John Rackham - Treasure Of Tau Ceti.pdf

(282 KB) Pobierz
700135486 UNPDF
Table of Contents
Treasure of Tau Ceti
I
II
III
IV
V
VI
VII
VIII
IX
X
XI
XII
I
ACCORDING TO Awell-worn fable, an empire can fall because of a loose horseshoe nail, meaning, I
take it, that great events can spring from trivial beginnings. In my case it was the idle whim to take a short
cut of a dark evening, on my way to my club from my once-a-week workout at Barry’s Gym. It was
dark enough to destroy color and sharp outline, but the alleyway was short, and there was nothing in my
mind except that it would save me ten minutes or so against the long way around. I like walking, and the
evening air was cool after my exertions, but I was out of sorts with life. To tell the truth I was finding
idleness a bore, and life tedious.
Then I saw two men in the gloom ahead of me. The streetlights here were discreetly dim, it being a
residential backwater, and I hesitated. Where there’s a choice I prefer to mind my own business, what
little of it I have, and one never knows just what may be going on in London of an evening. At the turn of
the century the metropolis is still a Mecca for tourists, and many other kinds of visitors, not quite so
innocuous, so I hung on my step a moment, peering. They appeared to be struggling, but it was difficult to
be sure. And then I caught the flicker of a knife, no doubt about that, and I went forward at a run,
without thinking. I was too late to stop the assault, but in time to catch the knife-wielder by the collar. It
was very nearly my last mistake, because he whipped around far faster than I expected, and it was sheer
instinct that made me lash out at his swinging arm. The knife went away and jangled on the pavement, but
he wasn’t done by any means. My impression was of a thin and wiry man of about five-eight—and I am
six foot three and heavy made—but he gave me a rough time until my surprise had worn off.
It’s a simple matter for a story-teller to say “life-and-death struggle” but it takes time for the idea to
penetrate, time enough for him to have kicked me in the wind, rapped his knuckles against my face two
or three times, and then to discover from somewhere a short club that hurt like the devil when he used it
on my shoulder. I lost my temper, which is something the gym instructors say one should never do. Right
or wrong, it put an end to the fight. I was shaking badly as I bent over the limpness I had thrown against
a wall, and it was a relief to discover him still breathing. There was enough light to see his lean face,
700135486.001.png
enough that I would know him again if need be.
Then I turned to the man who had been knifed, an older man, with a heavy jaw and a look of hard
experience in his lined face. He, too, was still breathing, but by the bubble and catch in his breath I
doubted if it would be for very much longer. His eyes opened as I turned him over.
“Keep still.” I said. “I’ll get a doctor.”
“Too late for that. Swilly—good with—a knife. I’m a fool—turned my back on him. What—?”
“I bounced him off the wall. He’ll he no more trouble. You’ll be safe for a minute—”
“No!” He managed to move, and the movement made him cough. I was more than ever sure he was a
dying man, but he grabbed my sleeve and held on. “Too late for me.” He choked, and then showed his
teeth in a grin that was pure hate. “Don’t want Swilly to get it. Paid him off, but he wanted a cut in the big
deal. A rat, always was. You have it.”
“Have what?” I demanded, thinking he was raving.
“Wig. My wig. It’s all there. Worth millions. Take it.”
I shook my head, and he grew agitated, coughed again, and there was blood on his lip. “Take it!” he
choked. “Millions. Tonight! Tonight!” and then he coughed again, gave a shudder in the middle of it, and
sagged. I felt him dwindle as I held him, and I knew he was dead. As I said before, it takes time to sink
in. I don’t know how long I crouched there, completely stunned, but it couldn’t have been more than
thirty seconds or so. A scuffle disturbed me, and I scrambled around in time to see my recent opponent
getting to his feet and vanishing into the gloom. It was pointless to give chase. As I turned back, a glint of
light from the knife-blade caught my eye, and I realized just how badly I was placed. Astonishingly
enough, no one had shown up to investigate, but that couldn’t last much longer, and here I was, bearing
all the marks of a fight, along with a dead man, and the knife that had killed him. Something about a wig. I
crouched again, drove my unwilling hand to investigate, and a shock of black hair with a pale lock
running through it came away in my grip. A wig!
I went away from there quickly. I wanted to run, but I bad just enough sense left to realize that if I once
started running, panic would take charge. I made myself walk. Fifteen minutes later I was breasting up to
the bar and asking the club steward for a brandy, a large one. He must have seen signs of damage and
distress but was too well trained to comment. I could see, in the mirror behind him, that I was a mess, so
I drank up hurriedly, perhaps unwisely, and made my way to the washroom. I was still shaking as I made
an inspection of myself, beat as much as I could of the dust from my knees and arms, and then leaned at
a mirror to look for bruises that would show. There were one or two, but cold water would reduce them
a little. I peeled off my cloak and was hoisting my sleeves when the washroom door opened to admit
someone else, a tall, easy-moving, competent-looking man of about thirty-five. He looked straight at me
and smiled, and I was to learn, later, that the smile was almost a part of him.
“Need any help?” he asked, very gently, and I was on the point of fending him off with some story when
a finger of memory stirred.
“We’ve met,” I said, “haven’t we?”
“That’s right. Once, just briefly, in your father’s office, about a year ago. Britannia. I'm Neil Carson.”
 
“Yes.” He had placed the memory for me. Re had also stirred something else, my father’s words in
reference to this man. “A very useful chap to know. If ever you want anything taken care of efficiently
and discreetly, you can’t do better.” It was almost enough to open my defenses, but not quite.
“What makes you think I need help?”
“Eyesight and experience. You carry all the marks of a scrap, but you’re big and strong enough to take
care of that, so why are you shaking like a leaf?” I saw his eyes flick to my arm, and come back to mine.
“Someone used a blackjack on you. I’ve seen marks like that before. A holdup?”
“Not quite. I’ve just seen a murder done.”
“I’ve seen one or two myself. Not pleasant. Here, let me help you off with that shirt. How are you
involved?”
It was his calmness that got me. No more than ten minutes later we had a secluded table in an alcove
and I was telling him everything just as it had happened. He was a good listener, and waited until I was
done before asking me to try and describe the two men involved.
“Swilly, I’ve heard of,” he said, and frowned thoughtfully. “Small time crook, runs errands for the big
men. A nose. One who gets information and sells it to the best bidder. I think I know the man with the
wig, too, but I won’t put a name to him yet. Tell me again what he said, the exact words if you can.
I told him as far as I was able, and he frowned again in thought.
“If it’s the man I think it is, he wouldn’t babble. He plays for big stakes. ‘Millions’ wouldn’t be just
words, but fact. And he gave it to you.”
“What are you getting at?”
“You have a choice. You can report this affair, and get yourself involved with the law, and investigations
and publicity. Or you can keep quiet. You left no traces, you didn’t handle the knife, you’re clear.”
“But Swilly saw me.
“Right. He won’t go to the law, that’s obvious. But he sells information, and he will sell this. The dead
man was on to something big, and Swilly knew it. You’ve got it now, and Swilly will guess that much,
and sell that, too. So you’re in trouble either way. Wouldn’t you like to know what it is that you have?”
“The wig, you mean? You haven’t even looked at it!”
“Don’t intend to, not here. Too public. Maybe I don’t want to get involved either.” Carson still had his
grin, but there was an undercurrent of seriousness in his voice, and it pulled me up sharp.
“That’s true, of course. I’ve no right to drag you in.”
“You didn’t. I offered, remember? And I’d like to help, so long as we get one point clear. I’m betting
this is something big, and outside the law. By that I don’t mean necessarily criminal, but we will be mixing
with criminals. The kind of people who carry knives, or worse, and are ready to use them, as you know.
Also, as you obviously don’t feel like handing this over to the lawful authorities, better get clear what
you’re letting yourself in for. Danger. Threats. Hazard. Possible rewards, no doubt, but it’s something
 
you have to commit yourself to, and no backing out once you’ve started. You think about it.”
I did think, while I finished off what was on my plate, and another cup of coffee. Carson had a point.
Events had moved so suddenly and swiftly that I needed time to take stock. From one point of view I
had everything to lose. My life could be summed up in a few brief phrases. Alan Noble:
Twenty-three; single and unencumbered; only son and heir of Robert Noble, director-owner of Noble
International Interplanetary Finance; amiable; inoffensive; totally unfit for a business life, much to my
father’s disgust; but well-acquainted with the pleasant occupation of caring for a country estate and
thoroughly bored with my life.That last emphasis had to be made, because I now had to set it against
what Carson was spreading before me. Risk and danger and possible disgrace, plus a mystery, but a
possible rich reward. It added up to adventure. I looked at him again, searchingly.
“You’ll come in with me?”
“Only if you’ll listen to my point and accept it. If we go any further with this thing we will be in it right up
to here.” He chopped at his chin with one hand. “We’ll be on our own. No crying for help. And the
competition doesn’t wear gloves. So, if you let me in, it will be to take charge. You see. I’ve done things
like this before.”
I can’t hope to describe the way he said that. All I can say is that he convinced me entirely. “You have a
deal,” I said, and offered him my hand. He took it firmly. “What now?” I asked. “What’s the first thing?”
“I make a phone call. It’s a pure guess, but it will save time. I know someone who might just be able to
help, and is reliable in any case.”
“A third party?”
I said reliable. Never be slow to use experts, where you can. I’ll be back in a minute. Finish your meal.”
I tried, while he was gone, to get from my memory a little more on him, but there wasn’t much to be had.
That he was American, I could deduce anyway from his slight accent. That the job he had done for my
father was something irregular and important was obvious from the respect with which be had treated
him. My father is slow to show respect to anyone unless there’s a good reason. I had completed my meal
by the time he returned.
“I’ve asked our expert to meet us at my apartment. It’s just along the Embankment. You fit?”
Some clock struck ten as we set off, and I could hardly believe that so much had happened in such a
short time. Even the Embankment itself looked different, almost unreal, with its great glazed-floor span
over the stinking Thames, and the steady roar of traffic to and fro. I have tried to imagine how it must
have been when the river was still open and ships hauled where that traffic was now skimming, but it’s
difficult. Where on earth did all the cars and runabouts travel, if not along the River Road?
“I know you don’t want to commit yourself as yet,” I said, “but when you say ‘something big,’ just how
big do you mean?”
“Do you know anything about the underworld, Noble? About people who move on the other side of the
law?”
“Nothing concrete. I’ve heard stories, of course.
 
“Stories have to be dramatized, made acceptable. And ethical. I mean, the good guys have to win, in
stories. Not in reality. I imagine you’d say your father is an honest man. I suppose he is, by most
standards. But he is up against people who can, and do, buy and sell information—trade secrets,
manufacturing tricks, industrial know-how, that kind of thing. So he has to do it too. And there are
organizations who specialize in just that. There are also individuals, very clever people, who will stop at
nothing to get something they can sell to someone who needs it. That’s the field I work in, and it can be
big stuff. In this case, unless my guesser is completely out of order, I’d say it is something off-planet.”
It was the last thing I expected to hear, and I said so. Apart from the fact that I had never been
off-planet myself, and had never felt the urge toward it, I had the impression that everything off Earth was
crude and half-civilized. Frontier stuff. He laughed; a quiet gentle chuckle.
“Insularity of the British,” he murmured. “No offense, but you people have difficulty crediting other parts
of Earth with culture, much less the far reaches of space. Like it or not, there are fortunes to be made out
there, and you should know, since a good third of your father’s business deals with trade out into space.
We’ll see, anyway.”
We’d hardly been in his apartment five minutes before the doorbell announced our expert. In that brief
time, we had both examined the enigmatic wig with some curiosity. I couldn’t see anything particularly
odd about it, apart from the lightness of the thing. I had always imagined a wig to be thick and heavy, but
this was soft and insubstantial. The pale lock running down the middle of it made it look like the pelt of
some strange animal. I put it on a table as he went to let his visitor in. He came hack to say, “Noble, this
is Fiona Knight. Fiona, meet Alan Noble, with a problem that should be right up your street.”
She looked as surprised as I was, but took my hand in a very good grip and grinned with more than a
hint of mischief.
“Nice to know that you’re real. I half suspected Neil had made you up just to drag me away from my
boredom. He thinks I’m bored, that is.”
She settled into a seat, and Carson handed her the wig.
“That’s the problem,” he said, and then, “I’ll make coffee.” And he went away into the kitchen. She
obviously knew him well, because she said nothing at all, just took the furry thing in her hands and
examined it closely. It gave me the opportunity to examine her. I like to think that I know how to use my
eyes, and it didn’t take long to see that there were two people here, one on the surface and another,
quite different, underneath. Her midnight-black hair and astonishingly blue eyes against a fair skin dusted
with freckles and, as far as I could see, innocent of makeup apart from her mouth, gave her an open-air
country look. She wore a heavily embroidered thing like a tabard, a brief garment that ended at her hips,
with matching ankle-boots, and the rest of her was as good as nude in an electro-static body stocking.
That much was the ultramodern demure look that so many try but few can justify as well as she did. But
there was also the stillness, the purposeful movements of her hands and fingers, the total involvement with
what she was doing, not even looking up as Carson set a coffee cup by her side. That didn’t match her
social butterfly exterior at all. Carson grinned at me as he sat.
“Fiona has the notion that I invent distractions for her.”
“So you do,” she murmured, without looking up. “You treat me as if I were still a small girl. What’s your
attitude toward women, Noble?”
 
Zgłoś jeśli naruszono regulamin