""Have all the answers except the source. When you find it, destroy it if possible. If you get Long Shadow or Worthington Ko, don"t bother bringing them back to Hong Kong, if they"re still alive. Leave them at Korse Lenken. Cable me from Chungking when you return.""
It was signed "Bradley."
"I like his confidence in us," Zircon remarked. "Not "if," but "when.""
"My boss does not know what it means to fail," Chahda said.
"I can see one failure," Zircon remarked. "How does one destroy a body of water?"
Scotty"s forehead wrinkled thoughtfully. "Couldn"t we stir it up? The heavy water is all at the bottom. If we could give it a stir, the heavy stuff would mix with the rest."
"But would maybe settle right back," Chahda objected.
"Not for a few thousand years," Zircon said. "A good idea, Scotty. Do you happen to have a spoon seven hundred feet long?"
Scotty grinned. "Yes. Mr. Ko supplied one." He reached into his pocket and pulled out a grenade. "These will do the best job of stirring that black cup of tea that you"ve ever seen."
"Capital!" Zircon exclaimed. "They"ll do perfectly, Scotty." He looked at the boys. "Who wants to go back?"
Sing spoke up. "I will go, and some of the lamas should, too. The monastery should know all about these caves, in case something like this ever happens again." He spoke to the lamas in Tibetan. They consulted briefly, then nodded a.s.sent. Five of them stepped forward.
"And Scotty and I will go," Rick volunteered. "I want to see how this spoon works." He looked at Long Shadow and Ko. "Maybe they ought to go back and see the end of their racket, whatever it is."
"No need," Zircon said. "They know it"s the end, and Bradley does too.
Which is more than we know, I must say. But we"ll find out from Bradley very soon."
Rick hefted his rifle. "Incidentally, there"s one thing I want to do before we go back."
"And that is?"
He grinned at the scientist. "I want to go hunting blue sheep."
"Me, too," Scotty chimed in.
Zircon chuckled. "Very well. One day for sheep before we hit the trail.
Since Bradley prohibits our taking revenge on the enemy, we"ll take it out on the local livestock. Now get going. And do a thorough job."
CHAPTER XIX
Canton Charlie"s
"You"ve come a long way, lads," Keaton-Yeats said. "From golden mice to blue sheep and back to golden mice again. I must say, you should be thoroughly familiar with the animal kingdom by now."
"They very familiar with animal world," Chahda agreed. "Also, sometimes become part of that world by making jacka.s.ses of their selves. Like when shooting blue sheep."
The boys had each bagged a blue sheep, but at considerable risk to life and limb. In the process, they had gotten themselves marooned on a rock ledge high above Korse Lenken, from which Sing, with the help of the bearers, had managed to rescue them.
"Never mind," Carl Bradley said. "They got their sheep, even if it almost took their necks to do it. Those heads will make nice trophies by the time the taxidermist is through with them."
The heads were in a Hong Kong shop, being mounted. Bradley had promised to ship them back to Spindrift by sea.
Canton Charlie made his way through the empty tables, followed by a Chinese who carried a tray laden with gla.s.ses.
"More dragon"s blood, meaning c.o.ke," Zircon said with a smile. "I suggest we drink a toast to success and then get down to business. Carl, you"ve kept us waiting long enough to hear your story."
"It"s the sort of tale that should be heard on a full stomach," the ethnologist said. "That"s why I"ve made you wait. Now that we"ve filled up on Charlie"s excellent chow, we"ll talk. We have a little while before the mob gathers."
Bradley had insisted that all of them, including Keaton-Yeats, dine with him at the Golden Mouse before swapping experiences and completing the story of the heavy water. They had eaten real Cantonese food, each using chopsticks, and they were full to the ears.
Scotty grinned at Canton Charlie. "We owe you an apology," he said.
The proprietor of the Golden Mouse shook his head. "The other way around. Carl and Chahda told me you would come. If I"d kept a better lookout while waiting for Carl to come after I sent him a message, that Portuguese would never have had a chance to tip off Long Shadow, and the Chinese who dropped the message would have been caught in the act."
After talking it over, they had decided that the Portuguese seaman who had been giving himself a manicure with a dagger probably had been the one who tipped off Long Shadow about three Americans who had asked for Chahda. Of course Long Shadow knew of Chahda"s connection with Bradley because of the incidents in Singapore.
Canton Charlie grinned evilly. "That Portuguese won"t do any more spyin"
for Long Shadow."
His meaning was clear. Rick"s eyes met Scotty"s.
"Pull up a chair, Charlie," Carl Bradley said. "We"ll drink a toast in c.o.ke to our former pals. Long Shadow and Worthington Ko."
Zircon lifted his gla.s.s, then took a sip. "Long Shadow said he and Ko were finished," he recalled. "And you said as much in your note, or implied it. But I"m hanged if I know why they"re finished. They were healthy enough when we left them at Korse Lenken."
Bradley smiled without mirth. "To understand their punishment, you must understand what has happened. Suppose I start at the beginning?"
"Best place," Chahda said. "Better start at Singapore, boss. Plenty I don"t know, too."
"All right, Chahda. To begin with, I first heard about heavy water in Singapore from an informant with whom I deal. I"m no physicist, of course. I wouldn"t know heavy water if I were served coffee made with the stuff. But I saw the implications right away and I sent a cable to Washington. You know about that because Steve Ames contacted Hartson Brant, if I"m right."
"You"re right," Rick agreed.
"At the time I knew nothing except that heavy water had appeared in Singapore. I continued investigations at top speed. I managed to locate the house which was headquarters for the heavy-water dealers, again with the aid of an informant. At first I thought the stuff was coming overland, down the Malay Peninsula. Then I learned it was being shipped in by boat from Hong Kong."
Customers were starting to come into the Golden Mouse. Bradley lowered his voice so as not to be overheard. "At the same time, the dealers spotted Chahda and me. It wasn"t hard to do for an expert such as we were up against. I walked into our hotel room and was jumped by Worthington Ko and some Chinese thugs. We had it hot and heavy for a while and some blood was shed." He grinned. "Not mine, I"m happy to say.
I managed to get clear and decided I"d better drop out of sight. So I became a Eurasian seaman. It"s a disguise I"ve used before, and it"s quite safe."
Rick studied Bradley"s face. He had a bone-deep tan, and his face, although pleasant, had no really distinguishing features. It was easy to see how he could become a Eurasian. Disguise, after all, was just putting yourself into a part. It wasn"t a matter of make-up.
"I hurried to Hong Kong," Bradley went on, "sure that Chahda would piece together the story enough to follow me. I stopped at Saigon on the way and contacted our legation there. The minister had received the cable sent to all missions in the Far East giving your names, descriptions, and time of arrival in Hong Kong."
"The timing must have been close," Scotty said.
"It was. The legation had received the cable only hours before my arrival. It probably was the day you left New York."