7 Back from the Deeps

Bob’s voice was filled with astonishment and awe. Even Roger Fairfane stood gawking. No wonder! I could hardly believe it myself. When a man is lost on a lung dive at thirteen hundred feet, you don’t expect him to be found drifting off shore months later—and still alive!

“Don’t stand there!” I cried. “Help me, Bob! We’ll give him artificial respiration. Roger, you stand by to take over!”

We dragged him up to the firm, dry sand and flipped him over. Bob knelt beside his head, taking care that his tongue did not choke him, while I spread his arms and moved them, wing fashion, up and down, up and down—

It was hardly necessary. We had barely begun when David rolled over suddenly, coughing. He tried to sit up.

“He’s alive!” cried Roger Fairfane. “Jim, you keep an eye on him. I’m going after an ambulance and a sea medic. I’ll report to the Commandant and—”

“Wait!” cried David Craken weakly. He propped himself on one arm, gasping for breath. “Please. Please don’t report anything—not yet.”

He gripped my arm with surprising strength and lifted himself up. Roger glanced at him worriedly, then, uneasily, out toward the dark sea, where that peculiar person who had said his name was Trencher had vanished with the pearls. “But we have to report this,” he said, without conviction. It was, in fact, an open question—there was nothing in the regulations to cover anything like this.

“Please,” said David again. He was shivering from the chill of the deep water, and exhausted as if from a long swim, but he was very much alive. The straps at his shoulders showed where his electrolung had been seated—lost, apparently, after he had surfaced. He said: “Don’t report anything. I—I’m lost, according to the Academy’s roster. Leave it that way.”

Bob demanded: “What happened, David? Where have you been?”

David shook his head, watching Roger. Roger stood irresolutely for a moment, staring at David, then at the lights of the Academy. At last he said: “All right, Craken. Have it your way. But I ought to get a sea medic—”

David choked, but managed a grin. “I don’t need a sea medic,” he said. “I’m not coming back as a cadet, you see. I’m here on business—for my father. I was in a sea car and I was attacked, down there.” He nodded toward the black water. “Subsea pirates,” he cried angrily. “They jumped my sea car and robbed me. I was lucky to get away with my life.”

“Pirates!” Roger was staring at him. “In the front yard of the Academy! Craken, we’ve got to do something about this. What did they look like? How many were there? What kind of sea car were they using? Give me the facts, Cracken—I’ll get a report to the Fleet, and we’ll—”

“Wait, Roger. Wait!” David protested desperately. “I don’t want the Fleet. There’s nothing they can do to help me now. And I—I can’t let anyone know I’m here.”

Roger looked at him suspiciously. Then he stared at Bob and me. I could see his brain working, could see the conclusion he was coming to.

“You don’t want the Fleet,” he said slowly. “You can’t let anyone know you’re here. Could that be—” he leaned down, staring into David’s eyes angrily—” could that be because of what you lost when you were robbed?”

David said weakly, “I—I don’t know what you’re talking about.”

“But you do, Craken! I’d bet a summer’s leave you do! Was it pearls you lost when they robbed you, Craken? Thirteen pearls, Tonga pearls, in an edenite tube?”

There was a moment’s silence. Then David got to his feet, his face blank. He said in a cold, changed voice:

“They’re mine. Where are they?”

“I thought so!” cried Roger. “What do you think of that, Eden? I knew it was just too much of a coincidence for Craken to turn up right now. He’s connected with that Joe Trencher, that stole my pearls.”

David stood up straight. For a moment I thought he was angry, but the expression in his eyes was not rage. He said: “Trencher? Did you say—Trencher?”

“That’s the name! As if you didn’t know. A queer little white-skinned man, with a case of asthma, I think. Trencher. Don’t try to tell us you never heard of him!”

David laughed sharply. “If only I could, Roger,” he said soberly. “If only I could! But I must admit that I’ve heard of him—of them, at any rate. Trencher isn’t a name, you see. Trencher is—from the Trench. The Tonga Trench!”

He shook his head. “Joe Trencher. Yes, he would give a name like that. And you met him?”

I cut in. “We not only met him, David, but I’m afraid we let him get away with the pearls.” I gave him a quick outline of what had happened, from the moment Bob Eskow felt the edenite cylinder wash against his foot until the stranger clipped me, grabbed it and dived into the sea. “He never came up,” I told David Craken. “No electrolung, no thermosuit—but he never came up. I suppose he must be drowned out there now…”

“Drowned? Him?” David Craken looked at me queerly, but then he shook his head again. “No, he isn’t drowned, Jim. Trust him for that. I’ll explain sometime—but the likes of Joe Trencher will never drown.” He looked soberly out to sea. “I thought I’d got away from them,” he said. “All this long way from Kermadec Dome. But they caught up with me. I suppose it was inevitable that they would. The first thing I knew was when the microsonar showed something approaching—fast and close. A projectile exploded, I suppose—anyway, the next thing that happened was that my sea car was out of control and taking in water. Those devils came in through the emergency hatches. I got away—but they got the pearls.” He sighed. “I needed those pearls,” he said. “It isn’t just money. I was going to sell them to—to buy something for my father. Something that he has to have.”

Roger demanded: “Where did you get the pearls? You’ve got to tell us that. Otherwise, Craken, I’m warning you—I’m going to report this whole thing!”

“Hold on a minute, Roger!” I interrupted. “There’s no sense blackmailing David!”

David Craken smiled at me, then looked at Roger Fairfane. “Blackmail is the word,” he said. “But bear this in mind, Roger. I’ll never tell you where the Tonga pearls come from. Men have died trying to find that out—I won’t tell. Is that perfectly clear?”

“Listen,” Roger blustered, “you needn’t think you can scare me! My father is an important man! You’ve heard of Trident Lines, haven’t you? My father is one of the biggest executives of the line! And if I tell my father—”

“Wait a minute,” said David Craken. His tone was oddly placating. He suddenly seemed struck with a thought. “Trident Lines, you say?”

“That’s right!” sneered Roger. “I thought that would straighten you out! You can’t buck Trident Lines!”

“No, no,” David said impatiently. “But—Trident Lines. They’re one of the big subsea shippers, aren’t they?”

“The third biggest line in the world,” said Roger Fairfane with pride.

David Craken took a deep breath. “Roger,” he said, “if you’re interested in the Tonga pearls, perhaps we can work something out. I—I need help.” He turned to us, imploringly. “But not from the Fleet! I don’t want anything reported!”

Roger said, puffed with pride now that things seemed to be going his way: “Perhaps that won’t be necessary, Craken. What do you want?”

David hesitated. “I—I want to think it over. I came here to do something for my father, and without the pearls, I can’t do it—unless I have some help. But first we’d better get out of sight. Is there any place we can go to talk this over?”

Roger said: “There’s a beach house about a mile below here—the Atlantic manager of Trident Lines maintains it. He isn’t there, but he told me I could use it any time.” He said it proudly.

“That will do,” said David. “Can you take me there?”

“Well—I suppose so,” said Roger, somewhat unwillingly. “Do you think it’s necessary? I mean, are you that worried about someone from the Academy seeing you?”

David looked worriedly out to sea, then at Roger.

“It isn’t anyone from the Academy that I’m worried about,” he told Roger Fairfane.

We made our arrangements. We left David waiting for us in a boathouse on the beach, and Roger, Bob and I hurried back to the Academy to sign in. Every swimmer who completed the marathon was entitled to an overnight pass as a reward, so there was no difficulty getting off the reservation. The cadet on guard, stiffly at attention in his sea-red dress uniform, gave our passes only a glance, but he examined the little bag Roger was carrying very carefully. “Civilian clothes?” he demanded. “What are you going to do with those?”

“They—ah—they need cleaning,” Roger said, not untruthfully. “There’s a good cleaner in Hamilton.”

The guard winked. “Pass, cadets,” he said, and returned to stiff attention. Still and all, I didn’t feel safe until we were out of sight of the gates. Roger hadn’t actually said we were gong to Hamilton—but he had certainly said enough to make the guard at the gate start asking questions if he saw us duck off the road in another direction.

We got back to the beach easily enough, and found David waiting. I was almost surprised to see him there—it would have been so easy to believe the whole thing was a dream if he had been gone. But he was there, big as life, and we waited while he got into Roger’s dry clothes.

And then the four of us headed down the beach toward the ornate beach house that belonged to the Atlantic manager of Trident Lines.

Overhead there was a ripping, screaming sound—the night passenger jet for the mainland. It was a common enough sound; Bob and Roger and I hardly noticed it. But David stopped still in his tracks, frozen, his face drawn.

He looked at me and grinned, shamefaced. “It’s only an airliner, isn’t it? But I just can’t get used to them. We don’t have them in Marinia, you see.”

Roger muttered something—I suppose it was a contemptuous reference to David Craken’s momentary nervousness—and stalked down the beach ahead of us. He seemed nervous himself about something, I thought. I said: “David, don’t mind him. We’re glad to see you back. Even Roger. It’s just his—his—”

“His desire to get hands on the Tonga pearls?” David finished for me, and grinned. He seemed more relaxed, though I couldn’t help noticing that his eyes never went far from the cold black sea. “I can’t blame him for that. They’re fabulously valuable, of course. Even somebody whose father is a high executive of Trident Lines might want to get a couple of Tonga pearls to put away against a rainy day.”

I said, trying to be fair: “I don’t think it’s only that, David. Roger always wants to—to win, I guess. It’s important to him. Remember the diving tests, when he carried on so? Remember—”

I stopped, staring at him. “That reminds me,” I said. “Don’t you have some explaining to do about that?”

He said seriously, “Jim, believe me, I’ll answer every question I can—even that one. But not now.” He hesitated, and lowered his voice. “I was kidnaped from the gym ship, Jim. Kidnaped by the same person who called himself ‘Joe Trencher.’”

I stared at him. “Kidnaped? At a depth of thirteen hundred feet? But that’s impossible, David! How could any human being do it—why, it would take a sea car and heaven knows what else to do a thing like that!”

David Craken looked at me, his eyes bright and serious in the moonlight.

“Jim,” he said, “what makes you think that Joe Trencher is human?”

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