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Ben glared. "Technically, you have broken our laws." He relented and grinned. "But if you will promise to import no more Egyptian cats...."
"I promise, swear, and affirm," Rick said hastily.
"Good. To continue. We took Ali Moustafa into custody, but not before a phone call reached him from New York. His chief clerk listened to this call and sold the information to Youssef. The clerk also agreed, for a share of the profits, to pretend to be Ali, and he enlisted the help of the other clerks. We know this from the clerk. He talked freely, in the hope of leniency."
Ben turned to Youssef. "Do you know what is in the cat?"
The thief shook his head. "Only that it is of great value. I bought the clerk's information and help because I knew it was the Moustafas who stole the necklace from the museum. I believe the necklace is in the cat."
Rick stared. The Kefren necklace, worth a quarter of a million! Great ghostly pyramids! This was big business!
"The necklace was smuggled out of the country," Ben agreed. "We are certain of that. But I do not believe it is in the cat."
"Open it," Rick begged.
The inspector held up his hand. "Presently. Aren't you enjoying the suspense?"
"It's killing us," Scotty wailed.
"Ah, the impatience of the young!" Ismail ben Adhem obviously was having a good time. "Well, the pieces are nearly tied up."
"Good," Rick applauded.
Ben chuckled. "On the same day that Kerama invited you to come, I had a call from the Interpol clearinghouse in Paris, a relay from the San Francisco police. A wealthy collector of early Egyptian objects in San Francisco had been bragging that he had just purchased a genuine necklace that had belonged to one of the early Pharaohs. We requested the Americans to investigate."
That explained the Californian who talked too much, Rick thought. He had known the purchase was illegal, but, like many collectors, could not resist letting a few friends in on his secret--and the secret had leaked to the police.
"This collector had paid for the necklace with a certified check, which was cashed by an American accomplice." Ben paused for effect. "The amount was two hundred thousand dollars cash."
He got his effect. All four of his listeners gasped in amazement.
"Even Moustafa didn't know the exact amount," Rick thought.
"The money was in thousand-dollar bills. I have the serial numbers."
Rick spoke up. "But, Ben, numbered bills are like a flag! No one can spend them without getting caught."
"That is true, Rick, when something illegal is involved. Had the collector kept his mouth shut, no one would have known any illegality was involved in the transaction."
"But you can't use American money in Cairo," Scotty objected. "It has to be changed."
"Right, Scotty. The problem was this: the revolutionaries could not convert their dollars to Egyptian pounds in America. It would have attracted too much attention, because only a few banks and finance houses can handle such amounts, and then only in co-operation with the government. Their best bet was to get the dollars into the Arab countries. We can watch international traffic, but local traffic among the Arab nations is hard to control. They would have sent the dollars to another country to be changed."
"An Arab country?" Rick asked.
"Probably. The borders between the Republic and its neighbors are desert, impossible to patrol. The dollars could have been sent, then gradually converted into Egyptian currency. Dollars sell readily in this part of the world, and sometimes not too many questions are asked."
"I get the picture," Rick stated. "The Moustafas stole the necklace, and smuggled it to America. Bartouki sold it to the collector, through an American helper. Then he had the money sealed in the cat. He handed it to me, because my sister gave him an opening and I fell into it.
Meanwhile, you put Ali in jail, then Fuad. Youssef got into the act through the clerk. So then we had Kemel Moustafa and Youssef on our trail. Why didn't you put Kemel in jail, too? And how about Bartouki?"
"We had no evidence that would stand up in court against Kemel, although we were convinced he was in the act with his brothers. That's why I waited until he tried to take the cat by force."
Rick exploded, "You used us and the cat for bait!"
"It worked," Ben pointed out mildly. "We got both Youssef and Moustafa, although the trap was only for Kemel. And you were never in any real danger, except for a stray bullet. I've been in the unfinished barracks with my men since noontime. The senior scientists knew it. That's why they were willing to leave you alone. Two of my men mingled with Youssef's gang as soon as they arrived, and weren't detected. Any sign of real danger to you and they'd have bailed you out fast. But we were holding off, because I had a radio message that Kemel was on his way with a gang of his own."
"You certainly had things taped," Scotty said admiringly. "I guess we ought to be mad. But you'd have an equal right to get mad because we tried to go it alone."
"We'll call it square," Ben agreed. "About Bartouki. We needed the evidence of the cat, and a statement from you that he had handed it to you. That was the only sure way of tying him in. Tonight we'll send a message via Interpol to the New York police."
So far, everything had been circ.u.mstantial evidence. Rick wanted to see if their guesses were correct. "Open the cat," he begged.
"Get the saw," Ben said.
Rick jumped to his feet. There was a toolbox in the closet. He brought it to the inspector.
Ben handed the cat to him. "Saw away."
Scotty held the cat firmly on a chair while Rick wielded the saw.
Plastic sawdust flew from under the blade.
Rick felt the blade hit metal and stopped. "Hit something!" he said excitedly. "Metal, but soft. Like lead."
Scotty groaned. "Do you suppose Bartouki was telling the truth?"
"We'll soon know." Rick moved the saw blade to a different angle and began cutting around the cat, changing angles each time he hit the material on the inside. Before long, the Egyptian cat had a cut around its middle and Rick put the saw away. There were a hammer and screw driver in the toolbox. He inserted the tip of the screw driver into the saw cut and tapped the handle with the hammer.
The cat split open.
Scotty let out a yell of triumph. In the bottom half was a square of lead, and it was clearly a box, not a solid lump.
"Hurry!" Rick pleaded.
Scotty took the screw driver and pried. The lead box yielded reluctantly.
There wasn't a sound in the control room except for the impulses from the tape recorder, which ran on unnoticed.
Scotty pried gingerly, and the lead box came loose and dropped to the floor.
Rick scooped it up and turned it in his hands, looking for the opening.
He found only a thin seam of solder around one flat side.
"Have to cut it open," Rick said. Using his jackknife, he scored the bead of solder. It cut easily. He scored it again, deeper, and felt the knife blade penetrate. He turned the box and did the same thing to both ends.
Face flushed with excitement, he took the screw driver, thrust it under the lid, and bent it upward.
The box opened.