The Last Alchemist td-64

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by Warren Murphy




  The Last Alchemist

  ( The Destroyer - 64 )

  Warren Murphy

  Richard Sapir

  The Philosopher's Stone. The key to turning base metals into gold. Everyone knew it didn't exist. Except it did. And now the last of the alchemists, Harrison Caldwell, had his hands on it and was reaching out to grab the nuclear power that would fuel his dream for bottomless wealth-and create a golden age of hell on earth.

  Only Remo and Chiun could stop him..if they could get past the army of the highest-paid killers on the globe..if they could survive the attacks of Francisco Braun, the golden-hairdo murderer, whose reputation for being the #1 assassin in his deadly trade was well earned..and if they could break the power of the magic metal that reduced governments to servants and turned even Remo Williams into its slave...

  Destroyer 64: The Last Alchemist

  By Warren Murphy and Richard Sapir

  Chapter 1

  The bodies were still there, preserved by the cold and dark of the sea, just as he said they would be. And they were right where he said they'd find them: two hundred feet down, off the coast of Spain, in the belly of a Spanish man-of-war. Maneuvering in the slow dreamwalk of the deep, the diver moved around the open hatch, watching the pantaloons of the dead quiver in the currents created with his heavy leaded feet. They were Spanish soldiers of the king, he had been told, guarding the ship for eternity. They would not harm him, he had been told. He had answered that he wasn't afraid of the dead; he was afraid of the old diving suit he had to wear. If they did find the wreck, and he had to enter it, an air hose going up to the mother ship could get caught in one of the old timbers.

  "You're not getting paid to test modern equipment, you're getting paid to find a damned ship and get me something," Mr. Harrison Caldwell had told him from behind a desk in a very modern salvage office in Barcelona. Mr. Caldwell was an American, but strangely he could speak Spanish as though born a grandee. The diver, Jesus Gomez, had been warned of that, warned not to make little snide remarks about the gringo in Spanish.

  "Mr. Caldwell, sir. There is no amount of money that is worth my life, sir," Jesus Gomez had answered. He made his protest about the old air hose in practiced English. Jesus was the son and grandson of divers, men who had gone under the water for sponges without any equipment and ended up crippled from the bends, walking into old age stooped like ships heeling to one side. He knew that if he wished to walk upright for the rest of his life he would have to dive with equipment. Getting equipment meant not diving for sponges but things under the sea important people wanted. And important people meant English-speaking people. So Jesus, the diver, learned English early on. The first word Jesus Gomez learned was "mister." The second was "sir."

  "Mr. Caldwell, sir. If I lose my life, what good is money? There is not enough money, sir, to pay for my life," Jesus Gomez had told Mr. Caldwell.

  "Oh, there most certainly is," Harrison Caldwell had said, brushing something imaginary off his dark immaculate suit. "Let's not waste time in this infernal Latin bargaining. Everything has a price; people are just too stupid to know it. Now, we are not talking about your definite death. We are talking about a risk of death."

  "Yessir," said Jesus Gomez. He sat a bit more stiffly than normal, because his mouth had learned the words, but not his soul.

  "You risk your life everytime you go down, so we are not even negotiating the risk of your life, but how much of a risk."

  "That is correct, Mr. Caldwell."

  "Therefore, what is your price for the greater risk?"

  "Sir, may I ask why you insist on the old air line connected to a heavy steel helmet and a diving suit? Air lines get tangled in wrecks. Suits are heavy. Wrecks are dangerous enough without entering them on the end of a thin air line."

  "I wish to have contact all the time. I wish to have telephone contact all the time."

  "Sir, may I suggest the new scuba equipment for me, with a telephone line for you. I will be safe. You will have your diving service, and we will both be happy."

  "My way, fifteen thousand dollars for the week," said Harrison Caldwell. He had a sharp long face with a highbridged nose, and an imperious dark-eyed stare that always reminded others of what, exactly, Harrison Caldwell thought they were-servants.

  "Sir, I will do it for ten thousand, but let me use my own gear."

  "Thirty thousand. We use mine," said Harrison Caldwell.

  "Sir..."

  "Forty," said Mr. Caldwell.

  "Fifty," said Jesus Gomez, and when the American agreed so readily, Jesus Gomez cursed himself for not demanding more. But still, fifty thousand American dollars, for one week of diving, was more than his father had made in a lifetime. Though Jesus was a man of twenty-eight, he almost did not tell his father of his good fortune; Jesus feared his father might regret his having given up his life for so little.

  "Jesus," said his father, "fifty thousand dollars American is far too much for a week of diving. It is too much."

  "There is no such thing as too much."

  "There is always a thing that is too much, " said the father. "I am afraid I will never see you again."

  "You will see me rich, Father. You will see a new home, and the good wine bought in bottles, and American cigarettes, and the French cheeses you once had on your trip to the big city. And Mama will have lace for her hair."

  "Too much for one week," his father had said. But his father was an old man who was crippled at forty from diving without any gear for the sponges that became farther and farther out, deeper and deeper down. An old man who had spent his strong days earning in his entire life the equivalent of twelve thousand American dollars.

  And so Jesus Gomez had taken the dive, and as Mr. Caldwell had said, the ship was waiting for him, including the dead men.

  "Yes, Mr. Caldwell," said Jesus Gomez, activating the telephone line with a switch. "I see the bodies where you said they would be."

  "Good," said Mr. Caldwell. "Are they wearing pantaloons?"

  "Yessir, Mr. Caldwell."

  "That is the front hatch, then. Go to the stern. I will wait. "

  Slowly Jesus Gomez made his way along the dark planking of the ship, shining the special deep light ahead of his steps, careful not to put his full weight on any plank lest he fall into the hull. Small fish darted in the bright beam, a hole of light in the great darkness of the silent deep. The wood was intact but not strong, not after more than four hundred years. When he reached the stern hatch, his light picked up white skulls, piled like cannonballs in a pyramid.

  "Santa Maria," gasped Jesus Gomez.

  "You're there," came down Harrison Caldwell's voice. "Wait for the camera." Even two hundred feet down, Jesus could see the strong lights break the surface above. By the time the lights were within the reach of his hands, they were blinding. He had to shut his eyes and grope. Once he had them pointed away, he saw they were mounted on a still camera, a very large still camera, strangely large considering that a movie camera would have been half the size.

  "Leave the skulls where they are," came Mr. Caldwell's voice. "Let yourself and the camera down, carefully down, on the prow side of the skulls. You will be walking toward the center."

  "I am afraid of my air."

  "You have twenty more minutes of work to do to collect the rest of your fifty thousand. Come, come. You are not really in a negotiating position."

  When Jesus Gomez shone the light into the dark hull with ribbing torn from the capsizing that took place centuries before, the words "sir" and "mister" came very slow from his throat. But they came nevertheless. Always mindful of his air line, he called for more, and pulled it in a loose coil to his side, careful to avoid a crimp
. He would know when he had a crimp. He simply wouldn't be able to breathe.

  With the coil carefully at his side, he allowed himself to fall slowly into the hull, prayers on his lips all the way.

  It was an insane way to dive, he knew. The camera came with him, its lights making sunshine on wood turned coal black by centuries of the Atlantic. His weighted diving boots kicked a bar and the bar did not move. Heavier than lead. He shone the light down, and it was what he suspected. Gold. A bar of gold. No, tons of gold, piled along the entire length and width of the hull stacked like cordwood in some peasant's hut. No wonder Mr. Caldwell so easily agreed to fifty thousand dollars.

  "Do you want me to photograph your gold now, Mr. Caldwell, sir?" said Jesus Gomez, the words now a joy because he knew why the money could be so plentiful. He was no longer obsessed with the danger of the dive, but with the richness of it.

  "No, No. Forget the gold. Farther toward the prow you will find it."

  "A man who does not value gold, a ship guarded by skulls."

  "Gomez, I value gold more than anything. As for guarding by skulls, that was an old practice for treasure. One skull per fortune."

  "But there is a stack of skulls back there."

  "Yes," said Mr. Caldwell.

  "What should I photograph?"

  "You will see it. You cannot miss it. It is made of stone, simple black basalt. And it is round."

  "Just that, sir?"

  "That's what you are being paid for," came back the voice of Mr. Caldwell.

  At that moment the air became just a bit more difficult to breathe, and not because of the line. Jesus was very careful about that line, jiggling it free from above and behind him every few feet, careful of the insurance coil of slack. At the first resistance of the line, he pulled no more and used the coil. He would not, he vowed, go one step beyond that coil.

  If there was gold in the stern, stacks of it, then there has to be more of it for ballast, he thought. Unless, of course, the stone is the ballast. The big stone in the middle of the ship is the ballast.

  And then he thought some more, stepping carefully over the floating hand of a man whose sword had been useless to defend his life under the water.

  No, he thought. If I am to photograph the stone, then the gold is the ballast. The stone had to be the many treasures, the reason for the many skulls. Such was the stunning revelation that came to Jesus Gomez as he stumbled onto the stone. It hit his feet. It was round, almost a perfect circle the diameter of a short man.

  "I have found it."

  "Turn on the camera. There is a rubber plunger switch at the rear ... good. That's it. Don't kick up the mud." This from Mr. Caldwell, who could obviously see through this camera. But that did not explain why it was so large. Television cameras could be made as small as a loaf of bread.

  "There are four quadrants," said Mr. Caldwell. "Do you see them?"

  "Oh, yes," said Gomez. The stone was divided into four parts. In the days of the Spanish, gold coins were divided into pieces of eight, and quarters, where the modern Americans got the name of their silver pieces from, not from quarters of dollars as they liked to believe.

  "Stand on the edge of the closest quadrant."

  "Yes, Mr. Caldwell."

  "Point the camera directly at your feet, and hold the camera steady."

  "I am, Mr. Caldwell."

  "Press the button on your left."

  "I am doing that, Mr. Caldwell." Jesus felt the camera whir and felt little clicks. Jesus did that two times minimum for every section of the quadrant, sometimes doing it as many as five times. And by this he realized every picture he took was seen and recorded on the surface ship, because otherwise Mr. Caldwell would not know to ask for another picture unless he could see something he didn't like in the first ones.

  Jesus thought he recognized some of the letters but could read no language. There were Arabic letters, he thought. Spanish letters, he thought. But the words were not Spanish, even though he thought he recognized one or two.

  Perhaps, he thought while waiting for the camera to do its job, one language is Latin. I have seen words like this chiseled into church walls. Perhaps the Arabic is old, too, he thought. Other letters he could not even remotely recognize.

  As he checked his watch he realized that if he had taken down tanks he would not have been able to stay so long. This made him feel better. There was some logic now to the risky suit. Mr. Caldwell wanted his photographs done in one dive. It would be fifty thousand dollars for a day. He had done all four quadrants. There was nothing left to do. He waited for Mr. Caldwell to call him up to the surface. Finally, he could wait no longer. "Are we done, Mr. Caldwell?" said Jesus Gomez.

  There was no answer from above. He felt his ears ring. Something was pushing in on his skull. The breathing was hard, like his lungs were being pushed out into his rib cage. It was hot, very hot for this deep. Then he realized the air pressure in the suit was increasing. Becoming enormous. He tried to move across the planking but his weighted feet were rising. He was rising. And he couldn't stop it.

  "Mr. Caldwell, Mr. Caldwell. Lower the pressure. Lower the pressure," cried Jesus Gomez. He felt himself lift from the base of the hull, rising toward the upper decks. The underside of the deck felt strangely soft. Very soft. It was as though the ceiling was as springy and as pliable as a balloon. Then he saw it-a gloved hand in a bloated arm. The pressure had pushed him into another diver, a diver who was also pinned to the roof. Dangling from the diver's hand was a camera similar to the one Mr. Caldwell had given Jesus, except it had a single light. Jesus had been sent a strong battery of lights. Did they try the first time and find out there were not enough lights to photograph the stone? But why did they strand the diver? At that moment, pinned inside the wreck of a ship two hundred feet and four centuries beneath the surface, Jesus Gomez knew exactly why Mr. Caldwell was willing to pay fifty thousand dollars for a week. He would have paid fifty million for a week. Because Mr. Caldwell never intended to pay him at all. Mr. Caldwell paid only in air pressure.

  Jesus saw the air line and the camera line float away. Apparently they could disassemble them from above, plugging the air line at Jesus' end. He knew it was from his end because bubbles came from the retreating end like a snake, like a snake of life saying good-bye to Jesus Gomez pinned to the ceiling of an old ship, another skull to guard the many treasures. He wondered if he should cut open his suit, just to get free of the ceiling. Of course he would drown, but maybe he could somehow get to that bubbling hose going away, taunting him with the air he needed. But the arms of Jesus Gomez, trapped in a taut balloon of a suit, could not move. And besides, the pressure was turning everything black anyhow. Or was it the batteries going out in the lights? Could they turn those out from above? he wondered. His father had been right. It was too much money. And his last dim thoughts as his body gave up its quest for air, in the warm comforting narcotic of death, was that his father, the poor sponge diver, was right. Too much money. Too much.

  Professor Augustine Cryx of Brussels had to laugh. Not only was it too much money, but anyone willing to pay money at all for his services had to be suspect.

  "What? Calling from America? Is there something wrong with the postal service? Eh? I can't hear you."

  "Professor Cryx, this is a perfect telephone connection. And you're hearing well. I want you to look at several photographs tomorrow. I will pay whatever you ask, just see me tomorrow."

  Professor Cryx laughed. Even the laughter was old, almost a crackle coming from a dry throat. He was eighty-seven years old, lived a life of virtual obscurity, pensioned off by the university in quiet embarrassment after the Second World War, and now someone was offering him four times what his yearly salary had been just to look at some pictures.

  "Mr. Caldwell," said Professor Cryx. "What would I do with the money? I have no need of money. How many years do you think I have left?"

  "What do you want?" said Harrison Caldwell. "Name it."

  "I wish to enjoy t
he feast of St. Vincense D'Ors. And that is tomorrow. And I have my wine, and I make libations in all four corners of the world, and chant the words so dear to his heart."

  "I can build a statue for him or of him, Professor Cryx. I'll make a donation to the church in St. Vincense D'Ors' name."

  "Wouldn't do any good, Mr. Caldwell. The Roman Catholic Church cleared poor Vincense out with St. Christopher and Philomena and so many others, years ago. We all no longer belong, including me. We are all finished and done with. Good day, Mr. Caldwell."

  "Wait. I can make a donation to the Catholic Church. They serve the living. I'll build them hospitals in St. Vincense's name. That's what you can do for St. Vincense D'Ors if you see me tomorrow. The Church won't turn down helping the poor."

  Again there was laughter over the transatlantic line. "Mr. Caldwell. Good old St. Vincense needs his libations and holy words. He needs them here in Brussels where he was born. Now why are you offering me so much money for a discredited science, so discredited that even in my youth I was forced to teach it as the history of the medieval ages? Why?"

  "Let me ask you then, sir. Why are you so insistent on performing those ceremonies tomorrow? Why not let others do it?"

  "Because, Mr. Caldwell, I am the only one to pour libations on St. Vincense's birthday. I am the last."

  "I will carry it on."

  "You lie. What do you care about the patron saint of alchemy? The science has been discredited for over a century. But I tell you, the alchemists were the beginning of Western science, no matter what you or anyone else says. No matter what the university feels. Other sciences have flaws. Do they call physics superstition because a theory doesn't work? Do they call psychoanalysis superstition because someone comes up with a new definition of the id? No. But alchemy, the source of Western chemistry and science, was discarded entirely as a superstition just because a few theories did not prove out."

  "Why are you yelling, professor? If I didn't believe, would I be offering to pay you so much money for one day?"

 

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