e came back, the told me the consul demanded to see me personally. I asked him to accompany me. When I arrived, the consul delivered the following speech: "We know with absolute certainty that you were in Bulgaria with General Pokrovsky at the time that he was killed by the Bulgarian police. We also know that he was in possession of a fortune which, of course, he had stolen from the Russian people. You are the only one who remains of his entourage and we also know that you have;on occasion, sold large quantities of valuables and diamonds. We regard this as proof that you have knowledge about the treasure, and what remains of it. Besides this, we have the records of a counterrevolutionary group in Germany that pursued you for two years, though they failed to find you." He was silent for a moment. I said nothing. "Now you belong to the Union of Soviet Patriots. Since you have lived abroad, you have committed no hostile act against your country, and you have not been active in any of the White organizations. During the war your behavior was absolutely correct. We are aware that you were harassed by the Belgian police at the instigation of the White Russian emigres. Now, however, it is your duty to give back to the Russian people what rightfully belongs to them. It is for that reason that the Soviet Union invites you to return. You will be paid back generously, and decorated. A few days from now a Soviet ship will stop at Anvers and take you on board." As I listened to all this, my first inclination was simply to refuse. I hesitated. I thanked the consul for the goodwill of the Soviet government and asked for a few days to think things over. Breslav, whose situation was delicate, warned me to be very careful. Maroussia begged me to refuse. This suggested a new tack. The next day I went back to see the consul. I explained that I was living with a Russian woman who was also a member of the Union of Soviet Patriots. "You know, when I think of how she saved my life during the war, I realize I could never leave her here by herself." The consul made it plain that this put him in a difficult position with his superiors. But after thinking it over for a few moments, he promised that she would be permitted to follow me shortly. "I will not go without her," I insisted. For two months they left us alone. Finally, the consul summoned me. Maroussia had been granted permission to return to the Soviet Union. I thanked him and went straight to Breslav's. "Now," he admitted, "you are really in a spot. If you refuse to go, you lose your job and will be expelled from the union." I didn't care, I told him, and I reminded him that even though he had left Russia before World War I, he didn't want to go back. How much more so in my case. I had fought the Soviets for two years, my whole family had served in the White Army, and everybody was dead. No matter how you sliced it, the whole deal was unacceptable. I was not a Soviet citizen, I had not requested citizenship. How dare they simply order me to return? "You will have to so inform the consul," I concluded. When Breslav returned, he told me that the consulate was in an uproar and the consul himself wanted to see me. I agreed on the condition that we meet in Breslav's home. That night, over dinner, Breslav asked me why I was in such a state about going back to Russia. "But it's obvious," I told him. "I'm afraid." He seemed unwilling to just accept that. He asked me why I was afraid and told me I would be given a hero's reception. Even he did not seem to understand why, after having lived all these years on my own, I would be so resentful at being handed a fait accompli by a government I had no relation to, and every reason to resent and distrust. Furthermore, I assured him, after all these years, I was not sure I could find the treasure; it might have been discovered and taken away (I was pretty sure this could not be true, but I spoke with conviction). "How would the authorities react to that? I would be a traitor, an officer of Wrangel's army, an enemv of the people. It would mean Siberia." The next day even Breslav advised me to refuse. If it had not been for the money I had gotten from the Americans, I would have been desperate, because I couldn't get a Belgian work permit. And now I had lost my job. 15. An End to My Prisons SO I BEGAN TO THINK about the treasure again. I had to have a good deal of money to go after it again, and now I would have to obtain a new passport under a different name, since the Soviets knew all about me. I also needed at least two people to help me, and that too would cost money. I couldn't go to anyone for backing. They would want to know who I was, and if they breathed one word to the Belgian police, I would be arrested again as a swindler. I had to make some money. Every morning Maroussia applied a yellow liquid to her hair. When I asked her what it was, she told me that her father, who was a doctor, had invented a way of restoring color to graying hair. After a number of experiments, I was finally persuaded that it did work. We planned to merchandise it, and I christened it Serebrine, from the Russian word for silver. At first, we were refused permission to manufacture and sell it in Belgium but after it was tested in government laboratories, we got a license. We set about the task of introducing it to the market with our extremely limited resources. Our business went only moderately well. A bottle of Serebrine sold for a hundred and thirty Belgian francs, and though sales were good, we didn't gross enough to cover our costs. Advertising was very dear, and even though we sold only for cash, our expenses ate up seventy-two percent of what we took in. I had tried to raise capital from a number of sources, but some were skeptical about the product and others had imposed unacceptable conditions. It would be a pity to throw in the towel so soon. We had put up a lot of money and effort into it, and we had never had a single complaint from a customer. In fact, we had letters from all over the country testifying to the product's effectiveness. We had no outstanding debts on Serebrine, and if I had had a job, I could have liquidated the business, but I could not get a work permit, and if the Belgian police were to discover that I was unemployed, they would expel me from the country without a passport. I was so worried I could not sleep nights. This was the time of the war between the People's Republic of China under Mao and Nationalist China under Chiang Kai-shek. My sympathies were with Mao, who seemed to be the weaker. The Americans were completely on Chiang's side and were pouring an enormous amount of aid into his campaign. He was using their money for luxuries. I decided to get hold of some of that money. First of all, I studied everything I could find on what was going on in China. I received some Soviet journals that were not very widely circulated in the West. When I felt I knew enough to discuss the Chinese situation with anyone, I called up the Chinese ambassador in Brussels. I told him I had something important to communicate to his government and asked to see him as soon as possible. The next day I went to the embassy and was received by the ambassador, a man of infinite charm and refinement. The plan I had devised to assist Mao -- like the document on the Soviet meeting that I had furnished to the Americans -- has never been found out as phony. I told him there was a Soviet headquarters organized to offer assistance to Mao, located in Kharbin, a Russian city in Manchuria. From the Soviet publications, I knew the names of the generals stationed in Siberia and who among them had contacts with Mao. Because I was able to include many of the real facts about the situation and the personnel in Manchuria, my story rang true. My connection with the Union of Soviet Patriots was also well known (only Breslav knew that I had been expelled) and I still went regularly to the restaurant run by the union. It was generally believed that I had been relieved of my duties in order to prepare for my departure to the Soviet Union, or because I had received a new assignment. The Chinese ambassador was enthusiastic about my offer to pass him information about Russian aid to Mao. He cabled Marshal Chiang immediately, and a few days later he informed me that my offer had been accepted. He would pay me for any information I gave him on a scale running between two hundred thousand and five hundred thousand Belgian francs. I accepted. For the next three years I passed on all kinds of false information and was well paid for it. But eventually the arrangement came to an end. One night the ambassador summoned me urgently. I was afraid I had been found out, but I could hardly refuse to go. We met in a supper club in the city and the ambassador was very nervous. Chiang had told him to obtain exact intelligence on the Red strategy for the inevitable battle at the Yellow River. I had never before been asked for such precise information; ordinarily, I furnished rather general information about Soviet assistance and various projects. I told him information would be hard to come by, that it would take at least two weeks, and that I could not guarantee anything. For the next two weeks I pored over all the news sources I could lay my hands on, and I stared at a map of China that I kept in my apartment. Then I prepared a report and presented it to the ambassador, pretending, as I always did, that I had got it from a Soviet diplomat in Brussels who had connections in Moscow. Once again, my so-called information turned out to be correct. Chiang's army was defeated and had to withdraw to Formosa. A week later, the ambassador called me again, but I decided to call this particular arrangement to a halt. I furnished other such "interesting" information to a number of embassies, including the Mexicans. One day as I was leaving their embassy, carrying the cash I had just been paid for a "document," I was picked up by two policemen and taken to a nearby station house. They confiscated the money (though they gave me a receipt). The ambassador had his information now, and evidently he wanted his money back. However, since we both posted a claim on the money, neither of us could get it. Some time later, the Mexicans threatened to denounce me to the Soviets unless I withdrew and allowed them to recover their money. I did what they asked but they denounced me anyhow. I was obliged to tell the whole story to the counselor of the Soviet embassy in Brussels. He scolded me for giving their counterintelligence service such a bad name. I explained that after the Union of Soviet Patriots had thrown me out I had no other way to make a living. He was understanding but had no advice to offer. He was very flattering about the "document" I had sold the Americans, although he said that any Soviet expert would have known it was false right off the bat from some of the language. "Anyhow, congratulations," he said. "It was a great job." I don't want to name all the embassies to whom I sold information, but there were many. My career in this line of work came to an end, however, some time later in Switzerland. I had fallen ill in Vevay and couldn't pay my hotel bill and, as a result, I was not thinking clearly. I wrote the United States embassy in Berne offering them important information from the Soviet Union. But I neglected to keep my fingerprints off the letter and they checked them as a matter of course. When I telephoned the embassy to follow up, I was told to go to a cafe near the federal capitol. There, I would get a telephone call and be told the exact time and place for a conference. I was suspicious, but I had no choice. When I arrived, the cafe was empty except for two very engrossed couples and a lone man reading a newspaper. It looked too well-staged, but I sat down at a table and ordered a coffee. A few minutes later the telephone rang and the owner announced, "A call for Monsieur Nicholas." I waited a moment before I got up and said, "That's me." I hadn't taken three steps before all five of them had me surrounded. The man who had been reading the newspaper was a Swiss federal police inspector named Muller. Very politely, he asked me to come along with him. I told the police that the Americans had cheated me of some money a few years back and that I was simply trying to get it back. They held me for about three weeks and then Muller, again very politely, invited me to leave Switzerland. So I returned to Brussels, where the sales of my homemade secret documents had been providing me with the capital to finance the Serebrine enterprise. Business was better and I was looking forward to future prosperity. Unfortunately, just then I got myself into another tight spot. While I was still on good terms with the Soviets, I had undertaken a project for them in order to raise money for another expedition to Bulgaria. I had a franchise to import typewriters from East Germany -- then the Soviet zone of occupation -- and to sell them in Western Europe. I had to pay for shipping and insurance and had to borrow over a million Belgian francs from four different individuals; the business and financial arrangements were very complicated. I was late in repaying my creditors. Two of them, to whom I owed altogether six hundred thousand francs, were getting impatient. To get them off my back, I paid them off, but I was still in debt to the tune of another six hundred thousand francs. I was looking for a way to raise the additional money. To add to my troubles, the chief inspector of the Belgian security police had it in for me. Somehow he learned that I owed P. two hundred thousand francs, his investment in the German typewriter deal plus interest. Once he found out, he persuaded P. that I had to be deported as a security risk. P. visited me. "Listen," he said, "this typewriter business is dragging on too long. The money I loaned you isn't mine. It belongs to my uncle and he is getting very nervous. "What can I do? Why not bring him here and I'll explain things to him." "That's okay but he won't believe you unless you show him something in writing. You must have something official in writing." "Nothing but the original letter from Berlin that you read." "So what? Make something up. We'll show it to him and tear it up afterward." "Okay, bring him around to your house tomorrow. But I must have your word of honor that I can tear up the paper as soon as he leaves." I went to the consulate and typed some notes about shipping and other details on Soviet letterhead. The next day P. introduced me to his "uncle." We had a drink and chatted about this and that. Then I brought up business. I assured him that everything was going well but that if he wanted to withdraw his investment, I would repay him the following week. As I said this, I took out the letter and handed it to him. He read it carefully and then folded it and calmly put it in his pocket. "What are you doing?" I said. "Why are you taking my letter?" "Because it is a forgery and I am placing you under arrest," he said, pulling out his police badge. I was convicted and put in prison. Needless to say, the Serebrine company foundered. Maroussia could not keep it going alone, and when I was released, I was issued a travel permit and ordered to leave Belgium. It was clear that I would never obtain the legal right to settle anywhere with such a document. My only choices were to get a passport of some kind or give up, and I was not ready to give up. I bought myself a good passport and with it I operated in several European countries as a clandestine export-import liaison between Western and Eastern Europe. Naturally, this was entirely extralegal, and I was often assumed to be a Russian spy. At one point, an official of the Ministry of the Interior refused to issue me a permit to settle in France because I had not paid any taxes. But how could I pay taxes when my official identity was false? For four months I did manage to live legally in Paris but it meant going to the police headquarters constantly to get my permit renewed, and the official from the Ministry of the Interior hounded me incessantly. Finally, I was assigned to live in Rennes, in Brittany. Rennes is a charming city, but I looked everywhere for a job, and after two months I had to face up to the fact that there was nothing there I could do. I had to get someplace else. To lead the kind of clandestine life I did, you have to have at least three passports. It's very tricky. I was arrested once in Nice for using a false name and not having a residence permit and sent to prison in Aix-en-Provence. Because I was a middle-aged man, I was assigned to the infirmary and there I made a new and extraordinary acquaintance. For whatever reason, a man presented himself at the prison one fine day and simply said, "I am Paul Leca. I want to give myself up." I had been immediately impressed with the deference with which both guards and prisoners treated him. It turned out that Paul Leca was a famous gangster, who had been involved in a theft of some of Begum Aga Khan's jewels. He had subsequently disappeared in South America for a while. His return was signaled by a series of gangland murders in Corsica and southern France. Various inconvenient witnesses were being eliminated one by one. He was a fascinating person and we spent a lot of time chatting about his adventures. Unfortunately, I did not have the chance to get to know him better. The court of appeals upheld my sentence and I was transferred to Les Baumettes to finish out my term. I brought a case of sausages from Leca to some of his friends there, and because I was known as a friend of his, I was once again put in the infirmary, a relatively comfortable spot. Two years after that, I received a letter from Leca. He was out of prison and wanted to get together. He invited me to come to Nice, in the south of France, where he owned a restaurant. I was vacationing in Alassio in Italy and I wrote him that I preferred to meet there, since I was trying to steer clear of places where the police were likely to be on the lookout. He arrived after a few days and we had a splendid reunion. Leca made me several propositions, any of which would have bought me all the residence and work permits I could use, if I had simply accepted and then gone to the police. But I assured him I would do no such thing, thanked him for his friendship, and declined. About this time I got interested in the tierce, which is a form of racetrack gambling very popular in France. I had come to the conclusion that it is possible to win quite a bit of money if one played the tierce systematically. Of course, it is necessary to place substantial bets. I figured out a system that has worked out quite well over the years, and I managed to win between sixty and one hundred thousand francs a year. But it is hard work. So that's the way I lived, betting and moving around. But I also met the last woman in my life. We have been together for almost eleven years and, even in the hardest times, she has never let me down. 16. Back to the Treasure I DIDN'T THINK MUCH about the treasure then for a long time. But every so often the thought would come to me that if I died it would be gone forever. I finally decided that I had to do something about it, even if I couldn't find anybody to help. I finally wrote to the Bulgarian ambassador in Paris, telling him what was involved and offering to share what was left with the Bulgarian Government. He wrote back to say that he had forwarded my letter to Sofia. When I telephoned the ambassador a month later, he asked me to come to the embassy. I preferred to meet at a cafe nearby. He indicated that his government was inclined to accept, but wanted to know my conditions. I told him I would offer a proposal shortly. My plan involved a friend in Paris who was a former member of the National Assembly. I approached him with it. The two of us would go to Bulgaria together, posing as simple tourists, during which time I would show him the first hiding place. At our ages, it would be physically impossible for us to actually dig it up. When we were back in Paris, I would inform the Bulgarians that my friend could conduct them to the first hiding place, but that he did not know any of the others. Whatever they recovered was to be transported to the French consulate, where it would be appraised by a Parisian expert whom I would send. My half of the treasure would be given to my friend to give to me. The Frenchman and I agreed, but when I laid it out to the Bulgarians, I saw at a glance that it was unworkable. It was clear to me that they would immediately alert the Russians, who would claim the treasure as their rightful property. The plan had been impractical, but at least I was sure that the treasure was not in any immediate danger. Before I did anything more about it, however, I decided that I ought to go to Bulgaria to make sure that the hiding places were still intact. But it was a long time before I was able to make the voyage, only a few years ago. And that trip was a series of adventures. I thought I might try to enter Bulgaria from Greece, where I had a friend who had been a fellow officer during the Civil War. Somehow, I had never been able to accept his invitations to visit him and his Greek wife. Now I went there to see them to tell him my plan. He said I had come to the right man. He could help. All I needed was a small solid boat and a reliable crew. He knew a captain who smuggled, but who was a man of his word and a good sailor. He arranged for us to meet. We went down into the old section of the city near the port and were admitted into a whitewashed stone building by an old woman. The captain was there, a giant of a man with a magnificent black beard and incredibly large hands and arms. My friend explained: I had to land in Bulgaria, stay there for about three days, and then go to an Italian port. The captain agreed to take me, and set a reasonable price. I was to take a regular ferry to the island where he kept his boat. I had no trouble finding his boat in the little port. It looked like an ordinary fishing boat, with a sail and a motor, about twenty yards long. The captain was in the interior of the island on business. While I waited for him, I stayed at his house, which was luxurious and exquisitely furnished with Oriental rugs. He threw a party for me the evening he returned, with members of his crew and a small orchestra. Greek wine and the local cognac flowed like water and a whole lamb was cooked on a grill. Two days later we set out. I had paid for my trip in dollars and the captain had said that he was going to purchase Bulgarian tobacco while we were there. He promised me that he would not sell it illegally until after he had landed me at an Italian port. We left the island about 4 P.M. As we came close to the entrance to the Dardanelles toward evening, the captain told me that a storm was brewing and that he would have to put in at a small port on one of the islands. We didn't make it, however. The waves grew huge and the wind howled. The boat pitched so deeply that I thought it would turn over. I was certain we would sink. I lav on my bed, since I could not stand without cracking my head against the walls of my cabin. The storm raged until 3 A.M. and then began to calm down. About 5 A.M., as dawn was breaking, I looked outside the cabin. I could hear the captain's voice just outside my door. When I opened it, there he was, and I have never been so happy to see anyone in my life. He smiled at me through his magnificent beard. "So, you are still alive." He had not been able to reach any of the islands, of course. And, in fact, for the moment we had had to stay as far from land as possible so as not to be driven onto the beach. There was some damage to the boat but nothing serious. It could be repaired in a few days and then we would continue on our way. Eventually, we stopped at a small village on one of the islands, where I spent a very pleasant two days. Then we went to Constantinople, where we purchased fuel and provisions. The next day we pushed on and soon we had entered the Black Sea, which I have always been in love with. But before we got to Bulgaria, the captain came to my cabin. "I don't know why you are going to Bulgaria," he said, "and I don't care. All I ask is that you do nothing to cause trouble between me and these people. As far as I'm concerned, you are a tourist on a pleasure cruise. And you know nothing about my business. Right?" I assured him that he had nothing to worry about. "I have come to check on some personal business," I said. "That's all." It was the truth. Before I even thought seriously about trying to recover the treasure, I had to make sure it was still there. I had no doubts that it was, but I wanted to find out whether the terrain had altered. Perhaps the woods had been cut down, or somebody might have built on the site. We landed, and after the usual formalities, the captain headed for Plovdiv, the center of the tobacco market. He gave me three days' leave before I had to be back at the boat. Disembarking was easy. The customs officials were very friendly. The city had changed tremendously since I had been there last and I did not recognize many of the streets. I strolled around all that day, and set out on my expedition toward evening. I was wearing old clothes so as to melt easily into the general population. By daybreak I had reached the first hiding place. It was undisturbed. By late afternoon I had found the other three spots. They too were untouched. All this had taken longer than I had planned and I was physically exhausted as well. Since I couldn't leave until it was completely dark, I stretched out to catch a nap. I must have been asleep for about three hours when I was awakened bv voices nearby. Two men were talking and were evidently awaiting a third person. They may have been bandits. In any case, I was afraid to move even an inch because the noise of the dry leaves would have given me away. I drew my pistol slowly. My back and legs were aching. I didn't know whether they were armed. This went on for about two hours, and then I heard a dog barking. The Bulgarians called out. It must have been their friend with his dog. The damn dog would certainly discover me. In a few minutes, the dog had picked up my scent. He began to bark and growl. At first the men must have thought he had found some animal. He was right on top of me and I was sure he was about to go for my throat, when I shot him in the snout, leaped up with my gun drawn, and ordered them to hold their hands up. I had taken them completely by surprise. To my relief I could see they were not armed, though each carried a big club. I told them to throw their clubs down. They realized immediately from my accent that I was Russian. All to the good. It made them all the more careful. I asked them what they were doing there. They told me some cock-and-bull story about looking for a lost dog. I said that was nonsense and that they could be shot as thieves. "Get out of here, fast," I said, and they set out running. By about 5 A.M. I was almost back at the port. I lay down in a small woods nearby for about an hour and then went back on board. Once back in my cabin, I slept for fourteen hours, almost till midnight. I had some supper and spent the rest of the night reading. Early the next morning, I heard the captain come back aboard and went out to greet him. "We will leave tomorrow," he said. "I haven't been able to do any business but I hope your affairs went well." As we entered the Aegean the captain asked whether it was all right with me if we changed course. "It will add two or three days to the trip," he said, "but you will see islands most tourists have never seen." I had nothing bet ter to do and it seemed like a delightful prospect. That night I went to sleep peacefully. About i A.M. I was awakened by shouting and screaming on the deck. I could hear people running around and falling down. I ran up to see what was going on. I couldn't believe my eyes. There were about twenty men attacking our crew. The captain was fighting like a madman, with his back up against the mast. I saw him pick a man up and heave him into the sea. Then someone hit me over the head. When I came to, I had a fierce pain in the back of my neck and I couldn't move. My hands were tied behind my back and there were irons on my ankles. And I was thirsty as the very devil, my mouth so dry I couldn't even call out. I had a fantasy that I had fallen into the hands of men who knew about the treasure and were going to torture me to find out the secret. I was in a dark room and on land. I couldn't hear a sound, and I could barely make out my surroundings. Then I lost consciousness again. When I awoke the next time I was astonished to find myself in a well-lighted room, lying on a clean bed. Just as I was getting ready to call for help and ask for something to drink, a young man came into the room with two pitchers, one of cold water and the other of white wine. He spoke to me in Greek, which I could not understand. Nor could he comprehend any of the languages I tried out on him. Then he began to count with his fingers. When he saw that I still did not understand, he lowered the lamp and raised it again, holding up seven fingers. I understood that he was telling me that I would have to wait until seven o'clock. He was not wearing a watch but when I pointed to his wrist, he held up his fingers to indicate that it was 11 A.M. I pointed to the wound on my head and groaned. He left and came back after a few minutes with an old, toothless crone dressed all in black. When she saw my wound, she began to scold the young man. Then they both left. I thought I wouldn't see them again. After a half hour they returned. She was carrying a bowl of hot water and a big wad of absorbent cotton. He had some cold meat, goat cheese, and bread and fruit. The woman gestured for me to turn over. Then she washed my wound with water and bathed it with an evil-smelling liquid which, to my surprise, eased the pain. Then she set a plate full of food in front of me. They both wished me kalispera, "good night," and left. My appetite had come back and I ate heartily. I was still trying to understand what in the world was going on. At last, even in my state, I dismissed the idea that it had anything to do with the treasure. The only person in Greece who knew anything about it was my Russian friend, whom I trusted absolutely. I decided to put it out of my mind and try to get some sleep. When I woke up the next morning, two men were standing over me, staring at me with curiosity but with no apparent hostility. "Good morning," one of them said in fairlv good French. "How did you sleep?" "How could I sleep well when here I am kidnapped and tied without knowing why? What's going on?" The one who spoke French translated for his companion, who was clearly his superior. They were both well dressed in European style. The more important man wore an expensive suit and a gold watch. He wanted to know who I was, what I had been doing on the boat, and how long and how well I knew the captain. I asked if they were from the police and they answered, "We are as far from the police as the moon is from the earth." They were gangsters. The captain and I had agreed on what my story should be if anyone wanted to know what I was doing on board his boat. So I told them that I was a former officer of the Russian White Army and that therefore I couldn't safely enter any communist countries. But I had had my heart set on going to Bulgaria to see my only sister, who had married a Bulgarian. This seemed to satisfy them. I hoped the captain had stuck to our story. They wanted to know if I knew why the captain went back and forth to Bulgaria. I said I didn't and that if they knew the captain, they also knew that he was not the kind of man one questioned too closely. Without another word they turned to leave, and the interpreter said, "Monsieur is satisfied with your answers. You will learn his decision this evening." I looked out through the barred window. The building was about two hundred yards from the sea and in the distance I could see a tiny island. I was almost certainly on one of those tiny islands in the Sporades and therefore far from any of the main routes. The time passed slowly as I waited to learn what "Monsieur" had decided. It was quite late when the interpreter finally returned. He handed me an envelope. "Monsieur regrets," he said, "that you have been so badly treated. Here is a thousand dollars. He wants you to accept it to make up for the unjust treatment you have received. Tomorrow, a doctor will come to take care of you. In the meanwhile, the old woman who took care of you last night will look after you. In a couple of days you can leave here with the captain, provided he agrees to make retribution for the harm he has done us. If he refuses, we will take you to any port that you choose. There is only one condition: you must swear to tell no one what has happened. It is to your advantage to accept this condition, because the police are after both the captain and us and I promise you they will give you nothing but trouble if they find out about all this." I swore I would speak to no one. Immediately after-ward, the old woman and the young man came with fresh bandages and food. They also had a large jug of cool white wine. The old lady was so gentle with me that after she had cleaned my wound, I kissed her on both cheeks. She placed her hand softly on my head and said something that I would have given anything to understand. When they left, I ate, then drank the whole jug of wine and threw myself on the bed quite drunk. The next morning the young man woke me and escorted me to another building. It had the same plain exterior but was very luxurious inside. He took me to a bathroom, where I was overjoyed to find my baggage, my papers and my books. I shaved, bathed, and changed my clothes. When I came out, he was waiting for me. "In a few days," he said, "you will be far from here, and I believe your friend the captain will be the one to take you. He is being quite reasonable and there is peace between us now." I was delighted. He led me into a drawing room, beautifully furnished in the Middle Eastern style, and offered me some strong Turkish coffee. Just then a small man, also dressed in the European style, appeared in the doorway and announced in perfect German that he was a doctor. He examined my wound and pronounced it not serious. The swelling was already going down. He reban-daged it, and advised me to keep it covered for three days and after that to let nature take its course. These gangsters were treating me so graciously that I was beginning to feel at home. I was almost ready to forgive them for my injury and the brutal way they had treated me. It must be a matter of two rival gangs involved in the same illicit traffic. All I hoped was that my part in their adventures would soon be over. I saw the captain again about noon. The door opened suddenly and there he was -- covered with bruises and almost his entire head in bandages. He threw his arms around me and kissed me on both cheeks. "My friend," he said, "I am so glad to see you. I hope you are feeling better. Forgive me for this frightful experience. I had no idea. One day they will pay for it. Someone -- it had to be someone in my crew -- betrayed me. I'll find out who it was and then he had better watch out." The young man came to lead us to another room, where we were served an excellent lunch. The captain told me that he had lost two men. The cook had been killed and a sailor had been fatally wounded. The attackers had also had two killed, both by the captain himself. The boat had suffered some damage but would be able to embark in a couple of days. I thought it best not to ask what had been the cause of the trouble. Once before, I had asked him what I had imagined was a harmless question and he had changed from a friendly companion into a cold, terrifying stranger. That evening, the chief, who was leaving the next day, gave a banquet to celebrate his reconciliation with the captain. We ate bounteously and drank gallons of wine until four o'clock in the morning. Everybody got drunk, including me. The men drew their pistols and started firing into the ceiling. At the end the chief brought two pretty dancers who had entertained during the evening to the captain and me. Unfortunately, I was so drunk that I fell asleep as soon as I hit the bed. That afternoon the captain and I walked around the island. I tried to find out where we might be by referring to Lemnos. He pretended not to understand. Honor among thieves. He would not betray his own enemies. The next day, the captain was as anxious as I to leave. Since there was no wind, he started up the engine, and soon we were far from the island. The two missing crew members had somehow been replaced. The captain was in a bad mood. and I understood he was brooding about the traitor who had given away his course and the enormous sum he must have had to pay to ransom himself, his crew and his boat. He got his revenge on the traitor that night. After dinner we were playing checkers when he announced suddenly that he was going to retire. I was exhausted and only too willing. I fell asleep immediately, and was awakened by such terrible and bloodcurdling screams that I covered my ears. I was sure the captain was extracting a confession from the suspect. The next morning he asked me if I had slept well. answered, "Never better." But about noon I noticed that the old helmsman was missing. The captain himself was at the rudder. Three days later he let me off at the same port| from which I had embarked, and before I left he gave me back the money I had paid him. "You were almost killed and it was all my fault," he said. "Take this money and don't give me any argument. Just keep all this to yourself." When I saw my old Russian friend again, I had to tell him all about my trip. He was terribly upset that he had put me in such danger. "Not at all," I told him. "I had to see if it was still there." I spent a week with him and his wife, and though they wanted me to stay longer I decided I had to get away from Greece. I wanted to go home. All that was left for me now was to dream about the treasure of the White Army buried in an obscure Bulgarian forest. Only I know where.