asked.

Simon Templar nodded. In so many ways he was content.

'I'm ready when you are,' he said.

2

They were settling the forty-pound lead weights over his shoulders, one on his back and one on his chest. He was already encased in the heavy rubber-lined twill overall, which covered him completely from foot to neck, with the vulcanised rubber cuffs adjusted on his wrists and the tinned copper corselet in position; and the weighted boots, each of them turning the scale at sixteen pounds, had been strapped on his feet. Another mem­ber of the crew, similarly clad, was explaining the working of the air outlet valve to him before the helmet was put on.

'If you screw up the valve you keep the air in the dress and so you float. If you unscrew it you let out the air, and you sink. When you get to the bottom, you adjust the valve so that you are comfortable. You keep enough air to balance the weights without lifting you off your feet, until it is time to come up. You understand?'

'You have a gift for putting things plainly,' said the Saint.

The man grunted and stepped back; and Kurt Vogel stood in front of him.

'Ivaloff will go down with you—in case you should be tempted to forget your position,' he explained. 'He will also lead you, to the strong-room, which I have shown him on the plans of the ship. He will also carry the underwater hydro-oxygen torch, which will cut through one and a half inches of solid steel—to be used as and when you direct him.'

Simon nodded, and drew at the cigarette he was smoking. He fingered an instrument from the kit which he had been examin­ing.

'Those are the tools of the man you killed,' said Vogel. 'He worked well with them. If there is anything else you need, we will try to supply you.'

'This looks like a pretty adequate outfit.'

Simon dropped the implement back in the bag from which he had taken it. The brilliance of the afternoon had passed its height, and the sea was like oiled crystal under the lowering sun. The sun was still bright, but it had lost its heat. A few streaks of cloud were drawing long streamers towards the west.

The Saint was looking at the scene more than at Vogel. There was a dry satirical whim in him to remember it— if memory went on to the twilight where he was going. Death in the afternoon. He had seen it so often, and now he had chosen it for himself. There was no fear in him; only a certain cynical peace. It was his one regret that Vogel had brought Loretta out on to the deck with him. He would rather have been spared that last reminder.

'I shall be in communication with both of you by telephone all the time, and I shall expect you to keep me informed of your progress.' Vogel was completing his instructions, in his invariable toneless voice, as if he were dealing with some ordinary mat­ter of business. 'As soon as you have opened the strong-room, you will help Ivaloff to bring out the gold and load it on to the tackle which will be sent down to you. ... I think that is all?'

He looked at the Saint inquiringly; and Simon shrugged.

'It's enough to be going on with,' he said; and Vogel stood aside and signed to the man who waited beside him with the helmet.

The heavy casque was put over the Saint's head, settled in the segmental neck rings on the corselet, and secured with a one-eighth turn; after which a catch on the back locked it against accidental unscrewing. Through the plate-glass window in the front Simon watched the same process being performed on Ivaloff, and saw two seamen take the handles of the reciprocat­ing air pump which had been brought out on deck. His breathing became tainted with a faint odour of oil and rubber. . . .

'Can you hear me?'

It was Vogel's voice, reverberating metallically through the telephone.

'Okay,' answered the Saint mechanically, and heard his own voice booming hollowly in his ears.

Ivaloff beckoned to him; and he stood up and walked clumsily to the stern. A section of the taffrail had been removed to give them a clear passage, and a sort of flat cradle had been slung from the end of the boom from which the bathystol had been lowered. They

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