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The Ravagers mh-8

Page 17

by Donald Hamilton


  I said, "It's not a question of what we can do for her, Irish. It's a question of what she can do for us. And nobody invited you."

  She was bright enough to catch my meaning. She said quickly, "Don't be silly. Just let me dump some dirt out of my shoes so I'll have room for more."

  The mine didn't bother me this time. I had nothing else left to do; I might as well be crawling through the bowels of the earth looking for something I didn't particularly want to find. The first thing I found, beyond the point where the shooting had occurred, was a scrap of acid-stained cloth caught on a nail. The next thing was my own knife. It lay at the side of the tunnel, unopened. It had blood and stuff on it as if it had been handled before being dropped.

  I didn't ask myself what Naomi had been wanting with a knife. I just wiped it on my shirt tail and dropped it into my pocket. Below were more signs of her progress. Finally, I found her. She was lying face down between the rusty rails, small, torn, dusty, and motionless, but I could hear her painful breathing.

  If you can do it, you'd damn well better be able to look at it. I put the lantern down and turned her over gently. I heard Jenny gasp and turn away, gagging. Well, I'd seen it once before; I'd known what to expect. I guess you could say Greg was avenged. I found her good hand and checked her pulse, for no very sensible reason. After all, if she could breathe, she was alive, The small hand I was holding closed on mine.

  "Dave?"

  The voice was strange and kind of thick. It seemed to come from deep down and far away. I said, "That's who."

  "Kill me," the voice said.

  I said, "Sure. Just hang on while I find a suitable rock. Do you prefer having your brains bashed out from front or rear?"

  "I mean it. You did this to me. Well, finish it. Kill me."

  "Take it easy, doll."

  She clung to my hand. "Don't let them save me! Don't let them take me to a hospital and… and wash me off and transfuse me and… I saw what it did to Mike Green. I don't want to live like that. I'd be a freak, a blind, faceless freak with a claw for a hand. Kill me!"

  "Sure," I said. "Sure, doll. But it will cost you."

  I heard Jenny draw in her breath sharply. Naomi said pleadingly, "It hurts, Dave! God, how it hurts!" I didn't say anything. She spoke in a different voice, almost businesslike: "What do you want?"

  "Information," I said. "Penelope Drilling. Where's she being held? Who's holding her?"

  Naomi whispered, "You'd blackmail me for that, damn you, after what you've already done to me?"

  I started to rise. "So long, baby. I'll send the doctors out when I get to town. They'll take good care of you."

  She gripped my hand tightly. "I love you, Clevenger. You're almost as mean as I am."

  "Meaner," I said. "I'll come visit you in the hospital. See how you're coming with your left handed Braille."

  I heard Jenny stir behind me. I guess she thought I was terrible, even though it was her child I was fighting for. She didn't count here. She didn't know how it was. She wasn't a pro, like the two of us.

  Naomi laughed harshly. "You're a darling," she gasped. "You're a wonderful, coldblooded beast. There isn't a drop of sympathy in you, is there?"

  "Not a drop."

  "I couldn't stand sympathy. That's another reason why… they'd be full of sympathy, all the kookie doctors and nurses. What do they know? Who wants their damn sympathy? Try a town called Greenwich. Greenwich, British Columbia. The house is about three miles west of town. A little farm. The brat's there if she's still alive. That I can't guarantee. The name on the mailbox is Turley. Mr. and Mrs. Claude Turley. Okay?"

  "Okay," I said. "I've got a pill for you. Just a minute while I get at it."

  "Oh, one of those," she breathed. "I had one, but I dropped it back there and couldn't find it again. Then I tried your knife but I couldn't get it open one-handed."

  "It takes practice," I said. "Here you are. You know the drill. Get it between your teeth and bite down. If you really want it."

  She said softly, "Chicken. You're going to make me decide, so you can tell yourself it wasn't you who did it."

  I said, "Hell, I'll cut your throat if you want me to, doll. But this way's clean and painless, they tell me."

  "Give it to me. It's beginning to hurt again. I can't stand much more."

  "Open your mouth," I said.

  "So long," she whispered. "I hope you have nightmares about me. In Technicolor. Give it to me now."

  When we came out of the mine, into the fading sunlight, a police car was just nosing into the opening below us where the Volkswagen had been and was no longer. A man got out of the rear and came up toward us as we slid and scrambled down the dump. I had him pegged right away. He was wearing a green tweed suit. I don't know why it is, whenever they get out of the uniform of the day, tweed is what they always get into, real rough and hairy and colorful.

  "Mr. Helm?" he said as I reached him. "I'm Commander Howland, U.S. Naval Intelligence. I'm working with the Canadians on this. I want to congratulate you. It looks very much as if our fish is taking the bait. Come on. I guess you deserve to be in at the kill"

  XXIII

  IT WAS a high bluff overlooking the ocean. The sun was down, but inshore you could still see wicked underwater rocks lurking beneath the innocent-looking surface. Farther out, the sea was dark and impenetrable. Way out there, a white boat was heading diagonally offshore, leaving a Vshaped wake.

  "He's still holding on," said Commander Howland. "I guess he hasn't bothered to open the envelope. Or maybe he'd keep on anyway, to get away. So Mrs. Drilling switched papers on us?"

  "So she says."

  "It's a pity. We had some very pretty ones fixed up by some of the best scientific brains in the world. It would be ironic if a handful of old letters turned the trick just as well." Howland put his eye to the tripod-mounted telescope behind which he was lying. It was a massive glass, looking like an overgrown half-binocular, with an objective lens as big as two fists. Howland said, "As it seems to be doing. Course, approximately due north. Speed, about twenty knots. He's got the old bucket up to maximum hull speed now; look at the way she's squatting. You know he put a new engine in her last year, a big one. They all figure if they double the horsepower they'll double the speed, but it doesn't work like that. All those extra horses just gave him about three knots more than he had with the old mill. The tub wasn't built to go faster."

  I said, "You seem to know quite a bit about Muir, Sir." In the business, we make a practice of siring all officers above the rank of major or lieutenant commander. It makes for good working relations with the service brass.

  "We've been watching him for three years, just in case we might have need of him or the people he contacts from time to time. It was merely a question of getting him something big enough that he'd feel justified in arranging a rendezvous." Howland rose. "Take a look if you like. I'm going over to talk with our friends. Sorry I can't invite you. The less you learn about the technical end of this, the less you'll have to forget."

  "Sure."

  I watched him go over to a knot of uniformed men stationed farther down the bluff. They had some radio stuff set up, and I couldn't have cared less about the technical details. I was, however, just a bit curious about whom all the communications gear were supposed to talk to, but I didn't expect to be told and I never was. I got down behind the low telescope and put my eye to the ocular and got things focused. The boat came in sharp and clear as if in broad daylight. It was quite a glass.

  I lay alone, watching Muir's little vessel buck the waves out there, smashing them into sheets of flying spray. Jenny was gone. This was all too highly classified for her to witness; besides, she wanted to be handy to learn what, if anything, was happening in a town called Greenwich, B.C. Besides, she probably wanted a bath and some clean clothes more than she wanted international secrets; she'd probably had enough of those. I wondered if I would ever see her again.

  Far out there, the white boat changed position in the
water. The stern rose, the bow settled, and spray ceased to fly. I was aware that Commander Howland had returned to stand over me.

  "He's cut the power," I said. "He's stopping."

  "Excuse me. May I look?"

  I got up and brushed myself off. Instinctively I looked skyward, but I couldn't see any planes. There probably was at least one up there, however. Whatever kind of a trap it was they were setting, they wouldn't rely entirely on shore-based observation. I heard Howland draw a sharp breath, and looked down. He was beckoning me to the scope.

  "Take a look," he whispered, as if he could be heard out there, miles at sea. "Take a good look, fella. There's a sight you won't see often. Not outside a top secret Soviet shipyard. One of their latest and best, and we've got her. We've got her in the bag!"

  I lay down again, and got the white boat sharp in the powerful telescope. I saw that it wasn't alone in the gathering dark. Beyond it lay a great, low, black, wet, monstrous shape. It used to be that automobiles looked like carriages without horses, and submarines looked like real ships that might just duck under the surface occasionally, but this was no ship. It was obviously a creature of the deeps. It was bigger than any pig-boat I'd ever seen, and faster, too. It had been still only a moment; now it was shooting ahead and slipping back under the sea. A moment later it was gone.

  "She's down," I reported. Then I said "Muir's boat seems to be sinking."

  "Yes. He'd have opened the sea cocks before he abandoned her."

  Howland's voice had a preoccupied sound. I looked up and he was watching, not the sea, but the fancy wrist-chronometer he was wearing. Muir's boat settled slowly and sank stern first. There was nothing left to see out there. I got up and stood beside the Commander. I saw his lips move.

  "Now," he whispered. "Now!"

  Nothing happened for a long breath of time. Then a white jet grew on the dark ocean far out there, and out of the middle rose a tremendous geyser of churned-up water. In this water were chunks of black debris. By the time the sound of the explosion reached us, everything was starting to settle back. Presently there was only a widening ring of oily, disturbed water out there. I head Howland make a funny little sound, and looked at him again. He swallowed oddly, and cleared his throat, and swallowed again.

  He said, "Damn, I hate to see a ship die, even one of theirs. You haven't seen anything, of course."

  "No, sir."

  "If you did see something, it was an accident. A terrible, unexplained accident. Expressions of sympathy will be sent to Moscow, you may be sure, as soon as the local people establish just what it was that blew up in their front yard."

  I said, "I don't suppose this has anything to do with the U.S. missile sub that went down on patrol a while back. It couldn't be that our friends tried a bluff of some kind way down in the ocean depths, and we've just given them the only kind of answer they understand?"

  He looked at me for a moment. Then he said softly, "Let us hope it was a bluff, Mr. Helm. And let us hope and pray they understand the answer, and believe we mean it, as we do. And of course I have no idea what you are talking about, none at all."

  *****

  Back in Washington, the consensus seemed to be that old Helm had lucked out as usual. At least that was the attitude I sensed in a certain office on the second floor of a certain old building, never mind where.

  "Everyone seems quite satisfied with your performance, Eric," Mac said. "However-"

  "Yes, sir," I said.

  He hesitated. "Never mind. There is a gentleman named Johnston in town. You will see him tomorrow and tell him whatever seems advisable. Let us try to keep our colleagues happy."

  "Happy," I said. "Yes, sir."

  "And I have a message for you. A lady wants to see you at the bar at the Hotel Vance at five-thirty this evening."

  "Any particular lady?" I asked.

  "She said to tell you that Penelope was safe. I gather she wishes to express her gratitude."

  I almost didn't recognize her. I don't suppose I was really expecting to find a disheveled young woman in a dirty blue jumper, after the days that had passed, but I wasn't prepared for the extent of the transformation. She was wearing something emerald-green and slinky and Chinese-looking, and the freckles were kind of subdued but the thick hair was a shade or two redder than I remembered, very soft and smooth and bright.

  "Mrs. Drilling, ma'am," I said.

  She turned from the bar and smiled. I'd forgotten what a pretty woman she really was. "And just what do I call you, Mr. Government Man," she asked. "What is your name today?"

  I said, "Looking like that, you don't have to call any man by name, Irish. Just snap your fingers."

  She laughed, and stopped laughing. "Penny's all right," she said seriously.

  "I know. I got your message."

  "She's with her father. I don't know how it's all going to work out, but in the meantime-" She hesitated. She seemed a little embarrassed. She said rather stiffly, "I pay my debts, Dave."

  "Meaning what?"

  "We had a… an arrangement, remember? But the payoff was kind of interrupted. Well, you were in my corner when I needed you. You were cruel and ruthless, but I guess you had to be. You accomplished something I couldn't have." She hesitated. "What I mean is, you did your part. I'll do mine. If you're still interested."

  I looked at her for a moment. Then I signaled a bartender to bring me a martini. I looked back to Jenny, who was watching me, waiting.

  I said, very carefully, "You had an arrangement with a shady private dick named Clevenger, who no longer exists."

  A little frowning crease showed between her eyes. "In other words, you aren't interested."

  "I didn't say that, Irish. I just mean that you're under no obligations because of what you may have promised a fictitious character in a moment of stress."

  She said, rather coolly, "Aren't you being overly honorable?"

  I said, "Hell, I'm just setting the record straight. Nobody owes nobody nothing."

  After a moment she smiled slowly. "Yes. I see what you mean. It is better that way, isn't it?"

  She was right. It was.

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