The Thief Clive Cussler (freenovel24 TXT) đ
- Author: Clive Cussler
Book online «The Thief Clive Cussler (freenovel24 TXT) đ». Author Clive Cussler
Two seamen were smoothing the wood railing with rasps and sandpaper.
âGood morning, sir.â
âGood morning, gents. Up early?â
âSoon as we can see to work,â said one.
The other said, âIf we let wear and tear go, the ship would be a bloominâ embarrassment. Look at this gouge! Fairly tore the rail in half.â He stepped back to show Bell their repair of what was actually the minutest gouge in the teak, which only an eagle-eyed bosun would notice.
Oddly, the gouge traced the full twelve-inch curve of the wood from inboard to outboard as if something flexible had wrapped around it. âWhat do you suppose caused that?â Bell asked.
âSome bloominâ swell, begging your pardon, sir, must have whacked it with his walking stick.â
âOr sword,â ventured his mate.
âSword?â the first echoed derisively.
âThe grain of the wood is cut.â
âIt ainât a cut. Itâs a gouge.â
âYou can call it a gouge if you like, mate, but I say he whacked it with a sword.â
âWhere the bloominâ hell would a First Cabin nob get his paws on a sword?â
âConcealed in his walking stick. Wouldnât you agree, sir?â he added, enlisting support when he saw Isaac Bell studying the gouge intently.
âWire,â Isaac Bell said.
âBeg your pardon, sir?â
âWire. A thin braided-wire cable.â
âWell, yes, it could be braided cable, sir. On the other hand, you might ask where would the swell get a braided cable and why would he whack the rail with it? Unless he was an out-and-out vandal. Not that we donât get the odd one or two of them aboardâ Youâll recall, Jake, there was that Frenchman.â
âWhat do you expect?â
âAn acrobat,â Bell said, half aloud. Had the Acrobat somehow grappled the railing with a flexible wire cable?
âAcrobat? No, sir, begging your pardon, that Frenchie was no acrobat.â
âA German acrobat.â
The seamen traded baffled looks.âWell, if you say so, sir.â
âAn acrobat it is, sir.â
As Bell hurried away, he heard whispers behind him. âWhat the blazes was he rattlinâ on about?â
âAcrobats.â
âNextâll be monkeys.â
Isaac Bell walked faster. He could imagine that a superb athlete, a muscular, lithe acrobat, could stop his fall by hooking a thin cable over the railing. But he could not imagine where the man could suddenly get the cable. Nor how he had secured it in the split second that he hurtled past the railing. Nor why the wire didnât slip through his hands. Or cut him to the bone if he wrapped it around his wrist.
Bell passed a barrier into Second Class, said good morning to the seaman Captain Turner had assigned to stand guard outside Clyde Lyndsâs cabin door, and knocked loudly. âItâs Isaac Bell, Clyde. Open up.â
Lynds let him into the cramped, windowless space he had shared with the Professor. He appeared to have slept in his shirt and trousers.
âYou look a mess,â said Bell.
âDidnât sleep a wink. The Professor was a good man. A kind man. He didnât deserve dying that way.â
âYou wouldnât either,â said Bell.
âAm I next?â
âMake a clean breast of it, Clyde. Your lifeâs in danger. Who are they? What do they want?â
âI swear I donât know them.â
âDoes it have to do with you deserting the German Army?â
âI didnât desert. I was never in the Army. Iâve never been a soldier.â
âThen why is the German Army after you?â
âI donât know. Theyâre lying.â
âWhy would the Army lie? If they are lying, why are they hunting you?â
âI donât know.â
âYes, you do.â
âI am not a deserter.â
âI know youâre not. Thatâs what makes it worse.â
âWorse?â
âThe German Army is helping Krieg RĂŒstungswerk steal your invention.â
âIâll be O.K. when I get to America.â
Isaac Bell asked the question he had come to Clydeâs cabin to ask. âDid you ever hear the Professor mention a name or a word that sounded like âacrobatâ?â
Lynds turned pale. âWhy do you ask?â
âWhen Professor Beiderbecke asked me to protect you, it was the last word he spoke. âAcrobat.ââ
âOh my Lord,â Clyde Lynds breathed. âAre you telling me the guy didnât fall overboard?â
âYou know who I mean.â
âYes,â Clyde admitted. âHeâs the one. Is he really on the ship?â
âI think the Professor saw him. I think this acrobat locked him in the trunk. If thatâs true, then youâre being stalked not by his accomplices, but by the man himself, the same man who tried get you in Bremen and again the night we sailed from Liverpool. You were lucky that night that I just happened to be there. Last night the Professorâs luck ran out. Whoever killed Professor Beiderbecke is hiding among either the passengers or the crew. He will not be found before disembarking in New York, at which point he will disappear into the cityâwhere he will find you easily, Clyde. A man who has hunted in the confines of a steamship with nearly a thousand crew to take notice is a formidable hunter. He will find you.â
Clyde Lynds puffed up. âWhat does an insurance man care about this?â he demanded, truculently.
âI donât give a hang about this or you,â Isaac Bell shot back.
âYou donât?â
âIf I hadnât promised the Professor to look out for your prevaricating hide, Iâd let you to swing it out with this murderer weâre calling the Acrobat. But I did promise. So youâre stuck with my help, like it or not.â
âCan you really protect me?â
âOnly if you can tell me what Iâm protecting you from. What is your âsecret inventionâ? Why do they want it?â
âO.K. O.K. Weâll do it your way.â
Lynds sat silent for a long moment. Bell prompted him, saying, âProfessor Beiderbecke started to name it when we had a drink before my wedding. He called it âSprechchend-somethingâ before he clammed up.â
Clyde Lynds laughed.
âWhat the devil is funny?â
âSprechendlichtspieltheater.â
âSprechendlichtspieltheater? What is Sprechendlichtspieltheater?â
âA ridiculous name. I told him we needed an American name. So he came up with âAnimatophone.â I told him that was worse. So he said, âHow about âPhotokinemaâ?â Which is a bad joke. I couldnât get it through
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