The smelter was in a stone building--one of a small group of mine houses which stood in a cauldron depression above excavations. Rounded domes of rock towered above them. The sun, even at this tri-noon hour, was gone behind the heights above us. The murky shadows of night were gathering, the mists of the Lowlands settling. The tube-lights of the mine, strung between small metal poles, winked on like bleary eyes.
"Of a day soon I will fling this job to h.e.l.l--"
I was paying scant attention to the fellow"s tirade. Could there be smuggling going on from this mine? It all seemed to be conducted openly enough. If the production record were being falsified I felt that this dissatisfied mine commander was not aware of it. He showed me the smelter, where the quicksilver condensed in the coils and ran with its small luminous silver streams into the vats.
He was called away momentarily by one of his men, leaving me standing there. I was alone; no one seemed in sight, or within hearing. In the shadow of the condensers I drew out my transmitter and called Hanley.
I got him within a minute.
"Chief!"
"Yes, Phil. I hoped you"d call me. Didn"t want to chance it, raising you when you might not be alone."
I told him swiftly what I had done; where I was now.
And Hanley said, with equal briskness: "I"ve an important fact. Just had Markes on secret wave-length. He tells me that Sp.a.w.n has been saving up his quicksilver for six months past. He"s got several hundred thousand dollar-standards" worth of it in ingots there right now."
"Here at the mine?"
"Yes. Got them all radiuminized, ready for the highest priced markets.
Markes says he is scheduled to turn them over to the government checkers to-morrow. The Nareda government takes its share to-morrow; then Sp.a.w.n exports the rest."
I heard a footstep. "Off, Chief! I"ll call you later!"
I clicked off summarily. The little grid was under my shirt when the mine commander rejoined me.
For another half hour or to I hovered about the smelter house. A treasure of quicksilver ingots here? I mentioned it casually to my companion. He shot me a sharp glance.
"Sp.a.w.n has told you that?"
"I heard it."
"His business. We do not talk of that. Never can I tell what Sp.a.w.n will choose to take offense at."
We rambled upon other subjects. Later, he said, "We work not at night.
But Sp.a.w.n, he is here often at night, with his friend, the Senor Perona."
That caught my attention. "I met Perona this morning," I said quickly.
"Is he a partner of Sp.a.w.n"s?"
"If he is so, I never was told it. But much he is here--at night."
"Why at night?"
The fellow really knew nothing. Or if he did, he was diplomatic enough not to jeopardize his post by babbling of it to me. He said:
"Perona is Sp.a.w.n"s friend. Why not? His daughter to marry: that will make him a son-in-law." He laughed. "An old fool, but not such a fool either. Sp.a.w.n is rich."
"His daughter. Has he a daughter?"
"The little Jetta. You haven"t seen her? Well, that is not strange.
Sp.a.w.n keeps her very hidden. A mystery about it: all Nareda talks, but no one knows; and Sp.a.w.n does not like questions."
Sp.a.w.n abruptly joined us! He came from the black shadows of the lurid smelter room. Had he heard us discussing Jetta? I wondered.
CHAPTER V
_Mysterious Meeting_
"Ah, Grant--have you enjoyed yourself?" He dismissed his subordinate. "I was detained. Sorry."
He was smoothly imperturbable. "Have you seen everything? Quite a little plant I have here? We shut down early to-day. I will make ready to close."
I followed him about while he arranged for the termination of the day"s activities. The clatter of the smelter house was presently still; the men departing. Sp.a.w.n and I were the last to leave, save for the eight men who were the mine"s night guards. They were stalwart, silent fellows, armed with electronic needle projectors.
The lights of the mine went low until they were mere pencil points of blue illumination in the gloom. The eery look of the place was intensified by the darkness and silence of the abnormally early nightfall. The fantastic crags stood dark with formless shadow.
Sp.a.w.n stopped to speak to one of the guards. The men wore a gold-trimmed, but now dirty, white linen uniform, wilted by the heat--the uniform of Nareda"s police. I remarked it to him.
"The government lent me the men," Sp.a.w.n explained. "Of an ordinary time I have only one guard."
"But this then, is not an ordinary time?" I hinted.
He looked at me sharply. And upon sudden impulse, I added:
"President Markes said something about you having a treasure here.
Radiumized quicksilver."
It was evidently Sp.a.w.n"s desire to appear thoroughly frank with me. He laughed. "Well, then, if Markes has told you, then might I not as well admit it? The treasure is here, indeed yes. Will you like to see it?"
He led me into a little strong room adjoining the smelter coil-rectifiers. He flashed his hand searchlight. On the floor, piled crosswise, were small moulded bars of refined quicksilver--dull, darkened silver ingots of this world"s most precious metal.
"Quite a treasure, Grant, here to-night. See, it is radiumized."
He snapped off his torch. In the darkness the little bars glowed irridescent.
"To-morrow I will divide with our Nareda government. One-third for them.
And my own share I will export: to Great New York, this shipment.