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Order of the Black Sun Box Set 4

Page 23

by Preston William Child


  ‘And once they hear of the secrets you have uncovered in your study of Nazi artifacts of post-World War II, they will be flocking to your lecture hall to hang on every word, every fact, every morsel of information they can.

  “Oh my God!” she whispered. “They found it!”

  “What?” Zain asked almost inaudibly.

  Having no idea that the discussion concerned a mere hoax, Cheryl gasped, “Malgas found the Admiral Graf Spee!”

  6

  On Malgas’ Heels

  After overhearing that Malgas had discovered the Nazi ship he had always chased since he caught wind of the possibility, the myth, Cheryl came up with a new plan. Not only would it free her of Zain and Sibu, but it had the prospect of making her rich. With the magnitude of wealth she would acquire assisting in such a find, she could leave her dirty, miserable life behind and get off the heroin and the cocaine once and for all. She could have her life back.

  “What is that all about?” Zain asked her while they were crouched behind the rows of seats in the lecture hall.

  "Sshh," she frowned. "They must not know we are here. Just wait. I'll tell you everything shortly." For once she received no reprimand or threat from them. Suddenly the lights went on. Sibu, Cheryl, and Zain froze in their spots, hardly breathing behind the wall of chairs, listening. They could feel the apprehension of the lecturer’s scrutiny across the auditorium. He thought he had seen something, but his assistant had picked up the rest of the materials and waited by the door until he was satisfied that nobody was there. Reluctantly, Dr. Malgas switched off the lights before closing the doors.

  As the place darkened, Cheryl started at the cold grasp of Zain's hand around her wrist. It reminded her of the fear he imposed on her and she remembered that she was still a captive, regardless of the plans she had hatched. “Don’t think you’re going to get away while it’s dark, sweetie pie,” she heard his sinister voice right in her ear. “Where are they going? To the store room?”

  “Listen,” she said. “Did you not hear what he said down there?”

  “Yes, but what does it mean?” Sibu asked. “If it doesn’t have anything to do with the money you owe us, we don’t give a shit what he said.” He flashed his eyes in the glare of his cell phone light, meeting eyes with his associate. “Come on, Zain. Let’s just get the money or kill the bitch. She is just stalling for time, playing us for fools, man!”

  Cheryl's body went cold at his proposal. She knew they were in cahoots above and beyond everything, and that Zain could easily follow to Sibu’s irrational suggestions.

  “I have to agree, Cheryl. You are just leading us along in hopes of getting a chance to flee. But I swear to God, we will gun you down like a rabid dog,” Zain spoke against her face. Her stomach churned at the sensation.

  "Listen to me!" she said, her voice a bit louder now. "We have to follow Dr. Malgas. Forget the store room. He just admitted that he discovered a shipwreck from World War II. Don't you get it? If they pull that wreck out of the ocean, the relics and Nazi gold, artworks, whatever the cargo was, would be worth billions!”

  Zain and Sibu grew serious, their glances darting in silent debate in the timid illumination of a cell phone screen. They sat up.

  “Cheryl, if you are playing with us…” Zain warned.

  "I'm not playing with you! You heard it for yourself! If we can convince Malgas that we are useful to him in this recovery, we can all get a cut of the salvage. You can go your own way after I pay you what I owe and stacks more," she implored, trying to keep her words and scheme simple to satisfy their meager thuggish aims.

  “It just sounds too good to be true,” Zain admitted.

  “But we would never have known about it if you guys did not bring me here. None of us would have known!” she insisted. The three of them sat in the lights of their cell phones. They dared not make their presence known yet, especially at this time of the night.

  “So now what? Do we take them hostage to find out…?” Sibu ranted, but Cheryl stopped him abruptly.

  “Don’t be fucking stupid!” she scowled.

  “What did you say?” he retorted, his vicious soldier’s face turning to stone again. But Zain lifted his hand, making sure they both saw his gun. “Shut it.”

  "We have to follow them. I don't know where Dr. Malgas lives now, so we have to follow them. At least that way we will know where to find him," Cheryl told Zain as if asking his permission. Unnoticed she had shifted closer to him, when Sibu locked horns with her. “Once we know the details – where the wreck is and when they are going to salvage it – we can decide how to get on board the project. He trusts me,” she smiled in reminiscence, but her face soon turned cold, “so he will never see it coming when we take them all out.”

  7

  Reunion of Liars

  It was time for Sam to make his way to Wrichtishousis, but he was still waiting for Billy Malgas to confirm his flight. He was horribly impatient, and rightly so since he had not heard from the lecturer for almost a week, yet he was the reason Sam had set up the meeting with Purdue. Not only did Sam elicit the help of Purdue as a silent partner of sorts, but apparently the wealthy, suave inventor had taken it upon himself to prepare a group of freelance professionals to assist him in this venture Sam had pointed him toward.

  Billy Malgas was indeed a trustworthy man. Sam had no reason to fear that he would not show, or not keep to the arrangements, but it worried him that it took Malgas this long to confirm. Eventually, he called the lecturer to make sure Purdue and whomever he decided to include in what would be a costly project were not being held up unnecessarily.

  “Billy. It’s Sam. I’m sorry for calling so late, but I have to be in Edinburgh by morning, and I just got your e-mail that you have been delayed," he told the sleepy man on the other side of the line.

  "I am so sorry, Sam. I have been having trouble…this is deeply embarrassing… to obtain enough funds to get my visas and plane ticket in order on time," Billy admitted. It was true. He had suffered dwindling class attendance, and his salary was just not enough anymore to sustain the lifestyle of an active academic and historical explorer. He thought he would have the means to make it to Scotland to meet with Sam and his contacts for funding to discuss a contract for the salvage, but he found that he was running short on cash.

  “Listen, we cannot discuss this via e-mail or over the phone. You have to meet with us in person,” Sam told Billy. “But I understand your predicament. How certain are you that this project is viable?”

  “I am one hundred percent certain, Sam. I have seen the wreck, but for now, it is a very tight secret. I have identified it. It is lying undetected on the ocean floor just off the coast of Bluewater Bay, but I am afraid it lies within the 12 nautical miles of the territorial waters of South Africa. They might not allow us to claim it,” Malgas told Sam from the comfort of his bed. Mieke had gone home for the night, but she had vowed to meet up with him in two days to fill him in on all the details of the so-called discovery.

  In fact, Billy Malgas was having serious second thoughts about the whole hoax idea. He hated leading Sam Cleave on like this, let alone the people the journalist had already gotten involved. But the very fact that he had had to admit that he lacked the money to even make it to their meeting said it all.

  He had to. He had to pull through, no matter the consequences. If all else failed, he could only claim that he was mistaken. It was not a matter of life and death for him to prove that it was indeed the enigma of the Second World War maritime history scholars in his country had been discussing for decades including the very professors who educated him; his own mentors who were now dead and gone.

  “I tell you what, Sam. If you can secure a contract with your people, I would be happy to sign an agreement for the salvage if it is within reason, you know?” Malgas said, chugging back copious amounts of rum to still his concerns about the whole ruse. “That way you will know that my intentions are valid, no matter how it turns out.”

&
nbsp; “Okay, Billy. I’ll go to Edinburgh without you then, and I will see how far we can take this project before confirming with you. If my associate agrees and decides to fund your operation, I’ll let you know,” Sam assured him.

  “Thank you, Sam,” Billy Malgas sighed, lifting the glass with the dark liquid to his mouth. “I really appreciate your help, and thank you for understanding my predicament.”

  “No problem. I’ll contact you soon,” Sam said, and ended the call, leaving Billy in the miserable silence of his empty house.

  Once he had been a flourishing academic, publishing papers and serving as a guest speaker all over the world. He had had tenure at one of the biggest institutions in Cape Town and a house full of lavish amenities. Now his belongings merely comprised a bed and a desk in his bedroom, his spare room used as storage space, his living room furnished with only a couch and an armchair, a television in a cabinet and a potted palm that was always teetering on the edge of demise. Had it not been his only company he may have neglected to water it at all.

  Malgas felt the effects of the cheap rum coursing through him, gradually urging him to drink more and care less. His body felt as numb as his feelings. In Billy's mind, his reputation was one brush away from non-existent anyway, and if his little hoax was exposed it would do little to destroy what was left of his professional career. Even if the plan were a success, he would still be in debt, and his house would still be empty because he knew full well that there was not real treasure or actual historical significance he could profit from.

  As a matter of fact, the only upside to the entire charade was that interest in his classes might be restored. Big deal. A knock on the door jerked Billy Malgas out of his self-pity bubble and forced him to compose himself over the alcohol and the listlessness of his current mood.

  ‘Good going! Listen to that knock, he thought to himself as he stumbled to his feet. That’s a knock…because you had to take down the fancy intercom when you lost your consultant position at Heyward’s.’

  He made his way to the door on his socks, shirt unbuttoned with the shirt tails hanging out of his pants.

  “Relax! I’m on my way,” he yelled in his half drunken state as the knock grew more urgent. Just short of the front door he took up his 9mm from the antique bookshelf. He lived near the university, on the southern side of Summerstrand, a neighborhood right on the edge of the city bordering on the scenic ocean route and the local nature reserve. Its slightly secluded location made it dangerous, and it was not the kind of area where one would just open a front door when someone knocked.

  “Who is it?” he grunted.

  From the other side of the door, he heard a very familiar, sweet voice he had thought he would never hear again. It jolted him into sub-sobriety and for the first time in a while Billy felt pure joy.

  “Dr. Malgas, I have come to say hello!” she said cheerfully, feigning it well.

  "No way," he said to himself, and then he replied out loud, "I cannot believe it! Cheryl? Is that you?" He opened the door, and there she stood, still in her formal clothing Zain had made her wear, fresh from following Malgas and his assistant from the auditorium.

  “You guessed it!” she smiled genuinely. It was wonderful to see Dr. Malgas, so Cheryl’s cheerfulness was not just based on her need to sell her deception. She was genuinely happy to see Dr. Malgas. Being in his presence took her back to the good times when she still had a future when both he and she still reveled in the delight of the past and the fantastic wealth of artifacts that it had left behind.

  "I cannot believe my eyes!" he exclaimed, almost completely sober at least in disposition and he flung his arms around her. They had embraced each other for a long while before he invited her in.

  “Please excuse the state of my home. I had no idea that I would be getting company,” he said, clearing his throat.

  "Oh come on, have you forgotten that I don't care about such trivial things, Dr. Malgas?" she chuckled, addressing him formally in jest. As he ushered her inside, she cast one last glance back to the corner of the street where Zain's car stood like a heavy shadow. It leered at her, as heavy and hard as her conscience. In the car, she could see the two silhouettes watching intently. Now that they knew where Dr. Malgas lived, she could do even less to escape them. Otherwise, they would target him, and that was something she would never allow.

  “Have a seat. I’ll make you some coffee,” he smiled, still mildly dizzy from his inebriation. “I haven’t seen you in months…probably, what, a year?”

  “Just about that long, yes,” she answered, surveying his house as she spoke to memorize its layout. “But I looked you up to share the good news with you.”

  “Oh?” he exclaimed. “Do tell! You have no idea how I need good news today.”

  “Yeah, I’ll bet you do,” she said under her breath. Then she recited her carefully fabricated cover story in a strong voice to sound ever more healthy and energetic. These were the attributes she felt he needed most at the moment and simply had to appeal to him.

  “I have been clean and sober for over eight months now! Got my act together and now work as freelance consultant in…the…” she had to think quickly of an institution he would not be familiar with, “…field of Maritime History, for a museum in Namibia.”

  ‘Good God, what a reach! Will he fall for this shit’? Her anxious thoughts hounded her as she spoke.

  “That is marvelous, Cheryl!” he cried, elated to hear the good news. He came back into the living room with two mugs of coffee, mostly for him to sober up at the same time. “How many? Eight months?” She nodded. “My God, that is fantastic! To be honest, the last time I saw you, I really thought you’d be dead within a month the way you were going on.”

  "I know, but I got stronger and decided to kick the habit," she chirped all the while clenching her fists. It was way past her last fix, and it was beginning to be unbearable. She needed a hit, and she needed one soon. Oh, the irony! She thought as she bit her lip at the smell of the java brew.

  “So, tell me about your work,” he smiled, truly interested in Cheryl’s recovery.

  "After I got out of rehab," she lied, "I got a job as an assistant in the acquisitions department of a research facility off the coast of Madagascar." He nodded intently, listening to her new credentials thinking of perhaps procuring her services to help with his hoax.

  “And what did you do there?” he asked. “Madagascar. I had no idea they had a research branch in any line of historical or archeological avenues?”

  “Oh, they have since closed down. They were owned by a Swedish professor,” she said quickly. Her heart pounded as she jumped from lie to lie, careful to leave untraceable facts hidden under undetectable names far from his academic and social reach.

  “The Swedes, interested in marine finds off Madagascar,” he pondered out loud, trying to make sense of it while trying to recall any Swedish acquaintances he had in the field. But Cheryl knew his facial expressions, and the face he pulled right now was a dangerous one. It was the countenance of contest.

  "Well, one of them was from Sweden, I remember. But I worked mostly with local people on the filing and administration side so that I could be mistaken," she rambled on rapidly. Quickly she changed the subject before he could exercise another thought, "And how about you, Billy? I have been wondering what exciting stuff you are busy with."

  It worked.

  He snapped out of his relentless train of thought and at once he looked both weary and coy at the prospect of telling her. The desperate lecturer explained that he had discovered a sunken Nazi vessel and that he was certain it contained valuable details of a Nazi faction clandestinely integrated within the Allied Forces in Simonstad, just as Mieke had prepared the false narrative.

  8

  Sam Arrives at Wrichtishousis

  Nina and Crystal were sitting on the study balcony, having tea, and while Crystal chose to enjoy the view from the third story of the house, Nina was scribbling seemingly nonsensical notes o
n her writing pad. She had been researching South African maritime history involving the Second World War though it was few and far between on the websites she had perused. Sam was due for their meeting today, and Purdue had gone to the airstrip to pick him up. They engaged in a bit of small talk, but in secret Nina was extremely curious about Crystal's real involvement in the project. Being a very direct person, usually, the historian would have simply come out and asked, but for some reason she did not want to appear as if she was prying. Finally, she could not hold back any longer.

  “Crystal, tell me, what exactly is this expedition about?”

  “Dave didn’t tell you?” she asked Nina. Crystal was genuinely surprised.

  “He did, but you know him. He told me about Sam’s old acquaintance and how he apparently discovered a historical wreck off the coast of Africa. And he gave me the job to consult on the find and so on and so on…but, what I want to know, is…” she hesitated, but Crystal was sharper than she had thought she was.

  “—what am I doing here?” she smiled charismatically at Nina, who nodded with a sheepish shrug and grin. “Well, I am more than just a lawyer. In fact, Dave is using me on this expedition for anything but my legal prowess.”

  “Sounds vaguely sinister,” Nina sniggered.

  “It really does, doesn’t it?” Crystal answered amicably. One thing Nina had to grant her was that she had a great sense of humor and was not an ounce as snobbish as she came across at first glance. “But earnestly, I am a professional salvor. I specialize in the salvage of historical wrecks, both marine and aircraft. My diving school is in Tönning, in Germany, where I live.”

  Nina was impressed. Now Crystal’s presence made far more sense.

  “That is fascinating!” she replied, chewing on the back of her pen. “I have been on a few dives, but I am far from a professional.”

 

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