The Assassin Clive Cussler (top 10 most read books in the world TXT) đ
- Author: Clive Cussler
Book online «The Assassin Clive Cussler (top 10 most read books in the world TXT) đ». Author Clive Cussler
Spike laughed. âRemember what I told him? âWeâll melt your passengers in our refinery, but itâs your job to make âem solid again.ââ
The president of the railroad had granted Spikeâs joke a thin smile and their lease a death blow: âYou canât pay me enough to let your pipe cross my tracks.â
âWhy not?â
âOrders straight from the Eleventh Floor.â
In the year 1899, there was only one âEleventh Floorâ in the United States of AmericaâRockefellerâs office at Standard Oilâs Number 26 Broadway headquarters in New Yorkâand it packed more punch than the White House and Congress combined.
Tonight, Bill Matters was punching back.
Sixty men piled out of the wagons with picks and shovels and tongs and pipe jacks. Working by starlight, they dug a shallow trench across the field and under the trestle. Tong hands wrestled thirty-foot-long eight-inch steel pipes off the wagons, propped them on jacks over the trench, and screwed the lengths together.
The distant train sounds they had heard earlier suddenly grew loud.
Matters saw a glow in the trees and realized, too late, he had misjudged their distance. They were indeed on this branch line, not far away, but steaming slowly, quietly, one from the north, one from the south.
Ditchdiggers and tong men looked up.
Headlamps blazed. The monster H6 Baldwin 2-8-0 locomotives burst from the wooded hills and rumbled onto the trestles.
âKeep working!â shouted Bill Matters. âWe own this land. We got every right! Keep working.â
The ninety-ton engines thundered overhead and stopped on the trestle, nose to nose, cowcatchers touching, directly above Matters and Hopewellâs just-laid pipe. One was hauling a flatcar crammed with railroad cops, the other a wreck train with a hundred-ton crane. The railroad cops shoved the locomotive firemen from their furnaces, threw open the fire doors, and snaked hoses from the locomotive boilers.
A giant mounted the front of the wreck train. The glaring headlamps lit a hard, hot-tempered face and a mammoth chest and belly. Matters recognized Big Pete Straub, a towering Standard Oil strikebreaker, with a company cop star pinned to his vest, a gun on his hip, and a pick handle in his fist.
âDrop your tools!â Straub shouted down at the men in the field.
âStand your ground!â yelled Matters. âBack to work.â
âRun!â roared Straub.
âLawâs on our side. We got every right!â
âLet âem have it, boys!â
The railroad cops scooped burning coals from the furnaces and whirled opened steam valves. Fire and boiling water rained down on Mattersâ workmen.
âStand your ground!â
Burned and scalded, they fled.
Matters intercepted the stampede and waded in with both fists, knocking men down as they tried to get away.
Spike grabbed his arm. âEase off, Bill. Let âem go. Theyâre outgunned.â
Matters smashed a ditchdiggerâs ribs and knocked another man cold with a single blow. âCowards!â
A burning coal sailed down from the starry sky trailing sparks.
It set Mattersâ coat sleeve on fire. Hot coals fanned his cheek. The stink of singed hair seared his nostrils. He jerked his Remington from his coat, ran straight at the trestle, and climbed the pier.
Spike charged back into the battle zone and grabbed his boot. âAre you nuts? Where you going?â
âKill Straub.â
âHeâs got twenty years on you and fifty armed men. Run!â
Spike Hopewell outweighed Bill Matters. He dragged him off the trestle.
Fire and steam drove them out of range. Bill Matters aimed his horse pistol at Straub. Spike knocked it out of his hand, snatched it from the mud, and tucked it in his coat.
Matters watched with helpless fury. The hundred-ton crane lowered an excavator bucket. Its jutting spike teeth bit into the freshly dug soil like the jaws of Tyrannosaurus rex. Steam hissed. The jaws crushed shut. The crane clawed pipes out of the ground and dropped them in a welter of bent and broken metal.
A pair of dim lights bounced slowly across the starlit field. The county sheriff pulled up in a Pittsburgh gasoline runabout. A scared-looking deputy was seated beside him.
Bill Matters and Spike Hopewell demanded protection for their workmen. Matters shouted that they had a legal right to route an independent pipe line under the railroadâs right-of-way because they had bought this low-lying farm where the elevated tracks crossed on tall trestles.
âThe railroad canât block us! We own this land free and clear.â
Here was their deed.
Matters shook the parchment in the dim glow of the runaboutâs headlamp.
The sheriff glanced down from his steering tiller. He answered too quickly, like a man who had been ordered to read a copy days ago. âSays on your deed that the Pennsylvania Railroad leased their right-of-way across this farm.â
âOnly for track and trestles.â
âLease says you mustnât damage their roadbed.â
âWeâre not hurting their road. Weâre trenching between the trestle piers.â
Matters shoved more paper into the light. See their engineerâs report! See their attorneyâs brief asserting their case! See this court case precedent!
âIâm no lawyer,â said the sheriff, âbut everybody knows that Mr. Rockefeller has a mighty big say in how they run the Pennsylvania Railroad.â
âBut we ownââ
The sheriff laughed. âWhat made you think you can fight Standard Oil?â
â
A coal-black Pittsburgh sky mirrored Bill Mattersâ despair.
âBusiness is business,â his banker was droning. Mortgaged to the hilt to build a pipe line they could not finish, they had to sell for pennies on the dollar to Standard Oil. âNo one else will make an offer. My advice is to accept theirs and walk away clean.â
âThey tricked us into building it for them,â Matters whispered.
âWhat about the Hook?â asked Spike.
âConstable Hook?â asked the banker. âPart of the package.â
âIt is the most modern refinery in
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