'Very well,' he said coldly. Uncle Arthur had as much humour as the next man, but discussing titled millionaires in tones of levity was not humorous.

'And Lady Skouras?'

He hesitated. 'Well—-'

'Not so well. Pale, drawn, unhappy, with dark smudges under her eyes. Not unlike myself. Her husband mistreats her and mistreats her badly. Mentally and physically. He humiliated her in front of a group of men last night. And she had rope burns on her arms. Why would she have rope burns on her arms, Sir Arthur?'

'Impossible. Quite fantastic. I knew the former Lady Skouras, the one who died this year in hospital. She------'

'She was undergoing treatment in a mental hospital. Skouras as good as told me.'

'No matter. She adored him. He adored her. A man can't change like that. Sir Anthony - Sir Anthony's a gentleman.'

'Is he? Tell me how he made his last millions. You saw Lady Skouras, didn't you?'

'I saw her,' he said slowly. 'She was late. She arrived with the filet mignon.' He didn't seem to find anything funny in that, 'She didn't look very well and she's a bruise on her right temple. She'd fallen climbing aboard from the tender and hit her head against a guardrail.'

'Hit her head against her husband's fist, more like. To get back to the first time you boarded the Firecrest this evening. Did you search it?'

'I searched it. All except the after cabin. It was locked, I assumed there was something in there you didn't want chance callers to see.'

'There was something in there that callers, not chance, didn't want you to see,' I said slowly. 'Hunslett. Hunslett under guard. They were wafting for word of my death, then they'd have lulled Hunslett or kept him prisoner. If wordcame through that I hadn't been killed, then they'd have waited until my return and taken me prisoner too. Or killed us both. For by then they would have known that I knew too much to be allowed to live. It takes time, a long time, to open up a strong-room and get all those tons of gold out and they know their time is running out. They're desperate now. But they still think of everything.'

'They were waiting for word of your death,' Uncle Arthur said mechanically. 'I don't understand.'

'That helicopter you laid on for me, sir. We were shot down to-night after sunset. The pilot's dead and the machine is at the bottom of the sea. They believe me to be dead also.'

'I see. You go from strength to strength, Calvert.' The absence of reaction was almost total, maybe he was getting punch-drunk by this time, more likely he was considering .the precise phraseology that would return me to the ranks of the unemployed with economy and dispatch. He lit a long, thin and very black cheroot and puffed meditatively. 'When we get back to London remind me to show you my confidential report on you.'

'Yes, sir.'  So this was how it was coming.

'I was having dinner with the Under-Secretary just forty-eight hours ago. One of .the things he asked me was which country had the best agents in Europe. Told him I'd no idea. But I told him who I thought, on the balance of probabilities, was the best agent in Europe. Philip Calvert.'

'That was very kind of you, sir.' If I could remove that beard, whisky, cheroot and monocle, at least three of which were obscuring his face at any given moment, his expression might have given me some faint clue as to what was going on in that devious mind, 'You were going to fire me thirty-six hours ago.'

'If you believe that,' Uncle Arthur said calmly, 'you'll believe anything.' He puffed out a cloud of foul smoke and went on: 'one of the comments in your report states: ' Unsuitable for routine investigation. Loses interest and becomes easily bored. Operates at his best only under extreme pressure. At this level he is unique.' It's on the files, Calvert. I don't cut off my right hand.'

'No, sir.   Do you know what you are, sir?'

'A Machiavellian old devil,' Uncle Arthur said with some satisfaction. 'You know what's going on?'

'Yes, sir.'

'Pour me another whisky, my boy, a large one, and tell me what's happened, what you know and what you think you know.'

So I poured him another whisky, a large one, and told him what had happened, what I knew and as much of what I '               thought I knew as seemed advisable to tell him.

He heard me out, then said:   'Loch Houron, you think?'

'Loch Houron it must be. I spoke to no one else, anywhere else, and to the best of my knowledge no one else saw me. Someone recognised me. Or someone'transmitted my description. By radio. It must have been by radio. The boat that was waiting for Williams and myself came from Torbay or somewhere near Torbay, a boat from Loch Houron could I               never have made it to the eastern end of the Sound of Torbay in five times the time we took. Somewhere near here, on              land or sea, is a transceiver set. Somewhere out on Loch Houron there's another.'

'This University expedition boat you saw on the south shore of Loch Houron. This alleged University expedition. It would have a radio transmitter aboard.'

'No, sir. Boys with beards.' I rose, pulled back the saloon curtains on both sides, then sat down again. 'I told you their boat was damaged and listing. She'd been, riding moored fore and aft in plenty of water. They didn't hole it themselves and it wasn't holed by any act of nature. Somebody kindly obliged. Another of those odd little boating incidents that occur with such profusion up and down the west coast.'

'Why did you pull those curtains back?'

'Another of those odd little boating incidents, sir. One that's about to happen. Some time to-night people will be coming aboard. Hunslett and I, those people think, are dead, At least, I'm dead and Hunslett is dead or a prisoner. But they can't leave an abandoned Firecrest at anchor to excite suspicion and invite investigation. So they'll come in a boat, up anchor, and take die Firecrest out into the Sound, followed by their own boat. Once there, they'll slice through the flexible salt-water cooling intake, open the

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