-light in a quick flash to see what I'd got into. As usual in lavatories there was no back door, just the usual paraphernalia of toilet, wash basin, medicine cabinet and shower. The shower was screened off by a semi-transparent plastic curtain. I switched off the light, held my breath, and listened. Lynch's voice was unmistakable. 'I heard voices -- who the devil were you talking to?' This was the crunch. If Slade was going to give me away he'd do it now, so I listened with care to what was arguably the most important conversation I was ever likely to hear. 'I must have been talking in my sleep,' said Slade, and my heartbeat slowed down to a mere gallop. 'I've been having bad dreams and I've got the makings of a headache.' 'Ach, it's no wonder, and you being cooped up in here all this while,' said Lynch. 'But rest easy, you'll soon be home.' 'Why have we been stopped all this time?' 'Something's gone wrong with the propellers,' said Lynch. 'But I didn't get the exact hang of it.' 'Where are we?' 'Now you know better than to ask that, Mr Slade. That's top secret.' 'Well, when will we be moving again and when do I get my feet on dry land?' 'As to the first,' said Lynch, 'maybe it'll be tomorrow. As to the last, I couldn't rightly tell you. I'm not one of the bosses, you know; they don't tell me everything.' He paused. 'But you're looking so white and peaky, Mr Slade. Could I get you the aspirin?' The hairs on the nape of my neck stood up and did a fandango as Slade answered. 'No, don't worry; I'll be all right.' It was borne heavily upon me that although I could hear Slade's voice I couldn't see what he was doing with his hands. He might be saying one thing and pointing out to Lynch that he had an unwanted visitor. Lynch said solicitously, 'Ach, it's no trouble at all. We promise to get you home in good condition; that's part of the deal. I'll get the aspirin for you.' I ducked into the shower stall and drew the plastic curtain just as Lynch opened the lavatory door. He switched on the light and I saw his outline quite clearly through the curtain as he stepped forward to open the medicine cabinet. I had the gun trained on him all the time and I thought that I could dispose of him and Slade, too, if it came to the push. Getting out would be another matter. I heard the rattle of pills in a bottle and then the rush of water as a tap was turned on. It was a relief to know that Lynch actually was getting aspirin and that Slade had not sold me out. Lynch filled the glass and turned to leave -- he was so close that I could have touched him by only half-extending my arm and only the curtain was between us. Fortunately he was back-lit and I wasn't or he would have seen me had he glanced my way. He went out, switching off the light and closing the door. 'Here, you are,' he said. 'This should clear up your headache.' Thanks,' said Slade, and I heard the clink of the glass. 'Man, but you're sweating,' said Lynch. 'Are you sure it's not the fever you've got?' 'I'll be all right,' said Slade. 'You can leave the light on. I think I'll read for a while.' 'Surely,' said Lynch. 'Have a quiet night, mind.' I heard the cabin door open and close, and then the snap of the lock as the key was turned. I was doing a fair amount of sweating myself as I waited for the trembling of my hands to stop. My stomach felt all churned up as the adrenalin sped on its appointed rounds gingering up my muscle tone and twanging my nerves like harp strings. At last I stepped out of the shower and gently opened the lavatory door. Whether his sweating was due to a fright or fever Slade had used his wits when he had asked Lynch to leave on the main cabin light. It meant that I could see at a glance if the place was safe. Slade certainly didn't want to be shot by accident. He lay in bed with a book held between slack fingers and his face was the yellow colour of old newsprint. 'Why didn't he see you?' he whispered. I flapped a hand at him to keep him quiet and went to the door, still keeping the gun pointing in his general direction. I heard nothing so presently I turned and strode over to Slade. 'Where does Lynch live? Do you know?' He shook his head and tugged at my sleeve. 'How the hell did he miss you?' He found it difficult to believe that in a narrow space the size of two telephone booths one man could miss seeing another. I found it hard to believe myself. 'I was taking a shower,' I said. 'How was Lynch dressed?' 'Dressing-gown.' That meant he hadn't come far and he probably had been allocated one of the cabins next door to be conveniently close to his charge. 'Have you any clothes?' Slade nodded. 'All right; get dressed -- quietly." I watched Slade carefully while he dressed, principally to make sure he didn't slip a blunt instrument into his pocket. When he had finished I said, 'Now get back into bed.' He was about to expostulate but I shut him up fast with a jab of the gun. 'I want to give Lynch time to get back to sleep.' Slade got back into bed and I retreated into the lavatory, leaving the door ajar. Slade had pulled the sheet up high and was lying on his side apparently reading his book. Everything would appear normal if Lynch took it into his head to come back. I gave him half an hour by my watch and during that time heard nothing out of the ordinary. I stepped into the cabin and signalled Slade to rise. While he was disentangling himself from the bedclothes -- it's really surprising how difficult it is to get out of bed when fully dressed because the sheet wraps itself round one's shoes -- I jimmied the lock on the door. I had to turn my back on Slade at this point but it couldn't be helped. I turned and found him walking towards me slowly. When he approached he put his mouth to my ear and whispered, "When 1 get on deck I'd better see Valletta.' I nodded my head impatiently, switched off the light, and opened the door on to the darkness of the passage. The staircase was immediately to the left and I prodded Slade up it with the gun in his back, holding his right arm. I stopped him before we got to the top and cautiously surveyed the deck lounge. All was quiet so I urged him on his way and we went out on to the after deck. I shone the light to give Slade some idea of the obstacle race he must run to get the twenty feet to the stern rail, and off we went again. Half-way across the afterdeck he stopped and looked around. 'You are right,' he whispered. 'It is Valletta.' 'Quit chattering.' I was edgy as I always am on the last lap. Once ashore I could turn Slade in to the Maltese Constabulary and the job was done, apart from wrapping up Wheeler and his mob, but we still had to get ashore. We got as far as the stern rail and no further. I groped for the grapnel alongside the ensign-staff and couldn't find it. Then shockingly a blaze of light split the darkness as the beam of a powerful lamp shone vertically down on us from the boat deck above, and a voice said, 'That's far enough.' I dug my elbow into Slade's ribs. 'Jump!' I yelled, but neither of us was quick enough. There was a rapid tattoo of feet on the deck as a small army of men rushed us and we were both grabbed and held. There wasn't a damned thing I could do -- two of the three men who tackled me were trying to tear my arms off so they could use them as clubs to beat me over the head, and the other was using my stomach as a bass drum and his fists weren't padded as drumsticks are. As I sagged and gasped for breath I was vaguely aware of Slade being dragged forward, hauled by two seamen with his feet trailing along the deck. Someone shouted and I was also hustled forward and thrust headlong through the doorway of the deck lounge. A burly black-bearded man whom I recognized as the skipper issued orders in a language whose flavour I couldn't catch. I was unceremoniously dropped to the deck and my assailants began to draw the curtains to the windows. Before the last of them was drawn I saw a searchlight from the bridge forward begin to search the water around Artina and I hoped Alison had got clear. Someone handed my pistol to the skipper; he looked at it with interest, made sure it was cocked, and pointed it at me. 'Who are you?' His English was accented, but with what I didn't know. I pushed myself up with wobbly arms. 'Does it matter?' I asked wearily. The skipper swung his eyes to Slade who sagged against a chair, and then beyond him to the staircase which led below. 'Ah, Lynch!' he said, rumbling like a volcano about to explode. 'What kind of a guard are you?" I turned my head. Lynch was looking at Slade with shocked amazement. 'How did he get here? I was with him not half an hour ago, and I made sure the door was locked.' 'The door was locked,' mimicked the skipper. 'Te keni kujdes; how could the door be locked?' He pointed to me. 'And this man -- he brought Slade out of the cabin.' Lynch looked at me. 'By God, it's Rearden. But he couldn't have been in the cabin,' he said stubbornly. 'I'd have seen him.' 'I was in the shower, standing right next to you, you silly bastard.' I turned to the skipper. 'He nearly got himself killed Not much of a guard, is he?' Lynch made for me with blood in his eye, but the skipper got to me first, warding off Lynch with an arm like an iron bar. He dragged my head up by my hair and stuck the gun in my face. 'So you are Rearden,' he said, caressing my cheek with the barrel. 'We're very interested in you, Rearden.' A cool voice said, 'He's not Rearden, of course.' The skipper swung away and I saw the Chinese, Chang Pi-wu, who looked at me expressionlessly. Next to him stood a tall man with ash-blond hair, who, at that moment, was fitting a cigarette into a long holder. He dipped his hand into the pocket of his elegant dressing-gown, produced a lighter and flicked it into flame. 'Stannard is the name, I believe,' said Wheeler. 'Owen Stannard.' He lit his cigarette. 'So thoughtful of you to join us, Mr Stannard. It saves me the trouble of looking for you.' CHAPTER TEN 'How did you get hold of him?' Wheeler asked the skipper. 'Mehmet found a hook on the stern rail and a rope leading to the water. He removed it and told me. I set up a watch.' Wheeler nodded. 'You didn't know whether someone was going to come on board or leave,' he commented. The skipper waved his hand at me and Slade. 'We caught these two leaving. This idiot . . .' He stabbed his finger at Lynch. ... let them go.' Wheeler regarded Lynch frostily. 'I'll talk to you later. Now get below.' Lynch looked as though he was about to expostulate but he caught the cold glare from Wheeler's eye and promptly turned on his heel and went away, giving me a look of dislike as he went. I was beginning to improve physically; my shoulders no longer felt totally dislocated and although my belly was one massive ache I could now breathe more or less normally. Wheeler said, 'Well, Mr Stannard; how did you expect to take Slade ashore? By boat? Where is it?' 'I swam out,' I said. 'And you were going to swim back,' he said incredulously. With Slade a cripple? I don't believe you.' He swung around to the skipper. 'Make a search for the boat.' The skipper didn't move. 'It's being done.' Wheeler nodded approvingly and crossed to Slade who had now sagged into a chair. 'My dear chap,' he said anxiously. 'What possessed you to leave with this man? Do you know who he is? If you had left the ship he would have put you in the hands of the police. And you know what that would mean -- forty years in a British gaol. What sort of tale could he have told you?' Slade wearily lifted up his head. 'I know you,' he said, 'We've met before.' 'Yes -- in happier -circumstances,' said Wheeler. 'Once at an EFTA conference and again, if my memory is correct, at a dinner given by some industrial organization or other- I forget which.' 'Your name is Wheeler; you're a member of Parliament. Why should you want to help me?' 'A good question,' I said. 'Answer him, Wheeler. Tell Slade why you are willing to commit treason.' I rubbed my sore stomach tentatively. 'As far as I know treason still carries the death penalty -- it isn't covered by the Act of Parliament which abolished hanging for murder.' I grinned at him. 'But who should know that better than you?' Wheeler didn't rile easily. He smiled, and said coolly, 'I am helping you because I don't recognize British law; because, like you, I'm fighting for a better world.' He put his hand on Slade's shoulder. 'Because, also like you, I'm a good communist.' 'Then why didn't I know about you?' asked Slade. 'I should have known.' 'Why should you have known? You didn't need to know, and therefore you weren't told. It was safer that way.' Wheeler smiled. 'You might have been important, Slade, but you were never as important as I am.' I corrected him. 'As important as you were. You're finished, Wheeler.' Apart from gently shaking his head he ignored me. With his eyes fixed on Slade. he said, 'What nonsense has Stannard been filling you up with? You're a fool if you believe the enemy.' Slade said, 'What are we doing here in Malta?" Wheeler straightened and laughed. 'So that's the maggot he's put in your mind. I'm taking you home, of course. I spend my annual holiday in the Mediterranean; it would have looked damned suspicious if I'd gone to the Baltic this year. Even for you I wouldn't risk that." I said to Slade. 'Ask him if he's read any good thoughts lately -- from the Little Red Book.' 'You're an Albanian,' said Slade flatly. 'I don't trust you.' 'So that's it,' said Wheeler softly. 'Does it make any difference?' Slade nodded towards the silent Chinese who stood behind Wheeler. 'He does.' I chipped in again. 'He makes a hell of a difference. Wheeler says he's taking you home. Home is where the heart is, and his heart is in Peking.' That got to Wheeler. He said venomously, 'I think I'll have to shut you up -- permanently.' He relaxed again and struck his hands lightly together. 'Not that it makes much difference whether you know or not, Slade. It made things easier as long as you believed you were going to Moscow -- a willing prisoner is easier to handle. But we've got you and you'll still get to your destination intact.' From the look in Slade's eyes I doubted it. It wouldn't be beyond his capabilities to commit suicide somewhere along the way, and death would be far preferable to the information-extracting process awaiting him in China. Besides, under the circumstances it was his duty to commit suicide. Any .man in his position knew that when it came to this sort of crunch he was expendable. But Wheeler was ahead of us on that one. 'Your confinement will be more rigorous, of course. We can't have you hanging yourself by your braces.' 'Do I get to go along?' I asked. Wheeler looked at me reflectively. 'You?' He shook his. head. 'I don't think my friends would be interested in you. You've been out of the game too long to know much about recent developments in British Intelligence. A South African sleeper is of no consequence.' He half turned his head and said over his shoulder. 'What do you think?' The Chinese spoke for the first time. 'He is of no use, but he is dangerous because of what he knows,' he said dispassionately. 'Kill him.' I said something indescribably rude in Mandarin, and he opened his mouth in surprise. Orientals aren't all that inscrutable. 'Yes, Stannard; we must kill you. But how to do it?' Wheeler asked himself pensively. 'I have it. We discover a stowaway on board -- an armed stowaway. There is a scuffle on his discovery and a shot is fired -- the stowaway is killed with his own gun. We notify the police here and he turns out to be none other than Rearden, the British gaol-breaker.' He smiled. 'That would do a lot for my image; think of the headlines in the British press. What do you think of it?' 'Not much,' I said. 'If you turn me in to the police they'll want to know about Slade, too. He's a hell of a sight more important than I am. They'll want to search this ship, and they'll take it apart .You wouldn't want them to do that with Slade still aboard.' Wheeler nodded. True. I'm afraid I must forgo that charming theatricality; my image must do without it. Besides, before you die there are some questions to be answered, such as what accomplices you have. That reminds me.' He turned to the skipper. 'What result of the search for his boat?' 'I'll find out,' said the skipper, and left the lounge. I sighed. 'I came aboard alone.' Wheeler nodded. 'You were alone at the beginning -1 know that. But you might have picked up someone along the way. You realize that I must be certain.' He indicated the Chinese. 'My friend has ways of making sure, but you won't want to hear about that.' I looked about the lounge casually. The departure of the skipper had reduced the odds against me, but not by much. There were two seamen behind me, one covering me with my own gun, and Wheeler and the Chinese were hi front. The Chinese held his hand in his pocket and I was certain he also had a gun. I looked at Slade and wondered if he'd join me if it came to putting up a fight. I said, 'I'd like to know how you got on to Mackintosh and me so fast. You seem to know all about me -- including my South African history.' Wheeler chuckled. 'You British are a nation of amateurs -and that goes for your intelligence services. I was told about you, of course.' I was genuinely bewildered. 'Who could have told you? There was only Mackintosh and me.' 'Precisely. And you didn't tell me.' My jaw dropped and I stared at Wheeler incredulously. 'Mackintosh?' 'Who else could -- as you point out. He was a little drunk and very indiscreet. I had no difficulty in flattering the fool. Towards the end he realized he was saying too much and shut up, but I got enough out of him.' He laughed. 'We were having a discussion on prison reform at the time.' I was bewildered. Wheeler's description didn't fit the Mackintosh I knew, who was not a fool and certainly not susceptible to flattery. What in hell had Mackintosh been doing to blow things like that? 'He's dead, of course,' said Wheeler casually. 'I saw to that immediately as soon as I was certain we had you safe in Ire-land. But we didn't have you safe, did we? Those IRA clowns are also amateurs. Never mind; here you are and all is well, after all.' I felt chilled to my bones. Whether Mackintosh was dead or not -- and that was a moot point because I had told Alison to spread the word of his impending demise -1 felt betrayed and utterly alone. Like a man who treads on a stair that isn't there. I felt jolted. I had to believe Wheeler because nothing else made sense, and yet Mackintosh's betrayal didn't make sense, either. Unless . . . The skipper returned, breaking my chain of thought. 'No boat found,' he said. Wheeler was fitting another cigarette into his holder. 'You may have been telling the truth, after all,' he said. He turned his head to the skipper. 'I want safe places for these two separately. What do you suggest?" 'Slade can go back to the cabin,' said the skipper. 'After what has just happened?' Wheeler lifted his eyebrows. The Chinese said, 'He must be manacled to the bed, and a man must stay in the cabin all the time. He must not be permitted to make noise.' Wheeler thought about it. 'All right; what about Stannard?' 'The forepeak; there's a steel bulkhead with a watertight door. He won't get out of there." Wheeler nodded curtly, then said to me, 'I'm afraid your interrogation will have to be postponed until we're away from land. The sound of a man screaming travels a long way,' He waved his hand and I found my arm held. 'By the way, were you responsible for what happened to our screws?' 'What's happened to your screws?' I managed to grin. 'Are they loose?' 'Very stiff-upper-lipped," commented Wheeler. 'A quip in the face of death -- very British. Take him away.' I was hustled out of the lounge, a man on each side of me. 1 passed Slade whose face was yellowy-grey and who looked absolutely defeated and then I was thrust out on to the stern deck. There were now lights aboard Artina and, as we went forward along the side-deck, I saw that the man on my right still carried my gun. I didn't like the sound of that forepeak; from what I had seen of it on the plans of Artina's sister ship it was only four feet high -- a hermetically-sealed steel box. The odds were I'd die of heat-stroke or suffocation. But relish the prospect or not, the man next to me had a gun. The fact that he wasn't pointing it directly at me made not a ha'porth of difference -- not while he gripped my arm and the man on the other side held me in a hammer-lock. They pushed me along the deck until we were amidships and then there was a noise like a dud firecracker and the man with a gun gave a yelp and dropped it on to the deck. He stopped and looked at the blood oozing from the hole in the back of his hand, and let go of me. I'd heard that dud firecracker go off before. I heard it go off again and saw a brief flash of light from the top of the deckhouse. The seaman who had me in the hammer-lock stumbled slightly and his grip loosened. He went down in apparent slow motion and I saw there was a dark red spot in the middle of his forehead. 'Jump, you damned fool,' yelled Alison, and I went over the side in an inelegant dive, arms and legs going every which way. I landed in the water with a hell of a splash and heard, two seconds later, another neater and more ladylike splash as Alison joined me. I wasted no time in getting under the surface and swam in a circle searching for her. My hand touched her leg and she twisted in the water and grabbed my wrist. I pulled, leading her, and we swam deep and under Artina. It would be natural for anyone to look for us from the side of the ship from which we had jumped and I wanted to get away from there. Matters were complicated by the fact that I was running out of air. Things had happened so fast that I hadn't had time to prepare myself by taking a good lungful of air, and that wasn't so good. I didn't want to come up within shooting distance of the ship. I compromised by coming up for air under Artina's stern, hanging on to her rudder with just my nose and mouth above water. Alison joined me. I took a few deep breaths and then allowed an ear out of the water. Things were going pop on deck; men ran along the deck in a seemingly confused way and the deep rumble of the skipper's voice held a note of menace. I prodded Alison under the chin so that her head came out of the water and whispered into her ear. 'Swim to Ta'Xbiex -- under water as far as possible. I'll meet you at the place we left.' She wasted no time in answering but sank under water and vanished. I took a last breath and followed her. Normally I like swimming but this was getting to be a bit too much; I like to swim in water I know to be clean. I took it easy, letting the air dribble from my mouth as the strain grew intolerable. When it finally became impossible to stay under any longer 1 surfaced face upwards, letting only my nose and mouth break the surface. I cleared my lungs in four breaths and then risked a glance back at Artina. A searchlight was probing the water again but not in my direction. As I was about to go under again I heard a roar and ducked under just in time as a fast launch came hurtling in my direction. I struck out strongly to gain depth and the launch passed directly overhead, the disturbance of the wake buffeting me in the water. Three times I had to surface before I came to the shore or, rather to the long line of yachts moored stern on to the wharf of the Lazzaretto Creek Marina. I came up under the bows of a floating gin palace, puffing and panting in an attempt to get my breath back, but I soon stopped that when 1 heard the pad of naked feet on the deck above. Whoever it was seemed irritable. 'More uproar -- everyone rushin' about in the middle of the night. What the hell do they think they're doin'?' A woman said, 'I thought I heard fireworks earlier,' 'Fireworks be damned- they're tomorrow night. And who the hell lets off fireworks at this time in the mornin'?' The launch came by again, going at a hell of a clip, and the boat I was holding on to rocked heavily in the swell of its passage. This provoked an outburst of rage from above. 'What the hell do you think you're doin'?' the man screamed, and I pictured him as a peppery, curry-voiced retired colonel. His wife said, 'You're making .more noise than anyone else, George. Come back to bed!' There was the slap of bare feet on the deck as they padded away. 'All right; but a fat lot of sleep I'll get,' he grumbled. 'I'll see the manager tomorrow. We can't have this happenin' at night.' I grinned and swam a couple of boats down the line before climbing ashore. Then I dog-trotted towards the place I'd assigned to meet Alison, hoping that she'd made it. I was worried about Alison for a number of reasons. Back in Ireland she had been distrustful of me and had wondered out loud if I hadn't sold out to the Scarperers. Now I was distrustful of her. If what Wheeler had said was true -- that Mackintosh had blown the gaff -- then I was really in trouble because Mackintosh wouldn't do a thing like that unheedingly. But why should I believe Wheeler? What incentive did he have to tell me the truth? In that case there was only one other person who could have sold out-Alison! What brought that line of thought up short with a jerk was the recent episode on Artina. If Alison had sold out then why did she rescue me? Why did she pop off with that natty pistol of hers to wound one man, kill another, and get Stannard off the hot spot? That made even less sense. But I determined to keep a careful eye on Mrs Alison Smith in the future -- providing she hadn't been run down by that launch. II I waited for fifteen minutes before she arrived. She was exhausted -- so weary she couldn't pull herself from the water. I hauled her out and waited for a while until she recovered sufficiently to speak. Her first words were, 'That damned boat -- nearly ran me down twice.' 'Did they see you?' She shook her head slowly. 'I don't think so -- they were just lucky.' 'They nearly got me,' I said. 'What happened to our boat?' 'I saw a man find the grapnel,' she said. 'And I knew you'd be in trouble. I went to the bows and climbed the anchor cable, and just let the boat drift.' 'Lucky for me you did. You're pretty handy with that popgun.' 'Six yards -- no more. Anyone could do that.' 'Anyone wasn't there,' I said. 'You were.' She looked about her. 'We'd better move. We could be picked up if we stay here.' I shook my head. 'We're pretty safe. This harbour has so many inlets and creeks that Wheeler and his boys would have to search ten miles of coastline. But you're right -- we'd better move on. It's a long walk back to the hotel and I want to get there before it's light. Do you feel fit?' Alison got to her feet. 'I'm ready.' It would take us, 1 estimated, a good hour to walk back to the hotel. We walked silently; I don't know what Alison was thinking but I was busy wondering what the hell to do next. At last I said, 'Well, I've fallen down on this one -- my instructions were to bring Slade back or to kill him. I've done neither.' 'I can't see that you could have done differently,' said Alison. 'Yes, I could -- I could have killed Slade on that yacht but I tried to bring him out.' 'It isn't easy to kill a sleeping man,' she said, and shivered. 'It isn't easy to kill anyone.' I gave her a sideways glance and wondered about her. All that training must have produced something. 'How many men have you killed?' 'One,' she said, and her voice caught. 'To . . . night.' She started to shake violently. I put my arm around her. Take it easy. It's a bad reaction, but it wears off in time. I know.' I damned Mackintosh for what he had done to his daughter. Yet at least he had made her into a professional and she would respond to the right stimulus just like one of Pavlov's dogs. To take her mind off what she had just done I said, 'We must leave the hotel.' 'Of course,' she said. 'But what then?' 'I'm damned if I know,' I admitted. 'It all depends on how much damage we've done to Wheeler's yacht. If she moves we're finished.' 'And if she doesn't?' 'We have another chance.' 'You can't go on board again -- that won't work twice.' 'I know,' I said. 'I must think of something else.' We fell into a dispirited silence as we trudged along. We were both wet and it was cold in the early hours of the morning. We were also tired, and none of this helped us to think straight. The sun was rising as we came into Floriana and there were a few people stirring in the streets. During our long walk our clothes had pretty well dried out and we didn't attract undue attention. Presently we passed workmen with ladders who were stringing up rows of gay bunting across the street. Those boys have started early,' I said. 'What's the celebration?' There's a festa today,' said Alison. They're always having them here.' I remembered the disgruntled man who had complained about noise in the harbour. 'They'll be having fireworks tonight, then.' 'Inevitably. The two go together in Malta." Something prickled at the back of my mind -- the first stirrings of an idea. I left it alone to grow in its own good time. 'How much money have we got?' 'About three thousand pounds -- including the five hundred I gave you.' At least we were well equipped with the sinews of war. The idea burgeoned a little more, but I'd have to study the plans of Artina's sister ship a little more closely before I could "bring it into the open. A sleepy porter gave us our keys at the hotel and we went up to our rooms. At my door, I said, 'Come in here for a minute.' When we were inside I poured a big lump of scotch into a tooth-glass and gave it to Alison. 'Put that inside you and you'll feel better. Get yourself a hot shower and a change of clothing, but make it fast. We're evacuating -1 want us to be out of here within a half-hour.' She gave a wan smile. 'Where are we going?' 'We're going to ground-just where I don't know. But Wheeler will have his men checking the hotels; he might have started already. Just bring essentials -- the money, passport and aircraft documents.' When she had gone I followed my own advice. I knocked back a fast scotch and took a three-minute hot shower which chased away some of the aches and put some warmth in my bones again. My stomach was black with bruises. I dressed quickly and began to assemble the things I needed, not that there was much. Then I sat down and began to study the ship plan. Fortunately it was scaled and I was able to measure distances fairly accurately. Not only was the idea burgeoning but blossoms were appearing. It all depended on whether Wheeler was immobilized in Marsamxett Harbour for another night. Alison came back carrying one of those big bags which magically hold about six times more than they appear to. We left the hotel by a rear entrance and five minutes later we were at Kingsgate boarding a bus for Senglea. Alison seemed brighter and said, 'Where are we going -- and why?' I paid the fare. 'I'll tell you when we get there.' The bus was crowded and I didn't want to talk about how I was going to kill Slade and Wheeler in public. The driver of the bus laboured under the misapprehension that his name was Jack Brabham, of perhaps he thought that the little shrine to the Virgin, so gaily decked in flowers, was a reasonable substitute for brakes. We got to Senglea in a remarkably short time. Senglea is a peninsula jutting out into the Grand Harbour between Dockyard Creek and French Creek. Since the rundown of the Royal Navy and the demilitarization of the Naval Dockyard in Malta it seemed to be a reasonable place to find what I wanted -- a boatshed, preferably with its own slipway. It was still too early to do anything about that but the cafes were already open so we had breakfast, and very welcome it was. Over the bacon and eggs I said, 'Were you seen last night -seen to be recognized again?' Alison shook her head. 'I don't think so.' 'Wheeler appeared to be uncertain about whether I had assistance,' I said. 'Of course, he knows now -- but he doesn't know who. I think you're elected to do the shopping; it might not be safe for me on the streets.' 'What do you want?' she asked concisely. 4I want a boatshed. I only want it for twelve hours but we can't say so -- we'll probably have to take it on three months' lease. I'm a boat designer and I'm working on a new type of ... er ... hydrofoil. I don't want anyone -- my rivals, for instance-looking over my shoulder while I'm doing it, so I want discretion and security. That's the story.' 'Then what?' 'Then you push off and buy us a boat. Something about twenty feet overall and hellish fast, with big engines.' 'Outboard or inboard?' 'Doesn't matter. Outboards will be cheaper, but they must be powerful. You bring the boat round to the shed.' I looked through the window of the cafe. 'Over there is a scrap metal yard; I should be able to get most of what I want over there, including the hire of a welding outfit.' Alison's brow wrinkled. 'So you have a fast boat and a welding outfit.' She waited patiently. "Then you hire a truck. Can you drive a truck?' She gave me a look of silent contempt, and I grinned. She had probably passed her driving test with flying colours -- in a Chieftain tank. I said, 'You take the truck and you buy enough fireworks to fill the boat.' Now I had got her attention. 'Fireworks!' 'Big ones -- especially the ones that go bang and throw out a shower of pretty lights. None of your paltry penny bangers; I want the big professional stuff. If they're so keen on fireworks here there should be quite a stock somewhere in this island. Think you can do that?' 'I can do it,' she said. 'Now tell me why the hell I should.' I pulled out the ship plan and laid it on the table. 'I've been on board Artina and everything I saw fitted in with this plan, so I think we can trust it.' I tapped with my finger. "The engine room, containing two 350 hp Rolls-Royce diesels which gulp a hell of a lot of fuel. Under the engine room a supply of fresh water and the ready use fuel tank which holds 1,200 gallons.' My finger moved on the plan. 'Forward of the engine room is Wheeler's cabin, and farther forward are the crew's quarters. Under that, extending for twenty feet, is a double bottom containing the main fuel supply -- 5,350 gallons of fuel oil. We know she's just taken on fuel so the tanks are full.' I did a bit of measuring with my finger nail. To penetrate that tank we have to ram a hole at least three feet below the water-line-preferably deeper. Her plating is mild steel, five-sixteenths of an inch thick -- to punch a hole through that will need a hell of a lot of power.' I looked up. 'I'm going to build a ram on the boat you're going to get me. At one time ramming was an orthodox naval tactic-all naval vessels had rams. But this is going to be a little different; it's going to be a combination ram and fireship. The boat will be full of fireworks. When we ram the tank we let out the oil. It floats. The fireworks go off pop and set the oil on fire.' 'So you're going to smoke out Wheeler?' I looked at her in silence for a moment, then I said, 'Don't be silly, I'm going to burn the bastard out.' m It all took time, and we had little enough of that. I was right in thinking that I could get a suitable boatshed in Senglea, but moving in quickly was something else again. A few enquiries made in the district soon turned up just what I wanted but the dickering promised to be protracted and it was ten-thirty that morning before the deal went through and only then because of the production of a hundred pounds in crisp, British fivers. As time was getting short I sent Alison off to buy the boat, which 1 hoped wouldn't prove to be as difficult and time-consuming as renting the shed. In the meantime I went to the scrap metal yard and rummaged about until I found what I wanted. I selected a few lengths of angle-iron, a lot of nuts and bolts and a steel bar, eight feet long and an inch and a half in diameter. I was also able to hire a welding outfit there, together with two full bottles of oxygen and acetylene and a pair of goggles. As I paid out for this lot I reflected that the expense account for this lark was going to raise some Treasury official's hair. 1 could imagine him querying the purchase of perhaps a quarter of a ton of fireworks and acidly scratching out a memo asking Mrs Smith for further verification. But perhaps Mrs Smith also had training in cooking the swindle sheet. I got all my equipment to the shed and waited around for Alison. I stared across the Grand Harbour to Valletta and wished I could see through it and into Marsamxett Harbour where Artina was still anchored -1 hoped. At one-thirty I was still waiting and coming to a slow boil. Time was wasting and 1 had a hell of a lot to do. It was nearly two o'clock before she arrived and the steam was blowing out of my ears. I caught the painter she tossed, and said curtly, 'What kept you?' 'I had to go to Sliema. Is she what you wanted?' I studied the boat. She was a sleek, Italian-built job with two 100 hp Kiekhaefer Mercury outboard motors. Her lines looked good and those big engines would push her along at a fair lick. Alison said, 'I got more than thirty knots out of her on the way here.' 'You brought her from Sliema? You must have passed Artina.' 'She's still there.' I sagged a little in relief. "They're doing a lot of work on her stern. When I passed they were hoisting out one of the propellers.' 'Were they, by God?' I laughed. Then it will be an all day job.' I jerked my thumb at the shed. 'There's a cradle in there. Help me get this thing up the slip and out of sight.' We ran the cradle down the slip, floated the boat into it, and then winched the lot into the shed. Alison looked at her watch. 'I've arranged for the fireworks, too. They'll be ready to be picked up at three.' 'Then you'd better push off.' She hesitated. 'Can you manage alone?' 'I should be able to. There's a block and tackle up there -I can use that to take the engines out." There's a flask of coffee and a packet of sandwiches in the boat. And a bottle of whisky. I'll be back as soon as I can.' She turned to go, and I said, 'Alison, there's just one more thing; see if you can get a big axe. A felling axe used for cutting down trees.' She looked puzzled and then doubtful. 'I'm not sure they use those on Malta-there are not too many trees.' 'Do your best.' She left and I rescued the victuals before the bottle got broken, and then I uncoupled the steering cables on the boat and hoisted out the engines. I also used the block and tackle to turn the boat out of the cradle so that it lay upside down on trestles. I ate the sandwiches and drank the coffee while studying the problem; the whisky I left strictly alone because there was a job to be done, although I'd probably be glad of a stiff jolt before I set out. I proceeded to get my hands dirty. The hull was of glass fibre and I began to ruin it by drilling holes in carefully selected places. The idea was to position the ram so that it was at least three feet below the water line when the boat was planing at speed, and it had to be fixed to the hull firmly enough so that it wouldn't come adrift on impact. If that happened then the momentum given by those big engines would be lost and the ram wouldn't penetrate Artina's steel shell. I cut up lengths of angle-iron and bolted them to the hull and through to steel cross-members which ran athwartship. Then I started to weld it up. It wasn't pretty welding and would have won no prizes at a craft school but, by God, it was strong -- I made sure of that. When I had got that far there were two steel triangles built into the hull, the apexes of which were a little over three feet below the bottom. I took the long steel bar and welded it to the apexes of my steel triangles so that it was parallel to the bottom of the hull and projecting two feet in front. Alison was back long before I had got that far and gave me enough by then to take you seriously.' She saw the point, but she didn't like it. She set her face in a stubborn mould and prepared to argue. I forestalled her. 'All right; this is what you do. You wait here until nightfall and help me to get the boat into the water. Then you hop over to Ta'Xbiex and hire another boat -- if you can get anyone to trust you.' I smiled. 'Looking as you do now I wouldn't trust you with a kid's bath toy.' She rubbed her smudged face and distastefully inspected her fingertips. 'Thanks,' she said. 'I'll clean up.' 'If you can't hire a boat, steal one. There are plenty of loose boats at the Marina. Meet me at the seaward point of Manoel Island and then follow me in, but not too closely. When the balloon goes up watch out for Slade and Wheeler -- they should be doing their best to jump overboard if all goes well. See they don't get ashore.' 'I lost the gun last night,' she said. 'Well, bat them over the head with an oar," I said. 'I'll be around somewhere so keep your oar away from me.' I looked at my watch. 'It'll be dark enough for launching in about an hour.' That hour seemed to stretch out interminably rather like I'm told it does in an LSD trip; I wouldn't know about that -1 haven't tried it. We didn't talk much and when we did it was of inconsequentialities. The sun set and the light slowly ebbed from the sky until at last it was dark enough to take the boat down the slip without anyone seeing it. Once it was in the water it wouldn't appear too abnormal. I patted the wickedly gleaming steel axe-head which formed the tip of the ram and went to open the big double doors of the shed, and we steered the cradle down the slip and into the water. I released the boat and we took the cradle away and 1 turned to see how my handiwork had turned out. It wasn't too bad; she was down by the head but not by too much considering the weight of iron under her bows, and she appeared quite normal apart from the bits of angle-iron which showed above water on each side of the hull. In another ten minutes it would be too dark to see even that, but even if I was picked up by a light in the harbour I doubt if anyone would notice anything particularly odd about her. 'That's it,' I said wearily. I was bone-tired; no sleep, a beating-up and a hard day's work did nothing to improve me. 'I'll go now,' said Alison quietly. 'Good luck, Owen.' She didn't kiss me, or even touch me. She just walked away, picking up her coat as she went. I climbed into the boat and rearranged a few of the fireworks to make myself more comfortable. I put the scuba gear handy and checked my primitive system of fuses. Then there was nothing to do but wait another hour before I was due to move off. Again it was a long wait. CHAPTER ELEVEN I checked my watch for the twentieth time in fifteen minutes and decided that time had come. I put on the scuba gear, tightened the weighted belt around my waist, and hung the mask around my neck. Then I started the engines and the boat quivered in the water. I cast off the painter and pushed the boat away with one hand and then tentatively opened the throttles a notch, not knowing what to expect. At a slow speed she didn't handle too badly although there seemed to be something a little soggy about her response to the wheel. 1 switched on the lights because I didn't want the harbour patrol to pick me up for running illegally, and went down French Creek into the Grand Harbour. Here, in time past, the British Battle Fleet had laic, line upon line of dreadnoughts and battle cruisers. Now, there was another, but odder, naval craft putting to sea, but this one was in an earlier tradition -- more like one of Drake's fireships. Across the harbour Valletta was all lit up and there were strings of coloured lights spangling Floriana. Tinny music floated across the quiet water punctuated by the thumping of a bass drum. The merry-making was well under way. I rounded the head of Senglea and steered to the harbour mouth. Nothing was coming my way so I decided to open up and see what the boat would do. The note of the engines deepened as I opened the throttles and I felt the surge of acceleration as 200 hp kicked her through the water. In terms of horse-power per ton of displacement this little boat was perhaps forty times as powerful as Artina; that's where the speed came from. The steering was worse than bad- it was dreadful. The wheel kicked in my hands violently and my course was erratic, to say the least, and I went down the Grand Harbour doing a pretty good imitation of a water boatman, those jerky insects that run across the surface of ponds. The damned boat wouldn't get on the step and plane and I don't suppose her speed was more than twelve knots, and that wasn't going to be enough. All the power going into the screws was doing nothing more than raising waves and I wasn't supposed to be in the wave-raising business. In desperation I slammed the throttles hard open and she suddenly rose in the water and took off, picking up at least an extra ten knots in as many seconds. But the steering was worse and there was a definite lag between hauling the wheel around and the corresponding reaction. I throttled down again and she sagged into the water, and her speed dropped as though she'd run into a wall. This was going to be a dicey business. At a pinch I could get the speed, provided the engines didn't blow up, but I didn't know if I could steer her straight enough to hit my target. In spite of the flow of cooling night air I found I was sweating profusely. If the only way to get her to plane was to run the engines at full bore I'd better not try that again. There would be no more trial speed runs because I was scared of the engines packing up, and next time this boat would be at speed again would be the last time. As for the steering, I'd have to handle that as best I could. I dropped speed even further and plugged on towards St Elmo's Point. Fort St Elmo reared up starkly against the night sky as I passed between the point and the breakwater. Now I was in the open sea and the boat wallowed sickeningly. That heavy steel bar slung three feet under the water was acting as a pendulum. This lubberly craft was enough to give any self-respecting boat designer the screaming meemies. I rounded the point and turned into Marsamxett Harbour, glad to get into sheltered waters again, and headed towards Manoel Island. Valletta was now to my left and I wondered from where they shot their fireworks. I checked the time and found I had little to spare. As I approached Manoel Island I closed the throttles until the engines were barely ticking over, just enough to give me steerage way. Not far away a light flickered and I saw that Alison was in position; she had struck a match and held it so that it illuminated her face. I steered in that direction and made contact. She was in what seemed to be a small runabout driven by a little outboard motor. "That's nice,' I said. 'Where did you get it?' 'I took your advice; I stole it,' she said, and laughed quietly. I grinned in the darkness. 'It's our duty to save government money,' I said virtuously. 'How did you get on?' she asked. 'She's a bitch,' I said. 'As cranky as the devil.' 'She was all right when I brought her from Sliema.' 'That was a different boat. She's damned near uncontrollable at speed. How much time have we got?' 'About ten minutes." I looked about. 'I'd better get in position. We don't want to stay here or we'll be run down by the Sliema ferry -- she's coming now. Is Artina in the same place?' 'Yes.' 'Then I'll be on my way. I'll go right down Lazzaretto Creek and turn around so as to get a good run up. You keep clear on the other side of Artina.' 1 paused. 'The steering is so bloody bad I might even miss her on the first pass. In that case I'll turn around and have a go on the other side. Don't be in my way or you'll get run over.' 'Good luck again,' said Alison. I said, 'If you see Wheeler give him a good clout with my compliments. He was looking forward to seeing his Chinese friend operate on me. If things work out I'll see you in Ta'Xbiex -- at the same place as last night." Gently I eased the throttles forward and moved off. I passed Artina quite closely; there were three men on deck -- Wheeler, the Skipper and the Chinese, Chang Pi-wu. I could see them quite clearly because they were illuminated, but I was low on the water in the dark and there was no chance of them recognizing me. I was just another snip passing in the night. , Mentally I made a cross on the place on the hull I intended to hit, and then I carried on down Lazzaretto Creek. At the bottom, near the Manoel Island bridge I turned with idling engines. I switched on the air from the scuba bottle and checked the demand-valve, and then bit on the mouthpiece and put on the mask. If things went well I wouldn't have time to do any of that later. Behind me traffic passed on the road and presently a procession came by with a band of pounding drums and off-key brass. I ignored it and looked across to Valletta and the forthcoming firework display. There was what I thought to be a heavier thump on a drum but it was a mortar banging off. A maroon burst over Valletta in a yellow sunburst and in the echoing reflection from the water of the harbour I saw Artina clearly for a brief moment. The fireworks had begun and it was time for me to add my share to the festivities. 1 advanced the throttles and moved off slowly as a rocket soared up and exploded in a shower of red and green fiery rain. I steered with one hand and with the other liberally doused my cargo with petrol from an open can, hoping to God that the sparks from the fireworks were totally extinguished by the time they reached water level. It only needed one of those in the boat and I'd go up in a cloud of glory. Then I pushed open the throttles wider and by the time I was making any kind of speed the sky was alive with lights as the Maltese spent their fireworks with reckless abandon. Artina was clearly silhouetted as, with equal abandon, I jammed the throttles wide open. The engines roared and the boat reared up in the water almost uncontrollably as she began to plane. The wheel lucked m my hands as 1 strove to keep her on course and I zig-zagged dangerously close to the line of yachts moored at the marina. 1 swung the wheel hard over but the bitch was late in responding and there was an outraged cry from the bow of one of the yachts. It sounded like the curry-voiced colonel who must have got the fright of his life as I scraped his paint at twenty knots. Then I was past him and heading out into the harbour, bucking and twisting and steering a course which would have brought tears to the eyes of any self-respecting helmsman. The fireworks banged and flashed overhead striking dazzling reflections from the water and my heart jumped into my mouth as a small runabout came out of nowhere and cut across my bows. I cursed him and swung the wheel and missed him by a whisker. That made two damned fools at large in Marsamxett Harbour. As I swung the wheel hard over the other way I looked for Artina and I saw that I was going to miss her by a sizeable margin. I cursed again at the thought of having to make another mad sortie. It occurred to me that with the steering being as crazy as it was then I'd better aim at anything but Artina and then I might have a chance of hitting her. I estimated I was going to shoot under her stern but just then the hard-pressed port engine blew up and, with a nasty flailing rattle of a broken connecting rod, it expired. The boat checked a little in the water and her bow came over to aim directly at Artina. I hung on as she loomed over me and then, with a satisfying smash, my underwater ram struck her amidships. I was thrown forward and bruised my ribs on the wheel but it saved me from going into the water. I still had one last thing to do. As I groped for my cigarette lighter I heard a shout on deck and I looked up into the eye-straining alternation of light and darkness and saw a movement as someone peered over the side to see what the hell had happened now. I couldn't see much of him but I must have been clearly visible as another batch of rockets went up. I flicked the lighter and it sparked but there was no flame. In the rocket's red glare I saw that the boat's bow was smashed and broken with the impact against Artina's side. The ram must have been deeply embedded because she showed no sign of wanting to drift away. Desperately I flicked the lighter again but again there was no flame. There was a bang from above and a bullet smashed into the instrument panel next to my elbow, ruining the rev counter. I leaned forward and put the lighter right next to a bunch of petrol-soaked fireworks. The boat was making water and I had to start a fire before she went under. I flicked again and the whole damned lot went up in a brilliant sheet of flame. It was only because I was fully equipped in scuba gear that I wasn't instantly incinerated. It went up, as suddenly ignited petrol does, in a soft explosion -- a great whooof of flame that blew me overboard. And as I went something hit me in the shoulder very hard. Whether or not I was actually on fire for a moment I don't know. When I hit the water I was dazed, but the sudden shock brought a reflex into action and I struck for the depths. It was then I found that my right arm was totally useless. Not that it mattered very much; in scuba diving the flippered feet do most of the work. But it worried me because I didn't know what could be wrong with it. I swam under water for a short while, then stopped because I didn't know where I was going. I was absolutely disoriented and, for all I knew, I could have been swimming out to sea. So I surfaced cautiously and looked around to get my bearings and to see what was happening to Artina. I had not swum as far as I thought -- she was about a hundred yards away, too close for comfort, especially in view of the little piece of hellfire that I had established amidships. My fireship was going great guns. With the ram stabbed into Artina's side like a narwhal's tusk she was securely fixed, and the fireworks were exploding like an artillery barrage, showering multi-coloured sparks and great gouts of flame which licked up her side. Already a canvas deck awning was on fire and men were running about the deck every which way. A big maroon went off like a howitzer shell, sending out a burst of green flame and sparks which reached out to patter on the surface of the water about me, hissing viciously as they were extinguished. I was close enough to be seen if anyone had the time to look, so I sank beneath the surface again after a last glance around, and struck out for the shore. I had not done a dozen strokes before I knew something was wrong. I felt curiously weak and light-headed and my right shoulder had developed a dull throb which was rapidly sharpening up into a stabbing pain. I eased off and felt my shoulder with my left hand and the pain jabbed me with such intensity that I nearly yelled aloud which is a good way of getting oneself drowned. So I surfaced again and drifted, becoming more light-headed and feeling the strength ebbing from my legs more swiftly every minute. The fire by Artina was still going strong but it all seemed blurred as though seen through a rain-washed window. It was then I knew that I was probably going to die, that I no longer had the strength to swim to the shore which was so close, and that I was drifting out to sea where I would drown. I think I passed out for a moment because the next thing I knew there was a light flashing in my eyes from very close and an urgent whisper, 'Owen; grab this!' Something fell across my face and floated in the water next to my head and I put out my left hand and found a rope. 'Can you hold on?' I knew it was Alison. An engine throbbed and the rope tightened and I was being drawn through the water. Desperately I concentrated all my attention on to holding on to that rope. Whatever strength I had left must be marshalled and pushed into the fingers of my left hand so that they would not relinquish their grip. The water lapped about my head, creating a miniature bow wave as I was towed behind Alison's boat and, even in that extremity, I paid tribute to the efficiency of Alison Smith and Mackintosh's training. She knew she could not haul an almost unconscious man into the boat without either capsizing or, worse, attracting attention. It was a ridiculously short distance to the shore and Alison brought up at a slipway. She rammed the boat up it, careless of the consequences, and jumped overboard into two feet of water and hauled me out bodily. 'What's wrong, Owen?' I flopped down and sat into the shallow water. 'I think I was shot,' I said carefully, and my voice seemed to come from miles away. 'In the shoulder -- the right shoulder.' The pain washed over me as her fingers probed, and then I heard the rip of cloth and she bandaged the wound roughly but effectively. I wouldn't have been surprised if she had operated there, and then, using a penknife and a hairpin to extract the bullet. I was becoming used to her surprising range of talents. I said tiredly, 'What's happening to Artina?' She moved away and I saw Artina in the harbour beyond. All the sea was on fire about her and above the yellow flames rose the rolling cloud of greasy black smoke that could only come from oil. The ram had done its work. Even as I watched there was a red flash just under the wheelhouse and then the wheelhouse vanished as an oil tank exploded in her vitals and blasted through the deck. A deep boom came across the water, echoed and re-echoed from the cliff-like fortifications of Valletta. 'That's it, then,' I said abstractedly. Alison leaned over me. 'Can you walk?' 'I don't know. I can try.' She put her hand under my left arm. 'You've been leaking blood like a stuck pig. You need a hospital,' I nodded. 'All right.' It didn't really matter now. The job had been done. Even if Slade or Wheeler had survived they were done for. I would be asked why I had destroyed Artina and I would tell the truth, and I would be listened to very carefully. People don't wander around blowing up millionaires' yachts for nothing and what I had to say would be heard. Whether it was believed or not would be another matter, but enough mud would stick to Wheeler to make sure that hard, professional eyes would be on him for ever more. As for Slade, I had escaped from prison with him and if I was on Malta and said that Slade was around then he would be picked up in jig time. It's a small island and strangers can't hide easily. As for myself I didn't know what would happen. Alison might give evidence in camera as to my part in the affair, but if Mackintosh was dead I didn't know how much weight that would carry. There was a strong possibility that I would spend the rest of my life in the maximum security wing of Durham Gaol. Right at that moment I was past caring. Alison helped me to my feet and I staggered like a drunken sailor up the slipway, hanging on to her arm with a flabby grip. We had just reached the top when I paused and stared at the man who was waiting. He looked remarkably like that tough, young copper, Sergeant Jervis, who had taken such a strong dislike to me because I had stolen some diamonds and had not the grace to tell him where they were. I turned my head and looked in the other direction. Brunskill was there with Forbes just behind him. Already they were striding out and coming towards us. I said to Alison, 'The end of the line, I think," and turned to face Brunskill. He stood in front of me and surveyed me with expressionless eyes, noting every detail of my disarray and the bandage on my shoulder. He flicked his eyes at Alison, and then nodded towards the harbour where Artina was going down in flames. 'Did you do that?' 'Me?' I shook my head. 'It must have been caused by a spark from the fireworks.' He smiled grimly. 'I must caution you that anything you say may be taken down in writing and used in evidence.' He looked at Alison. 'That applies to you, too." 'I don't think Malta is within your jurisdiction,' she said coolly. 'Not to worry about that,' said Brunskill. 'I have a platoon of the local constabulary on call.' He turned to me. 'If you had as many lives as a cat you'd spend them all inside. I'm going to wrap you up so tight this time that they'll have to build a prison just for you.' I could see him mentally formulating the list of charges. Arson, murder, grievous bodily harm, carrying weapons -- and worse -- using them, driving a horse and cart through the Explosives Act. Maybe, with a bit of twisting, he could toss in piracy and setting fire to the Queen's shipyards. Those last two are still capital offences. He said, 'What in hell did you think you were doing?' There was wonder in his voice. I swayed on my feet. 'I'll tell you after I've seen a doctor.' He caught me as I fell. II 1 woke up in the nick. It was the prison hospital, to be sure, but still inside thick walls, and they build walls thicker in Malta than anywhere else. But I had a private room and came to the conclusion that the local coppers didn't want the simple, uncomplicated Maltese criminals to be corrupted by contact with such a hard case as myself. This proved to be a wrong assumption. An uncommunicative doctor performed a simple operation on my shoulder under local anaesthetic and then I lay waiting for the arrival of Brunskill and his inevitable questions. I spent the time thinking out ingenious lies to tell him; there are certain aspects of HM Government it is better for the ordinary copper not to know. But it was a stranger and not Brunskill who was ushered into the room. He was a tall, middle-aged man with a smooth, unlined face and an air of quiet authority who introduced himself as Armitage. His credentials were impressive; I read a letter of introduction from the Prime Minister and pushed back the rest of the bumf unread. He pulled up a chair to the bedside and sat down. 'Well, Mr Stannard; how are you feeling?' I said, 'If you know my name is Stannard then you know most of the story. Did Alec Mackintosh send you?' 'I'm afraid not,' he said regretfully. 'Mackintosh is dead.' I felt a cold lump settle in my stomach. 'So he never came out of hospital.' 'He died without recovering consciousness,' said Armitage. I thought of Alison and wondered how she'd take it. The love-hate relationship she had with her father made it difficult to estimate her reaction. I said, 'Has Mrs Smith been told?' Armitage nodded. 'She took it quite well.' How would you know? I thought. 'This is all going to be difficult,' said Armitage. 'Your activities -- particularly in the Irish Republic -- could put the Government into an awkward position." He paused. 'Should they be fully disclosed.' I could imagine that they could. Relations were already strained over what was happening in Ulster and the Press would have a field day with garbled stories of a British agent on the rampage in the sovereign State of Ireland. I said ironically, 'Not to mention my own awkward position.' 'Just so,' said Armitage. We stared at each other. 'All right,' I said at last. 'Who blew the gaff? This operation had the tightest security of any I've been on. How did it fall apart?' Armitage sighed. 'It fell apart because of the tight security. It fell apart because Mackintosh was constitutionally unable to trust anyone.' He held me with his eye. 'He didn't even trust you.' I nodded, and Armitage snorted. 'He didn't even trust the Prime Minister. All through he played a lone hand and deceived everyone regarding his motives.' I said quietly, 'I have a big stake in this. I think you'd better tell me the story.' It all started with the spate of prison escapes which worried the people at the top. Mountbatten investigated the prison service and security was tightened, but the vague rumours of the Scarperers' organization kept the worries on the boil and Mackintosh was put in charge of doing something about it. 'I didn't like that,' said Armitage disapprovingly. 'And I said so at the time. It ought to have been left to the Special Branch.' 'Mackintosh told me they'd tried and failed,' I said. Armitage nodded impatiently. 'I know -- but they could have tried again. Mackintosh was too much the lone wolf -- too secretive.' I could see what stuck in Armitage's craw. He was a top-level civil servant -- a Whitehall mandarin -- and he liked things to go through channels in an orderly way. In particular, he didn't like the idea of the Prime Minister having a private hatchet man. It offended his sense of what was fitting. He leaned forward. 'Unknown to anybody Mackintosh already had his eye on Wheeler but he kept his suspicions to himself. He didn't even tell the PM. We'll never know what went through his mind, but perhaps he thought he wouldn't be believed Wheeler was coming up fast in popularity and influence; in fact, the Prime Minister was on the point of making him a Junior Minister in the Government." •Yes,' I said. 'I can see Alec's problem. How did he get on to Wheeler?' Armitage shook his head, 'I don't know. I believe the Prime Minister reposed full confidence in Mackintosh regarding certain measures of top-level security.' He sounded even more disapproving. So Mackintosh was running security checks on the elite. That was one answer to the question: Quis custodiet ipsos custodes? I could imagine the Prime Minister might expect Mackintosh to turn up some member of the radical Left or Right as a potential risk, but who would suspect a bourgeois capitalist who firmly trod the middle road of being a Maoist? The idea was laughable. 'So Mackintosh had unprovable suspicions,' I said. 'He didn't want them getting back to Wheeler so he kept his mouth shut until he could catch Wheeler in the act.' 'Thai must have been the size of it,' conceded Armitage. "He brought you in and put you next to Slade by means of the diamond robbery.' A slight smile mitigated his severe expression. 'Most ingenious. But he didn't tell you about Wheeler.' 'I wouldn't expect him to,' I said flatly. 'At that stage I didn't need to know.' I rubbed my chin. 'But I'd expect him to tell Mrs Smith.' 'He didn't -- but I'll come to that later.' Armitage leaned forward. 'When you and Slade escaped Mackintosh went to see Wheeler. We have established that he saw Wheeler at his club. They had a conversation in the course of which Mackintosh disclosed who you were. That's how ... er ... the gaff was blown.' I blinked, then closed my eyes and lay back on the pillow. 'He did it deliberately?' I asked softly. 'Oh, yes. He wanted to stampede Wheeler into ill-advised action. He wanted to catch him in flagrante delicto. Apparently you were expendable.' I opened my .eyes and looked at Armitage. 'I always was. It's an occupational hazard.' All the same I thought that Alec Mackintosh was a ruthless son of a bitch. 'Wheeler was stampeded, all right, but I'm not sure that Wheeler's action was ill-advised,' said Armitage reflectively. 'Mackintosh was run down by a car the same day. We've impounded all Wheeler's cars for forensic examination and I'm pretty sure we'll turn up some evidence even at this late date. I think the job was done by his Irish chauffeur.' 'Or his Chinese cook.' Armitage shrugged. 'So Mackintosh was unconscious in hospital. He was run down on his way to his office where Mrs Smith was awaiting him. Whether he was going to tell her what he'd done we'll never know. At all events, at this time no one in the Government knew about Wheeler. Do you see what I mean about the security of the operation being too tight?' I said, 'A top-rank Whitehall man, such as yourself, doesn't turn up in Malta out of the blue so opportunely. Something must have come up.' 'It did. Mackintosh died. He'd taken out insurance. He wrote out a full account of his actions and posted them to his lawyer just before he saw Wheeler. The snag about that was that the sealed envelope was inscribed, "Only to be opened in the event of my death."' Armitage stared at me. 'And Mackintosh was in the hands of the doctors. He wasn't dead, but you'd hardly call him alive although in the legal sense he was. He was a vegetable maintained by modern medical techniques and the doctors' duty by the Hippocratic Oath, and that was something he hadn't calculated for. That damned envelope was in the lawyer's hands for two weeks before Mackintosh died and by then it was nearly too late. It would have been too late were it not for your actions.' 'That's all very well,' I said. 'But how did that lead you to me? Mackintosh didn't know where I was.' 'We went straight for Wheeler,' said Armitage. 'We were just wondering how to tackle him when you took the problem out of our hands.' He smiled slightly. 'Your methods are direct, to say the least. It was thought that you might be around, so I we brought along people who could recognize you.' 'Brunskill and company,' I -said. 'So you've got Wheeler.' He shook his head. 'No; Wheeler is dead, and so is Slade. You saw to that very effectively, if I may say so. The Special Branch is working on the ramifications of Wheeler's organizations -- those that are legal and those that are not. I think it will be a lengthy task, but that is none of your concern.' He leaned back in his chair. 'However, you do present a problem to the Government, which is why I am here.' I couldn't suppress the smile. 'I bet I am.' 'It's no laughing matter, Mr Stannard,' said Armitage severely. 'Already the Press has become alerted to the fact that there is something in the wind." He stood up and wandered over to the window. 'Fortunately, the worst of your . . . er . . . crimes were committed outside the United Kingdom and to those we can turn a blind eye. But there is the matter of a diamond robbery which may well prove awkward to handle.' I said, 'Were the diamond merchants paid out by their insurance company?' Armitage turned and nodded. 'I should think so.' 'Well, why not leave it at that.' He was affronted. 'Her Majesty's Government cannot connive in the cheating of an insurance company.' 'Why not?' I asked reasonably. 'Her Majesty's Government is conniving in the murder of Wheeler and Slade. What the hell's so sacred about a few thousand quid?' That didn't sit well with him. Property rights come before human rights in British law. He harrumphed embarrassedly, and said, 'What is your suggestion?' 'Wheeler is dead and Slade is dead. Why shouldn't Rearden be dead, too? He can be killed while evading arrest-it shouldn't be too difficult to stage manage. But you'll have to gag Brunskill, Forbes and Jervis, and you can do that under the Official Secrets Act. Or you can throw the fear of God into them; I don't think any of that gang would relish being transferred to the Orkneys for the rest of his days.' 'And Mr Stannard comes to life again?' he queried. 'Precisely.' 'I suppose it could be arranged. And how do we explain the spectacular death of Wheeler?' 'It must have been those rockets they were shooting over the harbour,' I said. One of them must have gone out of whack and hit the ship. It was being repaired at the time -- I'll bet there was some fuel open on deck. I think the Maltese Government ought to be ticked off for not keeping proper control.' 'Very ingenious,' said Armitage, and took out a notebook. 'I'll suggest that the Navy offer a ship and a diver to help lift the wreck. We'll choose the diver, of course.' He made a note with a silver pen. 'You'd better,' I said, thinking of that ram which was probably still embedded in Artina's side. 'A sad end to a popular MP. Most regrettable.' Armitage's lips twitched and he put away the notebook. 'The organization for which you worked before Mackintosh pulled you out of South Africa apparently thinks highly of you. I am asked to inform you that someone called Lucy will be getting in touch.' I nodded. How Mackintosh would have sneered at that. 'And the Prime Minister has asked me to pass on his sincere thanks for the part you have played in the affair and for the way you have brought it to a conclusion. He regrets that thanks are all he has to offer under the circumstances.' 'Oh, well; you can't eat medals,' I said philosophically. Ill I sat in the lounge of the Hotel Phoenicia waiting for Alison. She had been whisked to England by the powers-that-be in order to attend Alec's funeral. I would have liked to have paid my respects, too, but my face had been splashed in the pages of the British newspapers with the name of Rearden underneath and it was considered unwise for me to put in an appearance until Rearden had been forgotten in the short-lived public memory. Meanwhile I was growing a beard. I was deriving much amusement from an intensive reading of an air mail edition of The Times. There was an obituary of Wheeler which should put him well on the road to canonization; his public-spiritedness was praised, his financial acumen lauded and his well-known charitableness eulogized. The first leader said that in view of Wheeler's work for the prisons his death was a blow to enlightened penology unequalled since the Mountbatten Report. I choked over that one. The Prime Minister, in a speech to the Commons, said that British politics would be so much the worse for the loss of such a valued colleague. The Commons rose and stood in silence for two minutes. That man ought to have had his mouth washed out with soap. Only the Financial Editor of The Times caught a whiff of something rotten. Commenting on the fall of share prices in the companies of Wheeler's empire he worried at the question of why it was thought necessary for the auditors to move in before Wheeler's body was cold. Apart from that quibble Wheeler had a rousing send-off on his journey to hell. Rearden came off worse. Condemned as a vicious desperado, his death in a gun battle was hailed as a salutary lesson to others of his kidney, Brunskill was commended for his perseverance on the trail of the villainous Rearden and for his fortitude in the face of almost certain death. 'It was nothing,' said Brunskill modestly. 'I was only doing my duty as a police officer.' It was hoped that Slade would soon be caught. There were full security wraps on Slade's death and I had no doubt that in another ten or twenty years any number of criminologically inclined writers would make a fair living churning out books about the Slade Mystery. I looked up to see Alison coming into the lounge. She looked pale and tired but she smiled when she saw me. I rose to my feet as she approached and she stopped for a moment to survey me, taking in the cast on my arm and the unshaven stubble on my cheeks. 'You look awful,' she said. 'I'm not feeling too bad; I can still bend my left elbow. What will you have?' 'A Campari.' She sat down and I whistled up a waiter. 'I see you've been reading all about it.' I grinned. 'Don't believe everything you read in the papers.' She leaned back in the chair. 'Well, Owen; it's over. It's all over.' 'Yes,' I said. 'I'm sorry about Alec.' 'Are you?' she asked in a flat voice. 'He nearly got you killed.' I shrugged. 'He miscalculated the speed and direction of Wheeler's reaction. But for that it was a good ploy.' 'Even though he was selling you out?' Her tone was incredulous. 'God damn it!" I said. 'We weren't playing pat-a-cake. The stakes were too great. Wheeler had to be nailed down and if the way to do it was to sacrifice a man in the field then there was no choice. Wheeler was striking at the heart of the State. The Prime Minister was considering him for a ministerial position, and God knows where he could have gone on from there.' 'If all statesmen are like Alec then God help Britain,' said Alison in a low voice. 'Don't be bitter,' I said. 'He's dead. He killed himself, not me. Never forget that.' The waiter came with the drinks and we were silent until he had gone, then Alison said, 'What are you going to do now?' I said, 'I had a visit from Lucy. Of course I can't do much until the shoulder heals -- say a month to six weeks.' 'Are you going back to South Africa?' I shook my head. 'I think I'm being considered for the active list.' I sipped my drink. 'What about you?' 'I haven't had time to think yet. There was a lot to do in London apart from the funeral. Alec's personal affairs had to be wound up; I spent a lot of time with his solicitor.' I leaned forward. 'Alison, will you marry me?' Her hand jerked so that she spilled a few drops of red Campari on to the table. She looked at me a little oddly,, as though I were a stranger, then said, 'Oh, no, Owen." I said, 'I love you very much.' 'And I think I love you.' Her lower lip trembled. 'Then what's the matter? We're very well suited.' 'I'll tell you,' she said. 'You're another Alec. In twenty years -- if you survive -- you'll be sitting in a little, obscure office pulling strings and making men jump around, just like Alec. You won't be doing it because you like it but because you think it's your duty. And you'll hate the job and you'll hate yourself -- just as Alec did. But you'll go on doing it.' I said, 'Someone has to do it.' 'But not the man I marry,' said Alison. 'I told you once that I was like a Venus Fly Trap. I want to be a cabbage of a housewife, living, perhaps on the green outskirts of an English country town, all tweedy and Country Life.' There's no reason why you shouldn't have that, too,' I said. 'And stay behind and be alone when you went on a job?' She shook her head. 'It wouldn't work, Owen.' I felt a sudden resentment, and said abruptly, "Then why did you come back here -- to Malta?' A look of consternation crossed her face. 'Oh, Owen; I'm sorry. You thought . . .' 'You didn't say goodbye and Armitage told me you'd be coming back after the funeral. What was I supposed to think?' 'I was flown to England in an RAF transport,' she said quietly. 'I've come back to pick up my plane . . . and to say goodbye.' To say goodbye -- just like that?' 'No,' she flared. 'Not just like that.' Her eyes filled with tears. 'Owen, it's all going wrong.' I took her hand in mine. 'Have you ever been to Morocco?' She looked at me warily, taken wrong-footed by the sudden change of subject. 'Yes; I know it quite well.' 'Could that aircraft of yours fly to Tangier from here?' 'It could,' she said uncertainly. 'But . . .' 'I need a holiday,' I said. 'And I have a year and a half of back pay which I need help in spending. I'm sure you'd make an efficient guide to Morocco. I need one -- I've never been there.' 'You're trying the blarney again,' she said, and there was laughter in her voice. 'Maeve O'Sullivan warned me about that,' Maeve had also told me that I wasn't the man for Alison Smith. She could be right, but I had to try. 'No strings and no promises,' said Alison. I smiled. Six weeks together was all the promise I needed. A lot could happen in six weeks. The end.